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1977-01-11 - Orange Coast Pilot
Lt I . Hotel Blaze I Irvine Company Newpor·t Seekin Opposes College ~Cooling. Down' Site Proposal Of Summer Fun · DAILY PILOT * * * 10< * * * TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 11, 1977 VOi. >O, HO ll, l SECTIONS. U PAGES British Kong 0Aoly Pllo! P"9!0 llY MIC ... rd K°""ltr Estancia I ligh School student Ed Maher was assigned to re-create a well known building for his ceramics class. lie chose the tower of Parliament that houses Big Ben, the famed clock in London. The 16-year·old Cos ta Mesan • a lso mold ed a King Kong monster. complete with crushed bi-plane. and attached it lo the tower to make his work more interesting. Residents Aet Hot Spot Cooldown I i Sought in Newport : Easter Week is no longer the headache it used to be ln Newport cb but ·residents of West wport say summer -and kularly the Fourth oC July - be pretty miserable. Representative• of the West ewporl Beach 'Improvement ~ ....... tment Owners A woman who claims she was aten and raped in her Hunt- aton Beach apartment a year o by an unknown intruder has ed the owner$ of the building seo.ooo In dam ages. The woman alleges in her Orange County Superior Court lawsuit that a faulty lock on her rear doc· f'nabled the roplst to Main entry Association appeared before the City Council Monday to ask for some help in ''cooling down" summer bot spots created by short-term tenants. John Shea. president of the as- sociation, explained t hat his members were asking for three Ulings -an ordinance requiring that tenants be notified or city laws when rental agreements are siped: passage of a noise or- dinance. and "a change In priorities" in· poUce enforce- ment. No form al action wa.s taken because the discussion was held during the council's study session. Councilmen, however, indicated they would not be wlll- ing to ln~Utute either of the Jaws sought by the association. In the case ot the rental agree- ments, City Attorney Dennis (See SUMMER, Page A2> - By Irvine Company Second College Site Opposed By WILLIAM SCHREIBER O! 1M DAiiy Pilol SUH The Irvine Company made an unexpected , last-minute bid Monday night to scuttle Sad· dleback College's chosen site for a 20-acre second campus in Irvine in favor of another loca- tion about three miles away. Boy, 15, Held In Strangling OfWoman,86 SACRAMENTO (AP) -A 15-year-old boy has been booked for investigation of murder in the death of an 86-year -old North Sacr amento woman in her home, police said today. Nellie King was beaten and strangled Monday night, police said. The suspect was taken to Juvenile Center after officers arrested him for investigation of murder. He lived in the neighborhood, they said. There were no signs ot forced entry. according t-0 police Lt. Joe Barnes. "We have no idea'' of what the motive for the killing was, Barnes said. Mrs. King had not been seen by her son in four days. She lives four houses away. Neighbors described the re- tired supply clerk as a nice lady, wht> only lert her home oc- casionally to go see her son or do some shopping. The s udden turn of events dis· mayed college trustees, who sharply criticized the company Cor failing to comment on the pro· posed campus s ite months ago. Gordon G. GetcheJ, the com· pany's manager of planning ad· ministration, s a id flaws have been found in the parcel selected by the college at the comer of Culver Drive and Bryan Avenue. He said the company is willing to make an attractive offe.r if the college instead will consider buy· ing a site at the intersection or Jeffrey Road a nd Jrvine Center Drive. Getchel said the offer could be drafted by early March but an· gry trustees gave him just one week to come back befol'e them with "the guts of a bona fide offer for the new site or forget it.'' No price has been fixed for the Myford-Bryan site, though an ap- praisal of lhe property has been completed. The college has re- served $1.3 million in next year's budget to buy the land and pre- pare it for development. Trustees were on the verge of giving the final go-ahead for negotiations with the company and, in fact, approved an en· vironmental impact report on the site Monday night. Getchel conceded that he was counting on a delay of four weeks or longer in preliminary develop- ment of the Myford-Bryan t>ite due to ongoing sewer and water service studies for the proposed ·campus. But he wu informed by coUego officials Monday that the Irvine Ranch Water District will com- (See CAM.PUS, P_,e At) Brown 'Slips' Peiformanee Rate Dimming SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Californians• eh· thusiaam for Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. is still, hJgb but di mining. the Callfomla Poll said today. •·Brown's current job rating, while still eenerally favorable, is the poorest he has received since tlling office as measured by the California Poll," said Pollster Mervin Field. But Field noted that the number ot persons who say Brown is doing a "good job" as governor -37 percent of those surveyed -ls almost as hllh as the best job performance rating given to former Gov. Ronald Reagan in earlier polls. AP Wlrephole WEEPS IN COURT Claudlne Longet 200Escape Pal,m Springs Hotel Blaze PALM SPRINGS (J\P1 About 200 guests fled their rooms as fire damaged the fas hion abl e Canyon Hotel before dawn today, firemen s aid. Officials said 13 people were treated for minor burns and smoke inhalation. No serious in· juries were reported. John McC lelland Jr .. ·publisher of t.he Long View (Wash.), Daily News, and his wile, Burdette, were evacuated by ladder from their room on the third floor, as were 100 others on that floor. • The fire was confined to the thlrd·floor lobby and hllllway$. None of the rooms burned, firemen said. The second floor also was evacuated. Among those forced to temporarily leave the three- a tor y ho t el were Arthur Sulzberger, publisher of the New York Times, and hls wife, Carol. The blue apparently started when a ctearette was dropped in a sofa ln the thlrd-floor lo~ by, firemen said. 'I'here was no immediate esli!llale of damage. Implied Motive Hinted AS PEN, Colo. (AP> Claudine Longet said she resent- ed the attitude among police of· ficers that. she was guilty of a crime the night her Jover was ki lled , the j ury in her manslaughter trial was told to- day. Pitkin County sheriff 's deputy Mary Wiggins said the defendant was distraught a nd cried softly the night Vladimir "Spider .. Sablch, a cham pion skier, was ratally shot in the mountainside home he shared with Miss Longet above this ski resort. Miss Wiggins also said M iss ~ Longet, a n ex-showgirl a nd former wife of s inger Andy Williams, was advised 'three • times of her legal rights after be-1 ing arrested, but still answered questions from Jaw enforcement officers. Miss Longet was asked how many times the .22-calibcr pistol that killed Sabich was fired, Miss Wiggins said. "She made a comment to Ute effect she resented the question, resented the implication there was an ulterior motive," Miss Wiggins testified for the prosecu· , lion, which said it hoped to close its case with a rew witnesses to· day after calling 11 persons to the (See LONGET,,Page A2} . Coast Weather Chance of fog early Wed- nesday, otherwise fair. Highs in the 60s. Lows in 405. INSIDE TODAY Co/fee prices.are beginning to drop .cu boycott efforts grind. along .. according to con- • u mer group.t hoping to cabtliu the market through reduced demand. Story. P.o.ge A4. latlex I A 2 DAIL y PILOT s Tuesday. January 11 t9n . Court Scuttles Low-income RezOning WASlllNGTON !AP> -tom· mwulles are not rl•qutrt'd to alter ·iomng laws Lo prov1dt' housing for low-income fam llws. the U S Su pr<.' me Cvurt rult'd toda> Thr court's 5 3 ruling carries far-reaching ~on•wqu('nces for many of thl' n;itlon's subur ban areas now dosed lo blacks and other minorities In an opinion written by .Justice Lewis F Powell Jr , the tourt said predom1nanlly \\htle com - muniltes do not have to make cer- tam allowances for inlegratlon unless there is proof of pu~eful racial d1scrim1nallon. The court rf'vcrsed a decision by the 7th U.S. Circwt Court or Ap- peals that the Arlington lleighls, lll., board oflrustees was guilty of racial discrimination when it re- fused to rl"zone a 15-acre plot for a low-income housing pro1ect "D1sproport1onate 1mpact is not irrelevant. but it is not the sole touchstone of an invtdlous racial d1scr1m1nat1on," Powell's opi· ruonsaid. Today's cour t's ruling limits how Car federal courts can go in hel p ing blac k s and oth er minorities find housing in pre- do minantly white communities. If the circuit court ruling had been a ll owed to stan d, o t h e r municipalities could have found themselves facing legal tests about their dec1s1ons. Chier Justice Warren E Burger and J ustices Potter Stewart, Harry A. Blackmun and William H. Rehnquist concurred in the majority opinion. J ustice Byron R. White Ciled a dissenting opl· nion, a nd Jus tices Thurgood Marshall a nd WilliamJ. Brennan Jr. dissented from a major por- tion of the m ajority opinion. Justice John Paul Steven:. took no part in consideration of tht' case. The court's maJorit) depended on a 1976 decision that omc1aJ ac· uon will not be held unconstitu· honal simply because it results in a racially disproportionate 1m pact. Jn that ruling. the court said u qualifying t est used by the Washington. 0 .C. police force was valid even though more blacks than wh1l<.>s railed the test In the LOnin~ case, the Ari· ington Heights trust(.'CS in 1971 re· fused to re.tone a \'aca.nt property s urrounded by single-family homes to aJlow con.51rUCtion or a federally subs1diicd development oflOO town houses The M elropolttan Hous ing Develop1D•nl Corp., .a Chicago- based nonprofit orga.niuUon. set up to build low rncome housing, sued the board. Spill Threat Growing 'Worst Yet To Come,' Senator Says WASlllNGTON CAP) The senator presiding over heanngs examining the rash of lanker al' cidents and 011 s pills ::.ays the en vironm<'nlal thr<'al posed by the hig ships 1s goin~ to get wor::.e Sen Wa rren Magnuson. c:.ha1rman of the S<"natc Com- .mcrce Comm1lt(•c, says the trar- .fic in bulk 011 earners increases daily in coastal waters. harbors and inland waterways, which arc already congested and crowded. "Those of us who have studi~ this area feel thl' worst is yet to Front Pug~ ,., J SUMMER ... iO"Ne1J pointed out that historical- y, thC' council has refused to become mvol\ Ni in mandc.iting rental agreeml•nts Mnce suC'h mandates could be s<.>en ai. in· Lerfcrence with property rights "There IS a Qll<'Sllon or the Im· propriety of the city government involving itself in contractual agreements bt't\\Ct'n privJte parties." he· explatnl'<I Rut counc1 I m en sauJ they would be more than wilhns: to take the points the association wanted included m the rental a~reements and devise a pam- phlet to be g1\·cn volunt:mly to short-term tenants by reul estate people and landlords. The noise ordinance abn met rl's1slance from councilmen <tft<.'r City M ana~cr noh Wynn t•xµlatned th<1t a sun l'\' of c1t1l's using such ord1nant'l' shows 1t to be int'ffectivl' 111 controlling par- ty disturbances. llis report was backed by Police Chief R James Clavas who said he <loubttod such an or· dinance would be useful to poltcc. Cit} Councilman Don Mcinnis, d res11lenl of Wt?::.t Newport. .igrccd \\llh \\'\nn JOd (;Ja,a,, Jnd su~ge.,Ll•d that .1ltcrnate means be cx11lored for controll- Jn.I! oarh d1.,turbanrcs C1lln~ th<' not th.it oc1·urrt'tl l:1sl Jul} .t. \1 l' Inn 1 .. sugJ!<.'Stcrl deploying Jll of thl• poltct.' depart rnent·s manpu,H·r on lndcpen· dence Day tn handh• problem'\ that occur thJt da\ or UMng man- lX>" er from other d(•partml·nts Ht' noted that the d1.•cllne of Easter \\' c£'k 1 n '\ l'\\ Port Bl•ach c•aml' about becausl' of the at tlt Ude Of the re'>ldl'nls ''People hen: made 1t clear t hey were SICI.. and tired of lhal ~Tap and would not p111 ur> with 1l 'They backed the r>l'l11 in whilt t hey had lo do. and m.1, h<' that's what'~ nl·<'d t·ll hC'rc'." ht• :.aid. Gia\ a•,. "'ho hJ1l hccn discuss JnJt pohcl• manpower before :Mcinnis spof..l'. a<l1fod wr, ly, "I t tunk th1!" 1s an l'Xl'ell<'nl time for ~to ask ror :Jo more orr.cer<; In a mor.-"t'riou., vein. Gia' ui:. warned th al tn 11111 all of his mun JlO"'t'I mtn \\ • l '\t•WJlflrt or anv either 'hot '(xii 1n ''ll· cit} woulcl be tu dC'prl\ <.• uther areas <if JlOhce protrr1111n "1 dor\ t think lh1·n · will e\cr be the m1llen1um "'hen the police c:lepartmenl can completely take t he burden O(( Cllllens ID SOiving thes(' problemi. "Resident~ who are disturbed cby problem~ r aui.ed by summer t t'nants> mu:.t come forward, tb~y must complain and they m ust he wllltng to testiry in ~·oOrt .. 0"ANGE COAST DAILY PILOT f~ 0,.....,. (H" 0Ail,. P1tnt wtfh•f'l•fl'I 1\ rt,.,_ bt~t,_.H••" "''"" ••O\IM•V'lil'Ol>fltw-0..•nr t o.'t P\tbhvw•o<o-npA"lt ,.,...,_. • ..,,,,._,.. .. ,, n•Jbl1~.J Moo"ta ... '"'~O"' ,,.04, ''" ( IA ~\ .. ~•0Uf'1 A•• "'· Mw ... tonQIO'\ ,.,.. •. Pl «.OVo't •a1ft Y•tl•y l'\t'""" \•1ff1Ph•ti It V•fl"" """1 t .. 0""4 S-• 1' '°'-'I\ Cn• t 'l\of'IOI· ,_...°""'•di ,,...., '" ~1\Nd \4hil'""' ~ ,.,,.,.4, '~ t" ·nit•~ .. 1 °"'>' '-h·nt •'•""t '' •i tJO 'Mnt t•1 !)b-1 (0''" "-4•~'°' {A!·l<)tf\ ,..,,.,._ ..... ,,,. .. .... p, .. ,,,.11'11 .. ,.,., ... "' ... ,.,, .J•O • (..,. .. , ViC" ~'•'tet"t •""f WPH•l~l\ot .. , '"•"'·" ic; ....... (.,,., TMfM4A M.,.._.., ••"tQ .... flt·'"' CM•lit' M \M• 11ticM,., ..... A.n•\t•ftt a.\olft•t·"" [Olten 0111CH Ce\t•AMU OOWt\l f\4•\trM «..·~ ..... ._ tt .. ('.lf'f'W'f!¥ ... ~, .. , H..,Mlt'Wlton .. ach '"''ft.ilt~lkM.ilill••rd ~•dictl•W4 tt: V.tll•w 1'111' ~A ,.., .. ,... ••"""Out .. ,.,,.. ••• Telephone (714)M2-4321 Cle .. lfled Advertl .. l'IQ 142-5171 Hcfol•l»Ci V•H,.. .. H/>W".Offt<f 511 .. i10 ,, ... s.~ Ct,...-.1. ..... °'" ,,_._.l~Oft-CAllftYC.00.-.•IU.. M0+12M =1·r~ :~,c:.·~,.c=,,~·:..f:.:. Mttt.r tt atwuft'ou'"'"" fllPr•ln m•• " ;:;;,~:=M~U~\tl t ... Cl•I ,._tflltlU*/" tt ~T;:,nc1t:'\:::!:T:, .c:!t0.:' c ~::. ~'=• =r~r...:~ :=:!..~~I:' ,,...,~Ir/ mtlll••r ._.._ come," s aid the Democrat from Washington s tate. "This country has just wit· nessetJ the worst ra-;h of lanker accidents e,·er. and on top of that, last year was the worst in history for tanker losses," s aid Magnuson in a statement pre- pared for hearings today aimed at making oil tankers safer. Fifteen tankers were lost last year. Since Der. 15, when Lhe Argo Mer chant hit a shoal orf Nantucket, 13 freight vessels in- cluding tankt•rs and barges have S•pe~t Freed APWl,.._...to Abu Daoud, suspected ter- rorist, was freed T uesday by a French court. after his a r res t las t week . T h e Isr aelis suspect Daoud of masterm inding the 1972 ter - rorist attack against Israeli ath letes at the Mun ic h Olympics. <See story Page A4.l F ront Page Al LONGET •.. stand on Monday. In his openin g statement, Deputy Dist. Atty. AshJey An· dcrson said Miss Longet "raised the gun , point ed it at (pr o- fess ional skier Vladi m ir ) "Spider" Sabich. jokinl(ly said 'bang-bang·, al which point Spider Sabich fell to the floor, dy- ing." As s he hear d details or Sabich's d eath, Miss Longet. 35, broke down twice. Once, she buried her face in her hands and cried several m inutes before becoming com posed again. The fi rst day's only surprise was provided by the secunty chief for the exclusive sub- dn•1111on where Miss Longet hved for two years with Sabich, a 31- year-old professional skier. Roy GnHith said that as hear· nved at Sablch's S250,000 moun- tainside home. he warned a Pitkin County sheriff's offi cer about Miss Longet: "Now watch it. this gal is ringy today." Neither the defense nor the prosec ution asked Griffith to de- fine "ringy." Ande rson told re- porters. "Let the jurors decide." Griffith described his entry in· to the home. "All at once, Miss Longet ap- peared in the hallway." he said. "She was holding her hand to her chest , a nd for an inst ant, I thought she had been shot ... l said, 'Claudine. who shot who?' and she said, 'l s hot Spider '." If con victed of the reckless mans Ja ugbte r c h ar ge. Mi ss Longet could r eceive a max· imum penally of 10 years in prison a.nd a $30,000 fine. She con· lends Sabich was teaching her to use the pistol before going out of town when the gun fired acciden- tally. SONAR SP01S NESS OBJECT EDINBURGH, ScoUand <AP) -Scientists hunting for the Loch Ness monster say sonar detec· tors spotted a large object on the bottom. They said it w 88 either a eun· ken bott or the 30·foot carcua or the monster. been involved in incidents or lost at sea. The latest sinking occurred Monday wh e n t h e e mpt y American ta nker Chesler A. Pol- ing broke up in a winter storm off Massachusetts. (Related story, A41 The h earings are bcing held t~ explore what safety standards may be set for fo reign-registerea vessels which carry95percentof the oil to the United St.ates. Ten of the 13 incidents involving vessels including tankers since Dec. 15 have invol ved vessels of foreign registry. Ma ritime specialis ts s ay several foreign nations have re· latively loose shipping regula- tions and t hat some vessels arc registered in those countries to a void complying with stiffer , rules elsewhere. Another aim of the hearings is to gather testimony on prospec- tive legislation to increase the liability of s hip owners for oil s p ill dam age. E ssentially, damage liability is currently hmited to the value of the vessel itself after the accident. The head of the Environmental Protection Agency testified to- day that the United States should be more aggressive in setting standards for foreign oil tankers to protect Amer\can shores and interests. Just Wild About Henry A belly dancer performs. much to the de· light of Secr etar y of State Henry Kiss- inger <:il u luncheon m his hono1· al the Na- tional P ress Club in Washington. EPA Administrator Russell E. Tr ain said the United States traditionally has sought interna- tional agr eem ents governing cons truction , operation and maintenance. But Train said this approach has largely failed : "J cannot overstress the exte nt to which the U.S. has had diCflculty in obtain- ing serious consideration of its positions . . . " Biting Horse Quarantined PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -A stallion who bit two people at the Arizona National Livestock Show last week has been loeated in San Diego and placed in quarantine, livestock oCficials said. Super Sable, a leopa rd Ap- paloosa, was named most col- orful horse at the show. He will rema in in quarantilJe al Lhe San Diego Esta tes Equestrian Center until Jan. 20. trainer Richard Atkinson said Monday. Livestock officials said the horse grabbed t wo spectators by the throat during the stock show. They said Charles Bandy and Peter Bag uley. bolh of Phoenix, were not serious ly injured. North State Weather Fair By The Associated Press Most of Northern California will continue fair through mid- week a fter the passage of a weak weather system moved through the ext reme Nor th State, scattering showers that were heaviest in the northwest. The Centra l Valley will have varia ble cloudiness, but the Sa cramento Valley could get some showers in the nort hern portion, t he Weather Service said. The Sier ra and northern m o untains cou Id get s now showers tonight and Wednes- day. Overnight temperat ur<.'s have been dip ping into the low teens in the Sierra. Ruling R eview Set WASHINGTON IAP) -The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday agreed to review an Ohio law which was challenged as an un- constitutiona l means or Unking government and religion. The law gives up to S88 million worth of m aterials and services over foe next two years to stu· dents in private schools. Isn't That D .uelctl? Jack Anderson, a volunteer fireman in Gladwyne, Pa., holds a decoy Canada goose that he and other depart· ment members spent two hours resc.uing after being called by a cllizen who thought a real bird was ln trou· blc near a dam construct.Ion project. ) Seizure Sufferer Dies; Molll Charged MT. HOLLY, N.J . (APJ -Cry. ing "Hallelujah" and appealing for God's help, Inez Council was arraigned in the dealh or her 21 -year-old daughte r , who authorities say was smothered by a turpent ine-soaked clolh pre- scribed by a "root doctor" to rid her of demons. After saying she understood the m anslaugh ter charge against her, Mrs . Council, of Brooklyn, N.Y .. was taken to jail Monday. Asst. Bu r li n gton Cou n ty Prosecutor Thom as McCormick said he would ask for $25,000 bail and psychiatric treatment after she arranged for an attorney. At one point in the short pro- ceeding, Mrs. Council appeared to be falling over . As she was led out of the courtroom clutching a formal copy of the charges, she said, "This paper needs lo be changed. It is wrong." Authorities gave the following account of her ~aughter's death: Catherine Council, a s tudent from Brookly n who had a history of seizures a nd has spent time in a psych1atric ward, died Sunday night as she. her mother and three companions drove back on Lhe New Jer sey turnpike from a visit to a Monks Com er, S.C., failh healer. Miss Council apparently had a seizure during the trip and tried to jump out of the car. Her hands and feet were bound to prevent her from kicking the driver and a scarf soaked in turpentine and ammon ia was placed over her face to prevent her from spilling. T h e d river slopped at a turnpike service center to ask for medical help and the young woman was ta ken to a hospital where she was pronounced dead. Police said the cloth had been prescribed by the root doctor as a c ure, a long with a brown medicine. Fro"' Page Al CAMPUS OPPOSED • • • plete its report within two weeks, deaJ of fo1th in this operation up cleari n g t he way for f inal tonow." purchase negotia tions and initial Getchel denied any "ulterior development work. motives" in the company's offer According lo Getchel, the site of an allernali\'e site and said chosen by the college last year there would be no need to disturb will cost more to improve with the district's "time line" for de- new sewer a nd water lines, velopment of the second campus. drainage systems, roads and "We're saying we may be too utilities than the actuaJ cost or late in this bu t we are raising t he the raw land. question before funds are ex· He a lso said that within the pended," he said . "Unfortunate· past rew weeks, company ex-ly, that puts the company in the perts have decided that the cam -position of looking suspicious." pus would be incongruous with Getchel said the company· the agricultural uses s ur round-favored site at J effrey and Irvine ing it. Center Drive would be much ''The road system in the area Is easier to d ev<'lop because it narrow and extremely dangerous a lready has nll the necessary a t s e veral intersections ,·· utilities "on silt'." Getchel said . lie agreed that the raw land · ' Th e b y -p rod u ct s o f would cost m or<' but Lhe savings agricultural operations: the odor would be realized in development of organic fertilizers, the abun-and site preparation. He also dance of mes, the presence of said the company would more re- slow, noisy fa rm machinery . . adily accept tt.c district's ap- wUI aJJ have ad verse impacts on praisal of the property's vnlue. academic operations." Some of the sharpest words Getchel also warned that the during the h our-long discussion school would a lso ''adversely ar-came from Tus tin trustee Frank feet" the company's farming Greinke, who alluded to the con· operations due to increased van-fusing court battle between dalism, damage to irrigation Mobil Oil and Cadillac-Fairview systems, reduced crop yield and for ownership or the Irvine Com- lnterference with traffic of farm pany. machines. "I am extremely d.l.sturbed by The latter conte ntions drew the the dereliction or duty in Irvine ire or Mission Viejo Trustee Don-planning," Greinke said. . na Berry, who ve rbally blasted "They had from September un· Getcbel for using "scare tactics" til now to say something and they to force the college into sub-didn't," be told Oetchel. "I'm mission. tired of being p111hed around by "I resent the company corning Cadillac and Mobil and ever· to us like this when they dJdn't ybody else playing aames with speak up at all d~ the hear· ~r land." inl when we decided to bu,y the The company ornctaJ s aid he site "said Mrs. Berry. --Was also dlsappotnted with the "f don't buy it," she conUnued. manner ln whlch the latest otrer "Tbe.y are dolng the taxpayers a hu been made to tho college and dlaH'rVice. I am suspicious of noted be b also "conJ\13ed" about their reasons and 1 bad a 1reat the ownership fight • ( , Pe nalty Measure Proposed St.ate Sen. Dennis Carpenter CR-Newport Beach) has become tbe fourth legl&lator to propose suigeated new gujdelines for re- instating the death penalty in California. Carpenter said Monday his bill ls modeled after a f1orida law that was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court. Anothe r Orange Coast legislator. Ron Cordova <D-El Toro) earlier introduced a bill listing unspecifi ed mitigating circumstances to be taken into consideration before sentencing someone to death. Carpenter's bill would require a court. before sending anyone to the gas chamber. to consider a specific set of circumstances that include the defendant's age. criminal r ecord . emotion al health and whether the defendant was acting under someone else's domination. The California Supreme Court said last month the state's death penally law didn't meet U.S. Supreme Court requirements. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. said last week he would veto any de· ath penalty bill that reached his desk. Supporters of capital punishment say they'll put the is· sue on the ballot if they can't override a veto. Carpenter's bill is similar to one already Introduced by As· aemblyman Mike Antonovich <R· Glendale>. Two other bills. by Assemblymen Bill McVittie <D· Upland). and Cordova. simply direct the court lo coo.sider un- s p e c if led mitigatin g dttumatances. OCC to Ge t Solar Assist Power System lnltallation of a new solar as- aist power system by the F.dison Company, has been approved for Orange Coast College by the acbool '• board of trustees. According to Edison's pro- poul, the Chilled Water Thermal Storage system has the potential to save energy and is the first or ill kind to be developed in thls a rea. Installation will be rmanced by a grant and F.dison will maintain the system for two years before turning it over to the District. Plans have been made for a similar system to be mstalled al the offices of KOCE·TV. Channel ~.on the cam pus of Golden West College Pardon Vrged By Goldwater WASHINGTON <AP) -Con- victed Wa tergate conspirators who are seeking pardons have an advocate in Sen. Bar r y Goldwater. "If h e C President Ford ) pardoned Nixon, I see no reason why be s bouldn 'l pardon the others. I Utink all these men re· ceived sentences way. way out of line with what they did ... We even now don't know what went on and won't know until ex- President Nixon tells the truth,'· Goldwater sajd Monday Ill an in· tervtew with CBS. Ford, in an October press con- ference. said there was "no credence" to rumors that he in- tended to give more Watergate pardons. But over the last weekend, in an interview wi th the Wubington Post. Ford declined to say whethe r be planned to grant more pardons. Dlllty,.... __ KIDS ENJOYING NEW TELEV1SION GAME 'PONG' But la Thia Fun Hazardou1 to Your TV Set? TV Damaged? County Hears Pong Woes By MICHAEL PASKEVJaJ OltlM Dally PllOtS~ Is your video game damaging your television set? Video games. <Pong. Odyssey. etc.) were 1976's Pet Rock with an estimated three million games sold. Now, the Federal Trade Commission <ITC> bas opened a preliminary investiga- tion to establish if the games can cause permanent d amage t o television picture tubes. The California State E lec- tronics Association CCSEA> has issued a warning to consumers that prolonged use of the video games can result in "burned-in" patterns on the screen. The association's executive director, Harry Midkiff, said people don't r ealize that the game image glow requires from 24,000 to 30,000 volts to produce. He said there is no danger to the phosphor burn or gJa.ss dis- coloration, but Ute lines and pat- terns may remain visible, even when the games are discon- nected. At present. no complaints have been filed with the Orange Coun· ty Consumer Affairs Depart· mer.t. according to spokesman Jo ScheUer. "If we bad con· elusive evidence we would lel local consumers know," she said. "but we don't want lo jump the gun." The investigation by the FTC bei;an J an. l , and is hs tcd ~ a ··prellm~nary inquiry.·· Sinatra P lane Crash P robe d PALM SPRINGS <AP> -In- vestigators are trying to discover the cause of the plane crash that killed Natalie "Dolly" Sinatra, the mother of entertainer Frank Sinatra. and three other people. Re<:overy teams have brought the four bodies down from rugged, snow-covered Mt. San Gorgonlo where the Lear jet crashed shortly after takeoff Thunday. Families of the victims were al Palm Springs airport when the plane carrying the remains ar· rived. Mrs. Sinatra's funeral is scheduled Wednesday. Douglas Laue. assistant chief of the California Bureau of Repair Services, said the FTC may u se th e bureau 's laboratories to conduct the in· vestigation. "We (bureau staff> hooked up a pong game to an old black and white set for between 16 and 29 hours and there was a vi5ible shadow." said Laue. He noted that tests so far seem to indicate thal older black and while sets are more prone to damage than newer or color sets. Video games. which racked up sales close to $200 million in 1976, range in price from slightly less than $30 to upwards of $150. "It's kind of strange. but it appears that cheaper models, which don't emit as strong or as stable a beam of light, are less likely to cause dama~e to a picture tube,'· said Laue. H a shadow image appears on the screen after the game is dis· connected, consumers may fmd themselves in a repair bind as far as warranty liability is con- cerned. "Defects of this nalure are con- sidered abusive picture tube operation and are outside the warranty liability on the set," ac- cording to CSEA 's Mid.klff. Therefore, state officials are warning consumers that most major television manufacturers will not replace a picture tube un· der warranty if the defect is caused by a video game. Gene Hazlett, service manager for the Los Angeles Division of Magnavox, says t~1e firm "has not developed a firm warranty stance concerning video games.