HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-12-26 - Orange Coast Pilot7
SUNDAY
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DAILY PILOT
* VOL. 69, NO. 361, 6 SECTIONS, 76 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNIA SUNDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1976 TWENTY-F IVE CENTS
El Toro: Forever a Major Airfield?
ByWll.LIAM SCHREIBER
Ol l"• O•lly ~llOI Sl•fl c<l on the Irvine Ranch for 33
years The way Col G. L •· H<'d ..
Fenenga has 1t fi J:ured. El Toro And the hard place is the reluc-
tance of county politicians to
enact land use plans that ex
pressly prohibit encroaching re-
s1dent1al development in rugh Jet
noise areas.
SIJNl,A\:' SPEl'IAI.
, Manne Corps
Alr Station is
between a
Tock and a
bard plal·e.
The rock, in
this case, 1s
th e U.S
Def ense
, Department's
1 un waverin~ commitment scH11e11e1t
to a military base that tlils cxa~t·
Compounding the latter pro·
blem, Fenenga argued, is the
fact that m any land developers
care only about one thing -big
money -with littleornoconcem
for the "unborn" who will occupy
future houses within those noisy
zones.
F ga a • gy
plain-spoken man who has spent
2S years as a Marine aviator. He
holds college degrees in political
science, with a master's in in-
ternational relations and says he
has been "a planner of one kind
or another for the past 14 years."
AS EL TORO 'S noise and plan· ning specialist, be is responsible
for representing Marine Corps
interests in a ny county land UM:
. -
;Equality Now Law
For Seal B each, the Facts of Life
By ARTlll'f( H. VINSt.I.
0t 0•• o .. 11v Pilot \t .. tt
Sexu::il equality I'> offic·1Jll\ J
tact of la fc tod av on tlw S1•al
.Beach Pohet' Dt•pjrtmcnt
This develops aftt·r J four
year. $125,0oO hattlc that l'Oulrt
have c·osl city tJ\J>a)<'r" ur1 to
$750,000 JU'>I lo gu.1rantl't" 1·11ps
arc all the SJ mt'. lw tht•) mill(· or
fem all'
But then <-.1 m1· .1 111•g11t 1ali'tl
settlement last \\l't·k 111 tht• ,,.,
d1scram111at1on SUit \\.hll'h '"<I'
filed hv six f1·m alt· nn•mla·r.., of
the pohct• clcpJrtnwnl
THAT S ETTLEMENT COST
the c1tv of Sl•al IJ<o;wh SS5.000 an
bark r;ay and IH•1a•f1h tlut• ltlC'
women On1• f1ri•<I f1•mu l1·
ernploy1· •'>no'' hack on the 1ob
So far. lht• wom1•n whn benefit
from th<• n('got1.1t<·d s1•ltll·rn1·nt
have made rw offat•wl t•ommcnt
on it
Fo rmt•r Ofra<"•·r \'1rg1111J
Black. 53, wh11 ";1.,, onh:red 1m
mediatl'ly promott•d lo patrol
sergeant rank In· " I ' '\ l>1stn<·t
Court con..,C'nl 11t·u 1•1• 11rc11•1. ha
ac·ted .ic; "flok1· .... 1wr,11n
The m•w 't'rgt'.tnl. '"ho an h('r
capac1t\ ""Ill lw an comm.incl 01
)ounitc'r p11IH·1·m1·11 \\11rk ... J
gra\1•\ .11 ii 'hart :1111J h.1s h1·1·n un
O.llY ~lot l'ltolo
THE FEDS ARE WATCHING
Chief Cibbarelll
.l\'a1lJble for comment
OFFICF.R DIANE Vasquez.
"'host' dut1e-; involve detective
work most recently dealing with
the city's well-known Downlown
Rapist. has been reluctant to dis-
cuss the issue .
Officer Virginia Hayes. who
was dis missed a year ago in a
disciplinary move related to
handling of a criminal investiga.
lion. returned to duty Thursday
under the court order.
Provisions of the court order
upholding discrimination claims
filed by the women under the 1964
Civil Rights Act. the Equal Op.
portunities Act and Fair Employ.
ment Practices Commission re·
gulation include distributing
$.55,000 in back pay due among
the plaintiffs
POI.ICE C HI EF ED C ib-
barelli says the r ecipients
h ave work ed ou t a m o n g
themselves and the court how it
will be distributed.
He said intervention by the
federal government in telling lhe
City of Seal Beach how its police
personnel system and job re-
quirements shoulc! be bandied
bas damaged departm e n t
morale.
"It's taken me away from my
work at times," he said, noting
<See EQUALITY, Page A2>
Agents Cut Drug Traffic
Ry The \ ''oc1att'd rr('s<.
\' () ll II g . (' J g l' r :\I(' )I. I(' a II
n arc11111·5 1·11111 rol .11~1·nh h<I\ r• <'Ill
:\ "Hilo '"'.1th 1111111wh th•· rtnw
11nc11·p~nrld 1li.1l 11rn~ 11r11\ 11lo·
most of lh•· h1·1111n 1t·.11 hmg llw
l 'lllll'tl SI .1t1·'
r\hout :!:ill ··~···nl•., m,trl\ or
lht•m '" I h1·1 r :!ll'i. h,I\ ,. ,, 111•11 (,I .'
mllhnn "ort h .. r c 111'.111w .11111
h('ro111 .111ct ~,ti:I 11111:-. 11r m.1n p1.1r1.1
in a nine-month period, says Dr.
Alejandro Gertz, who headed the
d 1 t 1• s q u a d u o t i I t h e a d
m1n1 ,trat1vc res huffle that
followC'd thl• inauguration Dec l
11f M1•xw11's new president, Jose
Lor>ez l'ort 1110
In .uhhl111n to lheseized drugs.
na rrnt 1cs agents destroyed 14,450
""' .... of roppy plantings. from
"'h11 h ht.'n1111 come-;, and hurned
Rams in Cold
13,800 acres of marijuana plants
during the same nine months,
Gertz said. ·
In that s ame period the agency
made 5.022 arrests. including 416
foreign ers, mos t of them
Americans.
Many of the arresLc; were made
as a res ult o f C'oopc r ation
between Mexican authorities and
the U.S . Dru g Enforcement
Agency aimed at halting the flow
or narcotics to the United States.
Mexico now s upplies about 80
percent or the heroin rcachin~
lhc United States. according t'>
the agency
The American agency plays an
active advisory and support role
an Mexico. rt has supplied Mexico
about three dozen planes and
helicopters the largest non-
military force in Latin America
and radios and other equip-
ment.
The successes, which Gertz
calJs "encouraging" but not con-
clusive in stopping drug traffick-
ing to the United States, have
come at high cost.
Twenty-two Mexican field
agents have been ki lled in the
IMt year. almost a 10 percent
loss. But most of the agents arc
young. eager, quick-triggered
and ready to accept the dangers
for the prestige and romance or
lhejob.
. . g r
be affected by the 4,600-acre
air base's "~tratcg1c training
mission ··
Over the nine months he has
been involved expressly with the
El Toro noise problem, Fenenga
has appeared before dozens of
college semmars, homeowner as·
sociation meetings, planning
commission meetings, city coun-
cil meetings and Orange County
Board of Supervisors meetings.
For A •fl
Pres ident -elect J1mm}
Carter's 9-year·old daughter
Amy unwraps a gift in the
h ospita l room or h e r
grandmother, Lillian Carter.
on ChriMmas Day. The cldrr
Mrs. Carter is resting up in
Americus. Ga.
Thais Probe
Crash Site
For Bodies
BANGKOK. Thailand CAP) -
Rescuers pulled charred bodies
from the s moldering wreckage of
an Egyptian j<'tliner which
plunged into a textile mall a mile
short of the Bangkok airport car·
ly Saturday. killing at least 51
persons aboard and several
workers
Officials said about 40 bodies
wen~ recovered befor<' the search
was suspended to await the ar-
n val of Egyptian avtalion ex·
perts summoned from Cairo.
All persons aboard the Egyp·
lair Boeing 707 were killed and 18
mill workers were reported miss·
ing and presumably dead, of·
ficials said.
Bangkok police said most of
the corpses were charred or
mangled heyond recognition and
the plane and factory WC're total
ly destroyed. They said it was the
worst aviation disaster in Thai
history.
Witnesses said the Jetliner
came in low in the prcdawn fog
Christmas day and sheared the
roofs orr several buildings and
tops or coconut trees before thun-
dering into the Thai Teijin texllle
factory one mile north of Don
Mua ng Airport. The j et ex·
ploded into flames.
His objeetlv' is to m~e lhe
milit.ary's •ltion clear without
appearing ~fJ>earing or de·
mandlng -an e>cercise in finesse
lhat might seem out of place in
the traditional conception of a
career Marine omcer.
Fenenga said the Marine
Corps' position on use of El Toro
is tbe same as it has always been
but lhe approach used to con-
vince the civilian population of
the base's importance b as
changed dras tically over the
years.
"Naturally, safety or our
operations is always number one
Arson Probed
priority," he said. "That js a
motherhood issue."
T HE SECOND priority is that
nothing will be done that will be
"deleterious to the base or its
m ission." Fenenga said.
"Our position is that El Toro is
a precious air traffic resource to
th.ts county, regard.less of who is
here usmg it," he said. "It will be •
a major air facility forever '
because logically, there is no
olher place for one.
"It's my job to es~blish our
permanence in the minds of the
<See NOISE, Page AJ>
2 Santa Anans
Blaze Victims
By JACKI E HYMAN
Of Ille 0 .. 1, ~olol St.II
Two men were critically
burned in Santa Ana Saturday
night in a fire police said was of
suspicious origin.
Bolh an arson investigator and
a police investigator were im-
mediately dispatched to the
scene.
The two v i c tims. whom
firemen were unable to identify,
were described as male Latins m
their late 20s. apparently hving
in a converted garage at 1402 W.
Santa Ana Blvd. Hoth wen~ taken
to the burn ward at UC lrvint'
Medical Center.
Meanwhile i.n other fires, four
firemen were injured, three of
them requiring hospitalization.
in two restaurant blazes Satur
day night.
All three fires occurred within
70 minutes of each olher.
One of the blazes occurred at
the Disneyland Hotel coffee shop
but did not Involve the main hotel
structure.
The most serious of lhe fires
was reported at 10:15 p.m. in the
Santa Ana garage. f<'ire men us-
ing five engines extinguished the
fire within fi ve minutes. report-
ing about $3,500 damage lo th~
structure and $500 to the con· .
tents.
Paramedics assisted the two
victims, one of whom suffered
second and third degree burni.
over 50 percent of his body. The
other had first degree burns on 20
percent or his body plus lung
burns from inhalation.
Police said there was a
possibility of arson or even al·
tempted murder, but declined to
FV Council
Urges R e peal
Of Data Law
The F ountain Valley City
Council has urged state officials
to repeal a law which allows the
Department or Motor Vehicles
<OMV) to sell names and ad·
dresses or auto registrants to a ny
individual or company.
The council adopted a resolu
tion which says the OMV can pro·
vide this info rmation t o
criminals who use it lo select
rape and robbery victims.
The information from the OMV
can also be used to locate police
officers, s ubjecting them to
harassment.and by advertisers
for malling "junk mail," the re·
solution said .
Mayor Al Hollinden said he will
write the governor. s tate
senators and assemblymen and
Herman Sillas. OMV director,
urging r epeal of the law.
elaborate pending investigation.
They said neighbors in the
house attached to the garage by a
shed apparently did not know the
two men.
Earlier 1n the evening, a
C~ FIRES, Page J\2)
Patrolman
Slwots
Countian
A Westminst er man was in
guarded condition following lung
surgery Saturday night after he
was shot by a policeman when
the victim allegedly threatened
to shoot the officer, police re·
ported.
The victim , Roc k Lee Fetzer.
21, of 15762 Brookhurst St., was
injured in the 6:36 p.m. shooting
at his home. He was operated on
at Fountain Valley Community
Hospital.
Police said they received a
phone call beli eved to have come
from a member of Fetzer 's ram•·
ly. Offi cer Hans De Haas was
sent to the home to check out a
report that a man with a s ledge
hammer was smashing windows
and attacking people1 When Officer De Haas arrived.
he spoke through the sli ghtly
opened door with Fetzer. The of·
ricer said Fetzer threatened to
shoot him and began to open the
door.
Police said Officer De Haas,
believing himself in danger,
fared .
They said the bullet appeared
lo have gone through Fetzer ,
poss1hly dama~ing a lung. Fetzer
was later found to have been
armed only with a sledge ham·
mer.
20 AGED DIE
IN HOME FIRE
ST. JOHN'S. Canada
<AP> At least 20 per.sons
were killed in a fire al an
old-age home near SL
J ohn's. fire officials re·
ported early today.
The offi cials said initial
reports indicated the death
toll could reach m ore thun
30.
The fire broke out at
about 10:30 pm. Saturday
at an o ld-age home in
Goulds, about eight miles
southwest of St. John 's. the
provincial capital of New·
found land.
Fire Victims
Recovering
CtN "rHI~ INSll)t~
........... ,.
Thia 11 how the Loa A••• Rama profe11lonel football tHm
apent "' ChrtatrnH dlnnet In the frigid clime of ltoomlngton,
Minn. R1m1 meet Mlnne.ota Viki~• at 10 a.m. today (Cftann.a
2) tor NFC champlonahlp. Oakland Raider• hoat Pltttbutgh
StH lera at 1 p.m. (Channel 4) for AFC title.
Three survivors of a fire that
killed a 16-year-old boy in Costa
Mesa were reported on the road
to recovery Saturday at UC
Irvine Medical Center's burn
unit.
A s pokesman said Carlita
Oaymon, 19, and Ken York, 22.
had both be\!n treated for smoke
Inhalation and released. Valerie
Anderson, 17, was still in the
hospital but was reported In good
condition.
The fire. believed to hnve start·
td In a aofabed, claimed the life
of Ktn Goldworthy·Hlgp In the
early morning hours Thunday at
719W. WilaonSt. -
SOLVERS OF MYSTERIES -
Orange County's Ubrarians do a
lot more than check out books -
everything from bunting down
little-known facts to aiding in-
valids. Laurie Kasper of the Dal·
ly Pilot Staff looks at what 's
nvallable to coast residents in
~toMes on Page 81.
ILLEGAL ALIENS Immi-
gration authorities admit they're
powerless to s tem the now of
Mexicans Into the United States,
despite or perhaps because of
more stringent quotas .
Meanwhile, some l{n>ups araue
that iUegal alle!'\s already here
should be legitimized. The story
Is on Page B2. --
'1• IN ROCK MUSIC -As -
sociated Press columnist Abe
Peck sees some healthy trends
and some discouraging signs for
the rock world jn an overview or
1976. The biggest new star of the
year was Peter Frampton, whose
live album is among Peck's
choices or top albums of the year .
Page B6.
'71 IN HISTORY -The single
most critical event in Ameriran
history may we ll have been
George Washington's salvation
of h.1.9 army at ChristmaR time,
1776. The famous painting of
Washingto n crossing the
Delaware was based on this ind·
dent. Page AlO.
'') ,
~ "' AIYM1rS.rvlco II lr-loonM<ll II at"I-• Cl c.anttm• Al
Clt"lll.. Cl-IO c ..... ...,.. •• DMI~ NMlttt Al
l dllOf'l•I ~ ... , U ·1 ln1•'1•111"''"' •••
" .. , .. , Mo,..wope """u°'"" Mevlff
::r:"•'• ........
$4!0'1• Tra .. 1 v"'"'""'•" .... , ... ,
OAll Y l'l~OTSICTIOl'S
"' .,
•• ••• •• .,
•• llt>-11
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............... ,
TV"ftt•
t '• I
A! DAIL v PILOT Suriday December 29, 1975
Weekly review of Orange Coast highlights
Costa Mesa
Away From a Manger
Sam got tired or playing his assigned part in a manger
scene al the Church of the Nazarene m Costa Mesa Monday.
So the donkey escaped, only to be nabbed by tire store
workers and handed over to policeman Robert Sulton. "This
J~ really tu mini! out to be some kind of a day," Sutton
grumbled "E ;irla<'r this mornrng we caught a reindeer over
by the Jl;irbor Shop1>1n~ Cc·nter. ''
Seal Beach
Uniform Agreement
A Ion~ st~rnding dispute over sex d1scriminat1on, based
on a lawsuit filed by six women employes against the Seal
Beach Police Department, was resolved Tuesday alter ex-
tended negotiations. Among the provisions are $SS,OOO in
back pay and benefit;!!· to the women, reinstatement of one
cmployc and pr o mot.Jon of another.
Newport Beach
Floats, but No Parade
The year's highest tide crested at 7.5 feet Tuesday
mominR and caused temporary flooding on Main Street
near the Ba lboa Pavilion in Newport Beach. No major
damagl' wa!-. n ·portl'<.I but al least one dock with a boat al
tached floated away when the tide forced the dock to rise
above its ccm l'nt pilings The boat and dock wer e later r e·
covered
Mission Viejo
San Clemente
Angel Gets
Into Deviltry
There was a different kind of
flood in Mission VieJO last week,
and 1t d a mpened one girl's
Christmas spirits. at least tem-
porarily Angel Anast, IS. was
hakin~ cookies and filling her
v.aterbed at the same t ime. 5he
rt.'membered the cookies. The
'' aterbed. however. burst and
~ent 150 ~allons or water stream-
ing through the house.
Scores Have Ups, Downs
S<·hool oHi nals sa1d tht•y weren't surprised when San
Clementl•'s Las Palmas School lo1rned some of the county's
lowest Cahforn1.t Ass<'ssmc•nt Program test scores this year
wh1I<' scon·~ nl Laguna N1~uel's Moulton School were
.1mon~ lht· hi ght"•! Although both schools are in the
('ap1strdno t ·nrfwd School 01 ~trict. thr ethnic and economir
m.1ke11p from v. h1C'h thr two schools 1J r;1w their s tud1•nts at c·
'1•n rhffrr<'nt 11rf1n:lls sairl
Index to Finger Bouncers
BJd dw('I. pa-;"<'f'> had better bounce right out of San
Clrmc·nl1• .1rron l1ng to mrrchant<> whn are banding
'"~!l'lhn 111 r1~ht 1111' ·papcor h.ingcrs .. Jn cooperation.with
ttw pol11·1· 1IPpt1rl nwnt. lhf'\ re forming a central check 1n-
rlc>~ tu hrlp. amon~ othrr things, insure that action 1s taken
again!-.l thos(• "'ho wnte rubber checks for s mall amounts.
bu1 do -;o &Ra m 11nd :i~am at different stores
Huntington Beach
Golden Years
Behind, Ahead
From 122 acres or farmland, It
11rew during the past 12 years into
a colll'ge that enrolls 20.000 stu·
dents Now its founding president
and chief administrator, Dr. R.
Dudley Boyce, 55. has decided it's
time to take his leave of Golden
West College. Dr. Boyce said he
and his wife are seeking "a
changeofpacr "
Wraps Ignite Blaze
A family burning Christmas
gift wrappings in their fireplace
accidentally set off a ftre th;ll
caused $26,000 da mage to the up-
per portion of their home, the
Orange County ,.~Ire Department
report(ld Saturday.
The 2:5~ p.m fire at the horn<'
o ( Vince Dav1i1, 13181 Chirping
Sparrow Way, In ('()unty terrl tory
next to Tustin. began when a
spark set fire to the roof. fire of-
ficials sa1d. A neighbor rt'J)Orted
theblaz~.
Firemen were able to uve more than half the house nnd
~
II
most or the contents, orncials
said. There were no injuries ex-
cept for a fireman who stepped
on a nail.
"Paper is light and it'll go up
through the chimney when it's
still on fire. Ir you don't have a
screen on there, then you· re sub-
Jecl to having the stuff land on
the roof. Everyone should have a
proper screen installed on their
chimney." a spokesman said.
lit said the department
handled two other fires ca11'ed by
· burnin g wuppings, but that
neither cauited much damage.
,.,_ ,..,__..__ ___ ._ . . ---
Filled With log
His Parlor's
A Wo:riderland
JJy AKTJH'R R. VINSEL
Ot I~• 0.11, P11.i )1•11
For many children ma modest
Westmins ter neighborhood,
C hris tmas came S aturda y
because an elderly llalian
~entl t!man named Matthew
Climo lives there.
Climo, 76. has turned his apart-
ment ut 13822 Locust St. into u
Christmas wonde rland.
A stcclworkl•r for 40 years, he
s tands proudly over the va:.t,
double-decker board that con-
talns an entire miniature town
with snow-covered cottages, a
hospital, two levels or railroad
track and five Lionel e1-?ctric
trains. ·
Thl' layout includes such a c
<'Umulated toys and keepsakes of
·•grownup s mall boy" fancies as
a Santa Claus and sleigh, a
plastic T y rannosaurus Rex
dinosaur, cars. trucks, double '
de c k e r Englis h bus and
miniature horses, cowboys and
Indians.
Chmo's neighborhood is just •
off W£•!>tm111s t cr Boulevard
There is a community mental
health clinic for the Spanish-
speaking people just around the
corner. One neighbor advertises
red fishing worms for a penny
eac:h.
There may not have been a lot
or luxury Christmas presents
beneath the trees in this
neighbor hood Saturday, but the
kids have Matthew Climo's
toyland. They swarm to his place
to play.
• ueighbor Judy, bccpuso lhey are
handicapped.
C!Jmaknows wt.'11 whutit is like
to nee« other people.
Once" near ly blind himself, tus
daughter notes, he had lus v1s1on
restored and is eternally grateful.·
vacation and alck pay benefil.8
"He was up at 4 a.m. bakin~
his traditional Christmas pizzas
for all the doctors and nurst.'s who
restored his sight and those who
have been so kind and good with
Mame."
This will be a very speci..11
Christmas for Climo and his wife
Fannie, 74, because while it may
well be her last, &ht: is coming
home for the holidays from a con-
vales cent hospital.
·'She is a terminally ill pa-
tient," explains Mrs. Lustig, '
"although doctors say her illness
is in re mission al the present
lime:"
· ''My father is not a wt>althy
man,·· she whispered necdll•ssly
as Climo enthus ias tically JOmed
his gra ndson and a pal at thl'
l'lectric train boarrl "But lw
gives all the ne ig hbo rhood
children some thing, a little bit of
m oney ...
"With the sadness of mama in
the hospital and everylh111,.:, antJ
at his <Jge, I don't SN' how he can
have suc h a true Chnstmas kl'I
mg, but there 1s the real spml h(•r(' '
0.lly Pilol Stolt PllOlo
MATTHEW CLIMO WITH FRIENDS I N TOYLAND
. Andy Giei a. 12, Enjoys With John Russ Lustig
From Page A I
''l"ve been doing this for 36
years , s ince 1940, back in Pen
nsylvania. but I had more things
in Rochester," he declares.
EQUALITY A MATTER OF LAW • • •
But his Westminster toyland is
impressive with a traditional
Mary, Joseph and Jesus manger
scene pres iding over the
tabletop. There is a modest but
magnificent Christmas tree
towering above the scene.
Four e lectric transformers
mounted side-by-side will allow
two youngsters at once to keep
the tr ams going clickety-clack
and the long, mournful hoot of a
fast freight frt>quently fills the
older apartment complex.
Downstairs, Mike, a blind boy.
lS, who li ves with his crippled
grandmother, Mrs. Mae McGin-
nis. hears the train whistle and
smiles . waiting for Climo's
grandson John Russ Lustig, 11, to
come <.ind describe how it looks
one more ti me .
"Mike can·t sec the train, but
he can hear it and it makes him
happy,·· says Climo·s daughter.
Mr!>. Carmelita Lusllg, of 16082
H11lon Lane, Huntington Beach.
Iler aged Cather gets a break on
his rent a s offi cial apartment
hou!'e handvman, but he looks
aft t•r Mr'>. ~1 cGinni~. her blind
grancbon and an.al.her nippled
Family of 6
Hurt in Irvine
Collision
A carload of she family mem-
bers was struck from behind
Saturday in rrvine. sending four
people to the hospital and sliJ:?hlly
1111uring several others, police
sa1rl .
The accident occurred at 4: 12
p m on Culver Drive near Bar-
r ant'a Ho acl
Hosp1tahlocl from the family
group were Albe rt Davison, 68.
and his wire Ve ra, 62, both of
Massachusetls.
Also slightly inJured in their
car hut not hospitalized, were
their son Russell Davison, 3l,
and his wife, J ant', 30, their son,
Ru~sell, 2, and their daughter,
Julie. ninl' months.
llosp1t ..1 hw d from tht' other car
were the driver, Mark David Van
de Water. 21. and his passenger,
Rruce Burdick, 2 1, both of
fo'ull erton.
SUNDAY
DAILY PILOT
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the endless series or conferences
and hearings involved.
"And it has created staff pro-
blems that wouldn't be there
otherwise,·· the ctucf added.
THE CHIEF DID NOTE that tn
the settlement, the federal gov·
ernment will allow Seal Beach
police t o continue using a
physical agility tes t for prospec
live polic e officers that de
monstrates if they can scale an
eight-foot fence in a pursuit.
"This city is full of eight-foot
fences," Chief CibbarelU notcc.l.
The federal government,
however, will keep its eye on
Chief Cibbarelli and the way Seu!
Beach police treat male and
female officers and prospective
officers for another four years,
under terms or a consent decree.
Negotiators for the state and
federal government made that a
condition of the agreement on file
in U.S . District Court in Los
Angeles.
C HIE F C IB BARt;LJ,I ."· a
former _, Nev.,iort Beach Pollcl•
lie utenant. inheritC'd what can·
only he calle d a m1scrablt·
bureaucratic mess when hired as
chief while the he'< d1scnm1nJ
lion matte r re m a ined un-
resolved.
He is clearly not happy O\'<·r
the outcome but he 1s clearly
happier than he mi~ht be or
than other officials faced with
similar sex discrimination issues
are going to be, he predicts.
"We have 'stopped' doing somc>
things which didn't become il-
legal until after we stopped doinl-!
th(•m ," C1bbart'lh cxplainl'd.
.. . • • Ir that makes a ny
sense ••• , '' he added wryly.
TO PUT IT BLUNTLY ancl
s uccinctly. the federal govern
menl has placed the Seal Beach
Police Department o n fo ur
years' probation and Chier Cib
barelli 's a~ency is happy to get
just a slap on the wnst.
Hiring and employment prac-
tices must be regularly reported
tothe US. Justice Deportment.
"I am not accepting the charge
thr city discriminated against
women," Chief C1bbarelli ex-
plained . "The law changed
through the yea rs and, 1l takes
tlmt' to catch up with the law."
He said the agreement con
summated by signin~ or the con.
~ent decree by all parties
originatrd w1th a 1972 lawsuit
filed by six female cmployes of
the police department. They
wanted equality with policemen,
both In pay and professional
duties.
THEV WANTED EQUAL pay
with men. despite the fact they -
by virtue of bemg women -did
not perform precisely the same
work.
"Women arc brought up on
dolls and men aro brought up lift-
Toro Cyclist
Still Critical
An El Toro youth remained In
crltlcol condition Saturday
follow1n1 ai motorcycle accident
earUer In the week. while his
companion was in stable condl
tlon at UC Jrvlnf' Medical Center.
Jeffrey W. Enda, 17, of 22595
OW\kenfleld Circle, El Toro, had
undergone surgery for massive
head Injuries al Saddleback
Hoapitaf after the Thursday
night accident.
ing weights and playing foot-
ball," ClbbarelU added. "It's not
my fault. They've been raised
differently and I need men who
can do the job ... "
The federal government.
however. maintains that people
are people and are created equal.
and the Seal Beach Police
Department must toe the line.
A WHOL E SERIES OF re-
quirements and rights for Chier
Cibbarelli 's department and Its
female officers -past, present
E'rona Page Al
FIRES •••
restaurant fire caused major
damage to the Miraloma Inn, :.i
re!ltauranl-c ocktail lounge at
3370 Miraloma Ave., Anaheim.
The fire was reported at 9 05
p m. and brought under control
w1 th1n 15 minutes. The
resta urant was apparently
closed at the time, firemen said
The cause is under investigation.
llos p1 tal1 z ed a l Ca n yon
General Hospital for smoke in-
ha lation were Firemen Ronald
Ua mnc and Don Barackman.
At 9:44 p.m ., a fire was report·
C'd in the coffee shop area at th<'
Dis neyla nd Hote l. Firemen
rushed to the s cene, calling on as-
sistance from I he Garden Grove
Fire Department.
Jn addition, the Orange County
Fire Departmen t sent two
engines , a truck and a jeep to
Anaheim m c ase any additional
fires or m edical emergencies
were reported .
The Disneyland Hotel fire,
caused an ~stimated SS,000
d am age t o the exhaust duct
srsl C'm O\'t'r the cooking ar<'<I.
\\•1th h ~ht s moke damage on Ull'
.sf'cond fl oor.
The fire was brought under
control in about an hour.
Fireman George Mendoza sur
feted a dry chemical burn m one
eye and was taken to Anaheim
Memorial Hospital. In addition,
Engineer Harold Thurber re-
ceived a deep cut on his right
hand and was treated and re-
leased al Good Samaritan
Hospital.
Earlier on Christmas Day, Los
Angeles County fi remen Crom
nine departm ents balllcd a fire
at Miller's Castings in City of In-
dustry. Although the blaze was
controlled within four minutes,
damage was estimated at more
than $1 million to contents or the
building.
An open storage area loaded
with 15·foot-tall paper bales
caught fire Saturday evening m
Vernon. ll took 90 firemen two
hours to extinguish it, with
damage estimated at $30,000.
EarUer, on F riday, a fire on a
fishing boat in Long Beach
Harbor spread to an adjacent
barge, for a total of about
$100,000 in d amage.
Delly Pilot D••"Y .........
Moridey·Ftfdty: II you Ck> riot have
your P•P•r by 5 30 p rn. call ~IOfe 7
pm, and your copy will be dellver9d
S..turdey 1nd Surid1y: It yOtJ do not
receive your copy by 8 am . c.atl
before fO a m. end your co11y wlll Ce
d.ir~.
Cite.I.ti°" Teiept•11u Mos! Or1nge Couniv Areas '41•4lJI Northwesl Hurillngtori Beec'I A
end Wtttmlnsttr •...... ~12 5ar'I Oemenle, C.pl11r1no Bekh.
S.n Ju1r1 Clplttr1no.
D1r11 Point. South LllOUlll.
Lltguna Niguel •.•••..•.. 4'M U O
and prospectiv(' ruture ones -
has now been laid down.
They include:
-A mmimum of 20 percent of
all police d e partment hlrces
must b(• wn m.-.n. or at least one in
t•very h\ c bJd~c-wcanng patrol
per!ionnr I,
Thl' dep a rtment n eed
not hire unqualified personnel a~
police P<'rsons. just bec:"Juse the)'
arc female instead or male, but
the U.S. Department of Jw.tict·
will he the sole judge or that.
No crite ria for a prospecllw·
police department employc that
would prohibit a woman from
filling the job slot muy be im -
posed.
-/\II employment tests ad-
minl11tered mu~t he validated in
the words of the ~ovcrnmcnt'i.
cons ent decrc<' aR reement.
althouRh Chief Clbbarelli asserts
there 1'1 no val1d :ited test in ex-
istence
--Officer Virginia Black, 5.1.
one of two Of the or1~inal SIX Whh
flied the la ws uit still Y.1th the uc
pa rtment. mu!-.t lJe promoted to
patrol ser~eantrank
-Fo rme r Officer Virt!inia
II ayes. also 53. v. tm v..as f1r(-d IK
months ago follow ml-{ Jn internal
in v cs t 1 ~a t10 n r C'l a ll v c lo <•
t•nmmal n 1sc of which she had
knowledge , mus t bt.' reinstated.
-RETIRE M ENT.
VACATION and sa·k pay bcnrfit~
must be re instated and Sgt
Hlack must be allowed to try oul
for her lieutenant '.':I stripes in one
year.
-Any among the five of the
original six womrn still cligibl1·
must be ~1 vt•n an opportunity to
take the physical agility test they
failed.
O ne o f th e s ix wom e n
part1 c1pating in the original
l a~!>Ull cla1m1 nj.! M'XUai ch!-.-
1•n m1nation. Hl c>nllf11'ft as Mrs
l>ott1<' Ruller. lat<'r dropped out
of the class ac tion htigulion.
Her hus band was a Lol'
Angeles Poli ce Dt•partment of
f1cer and retired and Mrs. Uutler
decided she didh't want to rejoin
the department, officials said.
Chief C1bbarelli said ln the
case or Officer Hayes, who was
fired, identic al findingstin the
case of a male officer would have
resulted in equally harsh treat·
ment.
He decline<! lo elaborate, hut
said it rl'laterl lo the handling of
an invcst1gat1on.
CHIEF' CIBBARELU said he
isn 't overjoyed at the require-
ments impos(•d by the consent
decree.
"It Is the b<'s l possible settle-
ment we could come up with."
the chief sold. "Hod we gone lo
court, J know we would have won
on some points but had we lost, 11
would have probably cost close to
three-quarters of a million
dollars.
''And that just isn't fair to the
taxpayers of Seal Deach. ·•
H E PO I NT E D OUT THE
original edict by the U.S. Depart·
menl or Justice would havr
forced him to promote three of
the six women on the force Lo
lieutenant.
This would have cost $100,000
in retroactive pay, and whltr
there were six women designated
M sworn, badge-carrying police
o(ficers two just wanted to ~
records clerks. 1 Chief C ihbarelli i:;aicf that
1 changing lawli originating wlU\
the 1964 Civil Rights Act and
creation or tbe Economic Op-
portunities Commis.<Jion CEOC>
contributed to the long legal bal-
Uc.
'
Sunday. Oecombor 26 1978 O~ll.Y PILOT A3
Coast's Coininons a Chess Master
By RAY ESTRAOA Of,,,. Daily ~1104 SI.,.
M arina lligh School graduate
Kim Commons has returned
home to Huntington Beach after
e stablishing a reputation in
Europe and t he Mideast as an in·
t emational chess champion.
Commons, 2!i, a UCLA
graduate, was the top player on
the U.S. championship team at
the Chess Olym piad held in
Haifa, Isr eal, in November.
The former coastal resident.
who now plans to live with his
wife Kim-Ellen in Newhall, also
received a gold medal for the
highest winning percentage at
the Chess Olympiad.
NOW RANKED NINTH among
all U.S. chess players, Commons
won six matches and tied three in
· tough international competition
at Haifa.
Commons began his travels as
a chess adviser for a U.S. player
a l at July tournament i n
Switzerla nd. "That provided
plane fare to Europe,·· he scud.
Jn August, Commons earned
international master status by
winning in a chess tournament in
Plovdiv, Bulgaria. He is now the
second youngest international
master from the US
Out of the 24 current US. in·
temational masters, half arc in·
active in chess competition.
C-0mmons said.
"MY NEXT .GOAL ts to
b ecom e an international
grandmaster.'' Commons stated ··r could do 1t in the m"<t year.
Then again. 1t might take the
next 30 years. To do this, I would
have to play very well in my next
three tournaments."
Ad m ittedly seH-confidcnt,
Commons is no ncwcoml'r to win-
ning highly competitive chess
matches.
He was th<' lop Orange County
chess player in 1968 and 1969
while a student at Manna High
School.
··1 owe a lot to the fact that
Dick Hiatt had such an active
chess club al Marina," said Com-
mons.
Jla alt , 35, Common's high
school chess coach, said. ''Kim
wus a once in a hCellme player."
Hiatt has coached chess swce
1965 at Marina.
"TO B E A SUPt:R player lak e
Commons," Hiatt said, "One
needs a tremendous inteJlig<.·nce
qu otient. li e mus t have
memoriezd hundreds or plays."
Jltall said, "A lop chess playC'r
must have a big ego. A lot of the
pros do."
Commons said, "When you·n·
in international tournaments yuu
have to have a tremendous
amount of conC1dcn<:c. My Sl'lf
confidence 1s based on the fact
that I work hard studying chess
and put a lot of time preparing
for competition "
Hiatt said of Commons. "He
used to play two games at one
time with his back to the boards,
wearing a blindfold."
Can the young chess master
still accomplish this feat?
Trying not to brag, Commons
said, "I have played three games
at one time at a party while hav-
lllg u drink and talking to a girl.
"I J UST VISUALIZE the board
in my mind . It's considered
normal for chess masters to play
wilhout a board."
In preparation for lus overseas
CHESS COACH DICK HIAlT WATCHES INTENTLY
Marina High School Student Bernie Yapp Plans His Next Move
'Nattering Elite' Meet
Kids Take a Stab at Rwming Things
By PHILIP ROSMARJN
Ol 11!• 0 •1ly Pol<M Swll
The men and women or the A:-·
se mbl y n atte r ed and
wisecracked
On the other side of the great
hall the senators knil their brows
and billowed their cht-eks. being
the more sN1ous ·mmdccl of tht·
legislat1 vc <'h tl•
They we re doing these things
because these '11.Cre the things
they had seen the real senators
and assembl\ men do 1n the
newspapers and on the televi.,1on
set
These were th<' men and
'II.Omen 0£ Barba ra ~ud~l''' sixth
grade clas.., uf 1\ltso S< hoot tn
LJguna Re.1l h
The:. ""l'rc hard 1·n~<1gccl in a
spec ial session of the mo1•k
leg1slaturl', called by Go\ (;re~g
S Baum. with th<' pcrm1ss1on or
course or Mrs "' ud~C'
The Hon Uo\ Baum. '.>l<'rn of
rountenance > t•l s moolh of '.'Im tit•
at JUSt the correct t1m<', sat amid
his legislator'> and br()()(kd upon
them
Baum kn<'"" JU't how lo kt•c•µ
these senator'> .in!I as..,<'mlllvmc•n
In line. llf' knc·w ho"" ..,trong """"'
the power of ht<,' t lo
One exasperated )Oun~ a'
scmblyman demanded to know
why Baum v('toed his f;norite
bill. something to dfl with start-
ing school .J little a lal<·r in the
day, so he could slet'p an onrl' in ,1
"lu(('
··Rccaust' l don't l1 kr 1t,··
Baum explained
"But why don t you like 1t" '
the legislator wanted to know.
Baum, without raising from his
chair. sent the young lobbyist
scurrying with a tcrnble stab
from his clear, cool eyes and the
pronouncement "l don't like at
hecaus t' 1 1lon 't like 1t and f'M nu: GOVERNOR! ..
F,\ en \1 rs Mudge wmcl'd at
that a httle
Mean\\ ht le th<' lt'~1slature r<'
ad. deb.Jted and voted on thr
bills
In thi' Assembly, tht> only
hous<' of the ll'J.:l!)fature art which
an appropriations bill may be in
troducC'd . a ml'mhcr called for
hmttt'd sah•s taxation of cluldren
under the age or 16
Mr., Mud~t'. me anwhile,
tran•ls from the Assc>mbly tabl<'
ml'r t o tht· Sl'nat<· and hack
agJ1n ne~11twt1ni.: hut not an
tcrfrnn.:
Som•· of thest' lt•g1slator'i arc
c,er1nus somf' :.ingnly so in
their t'mulat inn of th1· action th<·v
will travel to Sacramrnto to Sl'C
lat1•r an lhl' st•mt•..,ler Some
makt• Jnkt·.., Som1• of them JUsl
don t rar<'
Tahlc pnunthni.:. J>('nc1I tap
pinJ,!. tht• nat11r;il kadcrs nM•
above the rest , hut al s tough to
kt>ep order ""1th the hell aboul tn
nn11 for rc>cess
It'' ht>ct1c It s confused It s
noisy It's a lot hk<' the real thrng
And al seems lo work. After a
session of lawmaking, most or
Mrs . Mudge's youngsters know
more about the workings or state
government than do most or their
parents.
The accomplishments of the
legislature were impressive
The equal opportunity bill was
passed. but only after it was
amended to guarantee the rights
of everyone 12 years or older, in·
stead of six. who arc first tested
for intelligence.
It turns out that most of the stu.
dents are about 12 and consider
themselves pretty smart., or else
how do you think they came to be
senators and such?
Shoes were legislated off the
feet of school kids. to w1de ap-
plause and the demand of Gov.
Baum for the county health de·
partmenl to change that rule
right now ·'because we really
shoula gel that one ..
Capital punis hment passed the
Senate. tailed rn the Assembly,
was rewritten in the Senate and
died there and, as Mrs. Mudge
said. "The s ame big sticky pro·
blem that has bewildered the
adults of this land , with all their
wisdom. has still bewildered us."
And lh<' s leepy.eyed lad's pro-
posal to s tart school later so he
could g<'t some sleep '~ Gov.
Baum's veto withstood the over-
nde attempt
Gov Raum was a ve r v
powerful chief exeC'ullve. lie wa·s
not re-elected.
Front Page AJ
competition, Commons won the
American Open Chess Tourna-
ment in 1974 and 1975
"I want to go back to Europe
l ext summ er and concentrate on
ugoslav chess tournaments,"
ommon said .
Commons said he has tentatlvt·
invitations to tournaments next.
year in Leningrad, U.S.S.R., anti
Spain.
He also plans to play tn the 1977
Lone Pine and U.S. o~n tourna·
m ent to be held in California.
But lo continue his professional
chess career and provide a way
to travel, Commons said he and
tus wife are studying lo be real
estate agents in the Newhall
area.
"Kim-Ellen und I cnn combine
our careers with my chess play·
ing be<'ause of the lime needed to
attend tournaments," Commons
said.
.. 1T'S TREMENDOUSLY ex
citing to compete in an interna·
ttonal tournament," he added.
His wife thinks so as well.
''Kim-Ellen plays quite well and
became candidate for Bulgarian
Master chesg player status while
we were there," said Commons.
"She tells me what l did m our
hotel room after each tourna·
ment," Commons said.
Chess Looms Large
In Coastal Areas
West Orange CoWllY seems to be a training ground for
young chess talent.
Edison and Marina high schools have some of the top.
rated players in the county and great potential talent, ac·
cording to chess coaches al both schools.
Dick Hi att, who coached international star Kim Com-
mons for four years at Manna. said seniors Darrell Yapp
and Bernie Layton. both 17 and of lluntmgton Beach, :ire
two or the top players in the county.
BRIAN YEE. a 14·year-old Marana freshman, hus the·
potential to become another top player like Commons, Hiatt
commented ··It really depends on his interest," he added.
Hiatt said its harder for students at Manna to k~ep an
interest in chess because of the difficulties m scheduling
Hiatt, whose teams dominated Orange County ches:-
competition from 1964 until Commons was graduated 1n
1969. coached Marina's state champions in 1971and1972.
CROSSTOWN RIVAL Edison High School and Mission
Viejo High School's chess squad appears to be Manna's
most formidable compcllt1on County chess championships
begin in February, Hiatt said.
Edison's Paur Chaplin, a 16-year-old third-year s tudent,
is another top-ranked chess player in Orange County who
would like to turn professional.
Chaplin said he attended one of Kim Commons'
chess class!'s al Golden West College.
Edison has won a county championship for each year
since 1971. "W<' could win for the sixth ttmc in a row," s aid
Chaplin.
AP W1rfphOIO
SKIING IN COLORADO
President Ford
Lovers Kiss, Di~
VALENCI f:NNES, l''ranc•t•
<AP) -A man and a WC)man
who had r e(.'{·ntly left her
husband lay do~ n on a railroad
track in front of a speeding
freight train Friday and kissed
JUSt before the tram killed them,
police said.
Susan Ford
Gives Father
Gag Present
~
VA IL. Colo. (AP> -President
Ford's Christmas present from
his daughter, Susan, was a black
bath towel embroidered with a
wlute pig and the initials "!\fcp··
standing for "Male Chauvinist
PiE: ...
It was a humorous girt in the
exchange of prescnL'> among the
first family Saturday as they
celebrated the holiday with
church ~Oln)?. turkey dinner anu
:.-.kung at this Rocky !\1ountam re
sort.
Ford has been u proponent of
the Equal Rights Amendment
but continues to play golf al
Bummg Trc>e Country Club in
Bethesda. Md., which excludes
women. A spokesman for the
Ford family had no immediate ex-
planation for 19·year-old Susan·s
gift, except that ''she thought it
was cute ...
Be fore a roaring fire. the
Fords opened their pres<'nLs after
breakfast Christmas morning.
Prestd<'nl Ford i:ot his main
wish for a white Christmas. as J
n<'w thre<' inch s noWfall blanket-
ed Vail Mountain, which has
been short of snow.
Sayin~ h<' had recover<'d from
a bruised hip, Ford made a date
to ski with Sen. John Glenn <0-
0hio> and Lt. Gov. Robert Orr of
Indiana this afternoon.
O•llY Pllol Sl•ll PltOle
FUTURE GRANDMASTER?
Marina's Kim Commons
Oil Slick
Heading
For Shore
NANTUCKET. Mass. (AJ>)
A predicted shift of winds tn tht-
area around the wrecked Argo
Merchant could s<>nd the mas.,1ve
011 shek from th(' tanker's sp1llcd
cargo toward th<' Massachus,.tts
shore, the Coast Guard says.
Forecasters said s outh to
southeast wands of 30 to 40 knotS
wer e expected t:arly today
through this evcnm~.
A Coast Guard spokesman said
cleanup crews were on standby
throughout the weekend and a ll
c:leanup t'quipm<'nl was in place.
An additional contractor was
hired m the Chatham area of
Cape Cod in casc beach cleanup
was required, the s pokesman
:mid.
Earlier Saturd;.iy. offic<'rs had
said the oil was being moved
l'J..,tward, a"" av from the S.
coast and to..\ arrl the north-
movrng Gulf Strc;.im, by ""1nds
and currents. A11thorit1<.•s had
predicted th<' CJtl might wash
ashore on krlnnd or Gre;.il Bn-
tai n or s wirl s outh tnward
Rermuda on olh<'r currcnlo.;.
"We· re all so tired." said Coasl
Guard spokes man John Babhlch,
munching a Christmas tooki~
left for the officers by CapL' Cod
neighbors. "From now on, it's
JUSt a waiting game ...
The. Liberian registered Argo
Merchant sptlll•d its cargo of 1 1;
mtlhon gallons of thick. No Gin·
dustnal fu C'I 1111 when 1t r:rn
aground Dl'c. 15 on shoa ls off
Nantucket Islan<I It brokf' up 111
stormy seas M'vc•n days la!l·r.
Pump Crash
Driver Okay
I\ 16-year·old Laguna Bt'ach
youth escaped s erious inJury
wh(•n his vehicle knocked ov<'r n
i:iasoline pump at a servtl.'C s ta-
tion on South Pacific Coasl
Jhghway. pola ct• said.
The teenager's car throttle ap~
parently stuck as he was leaving
lhr s tation, police said.
The car knocked ovrr o ne
pump, struck a second gas pump
and dented <1 la:\1 c;.10. The out of.
contrCll vehldl· I hen c·amc to rcsl
on a thr('(•-root mdal post m·ar
th<' S<'rv icc s t;Jtion, La~una
Beach polic<' sa11l
No one was 1nju1 ('(I hut a pol<'n·
t1ally serious fire had lo be quid<·
ly cxtmg111shetl. pofll'c ~.:ud.
.NOISE RAISES HOWL IN EL TORO JETPORT AREA • • •
co.mmunlt y. the developers and
the loca l government agencies
and convince them that the pro·
blem with noise will never go
away," he said. "rt would pro·
ba bly be worse with commercial jets."
The mililary's third pnority is
to respond to the community and
this is where the biggest change
in tactics has occurred.
Fenenga cited four histon cal
phases of community relations,
starting with the "pea patch'' ap-
proach which got locaJ people in-
terested in the novelty of avia·
lion.
The second phase, between
World War II and Korea, has
been dubbed by Fenenga as a
"patriotic, flag-waving time"
when the government used its
eminent domain powers lo claim
thousands of acre."I or private
Jand for military installations.
"THAT WAS the time for say-
.Ing 'If you ar en't with us, you 're
against us·.·· Fcnenga sald.
From about 1955-70, Fenenga *'
hid a "pubJic relaUons raule·
dazzle" was used, wtth such ex-
tre rnes as alr s hows and
sloganeering like "Jets are the
sound of freedom.'·
Those days are gone. He said
Cbe:y have been replact."d by a • ··-
"systematic, rational. educated
approach using certain r e
cog n1z ed and app r oved
methodologies ··
The product of this new
philosophy is somethmg called
an Air Installation Compatible
Use Zone CAICUZl Study. Such
documents are being prepared
for all military airfields in the
country a nd one was completed
for El Toro last June.
AICUZ is basically the result or
analysis of noise and aircraft ac·
cident d ata and all known met·
hod5 of reducing aviation noise
impacts on the surrounding com-
munity. Muc h of the study
describes detailed methods for
achievln" "compatible land use"
within the n olse i mpact ed
areas.
FENENGA said the "barn door
hasn't been <'losed" In south
Orange County and that rational
planning can still prevent much
noise-impacted open land from
being residentially developed
But so far, apart Crom close
cooperation with the Irvine
Company, Fenenga said hi3 JOb
with other developers and local
politicians hH proved frustrat
lng.
"We're trying to do something
the mllllary h as never done
1
NOISE SPECIALIST
Col. G.L. Feneng•
before te ll people where we'll
all be in 35 years or so," Fenenga
said. "This county isn 't cramped
for s pace for houses but It ls just
so damn dumb aMut land use in
general terms."
"They approve construction in
flood plains and on prime
agricultura l la nd. wluch is d1sap·
pearing so fast that we are head·
ing for a real catastrophic effect
in this country down the road."
Fenenga said he favors per mit·
ting higher density development
on land that 1s not confronted
with environmental hazards -
s uch as the m oun tain foothills.
THE COLONEL conceded that
much or what he does could be
considered lobbying, though he
says he walks ''a very carerul
path , staying out of local
politics."
Ali far as the future is con·
cemed, Fe nenga believes the
Marine Corps is already doing all
it can short of shutting down
operations completel y -
something that will not happen
for many years, If at all.
"All in all, we're in pretty good
shape legally for whatever com-
es." he said .
But as for people let't to the
whim or public land use plan·
rung, Fenenga saJd the future
1ooka a good deal more bleak.
"Local leaders ha ve a duty to
serve the long r i.nge lmterests or
the community and that's not hap-
pening right now," he said. ,
Man's Best Friends? APWl .. ~le
Irvine Bolser or Seattle. Wash., invested in 20 chinchillas
about 20 years ago, fi guring he'd make some money rais·
ing the little rodents for their prized fur. Then he found out
he'd have to wr ing their necks to cash in. That prospect
soured his business spirit and he now has 250 or 300 pct
chinchilJas, all of which can expect Ion~ and comfort3blc
lives.
I
A4 DAILY PILOT Sunday. December 29. 1!178.
Snow Shortage
Hits Ski Shops
BJ JOANNE REYNOLDS
OllMO•Uy l'li.taqft
The unseasonal good weather
that has seiie4 the west.em Unit·
ed States in its sunny grip is
threatening to produce an un·
white -and. for some people, a
blue-Christmas.
· Even along the Orange Co.at,
where sunshine and warm tem·
_peratures are standard for this
time of year, the high pressure
buffer that is blocking the path of
winter storms is having an
~omlc impact on local busi·
nesses.
Travel agencies, ski shops and
airlines have all bad a decline in
business to some degree.
"People are getting paranoid
about it," says Betty Winkler, ski
department manager al Lido
Travel. .. It's not healthy.
I'm not saying that jus t'
because it affects us. It's the
whole complex that makes up the
ski industry.··
That industry is heavily reliant
on the school vacation trade,
which means that the season
characteristically opens over
Thanksgiving. with a sort of
second opening at Christmas.
So Car this year, none of the re·
sorts have regis tered the usual
snowfall. The snow has been so
light, in fact, that many have yel
to open and have canceled plans
!or Christmas.
necessarily go skiin& rl1bt
away.
But all store keepers aireed
they'd be doing a lot better U it
would Just start snowing.
The picture offered by the
weather map is not encouraging.
The only forecast storm activity
is a prediction of anow fiunies
this weekend in the northern
American Rockies.
The people at Pal's as well as
Big Five in Costa Mesa and
Neal's ln Newport Beach say the
sales are "all right" since people
will buy equipment and no~
Walter Rogers of the U.S.
Weather Service office ln Los
Angeles says the long.range
forecast calls for normal snow
and rainfall across the southern
half of the country from mid-
December to mid·January.
He says there's still plenty of
time for storms to move in, but
he conceded that snow won't
start falling until the high pre·
ssure ridge centered over
Nevada and Utah breaks down.
"I wouldn't say this kind of
weather condition is unusual,"
be commented. He said once the
pressure system moves, the
storms that normally come from
the Arctic will roll into the West
and the snow will fall.
A New Prophet?
Disciples Arg1U3 His Sanity
NEW YORK (AP> -Orie
Bovar always wanted to be ., at.ar.
A movie star, n theater star, an
opera star.
He never made lt.
Now people say be thinks he's
Chriat.
Bovar, an astroloeer and
psychic, is deified by his dwindl-
ing number of disciples. They
place their trust in him alone.
They reject all doctors and
medicine, saying Orie alone ls
the healer. Orie alone shows the
way.
Remembering the lighter days
and the gentler Orie, former
foUowers reel be is demented.
They say he lives in a fantasy
world be has populated with evil
spirits and holds out Faustian
promises of success.
So potent ls the belief of some
that five men joined Bovar in a
two-month vigil o~r the rotting
corpse of a follower who bad died
of cancer. They believed be
would return to life.
When pollce arrived at the
studio apartment here on Dec. 8,
Bovar intoned: "Stefan, come
back. Arise."
It was all a test of faith, Bovar
said later.
Like the earthquake be pre·
dieted would devastate New
York City on Sept. 1, 1975. That,
too, was a test, Orie said.
After the death room vigil, the
men were given a citation for a
health code violation: failure lo
report a corpse.
Now, say his friends, he has
plans for a great movie about his
Ufe as Christ, endinl with bJ..5
torture and resurrection.
But who ls the man with these
plans?
A portly, good·looklng m an
who wore a toupee and died bi.s
hair red, he now is drawn and his
hair ls white, althoucb bls eyes
are piercingly blue. Once a lover
of champagne anc) gourmet food ,
he now claims be needs no food or
drink and has no bodily func·
tions.
He lives alone lo an apartment
flamboyantly furnished by
followers in a style befitting a
gypsy fortune teller 1n Lbe West
VilJage.
* * * Ex-follower
Tells Fear,
Obedience
NEW YORK (AP) -••ue
makes you so crazy and so
scared of your own shadow. you
don't know what's up or down,••
says John, who was devoted to
Orie Bovar for years and was
finally rejected by him.
"We were a little group, living
in secrecy and fear," said John.
not his real name, who believes
his great fault was talking too
much about Bovar and hia in-
consistencies.
In spite of President Ford's op·
timistic appearance on Vail's up·
per slopes, travel agents say
there are no major western re·
sorts operating at full lift capaci·
t y other than Banff-Lake Louise
in Canada.
In the meantime, local skiers
are crowing increasingly
desperate, as are the busi-
nessmen who serve them.
The Mamtnoth Lakes Chamber
of Commerce, in conjunction
with the Bishop Chamber of
Commerce, is issuing a pamphlet
e n titled "Mammoth Has
More ..• " aimed at informing vis-
itors of all the things there are to
do in the Sierra resort other than
ski.
SKIERS IN CANADA ENJOY iGOOD SNOW
Now, the IRS reportedly is in-
vestigating whether Bovar has
declared all bis income. He has
worked as a mail-order
astrologer, but his followers say
he charges them nothing and
they don't know where he gets his
money.
John first contacted Orie ln
1961 when he wrote to him in
Europe for a $35 astrological
chart and found the insights
startling and true.
The Rest of the West Is Still Waiting for Season to Start
In Steamboat Springs, Colo., it
is said the entire population of
the town has turned out with
shovels to move snow from the
unsklable parts of the mountain
onto the ski runs.
The operators al Vail hired a
troupe of Ute Indians to repeat
their performance of the snow
dance which brought tons of the
while stufC to the area in 1964.
Orange Coast businessmen
don't have s hovels or Indian dan·
<'ers. What they mostly have is a
serious decline in ski equipment
saJes and rentals.
The exception seems to be Ski
'Mart's Laguna Hills Mall s hop,
which 1s reportedly doing record-
breaking sales in their ski de-
partment, primarily in clothes.
Rentals are slow there as they
are at Pat's Ski and Sport's Shop
in Huntington Beach, where ren-
tals arc described as a big source
of income.
There's ice skating, hayrides,
horseback riding, hiking, tennis,
fishing, bicycling, movies and a
lengthy list of other non-ski ac-
tivities.
But travel agents say the
"funzie" vacation is n't selling.
The skiers would rather cancel
than play tennis.
A spokesman for the Southern
California Automobile Club said
"People realize there is no snow,
so they are going other places.'•
Travel agents are now in a
mad scramble to re-book clients
for later in the ski season or send
them t.o resorts in Canada and
New England where there is
snow.
Mrs. Winkler said the clients
who normally book now for
February and March aren't
* * *
booking at all. "They're 1ust
waiting for it lo snow."
Bob Payton at Air California
said passenger traffic to Lake
Tahoe isn't as great as anticipat-
ed for this time of year, but, he
said, in one way the lack of snow
has brought the airline some
· passengers
"We're n1 rrying people who
wouldn't normally go to Tahoe if
there is snow Lhere," he said.
"While we are feeling the effect
of the lack of snow in charter can·
cellations, we are still carrying a
lot of passengers.•·
Cancellations are a problem.
agents say, because resorts that
are open, even if they're only
running one lift and guests are
skiing on man-made snow. are
refusing lo grant refunds for can-
cellations.
Others, where there is still no
snow, won't refund unless the
cancellation is made less than
48 hours before arrival.
This leaves skiers little time to
Drought Brings Worries
Tt\HOf: CIT\' (i\P I -Sierra
businessmen ,irl' worried that
.rnothcr month wi thout s now
t•ould me.in a maJOr financial
..,l'lba t·k t o s 1•n tee station
nperators and molrl owners.
Bustnl'::.::.mcn d1•pcnd on ski
bus1ne::.s, and no ~now means no
skie~.
Gene Oerifield, owner of the
Edge..., aler Lodge. srud that his
motel 1s only one.quarter full,
•'\ l·n I h<1u!!h holidays us ually
hrin1• touri:-h IH· I ht· bu.o;load.
"Stn('4' the 15th of this month
I \.e had about $5,CXX> worth of
<'an N?llattons, ··he saJd.
"Jo:\.cryonc I 'vc talked to at the
othrr lodi;tes arc m the same
hout Wr t·an't c·ontmue to lose
money like this ancl :.tay in bust
nesc; ·
Gas SlJtlllns that also depend
on the lire chaan busrncss also
:Jre hurting this winter.
"Chains are a very big busi·
ness for every station up here."
sa1ct Operator Keith Stee n.
"Wben the snow fl1es. you don't
sell tires, batteries or anything
else. You just pump gas, tow and
sell chains."
Federal W a term aster Claude
Dukes says that without a good
snowpack in the Sierra this year.
waler users down the Truckee
River will also face serious pro·
blems.
Lake Tahoe is in danger of
dropping below its natural outlet,
Dukes said, which would reduce
the Truckee's flow to a trickle.
It would also force residents of
Reno and Sparks to depend on
Sierra Pacific Power Co. wells.
Last year was the driest winter
in 52 years. Dukes said the Sierra
must receive above average
snowfall this season to return
rivers and streams to their
normal cood1t1on.
And officials said the drought
is affecting more than 1ust
humans.
The Stillwater National Wildlife
Refuge bas lost more than 9,000
acres or prime waterfowl habitat
and officials said the situation
has reduced the nonnal mflux of
nearly 200,000 ducks making
their annual migration
southward from Canada.
And if the drought lasts
another month, the l ,100 resi-
dents of Mariposa, a community
in central Sierra Nevada may be
drinking bad water.
The community's reservoir on
nearby Stockton Creek has
sbnmk from a capacity of 44Q
acre feet to a rurrent water level
of 60 acre feet, says Harold
Bondshu , chairman of the
Mariposa Public Utility District.
And only 10 acre feet of the re·
maining supply -enough for a
month or less -is considered
good water.
"Below the SO.acre-foot mark,
we have what we call bad
water," Bondshu said. "That
water is usable, but it is silted
and discolorctl ... It may cause
discoloration in washing, but it 1s
still basically pure."
Mariposa ant1c1patcd its water
problems more quickly lhcin
most California communities by
rationing s upplies 1n October to
use msHk homes
·'They are not suppo~ed to use
water for their lawns or for
washmg cars and things like
that," Bondshu said .
The district also has dug some
wells and has installed pumps on
five.
S lron~er conservati on
measures will have to he im·
posed if a storm doesn't arnvc
soon, Bondshu said.
"One good five·inch rainfall
and the emergency will be over,"
he add<'d
Yule Storm Sputters
Rain Dampens East's ChristmtU Day
v.s. s--....
Wiiis. • wlnt•• ~IOfl'l'I trl4td to de-
WIOO an O.rhfmes O•v In ,.,..._,~n
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dieted anow from I,.,. Grt.tt l...tll.H
tlW'Olql Ult .. , .. rn Olllo \/11..-, Into
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'clOuc:IV.
Prttlolt•llon l11<rH1td S.1urdav from Ille ,.,.,,,r,, 1nc:1 ctntr•I Gv!I
'CO.•t nortll l"to 11111 0 1110 ll•ll•y.
""""" f\ roln, oltllOllQll ••-llC)llt
..._ WA\ r•11<1rl4'(! Ill D•fl• Of Otlln
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Wlntfr \tnr,.,, w1rn1n9\ Wf>f<, In M
fK I S.tUNlov nlollt for Wt.I Vl1'111"1"
Md "'°'1 OC wo•tun PtnMvf•Mlle.
,.,.,.., ... ,. tthlM>•ln conllr!Wd !Of'
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~,.,.,., wetc,_. .,..,.. •nu.cf t-.ori
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untr•I Ntw Yorll •nc:l •11 ol Ven'MllC.
'
L19'11 '"°"' wo aoll•rtd l•Om .. ,tom ...nto Oaket.t 11110 ""'<"' .... n.. ...... ,, •• "'"'"'••'1trll00f1-0! W.,lll110lon •ntl Or~--Ill~·
,,_ nort"-'ttr11 Cellf~nl•.
~ llqlll tnow fell Ill IN 111(11\o!r
•1-•klM 01 Cot~ ttt1 / S.t-1
but tlltl llllS. lo 1....,0,.. ••II"' <Olldl ,...,,
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lOS ANOILU IAPI """ll'Vfv -• -t• Otrlstmn fnr OtOIV ll'O\e S..,llllrf'I telflornl•n• wlfh 011 Im
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C..tnOQA PAr~ ~n tltfllUdlflO Ind GI•""•'•·
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(
make alternate arrangements,
so the rule of thumb is t.o cancel
and forget the big trip this year.
Ironically, local resorts at Big
Bear that rely on man-made
snow -usually r egarded as less
than prime s kiing &ire doing
better than ever.
A spokesman for the Big Bear
Chamber of Commerce said the
two ski areas that are using
artificial s now Snow Summit
and Goldmine an· open daily
and accommodat1ons in the area
are booked sohd.
In spite or the gloom of the mo·
ment, s kiers. resort p<'Ople and
local businessmen all seem op
t1m1stic about the future
The think mg is that If the snow
comes late. 1l will stay late.
Mrs. Winkler quotes th<>
Farmer's Almanac which pre-
dicts no early s now, but lots by
March.
"In spite or the b1tter ex·
perience of the past four weeks."
she said, "I'm optimistic."
Now, the faithful have been
dropping away, fearing for their
friends who remain, and for
Bcwar who now speaks only to his
followers and to "the father."
His past is unclear, but it is
known that his theatrical,
operatic and astrological ambi-
tions have taken him around the
world , lo Ho l lywood , to
Germany, to Italy
He said he was born in
Switzerland and his father was a
British archaeologist who took
him to Egypt. An old fri end said
he was born in the Midwest. His parents disowned him, it 1::.
said. when he declared he want·
ed lo be an actor.
He was given the name Rico
Bravo by a numerologist and
later rearranged it to read Orie
Bovar. But he used the name
Richard Deane in his early
Hollywood days when he played
tweedy, aristocratic types.
They hel p you put
He adopted Bovar'a meditation
and advice to live moderately.
He became devoted t.o a man he
found charming. warm and
generous.
John, a 26-year·old carpenter
who dabbled in acting, was told
by Orie he was actually the in·
carnation of John the Baptist and
would act in a grand movie about
B<>var's life.
"He told me 1 would be rich.
live in a mansion with the sun
glittering on the swimming
pool," John said.
Bovar once told John he was no
longer near-sighted and could
throw away his glasses.
He was chastized when he said
his eyes were no better. He told
others in the group, that despite
Bovar's promise, he still couldn't.
see.
"He yelled and screamed at ,
me, and said if 1 did not throw my
glasses away, the gift of sight
would be withdrawn. I threw
them in the waste bin."
your world in focu s
Viewpoints of columni~ts appc:uin~ regularly on the editorial pages of the
Daily Ptlor help you c;h.irpcn your perspective of the events shaping your
world.
H ere's the lineup <if O:iily Pilor columnists:
,........ NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN pokes
~ ar scuffed shirrs everywherc -wuh :1 if -"J ff p.micularly sharp needle aimcJ ar rlw 4,,,, \Xl'5hon~toSn syce
0
nc:NEY
' '\ HARRIS mixes his
delightful dissertations wirh quizzes and
I
chumbnarJ observations to kc<·p readers on
rheir roes.
, ~co;: EARL WATERS has spent 10
California srarc govcrnmenr.
,· ) E VA NS AND NOVAK
It./'-Rowland Evan!> and Robert Novak team
ro exam inc rlw poltr1cal <>ccnl' ac; ir a(fcns
rhc narion.
CIIARLES MC CAB E places h1<>
rongue firmly in check for humorous looks
at evcrythin~ from sex to sandwichc~.
NORMAN COUSINS expands
your community to include the world.
JACK ANDERSON r('Veals. His
calcnt for pryin~ govemmenc secrcrs from
burellucracs drives Wa.shin~on bi~wi~ to
discraccion .
Find your favonrc columnise on chc editorial pages o( the
-DAILY PILOT
642-4321
.
Thirsty Desert Drive
Puts 'Santa' in Clink
BJ tk A11oc:la&ed Press
A Santa-sized thirst acquJred while
crossing California's Mojave Desert
proved too jolly for a man in a red swt
and white beard.
"You're not going to believe this.
we just arrested Santa Claus,"
California Highway Patrol officer
Don Elston radioed to hts dispatcher
aft.er halt.ing a motorist for drunken
driving late Christmas Eve.
The arr est was one of 624 in
California involving alleged drunken
driving over a 12-hour period
Christmas Eve and Christmas morn-
ing.
[ __ 1N_B_R_I_E_F_J
Center. Omos' injuries from being hit
by the car were not immediately
known.
Two Die fn R l.,er•ld e
RIVERSIDE <AP> -Two men
were shot lo death and a third victim
was wounded in three shooting inci-
dents in Riverside's troubled Casa
Blanca neighborhood, police said
Saturday night.
APWlo ..... lo
CHALLENGER?
Chief Ed Davis
Sunday. December 26, 1976 DAIL V PILOT A5
Brown in Davis' Sights
~Chief Takes a Few Potshots at San Francisco
LOS ANGELES CAP) -t.os Angeles Police
"Chief Ed Dav1s says he won't decide until late next
year whether be will try to unseat Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr. in 1978 but he is not cooling his con·
servative, tougb-tal.king rhetoric.
ing any political race and Indicated lbal no t.lecision
would be made before next October.
In the interview, he was particularly critical or
San Francisco's Police Ch1cf Charles Galo and
other city officials.
HE WANTS CAUFORNIA'S death penalty He said San Francisco ls "a good laboratory of
restored aod Is blunt about his feelings. cutting down all the reslricllons on homosexuality
"I've always said you don't shoot the rabid dog and dope, not locking people up and letting pros-
who's bitten somebody to make an example Lttutesrun wild.
out or him to other dogs," said Davis. "You ·r~:==:=::=:=:=:=:==:=::==::==::==::==:~ shoot him to keep him from biting and killing other
people.'' ·
Davis made his comments in an interview
published in the Saturday edition of the San Frao·
cisco Chronicle.
The police chi er said he would retire before m ak· Don 't-ope n -unti 1-Cb r is tm as
thoughts were discarded by the Santa
during a drive of about lSO miles from
Las Vegas, Nev., to Barstow, the CHP
theorized. A pint bottle or blackberry
brandy intended as a Christmas pre-
s ent bad b een unwrapped and
emptied, and two bottles of beer also
were nearly empty in the car.
"Maybe that's how he keeps his red
nose," CHP Sgt. Joe Stockel of
Barstow commented.
No arrests were made as police
searched "for reliable witnesses,"
said Lt. Charles Gonzales. The lieute-
nant said the firsl shooting, about
10:30 on Christmas Eve, may have
been gang related. triggering an eml>-
tlonally charged atmosphere that
may have sparked the two other
shootings, al 12:30 and 4 a.m . Satur-
day.
Death Wounds Family M'n&Women
$15.00 Haircuts
for $1t.OO
309 W. Coast Hwy.
Newport Beatb
for app&, $51·5111
Gag Auction Pleas In Japane •e L.eade l* Dead
SAN FRANCISCO
CAP) -For the first
time in his life, Frans
Munnich Jr. has no
Christmas tree this year.
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Three
persons have pleaded innocent to
charges or pandering for their roles in
a ''gay slave auction" last April in
Hollywood.
Ordered lo return to court F('b ::!8
for setting of a tnal date are Vallot
Martinelli, 36, an <u:tor li ving in
Hollywood; J eanne Was hburn
Barney, 37, of La Crescenta, who edits
a gay-oriented newspaper; and
Douglas R. llolliday, 32, an actor who
lives in Los Angclei..
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Edison
Uno, a Japanese-American civil
righls leader, has died or comphca
lions following surgery. lie was 47.
Uno entered the University of
California Medical Center h<·rc for
open heart surgery two wet·ks <1go.
While recovering from the operation,
a blood clot developed and caused a
stroke which killed him Friday night,
his family said. As a teen·agcr. Uno
spent three years dunng World War I l
in J apanese-/\meri('an detention
camps while four of his brothers were
fighting with United States military
forces.
"You see, that was
always the best time for
us," explains the 13·
yeur-old honor student
who is a vi(•t1m of
chronic asthma. "I re-
member my father de-
corating the tree. the
v.holc family decorating
the tree. And it just hurt
too much ... And I de-
pended on him so."
Dril'er Beconee s T orell
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A man car-
rying a can of gas to tus disabled car
on a Los Angeles freeway was turned
into a human torch when he was hit by
a passing car and the gas ignited ear-
ly today.
"Deadliest ' .Jobs T old
LOS ANGELES (/\P) --Bar and
restaurant managers, dental lab
technicians, electnc1an!> and rad10-
TV broadcasters apparently share an
increased risk of lung canc('r, rc-
sear c he rs at the University 11(
Southern CaLiforma medical ~chool
report.
Four months ago, his
39 year old father was
walking to his car after
completing his job as
maitre d' at a restaurant
in the fashionable Fair·
mont Hotel.
AS HE CROSSED the
~trcet at 2:30 a.m .• he
Wal> shot in the back of
the head and fell dead on
the cable car tracks.
The highway patrol said Jesus
Olmos suffered second · and third-
degree burns over 85 percent of his
body and was in ''extremely cntacal"
condition at County-USC Medical
Munnich's widow, Pat,
has mixed her grief for
hPr husband with anger
at city officials for their
lack of solicitude.
Seniors Shun School?
Viejo Students. Like It Where They Are
By ANNE COOPER
Ol UM Dally l'IMC $c.att
John Smart, principal of
Capistrano Valley High Scbool 10
Mission Viejo, conducts lours
around his campus, even though
the gymnasium 1s merely a shell
and the rest 1s concrete, brick
and raw beams
"Over there 1s the pnnc1pal 's
office." he said on a recent tour,
pointing to a roughly framed rec
tangle, "and you can see what a
fine view we'll ha\c from the
media center."
The media center lS far from
complete, but a two-stQry high
picture window has been framed.
The view from the tugh plateau,
where the school stands, is spec·
tacular.
To the west. across the San
Diego f'recway, is a panorama of
high grassy hills. Acrl'l!\s Avery
Park way to thc north arc more
hills. capped by t he ~tack , gn'y
a rchitecture or Saddlcback
Collette
"We have tht• c·apah1hty or
makll\g this h11th srhool u real
showplace.'' Sm a rt ~aid. ''not on·
Iv in :ippearancc, but in <-very
rc~pert ··
Capl'ltrnno Valley 1'1 scheduled
to OJ>('n 1n September. with <1
~apac1ly or 1,265 students ll , ...
UPHOLSTERY
~,_.,,,, .... ......
1912 Hllril« '"''-c .... M.-S41-0Z
THE
EARL'S
PLUMllHG
HIATIHO
Al• COHO,
.,~ ...... .. ,__,
~, ••• ,.. ~•,,Yn-ur A.,1t•-C....H
Ml';'.IQN YI( J<)
'"'l11 C.amtN> C '"""''"~ '~ .. .,. ., , .. ...,_,...,.
495-0401
CO'llAMtSA-
,!;,ft N.-..,,...,M 8•.-'1 '• '"
642-1753 •1 ""
After
Christmas
Salet Tndnvl
It's ;big"Jay
the third high school to be built in
tbe Capistrano Unified School
District, which serves the largest
land area in Orange County -
about 20 percent.
Communities served include
San Clemente, Dana Point,
Capistrano Beach, San Juan
Capistrano, Laguna Niguel and
part or Mission Viejo.
The school board is scheduled
Jan. 3 to consider a recommen-
dation from a district advisory
committee that the new high
school open in the fall without a
senior class.
High school juniors polled at
San Clemente and Dana Hills
High Sct\.ools indicated 80 per-
cent would prefer to complete
their secondary education where
they are now.
The advisory committee will
also rec om mend to district
trustees thal the Capistrano
Valley attendance area include
all of Mission Viejo lyin~ within
district boundaries. San Juan
north of the Ortega Highway and
east of the San Diego Frccway
and the Crown Valley Elcmcn
tary School attendant·e area of
Laguna Niguel
Dec1s1ons on who wlll attl'nd
the new school are among dozens
of policy matters which must be
resolved by September. One of
the most pressing decisions for
the new principal, he said, is
choosing school colors.
"Parts of the building will be
painted in our school colors," he
s aid. "The construction men are
pressing us for a color selection
right now."
Smart is devoting part of his
Christmas vacation to putting
together a citizen's advisory
committee to assure such de-
cisions involve the people the
new school will serve.
The new principal said he has
completed his transition from his
former job as assistant principal
at San Clemente High School.
Until the new school bas been
completed, he will work out of an
office at district headquarters,
32972 Calle P erfecto in San Juan
Capistrano.
Smart said he expectc; to be
working closely with principals
at the other two high schools lo
<'Stablish which teachers and ad·
m101strators will be transf<'rred
to Capistrano Valley. Transfers
will depend, in part, he said on in-
d1v1dual preference.
Once decisions are made on in·
tra-district transfers, vacant
positions will be advertised, he
!laid.
WANTED
TOP CASH DOLLAR PAID
FOR
Gold Jewelry
Diamonds & Other Fine Antique
or
Contemporary Jewelry
Watches
Crystal
Porcelains
China
Paintings
Bronze Statues
Silver
Vintage or Classic Autos
Boats
Antiques
etc.
We appraise & buy whole estates or single items or we'll sell for
you on commission.
H you don't know whal JI is or wbal 1t 11 worth -bring it in (or call
us and we'll come out). No obligation or charge for verbal
appraisal, either in your home or in our gallery.
1n big aavings
at Huntington
Center. WOl'1h
a specie! trie>
IClf all lhO
friendlV adlon.
<YY~:p~.£u.
APPRAISERS 2542 WEST COAST HlOHW AY AUCTIONEERS
NEWPORT BEACH -80·2200
Beacti Btvd
& Edinger8'
the Sen Diego Fwy.
F.STATE APPRAISALS AND SALES FOR LAWYERS • BANKS • TRUSTtES & EXECUTORS
murders are described
by police as motiveless, Ofl• bfUw J-u. '7f
In a letler lo Mayor
George Moscone, Mrs.
Munnich said,
"Everything that we had
in the world has been
taken from us by one
bullet on the streets of
San Francisco."
random shootings . ~~;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=:J THINKBRmSH THINK BREA.
She said the anguish
has increased in recent
weeks after a rash of
street crimes -includ-
ing a similar shooting
which killed a prominent
businessman -prompt-
ed the city lo beef up
police patrols.
"WHY NOT AFTER
lUr husband and
father's cold -blooded
murder?·· the letter
asked. "Mr. Mayor, we
are in agony. Didn 'l his
IJfecount for anything? ...
"What has happened
to San Francisco when a
decent man who has
worked every day or his
life is no longer sale on
the streets?''
The number o f
murders in San Fran·
cisco is up 12 percent
over last year, according
to crime statistics. About
one -f o urth of th e
TR7
$4995
• TM[ 1979 STICKER PRICE ••"8 BEEN REDUCED l ~~4' CAll TOOAY ~OR DETlllLS ON rxcmNO
P\.Al'I S TRUCIUR[O Lt~E A lEASE• SENSl8lf PAYMENTS'
, .. ~fH BRlA IOULEYAAO •BAE.A
tt4.'9':1'r~• lt~ •1
Starts Sunday, December 26.
FLY TO
GREECE
VIA.
TWA
••• A.MD LET US HB.P
YOU WITH YOUR
TRIP.
M ~:1~ .. ;:;;. ...
90 I Don St .. Wh 290
Hr#pOl't leach• 1714J 752-9036
DISCOVER
INSIDE PARKING ON 3-LEVELS
CONVENIENT TO AU. STORES
5outh . Coast ?lua
Sav·e 25°/o on
custom draperies.
25°/o off fabric. 25°/o off labor.
25°/o off lining. 25°/o off installation.
I '. I . ·1
. J,,
.. ". j' 1f \
I .. ,~
.@ ..____,..._ ___ ~
Save as ne11r.r bcloro on ., wist cou,. 1 1
of bf!aul•lul lab<oes lhdl inc.ludo I" nl~. o:"ten weaves. dam,1s~~ 1ac1111.1111~
le~lures S!l8'T\lps<; ~~ f'C'" .,nJ .1"1 •1 ,,.
<;o}ltn$ S.1~n lour qtO;JI w JV'
l>y 1Cl•n~ nf)w1 Sale prices effeclive ltirough Saturday, Jonuerv t
~'--7 ~~! \"' ' ' t:•! -f·-. --·-
Call for JCPcnney
custom decorating
servlco at home.
JC Penney
ARCADIA n13) US 6H•
CA"IOOA PARK (213) 98).)'60
CARSON (2U) 5n•2900
CULVfA CITY FOK HlllS' (213) 3t0 11&9
DOWNEY (2U) 10·0 '1
FULLERTON 171•1171 00
01.£.NOALl 'GALllAIA' (2U) 1eo 8700
HVNT1t4GT0N BEACH (7141892·7771
LACUNA Hill$ (7U) Sl1·7100 LAKEWOOD (213) 6)4°7000
MONTCLAIR 17 141 &21-3811
NEWPORT BEACH (71') 144-:313
NORTHRIOOE (211) HS0Ul4
ORANGE ·THE CITY (71 •) 634-1600
llALM SPRINGS (114) 321 15~1
PUC HT[ HILLS (213) g~\ 834 t n1vrns1Dr (714) H 1-306o
SAN 8CRNAR01NO (114) U•·~IOl
TORRAHC( (213) 371 °1571 wrst COVINA (213) H0-31 1 I
WH ITTWOOO (21l) 94M~11
•
A8 c DAI LY PILOT EDITORIAi. P\GE )
Justice or Injustice?
Almos t without e\ception we applaud e fforts to
secure l'qual puy and t'qual trt>atment for employed
women
And slrnnj.!t• .is soml' of the ele ments sound, we
would prc~urnc the agreements reached w beh<ilf of
women employed hy Seal ncuch Police Oepurtmcnl
a~ rclall'd 011 Pugt• l today had merit
Othn l'lt•mcnts of the dispute produce ~trong.
•·va<lcrlec that the foderal government acted unfairly
.1rrogantly <m<l IH•avy handedly in the caS('
First off. ~hy did thl· n(•partment of Justice pick
&·al Hcach to prow it.s point" Certainly many other
polite cJqrnrt nH:nt::. "astl.v lal'ger than Seal Beach
have m:inipulall•d turing and advancement criteria to
the dctrimt·n1 of females
Thcrt· is strong ~usp1cion that the feds picked on
&:,al Bt·ad1 :-imply because the c:1l} did not have
fmancial rcsourc:c:-. to defend it::.elf an what promil>ed
to bf' an extremely t'OMly legal ba ttle.
ll s hould he further noted that Seal Beach was on('
of the firs t departments anywhere to bring women m
to it~ ranks <if :.worn personnel .M any other Orange
(.;ounty departments have only token -often only one
female off1 C"<.'r<; and we don't see the Justice
Oc·partm cnt going after them with demands for cer·
lain pcrccnt<1gc·-. of \\omen m hiring practicc·s
And l::is t. tht' rn.ighly Justice Department mig ht
look in ils c)wn rnnks befor<.' it lays tls mass ive fists on
poor <'ilies s uc·h as Seal Hea<·h Jus t how many 1',BI
agt•nh 111 v lt·m•ilc. for ex<1rnplt ·1
Boob Tube Still Reigns
Soc:1olo~1cally. 1l'> lhat good or bad?
On lhC' on<.' h.md, tl may tndical e the people have
grown ~o Wl'~try of pap prugramming and idiot lcvc•J
TV a<ht•rthin~ that tht•y'r<' ahandoning their frozen
t'Yt'cl dcdwation t o thl' ~luff th<'Y'\'e betn S('eing.
On the oth<>r hand, tl could he that s ince all tht·
('hatrs in tht· hv1ng room or dt•n already face the TV
s<.Tct·n. it·-. 1us t ;m extC'n:-100 of a habit that can't lit•
h1·oktm
Hcgrt:lfulh . "''-' -.urmi:,c lh<•l our eyes arc tr;.iincd
to st~1rtn~ .it .1 v uh•o !>Crt'en. no matter what's heing
shown
Fnr rrnll'lus1q• t•vtdt•ncc. we offer th~ f<t<:l that a
N1.·w York TV '>talion showed on C hris tmas Eve a con
t111uou'> film of ;1 burning fireplace. in color. wh1)('
YuJc ::.on gs ~ <'r<' hroadca:-.l a !> aceompanimcnl
IL wa-. -.;11d to I~ a r oaring s u ccess. with or
\\1thout heat another s ign that our society seem s to
dc•pend on lht· boob tube for 311 its culture
Plain Jimmy Enough?
Amid tht· llurr) ol appointments and direCll\ l'"
<ind p1)l1l·1t'" s )H •\\ing l1 om tlw oflict· nf .limrn) Cartt•r
last we1.·I-.. ont• 1tt·111 1 t•n1:11ns 11n:tns\\ l'rNi \\hat I'> tht·
lt·gal n amt• ol 1111r nt'\\ l 'n·~1tk11t'
As gm t·rnrir ot c;1·oq.!t:t lw signed hilb .1:-pla111
old Jimmv < '.1rt (•1
But a· pilt• of ll'g al t·xpt•t'h 1s \\ork1ng on till' pr11
hlcm 111 \\ ht·I ht· r· Ill' ('tin rtn so .Is Pn·<,td(•11l Jh t l'ildl
lion. and pe rh.ips ll\ l.1\.\, .ill ht:-pn·dt•t·<•s:-.ors 11:-1·d
lht·1r I u 11 11;1 nws in signing h11 h into I ,I\\
/\r1y o11l' n ·•1d1ng the newspaper ad~ or treading
1 ht· -;ton· ;11s k :-. dunn~ tht· Chn'1lm<ts sea son knows
th;.it thost• pong l)J>'' gamC'~ tha t turn the fctmily TV
into •1 l)mmcing hall toy wt·rc-about the most popular
g1fl item around
Sn'" ill lw (·011t1nu1• lo lw 11la1n old .J1mm' l';11 lt•r
alter ht· lak1·~ 01111·1·" <>1· ''ill lw \\t•;ir :1 more tormal
.Jamt·s E<irl < ·,1111•1 .11 role· '' h!'n 11 (•o mcs t11 lull
s1g111n g :incl lht' ltkl' ·
'Sorr.\. we don 't ha Vt' much a vailablt'. Why don't _yvu I ry
th;it old ga ra ge duwn the s lrt'd?'
A Pn· ... ulc·nt nt'' 1•1 ~1·1·nh 111 r un out ot prohlt·m-.
t•\ t•n he fore.' h l• t akt's ort't<'I'
'Child Care Too Important to
WASlllNGTON Would Mary
h<JVe sent the Uaby Jesus to a duy
<:arc center" She might 1f she
were w1lh u' lhts Christmas
season anll s h1• ~as a carc>C'r
woman out the-rt· in the market
place hattltn$! for a pa) chcrk
right nloni.: with Jos('ph
Thal 's a:-.su m Ill$! that J11M•ph
had sen1or 11 v 1n !ht• '"'rpC'nlcr "·
union and
hadn 't ht•1•11
late! of t
othl.'rw1s..· ht·
(' n u I rt ~ I ;1 v
horn<' w1lh lh1·
R ,1 b )
.Ill hough ;1
f1•w mt•n 1n
our rultur<'
ha v c cl o r1 t•
\t.'rv \\ C'll .11
th,1i JOb
1r Jesus harl bl•t•n ~rnt lo ,1 d;n·
ran• Ct'nln short!\ artl'r Man
had rt.'C'OH•rl'd hl'r 'trength
PnOuJ,!h to J;?o h;u·k 111 \\-ork a:!> an
.1('('0Unt C'\l'<'Utl\ l' IT) JO 3dVt'rt1-.
rng ai::<·nt'\ or ,,.., .1 l,1v.} 1•r. hi·r
~n m1~hl not haH• ht•t·omc lht•
-.ymbol and 1dcJI of lovC'. both
hum;1n anrl !11\ tnl'. wht{'h lie ha'
hcen for our 1'1\1l11al11m fur 20
<'enturw-.
en R ..:x1•t:Rn:~n·: v.1111 111
f.int~ IA h1• .1r 1· put 1n lhl' 1nst1lu
l1ona1 selling so early 10 !Jfe 1s
tlial they g row up with consider a
ble difficulty l'Xprcssing love or
loyally
It ·s not kno" n as a sc1cnt1fiC'
faC't . hut th e 1mpress1011
gurnered by many observers 1s
that the childn•n of a kibbuti
type infancy grow up to be in
tensely middling pl·oplc•, nr\•t•r at
the bottom, never at the lop
THE DAY care center seems to
be an efficient means of rcann~
organization men and woml•n,
hut as Dr. Herbert Ratner has
said. "If nature wanted children
to be raised in tilters, they would
be born that way ... The r eason
only one child 1s born at a time 1s
because the only way to teach
children love is in a one lo-one n·
latlons hip That 1s why I'm
ag ainst rtay care centers "
Parents 1n the kihbutz a n · 111m
being encouraged to si><·nd n1or1·
time with their vcr} yoww. in
f:tnts for !>OmC O( lhl'Sl' V('f"\ rl•
asons Nol that there 1s .in;
j?round for com paring the t•arc•
an infant gets in Israel with the
treatment 1t gets in America. W1'
ran 't begin to offer such quality
of nurture
'' 0 U r In J? 1 h (' (Ir ~ t f 1• W
mon1hS of l'Xl:O.ll'llC'C,' Writes
( VON HOFFMAN )
H:irbara JoC' ,l mother of four
with a mast1•r' dcgn·c in social
c·an.· s1.•r\'1l·1•s, "they rcqu1rt•
many of the scrvict•s lhut would
he-prondcd by an inkns1vc cure
nursing home at any other stagt•
of life a liquid did, round-the·
clock feedings and assurance
that th<>1r brPathing 1s un
obstructed
"They must be dressed and
bathed. they a re incontinent,
they often regurgitate their food,
they cannot speak, and they are
practically 1mmob1le." After
that comes Jove and a million
other les-; tangible hut no less im-
port.int things
Thl' fu r tht·r .rlA ay one gC'ls
from holl'(' ancl nv1tlic•1 the less
alill' c111r su1.·ll•l) rs to provide
I h C' I.' 0 CC l"> \ 1 l 1 (•.., f II r II Ur
ch1lclren Tht• reason 1s11'1h;mt111
come by Thr h1i.:h :-.t.tlus, h1~h
respect occupation~ Jrt.' those·
concern in,:: mont'Y. pnld11cl1m1
power and faml'
The care or human bcmgi. is a
despised. low·casfr <X'cupal1on.
Our hospitals, old age, nursing
and conva lesc~nt homes arc
staffed with poorly paid. looked
down·upon Pl'Opl1.·
THE Cl.AMOR ror cli1} carr
centers from somt• \\Omen s or
gan17.ations but by no rneuns all
women's ~roup~ 1~. lh1•n, not for
the bcnciftl ur thl' c h1lcl . but uni v
the mother and fath<'r who don ;t
want to or can't tr.kl· C'are of their
offspring.
However. StrlC'l' there is no dat<1
anywhere s u1rncsting th<: in
stitut1onal rearing or infants
and small l·hildrcn 1s b<'ll<'r than
or even as good as a good horn~.
feminist groups might Ix• w1sl'r
urging women who don't want l\)
take care of their chtldr<:n Just
not to have them
The pressure 1s all the other
way. to go on mcre.tl>tnl! day care
center financing by the govern-
ment
With the ne w adm1mslrallon.
wh1ch is r:.ither thoughtles:,Jy
committed to day care, there will
be yet more pressure, e!.pec1all}
1n view of the fact these centers
t'3n appear to cr eate Jobs,
although 1L 's actually only hocus
pocus to pay people to perform a
service outside the home that can
be performed in it for about 20
percent or the cost
Switching over to govern
Wise Men's Gift Flourishes
I h1' 1, I h1· 1111' .. r 1 hr•,. IA'"'
mr-n
f'lll' Ill h I r "-I 't l'tlt'll
1.1ml' • H ,, l111rn I ;:i., IA·'" .•
Pr1111•-.tJ11I 11,, (11 '' ltJlt•r \4,"
I h I I 0 ••• I
m1n1,l1•r 1n
\\'1•,1 ll.1rn,1.1
hit' \1.ic; .. 111•
i.: r a f1 11 .1 1 1· '1
11 .1 r ' J r d .1
r I 11 m 1•
pl1 o;1)>11nt. pru
m 1 s 1 n ~
l;iv.H·r. prac
I I C' I'd I n
Bo~ton uni al
he wus notict•d hv thl.' King an<l
~:is mad1• ;1 hu r1•:111l'r:it ror th<'
Crown
f\«, Advncute GC'neral. he soon
learned what was n·ally expect
roof him was to authon2c snoop
ini: fur, and railroading or.
\'1olators of the Sui:;ar Act Then
'IOmethmJt happenccl inside this
hyhru1 Amc•ric·itn , ;inti h(• rr
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
flutwrt ,\ II rrd. f'uhlr.hrr
·1 hnm11' ~ ,.,.,.,, f:rlrr,,,
Thr l'llitnn.11 l'·•l't' nl 1lw 1>.11h r 1I11 t 't> l' k ~ I 11 1 n form an rl
,11m11l.111• rrat1rr~ h~ 1111•-.1non11
on 1111'< p.1~1· <11vrrM' fommcn1,1rv
nn 1 01)1<'~ n( rtllt-rt•!ol hv 11,\1\Ctit•al
1'ft r11l11mnr11ts anrl rortoo111,t~. h\
pt O\ 1cl1n~ a fC1r11rn fo1 n•acll•r.<
\'If'\\' 11nfl In Jlr<''t'nlll\1! thtS
n\•wspa11l'I ·, 11pi11ion11 nnd tclrn:.
nn currrnt ln!llC'~ Thi' t'<.lltorl11l
•1111ni111111 nf llw l>atl~ Pilot npp('nr
11nly 1n th1· ''tltl<lr rnl c·olumn nl thl•
t11p of t hr p.1111• ()p1n1ons c·x
IJ• t'.,M'(J by th1• c•olumnlsti; nncl
r11rtnnn1~tc; and lcttrr \\lilcr11 ar\'
llwir OIA n anti nn rnrlorllfmrnl of
thrtr \It'\\ .. b\ the lhlll\. runt
should bt' mrrrrrd
Sunday, Dec. 26, 1976
( P\lll. HARVEY J
'l~n('d his lu<·ralt\1•ofr1t·1
flt: (;i\ \"F. i\l.t. or hts llntt•
1.tlc•nb, .incl energy tu upµo~m~
ro} al 1nvas1on o r p('rc,on;il
privao tre n11st·<l h1-; ,·111c·1· 1r1
hPhalf of the r1ghb 11f tht• r n I o n 1 s t c; w h c r t' v l' r :i n ti
~henever anyoo1• woultl hslt·ri
When they stopped listening ht•
raised his voice higher
The once good-humorf'd, ~oc1a
ble fellow had been transformrd
by a blaiing inner fire. Thl' rash.
turbulent vehe mence or his
language dis tressed even ht..,
friends.
Rut he would not ~top
He became the fiery pohtical
leader of M ass ac-husetts Ray I lis
pamphlets got him thrcatC'nc-d by
the King with a treason trial in
England.
f'or he wa!' convinrccl tht•rt'
must be some better wa)
THEN ONE DAV . . Otis
made a shouting speech in the
British coffee house at what •~
now 60 State Street and officers
of the Crown set upon him nnd
administered to him such o beat
mg that he barely survived.
This man who once, with his
brilliant oratory, had swayed the
Massachusetts Legislature to op
pose the various revenue acts.
wns stark. raving mad'
Still the fire burned.
In 1775 Otis broke away from
confinement. borrowed a gun
and rushed out amid the flying
bullet_, of Bunker Hill.
Even this he survived
UNTIL t'INALLY this gentle
man who had devotoo a passion
for freedom so pol('nt It con
sumoo him -In May of 178.1. he
dJed.
He waa struck by llghlnlnJ:
while watching ti s ummer thun
derslorm
Rut Jamrs Otts h.1d lived wh1l<'
ht• had hvcd
i\nd frt•crtom \\ ,,.., n m t't'I\ 1.·ti
Chari('<; Carroll <>f Ccirrolllon
"a:-u C'ttthoh1•
Horn m Annripohs. t7:fi. hrs
l':tlly schooling v..;es \\1th Thl·
Society or .I t.•sus .. ;vcntually he
went abr1Jad to st111lv Hut most or
"hat he ll•,1rncd in Pans ancl
London was how mu<'h ht• loved
Maryl anti
THERt: RF.GAN a clt>tcr mmed
dream of 11beratmg the New
Worlcl from tht• Old. SI> h(' n·-
turned horn(' and aimed all his
efforts at that e nd
ll:irrrd from t)l)hli('s bN·ausf'
of his n•li~ion, he b1•came known
as "lht.' fi ghting former " II<•
fouitht for the• frec:dnm of thO!il'
who denied his lly 1773 he was
the> First Ci tizrn of Maryland
Al the Ma ryland ('1111vention or
1776 1t was Charlc-s Car roll whose
1nsp1rt•d oratory hrouj?ht
Maryland into hnc with the other
colonies which resolved to break
all ties with Britain
So this man whose religion had
demed him the right to vote went
on to be elected lo Congress from
his statC' and subsequently to tht·
Senate where he served until he
resigned in l 792
I N THE LOWER nght-hand
comer of the Declaration of In·
dependence you will see lhe
!lignaturc of Charles Carroll of
Carrollton.
The third wise man. named
Haym Salomon. was a Jew.
Born In Poland , 1740·
somethJng (he was never sure),
he emigrntcd to New York, 1712,
and became u merchant and did
well. Then whf'n the Brltfah hired
Hessian soldier s to fiJ(ht the
Colonists but could not make
their commands understood.
Salomon could. They hired him
:is an interpreter
But he had fou~ht for Pollsh 10
dependence. l11 s heart was with
the colonists
He s witc h ed s ignals and
quietly aided lhc ll ess 1:1n
mcrccnanc' to dcser1
IN 1776. tht• Rril1sh c.1ughl on
and imprisoned Haym S:ilomon
as a spy They said he had plcrlled
to burn the K mg 'c; flcc>t and
dcstrov Britis h warehou ... c·s
I le <>s<:apcd
They caught him aAain. tned
him for tr<'ason. scntc>ncccl him
to death. II<' cscaJ)('<I : went lo
Philadelphia went about rais
1nJt moncy 111 r esrlH' the
Colonists.
Again and :ign1n. <1l the brink
ur fin:inc ial roll:q>st·, the cause of
the colonists wns rescued by
llaym Salomon Oft<'n alont' he
cont ri butcd the' money which
maintainrcl govl•rnmcnt credit
Out of his own porkct he• pu11l the
salaries of govt•rnmc11l t•mploye:o.
and arm:v offerers
Then. one Yorn K1ppur. Gcorite
Washington tol!I Hohcrt Morns
that the Colon11.•s ncc<lccl cash
from somewhere quickly
Mor-ris sent for Sulomon
llAYM S ALOMON , h111
personal resources exhausted. in-
terrupted a synagogue service on
this holiest of Jewish holy days to
urge -finally to demand -that
the congregation raise the
necessary thousands of dollars to
loan to the American treasury to
meet the emergency.
They met the emergency
Prematurely, and from the cf.
feels of his imprisonment. Jfoym
Salomon died.
Penniless.
But freedom was born.
SO GOES MV 11tory of the thr<'c
wise men: James Olis. Charles
Carroll and Jlaym Salomon.
Men of three religions one
£alth
Notice my choice or words so
"goeR" the Rtory
1t is not over
Bureaucratize'
ment rearing of s mall children
isn't like switching from the pro-
duction or one kind or bomber to
another. Once you do it. you must
accept that you may have 1r
revers1hly changed society and
not necessarily for the better
As Barbara Joe wnle1L " on
cc begun. the experiment would
he difficult to abandon. This 1s
because the way people learn to
parent and girls specifically to
·mother' is first by exper1em ..
ing mothering roles.
·'IT WOULD be almost i mpossi
ble for a whole generation of
children raised in group setting"
without inclividualjzed mothering
and without examples of this in
their experience lo suddenly be
able to adapt this behavior upon
achieving biological parenthood.
whatever their intelle<'tual com
mitment might be
'"Thus. day care, while liberal
mg girls from the stereotyped
motherhood role. m1~hl liberate
them lo the extent that mother
mg would no longer be an option
for them and the choice. once
made. would have become 1r
reversible."
The least we can do. as
Barbara Joe points out in her ex
cellent unpublished paper.
"Child in Crisis." is debate the
s1gn1ficance of what we're drift·
ing into here. There are other
ways to handll' these problems.
MANY HAVE BEEN sug$!est
ed but scurccly Riven a l.eriou'
hearing. s uch ns according wives
and mothers Social Security pro-
tection even if they don't work
outside the home : universal child
allotments : and perhaps the nov·
cl idea of one job <decently paid )
per every two parents. perhaps
jointly held by the Wlfc-husband·
mother.father together. CaJI it a
shared employment program.
There arc many things Wl'
ran do beside bureaucratizing in-
fancy and early childhood. We
can pay attention to The Martha
Movcm enl (1022 Wilson
Boulevard. Suite 2610. Arlington.
Va.. 22209). an organization
trying to give some res pect.
d1gmty and pres tige to the call
1n~ of wife. mother and
homemaker 1n the traditional
sense
Don't knock it until you can
come up with a substitute. Cer
tainly we need the role models of
women Supremf> Court Justices
and women in other power. pre·
slige positions. but the role of
Mother in the Holy Family isn't
without honor either.
Panaina's Econo1ny:
Smoldering Crisis
WASHINGTON The
Panama Canal con troversy
could blow up in Jimmy Carter'!!
face after he moves into the
White House next month
Classified State Dept cable~
from the U .S f'mbassy tn
Panama warn
that "the
econom y is
floundering ...
This has been
caused. the
cab l es
declare blunt-
ly, by internal
mismanage ·
ment.
The bleak
economic outlook likely will en-
courage Panama's military dic-
tator. Omar Torrijos, to raise an
emotional issue lo divert the al·
lention of the populace from their
pocketbook problems. Almost
certainly, he will clamor more
loudly for sovereignty over the
Panama Canal.
A rew weeks ago, th<' Canal
Zone was rocked by bomb ex-
plosions. The bombs were pro·
fessionally rigged and carefully
planted to cause a maximum
scare. with minimum damage.
The nighttime explosions blew up
empty cars and damaged houses.
without personal injury.
Secret reports to the Pentagon
speculated that the bombs were
planted by Torrijos' own
guardsmen and were intended as
a message to the United States.
Torrijos want.a some major con·
cessions from the United Stales
on the Panama Canal, and he
want.a them right away. He badly
needs to produce a triumph to
save his regime from collapse.
For the economic crisis could
dry up capital and leave the Tor·
rijos regim e without the funds to
run the counb'y. The resulting ln·
fttabillty could lead to a left-wing
(J ACK ANDERso"NJ
rebellion that would sweep the
military government out of
power
nDS COULD present Carter
with his first international crisis.
lie mi.cht have to decide "hether
to use U.S. forces to defend the
Canal Zone. Such a show or force
would certainly alienate Latin
America, whose leaders are unit-
ed behind Panama on the canal
issue.
Torrijos has only himself to
blame. accordin g to the State
Dept. cables, for Panama's
deepening recession.
lie has permitted the external
debt to soar out of sight. He has
aJso been unwllllng to hold down
labor and production costs but,
on the contrary, has fostel'ed
"high wages, subsidies and con-
s umer imports."
This has produced "a standard
of Jiving which no longer appears
to be 11upportabJe by Panama's
inefficient domestic production."
High production costs have left
Panama's manufacturing in·
dustry with "little export or over·
all growth poten tial."
FINALLY. the Torrijos gov-
ernment has usually set support
prices above the world market
level. Result: Panama can't pro-
fitably export major crops like
rice and corn.
The only poa11ible solution for
Panama's economic problems,
tho cables stress, would requtre
1lH hln1 the wag~. sub.<Jldies
and other benefits that the Torri-
jos regime h aa granted the work·
lnC claaaea. Thi& might not be
"PoUtkally poaaible, ''the cables
conclude.
Secretary's Noted
For Negotiations
Dy BAR RV SCUWEID
TheA\,OCl.at ... Pf'9'l1-
WASHINGTON "1''r:mkly I
cannot imagine what the ~overn
menl would be li ke without you "
~ wrote H1 chard Nixon lo
Henry Kissini:er m 1971 And that
was after only two years <11 the
hPlm or American foreign policy.
Now. what thl' former Pres•·
dent found unamagrnable & .. about
to happen· The "Lone Ranger"
of American for('tgn pol.Jcy as
leaving the world stage.
His record 1s remarkable I LI'>
legacy ts uncertain.
111 S S K I L L 1 n s cc r 1· l
diplomacy, his 1ntelkct anti
energy and has ab1hty to turn .i
crisis to the advantageoflhe Un1l
cd States ha vc become legendary.
But there 1s considerable doubt
about the Pl'rmancnce or his
achievements. In the Middle
East, for example, 1t took J
superhuman effort lo S('paratt•
warring Is raelis and Arabs and
drive them inlo not one but thrt·~
interim sellkm1.•nt....
That mu eh 1s rcmark~1hle
rormed ()( lJ .s diplomacy toward
Moscow and Peking
Acquiescing in ·rurkcy's us.:
of U.S. weapon~ lo tnvadc Cypru!.
11\ l!YM .
AC'ling without surflt1ent n•
gard, in thi: view of ... ome c·nt1cs,
for humun rights and America's
moral values.
f\UT AS KISSINGER yields
power. the world 1s at pcacc
That, he has said, is "the mo'>I
moral " goal of all.
Arabs and farat•ll., JI c awl
.,hooting at each other.
The nuclear weapons trtal)'
that would put a numcncal t•cll
mg on American and Soviet mt:)
Mies ts 90 percent completed
Chma, despite internal up
heaval, gives no ind1callon or
wantmg to reverse the accom
rnodal1on with the Uruted States
initialed by Kissinger and Nixon.
After a late start, Washington
1s working for blatk maJorlly
rule in southern Africa and for
bridging the gap between the in·
dustrialized and developing n••
lions.
a ~eries of withdrawals that cap-
tivated Egypt and Syna -and
causc.'<1 the Russians some loss of
1nflut•nce in the so-cal led
moderate Arab world.
SO STRONG WAS Kissinger's
imprint on U S. foreign policy
that however much the Carter
administrntllln inte nds to ad
vance "morality" and avoid one·
man diplom:.ll')' it will be under
Kissinger's influence.
Cyrus R Vance, who comes
after him, will suffer the fate of a
great man's s uccessor : large
shoes to hll and the uneasy sense
that someone's Joolung over his
shoulder
At 53 Kissinger 1s still young
enough to come back m a future
Republic an ad mmistr a ti on. "I
would hke to point out," he
quipped in a farewell to the
NATO foreign ministers Dec. 10
in Brussels, "that at the end of
the Mondale administration r
will onlv be 69 years old."
The truth or the matter IS that
no one in Was hington really ex·
peels lo see Kissinger at the helm
again. An era has cndc.'CI.
Sunday December 28 1978 DAILY PILOT ,4 7
But will thcrL• finally bt:> l>l•at·t·,
or have the last thre<' yt·<irs bC'C"n
only a respite betwC'en Maddi~
East wars "
IN RF:TROSPt:C:T 1t m:.iy turn
out that KassangL•r 's grt•atest ac-
complishment was one that was
little recognited al the time
maintainmg Aml'nca·s position
in the world v.h1k WJtC'rgatc wa'>
bringing dov. n I he Nixon ad -
ministration
AMERICA'S POWER in thl'
world is no longer pre-eminent.
but Kissinger and others versed
m geopolitics would say its days
.1s the world's policeman in
e v1tahly had to come to an end
But he managed to e nhance
US. authority with the Arabs
with only s light risk lo Israel,
and acrobat 1cally balanced the
C~1nese against the Russians.
\
Kissinger: An Acquired Taste
Wall•rgatc .ind the l S. '>t't
back m \'1t•lnJm lu· rr•m.1rkc·ct in
Seplcmbc·r t!J7;>, h<iv(' ldt
Aml'rit·an'> v.1th .. ~•n almo ... t
metaphysH·al n·vub1on ..igain\l
foreign invol\ 1·nt <•nts
Throug h 1t .all. K1 .,s1ng1·r
persc~ert•d in th1· Mulcllt> East . in
enlarging lhl' opt·nang l•1 ChmJ,
in pressin g fnr ;1 riut•lt·<.1r
weapons trC'al\ with lht• Sovll'b
At the l'nd. I hough, th1· "slabh·
new worl<I ord1·r · that v. a., lh1·
former 11.arv .ird profl•ssor 's go<.11
s till c lu1l1·d him , a'> 1t h :.HI
Austriu ·., Ml'ltl•r111C'h aml Br 1
tain's Castlerc.11-(h. till' Juth c1·n
turv mastc>rs of stat1·nafl who
had innu('n('t•d his courM'
And st•rwu-; 11111•.,t aon ... 11
maincd .1boul m ;i nv of h1'
polac1cs and J 1·1111n'>
Among lht•m
-P ,\RTH'I P \TIO' 1"-lhc•
wirl'lapp111~ of C'lost• J1tl1•-. .111d
nev. ~mt·n In l r .11•1• lt•.1k~ of l!r •\
ernml•nt 1nfm 111.1111111 lhat I.or,.
no ,q1p.11 c•1i1 1 t•l.1llu11,t11p lo 11,1
llOnJI ~•'\'Urll \
Thi· 111, ;1..,11111 or < ·Jmt~'"'·'
and the• clP\ ;.-.t.1t1ni: lw1mhing:-. of
Hanoi .•IHI ll.11pht1rtJ.: t \l u .1fl1·1
the \'1t-tn.1m lo\ .1r :o.t•t•nwd 111 ... t
~om c•t1m•·' 1.Jru1 s1n.i:: th•·
it'ns1hllll11• ... of all1t·'>. <;U('h ..... thl'
Wt•.,t r:uropl·.in' ,1ntl .Japa11l''>t'
hv nnl k•'l'Jlllll' 1h1•n1 fulh 111
It probably does n't matter. but
Kissinger did all llus with a wit
uncommon lo s tatesmen and
wllh considerable d1!->rel'(ard for
I h r S t a t 1• I> l' p a r t m e n t
burc:rncrac~
lit· s poke often nf 111.., 'll·rnf1C'cl
t.tff" Jnd hl' ragl'd at llll'm
It wa~ a cl.J11l1r1g 1wrform,111t'P
m t•r 1•1ght) 1·ar-.
WOllKIN(; \\ ITll J l'rcs1<k11l
"JtXll l1 h e harely knl'W and
found difficult . s n1pc.·d at Ii)'
othNs in the White llousc, within
two years Kissinger became tht•
chief foreign policy advise r <m
•·very major matter except lht•
~11ddle Eas t t excluding that art'a
becausr hE' is a Jc·w ~ind chdn't
want U.S pohcy to seem b1asccl
toward Israel 1
Kissinger s quest for "global
o;t..1b1hty " permeated his dral
IOl!S v. ath ~1 oscow and Peking
l>t•ll•nte an ca s ing of tension ...
"'1th the Russians product'd
lhl' 1972 treat} limiting th(' two
pov. t•r\ m 1ss1le dt'fl•nse svstem.,
.wd m1 ... stl1• l.111 ncht•r.,, a ·han on
moi.t wc.ipons tests and a flock or
.11!n't'lllt'nts ranging from cancer
r' 'l'.11 d1 Io l h £' drwk 1 ng uf
p,11 t'l r Jft
llalann·d aga1n~t th1!. "'a' tht•
q1111•I 511pport for Chrn..i to the dis
trat't111n of tht• Sovit•L-.
I n t h I.' M 1 d d I t' f: a s t .
m1·;inv. hil1·. ht· nu~cd Israel intc1
By KENNETH J . FREED
T"e AUo<••t•d ~S
WASHINGTON (AP) -An
offtc1al who had served as one of
the Secretary of State's close
aides hes itated and said : "llenr)
Kissinger ts an artichoke ...
As obtu:-.e, even silly, as this
l'haractl.'rizat1on se emed, the
t•x1ting Kissinger aide had a
point. Like an artichokt..,
Kissinger as multi-laycrC'd and
<'Omb1m's a tart bitterness with a
hidden but tender heart. lie is an
..icquircd tastt.' ,
Kissinger as g1 vc•n to strong
;rnd quu.:k flashes of emotion,
with humor and anger followrng
so dose on each other as to be
nearly indistinguishable.
IT WAS AFTl.:R midnight in a
Brussels hotel when a reporter
heard that Kissinger was
meeting with a foreign leader
and dashed from tu s room to get
an interview. The newsman was
wearing jeans, a sweatshirt and
b.isketball shoes.
·what's the matter. have vou
no feeling for the d1gruty or ·my
office." Ktssmgcr snarled ''I'll
do better the next ti mt•." th••
n•porter said
The next t1mt• cJme about flVl'
hours later \.\hen th<' secretary
.1rrang<'d u breakfast meeting
w1lh yd ClnOth('r roreign
minister. The newsman couldn't
resist wearing the same outfit,
only with a tie around the
.,wcatshart
"That's muc h, much better,"
K1ssing<'r growled and then
pulled the tac lake a noose Ill'
giggled.
THERE W/\ ..alway s
something m congruous about
this five-foot. s t•vcn inch fat man
as he acted out a role ortc11
!>tereotyped as belonging lo ,,
slender, gray-hairc<l fdlow with
aquiline nose and Ivy Lcagul·
wardrobe
In informal t1mt''>, ht• 11.,uall~
was seen with his hanrb tuc·k1.'d
inside his wa1!-.tband During th1·
long flights to :rnd fro around lht•
world, Kissing<•r walked ubout in
his socks.
Other impn•s:.1un.,
Watching with horr11r .ind
near I y retch 1 n i.: a s .1 I 1 v <•
sturgeon was gultt'd t,, show ho"'
caviar is made Thc•n gmn1~ into a
banquet room a nd <'alanl-( larg1·
amounts or the dl'li< .1c·' "'1lh
great gusto
Dozing oH in .1 foreign
capital as his hos t dronl•J
through a nc·~1rly anterm1nabl1·
speech about h1 s.,1ng<'r s
greatness.
-Standing hdon· rc·portt•rs 111
Salzburg. Au...i ra a .• met nc•arl~
weeping as hl• 1hn•.1l!'1Wd to
res ign if qu<'stwn ... 1«rntmut·d
about his roll' in v.1rt'f;1pr1ng
newsmen ancl som e of ·,,., own
staff :iides
TH R 0 U G If A c· ;_ii c 11 I at l' ci
effort, Kissinger ac11u1rcd a
reputation as a wit as he filled his
speel'h es and nth<'r publat
appearances with onc·hners.
There was the time Kissinger
had been appointed -.errctary nr
stall' A reporter asked: Do you
prefer to be called Mr. Secretary
or Dr. Secretary? "I don't stand
on protocol. If you will just call
me t•xcellency, 1t will be okay,"
Kissinger replied.
He c ould laugh at himself.
During his trips. Kissinger would
us ua lly appear in the press
section in the r ear of his plane
and give his impn•ssions of tht·
11ff1c1al last \'isikd
It be•<'amt• a lit:rny "He is very
ltnght. very soph1st1cutc>d " It
became such a routine that lht·
reportc.•rs drew up cue cards with
the appropriate pal phrase and
hdd thC'm up jus t a s thP
st'eretary began his routine. lh·
stopped. "Oh. come on you ~uys.
I'm serious." A pause. then a
chuekle and an c'Urthyprofamly,
IUS ANGER was lC'gendary.
but he kept it from public view
almost always_
lie kept aides awake 2'1 hour:>
v. rt ling speech drafts. never
thank mg them . Many l.Jmes after
the aide ha d given up a weekend
to prepare a s peech. KissmgC'r
\\'Ould throw the papers back.
asking sar('ast1call} ... ls this tht•
bt:'st vou e an do?"
Oecause the r eporkr.!. had the•
pow<.'r to affect Kissinger·.,
impact on the puhhc. KissingC'r
usually hid any public disdain
l!ut he could s how strcJk!. or
eontempt
One reporter fr om "
prestigious daily newspaper w:.i.,
denied access to Kissinger for a
year after writing a story about
lJ S. and Soviet maneuvering an
the Middle Eas t that displeased
thr secretar y, even though the
account was accurate.
ms CONCER N for his image
"'as astounding lie read nearly
t>vl'.'ry s tory and editorial written
about ham and would harrass the
reporters endlessly, although
oftt'n playfully
KissingC'r ,., J l'Wtsh, but he
nvo1d~ll any religious
involvemc.·nl. lie was sworn into
offlCl' on " Saturday, lhe Jewish
Sabbath, and hl• took the oath on
~' King J<imcs vt•rslon of th<'
Bible clearly marked with a
C'ross.
He worked on Yom Kippur. the
sa n etified Jewis h Day of
Atonement. In various public
spccch<'s he nC'ver r('fcrrcd to
himself as Jl1w1sh. opting instead
for the phrase, .. For someone of
my heritage "
VET, WHEN v1s1t1ng Yad
Vas h1m . the m e morial Israel
built in Jc·rus alem to the six
million Jews. inc luding 12 of has
own relatives. killed bv thl'
Nazis. K1ss1ngcr wept. •
Another m oment came dunng
a wrenching tour or the death
camp the GNmnns built ct
Aus chwitz in Poland. Jn "
bulldmg used to house Jewish
womC'n the night before they
were taken to the.• /.'!:.ts chambers,
a J ewis h newsman was
overcome.
lie started to cry and was close
to coll;.ips ing . One person
grabbed his dbow and helped
him stand. rt w;.is Kissinger.
Fund Law 'Took Game Away From Fat Cats'
H> Jot" \\ (,,\RUM'.R
Jflhn \\' ( 1llriforr /ormf'T Sl•c·rrton1 nf /{('nl111
f:atJC<lJ :on 01111 "-l'l/ur1• " 'llJlL' rliuirmun u/
<'om mun Cn11.••
In the· poh11c.1l ""1r J!J7h 1.\1• '>aw th•·
first In.ii nr ... 01111• f.ir rt'al'hlOg rdorm'>
to tht· f1t1;1111·1oi.: of 1·ampaa,.:n.., "l'r>\\I w11h
the l'1Pct1on m .inv \\'t·rk-: twhinrl 11.,, rt .,
l.Jme lo ;ic;k oursel v~ how th<> rc•forms
workc>d
The' 1wer\lohc>lm1ni:t vNchct frnm P'<
perh'ncC'd polil1<'al obsC'nrrs 1s !hut thl'
reforms at the presidential l<>vel worked
except a on ally WC'll. To quote C)Ot'
edltori:al writ<.'r. 1h<• princaplto of public
financing "provNl 1ls<>lf nobly "
All <'•andidot<'S in th<' primarH''> and
general ell•ction were s part'tl the dC'
meanini: chore of b<'ggm~ for )}lg ~1rt o;
from the heavy s pC'ndcrs. and the wanner
is spared the obseeruty or l>Cing beholden
to WC'll·heelcd special interests
IT IS HARD TO bch<.'ve that. Just four
yea~ ago, the presidential race involved
money-raising m ethods that approached
extortion, money-s tufred satchels
·passed by shadowy figurt>s, the selling of
1 ambassadors hips and many downnghl
criminal actlv1ties
This time. tens o ( milhons or
Americans took the J(nme away from the
'fat cats and paid for the campa1gni.
''themselves through the one dollar
check-of( on their tnx returns.
Early critics of the law said only can-
didates with i::reat national reputatlon:i1
·• ~uld m eet the matching requirements
'ilnd get through lhc primaries. But the
• 1aw enabled a notionally unknown
"peanut farmer and ex-~overnor to travel
the long road to the l>cmocralic nomlna·
• Uon.
-Crltl<'!'I also snld thf' law would out·
raieously favor Incumbents. But in 1976
the incum~nt came close to losing the
oomlnatlon of h is own pArty -nnd In the
cet:teral electlon b came the rlrt1t lncum
1bent to be ddeated In t.hc 44 yurs since
Herbert Hoover
'It's hard to believe, just four years ago, the presidential
race involved money-raising methods that approached extortion. '
There are improvement., th~Jt must be
made In the law Spending limrts for the
candidates wer<· too low. The $21.8
million that went lo major party can·
d1datcs an the· 1976 elt•ct1on should b<'
significantly raised.
WE MUST NOT imagine. however,
that if the limits arC' raised, the extra
money will be spent Cas some would
hope) for bum per slickers, buttons and
volunteer organ11.1ng If the candidates
are able to spend more they'll spend it on
lhe media. unless other steps are taken
to focus resources on local activity.
One way to deal with Lh1s issue would
be to provide that state and local parties
<'Ould spend money on behalf of the pre·
sidential candidates at the same rate as
the two cents per voter prov1s1on for the
national parties This would correct a
mistake In the law and help restore lo the
state and local levels the opportunity to
play their traditional role.
The present law provides retroactive
payment of campaign debts for a ny In
dependent or minor party candidate who
gets five percent of the national vole.
None did, In th ls election ; and more
generous provlsion8 should be made.
For example. matching public funds
could be provided in the general election
once an independent or minor party can·
d.ldate had raised a threshold amount of
private money to demonstrate viability aa a candidate .
I\ MORE SERIOUS problem that mu:i1t
bt dealt with 1s the gr('Ol dlffictJlly 11
minor party candidate has in getting on
the ballot in many states.
Ther e was a lot of nattering <ibout the
paperwork and auditing required by the
new law, but it signified nothing_ Politics
was just about the last segment or our
national life in which the handling of
large sums of money had escaped audit
ing. It was bound to lose its carefree
status. The Watergate horrors were jus t
the precipitating cause
On the congressional level, the r<'
forms went only halfway, and the consc
quences were deeply disturbing. In 1974,
Congress took the presidency off the auc
tion block, but rejeded public financing
for itself because the reform would have
done too much to even up the relativr
positions of incumbent and chaJlenger
INCUMBENTS HAVE an enormous
advantage, and a majority of the I foui;e
of Representatives had no intention of
diminishing that advantage further by
putting public funds in the hands of their
challengers. Result : A lot of members of
Congress wer e bought and sold in t 97G.
just like the good old days except that the
going rates were higher.
Jn 1976 special-interest groups poured
well over $20 million into congressionul
campaigns. as compared with $12.5
m illion in 1974. That's an enormous In·
crease In just two years. Money-heavy
specia l i nterests couldn't buy
themselves a president so they tried to
buy Congress.
In a stu<1y of th•• 111p dor.en heaviest
s p end er.s un11111g s pf'<'ial interest
P<>lil ical co111m11 tL'"':. both labor and the
prorc•ssron!-:q11 ":1n~i to ciutrank busa-
nt's., in the• n mouna s pent, but the busi·
ne:-.s world 1,; ~~t·11n111{ up to regain its
p<>silion an 1!17>1 ~. WC' f:H'<' a kinrl of
l~l'ttlatin1: pol1I H'.1l .1rm.-, ruc•r•to s<'C who
(':in papc•r Ct1nl!rt•.,:; with the most cur·
r<'ney
One 1mmc•1li:1h' 1 f}rrect1ve measure
would bC' to r~cl111·c• ~ullslantiully the pre·
sent SS.000 ('C'ilmg un giving by special
antrrest political committees. In addi-
tion the SI ,()()() h mil on individual con
trihutions should he rf'tained.
BUT TH F: OV•:RRIDING solution is
public fina ncmg or congressional com·
paigns. A problem in the congressional
campaigns wai-. the inequity of heavy
spendin~ by wealthy candidates on their
own campaigns
The Supreme C:ourt has ruled that such
spending cannot be limited unless the
candidate accepts the limitation as a
condition of receiving public funds. So
agnin, public financing em erges as the
solution.
ln<lependent oversight and enforce-
ment i11 essential to maklng campaign
finance laws work. The Federal Election
Commission had an enormously dirflcult
La.k In 1978 Md did an admirable job.
Some members of Contrcss never d id
like the idea or Independent overseeing
?(their ucllvitJes and never will.
We must guard agaan ... t any efforts in
('ongress to res trict or cut back on the
C'omm1ss1on·s authority and we must
make s ure the com m1ss1on has adequate
rcsourees to carry out its responsibilities.
CONGRESS M UST remove itself from
the category o f purchasable com -
modities. The moment for 1t to clean its
own house 1s long overdue.
One need only sniff the breeze 'to plck
up richly malodorous evidence in the
Tong Sun Park affair -potentially one
of the most dam aging scandals Congress
has faced in our lifetimes. Involved in
the revelation s ar<' the South Korean
government. the South Korean CIA,
Tong Sun Par k (a b1g·spcnding South
Korean businessman or something)
who gave lavish Woshington parties and
handsome gifts.
Members o f the Democratic
leadership In the 94th Congress were
touched by the Park money. Some mem·
bers of Con gress have a lready
acknowledged receipt of favors, but
there is no certainty that a definitive Ust
of r ecipients a nd the degree of their In·
volvemt>nt will ever be revealed.
This is old-style, sleazy, confidento·
destroying sturr. T he pufl>OSe or all the
shenanigans and flowing cash was, of
course, to keep the U.S. Congress firmly
on the side or conUnued military aid to
South Korea.
SO P RESUMABLY what was lo be
bought with all the favors ·and money
was not ju11t our membel'll of Congress. It
was our foreign policy. That's not just
sleazy -it's devastating,
We restored dignity lo the presidential
election through u law that worked. a
law whose "profound impact" on the
election, to quote a leading journalist .
"was nearly invi11lble to the voters." We
can have the same profound impact on
Congressional elections and ensure rOT
Congress the Integrity that our best
senators and represent.aUves so sincere-
ly desire
'
A• DAIL v PILOT Sunday. December 29. 1919 I She's Citizen of _!!!at'
f. ~ y llA Y ESTllADA ~ CM .. o.11, ~ \l<lff
~ Bein& named Citizen ot the Year thla month
,. • y the Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce
as "ell maxed my year of awards," said
~ argaret Krukenber&, a 20-yea.r resident of the • ty.
Mrs. Krukenberg recthed one award every
i""'O'l()Oth of 1976 for some phase of her clvlc involve-~ent. ~· "lf l only won one of these awards I would
i2'?ave felt very honored," said the 65-year-old
~ivic leader. "The chamber award climaxed the
~~ear. After all, it's my own city."
A RESIDENT or Fountain Valley since the
city incorporated in 1957, Mrs. Krukenberg
beamed with pride as she said, "The chamber
award is something I really hoped I could earn."
Mrs. Krukenberg was one of three nominees
for the chamber award this year She was
nominated by the Fountain Valley Senior
Citizens group and tht lo~al chapter or the
ftmerican Association 1f l '?tired Persons.
She was prespnte' tt'' Citizen of the Year
Award al a ch am' er banouet Dec. 4.
The activitie~ ''-~~ .von Mrs. Krukenberg this
year's chamber award include her work on the
city's Bicentennial Comrruttee, work on a com-
mittee to design a new fountain for the civic
center, writing of a chamber of commerce his·
. tory as well as participation in Girl Scouts, Foun·
~ lain Valley Woman's Club, Coordinating Council
:":and Historical Society . ..
BESIDES the chamber award, Mrs. Kruken-
berg was also honored this year by the Girl
Scouts. South Coast Junior Women's Club,
Orange County Children's Home Society, Orange
County Board of Supervisors, West Orange Coun-
ty Volunteer Bureau and Fountain Valley's
highest citizen award.
She was also honored by the Fountain Valley
Cultural Arts Committee and Bicentennial Com·
mittee.
Mrs Krukcnberg rt>ceived a "Volunteer Ac·
t1vist " award at the Los Angeles Music center
Only 11 of these honors, sponsored by Broadway
Department stores and Germaine Monteil
Cosmetics, were given in Southern California.
She was the only Orange County resident to re·
ceive ont>.
Capping the list of her 12 awards in 1976 is a
plaque fro m the Los Angeles Board of
-'Super\'JSOrs for a 81ccntannial F1ower picture.
Mrs. Krukenberg admitted 1976 will be a
tough act to follow .
Jn Long Beach and Norw1tlk, Mrs
Krukenberg said she always :.eemed to keep
busy leaching catechlsm, working with the
Parent·Teacher Assoc1auon. Red Cr~s. Com-
munity Chest, Women's Club or Camp Fire
Girls.
SHE AND HER husband, Alvin, and three
daughters have shared In her work. Alvin
Krukenberg, who owns a pump and well supplJes
business, bas served as a Fountain Valley
honorary police chief, school trustee and plan·
ning commissioner.
The Krukenbergs said they moved to their
ranch-style home in f'ountain Valley at 17351
Magnolia St. for reuremenl. But neither Mr. nor
Mrs. Krukenberg shows many signs of slowing
down.
"We moved here beeau .. e Al liked the sea
breeze,'' said Mrs. Krukenberg.
But their former JS-acre ranch is now sur-
rounded by homes. Tamura Hisamatsu School
and the Fountain Valley First Baptist Church.
"WE WANTED our daughters to go to one
country school -Fountain Valley Elementary
School," she said "It was the only one in town."
Mrs. Krukenberg remembered, "I went to
PTA meetings and that's how I first started get-
ting involved. Then, PTA meetings always in -
cluded potluck dmners. Husbands and wives
came and it was more like town hall meetings m
the old days."
Margaret
Krukenberg
of Fountain
Valley has
won an award
every month
of 1976 for
her civic
involvement.
What's in a Bird?
Watchers Learn Sights, Songs
Saddleback College biologist Tom
Leshe is gearing up for another
1emester with the birds of Southern
Calllomia.
lo fact, he said, it should be a ban·
ner spring season for birdwatching
when his class gets into session Jan.
24.
Leslie said migrating R06s' Geese
and Arctic Terns have laid over in the
county's marshlands longer than
normal this year because of the un-
seasonably warm weather and clear
skies.
THE COLLEGE teacher developed
his birdwatching class to give area re-
sidents and students a chance to learn
how to recognize birds by their ap-
pearance and song. The class was an
instant hit when it premiered last
summer and this will be its first full
semester.
"Learning to recognize birds by
their song and call notes is one of the
most difficult tasks that confronts a
student," Leslie said. "Nevertheless,
it is especially important, because, as
a rule, over two-thirds of the birds re-
corded on a field trip a.re only heard."
To assist his students, Leslie has ar·
ranged to have a tape of bird songs
and calls av all able m thf' college
library al the audlo·visual desk.
.. We're trying to tum people on to
bird watching," he said. "It's a neat
pastime for the businessman and
anyone concernt.'d with ecology and
prolecUon of the environment.''
DURING T HE spri~ semester, the
class wlll me~l from 5·6 p .m. on
Tuesdays and Thursdays with a lab on
Saturday mornings for field observa·
lion or birds in their natural habitats.
Leslie will take his students to the
Tucker Wildlife Sanctuary in Mod·
jeska Canyon, to Upper Newport Bay
and other marsh and botanical re·
serves where birds can be observed.
The only neccasary equipment is a
pair of binoculars.
l'or Cl&'!~H1cd Ad
AC.~rlON
Cill J
0 :11ly Pilot
AD VISOR
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SHE SAID she had decided to go into "semi-
• retirement" in 1977.
~~~~~!ir~~~~~:t~~~~~~~~~~~lfREE! USE OF SPECIALIZED TOOLS!
•• Perhaps her biggest involvement will be or·
garuzat1on of Fountain Valley's 20th birthday
celebration.
But also on the List for 1977 arc a few personal
items Mrs. Krukcn~rg has been meaning to gel
around to.
"This coming year I'd like lo learn to play
the organ, read a few books, finish my scrap
books, join the Garden Club and go back to bowl·
ing," she said
This 1s what the civic leader calls "semi·
retirement."
"I've just completed my SOtl. year of volun·
teer work,·• she said. "I want other people lo re-
ceive these awards, too."
PUBLIC !'IOTKE
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L eutze 's famed
painting of
Washington
crossing the
Delaware
illustrates
the single
most critical
event in
U.S. history:
the saving
of the army
during 1776
Christmastime.
Sunday December ~6 1976
Save on developing
and printing your
Kodacolor film
OAILYPILOI AC
1776: Crucial Christmas AnyoJWfor 12 exp. roll
199 By UON McLEOD
Anoe:••'•' P..-eu Wrtltr
An American watching the col-
lapse of the Revolution m lhe eac-
Jy winter of 1776 called 1t "the
mos t h ellis h scene I ever
beheld," frozen bodies s huffling
along froie n roads, leaving
crimson evidence of their s uffer-
rng in the ice and snow.
An English olficcr surveying
the carnage m their wake saw
corpses "without s hoes or stock-
ings and several were observed
to have only linen drawers on.''
The living were little better
Their tents had been captured
and they slept on the ground.
They were "almost naked, dying
of cold, without blankets, and
ver y 11l -sup pl1ed with pro
visions.··
A VENGEFUL enemy napped
at their heels as they fled, beaten
and humiliated. They couldn 't
even d ig in and defend
lhemselv('s -their shovels and
picks had been a bandoned in
light.
John Bull laughed. saying the
Yanks ran hke frightened rab-
bits. And s ome did. When their
enlistments ('Xp1red at the end of
November. the Mary land and
New J ersey militia went home
a lmost l o a m a n. lt•av 1ng
Washington with fewC'r than J,000
troops lo face a llr1l1sh force four
times as big.
Washin~ton clrrw his ht1tlcred
army across tht' J>driwar<' Raver
and destroyed ;1 II lhi> b<ials ht·
co u Id n · t h id t· 0 11 th t' P c n
nsylvan1a s ide
"HE DID NOT appc<1r tn
despair and constantly showed
himself to his harassed and en
feebled army with a serene and
unembarrassed counlcnan t·e.
betraying no rears in himself and
in s piring others with con-
fidence,,, wrote LL John
Mars hall. the future ch1d
justice.
But something had lo be done
"I wiJl not d espai r,"
Washington said, and began
planning. He knew the enemy
was complacent, strung out from
New York to Trenton and settling
down to enjoy the Yuletide. lie
would find a weak spot and a l
tack it.
THE TARGET was the
Hessian brigade at Trenton. a
bloodthirsty band that had killed
more Americans than any other
force in the war.
Down lo the ferry tht!
A merican s marched and
boarded huge ore barges in a
blinding mid-winter s torm
Jagged floes of ice bounced
against lhe boats, drove them
from course and crushed poles
and oars.
The giant a rtillery com·
m ander. Henry Knox, directed
the operation. Fis he rmen-
soldiers from Marblehead,
Mass., manned the boats. Back
and forth the s huttle carried men
and guns, horses and supplies.
Midway across, th(' father of
his country turned in u tossing
vessel and told his portly chief of
artillery to .. shift yciur ar:w .
Knox, and trim the boat."
TWO OTHER units uttemphng
to cross at other poinL'i were de·
feated by the storm and ice, but
Washington made it, and sat on
the Je rsey s hore watching as the
s torm turned violent. lashing the
s truggling soldiers with raur,
snow, s leet and hail.
Brig. Gen. John Cadwallader
ordered a retreat and it took six
hours to get the advance units
back across the raver.
Meanwhile, Was hington 's
force upstream was completing
its crossrng with an tncredible ef-
fort.
They had started on Chnstmas
everung, but it was 3 a.m. before
they were over. Daylight would
soon be UPOn them , they could not
turn back without being dis-
covered and annihilated.
IT WAS CLOSE to 4 a.m.
befor<' the column began moving
the final nine miles to Trenton.
Washington had little hope left of
surprising the Hessians, who
would be awakenin~ from their
Christmas revels. But he pushed
on, hoping the blinding snow
would blind the e nemy as well.
It was broad daylight when the
Americans r eached the first
German pickets, and as the
Hessians Oed toward town shout-
1 n g a t a rd y alarm, l he
Amer icans fell after the m
screaming the battle cry of the
frontier.
Knox placed his cannon to
swee p Trenton 's two main
s treets. The infantry, with
powder enough to fire, sent a
vc!!0 y at the Hessians tumbling
out into the s now, then took re·
fuge 1n houses along lhe streets,
reprimed and fired from the win·
dows.
This most important battle
lasted only a few minutes. The
bewildered Hessians tried to ral-
ly, but finding their escape c ut
off, their commander fatally
wounded and themselves sur·
rounded by Yankee guns, they
threw down their colors.
"This is a glorious day for our
country,'' exclaimed Washington
as he directed tbe withdrawal to
the safe side of the Delaware.
Rattan Dining Sets ·• Wicker • Gas Logs
• Outdoor Aluminum Furniture • Fireplace
Equipment • Glass Top Wrought Iron Dinette Sets
SALE GOOD AT ALL FIVE LOCATIONS.
COSTA MESA w--... °"*" • o,. .. '0 n. ,.,.,,k HUNTINGTON llACH
1706 NIWPOIT IL VD. ORANGE 5140 IDINGll 146-1350
645·2400 204 W. CHAPMAN e 532-6791 COINIR Of S,.IHODALI & IDINOI• °""" .. _ -~ ... ti-••• 1 .. 1 M p1 ftM 10 .... fl'I. -• -twA, It .. .... 0,... ..... -.,..., ... , fl-..... IN
LAGUNA NIGUIL
MISSION VllJO
21162 CAMINO CA,_ITIANO t 4'S.1422 Off S-1Hep,., e Awwy ~ laJt
....,. ..... _M.~ ...... l-.1t...... ...,. ..... _ ..... __ ............ ...
SANTA ANA
1725 MAIN
543-121~
Tennis?
SAN l>I EGO <AP)
Eyebrows went up when
two visit o r s wi th a
Christmas gift of tennis
shoes a rri ved at the
county jail, which has no
tennis court.
20exp. roll
299
Inside the shoes, in·
tended as gifts to an un·
named inmate, jaile rs
said they found $200
worth of heroin.
YOU MUST BE SATISFIED
WITH YOUR PICTURES
OR YOU DON'T HAVE TO
ACCEPT THEM. Our Sal1~l;ictiM Guarantf'C' LOVE'£ MOR LEAVE .EM
The two men identified
as Edward Sottak, 31,
and Elmer Hall, 27, were
booked for in vestigation
ol smugg l1 n~.
transporting a n d
possessing heroin
Bingo Voted
LOS ANGELES (APJ
-The Los Angeles City
Council has dec ided to
let voters decide whether
they want play bingo for
charitable purposes. By
a vote or 11lo4, the coun-
cil placed enablin g
legislation on the April 5
municipal ballot.
•
NOTICE TO GROUPS AND INDIVIDUALS WHO MAY BE
AFFECTED BY OR INTERESTED IN THE CONSTRUCTION
OF FACILITIES OF A WASTEWATER PROJECT BEING
PROPOSED BY THE ALISO WATER MANAGEMENT
AGENCY IA WMAJ
The Board of Directors of the Ahso Water Management Agency {AWMA)
cordially invites you to attend and participate in a public hearing on a Supplemental
Project Report. Phases II and Ill. Sludge Handling and Inland Wastewater Treatment
Facilities; and a Supplemental Environmental Impact Report for Phases II and Ill of
Sludge Handling and Inland Wastewater Treatment Facilities. The public hearing will be held as follows:
Date: January 19. 1976
Time· 3:30 pm -6.00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. -10:00 p.m
Place Niguel Hills Junior High School
29071 Paseo Escuela
Lag11M Niguel. CA 92677 (Exit Crown Valley Pkwy
on Chapar&sa -school marked with sign
The purpose of the hearing is to discuss the Supplemental Project Report and
the Su pplemental Environmental Impact Report to evaluate the effects of
wastewater treatment and disposal facilities to serve the AWMA area. AWMA
encompasses approximately 43.000 acres and includes the City of Laguna Beach.
the Los Alisos Wat er Distnct. the South Coast County Water District (formerly the
SOuth Laguna Sanitary District), the Emerald Bay Service District. the El Toro Water
District. and portions of th e Irvine Ran ch Water Distri ct and the Moulton-Niguel Water District. .
In general, the area served by AWMA includes the Aliso Creek Watershed and
portions of the Salt Creek and Laguna Canyon drainage basins. and areas tributary thereto.
The Ahso Water Management Agency (AWMA) was formed in 1972 for the
purpose of i mplementing the State's Basin Plans as mandated by t he
Porter-Cologne Act. The facilities proposed by the Phase II and Ill project report are
designed to correct problems associated with insufficient treatment plant capacity.
ina1'equate solids handling facilities. unacceptable effluent quality. and
unsatisfactory and inadequate land disposal
· To correct these problems. AWMA has been directed by the State Water
Resources Control Board to construct a regional wastewater treatment system.
Two ma1or alternatives for construction of these facilities were considered in the
Supplemental Proiect Report and Environmental Impact Report.
Alternative1 A (Modified) provides for decentralized treatment facilities and ocean disposal at a total cost of approximately S34.000.000.
" Alternative 2H provides for centralized treatment facilities and ocean disposal at a total cost of approximately S32.000.000.
Alternative .1 A (Modified), though more costly, appears to be the apparent best
alternative because it provides more opportunities for wastewater reclamation '
qctivities in the inland areas and has the least adverse effects on the environment.
A Supplemental Project Report prepared by Boyle Engineering Corporation
and a Supplemental Environmental Impact Report prepared by the Center for
Planning and Research are available for your study and review at the following locations:
Moulton·Niguel Water District
El Toro Water District
City of Laguna Beach, City Hall
Emerald Bay Service Distri ct
South Coast County Water Oistnct
Irvine Ranch Water District
Los Alisos Water District
Orange County Environmental Management Agency
Laguna Beach Public Library
University of California -Irvine Library
Orange County Chamber of Commerce
Alexander Bowie. Attorney at Law
Orange County Public library-SOuth Laguna Branch
Orange County Public Library-Mission Viejo Branch
Copies of previous AWMA Project Reports, EIR's. and EIS are available for use
as a reference at the office of the Allso Water Management Agency, 27500 La Paz
Road. Laguna Niguel. California.
Should you have any questions or desire further Information or copies of the
Supplemental Project Report or EIR. please contact the Aliso Weter Management
Agency, 27500 La Paz Road, Laguna Niguel, CA. 92677. (714) 831 -2464: or Mr.
Dwight Schroeder. Boyle Engineering Corp., 1501 Quail Street. P.O. Box 3030,
Newport Beach. CA. 92663. (714) 752-0505.
It is respectfully requested that all comments relating to the Supplemental
Project Report and the Supplemental Environmental Impact Report be made
available to the Aliso Water Management Agency, as well as its Member Agencies,
its staff and consultants. by malling them to the Aliso Water Management Agency,
27500 La Paz Road. Laguna Nlguel. CA. 92677, wfthln 15 days of the date fa the Public hearing.
C4r1 J. Ky'T'lla, Chairman
Aliso Water Managemont Agency
,
\
t JI.JG DAILY PILOT Sunday, Oee.mber 26 1978
Get the best after-Christmas gift of all-
b1g savings on important items for you
and your home. Like easily installed.
top-quality insulation ahd furnace
f 1lters. They assure comfort, con-
serve fuel and keep heating bills
lower. And with heavy rains ex-
pected this time ot year. new
gutters are certainly in season
We have plenty on hand.
Talk 1t over with our home prod-
ucts spec1altsts. And while
you're here. look around
our other departments.
You'll see that the holi-
days may be over. but
the savings are just
beginning.
You car. never have enough of them
1 h"y re 10.1<:iet.l v.11-, o ""''' :'1"0 ria~e m::i1e tt1an
• N•CC tnr. i.r .. QI sqra;ird (1!'h"•31 OlJrp )SP
t:ta•tc1 "S You II r r>PrJ ple"'V of tnem tor Ch11stmas
1 JY'> a,,:l 'll'1er DJ""' f O"wl'•P\'l 1)1fls C ilnd D s•1es
• p IC~S ol 2 '.'c jf' s e.ic? ',I ti02 M
·1ouR CHOICf Rll( 0 VAf' lffAVY
D'JTI SUP£R Cf Lt 'JATTlR1/
Rel} qgc
68c
Mood maker, energy saver
t .t•
II Ii :011 f ''fl f10N
/,,,t I CJ J.O.' 1
p,,"J 4 9q
2.88
Trash stasher
Gt.1!.h your each,.. ol tra•.11 1n lh1s slurdy
cial11an1100 •.tP!'l lril'!h c.1n Desoqncd to stand up
to thl' wPe~ty billlfJ• n'l lrom the ·san1ta1ton
ronri1nrer' Sn11q httini-1 ton ltrr.ps odors "'
wandPrino dO'l • 'hit 30 q;illon Model 1!J f T
\.ALVAN/lfD TRA;,11 CAN
Rc'J 8 41)
6.88
Layered for strength
Plywood is a tough, du1able wood p1oduct that s
essential to many do 11-you1sell pro1ects
Use •I to1 cabinets tables a dollhouse. furniture.
hundreds of things "'"-"""
Sanded. shop grade plywood 4 • 11 8' K :y. ".
SANDED SHOP PLYWOOD.
Reg 14.99
11.88
FURNACE FIL TEAS
1 '', assorted sizes.
Reg. 59c each
48c each
ODD
ODD DOD
Get storage problems off your chest
A•1<l tn.o one ol thesP sioraqe chests Sturdy
c:.irdboard storaqc chl'sts pret11ed up with a
pr1ntNJ pa1tP1n Easy 10 assemble
yours,,lf Cnoosea2<1x18 x 11 ·
all P•i•P'lse chest. or a
• 'I > 1? ~Ii under t>ed ches1
Models • P07 A.
PU07A
YOUR CllOIC[
AM( R/CANA STORACC CHLS1
flP'l f 49
98c
A five year bright Idea
These bulbs last 5 years under normal usage (..___
and they come 1n 40. 60. 75or 100 watt sizes. '('" =
with an 1ns1de frost to give a sofl,
non glare light ~
5 YEAR LIGHT BULBS. _A ,
Reg 29c
19c
Cold facts about your car
Ant1lreeze 1s in season But •l's also one of the best
ways to protect your car all year 'round. because
11 s a summer coolant as well So steel< up on lhe
t•nest In gallon containers
DOWOARD ANT/fREEZE.
Reg. 4 69
3.48
The great pretender
With partrcle board panels you can pretend that
they're anything you want them to be Paint them
to a rich ftni1h, 11110 them. enamel them; or do a
smooth wallpaper rob .. all at a price that
won't put a dent In !tie budget 4' x 8' x Yl ".
PARTICLE BO!tRD PANELS.
Reg. 4.99
3.88
Ward & Harrington
G1rden Grove
7707 Garden Grove Blvd.
537-9571 or 893·6523
Open Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 9
Sat. & Sun 9 to 6
\
Fullerton
301 So. State College
870-0050
Open Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 9
Sat. & Sun. 9 to 6
Costa Mesa
1275 Brtatol
556·1500
Open Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 9
Sat. & Sun. ~ to 6
I
Orange
324 West t<atena
532·2506
Open 9 to 6 every day
' e• P'..
• 1n
KRAFT FACE INSULATION
31/2 "x15"x56',
GALVANIZED GUTTERS
10' section, model :t4K
Reg. 2.69 each R-11 , 70 Sq. Ft.
Reg. 10.49 1.58
6.88
31/2 "x23"x55'1 O",
R-11, 107 Sq. Ft.
Reg. 16.49
10.88
6"x1 S"x32',
R-19, 40 Sq. Ft.
Reg. 10.39
6.88
6"x23"x32',
R-19, 61.33 Sq. Ft.
~eg. 15.89
12.88
One leas thing to worry about
Have extra keys made for the car, the house. or
almost anything else that locks. So 1f a key
happens to get lost. you won't be Just bring 1n
any standard size key requiring a single cul
Our experts will cut 11 with perfect accuracy.
SINGLE CUT KEYS .
Reg. 59c each
38c each
I did it myself!
Now you can tnstall a beauf1lul Armstrong floor
and take p11de 1n saying • I did •1 myself " 11 s
easy and economical with Armstrong Place 'N
Press hies. Lots of exciting colors and patterns
Each tile 1s 12"' x 12·. .--.=--~~
ARMSTRONG PLACE 'N PRESS 1/LE,
29c each
Solldvarue
Ready-mixed concrete Is easy to use. 1usl add
water! For foundations. curbs. patios, and posts.
To patch large holes use concrete glue lo bond
new concrete to old.
CONCRETE, 60 LB. BAG,
Reg. 1.49
98c
Go on a redwood bender
Redwood bender stoct.. •s 1neal for a woven
IPnce. also uselul as a d1v1<ler botwcon gras'!
and ga1den, as a basis tor forms for concrete
man.y things. 3".
RtDWOOD BENDCR BOARD,
Reg. 8c hn fl
Sc lln. ft.
Sal• end• O.C. 31.
CloHCI New YHt'a D91.
Open 'tll 4 New Year'a 1¥9.
ad
..,,. .. _
I
I
I
t
I I
I
I 1
I
I
1 -·
DAIL y PILOT A I J
•.
The more tools the ·merrier J •
1.38
I
..
A.
1.88
8 .
1.88
c.
2.88
0.
· 2.88
E.
. '
Want some addition• to that tool box you received last
Chrl1tma1? Or maybe you just need extra tools. Either
way, we have the beat you can buy. Any good
do.lt-youraelf er can tell that at a glance.
A. STANLEY SURFORM.SHAVER
For wood. plastic, alumlnum Won't clog
Model #21-115.
Reg. 2.59
Sale1.38
B. STANLEY POCKET KNIFE
S1a1n1esa s1eel. Tops for carving, cutting,
whlllhng. S1ore e>11ra blades in h1ndle.
Model #10-049.
Reg. 3.19
Sale 1.88
C. OISSTON CHALLENGER II
HAND SAW
Durable enough for workshop or camping
26', 8pt.
Reg. 3.49
Sale 1.88
D. DISSTON NEST OF SAWS
W11h blades for circular. doco1atlve &
curved culs. Model #102
Reg. 5.99
Sale 2.88
E. STANLEY PUSH DRILL
Bores small holes In wood, plaster board.
soft me1al W1lh J~; po1n1 Model #QJ-049
Reg. 4.99
Sale 2.88
F. YOUR CHOICE USM POP
AIVETOOL OR THERMOGRIP
GLUE GUN
Your choice of two types ol bonders
Models J:K104, 203.
Reg. 5.19 to 7.79
Sale 3.68
3.68
F.
3.88
G. YOUR CHOICE STANLEY
CLAW OR RIP HAMMER
Convenient 16 OL slzo with wood handle.
Models .It HI 11'/z. H121 y,,
Reg. 7.09
Sale 3.88
H. LUFKIN 50' STEEL
TAPE MEASURE
Easy reading, llghtwelght. Model •so.
Reg. 6.99
Sale 3.48
I. 1 O" CRESCENT WRENCH
With sohd grip for all 'round use.
Model JtACl 10.
Reg. 9.19
Sale 4.58
J. ARROW STAPLE GUN
Fo1 lacking, upholslery. ~·and J<.· staples.
Model #JT -21.
Reg. 9.29
Sale 4.88
K. STANLEY 20'
TAPE MEASURE
With l/•" blade. Locks to hold lape at any
length. Model •PL-320.
Reg. 10.49
Sale 5.48
L. WELLER SOLDERING
GUN KIT
W11h 3 copper tips. wrench. flux. brush
soldP.nng aid tool. solder coil
Model .it8200 PK
Reg. 18.49
Sale 9.88
9.88
..
L.
5.48·
K.
4.88
J.
4.58
I.
3.48
Ward & Harrington
Garden Grove
7707 Garden Grove Blvd
537·9571 or 893-6523
Open Mon thru Fri 9 to 9
Sat & Sun 9 to 6
Fuller1on
301 So. State College
870-0050
Open Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 9
Sat. & Sun 9 to 6
Costa Mesa
1275 Bristol
556-1500
Open Mon thr\I Fri. 9 to 9
Sal & Sun. 9 to 6
Orange
324 West Ketella
532·2506
Open 9 to 8 every day
•
Sale end1Dec.31.
Cloaed New VHr't Day.
Open 'tll 4 New Year'• Eve.
...
/
'
~
'
,
;
• '•
'.
. -. -.
..
I I
,,
Now Directing
Internationally known actr ess Jeanne
Morea u , who is directin g the film
"Lumiere" (Light), d.Lscusses her work in
a two-part inter view beginning at 3:30
p.m -tod ay on Channel 28's ··woman"
ser ies.
Buyers Storm
London Shops
By STAN DELAPLANE
For tw o months London has been storm ed
by French, Be lgians and Germans buying
everything in sight and staggering back
home with the loot.
The slipping Englis h pound turned all
England into ;1 bargain basement. "The
Continental shopping m ar auders," one Lon-
don p aper called them. It la mented that
•·the Eng lis h Channel which s topped
Napoleon and Hitler has become no better
than a s1.x-inrh moat."
German trav<.•l agents sold weekend s hop·
ping tours with maps showing the best
b<.1rgc..11n ston•s. Germany-England com.
parat1vt• prin•s.
The American tourist benefits: A posh
holl'I room ov<'rlook1!1g Hyde Park cost $48
la!>t year Today il"~ $33.40.
CONTINENTAi, nl'wspapers printed
price lists. '"A 24 piece dinner service: Lon-
don. S:JO: Paris. S.5.5, Brussl'ls, $.57; Bonn,
$70."
P;irkccl frrr1t•s wt•n• arn,·ing every 40
minutes in Calais. D1sch;.1rgmg Frenchmen
loaded with cvt•rythrng from cashmeres to
rcfrq:~t·rators. French Customs people
seemed to he lnoking the other way. :\obody
was paying dut~
Paris nc-. .. s pap<'r" s~ud 10.000 French cars
made the Channel crossm/.! on the long
J-• Arm1st1ce Day W('.'t'k<.•nd
· ..
.
'
.. .. . . . ·
SF.Ll-'RIOGE'S th<.• \li.ln s of fa!-oh1ona-
blc Wc•st End said sail'.., \\·ere up 50 per
cent over last Christmas .. Four of everv HJ
shoppers art• forc1gnt•rs ·· ·
The £hl\ Fern· bct\.\-CC'O Pans and London
is SS~ round lrq; A gocl<i manv French took
th<" Night Ferr). It costs l\.\tC<.· as much but
lhere·s no change from boat lo tram on each
s1dc uf the Chann('(
It 's a boat t min ancl you sleep all the way.
Wake up in London. fresh and ready to at-
laC'k tht• shop..,
WE Wl·:NT do\.\n to ~cc the Boat Train
lea' t• \'1<:toria ~tat ion Lot of people already
unv. rapping p ackagt•s (;loating over their
buys Sht•ll;.ind s\\Catcrs. KOJak Kits. York
h ams and 1.irs of ('orn1sh humbugs. (Kojak
Kit with Mmgla"M''-· hadgc, warrants, sub-
po<•nJ , hanctruffs and lol11pop. S4 .95 >
I l<irrod -.. Sl'lfridge's. Marks & Spencer -
UH' IHggtl'" \\crc gC'ltang the bulk of the
bus m1•ss I lo\\ muc:h 1t brought Britain is
still ht·1ng t•..,ltmatt'<I SlOO m1l11 on 1s one
cuc•s ...
A Toun ... t Authority man quoted in The
Times · "Thn have gon<.• mad Wr are find -
ing al d1ffirult to J!C'l arrommod<1t1ons ··
SOME SllOPPF:RS were only going as far
as the Channel ports Shopping and rushing
home with hundlcs from Bntam.
Dover a nd Folkestone shops brought
down qu1ck·salc items -refriger ators and
ste reo SC'ts as fast as they could he
shipped. Stereos in Oovcr. S280; Paris. $.140:
Brussels, S350, Bonn. S400.
Thoug h thC'rc'll be u slowdown from
Christmas. Lo ndon merchants expect a
steady flow of buyers for som e time.
A director said . "There is a price lag
b<.'for c things start going up. The Continen-
tals will take advantage of it while it lasts."
0."'
TUE BRITISH VaJue Added Tax (a sales
lax > is eight percent. none on food, 12 on lux-
ury items. Francc·s are tops 33 percent.
Belgium i6 25 and Germany's 11.
A foreigner -if he wants to take lime and
trouble -can get the British VAT refunded.
Few people did that in the Chris tmas rush.
But they probably will now that the big gold
rush h as quieted down.
A French girl, loaded down on the Boat
'frain: "I spe nt every franc I had. My boy
frie nd will meet me to help carry the
packages. And it's a-good thing. I don't have
money for a taxi\"
Though they don 't car e much for
Germans, London shopkeepers prefer them
to the French. A West End specialty shop
woman 'Said: ·'The Germans at least are
behaved. The French and Belgiums are
savages. They scream and slap each other
and fight oYer the merchandise .''
The London weather: Splendid. A brisk 36
degrees al noon. The doorman at the Savoy
is wearing earmuffs.
--·
After
Christm
SAVE s10
SENSATIONAL SAVINGS
AND POWER! REALISTIC ®
AM-FM STEREO RECEIVER Reg. 259.95
vi -•m•-••-··---• --· --.. ----. ,, , ('
I
I
159~~~
If ,,
"',1 :.J
9 FUNCTION CALCULATOR
Reg.1495 24.95
65-616
Performs souare root sign change.
percent and more1 Fully addressable
3·key memory enables two calculations
al once Large c:a~y-to·read · 01g1tron"'
display
LOWEST PRICE EVER!
SAVE 33%
J:. __ _
• 10 01ffer11nt [lectron1c Pro111c1JI
• Requires fVo Toots! E11syl
• S11fe Bettery Powered Clfcu1tsl
SCIENCE
FAIR ~
20-IN-1
LAB KIT
Reg.
14.95
•Full 10·20.000 Hz Resp0nsef
SAVE UP TO 20%
ARCHER ELECTRONIC SOLDER
CAT NO. SIZE GAGE REG • SALE
6-4-001 0 S9 oz . 16 69 .59
64-002 1 SI oz 16 1.19 .99
64-004 4 21 oz 18 289 2.49
6-4-00S 2 64 Ol 18 2 69 2.29
SAVE s14oso
COMPLETE STA-77A
STEREO SYSTEM
Separate llems
Price ... 439.80
38% slashed off regular price of our
made-by-us ST A-77 A Ours randing fealures
include FM muting. magnetic phono inout.
tape monitor Perfect Loudness~. 18 watts
per channel mm RMS ., 8 ohms. 20-20.000 Hz
~· o 8~'o THO' Genuine walnut veneer caset
Theres only one place you can find 11 ..•
Radio Shack.
s299-lri ··-• Re11/is tic AM FM S-ite Receivttrl ~;l':llP'~WJ
• Two MC· I 000 Spu•er Systems'
• Re11t1st1c: l.AB·l4 Changer!
CB BLOCKBUSTER
SAVE UP TO s100
Prices slashed to lowest levels
in 16 years! All 23 channel CB
rad ios in stock reduced to
make room for new 1977 models.
Mobiles. base/mobiles .. phone
I type_s .• Tt:ie ·One Hander "". SSS.
all cut so low it S·T·A-G·G·E-R-S
the imagination! All models
not availabl.e at every store.
HURRY while supply lasts!
SAVE UP TO SAVE UP TO SAVE
560 303 503
"PETT ABLE
PORTABLES" GIANT SHACK rM
AM-FM STEREO
RECORD/PLAY
8·TRACK
SAVE s10
ARCHER R)
CB ANTENNAS
TWIN
TRUCKER
MIRROR
MOUNT
Reg. 34.95 ~k l 24~! i' • TWIN TRUNK
~ MOUNT
~9~s 19!~
AM RADIOS TOY CLOSEOUT!
Reg. 9.95 TO 12.95 SYSTEM e.....__.e
695 ~·
TO t
Buy toys now and· SAVE ..
for birthdays. special
occasions. next Christmas!
Huge assortment of sensible
toys reduced as much as
one-half off regular price!
Hurry. for the besl seleclton!
Reg. 199.95 ~ Delun1 RHltsfte
M odul11tre !> 8At 8951~~~
All Models
Nol Available Al All Stores.
Reg.
• SIH p Sw11c:h! 34,95
• Snooze 811r'
CUT 53050
REALISTIC
WALNUT VENEER
FLOOR SPEAKER
Reg. s49 79.50
139~~ • Two M•tc:hed Sped•r
Systems'
• T11pe Record Level Meters/
REALISTIC
AM-FM CLOCK
RADIO
CUT 20%
5Y4' AUTO SPEAKERS
SURFACE MOUNT
Reg. 14.95 1195
PAIR 12-1844 PAIR
FLUSH MOUNT
• Bus. Treble. P11use Controls/
SAVE 5 10
ELECTRONIC
AllTO ALARM
SYSTEM
Rog. 34.95
64-006 1 64 or. 20
64-007 112 lb. 16
249 1.99
J.39 2.99 40·1982
• Big 8" Wool1Jr ind 3~ TwHte"
Reg. 24.95 •995
PAIR 12·1845 I PAIR
• Gu11rds ¥our Cer,
C11mper or Trelfer
From Th11lf/ •
SAVE12% CUT 25%
7 -DELUXE r--·-=--:::::-== AUTO RECORDER
I I IGNITION ..,
HEAD
L. ---! KIT DEMAGNETIZER l .. ------------
Reg. 34!.~3 Roo. 5!~ 39.95 7.95
1 CUT33% -BATTERY
~-POWERED
w FLUORESCENT
LANTERN
Reg. 995
14.99 8J·2731
•
I -1~
..
I -.;j
SAVE10%
MICRONTAHJ
2-SCALE
BATTERY
TESTER
Reo. 895
9.95 22-030
• Al10 Test1 Me,cury
Bettert.1f
SAY "NO" TO INFLATION! RADIO SHACK'S LOW 1976 PRICES ARE ON AVERAGE WITHIN 1 % OF OUR LOW 1975 PRICES!
COSTA MESA
• llOH .. .,.,-t ll•d.
71 ... 42-ISJO
• 27H H.-11•4.
71 .. 14MUl
CORONA DEL MAR
• )427 L Peclfk C:Mtf Hwy.
71 .. 675-6010
FOUNT AIM VALLEY
• ,....... V.ltty Pl•&•
ltl20ll'Mltlwt1$1. ,, .. ,u.u11
• 170H~
714-141121
• '""........, 11•4. 714-fZt-OU
I A TANDY CORPORATION COMMNY
' I
HUHTINGTON lliCH
• lt41 A,_. A•t.
714-HZ.HOJ . "" w-•.,.. 7 t 444z.t 429
LAGUNA llACH • '64 M. ,_lfk c: ... 1 ....,,
114-4'7·1127
LAGUNA HIGUR
• lOlU Cre1111t Y..., l'lrwy •
714-f)t-IOfl
MISSION VIEJO
• n1001.,_.... l'liwy.
714421-4ll2
NEWltORT IEACH
• )427 Peclfk C:Mtt Hwy.
71447MotO
• 2700 W. c:-1 H•J·
~\ Miit S.--1
714-44J.O" 2
SAN CLEMENTE
• 1141..ttilfC.-..a ...
714-49).4424
TUSTIN
• UOJ4 ...,.,_..lt•4.
114-t>l-4112
SANTAANA
• JfSJ s.. '"'"' 1-... s..ef
MllCArflllw. ~ C.Ce'tl
71 .. SSMJSO
• 2101 s.....-SI.
71 .. 545-0405
• 140 W. 17 .. Sf. . ......,,....,
71M47·'70f
WISTMINSTER
• IUH• ...... tt
714-llt.t4f0
• Wut I lfarW
714ol94-4100
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SAM JUAN CAPISTIAHO
• Ul61C.....c:.,.._
714-49M424
fWCES MAY VAP.Y AT INDMOUAl ST~H
-
t
I
I
I
,, COuntri's LihFaries Go by the Book
t··
I
And by Films, Art, Story Hours .• e
Story hours, such as the one led by Cati
Lewis, above, start area residents on life-
times of reading for which County !-ibrarian
Harry Rowe Jr., right, provides materials.
YOU DAILY PILOT
SECTION 8
5unday December 26. 1976
o.tllr Piiot Pllotoby lltcll4rd IC-•·
8'orlea by LAURIE KASP E R Of IM D•lly P'llel ~tf
Within the next few weeks. of-
ficials of the Orange County
Public Library expect to put
their millionth book into clrcula·
Uon.
It's JUSt one mdicallon that
there's much more in area
libraries than meets the eye.
Visitors to any one of the
branches won't see these million
books. They're scattered in 26
libraries and three bookmobiles.
Still, the county's reading resi-
dents may get any of the million
and more
IN THE COAST area, Newport
Beach and Huntington Beach
have their own libraries and book
collections. Additionally, books
in the libraries at community col-
leges and UC lrvine are availa-
ble to the public.
And card holders can borrow
books from any public library in
the county (except Buena ParkJ
through a county cooperative
called the Santiago Library
System.
County Librarian Harry M
Rowe Jr. considers the coopera·
t1on one of the most notable voca-
tional developments in the past
20 years.
With the county since 1968 and
working in Fullerton for 11 years
prior to that. he recalled that
area l\brarles wi"re "pretty
much a closed scene" in the past
"When J firs t came to the coun-
ty, we said hello to each other but
there were no formal or informal
relationships," he said.
NOW THE nine staffs in
Anaheim, Fullerton, Huntington
Beach, Newport Beach, Orange
City. Orange County, Placentia,
Santa Ana and Yorba Linda work
together on programs and
services.
This cooperation. Rowe said,
provides better service for the
available money
Rowe s aid another significant
change is the development of im·
proved quarters.
Most libraries formerly were
dark, inadequate, poorly laid out
storefront operations, he said
Seek LOCNET and Ye Shall Find
Just the name. LOCNET. tn~
gers thoughts of a super spy out
lit.
Its task. too. can be mystcriou!>
and intriguing.
Once, LOCNET !'talf member"
investigated the federal govl'rn
ment 's 1943 t>xperimcnt on mak
ing naval ships disappear.
Another time. they providNI
materials that helJX'(f Rockwdl
Autonetics d evelop a com
puterized hngerprint 1denttlica
tion system.
AND. STILL .mother t1m<'.
they found out about the ·•forbid·
den stitch "
Bul LOCNET -an acronym
for Libraries of Orange County
Network -1s , in reality. an ex
tended reference service. It~
three librarians try to answer thl'
que5tions that s tump local re
ference librarians
Sandra Gle1c hmann, libranan
at the Marintrs branch 1n
N<'wport B<'ach. h•-;tif1ed that
LOCNET ~<'ts some "doom·~··
for questions
Ninety to 100 question~ a
month, Is a usual workJoad at·
cording to J oy Hasting!\, ad
mlnistrative head and reference
coordinator of LOCNET.
She said about 90 percent are
answered with resources an the
~arious public, private, college
and university libr aries that ar e
mt.>mbcrs of tht• conh.'<leration.
ADDITIONALLY, she s aid, lhe
servic<', which is funded with a
federal grant, gets about 2.600 in·
terlibrary loan requests each
month Approximately 85 per-
cent oflhcsC' are filled locally.
But if the answer can't be
found m the county, she said,
"We go worldwide to try and
locate what our patrons are look-
ing for "
By teletype or mail, she said,
they've gotten many books and
a ns w ers fro m libraries 1n
Canada and Engla nd But
they've also gone to Paris,
Russia and South Africa
Much or their work IS for stu·
dents and (acully mt'mbers
working on research projeds,
!\he said.
A student of design needed to
know about the "forbidden
stitch " Abo known a!-. the Pek
mg stitch. 1l turned out to Ix· a
form of Chinese embrrnderery so
mtncate chJldren went bhnd do
mg 1t Now they arc forbidden
from using 1t
LOCNET ALSO helps do re
st'ar<'h for engineers and scicn·
tJsts at various county manufac-
tunng firms
For Autonetlcs. the librarians
obtained reprints of articles from
1890 English and Scottish
Got a problem'' Tlll'n wnt1· tn Pat Dunn Pat tt'ill rut red lope. qctt1ng tlw
answers and action 1/(JU rwrd tn solve rnrqu1tres ~ qovernrncnt and lnm
nes1. Moil your qur.o;i1ons to l'al Dunn AL Your Serv1C'f'. Orange Coast Da1l!l
Pilot, P O Bor 1560.Costa Mcs<J. CA 92621i. Include your tt'iephnr1t number.
The column appcor.,daily except Saturdays .
...
.... ,..,,,, Fh ...... Sdll Paw Debt•
DEAR PAT: When my wife and I retired In 1973, we had
some savings and were Induced to loan It to Challenoe Hom.s
Inc. of Glenwood, Minn. We purchased a debenture bond for
$800. Following our move to California, we purchased $2,000
more In bonds In the next 18 months. When I was contacted by
the Securities and Exchange Commlss'lon requesting In·
formation on my business with Challenge Homes, I wrote to thecom~y. A manresoondedthat I ~houldfl ll out the Ques-
tionnaire and not be alar med. Lest May, we sen\ In our semi·
annual Interest COuPOn to the Glenwood, M inn. bank tor pay-
ment, but received nothing. We wrote the company with no
technical Journals They also told
the firm's hbranan where he
could find out· of -print books on
fingerprints and fingerprinting
techniques which research scien-
tists wanted
A chef wanted to know where
he could find ice scuJpting tools
These tools usually are very
rare and very ancient. Miss
Hastings said But she was able
lo help the man through a Los
Angeles hotel chef who wrote to a
friend in Japan for a list of
manufacturers there.
STILL OTHER questions come
from people simply because they
are interested in the subJect.
Information on the naval ship
experiment was wanted by a
pers9" looking for two people
who had been in volved in lhe
project
Miss Has tings said they found
a book that said not only that
there was such an experiment
but that the ship actually did dis·
appear with people on 1t. These
people, according the book. later
tended lo re-appear and disap-
pear every so often.
"l guess it was a reaJ experi·
ment," Miss Hastings said. She
added, "The more you went with
it, the more fascinating it got "
LOCAL librarians, however ,
also gel interesting questions.
Mrs. Gleichma nn recalled
finding information for a Balboa
woman whose pet duck had
arthritis.
Another women, who was writ
ing a novel. wanted to know if
any buildings have a 13th noor
The librarian found that there
are two in Fas hion Island and s ix
in Los Angeles. Others, she said,
just skip 13 on their elevator but-
tons.
Authors often seek help from
the local ltbraries.
Librarians at the county's Mis-
sion Viejo branch are processing
more than 50 requests for a
patro n . ·'He 1s purs uing
anything. I think, that has ever
been written on stamps,'' said
Lou Martel. branch head.
Mrs. Gleichmann said it Is
quite common to get questions
from people in the midst of an
argument.
ONE WOMAN wanted to know
if a newspaper article had ever
appeared reporting that cows'
burping rel ea~ed harmful
hydrocarbo n s into the at-
mosphere.
The woman didn't even care
it if were true. Mrs. Gliechmann
said. She just wanted lo know if
such an article existed so she
could win an argument with her
husband.
luck, and r eceived no response regarding our November In-
terest coupon. We need this money for health care. Our in-
come I sonly S21Sa montti in Social Security.
W.M .,CostaMesa
You ere on• of thouuna Of lnvHtort In• comp•ny which hH
been charged by the gowemm• with ff.udulent •nd ~v•
prllCticet. Ch•llenge "°"'98 Inc., one of • number of tlmU8' ftfm•
owned by Lowell D. Kremer, • T ••at bualneuman, WH lnve ..... t-9d by the SIC. All but OM .,. purpof'ted to be nonprofit °'laftlae.
UOft• lh•t aupport about ID nur9lng home• In 10 •t•t••· TM 8EC h•• ~that funda lnvHted In U.... operation.a han '""dlvet1ed
fnto the profit-making Aasured Fund• and .-..ct for qu .. ttonebte
bUelneu trenaactlonL
At a reault of the llEC tutt, CMtMnge Ml~"-tM umbrella
company-declared benbuptcy uncMr Chapt.,U oftM ••'*"'*7
Act, Which allow a the comp9"J to reorganize In otdw to pay oft all or
moeC of Ht debt• to lhllt It may Nmatft In bualneH. Ouettlona 81ao
..,. ralaed about the method• uMd •NII the bond• to people Nice
~··· Kramer la an ordelned mfraleter In tM AIMfnbly Of God du'Ch end le the tPGMQrof ~oriented TV~ ACCOf'd.
Int to an SEC attorn-r. CMllenge ftolHt' HI••"*' called on r• Ntlk»u• angJH and •modon81 pttchee to Mtl bond• pftmarlly to tfd•·
ly pertone. The 81!C dehna thet tome *3.4 mlltlon In bond• --.
tOld In thl• manner.
Cltalfenge Hom .. ' lft"91Gn...., be able to recoup .a or pert of
tMlr lnvHtment through tM b8"kluplcy proceedlftge. To fll• •
d•m. wrlt• to the Benkruptcy CoUft, 1100 Comm•n:• St., OallH, TX
1UOJ.Ref•rtottteCtteN1ngeMtnlltrtMc•••·
Now. most are modem, com·
rortable facilities
In tht! last five or six years, the
county has been adding about
lwo new branches each year. In
another six or seven years. Rowe
expects the library's building
program will be completed.
Then, he said, the <'oncern wlll be
direeLM toward maintenance
THE TYPICAL city library
usuatly has a large main library
plus a few small branches. But
the county has only an ad·
minis tratl\•e office and branches.
While some people dislike the
d ecentralized syste m, Rowe
said, olhl'rs prefer it. These pc<>·
pie. he said, feel the community
library belongs to them and de-
velop a closer rclallonslup with
the staff
In urbanized areas of lhe coun-
ty, the librarian said. a branch 1s
located no more than three miles
from any person Now the focus
of the county 's building prog ram
is in lrvrne and south because 1t
1s "obviously th e newly emcrg
ing part or the county ''
SOON T H E Dana Niguel
branch will be open. A 30,000
square foot re~ional branch is
planned for Irvine Funds have
been budgeted so a library can be
built in the future at San Juan
Capistrano's civic center.
A new library is being con-
sidered for San Clemente. And ,
"way down the line." Rowe said,
there m ay be the need for
another librar y in Mission Viejo.
Also. architects arc working on
a branch to be bullt in El Toro.
If the county gets a federal
grant it has applied for. tlus pro-
bably will be the first public
library in the s tate to have solar
heating If it works well. Rowe
said, other such fac1lit1cs may be
planned.
IN NEWPORT REACll a fifth
branch is due to open in Newport
Center next fall.
And a new central library was
opened in Huntington Beach less
than two years ago
Visitors have come from all
over the country lo sec it, accord·
tng to Walter Johnson, cUy
librarian. He explained thal ~
checking In and out ol book& la
computerized, saving staff Unto
and making more accurate ,..
cords.
IN ADDITION, all of Hunt·
ington's books arc listed cm
mlcroCllm rather than tn tile
traditional card catalog. Now a.ll
a person has to do Is push a ~
ton to find the book he or she iS
looking for. ~
Some people may wonder
whet.her libraries are worth lb.o
public investment They pc6~
bably share the concerns of •
elementary student who ask~
an author r ecently if people sUJI
read.
The librarians answer, "Yes."
Last year, Newport Beach
Library which holds l68,967
volumes circul ated 650,248
books. records and other items.
Noting that their circulation
figures out to 10 p<'r city resident,
Tim Gregory, administrative
.aide, said. ··w e hold the record tn
Orange County for beini the
most well·rcad city."
J ohnson said fluntington
Beach has been running wtth a
<'1rcuJat1on r ate of 700,000 to
~.OOObooks a year.
AN D THE COUNTY libraries,
<1ccording to Rowe, have been
circulating close to rive milliQJ\
items a year for the last several
years. lie doesn't expect thJs
figure lo grow too much, nor lo
decline.
"l don't think we're a dying in-
stitution," Rowe said. "I just
w1sh there were a way to get
more understand~ng of. what we
can and dodo."
He said he 1s con!i1dering a sur-
vey of users and nonusers in the
coming year lo determine what
the library 1s doing or not dolng
to meet their needs.
But mos t libraries already
have moved beyond the task of
1ust lending books and answering
reference questions In an .-(fort
10 keep up with chunging needs
and interes ts.
Libraries have long shown and
loaned"f1lms but now, through lhe
Santiago Library System, cap-
<Set-LlflRt\RlES, Page83)
CUiiy Pllol Steff f'MI•
Joy Hastings, coordinator of LOCNET uses
teletype console to contact oth er branches.
WusaH Cheer? The Re~ip~"• Here
DEAR PAT: I'm having a New Years Eve ope~ouse and I would like to serve an ofd·fashioned wassail bo . I've
tooke~ all over for a recipe with no success. Can you cate
one for me?
H.E., Costa M esa
An authentic wHHll bowl call• for theH Ingredient•: 4 •mall
orange•, whole clovH, 3 bottfH (12 oz. tlze) ale, 3 cupa derk rum,
th cup auger and Ye teHpoon gtnver. Pr•hHt oven to 350F. Stud
u..-efed orangH wtth dovH aptced ~Inch epart. Place orang••
In thellow pan; bake, uncovered for 30 minute•. In a l•rv•
uuc.pen, combine ale, rum, auger and ginger; bring Juat to boll
Jng. ttlrrfng conttantly untll sugar fa dlHol~d. Piece hot orenge._
Ht punch bowl; pour hot •I• mixture over them. Serve hot, In punch
eupa. Thia recipe m•kes 15 punch-cup Hrvlnga.
T1l'O Percent l•pound Paw•etd'• l..a"'
DEAR PAT: What happened to the movement that wu-
urgfng our legislators to require that Interest be paid oO:.
hOme loan Improvement accounts? There was a lot of public":
ty about thfs some time ago, but I've heard nothing since.
T .T ., M ission Viejo
You "'Utt have mlaeed the newt thet th• State Leglalature hat
paHed • blll that wlU ,...ire financial ln•tltutlona to pay et l•Ht
two ,.ro•nl almpfe lntttett pet tnnum on home foln Impound ac-
count•. Thi• blll epo~ by Loult J. Pepen of Daly City, beeom ..
effective Jan. t , 1t77 .
--
I \
J DAILY PILOT
. WASHINGTON CAP) Buned
undl'r fl clump or sagebrush on
the Texu·Mexko border, a l.Uty
blue and white sensor delttt.1 a
roottaJI in the dtsert sand.
At a Border Patrol station a
• ilea away. a Upt n.abes
J'.nother potential Ulqal im-
anl is attemptJni to enter
nit.ed St.ate•.
e time out or three, be wUl
i.way with It.
· bout LS0,000 times a year,
rs ran1!ng from Vietnam
yar castoffs to sophisticated new
aaodels send out their electronic
ia\pulses along the 1,945-mlle
boundary between lhc United
sand Mexico. ln an estimat-
0,000 cases, there Isn't
h manpower to follow up th' •ignals, the Im migration and
Naturalization Service says
JIVJTll M EXJCO'S population
led to reach 8S million hy
, compared with SO million In
, the message as clear to
ard F. Chapman, the former
e Corps commandant who
s the Im migration Service.
You know what is going to
n, .. says Chapman. "They
going to come by the
,dllJtions."
The flow of illegal imrnlgranLc;,
wb.lch Chapman has called a
''silent invasion... arrects u s.
taxpayers who pay for services
they receive and U.S worker:.
whose jobs they may take.
Sund• December 29. 1178
Congress has been grappl·
Ulg with the problem for years.
without approving either pro-
J'.)05al. President Ford has nld
that "a blanket decision of am·
nesly . . when we have a good
mMy other people wbo are try-
ina to •et into the United Slates
legall>: would be a mlatue."
President-elect Carter sald 1n Ju-
ly he favors legitimate stat.us for
"thoce who ar e already here up
to a certain date" and heavy
penalties for future hiring ol ii·
legal immigrants.
LEGAL i mmigration as
restrlcled to 120.000 persons a
year from th e Wes t e r n
Hemisphere and 170,000 from the
rest of the world, about one-firth
o( one percent of the U.S. popula·
ti on. No more than 20,000 may come
from any one country. This
restriction applied only to the
Eastern Hemisphere until
Congress extended it as oC Jan. I,
1976, throughout the world.
The main effect oC the change
will be on Mexico, which ac-
counted for 45,000 of the 120,000
Western Hemis phere limit in
1975.
"There is not doubt in m y mind
thJs was a singling out or Mexico
In terms of trying to st.op the flow
or legal immigrants into this
cou ntry." says Manuel D.
Fierro, president or the NationaJ
Congress of Hispanic American
Citiiens.
Immigration-
What's Next?
' .... illegal aliens cost taxpayers
$13 billion or more per year in taxes
for welfare and other public services.
How large is the bucket?
The Immigration Service
estimates there are six million il-
legal aliens In the Un1ted States
and the total is increasing by
more than 250,000 a year. Many
immigration lawyers and immi-
grant groups dispute the figure.
Only about 866,000 were ap-
prehended last year, more than
500,000 of them al the border or
within 72 hours ot crossing it.
In an effort to get better data.
the Immigration Service has
commissioned a seven-part
study of the alien population. The
fi~t part. released in September.
showed that 500,000 fraudulent
entries were made in 1975 at 10
airports and 15 border stations
which were studied
be worthwhile for their people to
cooperate. 1t will glve us a data
base (or use in lobbying e((orts
ror amnesty ...
"It's only going to be a guess,"
says Ja c k Wasser m a n, a
Wash!neton lawyer and former
member of the Board ol Immi-
gration Appeals. "Maybe the
guess wlJI be a good one."
However IJl any illegal aliens
there are, their Impact on the
U.S. economy is a matter of dis-
pute. ,
"The commissioner ls going
around saying they take jobs
away Crom Americans," says
Wasserman. "All my experience
indicates the contrary is true. A
lot of aliens open up bwsinesses
and give Americans jobs. A lot of
aliens are t aking jobs that
Americans aren't quallried for or
interested in.''
them were makt.n~ more than \AX])ayers Sl3 blllton or more-~·
S2 SO an hour ) car In taxcis fM welfare and
"Allens come to get jobs." ••Y• other public aervlces.
tho retired M arine Corps In San Fnncl:.l'O 1n 1976. :.ays
general. "As long as they can Chapman, an Illegal 1mJTllgrant
continue to get jobs they are go was found with a $33,000 medical
mg to keep on comtng." blll wbk h hlld to be paid from
They come in various ways. public funda. In WasbLn&ton
In addition to the half mllllon state, 33 penone out ~one 1roup
or more who eluded •P· of ue apprehended held rood
prehenalon at border cro1sinas atamPf. Seventeen lived in aub
and lnternaUonal allporta) the aldlled hou1lne , 18 were on
Immt1ratlon Service has welfare and nlM were on both
•timated that 300,000 per year welfare and food ataml)I.
overstay vlaitors' visas and ON THE OTHEa elde of the
93,000 violate student vlsas ledger , spokesmen for imma-
Others are forel1n crewmen who grants s ay the lmmlarallon
Jump ahipln U .S.port.s. Service harasses leaal Imm•
SOME CONTRAcr fake mar-grants, violates suspects' rights
riagea with U.S. ciUzens to gel and keep fumllles waltina for
around immigration quotas years to be reunited.
Chapman says Immigration "These people are really
Service files show a case in which scared or the Im migration," aays
one woman married six men and Sonia Gutierrez, director or
her two daughters each married Washington 'a Program of
three. The women received $1,000 English lnstrucllon for Lalin·
permarriage. Americana. "Most ot them are
Others obtain fraudulent let-6Cared to death of the Immigra-
ters saying they have occupa-Uon . They have seen the way
tional s pecialties, such as they act."
Chinese cooking, which would en· A PETITION filed with the
title them to an immigration Supreme Court on behalf of three
priority. Chinese seamen charges that Im-
Raul Salinas. 14, arrested at a mlgraUon Service offlcen came
soccer game In Washington, to the Dallaa, Tex., apartment ol
D.C., in December and ordered two or them, Cheung Chan and
deported to El Salvador, told or Hung Hol Che, at 7:30 a.m. Jan.
crawling three miles through a 26, 1973, pushed open the door
drainage ditch at midnight and without permission and word-
then following a freeway into the leuly "ransacked the entire
United States. apartment by going through all
The Immigration Service says the drawers, all the desks. When
It has detected s muggling rings It comes to privacy," says the
A Gallup Poll conducl<.>d ror th(•
l mmlgration Service in 1976
sho~ed that more than one
Amencan 10 six thlnks the coun
try should accept no additional
immigrants ut all.
CHAP~1AN, WHO support~cl
the legislation , denied this was <
motive. He says the change w<1::.
designed to equaliie treatment or
immigrants from all parts or lhc
world.
THE SECOND phase, being
conducted by J A. Reyes /\s·
sociates of Washington, is de-
signed to rind out how many "ii·
legals" are In the country.
which solicit c lients deep in the men's attorney, David CarUner
CHAPMA N SAVS the figures inte rior of Mexil'o and other or Washington, "people are
refute this. Im migration Service countries slip thetn across the picked up olC the st.reel if they
Immigrant group:s seek am
nesty for those already in thl'
country illegally. Labor unions
and the Immigration Service
want crimina l penalties for
employers who knowmgly hire 11
legal entrants.
"We will be in the field count-
ing in the spring, u sing
community people who have
been selected and trained," says
Louise Warner of Reyes. ·•w e
will talk to community leaders
and explain to them why It would
records s how tha t 76 percent of border. The smugglers in some look like they are Chinese."
employable illegal aliens who cases provide lllklt documents. Both Wasserman and Carliner He conceded that by reducing
legal immigration, it might In-
crease the flow of illeeal aliens
from Mexico by as much as
20,000 a year, but dismisses this
as a ''drop in the bucket."
were located last year wer e credit terms and job placement rQentioned what Wasserma n
working when they were round. service. called "unconscionable delays in
Nearly two-thirds of those Once they arc in the coun-reuniting families. caused by a
employed were working \n light try. i mm I gr at ion offi c i a Is system which is supposed to
or heavy Industry. Over haJf of esUmate the illegal aliens cost catchlllegalaliensanddoesn't." -:;iiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij~
Favorite
Carol Born
In Austria
i\RNSDORF, Austria <AP> In this
winter-white Alpine Valley where
"Silent Night" was born more than a
century and a half ago, Christmas has
remained touchingly uncommerc1al and
the old customs frozen in time.
"I am sorry but I have asked lhC'
children a nd not one or them has ever
heard or ·Rudolph, the Red· Nosed Rein -
deer ' Is he very popular 1n your coun·
try?'' asked Frau Lehrcnn -school
mistt ess -O ttiliealgner. with an
apoldgetic smile.
SHJ: WAS standing at the same P<!n·
scra~hed wooden desk in the same two·
room volkschule where Fraru Gruber
had stood on Christmas Eve in 1818.
when the priest from nearby Oberndorf
asked ham lo compose a guitar accom
parument for a little poem he had Just
wntten.
It was an emergency. and Father
Joseph Mohr explained the dilemma
that to this day every Austnan child can
retell better than any Christmas tale
from Dickens. The organ had broken
down in St. Nikola's Church where
Gruber was organist and choir director
a s well as being schoolmaster In
Amsdorf The poorest of church mice,
'legend now adds, had eaten away at the
l!!ather bellows. Unless they cam e up
with somethin1c there would be no
Christmas musk• ut tht' midnight mau
111 Obendorf
The history mad<' that ni~ht by the
\lllage schoolmastt>r and the country
ntrate stall touches this quiet, unspoiled
valley with a m a1t1c that out-daulea the
starlight on the old onlon·dome churchea
Olld the fro!lt Olttenng in the windows of
the ornate. wooden-balcorued chaJeta.
IN THF. Tl~Y schoolhouse. Gruber"!!
cherubic features, baJd.lng and benJan,
bu~ down on lhe blond-haired children f~ the spot on the wall above the
bl.ltboard usually rutrved In
A.rlcan claurooms for George ·w~hlngton's portrait.
'CJ>ltairs, h1a bedroom, his wrltlna
' Aliens
Snow drifts over grave of Josef Mohr as a
passing villager pauses to look. Mohr,
who died a pauper, wrote the words to
'Silent Night' in 1818 when he was 26.
dealt. his spinnet, his heavy red plush
furn iture a nd t he hand-c arved ,
beautifully costumed wooden figures
that, as sacristan, he had charge or ar-
ranging around the village c reche, have
been lovingly preserved.
Here "Silent Night" is sung the way
Gruber wrote It, ln 'd' major for two solo
voices -his bass and Mohr's tenor -in
harmony with a children's choir and
backed up by a "aupfrigen," or "pluck
violin" as the guitar was then called.
F'rau AJgner had six boys and girls
"with the sweetest voices in the school "
singing the carol from house to house on
the SUndays of advent in faithful r ecrea-
tion ol tl\e Lallie choir Father Mohr hast!
ly assembled lo learn his words and
Gruber's Instant musk
At midnight mass on Christmas.
"Silent Night" echoes down the years
from the voice• or these children in the
litUe onion-domed church at Arnsdorf,
from a trained cholr and from operatic
soloists accompanied by Grube r 's
original 1uitar at thP "Silent Night
Chapel" ln Oberndorl on the site or old
St. Nikola's Church, washed away by
flood~ long ago. It comes rrom a full or-
chestra and the magni(iceol 1,600-pipe
memorial organ in the parish church at
Hallein, where Gruber died. A congr eaa-
Uon of skiers and tourists slng it at the
winter resort oC Wagrain. further down
the valley, where Father Mohr died, like
Gruber, without knowing the immortali-
ty of their combined genius .
FATE COULD hardly have conspired
to bring together two more unlikely col-
laborators on the Christmas hit or all
time.
Gruber, then 31 , was a struggling
musician who had married a twice
widowed woman. 13 years older and with
two children. to avoid military service in
the Napoleonic wars sweeping across
Austria. Both her husbands had pre-
ceeded him as sacristan and school
master In Amsdorf.
Mohr was the IUegitlmate son of a
musketeer who deserted both the
archbishop or Salzburg's army and his
mistress. a seamstress.
To Report
WASJllNGTON CAP>
-Each alien 1n the Unit-
ed States must report his
address during January,
Commissioner of Immi-
gration and Naturaliza-
tion Leonard F. Chap·
man said last week.
FABRIC WAREHOUSE SALE
Chapman said tbe only
exceptions are persons
an diplomatic status.
"YEAR-END INVENTORY CLEARANCE"
"WE MUST CLEAN HOUSE
OFF OUR LOSS ·YOUR SAVINGS!" 25% FOR NEW SPRING FABRICS
D I •oCLow TH<eoowos• I I cOMUAAl v1 I
EVERY YARD PURCHASED! EVERY SALE MADE l
-
.~
After
Christmas
Safe!,!. ~l!
In big ~vlngs
at Huntln;ton
Center Worth
1 1pOC111 trio
for all tl\o
lrtendly action.
Btech 91Vd
a Edlnoer '' • lhO San Otego Fwv
.........................
OUR REGULAR LOW
PRICES ARE POSTED-
25% TAKEN OFF WHEN
YOU PAY! •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
. SAhEJIJYS DEC. io-ut". 31st
.-t ..... ,.. ..,, I.JI ...... .,~ .... , ..
.. .....•...............
ALL FAB,RICS
POLYESTER KNITS
JERSEYS-COTTONS
WOOL ENS-DENIMS
VELVETS-IMPORTS, ETC .
••••!•······················· DON'l MISS THISI
• ll 'utNT't1 401 S. AZUSA HOURS
•rt.._ tf , ... ,.,. 1"'1 ™·7117 MOH. THIU fRL
u.r! ~~~""' sot;,~ ';~~l:,~' 10 l.M. TO 9 P.M. * COUA MISA1 llTit I ~atmA SAT. lO A.M.·• P.M. m•I .... ..., SUN. 12-S P.M •
'
-
~ ... Hs
AFTER CHRISTMAS
and
MOVING SALE
Closed • ._._,, Dec.....-27
Sal• be;. D.c ....... ta.31
Al~ ..
Mwbd Down 1/J
Up To
Y2 OFF
Cpme on 1n, and hive 1 sample-befort you buy-ol the line foods you'll Ill'
serving your gueus.
, , ...... ~.r.,.,_, BEEF STICK~
• . SUMMER SAUSAGE
Betf et 1t1 best 1n lllos&ge
form, With 1 hickory smoke
llnvor 1h1t tastes terrific
Cheese Balls
A speclal blend of t1111v
cheesei rollotl 111
choico nut meah
and topc>Od with n red
chorry. S4lrvo with
Hickory FarmJ ol Ohio
Old fashioned Crackers.
Cheese Logs
Smoktd cheddar c.,.ue,
covered with 111tct n111
mHlt -I dth9htf11I llllCk
,\ Over ., ,,j, 126 Kinda
JJJ. -1 of Cheese
Cut to your ordtr
from huge whe1ls
end bulk forms.
tr .. h end full of flavor.
South Coast Plaza Open d•llv 'tll I p.rn
IA1urd•y 'Ill t ... m.
Sund.Iv tt 10 t p,m. COST A l..owar Carootfl Mall
MESA Brlnol •t Sin Dltgo Frttw1y Phone: &40 '°''
lMUJCA'S LWING CBIBSI STORES
t
Sunday December 26. 197G DAILY PILOT a3
You Can Help
Special Kids
Legion of Tests, But No Answer 111 ··n1 •1M
! •9')
PHU.ADELPHIA <AP> S<.'ient1sts have
Do you have love lo share with a special
child? Several local schools need senior
citi.ze~ to help with children in their spedal
education classes. These ctuldren have minor
handicaps and need lots of assistance and en-
couragement. If you are interested, call
675-9210 or 833-9278 and ask for R.S.V.P.
<Retired Seniors' Volunteer ProRram). Multi·
lingual volunteers are also needed
tei.t~d tissue samples, programmed computers.
examtned victims' lungs, IJ\terv1ewed hundreds
or people and even turned over rugs to find the
cause of Legionnaires' disease. They haven 'l had
much luck so far.
"As a people we are not acclimated to
!allure," s ays Or. Leonard Bachman, state health
secret ary ··But we should keep in mUld that Cod,
ID all his omnipotence, has not yet deemed it ap·
propr1ate to share all the secrets or the universe
withus ··
Several literacy centers in the Laguna
Beach area, San Clemente, San Juan
Capistrano and the Dana Point area are look-
mg for volunteers who enjoy mulU·cultural
experiences and would like ti help non-English speaking people. If you re interest
ed, call the Voluntary Act10 Center al
675-9210 or 833-9278 for more mfor ation
SO THE RESEARCH continues for the cause
ortheepldemic that killed29persons and sickened
151 others arter an American Legion convention
here last sum mer
And the researchers are being pressured for a
solution by a s colding U.S. House subcommittee
on consumer protection that feels the medical
community. especially the federal Center for Dls ·
ease Control <CDC>. loused up the mystery dis·
P:ise invest1gat1on by not reacting quickly enough
lo certain poss1 b1 It ties, like poison
A Fountain Valley teen help center 1s in
urgent need of people to act as rccephomsts
either Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday or
Thursday evenings. Jr you are 18 or older and
en1oy teen-agers, you can call the V.A C. at
675-9210 or 833·9278 lo volunteer
"To be chant able, they botched it up," Rep
John Murphy <D-N.Y.), the subcommittee's
chairman , sauJ durmg recent hearings in
Philadelphia. The Mental Health Associat10n is a large
county organization with many programs. In
addition to helping people cope with the every-
day problems or living, special programs deal
with the prevention and treatment of
alcoholism and drug abuse. A new series or
orientations for volunteers will be offered
alter the first or the year m several locations
To find out more about time and place call
530-2370.
Fore lose to fivemonthsnowthe medical com-
munity has been hunting for the cause, ticking orr one suspect alter another.
"ALL LABORATORY findings have given no
evidence or a known infectious disease," says Dr.
David Senccr, the CDC's director. "No toxins
<poisons) arc known lhat characteristically
m1m1c the clinical, epidemiological and
pathological fmdingsof Legionnaires' disease " Volunteers interested in fighting arthrilJs
are needed in the Newport area lo help in the
.. marchers and passers" campaign . These
volunteers pass or leave kits ·In their
neighborhoods durin~ the Arthritis f''ounda·
t1on Drive~ The arthritis agency :Jlso needs
volunteers who can work in their homes or in
the agency doing phone work. Call the Volun·
tary Action Center m Newport Beach al
675-9210 or 833-9278 if you arc interested
The U S. Army indicates it wasn't an agent of
chemical or biological warfare.
Thattlocsn 't lcavemuch
''l 'ma little concerned that we've eliminated
all causes." Dr Horatio Entertineorthe Universi·
ty of Pennsylvania medical school said at a
seminar Inst month. "Either there was no
ep1dem1c. or we're all wrong ·•
The studies have left Little unturned. In
Coast Colleges Call
VA Rules Impossible
By STEVE MITCH ELL
Of IM 0 41ly PllOCSr.tf
New regulations from lht•
Veterans Administration ha ve
been call<.'<1 unreasonable and 1m
possible by Coast Community
College District officiaJs, who arc
eyeing with concern a Jan. JI
deadhncimpos ed by thenewrul<'
The impending r<'g ulat1on
would limit the numberofv<>tcran
s tudents who may be enrolk'<I m
aoy one course. and Coast Com
mun1ty College n1strict Chan
cellor Norm an E Wat.son said thl.' rulm~ "will cripple our ab1ht1cs
to serve the students in our area.·
Public Law 94·502, which ls the
Veterans Education and Employ
ment Assistance Act of 1976, re
quir es an 85·15 percent ratio for
all colleges and schools in the
United States to establish a re
porting system that certifies not
more than 85 percent or the stu
dents in any course are recc1vm1:
veterans benefits.
IF TRE RATIO is more than 8.'>
percent receiving VA benefits or
other Cederally ruoded benefits,
those students would not rccel\ c
funding for those courses.
.. 1 know why they'resetllng th•~
up," s aid Ken ll earlson,
coordinator of veterans affair~
and fmanc1al :11ds al Coasthnl'
Community College
.. They did 1t spec1f1cally t11
catch those schools which wen·
set up Just to reap veterans
b<>nefits," he said .. Exrept wc·rc
caught up in the leg1slatJon, too "
11<' said that "hen Congress re
enacted VA leg1s latwn. they 1n
d uded the 85· 15 stipulallon. "and
included all schools. puhllc and
private ..
llEi\RLSON SAID most public
-.chools an· not just set u11 for
veterans. and r hargN1 the V /\
with settm~ its s1~hts at too broad
a level
"It's hke somebody talking m
class and the teacher making
cvt'r ybody stay afll-r school," he
said. •'Too many schools were try-
ing lo rip off the VA "
Dr. Lloyd E . Messers m1thofthe
California Community and Junior
College Association said, "The
VA 1s 1mpos mg reporting r e·
quirements whic h community
rolle,::es are not capable of satis-
fying. There is no "ay that they
will be able lo comply with these
l''Chaust1ve and stnngent report ms requirements ..
llF.ARLSON AGREED, s ay
mg, ·we need a soph1st1catf'd
computer system to find out how
many vl.'lerans arc m each class
in the district
··We're talking about 60,000 lo
70.000students. ··he said
P1:.tnct 0Hic1als havl' wnttcn
to the Vf'trran:. Adm1mstralton
and legis lators complasnmg
<Jbout the new re1?ulal1ons .
Hearl son said.
IJBRARIES SURPRISING. • •
<From PageBI>
lioned films for the deaf cirt•
ii;creened one evening a week at
four alternating libraries.
IF A CHILD wants to hear a
story, all he or she has to do 1s
pack up the telephone. The county
libr ary offers DiaJ·A-Story m
both E n glis h (832-3622 or
871-9793) and Spanish (832· 1933 or
871~790).
The county also has a Spanish
book collection . avaUabl e
e11p eclally In the San Juan
Capistrano, San Clemente, Stan-
ton and Fountain Valley
branches. Some staffs are bit
ingual.
Large print books•are availa
ble both in adult and chiJdren'!ii
works. Some libraries also have
a magnifying glass available
The loan of art prints is a
pe>pular service offered in the
Mission Viejo branch. Patrons
arc allowed to borrow a print for
one month a nd renew it for
another.
Children's programs, rang1ng
from films and story hours to
plays and parties, have proven
popular at most branches. And
librarians say films and lectures
for their adult patrons also have
been successful.
hard to sNv1ct· peoplt· who
normally don 't get scrv1re." said
Sandr a Gleichmann. librarian at
the Manners branch in Newport
A<>ach . She counts the han·
dlcapped in this minority.