·· He said local dealers have been directed to tell consumers to con· tact the nearest Consumer Af. fairs Departm ent lo open an in- vestigation. Hazlett said there is a minimal chance of dam age if video game owners remember to turn the set off and allow it to cool after a few hours of steady use. The state bureau of repairs also su ggests that owners operate video games at the lowest possible brightness or contrast. level to lower the chances of permanent "bum-in." Ford Homestead Sold &Newport Woman Makes $137,000 Detil WASHINGTON (AP> -Presi- detit Ford quadrupled his money and made more than $100,000 on hia suburban home, which has been sold ror $137,000 to a real estate salesman, it was an- nounced today. Moussa Moaadel agreed to pay cash for the seven-room brick and clapboard dwelling in Alex· andria, Va., the White House wd. Moaadel. from n earb y Betheld•, Md .. plans to Uve in the house wtth his family, the Whlt.e House aald. The real estate aaent for the ule was Susan Gherman Goldwater of Previews Inc. She la the estranged wife of Rep. BUT)' Goldwater Jr. CR-Calli) and the daughter of Dr. and Mn. E . Mortime r Gherman of Newport Beach. Moaadf'I wo rks ror the Wuh.lngton·based firm ol Shan· non Ii Luchs. Ford Bob RarretUald that Mn. Goldwator's rirm wlU rtietivo a ab: percent comml Ion on the sale. That would amount to SS,220. Previews bas sold other pre· aidential properties in the past. The Fords put their home on the market in early December. They signed the papers for the sale Monday evening. Word of the deal got out even before the buyer had been notified. Area r ealtors say houses similar to the Fords' are selling in the range of $100,000, but that the Ford residence Is more valuable because it is a presi- dent'• house and because of lm· provements such as the pool, valued at S7,500. Ford bouabt the four·bedroom house for $34,000 in 1955 and lived in lt unUl moving Into the While House ln August 1974. The President, meanwhile, bas rented a hou."e 111 Rancho Miraae, a desert resort near Palm Sprtn_ga, as n ~mporary bue alt.er be !eaves the Whlte llOUIOOO Jan. 20. H1a mllUarJ aide, Bob Durett. sald Ford still planl to buy or build a perm anent home in that area, where the President spent a poet-election golling vacation at the Thunderbird' Golf Club. The President does not know Moaadel and did not meet him during arrangements for the sale, the While House said. The house includes a backyard 20-by~ foot pool that the Fords built. It also has a converted two. car gara1e that was made lnto livinl quartera for Ford'a Secret Service agent.a during the year he lived there as vice president. The White House said the Geoetal Servlcee Administration would remove most or the esUntated-$7 ,500 worth ol govern· menl fire and aecurUy warning devices tn the home. Moaadol bas Indicated he does not want to keep the devtces, and the White House sa14 Ford bu asked the GSA to remove tbem wtth tho exception or a brick wall in Cront of the garage Ford plans to reimburse the GSA for the wall. TU!!d!y. January 11. 19T7 DAILY PfLOT ;n • Air Loan Suggested APCD Slwtdbwn Feared by So"lon A $2 million loan••~ Monday by a atate legislator to avoid what be said would be a virtual shutdown ol an air poUu. lion control agency serving Orange and three other counties. Assemblyman Jerry Lewis CR· lfighlands), s aid the emergency loan would be needed to avoid the layoff of about 200 employes of the Southern California Air Pollution Control District. That layoff. he said, would re- duce enforcement ol pollution re- gulations by about 70 percept and cause the agency virtually to cease operating. But Orange County Supervi.I« Laurence Schmit said Monday the Legislature should seek a new financing plan for the dis· trict instead of making a loan. He proposed that Lewis seek approval of legislation endorsed by representatives from Orange. Los,Angeles, Riverside and San Bernardino Counties last week that would add $1 to license plate fees to help pay for the pollution control agegcy. That legislation also would re- quire businesses and industries to pay annual permit fees to pay the rest of the agency's $8 million budget. Lewis. in a nnouncing the $2 million loan proposal, attacked what he called "Irresponsible" action by Los Angeles County supervisors. who have refused to pay their $2.3 million share or the agency budget this year. He said the S2 millioo loan would require repayment by June or counties would be aa- sessed a 10 percent penalty. County Con Recaptured After Escape TRACY (AP> -An Orange County man, serving aftve-yean- ~life prison term on a aeeond degree murder conviction was re- captured by state prison guarda after sawing his way out of bis cell. tn addition, he said, the state coukl subtract the a.mount of the loan from the counties• share ol state sales lax revenues if they refuse to pay. Orange County supervisors also have paid only $114,832 to the new agency so far lhia year. to cover expenses through the month orJ anuaey. · ~State Slay Trial Postponed Accused c ampus kille r Edward Charles Allaway was granted a three-week delay Moo- d ay of bis Orange County Superior Court trial on multiple murder charges. Allaway, 37, filed a new plea of not guilty by reason of insanity shortly before Judge Robert P. Kneeland canceled t h e scheduled trial date of Jan. 31 and ordered jury selection to begin Feb. 22. Allaway will be tried oo allega- tions that be shot and killed seven people and wounded two more July 12 when be went on a shoot- ing rampage in and around the library building at Cai State Fullerton. Judge Kneeland ruled Monday that reports compiled by psychiatrists who have ex- amined Allaway since bis arrest will remain confidential until the time of trial. Witnesses whose testimooy led to Allaway's indictment by the Grand Jury told the panel that the university janitor bad seemed despondent fet several days prior to the abtrtinp. The Gr and J ury wa tok! that Allaw~·s estranged wife, Bon- nie, 23, sued him foe divorce dur- ing the weekend before the kill- ings. They were bllled for s:M4.•~ cover expenses through M , but have not yet decided if ey will pay the remainder. ' Meanwhile, the state attordtly general has filed suit against ~ Angeles County supervisors tor their refusal to pay and report~· ly is considering adding Orange County lo the legal action. . . ,,._...,...; ... , .. Dead . Ollie F. Atkins , President : Nixon's pe r sonal photo·: grapber from 1969 lo 1974. , has died at h is Virginia , home after a long illness .. He was 60. ~ i i ( A pr ison spokesman said William Dunn, 23. and another escapee, Robert Loucella, 25, wbo is serving a life sentence for flrSt degree murder from Santa Clara County, were picked up within hours of their escape from the Deuel Vocational Institution. Court Rules Leary Lost 'Fifth' Rights I ,I Spokesman Bob Walraven said the escape occurred at about 3: 10 a.m . Sunday . Two officers searching the Livermore area on a tip found the two men in a phone booth Monday. Walraven said their case would be turned over to the San Joaquin County authorities for possible prosecution. 118 Victim's Body Found KELSO, Wash. (AP) -The body or a Huntington Beach man who died ln a traffic accident has been recovered from the Cowlitz River, the Washington State Patrol said today. Troopers said the body of Joseph E. West Jr., 32, was dis· covered last Saturday about four miles north of this Cowlitz Coun· tytown. West was thrown into the river on Nov. 30 when the car in wblch he was riding smashed into a railing on the Interstate 5 bridge over the Cowlitz about 18 mUes south or Chehalis, the patrol said. NEW ORLEANS CAP> -By lying to Customs agents. Timothy Leary lost Fifth Amend· ment protection in bis fight lo avoid a marijuana smuggling charge, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court ol Appeals ruled Monday. Leary. who served a prison sentence for possession of man- juana in La~una Beach1 was con- victed of bringing manjuana in· to the United States aft.er Mex- ican border officials refused lo admit him to Mexico, forcing his party to return across the bridge to Laredo. Tex. Al U.S. Customs, Leary said he had no contraband to declare, but the customs agent found a mari- juana seed in the party's car, or- dered a search and then found three marijuana cigarettes on Leary's daughter. Toboggan Accide nt Fatal to Youth, 19 BAKERSFIELD CAP> -A Southern California youth was killed in a toboggan accident in the Tehachapi mountains near Frazier Park, the Kem County coroner's office said. Mike Stanek, 19, of Simi Valley. struck a tree while riding down a hill Sunday, officials said. Non·stop service to San Francisco. Oakland and San Jose from nearby Orange County Airport. Convenient same-day round trips and low fares. too. U there's an easier way to get you there. we'll be the first to tell you. Coll Eow fr1{ormorlon In Orange Covnty. f7J4J 75~ 1000. Downey. (2131 924 3313: Leary argued that admitting possession of marijuana would have exposed him to prosecution in Texas . He s aid his false declaration at the border check· point amounted to a refusal to in- criminate himself. "Leary did not invoke the Fifth Amedndment." the court sald. affirming instead that he did rtot have anything to declare. ' SF Cop Vice Case Dropped SAN FRANCISCO (AP>-The district attorney's omce says charges against a San Francisco policeman accused of demanding money from a prostitute have been dropped. The charges against officer Johnnie Flannigan Jr. were dis- missed Monday on the action of Deputy Dist . Atty. Leonard Louie wbo said the woman "does ndt wish to cooperate in the prosecu-- tion." The prostitute charged that Flannigan, on the force (i\oe years, paid her $100 then de· manded the money back at gun- point. Logvnn 17141496 6000. Lo• Angeles. (2131627 540 l, San C~m•nle. (7 141 496 6000. R~rs1de1Son &mordlno. 1714J 82s.6900. or llO•" local 1r~I • AIR CALIFO!rlNLA We're easy to cake. C lM S/'IA .I • . .. 2 ' . • \ . • . , ' l .. , I ,tf DAILY PILOT TU!!d!y. Januaq 11, 1877 c.!.a:.11 ~ Ambassador Leaves ¥·. ~ Suspect Release Angers Israelis ceg with Tom ..,.ldae IDIPLE UP'E DEPT. -We bad another crisis early today ln OW' news room. I cruised into the otnce JO mJnutes Jate and noted three or my compatriots gathered around one ol our news wire machines. They had its mouth open. They were peertng at ita innards. There wu dis· cuuion. The machine was apparently broken. "Another monument to mass production." I grumbled to m}aelf. "We probably got a machine tbat was built during tbe coffee break.·· Anyway, I fled on quickly and hid ln my office. I have a rule to avoid broken machinery. Tbe trouble is that the machines usually are only partially broken. When that happens, you are expected to try fixing IL COMPLETELY BROKEN machines are Just fine. You don't even try then. You Just call the repairman. So that's what comu rrom mass production. Weseemableto manufacture things In one hell of a hurry and then spend the rest or OW' lives fixing them. So who do we blame for this All-American plight? Well, the Wrong Thinkers wlJl blame Henrf Ford, inventor of tbe Mode T, Model A and perhaps moet sl1D1flcant, creator of as· sembly line production. As a matter of fact, th1a Friday we shall celebrate the 83rd an· nivenary of Ford starting up his first assembly line. That's right. Jt all happened on Jan. 14, 1914. Henry started cranking out mass-produced Model T Fords. Now, over the years, every- thing is made on the assembly line. M y e l ectr ic pencil sharpener. Your washing machine. The Pong game you got for Christmas. Everyt.b.lng. Assembly lines have gotten faster and faster. They run them by computers in some places. And thus it is when things start break· ing. the Wrong Thinkers start blaming poor old Henry Ford. WHAT THE WRONG Thinkers forget is that Henry reaJly had a good idea. Take that Model T Ford, ror example. Henry knew how to build things on an assembly line. ln the first place, he dldn 't change models every time the calendar nipped over. He kept building the same ~ode! T tor 20 years. You didn't get multiple colors either. You could have a Model T Ford i.D any color you wanted so long aa it was black. Clearly. simplicity was the word. You could nx a Model T with a screwdriver and a pair or phers. On most autos today, I can·t even find the hood latch. Indeed, Henry Ford lrled to keep things plain and un· complicated with his assembly Line. You can't blame him that everybody copied the Idea. He didn't start pre-packaging every- tblng m plastic bags that you can·t rip open. He didn't Invent lhe aspirin bottle cap that only a child can open. Ford didn't put the pop-top on the pop can that pops off in your fin&ers and leaves the pop un-popped. ONLY THE WRONG Thinkers are golna to blame Henry Ford for our current mechanical malfunctions. Poor Henry. Ke probably never had any idea what he started. Now. I wonder 1( they've fixed that blamed contrapt.lon out In the newsroom and it's 1afe to go out there! PARIS CAP) -A French court cod.ly freed Abu Daoud. who aJ lqedly commanded t.be sla.rlng ot ur1ell a thlet.et at UJe 1'72 Munich Olympics. The Paleati- nta n flew Immediat ely lo AJ1ena. The JaraeU govemm,ent an. nounced tt was reca1Ung lta &m· busador to France, Mordechai Gazit, t-0 underline ita outra1e over the French action. IN TEL A VIV, Foreign Minister Vlgal Allon denounced the court dec1Jlon as a "dis· graceful surrender '' to Arab pre- ssure. The Palestine LlberaUon Organization praised "French justice." In Bonn. the West German gov emment. which like the Israel.ls had requested Daoud's extradi· tion, said bb release makes the "fight against international ter- rorism" more difficult. The court said there were no legal grounds for holding the sus· peel. DAOUD WAS Wll1SKED from the court to collect bis belongings at a Pana prison and wu then ruabed in a high-speed. seven-car official convoy to Orly airport Cor thefllgbt. Wben he was arrested Friday. Daoud was carrying an Iraqi passport under another name. He maintained in court thal lhis was bi& real identity. The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO> hailed the French action, 'but a Bavarian slate aovernment $pokeaman 1n Munich aald authoritle~ there were "very 1urprised." WEST GERMANY AND France's other European partners recently concluded a convention against terrorism. The court decision was expected to 1tir heated reactloo In llrael. The Palestine Liberation Organization otrlce In Pa.rU ls· sued a brief statement ''welcom· tn1 tbe attitude or French JuaUce." It said, "Everyone sees that aomeone wlsbed to harm the good relations between the PLO and France.'' France had been under heavy pressure from lts Arab frieods to release Daoud. Daoud was a rrested Friday night In Parts where he had come aa part or an ofrlclal Palestine UberaUon Organization delega-tion to attend the luneraJ of a Palestinian activist shot down In the street last week by un· known assassins. THE COURT MENJ'IONED no limitations on Daoud's fl'eedom when ordering him released. There was speculation be would quJckly be escorted to an airport and flown out for his own security. Daoud left the court to return to prison to collect hs belongings. He was driven to and from the court under heavy guard to pro- tect blm from rlak of attack. 1n the court.room. lawyer1 for the French 1ovemmeot &raued that DIOUd '1 Identity had not been clearly utabll1hed. Daoud'• lawyen contended ho ahould be freed on IJ'OUDda that he wu on an otriclal PaleaUnian mlaalon ln Parll when ~ted. A SUCCESSION OF Arab am- batladort went to the Foreisn Minl.ltl'y Monday to protest to Secretary-General Jean Marie Soutou. They tald their covem- menta cOt11ldered the arrest ot ~ blgb-ranklnl members ot the PLO an "unlnendJy act" toward the Arab world. 'I ........... lWO WOMEN ORDAINEO AS EptSCOPAl PRIESTS Ellen M•rle B•rr•~ Right, Leabl•n, •nd Annette Ruertr Lesbian Overcomes Foe Congregation Supports New Episcopal Priest NEW YORK CAP> -Despite a priest's charges that her ordlna· Uon ls a "travesty andasca.ndaJ,•• an avowed lesbian has beeoswom in as a minister or the Episcopal Church. The objection to Ellen Marie Barrett's ordination arose Mon- day as Episcopal Bishop Paul Moore asked the ritual question: "lt any or you know any impedi- ment or crime because of which we 1bould not proceed, come forward now. a nd make it known.'' FROM THE CONGREGATION or 200, a man in black clerical at· tire and RoQ\an collar stood and wallted tothe altar. "I come with a heavy heart.•· he said as be identified himself as "The Rev. James C. Wattiey, a priest or this diocese ..• He opposed the ordination cl Miss Barrett "for myself aJooe . . . on the eround of her Mlf. proclaimed lesbianiam." HE SAID THE church b&1 viewed and still views homoM1t· • uality u "a sin a1alnat the order of the Creator and against the or- der of Creation." Coffee Costs Fall Bishop Moore. ready for the ob. ject.ion, then read hi.I own sat. ment, which sald ln part, "Att.en· lion has been drawn to tbla ordination because Ms. Barrett baa not made a secret of her homosexual orientation." Boycott Grinds Along Legs to Sia.,, A Manhatt an Supr eme Court justice has supported Otis Simmons. 58-year-old derelict from Al abama, who says he'd rather "die with my legs on •· than have them amputated to stop gangrene. "l feel fine about <the ruling).'' he said from his New York hospital bed. WASHINGTON <AP > -A call for a national cutback in coffee drinking by Americans bu already caused a sharp drop in the swollen prices on interna- tional markets. A coalition or consumer groups meeting here Monday aslted Americans to cut their consump- tion by 20 lo 30 percent. "WE'VE SHOWN IN the past with sugar and meat that con· sumer acUon can have an Impact upon prices." s aid Ann Brown, a campaign coordinator. "We can do the same with coffee." Across the Atlantic, British cotree brokers were already backing up her words. Prices on the London cotcee market fell for the rourth straight day Monday in response to the consumer ac· tivlsm. "It ts chaos In aJ1 dlrec· lions," said a leading Londoa cof. fee broker who handles hundreds of thou.sands of bags of coffee a year. Arehie's Clear Court Backs TV PoliAh Joke WASHINGTON (AP) -Archie Bunker's e thnic msults to his Polish-American son·in-law are protect- ed by the First Amendment, according to the Federal Communications Commission. The FCC said Monday it could not act to censor broadcasters who air jokes and other material of- fensive to groups like the Polish-American Congress. The FCC then tmned down the congress's req\lest that it deny license renewals to three Chlcgo television stations: WLS, WMAQ and WBBM. The coogress bad accused them of airing the jokes and of discriminating against Polish-Americana in emploY· ment. The jokes the congress objected t.o were in several shows, including Bunker's "All in the Fami- ly." "Mike Douglas Show" and "Tonight Show." Late in December, a pound of Ugandan green coffee landing on the London docks reached an all. time high or $2.89 a pound wholesale. After Monday's shakeup it had tumbled to $2.02 a pound, dropping 87 cents In two weeks. The wbolesaJe price last summer was under $1.50 a pound. MRS. BROWN STRESSED that unlike the beef and sugar boycotts by consumers, "We're not asking people to cut back on coffee entirely. "A modest change in the amount of corree consumed dai· ly. either by drinking one or two fewer cups per person on the average, or by shlttlng to other beverages such as tea, should be sufficient.'• The coalition called also tor a congressional investigation of the rise in co(fee prices, now around $3 a pound on retail shelves. ELLEN HAAS OF THE Con.sumer Federation dlaputed lndmtry claim• that a coffee Before Beseue shortage, prompted by a crop free%e lm Brazil, ts behind the rise. "Coffee imports are at the same levels or even above thoee of 1974 and 1975," she said. "We don't have a shortage, but we're paying triple the price from two years ago." "Whal worries us," said the coalition in a written statement. "la that coffee prices could eaally reach $4 a pound, or even go higher. Tradltlonally, processing and distribution costs have added 100 to 130 percent more than the price of green colfe. beans to retail cotree prices. Cur- rently, the import price or Brazilian coffee is $2.25 a pound. "Our immediate objective ia to halt any further increase in col· fee prices, and, over the next two to four months, to work on briag- ing down the retail price. It will be an interesting experiment.•· COFFEE PRICES IN London tend to nuctuate wildly in times d •treas, according to market analysts. There ls no limit on trading. Mate~ See Death Stalking Wreckage GLOUCESTER, Mass. <AP> -Clinging to opposite ends of a wrecked otl tanker, buffeted by 35-foot waves and 70-mile-an.})our ~. John Gllmete and Harry SeJJect thought they were about to die. Gilmete prayed. Selleck sald to himself, "Goodbye, Harry." Both survived. They were among the six American crewmen rescued by Coast Guard cutters and heJJcopters Mon day after an empty American oil lanker broke in half durins a winter storm of( Cape Ann near the old f11bine Port of Gloucester. "However, herpereonallllehaa never been under criUciam. Many persons with homosexual tendell· cies are presently ln the ordalned ministry . . . . She ls highll't> qualified intellectually, morally and spiritually to be a priest." mEN BISHOP MOORE asked the coniregatlon. "ls it your will that Ellen Marie be ordained a priest?" and "Will you uphold her in this mlnhtry?" The replies, "It ia," and "We wlll" were thun- derous, obviously in rebuke to Father Wattley 'g position. No such objection had occurred when Bishop Moore put the ques- tion.a about the ordination of 47. year-old Annette Ruark. Applauae followed the actual hcytng on or hands by Biahop Moore, the rite of ordination, at the ceremony for both women. TBENEW PRIESTSgavelMr first blessings to the largely young adult congregation, ex- changed the biblical ldasofpeace with many, and later assisted the bishop ln distributing Commu- nion. The.Jtev. Ms. Barrett said she chose to disclose her sexuaJ orieo· talion because, "I couldn't ID before the aJtar and tlle the vows I took tonight and not be honelt about all or me ... Fire Destroys Town's Hopes For Job Boost PHILMONT. N.Y. CAP> - Neighboring firemen had to fight "near-blizzard conditions" to reach the site of an explosioa and nre that destroyed a nabber fac· tory that was to have become thia old mill town's chief employer. First '77 Storm Hits A SEVENTH CREWMAN, Joao DaRosa, 41, oC Pawtucket. R.I.. was missing and pre- sumed drowned after he Jeaped in desperation for a rescue ba1tet lowered by a belicoptM, but ml11ed and fell into the water. HLUlClt OIL.METE No serious injuries were re- ported, but several doz.en of the 1,300 residents were ev1cuat«1 Monday night to a nuni.ng home on a hill above the town u wlnda up to 30 miles per hour sent the names leaping across Main Street. TWO APARTMENT buildings, two stores and ;i barbershop tiao were gutted before about lOO firemen from 20 surrounding un- its brought the nre under control after six hours In temperatures below 20 degrees. Hl-'I l.tW •Ji.nv '1 .. 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MNttell't _.., tllouto.,.""""'" ..., ... _ ~ u • ..a lJ mjlM ., llOow t.11 lem119r.iu,.., lllOutO \1111 "-•bit··-. •1111 ...... ,,.., '° -~lrotn tOfoJS Ill Ille_,,. GaY' \Muld rut I\ llllo it.'°' et 11~ •1•••11ont and"° lo M "',,,. low Otwrts flflOfth •!loukl-. -101n 111e lllQl'I O.w"-'"._ mid-JO\ lntlle lqwa.M" l>Kf9MlllO lllOfl Cleuat -,,_Cly .._, ........ ,. "'"'' .,., •• Ill• ··~ "'"" ..,. ~·"' """" ....... ~Ill 119""41Wt, OMtlet 1...,..ratunt will ,.,.. ... ,_ ... •t •1141 ••• t "'-''"'" DWaltltff wfll ,.,._ .. _ H • M.,,.. _.,. IMl,.r4ltllr'e wlll ettO. s-,,,,....,n.,_ TUH DA'I' ~'110fl n s .. m. u S«Ol!O tow 1 tt 11.m 1.0 WIDMllO.AY l'lrst "'Oii t tu "' •·• "'"''°"' •1oee.m. tot koMl'ltQll 2.Mp.m. U Se(Ol!Q tow 11 II o.m. t _. lullflN .. ;,., M ... IO :ot•M. llMe!I rt .. 11.U llc4'11,. -10:41 '"' The 43-year -old, 281 -foot Chester A. Polinc waa cut In hair by the •torm, and the halves sank rapidly. GUmete, •1, of Jerwey Ctty, N.J., tbouiht none of tbe crewmen would live, althooch a dil\ress •lSllal had been tent. "The way the 1ea wu I didn't think we'd survive until the Coast Guard got \.here,·• aald Gllmete, ~7, ot Jersey City, N.J . ''I wu thinltlng of my family. my chlldren. l wu thlnking I wouldn't see my san grow up." HE AND FOtJa cnuEa men were on the stem as it went down • .. I kept praying,'' be said. "I lbJnk that pulled me through. The tanlcer started breaklq up, Uttle by lltUe wf\b eecb wave . When we aaw the C..t Guard ablpa, we tbou1ht we bad a Chance. Wo were aold. We were freeilQJ." Before l\11 part ol th •hip Welll under, Glim• piunred i. to tbe Icy water. He ., .. plucked from the sea by helicopter. SEU.ECK_ 'J, OF Brtckto"'1, N.J., was on the bow with ooe mate. "I figured r was a goner with the weather the way it was.'' he recalled from the hospital where the survivors were treat- ed. "They were monstrous seas. " 'Goodbye, Harry• I said to myself. In warm water, you can stay a!Joat for a long time, but in cold water. that's it," be said . ''WHEN THE BOW began to sink, t hJt the water and beian to swim for the cutter," Selleck sald. "Most of the time. I Just floated and went with the swells to save energy. The cutter mis· sed me the first time, and I was ln the wat&r 15 to 20 mlnutet before the second paaa." The Pottns. based in New Yort, was he.ded from 8oltoo to Newtniton, N.H., when the storm atnJck. It was the 13lh oll carrier ln· volved ln an accident tn or near U.S. waten ln the pat nioath. Only thre. Of the teddenta b1ve Involved Amerlcan veasei. and two of t.boee were oil barses. Eltbt accideots In volved I.Jberla.n re1llter«t 1blpa and two WIN Panamanian. Tbe rHh of 1ecldent1 1Dd splU. hu prompted a call for snater Amtrtcan ~.Uon ot foretp 1h1ppln1 In u:s. waten. The four-story 19th century brick mill bulldlng that housed the factory still smoldered early today, castlng a haze over• the town, Jocated In hUly terrain about 30 m lies 1outbeaat of Al~ny, near the MuaachuletU and Connecticut borders. Firemen, whose anival wu delayed by snow· and lee· covered road1 after the flrat alarm went out about 7:47 p.m., had to cblp their ho.es out from under 8 to 10 Inches ol Ice that .e· cumulated over them as they fou'1Jt the names. UPON RETURNING 10 tbl nrehouse. m any bad to be Ui.aJ . ly chlffled out of thelr coats. Oae b1d l ·tncb·long lciclea in his beard. "We bad pinned all our hopes" oo the X-Tyal plant, which bad start.cl operation• three montbll aso maltina rubber Ulerat\I and other lt.em1 for the aovemmeat. said Mayor Clinton MONman. who helped fight lhe nro. The fa ctory. owned by a Beacon, N. Y .• firm, had eo worker• but wu to bao employed up to 300 lat.er UU. year. Bill Set In Quake Research WASHIN GTON (f\PI Legislation to provide $220 million on earthquake prediction research was introducL'<I Monday by Sen Alan Cran:.ton. ID- Calif. > The measure. wtuch aho a:.ks for studies into reducing losses lo life and property from temblor::.. calls for $70 million more th<m a si milar bill introduc(•d hy Cranston and pltssed last year by the Senalt'. then dera1tcd in lht• House Eviderace ~aeking? VENTURA (l\l'I Thl'count\ rustrict attorncy ha~ askt'<l tha1 criminal char~cs bt> d1sm1ssed against tour of c1ght C:amanllu State Hospital t•mplo\ e!> \\ h11 were indicted folio\\ ing an 111 vestigation of pat1cn1 dl'<ith:-. al the mental facility ( S tal e J District Atty < • Stanley Trom said Monday he dill not feel then· was sufficient evidence lo pro secute three of the persons. The fourth. he said. had been pro mised immunity 10 return for his testimony on behalf of the pro secution. Watso11 ~laut .-1 n111«.•er LOS ANGELES IAP1 t\ Superior Court Judge ha!> ruled that Los Angeles rounty assessor Philip Watson must answer qucs lions fr o m supen 1sors 1n vestigating tlu• county's asses., menl practice., "H's not on!) tht• n~hl lml the duty of the Board or SupCr\'ISOr!> to kttp in touch \\1th the vanou .... activities of government. .. Judj!t' Waller E\'ans rull•d :\tonda). 32 OppoH• Bradley LOS ANGELES IAfll T\\o men named Alan Robbin., ;.1 stale sen ator who announced his candidacy long a~o and an un known municipal 1m·estmcnt ex eculivc are amoni: 32 pcopl1• who filed lo run against M:iyor Tom Bradley 1n the April 5 municipal primar). Al the 5 p.m . deadline· Monday a total or 188 Pt'Opl(' had filed IO tent ions to run for mayor. city al· tomey. controlll'r. ci~hl of the 15 city council .,cal!>, and three seats each on thr ell) school board and community college board or trus tees SENTENCED TO JAIL Sheriff Richard Hongisto Sheriff Says He'll Appeal Jail Sentence SAN FRANCISCO <Af>l Sheriff Richard Hoogisto says he will appeal a five-day jajl sen· ll'nce for contempt of court, but adds that it is "a small pnce to pay" for his failure to evict le· nanls of a low-rent hotel. Superior Court Judge John Benson on Monday !tenknrcJ Hongisto and Unders hcrirr James Denman to five days m Jail and S500 £incs and ordered them to report to nearby San ~aleo County Jail on Jun 21 Hongisto said he hoped that by then the city would complete ur rangements to buy the 137-ye..ir old lnternat10nal llotel. thus re lleving him o( the necessity of "going against m y conscience• by evicting 60 lo 80 aging Filipino and Chinese te nants from their SSO-a-month rooms. The sheriff who has tw1c<' won election on " liberal plat form ur~ing tolerance for gays and marijuana -had refused lo carry out the evictions last Or tober. riling a lack of manpower and training in the face of expect NI heavy re:;islanre from tenanL<1 and supporters. The hotel. which sits on highly valuable land bordering Chinatown. the Financial 01s· tricl and the tawdry North Beach night club wne. is owned by the A;ingkok-based Pour Seas Corp . "hich wants to destroy il to build :m unspecified proJect Let Us Be Your Banker l'cmt1· \ ·"""f'" " f 'r, '' tf1•1 I t 'hit>( J \l'r11tw1• <>tfir,., Brown's Plan Property Tax Rtilief Rapped SACRAMENTO <AP > -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s property lax relief plan was denounced as "half-baked" and "over· simplified" by some lawmakers when 1t WliS unveiled before an Assembly Committee But the committee chaJrman sajd it had possibilities "It's not as all-encompassing as I hoped it would be ... A'I>· semblyman Willie Brown said Monday after his Revenue and Tax atlon Committee was briefed on the proposal by a Department o( Finance expert "But J think it has poss1b11ilies for integral.ion into a workable program " TH E PLAN. outlined in the governor's proposed $15.2·b1l110n 1977·78 state budget. would target aid to about half of California's 3 R million homeowners. theoneshesaysneed it the most Under 1t. the state would pay 75 percent of any property tax that exceeded a certain percentage of a family's income Families making $10,000 or less would get a rebate if pMperty laxes exceeded thrCI! percent of their income. For families making more than S30.000. lhe figure would be five percent STATE PAYMENTS would be limited to a maximum of S700. and homeowners making more than a set amount would not be covered The property relJef portion of the plan is also lied lo long-range measures designed to limit local government expenditures and maintain a balance between portions or taxes paid by owners of different types or property. BROWN ALSO proposes rebates of $15 to $288 a year for up lo 416,000 elderly renters. But the plan provides no general renter relief. and that sparked some of the criticism during Monday's hearing. "Up to 40 percent of the property taxpayers are renters." As· semblyman Floyd Mori CD-Pleasanton), told Cliff Allenby. the Department of Finance's program budget manager. .. And yet you provide no mechanism so that renters can lake advantage of uny property lax relief al all. They probably have the largest amount of need in terms o( income," added Mon, who called the plan ''half-baked." And Assemblywoman Marilyn Ryan CR-Rancho Palos Verdes l. called the Brown plan "oversimplified " and said the state needed to look for tax sources other than property levies to fund social programs Refund Mulled PVC Views $129 Million SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A California Public Ullht1es Commission examiner's order which would require Pacific Telephone to refund nearly $129 million is under consider a lion, the firm said Monday. The order was cited al a proceeding to establish a new method of treating certain tax benefits for rate-making purposes Involved is the firm 's use of accelerated depreciation and job development investment credit. In addition to the refund. an ongoing rate reduction of nearly S50 million would be required It is proposed the order be effective 180 days after the commission adopts it to permit Che company to seek a ruling from the Internal Revenue Service or Pacific's lax eligibili- ty under the order ff<, eaw to ~rnm1• 111\0f\l.!d \\1th rl ~oocl b.1nk Ttwr~ an_• for, of tht.