For about four years Newport
Beach has offered an at-home
service. With the help of volun-
teers, books arc earned directly
into the homes of people who can-
not get ouL
Up-to-date local bu., schedules
are available in most libraries <or those who prefer to leave the
driving to someone else.
Some library staff members
register voters .
~
NEWPOltT BEACH libraries
loan e ngraving pencils given
them by the police department.
With these instruments, a resi-
dent can put bis or her driver's
license number on valuable. If
the property is stolen and re-
covered. it can be returned more
easily.
Many libraries maintain a me
of comm unity resources .
Ubrarians can 'l help everyone
but they often are able lo refer a
person to the agency he or she
needs.
Com munity bulletin boards,
alao are kept in many Ubraries.
One Saturday afternoon. Mrs.
DR. PHILIP NASH OF PENNSYLVANIA PUTS TISSUE SAMPLES INTO FREEZER
They Wiii Be Examined When Further Tests Are Devised to Solve Legionnaire's DiteHe ,·:
vestigators have even look under the rug for dust
samples m the lobby or the Bellevue-Stratford
hotel where the Legionnaires met July 21·24.
Hundreds or constants and variables have
been diagrammed and charted. Slides or the VIC·
tims' lungs, some r~embhng charred Brillo
pads. have been flashed on screens al seminars.
Fifty.four consultants have been utilized in
one way or another by the CDC to review field in
vestigations by the 32 CDC staffers dispatched lo
Pennsylvania.
What has all this told thcmveslJgators»
"All we know 1s lhat the evidence points to the
fact that Legionnaires' disease was derived from
a common source and was not spread from person
lo person." says Bachman, noting that hotel
employes and most other guesti; were not
stricken ... We do not understand why the disease
was so selective. so discriminatory in seek mg out
its victims;
"WE MAY \I ERV well be dealing with 11 new
causative aJ?ent or a causative agent that has been
with us for .somt' liml' and was previously
diagnosed incorrectly · ·
Meanwhile, mice at the CDC lab m Atlanta
continue to drink Bellevuc·Stratford water with
no apparent ill effect<;
Misses'
Pantsuits
J or . umpsu1ts
999
long sleeved panhuih styl·
ed with shirt jaclcet or
blazer. Short sleeved jump-
suih. Bright holiday colors.
Si1es 10 to 18.
;.: ..v •
• •) . •
..
. ' ... ,
,;
.... ..
..
,,,
·~
'· ' ..
' •'
! ..
•I '
THIS AO EFFECTIVE SUNDAY, DEC. 26
THRU FRIDAY, DEC. 31ST
Use Sears
Revolving
Charge
Fashionable
Pant Tops "
399
Pullovers, tuni<s. Easy-core Jcnih
or woven fabriu. Print1 or ,oUd,.
S, ,.,, l.
STOH HOU.S:
..
I
..
'• . .
I 't
JOHNSON SAID his Hunt-
ington Beach facillty has become
the tocaJ point for many meet·
lngs or 1ovemmental and 11ociaJ
iroups. Jn the Saddleback
Valley, where public buildlngg
are scarce, a commwl.ity room In
the future El Toro branch la ex-
pected t.o set. a lot Ot ~.
Gleicbmann recalled, a woman
called the Hbrary because
rrt~nd.a were comln« from out or
town and thelr plans for the even-
ln& had fallen through. "Could
you tell tas where we could go th.ls
cvtning?" she asked. With the
help ol the bulleUn•board, Mrl'.
GlddJ01ano •~id, a!M waa able Lo
1nakeaeverat su1gesttons
I Sears I So. Coast Ph1~a llut•11n Park Ornnfjft• M6fldoy tl.tv Thur•4'•,.
IQ AM tot,,..
"'doy
.... ,,,•kt.~'""''. ''Ubhrlans are tryini very
3333 Bri,tol St
Phone 54Q.Jl33
-
81 SO la Palmo Ave.
Phone: 818-•400
1100 N. lvttin lwe
Phon•: 637-2100
10 AM t• S130 '"' Sul'doy
l ·lO A"' I• 4130 ,Ni-• --
I
Ella H1g lt•y, ut IV!. doscn't remain idle , but keeps herself
invol\'Nl with other people. Her latest project is the
... Wlrti>"OIO
Garden of Friendship for Little Folk, <.1 new mini-park for
children under 5. She 1s shov.n watching over youngster::;.
No Rocker for Octogenarian
SA:-.i FRANCISCO (AP> -For
somE' pt•ople. life at 84 means
tt•nrltnl! to QUI et 0ower gardens.
Hut. 1wtoge11ar1an Ella Rigley,
frt',h frorr a stint as a VJST A
\"OIUntl'f• t'r!'alt•:-gardens Of a
d1ffNl'nl 'ort fertile places
wht•rr vounr c haldn•r can grow
Jnc' pro:.pt•r
She e:ill<i hc·r l:ite't ··The
Garden of Friendship for Little
Folk." S h e d es i g ned the
mmipark for c·h1ldren under five
because "those htUe ones just
rudn't have any pluce to play ...
One friend gave her 10 tons of
sand for her last birthday,
another a bunch of earthworms
tied up with pink ribbon. And
with a little persuasion. the Park
and Recreation Commission
pitched in as well .
'Tm ancient. .. the spry Nc·w
Englander admittE:d, but s he
added, 'Tve always been pretty
active."
Mrs. Rigley was somewh~re in
"lhe middle 70s" when she joined
VISTA. after moving here in 1962
following her husband's death.
During a lhree·year tour. s he
helped organize a play school in a
black community in South
Carolina and also worked with
migrant workers in Oregon.
Later. she s taged a one.woman
cru sade here again s t the
Daughters of the American
Revolution.
··1 had quite an argument with
the DAR over the civil rights pro-
blems. but they recovered, .. she
recalled. She belongs to the or-
ganization by virtue or nine dif-
ferent colonial ancestors.
Recently, Mrs. Rigley moved
in with the lloly Order of MANS.
a non -sectarian ser vice organ11 a
llon.
"A year a~o I was living in a
hotel and I thought. '1\m I going
to spend the rest of my hh.• going
l o DAR meet in gs an<I
horticulture mt'<'lmgs., No. I 'm
going to keep m y word to father
Blighton ....
She wouldn't reveal what new
projects await h er , but she looks
forward to them Mlh charac·
ter islic zeal. saying simply.
··How m any times can you do
something at the age of 84? '·
Tradition: Music to His Ears
Ry JUDI T H OLSON
Of• .... 0 .. 11, ....... ~ .... "
Churr h m us1 c us u any 1-.
thought tt ancludt· the t>ld. trad1
t101idl n~ mn ... lltur~1cal melodu.•c,
;mci no"' .. re.... folk rock type
p1en•s.
Except wher e Charles Friesen
1s concerned
f-neM•r, m1n1 ston of mw.1c at
St Andre"'·, PrC'!>by l<'r1an
Church 1n :-.lc•w p ort Beach .
()('la eve, ttw i.: rt• .n rnu...i« .. of the
dlUrch "hll'h ttfh·11 as f)<'rforml'd
m COIH't•rl halh 'houlrl tx• heard
an t hf' C'hu rc·h "h1·n· 11 twlonR'
llt• :u1m1ti. 1t ":. t•xix·n::.1v1• lo do
and oflt·n d1ff1t·ult with vol unteer
·hoar!> hut ht•ll«>''t'' 1t -.hould lw
1ltl'mpt1•1I h1•l·;111,t• · 11 com
nuniC'alt's tht• church ::. mes:.agc
4 llh .:n•.11 po"' 1•r
fo'rat•,t•n "'ho 1., t't'lt·hrntini:: the
fJ Ct th<1t ht> h,1, JU'it f'.trnN:I hl'i
PhO from l ~(" afll'r an 11 y<'ar
,tJnt an l(raduate school (mostly
pd r t-tame stuc1 v >. also thmki.
other arts should b<> included m
thP worship service
HI~ d1ssert.H1on. which took
four vear11 to coropl<>lc, wa!> on
avant i:arcle 'tylt''> of 14 0rship, m·
dudinJ( art. drama and dance as
well 11<, mu::.1r
Th<' t hC's1s .... as d1Hicull to
wr1le. ht• said . "hut J(ood for me.
It help<'d crystahzc my thinking
about thC' arts and their place in
worship :ind IJfr · ·
He found lhc job of resurchmg
and writin~ the paper hard
bec ~use of lhl' tam<' element and
the fact that he had been m
school for so long "But I couldn't
J(1' e 1t up.·· he added
The music professors at the un·
1vers1ty allowed him to enroll m
the professional program and
backed him up. and he considers
them his "musical parents."
Quitting definitely is not th1..·
style of the young minister of
music. who was techmcaJly in·
ehg1ble to study muslc m collegl'
because of his lack of formal
training
The son of a Baptist minister.
he took piano lessons from
church members in small town!->
in Oregon. Oklahoma and South
Dakota
"Thal was the basis of my
music I call it farmland piano."
Friesen laughed
Hts rather was a singer . his
mother played the piano and his
brothers were an school bands. so
there always v.as music m the
household.
As 3n undergraduate at the
University of South Dakot11 .
f'nesen "never quesltoned" that
he wanted to maJor m music
'Tve always been grateful to
them, .. he said. "The program
had liberal a rts. language and
com position, which have made
all the differen ce in my life."
Friesen said he didn't start out
to study foT a doctorate but kept
enrolling in adv anced courses
while he was finishing his
masters thesis. He soon had all
the cou rsework completed ror the
PhD and decided it would be sil·
ly not to finish it up.
"I failed the Fren(h c·xam five
limes Then I had to consider tak·
ing the comprehensives. They
are grueling and there is a lot of
pressure. but they re ally stretch
you." he commented.
''They emphasized my lack of
mastery in my fi eld. I see so
many things I want to learn . I
want to study other art forms
su ch as dance. drama and
architecture."
Friesen said art forms other
than m usic should be included in
worship because "people expect
to hear music. We need lo grow
in the experience of dance and
movement
"We now are in an age,
whether we realize at or not,
which is a post-literate age. So
much of whal is communicated is
done apart rro m printed words.··
He would like to go back to the
M1ddl<' Ages. before printing
came on the scene. "I love what
happen e d th e n . Liturgical
dramas were done in the
cathedral~ lo 11lu:.trate the
sermons
"Th<•n al l(Ot mor<' d aborate
Folk dancel' a nd drama were ~o
much a part of people'~ cxi:.Lt'n('e
then.··
In terms of his own job and
commitment. ht• intends lo
perform the great music or the
church but not neglect contem
porary music.
There will be a nod to the old
hymns at s peC'1a l "'s ing~"
throughout the year und he an
tends to have Pl'rforman<'e. an
lhe church of works which he
knows will attr:irl l1mikd au
di enc es
The most difficult part m plan
ning the mus ic program 1!. look·
ing to the future. h{• conccd<'d
""We should be avant ).(ardC' ..
Though it would ~el'm thcit th<'
Costa Mesa residl'nl would be
tired of music by the end of has
day, he now is taking a clas~ at
Cal State. FullcrLon. which en
tails s inging 1n an t'Vt'n1ng
chorale with one or hi!> revered
"idols .. as director
Friesen. who also unwind~ by
reading a nd cook1J1g. says. "I
don't know if I'm a good cook r
JUSt enjoy doing it.··
Although Cha rles Friesen likes
to cook and says he unwinds while
doing it, he is not sure he's a
good one. '/just enjoy it.'
Teacher Learns a Sad Lesson
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am
a teacher who Is considerint re·
signinc from my profession -
becaase I am sick or bein1 called
foul n ames by student.I.
I am sick of sludent.s calling
eacb other four-letter words. I
am sfok ot hearln1 \he prklpal
being referred to as ·'that dude in
lheomce."
I am sick or attitudes ex-
pressed In terms or "I don't
care" and "You can't make me ...
I am sick or aiarba,eand fights ln
the b allwaya. 1 am si~k of
parents who coddle their kid.I
and .tek~ their side when school
of'fiQal1 try to inaUU discipline as
their parents should have done
Iona ago.
1 have hope for my prores!lion,
but it grows dimmer by the day.
The only solution l see to this
sickness is that tea chers and ad-
mlallst.rators will one day aat red
up and insist on contrac\I that
permll them to exerciH •utb«l·
ty wt)en they feel tl ls needed.
Don't. mention the city. please.
Just sign me -IRRITATED I N
IOWA .
DEAR IOWA: Your leUer
AOallda aa If It were wrlt&t!o ln
1181. Tlae teac9-tn wWt wt.om I
lane 9-ad contut ln recenl years
tell me that 1tadentl ol all ates
are look.ID• better, tM:Ulng bet· wr ud beb1v L01 bette r.
II I've been m laled, I bope you
teacben out tbere wtl1 let me
know.
DEAR A NN : Now that
Christm as la near , will you
please deliver this message to
parenta of young children:
H you have decided your
youngster is old enough to be told
there is no Santa Claus, no
Ea!'ller Bunny and no Tooth
Fairy, will you plense Instruct
the child NOT t o t e ll his
pla ymates?
My husband nnd J are just sick.
Our Johnny, a second-grader,
believed 1n all \hose magical
characters and was so happy
J
with his fantasy friends until
yesterday. A boy in his room at
school spilled the beans. The dis
illusionmenl was so hurtful lo
Johnny he cried. What a cruel
lhinJ?. to rob a youngster of hiti
dream-world joys! It ju.st broke
ourhearu.
We hope you will print ttlii; l<'l·
ter and perhaps spare other
children Crom the same rate. -
JOHNNY'S MOM ANO DAD
DEAR M. AND 0.: There·~ no
way parents can prowct their
cblldreo from bt~mlna "d4"·
fanla!bed" by thf'tt r la)'MAl4",.
ln fact. lt l~ from thrt:r pl• •mates
t.bat mo~t kids learn what life 18
all about.
CALENDAR
A v aricty of topics will be discussed dunne a series of lee
tures. workshops und cl~l>l'S, scheduled to begin after the ft.r~t or
lheyear .
THE LOW STRF.SS DIET will be the topic of Dr. J . P .
Hutchins, natlonally·known surgeon and nutritionist.
HJa talk will begin at 10 a.m Tuesday, Jan 4, ln the Science
Lecture Hall at Orange Coast College
A past pr esident cl the International Academy of Applied
Nutrition, Dr. Hutchins also Is a member of the lntemational
Academy of Medical Metabiology and has appeared on a number
of television shows.
ON THE "LIGlffER" side w11l be an eight-week workshop on
losing weight. ·
Open to m en and women. the S<'rit:s will be held at l p.m.
Wednesdays at Goldt:n West College, beglnnlng Jan. S.
Sponsored by Lhe Women's Center. the series will be Cacilitat
t'd by Diane Goodman and RhoJa Weisel. lecturers for weighl
control organizations.
Because of enr"llment limitations. advance reservations are
necessary. They m ay be made by calling the center at 892-7711.
WOMEN ENTERING or returning to college are invited to a
special reservation day at Golden West College's community
center.
Sponsored by the Women's Center, the program will be from
9a.m. lo l p.m . Wednesday, Jan. S.
Instructors will be on hand Lo asslSt m ~electing courses and
one assertive tra ining group, especially for women.
ALSO AT T HE GWC's Women's Center wiJI be two noontime
workshops -one on women in art; the other, relaxation techni-ques.
Art instructor Kay Mortensen will conduct sessions on
women artists on Tuesdays beginning Jan. 11, in Forum 2.
Nannette Pistole-Brodie, college dance instructor, will in·
!.lruct the relaxation workshop in the Recreation Education
buiJding on Tuesdays. bei::inning J an 18.
Women m the commumty are invited to these free program!>.
ON THE SERIOUS side will be a four-part workshop designed
to help people deal Mth the problems associated with divorce.
Entitled Divorce and Arter . . the series will be presented
by the Family Service Association of Orange County. Regist.ra·
tion fee is $15, and classes will be held from 9 · 11 a .m . on
Saturdays, beginning Jan. 8. in the Tustin office.
Instructor will be John Taylor. MSW, and topics will be In·
troduction ; Sex and Singlehood, Emotional Readjustment and
Children.
Reserv a Lions may be made by calling the office at 838· 7377.
·.
=·
SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY YWCA is offering a career
enrichment course entitled, Where Do I Go From liece Wjlh My • _
Life?
It is geared toward people who arc looking for support and
guidance through a career enrichment cour:.c aimed ut the de·
velopment of life planning i.k11ls.
The course will start at 7 p.m Wednesda). Jan. 12. Registra·
t1on may be made at the Y m Santa Ana
EXAMI NING TH E IMAGf. or womt:n. rtep1cted by men
throughout history. Mil be a 10·wcek L'Cf Extension ~1ass which :s
!>Cheduled to start Tuesday, J an 11.
.... As a counterpoint. students will ~x plore Lhe work of women
~1sts, most of them contemporary.
Special features include a lecture by Mehndu Wortz. curator
of the UCI Fine Arts Gallery. and a visit lo the exhibition.
"Women Artists: 1550-1950" at the Los Angeles County Museum
of Art.
Instructor will be Miria m Leila McConnell. More informa·
lion is available by calling thc<'xlcnsion orrice at833·S414
Oolly .. 11•1 l'heto •YI Lt• l'tY~t
(Ann Landers ~]
..
· ..
DEAR ANN LANDERS· I am
writing this tor m y neighbor who
ts 84 years old. Her eyes are bad
and she has a rthritis in her hands
and can't hold a pen for lon1.
hot m eal prepared in somebody
else's kitchen. That, she says, is •
the best gift of all. So please, •
Ann, pus the word. -THE'.'
LADY DOWN THE STREET '
DE AR LADY : Consider It' This wom an wants you to put
somethin& in your column about
people who mean well but don 'l use their head." when It comes to
vtsltlng old folks.
tt seems they atwa~ brtng this
woman caramels or taffy or pop.
com which s he can't eat because
of her denture:-Sometimes they
bring dried nowers. wh.lch she
can't stand. or Q bottle or col
ogne. She ·s aller11tc to perf\Jm~.
The elderly would appreciate 3
passed. ..
T he r e Is a b ig differ en ce'
between cold and cool. Ann Lan-
ders shows you how to play It cool"~
wtthout freezing people out Ln her-
booklet. "Teen&J(O Sex -Ten·~
Woya to Cool It.·· Send 50 cents in•
COU'I and a long. i.eU-at1W'et.sed. ~tamped envelope to Ann Lan-··
ders. P O. Box 1400, Elgin, 111. •,
~120.
Traditional
Cleniente
Honies Set
Among the custom homes now
under construction at Mariners
Point ln San Clemente ls a re-
sidence designed In the Spanish
trad1tion by architect Frank
Spangler ol Newport Beach.
Just nine ocean-view homes
are being bum by Douglass.
Pacific CorporaUon ln thla first
group of estate homes at the
ridge-top community. Each has
been created for its individual
site by Ii ve noted architects and
residential d esigne rs, s tates
J ohn C. Douglass Jr .• president
or the development fl.rm.
The Spangler home, located at
504 Via Cisco, offers 2,MO square
feet of living area ln a two-story
design with four bedrooms. two
baths and a lower level powder
room. It is priced at $161,400 and
scheduled for completion in
December.
WGHUGRTING the Spangler
home is a s pectacular curved
staircase entry that enhances the
two-story high living room and
formal dining area. A large fami-
ly room with wet bar and second
fireplace and a window·walled
kitchen and nook are other lower
level features.
The upper level is a secluded
bedroom wing with mas ter suite
that has its own private deck and
fire place, a dressing room /bath
and walk-in closet.<·.
The Spangler's exterior styling
features Spanish-textured stuc-
co, detailed with wrou~ht-iron,
heavy beames and a tile roof.
There is private entry courtyard
plus three other patio areas and
the home features a three-car
garage.
OTHER CUSTOM homes at
Mariners Point offer from 2,370
to 3,150 square feet of living area
and include every conceivable,
modern luxury feature, Douglass
said. Prices o ( the residences
range from $143,400 up lo a
quarter of a million dollars.
Mariners Point may be re-
ached by taking the San Diego
Freeway to the El Carruno Real
exit in San Clemente, then left on
El Camino Real fi ve blocks to
San Pablo. Turn left again to
Avenida Acapulco and go up the
hill to the Mariners Point en-
trance signs.
.... WOOD DECK ENTRY AT LA MANCHA TOWNHOME
La Mancha Tract
Viejo Model Eyed
For Entertaining
A host of architectural dctu1ls
that appeal to the family that en-
tertains often are included in the
"Montiel" plan at La Mancha, a
new neighborhood located above
a.nd adjacent to Mission VieJO
Country Club in Mission Viejo
The wood deck entry, accented
by lush plantings maintained by
the La Marn:ha Homeowners As-
sociation. provides a warm and
inviting place to greet one's
guests.
The wet bar, jn the family
room, simplifies beverage
service and keeps kitchen traffic
at a minimum.
TifE LIVING room, which is
set off from the activity areas or
the home, provides the setting for
comfortable conversation. It
feature s a wood·burning
fireplace accented by a ceiting-
h i g h band of us ed brick,
cathedral ceilings and french
doors to the adjoining balcony.
The t,839·square-foot Montiel
plan has three bed.rooms and
three baths .
Tht> Bt•rkus Group of Irvine,
designers of La Mancha, gave
the homebuyer the option of us-
ing the large dinmg room as a
family room, since they included
a breakfast room that is spacious
enough for family dining.
The Montiel plan is priced
from $73.450-$74,950. Homes will
be ready for occupancy by April,
1977.
THE MONTIEL ts one of six
noorplans offered at La Mancha, a new townhome community
built on a series of knolls adja-
cent to the renowned "Mission
Imposs ible" golf course at the
country club.
Decorated models of all six La
Mancha plans are open daily
from JO a_m. until 6 p.m. The
model complex may be reached
by taking the San Diego Freeway
south to the Oso Parkway exit
and driving Pas t. Turn right onto
Goleta and follow the road up the
hill to La Mancha.
Short-term Recovery?
Economists Discuss Direction of Ecorwmy
Political m anipulations of
C1mgress. lbe Administration.
.uid th"' F!!deral Rescr.•e can
1·rcatt> short-term illusions or re-
nwt>ry. however, the price is dis·
.tstH in 1978-79." warns J on
Sl.t\lghtc>r, prl's1dt'l'1t of Walker &
l.1•1• ~lort~.·~e C'o. Anaheim,
(' .1l 1f
s I au~ h I 1• r J 1) 1ne11 l h r <' e
t•t·onom1~1" to d1~c uss "The
f:Mnomy Wher<' is it Going
This T1m('" clunn~ a gcncr"l
:-1 :-s111t\ of ttw 'l ,1 twnal Duild1ni,:
:--htiw .ti .\t d"orm1('k Pl .11:c.
Ct11(' :1 ;.!'II
'• ·Tht> t><•onomv where is 1l
l!lllll t! this tim e" • que ried
!"ll.1u~hl t•r · ll ', pr11trnhly Roin~
'~ tw1 t'\l'I' t h1• pol1lt{'1.1n' .ire .:o
11h.' to 1w1 m1t it to ,.:11 ·•
"S l:'ll ('F. POl.ITI C"IA :-;s
11t>1w1 :11lv put their own intt>rcst
11r 1 he interest of their party -
alh'.•~t of pubh c inter~t. next
)1•.1r will lw .1 hoom year," said
s1.,1whtt•r It's the following
H•;1r-< that "tll bear the (rwts o(
tnday's ('Oltt1r-; -and tho:i"
(ruits are gl11ng lo l>t.• bill 1•r 1r1
dl?t>tl ...
"The politically expedient
theory of spending the COW'llry
out of the current difficulties only
leads to bigger problems tn the
future," warned Slaughter.
"With more and more of the na-
tional debt being held by foreign
interests, we can no longer live
with the theory of continued de-
ficit spending.
'The dt'm.1 nd:-; bl'1n~ placed nn
th1' l';1p1t;d rn :1rkets hy f'Pdcr<tl,
St.ill'. .inti l11c:al governmt'nts
~uar.1nl l'\' .1n t'Xtrcme rapil lll
~h1,rt.1~1' Pl'ri1>d when we nm
thn1ul'.!h ttw n1•1d C}'('ll• of ti~ht
money. whi<'li has ot·1•urrN1 .ip·
pn,,1m.1l l'ly 1•very four vt-ar~
'IOl'1' W11rltt W .1r ll
"WF. fONTl!'JUf: TO h1'.1r
srreams tlf uut1gn<t11on hl•r.1 ust•
o( th1• infl:i t1on.1ry CUrlM"f!U l'nCl"\
u( !ht• ()pf.(' t•ll pncC llH.'l't'<ISCI>.
) t>t "l' d1\n •t hl''4 r anyune t.tlk11\J.!
.1hout the-infl <1t1on:try prt''"urt·,
o{ high interest rates, .. pointed
<-'t Slaughter . "All we ~«'em lo
•
Coast Realtor VP
On State Board
llarold R. "Hat" Pinchin or
Corona del Mar has been elected
regional vice president of the
Callfornla Association of
Realtors, etfecUve Jan. 1-He will
be repreaet1Ung District 32 of the
90.000-member Association.
Included in District 32 are
boards of realtors from Hunt-
ington Beach·Fountain Valley,
Laguna Beach, Newport Harbor
Costa Mesa. Saddleback Valley
and South Orange County.
A realtor since Ul8S, Pinchin
operates a resldential and invest·
ment property practice In
Corona del Mar. He was presi-
dent or the Newport Harbor·
Costa Mesa Board ln l t7S and a
put president of the C«oaa del
Mar Chamber of Commerce, the
Exchange Club and the Orange
County Industrial and Com-
mercial AuoclaUon ot Real
Estate BrokeMI.
Pinchin waa instrumental in
U1c organiiation ot t.he Orange
County Council of Real Estate
Boards and Auccceded to it,, pr.-
sidency In &.he latter half of this
year. He Is a member ol the In·
vestment Dlvtalon and the CAR
Board Pr•ldenu• ateertn,r com-
mtttee, 1ervln1 alao as an
alt.ernat.o QJ> &.he nomlnaUq tom· mlttte.
I
REALTOR EXECUTIVE
Harold Plnchfn
In 1970, he was hooored as run-
ner·u.p for the beat real eatate ex·
cbanie of the year ln tb• $'l50,000
and under catteory. Plnchln
bolda the Or.du.ate, Realtors
tuOtute (GRl) eertlticate.
h1'.1r 1:-; th::i t f'edt'ra1 R<'St'rve
R1.1ard rl:timing that high interest
r:ites prevent inflation
"Yt\ll would h:w1' a hard time
trying h1 determine'' hi t h comes
first in creating high inflatwnary
figures in this country -govern-
ment spending or the side effects
of thC' high inh'rest rate policies
of the Federal Reserve Board:·
L<lOking over the past two
y<>:in;, Slaughte r notro that twice
th<' Fede ral R t's<>rvc has
t i~htent>cl up on the purse slrings
tt) C'Ur h inflationary presstires. tn
both C'nscg, interest rules ru1d m ·
nat1nn skyrocketed h<'causc of
b11sinl•ss' :1ltempls to beal the
monl'Y i;qt1l't''ll'
"PF.RHAPS IF tht• r ecferal
Rt•sC'r\ e would take :i different
t ~lck to help C'ombat innation, the
business community would not
h;\Vt> le) bt•al higher intE'rest rates
tn 1ls pl :inmn ~ and could do a bet-
lt•r J11b in NintaininJ? inflationary
l'osts that are passed on to the
C'tinsumt~r · ·
"Wt> cH1lv think W<' we nt
through .1 t1>ugh period of high in-
'1 atu1n and interest rates in
197'1 , •· observed Slaughter_
"Look out tor 1978-79 when inna-
rion and inte rest rates could hit
15to20 percent.
"f don't know how the United
StatE's money m ar ket can absorb
a $90-bi Ilion F ederal budget cfc-
ficit in fiscal 1976 and still main-
tain any semblance of order,
especially in our current expand-
ing economy,'· he continued.
"THE NEED FOR short-term
funds to fin anC't> tht> expected
1976 demands will be close to S120
billion -almost a 50 percent in-
C'rease over this year. Businesses
and cons umers will require
<\lmo!lt S35 billion in addition to
the Federal government's re-
qwrements of about $75 billion_"
To avoid skyrocketing interest
r ates aC'corqpanied by high infla-
tion rates, there are only two
alt<'rnntlves , accordi ng t 11
Slaughter. The F'cderal Reserve
can supply the required monies
(whlC'h will be inflationary) or
the Ft'deral government can
curtail its spending program
(which will help supply more
funds for business' recovery).
"Until such time -if ever -
that all levels O( government l'C·
duce their rnte or 11pending and
their dem:mds on the capital
market:s, and the Federal
Reserve decldei. thllt It ls not the
Mic sal vetion of the counll'y, we
wUI continue to have a four-year
l"ycle of boom and bust." predict· ~Slaughter.
Moving Up
In Real Estate
L.B. JONES, a Newport Beach Real Estate In
vestment and Exchange Broker bas beeo .selected
to be an instructor at Orange Coast Colle1e.
Jonea. president of Newport Pacific Invest·
ments. will be teaching Real Estate Investments
and Excbangmg. The three-unit
course is spec1rlcaUy offered as
a practical and technical course
jn exchange and investment
counseling.
Jones is an active member
or the California As11ociation of
Realtors, Investment Division,
past President or the Orange
County Investment Sales and
Exchange and past Chairman of
the Newport Harbor Costa Mesa JOHU
Board of Realtors. Investment Sales and Ex-
changes. He also bas received his certificate trom
the California Association of Realtors, Graduate
Realtor Institute CGRl) and ls a graduate of USC.
GARRY B. COLE has joined M.J . Brock &
Sons, lnc. as general sales manager, responsible
for all residential development in Southern
California.
Cole, 36, has been in the real estate field for
seven years, most recently as director of the re-
COLI
sidential resale division or
Fredericks Development Com ·
pany, a division of Pacific Light-
ing Corporation. He had pre-
viously been a division sales
manager with Larwin Southern
California Company, where he
was responsible for pioneering
home development in Nevada_
He 1s a member ofthe Sales
and Marketing Council and the
Million Dollar Club of the Na-
tional Homebuilders Association.
BO BRUMMETr is joining his family's real
estate firm, Orange Coast Real Estat e, in Corona
del Mar.
He graduated from Corona del Mar High School
in 1965, where he was an All-American in swimming
and water polo. After attending
Orange Coast College, 'he
transferred to the University of
Hawaii.
Brummett has most recent-
ly been sn real estate in the Sad·
dleback area_
DON ALLISON has recently
joined Professional Escrow
Services and has been appointed
'~ .• ·.~.', ~~
director of marketing for their H UMME n
newly formed Business Development Division.
The announcement was made by Ray Prehm,
President and Chairman of the Board of the Orange
County bas ed escrow firm.
Long active in countywide
civic activities, Allison will
coordinate customer services
for the Company'i; locations in
Southern California.
The M1ss1on Viejo Company
has announced the promotion of
M.\RTIN G. RUSSO lo the posi-
tion of director of Community
ALLISON Services. responi.ible for carry.
ing out ongoing community involvement and in·
formation programs in the Mission Viejo com-
munity.
One of Mission Vi eJo Company's first
employes, Russo has been with the homebuilding
ft.rm for more than 11 years.
During that time, he has
served as a planning assistant
and plannjng administrator. Jn
1972 he assumed responsibilities
in community relations.
Prior lo joining Mission Vie·
jo Company he waii wi th the City
of Santa Ana Planning Depart-(
ment.
.. ·~··'
Russo h as a Bachelor of
Arts degree in geography with a Russo. .
concentration in urban planning from California
State Univers ity, Fullerton. He is a member of the
Mission Viejo Activities Committee and the Sad-
d.Jeback Valley Chamber of Commerce Board o(
Directors. He was a founding member of the Linda
Vista Parent· Teachers organization and has served
on numerous educational and civic advisory com-
mittees.
He bas lived in Mission Viejo ror 10 years with
his wife, Peg, and their two daughters, Gail and
Jill.
Valley Realty or Irvine has announced the pro-
motion of KIM LOWNDES to manager or the In-
vestment Division. Lowndes Joined Valley Realty
Investment Division in August as sales associate .
A native of Sydney, Australia, Lowndes moved
to the United States in 1974 as a California Invest-
ment Consultant to Australian
and European Investors. Sales
background includes Sales
Manager and Director of United
Rubber, Australian Division; In-
vestment Manager, COM In-
vestments, a real estate invest-
ment company In Australia; and
founder and owner of Harrods
Realty, a real estate company
consisting of four residential
Md commerclal sales offices ln
Sydney.
Valley Realty ls a division of Berg Enterprises,
Inc., which presently operates almo,,t 100 real
etitate brokerage offices ln New J ersey, Nevada,
f1orida, Arizona. California and Texas.
DON E. BOYKIN has joined the Irvine Com-
pany as project manager, according to Dave Kuhn,
director of community development of the Residen-
tial Division.
Jn this position, Boykin Is responsible for ob·
tainlng final zoning approvals for remaining
parcels in the first quarter of the
hew Irvine ViJlage of Wood-
bridge and for coordinating the
village construction which in-
volved nine for-sale houslng pro-
ducts and nn a partment project
as well as the parks, trans,
streets and commercial cor·
ridor.
Prior lo jolnlna the Irvine
Company, Boykin was in busi· ..11
nCSS (Or hlm&eJf, building IOYlllH
custom homes In the Del Mar·Solano Beach area.
Boykin studied architecture at Howud
University and holm a degree in Industrial design
from San Francisco St4te. He li ve!! with his wife
Catberlne, aoo JomoSagal and daughter NaJume ln
the Jrvtne Vllla1e of'l\atle Rock.
P UBLIC NOTICE
,ICTITIOUS aUilNIU
NAMI STATl!MUIT
T,,. lollOwl"!I per•on• ••• OOlnQ bu•I·
,_.,~.,
G M. MOMl!S 10017 G.,llt ld ""'""""• Hu"\lnQIOll llurh, GtllfOtnl• m..;
Philip M M<Neme•. f~I• S.omer
Orl•t. C<xl• Mew, C:.lllo•no•mu
Otlt 0 S1m11<0. 11'U A\11 ~1r .. 1.
Fount .. '! Vellcy. C.flfornl• '1IOI
Tl\ls °"''"'" '' <OllOlltltd O'i • fiMll· IHI """"''''llo. PlltllpM M<N•M• ..
This "•t•menl w .. 111..i w111t ,,... County Clerk of O<eno• Coun1y Ln
OK..nber I, n l•. ,.,,,.,
F'l.1111\11..i 0.•-Coa\I O~ly Pll04
Ott..-nber S. It. It 1'. 1'1' 501).1•
PUBLIC NOTICE
f'ICTITIOUS aUSINEU NAME STATIMEHT
~ loloowlr•O Pe•M>" is OOi"O "'1\1
rtess~n Ntc1<·s CU!.TOM PAINTING AMO PAPERING, "101 S<ou~tl Or. Hunl-lnQlon8H(h. CA ~2-
H'Ct\Ot•S JO\t'Oh S•v••no. •1'07 s.:_.11 Ctr .. HunllnQlon Be.ell, CA.
'l'll>I(> This bu•IMn Is condu<l~ll O't' .,, 111-
dt•1du•I
N 1( ho1•\ J ~4'v••no
[Ill\ \IOlem•nt "'"' lo1"'1 with llW
Count1 Cletk 01 Or.n9e Counlv on
O.teml>or I. 1•16 ......
Publl\~ O••nQt Co••I Dally Piiot, De< U.1•. lb. J•n 2 "71 SIOl-I•
PUBLIC NOTICE
l"ICTITIOUS aUSIHEU N'IME STATl!.,,_1!.HT
Th~ 1o110 .. 1ng Pt-•so•u •r~ do'llo) t>u•I
f't\\ ~~·
PUBLIC NOTICE
Pl(TITIOUS aUtlNIU NAMI $TAUMllNT
Tit• tollowt"11 ""0" 11 dolno ~·
"'"~\A !.!.Y C.ANIH !:. usoi
8rook~ur\I SI • f<ounlal" Veller. Cltll'::.':1':'':. ttlll, tUOO !MIO•~•
Strw«t, Ho. U , W••tml"''''' Qtl~ "~• bu\I""' 1, condutltd 1>1 aft lf'I. Olvl-1 M.,tlal' Mill
Tt>•\ \lalemol\I ,.o hltd with .. Counly Cltr~ ol Or•n~ County Oii
O.Cetnber t•. ltlt
PUBLIC NOTICE
'1CTITIOUS auSINEU N'IM~ ST-"T~Ml!HT
l,_ lollO#I~ ~f'\Oft' •r• OOillO bldl•
nrtU•\ C•Ltr'OllHIA OI RL. 100 ...,_
C•11t., Dr . !>ulte >O•. N•woon a.em.
C-"tl..O
Cerollyn O.Vore. • l"ern GonV"",
lrvl,,.. '-" •111'
R•vmond H Garra . .OS 0.litle.
Co<G<l•dol M•r, CA•?U~
Thi\ bY\IM •' I\ (Onduc\td t>Y •
oet'tf41 "rtne,.l\lo
C.•ro11wn OeVort
R. H Glrrt
Thi' 'l•t..-nont .... flltd Wiii\ lhlt
Countv Cltrk OI Or1nge Ct>Unly Of\
Oecem1>er 1. 106 p...,
Pul>4i>htd Or•n0t Cu•\I O•h y Pllol.
Dec 12. It, J•. 1'16 •nd J1nu•r1 l. IU? Sl.._1'
PUBLIC NOTICE P'I CI FIC PR OPE RTY-------:"."'.".-::-:.--M.AN'IGEMENT,,S62 Pemwoco.Hun ,ICTITIOUS aus1 .. 1ss
lingtot1 Be•Clt, CA '16•t HAM! STATIMEHT Rtt,,.,d SI T""mn. U lO Ott -The lollowl"IJ person ,, OOh'9 IJU)I. Ltvu,,. ~•<h. CA '116)1 """ ••· P~gqy Fr•l\Ch, •H1 Ptn,_ BURNS MORTGAGE COMPANY. H-ll\Q1ot1 S.•Lll, CA. •2~ till Oow Sltttt. Syl\e 215. ~WllO't
Th•\ bu..,1n,.\\ 1i, (Or\duCI~ by -1 &et<.h C.litofnl•"'f>lO
Qlf"C••I poirlMf\lllD P•ul Al•••ndtr 8urlll. ISIS
Rlc_Po!araSt ThO"n•\ Pft'\(111• l~"·· NtWPOrt Be•ch,
Th" •l•ltmcnl w•• tlltd ''"'" '"' c..111ornl• '1..0 I
COunly Ct~• ot Or•nv-County or Tl-I\ ""''~" t• (OflOU<\ed t>v .., lrt· ~<•mbu 1 1916 dMdlUI
,.... P ... I A BurM
Pvb1•·""'1 Or.o"q-Colt\I O•llv P,tot Thi\ ,taltm•11I ., .. llltd W1th the °"< It l• >• 1'1t•n11J•n 1. 191/ County Cit•~ ol Or4n9e county on
)11\1 Ot<tmber ll. 1'1•
PUBLIC NOTICE
l"ICTITIOUS 8UStMl:SS N'IME STATllMl:HT
TP\~ fnUow lnQ l>tf\On i\ dOl"'I) t>\l\t
,..\'\ d \
ll MONllOllE D ANl A6USC PROGRAM OF ORANG.E COUNTY 21
IM AP), J'.10 Perk A•t., Sulle Na. l.
l.Aq~ ii<'•<"· (A t 7U I Willl•m W Roudd M.O. ~•S El l\o\
QUO, lAQUM Ouch CA tn \1
T"h bu\*"''" I\ tonducted bV .an in·
d••1~''' w1lll•m W. Roudd M 0
l hi', "'•l\t"t'nf'nt W•\ tllt<(f With ttv-
:0U"IY Cl.,. ,,, Or•t\Q~ Counlv on
Oti-ctmber l, 1'>1&.
"ubtl\'1,.d Otaf'u3fl' Ct>•\t Oa Iv P1tot. °",."'""' s. ll ''· 7& ,,,. !08\ ,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
,ICTITIOUS •USIHESI NAME ST•TIMEHT
Tht tollowln') pet"°" I\ OC>i~ 1>11<1
'\\(\\ PERFORMl\flCE CITY 141 E. 11th SI (C>\I• Mt\A CA '1611
E lt>4n0r C tc1ttn\\_ l.fO lrv-intA ..-r
.... woort Buct.. CA '1 .. l
Thi• t;>.,.i\•neu '' conaucted bt •"'In. ,.,,,_,
E•@•nof" C Kfrtn\S Thi\ \lat.,mtnt wo tiled ..,th lhe
Q>unlv Clerk of Or•nv-Couf\11 on
OPc..-ni..r I, 191• -Pu!JllVIN! Or•noo CH \I Oall1 PllOt.
OPcem~r S, 11 " 26. ltl& JOMl.I•
PUBLIC NOTICE
,.ICTITIOVS •USINUS NAME STATEMENT
Tnt1 fnlfow+nq 0-0rson' ,u,1 dolno txJ\f.
l"K'\\ .... ROLF'<; Wl"IES & SPIRITS, 1000 W••I Co .. \I lofl(lt\W41. /'lt ,.PO'I 9".}l l'I. C.t..q2000
ROif En'lOn tnc .. • C•lolotnln rnr
oorat11')f'\, 11)()1') Wl"\t '"'")' M1qrt•O'I. N"•oort a,. •< "· c• •11t1;t')
n'l•lli hU\1n"··, 1, (C)n0UC.h.'d by tf Ctt'
Pot•ltl?n
P1'11 EtHJf•n. Inc
"'Tt'\j~ ,,.,,,.m,.nt IA!•!. t,1t•tt witt, the
c~""•v ,,.,. of O••no~ Coun11 °"'
O..crrn!>t'r I t'7~
F..-:1 Pub!•'""" Ot.tno• C<Msl D~lly P1lnt D<o( 12. It, :16. 191' •nd Jan 1. rtl / ... ~,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS aU$1NISS HAMIE ST ATIMEHT
Th@ lollowl~ perM>n ts C)O<ftO f>uV.
ntU •\' GLOBAl OISTlllllUTOllS. ?~I S.
M.ll" SI . S..nl• A.na. CA, '11101 Douglas A ICtllll. llU Slcyllne Or.,
LtgyN Buch.CA. '101
Thh bu1•neu 11 <-ucl~d t>y •n ln-dl•ldulll
~t•1 -"· IC1llP1
fll)S Sl•l•mtnt WH "'"° "'11h ,,,.
C-ly Cler• of Oren11e County on Oecember 1. ltl•. ,..,.,.
P\lbllSIW!d O.e11oe Coa,. Otlly PllOt.
0.Cembor 1, n. "· 26, 1'76 ~ ,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUS aUSIHIU HAMI STATIMIHT
TM lollow1n9 P'""'" Ii ClolftO l>vil ,._"•': SHULE R ENTEllPlllSES . .,,,
W••t1er A•• • Ho. ta, Hunt11101..., ~h.CAtt•H J...,., ROl>Orl Sl'Ktltr, .,,, Wat-
""" . No. 18. H11nll11QI"" lltt<'f\. CA .,w
Thi~ bull""n Is <Oftllu<t•d lJof.,, 111-
dlvl~••· Je-. II 51\ulcr
TNS •lal-'1\I WH llltd ""'"' l'-
QMiMy Clerk of Or•n9C "°""'" on Oe<Mlbff I, 191'-
Ntn Published er..,.. CUit 0•111 Piiot, o.c.me.r s, n. n, ». 1'7• ID'A-1•
People section
keeps track
of what people
are feeling,
saying and
doing In the
DAILY PILOT
..... 71
Pvblt\Md 0••"9t Co•st 0 •111 P•l\>l. OK. \' ,., ••I• •nd Jan t. '· vnf ),,~,. ~
PUBLIC NOTICF.
'1CTITIOUS auSINH.S NAMI: STAlEMENT
Tll• lollo.,ln11 l)('f\on Is dol"Q l>u"· MU•\ CHAZ WHOLESALE PR004CE, •.r SllO NtDtu"" lw•n..,,.. Newport Beecn: c..111~'"'" 91•~ I Cll.lrlt\ F MrOon••O Jr. !JIONei>-tun~ Avt.,u1•, Ne wport 8 CA(h.
C<llllorn•• 911,~J Th11 Du'''"'" Is conducltd by.,, ln-dlv1clu4I.
Cl>arl~\ r MtOOn•ldJr.
Tl\lt "~""'~"' ""'\ 1 lleo w•th 1 .... County C.INll 01 Or.tnl)e C°"nty Ott O.W.emo.r 1'. ttl~ . ...,.
PVbllV..O Or•nQt Co•\I Oelly PtlOI. O&c. ''· u . •'16 ond J an 1,
' tt11 S?O· I•
PUBLIC NOTICE
~
ili°MTIOUS auSIHES5 HAMIE STAT•MtNT
Tiie follow•"I! Pt'f\on Is dOlno tlllsl·
"""us JANES .t.LD ERWOOD APTS.,
11'31 !olly P•rl< Circle, Sit 0 , Irvine,
Cl>lll:i~,,·.-zt~ .... d J ...... ~ ......
P•rt"''• t0'6 Whll~ S.lts We1. Co<on.'' ' o.t Mar. C..lllorn•• •?Ml
Tl\ls !>lnl"tl\" CondU<ll!CI by• timll·
ldl>'lrt~rsl .. o
Mltht~I Oovltl Janes
Thl\ st•ltm.,11 Wdl fllMI Wiii\ t ....
Covnly Clork ot Orange CtKlnly on
Ot~mo.r 11, 1tl6
~,.,
Put>tiv.d Or•no• CNst Dilly Ptlot,,
Dot 14, 1'74 and J•n, 1, 9. 16, 1917
U)9 f6 I
PUBLIC NOTICE
,,CTITIOUS auSINIESS HAM£STATl:MENT
The lollowl"fl 11tr1oOn I\ doing bu''' I
NH•S OAlt. S~OWCASE, llH SoulllC.out HIQhw•y, l•QuoW Buer., Gtlltorn•A 9101
Sl\lrlo C•nlor. 1'Ul Slord•r.r, .....,.,.. Ntq~I. C•11tornl• 9'•n
Thll ~""'~ u conducted ?1 •n In· dl~I
SIMrlty C..ntor
Tiiis SIAt.l!IPl\I WO fllfO Wflh t~
CA>u11t1 Cler~ or O••noe COUl\ty on o.c..nt.rn.1t ll 1·'• .... ,,, "
l'Ubllwo Or•n'1" Coul Oaltr Pllof.
Oec n ... ,. 1n<1 J•n. t. •. 16 "'" • "°''' ' PUBLIC NOTICE
'1CTITIOUS aUSINISS NAMf Sl ATIM• NT flit fOllOWlnQ Ptr~ h OOinQ tKN·
"'IUs: r AGAPC CONSlRUCTION, IS .. ~kenll• ........... /IOI. 21tA, Norwpot'\
8c•<~. C.lllornl• t7114~ J•-• All•I\ Worrtll, ls.4t Ple<:t11•
II• A~ut. Aot '""· Newoor1 Beech. Cltlllnrlll• ., .. 3 • ••
Thi• bu1l""o I• <Ollducltd by en '"' dlYldutl
Jt"'O Alltn WOrr•ll " .. •,
Thi' \l•lt .... n\ w•\ fllod wllh "-~
County Clt r ~ ol O••noe Counly Oft
Oe<.ember '2. lt16.
""~ Pubtl•lled Oonci• Coast Ot lty 1>1101,1 f,
09<.. 16. "16 et\d Jen. 1, •. ·~~ ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
S.>1UJ
HOTtC• TO call>ITOttS ........ 54, SUl'la109' COU9'TOP'T .. I STAT• O,UUPOlllNIAl'Olt THI C:OUHTY0,09'-"HG« II\ t ... M1lltr of ''" E •tafe of If.A~"'\ eta1LH09'.t.CO,.l'IV,O.C-..,, ·~
Httkt I• llerelly (II-.. Utdl~
,_.... ''''"'' eqeln11 \lit -~ ~!l -to lllt N ld \l•lm1 lfl ti. 9tlk• '11-
tlot <llfll ef ,,.. elo,....-ld <_, °' le
""""'' thtm It the l#ldetll"""° et tl>to .. fl ke of MICHAIL P. Nl:WMAH, HIWMAN . CH IUINIA"I •nl IALOOHAOO IHC09'P0111Al eo.A~ ttrMy1 et Ulw JU H 1.,.r~ SI., I'.,
O. lie• 1'7e 111 lht Cit, Of W.\I Cov'"9, o'
In Lo\ tMQtlte Cou"fV. Wtll<I\ IMl<t< ~ •. flu II lilt pltet 01 t>u\lnen of tht 1111• ,1 -•'-<! Ill all l\\llttr\ ,,_,,alnlftll ti> ' »Id .. ,., •. $11(lt <l•IMt wlllt r11t ;
M<tt'frv •tuehtr\ Illus! bl lllff or , ~
fltt .. nt•d ., eto•utld wllftlll ~ •
MOfltllt ,,..,., 1r. ''"' publlotkwtolltlh ,.; .. nolltt , ,r-0.ted Otiomllltr It, 1'7~ 001£ Wll.LAl'IOCOFfC'\'
••ecutof'Of tllt Wiii OI
•ICIOe<9"nt MICMAaL P. HI WM AN ........ ., .... u.w N•WMAN,CM•IU4AM•a4 MILOOMADOINCO•P09'ATIO m111,..,.,_.,.,.,. l'.o .... ,.,.
W.1 c::MIM,, CA-'11'1
, '
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,. 88 DAILY PILO r Sunday December 26. 197_8_
' (Record Year for Rock
I By ABE PECK
SAN FRANCISCO -Rock h1s-
tonans might view 1976 as social
historians view the decline of the
.Boman Emplre.
Some signs, like the volume or
record albums sales, cried out
that rock was healthier than
ever. Other omens, like the dis·
appointing revenues at stadium
shows and the absence of a
watershed al bum, augured
change.
There was a certain malaise in
the air as every body awaited The
Next Big Thing. True, energetic
disco, soul, funk and even jazz in .
t"egrated the Top Ten singles
chart. But even here, disco's
mechanism and soul 's or
chestrated Philly sound began to
wear a httle thin.
ELTON J OHN, Led Zeppelin,
Wings, Bob Dylan, The Jefferson
Starship, even that favorite
bicentennial act. the Beach Boys,
,..4lll failed to matc h their previous
had somethmg gomg ror it.
Here are some boLiday suggel>
lions for catching up wtlh the
best rock of '76:
STEVIE WONDER -"~ngs
m the Key of Life" <Tamla). It
took two years to do, 1ts 21 cuts
are almost excessive, and there's
something naggingly inconsis-
tent about it all. But Stevle's
voice, words, piano playing and
sheer energy make this double
LP an inexhaustible upper.
Peter Frampton -"Frampton
Comes Alive" (A&M>. The
critics questioned the cutie·pie
guitarists's decision to come out
with a double-live album. To
date, it ·s sold five million copies
Next 81g Thing once Lynott
shakes the onus or sounding h.ke
Bruce Spnngsteen and makes his
teen·outlaw l> rics a tad more sophisticated
Path Smith "Horses" and
"Radio Eth1op1a" !Arista) The
punk queen or the New York art·
rockers combines street poetry,
anarchy and three chord music
mto a very special v1s1on of rock.
Steely Dan --"The Royal
Scam" (ABC>. What Patti Smith
would sound like 1f she'd stayed
in school. Walter Becker and
Donald Fagan 's characters live
1n a grad·school version or
Dante's lnferno. where sin is all
m the mind
Bob Seger and the Silver Bullet
Band "Live Bullet" <Capitol).
It took Seger 10 years to become
an overnight success. The secret
of his Midwestern hard-rock?
Stra1ght·ahead music with gntty
vocals mixed so you can hear the
words.
' recorded efforts. And the year's i major live show. The Band's
"Last Waltz" with Dylan, Neil
I Young, Joni Mitchell and a host
of others, was more a wake than
Rod Stewart -"A Night on the
Town" (Warner Bros). Old
raspy· v o i.c c · s back. and
"Tonight's the Night" 1s the
single or the year The whole
"slow side" pulses .,.,ith con
trolled energy, and, even ir the
hero dies in the end, "The Killing
of Georgie (Part I & ([)"is one or
rock's first sensitive songs about homosexuality.
David Bowie -"Statton to Sta·
lion" <RCA). Bowie's passion 1s
studied and his fire is as cold as
ice. Nevertheless. the music on
thls album was enough to form
the core or the year's best con·
cert lour.
LVNVRO SKVNYRD -"One
More From the Ro;id"' <MCA>.
This double album 1s not that
special, but Skynyrd's become
the Jimmy Carter of Rock,
parlaying a Dixie mystique into
national attention. a coming out party.
• But there were hopeful signs,
: too. Peter Frampton became the
2 new Elton John just as the uld
••
one started to talk about retire-
ment. A ll'an and hungry he<lvy-
metal sound eml•rgcd, along with
such prat•lilioncrs as Boston and
Ttun Lizzy Older hands likl· Hob
Seger and Roz Scaggs hrokc
through to l'ommcrd<1l success,
while regional acts like Dixie's
Lynyrd Skynyrd <ind New York's
Patti Smith broke out nationally
Sort rock was represented by
llall & OatC's and Jackson
Browne. Judy Collms and Joan
Baez also prol>percd. And any
ycarw1th a StcV'\c Wonder album
PARLIAMENT
'' M othersh i p Connection··
(Casablanca>. First Colton
came to Harlem, now llarlem's
gone to Mars. with a mixture of
funk music and science fiction.
Thin Lizzy "Jailbreak" and
"Johnny the Fox" <Mercury>.
The mystique built up around
Phil Lynott. the blac k lril>h
vocalist. writer and bass player,
obscures the absolute cleanness
of this guitar·dominated band's
muste. T-htn Lizzy rou1d be The
Boz Scaggs "Silk Degrees"
!Columbia). The album that has
broken Scaggs out or his San
f<'ranc1sco s tr aighl jacket and
has made him the reigning king
of the blue-eyed soul set.
Steve Miller fland -"Fly Like
An Eagle·" <Capitol>. Another
extremely clean sounding effort
More space·rock than blues this
lime around. but a good mix.
"Boston" <Epic l . Guitarist
Tom Scholz is the hip Horatio
Alger. havmg left a cushy job as
a camera company researcher to
pilot his moderately heavy· metal
band to rook•e·Of·the.year status.
TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE I local
E sports.
.. ..
. , , . ,
.t
AC HOSS
'Solu.11<' , fraqrann•
11 Domc!>l•Co.111'0
ll•~UdelNI
move·
n1en1
,'1 Mctr1<..
unot
:'.1 Sf'crr.t
wrotN
:?JW1,ar
.tw(sy
24 Npro ·,
lcJngu,i(j•'
)'> Thorou9hl.t"
aoor
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t ' •••
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I f ' ..
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l t
74 Small
amount
76 Ame11tan
e1p101cr
7 7 Plural
•t'nding
IH Man.,
n.1m1
19 P,pnt,,1
80 Artt<,I '
C<iP
82 P01Jl1r
contr"
loon
I\ l Jumo1n(.j
11"1•1t!CI
t!5 Alll'CloC1'1.oll'
•1.1mr>
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IJ C ICl"
l-1 f <;•C'>1
P'
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• "'' ; ,.. 1 l'l• 1
I \A OW
140 Garden
oest
142 Tome 1n·
doCdtOr
t 43 Hyalrte
14 7 Hrgh
priest
1 48 Underneath
1 50 Boat part
152 Pholtppino
tru ot
154 K1moro
sasn
1 !>5 Cd~I
If On
dObr
1 ~6 Rough
lilvJ
·, 1 a .. bo11,
I J9 CordJq1·
ftQfH
II.JO
d•:um
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mont•
H .l lid tfl IS
Jnd
1 '• Comouund
etner
'' • [l .. !,, lll!d
1 tJ 4 l .... "9' (
•: 1 PQ..,<>t•S'> Ott
• • ;> I'> ' ''" I
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t " ••
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t f :,
,, ... , ..
•I IJrulf'•
II: j l
pronoun
19 Autumnal
drink
20 Work as
dough
33 As lar as
35 VC'rd1
opera
37 M ui;eum
d1sp1ay
39 Large
snak.es
40 Contonf'nl
abbr
012 Le::in
(ln1rn,11~
.14 Cont,.,..,I
or 17•'
-If, T url lut•I
·IHS1•m1111
Q011
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eg l
I Sna~1
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person
""'->Decor.it vf'
m<>1JI
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d ">lt'i
• Ren!l .11e
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1t rm1n,1I
~ Jn •• , uv1an
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t •1 JtlO,,OlH,t!
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t l r nit
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1, L 1;nt ,,,
SEE CLASSIFIED SECTION FOR ANSWERS
I
god
98 Horn
blast
99 Pointed
11111
IOOPlancl
oath
1 QI Dinner
b!.'VNJ9!!
102 Haopcn•ng
1 u3 rrl.!nth
income
1 04 Sp111tf>d
horse
106 Sktn soot
1 JH Amb111on
1 O'l Rl-'c1orocar11d
I 1.' Erlq ••
I 1 1 L•'\lo·n
1 1 ~Godot
IOVI.'
l lbCho11
VOtC('
11aEarlh
QOOdl.'S\
113A.,syrr..in
god
1 :'.JCnarm
s,t,,ng
l ('2 Arrf''>I
1 23 Btack.b1rd
1 26 R1>t,1 in"''>
128 Vaut11J• s
aro
1 JO As-,1s1C•J
t J:? C"vton
m(.'J<;Uff'
I 11 Ht!.IOrtL
111.!fl(Jrl
I J5 MOhMY1mr>d !>
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~ Our team tells ,
• you everything '
E you want to ;
' know about r ~your team. •
~ Every day. j -n the r
JflJW'RW
"SHAGGY-0.A."
'''''"'0 ·\)0.?ii>-•t\
lhr \d\POlUI'> 111 lh•
WILDEI\NESS r AMIL? s~::;E~o
0 All T t 00 J OC>-\ tlO 1 00 -00
1!161 W. SUNFLOWER
W, OF llRISTOL (. M. 540 ()!;94
'°™IE SIL VIER
STUAIC" U'GI
H CITY SHOPPING CENTRE
ORANGE •!>32 6721
~ CITY CENTH CINEMAS I
• I
SA FRWY (MANCHESTER E><.1
0 0 l'RWY ICITY DR. EX.I
WALT DISHIEY'S t.,• "'THI SHAGGY D.A." !GI
,,"'). WALT DISNEY'S
y ''THI SHAGGY D.A." IG.J
~ "CA~I!"
"llOLLllt~ALL" lltl
"ADYIHTURIS O,_
THI WILOlllHIS$
,_AMILY" IGI
Peter Frampton emerged as
one of the most successful
performers of 19 76,
when his 'live' album
sold five million copies.
BALBOA /
CINEMA
"NICKELODEON" IPGI
"METWORK11 IRI
"THE SONG REMAINS
THE SAME" IPGI
,.THIE SHAGGY D.A."
"RIDE A W1LD PONY" IGt
ADVENTURES OF A WILDERNESS FA.MIL Y
"MISTER SUPER IMVISllLIE" CG>
"MARATHON MAH" IRt
.,.HREE DAYS Of THE CONDOR" I Rt
"CARRIE" CRJ
"THl:ATER OF ILOOD" IRt
"KING KONG11 IPG)
IT'S LAUGHTER UNLEASHED?
I • ..
New Dramas Air
"The Tapt.-i.try" nnd "Circles," two dramas
by young playwrighl Aleios OeVeaux, are
featured on "VISlo~" Thursday at 9 p rn. on
KCET, Channel 28
Both plays, dtr(.-<:kd by Maya Angelou, tell of
the enormous pressures exerted on ambitious
black women by fnendl> and family to conform to
life the way It Is.
. "' ... ... ....... ' llh> ()d,U\•i~ l'Tl"',1
d y ,, l .... ,, ... h, ..
• "KinJ KDng''
~11 llrdi, l1\11b(111dJn Ir••"
l'l,"'11J1111 ~11Cl~!IU I
Thi' Adventures of the
WILDZnmss
FAMILY
STARTS TOMORROW LIMITED IEHGAGf.Mf.HT
U• CITY CIH("4 U4 SOUIH CO•St
C•t 1e6'k >"'' C ••'Ar '''"' 1t.l4
$400lflACk ~lALA •OUNIAIN ~AllrY
fl,,.,,,~,&'""') , ,. 1-t ,y, ,.,ttt'•' (1
lllOO(HUUT
A-"°"~'1.'M•&
ll CUlllHO 'LAI•
f J I• '44 1"4tt
STADIUM U+t1wt. tlril
tf"tl ,,pfMfl NIGUll Tk!Al~I ', ''"; ' ' '
THE NEWEST,
PINKEST
PANTHER OF All-!
PETER SELLERS
'I ...
SlllTlllO HERBERT LOM
iN
with COLIN BLAKELY lEOltlRD ROSSITIR · lESlEHNHE DOWN
AmmaliOll br RICHA~ WILLIAMS STUDIO Musie •1 HENRY MANCINI
Anot11te PrOdueer TONY ADAMS · Com• To Mt Sling by TOM JOH ES
Wrfllet by FRANK WALDMAN and Bl.AKE EDWARDS
Produttd '"d D11ect1d by Bl'.AKE EDWARDS
rnmt4 In PANAVISION ·COLOR by Deluxe ,
{~OR!G-=Nt--11""1·=-,.-":-::,r-:-~ ·• "-~f(A ''~" ~'·' J. t, • .,.-,-.'.!..__.,.." .... ·•"""•-.,,-,.-"..,,""~n,-.f
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Sunday. December 26. 1978 DAILY PILOT 87
Babes • in Pisces Collects Debt Toy/and: Crunch!
By ERMA DOMBECK
Jr you are hkc mall.Ion~
of average parents you
are sitting there today m
the midst of toys that are
solid, c hald-proor. in-
destructible and bwlt·to-
be·abused.
A wheel has fallen off
the Lt:.t A·L1fclime car.
The mend -it self,
puncture-proof inflata·
ble ball d1dn 't and
wasn't. The reinforced
heavy-duty cardboard
castle wath 280 lifelike
warriors. 38 weapons
and 180-ptece cavalry
VOYAGE OF THE DAMNED
It lasted
30days ...
Youwll
remember
1"· itaskq
as you
Ive.
HARBOR BLVD. AT WILSON ST .
COSTA MESA 646·0573
2 MILES SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY.
I I I
' I .
J •'
--# __ /
..
1', I
EDWARDS CINEMA
HOLIDAY SCHEDULE
1 :45-4:30
7:15-10:00
. .,
blew over when the
furnace went on. and one
oflbe kids has s wallowed
a one-piece durable, no-
moving-parts barnyard
guaranteed s afe for tod·
dlers.
You are naive ar you
believe there is any such
toy as one that 1s "child
proof." I have seen
sweet, shy. precious lit·
Ue girls who did not have
the strength to put their
arm in a coat punch out
the eyes of a doll and
within minutes have her
insides stacked neatly in
to three piles
~ r AT ~ .. ,J WIT'S
END ·
their eyes. <Also h1ur
torn out by the roots, dJs·
l ocated Joint ~ and
teethmarks on 95 percent
oC their bod a es >
DO NOT be misled by
children who reign help-
SWlllgs into square knots. Jessness at not being able
Somehow, I've always to get a band-aid out of
identified with the com-the wrapper. Have you
mercial where they put a ever seen them tear into
suitcase in a cage with a a package of gum? It's
gorilla lo see how sturdy enough lo make your
the luggage s tands up. blood run cold.
MONDAY, DECEMBERZ1
By SYONEY OMARR
ARIES <March 2l·April 191
Cycle is such that you win, makt!
fresh starts. are rewarded for lD·
dependence.
TAURUS <April 2n-May 20):
What was hidden comes to light
You'r e going places as you rid
self or rears. doubts.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20>
Accent on friends, hopes, wishes
You feel more secure -you
leach, learn, pay and coiled.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22 )
Accent on promises. prestige,
goal. Be versatile.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl 22> Em·
phasas on the public. contests,
competition, agreements, legal
arrangements
SCORPIO <Oct 23·Nov. 21)~
Look deep -within yoursell.
Answers are av ad able il willing
lo accept truth.
SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22-00('..
21): Creative JUtces flow; gel in·
volved, express yourseU, imprint
style.
CAPRICORN <Oct'. 22-Jan.
19): Practical matters, con ·
clusions, evaluations. laxes -
these are spotlighted. •
Two minutes with my To my knowledge, we
middle child aod it only owned one toy that
wouldn't stand a chance. lasted longer than 15
For that matter, neither minutes. It was a robot
would the luggage. monster that ran on bat·
I HAV E ~een little When you think about teries and held me at bay
boys small enough to 1t, most toys don't die in the sink for ei$(ht
walk under a coffee table from old age. Jn fact, hours with a laser gun
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22J : Accent
on ability to communicate -
write, a d ver t ise, subm1l
manuscripts.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18)~
Accent on movement, short tripi;,
versatility. humor, messag~
from relatives in transit.
PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20>;
You locate lost article, obJect.
You collect debt. Accent on pay-
ments, evaluation a,nd protectioo
of possessions.
pull a jungle gym set out most of the dolls 1 have Now that I thank or it .
or the ground and tie the discarded have rear in It w~ pr~bably running
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Ex
amine subjects that intrigue
Answers to perplexing questions
are available. ---------------..:__ _ ____:. for llS II Ce from the
children.
.. , , . I
!I I ii I . I I
, .. . . . ',,
, , 'I I I . ' '" ' ' ... " I . I I " ~
THE NEWEST9 PINKEST
PANTHER OF ALL!
(R)
' I
•• •• ''} ,', V-', . ·.
3
DAYS OF
THECONOOR
IN THEATER #2
' " ... NOTHI NG LESS
HIS CIA CODE NAME IS CONDOR.
INTHE NEXT SEVENTY·TWO
HOURS ALMOST EVERYONE HE
TRUSTS WILL TRY TO KILL HIM.
THAN THE MOST
EXHILARATING
ENTERTAINMENT OF THE •
FILM YEAR TO DATE."
• • BEACH 8LVO AT ELLIS • •
HUNTINGTON BEACH • 848-0388
-N.Y. TIMES
\\ h,n In ~outh•m \ 1llloml1 , 1.,11 l ···•NIVIERSAL •TUDIO• TOUR ~.,..~c::c......,,. ..
"ONE HUNDRED PERCENT
ENTERTAINMENT ... a case of an
ingenious novel being turned into a
terrific movie. A lean back and Jove it
lark that is a practically incomparable
family film ... a garland of cheers."
Gene Sha/it , THE NBC TODAY SHOW
"A delightful
r>a..,1 ic he ... broughl
co f he !,C reen bv
proclul er-director
I lerb Ros., ... aboH
"Nothing les~ rhan
the most
exhilarating
entertainment or
the film year to
date. A collec1or's
item in terms or
performance ."
l m. ""' Co11ln
\'EW Y()RK TIMI '>
"An ingeniously
contrived spree,
wi th one of the
wittiest wrap-ups
of any mystery
.111 dn excellent cast
bring ... thi.., romantic ·
dd\ enture fo lire. 'l A \ erv high cla!>!> '
chardde thal neither
\\inks dn eve nor
stoops to si mpli stid.
... movie.
Pauline Kol'i
NEW YORKrn
le conquer on it ...
own level. and very
po~h and pleasing
ii i ." /11clilh t'rhl
"''I tJl<I >t\ Y /?/ VIHV
THE SEVEN-PER-CENT
SOLUTION
from tht> =I Bes t· elling Note/
A Hf RBUH HOSS flt 'I
ALAN ARKIN · VANESSA REDGRAVE · ROBERT DUVALL and NICOL WILllAMSON
OS Siq,..,ufld F •1•vd 1' I : (),., ,.. "'° J; (). lt "'"'" O\ o,~, • H, •,.,..,
in "THE SEVEN-PER-CENT SOLUTION"
o '<1110""'1 LAURENCE OLIVIER o.i · ...... , ,,, ... , .. ,·JOEL GREY . SAMANTHA EGGAR
CHARLES GRAY· GEORGIA BROWN · REGINE· and JEREMY KEMP
(., rtff'IM\ 1-11 NIC HOl A'> 'IL Y(J< H , • '" '" •• \ ''CHOL A, '1! HH l'•nt:1J•, ".wo f >.rmf'i 1,,. H!.RBf f<T ROSS
Mu'ic h ,JOHN AOIJl<,ON E '"' ,•" P•nd~u· AHL l:'<E ~ll I ER"> ·•~d Alf'<~ l'\11 ~KY 11(~ 1111\llt tlllel'ICI ~!(:11111
A>w<1drd 'rcxli.r1·r "TAMf\' 0 lQ(ll t /I l '-1\.fR'iAL RflEA"[ Tft"H"llLOl ~
~·-""A.IC~
12:)°'2:15-4:40
6:4 5-1:45-I ~40
-. \
1414 S. HltW...,_......,
AIMlitl111 • US.7601
ltKll ..... •wdtt•s
........ ltecti • MMlll
~Shew'"-t
Al t'l1ioiliftt'011 <:-... w•. Owyt 7:1'-t.>O
S.t.·S... 1:15-J:O
6:00.1!20.10:)0
• . . • . . • . •
.. DAILY PILOT Sundal· December 29. 1978
. The most~ original
otlon picture event of all time.
2 MILES SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY.
HOLIDAY
SHOW
.. TIMES
1 :00-3:30-6:00 ~ 8:30-11 :00 <
..
" .. .. ~ ,. . ..
:· ..
<lllff lUl'WOOO
THE ENfORCfR II )
OAIUU1 1~10..
• u~ "°' •~11>.o
l .... llT 114lllll lH"'l"11
THE ADV£NTU1t£S Of THE
WILDERNESS FAMILY 101
Ol llfl1 1 00.1 00.100700.tOO
_, 1n..otos • """ o NIAL
NICKELODEON ''°' 041\f &11 1'I S-l 10.
•OO.llo.100
llD 11 "lllH • ._ COom'I I ,,,_
SONG REMAINS THE SAME ''°I
Oll\ f &1 I I l·l l0«00.11.>0olO 41
(ll'ft \AS lWOOO
'"""• THl INfOICll(tl •t.oo...... nus
531 -9580 HIGH VllOCITY 1~1
~fHS II >o MATIHfll Oll\ Y
Wit I ITIOOtOS • t U.H O'HI Al
....... NICKILOOIONrro1 ,+c..._......., 't.UI
KAllY & Wllnt GO TO ll'W YOIK 1~1 ~INS ll >o IUTIHIU Ol l\Y
WOOOf l(lfN IS
THI flONT ,,.,
~UI
OUISStON ''°' ~INI 11 >o IUtlHH I Ol llY
IUO<&W&T NII Mlllll
CAHl(111
•WS
IOLUHAll111 °""' 11 lt 111.\flHtll 041\ f
P4CtFI( THtATA£S OfltV(·IH SOl'fll S'WAP llll((TS .._,.. Ii VO 0.. .. "' Swap Yett S.t. & Sun -1 "" lo 4 pm
~ Or1ve-ln I & 2 ._ ,v, ..... ,."W'.,..V.,.r ..........,~
Femlhl Funl Proftt\1 Betoains Gelo<•'
,,.....,,, ., .... ,,,
~2S 3S2t
\ ........ ...... ·-t21 4010
....... ........ ~ .-.. ..... '•l M2·2'11
l ......... .. ,,,, .....
S27 2223
\,~ ...... , .. ., ··-471 -8131
llD llfflllN
I. 10HG llMAIHS TMI f4Ml 1001
2. JANIS 111
l llMI Ml~ICU 1001
CllNT IASl'WOOO
fHI IN,OI CH111 •1us
HIGH VILOCITY 1001
·-.. .._" • ""' O'l<lll NICKllOOfON tl>01 ~us
WoWll(I WISHCS, WIHnl DftAMS 1001
"A MIUION fO ONI tHOT"
IOCKY CN1 llW
IUINT OffUINGI '"' ...... .,.,...
Clwt~
nCI INfOICll111 l'lllt
HIGH VILOCITY l'NI __..., .......
Wllf11t flUn lt()wUAU 1t1
Disasters Multiply ~ _J ..... -- -----. ____ __
iif-1' ~~·=======================;;:;;:;;:;;;;:=..-~~ Man-made Ones Head,ed for Screen THE DAY OF THE POSEIDON,
EARTHQUAKE, INFERNO '76! By KAL WAGENHEIM
, .. TN At-i.IM ,.,...,
Nobody scares people better than
people. Diabolical. unpredictable.
crazy people. And everybody, it seems, likes being scared
The shudder business has moved
from man-made creatures like
Frankenstein to vampires to fire,
flood and earthquake. Lately the con·
spiracy, the terrorist raid. the as-
sassination are spelling bonanzas for
the book publishing industry and for
movies.
Many best-selling disaster stories
today are plucked "rtght from the
front pages of our newspapers :
Arabs, Israelis, Russia, China,
nuclear confrontation, terrorism,"
says Al Silverman, editorial direct.or
of the Book of the Month Club, whose
current selection is "Thirty-Four
East," by Allred Coppel.
IN THAT NOVEL, the U.S. Presi-
dent is reported to be involved in a
plane crash, the vice president is kid-naped by terrorists, and Russia and
the United States move lo the brink of
nuclear war.
Until recently. natural disasters
were in vogue, with such films as
"Earthquake," "Towering Inferno"
and "The Poseidon Adventure." Man-
made disaster themes, such as "Doc-
tor Strangelove," the 1960s story of a
nuclear holocaust threat, were on the
fringe of science fiction.
cities. A recent MdJonald Lhriller.
"Hour of the Blue Fox," deaJs with
germ warfare;•the Ru:mans' attempt
to pollute a U.S. reservoir with a de-
adJy virus.
••1 DON'T KNOW exactly why the
public goes in for disaster themes,''
says McDonald. "Why, after aJI, did
everyone rush to the Coliseum to see
the lions devour the Christians? But l
do know that money isn't the only
motive for writers. l, for one, feel a
sense of responsibility to alert people
lo the possibilities and dangers that surround us."
"People fear the unknown. Jn a sub-
tle way, disaster plots make lhe un-
certain more certain, the un-
predicatable more predictable," says
E.L. Quarantelli, a sociologist who co-
directs the Disaster Research Center
al Ohio State University
The Disaster Research Center
documents actual disasters and con-ducts in-depth interviews.
Quarantelli says that "many people
(involved in disasters) have reported
that thing s had not been
as bad as expected. Perhaps the mass
media -books, movies, newscasts -
had conditioned them to expect
worse. In a way, while many books
and movies about disasters are not
wholly accu1·ate, they may help peo-
ple to cope emotionally with real dis-
aster if it occurs."
"But the science fiction or just a de·
cade or two ago seems to have
forecast quite amazingly what's
technologically possible today," says
Hugh McDonaJd, a successful author
of disaster themes.
DOES TECHNOLOGY threaten the
demise of natural disaster epics? Composite 'book ' shows ideal movie plot
McDonald's latest book, a PyraQlid
paperback entitled "Five Signs From
Ruby." is the story o! terrorists who
threaten to destroy five Israeli cities
with atomic devices planted in the
Not reaJly, say the experts. But the
so-called natural disasters must be
highly original, as in the case of Peter
Benchley's "Jaws."
The theme of a si_ogle killer wreak-
ing havoc is still compeJJing, as
evidenced by large crowds paying to
see George LaFountaioe's ''Two-
Minule Warning," about an ass:-tSsin
who threatens 90,000 fans on a Super
Bowl Sunday .
Fact is, even the word "disaster ..
has undergone change over the years.
Its original, now obsolete, meaning
was "an evil influence of a celestial
body." But the stars and planets are
less or a mystery today, so the new de-
BARBRA STREISAND
KRIS KRISTOFFERSON
SCHEDULE FOR CINEMA CENTER
1 :30-3:20-5:10-7:00-8:50-10:40 wmf1~~,~~~~1Lm ,
WUTMllf C~Tll 8'2·44')
-,:30-3:20-5:15-7:15
9:15-11:15
"An ingeniously
contri\/ed spree,
with one of the
wittiest wrap-ups
of any mystery . " movie.
roub"' K111 I
NEW 'r"ORKFU
HUNTINGTON CINEMA
l tACHoUIUh .H I
e47.'60t ~ tU-•017
CAR
WASH
I I
(R)
SHOW TIMES
1:45-4:30
7:15-10:00 CINEMA WEST wn TMIM~TU .. ' r.OlOf ...... , T
WUTMIH.CIHTH 1'1·440
ARY, NO PASSES
RYAN
O'NEAL
BURT
REYNOLDS
TATUM
O'NEAL
SORRY, NO PASSES
NEWPORT CINEMAS "'-"ICO&\IHW"f 04ACAllHllll
•cwrottOCCJtTD 644·07'
4Q :pt
CINEMA VIEJO \0 Mff""•HOlA,At
MISS/OW Vil.JO IJ0-6'90
WESTBR OK wur .. ,..,.,.. •THOOC-n
GUDfHG•Ovt 00·4401
CO·HIT AT MESA
"BVRNT
OFFERINGS"
edwards MESA CINEMA
lltWrOITll'°" 4f lfTM tr. con• MH• ..._'°"
fmition includes any incident that re-
sults in "destruction, distress or mis·
fortune."
Quips Ted Chichak of the Scott
Meredith literary agency, "I don't
know how interested your readers
would be, but I could recite to you a long, long list or llterary disasters ...
"3 DAYS OF
THE CONDOR"
ROBERT REDFORD
FAYE DUNAWAY I
HUNTINtTOH CINEMA lfACHA11llt\ HI
•47·'601 '4!-0388 147.,011
, CO·HIT A. T BRISTOL
111no• AT .... cuTHll•
S40°1444
CO·HIT AT CINEMA WEST
l"lftlUU...11 TUl''IOV,.
CINEMA WEST
WlSTMIHU .. Af90lOlMW1ST
wtSTMIH.ClKTB IU·4•U
-
I
' ··Too Many
Tra in m ov i~:. are alway!> a welcom e
pleasure. How many times have you been on a
train, traveling across the country on some
routine trip, and tanwued about making up
.your own movle plot to make the Journey more
interesting?
The aame t hing must hav~ happened to
writer Colln Hiegins. When he formalized his
thouehts into a movie plot, it aJI turned out lo be
"The SUver Streak." There's a lot of wild im·
agi.nation at work here. Too much for my taste.
Jn the final analysis, "The Sliver Streak" JUSt
aeems preposterous and idiotic. But il starts out
well enough.
An ordinar y businessman (Gen e Wilder>
who edits books <?O sex and garderung for a West
An
THEATRES-ORANGE COUNTY
MANN'S 0 MARA THON MAN'~., SO. COAST PLAZA ·-.. C.1U~ "3 11AYS OF TltE CONllOI" ,. ........
~1111 J,.._,.,,
1111 rMllllC
MANN'S llO--so. com PLAZA "Tit£ SONG REMAINS Tlt£ SAME" to11 Mu1 )Alt .... ,,, J , ... , .. , ... ,, ..
J41 1/fl
fllll&A& ....
MUM'S "ROCKY" so. com PLAZA WUU•Ys-> ) .. , 0 Hllu fltflr
J4t>lll
\AT W M-1 JO.k•O.\• ... M .OO I \
MAllll'S "KING KONG" CPG) ClllEMALAllD 'O>IT1"UOUS OIJU U1f \1 •hOu "'" ... I 1 1 .. 1 10.l_J .. J 4._I_
Ul lMI SU ONl Y-n:-U A."'-
llUIAallM
Mlllll'S "Tit£ SEVEN·PERCOO·SOlUTION" ClllEMllAHO
141'11 h i .. ! 1110·1 , ....... u ... I ......... L• .. lt·40
UI 1111
fallllol&[lll
MANN'S "MARATHON MAN .. CfNCMllANO 1;0 .. U O.IOot
1m u """' "3 'DAYS OF THE CONDOa'' "'"''• Ill ""
JI0.1 U
ME TRO GOLDWYN MAY[R presenrs SORRY
(R) FAYE DUNAWAY NO PASSES
WILLIAM HOLDEN
. PETER FINCH
ROBERT DUVALL ,,,
"llE1WORK"
DAILY SCHEDULE: 1:30-3:50-6:15
8:30-10:45
edwards BRISTOL CINEMA
BRISTOL A. T MACARTHUR
540·7444
Sunday December 26. 1978 DAIL V P1LOT ••
Plot Twists
Coast publisher 1s taking tus first train lrip to at
tend a wedding in Chicago. All he wants is to &et
some rest and catch up oohis reading.
IN T HE DINING car, he m eets J iii
Clayburgh, a sexy secretary who can't type.
Their sleeping compartments adjoln, the Jock ls
broken, and before you can hum "Chau anooga
Choo-Choo," they 're up to their necks ln dead
bodies, hoodlums searching for missing Rem·
brandt. letters, killers, W\dercover FBI agents
and assorted plot twists that only add to the con·
fusion.
ll would've made a terrific ro-minute TV
show, but the movie keeps padding out Its rumsy
plot by having Wilder fall off the train every time
he gets close to solving the mystery. This leads to
a lot of tim e-" astmg while he trudges through
the dese rt or tries vainly to get help from sub·
mental c·ops und a petty crook, played by
Richard Pryor. .
It all ends quite predictably with a shootout
Prepare }Ourself for a perfectly
outrageous motion picture.
~-FAYE WDJJAM PETER ROBERT
DUNAWAY HOLDEK FINCK DUVALL ...
METWllRK
PAllllY~
o,,.w., saJIU UIMIT ~•llOWAU G0TTTRJD
R] ~ """'0. jj';iiiiroata
..........
REX REED
in the raw
between the trains and a neet of police helicop-
ters that gets topped orf with the train zooming
out of control aa it zips through the Chicaeo sub·
urbs with blazing speed and crashes lnto the
Chicago railway terminal, crushing the station,
along with its shops and passenger lobbies, send-
ing hundreds or members of the Screen Extras
Guild acre a ming througb the debris.. • ••
••BOUND FOil Glory" is the seemmgly in-
ter minable movie biography of folk singer
Woody Guthrie . Wasting so much gorgeous
cinematography and so much 5enslt1vely re·
created Depression atmosphere on i.uch ..i
modest talent is like uslng the entire budget of
"King Kong" to redecor ate Nalhan ·s hot-dog
stand.
Wood y Guthrie was a man who pre
ferred the factor ies and farms, giving his songs
away free, to the Coconut Grove and the national
radio broadcasts on NBC where he might bave
reached more people and changed things. In the
final consideration, he's rather simpl~minded -
hardly a hero worth mating a 2~-bour movie
about. The movie itself is, however, quite another
matter.
David Carradine gives a remarkably COD·
vincing portrayal ol a country yokel who gets
caught up in the move west to that dream ol pie
in the sky. Car radine plays Woody Guthrie with
bewildered, open-faced integnty, like a young
Jimmy Stewart. It's not his rault that so much
good work goes for nothing -Woody emerges, in
the script, a s s tubborn, arrogant, selfish and
stupid. And his songs stink ..
Before Laurel met Hardy.
Before Butch Cassidy met
the Sundance Kid.
Before any movie ever mode
you laugh or cry or foll in love .
lhere was a handful of
adventurers who mode flickering
pictures you could see
for a nickel. BURT
• •
Unttiedw.v
Tbanks to you
it works ...
FORAllOFUS
REYNOLDS
TATUM
O'NEAL
MARTIN BALSAM • BEAU BRIDGES· MARILYN HASSETT
DAVID JANSSEN • JACK KLUGMAN • WALTER PIDGEON
GENA ROWLANDS·ui'K PETERs·DAv10 •·MllloNY DAVJs·JoE wr
A FILMWAYS PRODUCTION/ A LARRY PEERCE ·EDWARDS.FELDMAN FILM
Screenplay by EDWARD HUME· Based on the novel by GEORGE LaFOUNTAINE
Music by CHARLES FOX· Directed by LARRY PEERCE
Produced byEDWARDS.FELDMAN·A UNIVERSAL PICTURE liiTilQiiiiit•Wiino"=-::i.
TECHNICOlOA• • PANAVISION tact~:bd
=~
nt1 An1 Frwy. nMt C~p""n
Or1ng1 • 1558·7022
MAJOR STUDIO PREVIEW
ROBERT VAUGHN •MERRIE LYNN ROSS .... sew, "'91
KEEHAN WYNN • ALDO IA Y
----ONE f'YFORMAMCE-----
EACH EYIHING -8:30
SAT. 12/25-SUH. 12/26-MON.12/27
TUES. 12 /28
C• For Spedd ,,._,.iew .. far...tiOll
THE SURF THEATRE
-<e:-~ ·: ~ -I ; ' I •
COAST HIGM'WAY AT Snf
~TOt411ACH
536-9396
••• ••••••••••••• •••••••••••• •• * COAST HWY. AT MACARTHUR i:JLVD. *
NEWPORT BEACH * 644·0760
. ..
8J8 DAILY PILOT
. BLOOMINGTON, Mmn. CAP>
........ The Super Bowl·jl.J\Xed Min·
nesota Vikings seek thelr fourth
National Football Conference
championship today against the
playoff-Jinxed Los Angeles
Rams.
It's the third straight ap
pearance for the Rams m the
NFC championship game They
lost the other two
Minnesota hus won all thr ee of
the confer ence title games in
which it has played
enroute to losing the ensuing
Super Bowls.
The winner of today's game m
Sunday. December 26. 1976
frigid Minnesota will advance to
Super Bow I XI to m eet the
American Football Conference
champion -Oakland or Pit-
tsburgh.
The National Weather Service
predicts the tem perature in Min·
nesota at gametim e will be about
IO degrees above zero.
Vikings quarte rback Fran
Tarkenton, who holds au career
National Football League pass-
ing records. a nd Los Angeles
coach Chuc k Knox agree that this
season's ed1t1on 1s Minnesota's
best learn .
"We have more weapon!.,"
AP Wlrepf'loto
'CLARENCE DAVIS GEARS OAKLAND'S RUSHING ATTACK.
• .
·~sta Bowl
. • . Oklalwrna Rolls
i • • • . . To 41-7 Victory
:,TE\1 PE .. \r11 1,\f'f
(>JwahumJ quJt tt·rbat I.. J'hom;l',
~l. nanH•d 11ff1·n..,1\r pl,l\l'f of Ute ~am•· ;iflt•r J,!111d1nj.! tht•
tt_,ehth r.1nkt•d Srn•nt'I " lo .l 11 7
~m l.l II\ •• I \\' \ II m I ll j.: I ll
urda ~ ·.., f ll'-.L1 Bm\ l tlul v. h.1t
h;id °'l't (1\ll 1111111
Wl' \\;tnt1•d 10 \\lfl h1).! "' "1'
Id pl:l\ .1 lot 111 \OllllJ.! Jll'Oplf•
sho"" thl' n,1l1C1n l"'' v.hat
ttad of pl,J\ ('I' "I' hJ\ I .... 1111 Che 1uhil.1n1 ""llhllmon•
t Loll 'aid 111..lahomJ 11rohahh
~rt ,Nf ,1 lot of fW'<•Jllt· It\ ... c·ur
._, nn 1h r 1 r...i l \Hl ,~,, • ..,..,100-. or \it j.!am1· Hut ht.' .... 1111 hi' duh J!ol
floPp} ,1fll'r th.it ;ind I f1£urrd
,.,. n<'l?ded -.om1• rn1111• r><11ni... L~he SonnN-.. h<"1·cl1·d h1-. w1-.ht•..,
ild1 ng .1 11 II l1•;HI bl'for•'
Wyoming., Cov. hm-. ).!Ot on tht•
h orl'board 1n thl' 1·10 ... 1nJ.!
lecond"
l V>tt ru.,hed for i7 vanls, third
oe;tt for the Soonu,, .incl drew
•r a i s <' f ro m <' 11 iH' h B a r q
8Wlt1cr i "Thomas d1c1 a very i::ood 1oh
,icecullnJ? lht' opt inn and he de·
,Ol'Vl's tht' outslrtndmJ? offensive
fiiyer trophy.·· Swtl7.er said
• Loll counh•rt'd thul 1t's rasv to k ~ood .. ..,.,hen you hll\'(' ~-uys
root of you blocktnj.! and run·
backs who can run with thl'
J and block ju"t os well . Th<'
nrd could have J(onc to som l' of
other ~uys on our team as
Uy as mr
alfback 1:-:l\'ls Peacock set thl'
ge for the Sooners onslau~ht
hen h e scor ed the first
* *
tnuchdO\\ n of lh<' afll'rnoon on a
threl'·'.> artt run 1n lh<· OJh•nin~
riuart er That t•appl'll an 80-yard
drive whtl'h opened lhl' national
I.\' ll'I<'\ IM.'d gam1•, played under
~unn~ ... k H'~ lJdor<• iJ aowd uf
4R. il t
\\'_\omrng. whrch lost nnc fum
hie ;incl !iUffcrPd fJ V(' tnterC<.'p
tion:... \\a:-. unahlc to get any of.
fl•nst• ~eneratC'd after betn~ kept
1n the hol<' most of the day bv lht• 1·1~hth ranked Sooners · ·
Oklahoma wound up its seasnn
v. 1th a 9 2 I record ""h1le Wvo111 m~ f1n1shed 8 I ·
Pl'Jcock s '-C'Cond touchdown
l-.1m1• m the third quarter when
hl' look J prlchnut and ran 15
~ ard!> around riRhl <'nd to make
lhf' S('Or(' 27 ·0
Wyomin1(s only "cori: of lhc
dJy came with Ju:-.l 22 SC'cond1>
lrft. fullback Robbie Wright
plunginJ( 10 from one.} ard out lo
cap a 92-yard march.
Oklahoma's top ~round-gainer
was r l'ser ve halfback Woody
Shepard. who picked up 85 yards
on nine carries a nd scored a
fourth quarter touchdown The
Sooners also ROl touchdowns
1from halfback llorace Ivory and
fullbac k George Cumby
Ivory . who gained 54 yards
rushin~. scored the second
touchdown or the day for lhc
Sooners on a four-yard run with
3·22 left in the opentnlol quarter
Cornerback Terry Peters or
Oklahoma was named the
gam e 's outstanding defensive
player
Tarkenton says matter-0f-facUy
about the explosive Minnesota of
fense. which also rncludes All-pro
running back Chuck Foreman.
seMational rookie wide receiver
Sammy While and tackle Ron
Vary·all rated with the best at
their positions
"They arc." s ays Knox, not
quite so m alter -of.factly, ··a
great offensive football team and
Tarkenton m akes things happen
onthe field.''
The 16-year veteran enjoyed
another T a rkentonian season·
hilling 62 percent or his pass al·
tempts ror 2,961 yards, 17
Raiders,
Steelers
Tangle
~
OAKLAND (AP> The
longest -running and hottest
post-season rivalry in pro fool·
ball the Pittsburgh Steelers
versus the Oc.kland Raiders --is
into round five .
"More people will watch it
than the Super Bowl," predicted
Steelers center Mike Webster as
the team s prepared for today's
American Conference c ha m · .
pionship game here. ··n·11 be the
game or the century.··
Coach Chuck Noll's Steelers
have beaten the Raiders in the
last two AFC title games and
On Tl' Today
Channel -1 at l
gone on lo claim National Foot·
ball League c h ampionsllips .
Their goal is Lo become the first
team ever to win three con-
secutive Super Bowls
J ohn Madden's Raiders began
L.hls season with a dramatic 31·28
victory over Pittsburgh and post·
cd a 13·1 record. best in the NFL.
They certainly would be favored
in the Super Bowl over Min·
nesota or Los Angeles, the Nf''C
finalists. if they upset the defend·
mg champion Steelers.
"I think it 's i:reat," veteran
Oakland defensive back Willie
Brown said when both teams won
firs t-round playoff gCl{Jles, the
Raiders nipping New England
24 ·21 in a controversy-filled
game ending with quarterback
Ken S tabler 's last -minute
touchdown run a nd the Steelers
overpowennS? Balltmore40..14.
"They're the world champs,
and if we want to be the champs.
we've got to beat them," Brown
concluded.
In 1972 and 1973. the teams met
m first-round playoff games. Pit·
tsburgh won the first postseasoo
game on a freak touchdown, with
Franco Harris scoring after
catching a deflected pass. and in
1973 the Raiders won.
The Steelers came back from a
I ·4 start this season to win their
final nine regular season games.
Oakland finishe d the season with
10 consecuti vc victories includ-
ing one over Pittsburgh's AFC
Centr al rivals, the Cincinnati
Bengals. which opened the door
to the playoffs for the Steelers.
Pittsburgh's "Steel Curtain"
defense which allowed only two
touchdowns an nine weeks wall be
facing the NFL 's leading passer
rn Stabler. who threw for 27
touchdowns this sea5on
Phoenix Rallies
To Trip Lakers
P HO EN I X <AP1 Pa ul
Westphal of Phoenix scored 13
points 10 the fourth quarter a nd
ignit ed <l comt>-from -behind
Suns' chargl' that buried the Los
Angeles Lakers, 113·96, in a Na.
tional Bas ketball Association
gam e Saturday night.
Phoeni x trailed 28 20 at the end
of the first qua rter and 49.34 a l
the half In the first two periods.
the Suns shot 27 pC'rct.•nl from th(·
floor. and ... cored only 14 pomts 10
the second quarter
lOS &HGf l E'\ QI, f f')t11 t R1J"''"11 17 A brf111
J-Cb4r 11 Allrn I\ f~an-y " Nf'IUtntl"\n '
Wtt\f'tl"Of"'n \ A,,_.'""'"'" 1 "'-'flP' ~ T•lutnf
PHOI HI Jlt IP Htti'r41 1 '"°''Y lft /\')llm~
1• ~" H w,. IC>h4'1 1\ l V.\n Ar\d.aff" ~ D
\/•rt """'"I" 1 l t't ' A.,.u,_.., i J f',,_,f 1 Lo' Af"I0-1 .. , 1" )I 7• 71 ~
.,..,,."'' lf' .. '\Iii .t) t 1l
r outtd O•JI "'O""' ' '"' tQi1,;I\ lO\ A"9f' .. , lJ Pfw>fon•• 1• A t11'j
touchdowns and onJy eight 1n
tercept1 ons m 412 attempts
Rookie Pat Haden, who will
op en f or the R a m s al
quarterback, connected on 57 t
On T\I Todafl
Cltann#I 2, 10 a ....
percent or his 105 attempts for 896
yards and eight touchdownit
Haden was intercepted four
times .
"He's about tops running his
offense," said Rams assistant
coach Jim Wagstaff, rererrlng to
Title Tilt
TllTkenton. "Of course he has lhe
offense to do 1t."
In a regular season meetmg
Sept. 19, the Ra ms tied Min-
nesota 10·10 in overtime. The
Vlkmgs, who finished the year
wilh an 11-2·1 record, led 10..0 in
the fourth period before fumbling
d eep in their own territory to set
up the Rams' first touchdown.
"It 'II com e down to a cal-and
mouse game,'' says vete ran
Rams safety Dave Elmendorf
''Tarkenton trying to fool us and
<Rams defens ive coach) Ray
Malavasi trying to cross the~
up."
The teams met two years ago,
for the NFC title with Minnesota
takUlg udvantage or five Ram
turnovers in a 14-JO victory_ The
Rams also were NFC finallsts a
year ago, losing to Dallu. 37-6_
Lo8 Angeles has won only once
in 11 games at Minnesota, a 31.3
romp in 1968.
Minnesota middle linebacker
Jeff Siemon, with a pulled mus -
cle in the calf or his left leg, is
ltsted as doubtful for the game
and appears to be the lone re-
gular for either club who may not.
be able to play .
JOHN CAPPELLETTI IS ONE OF THE KEYS IN THE RAMS OFFENSE TODAY.
Too Fictional to Believe
Stephenson Epitomizes Determinatio"' Success
PASADE!':A If I had written
this story as f1ct1 onal movie
material. it probably would have
been rejected because 1t would be
too far out to be believable.
Yet the Curt Stephenson sue
cess story is indeed non riction.
And it is indeP.d unbeltevablc
Curt Stephenson reportcd to
the first day of practice football
practice when he was a collelole
freshman. f'or that brashness
alone he should have been given
a medal.
I mean. his background and his
size made him a cundidate for a
straight j acket the minute he
walked up to the head coach and
had enough audacity to say he
was trying out for the team.
Years ago, as a youth in his
nall\'e Michigan. Stt'phenson
went out for Pop Warner foothall
He was lhe quarterback of a
team that went 0-9
"Tha t ended my football
career until J was a ~emor al La
Jolla High School." he recalls . As
a senior nc started offensively
and defensively, playing wide re
cciver and safety
La Jolla had a rather unspec·
tacular 5 ·4 !>eason and
Stephenson was not j?Ood enough
to be accorded any sp ecial
honors. such a!'.> all-league. lie
had no scholars hip offers.
So he went off to coll<'ge lo
pursue his ambition of someday
becoming a coach. And he went
to the school that had been his
choice for several years: The
University of Michi10tan
The UofM 1s whal bi~limc fool
ball a nd winning gridiron tradt·
tion are all about. It has had
seven losing seasons s mce I 936
It's the pl ace that lum11 out
guys like Tom Harmon, F'orest
Evasheski. Al Wistert. Oenm<'
Oosterbaan, Don Dufek. Ron
Kramer, Ron Johnson. Chuck
Ortmann. etc
It is a univer sity that has pro-
duced 70 football All ·Amen cans
and which draws crowds in ex-
cess of 100.000 lo m ost of its home
gam es.
At any rate. Curt Stephenson.
boasting two seasons or com-
petitive football decided il would
be nice to play football for the
University of Michi,t?an.
David had a better chance
against Goliath.
Stephenson. standm{! 6·0 and
~
GL ENN NHITE
weighing a ll of 148 pounds .
turned out for practice.
lie was going against high
school All-Americans. collegiate
All ·/\mericans , g u ys who
generally had more honors to
their credit than he dad pounds.
When onl' Wolverines coach
saw this unimposing young m an
he Look Stephenson a5ide. told
him he was too young to die and
too sm all for a uniform. lie s ug-
gested that he come back in
about 100 m ore pounds and added
something else about the game of
football being something for
MEN ... BIG MEN
But Stephl'ns on wa s de
lermined to give 1l a shot and lhe
coaching staff finally decided to
give him a whirl
Amazingly, Stephenson lived
through the first day lie made 1t
through a week. And by the end
of the season . he was enough of a
prospect as a split end that head
coach Bo Sch embechler said he'd
put him on scholarship 1f he'd sit
out a year and learn more about
the progra m
Stephenson carMed on and lo·
day, as a junior, has earned
starting duties for the Big 10
champion Wolverines .
Schembcchler ~ays Stephenson
over ca m e the heavy odds
stacked against him because he
is aggressive, a good blocker.
good receiver and because he is
determined.
"I cou Id sec the natural talent
and dedication. If he was willing
to work. he dcserycd a chance,··
Schembcchler once said.
So Stephenson made good on
hi s chance and now wilt display
lus wares aj:(am st USC in the
Rose Bowl Saturday afternoon.
"I went to two Rose Bowl
games while I was in high school
!La J olla I. .. Stephenson says .
"Bul l never dreamed then that
someday I'd be playmg in the
Rose Bowl. However, the first
day l put on pads at Michigan I
knew som eday I might get to
play here. '
So he has earned his big op·
portun1ty. J\nd when you use the
word earned, Stt•phenson.indecd
ep1tom1 Lcs 1t
On TV Today ·
9 :45 a m. (34 >
SOCCER.
nITBOL
10 a.m . (2) NFC FOOT·
BAl.L The Los Angeles
Rams meet the Minnesota
Vikings for the championship
of lht> National Football Con·
ference 1n Bloomington,
Minn
11 a .m. C28) -TENNIS -
Tennis stars of the future are
s howc ased In the Junior
Davis Cup taped at Miami. \cont by Ou,,.,,
H 4 1 tt ti
'"""" ~ n ~ 1 • U11 P"ACor'-\run rv,,n-;th.'lm ,nn' f \.l
l'lfttt\'Arun vnn \t'"-.-~n"'"'"'-l
F C. 1> Von S< '"'m"""
Knox, Grant Don't Koo"' What to Expect I pm. (4 > AFC FOOT·
BALL The Pitts burgh
Steelers meet the Raiders in
Oaklan d for the c ham -
pionship of the American
Football Conference.
~G \O\fnn St-h,.m.,nn
Pf'"COt'k 1 ~run Vrtn ~"~"'"""' tnc''
Cumtn• • tvn •V"'"' \'""""'"'-" ~ •C 1i;' !.N>o..irottru"' 1\lf>t"!\ft\A""1nn ll11t •l W''O.,t • ,.u,, '(1'rt\,"f)vita'\ "'"•I -.e ,,.
dowft•
t•v•rd\ fWl ye•O• noro1
' I\
I•~ tn11
1111., 'Y•'C1\
n &TISTICS
0..r• Wt;ttm " ,. 11 111 41-Ul
ll II
.. 0
JSO ''" on I II ,.., • I uo • In
l"dlvlduel Lt*r\
114SHING OiolA•o'l"e VotOl'•d I CS I 011
• Pt<KIX-1-71 Wvomlnq )OM\ u IA Wf"l"' .c1 .. 1 .... 10 )6
C!tVl"IO A()~l."Otn• "'~,,,.., 1 •• -·
V""'l"'I. HOWAfd) 4S <:-I I
SIHO O• ••llOM• "~"', 10 ,. YA•O. ... o_ t, Wnm•"t, (l~I• ,.IH , ~ (O<Dlft• """"'>. ·--I
BLOOMJNGTO.N. Minn. (AP>
-Ask Bud Grant what to expect
in today·s National Football Con·
ference game between Min
nesota and Los Angeles and the
Vikings' coach just laughs.
"I'm the last gwy who l(nows,"
Grant said Saturdey. •·That's
why I've got a ll this gray hair."
Rams coach Chuck Knox
doesn't have gray hair yet , but
that doesn't mean he knows any
more about what wlll happen to-
day than Grant does
These two teams went at each
otber for fave quarters back in
September and settled notblna.
finishini:: tied at 10-10. Jn that
game. the Vikings passed almost
at will but couldn't run on the
Rams. Los Angeles. on the other
l\and. had a n effective ground
1ame working but got very ljtUe
through the a ir.
"What happened last time
won't arfcct this S?ame,'' said
Knox. "We l'xpect u real tough
game. but I think we·re ready lo
play."
Grant sees si milarities
between the two clubs. "We're
very much alike. personnel·
wise," he s111d "The teams ha-
ven't changed a great dl'al since
we played in September ..
The major differences a rc the
development of Ahmad Rashad
at wide receiver for Minnesota
and the absence of linebacker
Rick Kay for Los Angeles. Kay,
who made the lie Savini! in
terccption In the fmal seconds or
the overtime period. underwent
knee surgery Inter In the season
a nd hi s j ob went t o Jim
Youngblood
The Vikings w:ll have a change
at linebacker. too Amos Martin
wlll start in the middle, replacing
Jeff Siemon. who pulled a calf
muscle in Minnesota's 35·20 Cit"$t
round pl ayoff victory over
Washington last week.
Siemon did not pr~ctice this
pas~ week but Grant did not rule
out using him at some point in
today's game.
"This is the season of mirac les.
11m't il?" said Grant.
The Rams certainly hope so.
This is their third straight NFC
championship game and they're
still looking for their first berth
in the Super Bowl
··1 hope," said Knox. ''thot t.he
third time ls a cbarm."
3 p m . C 7 > -PRO
BOWLI NG Finalist.II com-
pete in the Hawaiian Invita-
tional Tourname nt, taped in
Honolulu. 6:~ p.m . (28) PRO SOC·
CEa Arsenal faces
Manchester United.
11 p.m. (28) THE WAY
fT WA S Sugar Ray
Robinson a nd Jake LaMotta
relive their middleweight
championship fig ht held Feb.
14, 1951
Sunday. December 26 1976 0-'IL Y PILOT 8 fl.
Cagers
CoRipete
Monday
JC Fives Play SantaAnita Cos Alamitos Results Former Seoul.
Skiff Dies
Oranie Coast CoU~ge
faces MlraCosta Monday
and Saddleback duels
Palo Verde Tuesday in
JC basketball tourna-
ment action.
To Launch' In Tournaments Meeting
.-..i.11ir••r
Cle•r, Tracll "•••
f'1•ir ••C• -000 ••'"' J .,.., -C•••m•"9 Pvt\• u 100 Ji9t•>M•H-
tMorfiMll I 0 00 10 00 I .0 ~tor S..re U1t\U<llelll •JO J 40
Oh lier 11•<1 CCl1rltM l 1 ID
Four Orllnge Coast area prep bas ketball
teams open tournament
J>Uly Monday aCteOlOOn
ar early evening
Huntington Heach, Sun
Clem e n te , Irv ine 's
• University and llunt·
ington Beach's Ecti i;on
are engaged 1n tourney
action.
Huntington Beach 1s at
the University of San
Diego t o compete
against a bevy of San
Dieao learns. Monday's
flrst round opponent is
St. Augustine
San Clemente draws
l..ong Beacb Wilson in the
.KatelJa High tourney at 7
p.m., while University
clashes with Montclair
at 12:30 in the Chino
tourney.
At Villa Park High the
Edison Ch argers vie
with Compton at 7
The pairings
VIit~ Park 11tv1t.lion .. t
Moncso
"l •S L8Mtlli .. anv\l~ Arn11,1'h
\ 1S (.dn1on v· M a9f\ut1d
1-<.:otr\oton V\ E: di\Ot\
e .lO -<.vprtt\\ ... , \1111 ... p,_,.
SO Vnl'ffn•h Tourt\•meftt
MOncl,Y
•a<"' -M l\\10n Htty Y\ EI r <ll(MAn
10 •.s -Linto•n "' Cl••rtHnont
J?·:JO-HtUfOOV\ \0 HOO\;f'tr
OCC's Pirates travel to
San Marcos to
participate in the annual
Palomar tourney, tangl-
ing with MiraCosta at
6:30. The Pirates will meet the winner or loser
of the Antelope Valley
Cuesta game Tuesday
night. The finals arc Wed-
n~day.
Meanwhile. Sad·
dleback 's Gauchos trek
to Palm Desert for a 4
o'clock meeting T uesday
with Palo Verde in the
College of the Desert
tourney. The Gauchos
are defending cham-
pions.
Saddleback will play
the winner or loser or the
Oxnard Mt San Jacinto
game Wednesday night.
The finals are Thurs·
day night.
Golden West is also JO·
volved in tournament
play this week, battling
tough Long Beach City
College at 7 Wednesday
night in the ope ning
round of the four-team
Fullerton classic The
other game natches
Fullerto n and Santa
Barbara.
The finals a re Th uni·
day night.
"''''''"' '•"'"•1 Mond.1y'' O•""•' l o m -Cue\t• "' AntttOr• \t..,11•• • ,o G,oumont Y\ C·Mtvo,.,
t. JO-Qr •nQt: (Oa\t V\ M lfA(..,,I•
8 1$ -Palornar V\ (.,l,,"di\h.1
TW1tt4l1y't G•mtt
3 -Cucnta~A"tetOP4' V•llfly It>~' " OCC Mlra(o11., io'Wlr
• 4S Gro\'\mont C.•nyon\ •~t •' P•lon"I•' c,1,.no.1..-lo\'-"
6 30-0CC M1ta CO\I• w1nr1titf ~' Antero~ V~tl•v·C.U•\t• wlntwt
I U P~11om11r Gtenrtttft ..,,~, "''
GrO\\mon1 (dn'(On\w 1nn1·'
c.1i.. 111111 o ... ,.. ,.., ... ,
Tvn.Uv'• G•mu
• -Saddteo.c:" v\ Palo \/err;,
S JO-CltrU).¥\ Tr•d• ff'll(h
1-0•n•rOv\ Mt S•nJKin•o
• X)-0.Wtt V\ c .. rra Co\• w .... ncl.1lr'• c;.mu
1 U-S.OO•ecwco. Peto v1•0t lowr
"'-O•nerd Ml ~n Jacinto 1.,...,
,. Cerra Co,• Ott•rt fOUor v'
C1t11J'\.--Tr~T•lnt~et.
S lG-S.OOlaCWcll.P•lo V••Ot w•n
ner VI. O•nUO Ml S•n JaC~"40 wr1n .....,
1-<Jtrr• Cow O.wr t wt~ •t.
C.lttU\» TrMtt-Ttch wr1nMr
Tl\u..U•y's a ......
S lO-<on...,t•llott <11•mp1onwn
I Tllt•O place
I JO ~rwtmo1on1~lo
f'11lltr1on Tourney
Wl'drte\.d.ty'\ G•m•'
1 -Go•OPn Wu,, V\ l Of'\Q ~,.ft-< h
I 'i f:ullerronvs Sdnt.1 D•'bif'•
Tthtr\dar·, Game-s
1 GWC LBCC fO\or '> Full•rton
S•.tHa B•rbu·a to\fr. • .s GWC.LB CC WIM•I V\
Fullerlof'\·S.anta B•rffro iNlnn1·r
ARCJ\DlA-The best
Jockey collect ion in track
history and an introduc-
tion to the metric system
wilt highlight the open.
mg of Santa Anita's 40t.h
thoroughbred racing
season Tuesday.
Post lime for the 78·
day meeting, which ends
April 10, will be 12:30
from Dec. 28-F eb. 13; 1
o'clock from Feb. 16·
April 9 and 1 : 30 on clos-
ing day.
Among the excellent
riders on hand are Sandy
Hawley, 1976 Eclipse
A ward winner as the na-
tion's outstanding
Jockey; Angel Cordero
Jr.. America's leading
money-winning rider
this year: Laffit Plncay
Jr., three-time Ecli1>3e
victor ; and William
Shoemaker, the win-
nlngest rider or all lime
with more than 7,000 vic-
tories.
Tlme-)0 SI
AIM> '"" -Oft Vtr ••" twldn ""90t, ,,, • .,.,..,, 2, Trvly l'ol<eY. Oii
O.nt. C.lm Com•I
Ho k••t<llel
u au«• .... _.. .• Nau Mell! a ,_ """1tt S.W., ... ._ U4t.ll
HCOND ltACa -UOyerdt ,.,...
okll' UC> Clelml119. p.,, .. U,jQO.
BvcldYW•YM
((:r1-• I 4.IO UO t ID
Su,.. "IHI fTrH1u••l t 00 1.10
MlclclMI T eltm Too (Ad•lrl 1 t0
Time-ta 01
Alto ••n -Q""st T O•roo, Gflf''
8oy. l\IOQVO. Sol•• '"••Qe. Wupv W•rr'or
N01Ct1tCl\es
TNlltD ltACI l lt V.,d, l V-••
olcK & UP. Clelml~o. Pv•H U.lllO
Serel\4l's lsl1
041<...,..mv•l
~IM•hel (Harl)
P..,. •Clllc <C•rdl>rel
Tl""' -0 •S
\Ml H O 300
•Ill )40
'40
At'41 r•'I -On Tiie H,,..Mt, P•PC>a'\
8r•t, l(lnQ RUld, HftlV l(lp, ~'
LNI C,.t•
No K•ft(Ml
l'OUllTN ••ca-'•OOY•'°'-2-• old• Allowenc1 Pvne U,000.
T""Burr~r
IH•rl) 620 3 «1 2.0
Qot~ Wall1 Uo CCarOoial 3• J 10 LOl!ta l'olly (CrH91rl 3 IO
Tl,,,. -20. It
Al10 ran -Eltemoon. Ml"
Aeuur1, 8 10 8 looM1rs, Covntry
~· Noo<r1tt~•
"'"" ltACI -lSO v•rd• l ~·· otd• f. uo. Cle>illl.O •llowaM1 PurM
M>.000.
Pro Scores
l :U Oowt\f'y v-. Pmnt Lo"'"
•-H un\1no1on Utdcn v\ ~t Auqv111n.,
,.4S--SO Un1v,.r\1ty Y' Nob•~",,.
11.JO--Ef CdtT11M ¥' Pi1th•t il H .. f\ty
~eat~y "'Sout"wt't
Ctr.i"O lnv1t•tlon•t
Moncsu 4 30-Pomon~ ¥\ non'ld
11--Gf'rtrlO'\ V\ Uol•l'\.ti
Racing Car Debut
Delayed by Gurney
Also, Cans will find the
metric distances of races
next to the usual mile
and fu rlong m easure-
ments on the program.
This move com es as a re-
sult ot a g radual switch
in the United States to
the metric system .
DENNIS ROSENE 4 to West Coast Hwy :
N•UDflel IUhUtall ..... 1."°"
Pr-nl• II), LO~ AnQtlH•&
Bullalo I U. Oelroll 106
wnnln9ton 1 n , c1ev111no ..i
PnllldtlDhla IOS. NV l(nl<lo,l 104
Chltaoo"6, lta nu• C11r .i
PortlandllO, S.•lllHS
1? lO U1'1¥•n•ly ¥\ Mn1'lttl4,, 2-<0•rw~4 ., l• Cdn•d"
1 10 Ml c., m•• ¥\ E ~'1"-><I
• Aft• lom11 v\ J ,."'01 .. Ctly
1 JO Evonct1do "<;\Chi""
~ <t•r,.mont "'' ,., '''" H1'tll't ,,,.,
K•t•ll• tnv1l•tlorul Moncur
1 Orn l R W 1l\.f)I'\" \ '" r1 .... n•""''" • .J) NtJll1hqlf .,._, Ii:,,. I
fue\d.1v
1 p m ( Ulh f'IOn ¥\ l""'--'
8 JO fh•t1r•lyH II• V\ '\t A,l\lhrll\y-
By ffOWA RD L . HANDY
O!tM D•llT l'ltot St..,
Dan Gurney and All·
American Racers have
pos tponed the debut or
their revolutionary new
Indianapolis ra cing
machine until Jan. 9 at
Ontario M otor
SJ>('edway.
Tests of the off-center.
Coa l Ar aerodynamic racing car 8 ea w e r e o r i g i n a l l y
scheduled for Dec. 16 at
Ontario. Sports
Calendar
"We 're doing a lot of
other work and the car is
so new that we decided to
wait," Gurney says.
''We're working more f1••~.1:i~~~~:.1~·;,.1:~u•Mm.n• on engine development
1co1,.,,, v\ rnmp1..,, 1 Pm 1 """ right now and checking
0."'10 Univ .. "1V lou•n.i"1•nl H•llot 0Ut 311 Systems We ha· fl'IQton 9,.,.,'°' "' \t A•t'J11· hnt •
., m 1. "•'•"• iou•n•m·~· 1\ '" ven't run before here in :;:;:::~~1' ~.1~~~~".~.'.~ ;;,;,.'~~'.:' our laborator y.
11·101>.m 1 p,,.,.,.., ... , .. ,,. '",.. "rt was a tough de-
<.o&\• .,.,.,..," "' ~ ''" '" c1s1on lo make not to run
\cJ( t., • '"" ,, ... ,/ . '".,. , ' "' t"I "'"1 1• '"' ,,,., .. "", ~ ,. r,... .• the car in December but
,.,._.,,.., I I n ' •1 M • • n '• we alJ thought ll best lO 1
""'""' w::ut and make sur<' or , •" .!":•d .. 0" " things before we tested."
'"*' C-'-,.,, ,,, ,, " , ',.1 ~·t
p, 10 V.,,·1t 'U t
W'•dl'\••d•t 10•\. 1'1
'°'lf\\.1 I ,.. NP#f\ •• H •'"""'' 'f'\
fl tJ,,_..,,, ti 1l1t It J'• I p T+
f I •y'°lt 'ill ~, J I I I" t + tft'l I •11 '" t
f tl\4"Jf" ~· I I µ t' • t \ n•• if ,.., t
Gurne) and his c rew nn
the Joq,?C'ns<'n Eagle that
1s Jpt to mak(' racing hJ~
tory in 1977 are rurn·ntlv ~orking on prehm1nar\
s ketches or painting the
new blu<' machine
F1bcr~las~ horl~ ()c.trt..s
will be added in Februan
aC'corct1ng to l'urren.t
srhedules anc1 Gurney 1-;
hniwCul of ha v tnJ! at lrast
one of lht• lwo cur:-he will
enter at Indy m May rt·
ady for t<'Sls in Indiana tn
March ~,;:~.,1:; 1
:' ~·-;'II .. A'.~'.";;0~~ :·,::. With Ou an<• Punrho '
•···~·· • ·· · ··,.,. ... • •· Carter. a Manna Ht~h
'• "'· • • " '• '1 ' ·~ •••1 «rad uate. a!I his dn ver . t 1.,111' , ·~· • "' ,11t • I l"tH. • t. ,.,. . ..., . ,. " • · ...... ·· Gurney ~a~ a~kt·cl 1r thl' ~~=. ~: ... " ~· ··; ..... ·~~~ .,l'('Ond rar IA-OU)d ,J)SO
, "' , •. "• ..... t'"" hO\t'adri,cr
<. •• "' • e •o-• LD"I "° •" ' "l/o, thl· :Ol'l'<llld 1·,1r ( • t ( • I A' l i •' INll' I tiJ'"""' t , , .. .• . ,,,.. • •• ~111 t..-a lladn1p tn l'8~•·
~-;:·,:..,.. : •· • ... "' ·• we hav(' an) lroulJll'. he
added ··R1~ht no~ 141•
don't plan to have two
<'Ors in the race "
"•\"•'f>• ., l I _,. ~.
C-....n• •')I";'"' ,., . r ,,.,., • 4tl '1111 .,. " u tr...,, rv.. A"t• ·• • r' 1,,,1"1,,,,.. 1
t .. o~ "•~t .. ,. ' .•• ,,.,,,.._ #It ,,,.,,, ./ ... ,,, •• •'•• tow• ..... , .. C.••m• t.-. •' ,,..,.,,.,,,. •~u,., .. , ,, ... .,,.., ... .. "' """ . . . .\,\.
O.· 4, ·,t n .. ,1111.,d, ' • ,....., . .,,
e t (oron • n .. t M ,, ~ ••• •Mft M•rot• ,., ' .. r.• • l l n,... '~ .,.., w .. ,,,. ... I,.,, 11\l<'J,jtP'tif't l'( I(,,,,~
ftl .,...,.., \f tt• I) 111\,.-t ) tddl bill lj
<~•l•q• ,, ,. ~·•·1• • ,.,_.. n., ... ,
''"'"f'll•"' Wrw\tt1f\•j •4 ,,.,,.,.~," ""-''" ,.
£'c.""a1on 1n .• u,, .. , , 1n .. ,,, '""'~'"
~, ... ,Mu '("\tAinutrt•1' ftf'l• ,., '
Mol'WtitY i Ui, 1 •
WrHtt1~) \4'il(14'0? !•OU\~ At °'"• H•ll• 11 1\1 T U"\d • ., fJ•11 ..
,..,,_ .. uw.n (o\t• M.-, .. •' M''"'nn "l•tO. ( IJ,Of'\' ,, .. , M ., ,., r 1 f11rn
O•na ~••H "'' l •' '""' U• ''" \l'HW''''"' "'' \•n rtt"'"'"'• ~"'"" .. 4\ Nt""'C"''' ~·''''"'' •fl 1tr /f "'-'" O,t •t ("nlw•tl A"'"'''"'°' °'''\t!M\ ..f LID1!'IY ("~•1\ll•n ll)<>tl\ •l 1 Jill
M,t '"" Al\tnr111) t ,,11 .. u• ... \Art d l..,twlO: Colll'Qe 1 I \01
Golf Results
NUNTINGTOlf l•ACLl,f'CC ~IT\ •"" Tur1'.ay SMot low ...,,
,,.IUl'O.y I I Ot,rnn H•11 ry M 1 At1 ... _Mii •7, l Loyd T1110<, 6'!
t~rl 1 8oD Holl1nd, M 1 Jof>n
S...ltlwell, Y J 1111111111 C.rrol1 9ol>
~'l'llU\"'n .. Trtt J•ru,•ry cal•n<l•r of•"""" •f
.._,"'tlnQ1on S.eathlf Country (•vb fl~ 19-mo<1lhly ,,, .. 11no on-•
...,, ~-Send• \f\Olqu<1 tourno_..t at I e.m JMI I\ \(Otft1j Oft• IWO !ltl
ftf' N lh Of tounom• "'"" •
Supremf:'I~ confident
lhe new cars will handle
better in turns at higher
s~eds and that they will
bring better fuel
econom y, Gurney 1s
hopeful that other owners
will beat a path to the
door11ofh1s All Am('n<'an
Hacers plant 1n Santa
Ana to purchase models
ofthenewcar.
"We have nothing but
good feelings about the
car and the way it Wlll
perform and we plan on
putting it in production if
anyone else wants to
purcbaseone, "he says.
But right now all er.
forts are geared for the
Sunday, Jan. 9 initial
trial on a race track
N ewPQrt Beach
645-6470
"Count on mt foreconomi protection
and prompt, pmooal service."
• Llkc a good nei,;i~.
State Fann is there .&
, .. ,., ...... c.~
\I•···· .u. ......... """.., .. -... .. °'' " •..-."'fl~ • ""
WHO NEEDS THE 50·YARD LINE?
Enjoy the game in your living room on your ...
SEVEN-FOOT
COLOR TELEVISION!
THE ADV ENT VIDEOBEAM COLOR TELEVISION SET
'Tanta~tic l"hat Ii 1ho on1y way to describe Advent's VideoBeam
color TV 111 1 Ir r<?C'<'IVOS TV proqrdms as any set does. but proiects
its vivid r oior p1c1ure onto .:i ·;fool ' screen. Just Imagine football,
movie& .in<t nil your 1avoritc p1ograms on a screen ten times 1he
sir.a of any '''""' Roi & Come 1n today tor a demonstration. We
qudTantr>P 11 ... 111 be an experience one you'll want 10 have at
home
I~ 1 ,, .. ,, rr•
STOP IN OUR SHOWROOM HOW FOR DEMONSTRATION
001 HfWIST STOH HOW C>nH AT
605 W. I 9ttl ST., COSTA MISA • 541.295 I
VIDEO PLUS, INC.
2816 E. COAST HWY. lnext to Pilar Wayn~'1I
COROMA del MAR • 640·5093
... , .... 2 ...
SMIY,.flll.9
DOORS OP(N Wf:CJl(NOS 12 HOON
WUl\llAYS 2 P.M. • ADUl.TS ~.SO
• JUNIORS (12161 $200 • JllOS ~Ill $12~
New condos and
fcono-"Inn" f7••• 64 .. 4'26
14061 "S...4451
<g,.._ S1.iJe1.,.
THE aOUNO IF~CTI M•N ...._,.......,,lftm._...· CAMPAH t,;111
V,llCATION
BllllDOl IAY HOVIEllOAl V,11CATION
..... , •• ,o ..
tM•t1 IOMI UO .
t•Oor.e •f'1•'t•l
M4t1 1 \h, t Ad •lt t
.... l'IOolt I Hull
AOow-eo..-•C•rf1ttt•' l ime 1110 •tlO Ni!:W YORK CAP) ~
'"'"' "•1 \v•l<nod "''~" M""4r• -1 Bid O•t 8ofn fl 'O"'"' Dill Sk1fC, a longtime
New York Yankee scout
who spent SS years in or-
ganl1cd bas eball, dkd
Saturday morrung at the
age or 81.
A.l'\O ran 0 11t•O (•P'I (••1t11
<Ir • ~ T1• 0..•l Miu Jtllt~~
Toe M·• LA O il'\ Too Men
NO\(tetcll ..
l'IGNTII .. ,.,. -IOO v••d• J yur
ol<b ~UC> Cl•omln!J. P~tH llWO
SllUH ltACI[ JSO urd• ) W•r
OH O..rmG••ll IW••<ll
OH·!ihe"'' Old\ f. up (l•IMl"O l"u•H "4,)00. t K<llghtl HO l ID l .0 w t,..tnlerk
CACl<lltl 01<•1 O•""-'10.lomb•I > 00 Skiff, or Bronxville.
Ht(. (W•honl
8•m•IO' (WfiOl\tl
Tlmt-10l'
u •uu e -1 c~••m o .... a >-
Olt•"-'11t, ,.Id ii .. '°
N .Y ., h ad been tt
catcher, minor league
manager, farm director
and scout. beginning his
baseball career in 1916.
He was a scout with the
Milwaukee Bre wers
when he retired in 1970.
f j,,,.. lltl
At1o0 ,,." Gold topy M•'\ R•·w.,re1
8•• Rectit on M•n, Myn•rn.1~w..
1)1u. .. , B•• •Gold, Just Jim O.ndv
"fO,U tlCM '
U Eucta -t·S,,.rm f. I DH
CMm1Galo, ... lt1 U7 \0
NINTH ltACK •!'IO YA'lh ) veM
"liuct• >-Wlnh" L••• .. t·M•O. l'alcll lM 00
otd~ Cl•1m1f\Q Puf\eUtOO
c;o cn10 Ch•<~
IOtlomO• I 14 00 • 00 '1111
Sl!vllnH ltACI! HO •••O• I 8vrd 8•aln I War ti• A OU I AO
veu o•o~ Pv•u llft•,000 Tllu oo•<IM
\t.-h• lutur lh '*v•ntn 'unnlnq
F1doecoun1 010'\' ~ tO He played briefly for •
the Pittsburgh Pirates in
1921 and fo r the Yankees
in 1926.
ComlnQf()tt"
~eo. I
,;rime 70 AO
. h I U <I• -t·O• Chltk Chltk 4
1·8vnl er acn, P•l• U 11 00
Alltll<l•n<1 -12 ... l
START THE NEW YEAR
WITH A NEW CAREER!
Fed Mart
WANTS YOU TO BE INCLUDED
The opening of our brand new store in Garden Grove will
create many rewarding career opportunities for you to
choose from. We're looking for enth usiastic, qualified
employees who are interested in being part of an exciting
new concept in retailing. As a member of the FedMart team,
you'll be an important contributor to a rapidly growing,
progressive company with annual sales In excess of
$480,000,000. Get in touch with us now, and let FedMart
show you what opportunity is all about.
HOURLY AND MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITIES ARE
AVAILABLE IN MANY OF THE DEPARTMENTS
LISTED BELOW:
MEAT DEPT.
PRODUCE DEPT.
GROCERY DEPT.
DB.JCATESSEN
PHARMACY
NURSERY
BUILDING MATERIAL CENTER
CLOTHING DEPARTMENTS
SPORTING FOODS
MAJOR APPLIANCES
HOUSEWARES
DOMESTICS
AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE
CENTER
JEWELRY DEPARTMENT
FURNITURE
CAMERA DEPARTMENT
PRIOR RETAIL EXPERIENCE HIGHLY DESIRAILE
CHECKSTANDS
tm1en:Jwmeym1n
Courtesy Clerks omcE
Vailt Clerks
Slc1t Miker
Sales bdlt Clerks
SOFTLINES
aethinf Sales
& Order Clerks
Domestic Sales l Order Clks
HOUSEWARES
Siies r. Order Clerks
CAMERA
Sales & Order Clerks
RNE 'JEWELRY
Siies & Order Clerks
HARDLINES AND HOME
IMPROVEMENT CENTER
Hardware Sales and Order Clks.
Blildlnf Supply Sales & Order
Clks.
Nursery Sales r. Order Clem
Green Goods
Nursery Accessories
Pant Siies
(Mbini hperienee)
Sportlnf Goods
cgtJllESY & IEFUHD CLEnS
MAINTDtlNCE PISONMEl
AUTO CENTER
MecUaics (llctnsed Ii
Certified)
fr11t [Id
lnbs
Tune-up
Lamps
Smo( (Clftffati11 Rtfd.)
PHARMACY
Sales CllR Typist
WAREHOUSE
FOOD
Food Stockers
Product Clerks
DELI CA TESS EN
Mat Sll~trs
Departmtnt H11d
Sna br P1ru~n1t
MEAT DEPARTMENT
Nut Cutters
Meat Wrappers
SUNDRIES
Stders
Book Sales
MA·JOR APPLIANCES
AHO ELECTRONICS
Salas Cllfks
Small Appliance Salts
SECURITY PERSONNil ·
APPLICATIONS FOR EMPLOYMENT
WILL BE ACCEPTED STARTING DECEMBER 27th, 8:30 A.M
TO 5:00 P.M., MONDAY THRU FRIDAY.
PLEASE APPLY IN PERSON
13831 Brookhurst Ave.
Garden Grove, CA
MANAGEMENT
Merchand1se/Deparlmeol management po11t1ona a1111l1bfe tn Celllorr11a
01v11ion or the FedMart Corporation .
• AUTO SERVICE CENTER MANAGERS
• HAROLINES (Building Materials,
BM1c Hardhnes. Sparttng Goods. Nursery)
• SOFTLINES (Mens. Boys , Woman s.
Girls , tnf1nt1")
We are looking lor energetic, eJCperienced retail people Send resume to.
THE FEDMART CORPORATION
UOS Metro St., S-DMcjo, c .... '2110
FedMart offers you:
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• Excellent benefits. including: hospitalization Insurance.
paid holidays. sick lea°'t!· 'Ylcatlons, etc
The Consurer's Friend Since 1954
Fed Mart
Family Savings Centers
An Equal Opportunity Employor-M F 1
f IJJ2 DAILY PILOT Sunde . 0.eembet 28 1978 •
J
;
Contemporary
sportswear separates.
Orig. 25.00-105.00.
Now 1h off PACEseneR
Famous maker
velvety separates, skirts,
pants and blazers.
Orig. 50.00-86.00.
Now 24. 99-42. 99 BETTER SPORTSWEAR
Vassarette® wrap robes.
Orig. 30.00. Now 17.97
YOUNG CALIFORNIAN LINGERIE
Full grain cowhide casual
shoulder bags.
special 15. 97 HANDBAGS
Blanket sleepers.
Orig. 9.00. Now 5.97 TODDLERS
BETTER COATS
All -weather coals with z1p-ou\ warmer, Orig 95 00 Now 45.99
DE SIGNER DRESSES
Selecled group of designer dresses costumes and evemngwear
Orig 100 00. 300 00 . . . . . . Now 49.99-149.99
WOMEN'S DRESSES
Group of designer dresses, costumes and evenlngwear.
Orig 80 00. 300 00 Now 39.99-149.99
SPORTSWEAR DRESSES
Dresses and pantsuits Ong 100.00-200 00 Now 49.99-99.99
ROBIN.AIRE Misses· DRESSES
1 and 2-pc dresses Ong 40 00-60 00 Now 19.99·29.99
_ong dresses Orig. 60.00-80 00 . . Now 29.99-39.99
MISS ROBINAIREICONTEMPORARY DRESSES
t and 2 pc knit dresses. Ong 36.00 -60.00 Now 17.99· 19.99
Long dresses. Orig: 56.00 -80.00 . Now 19.99-39.99
PAGE BOY MATERNITY BOUTIQUE
Tops Ong 14 00-23.00 Now 2.99-5.99
Pants Orig 18 00 -20.00 Now 4.99-8.99
HOBINAIRE SPORTSWEAR
Famous maker tall collectton
Ong 18 00-38 00 Now 1/2 off
ROBINAIRE DIRECTIONS
Pants. Ong. 20.00· 22 00 Now 7.99-9.99
CAREER DRESSES -
Wardrobers. polyester. Orig 44 00-48.00 Now 19.99
BETTER COATS
S~lect•on of better fashion coats Now 1/a off
MISSES' BETTER DRESSES
Daytime and late day dresses
Ong 86 00 · 150 00 Now 56.99-99.99
BRIDAL SALON
Bridal qowns. all-season fabrics. current styles in white
.111d ivory Orig 150 000-400 00 . Now 69.99-229.99
111 Los Angeles. Beverly Hills. Pasadena. Newport. San Diego.
l "111tt)S Woodland Hills. Puente Hills stores only
DE SIGNER SPORTSWEAR
F ,ill clearance ot designer sportswear
Oriq 40 00-240 00 Now 27.99-159.99
SPORTSWEAR DRESSES
1 anel 2. pc dresses. Orig 46 00. 80 00 Now 22.99-53.99
BETTER SPORTSWEAR
Fam0us maker wool separates Ong 30 00·90 OONow 19.99-59.99
BETTER SPORTSWEAR SEPARATES
Separate-; Orig 21 00-53 00 Now 13.97-34.97
BETTER SPORTSWEAR Ill
F:imous maker coord1nales Orig 21 00-61.00 Now 13.99-39.99
BETTER SWEATERS
Pullovers. wool, acrylics OnQ 25 00-52.00 Now 15.19-35.99
DRESSY SEPARATES
Assorted tops. pants and skirts Orig 28 00-82 00 Now 1h off
ROBINAIRE COATS
Street lenqth coats Ong 66 00-140 00 Now 39.99-79.99
ROBINAIRE MISSES' DRESSES
Dressy separates Orig 34 00-!>0 00 Now 2'.99-32.99
ROBINAIRE KNITS
Buftf' kmt wardrobers and pantsuits for tall and lhe holidays
Orig 82 00-164 00 Now 1n-'h off
MISS ROBINAIRE
1 ;md 2-pc. dresses Orig 42 00-68 00 Now 29.99-39.19
ROBIN.AIRE SPORTSWEAR
Solid and novelty pull-on pants Spec:ial 11.97
ROBINAIRE DIRECTIONS
Sweater sale Orig 14 00-36 00 How 8.97-23.97
Polyester gabardine penis Orig 21 00-23.00 Now 13.97-14.97
ROBIN.AIRE SPORTSWEAR II
01..ina tunic!> and shirts Oriq 16 00 · 22 00 Now 10.97-14.97
CAREER DRESSES
PolyP'ltf'r 1-and 2 -pc dresses
Orrg 30 00 · 38 00
CONTEMPORARY SPORTSWEAR
Famous maker cowl neck sweaters. Orig 22 00
YOUNG CALIFORNIAN SHOPS
How 14.99-21.99
Now 13.97
Sweaters Orig. 20 00-26 00 Now 12.99-14.99
Famous maker coordinates. Orig 21 00 -61 .00 .. Now 13.19·40.99
Holiday sweaters. Orig. 18.00-40 00 .
Career dresses Ong. 24 00-38 00
BLOUSES
Print blouses Orig. 19 00. 21 00
CAREER SWEATERS
Acrylic sweaters. shpovers and cardigans.
Orig 15 00-30 00
FASHION ACCESSORIES
Designer silk scarves
HANDBAGS
Now 11> -'" off Now 'h off
Now 13.97
Now 9.99· 14.19
.. SJMCl•I 5.97
Dressy. casual. patents. leather. suedes and vinyl baga.
Orig. 10.00-72.00 . . Now 5.19·47.19
HOSltRY
Burlington pantyhose. Oflg. 1 75 . . ••.•.•.•••
FINE JEWEUtV
How 313.IO
Assorted tine 1ewelry . • • . • . • • • • • . • • • . • • . Now 25%-50% off
Polyester 2-and 3-pc. pantsuits.
Ong. 30.00-46.00 ... Now 14.99-19.99
YOUNG CALIFORNIAN SHOPS
Plaid wool pantcoa1s. Orig. 68.00 • Now 19.99
HANDBAGS
Nylon shoulder bags with leather Wm
Orig. 26.00-48.00 ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Now 12.99-23.99
HOSIERY
Slip per and sandals. Orig. 6.00-14.00 . . . Now 1.99-5.99
FASHION JEWELRY
Fashion jewelry clearance. Orig. 4.00-10.00 Now 'h off
Famous maker jewelry gold-tone. silver-tone and
white. Orig. 5.00-35.00 . Now 'It off
BEAUTY SALON
Permanent wave. including cut. Orig. 40 .00 Now 20.00
LINGERIE/DAYWEAR
Olga® lacy bikinis. 4-7. Orig. 4.25 ...•.• _.. . . . . . Now 1.99
FASHION JEWELRY
14K gold/diamond 1ewelry. Orig. 95.00-400 00 Now 62.99-265.99
COSMETICS
Je Rev1ens body cream with 2 oz. Je Rev1ens Eau de
T oifette _ _ . . . . . . . . . . . _ Special 8.50
FASHION FOUNDATIONS
Vassarette• bras. Orig. 6.50-7.00 Now 5.19-5.59
YOUNG CALIFORNIAN LltlGERIE
Lanz sleepshirts, short or long. Orig 1t00-13 00 Now e.97-1.97
LINGERIE /DA YWEAR
Collon panties. 5-7. Orlr.i. 2.00-2 50 Now 314.00
LINGERIE/SLEEPWEAR
Warm sleepwear. Orig 13.00-18.00 . . .. Now 8.97-11.97
ROBES/LOUNGWEAR
Fleecy robes. Ong. 22.00-36.00 Now 14.97-25.97
SHOE SALON
Stanley Ph11tpson. Orig 39.00 . Now 25.99
WOMEN'S SHOES
Suedes and leather in tall colors from Amano
Orig. 36.00-40.00 . Now 23.99
AVANTIQUE SHOES
Passport stacked and closed heel . . •.. Spec:lal 11t.87
WOMEN'S CASUAL SHOES
Group of name brand casual shoes. Joyce, Penaljo, Old Town
and more Orig. 23.00-29.00 . . . . . . _Now 16.99
HI SHOP
Famous maker pants. jeans. Orig. 14 00-22 00 Now 8.99-13.99
GIRLS' 7-14
Cotton knit turtlenecks Orig. 7.00
GIRLS' 4-6x
Now 4.99
Famous maker cotton /polyester corduroy sportswear, pan\s,
skirts and 1umpers. Ong. 10.00-14.00 How 7.47-1.99
BOYS' 4.7
81lly the Kid cotton /polyester corduroy coordinates
Orig. 9 !>O-14 .50 . . . Now 5.99·8.99
TODDLERS
Sleepwear for boys and girls. Ong. 7.00-12.00
INFANTS' APPAREL
Dresses. . . . . . . . . ...•.
GIRLS' SLEEPWEAR/ ACCESSORIES
Gowns and pajamas. Ong 9 00-14.00 ...
YOUNG PEOPLE'S SHOES
Name brand slippers and boys and girls.
Orig. 4 00-9.50
MEN'S CLOTHING
Trios: jacket and 2 slacks In assorted
Now 4.99-7.99
.. Special 7.97
Now 5.99·8.99
.... Now 2.99
fa brics. Orig. 240.00 . _ . . . . • . . . • • . . ...•...... _ . Now 189.00
MEN'S SPORTSW~AA CASUALS
Casual slacks In dduble knit or texturized polyester.
Orig. 15.00-22.00 Now 10.19-13.99
TREND SHOP
European fit spor1shirts. Orig 18 50-35 00
MEN'S FURNISHINGS
Long sleeve dress shirts, polyester /cotton
Orig. 17.00-22.50 ...
MEN'S ACCESSORIES
Now 11.99-22.99
.• Now 12.17
Medallst underwear, T-shirts, V-neeks, A-shins. briefs, boxer
• shorts. slim boxer ah or ts. Orig. 316. 75, 315. 75. or 3.50 ea.
Selected leather belts.
MEN'S SPORT8WEA9'
How 20Y. off
. . • . .....•. SJMCl•I 4.97
Tailored sport shirts. Orig. 14.00-28.00 . . • . . . . . . . . . Now 10.97
14K gold chains,
bracelets and earrings
Orig. 10.00-152.0.0.
Now 7.50-114.00 FASHION JEWELRY
Haberdashery
man -tailored shirts
in assorted patterns.
Orig. 21.00. Now 13.97
CONTEMPORARY SPORTSWEAR
Polarized sunglasses.
Special 6. 97
FASHION ACCESSORIES
Nylon shirts. Special 7.97
YOUNG CALIFORN IAN SHOPS
Cotton knit. turtlenecks.
Orig. 8 .00. Now 4.97 HI s Ho P
GIRLS' ACCESSORIES
Belt collectron. Ong. 4.00-6.00
MEN'S ACCESSORIES
Now 1.99
Selected m en's gifts, pewter mugs, jewelry boxes
Orig . 12.50-40.00 ........... _ ... Now 1h oH
CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS
Ornaments. wreaths. garlands, tabletops.
trees. Orig. 45c-18.50 . . . . . . . ...
CANDY GOURMET
Mrs. Carver's and Betty Clark fruit cakes
Orig. 2.25-18.95 . . . . . . .
STATIONERY
Closed out on famous maker candles
Orig. 50c -9.95 .
BOOKS
Now 1h off
Now ''2 off
. Now 1/z off
The TrojiR~ Southern Calif. # 1 team Orig. 7 .95 .. Now 2.19 eussw
Lead crystal stemware. Pans Royal by J. G. Durand.
Goblet, wine or Sherbet/champagne. Orig. 4.00Now 1,99
LAMPS
Kappa shell swag or ceiling fixture.
AR~~~iFn5·00 · · · · · · · · · · · ·
Holiday candles. Orig. 5 00-10.00
MEN'S SPORTSWEAR COORDINATES
Coordinate slacks. Orig. 20.00-25.00 ..
MEN'S CAMPUS SHOP
Men's sport shifts.
. Now 89.95 ea.
. Now 1h off
Now 12.99
Orig. 17 00-18.00 ............................ Now 10.99
SOYS' SHOP
Outerwear and sweaters. Orig 10.00 -48.00 .. Now 1/1 oft
MEN'S SHOES
Select group of Freeman·s. Orig. 46.00 Now 34.99
NOTIONS
Fleur de lls paltern· Jumbo suit bag. Orig. 9.00 .. . . __ . _ ....•••.•.. Now 7.19
BOOKS
Look Book Orig 35.00 .. Now 17.99
TOYS
Miniature pinball games. Orig. 3 75 Now 1.99
LUGGAGE
Samsonite scandia soft side luggage.
Orig. 35.00-75.00 ... -. . . . . . Now 26.25-56.25
LINENS/ DOMESTIC I BEDDING
Cane vinyl clo1h with cotton flannel backing
Orig. 4.50·1 l.OO . . . . Now 2.99-6.99
Spectalor Slnpe sheets by Burlington in orange and brown.
Orig. 9 00-t9 oo . . .. Now 8.99-15.99
Imported goosedown pillows. Ong. 30 00 . Now 27.00
SILVERWARE
International silver plated holloware:
Well and lree .. _
Sugar and creamer .
CHINA/GLASSWARE
Mikasa Garden Club stoneware, 20-pc. set
Orig. 70 00
St Germaine French lead crystal stemware
Ong. 5.50
HOUSEWARES
Set of 6 wine glasses Ong 6.00
LAMPS
Aladdin accent lamp, 13"H. Orig. 25.00
ART GALLERY ART/GIFTS
Special 39.99
Specie! 29.99
Now 49.99
Now 3.49 ••·
Now 4.99
Now 20.00
Original 'Wildlife· photography collection, 7 subjects to choose
from. 20x24" • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .......... Specl•I 29.15 .. .
Decorative accessories. Ong. 5.00 -50.00. _. . . . . . Now 11>-1/2 off
DECORATIVE FABRICS
Off White basic custom drapery fabric ...... _ . . Speal•I 4.50 yd.
CURTAINS/DRAPERIES
Handwoven cotton spread: Twin. Orig. 59.95
Full. Orig. 74.95 ......... . . . .....
King or queen. Orig. 89.95
FURNITURE
. Now 49.95
. Now &us
Now 79.95
Italian provincial dining group, 6-pc. Orig. t,314 00 Now 715.00
Allmark chrome. brass and glass tables. Orig. 119.00-250 00
Now 107.00 -233.00
CASUAL LIVING
Parade. 5-pc. patio group includes 42" \able with 4
arm chairs. Orig. 400.00 . . . . . . . . ...•••
SLEEP SHOP
Sealy Posture Form Oelu)(e, firm support.
Twin. mattress or boxsprlng, ea. pc. Orig. 79,95
Full mattress or boxsprlng, ea. pc
Orig. 99.95. . . . . . . . . . .
Queen, 2•pc. set. Orig. 249.95
King. 3 -pc. set. Orig. 329.95 .
Now 219.95
Now SS.00
Now 75.00
. Now 185.00
•• Now 295.00
QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED. ALL ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE'.
I
Newport F•hlon tttlnd
Watmf Mter Mi ll Special Shopping Hours: Closed Christmas Dey. Shop Sunday 9·6. Monday 10·9:30
I
2800
898-4331
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AGING WOMEN FACE EVICTION FROM 'WONDERFUL HOME' IN WISCONSIN
Rigid State Regulations May Force Women Into Sterile Institutions
Women Face Eviction.
'Wonderful, Home' Not Up to Smtff
BROOKFIELD, Wi c;. !AP) -
For eight ye ars, P aul a nd
Dorothy Rush have been t aking
elderly wome n into their home as
foster "children." Now, city of·
flcials say the dwelling doesn't
meet legal require ments and the
women must be sent to institu-
tions .
"I wouldn't wa nt to leave,"
said Edith Bratlay, 89, one of the
seven women who live with the
Rushes. "I sure wouldn 't like to
llvein a nursing home.''
RUSH, 64, AND his wife, 58.
began their project by an!>wenng
a newspaper ad placed by the
W aukes ha C o unt y SQci a l
Services Board, which said the
women did not need nursing
home care but had nowhere else
to go.
"We met all the requirements
and have passed all the inspec-
tions by the Social Services
Board," Rush said.
Recently. however. Brookfield
city officials said the nine-room,
antique-filled house did not m eet
local fire safety standards and
zoning restric tions.
''THEY DON'T H AVE
anything on the books about
foster homes," Rush said, "so
they tried to m ake us meet the
fire regulations for nursing
homes, which are much dif-
ferent. We can Tdo that. Th.ls is a
home, not an institution."
He said it would be too cosUy
and would destroy the cozy,
homey atmosphere to make the
structural changes required by
the law.
Rush s aid officials told him he
could be fined up to $1,000 a day if
he continued to operate.
BUT BROOKFIELD Mayor
Wilham Mitchell Jr. hopes a
compromise can be worked out.
"We would hate to close down
the home," Mitchell said. "It's a
wonderful place wittl~ fami~y at-
mosphere. ll 's so much better
than an institution."
Sue Campbell, 76, who lives
there, agrees.
"IT'S JUST LIKE home, .. she
said. "Just like a family."
Dog Ate Her Child
Rush said it would cost local,
state a nd federal governments
an extra $1 ,200 lo $3,600 a person
annually to ins titutionalize the
women. Tragedy's Effects The Social Service s Board
pays Rush $300 a mooth for every
woman the board refers. He says
his expenses are $375, and he
charges up to $400 for private pa-
tients. Linger for Mother
CITY OFFICIALS told Rush.
after a meeting last Friday, that
he'll be able to kee p the women in
the home at least through
Chris tmas.
NEW YORK (AP> -J oanne Bashold, whose six-day-old daughter
was killed and par tially devoured by her starving watchdog last Sep·
tember, is still struggling to put the tragedy behind her.
A state Supreme Court judge dropped charges of criminally
negligent hom1c1d(', saying tha t J oanne had suffered enough. Mayor Mitchell said officials
will try to find a way to allow the
home to continue indefinitely if
Rush absolves the city of all
liability and installs fire ext-
inguishers and smoke detectors.
TODAY . S H E LF.ADS a
r eclusive life. st aying with a
married cous in m 'llew Yor k's
Soho dis trict and tr~ing to avoid
contact with r('portt'r~. rnends,
sympathizers and t>ven family
I
H e r m o t h e r , \1 a r g a r <' t
Bashold, of Ki rkland. Oluu, s aid
Joanne seldom {'alls homt'.'
•·After the trial. she came here
for a whale." Mrs Ba. .. hold <.aid,
"then s hl' went back lo New
York. I Just don't know what
she's going to do."
WHEN MISS BASllOl.D, who
had moved to New York tn 1973,
was rape d and became preg-
nant, she decided to havl' hrr
baby. For the last twn months or
pregnancy. s he was forced to ac.
cept welfare s upport because she
couldn't work. llr r Ea.st Harlem
flat was unrurn1shC'd excl'pt for a
folding chair :ind a rug. but she
had h e r m o n g rrl Grrman
shepherd. Le~ la. and the dream
of a bab) s he could IO\C'
Carra was born ~pt I. and
Miss Bashold happily called hl'r
parents, ~ho hadn't even known
she was pregnant Ml>thcr and
daughte r re t urned hom1• from
the hospital Sept 5, hut her
money rc maml'd locked inside
the hospital's property orface •
The n e xt m ornan ~. Miss
Basbold returned to the hospital
for her belong1ng!'I. Because it
was cold and Carra was slightly
jaundiced . s he decided to leave
her at home.
"I LEFT THE baby on the
floor with the dog to protect it,"
she said. When she returned,
Carra was de ad.
,,,,
1RYINQ TO FORGET
Jo•nn• B••ftoid, 25 ' I
A New Jersey firm donated
money lo provide a funeral for
Carra, and Miss Bashold lived
with her cousin m Soho. waiting
for her case to go before a grand
Jury. She was not in court for the
dism issal of her case. but her
lawyers said wh('n they told her
she broke into tears and sobbed,
"I can't beheve it. Atleast that's
over."
A public hearing also has been
scheduled for tonight on Rush's
request for an exemption to a
zoning ordinance prohibiting
more than three unrelated
persons from Ii ving in the same
single-family residence.
Remarriage Lost
To Grim Reaper
OMAHA. Neb. CAP) -Robert and Joanie Gibson
were a middle-age couple who had gotten divorced.
then had second thoughts. But they didn't act on those
thoughts soon enough.
This week. Gibson buried his former wife, after
watching -with ring and marriage license in hand -
as she died of cancer last week.
"WE THOUGlrr WE'D HAVE time. She went
downhill so fast," said Gibson, 48, city recreation
coordinator and the father of four children.
He said he wanted to talk about his ordeal so
others in similar situations might profit.
"You can't count on your health holding out," he
said.
GIBSON AND IDS WIFE ended their 17-year
marriage recently by mutual consent. He said he had
reached that "certain time in life when a man thinks
he should be doing lots of things. I wanted to open a
bait shop in Wisconsin, things I never had done
because I'd been tied down."
He said it was part of "all the fantasy of a man in
his 40s."
His wile, he said, agreed. She "wanted to be her
own boss ••. exertherindividuality."
THEIR A TI'ORNEYS WERE surprised, he said
"because no one was mad at anyone."
As months went by, they began to talk of remar-
rying, Gibson recalled. Then doctors detected a brain
tumor, she underwent surgery and he moved back
home to help care for her and the kids.
Mrs. Gibson began to recover , but "litUe things
held us up," he said of their remarriage plans, includ·
ing postponement so a brother from out of state could
attend.
She took a turn for the worse, and last week a d~
tor summoned him to a hospital, t elling Gibson there
wasn't much tim e.
RE GOT A SON AND friend to witness the
ceremony, procured a license and bought a ring. The
hospital priest was prepared to marry ~em when .
Mrs. Gibson lapsed into a semJcoma . •
"We couldn't perform the cer emony," Gibson
saidL.'.,'you have to be legally alert1to be married."
·1·ne next day, she died.
. Sund!f. December 25. 1976
Kissinger Departure
.,
~·rut End to a · Rare Wit
1tASJUNGTO~ CAP > -Whatever
Henry Kluioger's lega cy as a
it.atesman, he Wlll be recalled as a
rare wit lD an otherwise humorless
C&ty.
It's a reputation he earned early. Jn
1969, bis firs t year as d1rector ol the
National Security Council, Kissinger
told an interviewer :
"There cannot be a crisis next
week. My schedule is already full.·'
JI'\ an, in another interview. he re·
marked: ''This job has done wonders
for my paranoia. Now I really have
~nemies."
AND IN 1972, ASKED how fame had
cbanged his lire, Kissinger quipped:
"Now when I'm boring at a party.
people think it's their fault."
In 1973, Ki ss ing er became
secretary of state, taking his sense of
humor along.
A reporter as ked : "Do you prefer to
be called 'Mr. Secretary'?"
Kissinger shot back: "I don't stand
on protocol. JC you will just call me
'Excellency' it will be okay"
And he didn't stand on protocol at a
dinner party for the Brillsh, French
and West German fore ign ministers
when he declared :
"I AM TOLD THAT the British real·
ly adopt their accent just to impress
Americans. If you wake them up at 4
o'clock in the morning they speak
English just like everyone else."
As a bachelor in the Nixon ad-
ministration he frequently dated
b eautiful Ho llywood s tarlets.
AP Wtrei>hoto
Oldest Sco1d11UUter
Sideny Lom a n, 97, the oldest
scoutm aster in the U.S., has
been honored with a plaque in San
Diego by his troop. Loman has
been a leader for 50 years,
despite loss of both legs.
SC Chamber
NowAllmm
Dining Time
The president of t he San
Clemente Chamber of Com-
merce has complained that the
group's monthly luncheon meet·
ings are just long enough to have
time to do everything except eat.
Roy D. Hamm bas decided lo
do someth ing about it. The
usual monthly board of directors
meeting will accordingly be split
into three separate meetings .
There will be quarterly meet·
lngs, Hamm announced, with
programs of interes t to the
general membership, monthly
meetings to present new mem·
t>ers and awards. and monthly
board executive sessions.
In a written statement, Hamm
explained: •'The induction of new
members, monthly beaullfica·
lion and Amigo awards, have aJI
contributed to a lengthy and
cumbersome agenda with no
time for fellowship and sociabili·
ty, or even to eat."
Hamm said the board also ls
Investigating the possibiUty of
starting monthly breakfast meel·
ings for all m embers.
"Power ... be sud, "is a gre at
~phrodis lac.' '
Kissinger oft en spoke of has "ter-
rified staff." He raged at them in
private and in public made them a
butt of hlS jokes.
WHEN A RE PORTER TOLD Ki ss·
inger in 1975 \hat the horse six re·
porters had bought -and named
Henry the K -was being trained by a
former U.S. foreign service officer.
Kissinger said:
"That Is very interesting. How won-
derful that, at last. a U.S. foreifln
service officer is engaged in activity
up to his m ental level.·•
As his term as secretary or s tate ran
out, a rumor circulated that Kissinger
would take a commentator's job on
television. Asked about it, he said:
"I will not go on TV in less than a
year unless they make It a love
s tory."
WHEN BASKETBALL'S Harlem
Globetrotters offered to make him an
honorary player , Kissinger accepted
-although he said he was worried
about "how I will look in short pants."
Presented with a blue.red-and-gold
uniform by the freewhe eling,
barnstorming team, Kissinger s aid
the honor suited him. ''I, too, make up
the rules as I go along," he declared.
Unfortunately. on some rare oc-
casions. Kissinger's amiable glibness
caused him embarrassment.
Attempting pleasant conversation
with austere King Faisal of Saudi
Arabia in the king's palace, he in·
quired about a painting on the wall :
"Is that an Arabian dese£1?"
"That's the holy oasis," lhe king
responded, and then fell darkly s ilent.
Recalling the incident, Kissinger
s aid he told h imself: "There 's
another three months of the 011 em-
bargo.''
Juno's Travails
Come to End
In LA Gallery
LOS ANGELES CAP)-Her bodice
used to be lower and her right arm was
originally painted at her side, says the
proud new owner of what is believed to
be Rembrandt's last painting.
Dr. Armand Hammer, chairman of
the board of Occident al Petroleum,
was interviewed during the first show-
ing of " Juno" atthe Los Angeles Coun-
ty Museum of Art.
"IDS COMMON LAW wi!e was the
model and when she died, Rembrandt
refused to finis h the painting although·
it was a commission from an
Amsterdam collector and money
lender, Herman Becker." said Ha m-
mer.
"There were suits and counter suits
for years until Rembrandt was forced
to finish it. That madeitoneofthe most
documented paintings in history. We
know everything about it,•• said Ham-
mer. "Rembrandt aJ ways had money
problems. He didn't know how to han·
dleit."
The painting is named for the god.
dess or wealth a nd the protector or
births and marriages, but the woman
wears a 17th Century dress. Rem-
brandt finally finished the painting
four years before his death in 1669.
.. X-RAYS SHOWEDTllAT he paint·
ed over the original right arm and that
he raised the level or the bodice on her
dress," said H ammer .
A trustee o{ the Los Angeles
Museum, Hammer has promised to
donate '' Juno'• to t he gallery and it will
be on display there until Feb. 6. It will
later be on tour in Paris, MeJOco City
and Moscow. Hammer has donated
about$20million in arttothemuseum.
For about 200 years the painting was
thought to be only a work by followers
of' Rembrandt. Hitler ordered it sold by
the museum in Bonn in 1935 for the
equivalent of $214.
.. HITLER THOUGlfl'ITWASdeca-
dent art. He made a lot of mistakes,"
said Hammer.
New owners bad the p ainting
authenticated by Dutch experts and it
went through a succession of owners. lt
was purchased in 1966 by then
secretary of the Navy J . William Mid·
dendorf II. former ambassador to
Holland.
Gadget,• Got RJa9t.U..
\ .~ at least It will help womm who use the rhythm method or
birth control tell when they are near ovulation. Inventor says the
device moasurea body's electrical changes. Risi.DI readings 1how
approaching ovulation.
'
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MUST SELL
41R·2 STORY
POOL · $67,500
Tree lined street i n
p r i m e b ea ch
neighborhood. Formal
enlr.Y lo lAr'c faro1l.Y li · 1ng room Brick floor to
et•thng fireplace. Coun·
t r y k i t che n . Di ne .
Flug:.tone te rrace:
l11deaway master suite.
3 b3lh's. 22' fa mily enter-
tainment room . ~1 any
decoration items , 1.c.
cui.tom shutters and drapes. Hurry! Won·\
last. Call 963-7881.
I ,,. ' " • I \ I f • I '
!®B
Hcrbor Vu Hills
Shows hkc a dream One
owner . Many extras,
custo m rar~ts. drapes,
wall ('ovcrini:s. 4 Uedrm,
lite fami ly room w/fplc. Bltn kitchen with pass
lhru wmduw lo patio and
beautifully landscapeJ
yard with sprmklcri.. \
real IJUy for StJ8.50U
1).14 7270
u.Jti# SHdd
ti"~
REALTORS
HO!HO!HO!
HOLIDAY
SPECIAL PRICE
SI 02,500
Quick acUon wlll put YOU
in this delightful 4 bdrm., family/dining, Mesa
Verde home, sitting on a
large lot, nmong cust.om
homes.
WATERFRONT
Pier /float Choice loca· tion, 4 Bit, 3 baths, 2 frplcs .. lge. patio, new
dee . Won'l last long at
$179.500
NEWPORT HTS.
A de l11eht to s how I
Spacious 3 BR. 3 ba .. J>OOI home. 2 1-'rplcs .. sundec!k over garage with nee.an
view! $139,500 (Or will
lease a l.$650 mo., yearly)
Corona del Mer
Twin duplexes. $93,000
Each. Beller hurry on
these!
latboa lcry Prop.
Realtors * 675-706() *
Sf ART THE
NEWYEAR
JN YOUR OWN HOMP:
LOWDOWN Upgraded Costa Mesa home. 3 Bdrm., 2 84.
f'lreplace, bltns .. new
cpls .. professionally
pointed. Dbl. garage, II.
backyard w/BBQ, b ...
woll fence. Vacant, caf\
ahowdnyor night.
-HORTH TUSTIN
Large home on a lario
lot ror 8 large family.
4Br, fam rm, din rm.
Quiet reaidenUal locauoa
nr the junct ion Of
CG/Nwpl Fwya. $71,000.
TIIE HOM F.sELLERS '752·~353
IAYFROHT '
4 Bdrml .. 4 baths; ne_w9' never occupied I 2.Story.
lots oC 1'00Cl & glass; pltt
Cnr befat. Nlce water
view.$2$9,500
associated
nll'~•w. 1-..,, •rCJ· ..
' • """ I• •• j I' ...
·. Q OAIL Y PILOT Sunday. Oecemt.26. 1m
The Week's Market Highlights NY, AMEX, OTC Ups and Downs
..
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NASD Quotations on Mutual Funds
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COP'l'IUOllT "" .,,uoc1u10,•ns
Weekly Sales
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'1• I 09• 1 Ill 110• 10() Weekly Stock Spotlight
e.:..r'F~"''j07' NL
101 Ft! t II NL
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Thursday's NASDq
Summary
NEW YOlll( IAPl~I tctlw owt•· '';.~It<' \/~I~! 'l1:1td ~J.S&o.
~~"'g·:; :~.: ~°-!I~~ :,~
~h~.g·;~ :~:.: 'r..: ~ ; ~;
()11....C..O • • tlJ,tOO ... ... • ..
Dort/\ (i,.., l}.O'JO IO'l Ill', t '• Pn1•0G • .. • ".100 1)4-1)\0 -'It r,.~t' .. 11.100 1'• 1<1. -1 ••
""""""' • .. • .. tOO ,.--. ~ • .. ' l~h c;... ,, .100 • .... ....
-~ ............ •.... 4" °"' t,fttcl • • • . • • • .. • • • • • • .. .. • )01 \!'I' ... not<! • .. • • • • • • • • • • .. • I.Ill
Tot•1 '"~ ••••• •••••••••••• t.su ,_, .. .., NOfi'' •••. , . .. , , ll
Ph--<# lo.if\ ••••••••••••• I I..... 10 fol.ti w~ .•.......... , ... • 664!00
Dow Jones History
NEW YORI( fAPI -T•~ loltowlnq h •
11\I OI I"~ 110-.1,,9 Oow J~f'\ A\lf'f41QJ"\ ..
'""' '')' tr441"9 o.ty o• th• .....,.,, o..i.
0.. 71 OH II
()·t to °'" J No• l• Nov I' ..... ll
NIN. 5 Ott. N
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NY Leaders Amerleaa Leaders
NV Stoek Sales
Case of the billion-dollar blues
faces W. Bernard Richland, head of
New York City's law department. Thievery's Technical'
Rough Mo:n.th
For New York
NEW' OHK !Ar i -\\ Bernard Richland JS
.l l.1wyrr whose only clu•nt has a $1 billion suit to
'4.'lt It In f<H.t his c·l"·nt · \iew York City -seems
lu h,I\ 1• no l'nd or legal I rouble New York has
ht't'n 111\·ohpll in ten.-; tit thousands of lawsuits
'lll<'l' the t:ni;:h~h hom. fi5-year old uttorney
114.'c·Jmi· th<· ht•Jcl o( lhl· r1ty ·s I.aw Oepartmt"nt in
1~5 1us1 ;" tht• h~H'ttl rnsis wa~ beginning. In
:tilOtJl !Ill pt'rt•t•nt or thOS<' C'3Sl'S the city has been
tht• <11•ft•nrl.lnt
But lh1' p::i~t month has been especially
ro11i.:h
A MONTH AGO, an l'me~ency slate law al·
lowing lht' city to delay payment on Sl billion in
~h<lrt lt'rm not<'s for thrrc y('ars past their due
natc w:l:. ruled unC'on-.t1tut1onal by a state ap·
Pt·alc; <'Ourt.
Thi:; past wetk. the attomey for Flushing
Natlonal Bank which hc'>ld.s S600.000 in those un·
prud notes and which won the suit against the ci·
ty. rejet'ted the rlty's proposal to pay its billion·
dollar debt by next Novrmber. partly In cash,
and partly in long·term bonds.
Instead the noleholders, represented hy
fiuslung Notional. :ire demanding run cash pay.
ment w1thJn the O('Xl year The city has 30 days to
present its plan m court on how lo do so
It is Richland's job. nlon~ with officials or
the state, the city and the !>late-created emergen·
cy body, the Municipal Assistance Corp. <MAC>.
to drart such a plan. The JO.day grace period is
precious time since no one has figured out how lo
~~se that kmd or cash.
~' : BUT TIUS 18 just one of the legal hassles the
· .. etey faces as a result d the fiscal crisis, ac:cord-
• tn~ to Jim Greilshelmer, Richland's chJef UUgat·
log counsel.
fr! He says the city is cu.mmtly fichUng "200 or
" lawsuits directly coMecttd with the pro-
ms stemming from the cWTent thrff.year
aer1ency financial plan to keep the city from '°"11 bankrupt. The moratorium on lhe notes
was Just one of many elements in the plan.
A retired teacher Is suln1 the clty'i teacher
pension fund for buying Municipal Anlatanco
C:Orp. (MAC) bonds at the height of the city'a
trlsls a year ago. Several retired policemen and
fircmeo and three retired City Untventty
teachers are suing their pension funds for thelr
:. MAC bond purchases.
Black~. Puerto RlcMs and women have sued
:the clty charging thllt layoU~ stemming from the
fl.seal c:rials have cost them more jobs than other ,roup1.
A 8tJJT BY A taxpayer cJaJms that hU real
le tax ratd It Wecally hJgh. He claims t.bat
' ause the city's capital budaet improperly opotal.na city operatir\1 expenae It.ems, tho pro-
perty tax rate which is based in part on the an·
nual volume or capital spending has been Im-
properly lnOated.
At least four lawsuits against the city allege
securities fraud in the sale of city bonds and
notes and MAC bonds. The Securities and Ex-
change Commission has also launched an in·
vestigatlon into whether Investors in city
securities received mislead!ng or incomplete in.
formation.
There are city workers attacking the legality
of the one· year wage freeze that ended last June.
The city is legally representing the board of
education in suits challenging the elimination of
sabbaticals for teachers and aborter school days.
"Virtually all the issues relating to reduc·
lions m the budget one way or another end up In
court.'· says Greilsheimer, noUng that the
volwne of thii; type of lawsuit "has gone up
tremendously" slnce the beginning of the fiscal
crisis ln 1975.
LEGAL PROBLEMS stemming from re·
duced city services forced by New York's cash
crunch have also been on the rise, says Irwin
Herzog, an ad ministrulive attorney under
Richland.
"People sue on claims or lack ol police pro·
teclion. They sue when a neighborhood hospital
I~ cl<M1ecl. They sue when their car hits a pothole.
They sue If a sidewalk isn't cleared and they slip on the Ice," he says.
Determining exactly how much the city ls
losing ln legal judgments and claims ls difficult,
because until 1975, this figure was mixed in wllh
one of lhe operating expenses that cJty budiet of·
ndall Improperly squirreled into lhe capital
budget.
According to the city comptroller's office,
the dty paid out $48.1 mllllon in legal damages in
fiscal year 197S-76, and CS.5 million as of Dec. 10
ln the current fiacal year. In 1974-75, city ~rds
show payments of $10U mllUoo, but that figure
improperly IQcluded retroactive wage aetUe· menu. Therefore, comparative figures prior to
1975 do not e:dat.
MEANWHILE, AS the city's legal caseload
has increased, the stair at the City Law Depart·
ment has sufCered a greater-tban-averate reduc·
tlon as a result or budaet cutbacu. To meel the
terms of the city's financial plan, Richland's de·
partment must trim $1.3 million from its $14
million annual budaet.
Richland aaya his department has been if ven a go·3head to hire 65 new employes, but he
1&)'1 the department la f'indlnc lt lncreaslngly dlf·
ficult to attract and bold able young attorneys
out of law school. A ~ lawyer for the city
get. $14,600 a year salary, about $."5,000 teu \ban
he or she mt1ht 1et to.st.art at a prtvato law firm.
I
f
MENLO PARK CAP) -The spread of com·
puter technology has helped the spread or crime,
providing new opporturuties for both white collar
thieves and mobsters, says an expert on the sub·
jed.
The growing phenomenon or crime by com·
puter. like picking the lock on the office safe or
juggling the books ln a small town bank, is easy
for those with time. knowledge and opportunity,
says Donn Parker, an information processing
analyst at the Stanford Research Institute.
PARKER SAID his studies show an increas·
ing trend toward major thefts using computers,
lncludlng a thrust lnto the field by organiied
crime. although specific figures aren't available.
"We face a problem today in which data
worth billions of dollars is stored and processed
in computer and data communications systems
vulnerable to unscrupulous people," Parker
said.
"Were these assets in physical form. they
would be stored in lime.Jocked vaults and would
~processed and moved under the walchful eye
of guards."
Parker testified last week before the Na·
tional Commission on Electronic Fund
Transfers. whi ch has been holding bearings on
the subjed and will report to Congress and the
President late next year on ways to beef up com·
puter security.
THE PEOPLE WHO make computers and
the buslne:i1ses who use them were late in react·
ing to theft by computer, Parker says, perhaps
because they were overly trustCuJ of coworkers.
"The computer was introduced Into a benign
environment on the basis of everybody being
good guys, open and trustful," Parker said.
But the incidence of computer crime has
quickly increased and today Parker says it is an
estimated SlOO million a vear problem, although
figures are dangerously unreliable.
Parker said he ts convinced organized crime
is moving into the field, for several reasons.
Spirits Higher
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Christmas may be past
but Americans still seem to be into the spirits.
That evaluation was offered by Stuart D.
Watson, chairman of Heublein Inc., of Framlngton,
Conn., who said his company's liquor sales are up 25
percent over last year.
"PEOPLE ARE indulging themselves a litUe
this year,•· Watson suggested.
··I think it has a lot to do with the emergence of
women as a force in the business world. This means
more d.lsposa ble income."
Watson also pointed out that sales lndlcate that
while people are uslng alcoholic beverage more
moderately. they are using them more often and
are swUchlng from tradltiooal brown whiskies to
such liquors as vodka and tequila.
THE LIQUOR lndustry estimates an addlllonal
10 million cases of liquor and aix million case• of
wines will be sold durtng the holidays, but that tbls
will stlll not un the industry out of its sales
doldrums.
"This will be a record December, but for the
year tbe industry's growth rate won't be above ooe
to two percent, .. Watson said.
\
-'"" . ----.
Not only would it like to perpetrate
crimes against companies through computers.
but it wpuld like to compromise computer·stored
government files on its activities. Additionally,
orgal\Ued crime ls sueh big business that it needs
computers for lt.s own operations.
SOME COMPANIEs are reluctant to dis-
close losses because of bad publicity, Parker
said. and there ts no telling how many thefts go
undetected because of poor security systems.
"The nature of the problem leads us to
believe that computer abuse is or low incidence
but results in a large loss per incident," Parker
says, terming it a "universal and persistent
threat wherever computers are used."
Order Yours NOW
v-
• PERSONALIZED
•srYUSH
•EASY TO USE
1000
•••
J
•ORDER FOR YOURSELF OR A FRIEND
IHA~E ANO SIZ! OF' lABEL
M•• John Doe
123 M1ln 511111
Allylown. Anyst•l• 123.&S
t
lebela Oo Hot 11•u A P1111ted Bor df•
J
J ,.
~
1
Styli,!. Vogve type oft li111 qu1llly wllif• 9ull\mtd pap4,,
' . " ~-------------------~~, F111 In 1hl1 coupon, cllp and mall with S1. 75 lo:
Piiot Prlnt1n9 Libel DI• ..
Pott Offlc• Box 1560
Co1t1 M.u, C1llfornl1 92•26 ·~\ , .
9
•• av ..... -,_ ,. c.l. (j a
----... 11?1111·11111lil1f111il1i1t----~
------------------~
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TM
Sunc!;,y Oocember :is 1976
OruL ;~~L·:;r.~·
LICEMSE
PREPARATION
SCHOOL
DAIL V PILOT C:J
~·
I .'• -: . ') •1.T • I I• I -• j • -'I (, J > ... .. . ' . It,~,,. At J
;> 1 14 N Br w.1y ~.sntd Ana !168-93~ 1
MAKE 1977 YOUR YEAR!
11,,,111 I \,,, i .,,, ,., lu u, .• ,/ I''''"
• H l{ ·, ,,,,,
• lln1wl~t1t¥' 11p h\l..-11 l1(lt1 t ,f
•( 1,,.,1n+1nl h"'-uhvrttH'tlt ''l'~"•••
• t• I l'f lt•fl I f ,, ,,~ I
•A• 1 I •• ' u ti'"'' 1•1 ' "' • •
TUES .. WED .. THURS .. 7·10 PM SAT. 9.n AM
~9.00 tuition include$ textbook and lectum
C .. SSl-9J21
, COSTA MESA COSTA MESA FOUMTAIM VALLEY HUMTIMGTOM BEACH · HUNTIMGTOM BEACH NEWPORT BEACH
./ Investors T alee Motice • s H () I' I' I "' ( i (. ~. 'J T "· H "I I l I'
pJrt1allv tl1·1 l'ln1ll'1t '.!.I J,.. , .. , 111 lit·
l.'Om11lt•l\·d f/11 , 11/r II .. 1111 1 ~
l''<l'IU'I\ I''
•CO '1 :'>1 F: RC I .\ L hulld lllJ.: • 1·nlt•r of
Cm.ta M1•-..1. 1· ·1 all 11·1 rn , E~
ch:tllf:I'. C'"lt .. Cl, will 1·1m,1clrr
l1•J\I• h ;11 I.. 1'1•111111' "I !Juli 111 ,\
U11' h• , I>\ 111.x
Eastsid• Income Pr~
nccentlv n ·f11rti1 ... h1·d ~1J:..,,
Att:1l'h1·d .l:Jfat.!1'' .1111J l.1undrv
n.Qm 1-; ~ 1·e ti 1·11 l rc•nt.il tu tury.
con1l'nl\•11l 111 fn•1•1.<.n ' 1;n.•Jl
OOll'nltdl 0111n1•r 111111 cti·.1·11"11-rm'
or tr.1111· l".111 l\·111111 ' I \!;1111·11
lll';i) Jo:,1,111• Ii II! .1:1'17
Spic & Spcm
N1> \11111n1: in "111 k ri·11u1r1•t1
ht>re < nmpl••tl'lv rt•1h"·ordlt<d
w new 1·.1qH•h , pa111t & )uls of
"~:lbow 1;r1 .. 1<;c" make 1h1-. home a
ptea~urr to ~t·l· 3 ~pa1•111u~ 111.'llrms.
slldmg door~ lo the p11t111 & direel
arce!oo~ to the ~JrJRI' from thr
kitchen Localed on a .,arc Cul de
Sac lol S6J 900 .lu:.t h,,ll'd -.o don't
wait, <·all &15 7221. 1111• rr ht·rt· ti)
help C'1·ntury 21 We.,lcl1rt l!eJlly
5916 Wonief' An.
H...tin<Jfon leach 846-330 I
~ ..
East Costa Mno
Rentals A vaHable
2 Hit~ • ~!l<I 1110
C'..dl for m un· 11110
t '1·nt11r't ~I W1•-.td1fr ~IS-7:?:!1
El TORO
Don't Let This Slip By!
Opeft Haus• Sat f5Mtt l 0-4
lk,1ut1ru1 home -vwner 1-. kuvin~
.111•.1'' 2:!7l!2 ,\v,1ton St El Turn :!
'tor~ t 11 vr' nt•w 2 ht~lrm. l hath
llui:•• hn1;11., rm unf1n1~h•·il . .ill
plu1nti .. 11 l1Jr hat h1 oorn 6. f1111 11141111
111'.IUl r1'111I j,11·11111 ltlln 11111.! llBll
rulh ""ulJt1·1I ('t·nl ur' ~I Utll1Jn
t\ 1>111 ll'. ~ I ltiM
FOUNT AIM VALLEY
$47,500
llu" Jrl ou1-.1a11d1nj( 2 bl.'<irm home
111 .1 JJIJnned 0111t clc1elopment Onlv
I ~ 1•.ir nl'W & r('Jdv for you. Poob.
ll'nnis l'OUrh. clubhouses & ALL
tl'rm-. Call for un appointment
Century 21 Ucrg 962·11891 or 640-4950.
Fantastic Fireplac~
h S,1nla ., rn1ran1·e 11> a '>P<'rtaru!Jr
:! .,111rv I l:kdroom beauty. Super
IJrJ.!1• lol .,urrou11d' ttw, !oopertacular
h1>ml' Ow11e1 s anx1oic.. mu.st sell
/\SAi'. hurry ' We need help .
l\•ntury :.!l Ber..: 641H!l50 or !)62 1!8'JI
Bee Smcri
Honey for Money
V J•'ant t111u.,l' I lppt•,.. 1111 \ 11111111•r
want" .J 1· l 1 •• ~ 0 l-drm" I '• bath.-.. onh c:..0~~ old C'1·11lun
Park S71.t ~ 'cnturv l!I UuhJ11
Dovlt• Mil I If~ Open S<it 1Sun I I ~10 Wurbler /\Vl'. FV.
HUNTIMGTOM BEACH
I For Rent, 2 For Sal~
laCuesta Villas
H1·,111\ lnr \ 1111 .11111 '"'" l,11111h
llubtJrullm: h;1n.:J111 .1 llt'<lrm-. ~
11.1111 •lo"· tu "·t11111I' lr111111111~ .11111
IH'.11'11 llu11\ l 'l'rtl111\ :!l H.-rg
'Iii:! HX'l I 111 Ii IO 1'1'>11
A Custom Shdte Roof
leauty!
A lwav y i.hake roof to,,., 111 f ltus
beautiful 1 u~tom ;\ll'ado"l.irk
home . As you f.'nl1•r . yCiu're
impressed with a tx•aut1f11I U'il'd
bnck & lasleful natur.il woo<h 1'tus
home 1~ prnbahlv thl' l'((•Jnf"o.t m
Jluntmi?lon Heal'h 1intl '>how' hkr a
model Oon'l mi-.-. ii al u11ly $82.000.
Century 21 1-:m cry 1w; :JJ(ll
Meredith Mansion
Tht:, ouhlanrlini: :'>tl'n>d1th <ialllt'll'
home 'hll"'> hl.l' .1 mv;lel Y.llh tr1·~h
pull'lt. hl·auuful rww 1·arpt.•h 'J Ii:"
bedroom!>. ~1 2 IJJth-. h:• IJm11 ..
room & formal d111111i.: room II
you 're I u-.~y. vou II '''"' 1l 1\ t11r .1rl'a Open lloui.l' St1t Sun. ~o:IO:!
Ha1•t•nwood, ll untin~ton Brarh
('enlury 21 E"'rrv 81H :1:101
Adult Hide.Away
l'h1· M . .-.t1•1 Suri•• 111 1111., tw;wt 11111
p.irlv lwn11· 1' 1111.111•!1 1111 ti\ •1'•·11
'"' lhl• '\Tomi I lorn 011•1 l•111f..111 • .1
f.1h11l1t1h 1,, .. ,1 ,11111 1.1111111 \ j.!l 111111<1
!lu<•r 111l1·1t .11111111•111 1·1•11l1·r 111d
1(1111rm1•1 l.11 t•h"n .111· .111111111111.it
hu:>rl1J,:llh l•> 1111' 1 lkllroorn I
Ii.1th h11o:hl\ up)!1.11t1•il h111111· I lrr• 111
,1 i.. md .11 on I\ -.ii • 1u1 < "·11111n ·• 1
Em1•rv K.lli :1:1111
A Gift of Becuty
Is Yours In This!
from thh lll'aUlrful 1-'ran('is<·an 1'11111
llomt>! /\ .i::arrkn k1trh1•n nowmr.:
into a hl'autiful patlO pool an•a
hll(hli,l!hts thh 'r•ariou-. I bdrm, p,
hJlh fdm1ly home with upj?radc·-.
thruoul Clo\1• 111 n<'w central pJrk.
'l·hools, bea1·h1·' & 'hQppm.r:: Thi'
Wf'<•k', he:.l µool buy! Century ~l
Emery is.tl:i·3301
lyThe 5" u ... 1utdul 4 twdr1Jom. 2 hath LJ
<.'ut?-.ti.I 1\"um;1bll' lu,an ('11rm·r lnl
New drape,; ult l h1., and mm" fu1
~.9!!~ Centurv 21 Bt•ri.: r..io 4\>SO or
962 88'JI
IRVIME
CulYerdale
"Mini Rancho"
Lr:. Cul ck ';.it· lot ~urmunch th1~
ma"""" 2 ~l ~ ·I h1·1tr1n an11 HONl"S
R00\1 ht1n"' l.1w:1l1•!1 11 lilk rrorn
tht• 111.1\ i.:rnunll' /\. l•·n11" 1·11111 h
l )1.<rl\'r ,Jll\ttlU" -.o I ,Jll 1;.t~l i 221 &
'ubm1l 1 "'" IJ, .... , 11111 1 •\,Jone
'Ill.II 0011 \\ t• 1 • lwr t• lo tu·l p < 1•nlu1 \
~I \lw1•,l11111 1(,.,,11\
lluffs Condo
Tw1i.:i.:y a111i our 1•01100 hall'
~omt•thin!l 111 \'01111111111 llwy'n •
both form<'r modt•ls llur .X mol'lrl
h .iv .. 11lab1C' .111d tht' th111 pru•1•
muk«.>s Tw1~1-(Y look I ut' How would
you like to tl'll thP RUYS you'rt•
living with a formrr model? Call
Century 21 M .irtcn Real Estule
&W 53.57
View! View!
Like the uncrowded
f eellnq?
'rl•rn fw 11!0 llPt.:rC•\• \' rcw ot Lhe Bark
11,n 1\1.JllV l'u-.tom qu.1111\ fl°JlUrt>~
1111lh :1 h1•drm' " ''"" tam rl)om
l'ruf IJ111.hr J1w1l '"" n· h1·r" \11
lll'lp '" t'.111 t.1 • 1:! 'I C't•11111n :•1
W1•,ll'11ff tt1·allv
NEWPORT IEACH SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO
Conqratulations Ben!!
• n·nlurv 21 '\l a r1en R1•al t:.'\tale IS
proud to .rnnl)unct' thal the State of lnYestment
Ca!Jfornw ha~ Jll't pmmoted Dell Pudre Serra Jun1pero built «<
Roll to tht< Offu·e of Broker and M1so,;1on next door to this shoppin~
entrusted h\m as Notary Public. ptan t:onqu1sta<1ores nearly rumed
When you want Lo deal with a lhe neighborhood by carting away
prole!> .. 1onal of honesty aod 1Ls trra~ures. but now the louriM-.
mtes:nty cdll Bc·n. hr'll put your are bringing 1t buck To share in the
mtere.,t fir~t. I know. I'm his Son. I Ron anta call Century 21 Marten
Signed: Tom 640-53!17. · l Real E:.latc 640·!1357.
CALL or STOP BY one of the offices listed HERE for fast, efficient help:
I 7 3 3 W estdfff Dr.
Hewporl leach 64§..7221
I 9 89 I lroolchlrst
H...tin«Jfon leoch 962-8891
1740 Or~ AYe.
Costa Mesa 548-1168
200 Newport Cent« Dr.
He'l"porl leoch 640-5357
621 W. 19th St.
Costa Mesa 642-5062
2418 Mac: Arthur at
Ford Rd. NB 640.4950
We're NATIONAL, but we're NEIGHBORLY I 'J
1002
~~~!~!:.~~ .~~.~. · · · ·· · · ~~~!~! !.~~ -~~: ..... · · · I ~~~!~~ -~~~ ~~~ .. ··· ··· ~~!~~ .~~~ -~~~-· · .... -l ~~!~! .r:~~ ~~~ ....... .
G~ol I 002 G~ral I 002 GeMral I 002 Geftttol I 002 G~al I 002
~~~!~! :.~~ -~~: ........ I~~~!~!!.~~.~~~ ....... .
General I 002 Ge..eral IO OZ Getteral 1002 Getteral ...................................................................................•........•....••••............••.•.......•.•..............••..........................•......................•..............
ESLEY N
1\.YLOR CO.
* * •
Lorene Stinson
REAL TORS s rnce 1946
380 Poplar
LCl<JU"a leach
' 1111 .11 ,. ttw "'in 1wr 111
111 lo.1 h IC'lho•
SHORECUFFS EXCLUSIVE
Charming English ru)>tlt wtlh pit
turebook ~cit ing' kc~lful & bl·au11ful
area ('u...,tom built :J llH horn\! \.\1th
lo\ ('ly pool Abundant ftnt' '' ood
thruout V ll'\\ of ()('~an from m't r H H
:!(H Mornrn~ Cyn Open Sun 12 :iO I .Ju
Sports, Vac:atian
& Rec:reatianal
Vehicle Show
.111h1·
21 I l Son J~n HiRs Rood
''"n.1'1
I I I ' \ I ' I I It ' ll'.,lllt
HEWPOaT CENTE«. N.I. 644~49 I 0
I 111 ! \hi IJ ,J,111 'I
l ',1\1 hi'' ':tl1i>I •'\l 'tl:I Ir
'1;11111 \11111 lh l.1•h
* * •
I 002 Genttal I 002 Gette-ral 1002 .•.•...•.............••...•.•...............•••..•••••••.....••••••••
.... J t · • • J ,.. I • I J ,, ~, } j fP<l' B •r•" 1·>0 •' Elf'
~ ){!If " ,.,,..., • ., ...... ,,, ,.,,...._.,. )f f , ... '""• "'' ""'·P ·'C"\ ttapr v :"Jnc:J
I • • ,. r• 1 1 ,, •1 r1• .,.,., :Jt"t bul J rri,-:.r P •!)to ',,
,,. ., •• ' •f • •• • • ; • ., w·•O, . J •• ,. J'f! ,h,,n Nth 'h"" W')1P\
Looltiftc) forward to serving you Hlls
c°"9ng year -Hw ~s larocp ~ to sene, smdf ........ to corw.
Manny Altm;rn
l.mda Ago~tmo
Bob Ang('ll
Debbie Batley
.Jack Blanchard
Carol Brokopp
Pcg~y fo'renrh
.John Hassell
Barbara Keer
Bob Kocisko
Lou Meadow"
Carole MillN
.Jim Owen
Teddy Mair
Robby Robmson
Paul Schmidt
Randy Tyler
Dane Wilhite
Ed Wolfe
Carl Baker
Mark Cohen ,Jack Eisenhart
Dick G r een
Helen Kotob
Hal Sheakley
John Yaccarino
Joan Mills
1\<?a Arnold
Don Berman
Rill Bolton
Harrv Cowan
Carla Grifast
.Jim Hogu('
Pat Kent
Don Lake
Sam McDowell
Tom O'Connor
J eanine Paquette
Bunnie Porter
Gen Ryan
Bob Scott
Bob Sullivan
Ken Warden
Mike Wilson
Ted Timmons
Alan Beyer
Oennese Cole
Al Golub
Mike Murray
Bill Stewart
Ron McBride
.John Shea
WE WISH YOU A JOYFUL AMO
MliMIMGFUL CHRISTMAS DAY. MAY
THE LORD'S ILESSIMGS FILL YOUR
LIVES THRUOUT THE COMING YEAR.
SINCERELY
DONALD M . BIRD
Associates, Re altors
i 002 i Gen~ral 1002 .•..•....••....••••....
macnab I Irvine
realty
FINER HOMES
fltOM S 115,000 TO $1,200,000
A MEW HOME Foa A MEW YEAR
You can begin your New Year in a
lovely 3 bedroom home w /fabulous
view of the lake & golf course of
Rancho San .Joaquin. Beautifully
decorated ! $115.000 & you own the
la nd! Jeann e Newman 642-8235 (Wl3)
EXCLUSfVE IA YCREST
Custom-built -lg . beautiful lot
completely private. 4 bedrooms -
forma l dining family room
w/firepla ce -21".z baths. Covered
patio w /built-in BBQ unit for ex·
tensive entertaining overlooking
15x33 pool. Ideal l ocation for
schools & shopping. Asking $185.000.
Mary Lou Marion 642·8235. (Wl4)
PA.HOltAMIC VIEW Of IOA TS.
VIEW MANSION OVER THE BAY
Tasteful Ktngs Honn 4 bedroom that
has a view that won 't quit ! Beam
ceilings. newer ('Onslrut'lion, charm
ing kitchen (with an over-the·smk
view of the Turn mg Basm > and an in
credible amount of storage area. Thi!'
property has room for a tennis l'Ou rt
Presented at $32S,OOO ..
U~l()UI: li()M §
REAL TOHS', 675~6000
2443 East Coas1 t l1qhw.iv. Co1 011J <11 I Md1
Jlso "'M ...... Vt""' ,, ~ 11, 1,t)CI()
General 1002 GeMral 1002 .....•............••••......................•.
3 +
OCEAN VIEW
'\orlh l..11.~un.1 ffr.11'11
Condo Large· I IM•d1 m
11" hlllh, t11·(•pl.11'1' ,.;,
ll'n~l\t' '>Ulllll't•k \\ I.in
ta!>l1t· 1 It'"' ~;,l'lu-.1~\'
S&;.500 trl I 72ill
FAMILY ROOM
/IU4t.«c S,,.u~
lf"~"aM
REALTORS
ftl1· l'nl n to h111:t• I 111 n;.:
room lt.11 -r•il l:1mil'
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I 002 General ., 002 ..............................................
LEMON HElGKTS -S239,SOO
4 lclrM-Pool -Vlew
IALIOA ISLAHD -WATERFRONT -
$239,000
3 ....... 11/2 ...... U..it
llG CAHYON-$191,500
2 '*-& D• -Pool -Vl•w
LIDO ISU-$156,500
WISTCUff -HIWPottT HACH
$159,500
OCEAMFROMT LOT -S 155,000
HIWPORT DUPLES-SIS4.500
NEWPORT SHOttES -WATHMONT
-Sl 19.SOO
PIMIMSULA COM>O -$91,500
~
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•• PETE BARRETT
-REALTY-
~ IZ 5200
Genrral I 002 Grneral 1002 ...............................................
BUILDER'S
CLOSEOUT
A WARM SETTING
FOR
HAPPY LIVING Deerfield HotrMs
In lrYine
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. 1!1Jt.':!! l an=.-: ~ I: ftraP...-tl" Propwtin n2•1tH "'·tno 1 1•00 O\UllUt NIWl'Ollt llA<M 1400 OUAIUl NIWl'Q. llM>!
IA Y & CITY UGHTS
Dramatic Dover Shores 2 bedroom + den . wood & stone h o m e
w/spacious private courtyard, pool,
jacu izi , garden lighting &
maint-rrec landscaping on lg. cor·
ner lot. Features 2 fireplaces.
beveled mirrors in dining room lath
& plaster, beautifully crafted built·
in cabinets & deluxe security
!y~tem' $215.000 Marjorie Mahon
644.QOO. CW16)
642·1235
901 Dover OrlvP
644-6200
HarbOr View Ctni.r
WATERFRONT
HOMES
.!I•;; \V 1'0.1 I I I 110•
It COlDWlU IAHKU CO.
644-1766
'"' SAN JOAOUIN HlllSAD t ............. ~ ... ~-... ...
,.
In.tint •' Campu\ V•llty C.nttr
752·1414
'\i '1" r1 11. ' ..
I .toil t•11 i.iua
IN NIWPORTCENTER
* (;4 DAILY PILOT Sunday. 0ec.,-nb9f 26, 1976 ~.~!~!!.~~.~~ .... : .. j~~!!!!.~~.~~ ..... ,.. _ _ ~ .~ .~ ....... J "· .CMI •• •.tt •.. Fo •• ' •• s.• .......... Honn •••••••• Fot-., •• s. .... ,...... ~ .":""' ... s....... .. ... Ga•' at 1002 6•• u 411 '001 ,_ S... ..__ ,,_ Slllit ,..._... ,_. S-. . ................................................................... . fi.Mrof I 002 G...eral I 002 Gt'Mral I 002 G~ I OOt .... • ............ • .... • ..... •.. ..... .... .. ... G~ral I 002 Gt"Mrol I 002 GeMrol I 001 .~if.~~·g;~~·~:A;· ....................... ....................... ~ ~ .. ~~ii ii££: ...................... --:;··;;~~;~~~··
•. p,.ejcnl6 & A ffwr
. _ ' I '-/ /? f I NN fear WITH JOYOUS NOEL ....Plolida'J ~ree UuJ~. . '• ui-:oaooM w11111 1hr
YOU'VE FOUND IT!-i\Jovc fl"ht tnlu luxureo.m lnm•Jnf.::. ., IJm n stMn.•i. :s:nt,9u. -this Mesa Verde 4 bedrm. home fi. u OUr office is closed Saturday, • ~. u i-:DROOtil Oai Owner 's transferrnd and 1t 's ready Christmas Day, but will be open Sun. lnt.f. l·~I. o. Sut.1
now. In top conc.btion -well prn.·ed at ave a B#"U AnJ tk1&tU.lll.j0t, N~ 000 If JASMINE CR~ OH""ST,_Y • I 111-;tHtOOM 011\' )T ~. • -I:" ~ lll'W Ott h '\\M BtV'd 2121 Tabocjo Pl., Costa~ Swlday 1-5 u A real Doll! New exclusive! P ()rfcc:l ~t:!;1.ocMr
MERRY CHRISTM•s HOME • plan with 2 bdrms, den & 2 baths. Lgl• • :1 11~'.t>lt00,\1 i Ii.:
ft ntque living rm, lge dining fffi, wet bar. l,1111 1111 l'tt'IUl'l'"l!llt
Uft A. PICTURE -Cute Cape Cod new b eaut ldscpng . Terrific jacuuL ~ de ..S..4'. °"' lrvuit
ly re(urbis hed in well-es tablished /?/ f Security gate, pool., tennis ct. $™,000 81~~~ YOU A
nl' igh borhoocl . '.': l' w t«I r Pl'l s :.i 11d Lh ·~f '1F.RRY CltlUSTMAS•
paint total new kitchen and bath :! rt tna~. llG C.ANYOH-$215,000 400£.ddal" HI Ii
u<:drm. home, looking for a family Golf course view! Best location! Just .,
who will appreciate all this on the st eps Lo Big Cyn C.C. We a.re proud to C.M.:-£. ·. I\'t w
Eastside of Costa Mesa. 5)9,500 UNl()Uf: 11()Ml:S offer such an elegant 3 BR 2-stocy ~-
REAL TORS', 675-0000 model. Built by Deane Homes.
2443 E.1st Coast Highway, Corona d el MClf
di~ m Mew V~rde, J I ~46 5990 SHOlt£Cl..lffS BCWSlfE 642-5200
' I 002 G~eral I 002 .•....•.••.......•.•..• ····•···········•······
,_ + VIEi!
fm<.· Do\'er Shore:. lucJ
t 1t:M. Truly laat.ast.K· 4
lK•droom, fom1ly r0<xu
punl hom e w1th "'<·
REALTORS
675~551 I
f tt c:.utYGM ISLAMD S.VE: .. c.,_, c ........ ._. J ....... •d .... •••~ ..._9,, pt-.. ttuchwwwlf.t!tcJ
-Pool & t ..... r •• in h heart of H••port leach. SI 51,400.
COt.! OF MEWPORT IE41.TO.S
iS 15 l. Coast Hwy., CarGRe .. M•
675-5511
IOOiG~ral 1002 ....••.•...•.••.•...... ·•··········•····•····· MERRY! CHRISTMAS!
Charming English rustic with pic-
turebook setting! Restful & beautiful
area. Custom buiJt 3 BR home with
lovely pool. Abundant fine wood
thruout. View of ocean from ms&r. BR.
201 Morning Cyn. Open Sun. 12:30-4:30 pan..,l\t \1e'W of \he Up ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ per B:iv and ~urronnd1fl1! -
HAVE AN OCUHRtOKT CHRISTMAS
from your set'ludcd ~ bdrm .
hrdcawuy, you <:an r1uictly m£'ditatP
while the sea gulb t·avorl ovet tht·
:.urf & s;.in d <1 few ftet I rom your sun
ckuk. Purarl1:-t• for SP.1,;,00 Oh , yt>s ,
673-4400
To a ll our friends from the staff at
Davidson Realty .. may the joys of the
season he with you all the days of the
year '
Hob Aidt' r m 1111
Chris Drowr11n.:
.Jeanne Calle
(;t">rge Va 111<.h""
Tom Dearth
Kaye Evan-.
l>1ane Hurnr1ch
Jim Lamberth
Joanna P almquh t
Robert Penkwitt
Mary S1vnlian
l''lorence Thompson
1'01111 llll't'kt't
l'om Calli•
llN l y D ;iv 111.,,,11
llt'11CJrly Dearth
('l:iv Durr
l\ureo Hoffm:in
Na.ocy Hurst
Karen Newcomb
John Petterson
Cbucit Sable
Sally Somer-.
M Lke Yusk&S
llG CAHYOH C.C.
Gr eat View or area from this prof. d e
corated 4 BR & fam rm home. F ormal
dining rm & cozy conversati()(1 are• m
L .R . Many lovely fratun.-s. $235,000
BIG CAHYOH TOWHHOMES
moun1111os F.nt1rt hnm.• I
bu1l\ 11m11nd atnum. and G....,.ot I 002 Gt..r..e I OOZ
ov ll I pon1 .. 1th unu1ut• •• •• •• •• ••• •••••••••• •• •••••• •• ••• •. ••• ••••••• \'u-.111m tounl111n ('tt\' ,.,. ______________ _
l'l'l·d hv "'"an. rt'lt'll!'Ca 11
hi l' tlu Ill<' V .ti• 11 lou "
l.llrlllf' m a!.tf'r swt<• •'1\ll
\'lt>w>, Jltti. hi.':1Wd arid
fllll'lt'tl J:ll'U/11 '"tl1 I
'''"'111 11.oth .-r1<J ~ard\'11
" f (' " ~ I l (' b (' 0 W I \ h ~r~~•IM~l nno~. ~nd
l•m1b· rm w/w('t b ar
h iH 1• ' 11.'W al bay Thtt<'
~ too man) 41rnt-n11J~
to ~S<lnbc ltus Ul\tast11
hu11w lo 11:-.t Trul} a good
bu\ .&l $!"° 000
ELKINS
WE WISH YOU A
MERRY CHRISTMAS
ANDA JOYOUS
-HOLTDA YSEASON
·-DAVIDSON 1£ALTt
OPEH HOUSE SUNDAY 12:30-4:30
Brand New ! Golf <:ou rsc views. pit"
turcsquc spfit levefs t& J. teveO with
l'edar shingle exterior. Priva te patios,
beaut. ldscp, security ~ate. garde n
court entries. Vaulted ~tin~. w et bars, formal DR, pools, jacuzn, tennis
court. Choose f1"0tn 2 & 3 bdrm homes.
Buy today & save! For lease from
$100 l o $950 mo. F or sale from SI lS,500
to $159,500. 32 Canyon lstand Dr. (Off
Focd Rd-Nr. J amboree)
~UPERS
HOMES GEORGE EUUHS CO., ltUl TottS
...
General I 002 GHteral 1002 •.•....•......•••...... ·············~······ ....