>1•1 I lw 1d1.•.1 1-I• 1 l1nd 1 1~ond b,,nk 1h.1t' 11\1 •l\l'cl m "• 1 ,, r1<:1,on"I mt<'tl!'-1 111 110111 f11tc111c1t'l ,,ffan,. dnd '" ,j., IH /\nd tl1i1t' :111' k111d 111 b.mk 1\1' \ •' hel.'n ... 11111• 1lw Otl\. \\\' npl'111•cl \\ .. II' ,,., ;11 pPO("ll<· wo1kmq hMd (p 1n.1k,• 0111 b111'k \1111k (nr 11tli~1 l(l(",11 peoplr Togl•lh1'r n 1• II 1w11h11111' clnrw f, 11 \.~111 Think nf 11 .. ,,, volll J'll '"''' 11 lln.111(1.11 "dV1c.er; her,111<.l' th.11' 1•\,Kth1 1d1.1t ''I.' ,up Bnnq lh ln111 f·n.1nc1,1I probl~m' ~Vt> ll come up \11th 1.TC'11l1w ~lutton' /\ ... k II'-qul'~11ni1~ We'll giw V<:•U ,1n,1\l''' 1l1t11 m.ikt> 'l'lh~ You ,,,kl' \Vl· 1 c111 ,1l•11 111.1k1• b.mk1ng 1• 1~1l'1 ,md fti,tt'r (or \.n11lx><1111•1·111• 1,1k1• ,, 'hort dm.>cl p.11h 1h l'\ 1•n.1h111q 1\1' dn '\,, rumk>r<:ornl' corpo1.1!(• •uf"<'r.IT11r11m• P• • ,., mrik•\ 1 Pn11n11111c<1hon .. llt"I undue rl1?l,11.' B.rnl..inq wl\.in ,1m11ld ~ dt>M. "imple and t tlll\t'llWnt \V11h u .... 11 ... I 1•1 u ... hP \.1 >Ur b,,nl<l•r W1' \\,1111 to ht• 111\ol\t•d 111 tlung ... that ;ue rmporMnl lo ~'(HJ () CITIZENS BANK OF COSTA MESA 11.tth '·•I B ·~··I • l 1 I Ii "i" l~l~I . ,, .. ,.~ .... 't>I< H1111k"ht lluur, ~l•mtl.•\ I h11r ... L1\ "'" r, • I rkf 11 ol lq I• • "1h11d~\ ll 111 I Tueeday. January 11 . 1977 Bl~•t A .,,ard Dr J onas Salk, de\•eloper of the first polio vaccine. was presented India's highest civilian award Monday in a ceremony in New Delhi. the Nehru Award for lnterna lional Understanding. New TV Show Will Help You Find a Mate SAN DIEGO CA P ) Lonely" Come to San Diego and lune to Channel 6. where you can take a gander at prospective mates on a new program called "Singles Matchup." On each hair-hour program. Dr. Tom Gillette. a sociology pro- fessor. interviews three singles who are looking for long or short term relationships He saJd the show offers an alternative for people who don't want to go to singles bars or get mvolved with matchmaker firms "THE REACTION has been very positive.·· said Dr. Ed Eisman, a psychologist involved in formulating the production Participants so far have in eluded a divorced businessman. an attractive young woman look- ing for a husband and a male computer s pecialist seeking "a nontraditional marriage." Jl'LIAN KAUFMAN, general manager of the independent sta- tion. XETV. whose transmitter rs in Tijuana, Mexico. considers the program as public service lime He says Channel 6 is lak!ng a "calculated risk " with such a broadcast. but adds that "Mail response has been very heavy. ll looks like the program will be around for a while ... DAILY PILOT AJI -Forced 1 Bus Plan! Studied LOS ANGELES (AP ) _a; Forced busing of elementalr~ school students could be requirea" this September by an intcgrali()Jl plan under study by the sprawl· ing city school district. The Los Angeles City Board of Education, under court order to desegregate its 600 schools. Wai given the plan Monday by a 119-member citizens 11dv1sory group ll had set up Public hear· ings on the plan are set for Thurs- day . THE REPORT said \81 schools would be arrected in the huge dlS· trict that stretches from San Pedro to the far reaches of lhe San Fernando Valley " possi- ble driving distance of 50 miles. Travel time for forced busing of elementary students should not exceed 45 minutes one way, the report said T HE PLAN would require every school 1n the district to have al least 30 percent white students but no more than 70 per- cent. No school could have more than 60 percent blacks or Spanish.surnamed students or a total of 70 p ercent of blacks and Spanish surnames. The deadline for tnlcgrating elementary schools would be this September. with junior highs having until September 1978 and nigh schools ha vinJ? an additional year. TH E PLAN sel'ks voluntary transfers, but provides for forcefi transfers 1f the goal for elemen- tary schools 1!' not met by this June The cutorr dates for volun· tary r ho1ccs for JUntOr hJghs and rugh schools would be May 1978 and May 1979. An estimated 62,000 elemen- tary school students would have to change schools by lhis fall - about one-tenth of the some 600.000 pupils 111 the system WllJLE T HE BOARD was rl' ce1v1ng the report. l\\o groupi. of demonstrat ors t'ngugcd in a minor scuffle and seven persOM were arr ested. No mJuries were reported The school district was orderoo lo come up with a desegregation plan last summer as a result of lawsuit filed in 1963 bv the. American Civil Liberties Union Tt)e state Supreme Court ruled the school district must "take re- asonable and feasible steps to eUminate segregated schools .. You can buy a blazer suit for, 19.99 Now that's what we call a speclall The un -mannish man -tailored jacket and pants in a slubby texture, with the softening touch of a sleeveless shirt. By Georgee Originals, navy or red polyester, sizes 8-18. Interested? Calif ornienne Dresses t ' I I I 1 Bullock's wlll close at S: 30 p.m. ; i.m~~~T-hu--rs_d_•_v_._J_an_u_a_r_v_1_3_,t_o_r_1n_v_e_n_1o_r_y~~~-t J Bullock's.South Coost Pina, 3333 Bristol. C. M .• 55Et-0611 \ 1'6 DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE . . The Dollar Deluge Campaign financiaJ diacl01Sure statements med recently show that once again Onoae County pollti· era.ts lend the parade when lt comes to raising and spending campaign dollars. ' ' Though 1977 U; a non-election year. BOme otrlce ho1ders will keep the fund-raising merry-go-round go- i11g through the year as they try to pay for 1976's spending orgy and get ready for their next onslaught. County Supervisor Thomas Riley, for example, still owes $70,000 from his 237,000 primary election campaign. , Supervisors Philip Anthony and Laurence Schmit also have substantial carry-over campaign debts. And, like RiJey, it's likely they'll be turning to de- velopers and others with a vested interest in their de· els ions to bail them out. . -. "" The high-spending trio has somettltng else in com· moo: None of them seems to be responsible for piling up his political debts. Riley puts the blame on his campaign managers, Arnold Forde and Bill Butcher. Sclhnit said be isn't certain, though he signed his own disclosure state- ments, that he owes Dr. Louis Cella more than $100,000. And Anthony. the top spender with a "total in· vestment of $271,573, says he was so busy campaign. iJlg he wasn't sure who was donating, why they were contributing or how much they gave. Another county supervisor. Ralph Diedrich. says he was just being Mr. Nice Guy when be solicited cam· paign funds for a number of candidates. As might be expected when the dollar stakes are so high, there is an inevitable credibility dilemma. It's being asked, for example, why Diedrich acts as a fund-raiser when he, a multi·millionaire, doesn't give any candidate so much as a dime. The county SUJ)erV1sors are aghast whenever it is suggested that their constant pursuit of campaign funds casts them m less than a favorable light. But unJess prompt and strong corrective action is taken, the scramble for campaign funds will become a CuU time endt;avor that wiU carry them into con· tinually troubled waters. IC it is possible to limit campaign contributions in Presidential and Congressional elections, the supervisors surely can find some way to curb their own dollar deluge. . 1..ingering Bureaucracy It's a Cairly well established rule of bureaucracy that a government agency, once created, never dies. Usually it just keeps quietly growing. That's probably why the state of California now has some 200 assorted bureaus and departments. each automatically injected with life.sustaining funds at budget time. In recent years many states and even the federal government have played with the idea of •·sunset" laws. Such Jaws provide for the regular review of all agencies-and their automatic demise if their ex· istence no longer seems justified. Congress failed to pass such a a law at the federal level last year. So did the California Legislature. Three states. Colorado, Florida and Louisiana suc· ceeded in getting SW1Set Jaws onto the books. And it's also being asked why a former -paid police informer, Gene Conrad, a man who boasts of having connections with organized crime, suddenly became a major dollar benefactor for a number of political figures. Several bills with variations on the theme will be considered by the state lawmakers this year. If they can agree on some way to trim the bureaucracy there'll be more money in the pockets of taxpayers who can use it for more practical purposes than sup- porting dead wood. Or there will be dollars available to meet the state's many pressing problems without inciting a full scale taxpayers' revolt. 'If t ~ve you moniy yc>ud just blow it Ot1 coffee.' Just Plain Bankers ( ARTHOPPE ) Good morning housewives and other shut-ins. It's time for another heartwarming chapter cl'' Just Plains Folks" -the stir· ring saga of how a bumble U'I ol' peanut farmer licked the whole, entire, power-mad Eastern Establishment single-handed. As we join up with Just Plain Jimmy today he's down to the filling station having a heart·to-heart with bi s brother. Just Plain Billy. BWy: Holy Catfish. Jim· my, you did it! And now. Just as you been prom1s· ing for two years, you can toss out aU those fat cats. pointy· headed bureaucrats, and double· domed professors who've been running the country for an etemi· ty. Jimmy: That's ngbt, Billy Good-by, Kissinger, and the whole lot of them. Just as I pro- mised. I'm replacing them wilb just plai.n folks like you and me. BWy: Aod you know who'd make a swell Secretary ot Sl~te? Hee Woolsey, our just plain ltol'ekeeper Jlmmy: I already talked to him. "Hee," l said, "what would you do ii the Russian$ attacked Yugoslavia.,·· And he said, "Who's Yugoslavia?" Billy: A good. penetrating question Jl1nm): Yep But I decided to appoint Cyrus Vance lns~ad l've got to gel a&Jong with those Russians for four years. Billy: Cyrus? Re doesn't sound like a just plain folk somehow. Jimmy: He's a just plain Jvy League lawyer-diplomat.. But be Dear Gloomy Gos A lot of us hope that Dedicated Teacher <Gus. Jan.S> will remember us the three months next sum- mer when Teacher is hav- ing an extended holiday while we are stlll laboring on. trying to earn eDOUlb in 12 months to-0ome close to what we help Teacher earn in 9 months. V.J. ought to get along fine witb my Secretary of the Treasury, who's a jmt plain Board Chairman ol a conglomerate. 8Wy: ls it a j~ plain con- glomerate? Jimmy: You bet. And 111 need his advice in de.aliog witb COD• glomerates. Same with bankers. That's why I appointed a Just plain banker to manage my budget. Bllly: Well, at least you didn't appoint some old White House budget manager to the job. Jimmy: That's rigbt. I ap- pointed ~rge Scbuttze. the.old White House budget manqer, to be my top economic ~ in· stead. What's more, I showed those boondoggling Waablngtoo congressmen a tbinc or two. There'• still~ ol them I haven't yet aPPOlDted to a cabinet-Jewel politfon. BW.J: Good for you, Jim.my. But 1 thought you were go6na to hire folb whose names people never beard of. Jlaay: (did better than that. My national security adviler ia a jun plain Ivy League profeL!llOr whole name people can't even spell. Let's see now. B·R·Z· E-Z. .• ••• Well. friend.5, don't foqet to tune In again next Um!t Meanwb!Je, keep in miDd that Old bll of Just Plains Folb Wiadom: "U you can't join 'em. lick •em. 1ben JolD •em." · Accused Widow Mag Refle~t Mao's True Belief Another View of €hina Turmoil HONG KONG -In the name of Meo Tse-tung•, bis beirs bave staged a posthumous coup d'etat aeainst their departed leader. One China watcher calls it a Qllnese-style "militaryeoup." Tb.is ls the startling CODc.lu.sion that bas emerged from the coo- fli cti n g re· ports out of China. The details are difficult to verify, and no outsider claims to have certain knowledge . Bul experts, who spe · cialiie in interpreting events in China. believe the late, re- vered Mao bas been deposed even as he is being immortalized. According to their analysis, Kao aJienaied some of his powerful associates in 1966 when be touched' off tbe Cultural Revolutk>D. This was a controlled rebellion agalnsl his own en· tnmcbed administration. FOa OLD MAO was an incura· blef revolutionary who feared bis adminiltrators were losing their ldeol91ical purity and were de- velopmg into a new ruling class. Jlatber than let the country slip back into the easy, bourgeois ways of the past, he unleashed the Red Guarda. They swarmed ov~r tbe bureaucracy and literally dragged many adJntDJIU'ators ou\ of office. They mobbed some of the most power(ul figures in the country. ridiculing and bumillaUng them. At all levels or the government, old leaders were deposed and replaced by younger party worten. Many veterans fought their way back into power. Others were survived by friends with lOGI memories. In the Chinese way, they swallowed their bumiliaUon but never forgot. The experience Jen deep personal anlmOlltie.9. There Is no doubt, say our (JACK ANDERSON) sources. that the humiliated leaders harbored bitter resent· ment against Mao. They also lived in constant apprehension over the unpredictable directives and personal disruptions that the old man, at bis whim, could cause. But the glorified Mao Tse-lung, the father of modem China, was Car too formidable for them to op- pose. So they direcled their ire instead against the ideologues who carried out bis disruptive de· mands. They particularly disliked his willful wife, Chiang Ching, who bad been the queen of the Cultural Revolution. The division, therefore,deep- eoed between tbe ideologues, wbo put revolutionary values ahead of national progress, and t.M pragmatists, who wanted to build a powerful, modern socialist state. Mao bad a frustrating habit or taking both sides or an issue. He deliberately wrote contradictory sentences in the same statement. He also liked to shock his sub- ordinates by speaking out against a policy he bad ordered himself. THIS WAS PART of the eni,gmatic, oracular image be sought to create, our &OUttes say. The rival factions, therefore. could never be certain where he stood. The available evidence strongly indicates. however. that he remained an ideologue al heart. There is reason to believe that, through bis wife, the aging. ailing Mao continued to try to re- kindle the revoluliooary spirit in China. The most powerful of the pragmatists, the late Chou En· lai, wanted to groom Teng Hsio- plng as Mao's successor. But Chiang Ching, apparenUy with Mao's blessing, succeeded io ousting Teng in 1974. He was succeeded by Hua Kuo- feng, who was reported in the press to be a compromise selec· tioo. But our sources say his ap- pointment was definitely a v\c· tory for Madam Chiang and the ideologues. HUA TURNED against her, the sources believe, because he could see the power was on the side of the pragmatists as the fee. ble Mao began to slip. Despite all the contrary statements now blaring out of China, our sources are convinced that Mao supported his wife at the end. They believe a message from Mao, circuJated by Chiang Ching among her supporters last summer. is genuine. It is in the form of a poem to bis wife. ''You have been wronged." Mao declares. He laments: "To- day we are separating into two worlda. May each keep his peace. These few words may be my last message to you .•' He went on to warn that it might become necessary to re- tum to partisan warfare to defeat · lhe government. The showdown came after - Mao's death on Sept. 9. The army. whose top command favors an orderly, respoosible government, sided with the pragmatists. ON THE N1GllT of Ocl 6, the army arrested four leading ideologues and placed them in solitary confinement. Our sources claim this was really a military coup agaJnst the dead Mao, whose will the four were lrying to carry out. The defense minister. Yeb Chln-ying. represents the military in the new n.illng COUD· cils. But our sources describe him as too ill to be effective. The real power. they say, is held by Cbe'n Hsi-lien. the com· mander of the Peking garrison. Other.top army officers also bave a strong voice in lhe new govern· ment. Meanwhile, the pragmatists who had been humilialed in lbe 1960s -citing a Chinese ex· press ion, ··suan cbang," which means "settle the bill" -began to retaliate against their former tormentors. OUR SOURCES believe that most of the turmoil in the pro- vinces was precipitated by the revenge seekers. There Is another Chinese ex- pression that • · 10 years is not too long to wait for revenge." Il was 10 years ago that these leaden were harassed by the Maoists. Answer to Vandalism Vandalism in Chicagolnnd raged like wildfire across schools, parks and parted can. In one year 89,517 broken schoolhouse windows. It cost area taxpayers $3.S million to replace the windows ( PAUL HARVEY J destroyed each year. Private homes suffered damages totaling $3 mllllon in one year; public buildings were defaced and/or damaged. tionshlp. Much youth crime relates to a demand for recognition. lo the sardine society of a megaloPolis we all tend to lose our individual significance. Music Nouri$hes the Spirit plus another $3 .5 mlllion for new school security pro· grams plus another $3 million for ad· dltional watchmen. The first suburb to fight back was the community of Deerfield. And what Deerfield did reduced vandalism by 3S percent the first year. Promptly other suburbs toOk similar measures wtth similar results. The young person stealing a hubcap, Jooking both ways while be does, is pleading with bis heart: "Please somebody notice me! " And if Ignored and un- punished he probably will go on larger crimes ln h1B quest for al· tention. Now Chicaao area youncaten .,,, getting lncreuecl attention where it means most -at home r Yesterday was oneottboae bad days that everybody has. Nothing seemed to go right. Break:fut was tasteless, the sky was ugly. people looked plnc:hed md mean and freUul. Work was difficult. A column wouldn't come -l must have tolsed away a d o z e n 1tratned and wooden pan- ppbs. until I flnally gave ap in disgust and grlrnl)' at- tacked a stack of let· ters on my delk. 1 drove home early, cbanaed to al-cka and a T·ablrt.. sprawled on tho couch, and listened to a Mozart dlverthnento on the obonovaph. In a quart.er·hour, tM la~ ot the world bad chanted for me. Not asplri~1 nor liquor, nor any of the tradluooal opiatcl eoQJd bavc accomplished lbls. My annoyances shriveled down .. (SYDNEY BARRIS) to tbetr true petty dimensions. In the limpid realm of Moia.rt'a spirit, the food and the weather and the crowds sbnmk into tn. slplficance. Time and space fell aw•y. and I fell immensely pureed ot the slow accumulation ~the pol.sons of dally living. THIS therapeutic eftect of lood muaic-Cand ol aU ·U. ana:·to aome de~) 1a the 1'e1Ultr at a deep hunger in man's nature that eannot1onc go ansatblU!d. ~ it doet. we suffer aplri~al malnutrition, altbouab we •ual· ty call lt by &dme c::tJfer m'ee"'hl· leuname. • We c1tU it "boredom" or "amt· le«.y" or "tension" Ind .,e leek release by pill.I or J)(Mden, by a daperate sort of 1aJety, or by pluntlnf into some at.renuou.a Plwalca actJvity lbal lnducet fatl,ue and then at~. But the hunger remains un· aatiafted, deny It though we may. Tbo bad music excites us, but cannot exalt us; the pills dull the pain, but the poisons remain; the alcoholic frenzy creates more t.msJona than It ea.ws. AJI are Mlle attempts to make us forget ourMlvea. TIDS 18 our mistake. Man can· not acbJeye peace by forgettiog blmaelf. btlt onlJI bl/ ~ tdlo Giid IObat ~ I.a. Not as a n1me, or a face, or a aocta1 aecurilY number. but u a penon who lharea, in aome measure, the 1plrlt tha t animated Mlchelancelo and Shakespeare llDd llmart. 1Wbm we lose lbJI Jargenesa ol .tft, when we forget our di&· tlnctlve divinity Omferfecl thoqh ll ls), then wo fal vtC'tlm to our time and place and clrcumatance, and take ounelves too serious!)' in the Wl'Cftl way. It Is the paradoit ol human ulateoce lbat only when we learn to soar above ourstlv• can we re all)' see who wo are. and a)ory ln t.bia k.nowledte. .. , .. Vandals were costing taxpayers $10 L . mllllon each acbool yur. This does not include the thousand) ot boun of education lost because ol true and false fire alarms and true and false bomb threats and such. A Senate juvenile delinquency subeonlmtttee was proclaiming ''school crime at a crisis stage" and Ch.icqo ~boola were among tho wont: Brutal classroom as- sault.a and rapes ot tachers and studenta. atorttons, buqlanea. thefts -and thla unpreeedented wave of wanton dmtruction - vandallam. StJDDENLV there la less. Vandalism in suburban a.tcaao bu been F'9duced 15 per-ttot lo ono J•ar. And what a,Icaioans di to put a stop to it &ybocly can do. It,..,. not Just the school build· lqs in Chlcato wblcb suffered trom the epl4tmlc ot vandallsm. Fifty tbouland dollan • worth or ~ark picnic l&blu were WHAT THESE subU.rbs have adopted ls an anUvandal or· dinance wblcb says that porent1 an r~IJ)C)ftdble /or thit ~ ot thdr chUdr~. Proeecution Is tran.'lferred In moat cues from juvenile court - wb~ convicUons are rare -to local courts where convictions are probable. Ir the children cannot reim· bw'1e the victims of their van· d•l'-m the parents must pay rtnes ol up to $500. The constitutionality of these ordlnances Is yet to be court test· ed. Jt wU1 be argued by eome that one person cannot be made retpooalbJe tor lbe crimes of another. It will be interesting to see what Ute Supreme Court decJdes when theRe ordinances are dlalltnaJed. Bui rncanwbllc they are 11vtng taxpayers 11 lot of money and reioforctng the frt.'(luently ne1loc1ed parent·chlld relia· ORANG• COAST DAILY PILOT Hnl><'rt N Wrrd. P,./>IWt" Thom<l1 Ktt'V1I. Editor flarbara KrMbich, t;(IU()nOI Pogt f.d1tC1t The t'<hlor111I page of the Dally Pilot seek~ to lnrorm and st1mul11t~ re1Jders by praentlng on th1i. page d1vrrse commentary on topic or interest by syndical· ed c.'olumnist11 and cartoonists, by Providing 11 forum for rt'adef'5· vtewr. and by presenting lhis new11poper's oplnlon!i and Ideas on rurrent loplc11 The edltonal opinions or the Oa1ly Pilot apPear only In lhe editorial column at the top or the page Opinions ex pre11:1td by lhe columnists and r!lrtoonlsts and letter writers are lht>1r own nnd no endo~cmcnt ~ lho1r vtew1< hv the Druty Pilot should bl' inferred Tuesday. Jan ll, 1977 I 1 . Tuesoay. January 11, 1977 Sal Mineo's Murder Still a Mystery DAILY PILOT A7 arr .... LOS ANGELES tAPI The} fOW'ld the veteran actor l)ing 1n a pool o { clotting blood, breathing rap1a1y, eyes wade, cJyan~. has hc1nt pierced by an asl>a1lc1.11t'i. knaCe Miout~s eurller, neighbors heard ham shout has cries lor help, has plea. "Oh, my God, no•" ringing in the night. But no weapon was taken as thekilltr evidence "The country 1s full of would· be ac· The motl\•e was unclear. tors who come out here. find out Uetect1ves from the Los Angeles they can't make it and go back Portland H o nor s 2 St udents One bystander tried niuuth·to mouth breathing, but not hing would help this wound. It was over for the Bronx born son or Italian immigrants. lie rued Feb 12. 1976, and police have been track ing his kilier for a year without suc· cess. County Sheriff's Department began home. Mineo knew tome of them. T\\O Harbor Ur cu rcs1 the nuts-and-bolls work that COO· regarded them as friends. We want· dcnh made the fal\ tinues to this day, questioning ever ed to talk to the m," O'Sullivan said. semest er a c ademic yone who had any connection with Mineo, who never married, ap· h 0 n ° r r 0 11 f 0 r I h c Mineo in a search Cor clues . parently had lived alone in the University or Portland SAL MI NEO, 37, WHO thrilled movie audiences with leather-Jacket and-switchblade roles, who rose a bo ve New York street gan g viole11ce to become successful on several e n tertainme nt fr ont s. pumped out his life on the hard ~ur race of a parking lot behind has Hollywood apartment "We're still talking to anyone we Hollywood apart ment near the Gall Laura Thomasc9. THE Y BEGAN WITH witnesses can," said Lt. Robert O'Sullivan. Sunset Strip ror about three years. No. 7 Collins 1:-.land. who had seen a man run from the "This is a live, active case and we H i s acting career, which Newport Beach, ilrld parking area, and r eleased a have hopes of including it in our re-saw Academy award nominations Mar y 1-'rances Vistica. description : 20 to JO years old, solved cases file. We're tracking for his roles in "Rebel Without a 1914 Kauai PlaC(', Coi.La while, a bout 5-fool-8 with dark down every lead , talking to anyone Cause" a nd .. Exodus," had bot· AP wi·-•• Mesa. each uch1cvl'<J u brown or blac k hair. Investigators with any connection." tomed out but appeared to be on the 3.61 grudc point uverage. know a knife was used and can tell TWICE, D ETECJ1VES have gone upswing again with a stage role and LEADS EX PLORED Both are seniors enroll~ from the wound how large al was. as far as Texas in their search for the chance to direct u movie. Actor Sal Mineo m the School of Nursing ~---~~-------------~ ,.-------~-~-~~---~~--~~---~------~---~~-------~~---~ T ll F. FA:\11 L \' ClflCL'.'. Uy Bil l\t•UtH' 'i , • ........ "I was just kiddin! It tickled!" ----- 'Willi 11g to Fight, Town to Ask MILL VALLE\' li\PI Mall Valley hai. de· c1ded to jump 111lo a growing national conlrover:.y -what to do with throw3Wi!y cans and bottles by drafting a city law requiring deposits on all such containe rs sold al local :.tores. ''We're a small town, but we're willing to fight,·: said .Mayor J erold Hood after the City Council unanimously instructed the city attorney to draw up a law THE ONLY OTHER SAN Francisco Bav area city with <J similar plan 1s Berkeley, but ·,l has never be<'n lei.led because merchants opposing the idea have lakl•n 1l to court. The Mi ll Valley law will dirfer from Berkeley's an one important area -di!>tributors and oottlC'r ... \\ tll h:.i\l' to lab<.-1 their c·ontainers for "Mill Valley only " The Bcrkcl<'.Y reguJa. ----------. lion required that the ( C J labl'ling be done bv locaJ E OLOC Y merchants and lh.ey are --protel>tmg thJt 1t v.ould be an expt'n:.l\C, lime· consuming hdsslc LABELS A R E Nt:EDED TO prcH•nl people from other town!> from bnngmg their bottles lo Mill Valley and collectan~ a depo!-1t thc·y never paid "It dot•sn ·t make :.any !>ensC' at all . an fatt it's plain radaculous, to ha\c one Mlle cat} likt> Mtll Valle~ do 1t 1t ju.st docsn 'l bC'nt'f1t ;,inyone." romplainC'd Leon Otllt'nhurg, dirt'Ctor uf lht• Northern Cal1furn1a Grocers 1\~soc1ation "Wl''rc goani.: to devote all our dforts to t•n· couragmi;: dt•po:.1t contamcrs thro11i!hout Marin. so 1t becomes dear lhllt now is the time to stem the tide or needless waste." said Neal Smith of Marin Env1ronml'ntal Cooperative THE DEPOSIT 1!'\SllE HAS bt>Mm<' a n:.i t1onal '11.,putc -.1nr1• Ort'1:inn passed such a J;iw ~cveral Yt'ar!'. a ~o \'nmont. Mame and Mich1j!an have approvt'd '-I malar n•gulataons. althouJ?h thl' Maine and M11·h1i:an 1.1 .... ., haH' not }Cl lakt·n l'f reel Yo~cm1tt• l'.1rk .ind turn ('11 lh1· rnn C(>SS1on:11rr" at '"''l'n1llt• :"at1on~I P;irk. s11y their pro~ram of d(•1Jo!>1ls on drink cont :u nt•rs "h1ch thl'y sl.1m11 I hcrn-.<·h i!S, hu'I hct•n h1ghl) !'.UC crssru1 Court Backs Gay In Firing Appe al WAS lllNGTON (AJ>l The U.S.SupremeCourt has llel aside a lower court's decision that a federal agency a cted constitutionally in firing a homosexual activist On grounds thnl he weakened confidence in government by "Oaunting" his-wayoflife. The justices sent back lo the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals the case of John F. Singer. fired from bis job as a clerk-typist in the Seattle office of the Equal E mployment Opportunity Commission. THE J USTICES SAID THE lower court s hould consider legal opinions voiced by Solicitor General Robert H. Bork that new Civil Service Commission policies tell federal agencies persons cannot be found unsuitable for federal employment merely because they are homosexuals. Singer. a member of the board ofd1rectorsofthe Seattle Gay Alliance. was dismisst'd in 1972 on grounds that by "openly and publicly flaunting his homosexual way or Ufe" he would "lessen general public confidence in the fitness of the government to conduct public business with which it is entrusted." CIVIL SERVICE REGULATIONS formerly permitted t he dlscharfte of an employe on grounds of homosexuality. The Civil Service Commission has ' dropped this rule but retains a guideline under which an employe can be fired if his "sexual conduct af. fect.sjob fitness." Singer said in his J>4!Utlon for Supreme Court r~ vlew that ''1( an employc cannot advocate or even discuss his or her sexual orlenl#lion. such a policy change becomes meaningless and hQmosexuals arc effe<:lively barred from federal employment · · SAVE TAXES SAVE TIME . SAVE AT FIDELITY FEDERAL NOWHERE ELSE CAN YOU FIND All THESE FREE TAX RELATED SERVICES! ' It's all here at Fidelity Federal ... your convenient One-stop Savings Center. Income tax preparation PLUS real tax savings through the use of bona fide tax shelters PLUS the highest Interest allowed by law on your insured savings! INCOME TAX PREPARATION To start. let us prepare your normal personol 1976 Federal and California income tax returns absolutely FREE for first time users with a Fidelity Federal account of SS.000 or more. $2.500 in additional deposits required for repeat users. Other state returns can also be prepared at a nominal fee. 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IOI (11"9 year Gov .. ,..,,.,,, legulo!l()nl 'e<J-"'11 auta!on!ICI POr()ll('• '°' """" """" ~Ow<JI• on OI cemflc:ot•• ... pion to save , FSUC _...__ ....... • r • 21 offices to serve you statewide COSTA MESA NEWPORT BEACH 1855 Harbor Blvd. 645-4420 \ 4f DAILY PILOT Tuesday. J1nu1ry I 1. 1977 Elsewhere • &. ts, W@lliJ [[ UC Irvine Takes Week ~-~@[(\Y/0@@ Long Look at Israel WASHINGTON. Va lAPl Ollie F . Atkin~. 60. former President Nixon ·s per sonal photo grapher from 1969 to 1974. died Sunday after a long illness CHARLESTON. S.C (AP> -The rormer com· mander of the Atlantic Fleet Mine Force during World War II. retired Adm 8 . H•IJ Hanlon, 77, died Sunday at a locul hospital MINNEAPOLIS (AP> -Paul W . "Doc" evans, 69, a jazz m us•· cian and bandleader rn lhe Minneapolis area for decades. was found dead in his parked car on a s treet he r e Monday night CALEXICO (AP) - Funeral ser vices are scheduled Wednesday for Earl D. Roberts, 85, two-t ime mayor and former U S customs col lector ror the San D1eRO· Imperial County Dis t rict. Robe rts, former president o r Rotary clubs in San Diego and Calexico. died in a hospital Saturday Deof la Nofi<"e• DISMANG Cot a problem'' Then wntt' tu Pat Dunn J>at !Lill cut red zape. get/mg the umuers and actwn yuu need to solve mt•qwtwi; 111 qoven1ml'r1t and bust nt'SS Ma1I your questums to Pat Dunn Al Your Service. Oru11yt' Cuust V01l.11 l'1fot. P CJ Bur 156'J Custa Mesa CA '12626 l11cludt• yu11r telephont' number Thl' column uppeurs daily except Saturdays .