TAMARROH RESOtl'T, COLOR.ADO
111 winter, a Ju:<ury h1dc:.iway, rom·
plt·lt· wrlh uncrowde>d sk11n~. indoor
l<·nn1:-, health spa. sw1mmmg pool,
massaj.!t'. f1m• restaurant~ & la ve en-
lcrlammcnt In s ummer. known as
·onl' of lhc fint•st golf & eountry club
resorts . Xlnl c·ondo rental 1nvt·'it
men ls.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bayside Drive, N B 675 · 6161
macnab / irvine
fealty
· 1}ear bring p eace
fo live and 'Jrow
in /ailh & love
& harntony.
'J t?a r may we
perjona/f'I l/iank
our wonJerfu/
/,.ienJ~ anJ c/ienfj
in 'flewporl fia,./,o,.,
& alf o/.
Oran'Je C.Ounl'I fo,.
our greate~l 'Jflal-
'Jet. )}oin macnat
Sta// & _A6Jociaie6
642-1235 6-W-6200
901 Dover Orlw H•rbor View C~nter
lrvlrw •l Gatn9WI V•ll•'f Center
752-1414
5801 W Coo~t H-..) . N B 645 · 7575
3116 Newport Blvd N 8 673·9060
GHteral I 002. Geftt'f'GI 1002 ......•.............•.. •·••••·••··············
~
LES MILLE•
... has joined the saJes
sta ff o f Se l ect
Properties. Les, who
was formerly a teacher
and coach at Harbor
High and principal at
Costa M(.'S a High, has a
long list of community
achievements including
Li on 's Club Di strict Gove rnor,
Chamber of Commerce Director. and
president of the United Fund Drive.
Les has been active in local real
estate for five years and n•t.1 1ly knows
this community '
For truly professional servicing of all
vour real est ate nccdc; t'all Les at S.~i-2f>60
c;:;SELECT
I PROPERTIES
S@\\~~-L££trs·
That lnftiguing Wore/ Gome with a Cht1dfe
-----ldo"ol by C\AY I '0UAH
0 o.,.,,.0"911 ~' of the
l()U• 1(<0Mb\ed ..... d. bfl
low '" li'.'t•f'\ ,, JC ~ WOid•
I RYTACE I(
I I I I I I .
I V A N H E J
I I 11 I' 1 1 ·
I l Y R 0 G I ·H.J. h•, tho: von , on rM •
' J I J I ;J• I the Swccdrlh mdod, •' · · · -· · i"°' dropped --on the lront
I F U T ff A l I "I her dn: • ,, .a
..___..1-. -.-, .... \ .... , ...... ,,..._.,____, 0 f.;~"'"~ .~ ....... ~" ~
..__..._..., __ ___...__....__. 'tfN d•••lop hom ''•O No 3 b•k>w
rrrrr1
I I W I I I
REAL TY, INC.
Wi\he•, You m.,.,." Cfu.~1~
ff..O..Staff
Bob Bennett
Joe Guliono Lome Bennett
Jeori Mor,h
Vtli:ln Wonoc,,,
Betty Chappel
~yArc:fito
Benjie Ardito
WM..,s
Ao (;.ey
'"'9 McCO$olcni
Janet Mulde<
Bill S.oritey
IHIW ....... ,C.M.
""9 ......... .....
S4f .. 6SS
<IUY
15S$W C .
"'""' to Markl!I B~~ket 5C't·9655
_llJ DOYER DIJVE 631·1800
I LIDO ISLE HOME FOtt LUSE
Lovely 2-story, J Bdrm & den home in
cl. t~e mstr BR w/l~e sundcck. Spec
LR & formul dining . Cpls, drape.s. Un
furnished. $1,000 mo. By appoint.moot.
--------~al I 002 General 1002
21 I I S• Joc.qWn Hills Rood
HEWPORT CEMTER. H.I. 644.491 O
I 1002G~ol 1002 ..............................................
Luxurious 4 BR. home. 1'~&Dlll Y rm &
formal dining, with view "toward
Ha rbor Is land . Boat sJ1 p $325,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bay\•d• Orrve . ~ 8 67S· 6161
G~rol I 002 · Gent'rol 1002 ...............................................
SPACIOUS & PRIVATE
Charm yot11· f:,m1ly .ind f1wn11s \\ 1lh
this lu\'(•ly lla r lior V1vw P <dt•r11111
Model. It has .1 Ll'droom:., :1 larnaly
room, a formal dmin~ rnom , l lfl}lcs &
many other extras. $139,500. Shown b y
a ppointment only. Presented by ·
,.....~ •rv 640-4950 \..J'l llU.,,21 lot th• •n•~• k ~ IM Harbor Yltw ...._ ... BERG REALTY MeocA...._ 1o ,_.,,
Gfl\eral 1002 Ge-Mral 100 .......................
llDRMS
$39,500
•••..•...•••......•..•
~950
4 ll1·droom, :: 1 .. 1Lh,
1h.1111110&: h onw wit h
rlt'.1r tll!W plu'h 1 .1rpel
111~. W'""' c;h111~1P root
lk.1ut 11 ul l;wtJ.,c'OIJllftf.:
w1lh 'oftrlt1kl1•1' l.1walell
10 l int· nc1~hl111rh111111 nr
.S <Aast. Phu.a .
* * •
Brion Buscombe
18647 c.dw Cirde
Foo.tea. Vall~
\r111 .tfl' the• \\111nt•r ol ;.>
t 1t'l.l'L" tt• llw
Sporh. Yocoti•
& ·~Cftationat
Y~Sflo-w
Jl lh\•
,\:-.1,UJEl.\J
t.:tJ:--V E NTIUN
1 ·1-:"T~:n
l.111 :!tltru.1.rn •1
( .111 ltl:! ~iliil( t'\l JJj ,,,
1 l.1111\~•1Ul llt'kl'h • *.
EXECUT•VE
RESCOEHCE aH
IRVIHE
Tllttt.ACE
\\, llf't' PITloenlt "I( 1111'
1t1 ... 11nlU\<" homo· l11r
I"""' \\ hu t'Oj11\ .1 \\ ,11 m,
1 "'·"'"' ;1lmo,..,ncn· 111 ,,
<jUlt'l ('Ufflt'I (t( It \ Ill('
'I• 11.111· FelltYnni.: 111111
twdroom!> pl .. s lamely
r "Vln mcrlooku'S: .. n ~m
pit· '-\\ 1mm1~ ptK1l , tb1•
h11u,1• pm\ 1dl':. f nr 1·11m
11t1•ll' f.1m1ly pll'a!>urc
'1'11µ contl1t11111. ol 1·ot1r~c.
Wltll .1 l(l'lll'lttU<; ~ Ill
loMn~ fnr pl~ns to <'X·
piind. <.;a.U fur appoint·
tn<"'1I tn~r' ti73·855tl.
Of ltJ fl( 1) • H ', , I tJ 11 I ff ,...,, t •
[~lfflitl
$36,950
BU I <k-c:oratnag & lll··
ll~htful ht 1di patio .111•1 '
cu m 11 I I Ill ,. n I I h ' "
~pa1 IUU' I 'lur~ Lu~ II
honw If } nu ,1 n· pa) 1111!
'Wl'>lrt1 rent mno\·\·
h<-rt• ,. 'our t·ham·e to etl
!l0m1' C...\ Jt·dU<'\tnn:-. & 11
!>a \rnt.:' .tt·t nl -.1;.irh·d
Sm tin )I\ mn1 tH1"'1l1k
~7ill
• '>
UI ~-~ a 646.;,lUHl Priced to sen!
UNIVlmSITV PARK ~ssified Ads ~ell t11~ ANYTIME ~ this (•harmin~ us1
it ems. sma ll items or grutlt•d r11mily hom\'
any item. 6'2-S67K. --------1 ~on· ynu huy 3 lloedrm.
$~\\~~-~~?}$"
Thal Intriguing W orcJ Gome with a Chuc~le
------... ClA¥ &. _.., ____ _
0 leor"Of1gf' ~ 6 Kto,..b\iitrt
wo<ch bebw "' -· /, ........ ~ .............. ,.,
e')(.}\ '" ''' ltM: ol ti0votn
ME GR EE
I J J' I I
T U F T I 0
I I r I I
TEYRAT
11 I' I I f
I S A V L A S ) A t,enpeclced husband.
... '_...I _l__.l_..l.__1 ......... 1 = r:~~.~~'t!~:
I
V 0 J 1 l A
1
lng but fotOt' found out
1 J J I l f that she talked too mudi,
. . . . . . . wid, "A thing of be.Y1v ...._.._...__...._...._ __ _. J1 a - -"
la • H [ l A W I 0 ~ lht do~ ~ ' I I" I I I you :.~I:\! '!.. ;:.-i .::!' .... _,.....,._
:!VJ h;e, lg livinl( ~ Cam
nn. t 1 pl, bllns. Jo' A bc11t
Latmdry rm, swtw. dbl
g_. . luw llrll't' of $?4,000
i41; :r12H. l" t'~ ·&45-52.>'.I
CALLUS FOR
Cot.dos /TwMMI
In Tustin j1nllte
From $36,000 to $09.000 EXCF:t.t.E:"-ITTERMS
nfE HOMESEUEft~
752-5351
POOLSIDE
BEAUTY
SUpcr ~harp 2 bd, 21 ~ ba
townhomc next to pool &
MJ>s to tcnnu• courts
Hns A/C. blt-tn RUQ, gur
dlilar opener. 1•ompar1«, etc (or only $47,500.
5&S·94!ll. --
Walker r, l ~e
Real fsr11 te &Eiiw0 I' I' r I' r l' J' l' 1' r: I
•5-J I I • I l I l I· I I TrJ ll Dally P\1ol
Qn,1111/led Ad to buy, sell SCIAM-LETS ..._..,.... m ClouiflcoffotlS I 00 ortt.rll~. --·
..............................................
UMIYOSRY PARK -$74,900
Popul•r l bedroom Pranceton
modet townhouse in Village JU.
Beauttful open be<Am ceilin~s in
IJ ving & dininjt rooms . New tile
kitchen. J\iry end unit near pools &
t.ennis C<Mirts.
U. CAHTOM mt,000
4 bedt"OOm . Open & liglrt. View.
Convers-atioo pit. Good lot. Stained
g lass windows. Prof ess1onal
landscaping with fountain. Muc-h .
much mt>rt>
.A-FUMI IEACH HOME
Two blodts to bt'a<'h or community
tennis rourl & poob & clubhouse.
Comfortable 4 bedroom , wood
paneli~. privutc s undeck. open
study. Enjoy Newport. Beacb liv-
il18 for $94,7SO.
OLD Cotl°'4A 08.. MAR HOME
Natural wood, warm pape r s,
French doors, 2 patios, J
bedrooms. ::! b aths Remodeled in
1974. Two h ouses from t ennis
C'OU rts. $120, 000
IS SPANISH YOUR STYLE?
It '.s all h er e m this t:ustom de-
stg ne1;f corner homl' built by
V alcnlinl' & l and scapl•d b y
Beeson L<.irg (• ma'>SIVl' rooms
w ,1\i~h ceilings. 3 bc-drooms. ~ame
room . pri va te ma ... t<>r s uite
w /jaCU7.:r.i $239.!XX>
Tlltl1AC TlrHA
On lovely greenbelt in North
Bluffs. Prof essiorralty dcc:oratcd &
in move-in rondit.ion. 3 bedrooms,
2th bath s . Form<JI dinrng.
Realisticall y prict.'<1 at $122,500 .
lltVIHE TOWhWOMI
In beautiful Deerfield. This two
bedroom highly upgraded h ome is
priced as an investment opporl uni·
l y al ~.500
VIEW -INCOME -root.
One of Corona ~ Mar's finest 2
units. one with 2 bedrooms. 2 baths
& ~ame room w Met oar. Oth<'r
w {.)bedrooms, 2 hath.c; S210.000
THE CARllUL IUYaS DIUM
Get more for your money with this
o uts tandin g Turtle R ock 3
bedroom home onlY f'our houses •
from park & pool. With family
room, dining room, &trium & coun-
try-style wooden dttking. $89,950
land included.
RtE:MCH CHA 1UU CM lME IA Y
One of a kind Vtew w NJ• on lhe
water plus poot. 4 bedroom, 3 bath,
many c ustom features. Family
siied kitchen, large living room,
curving 'Staircoi.se. All with a reel-
' ing of quiet e1eg.once. $i75,000 fee .
A COl.DWIU ._.,.... CO.
644-1766
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Pete L?cu·N>l! /emfifl
/'"''Jc111 / J
WITH ·JOYOUS NOEL
YOU'VE FOUND IT! ~tovt· right 1r110
th1i.; l\ksa V(•rdc t hcdrm home
Ownf'r 's tra11-.frrn'{I .ind 1t '-; n·adv
now. In lop ""ncllt1on wl'll pric:cd al
$Ht),()()C)
2828 Tabo<Jo Pl., Costa Mesa Sunday 1-5
MERRY CHRISTMAS HOME
LIKE" PICTURE ('ult.• l'apt• Cod fl<'W
ly rcf11rbislwd 111 well esl.:.iblished
ne1g hhod1110<1 Nt•w c-:1rpels and paint
-total rww k1tt·ht·n and bath. 3
bedrm. h1HTH'. h1oking for a famitv
who will appn•c:1atc ;.ill this on the
Easts1dt.: of ( 'osta Mesa !ifiU.500
HAPPY HOLIDAYS
BUOYED IN WESTCUFf PERFECTION
\\'ann .rnd \\t. kom111g home with l'\·
tra spC('t<tl c·u-.tom dt•ccH·atin~. 3
l>edrooms and fJmilv room. Lovely
panetini.:. t11<:s :mcJ w~llpapN'l -like
a model hom1• $1:17,000
CHRISTMAS HOBBIES AND GAMES
ROOM IH 4 CAR GA.RAGE For rol
tcclori.;, h ohh11·-.1:-. Plus n1tT 3 lwdrm
home lm·atc·tl in 1'110H·t• neighhorhuo<l
Ill Newport ll<'1ght.... $1111.~>IM)
BRIGHT STAR
SUPERB LOCATIOM · < h crluuking
lf'ngth of Uppvr :--:l·wport Bay. Rambl-
ing 4 lwdrm h.H·1 .. ndu on :1 1 :! acres.
H1g trct•s, lov1·lv g:.mh.•ns "ith swim·
ming pool :ind Pnll·rt:11ning center.
~cparall' from main house.·. Hoom for
horses, lt:nn1-.. orchards ell: Si50,000
START THE NEW YEAR
IF YOU MISSED YOUR OREAMHOUSE -
for Christma:-., st'l' 1t now' Dover
Shores Bayfronl fiO' on th(' water
with pier :ind -.lip-. for l;.irgt• or many
small boats Gorgt·mh home -entry
1·11urt with -.w1mm111J..! pool. 5 lll'drm,
form..11 <.lrn111g and much mon•.
I
SPA.NISH
MAMSIOH
OH HILL
ftOOL + BEA.CH
S58,250
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CHRISTMAS
fHU\I
Tln:sT.U FOi·
C . f . Coleswo~thy
Realtors 640·0020
MESA VERDE
HUGE LOT
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MESA DELMAR
POOL HOME
-~A• ._.. ..... ---
...........•........... ...............•....... H~HForS• Sunday Decembe1' 26. 1976 DAILY PILOT cs . .•..••................
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HACHACCHS
4 IR R•duc~d
ta SI09,500.
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BRAND NEW
4BR +DEN
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3 ~droom/2 lath
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Roy McCardle
Rf'Clltor 1810 Newport
Costa Meso 548·7729
Hacienda
JOOO Sq. F•et
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WESTSIDE REAL TV
INC 848-2323
FHA
ASSUMABLE
lrvincr 1044 lnfM I 044 LOCJ'ana l~ac:h I 041 ········•·•·•••••·•······•·····•·•••·········· ...................... .
TURTU ROCK
OPEN HOUSE BY OWNER
s.dcry DEC 26 TH T1ru Thurs DEC 30th
2 Story, 6 BR-Plan 7. Giant wood
beamed s tep down hvmg room w /floor
to ceiling frplc'. Formal dmmg room,
family room, kild1en w /nook. Bl·aut.
I ands ca p e d . Io w ma tn t . y ;1 rd.
Secluded master bedroom, lowt:r floor
rooms open to garden & patio areas 3
Car gar age, loads of storage & m:.iny
extras.
Call Don Olk 17 I 4J 833-9609 or
(7141 751-4642
NORJNS REALTY
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<'ullllo for :-.:ile 4br, 2h,a,
Jt.511 sq IL nr Mile Squ.1r<
l'arlc Greenbelt & Mm
mou pool & rec. S&l,!IOO.
Hon 1-:lhs
II B Heally ~:Mi h5'>.•
Huntington Brach I 040 .......••.•••••••.•....
INCOME
PROPERTY
2 HOUSES
OMA LOT
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HAPPINESS IS
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ONLY S67,SOO
14656 Oranqe Acres
fj
RANCH REAL TY
551-2000
COZY&
COMFORT ABLE
0 THE
TERRACE"
ONLY
$68,900
THE
PRESTIGIOUS
RACQUET CLUB
Popular Urr:.l>.ine '1udl')
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13561 ESPIRIT
RANCH REAL TY
551-2000
SPANISH
SPLENDOR
B t• Jut 1 f u I !'. v r a<' u,, c•
:\ludl'I Ill COJll:.f.:\' l'ark
Th,.. <I hJrm home
fcJtun·:.: c..:.·ntrnl :i1r. tile
ruot. t'OH'r•·tl f1Jl111, el<·c.
J:Jrai.:e door 11/ICll<'I ,
lr,J!>h rom 11Jt'l11r 1>rn
h•'>!\IOll,llly 1Jn05<'Jl'CU
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Aslcing S77.900
14555 SERON
TENNIS PLAYERS
TAKE NOTICE!
Sup.-r -.h.irp I lx·.tnw1ni
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3 731 SUR
RANCH REAL TY
551-2000
llrJnge 1'1 l'I' L..rkl' t:u11d11
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ti75 tiJ:..'7 aft Gpm.
THERAMCH
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rm. d111 rrn. :11·Jr g,1r, up
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FAMILY
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MYSTICHIUS
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Christmas Bonus
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The Perfect Gift
For Christmas
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:.:nil UOll hJ' :.! lhJ)'m
.111-y i.ll'n, :! l1repl,1ce:. 1
up~radl.':-. Sl.25,000. CALL NOW 752-7315
DONALD M . BIRO
A ~~ociatcs . Rea hors
ICMp ""' hOllcly d n·•clory w>+ll '(Oii ltti• wfflr~ lt1
JOY CJO "-'~'1"9-.+.n ltw loco!io1n 11•1.d be-low
s. dHcnlMd ht qnater-~oil by od•ttii•"'9
elw~r 1" today'• O.+.ll'r ,,lOT W.+.KT ADS.
'~ tkw1"'J op•" ~ for •ol• « N'ftl ..,... ~ lo 11\t •«It '"'........,...., '" ""' col-•och ~..,dS..,doy
HOUSES FOR SALE
2 II & FAM RM or OEN
l\f-10 Pr1)<.pt•c·1 ''fr"port lkh
642·1).tl7 S7:lOOO ~Un 125
3 IEOROOM
•20! MorntnJ! Cyn <Shor1•clf..., l ('d:\t
f~l·t 4910 S235.000 S IS 12 30·1\·30
442 1<;1 M;idc·rw . Npl 11h , NB
546-23 t:J Sun 1 5
3 II & FAM RM or DEN
32.S:i Wash1n1!t1111 , .'Vlt·~:1 Vt•rdt'. C'M
546·231:1 Sun I 5
4 IEOROOM
6441 Hcubcns. JJ unlin).!ton lk ;.1ch
897 -03<! l Sun 1-5
17311 Apel. Jlunlml-!ton Bt.•<H:h
897-032 1 Sun 1·5
426 San Bcrn~rclino. Npt ffgts. NB
546-2313 Sun 12 S
4 IR & FA.M lM or DEH
2828 Tabago Pl.. Costa Mesa
642-5200 $86,000 Sun. 1·5
CONDOMINIUMS
FOR SALE
2 IEDtlOOM
32 Canyon Island Dr <Big Cyn) NB
644-4910 $118,500 Sun. 12 :3().4 :JO
HOUSES FOR RENT
l HDROOM
2005l Shorewood Circle. I I H
000-3989 $38.5 mo.
Pool
Wahrfroet
REMODELED
CLASSIC
I .\lt:lllth•tl 1141111 110111111
1111 \\ 1 llTI Ir plr .I 11~1·
t~lr "''· • 1>.1 Sl111w' 11!..1• r11111kl 11111111 , uq:111.1I
(I\\ U\• f ( 1 I t it I ,, I'\' d
l\011dll Ill'"' :.11 Jll It 1•11 111
•i•Jl ,11 ~)'l.'f Ill ,\I '111JI
BIG CANYON
c·.1u1 i11\111\ un 11h It·•
1.1, I 11 .• 111. 111111• Ill II
'""" \\ tq1li• 111111 11111
1111 1\ 1.1111 1111 I .tl1uf1111
h1tlll" 1111 1 ... 111 l.111111\
'"1111!111 ,\ l"\I II •1111·1
l.11 11111 1: Ioli, iii I •II
.1111 '1'111
lt.rrc• llurld.1/ilc H :! lot.
('h,11 rn111L! oldP1 h111111• r1·
1·4•1111\ ··rpl1t. tit pd &
p.11wl1 •d 1111.t:C' llv r111.
w '•II fll'r ~l11111• I 1 pk S1•p
l111l1hv I Ill. I/ .1111111• //I
fl11ilcl .1 111111 lur ..:11.1 111
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1>11. , , I l ur .• 111 ~·111
Shaded
T~H-Garden
$57,950-Vacant
\l11l1' lil!hl 111! Cerni,
,h,11Jy yanls .iround lh1-.
:1 lll-1h1>om horn" w1lh
cl\•11 ancl tl1111n1.t rr111m. 1'01
111'11~· :-.lnv1· tu warm Yllllr
l11t1•o;0 hy Tr;11l1-1 p.11 kin~:
l1<lll w IJl).!l' lot U p ul 1111 ..,,111t.1 \11,1 lii:hh
i.:r.11ktl ,-.arp,·t:-.. till' ,\ Blo;1ut1ful l'l;1n 1C1.! 111 1;n•;il /Juv ,11 ~;:,,:,00 c.lntPl'' 'lrntt·rl "1ndows ''Tht· Willows " .m•a of
1n hv 1 m lV. ~•·If d1•.ao1nr.: lr"111~· Tl11s slnl'll' story
O\c•n JI.< upr.:r;ldl'tl "'' h II Ill I' (I' .. , I u,. (• ~ J
hwa!>lwr 111 k11dwn. "'" ht~Jroom~ & t11n111i: ruom
111.r.: $7!1,SCMI b c•l11~1· t11 park. ll•Hil , ten
26 Sanderlinq 111,, c•uurts & I rv1111· ll11~h
l'nn•d for fo.,t ... d1• Can
red hill ;;;:.: ..
552-7500
l.t<• 1wcn on <1p1·11 huu~l' ----------• Sunday 1·5 WOODBRIDGE
' $62.750 S&S "Redwood"
~.
Great Potrntia»
J h<lrm. Imm!' on a luri:I"
)( 2 lol, room for an aduo
l 10n'1 I Ullll. $11.0011
t-'IHM .
llMS.1 <'11;"t ltwy.
LAGUNA BEJ\CH
497-2457 M1n1mum t•,111· v~111I l~•Ls lo oll1•r, 1n.i(, 1·.dl
.• 111 17:.!0
HOLIDAY
SPECIAL
\c •. ~ 14582 Oronqe Acres Nr•w on tlt1• mar k1•1. :-.n _ hurry 1f yuu'r•· lo11k111i.:
1
_________ _
~ lor .1 h111111· '" Wuu11 PORT~ RE"L.-v
TARBELL
"~I In California"
T die•· •I Uctlrms, l>t-11 .Jiit!
F;in11ly room, ;1tld P'H•I
JJl'Ut11, l1n• nni: :11111
RANCH REALTY
551-2000
'"l~·rh d1•1·orat1ni: S1•l 1n1----------1 lml'I~ rw1i:hoorh1H1tl on Premium location
LET pr".'11" trt'l' lined Cul Iii· ,\ c;r1•1·nlil'lt l11r<.1l11111 ;inti ~.il·. l'·'Y 11nfy ~ll IKIO .111d ;i mount.t1o, '""' arl' ouh
h,qiJlllH''s •:. "'"" 111 th" :.l.ut ol a 1011.1: ti-.11;1 THE DOG RUN 10110". l>llCl:IJllll'' 1\" 11\•llroom
.1101111.t th.-. ""''I" :i • +-lkn or 5 lh·llruo111 1 •. .,,,,, 1,1111111 '"''"''· :-. , Robert s 11.1mp11m 111 Cr1•t•n1n·1·
Ith I h1•f1• ' pl1•11t ~ or R It I lnml'"• lh.1l makt·~ Vl)ll
l1M111i 1111 hllll lo ~lrl'll h ea Y lt<t•l Irk(• )llU rl' ,1 1·11111itn
hh lc·i: . <11r ~ 1111 c-.) • Ill.!•• •••ch 11,0 rc~rdrnl t:1v(• :rn11r..1·l( a
·11ic•11 1l'la't on lh1• plush Huonoiton ~•<h Pll' Chrr:.lmas lr<:al uml
1.11Jil'l1n1: 111 f11111t of rour ----------1 cl.Ill lw.11111ful 11 -.(•jl 111 H·k -llc<l c.1rf)f't HC'altor~
l1r1·pl.1('1•. lnlc•rror 1o; um Meridith Gardens 1u:1 :u1111
qu..iy il1•rnraled with BY OWNER 1-•_--------•I
\'\•dar s11l111~ and "hak(•. 4 RR, formal L'nlry & 1lin· PltlCElJ TO SELL. I"
Outdoor c•nlcrlain1ni:!'!> r1n. i''am-rm w/har, owm•r. $R!l.OOO tmmc•d l~Zin lcO\'ed h:H:k yard comp.r1•r11·c·in/nut.:1c .. r occ·ui>:cm·y.l.uxuryi lltt .
& largl' 11al11> .irc•:., A iwr. IJ!c• bo11l gall• w/µrnil J1hr:1rv Hat1l'h11 San .Joa
J\ll'ST tnr 11 lull luvrni:. !>11.1· lot. Will 111· !l~t111i: qu1 11 ·cundu Fully ''fl·
pt·l luv111g lurnrly~ w/n•allor MH>ll . St1•:rl po1nl1•d, 1111·111 n1r ~i!l,OOtl now & !<:IVI' al S%,5(10 :-l-17-J!IM7 or :ill. f>plll &
IMQuaU l liilPlac•
Prop•rtiea 7S1·1920 1400 OUAll \J NtWl'OIT Ill.Cl<
l'rnw nnh· !ll:tl 7•1 M wkmls 511 ;,1111
1044 lrviM 1044 ·······••••··•·•·•··••· ·······•····•···•······
hruli:c. A 111•w .1 't11rv. 3 ""' "" •'
• l1drm. 11111111· 111 .. 1r lh1• JIXKJN.Cslllwy,Laiuo.1
• --~.. 11.11.k11h·._ <11'1•1111,111,1•11•: ti"i'!t.1 1:11 V4E9T7~!~8S :
-~ ~ .I '\ ii I Ill • II <\ I "'" .......
1·11h1r 111 1·;11111 1, ,\. l1l1· t•,1, ,our c; 1. loan: p;i11,1
551.2000
VIEW
ofl.1k<' JOI! rn11u11L1111.; In
1·1•11h•r of Wn111ltir11l 1-:e
<'low (11 111·111111"''1 :-hop·
p111i.: ITlll\•1 . 1\\li,1V I rum
tr011f11· <In :i r1u1et 1·11l-dt•·
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1111-:
.. 523 CAMPUS Da· IRVl"E
OPl<:N UAJLY
lli\.!\1.TOlil'.M
Only Slrt.'"MI l\noll-. I h•lrm "1lh.l·ww
red hill ~:1:1.
552-7500
Laquna Beach 1048
·············•·•••·••·· Merry Christmas
.11111
Happy Holidays
ro Al.I.
II 11. 7.;i1•n.11l1kv. llkr
1\J11·1• l l11ll111:111, A~~111·
"1." R•alty 494-861 I
.A611Zn
REAL ESTATE <100 Gfcnn eyr£> S, .•
49• 947l S49 Olli)
NORTH END
111 on·.m, \OJll<'V & Jlll'>
Si~dUI
OCEAMFRONT C1YO
Lu'<unou' TJhlc•rot"k .!
lxlrm , ~ 11.llh .... $1:!5,ootl
OCEAN VIEW
Srl.1t111u' & rriva.tt· .,
hclrm + tlt•n "'1th J>001 ••
Sl.ll,SCMI
.........
l«XJW'a Ni~I t052 .........................
SEATERRACf
ilrllt :!ha 11or1t1lar ·.I •
Pl:m I 'orrlf'r lot. 9111··~
t'UI 111• '·"" lwlll<'ll f.1111•1
IAM'all'd in llw 1•rfv111t·
l'l)ltllll it ll'IHU~ 11!)11 ".
rr\' ('l'lll1•1'. walk lo
lw111•h EN.JOY 'l'll I·:
c ;0011 r.w~:. $1:.i.,.ooo
.... CURTIS BRADlEY _... CO ,Rf AlTOAS
• -c < . •99-•584
nu: rm.test dn1w Ill lhe
Wcsr a Unity l'1lot
hl2 :;+..7H c;1.1~s1f1etl Ad. 642 56711.
mac nab I Irvine
realty
(irN•nlrC'<' 3 llH. 2 ba,
1•ounlry k1I. vaullrrt 1·c1I
mi:s, p;1t10, :!1 · cir gar,
lnd!>C'f>d , SiU,!IOO. llv
OWTl<'r ~hown by np11t.
Call 551·33-17.
St.'rh•~1on " lhr kl') n11h
m t/11, tl1..i·rim1n11t1111:
h 11111 t' I 11.111 t• ti \\ I I h
n1m·n1111·' \ 11 .! llr•d<
p;itlO'I $11'5,1100
THE STAFF Of
CURTIS BRADLEY co.
W1 .. h1·~ om• anll ,11l: 111 "
holi<luy Sl.'a:.on P~.11·e
:md 1;ooc1 Will, and'J>ru·
~J>('rily lhruoul lht' '.New VIEW! VIEW! V1EW!
Superb Rancho San Joaquin
lownhome ! Highly upgraded for the
ultimate in living! 2 bedrooms, den,
dining room + view of Turtlerock
Hills. $90,900. ,Lila Harper 752-1414.
(W17)
TAKE YOUR CHOICE
Lovely. new 4 bedroom /family
room/dining room home at S00,900
fee ... OR ... 2 bedroom/family room
at $96,000 fee. Both have s uper
University Pa rk locations! Las7.lo
Sharkany 752-1414. (Wl8)
642-8235 644·6200
901 Dover Drlvt" Hctrbor l/1ew C•nler
Jrvl~ at Clln'lpu' V11t1ev Cenll!r
752-1414
.... ··----·· --~ f
lCICJIMCI HICJIWI I 0521.ocjMna Miquel I 052 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
SUPER HOLIDAY SPECIAL
This lovely four bedroom. ocean
v1ew home is within walking dis-
tance to the beach. Enjoy private
community livint at $129,500.
4 COl.OWEU. 14NKat CO.
496-7222 831-0836
Vea~ :
CURTIS 8RAOlEY
CO .REAi.TORS
•99-•~
10$11 •••••••••••••••••••••••
GRACIOUS HOME
In choice ;rrc:;i, o n qull'f
street, spucc galore'
Incl. 5 bdrms .• :i bath-..
drtii:-htrul family t m •
i:ard<'n kitche n C'nm-binn
(l()n; formal dlmn~ rsn I<
<'xlra l11rJ.?c, bcnulif\.tll\
l11111l"c:i1>ed ynrd l\111n)
('xlras Won't l.1i.t lmh~ ;11
~.000
Othtr'Real &tote HcM.s.1 Un1urnl9'_.-ct Houttt U"tun.i*d ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
OAIL.Y PILOT S unday, Oecemt>er 26. 1976
~~!.~~~.~~ ...... ~~~~~~.~~-~ ....... ~~!!!.~~-~~-~ ...... .
Newport leoch I 069 Newport leach I 069 Son CS.menk I 07 6
~~ .. ~?.~~ ~!!~.t:t::! ...... ??.~! ~,_ ..... :1Z40 ~:~.~~!~~ .... !!~!!!.~~~~ .... ~.~~.~~~~ ...
MES.\ VERDE :1 br .. l r•••••~•:••·•:•:•• lnine 3244 N.wporf .. och 326' Mtwport hocll 376' ······················· ······················· ...................... . UNITS ramily 2 ba dbl. ••ar l ~ o )' C'O cl ' l{kllf £18· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
NOW IS THE OPPORTUNITY
to own :1 popular Newport Crest
Plan 4. Townhom(• localed on a quiet
eul-dt··s a<· EnJOY tht· view froin your
step·down . Jofll'<.1 cc1ltng living room
that overlooks a park like greenbelt.
Be creat1vt· with un oulslamhng floor
plan that offers up lo 4 hcdrms. or a
separate <fen /s tudy. and a m;.ister BR.
w /private rt>lr<'ul & :-.undeck. 3-Full
baths. Step:-. from pool. 1a cuzz1 & ten
nis. Min utes from Uu: l>t·ach. Only .
~.:mo. CALL fo1 ddd1I!>, or ~lop and
view.
CALL NOW 752-7315
DONALD M . BIRD
As!.ociotcs, RC'oltors
THfVllW
ALON!!: IS WOlt'l 11
$JU.OOO, Movt: 111 110\\
ROY Al REALTORS
u~9 Camloode r:i.u l'lla
Capo. Uch 4~J·214J
San.Ivon
Copi1traao I 078
·•·•·······•·•·•······· SolJlc'r i.haro V1ll o1Re ~.11\
J llll rt t () W 11 If 11 U IH' , :I
ll<'<lrm. 1;14 hlllh. lu1 Mt'
puuu. 1>1n~lt.· lt!Yt'I, 111-.1r
pool. $62 ,UOO
AHCHOIAGE
IHYHTMIHTS
(7141 06-7711
· · "' • sauna Jacuul pr .: or 4 4 4 7 1ti· llt-3o J :! 111 '"':1h 11.11nt. Akond $425. lx>iil 0~ trlr Clubhou 1 !'kw Woodbridito t-::.tute • * • Ckt'1mfronl Gttru11t" f\pl. .! ~ ttil 22-1 ~· SO!\t fo: l"ii.. ~IH 772'J ~r-_ mi to beach. 968 2~;u or ~ctfer.oa Model, Cor be ~ Wa16..-flr, l ba. 110 vtil~. ut1l 11<1
er Uppcri.. !:.UM!-; 1,, und ~:.L·ode $2l5 2 br lrnh !llJIS 440:, A£l -llr, 2 Sa, d\in. 1570 i.q fl rT-. •-Amovu~ .• ~~~:'10to b,30. SJ2!;
new. S O?'\i 1t,; pr&d•· nr ok 1-·t.~ . • ---~··'gdel lav rrn. ~A~ 204 ISth st. ""'~<I
ow11cr..h1p '1 H Uil . ~5370 m, .,. n area """ Newport leoch
um t!~-s, __ . -Hunff~ \ iew. tsSO/mo. Ml-3:133 You ;m~ l11t! Wlr!Mr ol :l San Clement• 11 jQuail ~ ~. 3 br fncd. kids, pets, HarbOur 1242 aftGPM ucketi.c..othl·
Plac• :.ll~lc~ ot... Fett ~···••••••••••••••••••• V1t!w, Turtlerock 'l'err. 3 Sport1. Vocation UJr hclnr, .111 ulll Youn~ PrOp•tf-M;ain lfrntals. :...&0·5370 .l -Hr 3 ba townhouse. Hr & Fam llm, beaut. & RecreotionaC people. $1:15. 1-'ee S15.
75'2•'920 ~ II Sl)urklln~ new cond. -..nnmo 7S2-0IH7 V-'"I •-Sho uA h >..n 6312011 1400 ouA1ut HlWl'Ollf HACH :i·lc~a dcl M.ir. 4Ur. :~ 1>11. $470 , Ca 11 ·•LI I 11 • •, ......, • irn c..,. w ..... ,at eom.,.,r.
t th or 547 2501 oltm.?1. JU-'ll redllco1 Jlcd. 844H371or846-MSS eves. New Putio Home. 2 br. 2 ll ~ ------RESORT PROP. !Mjg 4HtiS 1>.1 + xtras. Swimming. ANAHl!:lM South L09UM 3786
3:! UNITS on 4 un 1•., ln Fount-' V-''-323 .. Irv&. 3244 lenms. jul·un i. Adults. C 0 N .~Et;N1' !°"F.nT I U N •••••••••••••••••• ••••• Ufft un.,y .. ••••••••••••• •••••••••• Lsc ~·oo. n10 ~..... 111• · '" dowmown UH.i ut-;J\H :i .,. _., • J iln. 2 thru J ,in !I 2 !Ut. 2 ba on the ocean IJlk. .... lrom l.ik\., llll'Ollll' ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEASESAVAILAlH.}o; l'OUntforJon.524 9634 "·•II ••:l.""'u ... ,1 J,''.l l•• ,l'_urn $700 .•. unfurn S600 11' ~<I.OW. y rly ::O..rlt·S l<•'Ut'C. J UI',:! bu. llU CP!-S· Live In Irvine Vlllu~e. -------"w "'-.......... ~ • ' r t.ul l I l vrici• 1s $:.!40,000 / ~>0.000 <l:µs. fµl t. t•111:1. pu11~. We havt' homl•i. 11vn1I for 2 Ur 2 Ba, lul( uvt. ov1•r cllum your lk kc lt1. 0 • ~ceun Y. e e~~ or:-.,
dowu S>'llcr will t•;irry S375/mu . !l l.3·45 ti , leWl(lm.. look1ni; NcwJ>on Day • * • l"N' l..ielhtlc~ 4fll>·28J5
IJalanu• al w1, t' owner ~11 l1M5 AJ.:l Nu lei:' Walnut Squun• with balcony & fplc Apcrtm."h
3776 •••••••••••••••••••••••
d h Ran.t•h . t'ul llomc:. 833-lr.!34__ Ncwpm·t lll'tl!hb .. :.1
0
ll1. .2 •t..."--1~'--d c111)Crt•k, lll'Clh CJ !. "' 1.1; :1 llH J U/\, lrpl, B I 11 d I ""~ -t ·au • IJccrtlt 111 lln1v l>k 1 __ h h 3248 u, x nt eu · e ll·H ot, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 31901 PASEO CIELO 1 t• ibhw::.r Muny uvi:radcs Cuhcrdult· Col l'Mk ....,...o OC wotk to beaC'h. I yr ll'aSe #!_ ____ _. 3802
CALL 645-6646 ~385. 714-9113-4569 or Turtle lti•t·k •••••:••••••••••••••••• $425mo.642·8413 ~u.
t, U I( Ul'I UIJl!>VO} 531·9545.Agt.NoFel'. "'Wrm "OUr cho11•c ot 3 18R.2 Hlt&3br.bchfrnt --
t h1trmtn~ <!700 ''I ll 4 PR€HIG€ ---------• J on Cliff Dr. 4!14 21l:l3. llUt. 011 d!Jpro\ 'i .i•·r c· I HOM E:S 3 BDRM. t '~ Uo Pre:..tige rrom $340 to $400.. (213) 1176-2723 eves Son JuOft
Forrnul din. IJJll 111 la m --::ir l'a $4.l.JO mo. Agl. 3 bdrm. your cho1c.: of 14 --------Capbtrono 3278
rm w/wet bar. l'rnl 'ly f s..:i 2 0-0 962-4'171, 546-IHOJ lrom $335. lo $475 RENTALS •••••••••••••••••••••••
ldscpd ~round!>. SHH.SOO. Lots « me-2 4 bdrm your ('hoice 01 t. LAGUNA BEACH !hr, lb,•. Contfo Clean.
•BOHO REALTY• •••••••••••••••••••••••Lr.. Bonus Rm. 3 liH, 2 fromS4.50to SSSO 3 BDRM. newer homl! wa::.hl'r. tlr)l'r 11001, no
liALL'F.It V nr llOM t::S 111 * • UA. £rpl: dshwshr, cpls, No Fees located in Port ali no pets. S275 4!1~ 11:11::.
,71•J831·941 I C drp::.. Call about our RANCH REALTY h ---------.. 004.ICJ crM L'hnstmas Bonus. $395. SSl-2000 L ag una . 2 Bat 5 • WHtmfnst~r 3298
•••••••••••••••••••••••
21R WATWROHT
Utulllns. c.-rpts. drp~. U
B·Q, huge deck. garai.w.
$435
36011-'INLEY AVt:. N 13.
JACOBS REAL TY
675-6670
204l2Grayst~ 7\.1-003-4569 or 531-9545. ru-eplace. ocean. view.••••••••••••••••••••••• lalboobland l806
MiuionYiejo 1 067 Hewporl~och 1069 ------Lone J\gt.NoFee. WoodbridgeTwnhmeJDr ~~~~nt <am. home.2 Sty,4br.2 ba.nucpls,•••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Santo Ano 1 o9o H·~,·..,,ton 1.--h 2 Ba, A/C, upgrades. ....,_ · drps, fpk, OW. $-135/mo. New l Br, rrpk. yrly, $300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... ·~ ,.."""' 3 Br den 2 Ba fplc huge 1 d 1 CORONADO 1--•J•U-ST-L•l•S•T•E•D--•IOWNH 2br, J:ocxl locut1no. You .lre the winm•r of:! paUo, i>~t wtr, clb hsc _lake&poo!~riv.64().85(2 2 HDRM. HOM .I::, lge. ~ ~l-9M5 Agt. No :;.;~~nc u ing u t1 •
CHARMER °'·"IY ik cor'td toJ!J So llckets Lo lhl· priv. ownr , 5335 mo b e. Tunlcrock 38r, 2ba, auto sundeck w/ocean view 1.-e _ _ ~h.rt 11 .1111< I , H \ 111111 NEWPORT SHORES Oak St. $.16,!JOO. ~~ 1~1)(1 Sports. Vocation ~'68 2352 s pr k Ir s, <.' u 1-d . s ac Llv. rm. with fireplace . 2 S'I'ORY 4 hr z hd new lalboa Peninwla 3807 ~•1 II, ... ut" r p.11111 t 1 pli· '' hunw 10 11'111••ml1o·i ' :! & Recreationol _...;:~., .......... " 8 .. oc:h JZAO $-195/lsc. 559·5229__ _ _ "'! JW Carpet thruout 1·pl & drps, frpl. Co~. lot ••••••••••••••••••••••• 111 . til I II \ 1 ..., ,, .i tlt·•h 111 .111d tll'll l • lr01th llv n\\ nr·r J br t11" 11t111u'c Vehicle Show ~"'!II"'" ... .. Kitchen w rrunge & oven B<klt gule. <::.11! about our Ne:ir water. Sltl.'i Util vu
dh·n,u k l 'oll ':li.l.'HHI 1 11111pl..t1•I• 1 .111i.·1t·•I ~181\ C.:Jll aft1·r 1. 1.!1·11 Jt th•· ••••••••••••••••.,•••••• S&S bu1ll (;olle.:c Yark $125Mo Christm.is Bonui.. $4~.o Slv&rcfril! Fet•
110: l~1l ~ ~1~1( :~~I,' I \ t~. ~.:1 :,~,:~ ~ ';; ~\111'·' :',:~' l.l:J.~12:18 (. 0 "''\,\1'~!11':1.~~ I c) '\ FUH l.F.ASE : 3 be<.lrm. 2 ~~.h;,.,~\;~~~~~g .. J~J~r. I Bl.mM. J\l''J' al Woods ~1:~~:~ .. ~~. or ~•31 9545. M<lln RN1tals. S\O 5:Ji0
ht111\ Ill••"·""''" •11 O*Mr'ReolEstate ''L',N'J' .. '.I< ha,hrandnew,171Hl ,..'lft Cove Hcach . La11u1 CoronodelMor 3822 \\OOtl .Hui ( h.u tH ul ""r ••••••••••••••••••••••• "',. r_ L...anchn~ homt.• W I., l;U W/SWlm pool. 01\e of tlu.· Townhous.e-••••••••••••••••••••••• NEED MORE ROOM? '"" 111•11' ,.,,,. w .1utu MobileHo~s ,J,m J thniJ,111 ., "al ~525/mu t11e ltl •• *RENTALS • best rentals in Lagu11u Unfurnished 35251----------() I I for S_._ I I 00 Catt 1;.12 56711, I'"' :1:1.1 tu ,.. " 1 b t ..... 7• t '"'"'5 M ·10 1h1?l lo\t'l'r \t,-r t•·t opt•m•t \\twr n•·t«' ,,,, UIC' .:•!rrll'nc·t NnJ)('l:-t. r ,t c n ....... ...,... .1 or""°'' o. •••••••••••••••••••••••
1111 "', . .,11 " hui.:i· :-.:1lc.t 'all ~1u 11:,1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .t.um}ourli<·ki·h FUHLl•:,\St:.:11Jcdrm.:! J U/t.dt•n ...... · ...:sx.1 MISSIOMREALTY BRANON1-;W 3 Ur 2'J lifl, rS ..
111'.llll it 1111 ~ l.1 """ .qw<t Mublll'. Mo(lular JIOIOl' & ;, • .. h~1. brand 11ew 1~>00 ~q It :! Bit. .........••. s:1x:; PHONE 494-0 7 3 I fplc. 'r!o m1 Crum· Doht•m•.v 'Tl J .
t.1t , ""'1 .. 111 1tlil 1 w11 11111ld1ng U(:ll\cl \. Sl'l 1-<indrn.ii hum•· wilormul 2 Bit. • . . . . -·• · · · :::.1<!~1 -----St. Bch & Uana Wht1rl. ,. l~r!..~~
nrcrr1• J11•d 1 111 .... I'll'" uµ, & Servit'l'. t.i'i:i •~••O Lots--<:osfo Mesa •hn. rm .. tam rm. wt·l ~ 11JUlt< ·}u"'~ lla. ·· · ~;~ Uc aul secluded 2 Br, S4SO per mo. ~34·ll:!K2.
-.11 ..t k•· 1011 11'<1 h n11H• fodrecesl.orinfo :! \J('ant, l \\/fd il1.;r Id :-•'" .1. ........ ~ frpk , sun deck, ~ar, lrg 8·5PM,S2cl·I012 E\., t:OltO.NADELMAH 1----------1 -------huu.w, nxt. door is rll'wt•r bu r .s57;,., m u. inc j( J BR, Ot.>n .......... ~l4.HJ yd, '"'"'<+ut1·1.497.377·'. ---""t r trt• 111 a 1' 1"
111 '' 11~.· .,,, self ~1111l'ct, lull IJatt·1 ""rden r No,...,.. b ~ " a bo .. b II k ., Ur Townbousu fr•llc ·"'u ' l'On.~l. Can be wu~ht ;,.., :1 .,u · c • ,,_....... J BH, 2 a ..•...... S57~> -3 r + nus,~ a . ac w ~. • ~1 1 \I.I 1 \ 1·111
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' 1'111· l't·r!t•tl Chnslrnas 1ust rl'linish••li m::.1de. ~ct "J l'kJ"" i•r "· 1.,1,1 r.i ll' Robet-ts Realty . 3 BH, Fil, 2• ~ l>a . _. $.150 1 --Mi--' 3 2 52 Jiay. <.:pLc;. drp:.., hllns l'ool. tennis. Some ot·c.1 n in<I do"' t11 •.h .. pp1111.:, ll I t I " .. ~ ' ' _.,..... ~ •· ,. I . Cl ::...;!,.'.iUO. 1• l. lJ) rnnl ulw/1ner. up with awrun~. Sl!IOO <':.ti tor more 111l11r. 1\i;t 848·1688 :J BR,2 13<1 .......... i425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• s.125.645·9543 "'~ala ina views. O\l'
'\t:111 l\ .. 1Npvrt llarb<1r 5'UH!l13 1:73 7tl0l 1----------1 3. BR,2Ba.. .••••••• _.ssoo. OCEAN .Vl EW. adu lt ;;-n--. -NI ' to shopping & fino beaeh. \ ·" hl I lulr l .. 1sl nr llS ----3 BR, 2 lia ......... S'it.i5 c.•ommun1ty s pac 2 Br. -r .. L:iguna Jl UC I. 644·2611
l.11111 111 •ft"•ll ,1blo· <.inld 20x"'8 Univcr~al W. :! ljr ~ * * * :1 Br. or ,..l·hls, parks. bch :1tJlt,2 8-. •• ••••••·· :::.100 den, 2 Ba, lse. $475 mo .Ludbnl a1 rm, vJ:ew.fadulllsl.1•---------1 "·" l 01 \'''"on H) lJ<t adult park. Pool. j c DaYid Herh . .ber'CJ xlnt cond. !-'pie, $385 mu ·1 Utt 1-·n S..125 496-4482 gar• J c i I<' s llMu r 1,;;1111;is;e as. rent 11 lo bt-Jrh. Pl' C:.irul,642·4000 ' F' B ... d....... 7 Village ~ 640·1644 & ~~
HEW PRIME
Waterlront Condo
HewporfBeoc:h 1069 " lit.!:.\\ l 1l ll'\CI
•••••• •••• ••• •• • •• • • • • • lt>rtn.•l dua r rn t.Jf) Uo..cl ----------1 ~ I I ,, ':> J II II . 0 0 0 -
LIDO ISLE
.! lklrm t <kn. 11111•
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l'h l.~.! il~ll
CLIFF DRIVE
l 11<11111 """"'' 11 hilt II \\1lh \II'\\'. )'·.tlk 111 ti..·.1th
1 t pl I' 11 1\ \ , ... ". "' t •••• 1 !'>trr~t..dh <1t1 l.1r1't'
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·._1•1 lq tM•l1t 0 \l'1 ~11~•.:•tHt LIDO REALTY
:i:rr; 'i11 1.iclo. N .n.
*673-7300*
81GCAHYON
VIJW • S215.000
\II" '' \\ 11111 t Ii.I I It
645°3474 .-1-1
OK ror ham. 645 ;001 3 67 G enoa Lone -----:irn, 2 11 • en••·· ::.1 5 Miuion v· · 3267 S4a.281j · CUTE
C ... M t•• ., I ..... l' 0 3 Blt,2 Ba ··-..... ~HO 1eio ---------os.o HG '~11• "' >r ... ""· ' • 3 HH. 2' '1 Ua .. _ S5JO ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ont' lx'droom. one liuth
'1111 .ire lhc w inn .. r ot .! ipt ... drpi., :.! c.·.ir c.:ar J 81{,3 Hu .....•... SGOO Cln 3 Br, 2 ba on cul·d<?· DuplexesUnftrn 3600 aparlmcnti.. Snulh ot
t11lwt-.toth<· s:ll.• !lfi3 lSli!J ~di '•~.JS 4Ult.:J lia ....... S575 sae. !ncd yd. covered ••••••••••••••••••••••• h1,1th>Aay Clo~c to bcJl'h
Aettoqe fOf" tcH 1200 .........•..•.••.......
1.39 ACRES Sports, V oc:ation \J.:l no fei• 5 IJR. 2 • 3 Ba ........ S.SSO pauo. $375 Wlr pd. Call Nwpt DC'h, 3 Br:! ll:i, fpk, u nd :. hops. ~~SO l>I' 1
& Rec:reotional l 1111 l'ondo pool h'nn1.... 586-1195. ~ar. p::ilio, bltm;, 2 blk5 month Ai.k Cor M1::.s1, I< .111r l'roft'sMon.11 \I .11
l.1k1· 20 Unlb \\Ill 1 \
dl.•tl~l'
Vehic:~Shaw h:rndball & b.1sk1•thalt --bch.SJ00}rly.t;.i5 11'82 !ii'52:Jll ~,0 mo :.I?'• 78111! 3 Ur C..:Ondo. No peL<i. 1'<>01. - -~ red hill~:.;.
552-7500 l~Quail ~ liiilPlac•
Prap•rti•• , 75'2-1920 .... 1400 OUAll'I HIWl'OU HACH
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da•m \nur l11•l..t.•l"
~Hr,~·, f<.1. S:li!l m11
t7M I s:\1; 111 l:i or <'V•''
1;i1:t 1 7'l!H;5li0
4 LcJe In. 2 bath'
Clean' Heatly to m11v1•
Commer'ciol • • • s:n5 mo. 1st/last . 841i 27:17
Property 1600 W rt I<: llTWOO IJ. I as 1 &002·7788 ~sk_!.or El hot
••••••••••••••••••••••• 11111n1• 1>u1ld1ni.: '"' 111•..,l 1 Br,:! sly, 2''.> Aa, f)lto,,,
BA YFROHT ,1n-:1 Shermun. ~.1x llMiO, w/w t·pt, fa m' rm. Supc.-r
1JJl11·1• hu1 td111i.: 111•1 1.11, 711-t clean' $475. 962·9571
l.11 111.ir \II'\\ IU\lll Hlll ... Real Estate CLEAN 3 BR~ BA. rrvl.
··x1·1ul1\l'oll11•1·' \11\lnl E11chancJe 2800 <bhws hr.2 e ar ,::<1 r $:145
;1~r~ ~~rai::e S.125 mo Apc:rtments Furnished ~·J22t --••••••••••••••••••••••• THE IASIL UAF ----------i 2 llr. fplc. yard. clean. lalboo lslond 3706 Newly redecorated :: bdrm. 1 ba apt. Pool :J llr, 2 b11, on cul de i.;11·, lg ;iv;ail J an. l, SJOO mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Near beach Adults. S:IOo.
"" dobl! lo ~t·hb ,11,; prk 831·1256or8.11·2292 LGE 1 BR . d s hws hr, mo.
~;1;~ •. I s l mn urtl ~ ......_ I h-326-9 ws hr, dryer. l ge sun ·
!)52 0430 all 71'M ....... wport eac: deck. $3:!5. Yrly fi75·9378 _ 646-0883
FOR LEASE
....................... ---------------
............. ~~ IGlboa Peninwra 3707 2 Or, l ba duplex. View ol
ONPENINSULA ••••••••••••••••••••••• bay. Sl'a~on.a l . SJSO.
Exc1lmR 3 Bdrm home LJ:t' 2 br. :! ba, incl. util. ~05orl·7~182-·1 __
w/beach&wateracros!. Nr bt'a('h. S325.111 5 W. CostoMeso 3824
the street. $490/mo lsc ll:il Blvll 9G2-0505 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~PECIALLYLARGf; ----· VICTOn 1 Bd & d F l SL35 l:t1t pd Ready now! CASA I/\
t 4 .il.lltn,I ' 111111 !.ti• I II
Irv \1 .1111111 .. 111 111:111
l•~ll'lt "1111 \ 11 \\ \I II
111'.-,tult'nl •• • •• •• ••••• •• • •• ••• • • • •14·96:1·454J.9 or 531 9&15
NEWPORT SHORES BILL GRUNDY H"..tth 111 14u ('•t1•111111·1l J\)tt No Fl'c
'llr • 11 .• •h 11 • 11•11111, I REALTOR 675-6161 11•,1.111r.1111 l'r.1d1• for r.•
u~uut1£ul Un1vers1ly
I' ark l•J"' nhou :.t". J
Bdrms . 2 balhs ; !>llll(le
:;lory & dbl. :11lachl'd
~a ra.:c . Walk 111 slw p
PIO~ & M'hl'>OIS :1<425 pn
mun th
Red Hill Realty
544-4900
. rm en ron .1-\'t' I & 2 BH. unr or !urn. gao; w ,•1cw or watl'r. boaL" & & wtr pd Ad Its no pet» S11,yi:lass Hill $.575/mo. Mam Ht·nl.ils. 540 r,:no_ Pool. re<'. rm. ~cc. J!al~:
Ilk l111pl.11• l'1111kd ~ CostoMeso 3724 525 Vietori<i 1;.128970 ............•...••••••• ,.,1, "" 1 "101 •.I.! 11~1 ; 1--------.11 , ,, '" 11 1"1 111 i·d, I Br hou.-.1· <I\ ail no" J
'1\1 n .. r Income Property 2 000 .111111 "'"1' "'' !'>11 hm ll hath:... cpl.-;, drµs llllm. '\I·.\~ fo:ll I UH :! II \ q1i..., II A Ft l) T 0 fo' I N 0 ~ 40.00 WEEK & UP Adult E·:.1dt• :! b1 • encl •1111 ti d111111 '""'" \\' I
t. 1• ~I•·" 1t111 ... t..tf• tun .\
1111' \. I "I ' I '
••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,f; .l">.S..1 )..J50. 962·3533 ~ l:ar. PJ C10. Like new. '\u MEWPORT BEACH 8 .. och ... p1... d "'"· 1 q il ti~. h" :-.h r · Eastbluf£ t-:xec hom1· •Slud10 & t Hit Apt" & 08711 .. " .. •11r 2 Ba. adlt l'on1l•1 l.rb p.111ci SJ75 71'1 !163.i1Sb9 4br. 2b.i. ram rm. Soft TV & M d Scrv J\ 011 J>l'L'i 11 ----
11 ull I llr l•.•th... 1 )f·l·;rn \ "'" ·11tr ·•1i.1 & Rentots Ht•(' a n •a ', mr 111 h "r ~ .. 11 %15 Ant . No 1-'l'l' wut<•r. New crpls. drp,.,, • h 'Seal lltd \ t 2 " !\"30 "· I 'I ' 11111•1\ ,,,,,,11 ,. •P one rv. poo ur w/p,ar. ,;; . 1•t!W I .:111 .:i... I lit!.. 0 11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• i.:.11 '300. l'h b40 ;,0111 11.11nl Wa lk to schools. "376 N t UI d 1 ·l\1 l I r d I / l
111 l~H·r ~ 1111! 4 o I 1 <1t
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1•1 111 111,,t,,,,11,,, .. 1 \I"'' ""·~· ... d ll(Vl"'L· , 'ewror v •"" crp , ge nc ~' w pa 111 · • ' '" '""1 t .Hh !'>t II ti Houws ..._...1,...,e ,u , :.ho p&. tennis c luh 5-18·975.'i orG4S 3967 Watl'r pd. 2224 "I>"' '' I<" I-ll.1' "" I.tr~·· •I 1t.:i I!'"'" 111·~ I ~"' •••••••• ••• ••••••••••• • 1.AIU.iE l . .,I) :J "' • ~·, tiJ .! IJH. I II.• ~t:IO $750/mo. LS\.'. He Ii. --- -Pla1·l'nt1u, call llctwn l :. 1' ' 0 ' • I I.. • 111' 11 1 ·..111 Hun fo:11r.. lalboo Peninsula 3 I 07 Lim. rm. 1 rpl. ibhw!.hr, 2 Hit..! II.• ~llr> :175 640-6775 or 6-l5·2240 SUS CASIT AS tiJ6 4120
'''"' \\.111.. 111 '""'I' F11r 11 R Ht>Jltv 5.14,65115 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cb.lo bch.C.:c.1ll about11ur :!lllt.2 Bc.1 .. S.1755<!5 ----------•Minutes lo NB. 1 DH -·-------
"' ,,, .. ,~ 111· 1 .1).!1• 1ll S:l("I l'enn l'I 'll r ll:iv & Christmas Bonw-•. ~1!15 :1111t, 2 nu ... -$:l'J5·HOO *NOW AVAIL * furn. Adults. no pets. 2 Br 2 Ba, fplc, pool, 2 Sly. ~1.1·1 ,,1~1 td t ,,.,_•1 I'\'"'· l·---------1 ot'1•an 2 Br u nlit J unP. 'il<t-~456!1 or !i31 :!51:-,. 3 llll, 21' ba ..... $400 625 TIIE BLUFFS, SSOO to 2UO Newport nlvtl. CM. f:.S1de. Children OK.
;:,:i:11w1 1h11 • 8UHITS t:.!l:ll 2·l:t ~>3IC /\gt.N0Fe1· 4HR,2•,h<.1 ,lum •. $.595 S79Spermonth $290.548·0916
Nint.• Ann. ~·1\•e l. hdrm Clt•an & ~harp :1 Hr,<! Ila~ 4 Hll, 21 ~Ra .•.. $ 795-llOO BIG CANYON $750 lo HOLIDAY PLAZA SELi. 1dl~· 1t.-m:. w11n J x n lhrni.:' 1.1 .. t "llh t>.uh l)u1)\ 1'1101 ('l.1t11>1fll'd Art
r 1lnl \\.int \d., t;4i:!·~17X
~~
Personali zed Designer Pattern
Y 31JO
This feminine blour.e from Sew Speooy ties al t.be
nO<''lc. The !!leeves arc ~haPt.'<l with fullness :ind
totii narrow cuHio;. Fubrtc" cotton. silk. satin, · c~. fine linen Y 31JO 111 <'111 only in Ml11Hll 8-18. -;t~o 12 requires 2 318 yrl'I. of 4S" fubrir. To order.
~llJ)d pattern numbrr, ?.110, noine. address and 7.lp. yttcc $2.00 plus 30' l)Olllnl!e and handlinR.
Phtt<'nl Book~ by Clusslllcallon; Suppletntlnt G, ~w Speedy. St.SO pmtpaid. Make check oavablf" to Spadea. Send ordera to lhi~ newspaper. e to
~ea. Z Br1d10 St , Mllfcrd. N J 08848. Dept
& J l 1.xlrrn l1n m1· 1m1 ...,1,.11:1ut1" 1 111 . 2 Ba~ ""t'••ll qlLo;, <Irr~. llltns. fn<'tl. 4 HR 'r~ll<~;t.:A· N. Y-t>·N·. S600 S995 per month ' Deluxe l br apt SJ80 mo. Casa de Hermosa
µertv, Sl.!5.000. 1.,·. lr unl h o rn(· l•r p lc . l\r. Ma ll -; & :;rh h . '. HASTltolGS&CO. AdullSonly,nopcts.1!>65 2braptw/£ireplacc,H'.> dm~n ""hr dryr. d ... ll w,hr. l .. 1•.•.··/l't•l:-. <>K. SJ'.ll' 3 Bll .212 Ba ........ $700 n... .,.n"""n Pomonai\ve,J\pl.15. bath, range, oven, dis-
" u ·' • • •wall.Ors """''""""' hwasher. $.120. Afso 3 br BILL GRUND Y ... 11 1~·•r. S750 inn ·" .111 ~li' <!7li0
REALTOR 6 75·6161 .Ian tU Jul)' I. ;\11 lll'h llV Hms, Carmel 3 Br $1~5. Bachelor, all util. (sop. bldg> $370. 1~M%1f.!art 7 PM ·1 llr ~· 11~1. 1·p t-. dr t". +FR nrpark&school Singles ok. Fee $15. !GOW.Wilson
I ( I R I •· • • Beuchcomber. 631·2011 h ,,,.., nc·1. IH2. <-<'.111 '" "" ssso mo. 752--0617 or547.2501 3 Hr, 2 ba, luxury twnhse. 18 UNITS H.-,fl"ICJton Beach 3 I 40 ... harti S:l!lo 1$ff27•~1 ---------1 N"w shag •-kit appl. ••••••••••••••• • ••••• •• llluffs l·lcvcl 3 Bil, ~ ba. ... .,.
\I I .! H lo: P 111111 \I s1~11 lladll'lor rnlt .q.!1• Sh.1rp :1 Rr. 2 ha,.t.11111 111, l..ovely greenbelt & pool. Laguna hoch 3748 Jluge mstr, Npt lits loc,
I I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call 633-7059or S45--t93l. I Ill R 'I l-:1\ll!'> Ill.I> •\II ul1I !-tH•t. Fe•,. ~l.1 ltv rm. run•· 1 ,..1y 1· SSOOAgt644·1133
I '\LJl':lt ~111, ,1111 l'l'.11 lk.whcom h,•1, 1.:ll .!llll 1-~lwants & Sla ter Fn•e $!50. Furn beaut. 1 BR r ft lb .,b t wnb
•I BR, 2 BA. frpl.. llk. + apl, nr ocb. Hes p empl'd ..,..e r,.. a o ouse l '\ n ur :.17 :!..50! ' .. n.1 m a In I & w" t c I I I G
I k •. from ocean. Yrly. Ren· adlts. Ulil""" 494.4200. inqu ~t comp ex. arage I IQ a "I ~ ('lo-.· lo t't'l'llr.r pur <Y u573 C• .. ftll•Da·l"·v1"'E .... & pauo Adults only N1 U I hdi l\ld' ~h 11k. ~oo .., ""',.-u~ " ,. lal. $475. ARL S40-ll51, -. · · ' Plac• HousesU,.furnished K.l<!!ll!Jl,;ill hl>m O l'l-:;o..t>All.Y Ask£orl.cs Ocean view. $195. Ut1l peli. $325 6153381 ot
Pra -t1"•a ~ •••••••••• • • • • • •• • •• • •• paid. Fee 8.17·9517 P•• K \ \I. TU 1, I' M • R I !'> " 7~1_1910 , GeMf'ol 3202 S!la .! 111 1luplt•'. kid., B1R Cyn. 1124 Canyon ls. Mam e nla "· '10·S:no 2 k & 1 1 t
.I i I' nu 2 Br. den. 3 Ba. $795 lr r, nice c can. c ose n ••oo ouan \f Nlw,.0•111ACH •••••••••••• • • • ••• ••• •• JICl' ""' ,.,. r '\ EAH NEW 2 s ty 4 Br. 2'' lseopL Ownr. 552•713.1 L.ogwto Hills 3750 ... hop~1ng A~ults only.
s \, 1 1 I' ,1 1 Vl'i' 111':1.MO:-.. I !'>lll>ltl-.S On \la111 lk11tab. 540·.> <0 Ha. fom rm. c·p~. drp-;, ••••••••••••••••••••••• No f){l'i. tilS-IJ.IJ!I
. lll'\C'.1i 1 ·~n-;' ~~111~ d,;·1 ~11~··~w;,,<··~~·n:i .I llr. J 'b.• «onrln. Poot. ~~~l. Dt>p req ·d * •,... ALICIAPLAU Lar1te2 br_._l_b_a_c_o_tta_g_e-.
. . <ll·1·k SlollO mu ;\\I .J:111. patw :"io pels. 176115 ----------W. F. Deloice Scenic Mountain Vww-; Encl. p,11rage. J-;ast C.M.
Tllll'l.I:.\. SpJrklrnr.: 4~1350'J.lnr121 ·1111!1t 5:131 .'lle wland. $:l:.!5 mo . TurllHock C~l cn 11 14 16841 ArmlfrortcJ Large, dh: ~1dult 1&2 Adull'l only, no pets.
2 'J 2 townhM' un1U. tu.st 2 (.,l2 G•t2 l l''t' Sycamore. nu 5 Ur, 3 Ba. A Bdrm Apts. Furn & un· $300. 549.5300
lllo<:kll Imm surl I Yr~ lalboo lslond 3206 £ t'R. $795/lsc opt. Ownr, Ye. rurn.
111·w. SI 19,SO(J ••••••••••••···~····••• 3 ~.2 r~~c!g;n~';;r ~~:; !~ M2·7133 You are ~=':Mer or 2 Pool, Jacuui. Billiards NEW BREEDAPTS
. 1-'0 U fll'l.I·.~. IUdrm . t ba. Good toe. ptl.$375 mo.554·7533 J .M. Peters. 1126 Tahoe. t1Ak•'-••the S8l·615lorS8l·Gl30 IF brl apt, elncl. ~ara1"!: Uni ,$375,year ly nu lge 4Br3Baonpark• " ...... _ 25211 Stockport, Lag rp c, app ns, poo .,. ~~11:.'f~tw:llhl~:.ak~nt~:! WILUAMWIMTOH Very nice. 2Br., 11'JBa. $595/lse opt. Own. Sr:*:,!= Hills ..;.;_ae_u_1i1_.$230 __ ._64_5_,_44_1_1 __
1:1url. Sll.529 s:rrn.~. NPw Rent Eslate 675·3331 Condo. ~ll'eplace, la~n· 152.7133 Sorry, no pets. Attractive 1 br, W·W cpta. ----------• dry service area. m am· Yehle.._ Sho·#' d bll d 1•· lu.ling at Sl3!!,500 Corona del Mar" 3222 tenance free. S275mo. Like new 4 Br. 2 bn., terr ... ....wport leach 3769 rps. ns, 8 u ... no •BERTHA JI ENHY • althe ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets. Upstairs, t970 HEAL TORS 4112·4121 ••••••••••••••• •••••••• 96J·B7JS nts cl & pool. Colony ANAHEIM Wullacr. 646-0176. $175. 1
Del M S Cl •S. of llwv, newer. 3 hr, . area. Paul Martin co N v EN T r o N BEST IUY mo. '.!l5 ar.. a n. em. 21..la. fplc:lmlry, no pets, 2 Story. 4~r+ ram r m . :iv., Real Estute 644·T.183 CENTER Some people say you get•----------
4-PLEX. S76,500
WelJ built. 2 yr old in xlnl
. 1pprec1al1on lo1•:i tion
near proposed new :-.hop
pm)<I ccnlt'r. Low vacan
('Y raclor 10 ~mol( free
Hemet \'allry. a winter
rellOtl often relerred lo
'"' "Little l'alm Spr
mg.s • Seller muy ('On
rcf., gur., $<1115. 675·6900 ba. 5j,!35rtn833i:da1
1
6c/Slalcr 5--L-.-1, T h 3 Jan.2tbruJan.9 wh11lyoupay for! We of· 2 Br n -1.1 Ila Lwnhse brk.
-~----area ..... · · 9'J ·an uis ,ey wn se. Call 642·5678, ClCl. 333 to fer more. And the price 1s fplc, ~ar, ll{e patio, a dlta., 2 Bedrooms. lnrJZc open --, Br 2' 2 Ba. fple, wclbllr. .._ . k 1 t ~'75 2447 ~Iden bell nH'd Ii vi nJt room. Freshly painted 3 Or. I !It hq~hly upgraded. new Curlm your Uc elli. ess. Membership 111 :1 110 ve :.. """ · •
l:lrgi• fumily or dining Ba •. cpts. drps, bllns, drps&cpt.sthnaout.Lov-* * * Health Cluh. fl. tennis A.vl'. !17!1 ltl ~H . 1'.v,,.
ri>0m , dis hwus hcr & scrVJ<'t>. rm. pvt r~need cly view, walk to pool. club.Freelennjafessons . _646 __ -_1_021 ________ _
hu11l in!I . flrrpla <'e yd, quiet slr~el wost golf & tennis. No pets. WALKTOBEACH Biiiiards .. Swimming. CLEAN li;c i Br lower
W .ash or & 111 vcr 111 Shorewood Circle. l!\I SS50mo. 752.9259 3~8~~~~;,.o ~:~'n a~ri;•n:re'~~n!~: apt~ in4-plex. Cpts. d rp11,
chided. ljood t"ocatllun. i.trect E. of Mar!nollR off Like new 2 bdrm w/yard Uvlt.ies: Sund;1y UBQs. closed i:ar, a.dulls . n<J ssoo monlh.640·83S8 Adam!>, $3115 mo .• No 2 Br. 2 Ba townhouse. Port!-~, ..... live bonds. '"'ls. Appllcntrons laken dogs. Open Sun J.!/2G. Pool. clubhouse. 1385. It garage SSOO mo "'• .. .,, .,.. 1 3224 1·4P:\1. AvoU. now. 552-1429 PENINSULA POINT Free Sunday brunch now_. 64_s.. __ 4_M ____ _
4 Bdrms w /balconies. Lovely Igo 2 br upper •
'<Ider VA
PROfESSIONAI. Costa Meta ••......•..••....•.••.. REAL ESTATE 714·925-77$6; 925.7513, DESIRAILE
Ask for Ann HOME 1----------1 2BR, 28a, Den. crpld,
RMI &tote Co-.Mlor drps, forced alr heot,
Profes i nvestment aarb-d.isp, bltns, paUo,
analysis, nppralaals, lax 1 1 rage, water furn.
t.c exchange advice. Adultsonly.nopets.
Speciah7.ing rn Och RATEREASONABLE
mulli·plex proper ties. Across from Countr y
Sellers & Buyers avail. Club
Cull non F.lhs 275 Mesa Dr.*' 548-6706
H.B. Henlty 536·6565 1225 E /Side 2 br, dee .. cpt,
71Unit Apt Project, Cost a drps, gar, fncd. yd, patio.
.Mesa, prime location. to Mat. adJt&. 646-1078
be builtln l977. Excelltpt 3nr . 2 ba. No. c M.
tax sheller benefit.3 for SJ95tmo. So. Calif Realty 1977. Requires $320.000 In 546-500S 752.0558 J a nuary . Builder. __ . ___ _
(714>642-4905 Condo, 2br. 1 a, patio
SlX UNITS. Col!UI Meaa. 1a~age . No pets. $293.
Top locaUon. Xlnt coad. mo. ?5l-M43 ---
Must sell I $175.000. &Side 3br newly decor Y~AGER REALTY h~, lge yd & patio, Pl' ~171 l!Chools,S-.646-3389.
~-------------·.---~------· ..
Prest.icJous wood intr & YourrentdoUaragooven newly decornted. ldeaJ
extr, beama 4c warmth. furlher•••A terrific loc. No pets. sus. Mgr.at..
SOOO/Jrlyl3e. malntenaoco cnw, pro-fm.2531,288SMondoiaA. SHORT BLKTO OCH reuional m anage m ent•---------
tmmacuJale le wooclsey ataff that cares, and Nice 1 br, frpk, pool.
interlor. a Bdrm, a ba. friendly noil(bbou. adults, DO pets. $2:.>. IDO.
Vacant and ready lm· Models open dairy 10.7. SCMmor648-3798
medlatA!ly. '480 mo. Sony, no one under 21 fl
WATERFRONTHOMES no pe ts. Roommate
631-1400 aerv1co a vailablo. Mon·
$235. 2 br T .H . Pool.
Singles ok. Fee
Main Rentals, S.0-5370
FOR LEASE. lfufft
water •l•w 3
tb-to-mootb occ"pancr.
Oakwool1 Garden Apts
880 JrvJoo (It 16th)
(71')645~
INdrooM. 21/a berths. 170016lhSL(atDover)
$ 5 9 S • C A L L (7H )M3·8170
6 4 0 • t f 0 0 0 R l BR, across from bench.
644-0406e .. 1.1.ge..t. No pets. $170. Carport.
~or833·210S Leo 3 Br, Fam Rm, den, -
d1n. 2 fplc'1, 2 ba, pool, STEPS TO Bucb. 3 br. 2
tennis, ~. 673-GBSa or b a • W n t r • $ i ~ o ,
613-l"IOO m• amt
*** ... Kr..t
1145 Capri Circle
CodaMeM
Vou arc the WIMer or 2
Uckett to lhe
$port1, Vacation
lReenatioM
Veltldt5"ow
at the
i\NAfiElM
CON VENTJO
CENTER ' Jao.2thruJan.t ..
Call ~ ext. -to dalm J'Glll'tiCat..
*'* *
I
8'1 DAILY PILOT Sunday. Dect1mber 26 1976 DAILY PILOT C7
i
Add 1t...Build 1t...D1<.1J){:r 1t .Hammer it .. Carpet
it.. Cem ent 1t Wire> 1t Hoe 1t Clean 1t...M ove
• ..1t...Press rt . P,11n t 1t Nall 1t .Plaster it .. Fix 1 t . SERVICE DIRECTORY ~lumb 1t ... Patch 1t. .. P1pe 1t .. RE'mooe l if ·r )""'
Roof it .Landscclpe 1t. .. Tlle 1t. .. l run 1t.. Sew 1t
Haul 1l... Add 1t... P lant 1t. .. AltPr 1t l cc1rn 1t .. •
A,pllanc• R•palr Car-p.t Service Haulinq HIMtMcll'onlrMJ PointincJfPoptrlnq ·•·····••••·•····•···························• .•••....••...•••...•..••...•.••••...•..•...•••...•.••••..•...•..•••..
l\PP~lA 'l't-:Hl l'\IH 1.:J1111.1\IJll\\1lll.1\\ou1 '\ol ll\\1:ir 1t1 \lJY 111>1sn·1.1·:\\l:'\1. PaintYourCasHl'
~10 S.·r.,,11.·cl'Jll or n11111 llq>..11r" ,\ 11..Lll\lLIT\\\,\\ li\rd1Jbh.•l011u111, \\r i.:ExlrlSty~I:.
l7H151'1 24.!.! lfl'.1111111. ruv' <.;u.11 \\Cll I. J DI • .tl! WOt. 1!1·1 :. :>111 51\IJ ;i St> >Iii$ lntr s-i:i1 ni
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•••••••••••••••••••••• 111;:.'' IL .. lluJJ "' .. \1u1 I. ~.\(X'rll'rll't'd, with rel:. <:t1<tf in,.rJ . (r, ... '''l
FIMSll Hl':M!ll>l· I. ~Contractor lur u,,1bll• 1k11l' I t•11 Allt'r5 l':\I, ol!J:I UIJllO Tt:tlb3ti·iO!SSorSS2·0l:U
Hpr Sm:ill Juli (lh ••••••••••••••••••••••• • l'''"lui;~ rt:n111 \-\0 d l'.r:TEHS l'Al:"\TJ;\(;
Re.t'4 '17!1 0:17'1 1.1.;t: " .1 ,\It\ I!'> .,;; :!ou:. Y 0 u d 1 rt v t.• m W •. t-:'pr'd n·.i~. r;11c~. t rl'e
,\dch1 IOtl'> ~ lh•lf)flllc•l111i.: n .1':AN ... \I S~•t'CIJlit.. t':.t C.ill Gene 55:! 11451i
'Iii:! '>51'1 1.u '.ll7k "' ll.1ul111: 111111111i.: 'f1-.11111p 111i.: 111 vac.wt llonll·~ Ccrpet s~rvic~
··~·· •• •• •••• • • • • • • • • • • Gardtninq ~.· Uj) I'll•\\\ Ill" l(lo.1, l.a"u 'Hi!$ 7'111
~h.1nlpoo & 'l••.nu 'lt',1n •••••••••••••••••••••••
cui.:1•. Color li11i,:lil1·1w1, \\ r:r.ll"I' ('I.I.A \~'I'S Hou~cleanln9
Wtt (;Jlpl ~ /U Ultll •\\t•t•J..ty\lht1\tf'11iU\l•t•• •••••••••••••••••••••••
l>lo.ich l'lt.,111 II\ 1111 111 11 h•·•• I. ,1 '"~ 't'IO'. \\.1111 ,, I!~: \I .I., t'l.I'. \ \
l."I I rt·•• t'°'l II 1" 1°1117 111/l :O-l•:l'1.E1\'\l\C1 llV
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l'a111l111l!. lnl f><l lh•J:o..
1h.•p(•n1l.11Jll' Fn•c e i.l
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Worl.mu11:.hq1 (,uarn U
l11lt•r• 1-;,\l•r Fc't'l' '''l
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PolntlrMJ /Paperinq Plast.r ;1tepair Raofinq .•.....•...•••.•••••... ••••••................. •··•••·••··••••········
lnlr 1-:'t P.11nllnJ( Aq! r 1\f<.:l1 Pl.AS'rt-'lll;>.<; Hoollni:,S..t\~;!Olo;!~·. on
1m ~1..'i, 1111 prll'1·i. ind ••Al .l.TYPJo;S•• ..i lit'°" root C..ill 101
p..imt F1 l.'l!1.'bl b-12 Jl ·~ Fr l'l! l':>l 5~0 118.!:. prm.!i. !Ht. OOJt,
Dunt tw horn!>\\ JGJtll•d Plumbll'M) Television Repair
I tJr uru· <tuJl po1nUnf:t & ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •
IJ1r tH111•i. tuo, t·ulllO'ruH w /ad Plumh1n.: ~t\NOl'YTVS\C('O
H1chJ1d I hi 11rcl>:.urt wtr :.1·11. leJks, b.ithrm l:it Rall' &!r1 I<'~
1·k.1n 111 :.l, Ill) tht·y·1 1•11l'I Ht'a:..ljJ;J 2168 ut FJ1r l'nc•·:-'luO lb.IJ
l.1 l' 11\Jj llJli 5~>55 Pt.\J!'t111ER ·lfrpHtr. r1• Tre-eServlcl'
Ori9 SuperC)f'apflic$ v 1 IH'. 1 n " l J I I J t cu 11 • ••. • ••. ••. •• •• •••••••• L'ustum Murtibli3655~~. 1<\'Pll'l'S li linllcy Kl'movulo;. l11111m111~
1>12 !1:11 •' 11runio~'. In·•· l'="' l.11 cl
Pla$ter /Repair R fl Fullv in:•Ul'l'•l t.rl:! :!ti~ I ••••••••••••••••••••••• 00"9 .
\'l•:ltY NEi\T l'i\TCll ••••••••••••••••••••••• lh·mo\'tn~:. 1nrn111111 .:.
JOllS&'l'EX'l'\Jll1': lll'I'·""~ & Compo»1\11111 l11µµ1n1: I n ~ d . 111
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•iuar ttlltrt Pt.'l •Jtlttl CqH ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• •Cl STO!\t l'.'\J:\'1'1N<;.
l~llUll t.1 ,, t'\Jtl (Jll!'.l.iplu.uli·i duuq> 11111 ~ \\.1111 a H~ .. \1,1.\ Cl.I'..\\ !-;\ \ll1o•1l \111\t'I , l11p llllr i::\U' ltl'H'> IL.ill'' Tl'ullt• \•llll ol!I :-luff IOI
""''" ~ Ill\ .. 11 1(1·1-h.1ul111, II•'• \\I. 1n.1d llC>I ~~;· l'.dl (i1111•h.1111 t'(IUlpm1·11t, :.UVC monl'\, l01Jllllrucc 5:J:!:!IJl~l'll'' n('\\o l:OllUll':> \\l\h J Sdl lhrni.:" l,1,.l 1\llh 11J11\
.:110101 1111: ilt111tJ,l'll i .. .J.J'J.>11 1:1rl ln•t•e,,a,. t>l~.11 :!.I m'urrct.1rr1•1•\t l'l:tKlll!"l Scll1lllellt·m~ hl:!S6711 Cla-. ... dll'rlad lil:!!"lf1iH Wa11t Ad:-Ci.ill I>~<! 56711 1'1!ot W;1nt •\1b ·
Ofllr 1n4 Otllr Pllol ,..11, 1th•
r11v whal'• ..... •n rou• local
totnrnunlty .. every <My
•·tmU!t·~•
~~'!'.·.~·-·.~ ... J~'!::'.~~~.~ .... ~':'!.':.9:'!.s.~ ....• <:>!!!~~-~~~~ .•••• !~.~~ lknineH
Opportunity
l
5005 Announce~nb/ Lost & Found 5300 H~p Wonted 7100 Htlp Wa1tted 7100 ,.,.~s/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••···~·t· Co$ta Meso 3824 Costa Mesa 3824 Mewport leach 3869
~······················ ...•........•......•... ...••.••..••........... WESTCLIFF BLDG.
NEWPORT BEACH
.......•..•...•.•....•.
Clt;AREITE SUPPLY
DISTnl BUTOHSJ I 11'
Lost&Found ••••••••• LOST 1 L' • n Comp. lhkpr ll\c 111' IOYSA...,OGIRLS •• ••• ••••••••••• . £• a r I l g rer:.. Seil. P\l rm ba. TV "
WATERFRONT VIEWS IN
NEWPORT.
COl~t 'Wirl1•t< to ft 0.' "' ,1nu "'""" &ve Pan or Pull T1ml'
immediate nl'r1I 1n
Oran~e County and or
!>Urrounding rnwn~ lor
distributors. All rl'lail
nutll:U. "re :.ceurt•d h\
n•llll'dll) lht•rt•£orc n•
1m1<h1cl ::.l'ltm~. Uc1·11nw
d"lnbutor for .,ul'11 11,1
cinn..ilh ad\t'rl1 ,,t·al ··1;.,;ir~uc!> a-.. w111,1u11
C.1mcb. :'lla1 lboru f';oll
:'>l.111 , Sal\·ms. l\ouh
hl'rtl. t'll' To qualify ~ cm
111U!-.l hall' a t»ll' :l-K hr-
t>1.•r "'eek c rlJys or l'\ t·~ 1
.Announce-menh 51 00 KN'p:..11.e 2 bells under I 1 l l' c 0 0 k • <.: cl M 101 UJrly Pilot routes :;,,
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1n:.1gn1u Vacintl} 644_9666 ,.,_14 ,l/IO!i Arch Uc.il'h area ·0 1
FREE RENT
./ ••C--"'9 ~c-.i-1o..,.1 ... lfl .\r 11 s t-. & Craft!>men Fori:1t::.! 1...ii,:una lkad1 Mu!>l be
Ol't'dt'd fo1 wt..nd C:raf\ R~WAHO ti75·1739 A 11 'we r 1 n i; ~ 1• r v .1t le.1i.l 11) 'l.'.irs old. ,,_ .... ...
Sff Ml'w srro~1ng oes19n ano an
:/, .... ...
./ '"" .... bak.Oft'e• .l~tto• ~
Sale. m .1Jor "hop'g '.\li:.::.mi: & mi::.::.ed -;ed/· Operator.!15 \l ,.. ~;..,.,,·11 !'hum· t>4~ IJ2l. a:.k for c-<~lt'~'> ~.1y ~10 ~i.111 • brn Airedale mix: Male. only. <!28 Fore~l Av!! <.:1rrulallon El Syd Adutt Townhouses
• From $295 • Ccnlri.Jl Costa '.\'lcsa
1 lt>9anr l'\Cl[lnCJ way lO h\I(' CnOO\P tot{\ DJV wmoows stcfllghu fire naac.,s •our own onv.111 o 11 •O or o.i1Conv A I r11 nmv
111tll•On 0011.ir rec C fill\ 1 Tt•11111•, tOUI ti too
.,/ ~y .... tC ......
./ _.,, • .,.. .. "'9 ••• Naml' Uoorner. 497·1~ L:iituna Bl.'at•h BOYS AND GIRLS
• 2 Bdrm. 11 :! Ualh~ •Au· cond1l1oned Call Mr. Howard
US·&101 Byron latcheller LOST hlk l.~1h~.U~k~ AliTO l~SUR/\'.\'t'E
\ll' :'II Jin Udt l'r~. llii.;h CASUAL TY
10 to I) \'t'.H~ I-" JI ll
('hn~tm;" m11nr\ • ~:.'O lo
>IO 1x·r \H'l'k "l'llinr:: :o.uL
"·npttrnc... 111 1tw Daill
l'llul 1'1 ,111,1111rlJtlOll
1111111tft•ol "'" tll'll\ t•r'll'~
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• Private p<itto~
RESERVE HOW FOR I ST MONTH RH •I \I() !· H 1-.1·; I! E;<;T •
l .!'l l<in 11ll111·:-l1111n
4800 Campus Dr.
Newport leach
'011 ..ire \ht• w111nc•r nl
lh·kl'l:-t11 lhl0
Sl·h1•1.1I 01· t::ml'aald Uu~ UNDERWRITER
Wt ur in.: l'liu)..l• l h:.11;1 J.ari.;l' .\uto .\J.:t'n1 1 See Manager l!IW Ml'ver St jus t
off 19th Strt·t·t . ~1:.!.1 pt•r n111 Ad J ~ 494 7:!l~l Oran~e ('o t\l'4.'kllll'
I 'romontory Point
Weekdays 11 5 Si.Jt Sun 111 ·I ,\Cfllllfll 1 lloll'I 'litJ 1\.-,IM'
c l'll K;l.I :12i:1 I 1 I noon Sparh. Voc ation
& R~creatlonal
Vehicle Show
Pffsonals 5350 l'\lll:r"cJ & llUIOl't' .IUltl
11ndc•rwr1i.·r~ ·•·············•··••·•· 642-0282 60 PER SQ FT
li.17 \\ t·::-»1 t'l.l l"I· ;\II
\C; I' ~d I .. o:t:!
t>r1nl1.111g problem.,
l'ull l\lrnh<1l tlclphn1•
:!I hrs a day ~;1s-:sll:IO
L1l<urv Jdult renra1\ 1ror11 S~50 mnntn1v ~;l:.l()CI
l'1\Stl INVEST:\IE~'I
Costa Mesa 3824 Huntinqton leach 3840 ••·•··•··•········•···· ...................... .
100 Pr o•nontorv Or wcs1
lust norrn of JJmbor'°P on Pac111c coast Hlqnwav re1epnone 11101 67S 8000 ownea ana mana1Jea ov rne rrvane comoanv
I 50 I wHtcliff Dr.
II E<JUJH EU
For mon• 1nlormal111n
\\Tilt• tu 'CI(; AH 1-.:TT ~.
OIVIS!ON" #<!JW
,1t lht•
\:'>l,\J1r:1 \I
C U N V I·: !II I' I ti '\
Cl'.:NTEH PHl-:<:NANT !
* * •
SuzanM Olson
1870 Perk Newpo rt
M.wporl Beac h
'11u :in: 1h1· \\ 1niwr ''' :.
lll'kt·l~ l11 lh1·
Sports. Vacation
& R~creational
Vehic~ Show
iJ\ 111 ..
I (I
,\~ \lffl\I
\ \ I '\ I I
I L\ I I.Ii
ti \
• hr , • Ph J:HM •I. l•l.1 v "'
II " IJ I' l ~ :.! :.! II M I\
I h l.1wJr<' ~1'lh l~l:l'I
• Larqe Mttw Aph *
I .: .I beef room, d11lcl1t•11
ul, )II'\ 'i '11n-..11h•1 t·1I
dt'-h\\,"lh'I ' I ;11 llt'l~
olr.•1><' o '""·ti g .. r.1i:t·
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•• \ .I I I I h I.. I .I I I
•di '41 ••.•• ~. 111.1m 5p111
f d.1\"°I
PARK NEWPORT
APARTMENTS
I 11r 2 ilcdr0<>mi. :111u
To\\ nhou~<'s
horn!).'!!'>!• ~·
1111\'ll !I b Ll.111\
Sp.1 1'11uh I <'11111'
\1ro'' lrum F ;,...h111r'
blanc.I al J.1ml>o111· 111
:-..10 l11aqu111 llrlh lloJd
17141 644-1900
"'e1~ pm l I· 1 ria nui.I I L t1·
Leasinq Office Spa~e
t'.ill 11n ~Ill' \l.ina.:t·r
c71 I1 !ill! :11111•xl :• 11,
II '\ ou "lrl'U 1\ Stalktl <\
Fur llll)hl·tl llll 11•1• c .1 II
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I' i > Box 11. Hc•:-.l·rncJd
Cil !Jt1i0. 1nl'luc.lc >our
t1ht1nL' n11ml1<·r
Bttr /Witte T a•tttt
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Plu!>llll':O.l hJr in .in•J
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BURGER ST AHD
Jan 2 thr u .Jan ''
Call &I~ !iti711, t•\I J:J:I 11,
d.i1m your l1ckt'l" • '* •
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
~;rnl'r~~ Oulfll
111·.cl\ \ .1:-.. ;11
.In\ 1.ol \\ h.1lt•I
I\\\ IOU t-:\ t-.1<
C ,ir 1 n g , 1111 fl d l' n t 1 .i I
t·oun:.chn~ & referral
Ahortwn •• 1tloptron &
1-l'l'PlnJ:
At>CAIU: SH 251>:!
•SHARON'S*
<HJTl'Al.L :'llASSAGE
-l!t'J 1:!21
I llF EXPEHIE'>CE
Adull mulct Clu)o.t!d
11n u1l J'\ ~nr Hl'l>t'I'\ d
llun' 1.1~. ;1~ 7
f.111 :!lh1u.l,111 •1
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l Ill 1111 lol \ 1• ,1111111.
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11111
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188 E. 22nd Street
J.,tl I
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lo.1 Iii• I.. l•I I
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dft'd :..;,:1)11 \\;id J ,111 ht
t.'.ill all ,, ~' 111 "'I.nil
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J.¥o ot ()fonge County s
mOSI t>eouMul OOOrtmllfll
commu~ A reiO~lf'IQ
se1t1ng Wlltl srreoms
wuteitolls and moiesnc
rees feotu009 poois
JocUlZI. souno bliords
ond exclling c_,bhouse
Wtlh SOCIOI even!s Tennis
gym, and~· al
The Vlloge MOfe of
ewr,1tllng you re look.rig
f(Y(. fuml!Ure ts CM>loble.
Onll and 1wo Bedroom
AdUllHlng
Offices open 9 .00 to 6 00
Now rennng
1n:u ·x1·. 1 hr frpl lull
,11nl•111l11'' " lull r•'l'
l.H !h :0-.l'l' 111 lll'llt'\t''
K-17 1.tcri
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li1\\;tl11'I' 2 wk, 11t·•• 1'1•1H
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SPANIS H STYLE
.Ill .! Inf\ \\ ltµll
h,tl, ""' p,il 11• plchh
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l11•h I h1hli· II UI\ Hk1
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11111 • br. pool 'Jr.1g1• l.11b t;k ~ ,.,.
\l.A 111 llt·nl.11'. :;.in .>Jill
\,• 11 ••· H h $1ll0 I l'llfrrn. 1•·( 111. .......
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l01Slt. flllh'I 3fl'.I
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Hwitinqton
Hcrbour 3842 •..••.............•....
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OCEANFRONT
.! HH 2 IJ.1 ~JllO
BAYFRONT HOME
l HH :! lt.1 s;?OOO \lo ) rl)
STEPS TO BEACH
i rm :! h.1 uni •q.:.·.
c Hll ~ h.1 uni ~~tMI
associated
BROKERS-A EAL TORS
Z02~ W 8olboo U l JU J
l.i.;.l .:. hr .! h..i m·.u l~:.11 h
\ •. 1r I h I.! .!''HO l'I .. , ,\
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1,7,; 1:111 flr'k1
San Clemente 3876 .......................
•SPAHKLtN<:,,
:!br 1 trn ;q1l. JU"! re·
n111 .1lo•cl :! hlk' tn hc•h,
::>.!:!S & -.2:1:; Slovc• &
r 1• I r 1 i.: 1 .; ti I 5 2 W
~" .tl11n.... :-.an Cll•m
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• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • c:w-trnf'nts Furnishe-d \.\c11111111t11ic .~ AporUnfwnlsh~d 3900 t'l '\I ..., \I' I..,
;\ ' htlftll 1101t ....
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l'.dll11rr1· 1 I 1111c.i111"'
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Loqwtoa.och 3848 •......................
s;.?:!.'i I llr •lupin;, frpk,
n1•ar lnwn Th.1l1a &
.......................
1111-.l'\Tlll\t.
P ALM MESA APTS.
\II\ l I I:~ 11 J '\I' I
llCJJ
li.lt'h. 1&2 81<
trom SHI\
\olulh. ;\n 1'1•h
I .ll1I \lt" .. t 1'1
1; 1111..;, 1-: .... 1111 ;\1·w11nrt
BIHi I
516 9f!fJO
CJtahna. l!M 1:!77 ac.Jults . •R·--------4-0-0-0
1
---. ooms
Coty Sl111l 10 2 hi k."> heh or •••• • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • •
l11Y.·n S1n,.:l1• PN"•ln. no Sleeping rms SOO·S105 mo.
l'l'I.'. Llil incl,~ .• Jnhn All $50 y, k. Share kill·
1·11~tnr. 2!12 Cyprc:.:-Ur bath. Shnw11 Mon Sat
Apl 11 lfM 4!J.15 "only". <.:ult ufl l pnl .
M. -t v· "" 3867 Reis req'tl s~; 0058 or .,,,.on rer-548-595-1 ....................... ----
' lie 1·11111.lo. k1fl, 111. n1J ROO\IS S:I~ \\ k llJl Wtlh
ll l' t °' $ .! i ·' 111 o k1tdw11 . ..,,7 r10 ,..11, II)'
l'h Ii 15 .11~ ur R:li f.050 apl-.. ">Ill 'li:1.1
l'nmo• 1111 .1111111 111 llunl
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1""111'1' .11''.tl:lll'rt p;1rk
1111-' t 'all :\I 1 l'lunrnu•r
!~~' fiii\7
DELUXE OFFICES
I '11111ml &. 1ml-.tl ~PJl'c,,,
;!IWI 111 :.!IM~I ~'I I l ,\.., le>"
·" .1.1 ''I ll L.1i: -.:1 1!11t·I Xi
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BEDROOM
EXECUTIVES!
\\'Jnl 111 mcl\ c \our or11u·
out ol \he ill'droom & 1n1n
prc ~11i.:1nus l'irwporl
l'cntt•r al " I rul0l10n ol
the l'Xf>l'lll'1I co:.l ' 'l'h•·
ExN·ut1w !'iurlc ha1o 1h1•
.11h1q•r
I r•·•· ~~1ml1r1;.: huildan;.:
1.alh plt•nt,\ 111 p.11 l.111.:
llro'Sl'!> :>l.'i.IJOO. rno \l'.11
round lhutl'r 1..i1rrn:.:
\\'111 aCll'l'l 2:1' • tl•i" 11 \;.:c x..1; .,1wo
COFFEE SHOP
'<ETSS2000 l\ltl
I 'crtecl Mom & Po11 lm•a
tmn. Frc<• ~tamlrn,.: bu1IJ
mi:: \\1th plc11ly of purk
m.: lleavy lool lrallH'
IOI.· Shnrl hou r~ (;Qod
krrns. Al:\. 1137 4WO
Auto W~ckinq
$1ti00 !\tu N t-;T
Uranl{l' & L I\ Counlll''
ln<·at1rrn., I-ullv l11'l'O'<'cl
AJ,!l 837-4200
Fl:Jwers & Plonts
i\:t•ts SJ,;;(Ml lllU
~.m Franu:.u> ~l) It•
l'o•r ,un •1f)l'r.Jl1011 llu"
\l.cll loc Uni\ ~.11.1100
lull pnt:t'. "11h \•·rm.,
\j.!\ \1 !137·4200
COCKTAILS
:'\c.-wport RE>ach
rtu .. h . seal'> 100
l'arln rrs feuding
'frrm:-.. Al?l. 1137 ~201l
AFFILIATE
Opportunil)· tn r,,.. n a
hram·h offlr<" of a :-.uc
tessf ul Video Ui.1t 1n i::
Cluh. Ci.ill
Videoview
997-5400
Vour ol'l ll'l' r e nt In
t' I u ti <' ., , r c t• c JI ~ 1 o n
~ 1• ~' 1 c l'. r on f c rt· n c"
room. t>l'r:.onalizc•d
tclcphom· rnv1•1 ••i::c. mail -•
handlin1:. undcri:rnund llC!.lauranl. I' .t II wy.
parkmi:. JUflllor M'n ire. N.B. f•nu•d lo :o.t•ll fa:.t
.illul1ht11•,1•M'<'Pl1>honc Shcrma11 a·lR IUOO .