~P1'f.>r Too Old fo Prolttsl DEAR PAT: Which Washington, DC ofrlcc handles job discrimination problems that are relat ed to age? I feel that I have a Just complaml and prefer to "start at the top" with my complaint to the fC'deral government R E., Huntington Beach Your compl•lnt must bf> filed within 180 days after tbe alleKed dis<'rlminatioo has taken place. Send tbe details to: The Age and Hour Divlslon of the U.S. Deparlmcol of Labor, 14th and Constllutlon Ave. NW. Washington, OC20210. Tbe Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1117 prohibits discrimination against individuals 40 to '5 yeus old by employers and l•bor unions with regard to hiring, firing, j-Ob referral, employe s tatus and conditions or e mployment. It allow!> employers to make bona fide agt> restrictions U lbey are re- asonably necessary w the performance of the Job. l 'oreig11 Ordt>r• . ., Clra1u·y DEAR PAT: Last April. while in Brazil. I or dered a receiver from Radio Shack and sent a $150 total payment 1 was soon notified that the receiver was no longer in s tock but lhal a similar one was available at an additional $20. 1 sent the extra $20. I never received m v order. I wrote to Radio Shack several times and· spent a total of $60 on long dis· lance calls to the company from Brazil trying lo rmd out what ha ppened to my order. but J received no satisfaction N W . Costa Mesa "Survi vors, · an original play based on the holocau~t of thl' Jews during World War II, will h1ghllght Israel Aware- ness Week at UC lrvme January 14·23 This week long senes or lectures. e ntertain· ment and obser vances is oj)('n to Jewish a nd non- Jewish members of the <"O mmunil y under sponsorship or the UC I Jewish Student Union. ACTIVITIES include a Shabat dinner and entertainment; lee· lu r es o n ar - <.'haeologi c a I . scien· lirlc and tee hnological County Fire Area R eopens The hazardous fire area in the northeastern sect.ion of Orange County whlch was c losed to all public entry last May 15 has been re opened. ac- cording to St ate Forest Ranger a nd County Fire ChierCarl Downs. 1 The recent rainfall has sufficiently r educed the rire danger and the area will remain open until ORANGE COUNTY acllievements in Israel. informal information sessions. films, exhibi· tions and instruction in lsraeli dancing Izzy Oren of the Israeli Consulate in Los Angeles will speak on "masada Archaeology in Israel" at 7:30 p.m . Jan. 16, m the Mesa Commons Gold Room. "THE EFFECTS Ot' J immy Carter's a d ministr ation on US Middle East Polley A forecast for the Next Four Years" will be the topic of a talk by John r rancis Rothman J an. 17 Rothman. former ad· visor to U.S. Senator Frank C hu rch <D Idaho>. will speak in the Gold Room of Mc::.a Court Commons at 7 30 p.m - Dr Ir vin~ Bengelsdorf, director of science commun1ca1Jons at Caltfornia lnshtule of Technology in Pasadena. will lecture on "Science and Technology \n Israel·· 1n Room 167 of Steinhaus Hall at 8 p m Jan 19. All the lectures are o p en to the public without charge TUE NEW Arter Players. directed by Armand Volkas, will pre- sent "Survivors" in the UCJ Fine Arts Village Concert Hall at 8 pm. Jan. 23. The play, crcat ed by the ensemble. chronicles the cmotionaJ ravage or Jew!> 1n Europe and the Uruted States during World War II. Ticket s r or "Survivors·· at $3 50 for general admission and $2.50 for senior c1trzens and l>tudcnts may be ob tamed from the UCl As- sociated Students Box Orricc. f ir st floor or Gateway Commo ns. weekdays between 9 a.m and4:30p.m More information and a schedule of e vents• for UCl lsracl Awareness Weck may be obtained by ca lli n~ the UC! J ewish Student Union at 752-6353 DANIEL GlEN 01\MANG '"''°""' Of Soot" L.1quno C.ili'O•n1o• P1t\W'd eway JdflUlll''f b 1011 SurY•'tf<.t bY partt"f\M' artdM" c1,.nn01\MltnQof ~ JUltn(ao1,tr,1on ( t twobrotf'W'f\ M~r•at,, .. ,,..,c .. wilt bf' f\el'1' Siv'rtc·1 l.AQV"d 8 Pttr h (1"1-if"'I Qn W~'I Jltn..u.rv 11 Al U) '>'>AM Rurial At \4!.A Stwfttr l.t9un• 81•.)tl\ Mortwr,; O•r« MaU order problems wilhin the U.S. are bard enough to handle, and you asked for trouble by plac- ing an order from Brazil tot.he U.S. The m•il ~der department of Radio Shack, 900 Terminal Rd .. Fort Worth, Tex 76106, reports thal your receiver was shJpped in May 1976. 1be department tried to locate your order and fiJed a claim with the Postal ~r;lce. You now report that the missing r ecelver bu finally arrived. next summer and the ---------------------- ""\ BERNAL M~NU[l R 8EANAl '"'"10-nt Of Hvnt1nqton 8N I(,, C.tthfl)f'l'lltt P•\\.N'I • .,,.,.,, J&ttu.uv • 1011 Surv1wo by .. ,,,. •••Ila S-r~t tr\1101•1'1 l ttl1~ 8'rrwl Of ~ hO~ 011tn• 8ernitt ot thP ~ "nQiVltnit H u1f Of Gt11td,.n GrOvf' M anut'I 8trn"t Jr Of Munhn')fOft fire hazard re-occurs. according to Downs a-~~ C. St•ll" 9.,.,~, o• ,,... ...,..,_ UC I • Off 'Su\• .. S.rnat ot ,,,, P'IQm,. brOO'tt\ ......... n...-.e ers RO'\.&r10 Bl'rf'MI of Ph')f'n11c A.t1/tW\A .A. T .a..a.A f"tto 8trn.al IJf Pf'ltW'n1\ At'llrtfVt PA04f) 9-f'no\I of M"'u c O 4>4'"i t·t.,\f) l l'JOI I q t M--•i(O \•\t•u [rn~~11no(.t\trootM11io The area affected is bordered by the Santa Ana River on the north. the Cleveland National Forest on the east. a line approximately o ne mile north or Ir vine Boulevard, on the south. and the eastward ex· tensions or the cities of Anaheim. Orange and the unincorporated area ICI• g•a.,a<"''d'"" P•to• .. M '""" Unusual Oasses Qprnal of tf'W> """"" Ro\~rv w•U t> """'Cl 811 )'.)PM Wed"""~C:My J"nu'tfV 11"t St 8on8Yt'-ntu,,. Cttlholtr (hurcf'I 1n Hunt l"OIO'l 8'>ilch , .. Md\~wlll 1)41 tO lOAM T""r<\do'l'f J"nudtY I )f111 St 801'\1\~•nlorf' CJtthollC CP'lvrch lnt•rmt'nl 11t Good $"•P"erd C•mf't•\r v '" Munt1nq1on Brach, (.1 Sm1tf'I .. Murtu.Jn;id1teic.tor' on the west. llARTNO~OMEW CF fllAIHl lJ'IRTttOl..OMEllYr•\I oian1 ot SM1tt1 An<\. C1•lltornl.t PA\WO aw,Jty Janu!JrV I() 1q11 Survntf'ObvwU~ l otA flcttrlhOl'lm~w \On Ltturflt •ar'f'>Olom~w o, l4 Pu~ntt•, c.a . ,,., .. , llllV MO<X1> l')t C.ouco,, CA • thrtt \)r~P'lildren Sio•rv1ce .. ThurSdl~ "' 1 00 PM PAC 1tir V•"w Ct\.tOft \nVf"n· ~t ,-,t P rK1flr V1f'W Mftfn')f'IAI P,vtc ,., .. woort 9,..,., h C• P•Ctfl< y,,.., """°'1U<lfV<ltt,.., tQf \ \ULLIYAN DENIS £ \VL l tVAN ,..,.. ... ,,..nt l)f N •W'W'IX.f't ijr?U" ( dlffOt'l'\ld P.t\\ed 111111.;~ Jctf1U lff q 1~11 ~Uf\ftW-0 !W "'\ *''" Onrofl\y ~ulltY~l't ddvQP'ltf't' (.;Jth\I,. S H •'1h"IU "1•••"f1\.l)f\ JIWMt"4"t ( HIQfM>lt \•'''"'(°'ti \lfl '\ 8t~ttof ,,...... VOf'-( 11 ... t"w Y ••~ '"fVf(fll Ui"nd•!'WlP"'''' V wM"''' ldfV PETERSEN ANNA MAY Pf ff A\rN ~\Vtj ,..., ... J.Jf'\U.tt\'., lO't/ q4'\1n1-l'lf ftf (Ml t Bicycle touring. prac- tical law. ta p dancing and creative parenthood are a m o n g the n ew winter quarter offerings of UC Irvine Experimen- tal Collegc No n -c r ed i t Ex - perimental Co llege classes are offered free t o UC I s tude ntsand members of the com· munity each quarter Enrollment is conducted informally at the first class meetings lnstruc· tors are volunteers from the community. New course!> in pop music history. basics or auto r epair, cartooning. beginning and ad vanc·cd bridg e, self-h y pnosis, Zen and poetry have been added this quarter to tr a d itional Ex p e rime ntal College c lasses in ceramics. women's weight tram ing. disco dancing and gay studies . THE EARL'S l'LUMllHG HIEATIHG AIR COHO. ., ... , ...... •t y..,....,, C.,11'-.I(.• lr\'fOH l\,f•.t~C,,11 ... ,~,,IOU Ylf JO '/fNll C.•mino C:.1>•~•• m•) 495-0401 O'ol .. MES,;;-,_, r N~•~•t Q1va More information and 642-1753 Experime n tal College ~====~=~~~ ., ,.,. , class scheduJes may be lla\e something to sell., obtained by contactmc Class1f1e<I ad~ do 1t w('l I Robert Berman in the Call 642-5678. UCI Associated Students Put a tew words offi ce al 833-5547 to work for you. ~" ~··~~~:·,",.,~;,•r;11v .. ~ "~",.:7,,~ ______________________ _._ __________ _, ,... Qt'll"' f-r1't" lf'l'I ··I'\ I (MIA Mr'°" Start the New Y e.r Right. Join smokEnders® now. You will stop SDloking on Feb.24th .. H you join smokEn ders now, and follow our pleasant program. Hosted by hospitals, leading corporations, and government agencies coast-to-coast, smokEnders has hrlprd over 100,000 smokers kick the habit during the past B years. SmokEnders shows yo u the way to quit calmly and comfortably. You smoke as much as you want until you quit WITHOUT hypnosis, willpower, scarr tactics, electric shocks, or climbing the walls. Come lo a FREE EXPLANATORY SF.SS IO!'I, and bring your cigarettes. . by Feb. 2 l. you won need lhem anymore. LOCATION FREE SESSIONS SEMINA!"I START~ TuC\d.,y 112S 7 JOPM __ C' tw? b''>'"··', ~· f"l1 lm•"' EN> ot COSTA MESA "'•vnd•Y 1/10 u• I/If 7 JO PM M onoav Qin •1 '"'°'O!'JO"~ f'1'>" .,, T"lu "".. • THE WHOLESALE WAY Soult' Co3\l Pl•'-• Hot'e• '"'"' P•4rt lw'>ldt n• Ir,.• "' S1'YE San 0•890 Fwy. al BrtUut 1''"a ,,,,,,, • ., '' '1' " £LTOR0/LAGUNAHILL.S :.:,;-:.:;;~~·;.~ .. .,~;:",;' "·:,-;;...:,,, ~·;: TREES • SHRUIS. HOUSE PLAMTS ~j;4~~·i' nu~ RK~lchen Rell fYM~•·h' r"-to•• ~""''' • "" '"'''' E. ot San 01e90 f. w y ~:,/,;~~:~/~~::. ~!~,_ ~~·,~~! FULLERTON ~ •""~··" M•mo"•' ""'' 8E~L 8£l01 YfH.0l[SAl£ PK($ !JI Jlf. flll.OWIMC: ~~1~?:,~~';.-':.,y al HDrtim 91 6'"'lll0W"v MO<HVARY d<....CIO<\ 1/24 1 30 PM weone\OttY Wt>onesd•Y 1/12 nl 1/19 1126 I · 30 PM 7 30 PM WeOflttf.0.ty weon.,O•Y 1/120 • 1/19 11:>6 1 30 PM 7 .lO PM 6'1 ~•Ill Black Pine Tams Juniper!> 69c HUNTINGTON BEACH MAHONEY 0 " She111on Buch inn ,0,..., J MA><O"IE v ,.,..,..,, "' Nand1na Abella. leander. 2112 P1tc111c Co•ll H w y. (&<•• ..... {•'""'""' '""-•••Y Moceas lrts ond many more Between Beach .no Main '"""""' 1111 \,.,.,.,..ObV~l\wll•M SAN CLEMENTE "-t MAIV,,.,•• ''''whnm• ')_,.,.~,.,,,....,. Sin Ct emente Inn I M•....,_• n• '"" • "'"'• t~ """"' f'Wltl MINIMUM --125 Avenlda EsptanOt•n ... M.otf'l')ott_., M '''""''"' 0, L"" Al"Qlfl'H'I'\ AJUU San 01990 Fwy. •t c.,,,,. TF1u;~:r120 Thur\04~ J/27 7 JO PM 7·JO PM Tuesd•Y Tuosdty 1/11 or 1/18 1/25 1 30 PM 7 30 PM <.A ~.,~,._Of' T"\d-''f' J,.t\Ul!lr'f 11 Al SD Wh I al G ~~~::~ .. ~·.;~;~·.·~·~~:.;-~ . • o es e rowers SJMqMQ~~DERSt'!) • '' "''"~"" C"v"n ,,,,.,,,,, . .,, "' 11621 W.Altta AVI. ~ .. ~~·Aof"·~~;y",';';~~"~u·.:~~~ FOUMTAIH VA.LUY . ••ftwlA\VW~toQuu!wnoA.wlg" ..., ""' PHOME 546-342' 9603 AO•,,, .. Hun1in91on e ... ch, CA 92646 Hf:llltN\ O••n90 County (7141 963 86~5 waPRf" 11 All• \f£All"> S..n Oleqo Counly (7141 28:0"4357 ........ , •• ., ,.~.,..., •• ,.,, 11,..,...~, Los An9eles County (21JI 887·9600 -- QUEENIE By Ph il lnterlondl ·My trouble 1s I mixed my drinks The first one with the second one The se<.'ond one"' Ith the Uurd one Tht.> third one and ~o forth and 'IO on " DEAR JOE I'll cook for you no more. You have not taken me to that Italian Restaurant at 2827 S. Bnstol 1n Santa Ana to see how Romans eat. Goodbye. I go to "Arrivederci Roma" Carol P.S. Coll me at 549-0922 <M:RMIGHT? Learn What Makes The Lindoro Method So EHect1ve A complete program to instruct patients how !o !ose weight easily. then how to mo1nla1n their lean weight Doily therapy: wrth audio and sub-l1m1nol visual 01ds to promote motivation ond encouragement H CG a ~at mobrhmg suts:once. makes tt easier for patients ~o !ose weight w1th00t foligue or excessive hunger l1ndoro's very special diet. designed tor ropd wetght ~ cn:l 111J<oved eotng hctxts. Behavior mod1ficohon 1echn1ques to leOfn weight control L1ndoro s eosy-to-to1iow mo1ntenonce program lo prevent regorrnng The entire program is under the strict supervision of medical doct0<s. spec1ohsts in boriotr1c medicine C-011101 tnl01mo hOn Mondoy lhru f11d0y QAMl0 1PM -2PMIOoPM NEWPORT BEACH 640-6831 I r/ t r lJ I I l COSTA MESA 557-1893 t. Son Bernardino · E tong Beoch · Mtss1on Hills liow1home · Oronge • Newport Beach Gorden Grove · tong Beach • Pasadena Lo Habra ·Woodland Hills • Sherman Ooks West Covma · Fullerton • R1ve1stde • Santo Monica Cosio Meso • Pomona • Cemlos . Hollywood fLin~:OCALQ~ I tnOora lv"Nloe.ci Cltn• S OIP OWl"llYl one odn'•n•~le!M bv Meoico Doc•~ t"IQI rewic• !he~ PIOthCO IO 80flOlll\,.\ Al L One Pei!.0<1<1ef Doc 10<\ ono NU!S()\ ore tocenseo ov ltle !'.tote of COllfom10 9'(.&\t•M-Y ( .. , ... ,,.., .. ~•·¥if'f10¥ O--l""91f.tl\....._ ,.,, .... ._...,. ..... -' .. ~MIU !••• l "t ~·~--·--.:. ~HA''"""" W ""'·''"" f')t r,.r.....,_ ~!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===~;;;;;;;;;;~;;~===== tit•O.'"• \ \t•' M•1')M•t ,..,.,,,,.. ,,. (.o\•A Mt-\.a (• IM•,ff'Wlnl t111llty '""'""' Chi.,,.• c,~, .. ,., ,_ .... ~ "'"°"~ f or w ard •f'tQ drr• '"''' f\[\.L lllO&OWAY MOR f U...,l 'f' Ml "'"l IALT'Z-IHGHOM WHUALHOMI Corona del Mar 673·9450 Cos1a Mesa 646·2424 HllHOADWAT MOlTUAltT 110 Broadwa-, Costa Me,a 642·9150 McCOltMICIC MOITUAlllS Laguna Beacl'I •94-9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495·1776 rACIFIC YllW MIMOltlAl 'All( Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Onve Newport Cahlorn1a 64•·2700 "lafAMILY COLOMIAL PilMUAl HO ... I 7801 BolsJ Ave Westminster 893-3525 ""'"S' MOl'fUA.V 827 Main SI Huntington Boacl'I 536-6539 SMITH TUTHIU LAMI OUl WHTCLlllf CHAPa Mortuary • • 846-4888 4~7 E 17th St Colla Mesa Entire Stock ol • Scand1na111an lum11ure tn teak roeeWOOd and genuine leall'ler • 1\11 Rya Rugs on Sat 100• ';f'~'<t ./ MOMlflU•HISM~S • ROOR COVERINGS •UNOUUM • WAUPAPERS •DRAPERIES • LEVOlORS • WOVEN WOODS •CARPETING 30°/o liiiZ OFF! Ga 1100 .......... S.lte 205 Co1teMno Cor.H..._.& ..... 1"'4"-'-CALL 557-5153 0.-, .. .J~I W . M ( H ~RB (' u :;-. ) AMUSES, Saturdeyt In the DAILY PILOT ·c~~ I .'.-:'Ct~ d'-/ \ \ ,.8 8i ta if•~ One of the Southland'• LargHI ~~'furniture & Flneat Collectlon1 of Modern """ ·~ 1 ~ g1 J Furniture, Ughtlng and Accetaorles 225 HORTH HARBOR BLVD., FULLERTON, CALIFORNIA $2632 Phone (714) 8'71·5720 For Mothe r · s Long Home Stay Vrged WASllINGTON (AP) -Pbyllls ScbJany says women 1hould stay home and rear their children Cor llt leut a year and preferably three to five years btlore re-entering the job market Jin . Schlafly, in an interview, said she doesn't think women should return to work aner the nvaie 4 t.o 6 weeks' pregnancy leave, as an in· cnuing number of women do. '41 A• VE RY MUOI IN favor of women taking ._.. ot their babies when they are little." she said. •1 think four to six weeks olf is not enough. I lhinJt it .. •erJ unfortunate If we accept a society where it is a DOrmal thing for women with babies only to have lour to aix weeks off." Mns. Schlafly. an AJtoo, Ill .. columnist and Republican activist, is a leading figure in the na· UonaJ campaign against the constitutional Equal Rights Amendment for women. In the interview, she endorsed last month's U.S. Supreme Court ruling that companies did not violate sex dhcrimlna· tion laws if they refused t.o pay pregnancy sick leave, though paying time off for oth er medicaJ conwtions such as hair transplants. She agreed with employers that it would cost industry too much to pay pregnancy sick leaves; she said paid preg n ancy leaves should be negotiated on a contract-by-contract basis as is now the case. SCHLAFLY She said she saw no Iniquity in company plam that denied paid preg· nancy leaves but !(ranted leaves for hair transplant.a . .. I DON 'T SEE THAT 11IE exclusion of preg· uncy beneflts is sex discrimination unless you think the whole fact that women get pregnant is an oppression. an unfair burden that has to be solved b110Ciety,'' she said. Some critics have said the court ruling was an anti-mother hood decision because it failed to r e- cognize that most women work to support themselves or their families and. if there are going to be future generations, ~ts or pregnancy and child-bearing must be shared by society as a whole. Mrs. Schlafly does not agree. "l don't think that industry should be required to pay for babies," she said. '.'I think the ultimate rapoosibillty for the baby is with lhe mother and father. I think the father should have to support the baby. That's the Job of the father, whether he's married or not.·· ALTHOlJGH MRS. SCllLAFL Y SAID women tlbou.ld be guaranteed their jobs back after as much • fi ve years off to rear children, she also said she W'OUld be happier iC mothers stayed in their homes. She aaid the current job market is not receptive '°women, and should not be. "Today there are approximately 4-0 million women who are homemakers and l can't think or llOything worse than if you move any percentage of them into the work force," she said. "Where are all the jobs? We've got high unemployment now. I feel that anybody worried about the job market would encourage worn en to stay at borne.'· For the Record l ~--~ .. -... l"l ... Dot<-U c~OLER. Ml•d••O Ju ... ..., ""'"41em 0."d MEZA Marl• E --..T .OEIU:GNIER ~~ca-kl c;..,.,.. Ill MO\l'OllO, JoeNe ..,d Jo1'1' TIW>m•• HULL, 1( .. 111 L Jr """ !><>•en J ¥YER!>. l...iY" A--11-r W , FEIN, l.M "-"" -M.chHI A , VAl .. AS ~' A •"" LI""• M Bl<ltTH DI-1..0o• -11.-n Le--• ~NGEll, Meroe••I -(;er ... J W"'Ll IN(; sen.tr• L"' •"" "-LM LINT 0.••ldLloyo-VI~· -¥EZA 0£ I.A TORE. _,. Ro .. ·~ ''"' INN ERHOFEA, --""'"" r.AA.Y Ell-LM-•r., W•-ROBEllTSOH, ••.-.flll .-.,,,,. •• ,... w.,,.,. Jr JECKE.LL. \ot""r• C .,,., LA-• Ho ..... Alll-y FELLOWS, MHY -1 .... -SMt..reMI', HMIVEY. "'9iley Oi---· .. ~ #eH,..RO, Vor9IN• 8 -Oc!Ntld _., LOCKHAR f ll1<MrO t -0... L aATUill"'" (.al,.,.rlM M •"" OWel &Ka. HOOGICIHS, LI-K ... o Oa wlo Hall , WHI TAKEA, W1111am L •1td J••n•ll• N ~ANE, Oefteld "''""" -J-"'""· CH"'U"''N M•rou.<lte --11..,..kl E.-arcl, HA.RWOOO. ~ .._ .. ., -.-,.., TOllAH A-rOM •"cl Wotll•m A W"'ll RICKE.II. llOl\alo L '"'o Ootw>8 -~llRlf\, Wllll•m and a .. rll.tr•• -MARTINEL, A.Ida Ro••ll• • ..., Gwtoo: OWINEU . J\141111\ LllN' -Wllll•m Cllrl\IOOller. H"'Y¥E.S, OortM tlt•Y"• eftd ~.,,., Von E.$Cll18A.. 0.bor•ll a1td O..rl•• ,...•:Ll!WIH,R~S al'ld(l.eyS , 1"0M"50H, "'"' Mari. encl Wry Wlrtll; TACKETT, Belly C . ..,d AlllWt J., ALLEN. llelly Jo'l'Ce - GtreNJ; OILL, OoNld R•'f -1t1A11 9;ilj.;•uo. s...roo1 """" -"-'- A.LLEH, Th--•""JoflllL. -ITNEY. 11'onlaa MU-l(M!My<1 U.; OOOOELL, Paut Rk""nl Jr -Linde L.o\I, 80HO, Nancie E. -Ma"'l<f C , PAUL, !Elmer C •"" 11 .. M D ; W.llKll'IELO, P•ul• Nell lt •1'd O a ry 0•11•10 9'09tll0t!5, Oe\'ld R. •lld .--., N: zouweo. N•nc11 c. -o.wv A.; Q.Alll(, Con"ar><e H. and DoNld • : VlOl.IR. Donald Earl -Mi. """: JIENNIHOS, °'811-Otinand -*-1..,.; TlllTI. LH ... Melt .... ~I M"; IRVIN, Wllllem '"-" •lld Mer11 L••· 8.llKER. .--IE.Jr -0.-ltP "''"~'-U GOGGIN, An11• Marie •114 JoW '°rellCIKo; SOUSIS, Rls. LYM - 0ety fl'91«; STIEVl!NS, A.IOe F. -Joltll O.; CAMMACK, R_,, A. Jr -Dellt• AIWI. 8111KEY, ~la S -11-.., T • FLETCHER, C.-Veronlca •"d Rot:Mrl Richard. O'HA.RIE, l•rbar• Oewlli"O all<I Olenll JeMOll. A.M8ROSI!, Gary ....... alld Cynlhl• JOfle: CALOCA.. ~ ,,..,,,_ g,,_, ~. WINTllRS, U I-Utlle and Oeortt• Mmtte. 90tt0fll', .. redffk• w. -UftM l.; DllAl(li,stNIMfC.-a .. o . I URMS' Llllde Mee alld 11-11 ~•; 1111100, Roderldo °"'99 9111 hllla Jff11; TAYLOR. """"91• Lola •llf l,011 11 IEclwerd Jr : OIMAlt0.1,1'. Wla $.-"'!ilia A..: MCDOWtll.L. LI ... J.elld O'-'A.. DeJQtfO,Cal-e L .... ~ .. I %1ECM.lll, Ila~ Gell ... 8ert liolc:i.;TaltllV,Jllll-1(,_R_ ~.R01 lfllrley " end Plllrl<a I.I HOf'flMAN, Ntf!Cy Lo;if• efld .._ PMll. 81ROEVIN, 1no ........ -0-ryl LYf\11; lAMQIHT, ~ '"'"' -··-o..ttt· CONWAV, MMy A -U.. J.' Gltl .NllllO, luerly J-•"° .._.11M1<o1111. ~OM"°", l'!ty l. --M . CH ... llCHOL Vl-O • •" • •ftO J ac.k A tchard. HE1Gt4T""'N. llMr, Ell,_ - Hoirry ,,.._,.Jr ERICKSON, Alc"-rd 0 -LI-A , 8ACOH. M•rlel'e 8 . •nd LA-• 0 , CAOO. Judy ,.,., -Ao<lla rd \t•lll~y Jr VAAG ... S. Ge .. rlel Pavl •M M•lll• ~rle, PE ... SE L•""• A1'n •11d Oo1t1e t """'""'' ROGERS. 01-L AN10-. "" IC MILLER. M><-1 H ""° _., Elle<\, MILi.ER, Wiii,.... H -Pll•r "'blon. MAlll(W ... ROT K-11 V -Etalne J , T'fl.EA. HllQflG<--E-1,_ MILL(ll. P19qy ""••lne ond ~Id 11111<,..,,..,an SCOTT.~ I--W rle'y J .. 11, HIGGIN$, S.. -Otc..A .. 1 .... ~n EA TOH, J-M -Wllll_,, S 5"'LIN .. S, S...11• J encl .-, J• CALLAWAY, Pe11t1eoe J •nd 1-~ W • BROWN, JN,.,. -- -J-Alt ... rd FOV\TE.W...... E -Hl,.1m1 T , POWELL. Ja8n .... ny -RoY Oavld CURL.EV --J ""° JIK-A ROSEMAN • Cr•IQ M And Sl\011• L • '#EISl(IACHER. 01A'"'41 Sll>YI end LAO 018ri.t, JOHNSON, R.,..,., Cerl _ ...... ,,, ......... JOllOAH,MI<_. E _ _.,T. '"'"LSON 8owertr E••IM • ..., W.ner Je""· HUS8A.NO, Henry L•••Y A1tcl Jt11nle Cllevet ; WE DU!Y. llotlO•• H •11<1 Jon A , ~NllR, E-V ..-d WollW A... P"'llRINOTON, Wllllem ,_ 111 -SMton L" GOHlll!S. Juditll Jerll111t •11d PllllllO Hubert ; AQUii.Ji ... lies•-LOuiM -RM A.; SMITH, 1.ovl> "'· allO e.tty J.; l'OX, Mlc .... I J0/111 end .Hfln<fer -· AICINENA. Elllel el\d Ole11. TACICllTT, ~ E -Eric C.; HU40l!RSHOTT. MIC .... I C. -J en, CALLIH ... N, P•ul L allO ..._..w ,GRETLEll,H_ll _ -Mn. M ; MOlllUS. D.tvld ....... -VlrvJnla IA9: SHIELDS,~ E. -L.Ofl P , SIMMOflS, Rite M. •lld Lewrence 8., CHRISTNER, ..._, M. -O•vlo M , SPOiR. l>aflelO c....,, oi-w ...... o.c....-ra P"'TTIER$0N. Berber• A """ Dellotey M.; WINl'REE Cl-K . -"' _, J ; IC .. HLIE4, Liiii"' L. -Wllllan1 O .. OVE!N, Ml<'-l T afld 8eUr Jeno; FERNANDEZ • 0.lllC• LYrtll •110 M•rlo """" ... ' itAT"I, Tffrt Jemn •fld JeOle L~ HOl.UINO. Y-Mn •lld W-Oeorv-. JOHN SON. ,,..,_ ....,.,,,,_ -P•mele o ........ W14ARTOH, 0... L elld R•ndall M ; &llHSON. 5'-l!llWerd •fld Sllerllyn Jean. P"'ULSON, Carole '°ren<.s -Ooflnl\ All.,., HART, S...Oll E. - n.e.n.1 (;. ftHILLIPS, loll~ -Paul Dennis, EARLY, Cw'Of--. -"'lien R : 014VELLI. LllllMI J. -Wllll•ltl L.; PULOAS, lllllMW191 AM •nd ll•1111ar; OLOAKER, Cl•udl11a 8er111ce encl Wllll•m IEO..nt; CLIPPINOIEA, CoftNa - JalWI 1119tM; A.VU$0, VI..,,._ P. 8nd l"ldll, MYl!llS, ICal'fll I!. - '"-etL 80WIN, (Mo! J -~0 · WSfLl. Joell A. alld UwteflU 11:; CINTlll, Jac4ua11,,. Arid TllOrnet LM: l.AtTARI, ,,..,roe -""""' Luoltill; HOG4NSOH, "'-IM-Jerrell Haro64; MC 1'4RUIN0, Wt L. 8nd J«1lle R • llllSH, <;.II M. -Altfl I .; Sl'IERLINO, ~ e.u Olld Wl~anl Amos; IROWN, ~ L ~' ll&allelfl O.;. PITIIPlf;L.O. U9f'"M MICIC!yde ,.., 90WYIR, L-C. -Jlflwl'ly D.: WllSllNDIR, 1.M Predffk -1....-caret; LtCXlllHOV, ,.._ L -IMlrfe, RAMIRIZ. J-_. .... /llWle 0. Je-...,.,, Q.ARI(, DeflN ..._ NH I, WHITTAICIR, WUll•M JOlll\ .,,d I. l'llll Marie. --· T«*dg. Janu•ry ''. tm DAIL y PILOT ... GI Pension Pay Court Ruling Due Diet Suit Won by Inmate BOULDER, Colo. <AP) -A 25-year-old Boulder County Jail in· mate has won a court batUe to have a special diet -including peanut butter, wheat products and fresh vegetables - served in his cell. Per ry Eoveno, 25, serving a two-year term for attempted burglary, claimed in his suit that prison officials violated his constitutional right to freedom of religion by serving him food other prisoners got. Judge William Neighbors, after bearing Eoveno's claim that he w as a spi r it u a l naturopath, ordered the county to provide the special menu. WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbe U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to decide whether private companies must give veterans credit ror military service In computing pension benefits The case could affect hundreds of thousands or World War II veterans re aching retirement age. THE ISSUE WAS brought to the court by the AJubama Power Co .. which ex. eludes employes' tune ln the millta.ry in computing pensions. Raymond E. Uavts challenged the company's plan after he retired in 1971. Davis received d monthly pension of S198.95. If the company had lncluded the two years and seven months be served in Ute military during World War II in com- puting h.1s pension he would have re- ceived $216.06 a month. FEDEa AL TRIAL AND appellate courts upbeJd Davis' claim and ordered Alabama Power to include the penod of military service in calculating pension payments. The lower courts said pension pay. ments are one of the benefits of seruori-ty OCC Offers 300 Spring Classes ouAL1TY 1n1uranee More than 300 classes will be offend through the Afternoon College this spring at Orange Coast College. Classes run from 2 to 7 p.m. Courses are planned and offered in this time period to appeal to those who wish t.o come to the campus only once or twice weekly and want to avoid attendance ln the evening. Classes are less crowded, the campus is quiet and parking is ample during the afternoon, accord- ing to Dr . Richard W. Brightman, OCC's associate dean of instruction. Courses are tuition free for California resi- dents. Spring registration will continue through Feb. 1. For more information, caJl S56-5772. Inspector Sentenced LOS ANGELES <AP> -A former Department ol Wat.-and Power .inspector bas been sentenced to serve S2 consecutive weekends in county jail for taking bribes to lower the utility bills of San Fernando Valley businesses. Superior Court Judge G<lrdoo Ringer bad im- posed a five-year state prison term oo Kennetcb C. Novotny, but suspended that sentence because ol Novotny's health. at reasonable prices! ~ AUTO HOME OWNERS ... .._O .. H ........ '116. $25.000 ... ~.·~!. 56 7. .... TIA.a YUllT $166 COLU •I IT•DIMT • 5150. $50,000 • • . • • • • • .............. ~ ....... SIMGLI O Tll JO • CO'Nf" ,_ • • • .... ,.,... ,_TIAI ............ YACHTS STORE KEEPERS FACTORIES LARGE BOAT DISCOUNTS APARTMENrS EXTENDED CRUISING TO MEXICAN WATERS CONTRACTORS COMMERCIAL BOATS BOB PALEY MORTHOC-546-3205 "' ASSOC, INC. SOUTHOC-642-6500 . ' . l • At Serurity Pacific Bank, you can borrow on the money you have in your house. ,. Our simple interest Homeowners Loan Program means you can put the equity in your house to work. The key word is equity. Quite simply, equity is the cash you've invested in your hou c plu s it: increase in market value since you bought it. And in recent yt:nrs, that's probably a lot. Why not use it? You may be able to borrow fron1 $5.000 up, ba. cd on the equity ' in your hou se. And the loan \\'ill in no way affect the low Gl lQU!ll-LENDER interest rate you have on your first mortgage. You can take up to twelve years to pay it back and if you should want to pay it back sooner, there is no penalty whatever. Just 12% annual percentage rate. Quite a bit lower than most installment loans, we might ·add. And our processing costs arc low, too. Just $75. A glance at the chart wi ll give you a pretty good idea of a program that will fit your i ncomc and your needs. EXAMPLES Of HOMEOWNfR WAN PAYMENTS Amount Monchlv FlNANCE Toca I 1 in•n rd l'>vmtnc Tttm CHARGE Pa~mtnl . ~ "'' •111 1l ~"' Sl.l>H 1ll ~ till7l Z'1 ... -.\\\' ~ fo\ 1'1 I! m )t-\sti 411 s '14~~!1 "'I '\t\I j.fM/il h ... ~l '\N ~ ~h1i'if>QM ... ' ~\' ~ 'Ill~·· I! ,h loll "'I '>(I $11. llll Sf\ ,,,, ,,,, :0~!1 H \.,. ~ 114'> ~ WHti~ "'h'•''' SI II 4 "'" $1\'ll! ~ ~111'11196 ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RA.TI:• IZ'l Corne in today and apply for your Homeowners Loan at Security Pacific Bank. Where thrrc's security in numbers . SECURITY PACIFIC BANK There's Security in Numbers --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-' ltW ,.,,., .. ...,.,, ... ~. , ••• t-tlltl ..... ". 4111f •~Atil ". tot 1 u8sdsy January 11 tm ')I', • TEN-YEAR DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE I•• .. , .... 1911• l~ll PJll I'll J ttoM sun • REvtRS(O 7\0'\. f t t I 1974 197'> t 1 10'..0 tUUO 4'111 "°° a·..o • ~ I I /':.(; 100 h.0 tll)\) 't'rO ~ 4'10 'Graduated' Mortgage Program. Aimed at Buyers Hy Tb.-A1111oda\ed ~&S The steady s p1raJ of housm11 pnces has prompt('d new lntcrcM in plans to ease th~ b•k on buyers through vum•llons on Ult tradltlonul mortgage. In one development. the Oc1>urtmcnl of Housmg and Urban Development (HUO\ bas a nnouncl'<i u cominltment to lnsurc ~ groduatcd payment mortgages on ~ondominiums mb Hawaii uo ( C'n~i;;,oU'UER J· der J plan outlined y President VI "~ "i. Ford in a campalgn speech m September new home in September, accord· ing to the Census Bureau. wa:s $45.200. up 14 percent from a year ear her TO JANUARY 19n ui. ... ,.,,,,,.., .. '"""'1'(•1t..icu ·~·· Dean Wrttef' & Co Incorporated Research Oepanrnent MONTHLY PAYMENTS un der this plan a re lower than normal In the early years or a mortgage and rise gradually as the buyer's inco me goes up A HUO s p okesman said the mortgages insured so far range Ul value from $39.500to$43,900. Dow /ti arches to Many Drumnaers Over the last 10 yt!ars the Dow Jones industrial average has m~1 chcd tu political and economic tunes, to wan. and Ping Pong gumcs. to law suits and space trips IL reached its all time high in early 1973 and its decade's lowest ebb nearly two years later While some experts have forecast a 1700 average within five years (Daily Pi lot. Jan. S, l 977 > others have predicted a long losrng streak <Daily Pilot. Jan. 4. 1977). Old Ships to Transport Oil? meeting of the Financial Ex eculives Ins titute at 6 p m. Thursday at the Saddleback Jnn. Santa Ana. ( TAKING J __ S_TO_CK_ Bechtel Corp. a n er the construe;. lion firm agreed not to la.kc part in the Arab boycott against Israel. The agency hopes to insure 3.000 mortgages unde r the ex peramental program in the next )ear Consumers who want to participate apply to savings and loan institulions. mortgage banke rs or other lenders who, m turn. apply to the Federal Hous· tng Admin1st.ration. a division of HUD. for the insurance. The re are several payment s c h e dul es . Und e r one alternative. monthly payments on a SJS.000. JO.year mortgage start out at $233, about $46 less than the payment on a standard loan. The payme nts rise gradual- ly through the first 10 years of the mortgage. then level off at $300 .t month. about $31 higher thiln normal. LOS ANGELES {AP! -Most oU tankers scheduled t<> sail the stormy South Alaskan coast in service to the Trans·Al:iskan Pipeline won't be the s leek, modern ships industry promised but older vessels with minimal desi~n improvt'menl:,, the Los Angeles Ti m es reported. Keith E lloudyshelJ. Union Federal Savings and Loan As· sociat1on community relations consultant. will address the Orange district California Federation of Women's Clubs at t2·30 p.m. Friday at the Santa Ana Elks Club. 212 Elk Lane. Sanla An:i Registralion fee . which in· eludes a luncheon. is $10. Checks. made payable to Orange Coast College. may be sent to Busi· ness/Managemcnt Development Center, Orange Coa'lt College. 2701 Fairview Road. Costa Mesa 92626. The agreement was filed here Monday in U.S. District Court. It becomes final if the court ap proves it within 60 days Door Open~r7 a P WI,....,.., .. Quoting an Alaskan state rl'· port. the paper re1)0rl.cd Monday that 18 or the :.I I ships :.chcdulcd for use were built before 1976 anc.l only seH>n 5h1ps now under con struct1on "111 have the added safety of doullle bottom:. or dou ble hulls. There are \7 tankers that arc without gas·LDertlllg systems, a safety feature destgnt.'d lo avoid cargo tank explos1ous OCC Plans Selldnar Registration will be conducted by mail through Wednesday and at the door on a space-available basis. Information 1s available at 556-5880. Ex~utl1'e• to Me>ef. Dr J . Howard Cra\"cn will bt• the £Ul'Sl speaker at the monthly "How to start a business and prepare a business plan·· 1s the title of a one·day seminar that will be offered al Orange Coast ColJege from 8:30 a.m. lo 3 :30 p.m Saturday tn occ·s science hall Sadt Teraabaated SAN FRANCISCO <API -The J ustice Department has dropped a c1v1I antitrust 1.u1t against Business Clnsses Due The following arc <1mong business-related courses to be offered at Orange Coast College. Costa Mesa . during the spnng semester, which ~tarts Feb 7 Statics. :.in engineenng transfer course. will meet Mondays and Wednesdays from 5.30 to 7 p m Pre-requisite is two semesters of calculus Vector mathematics &bo 1s used extensively -A llOTE L·MOTEL marketmg clas!> will meet Wednesdays from 7 to 10 p.m. The three·unil course will cover the organization and function of hotel-motel ma rketing with empb351s on people, product, packaging, pncing and promotion The business d1v\s1on bas scheduled many manageme nt a nd data processing courses dunng the 4 7 p.m time pcnod N'temoon courses Include accounting. data base management. struc~ured programming , business report writing, com· murucation for managers. human relauons , buying or start.mg a bus iness and sales marketing and re· search PUILIC INV ITED FIEE SEMINAR TUESDAY AND THURSDAY "How to Amass a Fortune in Gold and Silver" 'l.i'.\.\ !'Oil I Ill-\t 'll ~111·0:1111 Th~· uuroo:.t• ol th1:. 11<1-.t-. ~•·111111 11 '' l•l •·\Jiil'• to lh• puhll• .111 11110:,tm1•11t pl,.11 thdl put j.;•1111 .ind ''"\'' ... 11 h111 ''"'"" ol vtrtuatly all "'"" "'.1nl tu .11 h11 "' (111.1111·1.i l 'Cl'Urtl \ .1nll 1orlcp.·1111t-11n 1 h1' 11r11• r .1m v. 111 1•,pl.11n tn tll'l.111 .,.,hut """ to. Ith m1"1 1•\1 t1 1ntt ino.,l 1•rfcl"l1 vt• .1 .. '>ct 1Ju1lrlint.: tout in 11•1t>1tl l11~111r~ 1111-. \I I (Ji\~ l'l,t\ V 1-"HO \I \llJ\ ~'\ 1nrnui:h rh1~~~1~U~~Jn .'~~n~!!rJ!~~n tho~1: with mutk .. l llll'lllnt• 1.in .10 um11l11t1· lurt.(\' t1mvunti. or i.:olll and ,,l\,•r h\ ln\l"•l•nl! '<ffiall 11mount:1 un u rc1tular 11.1!.1' It <lo+"' llt•l n •11u1n• .i lot of m<1ne~ In f.1 c-t. Midas I'> 1nll'n1!1•d :-111•11f1< 11ll\ 1t1 h1·tn th•• 11c 1·.,111) with hmth•d ·•~m·h In bUJltl u .. tr11n.: fln11 m•1;1I 1/11:.1: Monex Tells "Haw" This 1-.h1c-.1t1nn.it tocmlnar wlll l>t! conductc'<I by :'>1onex, one of lht· world'~ larl(clil 1nv1·~tmcml hous es s~c1allzlni1 1n pr1•1·1ou.'( mctul14 tor ~h1· 1nd1\1dual investor You'll 1.-nrn sh•p hy "''-'P how you 1·an mvc:1l 11:1 hllle a!> S.'iOO 1n1t1.illy with S5c> a month lhrrenf\er and suit l>ulld u .sizeable cl>t:itc m i.:old nnll Stiver A Lifetime of Benefits and llvantages Never Before Offered the Average Investor 'l ou II kurn .rhnul M1da " low ro,t prr ounel.' bulk vnrm.: 11t1• .id\ ant.•I!<'' or dollur·cost UH·rai.:in.:. how lo il<'(IUtro· 11 pr11 r~l.1 IHJrtmn nf ,, liar ttf ROlrl or ... 11\ er mun~ or the wd' .mt.1~<'~ pn·v1ou,ty re111?n~ for lar11c ur 1n.'1l1tut1on:1I m\ t•,tor " \lone>. will ttl'\o 1'\f>ltt111 1n !ltmplt• deto1l why gold and ~•Iver ho\1• !!Iii''"' ""''" :thcud uf lhl• dollar In Lerm1 ul rt:nl purt·hu:11ni.: pc114 er And 14•h~· prr<'1ou' metal~ s1nec 191>1 hn,,· nutpur1..·<l 111flutlu11 llko: no bank. bond or !illVtnl(s and loa11 111w:.lmt•nl hu" To r~~~~e~~ll !!~~,'h~~~~!Y~~re l ~~~MOO. 1.'Xl 2'1Jor:!72. Thi' Frtt-;1-: '''m1n.1r cnoobhgullonl will l>t! held Tu1.•11fl11y nml Thu1 sdoy tllllhlll al 7 30 P M Al the flel(l&try llott•I ut tl\800 Ma cArthur 111 Irvine ocross from Ornn1>1u Count)' Airport l':vcryone t~ l11v1tt'd Ther~ •nr no rcqulrcm\'nt\ other thun .1 Ninrrro' tlci.tn: for a solid ~ourrl' or 11upph•m\•nt11I lnC'omc llr1n11 )1111r :11J()wu: und romt-us you nre Saturday courses include introduction to computer and busmcss information systems, busi· ness Englis h. business correspondence. buying or starting a bus iness, business ownership and management, salesmanslup, selling by mail and typing. THE SATURDAY SCHEDULE ALSO includes a course for CPA aspirants. The certified public ac· countant review course wiU assist class members with preparation for the CaJlfomia State CPA ex· aminatioo. John Varga, a CPA, will teach the class on Saturdays from 9 a.m . to noon. Another item on the weekend schedule is the slate of Saturday morning reaJ estate classes, meel· mg from 9 a . m . lo noon and including apartment house management, reaJ estate principles and real est~te practices. Spring registration runs through Feb. I by ap- pointment. Open registration, on a drop-in basis, wtU be held f''eb. 2·10. Registration appointments may be secured In occ·s admissions and records office For registration information, phone ~772. L M. Boyd Musical Chicanery Most frequently mistyped words in English arc "the." "to." "of," "and," "ls," "which." '"it," "that ... "when," "with." "her~" and "be." ln descending order. Q "On Dmah Shore·s TV show sometime back. director Josb Logan told how years ago he helped Mary Martin overcome her fear of hulure by reciting a short poem lo ber just before the opening of a new show in London. What was the poem?" A Four lines from Wiiliam Blake: "ffe who doubts from what be sees ... Wlll ne'er helleve, do what you please ... If the s un and m oo n s hould douht .They'd Immediate· ly go out." In our Love and War Man's voluminous flle on the differences between men and women Is the ob· servation by Theodor Reik: "I've never seen n man turn around a nd scrutinize bis back. Yet women are qulle pre- occupied with this area. wondering If their skirt is mussed or their stockln~ wrinkled.·· Symphonic musicians. too, play tricks. rr they want to, they can knock their conductor right orr his podium, either forwa.rda or backwards. wltboul actually touching hlm. And they've done it to JUil about every big· name orchestra leader ill the world. Here's how: The score calls for crescendo. The music build.a towards lhe cllma.x. The maestro, ut· terty concentrated. signals the terrlfic downbeat. It'• met with abeolut.o silence. By plan, tbe humorous musicians froze. And their toes &be conductor. zap, nat oct ltlf race. U they want hlm to fall backwarda, lhey do their nothtna Ullnl on an upbeat. Remember. If thal wb.IAkey ls dealgnaled as o blend. it contains a touch or •berry. Addl"f'.t• moil to L M Bosld. P.O b ueo. Co.to Mtta~ LNG Re"i~" Soatght SACRAMENTO t AP > Federal regulators s hould order safety reviews ror 1tquef1cd natural gas ter minals proposed for California's coast. the state Energy Commission :.ay:. The commission will seek re· quirements similar to those used in the safety reviews of nuclear power plants, s aid chairman Richard Maullin. SEN. EDWARDM. BROOKS (R·Mass . > proposed a similar plan in Aug u s t. Ile caled statistics deve loped by Dr Henry Schechter. d irector of urban affairs for the AFL-CIO, to show that, based on 1974 income and housing expenses, homes sold at $35.000 would be beyond tbe reach of all but 20 lo 30 per· cent of the famiJies beaded by 'l0meoneaged25lo34. The situation has got.ten worse since 1974. The median price of a Ove•r Thr Counlt•r MASO Ustinqs former Rep Wilbur Milb (D-Ark ), r e tired from Congress la st year after publicity over his involw- m en t with entertainer Fanne Foxe. may become director of the Arkansas In dustrial Development Com· mission. Gov. David Pryor says Mills "could open doors in thi~ country and Arkansas." •).I )i6 I n• u s. 10\ UPS ""~ L•" ChQ A81C(0 l"O\ 1 • '~ M<.FtldEn1 l "' , • t Fl&C•oG.tro 41• " AmUndr-wrttr •1• 1~. Cf\ttt4tVO~u1,. • • 1 , ~~~~r. 'C:~ ~ : : : ~\t8n\ .,, 1 •· W"bO Revt\ I) ' t -, C:tOOlt Coro 1· • .. fuc:k~f0ftff ,... • '. 0.l•ram t oro 1 • • '• HMnltftroPtt 1J' • • ,,., 011JirtllBtO\ ))1·-t • 14" ASG t~v\t 1"-• '• Arao~ld~w 1~ • • • ~(IA.ml"\ 71'1 t '• Nuc~•r«lYf' J "9 , '- Vhe)ar t (r.llttio l''• • '• C1 •YComSy 10'~ • I Al~rt\I"( It • '• O&•rOufo• f'\Str 4''t • "-E.111-(trNUCll'O ,,., 1"1 °"'"1 tn10 1t •1 • • "' 6"-~r6Q'Cnn >•111 • '• lltl Uo JOO Uo ti. Uo "r Up ,,. Uo .. ) Uo U I Uo 14 J Uo t• l Uo ,. 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January 11, 1'177 I /N DAILY PILOT '4 f J Quaker Bar~ Alpo 'Bite' Challenged I by MILTON MOSKOWITZ I Alpo became the best seUmg canned dog food ln the t country by e mphaalling at waa 100 percent meat Persuaded , by thia emphasis were the do1 owners. not tho dois. since 1 there's no evidence that dogs can W1derstand television J commercials There's also no conclusive evidence that an 1 all-meat food IS the nutritional salvation or dogs But Alpo I certainly got pet owners to accept that lhesls Jt made the owners reel good lo feed their dogs Alpo Some years ago, after Allen Products, the maker or Alpo, was chaJlenged on this aJl· meat braggadocio, on the ground that Alpo contamed low grade or Money Tree gan meals, the company · altered its patch slightly lo say that Alpo was made of "meat and meat byproducts • ("By products" wua uttered sotto voce > LATER ON, AFrER VITAMINS, MINERALS and soy nour were added to AJpo, the patch was changed again to say that. an addition to meat and meat byproducts, Alpo bad 'balanced nutr1tlon " That last ingredient, "balanced nutrition," was a throwaway line What still came up strong on the volume meter was the the macho meat claim Here, for example, as the typical Alpo commercial reatunng the old "Bonanza" star, Lorne Greene, shown witbdogs "Look at them Every natural msbnct tells them lhal they should eat meat And you know something' They are absolutely right. because meat is good for jiogs It's full of protein, energy and nounshment. I feed ~ dogs Alpo beef chunk danner because it's meat, meat byproducts and balanced nutrition AJpo s all a dog ever needs to eat And there's no better dog food an the world " IF ANY PARTY IS IRRITATED BY THIS commercial, at s good old Quaker Oats, the maker of Ken L nation dog food A cereal based product, Ken L Rabon was the doma nant brand in the canned dog food market before Allen Products acquired the financial backing it needed for its telev1s1on assault on pet owners Allen latched onto this backing in 1964 when at sold out to cigarette maker Liggett & Myers, a company that saw a better future in dog food than tobacco Between 1964 and 1969 Alpo sales zoomed from $16 million to $125 mllhon Ther are now over the $160 m1lhon level, far ahead of the $90 mllhon done by Quaker's Ken· L Ration Quaker has "successfully" complained to advertising mdustry regulatory bodies about the Lorne Greene com merclal cited previously Quaker's argument 1s that no mat ter what the words say, the 1mpresslon left by the com merc1al Is that Alpo 1s an all meat product when m fact at is not Quaker also alleged that the commercial implied that Alpo is nutr1t1onally superior to other dog foods TO PROVE ITS CONTENTIONS, QUAKER surveyed 1.34 canned dog food users, finding that most of them had re ally been hoodwinked by the Al po commercials The Quaker Oats complaint was "successful" an that a National Adver tising Review Board panel accepted Quaker s evidence that the Alpo commercial was mislead mg pet owners And AJlt>n Pl-oducts. while 1t disagreed with the ruhng, said at would therefore modtfy its advertising lo reflect this dec1s1on What at will come up with this time 1 don t know First al was "meat byproducts · Then 1t was balanced nuln t1on " What euphemism will 1t extract now from the copywriter s kat bag to sallsfy tls critics and retain its all meat" story hne" One source 1t Wlll certamly not use 1s Thomas Wh1tes1de, a writer "ho recently did an insightful portrait or the pet rood industry for The New Yorker magazine Whltes1de reported there that at the U S Department of Agriculture the meal and meat byproducts that go into pet food are known simply as "4 D meat" -that 1s, "meat from dead, dying, diseased or disabled an1maJs " Stock Prices Fall Over Mideast News NEW YORK <AP) -The stock market dropped sharply today, suffering from some Jitters over Middle East de velopments Trad mg was active The Dow Jones average of 30 mdustnal stocks lost 10 22 points to 976 65 St.orb lta The Spot.fight "'EW YOAI< IA Pl S.>lts com 0<1u Md IWI tt>•"~ of the 1111e..,, "'°'' •< l~Zs1,:::.,~~1v s~:x.:,.,~'f~i l\\ve~ Occl~" "91 61?.«JO 11•~··~ US 11\0usl 199 coo 6 , • • McDOftetd 16S .., n ,_ ·~ 4111tlchll l46 llOO $4' •-1.\olt H•lllbur'lf\ ?11 llOO le < 1 T•,.to 11\C 71'1 COO 11._ ''t U..ITel U6 IOI! 19 0... Motor\ U6 lOO 1S I lto«MM AH 1lJ ~ U 1 • • Am Ttlt\ Ttl •OS 300 '' -• Dow Cl\ '91 000 tO->. ' tnt P-r 116 800 6' J 1 P•cG E 156 000 ll ~ Gull Oii IH 100 ti '• -'" VIK-1111 1•1500 l>'t+l t Anterl<>an Leaders What Sto<>lu Did . NEW YORI( 11\PI Prett TOCS.y d•Y oa e11 •071 tn Jll9 CIO 1'20 •<MO 117 10 t ' AJ2 DAILV PILOT Tue9day January"· 19n I 'll Never Play for BamsA.gain .. .Jaworski ~ YOU"NGSTOWN, Otuo <AP> Quarterback Ron Jaworslo, ells· enchanted with his pro football employers. says . "I w11l never play for the Los Angeles Rain:. again." Jaworski say:. he 1<; completely dislllus1oned by the Rams' failure to give him an adequate chance He has notified the Ram:. he 1s playing out his option and will be a free agent May I. Pat Haden and James Harris shared the bulk or the Los Angeles quarterbacking this !>eason, but Haden. a rookie and Rhodes Scholar from the Uruvers1ty of Southern Calirornia. caught thto> imagination of the fans and media. "Pat did a good job, but he doesn't possess my ability. cushioned by four years ex. pcrieoce as a pro," Jaworski said. "But in Los Angeles, a Southern Cahforma grad is like God, the newspapers. don·t give it to you straight. "They emphas ize Haden's ac complishments." he added. "but little was sa1d about his having lOArrested Fighting Mars Oakland Salute OAKLAND <AP) -Al lea!>l eight persons were lllJUred and 10 arrested when the official civic salute to the world champion Oakland Raiders football team turned ugly. police reported to- day Fighting and malicious mis· chief wa s wid es pre ad . authorities said. as under 20,000 fans -hall what had been hoped for -gathered in the Oakland Coliseum to s alute the Super Bowl winners Monday naght * * * ''Any time you have that sort of thing you can ex~t some of the problems that occurred.·· a police spokesman said. •·Jt was maJ1c1ous. mean sort of stuff." In contrast to the whooping. yelling. joyous crowds th;,it jammed Jack London Square Sunday night following the Raiders 32-14 win over the Mm nesota Vikings, Monday's crowd was surly. Police said people were be en by roving g roups or teena ers. several car windshields re smashed and a few people S' five i.n~rcepUons m the DaJJas and Minnesota games." Jaworski said he was offered 1700,000 for a five year arrange- ment last summer. alter a hot season. "When I h~itated. well. things didn 't work out. even though I had a g reat training ex- hibition season " The former Youngsto wn athlete said he broke h.is right shoulder in the opener against Atlanta and was supposed to give llsix weeks rest. Instead, he clime back in five weeks and directed the Rams to a 20-l2 victory over Chicago aod a lG-'1 lnumph ovlo!t New Orleans From there he went to the bench in favor of hrst Harns and then Haden ""They figured 1f I wa!ln't signed. why bothe r,' Jaworski explained. "And Chuck Knox. tht: coach. talked about my startin$1: and the like. but then 1t went to Harris or Haden " Looking ahead to a probable change of scenery. Jaworski i.a1d. "I prefer to play in the East. near my Lackawanna tN Y 1 home. There have been rumbh.ngs from WashlnRton. Cleveland, New York I know I can land a fine con Lract." Jaworski received $29,700 for the 1976season afterturrungdown the $700,000 deal That salary in· elude!' J 10 percent cut for playing out his option. ··1 can 'l see any sense in sitting on the bench when I know I can do tt better job than the other guy, just because you don't agree with the front office. When I was doing the quarterbacking, we were win· nlng." hes~id. 200 Brave Suh-zero Cold To See Vikes they had been victimized by '\11-..il".:O-. MINNEAPOLIS <AP > - Hard-core Minnesota Vikings fans have seen their club ap· pear in and lose four Super Bowls. And there was worry among some or the 200 or so fans who braved sub-zero cold to welcome the Vikings home. that their team's image had been tarnished. For a while the reception on Monday looked like a wake. But the fans' loyalty turned into en thusiasm whe n the Vikings ar- rived. "We 've got to lcl lbem know we're b e hind them." s aid Harley Forsbe rg of Richfield. Minn. "Nobody else has ever been to four Super Bowls." Forsberg·s son. Craig, agreed wtth his dad . but he was wor ried about the Vikm~s· image in the Nationa l Football League and wonde r ed whe ther they m1jtht be jtell1ng a mcnlaJ block about the Super Bowl ··w e ·r e known a s loser s no" !>aid young f'orsbe q~ purse snatchers or pickpockets Several hours after the 90 minute salute to the Rajders had ended. police reported the ar- rests or three adults for drunken ness and two for assault and hal- tery. Five juve niles were booked on various c harges. Coliseum security oHicers. who normally handle crowds without the help of local police. were forced to recruit four dozen city officers who had been posted outside the stadium to handle traffic to help control the mob. Eight persons were treated for cut5, bruises and lacerations suf. fered when they were attacked at the Coliseum. None of the in- juries were serious. Authorities s ajd the dis- turbances peaked prior to the Raiders' arrival, then picked up again following the on-the-field activities. Quarterback Ken Stabler, who was able to attend after backing out of the Pro Bowl because of a knee injury. drew a long standing ovation when he addressed the crowd The re we re cheers as the Raiders and their families marched onto the field. led by cornerback Willie Brown and running back Pete Banaszak car· rymg the Super Bowl's Vince Lombardi Trophy. AP- HANGING ON-Boston's Tom Boswell hangs on to the Lakers' Kareem Abdul- J abbar with one arm in recent play. then deddes it is better to hold with two in a WT'8p·around defense Cright>. Jabbar leads the Lakers against Cleveland tonight in a game to be t elevised on ChaMel S at 6. Loggen' Walker Too Tough Irvine Tumbles, 51-40 B7 CRAIG SHEFF OI ... Dally Pllel Staff University of Puget Sound's besketbalJ team figured to be flat Monday night at UC Irvine - after playing its best game or the season Saturday -an eight-point setback to Utah. But the defending NCAA Division 11 champions were anything but that against UCI's Anteaters as they led from the opening bucket in posting a 5140 victory at Crawford Hall. In notching its 30th victory in the last 31 games against Division II teams, Puget Sound didn't have it easy. Coach Tim Tift's Anteaters stayed on the Loggers' heals ror most of the game, once cutting the deficit to 28-27 with 16 minutes left In the second hall. That's when Puget Sound's Rick Walker went to work Walker, a 6-5 junior in h.is third season as a UPS starter. scored 11 of the Loggers' next 13 points on a variety of s hots, giving his team a 41-33 lead. UCI sliced the lead to six points twice on outside shots by Tim Tivenan. but Puget Sound, now in a delay game with two minutes to go. hit three easy baskets in close for a 49.37 advantage with 1 :30 left. Irvine played well -especially on defense. Although Puget Sound (9-4) h.il 52 5 percent or its shots ror the game. there was usually a lot of press ure from the Anteaters. Walker canned 12 of 17 shots. most or them 12-to-16-foot jum· per.;. He finished with 25 points. If Irvine had a fault. it was shooting. The Anteaters. who usually bavc a problem playing against a zone, ran into that Basketball Poll Tiie Too Tw•ntv ltOfl\\ I~ T,... A\'IOCl&tod Pren (Ollf.'9'1 bio\kt tt>•ll llOll with '"" f>lll(O .Ole\ In °"',."',,.""'·~•\.On rte< Orta\ _,nd tOial po1m, I llSF 1:1'11 I I l,Oflt 11 Mr<1elle • 1 lS4 1 l(y It > ' I t41 11 UCLA 11 1 ltl 1 Cln<y IS> 10•0 tl8 ll Low llle • 1 6l t '8"m• ISi 10 0 731 It Maryl..O tO I 'Ill S N C"r IJI 10 I Mii I\ Prov 10-1 "1 6 ,\,11<,n II I • I ~ 16 Arkll>•H II). I 6j 1 Wld'or"I II I 4114 ll Cit""''" II). t 6l I Mt v Lii l) 1 :Mj It Moll \I l) l )0 • Ml,... 10 o JlA t9 HlrO.-1 J " 10 l.rll°"" II I 141 lO~ II I ., situation Monday night -but had patience enough to usually lake only the percentage shots. The Anteaters hit 10 of 20 at· tempts in the opening half, but could only find the range eight times (25 tries> after the in- termission -and agamsl a good team like Puget Sound. lrvtne couJdn 'l afford to be that Ill· consistent. UCl received a good effort from guard Louis Stephens < 15 points) and got good in.side play from senior Scott Jenkins, junior Frank Chandler and freshman Leo Gonzalez. Irvine (5·8 l returns to play Thursday night. hosting the University of Missouri (Kansas City > Fighting Kangaroos. n .. ,..., !>~n• CJ>a""'"" Jitftttl~ Ao<IQitr• Gonu1or UClrv ... ltOI .. " ... "' l 0 ...... . I I I I\ l o'1lnQ••r I I l 1 (M'°" 1 I) J • °"''' 1 0 1 l Tot .. , l l \ 6 "'"-· 0 u ' 0 I 0 l l 0 0 ' 0 l 0 I • I! t n OCl Bruins Won't Delay Bartow Changes Game Plan LOS ANGELES CAP) -Coach Gene Bartow of the UCLA basket· ball Bruins says he is giving up a delay type of offense when his club leads near the end of the game. Twice that sophisticated style of keep away has been used in con· tests his club ultimately lost - and they've only Jost two "On the basis of the Notre Dame and Oregon games. the de- lay has been very bad for us ... Bartow told his regular Monday news conference "My reeling now 1s that we're going to attack. attack, attack for 40 minutes . With this team. we're better off attacking." Defending champion UCLA lost its opening Pac-8 conference game to Oregon 6Hi0 last Friday night and earlier had lost to Notre Dame. 66-63. in an intersectional battle. Both times the Bruins had led before going Into the delay, a close relative of the stall. UCLA came back to beat Oregon State on Saturday night for a 1·1 con· Cerence record and 11-2overall . "We played well against Oregon State and we played well at times against a good Oregon team. Oregon bas a team that must be reckoned with, one that could go right to the wire in the conference race. "In a lot or re spects, we find ourselves in the same position we were in last season," the big task now is to have ourselves ready to play against a good California team and a Stanford team that is surprising. UCLA plays at Cal Thursday rught and at Stanford Saturday night. "All In all. being 11·2 at this point after 13 games is in many ways gratifying. But if you want to look at the two losses and see we're only two minutes away from being rated No. 1, ilis dis ap- pointing. · · Aga111 il was a reference to the delay tactics in the final minute of each game. Bartow continued. "Had we won that Notre Dame game. we'd have been No. 1 in the country Does it help you to be No. l" Maybe it does and maybe it doesn't. I 'll like to try it some time." UCLA was 1·1 afterthefirsttwo Pac-8 games of last season, losing to Oregon Slate in the ope.ning set. The Bruins finished 13· l and 28-4 overall, losing lo champion In- diana ln the NCAA tournament semifinals. On TV Tonight 6 p.m. (5 ) -NBA BASKET· BALL -The Los Angeles Lakers meet the Cavallers at the Coliseum in Richfield, Ohio. Taped. AON JAWORSKI <:age Terun Gets.Scare On Plane GAlNESVlLLE, Fla. -A twin· engine airplane carrying the University of Florida basketball team home from a game at Knox· ville. Tenn .. made an emergency landing atthe Macon. Ga .. airport early today after one engine failed. The university-owned DC-3 had 24 passengers and two pilots aboard. Three fire trucks and one emergency vehicle were al the Macon airport. to mecl the plane but the landing was without inci· dent. The plane new 70 miles OD ooe engine. The passengers continued to Gainesville by chartered bus, but the problems weren't over . The bus broke down en route and the party did not arrive in Gamesvilie until7a.m. Tanner Trh,..plu SYDNEY. Aus tralia-Roscoe Tanner overcame an upset stomach to win a second round match over Dick Bomstcdt, 7-S. 6·3, m an international teMis tournament here today. Kim Warwick walked off the court while trailing 0-4 in the t.turd set and Chris Kachel was awarded a 3-6. 7-5. 6-0 verdict while Vic Amaya ousted Hank Pfister, 6·1, 3·6, 10 8 111 another match. Aneritraj fJp•et AUCKLAND, New Zealand- Australian Ernie Ewart upset _ No. 4 seeded Anand Amritraj, 1~. 6-2. in second round play of an international tenrus tourna· ment here today. In another men's match, Rod Frawley beat John llolladay, 6-0, 2-6. 6·4. Kathy Harter of Seal Belch. defeated Helen Harris , 6-4, 6-3 in women's smgles. Rayni Fox won over Sheryl Tebbutt. 6-3, 6-7. 7·5: Val Franta stopped Robyn Hunt, 6-4. 6·3 and Pauline Elliott de· reated Donna Stockton. 6-3. 7-6. Wade Breeze• HOLLYWOOD, Fla.-Virginla Wade took less than an hour to defeat Zenda Leiss. 6-0, 6·1. in second day action of a $100,000 professional woman's tennis tournament Monday. Francoise Durr was upset by unranked Kathy May, 7-6, 7-6; Sue Barker defeated Brigitte Cuypers. 6-4, 6·'1, 6-3; Kathy Kuykendall beat Re gina Marsikova. 6·2, 1·6, 7-6; and Jt>anne Russell stopped Marise Krueger. 6·4, 4·6, 7-6. Readers' Hot Corner Dear Glenn: l would Ukc to thank you Cor the increased coverage the Dally Pilot gave the sport of water polo this past season. One of the things, along with mooey, our sport and other so called minor sports sorely needs is vast media exposure If we t!Xpecl to do well at the international level. It is too bad that other newspapers and media sources do not realize thJs. J am sure that more people would like the Oakland Raiden to win the Super Bowl than the United States wln anything. Sincerely, Bl LL BARNETT Newport Harbor ffigb Water Polo Coach Stabler, Tark Pass Up Pro Bowl ·Who Bas the Ball? Washinfton 's Kim Stewart appears to have control or the baJ In a recent Pacific-8 basketball game. But an unidentified Stanford player also has a band on the ball. SAN DIEGO CAP> -Practices for next week's Pro Bowl game are under way, but lnjuries and nights scrambled by the weather have kept some or the bigger footbalJ names out of the action. Ken Stabler of the National football League champion Oakl and Raiders and Fran Tarkenton, Chuck Foreman and Alan Page. all of four-Ume Super Bowl runnerup Mlnn~a. are outollhe gam e. Stabler and Tarkenton, the surtlng quarterbacks in Sun· day's Super Bowl at Pasadena, both have bum knees. Foreman was sidelined after striking a wall in the game during the second half of Oakland's 32·14 victory and Page was excused so he couJd return to Minneapolis to lake law school exams. Jim Hart of the Sl Louis Cardinals Is Tarkenlon 's replacement, while Ken An - derson Of the ClnclMati Bengals r eplaced Stabler on the American Conference team. The game ls set for Monday in Seattle's Klngdome. but Snn Otego WH picked ns o warm weather practice site. ,Running back Mike Thomas of the Redskins was notified late Monday afternoon be would play in place of Foreman, but missed Monday's practice. Adverse weather around the country made it tough Cor other players to arrive in San Diego on time for the initial workout under the coaching of Chuck Noll of the Pittsburgh Steelers for lhe American Conference and Chuck Knox of the Los Angeles Rams for the Na lion al Conference Squad. Other newcomers for the NFC team will be derens1ve tackle Larry Brooks of the Rams, who ts Page's replacement. and San Francisco's Dave Washington. who takes over for injured Red.skins' linebacker Chris !Ian burger. The only other AFC chan~e is Denver's Otis Armstrong for run· ning back O.J. Simpson, who suf fered injured ribs in Bulfulo's final game of the season. The six replacements, an NFt. offl~lal aaid, all were next on the list of players Pro Softball San Diego Drafts Golden West Gal 91 BOWARD L HANDY Of ... 011111 '"""",.... Key Grune Features SC, Mesa Survlv•l in the UUe chase is at stake for the Costa Mesa High Muatanas tonlgbt in Soulb Coast League basketball act.loo as San Clemente (2· 0) invades the Mesa gym. DAILY PILOT .4Jt Santa Anita Entries '~•-•ay fllnl .... 111. PlltST •ACI • •~·~ 1-0IO Ullt & Uotl01"11• Clalmlrtfl -. UlCO ''•'"''"9 "''<• no.ooo •••.OCI01 Or Jo58/I IOl~ICO,.I t t• l'lyl119Ama-CM.....,11 •1t Gl .. Mlng 1(11lgll1 IMallor,,.Y I '16 ll.,•~111 1Ca'1a'*'•l 116 Elroy l'l<aU" 1011•••••1 11• O.C.our ICeball•rol 114 E-.rvtlll<IQLuUy !!.ftlllhl 11• Iha Brown played first base for tbe Golden W~t College na· tioeal championship women's IOftbaU team lasl apriog and eoecb J\ldi Garman has her pen- dled 1D a1ain to handle the job durlq the um campaign. Alf tn the other circuit games tonlght-Mlsaion Viejo at Corona del Mar, El Toro at Dana Hills and Laguna Beach at University. Upofflsat 7. ., Harwtl ... l t<hel COl11I Ht But the Rancho Alamitos High grllduate was drafted on the first round of the Internation al Women's Professional Softball A.aaociatlon selections by San Diego in the fall and may pass up the coming college campaign. "San Diego hasn't contacted me yet and I 'll have to wait until I lalk with them before I make up my mind," Brown says. "l thjnk if l tum pro, I will finish my schooling this year and play in the summer." Reportedly the minimum salary is $1,500 for a player who sits on the bench most of the time. Brown doesn 't figure lo be that type of player and it IS doubtful if she will sign for that kind of money. She started her career as a abortatop then turned to the out- field in high school and was moved to first base by Garman last year. "We had three shortstops to at.art the season and I guess I was the best at first base so she moved me over there," Brown aays. At S-9 and with a .336 batting average, she figures to give the RuatJers a boost again this spring iflhe remains in school. She had two big thrills last seuoo. First was the winning of tbe national championship after the Rustlers lost to Glendale, Arizona and had lo come back to win three games the next day. two from Glendale. Moors (15-1), FV (12-1) Vie; Tars at Los Al Two non-league basket.ball tiffs are slated ror Or ange Coast area quintets tonight-highlighted by the invasion of Fountain Valley's Barona (12-1) at 15·1Albambra. Tbe other till slated involves "ewport Harbor (4-7) at Los Alamitos, which features guard Dave Bak er and 6·7 Tom Beckerle. Both games are scheduled to begin at 7. Alhambra. under coach Steve Kemp. won tourney titles at Ar royo and Pioneer and among 15 victims is Crescenta Valley which fell . 58-51 But the core of Alhambra's at· lack may ~ massing First team All-Cl F 4·A re turnee George Ratkovich. the Moors' 6-1 guard with a :U.2 average, has m issed &be last two games with " sprained ankle and 1t 1s not known whether he'll play EVA BROWN In the three games in one day. Brown had five bits in 13 plate appearances. a husky .385 bat· ling average. For a girl who belled a bome run earlier in the season in the bottom of the seventh inning to give ~Iden West a 3-2 victory over UCLA's varsity, that bad to be quite an admission. But Garman says she is that kind of player-one who can be co.mted on to help the team al ao1time. It may be ltind ol a mutual ad- miratioo society. Brown went to Golden West Idler Garman convinced her that lbe program was sound and that the Rustlers bad a winning team. "Sbe'• a great coach," Brown sa,-of Garman. "She has really helped me and has taught me a kJl ol things about playing the game. She really knows what she is doing out there and she knows how to get what she wants across to you." Brown is also a basketball player and after two years as a starter at GWC, has an average rJ. 12 points a game. But softball is her sport and if the San Diego entry in the IWPSA makes her the right kind ol monetary offer, she may move to the professional ranks before conclusion of the 1977 GWC season. For the Mustangs, it's a must- win situation. Aasumina Corona del Mar (2-0 ) ls successful against Mlsslou Viejo, a loss for coach Larry Sunderman's Mesa quintet O ·l ) wo&lld put the Mustangs two games behind two teams in this, the third of a 14· game league slate. CoofronUnc COila Mesa is a San Clemente front line that measures 6-7 -. 