( .111 711 'lilll 5lill H41i 711 1
I' II I·, 1-. X t·: (. ll 1 I \' ~: Sl • 1 n : Steel Fabrication
"" '1.111 \1t·nt.1, J>r, Su1\c NF.TSS2100 mo
II•• \I'\\ flOl l lll'iH h. l'.t Misc. SICl'I Work111i.: !HI' wr\h ronlrnctor~ 1 lt•lp
• • •
Dolor e s Eifler
4307 Patric~
Newport Beach y.,., .ire the "lllfll'' ol
111•kt'I~ lu lht•
Sports, Vacation
& Recreational
V ~hicle Show
.11 ltH'
\'\o;,\111-:1\1
0 " \' ,.; .'J I I II \
('1-;Yf'Fll
I.in .! 1h1 u .I.in •1
l'.tll 1,1;,: :11t'ill l 'I ;1;n 111
d J llll \•Ill/ l 11 1.l•h • • •
Lost & Found 5300 ..........•.•...•......
l.o:. I I! cw .1 ril ~ 111.al I
hlJ<'k da~ w wht l'll•''l
'k 1 11n 1 1 .. i.:., m .tit•
(»l.! l:lOJ .11l '• ,lllplll
l..c.J..~t Silt C\ c l>N' Ill. on
nr Pa\ll1011 <'un·n (;old
l.ir.11·1•lrt with ~old corn
llcwartl. li7:1 7467.
LOST Small IUf'\
;ll1n111lur1• S1·hna11zl'r
Malt•. t\µc 14 Nt•cth
ml•d1cnlion. Hewurcl
llunl l la1hnur
1;.!1:115!1:! :-;1;:-,i1 Call 1'01
lt•l'I
1n: w " H u 1111 .: o 1 i1 "' 111:.imoml I"''" on ,11·m
11111 I J>,l I:• l1 1t1 \I II
t ',111 h7'M7i7
IJl"l Sml m.111' hl.11·k pno
.tic :'111~:.mn \ 11 10 Jll'.I.
olf \H•ry An:-to Sut1n 1n:w ,\ trn 1~~ 1•11; 11.111~1.1 lnn. K''iO mo tnl'I
1111: IUS Maio Sl llJlbo,1
111.1 11740
run Hequ1r<'" n11 ~·'<
fll'fl!'ntl' llWtll'f '4111
1 ram t ,1111d 11•1 m~ 1\gl. H.Ji 1;!11(/ rou:-.. u lllack m:11l• doi:
t'd:'>l390 tol050MICl Cpts, - -\1c ln111~. Uel· 17
d r p!>. /I / C, Jan 1 tor, 64-\·J:..'07 or 5311 4:XW
park'it. l\lasters li7~4120 Money to loan 5025 Found. grown Irish Set
OFl-'IC~; SPACE. N II ••••••••••••••••••••••• ler. dl'ep red w /chok1•
lhl'I \\.-~lcl1ff l>r. Au , $CASH$ chain Vii" l'at'. <..:~1
pit toilN, t•ll:. Two u111b llwy, & Wurm·r, 11.U
400 :iq. IL cu. 5200/mo-no HOME OWNt:ns borrow 847·1689
"'<lras. Onr unil 1:100 ~11 al tow bunk rates to con· --------•
ft. 2 Lollcts. as is. solidatcdebt.s,paylaxes, FOUND: Uark Gray &
s.iOO/mo. PAC l F I C take a vacation. room tan ctnµ, m ule mixed
nF:AL ESTATE, Gene addition. swim pool, pi.iy bre<'d. vr<:So.Santa Ana.
llill.bl2 0200 off existing 2nd or <tnY Call5$2·1183.
------purpose.
1200 Sq. ft. or :.1>acc avail. MECHANICS .Jan I. S.100 mo 111cld J.t011oriJI :-c•r\'u:e N.Jl NATION.AL IANK
1111 Pac C,.t llw~ <.;all 17141638°3954
LOST "H~w<ird "
Very frlr'nrllv, rl1•clawed,
wht, 11111,.: h111r l'ahco cut
W/JlOlrl /hlk m.1rktnJ:~ S
yrs. Jilk l 0oll:11 \\ '11\N
1,1'\I :!A:\1 11:ut lillt!
ABORTION
l'oun,.C'lrlll! & Hl'll-rr.al
l'1cg ll':.t .l\.iLI. \\klltl°'
'1 1 Ir I Id pl 1m• S 17 11111;,
•••
Jeri Cox
1 I 4 7 Hamilton
Costa Mesa
\ 1111 art' lhl' wannt•r ol .,
111kl'(-.111 tlw
Sporh, Vacation
& Recre ational
Ve hicle Show
.1! lhl'
\ '\,\11 El \I
t II '\ \' I·: ' I' I 0 ' l i-;:q,.,u
l.111 .: lhn1 .l;w 'I
I ,111 Id;! ,1,;>1 t•\I .U:I 111
d.11111 \11111 111 l. .. h
• • •
110\11-: (Wl'ICI': I' \I( I\
I ;l'I C\l'r\ tlnl' 111 \Ill' p ll
IUrr l'hOltij!I .1ph1·1 1111
e.111 for lhc· hulidi.lys
tii:l lllOI -----\l'I\' llancbonw nillurcd
& -.011h1:-l1c·atcd man .• 1gc
10 \\%hes the l'om11any ol
;in altract1vac li.idy 25-:!5
on \'ll('alion to Tahol'.
l>t'l'. :~1 thru Jan ~r. Cull
:;5!1 ~·10 ·-------1
•Sl'JHITU1\L HEADER
Fully l.icrnscll
18155 El C:.imino lh•al
S:in <.:lcm1.'nlc. For appt.
•l!Jl !10:1 I 1!12 7Wti
ll !-;I. \XI :O.:t: !\I t\SSAI. ~;
lloh ,f .1 mt•s-l.1t• \1.1~»1·ur
Oull·;alb 9-fl, 1!11 :ii II
'\11·oh• & S1mrm•r. allrac -
11\l' r\•tlht•.i1t, \\llUltl Ill..\•
lo m1·1·l c:c•n1l1•rn1•11 tor
11.1\ 11r •'H' lu11 :-,:1.5 ;,:1L:J
•••
David ReyrM>lds
1861 Parkvil'w Circl~
Co1taMesa
You are the winner of 2
l11·kN:-. to the
Sports, Vacation .t. RecnoH011ol
Vehicle Show
at the
ANAlll':IM
CON VF:NT I ON
<.;ENTl·:H
Jan.:.: thru .Ian fl
Call t;I<! !'J'l71l, c•\I :JJJ lo
chum yourl11·k1'b ....
H11hb11' ~111·07!'l7 I $f, 2nd & 3rd T.O. '$ barrel <un"·n•w burrel Employment &
\l'l'IWXROQ<;q ft.C2.1l LOANSAVAJLABLJo: and 1n10 1111 111:.1de1 Preparation
~l.·1•p1ni.: 1111 I" 1 IJ,1 . 130 Jo: l7lh St. Suite ·1 Credit not important An:swt'r' tu "Sl·an111" •••••••••••••••••••••••
Mewport Beoch 3869 1•111pl'tl t.l.iy.. ~.'.1 \\ k Sl,'J(l1mo l>o~ h' 54A·0479 673-4883 Rroker Gall Ht>~<' S1·01l 4!l$-471\!}. School1 &
•·\t 5111 :iii
••••••••••••••••••••••• llunt n~~u·h. :,:u, ;u~,•t ---------Plea~c help makt• our Instruction 7005 l. llr t •, ua rwnh .. e .,t, h'. ,_ .. ,.,, 1., 1,1 Businen Rentol 4450 Mort-s. Trust ''hr1stm"~ ·1 huppy one RE . ~~-~ • Y~• eeOeOOeOOOoOooeoeo••••• hhns. cpl~. rtrp~ •ntl ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ds 5035
l'attv.he::itcdpool Atlll:-., lloom w klll'h 11rl\tl 'IEWPORTBCHSTOHI-; •••••••••"••••••••••••FOUND · Fl•maleLab.vie MF.N WOME N
1'1(lfl('lll.S23S.5'11\268'! female onl~. CnHa :!li:l()fwonSt ·S270>'11o. 23rd & lrv1nt.', N.U TRAIMFOR
'. l & 2 B b Ad :0.l<'Sa S8S+ut1I 'illl 1'1112 .Jt-rry Wynn l213>477-7701 LOANS 9% 548-0169 IA.RTEHDIHG -e1 r, 2 ::i. ulL.<. Sl;!5. llarhclor. all util. .:. · · · ' TWO WEE
on y._no pets. Pool. sin g l es . 1-'ee s i s . VoccrHonR""tol1 4250 Industrial Rental 4500 .AboledTDLoons FOUND: Brown/Black NATJON·W~~~~
jaCUUl. Fror;n SZ20 mo t\E>achcombo!r, 631·20llor •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• FalrestTermssince 1949 m ale German Shep, PLACEMENT 19132 Magnolia. 962·l800 ~7-2501 AKE A R ROWHF.A n, Leasl' or Rent, Ille in· S~ Mtc). Co. Mervyn's Buschard & ASSISTANCE
Pretty lake view sips 10 duslrial 14,000 sq fl, 17' 642·2171 545·0611 Adams 11· 8· 895·6670 •• GOOD JOB Cotta Mno · 1124 Costa M... 3124 "IOO wknd • ..,,.,. w' k S2SO• h __ .. ~ _.,., • i;:ross, ea''Y pwr, #!"•""' ---------Found·. 2 Par·r· Men's OPPORTUNITIES •••••••••••••••••• ••••• ••••••••••••••••• •••• •• I lol1day wk ........ c ... '"'• rr r ' " .,.... ...,..,. o ices. A<'ross r OC S"VESS Sla ck11-Blue, White, AMERICAH
----------. htdal1t0Shcin 4300 Airport. C:.ill 5•16·<1731 PrivatepartywUJ buy P i a ad. UCB, CdM I ARTE HD ER S
5MflsH'NG' Dys;$.t04713 Evs. your2ndT.D.64.2·3573 ......,iuc:• •••••••••• ••••••••• •• •• "'""'"""· SCHOOL
•. AVOID INCOMPATIBLE .,.._tt/ht•Ht/ t'OUNO: Seoul Orange & 1104 E 17th Sl SA
Awtnnlngcomblnotton HOOMMJ\Tt:S! Rlt9nee • ht&'lftCITDLo•t wbJtemalocolvlcBeach &34.1900 " f"'\.~ .. r.r-n·-· n .•.... _ .. :_:~~::·,•,••••••••••••••• 81'.r.,,,• a•o-0 ""2 & Talbert. Well trained. School11 Coast To Coast or odull oporTmenr homes ...,..,..,. \..1..£1\J ... UJ'IW'\I , Uol -·-.,.. .,...,
wllh luxury oppolnrmenrs ond Take~ the Gu{'111t\\ ork Oppor+uftlty 5005 Irvine Pacific Financial ~20.:?.:.. H.tp W..ted 7100
superb recreollon of o premium oul of ft111t 1n11 \hnl ••••••••••••••••••••• .. $40,000 1st TO w /relier L 0 S T G r e Y MI n .............. •••••••••••
locollon. TeMI$ •gym • theroPV Rl~l-11' H~~OM MAT~ ae~tt1ur1Anl, Co:1ta MC'llll, clouse covering 40 Acres Sehnnu1er Male Vk AAAAAAt\/\AAAA
spo • swtmmlng •billiards. ~4134 Since ~71 tor lea~. fully equipped. Wr \fhtwood : ~.11y11bll' Hbr . Vu H omes, N tl SECY /GEH OFC
One &TwoB..,.rooms,OnoBolh ~ G ... R _. 050 557-3534 $400 mo Incl 10 o due 3 64o-QOIJO&&H·2796 Ac:countina/Recept. vu ,,.. r-,.1 tor •m yrs. 15"1. d111counl. Under ---Emplo r AJI F
From talO. PANc Me~ Vh5 •••••••••··~··••••••••• '68Squ~b•c.-k, new Urea, dc!vJpmnl for 8 2.,_ Acre Class I fled ada sell b11t 'i Lli R~f~cr!YAgenc~s
(i) .::;:.':"':' .J -.. ,w "lt $30. srNGLE. Slor•ll~ on-bra.Ices, reblt en1. Xlnl parcels ror mobile hms. ltema. sm11ll il<'mll or 4020 Birch St, Ste UM
HO'oulatlnoAvt.,Co1fOMt1G 751-ttt5 ly um i>lacenUa. Costa ~nd.Sunroof,roofrack. Wt.r 4' pwr avail. (714) n y Hem. Just call Newport.Beach 833-1190
--·-... Mesa. 494-1763 673-0752 TS1••· 142•5178. CalJlor Appt/Eltab '65
·-------
& OFFICE CLkS
Earnmi.:i. I n11n
SS 15 Mo to SSOO Mo
Apply
li400 Brookhurl>l, Ste· .!08
Founla1n Valkv
Union Fcc.ll'ral
Sa\'1111!~ Hu1ld111i.;
54~1 lllt.1
Automoll ve
New Detar I Shop .11ecd"t
help
Top \\ a).!es vanl. Fn1:1nc
Sll.'amcr:-, t•n~ pa111lt.'rl>
buff1•c' & poh-.ln•r..,, 11p
holsterv shampuot.'rs
t'IWt·k out. 1m·I. UI) & Ul'
h\·1•ry ,\ppl~ .11
<!05l> liar hu1 Ill l':'ll
1145 \IMO
Uab):.llll'r ~unt<-d 1.,1 !I 11
ulol l' \I .11 l'J Ow11
traru. All ~dwnt & -.onw
l'\t'' '>on ~mn!\1•1 t'.tll
SS.; 11>\:.!ci or 1>4 I l:IW
• • •
Bill Connor
31231 E.NineDr.
BOYS AHD GIRLS
'I ":-lun \' ll' lu El Turo
.irt"' 1-:Jrrc }our O \\oll
111011cy :.l'lhni.: :.uh:.cnri
tum:-. Jfl!!r M'hool For 111
1111matmn,1·.11l K:l(l 1>!1t:l
BUS DRIVER
St:lrtin~ ~ulary Si:IS per
month. Valid Cahf. Cius"
II dr1wri. he. req 'd App
h . Pc•r..onnel Ofrlcc. C>l\
111 l..ij!Ult:I lkadl, 50f
F11r<'~l ,\\t'. l.a.:un..i
lk•.1dl FmJI 1111111! d:itt·
l I 17
CABDRIVERS
\lt•n or Wcmwn
\l usl ht· :!S 11r Q\l•r
\p111\ In 1'1•1 s1111
Y~llow Cab
11 •:11Sl.tll'I'1\\ 1•11111•
I 011nt:i111 V.dh·'
CASHIER
OH•r :!I W11l'l'ra111
5 l.1""' t inn~
\lc•11111',1rW<1:.h •;
:!!l5'lllarbor. C.M ~ _::.., LCJC)Ufta leach
You arc l h<' winner "I
l11·1<l'ls to the
Sports, Vacation
& Recreational
V~hicle Show
:: Cttt-:F. SllOCJ. mo. 3';'-:0
pt•r'd ~111 ·:-. llluc Bel'\.~
107 :!ht l'I. N B :ift 4
µ111 675-:l:l!l:\
al lht·
t\NAlll-:DI <' 0 "II V 1-: "1 'I' I 0 "-
Cr::\ I I.II
Jan 2th1u .J.<O •1
t\111 l~I:! Sllill, t''l :1.1:1 111
da11n your tu k~ls • • •
1101\T HEI' \I H \I I-:\
S.inw llbt:ri.:l.1s~ & hll'
m1·1·h a n1c« I 1·' 111·1
l'1 ~=-•ahnrr ('01 p 11,.!1,
l'lau:nu.i Ale, C \I
BOOKS
Studenb
Housewives&
Moonli9h~rs
l\li!l1on Dollar corp
needs men & women of
uny age wht~ enJo,V
speak in~ w/othcrs & who
url' bored w ithc avcragt•
run of th~ m1ll JOh~
No actual ~1·ll1n1t 111
volved ,'I, no ~l'llllll! ;.ap
poin\mcnl<; Wnrk w/nnc
of tht• mri..,l pn11ular t.
~UCCC!>SI ul 11roduc·t:-. on
lhe markt•l lodav An 111
ell.pcllSI\ e pro1hu•t \\ hn '
ni.lmt• I' ,1 l111C"l'l1Ul1l
\\Off1 \hruout lht• \\oriel
Work 111 a )t1lllhf11I.
I ricnrlly atmo:.phcrc &
have fun wh1ll' )HU ~arn
t111> pu~. You rrrt·rvt· a
i:uarantced '>alary + cx
lremely laberal com
m1s!>1on & honuse:. Con
tests & othrr ancenllvl'"·
XlnL ad\...incemcnl
possrbilatlrs for llolh men
&women.
No exper. nrr. You rl'·
ceavc full Pi.IY while bl.'ang
trained. You r:1n work
morninr:: or l'Vf'. hrs. On
Jy 10 mm. by Fw\I. frnm
all surrounl'lini: cnm·
munctll's. You owC' 1l lo
yourself lo al l1"<1sl in
ves(1ga(1' this un11.,\111 !
oppor Con\ ad ltcncc
Ro:.s1, R:l:I KIY-111
Frnd what you wunl in
Daily Pilot <..:10,~1f1t•rl,.
SEEK & FINDe
C.'lt'rrt'al Trauw1·
Just Leornin9?
,\ Wl'!!f:l'l' Int of I\ pinK "
.111 \OU na·c·cl tor lh1:-~.II
cwr 11" 111 C '.111 Cnntrol Cu n•t• 1 I·: m plo} ment
A1:1·m·v. 5'.ih H:"iO.'i
COMPLETE
MAIHTENANCE
\'ouni.:. r;1p11ll\' 1:row11w
,,,n1111r1 • .t 1.1111lori.tl &
m.u11t4•n •nrt• "'"' 'u·p c·u
111·1·1h l'\IH'l'll'nt l'cl fll
11ualil•l'd peopl1· Will
11.11n Top pay. Wl· ('C.lft~1
all or Ornngc Coun{J.
Wanl mC'n or women. ~uprrv1,ors. couple:-,
"''11no•n IC1r hou .. ccll-an-
111i.:. Janitors. paant(·r~ &
handymen. Day or night
"nrk, weekends, part~
fu ll lime. Call 631·0723 or
673·4:1.'>li Sam •111 noon. or
aJ)11ly al 8:13 W. l 7lh. ~l ,
C.M. !!urn 'ti! noon. __ ___._
Cook & Uroilcrman f'OTll•
b111al1un. Apply 2530 W
Coast llwv. N 8 . hlw11
:i:IO&:-i MonSat
t'OOKS. H \llTl-;NOl·.ttS
l>IU\ ~:n~ I' lime. (h,·r
.!I 'r' lm1111•1I 01>e111ni.. ...
\11111' 111 t><·r .. un. :\11
II ~,lh 1'111.1 1111 E. ti ll
St, C' \I
1.A-ht1·rv m.111 for e;1rlv
morn I. I\ Trnws, hom1
ill'11\l·rv rnule. Va hr., a
d.1 ) . :'It usl have ccun
l'ar. Adoll<i only. No
~hr1t1nl!. no collectinJ.t
Wrslmin~trr /llunl. Dch
nrri.l 6.'1>1·0126 -------~---DENTAL
OFFICE MGR.
F.xpl·rirnro ll<'Ccssary.
Btts,v prarl11:<'. Short
wnrk w1•ek. Bondil s.
ll unl1n~ton Hr<ich.
1147 1~171i
DIUVl-:tt Wi\N'l'r:o
St•ml n·11rNI todr1vr nw
mv \'o1r N II .111•,1 \c
Ariah1•rrn cl;11h· 7i:! Ol 11
d;iy•,_ ti<\() 20711 ('\IC'I
BIRTH OF JESUS
R V A G N I K R M V R R H T G I S R E
E T 0 M V W C E U P £ A C E B E A T S
M I A N G I T R 0 H A E P E T E H 5
M V l N 0 I T S l G l H P E S 0 J A R
A I R P R A I S E S T V N H E R A I E
N T T W I S H l E H l M A N G E R S T
U A ~O V I P E R T S 0 R I S V E N E G R E AT J,0 Y N V E l HT E B
l E R E I S H Y R A H N l G R t V M S
£ H 0 H D U S H D 0 G 0 T Y R 0 L G T
H T 0 T E A V I B E T H l E H E H A
E O S 0 R E H P E H S H 0 I V A D E R
O G 0 0 0 WI l l f o MENG 0 HAG
M W L S £ H T 0 L C A R 0 L S 0 A W S
R R E H B E H T R A E N 0 E C A E P T
lntl!uctlon1: Hidden words btlow 1ppet1 forward, bKk·
wtrd, up, down nt dlaoonally. ~.nd each •nd box It In. 't
Angel Manger Star J
Be thlehem Peace On Earth Not1vtty ~
Carols Saviour V1rgtn Mary •
Great Joy Shepherds Wise Men
Monday 11111
•. C8 DAILY PILOT Sund•y Deeembe/}29 1976 ~~~.~·~.~ ••••• ?!.~~,~~I!.~.~·~~•••••~!.~~ ~·
~pWcmted 71 0 HetpWont•d 7100 Ht4pWa"t•d 71 00 H•lpWante~ 7 I OO ~ ~lances 8010 Fn•to You 804 5 Ml•c•llontous 8080 -······················ ......•••••.•••........ ··••······•··•········· ··••·•·····•••········• •....................•..•....•••..•.••...•.••. ••···•········•••·••···
ELECTRONIC
ASSEMBLER
t<leclronic·, \tr.: hJ., tm
AVON
mm•·d OlJt:lllOI(~ lur •In Ha-.c A Very Merry I t •J 111 1· ,, '> ,.. e m h I 1• r ' • ~ildt·rin.:. ,1 ufl •rll! ,. 1 • Christmas ...
l•>Jfd rcti )dnl ht'lll' 111 Jnd the rnnnt•v lv µJ) loc
di: med di·nt.il 111,r 111 11 1·;,, 1·1lcnt p l llOH'
It• r v 1 cw J' u ,. ,.. w, ti \•.1ri1111g u111.111rt u111t v Cull
Thurs !lam lo a 11111 ()IM' .~ •• 1.0.-7·04-l ·u·r·Z·e·n··t·h·7-l:.l.~>.~J_,
lOblTUmenL~. Ill:! ll.1kl'I
Sl CoslJ !\11''>.I, I'll
'li9 s:JOO E 0 E llotd
HOUSEKEEJllHG
PORTER
'\o11:hl :..hill, 1101110
IA'nl'itb l'h.•Jw 1·:.ill fo1
;ipµl (''.1.l 5:.?0, ~15 5000
I Juuscdt•<i rll'r, t•x µer 'd ,
Vnd.1~'. llJ ll111J bhmu
1,7~ :.l:!;!K
I.IE. MAHAGE.MEHT:
Vice Pr esident opcum~ CXl:!>ts for ag
gress1ve Apartment Mana~ement pro
fessiona.1 Must hctve manJged O\er
2000 units. be ready to mo\ e up lo
Presidency of company quickly a nd
have_ a followin~. Salary plu~ profit
sharin g. Our staff knows of this ad
Subm it r esume to; Ad 1*812 Daily
Pilot, P 0 Box ls&>, C M . Ca. 92626 ·
.WlpWonled 71 00 Help Wanted 7100
·•····••·•··········•··
MAIL DEPT.
'l'lti\INEI.-:
······•·······•········ 1 ..................... 1
PAYROLL CLERK
t:!I l'oi.tlllin s <l\:ltl Tht'.11111\ ltug1·r 1111 1' HOUSEKEEPERS \ JrJOU' du111·-... opt>rale luul.1111: 1111 ·' full !11111·
REAL ESTATE
CONDO CONVERSION
SPECIALIST
If you havt-~ub:.t.10l1al cxpencnt·c m
~tll phase•:-of rondo l'Onvers1on <ind are
prcpan•d lo IH•t·l111w VtC·e Preside nt of
a dynami1·. l'Xpandmg t•ompany with
spcctatular growth in ltw investment
field <Salary & profit !'.haring>. Wnle
Don Berman P resident. QUAIL
Pl.r\CF. P R OPERTJ ES. 1400 Quail
Slrcct, Newport &ach
~~·!. ~.ra::.e.~ ..... ~ !.~~ r~~'f. ~ ~.~t~.~ ••••• ~ ! .~~
RECEPTIONIST
1n;1'·111t;r;11 \ roit~
\\Asllio:Hs 1)1<\ fo:l<S
Hn·not11111111-.. I<• 1•r<» &
1'1~l l>a111.1g1 t.u.1r 1>1·1
.'!l \ 1 ... Ill 0 1 ,111j:!c ( '11
DUNLAP'S
1111~• '''" pt11 I Ill. l"\I
l 01\ I.I.~> IK 771111
\\ .t!<llt'r & l>r' 1-r. ,:ovd
<'•llltl SI '>O l111lh flu h)
furn & m1:o.1 ~Ill 1172rt
•• *
Etiiobeth Spurr
2 18 Via Grosiana
Newport Beach
\'1111 an• llw "tnncr ol :!
lll'kt•h lo lhc
Sports, Vacation
& Recreational
V•hicle Show
'l'l'll h1111• l11r L'hn~llll..t'. tll~t·tlwr .11wrl "" nr .ti I~• ~·l ti mo Shep I.JI•
11•:rt111 m' ti rno l..1tkn
t.•th h1-bl.rn -;.;!I UOl.O 1'\l'
8050 ••...••............•...
*•I BUY**
l;('tl1.t 11:.1•11 ~\11 n1ttlrl' &
J\pµlaJm·c~ Oil I wtll
:.;·II or S 1-:1.1. for \ ou
MASTERS AUCTIOH
646-8686 & 833-9625
S.\VI':' Nl'W & lls~d turn.
.111pl 'i., 1n1~l· W1hon·,
lfar~Jlll Nu11k. Nuw :!
. . ,,
Linda Rice
5981 Mldif"Oft C ird•
H..ntlngton Beac h
\ ou an· Ila.• ... inner of •
111°1.1'\\ lo tht•
Sports, Vocation
& R•cnotioncil
Vehlcl• Show
al till'
,\N,\11 1".1 M
l' o " \' 1-; N I' I l) N CF:~T1<:1<
.l.111 2 thruJJ11 11
( '.111 t..t:! 5ti7K, t•i. l JJJ tu
cl.11111) uur lll'l.l·b • • •
Stores !>IS & Kl I W t·...,.,1 t'urp<.'I ~tppru\ 1.111 l~•th. (." M ti~:!·711~U & ~·1b $;! 00 l><'I ~ll llru111
~ .. 111 :C!H:! \\~ HU 'I :wt $1~.Cl ms i;1111;
W!lll l>1t1 ~ thl. ti l'hJll' & :-.1 11 , 111 i.: :.al••. t u1 ll
Equipment Mec hanic
~Jrl1ni: !.alun ~'J7'1 I" t
111011th Avpn•111111•-.h1p
"r \ulo i\1 1•1·hJ1111 111
J·:11u1p1111•nt Tra1111ng 1·\
111•r 1'~11 ·i1 . Apply. I '1 r '""
lld (HI l(·c, t' t I) ol
I. ,1 g u n a Ht• a l' h , ~>II;,
fo'nr•·~l A\ l'. l..11:1111.1
Ueal·h. F10JI lil111~ •I.JI"
I 1 77 l.m11lo}•·r::. Jt.l} fee:.. P1ln{'\. J>u~\Jgl' mJl.'hmt-. 1'.i\ roll t·i.-1 k ~'I"'
11,l' 111 . 5 <lJ):o. .! run err.inti.. Ja...tnbutc mu-.t 111du1J,• IJm1l1.111t\ 'l,1111 ·•111n \1 I' :\Int h.1w
,,,1 .I.. u• p1ul1l ,.hat 1111!
1'.A1d hol11J • .1\:o. .\lcll i$..
I.tit' '"' ln11·111:i\11111al
.I \' l .1 I I' 1· I' ,1 I l I' II
l'11r1111r;11,• of I il'c!>. N II
i~;! J:1::3 Hum jpm
WAITRESSES
HOSTESSES
Uull t•l C.111 t..la) '• ,11um111um :>hitll. !\p111h
.1l th1 l>-l'> :iJJ<! ,•qp ,\. 111.-.1· 1lt•m,,, :!h 11 ..
t. u:... \~~!1~'1! l l) :-.. .,.,~,,lll'Pl'tll·~l.11\\\1 IM!d \'1Jl.J1,1.:V1 v:\Kl11.11 Ce~ral Ofhec
A 77WIHNER!
l<u'l~ typmi; \~111 du 1111
dct:.111 mrndt·d 11.1111:ahl1·
Jll.'rsun . Call ('1111t1111
Carl'er ~mplo~ 1111•111
l\gcnn. !>SI• 8:.41.1
GENERAL OFFICE
1:h1ldn·n, )S(JO mo mlcroll1l~ tnJ1I. Some " IJt i.:•· • um11u11·1 """
M K" lilt-rn.11nlt•n.1nn· Aµpl~ p11yroll. •1unrte-rlv lit'< rr· arCJO ln<J 'Jatwnal s.1,ll'ms, ol:Jlil lu1 '" & other p.1\ rvll re
Personnel Agenc y D 1 .... 1 l.1tl·ll 1lut1e!>. Tl11s po,.1
8 86 1r1· 1 M, ,,, 3 63 ·O 2 -----lion ri·qu1rcs lht.• :ili1ltl'
-·''"~ \<; 1·:us t·:,11 ·d cou Ill 11 ••• 11 l'lfl·ctl\·eh w .111 iluu,~k,·,·1'.k!r. h11,p1l.il l'X· pie IO m,11\al(1• 1.1 untl' Ind' ol ma11ag1•111ent
,,...r prd'd 1<.tl1·1gh llllb adull t'llmJil1•\, l.' :\I ~1u,.1 h1• av.i,IJhll' 111 SECRETARY
llll'PtlJI. 1r.o1 E II.Ith Sl. :!Hit. <ihJ ;apt. ultl's ~ "111 k owrllml' "111•11 r.·
'wpllkh :.alJn suuthlanaJ q 'd. s.1L1r) ~orn PART-TIME
l nLerC':..lini: 1'11 ~1 1100 Prup1:rt1c'> \IJnagcmcnt m~11,ur.1t1• w l''\1'1~1 1'.\tl'll1·nt 11pp111111r111~
;,in-..1H·nni.: :o.lud.·nt 1n JJn1t11r "'•HI.. jlarl llmt• !>Ill aJOO l'li•J-.i' ..ippl) 111 Jll'I .,,.11 111r inti I\ ulu.11 tl1•sir111.:
•1u1r1t·-. hy m.ul lh'q', eH·:.. 0 C. lall·.itt<lll:.. 1701.! 1;1Jktlt'. ln1111• p.1rt taml· \\ork !l.1111
m.1t111l' 1udi:e1111•nt i:ond S"Jf~J hr f" 1.;,..,.wr Jtl1tlt:-. )Jan1C·urt'l. t•\111·r ·11 ll:'1n 'tpm '\lon thru Frt 11111,0 Mou lhru l·n T'I"'
111c1110r), cll'l.111 ,1h1il\\', orll) t:!t:l)!l:!7tll l!"1 St('.111\ :1:1~,;, V1.1 L1clt1.1----------•liU ~h!lll
I \ r 1 n g 4 :i I w II m N B. 'tii:I h7 Ill ,,;;i 1.1w1 c 11 644 3389 ~ u'111n1l'r !>l'n 11·,· l•.•l k I .r~.tl Sl·1·11·1,1ry. mature-''"'' I' l':o l't .t-: I' EHSU'\ !1a\ '1 ·1 ti ~11on
l'l'•tutd hl'lplul \,1111\ T11 ~IJrl .tlkr till' '\t•\\ '"'''t' 1w1•tl-. I' t11111• ·"
·'·'""'1,11 ~\ ,..,,.,,,. t uq1 \ l'Jr 1>11 ·,;·10 MECHANIC .,,,. m wh,il· '"l'Ph I 111 THE IRYIHE CO
I ~.1 ll1rd1 .... , '\ II \11l11m11l11lt· ( I 1 ' \ 111 I\' ·•IHl.1lttt•1l ..... .:;!.!.I '..i.,(J "''"'port Ctr 1>r1\I
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GUARDS
Costa Mesa
l11•rm;11ll'nl Full & l'.1rt
tmw l'lt1tr1l· & trJ11-..p n•
<t 11 Ht'\trt<tl .,.,.11:111111•
t ' .. 11 ~>Iii O:!i I. 111!· 111' Ill:!
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HAPPY
NEWYEAR
I· HO\!
Control Core er
Employment A gency
:,:-,1; >1.~11., -Happy
l11 111~e~-~~t~.r~I ... \
1.11.'l I'. l~lh \°11.-..l.i \lo ,I
~1111t• '.!.!I to I ' 11.1 -
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:::,IOU t p11,...,11r. lnr i;•1t1<l l'.qu.il Uppor Empltn 1·r
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lh.11 \II' <',Ill 11.1111 Ill 111
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t 11'1Ullll l' Ill ('Jltl i\.
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ttkJI lrtl'Olll~ ole Jl
mu~l>hcre. CrcJll\C op-)totl'I ;\IJ1\I nct'lh'll, 111
l~•r fur nwn ,'(, wonll'n tn clud1•s \\ a~h1111: "111tl11\\'
m.1lw <1:; rnud1 mn1wv a~ 4hrsdav.~cJ.1vwk,,A:\1
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n111rn1ni;' I 11r 11<'r~11nJI
illll'I \ il'\\o' 1'11111.tt l \h
11.,.,,.., >1:1:i H4l!ll! 'I 11111· l.rh·
L11J1 .1nt'' 1111· 1-.qual Op
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MAID
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MOTOR ROUTE
DELIVERY
Su11d.i\ ()nl\ tlcll\cC\ ui
lhl' f);11h l'llul lo \,or
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iJllol l..1i!t1ll<• '\J).!IH'l Ht'
qu1n·s ~tal1t111 wa~·on or
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lur ll.11 n S1'l'I"'
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NURSES AIDES
& ORDERLIES
\I .I. !'>11 IFT~
PHONE SALES
l 'h11111· ~·'""' IH'llJll•·
111;111· 11r ll·malt•. It. l•• '"'
\l•,11 '> ut .il:l' (;UJI ,1111'-1•!1
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PHONE
S OLICITORS
l ... J,\ Tlll':l\,lnl C'n•n1ni::
\\111 h I 'I \11111 Jo'rt '\l'1'CI
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S ECRETARY
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SECURITY GUARDS
I mm~d l'rn plo~ nwnt t ull
II.. p lime. ln1111· ·"'"' \gt·~ :!I & IH t•r L'nrlorm"
IUl'll CJr & plttHI\' 111'1'
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d.1111. 1"-twr d 1>.1~ &
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ph. ~hell Sl..ilton, 17th &
In inc, :-0: £\
TELLERS
ll.1111.1111: l'\IWr 11n1,
1 ·1111t.1l l Hob t'n·11:ht1111
In 1n1· '\,1lt11n.1l 1\.101.
1<.1.1 .1••~1
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SECRETARY'
llH\I' "111wth1111! 111 ,,.11' tu ..,c•ll" l'la-. ... 11&t•d ,111:-tl11
I"'" 1111'1 ti Willlra1n111
11·11•,l1•d tr1dJ\ 1tl11.tl-..
SELL HOMES
LEARN
1 .. l'r1•:.1dcnt. Oil,..,. :Vlj.!r s l J ,. l 1 II I! s ;1 I .• ,. '
~ 7110 s•100 I' 11111 \I 11-.l
ha\I':: yrs l'XJI In lfllJ ltl\
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Seamed· TO· Slim Quickie Top!
L1tl11 t '11n\,il1·w•·nl ('tr
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NURSES AIDES
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PART-TIME EVES
I 1'()~111(),'\~
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t tltft•r\\ 11\1•1., ~;a r11111g:-
ll,1 ,.,I 1111 \lultt'
549-8 16 1
* * •
Pat Haeclcel
17546 S•quoia Tree
lrviM
\IHI oll'P lh1• "lillh'I Ill "
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Investment Sales
Opt•ning:.. l'Xl~l 10 Ur.tni.:1·
anti :'-.l'\\ port Bt•J1 h 1111
Jo; \ I) C r I e 11 I' e tf
SJlt''J>l'r"on'> 1nt>'rt''>lf'd
tn 11wt•::.lmcnls. \\ 1· :..d I
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\1tr11t111 11\1•r 111. 111r
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'""\ run Joh \lr (;l'l'.
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I 11111w1h.111' op~nllll! t.1r
TYPISTS
Part-Time Eves
IB\t \utnT~l')e\\rll>'r
1-;,Pt·r lll'lµrul ~.tl.1r)
I IJk'll IH.'r 1•'\J>l'rt1•t11 t•
549-8161
UTOTEM
I\ ET,\l l. CLEll 1'S
W.11\ll'O Upµortun1t 11•,
l1lr ,ui\'ann·mcnl .I\ ail
llp1·11111i.:-. 111.Co-..l.1 7\lr·,:1
\0,1hl'llTI. C;arcJc/I lirt>H'
&. We:-.1rn1n~lt·r
642-7702
I h« I J,\l'sl draw 111 lht•
\\ "'l .r D.i 1 h Pllul
t'l.1-.s1l1"d Ad. lil;!.Siiill
PJrl ltnH' & full lime·
!lay & mi;hl :,hill, appl)
\F:~TER & ht-lllt'r.:; dra~ ctlt•i.1. Slat<' pool lal1IC'
.Ian :! thru .Jan. 'l SISO &12 ll5&! lfl x llll. Mal.\·
10 person l':1ll t>l~ ~71!. 1"<\ 3JJ tu GarO!Je Sale--USS ofrl·r. 8:13 I t:lli
t•JJJOl) OUt t il'""'l*l:-•••••• • •• ••• • • •• • • • • • • • • * * DeMy's Jr-.
1600 Coast Hwy
LOCJ'lfta B•ac:h, Ca. Bicycles 8020 -...................... .
\\ .11l11·s" t-'t)()ll t 'od.r.11b L'S f<. D. It E U l' I I. T &
•\ppl\ .tit 4pm !'>1<l 'klu,· (;u,1rJ11ll•t•d. All 1~ ilC'.
lk•l'l, lll'i .!l~I 1'1 N 11 parts, rt·p.11r~ Tr<i<l~ lib
W.1111t·d liq•"' lwu,..1.: :.icccptcdt>:ll 2101
kct•1>cr Hoom. ll<turd & .,,...;1-:w n.,Jo:J) BIKI'~!:>*
:.mall :..ilary 2 d1aldrl•n 6 n11, Sl'll Tratle
& II C•ill \'\l'!:I :170 017~1 l'.trh & lh•p.itr:.
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Mttchondise ...................•...
8005 .••.••..•..............
Wonderland
Of Antiques!
II l.' c; ~; w ·' rt• ho 11 ~ c·
r ramm.•11 with II\ N :.oo
rnu,..a· 1111" '• 1111 I.Pio
dl'OO µ1.11111~ • 11 I U' or
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i:r,1nJLit lt•·r 1 l1ll·k -..
la"l'IO<t\lllj.! olllltctllt'
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(;.tlh·r;"', 1110:.! T l\•·ll1•r
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S.tl 'I \ \l 111 I l'\1 \''II
PUBLIC AUCTION
\I.\:\\' Fl'\ E II 1-. \IS OF
EST \TE .f I·: WI': L II\
\HT 1>11.1 u· rs. ,,:-.,
TIQl;l·:S. Fl'\;t-; FUH-.;
1':TL' 1'110'.'>E FOii 1;'1.
FO & BH<H'lllJH ,.;
1'15·<!:.'00
llOHSP. IJlt \\\'' W,\TEH
W.\c;u:--. ~""' ."t.')J 71~11
Cameras &
E•ipment 8030 •......•...............
"c" OI) m1>U" 0\1 2. c·.1:-.e.
bal! I H mr I( "ml) S375
ur L1.•11'J ll atll• !lli2 5278
Cah 8035 •••.•....•.............
llUHME::it: KL'rn;Ns
(.'f,\ rt'g1'l1'rcd
!llo:J ~;!()!)
Doqs 8040 .......................
POODLES-R...PEOPLE
'II !'Ir-. tit 11 s11: :!1'.J.IK
:! ' I old lo-Ill Shi'! I 1\' I 111
:-.;iii• ,\ll ~11111' I ,di
!~;;1:1o:i.1
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Hull t1·111,•r,. .\h.<' :i
111.il1·' ':ooilKI I ·' 'l 111 x:r;1
l'I•. \( l!IHll-. I \\ l'.I ~'-I I
1 •>lllil l'l 1•1·11·;s
(',ol(.1111 l'IJ)j
'l 1111 l),1dh IW•l 11 ""' ::
!ilk & 'Lan /com & 111111.:
hatrt'd m.111• Sl:!5 1•a
1\1'C I.JI! 111 h 1!17 :1~1 t .!
llU;'l.TI Nt; IX)(;S. lh-;11h
lor Chn,,1rn.1" • ~ 1;l·rm
Shor\hJtr 1 .. lllul'l11.·k
Fn•nth -.11kli11;inl. 'Int llo untl ~!l 1•;i til!l ;!li:!:l
~ I 7 ;, I-' I Ill' 1· h <' "l 0 I 1lrawl'r~. s~r .. ,\11l111ul· me to You 8045
.. 1l\,•r & hr._1~' 1h·m:-. $50 •••••••••••••••••••••••
111 ~l"J t.i:I l~IW -. • 'lit
\n1111ul' 1·~11. t "' •l!ltl \ 11 Margaret Miller
trol.1 l:!!lt<'•onh 1n1ld 159390nrtonSt.
L•nN•' 1.111o 1.10: Fol.Wltain Valley
ltJrc ('h11w"' \loni.wll.111
t'pt 8\ lU 'Int 111nd
Sl!J!\O h~l 1111 '1!17 110 I
Appliances 80 10 .•.•••...•.•....•.•....
WASHER-DRYER
l..1l<' modl'I. ~u1wr dc•lu\
:\l111l1-n1'11• ltkl' llt'"
J'l'rf 1·11nd "·11·11111·1• al
;;;;t;t;, Inf' h111h (',tll
7.11 :)1;;
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lll'k11 .. l11 tlw
Sports, Vacation
& Recreational
Vehicle Show
( ()
al thr
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l 1-:-..;TJ.:1< () '
.Jan :! \hru .J ;in !I
('all Ii I.! ~Mi ill. "'I 'IJ:l lo
1 l.11m ,\·11ur t11 l..l•h • • •
PUBLIC AUCTlOH
MA:\' FINI:: ITE:\1S CW
EST,\TE J EWE Lit\'
\ltT OUJ ECTS. ,,:-;
THRJES. Fl:-O:r; l''uH:-.0
ETC 1'110:'\ 1-; FUil I~
FO & UHOCll I' HJ·:
Hones 8060 .....•...•.............
!'or S;tlt• ~ ponh·• ~· 'h'"~
<tUJ rll•rl11ir~1·
t all K.\7 ltrll
Rcre Offerin9
I!~~ Bucbl.111 (/u.1111·1
II 11 r ',. sh" w " \
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\\ <ihiltly 6 1:.? .:l ib;) or
t.-1:.! J IH
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SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
<;)rate H ,1\1•n
I: lory F!Ju11l
AN EG<:
"Ila h ;1, lht• )11lk', ""
11l1'." ;.,11d the SY>t'llbh
111a11I ,,.., :..ht• dr11pp1·•I /\"
i':(:t; un llw t 10111 111 h"'
dr,•-....
L.l't 011111111· "h11pp111g. to11
om• \\h11 hJ' l'H'I ,1111111:
I,..: \111u1111·tl ~.1111.-..h
$:1."10 Iii;) :117.i
JUKEBOX
Woo 111 t•ontl·~l. mu''
:..di. C11mµldc w 1~10 n ·
rorcb vt.:! :lbSO.
~c.•l l':,t·l'll<'nl ~1:iui..----------
l11m U!'ton.• 11 Jm or
al\1.:r :1rm ti45-l:!:ltt
Jew•lr-y 8070 •••••••••••••••••••••••
WANTED
TOP C/\Sll DOLl./\H
l'/\ID FOR YOl'H
JEW~:Lll\'. W/\f('lli':S .
,\U f Oll,U:CT.S.. tiULU.
~ 11. \'EH SE H \'I l ' 1-:
I-I :'lo r; 1·' 1. It ;-.. & /\ N
TH/l 1':S 111:-, :!:!00
DIME
-A-
LINES
ll It A I' ~: n I ES . I t n l' <I •
livedock 8075 pnnt in Jlrt'l'O. or<1nj!1•.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • •• •• • • • • • • \'t11lO\i\. lf" Jt~n;.:1 h hy 10'
"111th. S20 (j n•t·n \\ tn<h11> lki.: :'>luri:.111 tllJft'. lirul-1• alJi m i lm·I-S:I :1 J1>ng
lo rt1fa• '"' tlrt\ ,. hi!. t•••H'f"l' nxb .1 t•Mh 1 1>.11.uh· \1111 ~·'" 1:dd111i.: Lui, \\ ,.,..1, 111 I~ II I tH.lllj(l' I ) I 11<1" 11\'
t' •11 J I or p 1 I Io"' ' ~:I .1.1>< 11111 !.Mi2 :~1:.'11
Mlsc e llaneous 8080 Nil'~: ,.~l~m "' lll'<I ~;1 •••••••••••• ••• ••••• ••• MHplf' twin hl:d 52" t\o1at WANTED tr<'Sl> ~<'I, l1k(' nt'"· 52.'1
1'01' l'M;JI 1)01.L,\lt SI und1ni.: firC'(.tl:.tt·t•
1, \ 1 I> t-' OH y () t I< ~CrC'C'O , :ll-c:i2. Siil Sea.-..
.IJ-:WEl.HY. \\',\Tnn;:-; m11r1• bux "•th saw, si:,
\HT 011.11-XTS. < .Ol.IJ ;_52_,_8:!_~_1 _____ _
s.11.v.~;1! .s t-:HVI('~; ROOKS, l(.tmr:;, Sl·Sltl
I' IN ~. I· UH N & 1\ ~ Old record:. Sl SIO. Pln"
Tl<ltlES c>tS 2200 _ pool( table w1lh N\Ulp
mcnt S25. SC'rv1ni: cart lUGGAGETAGS SID Slid!'rul1•.; SJ-S!>.
t rom 'our bu:..tne,..., 1 ,, rd
S.·1111 ·,.n .. c·<inl for \•,1d1
tag 11l11s llOl' '-ll••rt: \4,"
1eturn lll'rmJn< 11\h
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,1r;q 1, mt'l'lllll-! ;11rl1n1•
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11·11t 1.,,.., & thl'lt! Fm ,,
p1•r..,nn:1l11.C'd t:ii.: c-111 l1ht'
..... dlpapt•r, lal>111· or
"l>ay t;lo' p:iJ>C'r ~ "''
\\ 111 h;11"lo. & 1111n \our
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h.Jt I. to h.11 I.
l'Hlt'I-:..'-.
s:! ea or :1 S..5
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ti :1 tags SI 50 1•;1
1011r more Sl 40 t"1
Salrs Tax lrwl111h·ol
'l;U C1\ It I>"
<:aml•r;1 $.'> Ch.nr::. SI~r 1 rut rt• o; Sl·S20
T\Pl'\\rtlcr S2S BJr
stool-.. Sl<! c;1rh GJI 11:11
nOYAL l yp<'v. r!IC'r 111
p1.'rrl·t·l rond111on S>.:S
Round k 1tr·h1· 11 t.il>k. r n r m 1 1· a l n p • S t !\
M ahog<in~ q1 a1r SI~>
llcall'r hl!hl s4 . olht·r :!
l:ihlc.;, S7 eueh S1;ind1ni.:
el<'rtr1c h<'Jll'f Int
bathroom or bedroom S!
Small labl<' for ktlrh<'n .. 1
sh<'lves, S.'i Card t11hh•
S2 Plastic cnVl'red rock
1ng c h;11r, i.w1H•I. S1 40'J
7th St, I LU. 536 0721i
Sports, Vocation
& Rec reationaf
Vehicle Show
.11 111 .. 1
1•'ll'l'l111t11 .1 Front 01111 ,.
,fltfH'.H .. ltll' ,\ lft'f-,f11t.1l1 ,, ~'"I"" FIND YOUR NAME l>ra" \011r """ ur 't•nd n.1m1• .• Hlrln•ss, 11hn1w &.
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Hetp W ont•d 71 00 H•lp Wanted ........•..•...........
MIR'-'disinq
START THE NEW YEAR
WITH A NEW CAREER!
Fed Mart
Wants You Jo k lnclt.Cled
Hourly and MWfement
Opporl1111bes
Avail~ble In Many Departments
I
WIN TICKETS
WORTH $5.00
SUNDAY NAHEIM g::1Er1101
-.
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PILOT PRINTING
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PUBLIC AUCTIOH
MANY ITEMS OF FI N~:
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J\HT OBJECT S, /\:'II
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proclucL' Cuanmh•c<I t1t
work
l 1w(•tl 1lt~lrihulors'
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WOVEN WOODS
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""D'-'"J;;...;0;;._D_A_IL_Y_Pl_L_O_T ______ S_1_1u_r_d_.1y._._o_ec_e_m_t>e_r_25.;...;...1_9_76 .A<oi, Imported .A<os, lmporhd A.uto1, lmport.d Sunday. December 26. 1976 OAIL.Y PILOT (:9
.. ..~~--4 WM.I Drlns 9550 ;;;·••••••••••••;;·,·~ ~··•••••••••·;;;·; ~·:;:1:.:;···;;;~ Auto1, Imported Autos, UHd Auto.. UMCI
• 0. I I rcmt.,...... • VTtVn • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ 9901 ....................... c • .,.., Sde/ '71CJ7 Jrep, xtr111, lo mt, lrmd Mew •76 1914 280 4·dr te<l $8000, MG 9742 ....................... Chevrolet 9920 WANTED tJ1ed Jarae itftt 912 0 ~7964 or 7511Al95 all ouveattt!n,XLNTcon<I ....................... .. .................... .
Side. Call 649 Z7~ dJys ••••••••••••••••••••.••• 5PM HONDA Cars Stereo, uir, p'4rf wndwi. •74 MG MIDGET '68 J11\'clln ' Spd, m•tt•.
or968-0427eves. Cam1X"r tui> for Courier OVER 100 ~<'hpt"1t ,;MJM 1111 <\ill Likl' new • A .\t/FM h1•Jd1•r!; Sharp! $615.
Mmkol Re1.:otar l'u·kup c..imper Trvcb • 9560 To ChooteFrofft! 549-9361 ur4'1J 1.a:. <11t·r4'0 t".1n l1•;1se . hi:l:1Kf~1
•• !'!:!'!!':.'!•: ..... ~?.~~ top \luk~11!.'~%s ~7;·~·°i:e·v·~~~·~·~:·1~~·;,:~ '77 BMWS UNol!~biS.~TY Clauie Meree•s ~~:l;:;~L~·~:h:.~~.~:. m1 ·7~! ~:·i:r~~.i.u1~.,~ri1~~:
<.:onn Mln·O·MAUc eler Mo~udll .. -a 91 .. 0 PIS. P/B, lo mi. Ciall ,...,,_ ~ uno 280~1'; l'nvt ~lut BRITtSHCARCO. Xlra clean. $2~1s. II ~l -,. l'Olld $17,500 M2 70'JI ~';!~~.·P~P.e~-~d• ··~~~;;·;·.~;;::;· 968-ll923 HERE NOW Honda ~r::'u· GMC MERCEDES IEHZ .~~::::~~ u:c~r?ho:rrgrwru1f0~. =/ -· 9'2S
.C Pc Drum Set "Sonar' ......_. • YClllS 9570 ::x.o1.1 1t.1rhor 81"11 House of Imports rormaUon al642-0796. •••••••••••••••••••••••
xlntcoad. $150. Pvll)ty I....., ••••••••••••••••••••••• 91u1U1 S "'LES ('u,1.t \lt-~.1 Siii !Milll t:.!13) !l:!I ~ MGI 9744 '78Corclova. Beautitul, N!· &u~&Ml 1975 c;~~c ,., .,... "' (714) s2:.1 72.SO ••••••••••••••••••••••• * * * ally loaded. B~•t r e · "' '7u .:11u uc;:s I i.11 . '7!> t:VCC lllchbck. '67 MGB (iT. Xlot cond, Hoff SURFEAVAM <~t'S> Doloret asonableofr.761~ Hammond Spinet Orao
M -3. Like nu, $750
WurUtur Juke box, from
·~era. $675. '7~·6870
OHie. fwTelture & Eqyl,......t 8085 •••••••••••••••••••••••
8087
LuadcJ, 2L,OOO mt, '72250Ml'ICpe low ml., wll'cs, radials, 73 .. W W1•
Automatic, air cond .. '7'!2002-A. (53.ml\K). perfect rood. $JJOO/b:>t Silver/Ulk Int Out.st.and· new cpl & paint. $1~. .. • •ICHt Contfnttttal 9930
1>W1roof, Portholes, de '7 3 3 0 <.: S 1 :. 11. ulr,. ti73·407!lor673 311'11 Ing cond <~5~1''Bf ). 497.3005, Co•ta M.1a •••••••••••••••••-••••
luxe trim, c-hro11w "-Ill" f!lhol\1.\1) 9730 $7999• You BN the winner of 2 70 ConUnenUll.-Leather,
wheel:. & 8 trac.:k 'Jll·rco 'i .I ft .1 v .i r 1 u 1> I).· Jogucr tickets to Uu1 A u /1-'M stereo, air, pwr.
toi4!)1 HiHOl'l'\11. •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Opef 9746 Sports, Vacation ;l~~ $\295. S49-IW79 SADDLEBACK '71 11 1n.i11u :.1" JAGUARS76's HOUSEOF ••••••••••••••••••••••• &R reatio 1 VALLEY IMPORTS 1=~11tl.r'M1 Ntw lluv l'lan. !SCOsihlc IMPORTS Hf:DINCOIJOR. ve:~ .. Sho": Corntte 9932
3120 .. 0 .. 95 9" 1~:.!00.'i\ 10:1~1 1 p.1~111i·11t-.. Structu1t•t.l 213/921-8588 <:IU:EN W1111ENVY! ••••••••••••••••-•••••
S • .. ,. •4 .. 9 '7[.;,,l(tJ,\ \ l'Hlt.iM\'C; I l1k1· .1 h·:1w CJll for t·onf. 'fill Qn.ol GT. !led. New 1tl lhc '7SC0IlV~ITE. -----~--S"'DDLEB"CK 714/523•7250 ... ~ ANAllJt;JM LOADED .., 'li.3 Van, Mai:" heels, ~oot.1 " A ''uoh.' ------ttrc~, new brakl's, la\)(! C 0 N V t-: N '"r 1 0 N t •• 995 p.11nt &. utlhol , 1 un, VALLEY IMPORTS BRITISH CAR CO. (100\I Sl'lt'l"\lon uC 21!0":. deck J\ swal for SHOO CENTER 848·1400dys,S36·628Sev
;:11011. Sll~I ~)1.1 ltili'I 831-2040 495-4949 213/990-2525 from ~·1,!l!I!). \:.!i:!l,Wll) ($!00 ool~~~ book). Jan 2 tltru Jan. 9 '76 VETTE 71 "/~4•2854 lluyf Leu:.e. Scn:.tbk "-II ,, •. , ...... 8, ext !j:iS t.O ...-wport-Motors 1:! t.i~C 1 tuu v.1Co11t1•m .. .,.,, t '-" """"""'' Only lG 000 miles 4 •pd 1 -So. West Pet Center, ._ ~· pym" cl.umyourtiekct.:.. ' ' 0
• J969Harborlll\d .t: \1, Vo l0.im1wr 1\Ul•l, I'S HOUSE OF of a kind. AC, AM/FM
•••••••••••••••••••••••
World's l or~llsl , PU.a1rcont.1,2t,U001111 '7:!~1-.r::!t-:!.l.omih·,, Pone~ 9750 *** stereo.Loaded.Like
Bristol/McArthur S.J\ __ CALL_!~2·~~ is;{I !!JOU , \l11t 1 o1111I !\1•v. lilt , IMPORTS ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• 9905 oew.t:an Lease/Buy.
556-1994 h I -----5 · St . HO,.OWAY l.11.1<\,•1\ s:·.11'.1!"1 l'h 213/921-8588 'IA) 9115, new red paint. AMC BRITISHC .. RCO ---------New l'uc Mupi·d. x nt ·7~ 1-·urJ Eltlo Cumph I• s'""" A'4A 1••1 1.i11•1,1t1 t; :111 new black int, fron ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •
Parrot, tame w/rage. t: n n d • I 0 111 1 I l· .t !: c l.lL'tom \Int t·o111I lj 11()!• 835.3171 714/523-7250 51.,.nlcr, reblt eng & 5 spd '74 Gremlin, f:OOd eond, 213/990·2525 ~~~~:::;:1~ $SOO/o~4,itw:~ mi.:>:i!flio lHti IS:!'I lttr uL11uut 1>A1v111GuACH1N1. '7I JAGUAR XJ6 tr;ins , mags, radials, new tirt>s. lt·s:. than 714/894-2854 ----------t MOPED, red 1'-0:\1, luh ul Sh:1111' Cuod t·ng1nr A<.:, '76 450SL ;iux ht-al.er, AMSW /FM, 30,000. J\:.king $2100 . .,__... ,9 .. 0 TV, Rodio. xtros. Must :.cU. !\1akt-FREE •USED BMW's* ;\\I F\1 C.ill ror lo· Metallic paint, \\ires. $1)7~) 751·8019 548-ll<tO ruru , HIR,Ster.to 8098 olfer.63Hl5t>7 'i.l ll.ivairn CIOOl.VY) p \mt h.00\IPl'J 11.oou m 1. :.tereo --------------•••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• LI-A...-•-COLOR TV • •200'.! (8,.jJ'-1.J \I> BRITISH CAR CO. lluy/Lcasc c032PQL). Collector:. llcm, 1965912, "7S A:\1C ~tatadorl, 7'?'dacl· '72 Pintos.ct.. ,._,,_-.,yctcs/ t'lltiOO (ZX.'\1166) :,pd. !\cw eni:. truly a lual m1, :.lee, r.a 1a MJdJand, CB radio. Brand Scooters 9150 Buy ANY nrw or used Cl 1 d On S da 2 13/990·2525 S 17,999. :,ai:rific.:c Jt $3600or trad tm'S, air rond, 1 /~, pwr DJrk green, aut-Omalk
new.$100orbes torrer .••••••••••••••••••••••• cdran<lwcw11lgnll>ou ose un ys 714/694-2854 H di:,cbrdkcs6759028art transmission.new 557 8393after8pm a color TV free. orrcr ----:-------OUSE OF plU'.> l•u!>h. 496•7620 0 • • brakes & balt.ery, run."
. BMW '74. H75 /6, con -good through Jan. 2, 1!>77. ORANGE COUNTY S l<crmann Ghio 9735 IMPORTS 496 (}13:! 5·30 great. Good economy
Stereo Pre·Ampllf1er. cowse, l!OOO mt, '1Clras. BOB WITHAM OLDEST ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2131921 _8588 RollsRoyce 9756'611ck 9910 cur!! 536·796l Leave
Dyna Pas J·X. A superb Mu:.l sell, mQving North 't>I l\.trm;inn < :ttia Hun,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• message for Linda.
pre-amp, extremely $1:!75.5-19·0733 VW &•· i1t·ll. 11111 <·ug.;? h.trrt"I 714/523-7250 "lDEALERINU.S.A. ·73 Hu1~·k Century, 2 dr, •75 l.TU
quiet, lab tested. ll/o ,73 Yam· h· (''f 80 .1 7WOWestminster Dlvd 1 1"', It 1 l" 11 hdtp, ~Int cnno, fully
O""'r $130 644-9539 a u ' · si ver. W t •~ 8"3 7•51 '.tr 1' • 11 "~~ rn, '72 3SOSL ROY t"iu1vpcd "'"'". 5. "A4·7572 Sunroof, xtrns ''" · used only 3() hrs. $250. '7 cs min.•i. . ..,r ., ·' • 1 .1!1111. 1 hr11m1· "ltb, rR ' ""'"' '" S3950 545 1
yam ah a ch a pp)' s.ilb St•n 1<·e l.t•a"ni.: Slt.1rp1·,1r :)97:l. ti·l:; Xiii 1 Rare Modl!I! Excellent R CARVER Xlnt mpg .• 73 E!>tUt.e Wgn, : · 493
Boats. Maintenanc9{, automatic, ;,WO m1, lk SURFS UP Roy Carver,lrtc. cond. (713EAJ\l I r ROLLS·ROYC( !!·pass. idnt mcch cond. 6~ t 0 rd Fa l r I an e
Service 20 new. $300. 'ili Yamah See vw Surfer llCJlls rtm1•1· l\:\I W Moz.da 9738 HOUSE OF l~J•mboree lo m1·, <>II xtrn~. inc l'ustback, 390, Hurst ••••••••••••••••••••••• Strnct, ffiJ"'S, ·'riv l.1111.J,1rr1lu1r1•1• ••••••••••••••••••••••• B ... u ... ·~ l C .. ., u n Newport ucn st~rco. roof rack & hitch. rans, rage rs, !"lgR. Expert Boal Painun11 & shaft. 1.450 m1. Brand B 0 B WITHAM N1•v. IK•rt H<.·at·h •~1111.111 '1 \l.t1rla HX.t <"•>u11t•. I IMPORTS l'----MU44• $3150. 4!.16 6569. Fantastic $400 or best ofr. 768-313!1
Refinishing. Refs. Make new. $2()()(). Cull afl. llpm -~rd. und<'r wrnly, very 2131921 8588 ClO$lO ~uNOAY~ lam car ~r 4
.i appt. today for free e::.t:-. 494.7049 VW t•N;!I H\IW tr~JO \\I F\1. d··111!'oJ~ :1~02 ---------
ror work done aft ----------• 7WO Westm1tl.\tcr Blvd :\111 hl'ltr1' ~1.J:1'l 714/523-7250 Si\CRJ 1''1C E ~3695 .. '64 Codilloe 9915 '66 Ford Falcon, 2dr, auto
holidays.675·3175 '71Yamaha12SMX. Wcstminsler M:J 7551 t;;,1 ;,1.,1 >i.J.I :.x11, Me-reedes B~n1 9740 It.oils con,cr~1on, s1hcr ... •••••••••••••••••••• 6 cyl, R&ll. Runs Xlnl.
D-....._, u-i-XJnt cond S450/bslofr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• \18 '69 2JlOSI., I owner bea~ly 536 2:!·1R 197 .. C "'DILL ... C $499. 673-9494.
uuvn ,.._ ·-Call5480350. AutosWon~ 9590coprl 9715 1952 :'ltB7. :mo" t"las:.ic Pvtpty.S7HOO .. "' "'
Equipment 9030 ----------1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• <Aupt•·Une of onlv 116 pro C;ill t>-14·48-IO Toyota 9765 COUPE DEVILLE '74 FORD It 00
••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 Honda CU350, $650. e.it CASH FOR CA.RS! '72 CAPRI 2000 dun•tl thJl ) 1·Jr~ :\l u,l 'G8 ~St:: 4 l>r Bro.,. n ••••••••••••••••••••••• (20-1KGJ). Deluxe cust-Om Ski van.
New 11 foot life rafl.cost cellenl condJuon, mu::. T s Doll s d f v··· to ..iJ>prenJ\c' l'n ,77 $6295 Needs nothmg bul ga:>! op ar PjJ or 1\l1t11n1,·1t11, air •·on1I '"' 71 "''" · ··11)•u• l'\1 $13800; will Sell for only scll.897-7686 I d l k & ' "'' >!I 7111 ·""" mis ..-vv Loaded! Can Lease. Lo ftKOO C 1149~1.,.." ccanuse cars, rue<; :-.11111 0"1 .!.. lu\\ m1 l1• ' '.:._ ----Pty M86&lu,1,l:?!'iWO t OAC l ·1e ....... · a ~""" y h ,7 , ·oo"C Corvettes. A~k for Paul 1,,,t·ll'"I pym s • o·mt s. ama a "· " " o:-; 11 ~ ' Lease MBZ TOYOTA 1974CADILLA.C Che rr y, Priced. ~.':~::~ ..... !~.~~ ~~~~·~~~i;_nd l.O\\ H00WARD Chevrolet SADDLEBACK Hew. Used s COUPE DEVILLE (33153Y).
Do\'e & Quall ~h V AlLEY 1MPORTS OVER I OO <50411XX ). BRITISH CAR CO .. 1974 Bost-On Whaler, 11 'J"
'75 15 h p. Johnson motor
with only 10 hours $141)0
firm. Replarcmcnt value
S2100 Call 642 44112
LASER
1112199 rt11ec xtra.., &
HONDA !JOIJ FOl"ll
Need:. soml' work
$150 blt100
1974 C8 360 llon<la. 7 .llOI
mt, Fairing I ui.:g 1,1l·k, t
t.µeed $600. :>J:-!3 i1!1:!
fbgls cnlrbrl.i ~725. MotorHoiMs, ~1089orM5·2lllO SalefRent 9160 -.............•......... Boots. Soil 9060 .•.•••.................
Hobie 16, trlr, new tran~ &
more. $1,425. &IG·IS2~ or
581·7505.
ERICSON 29, full
cruise/race, $21,000/o(
fer . 675-1830 evci. & wknds.
BUILD YOUR OWM
IUUT. WESTSA.ll
WORLD CRUISER
llundr ed~ of proud
Motot-Home Rental
181/l'to 32'
l'"ully self c11nt.11nc·~t
Rc:.erve riow for
llohday Wk nrl:.
R Jo:G t:NCY 'H>'l't)lt
110~11': Ht.\"J",\l.S
925 N. 1Jarbn1 llh 11 :-. \
26'GMC \10TOHHO:\H.:
~lps 6. Wntr rate:.. I'\ t
ply g:~ 2til6.
1>42·40'17 '\wpt
11 w n •· r :. a re h a n II (; \ll" Late ·; 1 \lilt con1I
f1m~h1ng thl•Jr We-.hJ1b ~Ip' b , s1·1 1011. 1:!31i
in tlw1r :.pare t1m1• l'ul.tri,. 'di 1111.:1.lt.
fh<'rc s JI(> reai.on > 11u 1·an"t I.lo 1l loo Tal.e .111 IJ.tlt>"i. II\ It• 111.11
vant;ii.:c of \\-tntt•r & CJr ;; Arri:" i3 i•. 1110•1• I
ly sprmi: t1..i1 H'rll':. 1111 Irv int> ..,., 1111o
'Pf'ciallv pricrd semi ltf'nt 19;7 2:1 lht•1 l,111tl hn1,ht•ll ZIS' lhru 4:1 Fully c•11xt, ""' .11r1,1hl1· West.sail packa1tc' Crom p, t Ply :;5-i 1 • •" $1>."'l'.l.). for hull J\ 'I, I> clrck 1 -'
Attend our IH1ll1lrr .. Trallen, Trav•I 9170
forumi1 Mon. & Wf'<I •••••••••••••••••••••••
CV('S lo find out aoout 311\8 Spartan l'rlr llmt' fuu~hm$! pncka~<'' & fa1 ~.000 h'>t 1111 tory. support Wc:-.t,Jtl For info c·~ll K\i o•t:\i Cru1s1n" Center. Lillo ----
Vrll:oie Center, Suitt' 2111 A ........ f S 1 J.'32 Via Oporto, Newpon ~• CM' a e
&arh, 92ti63. 675 !'>190 •••••••••••••• ••• ••• • • • Gen.ral 9 5 I 0
::7' Feathrr :? "l'ti'I i;,11h
Wood. eng, $l,OOO /olr
S29 \TZ3
••.••••••••............
J.!' F1ber1tl.i'>s 'in•i.,. bud
"all boat :-Oo I ':! w trlr
S350 213 091 64.:!l
1~'75 C°hl'\1oh·1 \l.tlil111 to
mi. $.!'.1% 1 1 1 S11111l.1
moturc 1 ch· ·1 \I I , ltl.•
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Boat.., Slips/
Docks
SUP WANTED for JS'
Chris Crah . <.:all
549 OS<\t
FQr quick 11;tl1• ~11~10 ('all
1\94-7432
Autos.Mew 9800 Autos, Hew 9100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
I~ Holfday Gf'fffiftCJS<.qA. ~ 'Y("/
I . J. SPortlc• C...ter 'Al 0,..... e.....y. ,,, .... l>Mhf-
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U.RM s&ICTIOH OF
XI /t'• I: 124 SN>as ....
A Large Selection of
Extra Clean
Used Sports Cars
We'N ..... t. IW'tfce wMt we Ml. Ht1p '' a..y _.. ..... a M4f1 .,_,. S.nlu Dtpt • .,.._ ........... ,._
S.• ~· 0,.. ~w '"" hyl
_"_t:,_\·l'~n Hr: \l'll 831-2040 495.4949 MERCEDES HERE NOW $5695 213/990-2525
Wh I'.\ y WI' 001.1 •• \lt Datsun 9720 ON DISPLA y 714/894-2854
.1•0H Toi' usi-.u c ,, 1es ....................... unicEDES 8rwz 1'-HEW COLORS 1973 CADILLAC
F<>HEJ<;'\, no\! 1·;s 1 fl' DRIVE • House of lmDOris """ "" •HEW MODELS ELDORA.DO COUPE 9941
" "" \L TttoHizJ.:u WEEKLY SPECIALS or u. \SSH:" • llll'"' Sav1"n"S on ALL rA ((V"'lfSU) lf\1111r•·.1rts1•xl1.1tll'.in LITTLE... :\lEH<.:t::Ul-:SOfo:Al.ER .. , " " '"" m,11nlng new 7t>s & $5495
•••••••••••••••••••••••
'70 Maverick, auto, A/C,
P/S, clean. ~15. 848·1400.
days, 536·6285 eves. I .. u first ~ Manchc!>ter,
"·c ~,·' ·u·ER· BUICK SAVE A LOT Uuunu l'ark -HCW '76-lk•rnos. "' The Better Bari~ain
523·7250 450 SEL MAR9UIS TOY OT A 1973 CADILLAC Mercury ?9.50 2!125 11 a rhor Blvd
Co!>ta J\le:.u 97:1 :.!~1011
WE BUY
CLEAN CARS
& TRUCKS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
211...?ll llnrbnr Tll\d
t:UST ,\ l\I !::Si\
546-1200
IMW 9712 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1976 BMW 2002
Blue mclalllr
Automatic, air cnnd ,
sunroof, ~l<'rco & ONLY
4000 MILT·:.-:;! (MVll\~l >
MISSION VIEJO
IMPORTS
Avery Pkwy .. s .o. Frwv
211701 M11r~ucrlle l'kwy.
Bl1·1741
''12 Mdl Bavorlo, • ~pd.
air. sun roof, good cond
pp S48$0, .ui.tl54
'G BMW UIOO. AM·FM
Xlotoond. Vorycloan.
752-8300
'
:..110 I' & <.:O~l l' /\It t-:
BARWICK. DATSUN
. " .. 111 .fu.111 C,q11:-.lranu
831 -1375493-3375
NEWPORT DATSUN
SPECIALS
1\210 ~ {Joor . 4 speed.
fi3'i71SI.
MOW$2895
888 OOVESTHLET
!'\eJr MJcArthur
&.lambnrrc Hoad:.
833-1300
TOP BUYER
On tlw Sanla Ana "'' > MISSION VIEJO COUPE DEVILLE •••••••••••••••••••••••
69 Mercury, xlnt cond •
Louded, l owner. $1.000.
Call 536·0907 or 962-7787
1961 MBZ 190SL
COUPE ROA.OSTER
llardl11p. Ori ~ina
lcatht•r w1Lh 71.0011 miles
:\lust see! (OHi:-:Lc ).
1958 MBZ I 90Sl
COUPE ROADSTER
Hardtop & :,o{l top.
Ongmal leal.hrr w/rad10.
AClasslc! llTX775J
SA.DDLEBACK
VA.I.LEY IMPORTS
831-2040 495-4949
'
I
6 to Choose From 831-2e80 49s-1210 w12cnK>. To~ola Corolla 'iO, 2 dr, 4 4995 $20 669 i.PtJ. air, Multiple" 8 lrk. H.I...&...--
'
dl'l'k rack, specrnl paint. ~ Coc:lfflaC l!l66 Mercury, Park Lane.
& d 1 94 7737 2'00 H......._ .._... H/)(, A/C. good trans, ~r. No. OS4tl27 mai:s ra ia s . .,_ . __. ~ $225. 963-6970
-HCW17-
450 SEL
$24 900
Ser NJ 059573
CM.I. FOR QUOTF:
ON \8 MOS LEA.SI::
CLOSEOUT!
1976
PEUGEOT'S
6 to Choose From
~ch.111.,. StJllOn Wai;on~
All Nl•W
fllO:\"I
$5821
-USCD CARS-
GRUT SElCCTION
OF QUALITY 280s
BUY /LUSE NOW!
213/921-8588
714/523-7250
. MERCEDES
BENZ
Toyota Corolla Liflback Colta ,_.. 540 9'00 --------
'76, SH-5. ;ur, ;\lul11pll·x -Mustang 9'52
lrk, CB, shadow •••••••••••••••••••••••
494-1737. (!!) · '75 Muswng 11 hardtop,
Trf""1ph 9767 IT\lnt con<I, PP 644·~ it only 8,000 mi, $3,400. In
••••• •••••••• ••• •• • • •• • aft 7P~1
TR's 76's "-_ •• ---------.~ 1965 Mustang 289. Xlnl buy plan wilh scni;1 p JS, A/C. Nds work.
blc payments. Struc $700 S45·7697
turcd hke a lease. Tcr N be
rtf11• '>lock on hJnd a fS Pinto 9957
BRITISH CAR CO.
213/990·2525
714/694-2854
'74 TR6
l\!\t 11"!\l :.ler<?o So nit·t
('an Ll·<•~" ! \'erv lo
mrlc«. <O;!otM DU l. .
. BRITISH CAR CO.
213/990-2525
714/694-2854
Volltswagen 9770 ......•.•..•••••..•••..
1973 Super Beetfe
., :;peril. II track tape &
lowm1lcs CJIJJES).
SADDLEBA.CK
VALLEY IMPORTS
8 31·2040 495-4949
•vw Sqhk Xlnt cond
:\lu.'t 'l '' 10 Jpprec1atc
S~I hsl ofr 75HS301
'77
VOLVO
HERE How ·
•MEW COLORS
•NIWMODRS
Huge Hvlngs on all re·
mainlng new 78s &
Drmoa ln atock .
MAJtQUIS VOLVO
MISSION VIEJO
831·2110 495-1210
ORA.MGE COUHTY
VOLVO
EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO
Lurt1e:1t. Volvo Dealer
ln Orange County I
BUYorLEAS€
DIRECT
Cadl.llac ······················· 77 Pmlo, won in contest,
:.IJek ::.tuft.
Qu.llity and Price
C1ua1 anrc<'d
I 1· l'trr• Spcll.1l1'>l'>
f'1\'1111~J K.itc~
I .11~"'''1 Seit l l1<1n
ul N1·w & U"·J
( .i.lrll.1C\ 111
Ur.uws Cotrnry
<Jr1·n SumJ.1y
Cadill.ic
Ma~trr Oe.-ilrt
21tlltl II 1rhnr Blvd
Co\IJ f.k\J 5 t0·9 I 00
Nabers
Cadillac
l 97 l CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE
646-2982
'71 nunabOut, very low
m1les, xlnl cond. Pvt ply.
$1325. 644·2440
Plymouttt 9960 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ATLAS
Chrysler /Plymouth
Open Dally & Sun. 'ul 10 PM .
2929 Harbor Bfvd.,
Costa Mesa
546-1934
.9965 ................ , ..... .
70 Grand l'rtx SJ . Slyle,
rla:-.~. performance.
Ucauuful cond. After 5
pm~ll 968_7_1_37 __ _
'76 White Pontiac 'l'raru.-
J\m. Clean. Xtras.
:l1i8·6372
:··············i •NEW CHEVY'·S!:
: USED CARS! :
: We're e
: OPEN SUNDAY!·:
e Deceuber 26th :
• I 0 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. • • :HOWARD!
!Chevrolet!-• ..... =r.= Sh. ~ ID: ·~o;s .: ;·
Anaheim 750-2011 , ................ .
,
tJO DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
CHRISTMAS SPECIALS • HEW '76 280Z COUPE
Polar white. automatic. air cond .•
mag wheels & much more! (1758).
•7 6 7 ~-T ~ TIOH WGH.
.llutomat; 0'' "M/~M radio.
metallic &.0 'l5lJ
s4c;, • -
HEW '76 Fl 0 WAGON
Front Wheel Drive -4 speed. '' ag
wheels & customized antique gold
f1n15h. 14072
$3695
'75 710 COUPE
4 -,0 ,.,..d. ,J1r cond vlnvT too &
AM/FM rJdlO -Demo :3134,
'75 710 COUPE
4 soeed w11ti ,Jir crJnd Demo '3078)
s3295
24 HEW
.l5 '76 821 Os
IN STOCK
Au1oma11c" I!. 4 ~PPP.d'i all body
:;tyles & P'1u1opprf ltiP. way you want
them Must bP -;old IQ make room for
lhe ·p s•
SALE EMOS 12-31-76
Holiday
Buys
JUST A FE\V FROM THE
LARGEST SE LE CT ION
IN ORANGE COUNTY
t 2,000 mil~ °'" I 2 o oc
oh•~ 1',.ot. S•,.•ic~ Aq,.••-11t
•oilabl• ~ 1',..-ow11l'd 1973.197 6
wfflt '"' tt.91 50 0 00 Mli...
76 CouoP dPV1lle . . . S8995
10220431\
76 CoupP r:IPV1llf> \8795
rQ t6J064)
75 Eldorado Co110P S8695
1725KYSJ
75Couoede>V1ll11 S7595
1705MMN1
·74 Couoe deV1lle . . S6295
!204KGJ1 7~ Coupe deV1lle . . . . .S6695
!084KZI)
74 Coupe deV1lle . . . . .S5695
(504HXX)
~
73 Eldorado Coupe • . . . . . . $5495
!OOOHSU)
73Coupe deV1t1e ........... S4995
. :.-. .
:i:' ::
· (642GRK)
•
••••••
HAPPY
HOLIDAYS
FROM
I
'
BUY
FROM
IKE
'65 VWIUG
4 speed. (NHW641 ).
•72 HONDA CIVIC
4 soeed. (950FYKJ
'74 CHEVY LUY
AM/FM stereo. air cond camper
shell mags 139782Ul
•74 DATSUN 710
4 soeed (972JCFl
52199
BRAND NEW
1976
D
0
N
SELECTION
IS
WHY WE'RE
No.1
IMMEOIA TE DBJYHY
TODAY
Wherever you live in
Orange County, buying a
Used Car In Costa Mesa
from Johnson & Son
"Just Makes Sense!" • '75 llMCOLH MARK IV
2 to choose from. These fme luxury
cars are all scrvttl'd and ready to
go. St o1> in & see the m today.
(691LPY>. Priced as low a:.
58895
'73 LIMCOLM COUK
Beautiful de ep gret:>n w/wtutc vinyl
roof, and I ull power. air con~ ..
atuomatic tra ns., AM IFM radio.
(1151JEZ>. This beauty on sale now
only
S4695
73 CADILLAC SEDAM DEVILLE .
Handsome 4 dr. with fl;Jll power. air
cond .. auto. lransm1ss1on, deep
brown with matching intenor. See 1t
now. Stk. #1812a. Only
s4995
•74 FORD EUTt
2 Dr. Cpe. Power brakc'S ~steering.
radio, auto. tran~m1s!>wn. vinyl
roof. wire wheel rovers. light ~lue
body with dark hlue roof & mtenor.
Buy it today. C380KXX>. Only
s3995
'71 UHCOLM 4 DR. SED.
Great f<1mily S<'dan. full power~
radio. air cond. <322KLlll
s2695
'75 MERCURY MONT'EGO
·I Dr. Sed. Power steering & brakes ,
air cond .. radio. a nice clean car"· al
a real savings 1742:'.1NG > Only
s3195
· '72 COUGAR XR-7
Power hr;1kc<; & ~teC'nng. A:\f radio
w i t ape dPl'k. bucket !'<•at-;. ~1r
cond .. medium grc·cn .with white
inte rior. & while viny l roof
f.13.511GCI
s2295
'73 IUICK CEtnURY
3 seat Sta W!(n. Pow<'r stC'cring .&
hrakC's. power winclo\'"' & scats. tilt
wheel . radio. air concl. a
great wagon. dl'an as tht>y come
While marnun interior (452HZS>
, •• · ·-; TRIUMPH ~ TR7: THE SHAPE Of THINGS TO COME ,~. AT A PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD TODAY.
NOW ONLY
S4,995*
•Pius Tax & License Manufacturers
suggested 1976 retail one~ P 0 E.
Doe s not include i n land
t ransportation. local taxes or
preparation charges & accessories.
FREE
THIS WEEKEND OHL Y
With Th• l'urchow of
Any MG Mld9et-A M.l.C.
3 y._,., 36.000 Mlle w~
NEW MG
MIDGET
All of our cars have a 5 vear·
50,000 mite warranty available
·~ Mlle So or the San Diego Frwy
Between Adams & Baker
OPEN SUNDAY
(
'FREE FOR ALL
•FREE PARTS
• FREE OIL
• FREE SERVICE
fM 2 Y.ars or 25,000 Miltt
AND THEN •.•
S YEAR, 75,000,MILE
Foc:tory w pn'onty °"
All Rotary En<J1wn
HEW MADrAa
ST ART, AS LOW.AS
s2794
(STC36219l • OUTSTANDING
RESALE VALUES
1973 MGI
ROADSTER
4 speed. AM/FM stereo 8 track &
wire wheels. (614GOTJ.
SALE, PRICE s3299 • 1973 VW BUS
7 passenger model Has AM/FM 8
track stereo & low m1fes. ( 168HOK).
s3375 TODAY SALE PRICE OML Y • , I 975 MG MIDGEJ ~ 4 speed. AM/FM radio & only 15.000
m11es (989NKK) • •
SALE PRICES 3 5 9 9 • • 1974 TOYOTA
UMOCRUISER.
4 wheel driv~. roll bar. custom
wheels & tires & only 22.CXJO miles -
LIKE NEW• (490MPR) n·.
SALE PRICES 3 999· • 1976 MGB
ROADSTER
4 soeed. stereo & rack -:..tKE NEvy'
(219PHC)
SALU'tllCE s4599
REBATE
ON
' . ... . ,
ALL
MEW
'76 & '77
PACERS
IN STOCK
~YEAR END
USED CAR
CLEARANCE!
It's our Biggest Used
Car Sale of the year!
From reliable
transpo'rtation t<! . ul-
timate luxury dr1v1ng
-this is your once-a·
year chance for sav·
ings like this!
------
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
AND
GENERAL MOTORS
ANNOUNCES
CASH
REBATE
FROM THE FACTORY
FROM HOV. I I to JAM. 10
' 1 If yo u purchase any new ·~s
or '77 Chevette or Vega in
stock, you 'II receive your
S200 factory cash rebate.
See us today!
OVER 70 IM STOCK
FOR
IMMEDIATE D&IVERY
• '
I SEE ,,ou'RE
NOT WEAR ING
M'-1 CHRISTMAS
f'~ESENT ...
\
NANCY
FINAL
SPORT S
BUT IT'S JUST
NCT THE socr OF
T~I NG liOU WEAR
Ev'ER4' DA'I !
'
SUNDAY, DICIMlll 26, 1976
I 80 VGHT IT
FOR '1'0V WITH
M". OWN
MONE'! ...
BE~IOE5,
I WAS
~AVI N6 IT IN
CASE I 60T
INYITEO TO
THE CR058'1' ..
. . ... . . .
LOCAL
WANT ADS
BXCLUSIVB
ORANGI! COAST
NEWS
I I /!
IF A PERSON GOES OUT
OF HE~ WAL/ TO BU'l l.(OU
SOMETHING SPEC IAL,
TME LEAST '1'0U CAN
DO 15 WEA~ IT !
ALL RIG~T !
l1 LL WEAR IT !
l1 LL WEA~ IT !
By Ernie Bushmilf er
I I I
1 I I
I I -r---,-
. •(
HOW ooe~
YOl.A~
?Ef!VIC~
WOfl'.':K 1 MA~CIA ?
ve~y GIMPLE. YOIA
T~INK E5ACK, AND
~~CALL A YEA~
WHEN eVe~YTHING
WENT WEL.L. ~O~
1ns:DE
v
--E
N --
YOll( .... ~=~3'I
1t4~Y NetPeP WAJ?l<I~,
Mir:> 'ffi~ AU£N Ct.All.I,
W~ICli gy 1"HeN WA$
~ t.A.RiSe,
1fiOV6141' "f"HeY
W\1c;> tt f~~f(S..11
..
-A YEAF' IN
WHICH YOU~
LIFE WAt; G00£'1
eA~~ AND
HAR'MONIOL,,{5
! ~IC'
f1Ft<f
~~~
1l:> Gef'
1io"
~~
f~NiY
Gf;~~Y. ..
(*~H)
ANOTHE~
NEW veA~ ....
A NOTH!:" New, tANr~1eo
VEAi':,,.
! PllOVIPe YOL.l.
WITH TMAT ~AR',
AND.,. tANL.IKe iHE.
f(E~T OF US, YOU.
NeeD NOi
FACE'
1'177 //
• MAF<CIA MASO 'S
" "1hit-wa,·A ·Vt/f'l·G#oJ-~i11" Sl~VICI.
wHWa A New; v~112iiD
'f EA~ ? t'S-L-tVt: AN OL-D 1_is ,_.....,
su-r e~e.!!
~ > •
l'f 70 WA~ A GOO"
Yl:Aftu. t WAS YOUNG/
MY PAJtENT'S THOtAGHT
eve~YTHING I 0 10
WAt; Cl.AiE' ... MY trrn.e
f'~TME.~ WASN'T
eJOftN 'YET ....
t!JOOO 1..UCtc: IN 1q10, t'l!A/
YOU'VE GOT' TI'4e ~ll:IP1'1
4'0 TO ~PEAK . NOW, AL.L..
YOU Neeo DO I~ ~ILL.
IN TH~
CA'T' Of=" CHA~ACTE !(.'$ !
YOUR FACE 5EEMS
FAMILIAR! J NEVER
FORGET A FACE !
/1C¥. IN 'fkf F'1~ Ca-..t(VitY, 1'-IE. HU~, 1'Hf M~'( V!GIO~,
C~L. ~Pl'«~ IN H"~' We#Z! GOING 1'o INllADe
A. "(Oii.)~ ...
'" ... ~NP 'f~€Y ~f'RON1'et' -
'fH€ H~ HW A~MV ...
• ... Al\JP 1fiE" 'fOWN
cA~P V:Oft
VOl.lJNf'e€~S ... ...
.1 .. :
• . i . .
... -
-£ ... ... ·~ .. . ·-. .
. I.
ONc.E ~ERE UJAS A Liin.£ CAN
OF BE~ T~AT SAT fJJA4 IN
BACK ON lHf;. iOP SHELF AT
1HE SUPERMARK6T WHER6 f\l:J ~ C:.OOl.D EVEN SEE rr J
~EE! HEEi
\ I I --. -----
11-tE U1i1.E CAN (ilqNTED
10 sg wrrn "ffiE CAN5
oN 1HE MIDDLE 6HELF
~PB)fll£~
AL.1JJtlS PIGKfNG -rnEM
lJP AND 11\KtNG 1l1EM
SOMEWHERE f
I
ONE DA£,>,wrTH A GREATEF~r, 1AE MORAL..: To'"rnlNE
n.tE LlifLE. CA~ MANAGED ib OOJN SHELF BE !RUE J
JUMP oow~ miHE ll\IDDLE
SHELF,luHE.REUPON SOME.ON~
'TOOK "THE. L.ffllE CAN OF BEANb
HOME AND ATE TuEM ALL UP f
ANI> S,ANTA BROU<5HT ME
A NE,AT LlN,ACSSEMBLE:D
BJCYCt..S WITH A NOTE
TO See LORD R,.
~ _,
I H,ADMY
HANDS FULL.
Bf:SIDES,
PLUSHIE, you
GoTA
iALENT FO~ \
GETTIN' THIN<:S
SCf<~WED
ASSEMBL/N~
IH'SOCCSR
BALL. ...
/DOCTOR SMOCK
OKAY, SO -Y-AKC: A
COUPL-~ OF PE:E:PI NG
Pl L..t...S AN c:> CAL..t... MS
IN IHS MORN I NG
•
HESY, HOW '~ES
YOU POIN ' IN
'THE::RE: ?
UP.
By George Lemont
eve:N
MAKING oNe: House
CAL..l-A YE:A~
IS F"OR -r"HS
e1Rc:>S .'
we L...L..-.1 DOC , IH~·
vv1Fe IS
HC:AVY
WllH eeG
ANc:> MY
SINUS IS
011.-t...ING
ME:.'
®·
0
--..... ",,,. " I '---t I '~· t •.,.
rf'N1l .il j 'j
J/. .•. • •. .... . • .J!fl..
~'7 ALL HI~ FIGi.ffl~ wrri.t 417 MOUTH.
v
t ....................... \o.lit., ... ~'-
He's MV PIAflt
,OLP HORSE, ANP
l'LL SfANP UP FOR
HIM ilLt I CAN
fJNLOAP HIM!
CAN YOU TRUST YOUR EYF.S? Thett are 1l leut six differ·
enees in drawin1 details between top and bottom panels. How
quickly c1n you nnd them? Check anawen with thOM below.
"9a1lllt1D ll tnv ·9 ·~oom•odu " auv '9 "IUlWlm " Hi.t 't ·lulRfUl
" IP' i:.tto s • 11 ·iatrt m11 " io.uw1 ·r; "l'aJll1UI " am.JO · t :N:MJ•nma
BOOMER
G~eAf 5~0W
~ -1'0 ,J1GH1',
K~U..Y !
1HAi WAS .
ALL ~1Gi.{I, --
MAN!
GORDO
NO RULE
SAVS
A 7:~E
MAW:> •
,.
Hal k;r,ufman ~
TAXES PULL! fl youhaHafidl
who's a ~hron1l 11( \lra1~hll."nt'r
ur threJd rt•mo-.r1, hnr\ d wdy
10 gt't t'\t'll, I hrc4J one .-ml ol a
\po0I 0r lhl'\'dd lhrou.,:h
.i needle. P14tt' tht
'pool in an 1n,1Jl' pod.·
el anJ run the nerJle
lhrough >our Jad.et or
sweattr so thc11 lln 1n~h
or more of 1he lhread
JaniJes loo\t al a con-
spicuous 'pot on the
lapel or \hnuldu
Remove lht n.-rdle,
of counc.
When your fmnd, the
lhre.id·f'ullrr, ~llt'\ 11110
a•t1on, ht or 'h~ 1\ ir1
for a 'omt'what rm·
barra\\lng \llff'rl\t'
----I ULLETIN IOA RO ----e HA VE A HAPPY . . . . Alfred Lord TeMy10n
wrote: "Rm1 out the old; nn1 In the new. R1n1 out
the _ ; nn1 in the __ . " Fill blanb.
e All Elbows! Scntcb you1 •u with you.r elbow.
Touch 1 toe wtth youi elbow. Touch your noee
with you.r elbow. Good luck.
e Forward Look! It the year 1977 1tArt1 on 1
Saturday, ori what day of the week will It end?
Remember, It la not a Leap Year.
·.twp.rn1•s • uo pu1 nl"' 11
e Royal Jollies: Wh o wu the klullie&t EnRll~h
kin(? William the Klunkerer Who w11> the spicie&t
Enallsh queep? Anne or Clov~.
()lb 10 ~ •• 15 12 t-l
llJ O" ... . . . ii ~ 17 ; ...
"' 4 21. 7 ~ :>
• 2 • ... .. ~ !;
~
"' ~
t ·3 ~ ..
!'
It will seem dS though
your entire i:o,tumc IS
unravelln&.
SAY WHEN! Add miwnl lines dot·to-dol to complete 2.
thla timely · scene. What can you diaw? Ventun a aueu.
OVER AND OUT! Add the Collowln1 colon neaUy for 1 IW·
prlM picture: 1-R.ed. 2-U. blue. 3-YeUow. 4-LL brown.
~-Fleab. 6-Lt. OH.II. 7-Dk. brown. 8-Ma.roon. 9-Lt. lt'IY· ...
SPELLBINDER!
SCO.RE I 0 poinla for u11na all the -----+-----
lettera In the wo1d below to form -----+-----
t WO romolete word a
ENDURING
THEN 1core % point• each ror all ____ ...._ ___ _
worda or four letteu or more ____ .._ ___ _
found amon11 tbe letters.
Try ~ tcore al leaat & 0 polnta. ----------
'MmP 'tOl1I {ure.JhtrW •lCll"O.I
By Brown and Casson
/YOU KNOCK~
1~M l/6A£7 ,
6UPP'f"!
WE
CAN'T
HAVE
A I
lµf Wl-tVLE:-TOWN WA~
·n.t£1Z~, K~L.L'< !
WE:LL , ~ow 010 Ii
r~~L lo Glv~ mu~
OWN cHl2t5TMA'3
CONC £12T ?
\
.. .. -.. Gus Arriola
(.
A
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AD\ LRTl~L \If.I\ I
FOR BENNY GOODMAN. clarinetist
A.a a mlc great. do yoa na go to rock coeca ta.
a.I. II so, wt.at do J011 tllillk of tM:m?-ff.D .• u..1-
t..._ OWo
• I once went to a Rolling Stones concert but had no Idea
of what was going on. "There seemed to be so much cam-
FOR .fEANE DIXON. astrologeT •
If,_ foraaw a lnigelly la yo.r lie cw la a.t of a mamba
of,.. • ...,. wliatwo.111,.. tlo?---.W. .......... Port
A6tt.s, Taaa
•I'd react just the way I do when l see misfortune In the
future of anyone else. I believe In the old saying. "fore-
warned ls forearmed." 1lle reason we're given premoni-
tions of danger ls so that we can use our Intelligence to
avoid It And what we can't avoid, we must learn to accept
as God's wlll for us.
FOR BARRY MMR.OW, pop singer and composer
Do,.. di write <U nrc:Wll?-.1.M., A•sscc. Olllo
• Before my records made an Impact. I participated In
creating a few dozen Jingles, had a great ttme and learned
enough to enable me to move on. I don't know why, but rve recently been credited with turning out just about
every jingle ever written. And If one more person tells me
l'm the one who wrote that MacDonaJd's one, I won't be
responsible for what fll do with my next Big Mac.
FJ)R fl.JZABEllt POST, etiquette expert
r •• ••cH9er ..,. •• ( ll'Mbedy toW •• aw were Mer-
... .._ my,.,_....,.. my ese-Are lky tlgld?-8.G.,
~1191i*a.,1h, N.Y.
• Yes, and the b'9ge.st difference ls the way our young
treat our old. It's deplorable! In this country, there lsn't
the respect that's found In Europe. Youngsters can't get It
Into their heads that those a generation or two ahead of
them have much to contribute due to their experience
and knowledge.
FOR LORETT A LYNN. OOWltry sJnger
De,.. ..................... 1-0.B .• c..u. Wyo.
e V es.. Once I tested something I'd read, which said that
with concentration you could re-llve a past life. After
letting my mind drtft for a while, I saw myself as an lndlan
woman. I was near an Indian on horseback, and something
tdd me he was my husband and chk?f of the tribe. I saw
myself saying ~ye as he went off Into battle. A few
m1nutu later, there was a shot. and my ''husband" toppled
off his hone. I creamed. and the notse JOited me out ol
my trance..
FOR n£ .. ASK THEM YOURSEJF' EDITOR
.._, .... •New Vws n11ti" , a....,.••••"
.._. .W c1l1•.-.. McWc. Do ,.. bow?-P..£.. .........
e Opera star Beverly Sills always makes the same one:
'This ve-1 want to spend mor• ttme with my family."
JaTY l.Awls, soon to make his Broadway debut In
Hell6apop,,U.' says; '1 ruolw never to do anything that
isn't perfect. That means no trnOk.lng. drinking. women, andy or golf. Just hard work. That way, ru earn ~
money to pay fOf' my~ but rn twwe died or bore-
dom. •• Art BuchwaJd. the tongue-in<heek coh.mnlst: 'Tm
wtth Jlmmy Carter. I wtU not lust for any INOrnan In my
heart In lm." Actress Deborah Raffln: "My raolve: to
Improve my backhand ln tennls."
•
BevalySW.
cowr Plloto by UPI
motion on stage that wasn't related to musk:. Mick Jagger
ls probably to rock what Pavlova was to ballet. but no one
seemed to be paying attention. I doubt the audience oouJd
hear the musk:; It was so drowned out and distorted by
the amplifk:atlon. AU In al~ I can't say I'm In love with
electronic sounds. but since I'm In the business, I feel I
must make an effort to understand them.
FOR Jl.IJUS FAST, author of The Pl«uur~ Boole
\fty do w people feel_,• daey a)oy ... moelva?
-S.S .. M.lfonl, Ores.
e Society and a puritanical upbringing might be the awse..
From the cradle. we're fed the proverb,·~ DevU finds
work for Idle hands," and we're convinced that lf we
don't spend our Ume doing something profltabie, we're
doing something wrong. ln other words, enjoyment Is
virtually a stn. Once one ls aware of the guilt. one ls on
the way to overcoming It and getting some foo out of life.
FOR PHVUJS Dill.ER. comedienne
WUt ... ,_.. ~ ,..., .............. at?-
p .L. Ulde Roclr.. Arll.
e 1lle failure of both my 1V series. And the knowledge
that I was to blame. I did not work hard enou9h or pay
sufficient attention to the many details that make up a
show.
FOR GU\' LOMBARDO, "Mr. New Year's Eve"
WMt ...... ., ....... ,_ ... ,., ....... llnc?-
LS.U.. LM Cnca. N.M.
• I began to study music about the same time I started to
walk. While we were In grammar schoo~ Carmen. Lebert
and I formed a band. From school dances we worked our
way up to church socials. Our first big break was an ap.
pearance on a local Cleveland radk> show. fve learned a
lot about musk over the years-except how to dance to
It 1lle only way I can get around the floor ls with a push
--and a prayer.
FOR MO< CARTER. comedian
v .. · .. bea .......... ao.s ....... r. wu•atas.., ,._ c:m... ..._., .... Wlell fwtller?-T ~ .. Do.er, I>&
e My rotten personality has been a big deterrent. rm a
manic-depressive, live on the brtnk of destruction and
have a sullen, hangdog look. In this business you have to
be a. walking smile machine and pleasant to everyone.
I'm not. That's why I'm not the big name I should have
been.