6-6, M <Bill Nee- 1 y. Ted He ttinga and Jobn Carsoo > and scoring potential from guard Tim Dunham, wbo ba.5 scored 38, 27, 2S and 2' points • dUring the campaign. Costa Mesa's major asset is its front line of Steve Parrino (6-3), Gary Wills (6--4) and stan Miller (6-311.i) and the game figures to be decided in rebolUld.ing and in Mesa's ability to effectively press. Much of Mesa's success has been in collecting oftenslve re- bounds and putting the ball back up for the short bucltet. CUP WlNNER -Mary Ann Barker (right> defeated Nlna Hannahs to capture the women's president's cup championship at Irvine Coast Country Club recenUy . Corona del Mar will be trying to improve its record to 10-4 over- all u Orange County's No. 2- rated quintet boats Mission Viejo. Los AlaDJitos Entries l'OltTUUOAY, l'ltln l"OST 1:0 P M. The Sea Kings of CdM rely on J&A .. Tu• (0 ") and Alex Black "'•ST••~ -*yard' 1 ... , en.• .. U'"'1 ~ C1almt"O Put'W i1100 Oalmlnq (&-7), who have averaged 38.8 ~~=uBot>ic ... _,1 111 points per game between them. s., Fty -"'t 1v_,,...1 m o-:: ~g~·:~&~~d~~e;a::~~ ~=~~:::· :;~ both ends of the court, but have F10 .. Sc>ur,.... tHartt 11~ little height to counteract the ~:.'~~;: i~1~o::i;;:1 :;; CdM duo. '""""e'lS1rH,•r ICalH 11• One or the Diablos' best assets ~~'~:.:..Illa 11• i.a ~11 sophomore Pete DeCasas, °"" t1C..ioM1 "' Who possesses some excellent ._ .. oie111eB¥<A-"1 in Glada!JOVI IB<OOllll '" moves. Surprl>1<1QMutt tHart1 11t El Toro and Dana Hills is a nc:ottouc:E -ssoyarO\ ,.,.., matchup of similar physical size, °"" & up. Attow&<1c~ Purse "*° ability and style. Both play man-. ~ .. ::~::,:~~;~11 ::: t.>-man defen" and neither relies . u111. Aep11ca 11<,,1gno 111 on the big postman. ~~~"!'J:t~~;,9\1 :~ The J,.aguna Beach Univeniity 1tewAu1er1vaughan1 m conflict features Laguna's Ben k•nd P1oa.s <wardt m Bacon against Roger Poirier, the =~~~,-~~;::.,1 :~ 6-4 University gem. TMlltO ltAC• -000 yard\. ) - Ol<H & up. Cl•lml<IQ Purv '2000. O ah"1f1Qprlces2000. 0..'91" Foot cw.,d1 T~ytllrM Sll 1000 ( BrOOltt 19tdl F•-Go !lle>Mml ... , ... , ....... l.OC .. OOll ll(nl9flll Ol>l<ka<I Dale CHartl 11' ICffOT~Ch&"Gl lLlohamt I It BIQ Bl_.,. CMllcMlll 171 Ou\•v'•Go !C:C•rl\MI Elll\I~ Homllftl !W•I'°" I \If B.-.Gum-!Harli 11Y Btq Tt<N Aoc.kel tFreyl ~ICIA!M.._,.IC-dot•I SllfUfT" ltAC:E 1!0 y-l A~U19!Me ~°"" !Llpl\an.i .,.., old\ & 1111 FClll•• & """M. Al· -.nt• l'ut'Wtl!CO 110 •11 110 ... ", 110 1n 119 UQlll Fool LAI" !Wat'°" I Coco'• COoY ICa<OOr& l l.On!Y Aoc k•1 (A_., I --.·1Aoc1tol !l<"•Vllfl 119 NlllT14 lllACE -llO ye~ l -r ::: -'" UC>. Cl•lmlnQ. Pvroe UG> I mASIK*Till<IQ CMllCMlll DN<Ol•Glrt ILIC>Mml -•So9cl1I l llroolr\l .111'1 A.,ld Yc1Y CWardl tmpr•u)lwly 1TrMM1rll llt llff't tm-(Hartl , .. ~~~'f~.~· 11• Bllarn1v ITrM•Ur9l 11• P'"s""°llO Jev llt"l9fl" 11• Fe•rlec1Frattlr 1ci.r11MI •tt V•"'\ Star IAclalr I 171 ~Imp ILo(lhaml 171 GoCelU" 18'00l<st '"''Y -Y tterOoral Boy 1""'90 CO..yo< I <Acl4uroel Enrlc.,., '"•rt I UGt4T" aACE -1!.oy&rd\ , ... , -Ct.irni<IQ P\irM 0800 C.lai"""V o-IUUO,VOO l" AltoUl<Jlbte ~ny Go IT ruwre I Hoty\MOO (W••dl 1111 .. Your Prl<o !Brooht •>• Flylng D•~ld I Ward I 110 ,,,,.. T•&• 10elomt>a l ttO 1n 11• •11 •n 1)7 117 ,,., 111 Los Al Results l'fflileMay NOKratchft Bacon baa averaged 18.0 points per start, while Poirier b as poured in 15.6 per game. C:IHr. Treo Mta~, 11) •lllllT llAC:E -)JO v••d• ) -11~ old• Maid•"'· Ctalml11g Plorse 11• ~t,IOO A-Orut~•r aftd Cltrtl and RanOY 8u<lle<1trv Gymnastics Vista Bright for GWC Olautv o.nw 10.1omc.a 1 B1wo-y11-1TrH wrel Tlmolo Owi~ !Adair) Sem'O¥onderMe<1 IWardl ICtl<lluO !llk!Wirdsl O..roor Sl)Ol IMYIH ) leo'• J.ou IOrever I Pon Clebtlf>r IC..rta) MaQrloll• ~~ ICterl1MI Olaf C:Hcll ICardota I ...... 1 ...... Fan l'ella 1Tru1un I Jo~slWardl TVff Ao 18'00l<Oeldl ftfTl'Gffl llllCharchl tit Bufl'1A,.... '" 10.lombal • 60 ~ C) uo Hft Bud't llo 0ecld0.-• .. rt lO 60 I IO 12l 11HuGu1 tRlcllerd<I ua •I~ Tl--lls-112 Also r•n -OtlUI S1real<er. GI..,, 11' Do Ct•ma Bar._ MIN A,.,,.rlc ... Girl. S..rQot't Die-. Keweall Ovl1, '" s-tAttreat ttl 5cre!c--Su-'1MIM.Mal0r 1" Sw!llQ Mall, I'm a S.1111, Mia P'i.t llt "- \IXTM ltACE ->50 yard\. 1 .,.., -& up. ClelmlftO. For llillet a. m.rH-Purw U .000. !.m¥10l11e tOelomb<tl U «J 11 )() It 70 E~ Artl\1 IW4rdl u 4 60 l 70 PNlliorl tLl""8ml 11 "° Tl,.,. 1115 "''° ,.,. -llebel ltay Y-08(). ba Poo flyl"'O Oii< "111•. Ml VIiia Ea\YJ•l'•SeQt. lllllll~Uce U Eucta l·Smaf1ObieA2·E..- Attit11. P.WUJa.• With the r eturn or SIX sophomore state rinallsh. Golden West College gymnasl.lcs coac h Georg e Beckstead believes bis Rustlers are ready to make a run at Long Beach's dominance of the state cham· pionship. Long Beach has won nine con· secutive state titles, but the largest Colden West turnout ever (lB l could help the Rustlers lo c hallenge the Vik i n gs' supremacy. Searles, Perry Johnson, Dale A:T.- berg, Jay Levi, Randy Whitaker, Bruce Bums, Art Cruz, Tony Draguesku and Richard Gbhl. Searles, Johnson, Axberg and Levi competed for the RusUers in 197S when Golden West reached its highest point, secood in the state. Searles won the state cham- pionship in floor exercise and vaulting during that campaign. His 9.35 on the floor and 9.60 in vaulting are GWC records. ln la.st season's state meet. Dtaguesku placed second on the l'OUllTH llACE -1JOv•rctt )-a•ucte~ .... '1A.-A~s .. Oedl ... aNSJM •• Old ma..,.., •. Purw neoo Joleeft Bars !Broo-ci.1d1 SorlrtQ Et-1 IV..,ghnl T11-Junc:I'°" l1C"1gn11 JM~JudV CLl!lflaml BlqMGoC..y,.Oo !Hartl -Hones. (8rooo.u FUcl<a Te IWettotll Tot4allorHhNOI !Trusurel Cell"'"""'y ICaUI ~1 11191\ lllOUVhl Alto Eno1-1• Wlrdy Aocut ICterluet "'-Geor~ r11ouv111 O..roer Bell• IBroo~li•ldl 111 111 MCIONO aAClt-HO urd\ l - 171 -& "" '4arwh •llOWllN:" ""'-111 '1 tao Ill ~FllQM 111 IVaUQIMI 11.00 S JO UIO 11f Tht0t-0...(A<lelr1 Ull <00 171 E'IN!lla'\Oldle IMytul ) 00 1n Tl,.,. -Miu 1:11 AllO "'" -l(lllQ N • .-~ SMr'm, Bid Pl1I04. ¥111" N 1'11«9, Ml• 1n Dallal Ov•. Howe'• Sonny Boy, 111 SNclowl Chief "' Scr~tcr..ci -L.90'4 B•llv. Sig Gl-nY011, Ou\I 0.vfl 1, f'm For You TtllltD llAC:E ->SO v•rlb. J - l'I~ llACE -810 yard' J ~Ar old$ & UP. C1elmtng. Pur .. ~100 O•lmll'IQ price '6500 old\ M•ldonl. CtalmlnQ. PurM m HICO S-ICardotal P-'H.an !Mylul O>rl• Teytor IC.to 111 Aunl(llly 11t !Hartl 10.AO HO 100 '" C.000.r Scl<'cl•llBroo._u loo ? .o •71 Cut• But P1u1Chi.1carOO.•I '60 t 10 T Imo -II ll ~ENTM ltAC:E -<.0 Y~ l .,. .. olOS & ""· ClaHlliad al-..-.<• """" J) JJIJO. N'l Allbl fMylftl a.ua '" rw ... dl ~ty Parr IC.Ill Tlme-n .• t.60 <IO • 00 1.10 uo uo ,.,"° ,.,.n -SavanftalOft, Vf'Qoe\ 111r.vo. Call Ma 8udd\l. l(lpty's Orum. .Jer.,,,lah Bar llOffT" AAC:E -3~ ylf'dl. J )'98• ol<ft. All-•nr;•, Purw µ,ooo. 5ar\!O tAdllrl A.bl>-ICMdorel IC!lllGlrl ITreasurtl Tlmo -11.11 •OO UO HO 1.00 uo uo Af>O ,.., -Tt.e CaMldalt, l4rd'f \ RoYal. Nu Diamond, t'am A 1Clpty Too. Pa<Jtant Queen. WIMY9D SUelched -Lilli• Mambo Moon, -Kind, Olilldlp, lllockl" ~ SICO..O llAC• ont mt,. J -old 11111.. Cl1lmlno. Purw 11000 Ct•lmlnvO'l<••••.000 '"'" ooo /Mllllla Sclulr~ COllvor" I C-FrlOfld ISkl,,,,.rt N\411\alle J IPlllUY Jr! 81Q8"111'•1 l0111I Ol4W..lbu•Y l<;orOtre> Jrl Tort Uu CCaUa"'"'el ...,..,.,, CSellonl A.Cl°""' o I Piere• I A-Snowoel In IP1•rt•l Decorator Da<>cer IT oro l ll'OUllTM lllAC:I • lvrtonqt. J .,_ar 04d maiden cof1• & oetdlr.v-- In C.111 PVl'M '10.000 Pert,_,.., Be!i\IV•-'1 C..na CollMY Oot!Uller I AmllirratlO CS.Htrsl winay o.nc ... 1umoert 1 AIQU Orlv• CCarnpaJ l Dumpty'• OU!tt !Toro> Proud,.._t CCaslenedel Tom'•Jov 101111cotal "' 111 1111) 111 111 "' .,. "' 11'/l'TN llACI' • furl-. J -r olci coll\ & vtldln9•. AUowana" PurtUll,000 J Geor~ florol KnlQnl'' R•ti.I IOll••re•I Ollhula CCA\ltMdal Tequila Sunrl\e IPl11<av Jrl Au Vol ICo<dtro Jrt ~'°"1Alne IS1'oemokerl CMIU PU\ (Harrill e1v er,.1wr ICru11 Colr.. !Sml01I St~CO•a1I Natl ... Hide (Artorburnl 8Hu!ort Sette CSktn11tr) "• 111 ,,. 1?0 '" 111 •10 114 110 1JIO )(11\ 11• SlllTN aAC:a -•fur~. Flllle\ & ma•~\. • uar otdl & lie> Al '-l"<H Purw \1) 000 lleqtlme Girt Cta~l•n4dal A-ken IGenlMOI OliwWru111 C~mtl<•rl MlrkOIO fVe'9'1r• 1 lhlr....,thH-CDlnlcolal Ol>evtllt Helm CCordtroJrt 11-··o.m CN-11 Ol'Sl'1 Boot\ IS. !Ifft I ,,, 11 11• "' '" 11' 11) 1110' SEVENTM ltACE -'"' "'''" FllllH & m•r~ ... •oar Okh'""" f>l· towanc•• Purv Sll.000. La Vtnc:.OOr IStun-.r I 0r1,.. ol Ao-!Toro) TV T~rew CCorcltroJrl !>nowv Cedt 1!.tlltr" CiOBerOQue IPlncty Jr) l.ady lunar CMU<W>rl .,.n.,yQOwn fQ~IA.,oelal 5cllon CM<!na I Duntt•WMld COlnlcottl Plt~urt II Minor l~arrltl • L11Cle '9\enet csi.o.mehr I ll~T" ltACE -.iurl-.J-r old 1111111. Staku Plir\I U S,000 •Clded. Grou ,1',600. To wl,,,.er \11,3~, -ond UOOO, third '31SO. lour1~tll1S. llllll~U. Your P1eca or Ml,.. I Davi A ~Id View CCo<cltroJrl Col~Sltr IN0guez) Oon'sMullc ITorol Fle.1olAll (MallOrMVI AmathN <Ptnc:av Jrl Danersu IOlnlcolal "°"•nc• Ball'f 15-f'nal!er I A lllomln1sclriQ CCorderoJrl Gl-Brlw IPi.rcol Al•J El""""° (Vtf'l>aral 118 1'8 lit 118 119 111 "" 118 Ill U9 111 Nllfllt ltAC• -11/l mlltl. , _.. ~&uP 11.1towenc" Pu ..... sn.ooo. P>ogrem TralMr CGonUllH ) 111 A.5'ff-!Campa\) 1U 8<'onn Tobl<1 !~•cei 11T En._.I_ IT.,,.,I tu TrwOtl"'" tvaroatl "' -et!N-11 II\ S..t>orM ICasl•Md•I U • Celba!IV t(.ordero Jr I 11S llelraldO ts-mo or I 111 p,.t.r llylcll !S<llll!"s I X 110 FelMll IVtroer .. 1 11' OelMGl>lan (Plnr;ay Jrl 11• Field Hockey YAll$1TY WHtmlftt1W C2I IOI HWllt .... II Wm. tcorlng-Mulherl" t JUNIOR VAASIT't w111111. ... 11111111w"t- HBKorl11Q-0et1n1,1on. YAlt$1TY Ratkovich has averaged seven assists per game and is backed up by 6· 7 ~, Rick Jones < 11 te· bounds and 10 points per game l. M Gary Arnold (16 points and nine rebounds per game>. Eda son Hiih or .H untin gton Beac h transfer s.2,,, Craig Boatman and 6-0 Ron Vermeulen "This is the most depth we've ever had at Golden West," said Reckstead, who is beginning his eighth year at the Rustlers helm. "lienerally we've bad to rely on two or three men to carry us, but thls is the most quality we've had throughout the roster " pommel horse a nd Whitaker finished second on the same ap- paratus in 1975. Alght On Wiiiie CAd•" I U<Nlme 0. O ebller !Hbrt I Un Cllaroe I OeH>mtwl I s.,.,,,.., hie CUP1'1am1 1n 11.11<0 ren -A1uret1, Tonto'• Go Go. Smollav PtrfecllOI>, Civic Gerttor. Jaclt Pit( Coa. Lucky Saa le, Gol GYl*I _...,. V•llO UI (I ) MartN FVM:Of'lllQ:Tru...bull. Bell~ u•-1•> m New.,.n u Euct.t ~S.B• & .... ..._... EdlJO•UCOf'l!IQ Baum. Aona. Sl1Ye, P.i.J~.. ~men. 1'4H Korll!Q-Monl_.....,, Sll(Tlt llAC:E -lSO verd\ 3 ~r o4<B. CtalmlriQ PUrM '1800 C1elmll'lg orluU0.000. 117 5cralcl'leel -Ml Buddle, ~ Boy, Oolnmta, Mr. &lrdllOllQ NllfTM ltAC:E ->SO YA,.,,,_ l l'N• HE"'~lfl\ Sur>MI LtAQ\19 ~ 040\ & uo C•••rnl"CJ. PurM U.000. Plon>/llPWllll uw •lctorv ThP Moors can run lthey KOred 106 n~ain"lt D1shop Amat > or play th<.' slower tempo accord mg to Kemµ "We saw Fountain Valley m ats opener against Los Amigos." says Kemp. 'and we uw no weaknesses " Go ld e n We s t has nine sophomores on the squad. BUI Beckstead has added nine ex- cellent freshmen. including two CIF c h a mpi ons, Bruce McGregor and Paul Von Ruiten. McGregor was the ClF cham- pion in the floor exercise and Von Rutten wu the CIF champ on the high bar and parallel bars two seasons ago. Both a re from Westminster High Scbool. ~ater llocl<et llllc"4rO~I Laba Def>IXllS IBrOO~l I CIM'N Hot IWatsotll Srnaotll-Jel CMltctwlll TallalMalrl P-LastOla11<e (Hlrtl Ut.ema ICardoui I '" l"OUll'TM•ACl!-UOvaro..J-111 oldl CallH1red. Clalm1"9 Purw 110 '1.~ Dick'• O..vll Jl.INIOlt YA a SI TY CTN!a•ur~ I ti 00 1 00 I Ill) M1o1M Ill (ti P-tal• 'Val .... RocUltll•r IC..rdoUI 1 '° f 60 MarlrM tcorlftO ""O<k. Sal"'°" i:..orqy Jet IMvlet• • 00 '""'"'1 (11 (1) l!o11-171 Vain lrdlet1 T1""' -18.J'I N••Porl l(Orl"O Ec111tr"<1(ll. Rustlers Play 119 !lll<lla"'" 4 60 )40 t.AO Also r~ -Slrlp'• Coffff CUI> Tiny Edl--/llol McClure. 111 010oy,Aprll(Adalr1 •60 100 MIO , llllytllm Ouuer. 8eulall •-----------CllerQ•. Sl y 01 O l amo"d· Colors Picked FV coach Dave Rrown says he'll slJck with the same hncup tbat deo;troyrd l\nahc1m's Katella -guards Gl'()('ge Barno~ and Scott Ford. forwards Bret Wilkinson and Roger Holmes and &-6 center Gre~g Svalstad. Newport will be trying to stop a three-game losing streak and has Rob Galey and Roll Schwalbe pacing the attack Golden West College, blitzed by LA Harbor in its Southern California Conference basketball opener last Friday, attempts to regroup tonight whe n tbe Rustlers host Rio Hondo at 8 o'clock Rio Hondo comes into the Rame with a t-l SoCaJ mark and an ll·S season record. Higb- scoring forward Steve McGuire sparks the RoadruMers. Other freshmen on the squad are Rick DeLuca, Steve Manes, Don Solo and Ed Villa o f Westminster; Jim Fournier and PhU Zi rges of San Clemente; and Robert Trachtenberg of Hunt- ington Beach. Capis tra no Valley High School, which is scheduled to open in the fall, will be known as the Cougars under a black and gold banner. Attendance boun- daries and grade levelS for the first year are still to be determined accord· ing to principal John Smart. Galey has been in double figures 10 of 11 games and is averaging 17. I points. GWC is now 7.9 following the 9&-Q setback to Harbor. The Rus tle rs ope n their season, F eb . 4-5, with the Northern California Invitational al Diablo Valley College in Pleasant Hill. SoCaJ Play8 Grand Canyon PHOENIX -Coach Paul Peat's Southern California College <Costa Mesa) basketball team opens the toughest two weeks of the season .tooigbl against Grand Canyon College here. The SoCal Vanguards dropped a last-second. f7·66 decision to Cal Qate <Domln1uei llllls) to bring their seuon re. cont to 5-4 Frlday nighl Following tonight's 1ame, tbe Vanguards boat Biola Thursday, travel to Pt. Loma, host USW and Journey to Cal a.ptiat dW'ing the two week period. The Vanauards' lead l n1 scor e r , Ted Bttcenon, wH held to fourpolnt.s at Dom~ • lWla. HVC Belts Foe, 83-40 MA L IB U -J e re Fraser scored 30 points and Huntington Valley Christian's other four starters tallied in double figures as the Con- querors from Newport Beach r olled past San Fernando Valley Chris· Basketball Mluour11U, 5a"Ole9pst .. ArUlltU 60. TtotH Tt<ll U 8aylo< «I, TCU 14 Ol'alAollemM.SWTtuUO SMU 71, "I<• 61 1 ..... ,_ Tua\Af.M11 WICllll• &t. n °"'•"""'• Cltv .. A1hltl•l In A( llOM 'Cl $1. LOUlt 61 CrtiQMOl'U C11wlandS1 to O.vton Ii. YOV11Q1town st Al.O.ma 101. MIUIUll>Cll • """'"".,· Offrvl• 11 Olikt t'I, Ull•l"11• ti <;.orvt• lac II 14. c:;..orqle 51 W J•Oto11v1flt'4I s FtOrlO• ff AMmplll 1 $1 II, Tulane 6A VMI IC. AtljMll1<nla11 St ~ wm1am & MArr 11 Vlrvl<1latJ Army,, ~fetllon., IOTI Duquol\no It """" $1 If HV11tre II. i.14!0lr• 10 tian, 83-40, in non-league basketball action Mon- day night at Pepperdine College, he re. Now 5·2, the Con- querors applied a full court press that forced 31 turnovers. opening a 44.15 lead and breezing. HVC also shot 68 per. cent from the floor, as the 6-1 Fraser hit 10 ()f 13 for 77 percent. Doug Hanson, who sank eight of 17 from tbe fioor, added 20 polnta, while Rod New grabbed 11 re- bouodl. H'lfC:(l:ll •• ft ,,, ,, IC.1"11 ; • t 1J ....,,..,,, • • J ?O ~-• t 0 10 l'r•Mr 10 10 J JO It ..... • J t 11 T91als JO ,, -.., °""""" 10 '1 HVC IS ,. 11 .. u S...l'erNMO • ' .. 11-4) BONDA MISSION VIEdO HUI A .. \' NWY-IJl..0121. 491-102' WE'RE SPONSORING A MOTORCYCLE SAFETY COURSE THAU SADDLEIACK COLLEGE *********************** A scheduled Motorcycle Safety Course offered by Saddleback College b~glns January 25. We have appllcation forms at our deale~hlp and will be happy to give potential applicants more Information concerning this essential Instruction for "survival." Call or see us today. *********************** why list prf ces when we are a DISCOUNT DEALER CALL BEFORE YOU BUY Our Slllo !Hin I ~ 60 T"'>e II,. "'"' '"" ~Mllroo. o.-1 r.,.... S.r 01,,.ll Mo, Som .. wt o.-.. 8u it Girt ScratclltG -Lolw lllt91rd l'll'TM ltACE 110 y1rth J -~ & ""· Allowa"et Pvrw ,.,000 ,., ... '°""°' IU!lMml 11 10 f 00 1 C) A,,,.,1c"" c;...1 !Han 1 J 10 t 80 GoO....r Go IV•v9'11tl HO 11,,,. -41 ,. A('° rtn -A S.t1d Al,,., Au!lltll,,,., Litt lo Go FIM1, ICl•bu•V'• •n-. Otdt ~1111e ~ ..... _ ScrarcMcl -MIH M_. S<Gkll. Mt T Olar91r, Mltltr Vtt .. 1, lloq Aoyat 800 U Eu <I• 1·01<~'• Ooll & 1 -..... Paid MUI.to Pro Scores Nati-1 llHte~ll AJ-14111 ... ""°9"1• 93, Atlanta '2 Netlellel Maclt•'I' ......... Washl"91on1. OetroltO NY hlMdor> I, PlllC-lpll1a l I HIGH·RISE VIEWS. LOW· RISE CONVENIENCE. Gateway Plaza In Newport Center. Four new bulldlngs In a garden office community. outstanding views, high ldenflty, prestige environment. Up to 8,000 square feet per floor. Free adjacent parking. Free space planning. ~A~wrAV Contact vour broker ~1119 Ml or 8111 Dolley or Tom Utmon PLAZA of Mollow·Kennedv Corporollon. (714) 644-5165 y "/, ,. '!.;j, NEWPORTtjjCENTER by 1HE IRVlNE c:Dv1~ A t>efler place ror bu11neu in o ~11., env11onme111 fOf ~· 1 .._ ...... ~ that yourl may notl COMPLm OIANel COUNTY COYllAM llKINI .. : L..-...... s .. c ............... ,... .... ,.,, ...... """ ... .... ...,.,LA._ 2 1140N'Tl4 TO MOffTM UNTAl IASI$ 41 NO OIPOSIT UfUIUI ~ oN •mono cuon 4 ONLY 511 10 PO MOlllTN TOTAi. COST .~,..., 5 NIW COMPACT lntlT StD tlV• a 4 I Vtt 6 \IOICI lllUSA61 PA•lll Al.SO AU AYAILAtLI 1 .uu nu MAINTINANCI orwm1 couN n RJ\OI07fl E PHONf. Sf llVICE .. r . 17l4J 13S.330• .. IO. WITA , .. WITA AM •-ut-t ........... ~ o.. ....... ,~ ... '- Clfl'"'-11 -... -... OW Ill A l f DAILY PILOT Tonight's TV Highlights ABC fl 7:30 -Sha Na Na Variety Special. Memories of yeste~ear in roc_k and roll music are the specialty of this popular group in a ball-hour special featuring guests Rita Moreno and Harvey Lem beck. NBC 1J 8.00 -Baa Baa Black Sheep. The real Pappy Boyington makes a gu~st appearance as a visiting general while Robert Conrad, pJaying Pappy, falls in love with a nurse in the first of a two-part story. KCET.@ 8:00 -Kissinger . ~e ou~ going secretary of state i_s profiled_ m lh!s documentary retrospective covenng his early days in Germany, at Harvard and through his rise to power in Washington. (TV DAILY LOG) f TUESDAY ( 6:00 n u rn r;OJ mn (fl> """' u ll~ <JJ <129J m m ,..., U Cl§) LIUrs Bult!MU l1kers at 0-land (IJC..r r'yie D ~• m hMdre f11m11 0> AcS.·IZ m Oedric c."'"' e an..tit s-s ID DMIM m L1c11111u1s -6:30- 0 DiMlll Cunis 1ncludt Bob HoPt' l'Mty IMt. Chuck Wo,.Mry and AnOy leolf~· (})..., Cntfrtll ®'~Griff•~ CD f allilf Altw ml (fl) '-all mi.. 7 :00 u u r:n1 m m m """ Cl) ., ... s- (1) Jo Ttl lfll Tn6 D c.c.tr.- CD 1 LM Liicy m n.. n11 fl> -.U/btMI Jtwall "8ur E ._.../Llltrer .. port (8 (.1)) eo...o m.,...,..,, -7:30-u c...w c-. ()) "' Odd '-" D • • le Variety ~ lh11 ll'OllP ol 10 •ady rock and roOe1~ _,. 111tmorlfS d 1u ltrtear wtlh II** puts R1t1 M0<eno. Hariey la.beck alld P1mtl1 Mym Cl) "' '°"' 1'w D llll.loUr'sW'IW ® IHI (J) m HICIJwlld Sqiiara . ..., ... m m> ....... 111t1._. fl) a..llli 21 Tll4P( QI ~~ mTr..., 8:00 9 ((IT) I})) f Wllo'J Wtlt AtB'.; ..., ltllH 1111t~ Oan ~Iller ChallP\ 11n11 111d 8¥bl11 Howar 1tpo11tn1 om .. tmt1n2 PfOl!lf lro1111U .. aa f M .. lht ~blf(IS ol Who \ Who will loc¥l on PtOl>lt wfloW Khflht!> N~• ..._ -111r ot 11!tnl1011 from poll ~. bot$1ntu. and the 1rt Cll.l1tu a.1111 trtll cont1>1>ute lutu1u on un nllll lolu lie \ fOUftd On lht Ro.l4 u @ , & } m 1u a.. It.ck a._, '1ht OUdloUI lnt1t1y ol All Ti.. rul PaPO, Bo11nc1on rutsts u 1 "'""•11 1tn1111 •hilt series Sh• ~ Conrfd as PaP9J, tails 1n kl.e Wlttl 1 bteutifwl nu11t "' Part t of A two pat! 1 P•wde tU lilliM c •(211r)"tfia1tlfiNl1t1 --..· (16•) "6~ Anthony Quin• lall'IH Cobul ft 8 (,..I t ) QI ... ,,, DIJ1 A &.. Ul>\¥it PI01tCI ba<kh1,s •hfn s°""" •lOl!f 111th llt<h1e. Porsr R41pn _, !NII 11.!!n tet tlltm~t•t\ Ill( \•d • -... •flll1 rn llowud \ ha1dw1,, ti<!" D ...,. C (b r) "Sc.al'*~" (wt1) 66 l.J•I• Rob.,lso11 llob01t ~ Ot.1n4 H1!t"O 11G u bu a Wen1111 ,_. ID lJill If t11t ~ G),.,.,.,.._ fD .._, ll"Wloc Albtt1 a..... c (1hrl "S,.•<tr'1 ....._. Id<•! liJ H•My tnnoc Ma111ttft 0 H111 lall'H MACA/lhu1 fli) llatllltf A rtlrOSOt(hvt Oii Mtltt.ll) ol Statt Htnry K1\Slftfj'1 1two11111 M1f111.1l •nd \IOI'\ lttm pllo toCflphs rn studio comm'"'lllY 1n '"°""' Wit~ ~1$ SUPCJ0rttf1 •nd dt!llC!ors ind wtlh K1$51nCtf h.,. w• fllt ~ram coven K1u1nc11 ~ YGlll~ 111 Ge1 m1ny yurs at 11¥v110 ~is 1rrwal 1n Wt!.111nf1on and ht$ risr to tl1t top uf the Wuh1n1ton l>O'lt< slr\ICturt m ctin,irito • hycJllC l'lllMlneN -8:30- • Mftie: CCl !'Cl) "Thurllltf 111 .. SIHI" C•n) ·~9 W I Ch1ndlt1. Su\an Hayward 8 (l<ltl l t)) "" lmrne & Sllitlty l1verne tel~i Shirley tnlo ta~in1 1 day olf from lhp brew.iv. but tht &lfls don I h~ve h much hrn as they 11111c1paled m er--. ID ailMte ""'1111 ., Sbltilll c..;y 9:00 • <l.Jl> rn> ITl 11•a•s•H Hl•~trt and 8 J find thtmSttv" •t odd Wltll the bliss au1n This limt If& Ille Navy bias$ whtn Hawitn s lldte><d for help from 1 Slllfton tMdy abo.lrd the earner Essa ~ 1111t1prtltd as 1 med1t1I tmer1ency 8 ~II Cl) ®I GI Mee~ •<•' ) ~ ....... ... Billy Ind Cllat1tl ult11 lotn tor.1& .. nsl Rud), and \lltslty COii• .,~"'' ~" l"H\llit ae1111st r11cone111 ., tu veeas m 111m Gnffil s- 0> Yw~ fB lllUSldl Wlrit!J a> CM•...., Wmtli111 -9:30- 0 (ITT) ())) (.f) OM Day al A fiftll Ann"s concern over Juht'1 sud· den built of enthusm111 IM her first C1111stian p101ect increases when the pio,ecl muns having a derelict for a house guest . Ell) American flldl111 Ar11sts A s1•· week se11es about contemporary l\mer1can ir11sls whose unique stytes ·draw upon Indian trad1hons Grace ltlled1c1ne f'lowe1 and Josfp~ tone· wott are featured lon1gllt m~r'75 10 :00 0 llOJAll llu moYtd to '* Tuewy! Church scene of tonicht's dram1! D (.t7J W > Cl) lopk A lllllth&hltr eoes berser\ after he d1l(D~t" h.s unfJ1lhful wrfe m111· dertd and then holds 111r.'Xent 'r1Ct11111 hos1age in i chu1cJi. D Police St1111! federal '* •cent Huth O'Brian rs. Muhine 61111 RunMn 0 <13J (I) (fO) m l'olitt Story Hugh O 811an stars as a lederil aient •llo rs brought 111 to help lind 111 ~leg1I wupon attei pahce officen trac king hom1c1dt suspects draw machine gun fKt 0 0 ._ 16) c.bril) ....... D (1291 CU) ~ rarlltly 124)~ ID Mttti11c of 111t lllillds (R) me._.._ -10:30-m O> ED llnl 1 1:00 O D ED OJJ "- U CJ) CH8 ~ Cl)"-U QI) ( '2fl (J)) Ltwt a,..rle.I• Style f ) Sillila llatm u, CJll&Mrd CD llllry Hin.., Mirr 1br1m. a>~Me ( 11) (3"1) Riii futlrt mrt11tovi.uoes -11:30- 0 < 111 > m cas Late Mllllw. c -~: llrtcJI Cassidt Iida Aptl!H (d!i) '73-0tnnis Wuvtr. J b ClnM11. Stela"" Powers U ~1 tl 111l m.....,c.-o> 111e m Cid 8 (~ '\.)QtJTIUda1 lllolfleof ....... Cit """ at Tiie NllltoNllllllY""IWllllll•ttnri i>fl Tiie 700 c... fD""'1MM 1 2 :00 D lat tf Croudlt 0 M.M: •Kitt* & HIPtf" (min) &J "41Chete libpn, r11nk S1nalf1, lacl Hiler m ...... : "BlrMdt llill" (COii!) 41 Wallact Beery Mar1M1t M1tn 0) ....,_: ~ & '1tllln'' (dr') "61 Doll Bur11tt1 Cuy Williams -12:30-0 U.Mpt Sllow: "C411tlfllpt." •• f eu ill Ille bill." '1ecnt GI t1le a...."' 1:00 u lJ • 11) ,...,., .. 2 :00 1J ...... Dollllelutwc: ..... of A ~ fltft." wn... T•" m AMic!tt Slw: *Dulll C.W II Tart..~ •Duka o1 West POllll" 3:00 n flloN '1llt lmttm" (dra) 62 M1ch111 C..11111 Cl1ll llobt11S011. James MKArthur oam111£ 111ov1u IMUMT 12 Btlow, '°' ,., -WllU, ... "" dfy's mowla. 9:30 O "Goldtft Carrin11" (dr1) ·41 _Ray Milland. Marlen' Oiplrich 10:00 •Ml 1c1 "Destination Go•i" (1dv) ~J Richard Widmark, Don hylor II :00 llJ "ltt11t Bwl tlM lotltlJ Ktarl" (d10 '44-Ciry Grant, Ethel 8arrv11101e 12:00 CD "Aulcllfltflt In lllttlf!Y" (my\) '43-lean Pttne Allrnont. S.S.n l'fltri, S11ne Ha1t0 1:00 D "Out! at ~ Weis" (1110) '56-Btn Cooper. Ann• Mari~ Albtr&htlh ~ tel "lliM lleurs tt bllla" <•<l'f> '63-Hom Buchholz. me rum, Oiane 8'kt1. Z:OO 0 IC) "lattlt "--" (dll) 'SI-Roe' Hudson, Marta. Hyt1, O.n Ourvt•. Anna k1sllf1 J:OO ®' CC) "Tiit ._._... (d11) '70-Josa ftlrt r, aiur~o Montalbln KOCE T elevision (50) Brochure Issued By Clubs Sail Limits Debated Heavier Costs Loom for Owners of Old Boats The Sout h er n California Yachting A&· soclaUon, composed ol tr7 yac.bt clubs in Soutbem California and Arir.ooa. has issued Ha annual brochure giving dates, t BOATING entry fees and locations Bo Sh for the more than 1,000 at ow I boats in about 100 classes that are expected to compete in the 48th an-Attr a ct s nual r e n e w al of Midwinter Regatta. • Dates for lbis year's B1a D e mand "Midwinters" are Feb. -e J.9.20-21. The event bas traditionally been held The heaviest demand on the weekend nearest for exhibitor space ln the George Washington's 21-year history of lbe birtbda Soutbem California Boat y. Show la reported by AS IN THE past. the chairman JC!hn Cordes of regatta will be spread the spo~nng ~uthem over a wide area from California Maripe As· Dana Point to Marinade& aocJaUoo. BJ ALMON LOCKAISEY four 1plnnakera. The CJaaa C. °'..,.°"'..,_.._.. CJasa Band lower rated Class A A proposal to limit the number yacbta would be allowed to carry of sails that can be carried from aix to 10 beadsaila (Jibe, •board a saUing yacht in an 'I jibt offshore la caualn1 contualon, ~bl~'ri .. '!:l~·tat'boys")0!:d constemaUon -and even would from four to six apinnaters of delve Into lbe pocketbooU or v~welgbu and~. ,manyownersandaldppers. 'ls 1 a....;;;.._ t The rule, scheduled to go lnto e 00 ar1e uvcai.a cos effect April 1, was fonnulated by $1,000 each and higher. and apln· the Ocean Racln o Council, the in· oaken cost from $5,000 to $10,000. • Similar salla on tbe smaller ternational governlne body for yachta run from $l500 to f150 per offshore racing. The rule was lnstJaated to Pte· copy. sum ably cut down oo the cost or IT WAS POINTED out that the an already expensive sport, but a llmltation applies only to sails number of Southland racing skip. carried aboard in any given race. pers -including several Someweallbyownerscouldbave sallmake~ -would result in other aalla stowed In their heavier costs to owners of old lockers or garages. boats and some small boats who Diet Deaver, bead ol North would have to increase or renew Salls in the Seal Beach loft and their aall wardrobes ln order to an experienced ocean racer, stay competitive with their more believes lbe rule may be pre- atnueot counterparts. mature and might further eliminate many owners from DIS A D VA NT AG E D I N racing in lotematiooal Offshore another respect would be the Rule races. He said a more re- owners of large yachts who alistic way of cutting down the would be limited on tbe number cost of yachting would be lbe of headsaib and spinnakers lbey limitation of winches and elH- can carry aboard -even though tronic gear which also nm into tbe cost to them would be in· the thousands of dollars. ffighly consequential. geared winches on all-out racing The limitation applies ooly to yachta cost from $1,000 to $20,000. Cle«<> also bflleve.. that tbe limltatJon rule might lead an at- U'!llpl by some skippers to cheat, leac.Jng to a rash of proteata. "If you aee a yacht sailing close by holst a combination of aalls that allows blm to start pull- iq ahead and you are iure that lt ls a combination he .. not sup. posed to bave aboard, you can be au.re that there will be a protest and an inspection ol the yacht at the end of the race. Tb1s could lead to policing problems," said Cicero. But whet.her 1ailmakers agree with the limitation or not, tbey mostly agree that it ma.y be good for their buainesaes. Most serious racers would be sure they had their full quota of sails before starting a race. WllETHEB OB nol the limlta- tioo rule ls good for business, Deaver believes it was pre- mature, Ill advised and pro- mulgated by "people who were not thinking straigbL" Deaver believes yacht clubs and other organizations apoosor~ i.ng offshore series and r~ should approach tbe controversy slowly and cautiously and not force owners Into buying a lot ol salla they might ill afford. Rey. Seven Orange 1be all·marine show, County clubs will be COD· ranting among the three ducting divisions ol tbe largest shows in the na- re g a tt a . They are Uon, ts scheduled foe a Newport ~arb o r, 1().day run, Feb. 4.13 at Balboa. Bahia Corin· the Los Angeles Cooven- tbian, Lido Isle, Dana lion center. ~dsails and spinnakers, includ· Highly sophisticated electronic Point, Capistrano Bay and Huntingt o n Harbour. ~ stayaalls, bloopers, etc. navigational gear boost the cost Dana School Se•-Lar hts ith JOR tJn additional thousands. ..., ge yac w ra gs Deaver believes tbe hard_. bit IndicaUve of the en· of 62.1 feet lllld higher would be ~~ thuslasm the marine in-allowedlltl.eadsallsandsixapln-financially will be the owners ol Safe Boat Coone dustry holds for the nakers, regardless or tbe length older boats and lbe newer boats Most of the action will Southland show is the ol the race and the anticipated with double bead rigs.· On a dou· A "Safe Boating and Sailing" be in the Los Angeles· fad that more than 00 weather !ondltions. The yachts blebeadrigyachtbothtbestays'I course will be offered beginning Loog Beach harbor area percent of the exhibitors would fall in the category of and jibtop would be counted in at 7:30 p.m. Jan. 17 at Dana Hills where the regatta bad its in 1976 have booked Kialoa, BaJJyhoo, Ragtime, the limitation. High School by the Dana Point beginnings nearly a baJ!. apace for the 1977 show. Windward Passage and others. TERRY CICERO ol the Baxter U.S. Power Squadroo. century ago. Clubs in Many or the returnees and Cicero loft, Newport Beach. Classes will be held every Mon- that area hosting part ol have asked for more LOWER RATING yachts such agrees that the rule could be un-day night for 15 weeks. Registra· the events will be space, ael!ording to asthequarter.ton,half·ton,three falratbothendsoftbescale.He lion may be made at the ftrst Alamitos Bay, CabriUo Cordes. This year's show quarter-ton and one ton pointed out lbat most owners class. Seamanship, safety at sea, Beach, Little Ships will occupy 240.000 categories would be allowed would certainly fill their sail and rules of navigation for sail F1eet, Long Beach, Seal square feet of the Coo· from three to six jibs (depending wardrobes to lbe limit to stay and power craft will be taught. ~~~ c~~~--Ang--el-es __ v_eo_u_on_c_e_n_te_r_. _____ oo __ th_eir_r_a_Un_· ..:g:..>_an_. d_fro_rn_oo_e_to __ co_m...:peti __ u_v_e_. _________ 'lbe_re_is_no_ch_a_r..;:g;._e_ro_rth_e_cl_ass_._ COME AND CELEBRATE MILLER'S OUTPOST 4TH ANNUAL BLUE SALE WITH US! M EN'S ASSORTED SWEATERS The choice ii youn from tha rabulout sroup or acrylic lmitt. Lots of colors to~ from. too. S-M ·L. Ree. 17.00 MEN'S FAMOUS MAKER• JEANS Pre-washed faahiona In the latnt 1tyles. Lota of detailina on the.e and you ·11 1urely rec<>&niu the name when you Me the label. Sus : l8 to JS. Some colora not •••liable In all 1tyles. Res . to ll.00 997---.. 4ila, • One of thne ~ famous brand.a ... Brlllania ·~, H.D. Lee. or ·--... Sedgelield LADIES' ASSORTED SWEATERS All lit quality ~ wr1119, Y·necb, and taberda. Solida, ~ pattern• .•. your cboioe. There'• bound to be JOl'nethine here '"' __., one. S.M ·L: J«c. to J0...00 UiJU FOR GALS Cord pants In aolld colorl. Choose from the Batie. the Cinch Back. or the Faahloa Jean. Sitct: 5 to 1J and 8 to 16. Rq. to 22.00. l!!lf FOR YOUNG GUYS LEVI'S JACKET· Studftlt 1•-· • u:ea •n many dill ttyle,, Some •tylea erent color. and Value. to 18.00 not available in •II mlMt. LEVI'S PANTS· Big assortment of d" • . color1. Bruihect IJCOntint.tect atylft 8ad c_orda •re includ=~°':bi~Uah iean., and "~·Values to IS.OO ll'n>up. Brokm YOUR CHOICE: 6 9 7 :~:::::::::;;-------. ............... .:~~~ea:c:h~ PRJCltS l.P'nCTlVE JAN. 11 THRU JAN. 16. 