Dee~ a.1171 FAMILY WEEKLY "'• "-~'* Meoulne
MORTON FRANK. ,.,..,._, Md ,,.,,,..,..,
'ATIUCK M. LINIOY, Executive V.P.-81118 Dir Scott 0.0-, EKICUllve Edllot
Oer .. d L Wroe, Ad Manager; Ncflwd K. Canoll, TIM Mulllgen, Man1glng Editor
Al&OC. EHlarn Mgr.; JN Fnnr,Jr., WHttrn Mor ; IUctwnl Y•ht.itl, All D11eclOI'
DnW l..Ofte, Auoc. ChlC8go Mgr.: "--II. "-trft ~ Senior Editor
AM, O.lrolt Mgr.; ......_ ._,_., "°" det Het Uncloft, Senior Edito1
Uetll eM ...,...,_,Cali!.; lteftt D'NeeeMclro, ...,..,.,. H-, Food Editor
Mettc.ilng Mgr.; JoM -..-. Prom. Dir : h1efte w...., Aalt. All Olroctor
C.ryt Ow, Mdang Mgr. ..lll °""9fto, Art: Glot1e "*· Pk:tu1ee ,....., W w.ATIW: flOlllJn D. CAWY
1nd ~ 1UJ8. v P.a and Co-Olrector1: p_, °'"8....._, Roving Ed110r
......... -.... Uny ........ ~ Cwnft, "' _, ..... ""V'· ""8U8M" MRVtC:S.: ~ 8-, Contributing EdllOfe; ..._.J.C ........ Mgr.;,,.._ G. ..,_, _ ,.._.. __ .._
Bu11ne11 Manaoer: '9olMwt ..,..,, Promotion _,,_ -·-•.....,..Lone, Edll. """
...., ~ Coneumer S.l\'lce1 UlfWACTUfllMO: IUclMlrd Mlllell, V P ·D11ec101
...,...... A"1ann•, Public Ret1t1ons Mg1. llottena Comne. M1keuo Mor ~ L O..WO., Chairman Emarllua ......,_ Welt:IMr, Production Mgr.
H11dqu1rltl'l l4t Lt)(lngton AY9 .. N.Y., N.Y. 10022 01978 FAMILY WEEKLY, INC. All rlghll rHOl'lled.
::..~~z
· Back tn Victorian days. a woman decorated her parlor with a lot of knickknacks and clutter because that was
the style ol tbe <Jay. Also because it was harder for her husband to see her if she wanted to sneak a ctoarette.
1s .. :·w:·1.o ... niCCJ1M.tv.
per ciprlttt, FTC Rtpon AIJ.' 76
Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarett e Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
'•
It couldn't have come at a better time, our Bicentennial.
and all over the country we not only celebrated but also
rededicated ourselves to the ideals we were founded on.
By Harriet Van Home
As a nation, we haye had some vint-
age years. But wlll any Unger as
proudly In the memory as 1976?
We. took the measure of our splrtt
during this Bicentennial year. And we
fbmtd It good.
We emerge from our 200th anniver-
sary with a new sense of Identity We
are-let's hear ruffles and flourishes--
the world's oldest democracy. Our
Constitution has been the model for all
emerging nations aspiring to breathe
free. We are one of a half-dozen coun-
tries on this planet that still enjoy~
freedom of the press and free elec-
tions.
A.s the Blble says of Man we may
say of our country: 'We are fearfully
and wonderfully made.I"
We are not perfect, but come what
may, we have been blessed.
n.a.b to IM Bk ..... ••• some of usnow twlve a deeper awareness of
our brave and bloody origins. Some of
us know, for the first time, the names
of the men who pledged the'r lives,
their fortunes and their sacred honor
that the United States of America
might come to birth-and endure.
In an almost mystical way, we
needed this Bicentennial Our· pride.-
sHll raw from Vietnam and Watergate
Harriet Van Horne u one of
thr country's beat-ltnown rt-
.ayuts. Hrr special intere1ts
OTf! politics and social trends,
and IM ia also a frequent
1ue1t on 7V and radio panel
ahow1. She i4 the author of
' Never Go Anywhere Without
a Pencil (Putnam).
4 • FAMILY WEEKLY, Decembef 2'8, 1t71
•
-needed a healing touch. lt was time
we believed In our own decency again.
It was time we stirred our roots, time
we took a long look at our own good
earth.
"History, by apprlslng us of the
past," wrote 1homas Jefferson, "en-
ables us to judge of the future."
Reaching OW' 200th year reminded
Americans of how blessed It Is to
continue. That Is, to maintain the tradi-
tions, to honor the Founding Fathers,
and to hold back the barbarians that
always lurk at the gates of civilized
society.
It al caJH to• !fud dbau-our
pride, our love, our vigor and style--
In the Fourth of July celebrations,
coast to coast. W aa thue ever auch a
day?
There were the tall sailing ships of
30 nations sparkling In New Yori< Har-
bor. There were relays of marathon
runners. carrying the torch of liberty
through the 50 states, There was a
horse race down the main street of
Lexington, Kentucky. There were sun-
rise services at a wagon encampment
on the battleground at Valley Forge.
And somewhere, out In space, there
roared a U.S. rocket, poised to land on
Mars. Man's first serious venture be-
yond the moon A Bicentennial event
beyond the Imagination of the Found-
ing Fathers.
Try as we would, some of us could
not remain cool and dry-eyed about
this 200th.fourth of July. We were sud-
denly awash In emotions we never
expected to feel.
F astldlous Americans who have de·
plored the noisy patriotism of ''flag
wavers.'' now discovered the depth of
their own patriotism. It was. as some
poet has said, "too deep for sound or
foam." We cried over this Fourth of
July precisely as one cries at christen-
ings, graduations and weddings. Out of
love. We heard America singing! We
heard the street jazz In New Orleans,
watched the Indian powwow In Okla-
homa and saw President Ford land on
the deck of the Forrestal. We watched
all these happenings together, as a
family .
Sadly, though, there were some
profiteers among the revelers on the
Fourth. They sold novelty toys that
broke In five minutes. They peddled
standing room on piers and rooftops
for five dollars and orange-tinted water
for one dollar a cup. Where crowd~
\
I
gather, thieves gather.
• I
\
Were some time-warp to restore the
Founding Fathers to us, would they
look upon us, their progeny, with
pride?
If you are f alrly prosperous, If you
are moderately educated, If you have
glimpsed the dream of the men that
begat us. then you could well ay to
Washington, Jefferson, Madison and
Adams-"Look, the dream came true!"
But for millions of your fellow citizens.
the dream Is Impossible because even
with all the joy we've e>tperieneed,
there are still unsolved problems. ·
Our greatest shame Is our poverty
and Ignorance. Through general edu-
cation, Jefferson saw "a prospect of
great advancement In the happiness of
the human race." It would wound him
to learn that 20 percent of us. In this
land of compulsory free schooling, Is
Illiterate.
No matter how sweetly this Bicen-
tennial year lives on In our minds, It
cannot gloss over the grim poverty of
30 mllllon despairing citizens. We put
out more flags, we marched and sang
and sent forth a Freedom Train bearing
a Howdy-Doody doll, an electric chal.r
and President Ford's Bib le.
We allowed IM wodcl the very best
of Amerlca on the Fourth of July-but
we went on hiding the worst from our-
selves. In that 16-hour television mara-
thon, we saw the essence ofAmerica's
goodness. We saw nothing of slums.
migrant workers' shacks, prisons or the
porn merchants In our decaying cities.
Looking back down the years, It may
fairly be said that we have wasted
much of our natural resources In
riotous living.
Even so, we're still on the threshold
of a new era--perha~ even a new
revolution. If so, we'll do better with
our new revolution If we carefully
study the lessons of the old. We have
come a long journey, we are renewed
In spirit, but there Is much to de done.
Across the years John Adams shakes
his quill at us. "Po.sterltyl You wlll
never know how much It cost the pre$-
ent generation to preserve your free-
dom. I hope you will make good use of
It. tr you do not, I shall repent ln heaven
that l ever took half the pains to pre-
serve It."
RdM119 tWt Blc:atcaDW year ln
memory, I am reminded of the refugees
who came here as "displaced persons"
after the last war. How moved they
were, how eager to be Americans--
and how they shamed us for years for
never hanging out the flag, never priz-
ing our freedom, never caring enough!
Well, we ar~ not so uncaring any-
more. The Bicentennial year has
brought us a new awareness of who
we are-and what blessings we enjoy.
Blesslngs upon 19761 Set It among the
high tides of the calendar. fWll
It was a very good year. '61)11
Caue111canklep1111 ln111-.-1 BreacarC.-.UCile bas ulrat H takes to help get Jiii
ll10l911he.-.
Breacol9 Cough Medicine contains one of the
strongest cough suppressants you can get. And
because a stuffed-up nose can also make it hard
to fall asleep, Breacol contains a strong
decongestant-Synephenol-Dn. -to help you
breathe easier. It's cold-catching time. So be
prepared-with a cough medicine that has
what it takes to help you through the night.
Bred.
TlllC1 J m1l~ .. 1llllllllllllllllll ..... •1111'.
.....
e, Sloan Wilson
Now dW a.n.tmu i. over, I can't
help remembering a very different one
many years ago when I had first written
Tu Man in tM Gray Flannel Suit.
We had recently moved to .a rich
st.1burb outside ~f New York City, and
apparently the custom there that year
was for the many affluent neighbors to
give expensive gifts to the children of
their friends and acquaintances. Busl·
ness connecUons added to the pres-
ents, ~ did people who wanted to
become business connections, such as
Insurance salesmen and stockbrokers.
""'"'The mountain started to build up
about'ten days before Christmas. And
as Christmas grew nearer, It grew with
Increasing speed. Long boxes wrapped
in gold paper, big square boxes 1n red-
and-white stripes, little expensive-look·
Ing boxes all sllver-<:olored-they
arrived by mall and by special messen-
ger. Most were addressed to my three
children, and they soon fonned a wall
around the Christmas tree so high that
the star of Bethlehem at the top threat-
ened to disappear. Tags lied to the
ribbons Identified the givers of these
presents. Most of the names were
totally unfamiliar to me.
Ours was not the only howe with a
rri&mtaln of presents. The many sue·
cessful actors, producers, advertising
executives and broadcasters who lived
nearby were assembling whole ranges
of mountains with foothllls Some of
them even had Christmas trees two
stories high which had been decorated
by professionals. I had never known
there was such a thing as a profe$--
sional Christmas-tree decorator.
Our three children, then seven. nine
and 10, did not pay much attention to
all this. In the pa5t they had made a
joke of looking In closets to locate hid-
den presents, but this mountain of
gbUdlly wrapped boxes right out In the
open defied speculation. On Christmas
'·"'"'Ing, however, the children were,
as usual, up at dawn. They threw them-
selve.s agalMt the gifts like soldiers
again.st an enemy rampart. Shreds of
brllllantly colored paper flew In every
direction As their excitement In-
creased, J couJd think only of sharks In
a killing fren2y When I flrutlly Insisted
on calling a halt and putting the rest of
the presents In the attic until we could
Slcan Wilton, a freq~nt contributor
to F.um.Y WDKLY, is lhe author o/
'The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit, A
Summer Plaoe and other beat ultn'1t.
Hu moat recent book, What Shall We
Wear to Thia Party? an autobiog-
raphy. was publuMd to outstandin1
reuiews earlier thi• yttor by Arbor
Prt'Sll.
I • FAMILY WEEKLY. O.Cember 2t, 1119
WHAT MAKES
A HAPPY CHRISTMAS?
TWOTALESOF
GIVING AND GETTING
"Today our Christmas
holiday is a joyful, family
event with handmade gifts,
carol singing and the
surrounding wannth of
friendly neighbors. But it
wasn't always that way .... "
figure out what to do with them, I think
the children were relieved.
That Christmas had another surprise
for us: In the afternoon, the wives of
our friends stopped by to show us the
gifts they had received from their hus-
bands. A white convertible, a diamond
bracelet, a mink coat-all were
proudly exhibited. Since J had not
progressed beyond the stage of giving
my wife a dressing gown. a pop-up
toaster and a bottle of perfume from
the local pharmacy, I found this display
of the generosity of other men un-
nerving.
''What did you get?" our friends
asked my wife.
"Oh, It hasn't come yeti" I blurted
out. "It's a surprise, but It will have to
be late."
I never like to lie, but how can one
allow one's wtfe to compare a pop-up
toaster to a convertible?
AD llaal WM a lo119-time ago. Now.
Instead of living In one of the wealthl-
est counties In New York State, I live In
one of the poorest and most beautlfu'I.
In our village of Ticonderoga, In the
foothllls of the Adirondacks, we have
an old farmhouse. My youngest daugh-
ter, Jessica, Is about the age my eldest
was 20 years ago, when the children
charged the mountain of presents.
Jessica lives a very different Kind of
life. Here there are no professional
decorators of Christmas trees. Jn fact.
Ticonderoga Is one of the last places
where a Christma.s tree still Is a do-It·
yourself project, beginning with an ax.
A forest of Christmas trees surrounds
us, and all you need do ls get permis-
sion from a friendly fanner to cut one.
Like many people, we make our oWn
decorations. I started thls when Jesslea
bit Into a glass ball that lacerated her
lips. The next year, all the decorations
on our tree were edible. Gingerbread
men, strings of popcorn and cranber-
ries, candy canes, apples and orange.s
-nothing a child could not touch. The
success was so great that we have
recreated It each year, even though
Jessica Is well past the stage where
she finds danger In glass balls.
Gone, too, Is the mountain of
presents. In Ticonderoga, fortunately,
friends rarely give presents to the chi~
dren of friends. Everything under our
tree came from members of the family.
Many of the gifts were handmade.
Jes.slca, for Instance. made paper-
weights and pen stands In which she
embedded fall leaves, the feather from
the wing of a blue jay and ~ Indian
arrowhead My wife measured my old
sweaters and knitted very fast when I
wasn't looking.
Throughout most of the Chrisbnas
vacation, the many hills surrounding
our mountain village are thronged by
children trying out their new skis and
sleds. A new sled or a pair of skis ls
considered a very big present around
here, somethlng to be treasured and
passed On to younger brothers and
sisters. A child who received a big
pre.sent llke a sled would not ordinar·
lly expect something else, except, per-
haps, a few trinkets In a stocking.
Judging from the merriment of the
children on the slopes, the happiness of
Christmas obviously doe.s not depend
on the quantity or quality of the gifts.
If they had a whole mountain of pres-
ents, those youngsters couJd not be as
happy
As In an old New England village,
much of the social life revolves around
the churches. Most of them have festive
suppers during the holiday season. The
Baptist church, for example, has an
especially active program for children;
It even ran a bus to a town SO mlles
away which has an Indoor swimming
pool, and It has a group that sings
carols. As ' the kids go from church
supper to church supper, from one
group of carol singers to another, I
think they begin to believe that they
belong to all the churches.
It's all so different from that expert·
ence so many years ago. So much more
real. So much more full of what we
used to call Christmas splrlt And, rJlllm
yes, so much more meaningful. lillll
I
FOR WHOM THE BELLS
TOIL:THE STORY OF
OUR FIRST TELEPHONE
The telephone has been around for just over 100 years
now. but when the Levensons finally got theirs. it was a
major social eve nt and was soon put to use for their
entire apartment building.
By Sam l..ewensoo
It's a long way b~ to my own first
telephone. a homemade walkie·talkle
"secret" oo-batterv Intercom made of
two oatmeal-box cylinders connected
by a waxed string My brother Albert
would put his oatmeal-box receiver to
hlS ear and l, eight Inches away, would
yell Into the mouthpiece at the top of
my voice, "Can you hear me?" (You
could heM me 1n Detroit. without an
oatmeal box )
I really didn't need a lelephont? to
keep In touch with my friends. All I
had to do was to extend my hand and
touch them. A local call. Any<>nt? not in
the immedl.ste vicinity could be
reacht?d by other methods. You could
yell up the dumbwaiter or tie a note
ta. a cord and lower It from the rooftop
to the desired floor, then run down and
tell to-whom·lt may-concern to pull In
his mes.sage or wrap a note around a
rock and throw It through a window or
leave a m~ under the door, knock.
and run away If the people upstalrs
were nolsy. you banged on the ceiling
with the handle of a broom. If you dJd
this vigorously enough. you could even
get to see them making the noise.
You did not have to d\al a taped
recording to hod out the weather; you
just looked oul of the window and you
knew "whether .. Besides, by the time
l was three years old, I already had
corns thclt bothered me when II was
f'ng to rain l llsteoed to them.
SOme buildings had a public tele
phone Of\ the ground-floor wall In the
hall next to the Janitor's apartment.
Our jMlltor would answer the phone
and yell. "Who In the hall do you
want?" Once he caused a ma)Or panic
when he painted <Ner the wall around
the phone on which we all had written
Som Lrvenllon, o native New
Yorlur. startl!d hill humorous obKrva·
lions on life, love and tM pursuit of
happinru at a tMCht!r in Brooltlyn.
That ~d him lllto ah.ow bl.l.8iMu, and
M made hu notionwi.de dt'but as a TV
~rsonality on lM Ed Sullivan •hew.
lk ha.a writkn se~raJ boo••· Hu
l.ouet, You Can Say That Again. Sam!
is an anthology of h~ choiu wit and
wi..dom.
t • F~llY WEEIU.'I', ~ ........ ft, \11'
phone numbers. cutting off about 30
young girls from possible dates.
Families with only sons had no need
to take in a phone. "Let the girls'
mothers get the telephones." Where
there were one or more daughters to
marry off, a phone was a necessity. We
had one sister. That was eo<>ugh to
force Mama's hand. (I had a personal
interest in getting Dora married and
out of the house. It meant l would get
a bed to sleep in.)
When we got our first phone. Papa
called a meeting to discus.s ways and
means of financing II. We agreed that
we would each pay for our calls on the
honor system. Papa cut a slit Into a
little teabox In the shape of a trunk,
then put a large lock over the latch or
the trunk. ''Whenever you make a call.
you'll put a nickel Into the slot." For
good will, Papa started us off by put-
ting two nickels Into the slot himself.
At the end of the first month, not only
did we have a blll for $4.82, but Papa's
two nickels were missing,
We had to teach Papa how to use the
two-part telephone. "You put this thing
to your ear and this thing to your
mouth." Completely bewildered. Papa
asked, "And with what should I talk?"
He eventually learned to use It. but
he thought that the farther away the
penon with whom he was talking. the
louder he had to talk. The day he called
Jersey City two fire engines showed up
at our house
Even In those days there was a com-
mon practk:e of calling yourself long
dlstanee on a person·to-person basts
when you were away from home
llwm your family knew you had ar-
rived safely. So when Papa went to visit
his brother In Canada, we got a long.
di.stance telephone call from Montreal.
Mama plcked up the receiver to hear
the opera toT say, "l have a long-dis..
lance person·tO·person call from
Montreal for Mr. Hyman Levenson."
"Thank God," said Mama. and hung up.
At first, our phone didn't get much
action, since most of the people we
knew didn't have phonu. and the same
people never dreamed that we oould
have one. But It wasn't long before the
neighbors found out that the Leven.
sons had a telephone and calls started
to come In. We became the mes.sage
.servlc-e for the entire building. wlth
Papa as switchboard operator. We had
to devls.e a code for calling different
people lo the phone. If you knocked
on the steamplpe once. that was for
Mrs. Bums, twice for Mrs. Gordon.
three times for Mrs. Brown. (If we
didn't get Mrs. Brown at least we got
steam.)
"Harold Upstairs" (as distinguished
from ''Harold Downstairs") and I de-
veloped our own code: One bang on
the pipes for ''A." two for "B." The
mght I got four bangs Papa said. "Tell
'Harold Upstairs' to watch his lan-
guage.''
We got our quota of complaints from
the neighbors. "My daughter got a
phone call from a feller la.st Sunday
night, and you weren't home. You want
she should become an old maid?" Mr
Hessel, on the other hand, had a fight
with the operator-insulted her-and
the last thing we heard him saying was,
"What do I care? Pull out the rotten
telephone.'' Papa had to apologize first
to the operator, then to Mr. Hessel.
One evening Papa got a message for
"first-floor back" to the effect that that
lady's daughter had just given birth to a
boy. This was cause for a general cele·
bratlon In the building. 1he news zig-
zagged back and forth through the
building like a streak of lightning
(rom flrs1·floor back to second-floor
front to third-floor back to fourth-floor
front to flfth.(loor back and then down
agaln, touching every apartment ii had
mlssed on the way up. And the ne1gh-
bot-s au came to our kitchen to hear
Papa make the announcement again.
Mama took out the cake and the wine.
and there was much "Blessed Be God"
and klssll>g and crying and congratula-
tions. It cost Papa about $30 before we
found out It had been a wrong number.
Since Papa was so busy taking care
or the neighbors, we left our own per·
sonal messages to Mama:
"Ma, were there any calls for me
today?"
"Yes. There was a call for you."
"Who called, Ma?"
"I wrote It down on a piece of paper
so I wouldn't get It WTong. Last time I
made a mistake. lt' s spelled T ·r-c-p-1-m
with an 'S'"
''Trcplm-s? What kind of crazy name
is that?"
"Don't blame me, l don't pick your
f rle.nds. Maybe It was Eddie."
"Eddie? Ma. I don't know no Eddie."
"So why does he call you If you don't
know him?"
'Think hard, Mama, please. It may
be Important. Maybell was Teddy?"
''Teddy? Teddy Isn't a girl's name."
"Oh, It was a gltl? Then it must be
Betty."
'That's right, Mildred."
My brother Mike called home late
one night:
"Hello, Mama? This ls Mlke."
"Mike? Mike Isn't home." And she
hung up.
He called back "Mama. thi.s Is Mike.
Listen carefully."
"Mike Isn't home!'' And she hung up.
He called again. "Ma. please listen.
Don't hang up. I don't want you to
worry I'm stuck In the office. I have to
work overtime, and I don't know what
time I'll get home tonight I don't want
you to worry."
"All right. I'll tell him when he ,_
comes home." And she hung up. ~
"'°" ...... Col ..... Aeoord AT.,. auo now ......... lo bur 1 MCMe ••l•ctioM (•t ,...._ Ctub pttoee) In IM coiNnt a,...
Choose from almost 300 -
exciting selections on
the following 3 pages ...
Get a lot
of music.
Go a little
crazy.
•
•
Takeany11
• •
This is the beginning of a fling.
A crazy fllng.
A fling filled with music.
The music you love most.
More music than you've ever been
able to get at once.
Part One of the fling: you go over
the list of albums on these 3 pages.
And you choose the 11 yo.u want
most. Then mail the coupon.
Part Two of the fling: your 11
records or tapes arrive in the
mall.
This, of course, is the part
where you really go crazy.
You can tease yourself and
play one a day. Or you can
play them all at once in the
most incredible concert
you've ever had in your
room. You can Invite good
friends over to share the
fun. And, of course, you can
play them again and again
and again.
11 hlt'albums for $1.00, plus
shipping and handling. A crazy
idea, perhaps. But it can happen
to you as a new member of the
Columbia Record & Tape Club.
Make it happen now ...
----------------------------------COLUMBIA RECORD 6 TAPE CLUI , Terre Heute, lndlene H111
I em enctootno ell eek 01 money order lor 11 M II"" a St 00
tor my 11 selectiont plue 9&c tor 1t\l~·D1no encl henclllnQ)
PIHi" occePt my 1ppl1cellon unclet tne terma outllnecl in
t~ • 1dv1rt11ement t eoru to buy 8 more H leellone tat reg
ulat Ctut> prtceal tn IP'I~ n•.1.t 3 year• •nd m1y c 1ncel
memo1ren1p any 11me etter dolnQ eo I em lnter .. ted tn 11111
type ol reco1dtno (CHECK ONE ONLY):
8-Track Tap.. L AHi TapH 5CP/WB
l Tape CaHaltH [] Record•
MY MAIN MUllCAL INUAl!IT ti (check one):
(But I em •l•.,.Y• 1r .. to chooH from •ny cete1101y) r IE81J Llotenlno 2 n Tun Hitt T r 1 Cla11tcel 1
0 CounlrJ 5 (no reel tePH ) n Jan• (no IHI llDH)
§.,,
Mf't. ., ............. .
( MM ~r1"1J ,.l•t~ N•~•
'•'· , ........... .. .........................
o". . .. . . . .. . . .................. .
s.... . . . . . .... " . . .. .. . . . it, ~ . . . . ...... .
Oe \'eu Ha,.. A Tele,hene? (Check lflll 0 US.. .Q NO
Send rn• 111111
11 11tectlon1
r l Aloo Hrfd my nr11 Hlectlon al •
50% dleeounl, tor which t om 1110 oncloolng oddltlonol p1yment ol '3 ~O
(record) or S3 00 (t•o•) I then need buy only 7 more oetectlono 111 rbguler Club
prlcH ) In the nut 3 yHro
IJI 517
~---~~~~-
tapes or records-S1.QQ
... '°".....,..-to bur•...,... .... ~<•......., cw. ,nc.) •..,.Mat a,...
S1mc>1y m..i trie apphc:etion card, together Miii check
or money enter for 11eeue>eyme<'ll111\111s11 00 for
yOUf 11,,t 11 MlectlOl19. plue 8eC for lhtpplng and
nandllng)
EV9f)' four...,.-. (1311~ a ~ar) you U r-ive tM
Club 1 music meoazine. whtefl deeertbea tile s.i.c:tion
of the Month for MCfl mualcal ''"'"' ptua hundredl of alternllln from ftv«Y llel<I al mualo In eddltiOn, uo to ... ,,,,_ a veer yOU rrwy ,_Ive off4H'I al Special
Selectione. .._ity at • dlecount otf reouler prlcee
It you -h to _,,. the Selection ot the Month or
the Special s.lec11on, YoU Neddo nothing-II will be
shipped eutomlllk:ally If YoU prefer an alternete ..
lectlon. or none Ill all, •mcify f~I in the r•POnN card a1-va prO\llded and mall It by the date IC)eelfted
'lbJ will al~ haw et 1-.t lO c:111Y9 In which to
make your oaclelon If \IOU ~ r-kle any Set~
lion WlthOut having had at lee.t lO 0eya IO d9cide. )'OU
may return It at our exe>e,.., '°' fvtl credit
'ltlur own ctulfV• account will be oe>ened the -lectlone you order wtll be malled and billed at the
regular Club prleea. which CUf~ly are 8-track taC>M
and CMMll•, le.98 0t 1798, r .. 1 fapet. '798, rec·
Ofdll. a& 98 or te.98-e>lua ltllpplng alld h•ndllno
1Mul1iple unit Mitt and Double Se4ec11<>n1 may be
110meWhet l'lloher I
After comc>le11no your enrollment 11Qreemen1 (by
buying 8 Mlectlom within 3 yeen). )'OIJ mey canoe•
mef'llbenlNp at any time. If ycu decide to continue.
you'll be etlgjble tor our oeneroua ~
bol'l111 plan. So act nowt
NOT'fc:• ....... -............... Mlle...... ....__ .. ,.... ........... ,,. "''
" .. cant ............. ......,.., ... "" Mtow I°"',._ .... di-> ti> loM .. Cll6 eM ... p0W 11 '9COfdl ot ......... Oii lM Mlrt,... • • • .
roowniiE~~o~~-c:W;--------------
1 ................. ,1111 ....... ,, .......
I am eN:IOllng eNc:k or money order for SUMS (wtllch
lncludn St.00 lorthe tt Mlectlon• lndlcal9d here, plu1
MC for shipping and hendllng). Pie ... ecC8ilt my mem--------..i beralllt_~lcatlon under the t8'1M outlined In ttll• edwrt t .. I egrwe to buy eight more Mlectlon• (at
regular CM> pricee) during tM coming ttiree yura ---------r and may csncel tnembef'lh~ lll'IY time after doing eo.
I -ln ... 111 •la U. ........ t"9 ..........
lCMECK ONE O•Y): -------4
0 I-Tr.di T..-0 "884 T.,_ !SCl"/Wtl
O T..-Ct t ... 0 ........
llY .,. llUSICM. ,.,......,. .. c-.. _,:
(Biii I -alw•,. ''" to chooft ''°"' .,,., ~I O t..,~a D T-Ml'91 o c.....1
0 C-lry I (no reel lllPM) O ,,_ • (no _, 1eoe1)
§;.;.;;.o····· ... ;.;.·~·········i;..-.w··········~~···· ______ __,
...................... ············ .............. ~: ........... 1-----..-----r
Gt., •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• ---------1
--····································· .a.c. .............. --------1
.. Y• ..... A,...,._., !CJi1ote -· 0 YO ..•... Q • uo. '""· ........ ,, ..... ,._.. ~.,. ,_ .....w.,. . ..,..,.,
~ 2IO MOre 11t1ctw Wiid
COii ........... Oft ..... " ......
Any11tapes
or records-~
TOii T. IW.L nma I --PAULAHKA FEELINGS
BOOKS AMD COOKS/By Marilyn Hansen
Graham KerrS fAokbook,
"The New~,.,.
·Graha m Ken ach ieved worldwide renown through his
television series. The Galloping Gounn~OP says Food Editor
Marilyn Hansen. loday, Graham and his wife Treena live on a
Christian ministry ranch called Rejoice Fellowship:"
p
The Ktn family al &joi.c~ Fellowalaip.
CREAM Of LETIUCE SOUP
2.-11rpaaN....,
2l.....,QL'M ......
1 ................. rtneed ...
CGre r•1111 lld
1 ... Clft6clR. ....
"' ~ IA-purpoM "°"' 2 cupe "c:ootAng .-nt"•
2 c:..-c:Mctllllt .....
2 ..... ..,.
F,_..,, ground _,. or 1 .._po°"
C09rMult Ff911111r ground wNte ,..,,.,
D•soilll
1. Separate freshly rinsed lettuce Into
le.sves; place In large. heavy sauce pan
with 2 tablespoons water. Cook over
medium heat, covered for 6 minutes.
l. Place butter In another pan on low
heat, stir In onion and let cook until
soft, about 8 minutes. Stir In flour,
making a roux. Cook 3 minutes, stirring.
1 Stlr cooking mlJk Into roux and add
~ of the ch.k:ken sb:k.
•· RemoYe cooked lettuce from pot, puree In a blender, return to pot and
add soup. Add retNlinlng chkken stock
and cook whne sttn1ng f« 7 minutes
or untU thickened. Sea.son to taste with
salt and pepper.
S. Strain lettuce "iOUJ> thf'CIU!ti a sieve
Into a soup tureen and serve at once
with a dusting of dlllweed.
MaU. 5 cupe. 4 ae:ruin1•
•Cooktng milk: Blend l qt. ml9' made
from Instant sldm-mDc powder and 1
ql of regular milk. use 2 cups for
recipe.
S1\JFfED SOURDOUGH
MEATLOAF
1 c1o¥e 9lfl1lc. ctta11p9'11
1 ......... °"'°"' cftottped 1.-11.,a•MlilllcMwol
1 lb. ...., dw.:i pp Id Of ha MI 9"0Uftd M9f "' .............. 1 tltlt .. DMt C:..-,.,...
,.~.,~
~ C:-.""'°'
11ir•pa•or...,.o....,_
1 ICMlf IOWdough ot Frend\ blMd, eout .... , ..
2 ........ a DI• llulllr
2. dolea a-lie, c-..-S
l . In large skillet. sauta 1 clove
chopped garlic and onion ln oU; cook.
stirrtng 5 to 8 minutes until golden.
!. Add beef and cook until meat
changes~; drain excess fat from
pan.
1 Add tomato paste; cook l»"ltil It be-
gins to brown. Add chiU powder, sov
sauce and water.
4. CoYer, reduce heat to low, and slm-
mer 30 minutes. Add oregano.
5. While meat simmers, remove center
from bread loaf by hinging back the
top and spooning out the bread Leave
about ~-Inch wall aJI around.
6. Melt butter; add 2 cloves of garlic
and brush on Inside of loaf.
7. Spoon ln chill mixture and cover with
Hot Bean Ores.sing.
8. Replace top of loaf. Heat at 350" F.
for 20 minutes until loaf Is brown and
crusty. Cut diagonally to serve.
Make• 6 u ruin1a
HOT Bf.AN DRESSING
1 cup dried red kldnilf .,.....
1 (1 2 on.) amoked ham hock, bone In
4 lllcee beccwl
1 Medklm °"'°" 1 ''lblxp:an cNU powdef
Mi c-.eour~ 1 ........ ,... .,...... dlllU ,....,
2 •ntita ap a a.•~ tw.lld mnd butW
pkllloe
I. Soak beans In cold water for 24
hours; drain. Place beans ln clean fresh
water with ham hod< and bring very
slowly to bolling (should take about ~
minutes). Now reduce he.at.~ and
simmer for another 1 ~ hours untJI
beans are tender. Cool beans In stock.
!. OlOP the bacon finely; peel and
finely dice the onion. Fry bacon and
onion together.
1 Stir ln chill po-..vder and continue to
fry for one minute. Add the drained
cooked red beans; stir gentJy.
t . Pour on the sour cream. and cook
over a low heat for ~ minutes more-
unttl the beans have practtca)ly ab-
SOl't>ed the sauce.
5. Serve hot or cold with chopped
pickles and chill peppers stirred In at
the end. Or pickles and peppers can be
served in small separate dishes to be
added by the indMdual at the table.
~: This ls a general recipe that can
be used to spice up other dishes, es·
peclally Mexican or Spanish one.s.
Malee• 6 .auin1•
,,.. H-S.•onlne 1$7~•1 le pUbll~ 11y a1-11 •nd Scflvllef Mid''
dltlrlbu!M lly ''-"'"" H ...... II Co .. Old Ta~. N.J.
,AMllYWE£1ClY. ~l>e1ft,117'1 • 1S
~ SPECIAL OFFER TO OUR READERS
linit one cartridge with
coupon from this ad only
NEW BORDERLESS PRINTS
Offer ends June 30. 1977
,-------------~--------~-~ ~ We uae Kodak .,..,er. O t«N.IOLAND PttOTO. ,.,.,
I 0 Here ia ~ cartridc• of 12-uposure Kocblcolor I I f,.. film. I am enclo.Ln, S 1.00 with thl .. peclal coupon. I
I 0 Here ia ~ cartrid(e of 20·exJ)09Unt Koct.color I I / ~-t (tlm. I am encloeins $2.60. ~ ~ I
: P~ P11J1 I undentand f~unie will be credited. .Ii ~ \ :
I lltlnoi9~ l-~~ I
I ~I .~~ I
I ~~~ I
L OTY STATE ZIP f WtHJ ----------------------------
ORDER BY MAIL OR PHONE-USE '«>UR MASTER CHARGE OR BAN<AMERICARD
HUNOM.DS OP SMMMERING • MOOMJT" ISEAOS OP
LIGHT SHOWER YOUR ~ .. DAZZLING SPLENDOR
Exquisite 61Rose Garden" Fountain of light
DECORATOR LAMP
• -• foot tlll--(........, ....... _...,
• fOl'llO• .._.of hot ....................
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i-1oot1a1ne
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•llr81r~1
Striking decorator
noral arrange111e11t by
NY and the lftGet ...
oiling lftood llghtlng -r created by nl(lllll
E--not lft. ft -doon any ,_ wlllt ro-
..._ Two 918'11 5" wlM
lftUttf4eyeftd -4hN -rt• INljMtlc:ally.lr-a Jet bledr be•, llanlied by .... 11dlng toll
II'"" ••-• end golden acc:anbl.
Soetlna ''°"' c:an1er ot .. ch cryml-llu ,_ are hundr.d• ol wl1py whit•
m-ta. O•~ room -.,.. .. "on" "'"di -and be p<eperad lor • vlauaf a•partenca truly brHt/ltalUngl Your
r-le ~barded by a btllll.,t •~· er ol gllt1er1ng. ehflftmerlno "llrelllH " T tVIY epactecular •• • dinner P9"l' oente<i>I-. UMt two "C" batter1N
(no4 Incl). ,..,._.__ ..........
A.a. ST.• UL.a M.11
Special Sale Off er for Collectors
AUTHENTIC J MUSEUM-PIECE
REPLICA RARE MEOIEV AL
CANDLE
CLOCK
INVENTED BY
"AlfRID THE GREAT!"
• Worb uactl1 u It did bl
-A.D.I
•Rud-crafted. b-6-WMtlin-
M a. -'at-look real pJM
woocll
• Blaow• llaare ln botla Roma.a a Anblc DWHr ... I
• Elepnt bl.eek wroapt Iron ...... caa.u. II.older!
ONLY
s399 FULL p()()T
TAJ.JrOVB• ,,,roar
WJDBI i..re I• en .. cll"'9 COl\J'ftMtlOD111-and rich dec-L-----t .... -t 10< fOllf "-or ofncet Ulad tllrouotiooit the Middle •llM bf the Notdlc Md Anglo-Suon countrl ... 1111 lnwntlon 11 credli.cl to ~Ired the 0,...1. The ptlnclpl• -prtMltl\'9, bul IT
WORK£0 111et1 end It WORKS -· M "ti .... candle" burne, II cMta en ever~llangln11 e!Mldow on the pfeQUe behind II ... lllng llM hcMlr of IN d1yl Ancient perctwHnl tool! eohle..cl on lite time pleqve ldde to Ille authenticity ol Ihle u c•r.tlonal piece cle1llned to be a provocative ,_, point wherever It 11 paced. il'IOludH bot/\ oanctte lllld in.tNOll-1
l imited 1upply, 10 order now. 14111--CeM!e C'°8ll . . • . • . • . . . . . . • . . • .•• f'eo.16.tl Ml.a ....
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CARRIES ALL YOUR lRAVEL
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Deluxe Folding VIHI _bl,_ c:ar?y-ot> convent.nee "'"" epecl-c:any ... 11 Wfntlllty. faM>aQ!no, f11ll-l9flClll\ IMer OOfllOMment hotd1
2 e11llll or dr ..... ..,,,,.,..,,... on locUd>-ln llengera. S....,,. zippered
pcxiOll-llll• C0111pet11Mnta hold ahl rta, utlderweer, ahOea, •CCMeorl•. toilet ertl~verythlno lor O¥emlgtll or elCl•rwled ttlpe, Even peolced
to btlm, nulbl• llollt....iQht V•l•t 11111 loJd• In Mii to c:atry II*• • IKlatoaHI
Valet 11 Of.tied In eouff·and-ltaln -1•111'1 vinyl wit!\ fool! .. o tutur•
of tu.uri-i..tlter. HNvy-~luty zippers, nigged dlromad ena119 artd
IMtenera, doubl•llllck -tor1-arlp llandlM end reinforced 111r ... polnte eftellre ,..,,. of .... l•bl• Mn'lce. Avalllll>I• In dMp 111~lored brown or 11rtkln9 navy blu.. T.-1 ........... •tme, .,_•Mall ... Aeg.t211.91MU!lt4.•
Oo ecuy eurciaes while you sil a1td rft4'C ! Trim and firm ~ waUl and /Ups ... WiJlaoul $l~IWOW exm:ile!
STAY-AT-HOME
PED-A-BIKE
Puta your ....... time end momenta
of~ to good UMI •
•
I
f
Now you OM pedeJ-1out41y to a ,,_ fMlln!I ol pfty91oel ni-1 0o
Ihle wtlll• refulng .•. •aldlln9 TV . • ~ • •JI! 811 In yOUI' llYOrll• ollalr and pedal lo • trl,.._r •.. 11,_r ..• lftOf• 1ttnc:H ...
)'Olll fl'• lde•I fOf -~• FOf lege, w1l1t, lllpe, you IMlt llleur• u-end 111-11 of relu.alloo to toocl -WITHOUT l"9 nMd lo< •U.-eQfetM . .allle rtd!ft9 he1 lfwllY'I lleetl a llraklte ,_ of
conditioning •• ..ii • • llln • .,, to refu. Now you cen heve 111 of II• ~l'lte .. • •lthout 8f11 of the dlMdnnt .... Of weatller, NMclaJ d-Of Ille tl--.day. Pteted l\lbuler ""'with n-llp rul>Oer ttllt*I ende. Appro1d1111tety to"' 11 "" lnc"411 wide. Ped1l1 ,,. .. ch
7 lnollee long. °"'11 llAY llOT ea lllNATID TMl8 IMAIC*I We urge YOll to
order tlpht l'IOW to wold dlNPC>Olnln>ent. Onlera wlll be filled on 1
111111 o-. flret .. Mid Hll• 11141-oftei' _, noc be 19pa1ted "''' ..-. -..,._ ".... • .. · • · • • • • • • • • ............ Aeg ... ,91 IALI M.•
USE NJUURE'S C1NN BODY
MASSAGE & CLEANSING MD
• GIVES YOUR SKIN THE GLOWING SENSUAL
LOOK OF YOUTH!
•ENJOY lNYIGORATIHG MASSAGE!
Woltdrout Lllffa. fie ...Curet n11et ..... clotll, 11 betoved by lftll·
lloN lor tcnibblno .. .,, dry tlelly •kin. lor lnvtgorellno, tlngl~
-.... end 1111-r body ~1119. Thfl ·~ 9P0ft09,
• llllr•cl• of l'llblre. It partk:ulerlY elfectl,.. In bullt..,p, rMlirtMt "herd ekln" a,... 1uch u elbows, hfflt end kl'ludllee. 01-
• tebulou. gtowt VfffJ In llN Oflenl '"' oem11rtee .... fld In lnfemallonl/ ll/Jlury epu/ l llffa Wonder Ped• .,. mlde of ell-natural fiber from • m-ber of IN C41cumber flfnlfy, eun dried end 1ll1119d Into
p1dt. They 1 .. 1 and lut hold loeda ol eud1, won't •beotb din or odors, rlnae CIHl'I, dry In MlnutH. Our l••I ell/pmenr .old
a.It 1-dl•lll'f. Order now lor tlngllng M11111941 end H llny
1moolll ekln. Set of 3 Luff• padt wllll h1ncly heng-toopa.
LMNll ,. .. •t ........................ Rq, S2.918AUIUt
ALIO AVAILAllL.2 ,OA UM WITH PADI
L¥fle ,ltctleft Oii wllll Vllff!IN A..-I •1tl14 ..... Oltly 11 ... U.... .. _...... C.-wt• V,...._ A aM a 111171 ..,,, U .•
PIOllPT SM.,..,.-.----IWl llO.-J-IACl .. UIAllTU COWO. l'Olln'---...
GREENLAND STIJDIOS
129460rMnland Bldo.. Miami, Aorkfa ~St
Please rueh me Items as checked below with full
Money-Back Guar111tee If not delighted. I enclose
check or m.o. for $, ____ _
_Rote Lamp(•) •14149 @.S..99 + 95¢ p&h ea.
_Folding Valet Travel Bag(a) @ $14.99 + 95¢
p&h ea. _Blue •17819 -8rown •9~
_Lutfa Pads Set(•) •14458@ $1 .99 + 50¢ p&h ea.
_Luffa 011 (8 Oz.) •16674@ $1.99 + ~ p&h ea.
_Luff• Creme (2 OL) •18675@ $2.99 + 50¢
p&h ea.
_c andle Clock(•) •14118 @ S3.99 + 75-p&h ea.
_Ped-A-Blke{a) •9993 @ S..99 + 95¢ p&h ea.
On Ofden Oftt 15.00 fOU mar dwl1ge IO:
O Maeter Charge• O BankAmerlcard
Exp.
----------J/Jat•----Acct. tt
Signature:
• 11 111ln1 Ml1llr Cll•rs•. 1nc11e11t
t1le '°"' ..uM111t1 o..r Mme ~••• -----\
atat., ___________ __....,.. ___ ....;:..r_
(N.Y. l Fla. reeldent1 add H IH tu.)
P'flel 14 HOUtt PHONe-IN ~ lor our cherge card
cu1tomera. CALL TOLl FAE~ {Minimum order Jt2.) !Ile:
327..es&t ; Fla. c:u1tomere t-90CM32·11m. CAU ROWr ______________________ .... ~-·
Quips & Quotes
A TIDVSPEU..
I've just been throu1h a tidy spell,
I tell you ira a uerity.
I've sorted out the things to keep,
The thin1s to five to charity.
I've sorted out my ties and belts,
I 've sorted out my shirts,
I've 110rted out my coata and slackll-
To part with some it hurts.
I've &orted out my ah<Ha and socks,
I've $0Tted out my ahorts,
I've sorted out so much, in foct,
That now I'm out of M>rts.
Why bitin1 doga don't bark: They figure
that action apealu louder than wor<U.
-Frank Ty,er
"My husband didn't leave a bit of insur-
ance," the widow complained
'Then where did you get 1hat gorgeous
diamond ring?'' asked her friend.
''Well, he left $1,000 for his casket and
$5,000 for a stone. This Is the stone."
-Conrad Fiorello
A comic re{>Ol'U: "I'll tell you how bad
the amog i1J. La1Jt week I ttaw the blackbird
of ltappiM83 " Robert Orben
By Frenk Beglnekl
LfTTlE EMILY
'AMILY W££1CLY, 0.CeMl>er 2t, 1t78 • ta
FROM FRENCH SCIENTIST'S PRIVATE FORMULAS
Cosmetic Chemist develops home treatment that
Wipe$ away blackheads
and clears problem skin
IN JUST MINUTES A DAY
By Renee Bouchard
Beauty Consultant to Malson Cher
If you do nothing else today,
please read these few para-
graphs. They are vitally Important
If you have problem skin.
Recently In Paris, I saw demon-
strated a simple home treatment
that really wiped away black-
heads, healed blemishes. tight-
ened pores and made skin softer,
smoother and younger looking.
Results were almost breathtaking.
In fact, I saw these dramatic Im-
provements after just one treat-
ment. With teenagers I saw
pimples and blemishes virtually
dry up and disappear Immediately
and with older women I saw com-
plexions firm up and beautify with
a smoother, tighter, more youth-
ful, almost baby-like look.
AMAZINGLY SIMPLE-YOU
DO IT YOURSELF
"MAGIC" STEP NUMBER ONE
After removing all makeup thor-
oughly, you start the treatment by
rinsing your fa ce thoroughly with
warm water. Then you apply a
special formula drawing lotion to
the affected areas, now you sim-
ply relax. Within minutes, you can
actually feel the blackheads. skin
impurities and pimples powerfully
drawn to the surface by the gen-
tle emolllent action. You then
gently massage with fingertips for
just 10 seconds to literally wipe
away the loosened grime end Im-
purities and you are reedy for ...
TifE SECOND "MAOIC" STEP
Now you apply the amazing new
Protein Menthol Masque with your
fingertips and leave on just 10 to
15 minutes. You wlll actually feel
the masque close the pores and
tighten the skin. Now the "magic"
ingredients go to work eliminat-
ing redness, reducing swelling of
blemishes and leaving skin soft,
moist and radiant. The secret of
this special masque Is that it con-
tains no harsh alcohols or Irri-
tants but that it does contain
lmportent Facta
About Our ProdUc:te
M1ny leading 1alon1 In the United
States ind Europe aell facial care
products almilar to Ot.lrs but at
double or triple our price•. Thia
i. 1lao the fira1 time the9e Malaon
Cher akin care product• have
been 1vai11bla at 1ny price and
theae product• are so new In U'9
United States, thlt they are not
av1llable In your neighborhood
drug1tore-only direct from
"Malaon Cher."
protein that nourishes the skin
and special anti-bacterial and an-
tiseptic Ingredients to promote
purification and healing. There,
that's all there Is to itl Believe It
or not, you're finished as you sim-
ply rinse the masque off with
warm water.
RESULTS ARE THRILLING
Many men and women will find
the results hard to believe. Even
those who have had problem skin
for years will see a "miracle" hap-
pen In front of their very eyes.
Skin will be more beautiful even
after just one treatment. And with
3 or <4 treatments a week, you wlll
see a really remarkable complex-
ion Improvement. After that, a sin-
gle maintenance treatment weekly
Is probably ell your skin will ever
need to keep it clear of blemishes
and glowing with a healthy and
younger look.
See Marked Improvement
After Only One Treatment
UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED
Our guarantee is that you must
see and feel a marked Improve-
ment even after just one treat-
ment. Some of your skin blemishes
and blackheads must be removed
and all must be removed with fur-
ther treatments or every cent
you've paid will be refunded In
full.
-MAIL NO-RllK COUPON TOOAY-
TO: MAllON CHU, IM., l>ept,12947
4IOO N.W. 1HU1 It., MIMlll, f\e. noN
Pi. ... Miid -my Ce>mPl•t• M4IJ1on Cll9r 111.olthHd Alld Slr.fn 111.mllh R1111oval Kit,
lncludln'I LAborlCoty TMtld Dr1W111, L~ !Ion 1n Proi.ln Men111ol M••-· .,..
cio .. c119clr. ot m.o. lot a or
char11• my onler 11 lndlcllld Htow.
Ch•olr. 1111 d•1lr•d:
0 M.96 "'0Ular l lH •86607, •nougll IOI 20 1t111m1n11 at , .. thi n t5f each.
(PIHll IMld 6&f !Of pol l. I h1ndl.)
0 et.85 I erg• .oonomy •la. • IHOt, enough for 40 trHtmenie al i.11 Ulan t., .. oh. (You .. ,,. U .M.) 1r1 .... add e6f tor 1>01t. I halldl.)
PIH" charge my·
0 Maat., Cf\1•119'; O ll•nlr.Attl•rlo11d bplr,
Acct Ho.-----Dale -
81gnalure --------
'M11l1r Ohar1111. lndlc111
4 n11111be11 ·~ your name ..... _________ _
~
Cttr ..... _ --~-
H Y, end l'ta '"'-11 8dd Miff IU . .__
1:. ,: .. .. , ... . • • B • 1::1 ..
!Y!:1"f _. · V ._ 'f . •I, "! •
\,.,.!"!"''I t
U. 1111 ,_ .... IUMlltlU tw ,_ S ~.., ........ .., ... -... wtdt'I TV, lim.i•I t8 1111 ltefM •.. if ,. •'t N(iu ,_ wntli1lt tr. , .. ., Wlntllf Diil wua ... lt,. •
Ml -tnmt.c rt•lta •llMlfi TWO wuu ... 11,.. .... , ........ ..
Ill slJWlll1t ... m.1-. ...," min •I 19 u fw a 1111 ........ If .-dllee .,1ce, • ...a-...,.., .... u.t's
• ..,....i.IWitoact
fiUllftW PIODUCTS ,. ..........
......... tJ'D'I
. ---, ...... IWW~
I :r,:....., ........ tJ'D'I I , ............... ::;.;t.ttt1.94y ... ___ ,
I .• ~llfUTt SlllllLlllUGI ) •• 1111 ~· ....... ~ ... J.st11la(1119l'&1ll00ef llll .ni-~• ,ncell••a..JO
I ...... -""''" .......... ' .......... I llMtnlMlll tllft If ' I • ..C c_,lttely •hJll!tN 91111 1111 N'9IU 1t .,..... I .., relllnl
••• 11111 ............ ~ ,,.a ...... .u.. ..... , ~ ... I I IJ (lloil. ' .... IUI~ ... Ula ta.\.)
CllMllll "' I I g :::-g =.~ic:r Pm: a... I
I I Met. ... .., . llllla I
1::_ ·--u I I c;,, __________ I
Stlb I L.::---·• ..... ~,•9" ____ ..
THE fAIUlOUS lfit EIDCISEI JHArs TAIM
JHE HWJH AllD IWITf WOl10 If STOIMI
-~ llA&mlf Y YOU'I
809T .•. , ... W ,
SUM---~JJ....otw,
8llDUllANCI tOOlf
MIO HU
Y~llf
firm up and trim
your waistline
in5easy
minutes
a day ...
without
dieting!
dOBMANSHIP
How to Avoid the
"Gyp"'hde
Schools
If you are bored with your job~ hungry
for better-paying work, you have probably
thought that a good paying trade might be
the answet. Your next step Is to find a
reliable trade school. Jn a unique and helpful
book, lf Not Collete Whal? The Guilk To
Caru:r Education (Quadrangle Books. $8.95
hNdcowr; $3.95 paperback), Muriel Lederer
has collected and clearly explained all ~
ooukl need to know about 200 trades and
si<ills: how to learn them, what the 'WOl'k
opportLS\lUes and salaries are.. what kind of
person is most likely to en joy that work.
Omng her research, she di.sooYe:red the
signs of ugyp" trade schools that take yoor
money bot do not fulfill their promJses.
Wak:h out, for instance, If the salesperson
offers a Slbstantial discount on tuition In
·exchange for tnwnediate cdi payment, or If
he Insists you make up your mind immedi-
ately because "there are only a few openings
left" Be suspicious of a school that makes
extravagant claims for placement, yet seems
reluctant to release the names of graduates
you can talk to for recommendatlon.s. JI the
school dlsoourages your attempt to visit It
beforehand. ask why. Be on your guard If
the school promises a f abuious career In a
glamorous industry after onJy a few weeks
tralnlng, or if a private correspondence
oourse promises dipk>mas usually granted
only by colleges. Sure., you'U have the
"dtpkJma." but who will take It seriously?
Also. whe:n you read the words
"registered," "apprc:M!ld'' or "a<X:TedJted"
about a school. realir.e the words by them-
selves ~ nothing. 1ne question is: ap-
proved.. aocredlted and regtste:Ted by which
~ or group? Pmally, does the school
haYe a fair refund policy c:lt!arly :st.a.l.ed in
writing in iU bulletin~ Without one, you may
find you are legally obligated to pay the
entire tuition fee., everi if you drop the
course soon after It begins. Yoor local
Better Business Bure.au or Ownnber" of
Commerce can tell you whether any com-
plaints have been registered against the
school. And always ask potential employers
in your field if they would hire someone who
took that school's course.
Two free directories of reliable schools
are avallable upon request: Directory of
Accredited Priuate Trruh and Technical
Sclt.ooU, Natk>nal Association of Trade and
Technical Schools, 2021 L Street, NW ..
Washington. O.C. 20009; Direct«y of
Accredited Privak RorM Stu.dy Schoola.
National Home Study Council 1601 18th
Street, N.W .. W~lngton. O.C. 20009.
-S. R. Redfonl
1t e fA .. ILY WEEKLY, 0110111~ 2t, 1178
I
I
I
FAST PROCESSING OF
KODACOLOR
111 er 121-12 EIP.
l•llllESS
SIU FmSI
I .....
I KODAK....., tof ..........
!• •MILE
OllLY
150
: '"" I
-,.., _ ... : .... ,
, . r _ ...
L Ill. ... -----' ; ...... ..
RID YOUR HOME OF
ROACHES COMPLETELY
AND KEEP
THEM OUT
FORUPTO
RYE YEARS
...-.oasll009..-
0NLY'2.99 .,., '~ ,.,.,.__... ... ,.-
'"""' -• dHd l<Hlctl •ll•ln and n-r
-• llvll -ellher1 Thie llllcill"ll -pn>ducl complel•IY ellmlnat•• roac:hlls and walelbuga. They al"'Pfy c:an'I ,...lat Duo Off
Md II ~Ila them duel. Buo Off cantal.,. no
D.D. T. Md I• odOftM&, Neecle no llHllc:atllf.
you almc>IY ...-It "°"' Miii. · ev1 on ....... lte ldlltnt PGW9f Md wOftal el .... l'W up to 5 11111 ,._ to ~ reln!MUllon.
A 5 01. 1Upply le -pi. fot • 5 r-"-·
r:I ~~c:.:~~·,
,._ lad .. Ii. dllded IMlow. If I
.. 11111 dtli.Mtd. I.., reblnl for • -
I _.... ,.-... CJldoMd .. ~ • .... I
.... $
I -'"Loo •OKll Klllet 1•1309.:J tt $1.n. II I 11 .•a. Add ase posu,. 11#dtfnt.
,.__ I ,...,.. ________ _
I I c"' ___ _... .. --~ I tN 1' • "• ... w.nn... .+t ui.. ta•.I
If you order by mail.
~ says:
''P'lcue allow up to rour
wed.11 for delPtry when you Ofdcr by mail from Family
Weekly. Family Wcek.ly'a ads are
placed by reputable companies. The
Item. and c:opy are checked for
rcliabUily. Yet. unintenlion-1 delays
OCCUI, becaUlic l1-Jlda at ordcn
oome in to ow-advertilenl from all
over the~. We at Family
Weekly want 10 llSsilt you u much
II pc19iblc what tbele infrequent
ddaJI occur; 10 ii lhey do, jute lend me 1 card or letter. I'll i.mme·
diltely look into it." Write: Mary Ayra, Family Wttltlr
641 Lutnalon Aven~
New York. N.Y. 10022
Occult Investigator Claims Amazing
AVATAR POWER CHANTS
GUARANTEED TO BRING RESULTSI
• Make Others Obey! • Dispel Evil! • Bring Amazing Prosperity! • Bring Sudden
Winnings! • Repel Enemies! • Excite love after love!
"AVATAR POWER CHANTS WORK!"
Saya liNt lny·C*
CHANT TO PAY OCaTS 81U C, ol l oron10, CinJlda, wu IO far an dcbl, be 1.hdn'1 know .,.hicb way IO nun "fbe ~bl cullec1ou knock on my door a.od call me up al work rvery day," he MJd ··11·, ma.ktna me a nervous •r~:·
Bill C. 111\J1kd11tc(y uJoed lht CHANT TO r11 Y DE!n'S.
The nu1 day, he wa. 11•cn a check tor $650 by hll em·
ploycn-M a I&& rdund. A 1maU ...:1n1 bel pew1 olf S950.
An old an.ur~ p0l1<y paid him a caJh bonus Ht &QI a
!)e)' raue, ptid olf CYery dcbl-..nd looC a Y1'Call0n. (See
PP· n .. , CHANT TO WIN U:CA!. AC110N-Joh.n L. MXtdm-1~ b11 a llOff window wbco he IO$l conlrol ol bu car. "The
owou promptly ukcd for Sl5,000 ID damajpO'i. Bui John bad no tMUrana IN1cad. be uatd a C HANT TO WIN II
LE.GAL ACTION Thai •uy day, lho '10R owner w11hdrcw
hll complaJntl And John 101 Iha car flud frtt of char~!
CHA.Hr t'Oa SAfl:Tv SAVES L·lFI!.! Hush V , a
<lOQlfKlor from Lou"Ulll•. ~ aJ1•e today bccau>e he uxd
e special AVATAR POWEA CHANT. He WM drt•ina botne laie CM>c al1erf>OOI'. when enolhtr cu came ruarm1
around the bend un the wrO<IJ udc ut the roed In a Ila)!!, llusb uuaed I.tu• l HANT, and !ht Other car JU" natrowly mlS.Wd l11ml (Sec pp. 1 U -1>1 )
CHA.HT TO DC~ LOVE-Ma111.u W. ol Loa An-Sdft c~ "I'm 101AllY lonely." He waAl.cd IO ~now ii e C.HANT TO EXCITE LOVE would be.Ip bun. btuuw Ille: woma.e ol b" drums waa C0111Ple1<ly anddlfcrcnt lo hiBL Ocie Wiid aflet usini 11, Mariul ~rled: "Her lo•e tor
mt 1i a.lmc»I fntblcnrna I can nc"fer u 1 I'm loocly any
more.'' The C40l&»e arc matrted now. (Ste pp. n .... ) <.:HANT TO a£11t1 Nl>LI MATE'S INTIHlST-Quttnot S ...... lier huiballd cnlcr a ru1aurant wilh another
woruo. Sbe 1mmct1111ely ~ a CHANT TO R£1UNDLE. A MATE'S IN ff.RE~T. "/\Jl hour later1 m7 husban<I .,amc
home !Oot1n1 •cry wbducd,' Ille u1<1 "Hia CJ~ ht up when he ww nw. end lie er~ the room. boldttll ou1 hu
atm\ to me tic •cnl down on his 'ncc:s 'l'•e b«n •
fool.' h« .a.d . He ... mt as "" perfect woman •PIA and he ~ ne•cr Ith my Jl<lc .,nee .. (Set pp 191 -J )
l HANT TO 81UNC H~ALT\t Ken N , 56, wlltftd
web ~nrc ti.d pein. lie couldn't lifl en1th11'1 huv~r
lh4n a few ~-of kan doWft. Slttp"ll WU OUI of !be
qualtCJn-he'd •ah up uery 10 minutes. H.• doctor rec· u~ a U ,000 ocicret.on. "My back '4ancd IO ~
bcllcr af1er tbe lirM -will\ lbt Cl\an1 (LO Bnn& Hollh•," he •row Ha~ now c.,...~1<17 free of !)&In. "I
1.a11 ptar tolf, 1cnfln an11hlns. · he .. 1, "I'm a ttcw man IS« pp •• ) ) t.'HAl'O' TO WIN AT llACU-l•or D , I'°"' ()ucbtc
(. 11y, l:an6da. lo"C'd ll\e 1.ca. bul uwally wlfercd he .. 1'
~ a1 t"4 ln<k /\her urn11 a Cll/\NT TO WIN AT rift. RACES, he rc:pu<lcd "You re 1alk1ns lo a rtdl man.
l'~c ~ 00..lf\I a -I.Al, a color 'TV, a new uawmobdc
and I •e petd off evcr1 b<ll wtuch has b«n worr)i111 me tic jlo(lcd \&A w1nn111t l\onn 1n one clay at Ille 1raclt.
lie <Ofle1nuo IO ".tt 1h" CHANT. con.. .. cnll1 pock1n1 w1nnen. •nd the ca~ 1u•1 roll> 1n. 1n a Pd<n ftood (Sec pp 11 II)
(."ffANT TO cu•t ALCOHOLIC ~00)' v .. hu.1>6nd "'*' en ak:otlo!K' Fvuy pay day he d •prnd lhc famllY't
muM> Otl liq.,ot Penn) wu tn da!*•. bu1 '"" lncd a ( llANT T O CUR E. HE.R ALCOHOLIC HUSBAND
"Wuuld yuu bdtc•• lhal Ralph o«>ppcd d11nl1n1 lu" 1wo
day• alter I'd ul.td lot hC'lp.,.. w rt1>0ncd. "I • cllltk home .. ~ •. and he ha•n'I to<Kh a drop \lnc:c Ht .. ,, he no loft~t haa 1ha1 tcrtibk cruina for alcol\ol.'' (:5« pp.
14 1 I
CHANT trO• raontc noN f'll()M t:VIL-l i7 R . I
flJJna cle1k from Wai.btt'\&tofl, hail been cuncd by en c•il wnmen wuh 81ad M•aic. ShC' t0uih1 my b«lp becauw her
l1ndlmd had c•lcted her 10 1otl h111\er rent . . .tic lnod come
dnw11 wilh 1nnut11,. ..rid loo1 hC'r ~ ... and her too1lrlend
hll\I quarreled w11h hct and dt .. ppearcd. Liz u<cd a CHANT
FOR PMOTl-.C.'TION fROM F.VIL. Tlw vc1y nc•I day -'>t
Wll• ontred II bcll(rf' b. JH1yln1 ftwle# Whal ..t\t'd rccti•ed bc<f11rc. Her l1ndlu r cell~ and bcQ('d her 10 1ake the
apartme111 *k at a k>•u rr"'· Her boylncnd lelurned end 1polop1td And 'he iJ now h11'Pkr thin ettr.
(.'HANT f'OR A P4Y a41SE-Hllde F w .. IOOd 11 her iob. b\11 h9CI nucr hec-n ll•cn • raM. After two yol'I., ~
tell \M WM OW>rth more lh1111 $75 •...,.It a • m.eh1111 ~
enlor llvt each 1inw .n. u lled lier botil, he turned hc1
down. TI>e11 ahe uwd • CHANT FOA A RAISE!. Nc•t
lhl111 1he 11-. her bou wH t(Rlna lier "I'm ~ 1o •-'•
yovr '91&11 '° $193 and iivt 10\I In cha"" ol lhe -mbly
llN " Hilda al,,_. IM.titlc.d •heft '"" heard h1M ..... u~rina 1o lllllltdf, MNow what ma4c mt wiy 1h11r· Hilda r«iedved
her ratM and promotoon. (Sec p IOI )
Read hJs own worcb.
"A woman I know recently WIOlc IO me !hat, Iller Ulina an
AVATAR r<>WER C HANT FOil WINNING CONTESTS she won $1 ~000 tn • Stale Lollcry, Neat, ~tried m7 CHANT TO
EXCITr. WVE-end w11h1n e wccl mel a rich, handtome man and muritd bun She ~lld her hu.b•nd l\ad a Ut1.k 1roubk with a
dtShonesl compelJtor-.ht djd an A1tac1Lin1 Ch&nl and tbb com·
pclllDr wcnl b&11Lrupt l daJ• la1cr1"
AVATAR POWt::R CHANTS -•IL •.. il't as sunpk u lha1.
Merely by r~lm' e few -rcb, they ca.o bri"' you money, or an,y1J1111a die, o(lcn ns1anla11C10\lllyt
Tlw proof b my own c•pcrienc«. and the hundreds who IOld me
1hc1r. 1n my pb u a n~porur, tor ouch mapnnn b Fa,,, ltlhl· ,.,,,,,, and lhc H•tK>-1 £iumlnn. l'•e lollown Olhcn bow lo Ute
them now let met.how !hem IO YOUI
By u11n1 the same: /.VATAR POWER CHANTS. )'Otl IOO coukl allract a lot1unc . . b .. e money whtot•cr )'OU need it ..• a
bcllcr life ... lua11rln po'lolaMOM . ll\e lo•c of • matt . 1nd mudl more. lfa all 1n my book THE MIRACLE OF NEW
AVATAR POWER, youn to try withOul rnli.m1 a penny tor )0
days. I.At me t«U you mote about u
Mut.t ... Ant.II ..... Clim T• 111"1 Yll ....,,
Hub, Lnt, ...... ,.......... ... "',,.....'
You need no unuwal ll>Ulllnl IC }'OU can read a few simple
worcb. you're readJ to u>e AVATAR POWER C HANTS riabt
nowl Suppoac you wish 10 w111 a COfllal-lll\Y contest Ill alf-a
state lollery, lhc Ir~ S•tt'P'lakn. Tum to pqc ~r and 1ou'U
find a NEW AVATAR POWER CHANT FOR WINNING CON·
TESTS!
lmm&dlaldy alter l&•nt ii. Lynn 8.--a boutewtfc from Rtadina,
Entland, Knl m a lottcr)"coupon and -n $750,000! She .. tbc lint IO adm.11 II WO RKS i( utod col'ftellj. You'U ltlld
her own -rds in 1hc boa o n thb pap. • Elaine f'. uacd lhb C HANT to win $5,000 al roultllc In oet ~hlinJ. Joe P" of L.all\rop, Ct.litornla1 -n SflOO-.tbe day alter l ~huwtd IUm tlll& me1huJ-1n one of Inc b11 casinol an Reno.
Remember, you on U'.ICI the &ame CHANTI You'U find II rilhl
on peie 50 -•d-for--rdl Winnie 8 .. a l\ouscwlfe from N-
Jcocy, 1.a llvin1 proof 1hat anybody can win w111\ AVATAR POWER t:HANTS! Her lu~L •b t(rrible until I showed bu tlW
inc1hocl-and atw won U~0.000 1n !ht lrull SwcepoUltesl
"II WM M t.imp&e u lhat,'' w •rote IO me. "We'•e abo bad
b1c wuu at Tahoe end Meno . wlnninJ roulette We're liter·
"OI A-., Yeer ........ OcarwtUllll .... o.~:,._ .............. .
........ .. NMst let1Mtl11111ly ••• "
"" .... lny.(Mll
An you thott of MOtWl? ~ :rour lo•c·hfe duappoinl you? Arc )'OU a YICtim o poor het.lll\? Wlt.b New AYatar Power~ ••IJ h .. e • wa1 tu chansc y00r IJe a111 ...,. you .. ~ Ocot G1ay..Cobb. S.mply b7 repeatift& tlw wordt o any \pec1ftc AVATAR POWER CHA't'iT-1n
.okmn riltlal-a mq>C power i. IRYulted 1ha1 can brint )'OU
uec:tly whet you wan1.
AVATAR rowEA CHANTS can-·" any miracle )'OU wHh, ta)" Ocol Grey.Cobb. YCM11 lnteU1amce, tducatloe,
IHM:karound-nonc ul lhc>c ha•c an)' cftcct on )'Ollr NCY
Antu Puwer. AVATAR POWER CHANTS ddy c~·
nation\ n to why they wor\, -an lhb c•pcn, "Bui wo1k
lhty do!"
No mailer whclhcr you belle•• thac -rcb-e•cn It )'Otl
tot1lly d.:111their11ulh-AVATAJl rQWEA CHANTS can
and """' OW>rk for 1ou. yya lho upe11. Will you han io
•lruqlc lo make 1hcm war\.? Nol at all. In llCI, lhal would
01111 delay tilt r.,uhl, /Im llJf rlielfl-&a~ Geo( Oray-Cobb
end 1hcy can 11t1orn111ully brln1 rnuhs whhln d17s, or
c•en ho11ral Mo~y? No Pl'l>i>lcm to your New A•alat Powcrl Lova? U11t 7uur Power to duw IO _)'ou who mever you want! Hcahh? The AVATAR POWER CliANTS for Healll\ In lh~ bnok h1•e healed thouu ndt-c•en In 11ttmlntl1 llopc.. Ina ca.n ii.en them •lr<>nt. llcahl\)', yuullltul bodlft, wlrll
bo11ndlod> ptp and UlMI
"Y11 Ct.-Fd," He uysl
"You Mme II-and I mun thal Quhe literally and l'OUI
Ntw Aular Po wer will b1ln1 h 10 you," HYt 01of
Ciray-<:obb
You t a11no1 fall ... 1' thlJ upcrt, becauwi on« you he•e \lllCd yvur dt:Slrc-whclher for riches, hcahh, love, or ID)·
thine the-AVATAR POWER CHANTS brlna ii into rcali1y with al-. no furihcr effort on :rour pertl
IW'ROVUIUfT llOOtCI CO~ Dept. l2M4
1>* N.W. 4H1 Awa~ 0,. Lodi.a, Fla. aMH
1..U t'
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4.Yldlt a ......
l. ..... 1.---l.C*T.V.
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14. F1'Mea , .. ,.....
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a....ToWlftC......OlllNl90M..
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CtleM To Wlfl .\ 1.otM Adl4lll ... P999 M. ca.... '°' '"'4oclloll ,,_ht! Oft,... SI. ClleM To &etlo I.OM ... "9917. CIWlll To fl~ A llltllo'• ,...., ... Oii peee Ill.
°'9lll To 0 ..... ._,... .. _.....Oft,_.. to.
0.... To lkifll Hoellll Oft paeo 11. a..t To a"'°,_ o..r Otllofe °" paeo N.
C9l..e lo 9-MO A l"wrdllc ....... °" peeo 1 .. 14'1. CltMl To Obtain Oohl CHI ...... 1 .. 14'1. CMM l"Of OalllC 111..,-.-°" ,_.. 1•1 •
a.Uy rollin• it\ munty .. and ANYONE ELSE <:OULO DO THE
SAME!" ~ ...... ,
Why, I have peoonaUy -n and recotdcd bundre<b or tboc
mlradal You limply .,a11'1 btlic¥e ii until )'OU try llldc AVATAR
POWER CHAN1'>-jUM u Mike P. did. when ht 901 ri6 of bit cripplln• .,thrit11 o.,.,,.;,1i1-u1in1 1n AVATAR POWER
CHANT! J\1:91 like Quttnlc S. who -her htnb&nd back from a
1011nscr aJrl, in'"'""'"· uttna ano1bcr AVATAR POWER
CHANTl
l'M GOING TO SHOW YOU lhnc Clients . . \how you bow 8ob D .. won j $,000 111 a popular lotkry with en AVATAR POWER
CHANT :rou can ux, IOOI How h or D~ of Quc+tec C ity, Canada1 p;c\.cod Ilia .-innlna hone\ 1n "" raceo-ln ont day-and r~IN
the dernonW•llon m1ny Ii~ o•cr wilh AV/\ TAR rOWER
CHANTS! And aliU that'• jvM lhc bcaJMinl Simply by r~atint the wordJ o( any 'f'«lfk CHANT -i11
\Olcmn ril~-• maaic power iJ lnYOkcd thet can brtn1 you uaclly
what 10U '""" Sinccrdy youn ,
r----MAll NO RISI< COUPON TODAY!----.,
IMPAOV!M!JfT BOOICI CO., o.,t. 12M4 I
13490 N.W. 45th A .... Or>9 Loella, Al. UO!St 1 Ocntlemen: Ple1ac rn~ me e 0091 ot TIU! Ml1'ACt.E I OF NEW AVATAR POWER. •90169 by Ocof Oray.Cobl>.
I endow SJ.98 In lull p•~~nt. In addhlofl, I understand I
1ha1 I may t<umlnc 1hll book for a tun JO da71 cn1lrtly al I your r!K or money bllcL e..cto.d Iii cllcd or M.O. for I I
YOU MAY CHA•OB MY: I 0 MAST1!11l ('14Alll()I! 0 tANltAMHl('AlllO I A«'t # __________________ _
1111er aaftll , _____________ (f lft41bov1 I
E•l'l••tlOft 4oie of"" ur
NAM£
"DfllllEU
CITY
)'O\lf' ftame) I
I ,...,,,.t,,, I
I
I n An u, I
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• • 9 • p ..
Eapedally 'tor ya ltollday cwaeaten:
As part of the experiment to detennJne
the value to the human heart of pro-
longed exercise, pigs are jogging five
miles a day at the University of Cali-
fornia. No, not on the school track-
the black, hairless porkers are runnJng
on treadmills. 'The pig may not be the
most glorious animal. but Its he.art
structure is the most similar to a hu-
man's," explained Dr. Max Sanders. an
exercise physiologist at the university.
"In order to assess contlnulng changes
in their condition, half of the pigs eat
and jog. while the others "just sit
around all day, like most people do,"
Sanders said. The joggers are dMded
into two groups: one healthy and the
other with induced heart damage. The
results of the study will be released this
spring. Sanders worked previously wlth
dogs but found they are less useful be-
cause their capacity for exercise Is far
superior to that of humans. "You can
take the average dog on the street, put
him on a treadmill, and he can run for
two hours straight at a good rate,"
Sanders said. 'That's far longer than
any overfed, sedentary human-<>r pig
-a>old do. When we started working
with the pigs, they could only run a
couple of minutes at a time." After
training, however, the best-conditioned
of the healthy pigs is now running his
mUe in a neat elg>lt minutes..
THE CARDBOARD LEAGUE
Wlaat CM YCM1 say abcMd
•.l76Wtta?
8MCbal playcn ma be ""Y tOtldy
about the.Jr photos, and the Topps
BMeball Card photographers tn; to
depict them at their best, though as
Sports Card Director Sy Berger says.
.. You can't make a sill< purse out of a
sow"s ear " As for player statistics, un-
fortunately, those too just can't be
changed. ''YOU don't know the agony
of trying to think up something nice to
say about same guy who hit .176 last
year and made 25 errors,'' Berger
laments. 'What can you say-This guy
stinks'?" Everything ls done as fairly as
possible, and most of the players
wouldn't expect preferential treat·
ment, anyway. Ju.st being on a baseball
c.vd Is enough, and some would ap-
pear there '°' love alone. "It's like the
actor or movie star who makes It to the
top and gets his name up In lights on a
theater marquee." Berger says, 'When
a player reaches the majors and gets
hJs picture on a baseball card, he feels
he has made It I've had many of them
tell me It was one of their biggest
thrills." (From TM Great Amaican
CMwm, Gum Boole, by Robert Hend-
rickson, Chilton, $9 95).
11 • FAMILY WUl<lY. ~ llt, 1179
••SUPERMAN" READY TO FL V
Br-SO Set to Star; m.d • ...... t..e?
Ouk Kat. = rrel rqMWtia
for a great metropoUtan newspaper, ls
back in the spotlight In an upcoming
1977 multimllUon-Oollar Superman film
extravaganza. Already signed for the
cast are Marlon Brando as Jor-El,
Superman's scientist father on Ktyp-
ton, and Gene Haclonan as lAJther,
archvillain and &..perman' s nemesis.
Hackman finds the Luther role .. one of
the most Interesting and challenging
I've ever played," according to his
EJedrocetiow oa tM bMqMt dralff?
Ted Bernstein, an electrfcal engineer-
ing professor, doubles as an after-
dinner and banquet speaker for legion·
nalres and the P.T.A., among others.
His topic: the electric chair, Its origin,
history and use. "There were a number
of botched hangings In New York In
the lSl:KY s, and people began to k>ol<
for something better," the University
of Wisconsin profe590r relates. ''They
thought of shooting, the garrote., the
guillotine and other things, but they
were all too messy. They thought of
lethal injections, but no doctor would
doll" Then. with the rise ln the use of
eJectricity, people were being aocl-
dentally electrocuted, and It seemed
quick and easy. "There was a big politi·
cal thing between Thomas Edison and
George We.stinghoose over how legal
electrocutions should be done." says
Bernstein. "Edison was against capital
punlshment but said If It were done It
should be done wlth Westlnghou.w's
altemating<:tJtTent (AC) because It was
more dangerous. There WAS no word
for electrocution at the tJme, and Edi-
son wanted the process to be called
Westinghouslng." Bernstein reports. He
credits a Buffalo dentist, A. P. ''Old
Spark" Southwick, with spreading the
word of the electrk: chair and calls him
agent, Dick Guttman. Helping tQ create
all that artistic excitement, no doobt, ls
the reported $2 million Hackman will
receive for h1s part. Under constdera·
tlon for the title role of the Man of
Steel ls Perry King. who appeared In
T~ LoNU of Flatbush and Mandinflo.
The producers-the father-and-son
team of Alexander and llya Salklnd-
say they hope to get Jacqueline Bisset
to play Lols Lane and Arthur Hill for
Perry ''Don't-call-me-Chief' White.
"the father of legal execution.'' In a ll,
Bernstein says, 4,310 persons have
been put to death In the electric chair.
He says many people are fascinated by
It, but he still has no answer for those
who ask whether It really hurts or not.
'There's no way to know."
ROCKS FIND ETERNAL REST
A cUffermt lllDd of pd caDdery
WMa yCMlr pd rock ........
one option for the dl.sposltlon of the
remains Is to send It to Jackie Hopper's
pet-rock cemetery ln Detroit. It's a
small graveyard. decked wlth plastic
grass and plots marked by white con-
crete blocks and growing In popular-
ity. Ms. Hopper started her cemetery
In a parking lot across from her tavern
after seeing ads for food to keep pet
rocks alive. So she decided to provide
a free service for their afterlife. Al-
ready 23 plots are filled, some wlth
tombstone epitaphs: ''Ge.orge went
through too many windows." An alter-
native to the pet-rock cemetery ls the
developing field of rock c:ryogenlcs. a
procedure now possible at home:
Wrap the deceased rod< In alumlnwn
foil and keep It In the fre.eur until
science discovers a way to revive IL
Gceat dlu.ta a. yow liiome at.ate: If you
want to see great plays, you don't ne-
cessarily have to give your regards to
Broadway. ln fact, If you want to get
an idea of what plays wlll be coming to
New York thls season as well as In
future seasons, you ought to take a
look at the schedules In your own home
town. From The Actors Theater ln
Louisville to The Arizona Civic Theater
In Tucson to the Seattle Repertory
Theater In Washington, theater activity
Is exploding all over the country. It's
all thanks to the league of Reskient
Theaters (LORT), a national organiza-
tion of nonprofit professional theater
groups, whose aim ls to provide a per-
manent, creative environment for the
artistic perlonnance of plays on a con-
tinuing basis. And more and more
people-producers, playwrights. ac-
tors, ~nts, audiences-are focusing
their attention on regional theater. In
fact, some of our most famous play-
wrights are turning to these theaters
first: Tennessee Williams spent last
season at the Amerlcan Conservatory
Theater In San Francisco, while this
sea.son Arthur Miller has promised his
Late.st play to the Long Wharf Theater
in New Haven, Corm., and Edward
Albee will be nearby wlth two new
one-act pLays at the Hartford Stage
Company. So make It a New Year's
resolution to find enough time to check
out the theater nearest you. ·
DATE: New Year's Day Is S.mrday.
ANNIVERSARY: The end of Wodd
War U was offlclally proclaimed by
President Harry Truman 30 years ago
Friday.
BmntDAYS (all Caprloom): S-Uy-
Steve. Allen 55; Rkhard Widmark 62;
Alan King 49; Henry Mlller 85. Mo.My
-Marlene Dietrich 72. T~
Levenson 65; Lou Jacobi 63; Maggie
Smith 42; Martin Milner 43; Lew Ayres
68. Welantl.y-Mary Tyler Moore 39;
Jon Voight 38. l'llllnday-Sandy Kou-
fax 41; Bert Parks 62; Bo Diddley 4S;
Del Shannon 37. Friday-John Denver
33; Harry Guardino 51; Nathan Milstein
72. S.hlnlaJ-Xavler Cogat 77; Barry
Goldwater 68, J. D. Salinger 58.
BIR11IDAV PEOPLE:
Maey Tyler Moore ud Stett Aka
Werning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
1hlt Ciprlne Smoking Is Dangerous to Ycu Health.
2 ~ ~l A SS :.
( •G 4 ;; ! 111 S
--_ _j
Uat Item• you wlalt ltwe:
TOTAL NICI
TOTAL-amount ~ 0
-WU--COSTA MESA SADDLEBACk LAGUNA BEACH
HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY IRVINE SAN CLEMENTE
WARDS. LEE IMC.
1234 S Main St
Santa Ana -547·&12'
CIEVIH MOTORS
208 W. 1st St.
Santa Ana -llS-lll 71
BUICK
PHIWPS IUICI(, POMT'IAC
& OPEl.. IHC.
24888 Alicia Parkway
Laguna Hills -117-2400
CADILLAC
HAIERS CADILLAC
2600 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa -540.91 00
CHEVROLET
CONMElL CHEVROLET
2600 Harbor Blvd
Costa Mesa -546· I 200
DATSUN
DOTDATSUH
18835 Beach Blvd
Hunt Beach -142-7711
THEODORE ROllMS FOID
2060 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa -642-0010
SUHSn FORD
5440 Garden Grove Blvd.
Westminster -646-40 IO
UMIVERSITY
OLDSMOllLE
2850 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa -540-9640
AL.LEH OLOSMOllLE.
CADILLAC & GMC
28332 Camino Capistrano
Laguna Niguel -831..0100
HONDA
ROH GOODWIN HONDA
700 S. Harbor Blvd.
Fullerton -171-0412
HONDA SAHT A AHA
301 W. Warner Ave.
Santa Ana -540-7430
TV WFEK. DC:CEMBEll 26. 1976
JOHHSOH & SOM
UHCOLM-MERCUIY
2626 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa -540-5'30
SAMT'A AMA .
UMCOLM MERCURY
1301 No. Tustin
Santa Ana -547-0511
OLDSMOBILE
UHIVERSITY
OU>SMOllLE
2850 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa -540-9640
PONTIAC
ROH GOODWIN
PONTIAC -GMC
700 S. Harbor Blvd.
Fullerton -871-0412
PORSCHE-AUDI
CHIClt IVERSOM, IHC.
445 E Coast Hwy
Newport Beach -67)..()900
TOYOTA
llLL MAXEY
TOYOTA
18881 Beae,h Blvd.
Hunt. Beach -147-8555
SUllOAY, OECUllU M
11:00 m lunioi Duis Cup TtMls lhe prtm1m tum tournament /01 /UlllOI
olayeis 17 ynrs old ind younaer L"e lrom rt1m1n10 P•rk 111 M1am1 FIO<ta•
ll:lO fJ llfl Football 'rt·Calllt Show ., "•lldittnd I ;00 U llfl foollllll Q1111piol11llip &.me
II m AfC FootNM C111mp1onslup
2:00 U llHllA WO!kl Wo!ld f'1uh Co•t111e ol the J 21h Aonual Winston
W0tld F 1n1ts dr1111ces trom Onta110 ft1tu11ne IJl'Ot1IU 1n lht windup 10
lht 1916 National Hol Rod Assoc:111ton championship
l:OO fJ 1111 Annu1I Ka••iian '8A fouru111tnl
MONDAY, om1m11 27
6:00 U (lltl L ) U1 lllondar lli1llt roo~n: the Gltoi 8owt Live
covmec of this 11me bel•een Penn Stale and Notr~ Dam, lrom Jack$0nv11le. rto11d1
fUESOAY, OECElll8E• 21
6:00 Ill lllnp lioatJ Kinas "' M1nnesot1 Northstars flUDAY, OECEMllEll 31
ll:WM l8l 'Ndl 8otrt North Carolina Y'I Kentucky
l :lO CD "-8otrt llklotl lull(llton Bill Welsh hosh
S:OO S lll11t IOftntl 9owt Teru Tech vs Nebraska
1:30 D Altrt lll11tbon11tt 9owt Taped from the Houston Astro Dome m reus, Nebruka •s Ttm heh
1:00 II) lllnth Annuel l'tKh lowt North Carolina vs Un1veu1ty ol Kentuck~ 11 Atlanta Ceo1111
SATUllOAY, IAllUUY I
t.30 U (12i) (]) (Jl Tht Sucar lowl live coveraae of lhe came btlwm P1tlsburah and Ctora11 from Ne• Orleans Lou1s1ana
11 :00 fJ (tjJ) tJ l) 1 t flit Cotton lolrl In the trad1t1onal Nt• Yw s 01y
Cotton Bowl loolball clus1c 1n Oallu feus lht unbtal'n Un1vm1ty ot
Maryland ftrrap1ns battle tht Un1vemtr ol Houston Couia•s
l:lO ., Qll rr1 ~ m ~ Bowl "'•·Glmr
2:00 U DJ 6 101 m ~ 8otrt CO.mt M1Ch11an Wotvtnnts play tht
USC lro11ns al lht 6Jrd Rose Bowl m P1~dtna C11t1orn11 Don
Meredith and Curt Gowdy ire commentators
5:00 Cl (2) ru tIO m Drane• Bowl &11111 Ohio State Buc~tres mt'I
Colorado BuHalOfi al lhe Oranre Bowl 1n M11m1 flor1d1 Jim Simpson
and lohn Brodit 11e cummenlato•s
SUllDAY, DECCIHU 26
5:00 II Cl "Slrffb of l.1r1clo" ("esJ '49 Wilham lfoldM
7:00 Ill (C 1 "On the tlunllold of ~•" (adv) 56 Cuv Madison v11a1n1a Ltith
1:00 CD ·~ "'llldelpltl.t Storr" (com) ·•o Kalhrmt u,pburn lamu
Stewart
9:00 fJ (Cit\ l6JI ~ti tCJ "Oi1mond1 Ara Forner" (adv) 11 Sean
Connery, Jill SI JoMi. C/la1tu Gra1
MullDAY, DECEMIEll 27
8:00 II lCJ "Th• M1nlpuf1to1" (d1a) '72 Stephan Boyd, Sylvia Kosc•na
9:00 II flll I 6 J 110J Im r~J "C1111tlol" Cone! ldta) '61 Richa•d Hams,
Vanessa Redarave. rranco Nero
8 fC) "Kine llOlltwS. '°4dll1" (horJ 63 Michael J(tilh, James ~Iii TUESDAY, OECMC8Ell ll
&.-00 liJ ICI 1'ht Spanisll Mal11" (adv) ·45 Maurten 0 Hara, Paul Hen1e1d WCOllESOAt, O£ClMllEll 29
1:00 D "Golna lily Way" (muO ·44 B1n1 Crosby Barrt F111aer1ld Rise Stevens
0 tel "l!U<O•ar•. the l'iralt" (adv) ·52 Robert Newlon Linda
Darnell
9 00 D (IJ7 • J1) I C "S111ftt" (com I 7S Bruce Dern 8ar~111 fcl
clon Mtehaet Kidd Ceolhty ltw1s
TllUllSDAY, OlCCM8U 30
1:00 D C. '11111 11111 ftOlll «io" (adv) &4 /~an P1ul Belmondo Ill IC ''Sl11bad tlit S.tlot" (adv) 47 Douala) f111b1n~t h
lltDAY, 0£COllER JI
1:00 D (1Jl •' ) t C "lt't Ulf4, Mid, llld, llad World" <com) 63 Spencer lrKy M1llnn tit,., Sldt t.ies.lr [lhel Mtrt11on
liJ te l "U11dt1 Caprico111" (dr1) 49 ln1r1d Bt•eman foseph Colton
9:00 fJ (!HJ (f l) !Jtl •CJ "One ol My Wlwn Is Mluinr" (dra) 76 Jae•
Klutman lames f r1nc1scus
$.\T\lllDAY, IAllUAllY I
6.:00 U ~ "'rM and 01111ntd" (dra) 11 Chuc• Connor~ Jo~r Greco
1:00 liJ "Slltl*k Holmu and tllt ,..,, of Onth" fmm 44 BISll
Rathbone, N1aet 81utt
9:00 II (Cl "I.Mins You" (mus) ~l llv11 f•,,sfey l 1tabtlh Scoll, Wendell Corey
9:30 Iii "Sherlock Holmu and lht Scarlet Claw" (myl) 44 Basil
Rathbone. Niar) Brm
THIS WEEK ON CHANNEL SO
KOCE-TV ORANGE COUNTY TELEVISION
SUNDAY, 0£C£M8Cll 2'
2:00 Ftwtl.wl Sbtt111111
l:OOA&MH.._
4:00 r..is tot t11t ,,,...,
S:lO lia ._. Ml""
6:00 ~ Ul*I A Clamc 6:30..,
7:00 teliltf• ._ 7:l0,,_,n
l'OO Hlrml and Gttltl
t:oo So.ldstaa• 10:00 Vlslo111, "llftlom ol t~•
Opt11 Htartll
MOlllD.U, OECOllEll 21
t:OOMt Tai Cltl C11'111t1 t:lO FOClft IOt tl1t ftmlly
10:00 £11ropu11 Vlsloll of Allltllcl
II :00 Tiit Miiiie of C~rlstnlaa
ll::to Eltdtlc Com,enr
12:00 S..111t St!ttt
1:00 Yo.111 In T11111lli. l earn1na
01"b1hties Causes •nd Cum ..
2:00 lllolldtr Ant-.
3:00 Saa111t SlrHI
4:00 l.Mnll
4;)0 El«lt1c Comfl'llf
5.'00 Millar Roctn lltiallllofhoed
5:30 Villa Altcrt
6:00 FoNt •• 1111 , llllily
6:)0 • 1'lllll lo "-
7:00 Aa MM w • ._
7:l0 TH frllldl Clltl
l:OOClMtttll
9:00 OMI S-*IM Sllw
11:00 Macltil/ltflrtr lleport
TUCSOAY, D(COllU ZI
t:OOMt Maclltil/Ltllm bJOrt
t.30 f rttll.tllcl Shtt~ilc
10:00 Sollp of the s.a-
IO:lO Act of $pKe fr111.Utioll
II :00 TllrH Mltrica11 Golclsmlths
ll:JO Dedrk C:O.PlllJ
1?:00 Saa1111 Street
1:00 YOlllll ill Tl'Ol/Me "T1t1hn1
Oehnquency"
2:00 1111s i..nc1
J;OOSaa111tStmt
4:00 ZOOM!
4;>0 Clectrk Comptny
5.-00 Misltr Roten llltltll'*'-'
5:JO l11fl111ty r acw,
t-00 Man tflcl Emrt11lllttlt
6:30 r,..-,1141 Shtdllfta
1;00 Rall Ubte llld ,..,
7:l0 '""" Mtfb11 ,..,_Hiii l-00 Clllfonlla .... l:JO~ ,,.
9:00......,.. Thutrt "five
Red Htmnp"
10:00 lllfllMtf --11:00 llldltil/Uflrtr lltjllff
WllHllSOAY, OCCUllO lt
t:OOMt MfC.lltll/lMlrtr •JOrt
t:lO , ... -Hie flfllifJ 10:00 btty AMtl1c111s
11:00 ... .i, .. the .....
ll;GO llllmn • """
ll:JO Dedtk c..,."'
12:00 '--StrMI
1:00 YOlllll ii T,_.., "lv1l111hon
~ Committed Dtl1411tntf'
2:00 Cilldtt'tti.
l:OO S.1111 Slr..t
4:001-rll
4:JD fledric ~
S:OO 11111111 .... ,, Ntl.,...,,,...
5:30 WIUI Alter•
6:00 f ... '°'Hie '"""' 6:JOA r-to Gift 7:00 Al ..,,. llelllttt
7:l0 ""'' .... Ille WoH 1:00~
t:OO l'lcu41tly Clrcwi ·eattel
Shoes" A story ol thret orphan
11r1s ''"'"' 1n poverty and their drtllll$ Of l1mt Ind fortiw
lO:lO rel C-1 t-·uull'ltdlt ....
11.00 lbdltll/Ullrtt lleport
fkUllSOAY, OECUHCa JO
9:00Mil Maclltdl ltflr11 lltpOt1
t:JO fr.llaM Sht~lfll
I 0:00 rkudllly CJteut
ll:JO [le(trlc t.111111~
IZ:OO S-.... SltMt
1:00 Yotltll hi T11111W. "loo~1na Ahead"
Z:OO CoftsutNr SlirYlw11 t!ft
2:JOOwnly
1:00 S..111t SlrMt
4:00 Z.00..1 4:30 Dtctrit Comp111y
S:OO Mimr ftoctri lltlc1111othoo4 S: lO lllfHW!y , ..,
,:00 llift .., lltwirt111M11t
6:30 r rMllllld Sbtdlill1
7:00 llnt Ubtt 1114 You
7.JO"" 'ua GMlt An eapk>l1 llOll ol the hvtnt h1btts ol thf
tree Ind unlrammeltd animals
ot South Amenu Tht rtsel'lts
aive lhe an1m11s complete
tmdom to behave simply and
natur•lly
l:OOllloNttW.
t.00 l'lc:caclllly Cima
I 0:30 klllM w..f Witll
J I :00 Maclltltll.tflrtr 11.,.n
fllDAY, OECDllU Jl
t:OOAM Maclltlltl.tllm Rtpo11
t:lO FoMs '°' t11e fl111ilr 10:00 ~ Cirella
ll:JO fledric c...a•r
lt:OO S.UM SlrHI
1:00 Yotltll Ill TrwW. "~We See
It"
l:OO lJoft •nd tlle Allclrodes
3:00 S..111t Stlfft
4:001-11 •:lO f.l«trlc c.mp..,
5:00 Mli!ttr ltottri lltl~
S:lO Ville Alert•
':00 foMt '°' 1111 f111111J 6:30 A TltM Tt "-7:00 l'!tofllt
7:.JO A 11tw "-ia!IM l:OOW~ WM 111 .......
tlOWll Strttl ....
9:00 Diie If U M
10:00 t11,trtl1Ct ti ltlal
f.111119
ll:lO The MICtltilllllrrtr 1111,ert
lATIJROAY, IA#UMT 1
l:OO A TltM It ~-l:JO Clllttntll ...
4:00 .... *' fmlrlMMtll t.Go .... (tbte ... ,.,
6.<00~
1:00 ""' .... lilt Woll 1: )(I Gettlll' °" l:OOGerpel
t.00 ..... """' Tlltltre r 1ve
Rtd Herrlnes"
10:00 Cit.ti hffwm-
MORNING
e:oo
U SlntriM s..atcr ......... ~
aom rut111n
Ill) C.Uln bllfarot
-6:30-
.. (]) Ill futvfa
.. llot fef Wllnetl o.i,
• lllidlMI J.U-s-.
CDMy"c m Slpenq11AQ"'"''" fllll CD> GoM Dtr
7 :00 u cm rn oo ....,
U Ill> IIOl Im Tod.Ir Show •a 100 au• ()) II> Cart-.
• (llll (()) iliJ &ood 1101111111 Alteriu
CD lllrs & Ha Mdiu fl.I Stoel Mtrht O,.n1111
fl!) Yop for Ht1ltll
-7:30-c.rt-
G l.mit
fD Mister ltottrs
8:00
8 (I) ~hi KM11reo Cl)_,
.. Ifill Tiii Till
mTM ~
Cl) llec*M ' Helle (fl) TM rn au11
ill Tiit .ltt.n
&l)Z.00.!
11:00
0 d1l (]1 iT1 Y1111111 & Rnt!esa
U <UJ ~ m SO Grud
$11111
1J 'flit MilllOftlift a ca CIJ> a 0a. "° Sbow Ill *"It' See Daytimr Movies m...., m Electnc c.iitP1n1
-J1:30-
a f1 {l l J S.11t11 lor Tomor ,..
u (J <Jli m a, '°"I ShOll
8 (<8J 1 I l) QlJ h1111ty Fev4
TQ) ..,,, H1rtl111n, Mary "'rtAI"' m 1.t1·, a.,
Q) ll1nnr & tht ProfutOf
IHI Tht '•Kii 8ottl I 11 HOtlh C..1 olin1 vs l\e"IUC~y
I AFTERNOON
12:00
a 11oon1i1111
D Tllft '1rl
lll Diel V111 Oyh
8 (fBJ {)J) S20,000 P'yra1111d
(Jj ®!....,
a> Morie: ~' D~yt1me Movies a> I Drt1111 of Ju 11111t
lb '"J ... ANl!f/JM lmttt ~I ']) Mity IW1INn, Mity Hirhan
13) LM Al!Mr i<.111 Style m c.te4nl.t m GoM o.,,
11!"""
-12:30-
D •11> ~ Al tlN Wot1d T•m D Qt 1{) C10 0) Days ol Our u-
l.) I lore t..cp
8 ('21! I U) 0 All My Clrildrtn
Cl) to.rtlllip ol E.-1e·, falhtr a 0or1s o., s.
f2!I Toe• lor H111t11 m Mola Lot Allc•lts
1:00
ti) lklru 11M11 Alle11 •ca (J)) a 11y.111·s Ho,e
Clhn .., Major W.1111
Qll lilffit: See D11t1me Movies
ID £J Show de 111
-1:30-a !lll c11 rn Tiit Gttldifta uattt D 0 ()) <RI G flit Oocton
Tiit .._.,,.._." 8 (Qfl QI) 011t Ult It U'ft
Cl DMrct C..rt
2:00
D l]b Cl) Al i11 CM r 1111ily
G 9 CU CID m ~ Wol'ld e Oult & Hurltt
T9"tf D -..it: Su D1yt1me Movies ..,...,,.
G) Mm11ll
-2:15-
• (Qfi ())) ID IOetlt11I Hos,IUI
-2:30-
D <l1l CU ClJ Mltdl Gl111t Gene
A•ibu1n llosts e Su llu•t m l.uw It to ... ,.,
• Mkley Moua CIMb
3:00
U lll'J CV Ttttlttates
D O)Solilervl em"",. (I) tart.fts
• (QI) ) Qt Ed&• of 1111111 I~ W..lt: Ste D~yt1mt Mov1ts
CD VatMJ ti tli1 D1110S1urs
@ 119M14t
9)0ur lilrit OJ Vida I* Vld1
-3:30-
• D IHI .. ,., Doupu Sllott
D Mt4kll Ctftta1
II Ii& 11111 Marllle f n
Cl) Tht M1111st11i
8 lilffit: Set D11111ne Moms
([l lfldJ llllldl m 1Jv11 IWllllJ Cartoon'; llOH Bowl IUckoff lu11dleon f11 8111 Welsh
lnlttVltWS the Ca.Ches ol fht
comptline team1 John Robin1on of
llSC and Bo Schembecllle1 ot the
Umve1sity of Mrch1ean-1n<1 Ute co
captains ol both tum1
II> C.rtoo•• ITT' Q) ._., .,. ,.,
Clf)AinbtOMI
((21) Cl),..,.~"'-"·
4:00
II lie .. ,..,
{I) e.!ftlH
Ei!lt11111e, 0111
l1J P'llil °""hut $llow m lllp & His llllMits
Cl) Heal• I Jedle
(fll u... R.111•1
11) Adlllt· J 2 ® I Dru. of JtHllit m Stsll'llt Strffl ( l3J t})) Tiit f'llnlitM«J
G .._,. 4e Hi1111te
'5 U11elt W1W.