1971 •WHILE STOCKS LAST :--,i " I· J I I ' . COSTA MESA 2302 Harbor Blvd. FOUNTAIN VALLEY GARDEN GROVE 16185 Brookhurst Chapman & Brookhunt LAGUNA HILLS MALL WESTMINSTER MALt Laguna Hiiis Westminster MARINA PACIFICA VILLAGE Lons Beach •• I l .. 'Madness' Manifests Masterm-i nd By DENNIS MeLELLAN Of Ille O•llr Pilot StaH Ray Bradbury discovered Buck Rogers comics when he was 9. It was love at first sight. As it is with many young loves, however, he was ridiculed by his friends. He tore up his space man collection. Several months later he re- aJjzed he had torn up his love. He shunned the criticism and went back to collecting Buck Rogers. The payoff? Man y years taler the publishers of the collected works of Buck Rogers needed an in- troduction to their tome. Who did they ask to write it? "Good old Ray, who was wrong." There's obviously a message there, a key to what makes the famed science fiction author lick. Anyone who attended his appearance f o r the .. Writerstalk .. series at Orange Coast College was left with no doubt as to what it is. "THE IMPORTANT thing, .. said the 56-year-old man who never grew up, "is to fall madly in love early -and never give up your madness. "Dare to be foolish. stupid and adventurous and see what comes of it." Science fiction lovers certainly know what became of Brad- bury's .. madness": "The Mar- l.Jan Chronicles," "The Illustrat- ed Man," .. Fahrenheit 451," and countless short stories, plays, poems and articles. Buck Rogers was just one seed of his youth that later came to fruition. Out of this ''mulch, this horse manure," grew Ray Brad. bury, author. 'Tm a child of this period of history," he told his capacity au- ruence. "I'm really a child or the century." At 3, his mother, a great movie Jover. took him to see Lon Chaney in ·'The Hunchback of Notre Dame." It left an im· pression on the boy. "I walked strangely for three months thereafter," he said . "And l 've never been the same." AT 8 HE fell in love with Edgar Allan Poe. At 9 it was Buck Rogers, then "Tarzan" and all the Edgar Rice Burroughs books, which were not allowed in the libraries of the time. Literary Theory More Critical By J UDITH OLSON Oltht 0• 11 y Pilot SY!! If you thumb through the cat.alogues of most major un- iversities today you'll find a course or two or a whole em· phasis on literary criticism. It hasn't always been so and no one knows it better than Murray Krieger Dr . Krieger. professor of English and comparative literature at ucr and one or the founders of the university's pre· stigious School of Criticism and Theory. has led a JO.year battle to have the discipline accepted by departments of English and literature. In the days when Dr. Krieger was an under~raduate at Rutgers Un1vers1ty. literature was st udied bv authors or periods. · "When I graduated l wanted to be marketed as a person in literary theory." he said. "I de· cided I would create interest in this field or not get a job "This was a very senous in- tellectual problem then. You learned about the pe<>ple and the limes rather than focusing on works themselves as literary artifacts. "Methodolo~1cally it used to be easy to teach about the genesis of a work and its relationship to movements. But once you stnpped away those areas you got into more slippery grounds." THE PROFF.SSORS always felt secure talking about literature in the trarutlonal ways, Dr. Krieger said. "But I was in· troducing a whole series of dis· ciplines that literature teachers weren't comfortable with. "Philosophic al study is alien to literature.·· Dr. Krieger's early career was spent in Big 10 universities as a "missionary" working for the ac- ceptance of literary criticism. There was resistance every- where he went, however , because he was threatening whole departments. He recalled that at one Big 10 school students had to come lo his home at night to study criticism surreptitiously. The first full recognition of the topic came from the Uruversity of Iowa, which created a special chak for it. "With that chair, literary criticism had achieved status," Dr. Krieger asserted. lo 1966 tie was recrillted by Huard Adams, a professor who had been fighting much the same battle at tbe University of Michigan and who then was plan- ning to start a new department of English and criticism at UCI. ESTABUSWNG 11IE new de· partment with criticism as its focus was a "shrewd tactic" on the part of the university, Dr. Krieger asserted. "We didn't re- peat what had already been done at other universities." It is difficult for a new school to establish visibility and respect in the humanities, he added. "We correctly guessed that the only way to do this was to do something no one else wanted lo do.'' Or. Krieger's perseverance and hard work have paid off for him. In 1974 he was appointed a university pro fessor, a dist- inguished honor given only to a select few faculty members in the University of California system. T'n h.ave been appointed so far. Dr. Krieger sajd. Of these. three now are emeritus and six Renaissance The art of stained glass is experiencing a renaissance, the first in · 800 years. The aesthetic medium -;o/orfully decorates 1ntrywa ys, kitchens, stairwells, ~alls and windows. A"' H•wtfeaturft Stained glass is being worked into homes to accommodate the physical style and function of an area. It forms the roof or bathrooms, it is used in e n- tryways a nd kitchens, on stairwells and as walls. Autonomous glass -free standing and hanging -which can be suspended from a window or used as a divider or as a piece of art ia pQpular wilh young peo. pie because it can be moved from place to pJace. As an architectural med.I~ the new glass has little re· semblance to the medieval glass that complement ed Gothic atthit«ture. "It has no compllf'iJlon either to Victorian or Art.Nouveau revival "Librarians. in their inlellee- tual enHgbtenmenl, rudn't buy the wonderful, trashy works of Mr. Burroughs." He had to borrow the books from relatives. Lying on ·the grass reading the author's science fiction books, one day he cried, "Mars, take me home. And Mars did. It sucked me right into the sky and I never came back." At 12, on a toy typewriter, he created his first ·'novel," a thousand-page sequel to Bur- roughs· Mars stories. "I've been writing every day since for the last44 years." Another of his early loves was radio's Chandu the Magician. Bradbury was fascinated. He de- are teaching at Berkeley. · 'l welcomed it as a recognition of my own work and what Irvine could offer to other campuses," Dr. Krieger said, explaining that the title carries with it the obliga- tion to teach and lecture at other campuses. Dr. Krieger also is excited by the s uccess of the school of criticism and theory, which is de· signed for post-doctoral students and which has brought na- tionwide recognition to Irvine. "WE W ENT OUT and persuaded people from major un- iversities to join us on a board of senior fellows," Dr. Krieger re- lated. The first board included Northrop Frye from t he University of Toronto, Ralph Freedtnan of Princeton, Geof- frey Hartman oC Yale and Science fiction writer Ray Bradbury believes in falling in love early and never giving up the madness. His passions include Buck Rogers, Edgar Allen Poe, Chandu the Magician and the red planet, Mars. 'Dare to be adventurous,' he said at Orange Coast College. cided he'd grow up to be a raruo actor. His friends laughed. BUT BRADBURY, then living in Los Angeles. hung around a radio station rw two weeks. emp- tying ash· trays. Finally, he got a job reading tt'\e comic strips over the air to kids on Saturday rughts. llis pay? Free tickets lo the local movies to see "King Kong;• •·The Mummy," and "Frankens- tein." .. How rich can you get," said Bradbury, his voice raising lo a peak. "It was the things that I loved. See my point? I couldn't. do without. If you 're deprived of these things you will die. "What's the message? Mad- Edward Said of Columbia. The school or criticism, wtuch has the backing of UCI Chan- cellor Daniel E . Aldrich and a grant from the National Endow- ment fo r the Humaruties, attract- ed 60 students the first year. Last year also was a banner year for Dr. Krieger's publishing endeavors. Though he has writ- ten highly acclaimed books on criticism for the last 25 years, his culminatin~ work was com- pleted. The book . ·'Theory of Criticism." was "an attempt to put together the elements of a literary system I've bee n workimg on," the professor ex· plained. · Dr. Krieger's volume was described by Princeton's Freed· man as "a mature and crowning achievement in the work of a ma· BEAANDERSON, Editor Tuesday, January 11, t9n Bt ness, foolishness, stupiruty, love. For God's sake that's all you have. If you don't go out of here and be your own mad self . . . that's everything." DON'T LOOK left or right to see who is judging you, he ad· vised. "Go on your own, enjoy yourself, become yourself. "Because I trusted my own taste, 1 became a writer, l de· veloped. Who wanted science fic- tion 30 years ago? But I had a love. I went and did it, because I couldn't resist it. "What if I had listened to those pe<>ple? ls there a lesson there? I want you to be in Jove. Otherwise it's not worth 1i ving." Dr. Murray Krieger is one of the founders jor critic. "It will remain am illuminat- ing work for specia)jsts but it also will open new doors for more freewheeling poets and critics." he said. THE BOOK ALSO celebrates a "coming of age of theory in the advanced uni versity cur - riculum," Dr. Krieger believes. Why did he turn to criticism? "I was as interested in philosophy as li teralure.' · he said. "I was always concerned that literary theory was not theoretical enough." As a child be was not particular- ly fond of literature. he said, and before serving in World War II was a history and political science major in college. Two of the his four years in the of UCl's School of Criticism and Theory. In 1974, he was appointed a university professor, a distinguished honor given to a select few faculty members in the University of California system. service were spent in India. where life was slow. "I simply read the library out of books," Dr. Krieger said. "My college education was in· terrupted after two years. I calbe back and said I wasn't going to study the same thing. My brother is a very distinguished historian and a professor al the University of Chicago. One historian in the family is enough." Dr. Krieger, a Laguna Beach resident, finds time to walk on the beach but his life is extreme- ly wrapped up in his teachlng, which takes him to other UC campuses frequently, and volun· teer work with the developmen· tally disabled. Being a university professor has its blessings, Dr. Krieger as- serted. ''But is has its curses as . well. It keeps me very busy." Glas·s lnspir~s Artists character from day to night. • 1n styles. A renaissance, the first In 800 years. it is a new exploration of the medium," explains Otto 8 . Rig an of Atwater, Calif. A painter. Rig an was dis - couraged in the '60s when be tried to learn the art. Studios were secretive and competitive. He moved to Europe to paint and returned to the United SUtes in the '70S to discover "a whole network of artists along the West Coast doing glass work." Inspired, he studied and visited studios where the medium was being explond ln Its "new aesthetic perspective" and he decided the worlt should be documented, he ex-plained, wlllle discussing his book, "New Glass.'· whid, de~crlbes the work of 24 artists and includes photographs -64 pages in color and mo re than 100 monochr.omatic pictures by Charles Frizzell. "I got to know the artists and their different estbetic orienta· tiona in travelng from San Diego ·to Victoria, 8 .C.," he said, ad- diJ\g that. the budding artists in a field d ominated by tradi· tionalists and hobbyists must often opt for a commission to eftlll a living, rather than follow their own artistic pursu.its. Individual pieces are priced as gallery art: architectural work ranges from $30 to $100 a square foot. He has seen panels that were worth far more than t.he en· vironment in which they arc placed. he said. Th& new art has attracted women artists. Sculptor Judy Jansen blows her own glass in sensuous shapes that are inte- grated with flat glass. Rigan watche'.d her work on an 18-foot- square window in browns and yellows for an entry wall. Kristin Newton designed a room divider, an assembly of motorized louver11 with each ·vertical in m otion. She likes· kinetic effects and free form shapes. An artisUc sense of freedom &he "d1Cln 't-have with painting" rnotlvates EHzabeth Devereaux Tallant, whose glass arch above a picture window changes In Deep greens, browns and blues go into some of the glass windows of Kathie Stackpole Bunnell who often uses three elements in de· sign. And after designing some very large windows -for exam· ple, the Salvation Army Chapel doors in San Francisco -Judy RaffaeJ Is limiting herself t.o less time-consuming work. A painter and quilter, she often uses border designs to frame her images. A prolific output of glass by Peter Mollica includes a bath w\ndow of cool blue and whi\e that ls designed to provide estheUc relief from the beat of the Japanese-style tub whlll' steam from the water fogs the g~ais wlth a mysUcnl quality. .. .. 8% DAILY PILOT Taurus Take Ring ·Roads WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 12 llySYDNEYOMARR ARIES CMar ch 21· April 19 l : If contract or partnership is on shaky g round, you find out about 11. Marital !.talus also is spotlighted. TAURUS (A pril 20· May 20): Avoid direct confrontations Taking nng roads now would be m os t con s tructive course. Conserve assets, energy. Get together with one who shares service. GEMINI <May 21-June 20>: Affairs of heart domfoale -whatever OC· curs does so with na<>h. all of a sudden -s urpnsc element is very strong. Social life1s enhanced. CANCE R (June 21· July 22>: Your na(ural abilities surface: views are vi ndicated. Those you res pect show a p· preciation for your cf forts. Accent on solidity, bu ilding, r <'si dc ncc, security. LEO <July 23·Aug 22): Take special care in tra.f· fie -people around you tend to be careless. Be sure you arc being cor- rectly quol~d . Check calls, mail , messages. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Accent on home im- provement, investments, concilia to r y gesture from one who had been in- different to your efforts . LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 22 J • You j!ct what you wa nt, but circumstances arC' unusual SurprisC'elc· mcnt 1s featured Sec places. people as they nre a \'01d self den•pt1on SCORPIO <Oct. 23· Nov. 21 l' Organize, get J:actua l material in pro- • per orde r asi;umc ·: respons ibility for ac. ~· tions, in v e s tmC'nts . !?·Capricorn can aid. What Tu8'day, January 11 19n lnagural Choice Joan Mondale , wife of Vice President-elect Walter F. Mon- dale, has com missioned Eleanor Brenner of New York's Seventh Avenue fashion district, lo design her clothes for the J an. 20 in- a u guration. At left is the Inaugural Day outfit, a two piece flame-red worsted with a matching nubby wool princess style coat. For evening she will wear a melon gown of hammered s atin and a floor-length nubby wool coat in white. p~MpE.R YOURSELF I l l Lectures to Generate Interest JANUARY SPECIAL Relax with a luxurious facial massage as you learn to care for your skin the Scandinavian way •1500 (orig. $25) · WOMEN JN COM· MUNICATIONS: Robert Eaton. West Coast direc· tor of news for N BC, will discuss T V News - Where It Is tod ay. at a WICI dinner m eeting Tuesday,J an.18. The session w i II begin with a 6:30 p.m. sociaJ hour in the Saddleback Inn, Santa Ana. Me mbers of all other co mmuni ca t ion s- oriented groups in the county are mvrted to hear Eaton discuss the stale of television news today, how mater ial is obtamed and the station's hiring procedures. Reservations may be m ade by calling Pat Whatley at 752-8600. HARBOR V I EW lllLLS COMMITTEE: The Evolution of Dance . Robert Eaton will be presented by Dallace Winkler at a 10 a.m. meeting Tuesday, Jan. 18, in the Baywood Clubhouse. The g roup is affi liate d with the O range C ount y Philharmonic Society. SINGLES SERIES: How singJes can get the most out of life will be the focus or a free five- E F F E C T I V E part lecture series begin- PA RE NTHOO D: Peer ning Thursday, ~an. 13, Vs. Parental Influence : at 7 :30 p.m . in the How Can We Guide? is E n s i g n S c h o o 1 the title of the Sunday, multipurpose room. Jan. 16, session of the N o rm Rockmael, Parent Support Group. author. lecturer and in· sponsored by the Com-structor, will teach the munity Church Congre-c l as s • off e r ed b y gational, Coronadel Mar. Coastline Community The group is led by Dr. College. Elizabeth E c kha rdt, Sessions will cover clinica l psychologist and such topics as Making IL m arriage. fa m ily and as aSingle,Gettmg Your c hil d co unselo r . A Act Together, Where to member or the church, Go and What to Do and Dr. Eckhardt is provid· the Single Experience. ing the service for its · members and friends. C H I N E S E The group also will CULTURAL CLUB: The meet at the church from Orange County group is 1-8 :30 p.m. Sundays, openingspringclassesin t-0nese and Chinese folk dancing. Classes are of- Call Carol at Maggie's Majic 642-6245 fered Friday evenings------------------- and Saturday mornings at Veeh Elementary School, Tustin. Further information is available by calling Mrs. Ruth Ding al 833-1342 or 644-8603. BRANDEIS NATIONAL WOMEN: Modern Am e ric an Architecture will be pre- sented in a slide lecture formal by Gerald Berns- tein, associate professor of fine arts at the un- iversity. The event will take place at 8 p.m. Monday, Jan. 17, in the Glendale Fede ral Savings and Loan, Fashion Island. STOREWIDE CLEARANCE . SALE UPTO 70°/o Off Fashion Boutique 333 £. 17Ht ST •• COSTA MESA Behind the International Pancake House ""17141 64s-ll22 Jan. 23 and 30, and on Mandarin , Ch inese ____________________________ _ Feb. 6 Painting, Kung Fu, Can- ~ occ urs behind scenes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ :-; could be of direct benefit. ~ SAGITTARIUS <Nov. :;:, 22·Dec. 2U · Friendship ;,:-rould be r eplaced by :• • · m t.' a n 1 n g f u I r e I a -v t ionsh1p " If you are :. merely playml? games, f.. the stake ... are high and ~ t ould be "for keeps " In Celebration of Our CAPRICORN <Dec 22·Jan t9 r: Y ou J'(et second chance. another opportunity lo prove a ma1or poin t Accent on career, ~oal. ab1hlytoac- cept comphmenti; AQl'ARlt:' <J an 20· F eb 18 • Follow throu~h on hunch. inner feeling, fi rst 1mprc~s1on Give full plav to intuitive in· (ell £•ct. Lea r n by • teaching catch up on t ba!.IC.., ; PISCES <F e b. 19- MJrch 20 >. Costs. ex pans1on pos~1bilit1es are .. highlighted. P artnt.•r or ,.. mate has something to .: say -or "rile -and de- ser\'es attention • rr January 12th Is your ~ birthday you have sense • of humor and a wer~ht problem You appear 'e<>ld to ma ny, but some ·others recognize your basic w a rmth. even ···blazing pass10n " +- ~- • • • ENJOY EVERYTHING YOU DO IN 1977 If you've added pounds and inches over the holidays ... if it is difficult getting into that tight fitting pants suit ... Start now at Lillian Ballards it takes so little time and ef- fort. It all beg i n s with your trained f igure counselor. She will give you a thorough figure analysis to help you set your weight goals. I don't know what comes first-o Httse of wtl beittg ••• or a 1ttott attroctl•e fic)ire. U•C9t Wcrd T1Mn yo.a wlH be shown how our method can help you acquire your lov~ty pro- portions wlthovt shots. pills or w~lght tifffng. MoftlitHJ quite c-.aires to feeling totally attrac:ti•~. and admired. If you•re Ike most women. you need some help to achieve it. ft can happftt the day you becJ1n with Lillian Wwd. What could IM nicer to look forward to? ./ No Strenuous Exercise ./ No Shots or Pills ./ Nutritional Guidance ./ No Disrobing .( Improved Postu're ./ 10 years Experience SALON HOURS: Mon.-Frl. 8 a.rTI:-8 p.m. Sat. 9 .a.m.·~ p.m. Call Now For Your Complimentary ) FIGURI ANALYSIS 631-2444 FIRST ANNIVER.SARY INVITES YOU TO A Ft\BULOUS JEWELRY SALE Ya OFF Sale Starts Wednesday, January l? 3375 Via Lido Newport Beach, Ca. '75-7511 lZZl W. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach, Ca. hi tbe lobby ol tit~ Balboa Bay Club 631-MU .. ) - DAILY PILOT aJ Thumbing Nose at Critics DEAR ANN LANDERS· It seems everybody takes their problems to you sooner or later so l 've decided to join The Club. J realize garderung 15n't your field but you seem to know experts all over and hopefully )OU can belp me. You've heard of a green thumb? Well. I have a black thumb. Every flower, plant, 1>brub or growing vegetable I touch 1>eems to die . My neighbors on both sides have wonderful luck with their auratum lilies, moss rocte.'I, pansies and daf· fodils. Their indoor plants thrive. Their lawns are like velvet. My flowers never make it. My plants are pathetic and my lawn is a disgrace Even my trees get odd diseases l 've had two florists come look al my "pro blems." They just shook their heads and said, "You ought to try another hobby." I love growing thln"s and am not going to give up so easily Please suggest sometlung -TY PHO JD MA RY DEAR MARY : Don't despair. Help Is on the way. A charming and lnlormaUve book, "First Gardea" by C.Z. Guest, will tell you exactly what yoa need to know. 1be publisher ls Putnam and tbe prtce i• S8.•s. 1be book is so beautifully ii· 1-..trated by Cecil Beaton that people with green tbulbs wUI love It! DEAR ANN LANDERS. Several weeks ago Puppet Preview Bob Oakcr Marionettes will be performing three times on Saturday, J an . 29 , in th e Rancho San Joaquin Intermediate School. Sponsored by the Child's W or ld Preschool, the show is open to the public. Presentations will be at 9:30 and 11 a.m. and 1 p m. Tickets are $1.50. Anticipat- ing the fun are Cleft to right ) Scott Worsdell, Samantha Pietsch and Andrew Pietsch. Tied With Hope you described as "revolting" a doll which, when ita arm is twisted, swells up ln certain places and produces a pair of breasts. Will you please com· ment on another one of the year's most prohtablc "toys"? The ad for this horror says, "'Uncle Sherman has something to show you." It is billed as "The Original Flasher Doll" and sells for ·would you believe -$20? Uncle Sherman isn't much to look at but a quick lift of his beige trench coat is s ure to startle the most sophisticated of viewers. Al least 50,000 of the disgusting things have been sold to date and the company can't keep up with the orders. The relailerS"say the doll Is de· finitely not for children The biggest customers are women between :Kl and 40 -"the sophistical· ed segment or society." according to one of the largest sources. Please comment. -IRKED JN TEXAS DEAR I.: U that's sopbisUcaUon, I'm a left· handed pitcher for the Oakland As. Sorry to leam there were so many morons loose wltb Rt bills. DEAR ANN : Usually parents write and ask what to do with their teenagers. Well, here's a switch. l 'm a tee nage girl who wants to know what to do about mv father. Bonds Golden By ERMA BOMBECK You bear a lot or talk these days about the marriages that <bl't last. One ol my favorite part..-; of the newspaper is the sect.ton devoted to couples celebral.IJlg their 50t.h wedding anniversaries Some o r the photographs reflect embarrassment over the fuaa being m ade. Some show them standing three feet apart Some husbands and wives even k>Ok alik~ r AT WIT'S END '\.. ~ l'IOtSe that drove her up the wall? Did she say every night for 30 years when he walked through the front door. "Is that you?" Did they really love one a.not.her through revers. nu. fat- ness. nausea. 1rritabihty and sarcasm or did they Just hang on? In bia younger days, Dad had a great physi- que. He was the type who had snapshots or himself taken at the beach with a girl on each shoulder and two al his feet. I'm afraid Dad doesn't realize how much beer has gone down the hatch since he po$ed Ml Santa Monica. When be sits around the house In his swimming trunks and my girl friends come over I get very embarrassed. Mom doesn't like It either. Sometimes she says, "Frank. go put your robe on." He pays no attention. Dad is a great guy but this one thing bothers me a lot.·What can I do about it? -IT'S THE PITS DEAR PITS: You cu &ell yoa.r dad (la a sweet way, of course> that you wou.ldn 'l sit in lbe Uvtng room ln your bUdni when HE bas guests and you'd appreciate Ute same consideration. 'lbeo ask your mom to buy b.Jm 1 sharp-looking terrycloth robe. And hope for the best. Is alcoholism ruining your life? Know the danger signals and what to do. Read the booklet "Alcoholis m -Hope and Help," by Ann Lan- ders. Enclose 50 cents in coin with your request and a long. stamped, self-addressed envelope to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 1400. Elgin. Ill. 60120. LiSd#4 25th Annual Out CJOeS all Fall cmd Holiday Merchandise !AfllOS A facial designed for you-to ~elp a problem sit.in or 10 ma1nta1n a loliely complexion lhe Eurooean wat Call for your Serenity aooointment 504 North Newport Blvd. 1 (old NeWDOtf Blvd ) ::t Newport Beach .";_ .. ~2-4911 ... ~~ But the part I hkc best Is whnc they sum up their lives togeth(•r The other day I read Y.here one couple said. ··we ve hauled water by horse and wagon. coped with the cold and the deep snow rBJSed and educated a family of ten . and lost ct daughter. \'1rginia Did they d1 ~a ppo1nt one anotht:r when the baby died. when he lost his JOb. or when she felt neglected" • Jmnpsuits and Pantsuits Capris That·s 50 years or l11.1n1": con- den&e<l in 27 words Did she evc•r know he hated pepper~ in his meal loaf and she had put pepper~ in the meat loaf for SO yen rs., Did he ever SUSl>Ci.'l she hated houscshpper.. without heels . but buy them every Christmas"' You have to wonder Were there other moments., Otd the) hang wallpaper together" Argue about who slept next to the wall" Toast a no-baby month., Become Jealous over j guidance counselor"' Ten c: hlld ren that's a lot of Did she gel :;1ck of tut. !>amc joke year after year? Did he tire of h earing about her arthritis., Did they wonder about their future together the year he taught her how to drive., The year his mother babysat and cleaned her oven? Wa-,, he cheap? Was she bonng? shoes. a lifetime or overbites. an eternity of "Can l's., .... end- less evenings or PTA's, an unm· terrupted '>pan of "We've got the children to think about.·· Golden anniversaries like the metal are very pre<:1ous m tlus country. Pound for pound. they outclass everything e lse How do they do 1t? Different ways A.:> one golden celebrant replied when he was asked how he held on so long. "I have hopes of ~etling in the last word " Otd be h<ive an annoying habit of picking his teeth with hi:-. toogue and m aking a clicking For Pool Loneliness Tabled EL MONTE CAP) - lbey could have been sit· ting at home. like most women their age. But members of the Eves Senior Women's Club have loo much run hanging a r ound pool baJl5 to do that. Last ye ar . the •·omen decided they wanted s omething challenging to do, so they bad the club sponsor a -women-only pool touma· ment. And for the past several months. they have been spending most ol their evenings shoot· inc pool at the E l Monte Stnlor Citizens Center. ·'A lot of senior women lole their husbands and then Just sit around do- ing nothing,·· explained club president Adella ClUvas. "We aren't very good. But we really enfoy play· ing pool. That's the main thing." she added. The pool room at the senior citizens center was one of the mos t popular even before the women Invaded it. And since then It has been ex- panded from two tables to three. "Some of the men dJdn"t like to give up the table to us. and a lot of t.bem still feel pool is un· ladyllke,.. Mrs. Cblvas says. But sbe points out sternly. ·'The cent.er l11 for everyone, and so 1s the pool room.·· Mrs. Alta Kennon and her partner Virginia Lyon came out on top or the 14 wom en in the tournament. But nobody really seemed to care much wher e they rmisbed. They were too busy haviJJg Cun . "lt 's too bad th ls ha sn·t b ee n done before." said tourna· ment runnerup Mary ·Berry. "After this I'm going to practice and re- ally gel good." And lf they get good enough. some or the women suggest, they might even challenge the men to a !howdown. Sometime. c 11IRa ID Jllll 1t 1111ts ... RIUU. If US Orette. Sir Je. Miss Elllelte. L1lh Diamond. Elegant Miss. H/8 . Jr Badin. Alex Colman. Jrs. Sizei. 5-16 RIC) to $33.00 W. Price .•.....................• $18.88 Rl'CJ-to $50.00 . W. Pric~ ........................ $24.88 Rf9. to q6,00 Sal• Price ........................ $42.88 Short and Lon9 Dresses Juhe Miller. Elegant Miss. Signor. C4l1fomla Girt, Miss El!lette, S4zea5-18 Reci. to $32.00 ' Sale Price •••••••••••••••.•••••••• $ I 5.88 RIC) to $48.00 Sah Price ........................ $2 3.88 RfCJ. to $68.00 SM Prk• ........................ $33.88 he). to $80.00 Sale Pric• ........................ $39 .88 Rf9. to S 160.00 Sak Pric• •..........•.....••..... $79 .88 Jeans Love and Stuff, 0eta Vu. A-&nl .. RecJ. to $24.00 W. Price ••••••••••.••••••••.•••• S 8.88 LeRoy. NewPort Sportswear. Rot>01e Bee. Alex Colman and others Rf9. to S 12.00 Sole Price ........................ $ 5.88 Rf9. to S 18.00 SM Price .•.••••••••••••••..••••• $ 8.88 RIC) to $26.00 Sale Pric• . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . $ I 2.88 Rf9. to $44.00 W. Pric• ....•......••..........• $2 1.88 Blouses and Tops Alex Cotman. Shapely Shirls, Bodin, Rhodes, t<enntngton and rmre . Polynten, Qulanas, Cotto. Rf9. to St4.00 Sale Price ........................ $ 6.88 Reg. to S 18.00 Sal~ Price .....................•.. $ 8.88 Reci. to $22.00 . Sale Price .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. • . . . .. . .. $ I 1.88 R19-to $28 Sal• Price ........................ $I 3.88 Wann-up Suits & Tennis Dresses Jez and Pac1t1c Sportswear Reg. to $35.00 W. Price ...••••••.••••••••••••.• S 17.88 --------------.... ---------------------------.---------------.--11RQIOISE SALE 75%oFF AU. UqueD SfLYa Rtg $24 00 .•.. S4LI S.4.00 R9g. '48.00 .••••• SAU S 11.00, Rtg. 136.00 •••••• IA.f.I Sf.OD 66%oFF AU BRACELETS, S.LVER AND TURQUOISE Reg S240 00 .•.• SALi SIO.OO, Reg. $96 00 •. , •.. SAU Ut.00 Rog S6000 .•.• uuszo.oo ----------~----------~------~--------------------~---... ./ ~ 3424 Via Udo LIDO Vil.LAGE Newport BNCh Open Dally 9:30.5:30 .. DAA. Y PILOT TU!!d.ty. JlllU!J ff. 19" IOOMER ' (I ... lt'SIDE WOODY ALLEN FUNKY WIHKERBEAH ~ iHEl/WERE Cf ELLING, 11FREE OUR PRESIDENT Al-JD GIVE US INPEP~NDeNCE !'' by Wrn. F. Brown and Mii CoSIOll • I 11 • • ANO GE1' t&owl.o A1 f,l/Erl'( ~IGHf? by Joe Mai II•• byT• latilk AND UJE Slt>ICAU!.> AWAIT COR FATE UJllH Dl&NIW ! 0 0 lAHK McNAMARA by Jeff Mlhr & Ill Hinds ----~~~~~--~ MAN CY MV MUSC eox 15 EXACTL.Y A I JUST FOUND THE OLD SAL..E.S SL.IP ft YEAR OLD ~ ,,.~ ,, ~\ { /;;f ,...,.,~"' TODAY'S CBDSSWDRD PVZZLI UNITED Feature Syndicate Monoar • P..uie Sol'ttd ACROSS 1 Crow $FOO<! tFormerGt!f man state 14 ····•bout ti tnN r • H«111<1es i.~no 1eCM1>111'a lofte 17 Aauauc plant 1a"--01t111 Storm COllfllf y'" ltf.qiects wlllld•lr• 20Attounds Uln/Ufy H ttorllontat .. ,.,, 2tA6Dletctnt 211:~~ taltutll Var a Controversial drug 30 PrOlloun 33 Ttott I ~· 37Wtlcl1n1m11 31 SometlllnQ won 39 Wlf'n,,., ••• Braun 40Vltrtous lfttntr1I compound 4 1 A11l1t1nl 42 Tr1nsl1Uons u ··lhehne 4!1 F1s11 leature 46 Ftep vK>fflntly <11 GI rnue 49 Metal worke1s $3 Paraoe gr01.1nd order !17 M11<1oalll !180oll unrt !19 °"''I low 61 Gardlr*'• ICCHSOf'f ti? Nttkel alloy tl3 AclOf Fr'11chol .. 