-4:30-
D Tt Ten Ill• h•lll
fl Gillian'• ltlall4
ID W.111·12 m Tllt '1i11btonts
Q) 11111 lll1111J
1.IlJ Cl) Pri« h Ri1llt
8 (J) Mtrv Griflirl Show l2tl r1111lly Aff11r SD SeAmt StrHI
(all Cl)) Uttlt Rascah a> D11m1tk Stritl '1J Tt111MuH Turtdo
5:00
... IJ (.I) UDJ "''" UloM11u
CJ) Fa111lly Altair
Cl Wild Wild West
ID The lrMly IUll(ll
Q) .. , ... "
13) lfldJ lu11<Jt; llu. lonHI Bowl
f 11 Tuu lech vs Nebruka
(121! (I)) P'artrid&• r111111l m 01111~1
Q&llftllll
-5:30-
D Cll>lU ....,
P1rtridtt f 1111ily
ID ltwitdlt4 a> Su,.,.."
·~·
N
1'Tltl SMALL CAa lXPlaTS"
FACTORY AUTHORIZED SALES-SERVICE -PARTS
n110NALIUD llAllNG -ALL MAKES & MODUS
A ll#E SllEC110# Of USED CARS
842-7781 540-0442
S ervi11g ..Aff B eac/, Ci uej
S MINUTES SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY
18835 BEACH BLVD .
(Highway 39 )
HUNTINGTON BEACH
18LIJE COLLAR LIFE'
"Wuw!" 1utd tht' rolleJ:e pres1de111, 11·hu wa.1 aim d1sh-
kfl1ht!r und d11chdtxxer ememus "/ hurdl1• know ... hat to
tu1•" 'f'ht• prt'\ I' ttmporarifr al a Inn for "nrds "'US Dr.
Jnhn Colt•mun /lf'd 1ur1 reen a drum11t1zu1wn of htr
venturer into u gmm• ... urld dep11 ted tn "The Serret life nj
Juhn Chupman, .. 1<h11 h Utr\ on(,£ rheutt'f, Mt111da1frum
Y JO tn 111' M on (BS
Colem<1n j tht' fe/1011 11 ho oeraJ1oned all kmds uf nett.s
.. ·hen he re1·euled in 1he hf>u-sel/er. "Blue Collar Journal,"
1ha1 he'd earned a he11er 1hu11 pulsing mar/.. in a new self
1mp0Jed ltje e\per1tnre ru11r1t J/e 'ti rpent a recret sabbatt·
ral Ikea1tnjl. 1111d lear'ltnJ.: a Im t1ho111 himself a'l<I people in
general
Watching Ralph Wa11e. lht' father in I he Wa/Jons
rtrte.1, rr·enac1 1ha1 ba,•kbreu/..ing per1od WUJ "a very
emottnnal t'\perttnl't," Colem11n 11dm11ted k'llen he'd re-
covered lrtr norm11/, ear)'. amrnlote speech tha1 ·s just
1111ged 11·11/i a trace o/ l11s na1111e Canadian uc1·enr "/ co"ld
1den1tfr complete/I k uh the mun 111 the film anti"'"" Ralph
W1111r 'r performunn!. " he f111111d
( h111 cupped 111 h1111d, ltl!'t/ "'Ull'hl!d ht.r TV 11/1er ego
/1red /f>r ini·ompt.'tetl< 1• from u ;oh ar a dt.rlt1<usher lie 'd
chul'l.:led apprena11vt•l1 m Watte vamlv tried 111 control the
wa1·wurd m11ktngr of a d uh w11d1../('h 1t•he11 he landed (n11d
jma/11• k1•p1) 11 herth us 1h1Ht 1Jrdl!r wo/.., and nodded k'ith
ab.IOI"'" underHund111J1 of the hackarhe 11/ 1hat frrw d1tch-
d1gg1ng da11 por/rured un tht' rrrt'en
l.tke the 1·hararter In 1lte CJ:. Thell/er dramu. Colemon
rt'turned 10 "hat Ire 1'u/IJ hi:. "11/ht'r pih" af rnllege
pre.rtdt'lll. h111 he lru1e1 11 regular/1 tn /..eep one fu/11 111 the
... nrld 1</iue hr<1wn cnunH m11re than hrwn.r E1·err wm-
mer. he fpend1 htf "wu 1111nn" Ir/ a d1fferem lahorer'f joh
fin far, he '.r pulled r,arb<tl!,t. heen a rOllf.hner/.. nn a drtlltng
rrew. and lrP111ed 51Jpo11nd l>axr nf pu/vert;e,/ marhle 111
otM1wn to thr ulht!r 111h1 dept<"led 111 "1 hr 4>e1·ret 1.tfe nj
Juhn Chupman " -Ind tk IH' u month. he 11tl/ pu11 1n e11:J11
h11urr 11( garht1gl! m11ng
Wh1·• Well.Jorone thing 11'f Ct>leman\ "'H oJ practk·
ing 1"h111 he 'f fit'r11 preu1 htnl!, ''' ht 1 rtudrnt r /flf mm~ 1
rean tl1ere 'r ti l(}I /fl ht-h•urned 011/rtde th<' 11111/1 n/t v1 It'!.
alw rn11rir1ent k'tth hn rnn 11tr111111 thm ed11fu11Jn "don't
hold 0111 eno11gh n111d1•I{ of cnreer.f jnr H11dent.r In Jolla"'· a
wme11• 11/ 1oh1 1hni ""' nr11 < 111/el!,e-related
SU'flfl.flllj!,fl. ( t>lt•1111111 WJV.t, ht• fi>Ufl d /11msclf rea/11• !he
mme I.. tnd nf perwn ll'hetht•r hr k'a~ 1<1e1mnx rnp tJnd gown
nr cap and coverallr ... Wiren I wt•nt nll'ayjor 1he first lin1e,
I had the t!/uJir111 I 1<v1111tl he 1•ery dilferent I wo11/d he vei:1
m11clt more mugntng l'euplr w11uld rt'ul(1 get 10 know me
IJ111 I /01md lhtJI I tt.'U\ )II.ff a.r fh v <1nd JLW as hard lfl p,et to
kno•• ,yi:l'u/a/ '""'""
)Qh" Chapmon (Ralph Wa11t) jindt nut what 11:, //Ju. 10 />t 11
/ahorrr u"d a .rhnrt 11rdl'r rhtf. ht r1/rn /l'tlrn •a /111 ah<ml hlmsrlf
P~e
SUNDAY
DECCMIER 2'
MOANING
* lndiutes 1n Advertisement
-5:45-m 111>1t w..111CJ1~1)
e:oo
a A ~lion of Nations fulu11n1
the 1nnu1I Chnslmu Atound the
W01ld" lesllval ol Ch1u1o's Museum
of Science and lndustl)'
Ill Mttt tllt Maron QI Southern Cllff11r1111
-6:30-
1!1 lltSl the I.old, All Ye Bents
rocuses on the •n1m1ts present 11
lhe birth of lesus 1n lhe manaer rn
Bethlehem
Cl Ope11tioll Eme1renc7
m w-11h1t
QI "°"'"'' Room
-6:45-
CE Clrboll & Conlp1nr/With Thil
Rill1
7:00
8 Hlldwft llrothtn
D ~ Gllost/Frnhnst.U. Jr. II Mm & tlM Sfo'tn Word
Cl) ""1t & Nil Friellds
D °'"" & Geli1t11 CD Dt111t11tary lftw1
!2}) {I) Tllis h tlM lift
8 Around ~ Woficl Ill to Days
fl!) '°" for Hulth Ill -.ri<ulture USA
-7:30-
• hr Out S,.C. "ub D a.1 .lolln, IJttl4 Jolln a Geotce of tlM JunCI•
Cl) le( There • liilrt Cl Illy of Dixoftry
®l flublic flulst CD TIM RintstoMs
Q) Draplin of Bolir11on St1Ht
(<I1J CIJ) Jerry falweff
U1 Cl) Dawty & Goliath
I.Bl Uftinc u, Jesus Cl\ISMles
fl!) Miiter ltottn
('8) (t)) TOWll Hall Mttlint
(81 Sint Your hllses to H Im
8:00
fJ Dusty's T rHlloust D Tllat'1 Cit
0 .....,.. Clr!DoM
Jin1111y S..a1rt Show
Cl) TY I Loots al lurnin1 l'J Ra. lAf., ltnk111s
tlQl 121) Jerry F&lwt•
8)Wo!Mlt11111a
Q) llu Humbird
@ CJ) lllSicht
flt S.U111t Slr•t
(QI) (I)) Day of Dbcowery
IJ) °"""'&o A Do11unao
(ft) Wiie Is My lltjpbor
-8:30-
• Face Ille Nation
D S.rtllClipity
Cl) lallllS ..,_ •• ,, ••
8 l21J CV It Is Written
(I) DIY of Oitcoftry
D Mettifli ThM at Cllnry
Ctrn CIJ) Hudton lroth1n
((2J) ())) a.1 H11111btrd
alJ Htr11d of T rvtll
9:00 U Sunflowtr Compa~,
D Tht Cl1rist1111htn
J) ltu Humbard
U C1111pus f'rofllt o @ m m 0111 11o11erts
dD, It Is Written
Im M"t tht Pms
Cl) lln•r••d Al
([li ) ~ "ub t3 T1~11J.W011d Mllliocu
ID Sesame Stlfft ill ltnow Your Bible
-9:30-
• Steps to Ulrnl111
D Tllb Is tllt Ult
D Di111tmlolls
lllt1r111tiollal Hour
D Tiit •lna 11 Com•••
[D) Spectrum
Q) Gosptl No.ir
(ft7J ) Clntma S.nnlNn
12}) (IJ C1111dmnd
131 fttv. luoy JH&lns
(t2fJ (L)Jlmmy Sw•ml1 Sllow m futbol Socc•r Im Trtthol!N Club
(DJ Rln1Jto1111
10:00
U Totlay's Rtliflon
Cl Odyue1 0 { e Kout of f'owtr
D Dotnin10
&lJ Nertlcl ol Truth
ff.A) f'llblic f'lllM
il21 (J #Fl Footblll
M Sundiy Cc1tb11tro11 fD OllCt Up0n A CWs1< (~J;)Wrtlllt m Filtll for Todly
1t San Diep Inside Out
-10:30-u Moorie: ~ "Thtrt's llo 81111·
lltU Uh Show 811S111US" (mus) ·~ Ethel Merman Dan Oa1ley
O AIOnt Wr1h ... D ((21) <JJ) r>t Ad,.nlms of
611111111
lJ ) Wildhft Tllut11
Cl.I Abbott l Costello
fJOl Mttt the P11u
Q) CJlvary CllJt"I
El!) Infinity factory m lnsipt
11:00 0 011 of DiSCO'ftry
t U nJuana: Window to lht South
0 (fttl Cf)) <HI Odd 8111 Couplt
! A) Hi1h Ch1partal
(fOJ family Matten m hwitch.cl
Q) Church In the Home
IBJ First Baptist Church
fD Junior Olfis Cup Tennis I he
orem1eie leam louinamenl 101 1un101
otaym 17 yem old and youneer m Human Dlmelt1ion
-11:30-D MMt tlle 1'1tu
0 Jin11111 Swau111 Show f Meritt: .. ,_ Little Ilic.II C1t1"
(com) ·3~ Shirle~ ltmolt
U lat • ) HJ Alllmals, A111mals
JOI Gr1ndMtd m Ghost and Mn. Muir
((17' t 3 ) 'h11<r """"'" m Cllnitopller Closeuf
12:00
D Su,er Bowl Specltb D Tiit Cllampiolls
D ((8) CJJ) fJIJ IUUlt Ind
Answtn
! e I San DltlO Shl1 l u h tb1ll
Hllhlithts
'BEVY OF BEAUTIES'
When Irwin Shaw first put his best·seller Rich Man, Poor Man
toðer. he very appropriately surrounded his heroes with buutitul
women. Last season ABC and Un1msal Television produced the
~plos1vt novel IOI the telev1sio11 viewer and they kept Shaw'~ 1dus in
mind and surrounded the heroes-Peter Strauss and Nick Nolte-1111th
a bevy of beauties-such as Susan Blakely. Kay Lenz, Kim Darby,
Lynda Day Geor&e and Jo Ann H1111s
Now, ABC end Universal have a&11n banded toeelher to brine to
the telev1s1on screen Rich Man. Poor Man-Book II {Tuesdays at
9PM) With this new edition the heroes-Strauss and newcomers
James Carroll Jordan and Greaa Henry-find themselves 1n a s1m11ar
1lfed1tament...they f\Jst can'I avoid beme an the midst ot more
buuhful women.
The women ol Book II are Susan Sullivan, who portrays lhe
sensuous attorney Manie Porter. Kimberly Beck, who as Man1e's
Stlually precocious teenaged dau2hter Diane provides a bit of spice
for the Jordache boys; Penny Peyser, in true hie the daughter of a
United Slates Ccngressman,tn Rich Man, Poor Man-Book II the
quiet, but sexually awakening Ramona: Cassie Yates, as Annie-the
innocent looking singer who makes her own decisions and beds those
she wants, not those who want her and Colleen Camp, a true beauty
with a figure to match, who appears as V1ck1e St. John-a sin&er and
eo·eo dancer using her looks to get ahead .
.. Maggie and I are very much alike ... says Susan Sulhvan .. We are,
f11st of all, dedicated to our careers mine 1s acting and Manie's 1s
her law pract1ct Susan first thought about the stage and screen when
she was "about three years old I remember goine to a school play
where my brother was appeanna as a little lnd11n The minute I saw
him on the sta&e. I knew that was what l wanted •·
Although the youn&est of the five beauties Kimberly Beck coul d be
the one with the most actm& experience "My first 1ob was m 'Torpedo
Run' with Glenn Ford," recalls Kimberly "I was two years old then
and I played hrs daughter .. A bit of a world traveler. Kimberly-alter
slops in Australia and France-has been around lelev1s1on for a long
time At the age ol nine she appeared 1n at least one hundred
episodes of ABC's Peyton Place
Ca$$ie Yates was walkin& down the street an her hometown of
Atlanta, Geor11a, one day when she happened on an outdoor set of a
movie being filmed there
"They asked me lo be part of the atmosphere (background utras)
and the bug bit me-the acting bug, that is " Cassie since then has
wanted to be a star.
ThtM a,. llM lttradiwt lllCI 1tron1·•Hltcl womlfl ltl Rid! Man, Poor
Man-lool II, ABC's drama nkll al11 on Tuesdlp (9PM). L to r.
front, art: Colltlfl Camp as Vldlt SL John, Ptnnr PtJUr as ltomon1
Scott and Casslt Yates and Allnlt Adams. llCk (I. tor.) 1Umber1J Itek
•Diane Porter and Sldan Sullinn as M1ult Porter, Diane's mother,
with 1'llom Rudy is romantlcllly lnYOlwtcl.
Order Yours NOW .. (-_?:::,
{;f~100~ ~~_:_~~Beautiful 1T
Stick-on Labels
• PERSONALIZm
• STYLISH
• EASY TO USE
• ORDER FOR YOURSELF OR A FRIEND
SHAPE ANO SIZE OF L ABEL
Mii John Doe
123 Ma in Slr••I
Anytown, Anyll•I• '23.&5
Labels Oo Not Have A Printed Border
Sryli~h Voque rype on
fine quality white
gummed paper.
i-AH In "f hla ~~;o~.ci;p-;;, ;;;,~tth-$1~7S ;,;-I I Pilot Printing Label Div.,
I 1 Post Off ice Box 1560
I Coit• M•1•, California 92626
I
I
I
I
I
I
I I I • Sure to UM your Zip Code
! 14''·''49'1"'"' ----------------------~
P9997
SUNDAY (Contlnu9d) D Tllrilltr cm Alt football l'b70tt1 ID Movie: "little Women" (d11)
'•9-Junt Allywn. Petti llwford
Cl> h illl fOf foQJ !I'm ) ... ,., hid a flllW rt1tu11
fl) ROlllMI Ct10/u tf lt1111do m Alllerku All<r
-12:30-
D (tllJ en llfl rootb1ll ,,, '-111t D m C11ndstnd
B (13i ([')<ill Dlrtc11011i
w 11n "'""• G) Mot1t: "fhe111u Snt lllf
Cllifd" (com/ H -Sp1~e /ones
8uddy Hatkfll
S 111111 Rtport
1:00
D ((I1J (JJ) lffl Football Cham·
pionth" Tums undecided at our
IHUS hme
D m AFC footb11f Cham~nMllP
l e1ms undecided 11 our preu time
D Tiit Ii& V1flt1
tl)ISpJ
U Head On
11J ~It: "Oddi Aa1ln1t TomOf·
row" (d11) '59-H111y Belafonle
Robert Ryan. Ed Besley. Snelle~
Winters, Gto111 G11h1mt ID The SIYlor a Wok• of A&ncuhurt ca ) t>t r1rm • .,."
C> Sltmpr• tn DDl'llnao
-1:30-
• Coltllrity '"'"'• IS Tiit «rout h!M" ((3! ) Ani111al Wtrld
2:00 a a1me: "T11t1 Get •• c...red"
(adv) •3 Bob Hope Dorothy
Lamour
lllN S411M B lfHU hid rlnab Covmat of lht 11th annual Winston World r 1n1ls
drac raus from On1a110 tnlurin1
l1v0t1tes 1n tht w1nduo to tht 1916
H111on1I Hot Rod Anomt1on
champ1on1/11p suson
ID 1'ovit: "Mr. 1114 Mrs. Smltll"
(com) ·• 1-C11ott Lombard. Gent
Raymond
Q»hrun
(21) faith for Tod•J
(IBl (I) Coftaumtr'a Wofld
O lobline
-2:30-
il)J ti) lllowlt: "~lrtlta of Tortu11"
(dra) ·6t-Ken Sco1t, Le1tc11 Roman
Dave Kt01. Muwell Rud S M111k ind the Spohn Word ((D ) Soorb<ope
IJJ Sov1 T 11111
3 :00
Cl) Wild Wiid Wut
• Sta Auwef H•••ilan '8A ,...,.. .. ,.,
e Mttlt: "011 the TlutllHIW ef
s,au" (ldY) ~6 Cuy Madison
Vir11n11 l11th. John HOd••~ Dun
Jauer. M1rt1n M1lne1
<JA) IAotll: ''Ride tllt Hill! C..ntl)"
(•es) '62 -Rudolph Scott. Joel
McClu . Mariette Har11ty
II) Sl11bttt tl!MIM
IB Jlfll111J Sw1g 11t Shew S> Tiit Mild hlldl
(t21J Cl)) S,.rb CMllense
-3:30-a bll11out Ttw11 Hiii
GW...111
((3) CJ)) llfl Qame of tht W11k
O .i.rcus w•. M.O.
P-oet
4 :00
U ll"11111h" U KlllC F1111ily Ch1iStmas
CJ Vo,11• to lbt 8ottom o1 !flt Su m lonanu
I) World of Ille SH
CD llotlt: "A Sur b lorn" (d11)
JT Janet Gaynor Fredric Marth
Adolph Men1ou May Robson Alidy
Drnne
I Ti ) Woo Coftun
<3J lllor14 of Sur~al
mw1USlrfftWttl
((3) j 1) Su,., 8owt $pe<!41s • m Mowlt: "four Jilb in A Jeep"
(com) ·u C1role land1s Kay
f11nc1s
Cf) VltW,oint 4141 llutrlt.loA
-4:30-
u iiao.11: .C1 "Tiit Wtcliul Slllp
in the Army" (tom) 61 Jack
Lemmon Ricky N!lson John lund
Chip$ Raflt•ly, Tom Tully
B World of Survin l
rJ) f 1c.e the llatioll
@ ClJ Co11mn
(21) fhrM f'as:sporb lo Adnnlurt m World f'rus
(Qf m> f'ro football l"l•Jback m Hollywood Chtl
S:OO
lit Star Trll
~ Super lowl Specllls u mi .. ..,
•f l World el JKQlllS Cousteau
CJ Somethlna s,.u.1 a> MM1t: "You111 11 Heart" (mus)
54-rrank S1naha Dous Day Cthtl
B111ymo1t G11 Youn& -Oorothr
Milone
flJ AfllttlC.H/IJratl Jtwtsll Holl/
121> Meet Hit f'rea
Qll WIW Wlkl W.sl m Wullillf\Oll W"' 111 Remw
'1J) Mot11: 11:. ''SHtll Tllt!Yts''
(adv) 60 [dward C Robinson Rod
Ste11er Ja.n Collins, Ch Wall1th
Alt•nde1 Scourby m Uttt• lase.ab
-5:30-
D (1)1 <I> l1.0) m lftn
G Wiclt World of Mvuturt
((Jl) Wl AMerlcln Ute Slflt fD Th 0Pt11 Mind m Fits!• flflpl11a
•V•NING
.. _ 1 e:oo l!I _,I
IJ 1114'90<1d
D tllowlt: .O (nr) "Stmh ot
Llrtclo" (•m) 49-Wifham Holden.
Wilham Btnd11
8 (@ ())) C.ptein & T1nniflt
(R) Redd r 01 a Bob Hol)f and John
T11vo1t1 are 1ues1s D [al Do IL To Ille M usJc ID Mcwlt: "Tiit WH Slloes'' (d11)
'C8-Mo111 Shearer. Anion Walbrook
((lJJ ) Otlbnd btdt" Sldtlilltl
QJ UFO 0111'°"" IJJI 11'1111.Wt
llCl S,.U: I Ht
fl) lun11t Wolf With
C> Mllliul/Vtritty $llOw m 0t111h m Cott11a,...
-6:30-
• ((11) (2)) (I) ......
D Celt~ SW..,.Ulb
9 Stir MoMM111t m Sur Socctr
m Roller ""'"
7:00 a ({11) Clll l() 50 ltllluttt
D QJJ Cl) ~ m WOrlel of Oi.-
1111 'Babes 1n To1t1nd" Cone! R1y
Botu1. Ed Wynn, lommy Sands and
Annttte run1cello stir 1n an
ad1p1111on ol Victor He1btrt s
dththtful muS1Cal t111y lalt lht evil
Barnaby reduces Tom Piper and lht
Toy'llaker to 1111natu1u ot lhtm
selvtS 1n It!' lloot th1t M11y Conhtl'f
will dtt1de to marry him. but lom
leach a loy army ae11ns1 the v11!11n
and saves the day
l"I) Mr. lbp's CtuiJIJlln C.rol a <1tt , u> at lb •1111r1c111
Co11dltion H11ry Rusoner and
Barbira W1ltt11 11111 pre~nl a yu1
end ~urvty ol th1et 1mp0rt1nt llUJ
of Amt11tan hie the national
economy, tht status of bl1cks and
&overnrnent buu ucracy
llJ 111Gvi1: CC) (2hr) "On tltt Tllrallold of S..U" (adv) ·so Guy
Madison. V1111n11 l e11~ a> The r.1.1.
ti) Jap.111ne D11m1
ill) Mowit: "$milt Wiien You Sly t
Do" (com) 13-Allen funl
-7:30-m [ven1n1 II Sy111phonr
ll) ll.ort111 Laq11111t Proarami
8:00
fJ ((j!) ll J) ll Sonny ' Cher
Show Joey Heatherton and Don
Knotts 1uest D @ IJa) m Sunday .. ,,
tlf)-Mctloud "II Wn 1ne r1ahl
Bttore Ch11stmas' Marshal Mc
Clouds pt1ns tor 1 qu1tl Ch11stmas
ewe w1lh his 11t1f1tnd 11e 1n1e11upted
by a wom•n's suicide attempt and by
a 1110 ot narcotics add•cts •ho
foiled 1n tht11 holdup attrmpt
esQpe with hostatts
U The IM!lftlll ' larllty
'J) l'tttr Ml!Wn W1rltty Hollr U (at) <Dl Qll $11 lll~lion S Mu
(R) A 1t1morous lest prtol 1s f011nd
un1n1ured altei radio1nc lhal she hu
been shol down by 1 World Wai II
Japanese Zero and Steve sets out to
solvt the mystery
CD lilowit: (2hr) ''Tiit 1'11Ua4elpllll
Story" (com) '40 K1lh11ne
Hepburn, James Sle11111, Carv Grant,
Ruth Hussey, a> Sim Yorty $llow fB ltlppo11·flo.UIJ
Ill fl 5"" de SyMt f'ln1l
-8:30-a Holiday IClllic Fnti'f1I
9 :00
fJ ((JJ) (})) Cl) -...-[VM on
Clmstmas (Ye, Kotak and his staff
find the11 h•n4J full alter 1 dis
trauaht nvsband mistakenly 111u to
sllool 1 110man who looks like htJ
wrfe 1nd a spoiled younc woman is
afr11d her mtSStn& boy111end is about
to commit a come lo buy htr an
e111tnSl'fe Cllnstmu present
• Oral .. Its
8 Oial'llOllds Are For"'' * Daulin1 J1ma loftdl
Sein Conntl'J S!Ars U (121) CJ.)) IJI) Alt SOdlJ
MoN: ~ (l~r) "Olu!oMs Art Fomtr" (adv) '11-SNn Connery,
Jtfl St John, Ch11les G11r A(ent 001
uncovers i!Ch villain Bloeletd's plol
lo corner the diamond m1rket and
build • aem battened salelhte which
can destroy the 110rld
Ill T1le l.u(y $hoe
Q) ... Humbard
TV WEEK, Ul:l:t:Mt;t:I< ~ hlb
m Japanese Fl1111 a fllt 0111 W•r
f.l!) MISttrpltet Thutre "rive Red
Hernn&s'' m RusilJ r.ru
-9:30-
11 COAIEOT SPECIAL! Tlllt
• Was Tiie Yur That Was
A ,.,, in the m1lin1l
D ~}I (I) 110) ID Tlit Ila Event:
Thal Wu the Yur 11111 Was A none
too H11ous bukwa1d lock •I tht
event fitted 81ttnte11n1altelec11on
yur 1916 Chevy Chue. Buck
Henry, Art Buchwald ind NBC News
correspondent Edwin Ntwman art
amons tho~t scheduled '" th1l humorous rev1tw of even1s
lit Tiit Krna b Co1111111
Cl 511111111 ' '°'"'"'' Ill ~ and Costtlto II> Colllt .,,,. m Corona llow
10 :00
fJ (!!]) ())) (J) Dtfncclllo Del
vecch1o's plan for soend1n1 a
1om1nt1c Ch111tmas Eve with a err I
f11tnd teeters p1et1riou$1y alter ht
eets wold '"'' an old ftttnd, tfderly Jack Htndmon, 1s about to commit
suicide lo repar a dtbt a D•r ot Otscowery
Ill Tiie ltHll 11 C4mln1 a> c:.,.4 Hollr
CD m11ns
(8) .ltny htwtM m ,,.,, f'•rf-alltits m loll eo..don S11ow
-10:30-
CI J1111111y Swauart Sllow
QJ Wtedtr1ul World
11:00 D . ((J» (JJ) fD tins
O ClQl QJl 11t111 a h«Mtten m T11t m a"' CD MoYM: "llo Tl111t fot C«ntclJ''
(com) ·ao-fames Stewart Cl> Sinister Cinema
lft 1111111 of the Gtmt ta ~ Poller fonrrn
f.tl) The WIJ II Wn €C1 111111111 Sw1u1rt
-11:30-
D Sund•r Sporb Final/Movie: "Mlrriaae: Y11r 0111" (d11) ·71 _
~lly r 1tld, Robtil Prtll
D S.11my I Compenp Iii 'Ille 700 Club ......
(I) Ttltpube
Ill Movie: a:J ''Tl!• f'riu~ (d11)
63 -Paul Newman <m Morie: CC) "laadora" (d1a)
'69-Vanew Rtd111ve
(121) ) llft Andy Wlllllma Sllow
(llJ --..: CC) "How 10 It Very,
Wtry f'o,11111" (d11) 'SS-Belly
Grable, Sllerte North
•ta •IJ s-.
1 2:00
) f'ott1 M1rdlall Wtrl·
1:00 D At D11t With ..
-1:30-
• Sl4rtitlle
2:00 a Movie: <Cl "Siie's h'k on
lroadwap'' (mus) 'SJ Vue11111
Mayo. Gene Helson
-3:25-a lilowle: <CJ "I'd R11t111 It Rich"
<com) '64 Sandra Dee
I MONDAY
OEC£MllU 11
Fer ~i111 llMi 1tterllOOll 11st111cs.
plme see OAnlME 'ROGRAMS.
klow, to< rour comtnitnct, are Ille
lily's 1110¥ie$.
DAmME MOVIES
10:00 u "8-ty and lllt ..,,.
(com) 60-M1m1t Van Dom
lou1s Hrt "llfontieur l•n·
uut" <com) 46 Bob Hooe Joan C,uHield
C2tJ c_ci "Glory" {d11 l 56
Mar&artl 0'811en Wall"
Bltnnan Cll;ulOtlt Greenwood
John Lupton. l1Sil Oawrs
11:00 II lCJ "Dairy" (wtl) !>!>
Audie Murphy Man Bla11Cha1d
lyle Bettger lori Nelson
12:00 m "llle Gor1eous Huuy•·
(dra) '36 Joan Crawford Rober1
h7l0<. lt011el Barrymore
I :00 iltJ rC) "On th lllY1t11"
(mus) 'SI Danny Kaye. Gent
Tierney. Cor1Me Calv~•
2:00 II •.C.I "Min of Ille Wlldtt
neu" (dra) '6~ Adam West.
Denver Pvle. Linda ~under
l:OO lTGl , CJ "Cunt of Iha fly''
(hO<) '6~ Brran Oonlevy
3:30 D C) "A Man C1tlff fllftt·
st-" (animated) '66
EVENING
e:oo
f) cu (f) ((tl) (1 ) .....,
0 QlJ ...... o 121! Sur T11•
J) licMMI P'J4t D (f21 l Monday Nipt foa4·
ball: Tht Gltot Bowl live cover1ee 01
this 11me btlwttn Penn Slate and
Notre Dame hom lacksonv11te
ftonda
O ~t
ll,.rtrid11 ramify
Cl) AdaM·lZ
t2l) CJtctric Col!lpHJ
ID Onuu tic S.ries
4)J Oitllllt m utt11 11uca1s
-6:30-u 01111111 Cuesls rncl .. Je ~avid
host. Ralph Waite. Richard Jordan,
Billy Wray and John Rodby & Super
B.tllll
() AM) Griffitll
fa) Mt" Qfiffin Sllaw
Gt flllllly Affair
(ltl) (})) Gu~· m Ton fall
7 :00 u (llJ c iJ m m ,...,,
IJ Uars Qttb
fl My l'lltH Softs
<Il To Ttl tltt rr11tll
0 CGftaft1ratloft
m 1 LM Luty a>Tlle f1I m CiM •• c..anoe Sl Andy C;riffitll m lladWl/Uhm bport
(.'f) Mdlm Fe1111ly
-7:30-
IJ KlllC Oot11111111tary: TIM Rtd
I.Jiit You m1y live 1n •hat \known as
4 red lined" aru an aru de"a
naCed by cerca1n fenders as be1n& loo
r11ky to fend money 1n Proaram will
tell whom to appuf to 11 you think
you've been d1scrrmin•te<1 •a~rn~I
Iii Bowtin1 lor Dollars
I) Tht Odd Couple
ll.J Na111t TMt Tune
0 Tht John Wild
(fQ) lite Harold ll preu m Brady lunch
( ft 1 )J) Gosptf Shi11rs Jubilee 1.2.~ t Wild Wofld •I An1mah
IN Noaan's Ht1'11H
tD C!Mnntl ?I T011tpt m fritnclJ ol Mall m nm Gofdoll
8:00 D ( fr J ) r. ~ (R) Rhoda
Gerard upr11entes the trnma of a
bhnd dalt" "'htn Brenda s boy
f11rnd tut~ htr uo ••lh 1 loud
pushy 11101an1 and egollsllcal
sllowb11 type
0 '2i1 6> 1.0 m l1U1e House
Oii 1111 rufrit laura thinks \ht has
dr~covertd rold and 1n her
drums she aives her tam11v a
wonderful new hie
0 Mom: 1C (2hr) "Tiit M1n1pu
tator" (dra) '72 Steohan Bove!
Sy1v11 Kosc1na
6 llcw1e: C (2hr) "five WHlt In
1 Balloon" (com) 62 Red Buttons.
f abian Su Richard Haydn. Cra1& Hill D Trans World Mission J tlttlton (4hr) Jahn and lennit Dl,on are
h01h for the four hour telethon that
will include l 3 film seaments show
1ng lhe m1ssoon pro1ects 1n Mu1co.
Cuuemala Hondu11s, Nicuaque
Costa RICa and Bra11I m Ytar End Rt,ort 8111 loraensen
1r~es a rewie• of the most t•cit1n1
events lrencls and dtvelopmenl~ m
1916
Cl) ,.,,., MISOll
8 Motte: C (h t) "Seven 811des
for S.W.11 Btotlltrs" t mus) ~
Howard fleet. Jane Powell Jell
R1Chards. lommy Rall Run hblyn
ID rt«Hifly Circus Ballel Shots
Noel Strealfield s ct1ss1' th1ld"n s
story 11. • b1tltrs-!fl tale of three
orphan c111s 1n searcll of an 1den11ty
and bubbhn& with dream\ of staae
tu et rs
€9 Spanflll Mow!f m l1panest La111u11e 'roir1ms
-8:30-
0 ((f!I (1)) r.L 'hJlliS (R)
Phyllis, •1thout h1ends w1lhn& to 101n
her· birthday teltbr1flon, places. a
dtsperate calf lo Mary 1n
Mmnupohs askma that $ht drop
emythm& and Uy to her Me When
M11y amves and learns wllat
promoted the despmte inv1t~tmn.
sl1e verbally ta~u Phyllis ap3rt
9:00 U ( Tn 1 })) 'J Maudt IR)
Maude torcu Vivian to atlend the
funeral of 1 du1 friend lhey both
hated and lhc ordeal 1s worsened by
a rewttallon 1n the Unend1n1
Slumbe1 Room
Q (2JI i !Dl (0 Monday IOfl!t
Moorlt: Ct (2hr) "Camelot" Conrl
(dt4) 67 Rich11d HuK Vanessa
Reda1nc funco Nero. David
Hemmings lhe krntdom ot Camelot
crumbles •lltn Mme 4'1hur s wife,
Outen Guenevere lalls m tove with
S11 Lancelot and Arthur rs. forced 10
RO to war •1th him
fJ Moorit: (' "llln1 kon1 WL God·
'1lla" (hor) 6l Michael lle1th
l1mu Vaa1, hdao T1~ashrm1 II s
the battle ol lht century as l\1n1
Kone metls his m1ehl1ut con<ender
•n Cod11ll1 and lhe lwo monstm
batlle tor supiemacy while dutroy
rne emytti1nt rn their path
THE
BIG DIFFERENCE
IN SECOND TRUST
DEED LOANS
ON ANY
REAL ESTATE:
17%·213
onu·s ~ANIUAA '9CINTAOC RAT1-3to5 YU.
12.883
llUAJW'S
~ flOICINTAGI RATt-llU.S.
Nol all H cond trust deed loans cost lhe same.
Thar's why lhe Federal Government has given you
a simple way of comparing the annual cost of any
loan .. the Annual Perl.entage Rate. The lower 1his
rate, the lower your annual cost
Most other companiei. ask you lo pay Annual
Percentage Rates from 17'\. to 21'\. That's because
they charge you JO'\, intPres l, a ma11imum commis·
sion and give you a short time to repay. Not us.
Through Reliable your interest rate is lower (9%),
the commission is lower, and you get more time -
8 years to fully repay your loan, including prin·
cipal and interest There are no balloon payments.
We offer you an Annual Percentage Rate of 12.88%.
C heck around. We believe it's the best rate avail·
able ... and it's available to everyone.
The figures look like this. For every $1 ,000 you
borrow you pay only $14.66 a month for 96
months. The total of payments is $1.407.36. We also
offer shorter te rm loans at the same interest rate
and commission, but with proportionately higher
Annual Percentage Rates. Nalurally, you can pay
off your loan at any time by pre·paying interesl on
the balance in accordance wirh state law.
You may borrow from $2,000 lo $50,000 on a first
or second trust deed loan -o n any real estate any-
where in California. On the average, you11 have
your loan in JO working days .
No gimmicks. No double-talk. We just ct)ink it's
good business to give you the facts ... a nd more
money for your money.
I eiRELIABLE
Ill MORTGAGE CORPORATION
Trusted and Resp1cl1d Brokers lor 26 reari
IM9ional OffkH:
Ora-ee Co: 2::19'; W Beil! Rd An.1l14.•1m (714) 776·6S43
Loe Anple•: 320 No Vv1mon1 (21.3) 666·2525
SF Valle,,r: l!M55 BurhMk Blvd TalloM (21.3) 987•22S4
06rec1 Toll•fN• PhonH:
~n G'11vwl Vallt'y 1?131442 6668
C:.0111h ('\,,y l 111MJ fM''1C II (:.!IJ) 614 1.'1.7'2
v .. 11111111 t "l"''V IRO">l 497 371.1
Pap II
... MONDAY (Contlnu9dl
Q) MtrY Griffin Sllow
Q) Tht Vir1inlan
fB Cine Uniwerwl
(Qt <l ) Wtlt0m1 lick Kotter
-9:30-u GE THlilTR£: "Se<ret * Lile of John Chapman''
lblph Waite, Su""
Alispuh, ~It Hlnale
D (1]1' I llllZllll Tiit
Stmt life or John~""" Ra lph
Waite $Ills as a collece ores1den1
wllo <11scove1s lhal 11~1nc 1 llSL
lemp0fat1ly chao1tnl his fOb Status
leads to 1 more comp1ss1on11e
unders1and1n1 of peoole Ind lhe
work they do
fll) •enuonct: Whtrt All Tflin&s
ltlon1 A Poth< telem1on emy cele
b1atin1 the process of rebirth 1n
natul! and 1n 1nd1v1duals today
( 1f) 11 ) W11<01111 lack Kotter
10:00
0Kews
~v G2IJ Gunamo._
((ft) ((J) Slrffb ot Su fnncLKo
f!) £1 llen Amado
tSl, Captain l T '"nlUt
-10:30-
m mm"'"'
11:00
a e ru (fO !l~11 t 1 """ 0 2f (<2t ( e I) lou Arurlcu
Style
tJ Sta Hunt
D lm 1U 1Ntwt
Q) Mary Hart1mn, Miry H1rtm1n
m Taitt of "" lmrrt ( 11 f ) Stvmp the ~1111
Ell) Mo.11: ''W11U of tflt T01udor1"
ID Ort""hc S.rits
-lJ:JO-u (Ill' .I ) t CIS ult MO'fit
U a]1 1J) <f0) fD Jolwlily Ca1'111n
r I ) Tiit rn Clu•
D t' Ollr Show of Sflow1
m "'"' iltl Tiit TOO Club
(<21! te l Scienca fiction Th11tr1 m Nawall•O'fit
()ti Mowlt: 1C1 "lest ol hery·
th1n1'' (dra) '59 Hope lan&e
S1ephen Boyd. Su1y Pa1~e1 Boan
Ah'lne. lou1s Jo1dan
12:00
U Btst of Groucllo
Ci) MO'fit: "Run Siltnt, Run 0Hp"
td1a) ·~s Clark Cable 8v11
laocasl•r lack Warden, Brad
OtiW m Mow1t· "St1•n11 lntrudtr" (dra>
56 ldmund Pu1dom. ld1 tu111no
Aon H11drnR Glo11a hlbol Jacques
Bt•etrac
-12:30-
D Atl·Nt1M Show: "Cnc• Up,"
"C11111by, M.O" "S111br111h Trill" m Mme: re "Man W11o uu1ll•"
(adYl 66 Jun Sarti ldmund
Purdom
1:00 u 1U1 1 eJ 10 T01110rr .. m flit I'll Clu~
-1:30-
u "'"'
2:00
U ~Ylt: !Cl "A Wrtlh ol An1fu"
(d11l 69 Rnberl Stack Rr c•ido
Monlalban, f dwa1d And1ews. John
~e11 Mori Mill~. f el1c' Otland1
Pttge 10
TUESDAY
OECEMBH ZI ,Of 1110t11ift1 1114 1tltr-llstiftp,
plu-. Mt OAt'TllilE P•OGRAMS.
Wow, lor ywr c:tnwellltoce, 1r1 tht
daJ'•~
DAmMc MOVIES
10:00 e "lftt1r1111ion1I Sttllt
lllHI" (dra ) 'J8-Geo11e
S.ndtrs Dolores def Rt0 June
lln1. lohn Cl11Jd1ne "TM Man
In tllt Iron W.sl" (d11) 39-
loan Btnntll. Alan Hale louos
Haywatd JoRph Schlldk11ul
Bl 11:) "Tht D11drt1Mtr"
(•n1mllfd) 66-Votees of Ray
Bolter h t L G1llord, Hayley Mills
11.00 II CC) ·~11111 of tllt Sky"
(wU) '56-Jell Chandler
Oorolhy Malone w-1d Bond,
llerlh Andes. lee M1rvm
t2:00 QI "Mita Stdie "'°"1pson"
(dra) ·54 Jose Ferrer. Rita
Hay .. orth, Aldo Ray, Russell
Collins
1:00 !Rt 'CJ "All Mint to Give"
(dra) '56-Glynnrs lohns
Came1on M1fthell, Patty
McColmrck
2:00 Ill ::ti "S,olt ol th1
Anurcli<" (dral ·cg John Mrlll.
Derek Bond
J.00 cm c "Rtlurft ot 111• Gun·
li1hter" (wts) 67 Robert
hylor Chad hmtl Ana
Martin Lilt 8et1aer
3:30 II 1C wk rn Free .. lad~)
66 V1r11n11 MtKtnna Bill
hams
EVENING
8 :00
fJ .. t ) 'fll ((111 f}_j)"""
D ~) rt J 1'8 <Um Ntw\ 0 •i-ll Hod•J Krne\ •S
Minnesota Northstm
(j l Gomer Pyle
D ~• m httrida• F 1mr11 m Ad•111·12 !XI Star Trtll
f2!) Eltdric ~ny m 0n"'-11c S.ritt
01) ~!lahl m 1.itt1t •.uu1s
-6:30-u Dinah! Guests include loey
Bishop, SylY11 Porftr Syt•tsle1
Slallonr and lht Rl(h1e F 1m1ly
t UWJ Gllffitll
(f§J ltltrv Glittln SllOll m 1am11y Affa11 (11'71 l3 .) Gu~t mz-
7 :00
uu ~a rv mmNewi J> My Tllrtt S-I To Tell 1111 Tnrt~
D c-..ittr1titlt m 11.M L11t1
II) Tht Fii
fa AllllriullvHI ltwhll Hour aw, cnffi111 m ~tll/ltltrtr Report
((81 Cl )) Whit W~I Wa Sir to A
H11111ry WorW m Add1111t Flmlly
-7:30-u Candid C.111111
(t)l'lltOdd ~"'·
a Mi ~JI ()) Holltw004 Squ11•• m Th• Gona S11011 C1J Tiit lok11's Wiid m "1d1 Bllncll
((ll) ) NHllliHt on tht Road
l2ll Hop11's Heroes
fJ.l) Cl1untl 21 Tor11cht m Ari's Sport's W.rld
l8i Ctltbrlty s .. •pit•ko m fl.uh Gordon
8:00
U (<Ir ) CL Tony Orlando
1114 1>"'11 f red MacMurray and Cory
811verm1n 1uest u 1U1 (IA! cm .,, 1u 1111d
SllMp (R) Canel ol lht orem1e1e
episode 1n whlCh Pappy s h1b11 ol
cun1n1 cornt!l outhn1 j111n1s and
brul1na 1ults thrulens lo c1fch up
•1th him so he dtttdes lhal the only
fh1n1 1n11 tin UYe him and his c1tw
ll 4 i11ttlatul11 victory 1n the au
l.) Mowle: (2-1) "Tht M11k of
Zorro" (•d•l ·ao Ty1one Powe1.
Linda Oa1nell. Bu.11 Aalhbone, £11
1ene P1llene. Gale Sonderau1d
U (llJ Happy Daya A lime capsule
pro1ec1 backfues when ron11e and
the euys alona o'llth 1hw dales gel
themselves locked in th' vaull at lht
hardwaie slo1e
Ci) Mo.11: ~1 (2hr) "The Spanish
Main" (adv) 45 Mau1,en O'Haia,
Paul Henre1d. Wallet Sle11k Nancy
Gates
Q) ~Jt ol lltt WM
0> Perry Maton
QJ ~PW/IC All11n
llf) Mowlt: (lflr) '1he Amtrtuniu
lion of C111ily'' <com) 6C lames
Gunu Juhe Andrews Melvyn
Ooualas lames Co1>u1n
m PlcqdrllJ Clrtui Balltl S~ou
f.ollcius•on of lhe clau.c th1ld1en·s
sto1y about lbree 0tphan 111h and
th'" drums of lame and fortune m C11npr111o
ft) Psy<hK Pllenorntna
-8:30-
u 11t1 Llwtrllt ' Slllrlty f!I) II s
lht Watt1" Shuley 1s given a promo
llon as an 0N1c11I bm taster al lhe
b1ewety by an uecuhve .. no ~no"~
she eels hpsy when Sht Sips lhe brtw
~nd who hu an ulte1101 motive
m c1ou.w11i m Chinese Proaram
OJ Sltualton Comt4J
9:00
U (117> f3J) (JJ MWS•H IRJ
Be1n11 a iOOd sama11tan pdys no
drw1dtnds 101 tlawkeye when ht
allempts lo lr1hl a nursc·s au stove
al 4 o clock in lht mo1n1nc and
suiters blrndnt~ and severe burns '"
lhE 1esu1tanl eapfosron
Q tl~ !(11f0l m hhu Wo1nan
(RI fhe k1ll1nt of a p0l1tt Ofl•W
bttu Ser Anderson lo co und,.
conr and 1orn a band of 1 'volu
hooarv te11011s1s suscecltd ot lht
slay1111
D Od Van Oyb D Gt Rich Man, POCH Man Ho
mlo1m1hon aorlablt ti our ems
hme m MtrY G1itt111 SllOW
Q) Vlr1lnlan
el} Minic.ti Vlfltl) m CMmploruhlp Wrtsllln1
-9:30-
... (ITTH JJ) 1110111 D11 11 A
Tifllt !fO 1nf01m1hon aYltlablt ~t OUI
P•ess !tme
D Dick V1n O,kt til> Mowit: "Rlch1rd Ill" (dr1) ·55
Su Laurence OltYet, Su John C1el1ud
S11 Halph R1ch11dson Su Ced11c
Ha1dw1cke, Clair' Bloom P1mela
81own m E.lptct.acultr '76
10:00
G (ffT 1 ) IJ $wrtch (Ill Pele
and Mac take what seems Lo l>t a
rouhnt cue where Pelt aoes lo Hew
Y01k 10 conduct a con!tdenlr•I m~o
111a1ton but 1nstue1 1s bulen ~D
ar1esttd and lhen relurns to Los
Altcelu only lo be k1dnappea
D Ill• )) l~ cm Polin StorJ
<R> Vmce Ed .. ards po1trays a polite
St! &Unt whost Ytn1tnce tn lhe
pursuit of the slayer of hlS lon111me
p111nt1 leads him lo force a 1elo1meo
1unk11 ana 1nlorm1nt to retuin 10 lhe
dudly undetwO•ld he had ltlt
behind
811Ktws m Bonanu D !It ramily (RI W1ll1t s best
hiend hom childhood Zeke Remsen
" aires(td 1n • 'Qay" bat and W1ll1t finds 11 hard lo 1ccep1 fhe truth
!8l Gunsmokt m U !Min Am1clo
-10:30-m mm 11 ....
11:00 0 u Im (1J ,.,.,,
u (J) '~ ~ ll "'"' 0 !Rt ('8 1 I l) Lou A1n111can
Style
C!J C.ltbrrty •ttut
QI Mery IUrtmu, Mary Hartman m Talu of the 81.!mt
(flT ~ ) Stu111p flit Stm
-11:30-
fJ (tlr ~ ) I CBS late Movie:
Cl "a.O!I' e Qi1 't 101 m .1o1111ny C.llOll t 1 !'lit rTL Club
D (IJI) f l) JtJ hH1Mf1J ltlow1e of
lht WHk
m "'"' (2tl The 700 Club
@!) Ne1r1/Mow11
12:00
0 But OI 6ro11<ho
C!) .. 011t. 1c 1 "Wonderful Coun
try" 1~es) 'S9 llobeit Mitchum,
lulie London. Ga1y Me111ll
QI llowle: "Tell It to Ille Judie"
(com) 0 Ro~al1nd Russell Rob"'
CummtnRS. r.1g Youna
Ell) Mow1t: "Weill ol the Torudora"
(rnm) 61 P,lt• Sellers
-12:30-
0 All·llr1ht Show "Ood1worth,"
"Shldo9 of Treuo11," ''Tht third ViJitOr''
Q) MO'f1t: "Two Art GuWI)'' (d•tl
63 Anlhony P"k1ns Jun Claude
8111fy
1:00
U !JS 6 110 tomorrow m ""rn Club
2:00
(i) Mo•tt Ooulllet111ure '1ht Oar
lht Hot Ll11t '411 Hot" "Svretde
Com1nandos" m Afl.flltlll Sllow: "Lllllu R111·
'4U," "rtre M11dtn1 of Dufer Spice"
3:00 a MO'flt: I Cl "Wltfl A Sons In .. ,
lle1rt" (mus) ·~? Suuo Hayw11d,
OIY•d Wayne, Rory Calhoun
•
fWEDNESDAYJ
D£CEMl£1t 29
For mornina and afternoon llstinss.
pleue see DAYTIME l'ltOGllAMS.
8tlow, tor yo11r connn1tntt. 111 tht
d1y's -es.
DAmMC MOVIES
10:00 U "T011Ptr hhs • Tnp"
(com) 39 Rolud Youn&
Constanct Bennett "Topper
lleturna" (com) CI Roland
Youne Joan Blondell
fll ~ "Snow Whitt Ind tht
ThrH Stoosn" (tom) 61 Carol
Herss The lhree Stooaes
11:00 0 It) "Blltk Stlltlcl of hi
-U." (adv) 54 Tony Cu111s
Janet le1ah. David f arrar
12:00 m "loots Milone" (dra)
'52-Willlam Holden. Johnny
Stewart
1:00 IS' '1 "Kint ltich11d and
lht Crusaders" (adv) 54 Rr.
Harmon, Laurence Harvey
V1rg1n1a Mayo
2:00 ll) "MiJhly Jot Yount" (dra)
'49 -lerry Moore, Robert
Armstrone
3:00 l]Q 'CJ "Senn Sus to
Ciiiis" (dra) 63 Roo laylor
Keith Mitchell
3:30 D 1C> "rrrst Men In lire
Moon" (adv) 64 Edward Judd
lronel Jett11es Martha Hyer lrik
Chitty
EVENING
8:00
U D JJ •10 < 111 3 ) lltw1
0 l.l~J ro (12ti 1 f) m News 0 \.at Star Tre•
f I Gomtr P'ylf
0 Gun"11Cile m l'1rtrld11 r1m1Jy m Adlm·12 m Eltc1r1e Company
ED D1111\1t1C Serit.s lt Dtn1h! m 1Jlt1e Rltuls
-6:30-u Dtn1M Guests include Vale11e
Perrone Pat Boone Bob Mackie Cole
hsh1ons frank Welk" Par Collons
John Rodbt & Super Band
T Alldy &nlfrth
II Men Gritt1" ~ m ramify AH1ir ( 11 '])) Gurumob
fl.l)loom
7:00
0D 12~ rl) ED m News O U1r't Club
( MJ ThrH Sons
8 •To Tell the Trulli m Cont1nt11tion ml l.on lucy a.> The FBI
Q) Ko!un D11m1
jt Andy Grittith
ID Maclltil/lehm Report
(lft lJ 1) Bonanu m Addams hmilJ
-7:30-
0 KllBC Documentary A Womans
Place Nicole P1e1ce will host this
unoQue perspective on .,.omen a
prolile of lour women all over 40
who were successful <n caoe"s usually dominated by men
U lowltna lo! Dollars
l The Odd Couplt
Bruce Dern (top, with arms raised) stars as the chief judge
and Dick McGarvin IS leatured as the master of ceremonies
of a beauty contest (choreographed contestants in bottom
pfcture) In "Smile." a spool of beauty pageants. to be
presented for the first time on televrslon on The CBS
Wednesday Night Movies. Wednesday at 9PM
D llABC Sptci1I; Wt Scre1rn 1n
D11knus Repo1ter Geoff Smith
presents lh•S repo11 on forced drug
g1ng of Cal1fo1n1a Stale p11son
mmares Included ,.111 be ontervoews
with inmates 1n p11son fo1me1
mmales and prison doctors There is
also a folmed report on 1 surp11se
v1s11 to a proson wl!h Anemblyman
R1Chard Alatorre Chairman of the
Select Comm11tee on Co11tchons 'L sin,ooo Question
0 The .lohr's Wild _, .......
~ l'rict b 1111111 m 8r1dy lu11<h /
(IlJ ) Pop Gott Ille Country
ill, £ Celebrity SwHpsllktt 'll lloaan't lltr0t1
fD Channel 21 Ton1Jhl
1>1 $2$,000 P'yr1mlcl
"1) flHll Gordon
8:00
U (l!Z tI) lf Good Times (RI
When Thelma s favo11te tucheo v1s1ls
the Evans she first !alls lor J J s paintings and then 101 J J
0 U1 <J) ®I Em CPO Sharkey
Some recruits brong m a lilt Solt
rubber doll 1n a b1km1 When a
snooping otf1ce1 sees Sharkey talking
to 11 he thinks he brought a dal~ on
boa1d
U Mcwie: (2hr) "GcHn1 My W11"
(mus) ·u Bina Crosby
{"1 Mcwre: (2hr) "Bl1tk Shltld of
hlworth" (adv) ·s4 To~y Curtis
D (12f 'I ) Jt I ronic -.0111111
(R) Jaomt competes m lhr 11n1 as a
lady w1rsllt1 wh1lt on unde1co•er
ass11nmenl to surch tor a rn1ssrng
OSI aaen1
D MOYie: ~ (2hr) "lladbtard,
The 1'111te" (Id•) S2 Robtrl
Nfwton l1ndl1 Dllrnell
m Wild World of Animals
0> l'erry Mason
fl) Korun Variety Ho~r
\.atl ll1tio1111 Geoaraph1e
fD The Btllt of Amhtnt Julie Hams
s11~ 1n this one woman celebrahon
or the hit sp1111 and poetry of Emily
Dickinson America's first areal
woman poet
U> Ch1mpionsllip Wrnthns m hpantse lln1u•1• P'roar1ms
-8:30-u <ru .J ) 'L The J11t111on1 (R) l t0nel s 1111nc1plrs could cost him
hos 1ob and the respect of his lather
,.hen ht is strapped to 1 lit detector
on his hrst day 11 woik
0 @ I) ®) Ill' Mclun
Stevenson Show Macs fatal
Charm Mic 1s templed when Linda
a divorcee lmnd of his dauahte1
mou 1 play for him m Crosa·Wlts
9:00
8 (111: f.3)) !J1 CIS Wedntlda1
Mow11: fC) (2hr) "Smile" {com)
·75 Bruce Dern. Barbara feldon A
hilarious hkeofl on that areal
Ame11can 1nsl1lut1on the small town
beauty paaeanl
0 ~31 <J> <]OI m Sirota's Court An omly eaeer pohct woman on the
vice squad armts a 1udae who-she
btheves 15 lryma lo pock her up
and the nsrstanl DA sees 11 as an
opportunity to eel some lavorable hudhnu lor h1msrll
D (ff) r 8 l JI Biretta (R) Tony
rs ordmd 10 10 10 1ny lenaths 10
stop 1 prolrss1onal killer who has
com' lo IO•n wr/h a syndrcatt
contract on a local mobster but
lhe hit man turns out lo be Barrlla s
closest childhood l11end
Fameo orchestra leader Guy Lombardo (center) will once
again ring in the New Year with hrs Royal Canadians playing
"the sweetest music this side of heaven:· on .. New Year's
Eve With Guy Lombardo ... a 90-minute speclal a1rir1g hve
from New York City on Frrday at 11 JOPM on CBS
Page 11
WEDNESDAY (Condnuad) m Mm Gt11f1n Show
11> V1111n11
13) 8fr Ctty aollm
-9:30-
0 JULES TAKES T£STl
• PRACTICE PARTNER
D !1i I rJ 110> m Tht rmt1ce
lulu ra~u A P111nrr" Jules opens
his 11ms-,nd his offict -to save a
caUuaue from the boiedom ol 1etare
mtnl onlr to d1scowe1 thll lhtr ait
both too stubborn to chance theu
wars ED TMatre 1n Alntnca Cr11no dt
Btti"" O> la Cr11da lllen C1iad1
10:00
Cl 1UJ 1 J I 110J Em ne Qwest Monte Markham iuesh u Nelson
Story a r11hltous ti.11 suppht• who
1s 101ned br the Baud•nt brothers
when ht ~ti~ out lo rescue a party ol
1o•e1nmenl survrvo1s •ho wt1e
awufltd and left 10 d1t by bOrdt1
raiders
0 C1) """ 'll Bonuu
u (!211 f ()) 1n 1 Chartit's All11ts
!he Me11c1n Conntcllon" The
Aneels mveshtalt a Mrncan pl.int
trnh involvinc herorn and a mu1d1td
1111
IB\ tiunSlllOh e> Ora1114ti< Strlei
-10:30-m mm 1ttt1S
11 :00
U D 6' !Jtl llf1n U 1) (lJ/ If ) (})) i..w,
'1 (12tl •J ) 13) lon A111rncu
Style
C1J Sea Hurll o C.ltlHitr """' m Mal} Hlrtman, Mary Hart1111n
Q) USC lldttblll
(CUJ <SJ) Stu111p th Stirs
-11:30-u (CIJl ) (J) CBS Late Movlt
D 0 fJJ <ml m Jolw!f c;,,_
8 (al Cl)) QJl Tht ltookit1/
Mrst11y of !ht WH•
CD lltw1 CD Mowlt: CCI "lhtk Fire" (d1a)
'54-Yvoone DeC1rlo
(3) Thi 700 Club
ID lltws/Movle
12:00
Cl kst al G10U<ho
CiJ Mowi•: (CJ "I01n of Arc" (dra)
'48-lnand Huaman Jost reuer
CD lllovl1: "flrt Oft11 hlow" (dra)
'57-Rrta Hayworth. Robert Mrlchum m WOftl1n
-12:30-
" All lll11tt $Ito•. "Gunt l>ort'I A1111t," "Tiit 8en4ib ot Oraosole."
"llm ~tt•llon" m Morie: '1he rtutldt1trs" (ad;)
48 leff Chandltr lolln S.1011
1:00
.. .Ul Ct TOlllOITOW
2:00
• Mov11: HGood'Ye, MJ fu1cy"
(com) 51 -loan Ct1wford, Rober1
Youna, r 1111k loveioy
D Movie OollblelNtu1e: "Tiit Loni
liltlftOry," wMab Ml111 Min•"
CD All-lllc~t Show: ''Alk1 Ad11111,"
"Ga111t of l>uth"
-3:45-
D Movie: ct) "Th. R111 llrtt4"
(adv) '66-James Stewart
THURSDAY I
D£CCMBUI lO
for "*"'"' ind after-listinp, pltHt Ht l>AYTllllE ,~GRAMS.
.... fOf 'fOlll COllftrttenct, 1r1 lilt
dr(1~
DAYTIME MOVIES
10:00 a (C) Mllhmet"" of tllt
So" (Id•) 60-P•u Anrth
Robert Alda "A Connechcwt
"""' 111 Kint Arthu1'1 Co.lrt" (mus) 49 B1n1 C11nby Rhond1
nemine
l(J eJ MA Dot of flan4e11''
(d11) 59 Do1d Ladd Donald
Ct1sp
11:00 O "ft1llt1111 htller Dut111e"
(dra) '48 Pal 0"8r1en D~ryl
Hickman
12:00 CD "llest Foat Forwaid"
(mus) U -luc11fe Ball Wilham
Caxton. Junt Allyson
1:00 (2fl CJ "Tht Jm Sin111"
(mus) ·~3 Danny Thomas
Pem le~
2:00 Ii) lC "Dir of tile Triffids"
(sci h) '6l Ho•aid Ktel Nrcoli.•
Maure,
3:00 ITO! CI "Or. Cooh Garden"
(dra) 70 -Bine Crosby Fran'
!Alnmse
l :lO U tC) "The Mouse thll
Roued" (com) 59 Pettt
Sellers )()an Seber&
EVENING
8:00
Q 8 IJJ rT0_ (IJt !J ) lltw1
G all tl < 211 CT) m llttlS 0 QI) SIJr Trd JJ CoNr l'ylt
-~t CD '•rtrida• r.m11y a> Ad1111·IZ m E.ltctric Comp,an,
I!) OnNtic Serie
IJl) Dinlll! m utt1e blurs
-6:30-u Dinah! Guests include Sean
Conn&1y, Jill Ireland, Ce()(et Kirby,
01 Bum1d & 011g1na1 S~vannah
Band
CJ1 Wy G11ftltll
('JD) Mel\' Griffin Sllow CD F1111itr Affair c@ rn' Gcmsmot1 mz-
7:00 ea @ mm ...., a U.n an
m .,, "''" Solla Tt T.U the T1uttl
C1) r-tt11tr1han
CD I Lowt ~
Q) Tiit f1I m ea"'°"' (SWy Gritfltll m 111t 1&ac11t1i.Lt111ei 11.,o11
(IJI) (J) loftitlU
m~msflmily
-7:30-u Aaltna: r114 fOUlll Uler1tnce
'"Thi Sellin' ol Jamie"· Part I Tht
tr11rc d11m1 of 1 slave family torn
apart by 1 sl1vt auctron and th'"
attempt lo 1tunile 1n10 1 l1m1ly un1I
8 lowlin1 IOI Doll111
CJ) The ~ C:OU,lt
• "'' GonJ Sllow (() Calldid C.111111
fi) Tht Joler's Wlld
®J tUJ r I • Merell Game
CD Tht llr1d1 Bunch
(ITT' (J }) Tiit Wilburn Brothers
fl) To1lly's Cooi1111
tR Ho(ln's Httoei m Cllln11el 21 f01111ht m ,,K, 11 •11111
CHI EyewitMD 011 S.mct m nas11 Goidoft
8:00
0 DRAMATIC ENCORE!
+ 2hr. WALTONS SHOW U ( 1r 1-l J., The ffaltOlls (It)
foe dt,ulalts lht old Wallun hou~
and aflhovth the l1m1ly m1011t) lo
escape the u,mn unh11med 1n the
phymal ""H the tll1S11ophe
1nll1ch emnltonel •ound~ and
so111lual separation
.. 11•1 6) m Vu Dy•• Ind
Com111nr Tommy Smothers guests
0 1110"1: lC (2h1) "That Mu
from Rio" (adv) 64 Jean Paul
Btlmondo. r1anco1se Dor1tac
l l Movie: ( C (2hr) wltlt1• Mui.
dtrs" tdra) fl Elliot Could
U latJ (lJ) flli Welcome Bao
~tier (R) Ho1shack lalb head ovtr
heals m love w1lh a nrw 1111 1n
5ehool. but h1S chanCH OI tellln& htl are ~hm •htn ht hnds ou1 Sht s
fpste1n ·s sister
0 "'"'*; 'C (211r) "'Slnbld Ille
S.ilot" (ad•) 41 D<>ual.s F auban~s
)1 M1u1ren D Hai~
10 lallS 11.C.
CD Tiit $2S,OOO "'""'" CE l'erry ~
fD Sa111u111 Mo.tt C21i MoN: <C muJ '111oM M11111
fit1nl Mfll HI Tllt11 fly1111 MachlHf'
(tom) 65 Stuart Wh1lm1n m lllntttptta TIM•lrt m future Fi1111 m J1pa111:M U•(llllt l'roeram
-8:30-
u (QI) J)) llfh1l'1 H1pptn1111
When [rnest 111es to avGtd ltlhna hrs
motht• that he"s been ~1ptlled 1tom
SC:hOOI by lalk1n2 hrs lalhe1 rnlo
tom1 lo lht p110c1p•I l0t him ht
mrslakenJy Jhrnh he 1s homt l1tt
Jal Gallery
m Crou-Wlts
9:00
Cl (21J (jJ cm lat Sellen: 011<1
1n Elllt Chaple1 6 Sim Damon
successfully defends 1'¥1 Jot Bund
1n a t11al 11ft with racial ovettonu
llld Donny Oamon, deh¥e11n& hrs
class valend1c1ory address pleads lor
~mt•ica to avoid 1nvolvemenl 1n the
&alhenn& P1c1hc wAI U ((21) I])) Ot1 Ba1111J Mllltr (fl)
B11ney's dete,f1vu tact ~ He•
Vu1·s Eve ot 1umpers d1unkl prck
pockets and 1 spanish spe1k1n1
upectant mother about 10 &•vt buth
dQ) Mow11· ''Tht Sltll441 Thrud"
(d11) "66-Stdnty P11the1
CD Men '41ffin Show
II> V1111nian
fD ludo S-.\odtll
fll) VISIONS hpestry/
+ Cirdtt·811<k M>man
feels prtssure to
accept life u it is .
ED Vitlollt lht hpohy 4nd
'Cuclu • !wo dramu by Alem
DeVuuxconcern the en1>rmous pres
mes on black •omen to settle 101
111, II 11 IS ''The I 1pn1ry" IOCUW!S
on 1 woman about lo lak' her law
school eurns and stars Cloria Jnnu
Schufli ··cucln · '' about a youn&
11r1 who l1nt.s1m about berni a
dan'''
IV WEEK DECEMBE.A 26 1a76
-9:30-u ((3) <ll) fltJ The Tonr ll1nd1ll
$how ludJt F r1nkhn IS Otftrtd I
luc1ahvt f)Os11ton w1lh hrs old l3w
lum and laces Ille dtC1$10n ot
111\elher 01 not to stay on lhe ben,h
fB Womtn'i Goll
10:00
U (tt1 J ) t l1111aby Jones
Bradford D1flm1n 8Uts1S IS I Oli~
boy u 1thlett •ho 01{)1s a d1lhtul1
S? mrlhon doll" diamond hml lhal
1nwol~ed an u11tt1 bu11111y lo obtain
pt1ns ot t~t ~ecu111r mtem eu•ird1n11
1he IOllune 1n aems
D ,u f l Im G1bbnilt1 Attr1
noon Walli A young hen •hO 1~
t01nR bhnd tS tau1ht lo Ste trlt m a
ntw 1111y
0 0 lhn
• l lauhual
U (t2fl t i) >t1 Slreeb of San
Jrancbco Dead 01 Ahwe ' IR) Whfn
a 111ev1n1 lather ollm SI m1ll1on lo•
lhe su~pecl 1n thr rapetmu1dt1 ol
h1~ d111ahle1 the sheets turn 1nlo •
fret 101 all •h~n nea1ly evuyone
111es lo coflec1
tB G1ttttnp From Cer111111,
(2t Gun1111okt
0) El Bren Am1do
-10:30-
CD CE ID llews fD BUc• ,llSj>tcflVt Oft !ht lftw1
11:00
u D • m at11tws D ill! U 10J m Ntws a ( .2:l f' l l2t loo Allletiu A
Stylt ,. Su Hllftt
O ~tbnty Rnue m Miry H1rt111111, Mii) Hartm,n m use ~•tNH H1ctilltn
( IT ) $11111111 tilt SIJrs fD Mo.it· ... 1n1 ot tht Toftadon"
-11:30-u ( 17 );) l Cl $ Ult Movlt:
loll' u ~' 1J1 l'.JDJ m Jo111111J ~,.., CJJ Tht l'Tt tlub
B (ill) If)) Qti Streeb al San
f1a11eisco10111 Au1ust
CDlltn
(81 Tht 700 Club 0> lltws/M0¥1t
12:00 a &est of Groucha
O Movie: "A W0111111 of lht Town"
(•u) •l Clair, h~vo1 Albert l>tli~er m Mowie. "You ltlona to M•"
!com) 41 Barbara Stanw~cl. [dlf' Buch1n1n
-12:30-
... AJl.lllcht Show: "0.S.$. 117-
Dollblt Act11t," "T11t A111111111 T11ni-
p11tllt MH," wHo_,. of Fur" m Mowit c "The Slave" (adv)
63 Sieve Rtors Juquu Seinu
1:00
D 12a • ID TOlllOITaw m Tiie I'll Clull
2:00
Ill Mowlt Deubltlutu11: "Opeu
!loll Dbnl11," "Tr1111 ol hHli"
CD All·ll!Pt Show: "lload lo Glory,"
"Thi 8110 1111(111"
-3:0S-
D Mowlt : CCI "0111 M Fo1
Mu1d11 " (du) ~4 Ray Milland
Grace Kelly
FRIDAY
D£t0tl9E• 31
fO< lllOlntn( Ind ltttr-lis1l11p,
pluse see DAYTIME PllOGRAMS
8tlow, tOf "*' c.c111wtnM1nct, art tllt
41y's MMs.
DAmME ltlOVIES
10:00 O "lncendi111 Blonde"
(dra) 45 Belly Hulton Bairy
r1ugmld Charlrs Ruules Ar
luro de Colclova "Up Ult RMr"
(com) '38 PreSlon Fo$1tr Ion,
Martin. Pltylhs Broo~~
(21, IC "lhckr World ol
Mother Coose" (com) 61
Maru1et Ruther1ord
11:00 C> "flrrna luthernt(h "
(adv) ·~1 John Wayne. HOberl
Ry1n
12:00 m "It Should H1pptn to
You" (tom) S4 Judy Holiday
Jack Lemmon. Pete1 Lawford
Mrchael O'Shea
2:00 C> ~ "Fin Bold Women"
(dra) S9-Jell Morrow Me11y
Al1dm Jim Rose Irish McCalls
Guinn Williams l:OO 110 1~1 "Wpt" (dra) ·11
Ch11stopher Gtore' Avt1y
Schrrrber M111lyn Muon
W111t1m Windom Hunti Hall
Glona G11h1mt
l:lO U ..c,, '11lt Vo,aee ot 1111
Yes" (adv) 73 Desi Ainu J1
Mike Cv1ns Severi; Carland
S~1p Home1er Oella Reese
l!Vl!NING
6:00
OU .Ii(ll'J ll tJtllttrs
D 1UJ (12f ) ) tm lltws
O Sbr Trt• () '°"'" P'yll 0 Ciullsmolt m '8rtn6&t ramlly
Cl) Adam·12
fD Dtdric Company m Of11111tlc Str1ts
(JJ) Dinllll m Uttlt lbKals
-6:30-
fJ Dinah! Guests include Lucille
Sill/Cary Morton. lames and Glorta
Stewart. Steve Law1ence/[dy1e
('.orme, lohn Rodby & Super Band
(JI Andy 'ritflth (~ MtrY Grllflft Show m remilJ Malt
(<lll ) Gu"~' m Zoom m fritllds of Min
7:00
D U !fl! CJJ ID G "-"' a U1n Club U lty TillN $ons
To Ttl !!It Truth
11 C01Kelltf1ho11 CD I LM Lucy m Tht r11
fBGolMpr
GD MKlltll/lltlrtr Report ( t2ll (Jl) a.11111 e Th• AddllM family
-7:30-
D Mltrla: Tht '""' uperlt11<t The Sellin ol l1mtt" Conclu tscap
rn1 slivery WH not the end ot the
llfOblems ol thost •ho tied lht Sc!uth
by way of the underaround ra.lwtr 1n
lhe 1840's Iha story ol one family's
ad1ustmenl to hie 1n the North 1s the
sub1ecl
O As1ro 81uebollnet Bowl hpt!d
from the Houston Astro Oumt m
leaas Nebraska vs leau Jech
J.., Tiit Odd Couple
U ~a 1t l Holl1ll'OOCI Sq~res
• j Tht Muppels 0 Tiit Joltt's Wild
10! 8111)' C11lum ~ml
CD Tiie Budy 81111(11
<ill ill Ooltr '"'°" m C.rtoons
fl!) Clunntl 21 T 11111allt m Wild llliltdofll
H 81u~ the 8'11) m flull Co!don
8 :00
0 ( 17 3 ) t i CBS frld1y
Mmt: re (3hr) "It's A lhd, Mad.
Mid, Mid Wo1ld" (roml 63
Spenttr Tr~cy Millon Btrlt Std
Caesar. Budd1 H4dett (lhel
Merman Mickey Rooney S'mat
hrehway 1t~vtlf11 c101s1n& the
Cahtornld desert on lhe11 way to las
VeeH comt upon a mortally in1ured
mnto11st whose dying rasp rs a tluP
lo whr.re $350,000 111 stolen loot rs
stashed lht aerm ot greed infects
lhem all and they make a m.id dash
tor the ush tatht
D IJSt 61 jQj m ~Ord
Annu1I Kint Orua..--ilmboree
l'aredt lo' Cara11ola and Anita
81y1n1 ''' co hom ot the ltve covmae ol the New Yta1'~ Eve
spect1tle hom Miamr s Biscayne
Boulevard Th, 1911 Orange Bowl
Queen 12 yui old M1r2el)' lnhns
w;ll rt11n over the fest"'"'~
j ltlowlt: IC (2hr) "A Timt tor
Eterr SuSOll" Cd0<> n
U ( 2t I ) ll Doti~, arid M111t
l1n1 Turner Billy Preston .ind Rip
10:00
D /Ul ltl ltGl m S.rpico St1
pico lurns that he's beinc used 10
stl up a union 1ctmst whose hit he
hn been ns1gned lo protect
1£ Or1I ltobtrt's Chnrtmu $pKi1I
0 m lltn En A Sbtln1 Speruculu Se•etal
Olympic sk1ters •nd the Genesstt
F11u1e Sk11hne Ctub perl01m m u litfl Allluo
-10:30-
0 mm lltws f» llOIUll 0111111
11:00
DD m U1 llttn
D 1.(1 °" Ill! t lltws 0 '2f. ( 2ti ( l ) love Amt11t1n
Sty It
t 1 ''° Foot'"" ''•rbt<• O (117' · 3 l) Brllr Gnh1111 II••
Yur's En
Q) h its ol the 81urrt
tD llew Yur's Ewe at the Pops
-11 :30-0 (1f1' a.) (j .... ,..,., Ev•
with Guy L0111budo Cuy lomba1do.
the famed orchest11 leader who's
b,en nnema m the New Vear lor 48
years on the anwnes, ieturns illa1n
"'''h his Royal Canadians u ~l .J) !Jal JollMr C.l10n
CT Movie: "Mother Is A fresllman"
(com) 49 Lorelli Youne Van John
son. Rudy V1llee Barb111 la•rencr
0 (ta U) -at llt• Yt11'1
loc•in' Eve lhe show will 0111in11e 1n
Hollywood and New York wrlh Ore~
Oar~ p1ts1d1ne o.er lht li.e portion
rn New York s Time Sqo"e S111s
hankie Valh and the rou1 Sta~ns
with k C and tht Sunshrnt Btnd
fl/ WEEK DECEMBER 26, 1916
I!) llt• Yur's ht ~Ill ltvt
lrom the Troub1dor
'°""' l2fl 700Club In lilt, 611h1111 S,.c11I
12:00
0 ksl ol Grtudlo
(D '" ftolNll "-Y'ft\
-12:30-
0 All·lllpt Show: "The Old Full-
IOlltd llllJ," "Go Wtrt Ytllftl Mn,"
"$tr 91 A l(iftd," "Goin' to TtW!I"
Q) lilovlt' "Cnmt & PuRisl1mut.
USA" (dra) S9 CtOl&t tt1m1llon
M.,y Mu1phy Martan Seidt!
1:00
0 Tathbout
D 1,U} tl J 1!0! m Doc and
Gladys Ctltbr1tt Gladys Kn1thl ano
lhe Pips and Doc Severrnstn 101n
loðer 1n a musical celebration lo
welcome the arr1vJI ol 1971
U (!HJ (l)) I" COll(trt
(D AtMllrht Show: "Allair With A
Stnn111.'' "ConYkled." "A uwleu
Street"
IIl)Tht '1l Club
2:00
O Ooubleluturt Mowle: "San
Otmttrio, londoft," "The ltloon·
nhr"
-3:05-
fJ Movlt: "Slbrl111" (com) 'S4-
Audrey Hepburn. Humphrey Bo11a11.
W1lh1m Holden. W1lttr Hampden
4:00
D Mowit: ~ "llont But tht
lrnt" (dra) '6~ frank Sinatra
Chnt Walker
hylOI 101n 1n •New Ye11s Eve~--------------------
celeblafton O Mow,.. C (2h1) "Under C1p11-
corn" (dril 49 ln1111d Bettman
lostph Colten. Michael W1ld1n11 m 8ru• !ht Bin•
Cl) lllnth Annual Puch Bowl North
Caroltna vs University ot l\enlucky at
Atlanta Geor211
Qf ltlme· lC (Jhr) "117i" (musl
· 7Z llow11d OaS1lv1, Wtllram
01n1els Blyth, Danner
rlJ Wuluntton Wtt• in 118'1 ..
fD D Chno E hp1nne un1u11e Prop1ms
-8:30-
6 H1n1 Ch11st11n Anderson
Animated Ch,.stmas Special
(D Crou-Will
f1!) llltll Strfft Wttk
ID Conltdr v 11 ltty Show
9:00
D '21J tlJ t1~ m The Rockford
filti !ht Fourth M1n (R) An 11rhne
stewardess becomes the target of an
ususin for no epparent reason until
Roc"ord s sleuth•nt rewuls an entnely unupected oplanafton u ( Jf r ) (JI Alt Frldey lh1ht
ltlOfit• IC (2Jlr) "Ont of My W'Ms
11 Milsinr" (drt) 76 IKk Klufmtn
(lt11belh Ashley lames rmw:rscus
A small town detHltvr rs laced ••th a
ballhnR case #hen the m1s.s1n11 10rte
ol t wealthy min suddenly ruppu rs
and lht husbtnd rlaims \ht is an
imposter m Mtl'f Crlfftn Show
fl) ~mural Mov11
fL) llomtfown ~turdty lllpt et Hocar Ovke Hotar
-9:30-
0) llMhet hplllH
LUGGAGE TAGS
from your business card
Send one card for each tag
+ one spare We return
permanently sealed
attractive tag & strap.
meeting airline 1.0.
requi rements. Prevent
loss & theft! For a
personalized tag
enclose wallpaper,
fabric or "Day Glo'
paper & we will
back & trim your tags. Or
try two cards back to back.
$2 ea. or 3/$5
4/5tagsS1 .60 ea.
6/9 tags $1.50 ea.
10 or more $1.40
ea.
Sales Tax included
No C•rd?
Of•w "°"''own or \lf\d your '"'nw. •Olt10 •no ol"IOn• num~r Wit fl rll<I~• on• uro P•' lfO "00 ?I tA<ll
ENDCHECKORMONEY RD
PILOT PRINTING
P. 0 . Box 1560 Coata Meaa, Cellfornla 92626
P.ge13
SATURDAY
JANUARY I
MOANING
6:00
O lltd-lcl
l SunrtSC Sfmattr
C1J Con111111nity feedNd. m See The Rose Pa rade
• With Wonderarna 's Sob
McAllister, Bill
Welsh Ii Btn Hunter m To111na111ent of llosu Pre
Parl4e $pe<l1I 8fn Hunter will br
rtport1n11 fr om tht lourn1ment
House Sob McAlhsler 11 lht s11t
where lhe 110115 line up belort the
par1de and 8111 Welsh will 1nterMw
people i t the coiner ol Color1do
Blvd and Orln&t Grove Blvd
-6:30-a Sunrla S.mtster
IJ That's Cat
l!I Cl) Cartoons
r J Wlllttr flrtwin m Meet th• M110rs
lit Villi Alle&r•
7:00
U 17 13 • 1 t Cotton ao .. 1
Fut1ul P'arede Wilham Conr1d
Kevon Dobson and Bt1nade1te Pelm
will tiom this pa11dt live from I uu
D llJ J1 <OJ m Jun'°' 0t1nce
8ow4 P'mclt e aose ,.,,.d, ,, .....
• Wffltlld
U (ill t .) H Tom & lerryt
GI ape Aclt $llow
I') Youlti & tllt IJ.:WIS
Q) Sim Yorty Slloot
fD fot1 lor Healtll
-7:30-
.. ( 2t I ) llt labbtr)'•
Q Hot F11C111 Slloll fD M!Stt1 Rocers
-7:45-
0 cn 1·ei110) @m Rose Pmde
Prniew
Q) Rost P1'14e Prnirw
8:00
61 l'09tYt/Bll1s Cartoons
0 (t2t t J) IU1 Stoobr Dool
Oynomutt
O Movie: "11111\d Rt1e11t" (com)
57 Clyn1& IOhns. David Niven
HI VOlc:t of Tatro m Snlme Street
-8:30-u 17 '~ • &l Tourn1m1nl ol
Roses Parade Bob Ba1~er David
Groh tslher Rolle and loretla Sw11 ho~t this 881n innual pa1ad! Roy
Rogeis and Dale Evans illt lhr Grand
Marshals the lu~t husband and w11,
tum tu hold lht award
D (Ul §J .fOl m 1977 Pm·
dua Tour111m1nt ol Rosu Roy
Ro2ers and Dalt (vans will bt the
Grand Mmltats Hosts •111 be Kelly
lan&t and Michael land-On
Q Rose P111de Dick (11bt1g and
children ~ndrt• and lenn1le1 ue
hosts for tht 1971 Ro~ Parade hve
lrom Pasadena m The 11th Ann11al Tournament ol
llosa Parade for the 29th consecu
!Ive yu r 8111 Welsh will be
announc1n& the parade
Cl) T~• Tourumenl ol Rosu
Pared• Hosted by 8111 Hayes and
Susan Seaforth Hayes
CD llou P'111de 1977 Hosrs Carmen
De la Ve11a and r ernando Escandon
9:00
( 8 Movie: "Docks of New York"
(com) '45-(ast Side Koos
f.Zl> Once Upon A Classic
-9:30-
0 ( tt t ) l)t The Su1ar Bowl
l 1ve coveraee of lhe came between
1'1t1sbu1gh and Geora•a from New
O•luns lou1s1ana mzoom
10:00
0 "•"ltd Dud 0t Alrtt
M' Hot fllda• Show fD fnf1nrty F Ktory
-10:30-e m Q) Em Tournam1nt of
Rows P111d1 Repe1t s" 8 JO~M
lrs1tne
OJ lilo¥11: "Tiie Country Husll1nd"
(drl) 56 Frank lo•e1oy Barbara
Halt
D Abbott & Coittllo M Yoe1 & H11ck
fJl) lttbop
11:00
fJ 111 I ~l I 81 Tht Cotton Bowl In
lhe traditional New Yea1 s Day
Colton Bowl lool ball Ous•G 1n
Dallas. I t•a~ the unbeaten Un1ver
Soly of Maryland fer1ap1ns battle lhe
Unrvmrly ol ltouslon Cougars
1J (ll) l&J tm Woody Wood·
pechr Show
1101 Mom: "Mutiny on the lolinty"
(d1a) ]5 Clark Gable
l2J1 The Munsters m C1ncl1rell1
Carol Burnett (left). as a Hollywood has-been, gets some
acting tips from Madeline Kahn and Harvey Korman. on Tne
Carol Burnett Show. Saturday at 10PM o" CBS
P•ve 14
-11:30-u .2)1 6 €0 Prnk P1nther
!2f1 Tiie Acld1ms femur
AFTl!ANOON
12:00
~· Mow11 C "T111111'1 nn1
Cl!alltnr .. " (•dv) 6J Joel
Mahoney WooOy Strode
Q Us1 Srdt lll4s a A<holl Tll11lrt
ED As Lona As We're Torether
-12:30-0 Mow1t: "011cul1's DIU&Mer"
(hor) 36-0llo Krutt•
U ( :tt l ) llrollts SuptrUlow m l.os1 '" Spice Cl> Comtdr Clauiu
\J) Mowlt:. "Calamity line" (wt$)
·53 Dons Dir. How1rd Keel Ph11tp
C1rey, Allyn Melone
1:00
Q Suptr Bowl Specials
(fl) lJ) frtulJle, Pro Style
fD A Sbtln1 Spectacul" (II) O> Dramatic Serles m flyfn1 Sportsman lod11
-1:30-
D ll~ r61 101 m ltou Bo•I
l're·Glme
§ Science nc11on ThNtre
U (!29 e ) Supertritnds O Mow1e "Unorlhlr Stnnaer"
(Seo Ir) 6' John Ntvollt l'h1lrp
Stune C1bnell• lHud1 Pa111c\
Ne .. ell m Soul J111n
2 :00
fJ 11 3 S1lns111 & Tweety
Q fl 6 lfO. @m 11011 Bowl
Glmt Mich1R1n Wolverines play lht
USC T101ans at the 63rd Rost Bowl rn
P1sadena Calolo1n11 Oon Meredith
and Curt Gowdt dre cummfntators
Q Mons111 bllr
O ('.lt 1 e ) h. Almost Anythlnc
Cots e J Three Stoo1es
Q) Tur1n m Film fut11rr
-2:30-
fJ 111! 13 1 Clue Club
0 Mom: re, "lhrtt Guns for
hus'' (wr.s) 68 Nev1llr Br and
Peter !lrnwn Mat11fi M1ln,r Wilham
Smith
f 1 UFO m Outer l1mih
(~ 1 o •)All AbOlrd America
U M11'1n Welby
3:00
fJ 111 3 Buu Bunnyt Ro.d
Runner
6 Su Hunt 0 Mo.ie: "lttturn ol the 81dmen"
(west 48 Ralph Scoll AMt
Jefl"ys
ID Mowie· C "lohn Goldtarb,
Pltaw Comt H0111t" tcom1 6~
Shuley Macl11nt R1eh11d CrPnna
i2t The MIWC l'IHt
((jfJ 1JJ) Sportuope
E!I future film
-3:30-
1!1 Kenner SptCJ1I s.,1\\ I ~molv
Robinson
' t The Cll1rnpiont
1I 1 Stu frtk m Mission: lmponlblt
IHJ Porter W11on11
(•S J re 1) CollltdJ Claulu Spm1t
HJ Water World
T\I W(EI( OECEM8EA 2& 197&
4 :00
fJ lilled11
Q Wo111e lo the Bottom OI tlle S.1
I U Are's Sports World
17 r3 Soul Train
fl) Cine Unwerul
fl) ll1<k l'trspt<h'll Oil the Nein >• Wild K1n16om m Voice ol A111(ulture
-4:30-
fJ llt1111111kers f Wild Wild West
U Spotts Chlllen1• e hi• Abollt Pictures m M0¥1t' "The Min from l.11111111"
1 .. tsJ !IS lames Stewa11
llf llullv1llt MllSI(
f1J Gtt1111a On
H News '7l Corona llow
5:00
fJ It hhs All lllnds
IJ (2J) r U IJA) Ill! Oran1t lowl G1me Ohio State B11t~eyes mut
Colorado Buffaloes al the Oranae
Bowl 1n M1am1 Fio11d1 Jim Simpson
and John Brodie are commenlators
D Star Trt•
U rn L110k 11 Lldy llow Hosted by
Cathy R•iby. this p1ogr1m looks nol
only al lh& sports woman ol today
but at most ol lhe rrea1 Champions
of !he past .. ho laid lht g1oundwo1~
101 tod1y's women in sports e N1hon1I Gtoe11ph1c
O Jiit Mun Salu Mtcll1ne
Cl) Movie. '1he Wett" ldral SI
R1(ha1d RobPt H111y Moriln
17 3 C111mpionsl11p Bowllnc
fD f'ilm Future
( .2$ 8 ) friends ol M1n
E!I Srtu1liot1 Comedy m ll1mb1
-5:30-
• MUSIC Hill AmtllU
( Jt, e ) World ol SurYiul m Ultra Min
EVENING
6 :00
fJ , e • t7 3 llein O Mowie: 1C (2hr) "Proud and
01mned'' (dra) 7? Churk Connors 0 l1ons1dt m Cine Unlwerul
ID Once Upon A Classic
! 2t• e ) Ski the Volunoes
E!I Srluatlon Comedy
-6:30-
fJ U e (<2t1 '• ) >t News 6 Htt Haw m s 121.000 Question
I 1 3 S•i Scttte m New Y11r l'rollltK
7 :00
fJ The Muppets
O Crew1t11eu Los An1tles
8 In Surt11 Of _ m ( 2t e ) H Ll•rtnce Wtlk
Cl) Adam 11
ti 3 Hte H1w
fD Dr Who· 11\t Ambuwdoo ot
Dtllh m Bo11nc m h ln of llp•n
-7:30-
fJ Heit •nd Now
6 Andy Wilh1ms Show U let's Makt A Dul e I Unllmtd World Cl> ~OOlll 222
fI!) Monty 'Ylhon's Ffy1n1 Cucus m Japantst l1n1u111 PIOJlllftl
8:00
8 Ul f l It) M11y Tyler lloort (R) Mary linds hmetf wit h more
duhtS as 1 hostess than slle antoc1
Plied 01 rutty u1ed lo h1ndl'
when she &1vts I QUlel d1nne1 lor lht
WJM TV news tum Ceoreett~
crutes p1ndemon1um •hen sh~
announces she is 1udy to 11vt
birth MOW'
I) IA Se.trcll of.. e be h11de Reput See tos11na
al 8 JOAM
llowie •M,.stery ol tilt Wu
Muuu111" (ho1 I 3J F •Y Wray
Lionel Atwell Glynda futtll rian•
McHu&h
8 (i3l I.I}) Oli Wondtr Wofnlft
"8uuly on Parade' IR) Wonder
Wo1111n 1nl1ttralts • buuty paeeant
tounna top seturtry m1h1uv bun ro
1nvest111te wb11aae 111rmpts on a
secret pro1ect
Cl lilootlt: l'C)) "Shtt1ock "°'m• 11141 tllt hart ti O.atlt" (m,s) '44
8aS1I Rat~bone. H1ael B1uce. Eveyln
Ankers. Dennis Hoey
[§) Tht llofttymoontn
CD Thi Tourn1111ent ot Rosu
hrldt (Repul) Bill Welsh hosts
Q) Tour~11unt of lluu h11d1
(Re~e11) 8111 Hayes and Suun
Se.forth Hayes llosl
fB llte Y .. f's Grtttin1 ID CJ) Tear f.nd llttitw
all ...... : "l1ntH Ooodle Oalldy"
(mus) '42 -limes Carney Joan
Leslie W1tte1 Huston Rt<fl11d WhO<f
Rosemary De~mp Irene M1nmnc
frantes lanrford m ri1111 r .. tu11 m Lnrtl!Q Wll•
-8:30-
• Ill The W llnflart
$hw (R) lht H1rtleys m11s lhf11
lr11nd's 1111 fourth of July 81ctnlen
n11l party shen th~y become trapped
111 1 sto111e loch r
D Alldy f101tntt Henderson
2uests
ff) trettillp to Els1 •lld West
'2}1 1 {I lllowie: "Mmlll's
' M111116trs'' (dra) 62 Jeff Chandte1
Ty H11d1n, Peter 81own Will
Hutchins. And1ew Ouaran
ta Ole Btllt of Alnlltrtt (II) ,
9:00
fJ llll CD ()) AU in 1111 hmllr
(R) Alch1t and t.11~e continue lhe11
d1Sl)ult over hllle Joey s 1eli11oos
dt$llny-bul this hme Archie will
ttop at noth1n1 1n !lfdtr to hive h1s
&find~ bfptKed
I) llltlt Cl11h111 4; Cl (Zhr)
"lmn1 You" (mus) ~I -Elvis Pre
stey, l111~lh Scott Wendell Cotey
Dolotn Hart lames Gtuson Cirl
PftSS a1ent s•ans small town bor to•
contract aM ,ob with e1husband·s
band An overn1ahl sensation he
faHS for flll SlnJtr
• (8 m> at Sfj,., ' Hutc~ (R) Members of • deadlr cult h1dn1p
$fjrs~r wtlh lht threat that ht will
die 1f the11 leidet 1s not ttlus.ed
from p11son w1lh1n 2• hours
Cfal llowle: ~Les Girts" ('om) 51
Ctne Kelly, M11/1 Gaynor la1n1 Elr
Kay Kendall m Anut11tr tonlll1
m us '"""''Mu fID Movlt: "ltldlta al To•o·lll"
(dra) '55 Wtllt1rn Hold'"· Gme
Kelly, fred11t Miich, Mickey Rooney
Robert Strauss.
-9:30-
• fTI 3J (}) Aliu (R) In hopes
ol 1ell1n1 1 lOOd revte• ind
allrachn& som, new CY$1omers. Alice
1ni1les the local new$pape1'\ lood
td1to1 to sample the Im al Met s
C.lt and 1usl •bout anythtnf th•t
"" eo #lone. does i Steve Alltft'l uuall·BK•
ClJ Mttie: (W) '°!lltrloct "°"""' t!1t Sutt.I Claw" {mys} U -BJS1I
llathbon' H11el Bruce
10:00
O 11 1) 1 f C11ol lurn1t1
SllOw (R) Madeline Kahn cuuts 0 Tlte Lohm1n 1nd .,,,,.,
U (f2t .l ) mi Most Wanted
'Whilt Coll11 K1lle1 lht Mosr
Wanted tum aoes unde1cove1 to
inl1llrtlt • p11son and mve~1te1tf a
ur1u of rnu1ders ol whilt collat
crtm1nals .......
d) Nlcflt C,ll1ty
fB Samurai O.tt(tl•• o CV tr0111Jd• !BJ C1Ht1111 Fe.turo
D Vision• m llluJlal V1riety SIMwt
GD 11te Y.,r Spe(lal
11:00
U D lU m i>t llees 11 01 Ntws
D lM Amtricu Stylt
tt 1 11n '-"'' of 1111 w .. ~ O frl&ht ltl1ht m Mont: "Thi Mu ltt1111 t,,11m1t"
(wu) ~I limes Stewatt
Cll Si111J1er Cillema
Jll 1 rTl Club
((21/ lJ) Rn Humbard m ~ Goet tht Country
-11 :30-
f) lilOYtt: I.(!) "San F rift CISCO
lntt1111tlo111I" (d11) JO-Vin
Johnson, Peinell Roberts
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Ray Milland
8 Morie: £1 "l'llosc M1p1fitt11I
Mtn i11 Tht11 flyi111 M1d1ints" (com>
'65-Stuart Whllm•n, Sarah Mllu ( e' Movie: lC) "It one but the
lrtu" (d11) '6~-frank Sinatra,
Clint Wilker
lJJl m Adam·l2
!Ml Th• 700 th1b
O)lltwt/Movle
tm '°' Gon tht Country 1U1 lllovll: "ThtM Tho11u11d Hltlt"
(•,$) ·59 Don Mu11ay
12:00
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lohn P1rne Allene D1hl
( ~ 1 l,) lleWl/Sti·R Tht1tre
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1 :00
D t Roe• Collct1t
CD All lti1bt Show· "Ym 2119,"
"J1r1111f1r." "A klllt 11 W111tn1''
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D Mowlt IC "Ch ina ot
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00!01 hy lamuu1
ClJ Ooubl1f11tu11 Movies:
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3:00
f) Movie: "Str1111tn Oii A Tr1tn"
(dra) ·~ t htley Cunae1
TV WEEI(, DECEMBER 26 1978
I!fEILIEI-JTIAfi.IKJ ......... ............ ..... . ......... . ........ .
Pilul Hornung com-
bined the.irrics with
foot~ll when he lifilrred
for lhe Green B.iy Pull-
ers, so ii ureer in bro.id·
cuting seemed like ii
nillur•I step when his
plilying d•ys were over.
So, the former P.ickers
"Golden Boy" returned
for .i second yeu u Nil-
tionill Footbill Lugue
g.ime .lnalysl for CBS
Sports bro.idcuh on
CBS, with vuled broild·
usf e•perlence behind
him, ;among them being
sports •nchormiln for
CBS owned WBBM·TV In
ChicilgQ, for ii ye.ir·.and •
i·h.ilf, .ind host of "P.iul
Hornung's Sports Leg·
ends," .i syndic.ited tele·
vision series. It h.is not .ill
been high points, how-
ever. Hornung .ilso •cted
.ls .in.ilyst for the ill-
stured World Footb.ill
Lugue. Once, he w.is
st.inding on the sidelines,
microphone in h•nd lo
pick up co.ich·qu.irter·
buk str•tegy •I whir
pused for • tense mo·
ment in Wfl pl.iy. Just
before the b•ll w.u
sn•pped, the co•ch s.iw
the lineh.ickers m•ne11-
ver. "W.itch out for those
(expletive deleted)!," he
cried into Piul's micro·
phone. After m•king sure
he'd he.ird whit he
he•rd, Hornung uld
calmly: "Th•t's telling it
like it is. And now, buk
to you, upst•irs."
The combln•tlon of in·
souci.ince .ind profl's·
sionillsm m,uked the
Hornung footb•ll ureer,
When it w.s said •h•t he
pl.lyed u hud off the
field n he did on, the
records he set lndic•te a
high-octane life style,
He led the NFL in scor-
ing three str•ight
yeirs( 1960-61 ·62); scored
15 touchdowns, kicked
15 field go•ls .md 41 Htra
points to brHk the su·
son scoring record set by
.molher Green B•y leg·
end, Don Hutson, 176
polnl5 lo l:la In 1960; •nd
w.u the NH's Moil V•lu·
;ible Pl•ytr In 1961. And
when he won the scoring
title for the third stro11ight
ye.u with 148 points, he'd
plo11yed •I lusl three
g<11mes with • pulled leg
muscle, missed two be·
uuse of Army service,
•nd pl.iyed In others
without mid-week pr•c-
tice beuuse of his mlli·
tuy oblig•tion.
It's no wonder th•I his
filvorite co.ich, the legen·
do11ry Vince Lombi1rdl, re·
lurned the compliment
by c•lllng Hornung "the
most vers.itlle m•n who
ever pliyed the g•me."
II Hornung c<11used
controversy by throwing
the b<11ll to • prelly girl
•fter scoring • touch·
down •g.iinst the Chi·
<•go Be;ars (Chiugo
co;ich George H•l•s
winted him to p•y for
the b•ll), o r by going into
the st•nds in Clevel•nd
to shike hands with ;id-
mirers, or by po~ing witll
.i pretty girl who duhed
on the fteW In Los An-
geles, the conserv•tlve
lom~rdl .1ccepted him
beuuse Hornung
worked Just u h<11rd get-
ting Into sh.lpe.
II w•s Lombudi, .1fter
.ill, who rescued him
.1fter the Ho rnung •th·
letic cueer, which took
off lilce • rocket, seemed
lo have leveled.
When he w.ls in eighth
gr.ide •t Louisville's St.
P•lrick's gnde school,
H11mung w•s .lllowed to
m.dte up the pl•ys by the
COilCh.
College co.lches
umped on the doorstep
u Hornung st.irred in
b.lslcetb.ill ind footb•ll at
Fl•get High School.
Bur Bry.int, then .it
Kentucky, brought the
governer •round for two
visits to the Hornung
home.
But Hornung cho~e
Notre D•me, where he
twice rn;ide All Amerio,
.ind, In 1956, won the
Hei,m•n trophy. He
joined the Pukers in a
b•rr•ge of publlclty but
soon t.ingled with th~
then cou~h.
El
,... ....
TV WEEK. OECet.IBER 28. 111711
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