64 Italian com 111un1ry es Sllldeol gray ee rvo1t1or ''°" 67 HlfYtll OOWN 1 Yechl.S 2 ittuery 3 ··-·0I Co'ltrllly 4 flrtDtrt lor Ult lllOll SClv1h1n e Old91rdtn work 7 Aasaull 8 Deserts 9 ······ tt'te t ight ball Sil ASH HAT'S '0]7~ r1• NI A ?'i:"j'( °4 L"i U IA LS ~ 'fi/o 71'()~ N 1 • 11 l IT ,~ I T 0 P P CLUED SPEE I IU L ,I I II E M 1 O M1nu111 for one quanlilitl 40 Tra~M Oii 1 I T •tell 1001 12 Del19hllul •2 Oebluchtty a!IOOI 43 RalNO 13 •.•• ego RRs 2 I Mlftlng 811· 45 StrOlle with cavthon allectl()O 23 RtlluhOn •7 John 2 S 100 •CIUtf• 8'own'1 rnetefS Body"Poet 28 Sev111111 •8 Leg1slllor Day so Thi one• OVl!f lhlfl 30 In lht netr 5 I ····· la lutut• vlata. Sp 31 Execute OOO<l·b'f• 32 lmOQfttnt 52 l'otal victory tirMS 53 Body l)efll 33 Oy1t11r'a l1r· 54 Wrench w1111age 55 Alblcore 34 Small orouo 56 "·· •• 35 llut Ntnelltn 1ncl\or 60 Church 36 Swlndlt 1>en.;11 3 7 Engjllhmtn, MER.E'S THE GUARANTEE PEANUTS • ! ~.n: ~''VERY ~ JUDGE PARKER TUMILEWllDS tlllW:HP HUH'IMS HANPfOOK 'lb thue in Hia d.1welna,Puture Bl'i4e, -you mut ah&nl inRis Way'4Life. THE VIRTUE OF VEIA VAUANI' DR. SMOCK ' I J I f i • GORDO J..~·-~"Yt> Aa IT/ z.,r~ SHOW/ MOON MULUNS oH, I'VE ~OTTEN ~n·Wf:l..L CARDS FROM .ALL Pt.ROSS IHE COUNTRY·· MAINE; FLORIDA> CMIFOFlNl.A, if.x,AS ... ,AC.TOAU.Y, ,ALL "THE C,ARt>S AAs~M COUSIN LOUIE'. by Hcrolcl Le Doux by GeonJe Lemont by Gus Aniola THE GIRLS 0 "7f .... "Mr,. Hopkin~ rcpcm that by carefully watchn'l(l llcr dtet over the hoftday~ 'lie managed to lo?1e ten paund~-1 know we're all a\ by Tom K. Ryan • t t t tt/ • • I• .. :' '1MACK .1 :. '• .... , .. ,., .. ' VOt.A ~11.vt~·'fCN~I" ~AL..,Y(M / by Mel llllppy as she 1s." DENNIS THE MENACE 'Old Times' a t S CH Pinter Drama Tricky "Old Times," the latest Harold Puiter play to rucb the ataee of South Coast Repertory, weaves tbe British playwright's now-familiar steallby style into a Twil.libt Zone pattern of theatrical chicanery wtaleh leaves the playgoer, at the final curtain, with tbe dlstinct impression or having chosen the shell without the pea benealb. Wbile SCR's other Pinter presentations C''Tbe Birthday Party," "The Caretaker," "The Homecoming") dealt, however enigmatically, with c.,;, .... -······ 0.•'-Palt l\ , ... , ... u ........ lf"eftrtRotffft psffl)tible themes, "Old Times" exposes the plaJwrigbl pulling strings in the wings. It i5 the sort d tbeatrlcal legerdemain one might expect from Plater's countrymflll, Tom Stoppard. TO BE SUR E, 11IE Pinter trademarks are all llere -the m addening non-sequiturs, lhe un- deYeloped premises, t he menacing silences. 11aen ii even a beautifully orchestrated reality vs. • WALT DISMIY'S • "ntl SHAMY D.A.• IGI "'UDI A W1LD POM'f" WALT DISHIY'S "ntl SHAGGY D.A. • cGJ ... m!!I .,...., .. .,, Smllh ..,._,.. __ A_WR.D--'°-"-Y"--tl rRm o .......... "°" -CAHll" EDWAN>SCINEMACEHTEA -.ot.UUAU. Ill COSTAMESA-f7'M141 U.A. LOS CERRITOS 124-7229 C.11642-5678. Put a few words to work tor ou. ''NICKaODEOM .. CPGJ '141AITS OF THI wur· 11NE1WORK11 11• -rHI SUMSHIHE IOYS .. 'THI SOMC9 llMAIMS THE SAME .. -elMME sta.TB .. IPG OflPOtlTUHITY knocb often when you ""' resuJt.getUng Dally PUol Clasalried Ads to rMdl Lhe Orange Coast •rket PbMt "2·$678 fantuy struggle between two or the play·s char ac ten for the attenllons ol the Uurd. But the ulumate impnraaion is one of trickery. and it weakens the 1m- J)9ctof wbat has previously transpired. A. ia to be expected, the South Coast Repertory production, under the direction of David Emmes, is immaculate. Whde the play finds its strength in dialogue (and lack of it) with a bare minJmum or physical contact, il is. nevertheless. engrossing. Pinter challenges his audiences to a guessing game and the playwright bolds all the cards. SPARSEL V STATED. TilE premise or "Old nmes" involves a long-married man and woman awaiting the arrival of her girlhood friend -who is onstage from the outset and blends into the action a.lmo6t offhandedly. Elements of the action are omitted, as if sevenl pages or the script were skipped, and the play lapses periodically into the put. when the two women were roommates. To further tantilize the audience, Michael Devine'• optical illu.sioo-like selling is reversed at intermission, another example of Stoppardesque technique. It conveys the impression that all t bis RCA Closing TWo Recording Studios NEW YORK <AP> -RCA Records says it will close its Nashville and Hollywood recording studios tbi& month to save money and give its artists more flexibiUty. This means RCA artists will record al indepen- dent studios or at RCA 's New York studios. But RCA said its New York studios may also be closed. "It has become increasingly necessary for companies with studio facilities to have greater. flexibility in operating those studios," the company said in a state ment. "We have not bad the fl exibility which would make continued use of our studios economically feasible. "More and more artists have been recording elsewhere with the result that our studios have had limited utilization." the company said. "Their con· tinued operation therefore has become a financial burden rather than a necessity." The Nashville and Hollywood studios accounted for a substantial portion or the RCA recordings, a spokesman said. ._ ·~ .. Nothing less th an ~~<>::~~ the most exhilarating ' e n tertainme nt of the 'film year to date." ... v.,, ... n1 C0<1011 NCW YORK TIMES ~~ from the t:I Be:.1·5 1'1/inq N ovel THE SEVEN-PER-CiENT SOLUTION ~~~o ~~ Tuesday January 11, 1W7 DAILY PILOT .. Intermission Tom Titus may not, in tact, be happening -and indeed It may not be. CHERIE PATat IS EEIULY effective as the spacy wife who seems to be heavily sedated throughout. Charles Lanyer strongly portrays ber pragmaUc. probing husband. And SCR newcomer lreoe Roseen la superb as the ominous visitor, an elegant, patrician beauty &jven to theatrical man· nerisma and condescending demeanor. "Old Times•• ls, u director Em mes has pointed out, open to a number or interpretations -as is any Pinter work. Yet it is the first of the playwright's locally presented offerings in which the Pinlerian hand is exposed to the point where plotting eclipses character relationships. Audiences will enjoy the challenge of attempt- ing to ascertain the direction Pinter is taking, much like watching an Agatha Christie vehicle unfold. if on a more esoteric level. "Old Times" continues nigbt)y, except Mondays, at 8 p.m., with a 3 p.m. Sunday matinee. through Feb. 19 al the Third Step Theater. 1821 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. -·~1 ...... T ... ~ CAlmll(I) ""9 llOlUlllAll 1a1 _.,... ........ """ t tt•M.111 -···--··· lllf'Ollf ""1 iionce1 am.DNll _. " - Em a l nt1 IOOUll'ltl ""' CMaU IN TIOUILll'ltl -llAl'fW009 n11 1NP011a1., .... HIOMYILOCITYINI 1-w_;;1;;;::1 :;;;iPJ;;:::::~ ~, nt::....· -··~~ •. ~ ·····~· ~ I fl HAllHfl 1111·.1 1,4 .. ......... ;' Elim ;. ~, ... ~r~ DC Movie for TJ?Ol LOS ANGELES (AP> -Jason Robards, cdrr Robertson, Robert Vaughn, Stefanie Powers. Jolur Houseman and Barry, Nelson head the cast of ABC ~ next novel-for-TV, ·Washington." Paramount Plc· tures is producing the 10-hoor film based on the nov- el, ''The Company," by former While House aide and Watergate fiaureJohn Ehrlicbman. •e·•ra ''SHAGGY D.A." ,.,..., .... ,. "AIDE A WILD PONY" ~f.21 • ~King THE (R) u rw-v'T,, ENFC>RCER l"-..J!~--~(P~G~)~~~~·------ t' • -DAILY PILOT WASHINGTON CAP> .-Aa economic pack•ge rouahly comparable to tbat propos e d by President-elect Carter eou.ld generate 610,000 jobs this year nnd 905,000 MW jobs by the end of 1Sr18, the Congressional Budget Office reported &oday. The report. entitled .. The Disappointing Recove ry." concluded \hat without government Intervention the economy will continue to grow •lowly -3.S percent to S percent -and there still will be up to 7t..<J million persons unemployed by the end of this year. 6cu Sltonage WASHINGTON CAP) -Federal Energy Ad· rniniatration officials are reworking their charts IDd tables to account for Uw severe natural gas nutaHments that have •truck six states in America's midsection and one on its eastern seaboard. (Re l ated 11ory,A4) (IN SHORT ) None o f the six midwestem states was on the list the FEA published in Novemberof states which would suffer most in the event that un· u sually low tem · peratures caused heavy demanJl on natural gas supplies. Businesses and schools in parts or Ohio. Texas, Oklahoma, M.ts· a ouri, Kansas and Nebraska are faced with shutdowns. AlrBagsOK'd WASHINGTON CAP > -A major automa.nu!ac· turer has te ntatively .,reed to equip some ol itl new cars with air ~a gs , according to ~retary of Transporta· Clon William T. Coleman .«. ·Coleman :ia1d Monday M hopes to get a second automaker to agree to the trial before he leaves of· Ike later this month. and dlat an insurance firm ha.I agreed to offer re· duced premiums for cars equipped with the con- t.roversi al safely system Coleman a nnounced on Dec. 6 that he would not require automakers to in- st.all air bags !W.'t'. Tl~• CUM MIAMI CAP1 A f*1era1 judge has begun c:naunal contempt pro- ~ngs against the New York Times because of lbe newspaper's dis cl<Jeure or portions of lt ~ret U.S grand jury re· port on the Internal Reve nue Service un dercover 1nvesligatton ~•lled Operation l.Ap'echaun U S Ollt. Judge C Clyde Alluns on Monday ordered theTimea to send ,..-..entaUves to a Jan. M bearing at which they muat show why they *>uldn'l be held iJ\ con tanpt for publl3~ a ltol')' on the report on Jan e ..... dllb~• LONDON (AP> -The British pound helped by • S3 bilJlon "safety net" erected by, the West's eentral banka, rose near· ty two cent.a to alm<16t Sl. 73 ln early trading to- day, then slipped back a bit. The London Stock Eit· change opened with some 'gains and the prospect of a more stable pound kik>cked more than $2.SO otr the price of gold. Gold wu down to $128.50 an ounce in early deals, compared to Monday's do9eofS131.3'7S T~ Colutdered COTTAGE C ROVE. Ore. <AP> -Voters who have refused to finance ecbool bud1et.a In three Oregon dfatrtcu a.re get. Ulla another chancetode-ddt whether there will~ -., more c I aa1e1 lhia 7..,.fort,0001tudent.t. In the South Lane dis· lrtct here, and In Eatle Point and La Grande, new property tu levi• were on the ballot tod11. In a total Of lJ preriOWI YOt", the school dia· lriet.t' rtqu11u laaH bee~. Tu.day. January 1 t, 1977 "Wt'ft beea comiag ber~ lor our pimica b yean." Illinois Case Court Orders S1nutStudy WASHINGTON CAP> -The U.S. Supreme Court says it will again study the question ol what is ob- aceoe. By deciding to hear arguments challenging II· li.noU' obscenity law, the high court may be forced to expand or make more specific its 1973 landmark ruliJ\g on ob- 1cenity. IN TIIAT decision, the court laid down three «»ta for obscenity cases: patently offensive way, sexual co ndu ct "apedfically defined bv the applicable slate Jaw." PEORIA, IL L . Hair Doctors Charged DOWNEY (AP> -A doctor who operates hair tnnaplaot clinics in Call!ornia and Nevada bu been charged with allowing unlicensed personnel to engage in ~awful medical prac· lice at one of the cenlenl. The di.strict attorney's office riled charges agabiat Dr. E.B. Frankel and his associate, Dr. Merrill O'Donnell. THE PHYSICIANS ap- peareci before Municipal Court Judge Charles E. Frl1co who postponed their arraignment until Jan. 31. They were freed o n their own re - cognizance. Frankel also was charged with using the name American Hair Ce nters for hi s tran spl ant offices without authorization or the stale Board of Medical Examiners. FRANKEL operates offices in Los Angeles. Huntington Beach. Santa Ana, San Diego and Las Vegas. The charges were limited to operations at his Lakewood Center. Housework Classes -Would the "average person, applying con- temporary community standards" Hod the work. taken as a whole, appealing to prurient shameful or morbid in· terest.a in nudity. sex or excretion? boo k store o pe rator At C ll W e s I e y W a r d • 0 eue challenged the state's ~· law as being unconstitu-Three new classes in tionally overboard and a d m i n i s t r a t i v e v!lgue after ~e was con· housekeeping will be of- Vlcted of selhng two ob-feted this spring at -Does the work lack s erious, lite rary, artistic. political or scientific value? scene publications. Orange Coast College. The state S upreme The classes are "Bask -Whether the work depicu or describes, in a ~ uphe~d the state H o u s e k e e p i n g • • • law m Ward s case, but a Fridays, 8 a.m. to ooon. federal court in Illinois • · A d m in is t r at i v e Slf?Ck down the law in Housekeeping II," Mon-' ruling on another case. days, 6 to 9 p .m. and Occupational Classes Open "Health Care Housekeeping." Wed- nesdays, 6 to 9 p.m . Course material includes housekeeping fundamen- tals, employe training, record keeping, work methods, room design, linens and specialized hospital housekeeping. 'The Capistrano-Laguna Rc~ional Occupational Program has announced a new scheduJe or classes av&l.l"ble to high school students and adults begin· o.i.og the week or Feb. 7. ' Spring registration runs through Feb. 10. For more information, call SS6-5866. Residents of the Capistrano and Laguna Uni.ned School districts can register for courses at ROP offices. 26900 Acjachema St. in San Juan Capistrano from 10 a.m. to7 p.m. Feb. 3. Courses to be offered include : landscaping, nursery operations, banking, checkst1tnd and re gister operations. fashion merchandising. retail trades, diesel engine maintenance and repair. motorcycle maintenance and repair, refrigeration and aJt cond1Uoning. Mesa Woman On Honor Roll Training will also be available to work In tht• following occupations : escrow c lerk, legal secretary. emergency medical technician dental ~sistanl. nursing assistant or orderly, veterinary rude, mstruct1onal aide in early childhood educa Uon. and special education aide. Costa Mesa resident Lynn C. Baird has beeo named to the fall quarter academic honor roll at Eastern Washington State College in Cheney, Wash. Baird is a junior ma- joring In applied psychology. She ls the daughter or Mr. and Mrs. Frank J . Fallein, 333 CabriUo. IUgh school students can register for ROP courses during registration scheduled at their schools during the last week in January. AddiUonal in!orroation on courses or registra· Uon la available by calling ROP o!riees, 496-3118. Job Bunting Long Drives Pay Off 8 7 JOYCE L. KENNEDY Dear loy~e : My bmband, Sot, baa beetl u uemployed ~ecatlve ln tbe ~u1 tor aevenl lllCIMlaa. Now a.e•a talk!as aboul idtlac In hb ur ...S looklag In otlter parta of~ coan- lrJ. Do TCMt &IWU &!Ua "drtft.Oat" •P· ...-,ell wW worU -Esec'aWUe It did for Richard A. Dey. "l wouldn't want to do it again, but It may be the only way,·· says Dey, who at 55 ~ome a highway Ulysses in his 8.-mlle job search. When Dey found his opt.ions in Mot· rilltown. N.J. were not autographed with offers. he decided to head for the J)OW)ding surf of the Southeast cout, lrom North Carolina to F1orida. To minimize travel costs, be sugg~ts us- ing a mobile home hook-up that permlu the car to be detached from the living quarters. AFTER PAINSTAKINGLY re- aearcbln1 prospective employers, Dey drew an itlner&I')' and drove from city to city seeklng personal ln· lttview1 with preseleeted companies. He alao int erviewed bankers, Jawyen, CPAa, insurance broken and others for leads after arrtvtn& in a dt1. Wben Dey needed more than a phone booth, be went to a telephone compan)"• maln offlce, uked for the manager. saJd he was took'lng for • Job and requbted the use of a desk and phone for several hounl. Many managers, sympathetic to hi.a situa- tion, auppUed thl~ service Md JoeaJ calll were free. D&Y'I PSRSONAL odyssey <d.cribed fully la the November. ( CAREERS J 1974 Issue of Fortune magazine> C06t SS,500, required 2~ months on the road, covered 16 cities and towns, and was filled with rejeclions. Allqt he landed a job as director of human resources tor a large land and resort developer on Hilton Head l•land, S.C. Eighteen months later, however, construction capital evaporated and 60 percent or the firm 's employes were terminated, in- cluding Dey. Fortunately, Dey's former boss mentioned that the Jfilton Head lsland Chamber of Commerce was looking for an executive direct.or. Dey ap· plied, was hired. and bolds the posi- tion today. IF Y01J w ANT OR need to chanae scenery. an odyssey may be necessary . M Dey aays, "Letters and phone calls won 't do It. You're like a kaged product that people won't untU they see ft." er Job seeking met.bods, which doo't require hitUn1 the ro&d, &n detcribed In a new book appropriate for executives, "FindJna the Job You've Alwaya Want«i," by Burdette E. Boetwlck; pubU1hed by John WIJty & Soni. 605 Thlrd Ave . New York, N.V. 10016: $12.95. A Moving Story Home 'Dancinl{' Toward Brink PALOS VERDES CAP> - 'lbeir home may not set records for the 100-yard dash, but Margaret and Don Fraser's place overlooking the Pacific might win a dance contest. In 20 years their place has boogalooed SS reet toward the sea and is still moving -rour to five feet a year -on a slow-moving landslide. "SOME PEOPLE GET dizzy when they vlslt us," said Mrs. Fraser. "Some even get• sens&· tioo like seasickness. "My daughter can't get used to the kitchen." she said. "When sbe comes to visit, she'll chop vegetables and they all fall on the Door. You have to bold onto the pan when you're cooking. You put dishes on the table and they start sliding toward the Door " She said periodically the house tips so badly beds s lide up against the wall. ABOUT EVERY TWO or three years the home is leveled with hydraulic jacks. "The kitchen tips. We have to keep raising the porch. And sometimes we can't open doors, so we have to jack up an area to get them open," Mrs. Fraser says. Even so. living on a landslide ha.a its advantages. Taxes on the high-rillk rroperty a re low. Nobody wil build next door and ruin their "gorgeo~ view or the Pacific," Mrs. Fraser said. Law forbids any new const.ruction in the slide area. ..... ,,.,.... CRACKS SHOW MOVEMENT OF PALOS VERDES HOME Homeowner Don Fraser's Ufe Spent on 'Ttn· HOMES OF SOME neighbors have moved as much as 150 feet and some have tipped Into the ocean. Jn the late 1950s. a major s lide damaged or destroyed 125 homes in the area. m the Portuguese Bend area of the Palos Verdes Peninsula. They are among the few original owners. having moved there in 1950. FRASER ADDED, "THE house cracks and groans, but we're accust.omed to it." There's no real danger. added his wtle. Fraser. a 60-year-0ld boat in· surance salesman, and his wife are among 30 families still living "We stay because we both love the country. and we couldn't possibly afford to buy a place now with this beauU!ul view," she said. "We're not goiJ\g to j~t slide into the ocean," she said. ''The houses that were near the oceu did slide off, but we've gol a kJDa way to go." Cannonball to Court Suing TV Station for Showing His Act From APl>t.sp1tches Hugo Zaccbilll, who calls himself "lhe Human Cannonball," bas won his bid for a U.S. Supreme Court hearing in his right with a Cleveland television station which broadcast film of bis lS· second performance as part of a news program The justices said they will review an Ohio SUpreme Court decision that WEWS-TV, which ts owned by the Scripps-Howard Broadcasting Co., had a right to show the film because Zacchini 's performance at the Geauga County Fair in 1972 "was a matter or legitimate public interest ... Appealing the Ohio court decision, Zacchini contended that bis act is his professiooal property and be has a right to exclusive cont.rot over publlci· ty about his performance. In Uie act, Zacchini is shot from a cannon into a netsome200 feet away. .. Film st.ar Omar Sllartf ls engaged to the latest sex queen of Egyptian movies, Sobetr R1m&y. Sharif was divorced last year from the Egyp. tian screen's foremost actress, Fat.ea Hamama, after more than 18 years of mar· riage on the grounds that their profession kept them apart. Miss Ramzy's mother said her 30-year-old daughter and Sharif. 45, became engaged al a party attended by family and cloeie friends. In her latest film, Miss Ramzy plays a tilm star murdered by her nance because of her sexual involvement with a SHAii•" number or men. The movie, considered daring by contemporary Egyptian standards, has been tun· Ding in Cairo for two months. • It wa.. one of those days for state Rep. S&.eve Weuel, a candidate seeking the Democratic· Farmer· Labor party endorsement in Minnesota for Congress. Appearing before a scr eening committee, ( J Wemel declared that he PEOPLE WU opposed to the Bl bomber and noted that he -------- bad never n own in one. He apparently bad forgolten that only test models ~the strategic bomber have been produced. And, intending to portray himself aa m eeting Is · suet bead-on, Wenzel misspoke and said: "I am not atraid to duck or dodge the controversial Issues.·· • President Ford saluted 22 Americans for "out· st.anding accomplishments" In awarding them the nation's highest civilian honor, t.he Medal of Freedom, at a White Howse ceremony. There were stand.lng ova· Uoos for Lady Bird .lolmlea, cit- ed as "one of America's great First Ladles" whose leadersbJp helped preserve America's natural beauty, and for Vice President Nelaon Rockefeller. honored ror his governmental "contributio na beyond measure." MllS. JOHNSON Presiding at the format Ea5t Room ceremony, Font told the recipients "your out.standing ac· compliabment.a have made our llvea better and set ltining eumpJe1 tor otherl to follow " · • Gov. Edmued Bron Jr. won't have to move to the M W mansion lo t.ah • tOlar·beated shower aft.er all. Sucb a system will be installed ln bit S'l75-•· month apartment actoH tho street from the Capitol, 1ay1 Sim Van der 11.Ja, elate ercbJtect. Van der Ryn lt havtn1 a number of •Y•tema In· stalled for solar·beated water &t 1tal.e-01Vned apart· mtnl buildinga, and ,..,. one wW aventuaJly be put ill where Brown Uvt1. • f"raU &ar1141U. a f<lm>V P'BI ••tnt, bu been lnltaU.cl u 1ovemor ol Am.tcan Samoa In a col· orful ceremony conducted by tradllional chiefs. Barnett. 43, a Tennessee lawyer, was appointed lieutenant governor of the island territoty two years ago. He was appointed governor by Interior Secretary Thomas S. Kleppe on Dec. 10. Tattooed chiefs wearing traditional garb bestowed the title or "paramount chief" OD Barnett by sprinkling his head with the Juice of a coconut, then gave him gifts of Samoan food and a finely woven recd mat. • Jarnes B. Irwin. 46, the eighth astronaut to walk on the moon. was reported in s atisfactory condlUoo after bypass surgery at the Tex· as Heart Institute in Houston. A spoiitesman for the in- stitut.e ctt St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital said that the surgery Involved the replacement of three segments of vein from the heart wit.h veins removed from Irwin's legs. Irwin was the lunar module pilot on the Apollo 15 mission in 1971. He and Astronaut David R . lllWIN Scott made the first use of a lunar roving vehicle tor movement about the moon's surface. * A woman who lost her job mopping noors in Jersey City's Clty Hall is seeking a seat on the City Council. Rose Topoleskl races rour rivals in the noa· partisan May election for the Bergen-Lafayette Ward council seat, her first poUtic:al contesL Mrs. Topoleski. the widowed mot.her of four grown children, worked as a cleaning woman ln Ci- ty Hall for about a year unliJ she was laid ofr ln a payroll cutback last February. • OnJy Orson Welles could do it. In what was billed as h i1 performance in 17 years, Welles drew 2.000 persons, many of coJ- lege age, to Symphony Hall in Boston despite a storm that ·-~ ......... dumped more than a root ot snow on the city. Welles, 61, won standing ovations at the beginning and end of his appearance. • Grand Ole Opry comedJan Jerry Clower wlll be cited by the wu Lu Southern Baptist Radio and Television Commluiolll for "sharing bis great git\ for laughter in a world that desperately needs mirth." PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE .. ---- PUBUC N011CE flfC'TITIOUS I USllllb llAMI IT.&TaMINT PVBUC N011CE f'ICTITIOU• I Ulllll .. U lllAMI n.&TIMl lllT • PVAUCNO'llCE PU8UC NOTJCE PVBLIC NOTICE NOTICl llllVITllllO l lDt fllCTITIOUS a UI UtHI lllOTICI 01' llofTINTIO# lk , .. ,.,.~ ,.,.,..., '' ~ .... euv. ,.--.. ~ "TN lellOwlnq P.,!oOfl, att ltelftg ..,.a,. ... " .. ' Holl<•" krOyelwe .. ni.tll'<t......, _.AMllTA,I MI NT tOllofGAOl IN TMl \41..1 tll T•lltlH• tf lllt CHU (.iommuNty T"9 lolltwl11111>trao11 I• "°'"9 DuSo 0"•LCONOUCa l\llltAGSS C.114 .. Olllrl<I ti Orentt '°41"1T N U o " 1 • 11 TNI! Tltfl! ICl!t!l'l!lt >Ol<iMr•t •w , .. l.,..hl-.CA IH.&l(l!lo\'000 Al'.<TMl!Hf'S, -.. Stat•• A'""""· Fo1H1i.la v.ii.y, CA. t'l10I C.llfoffllt . will reu l .... , .. ,~ -uo • SAIL1 HOM~ Ol!llElOPERS To Who"' II May Contrn W II 00 • m , Tllu•>dt y, ft-Y J. OllttllSl, HtWPtrt lot<ll,CAt?Mt Sut,.ct lo l\>U<ln(t of the h<•n .. aC1 11n. •I the l'urc~ .. 1ng OoC>I Of .. 10 H •' "'• .la • fl I( 1e111. 11 o) O'•od tor nouu t• l>o••bv 1•,..n 1-.111>o ~ .i'1rkt loutw ti ll/O ....,,., H•~lltad Ad.,~ • ..-.,. •• CA tllOJ -•flll"t<I 0<0PO", 10 ,.,, •I<-•< ••••ltr Charlo Stt•hltQ, >OS 0.,.,,.. Aw , let-. hi and, CA Tl1lt bwl"4U Ii COftd"'lto ., ....... ., ... ~. llfMl•Y5Hrll~ McHl!IL "EAL IUT.&TE f'UHOV, LfO .. UQO~ Hiii 11"4!, -lo,.,,, CA.tcS .. ....... "'"• Mt\I, c..111..,,,10, •I "''• "-"111eu lacel'l-.CIM .,., 1 1tm11 l>t .. ••Q<>• •I ..... P••,.,.h•• ""~"bo<I -ti! 11-U ld bid• Wiii Dt l>UOflcl'f .,..,, .. hl\IJ •••OC-\lnt ... •Net ..... V._OtlOw 1111• tlat•fl'tM wa\ Ill ..... Ill 11w Couftly Cit" et Ota,, .. Coo.my ..., J-ryS,1tn, Thh MINO I• con4uel•d by a lil'flh> _,~n/11p, • 0. ".. t n cl , •• d I., ti I "-'-Joen ICltJ11 \ti w '"" Sl•HI. Co•lt llWMI, C• AMt-yll'hHlo••o l!Qu0rn1· 01 Tiii' •t•t•ment .... , "'" ..,,., 111o .,.,, M<Ntll ll .. 111!\ta l• •.....iv, ltd. OoM•l.&l\ltllnol!4<1lpm""• C'.ollflty0tr11MOrt""C~onJtn P"'w•nt to w<ll lnt•ntloft. tfle,., ""'" _._ 0.-GtHI 0 .. ly Pl'-1, .J--, II, II, U. • ..., ... ..,,..,., 1. !tit Jt.n Jl\I\ tUl•-ftl WH fllH Wl(ft ti. ~1 Cl•·-•• o .... ,. '-'• ... ~10,1" .. All Illa••• to be '" •«t•daftu w.1. S, 1'17 Oer•IQ#\cd " •PP'vlnt 10 1"° °"°"'' Ille 1,,.rrvctltM ..,d Condll-• • ..., -• _.,,at Al<ol\ol•t Btw•"Ot Concro1 tor $jleclllutlto11 wllltll ••• now Oft 111• 11\A>tlt.lltd o,.,., .. Coast O.lly Ptlo4. ou utnce 01 •• •l<ohOll< Dov., age -"'"'be -'"" 1,. 1"4 olflco at'"' J.,. II te. U, •nd '•D. 1, tt77 lion .. ror ll<•n•o l IO• 11>•"" premo~, PVBLIC NOTICE ...... "-1111i11M Ora11 .. CO••I Oally l'lttt, DK 11,2t, 1'1t..,dJan.4, 11, "" ' l'\ittllHI"' Aotlll t i u 10 ,,....., tlh lf.11 ••lollo•n: 1•"1. 1--------------1 ••tt" on S.1• 11 .... WIN IPullfoc Ettll bl-r mint lutMlt wltllflltl>I• "'9ml11,1 1. SlllMt • tatllle•'' <htc-. certified <ht<~. °' PUBLIC NOTICE VAN OIC•Ml..I N, 0 •-E ~ ...,."\ Miid mtde OtY•Dlt \II the or· ""N OlllML6N Aot>er\R PICTITIOUI 1ua1111111 N.&Ml lTATI MllfT "'-fOl•-1119 P.PIOll la dOlnv """ NJa~! fllN llALL·flROMOrt ON & MANA,Ol!MflNT FlllM, >OOHol,,,.,.._ Dr. ~I IHCll, CA. t16'J St ... rt fl.M. W"lf•, llOW1 Riv., A ... , Nt•ioort IHtll. CA.""'> Thia"""-• I• COndu<ltd by •n 1,,. <Olvhll'fl. SllHft F.M. Wllltn Tiii\ Sl•l•,,,.nt ••• llltO .,1111 the O.unty Cieri( of Orongo County Oii 0.CtmDtr 29, ltl6, f'Hnt PIAlll.,..., 0.fllllt CCMU O•llY PllOI, .J.,, 4, 11, 11, H , 1'77 SJn·76 PUBLIC NOTICE PtJBLIC NOTICE f l(TITIOUS I USINESS lllAMl!ST.&TIMI NT ,..,. tollowlng Pttson 11 doltlQ 1111\1· ....... : ---------------def Of the c ... t Com""""'"' Ctl,._ '""" P..,Oll•l'tfd O••nOt Coast Ottly Pttol PUB UC NOTICE Ol•trlct 11 .. ,., of Trlltl••• lnellarflt\#\1 •u,.StUOlt COUllt OF THI .i.nuary 11, It// ,. 11 PUBLJC NOTICE S·O tOI SU,.lfltlOltCOUllTOl'THE $T.&TI! OJ'C4LlfOltNIA l'Oll THI COUNTYOl'ORAHGE Ne. A·ttOJc not lt H IJI.,. llwe parcfnt IJ"I of tho ST.&TtfOl'C.&L.,ORNIAl'IOlt ~bid es • tlUt •ll'teo l~tlthtbo-THICOUlllTVOflOltAHOI PUBLIC NOTICE wtlt •11ter lnlo tflo '"'P"Ud Coolllr.c:t II No. A• ... )I lhe .. .._.It awerdtd lo lllm. In tht MOTIC:llOJ'H•41111110 01',.ITITIO#l--------------o .. •I of fallurt It tllter Into sucll <Of!. l'Olt f'•OaATI Ofl Wf\L ANO f'Olt trtel,theprocH dtOflh1thtckwOl be LI TTl•5 Tl$T4MtlNTARV .&1110 lor1tltod,Ol'lnlllt t Utot e -.tht t~ICI A L LITTlltl 0 ' AO· lull sum thtrto1 wlll be forftlttd 10 utd Ml 11tnllATION SCMoldlWl<I. l!•l•lo ot "'AMIE KATWEAINE NttMddtr m•ywlthdrt w lllsbldlor a TliOM4S•~• KATHERINE Tl40MA5, porlod o! lorty.flwt (0 1 d•YS tllff 1114t OetttMct. d<tlt .. tfOflhoOPoftlllg llltrtot. Nonce IS HeREllV GlllEN lhal l ht Icard Of TtU\ltH '"'""""' ·~ LEONARO JOSePH MOSl(INSON -prtvll09t of ••1•<1111'1 eny •na 111 l>l<h or llltes lltroln • petltlOll FOR Pltoe.A TE to Wtlwt ally ....... 1.•ltlu or In 01' WILL ANO FOlt ISSUANCE OF IOfMtlltlolna•yt>fdor lnthtti.dcllng. LeTTf;llS TESTAMENTARY ANO NOllMAN E. WATSON '011 SPECIAL LETTEA5 01' AO· S.Cty, loardot Trust... MIHIST'll•TIOH, rtltrtnct IOWlll<llfl Opof\: Ftb<\ltff), 1917-11 Ola"'--IOI' lvrthef pertl<11ta'S, ll'ld V..t l'llbll.,_.d OrtnQt Coall Otlly Pilot, !"-time -pl•<• of karl119 lho w<N Jan.,.,, 11, It, lt11 , .. ,, ,.., bttft WI !or Ftl>•utrY I, ""· "' 10 00 t .m , In the courtrooM 01 Depart· PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI I USllllH$ N4MI IT.&TIMI NT TN IOll-fno "''°" I• Clolno ll<df. Mi>•': M I( E .. OIHEllltlHG, 1llU 0...11 St , He""'°" let<". CA t1WO ~rtln ICllment, ""' Gfow,,.i. Aw., Wlllnlu , CA '°60• Thi• ..... 1 ... u I' <OnducltCI DY ti\ If!· dMdutl. Mtr11n ICllm.nt Tiiis 1t•l•"l1111 ••• flltd "'''" tho (ouMy Clttk of Oran~ CouMy on J.,,, S,ltn. l'f"971 Pllbll-.f Ortn~ Cout Oally PllOI, Jan. II, 1e,U.t nd Feb. I, lt71 PUBLIC NOTICE "'°nt No. > Of \tld cov•t, tt 700 CJvlc C...tt• O•l•e WUI, I• tllt C11101 SM>I• ""•· c.111o ... 1. Otled Jtnu••• 4 t~ll WILLl4M f SIJOHlof. County Cle•~ ltGelAT O. ZIMMl ltMAN A-I'll Law fTU Wertlltl1111ff A .. •vo W..1"11Mttf. CA. t161J Antr1ttylw : h tlllt M r l'ulllllNd Orange Cof\t 0 .. 1, Piiot, Jar1uary 11 U, 1t. tt17 111-17 PUBLIC N011CE '9CTITIOUS I USINISS lllAMlfSTATIMINT Tiie lollowlr19 ""''°" I~ clolnv buM· "''-'es: OLE lOWN REALTY, ~··,!Ill\ Slr .. t, Nunll1191on &tact\, CA, Dowey 0 . O••IOe. 14MI Erin Rd., WestmlMlor, C•. t161J "CTITIOUS I USINSU N4MIE ST.&TIEMINT "'' IOllOwlno l)trlOM •rt dol"9 Diii• "tu•a: HUNTINGTON ASSOCIATES. llOJ l'lorfh Harl>or \loult•erct. ~ulle I( II Cost• Mo•, Cetuo, "'" t1n1 "''~• C•tr~ Uevel~pm•11t. Int Stale of Calllorni.. l JOl NOtlh H•rbor Boul~v•,d. Su,te i< H, Coit• Mtt• <;.i110,,11e t1U7 Pwllne M. C.OOotr. 0701 H•rbof Rty Clrcle. Hunllnolon 8 .. cll Qll!ornt• •U•I T~I\ bu"""~ h conduttt<l DY -CJitfW''•' Pt't~,\hlp. Ml~•Clark 0."elOl>menl, Inc. Ml<llHI W. Cler~. PrtSIO.M Thi> Sltl•,.,enl WfS r/lt<I "'llh Ille Cou•tv Cle•\ ol Or•no• C-11 °" Oo<ember )'I, 197'. '"m Pubti\illtd Ora~t CoHI O•llY Pol0f0 JMMJtry 4. II 11. 1S, 1'77 SJU.Jo PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS a USIHlU 1114MISTATEMlNT The lollowl"9 ............. oolr19 °"'' '-U tl: S TUAR T NAI OET H PHOTOOltAPHY, C71 Ft or Or., :111).j, C<>\lt Mnt, CA. 97U6 Stuort N•lcl<!th. 01 Fair O. .. : •04, ~I• Mua, CA. •206 JO•n AVI Neldtlh, .,, F•lr Or . II IOI, COtt• M .. t . CA •2'1• T~ls Du•lnu\ " < onduct&cl t>v ,; 91ner•I pi1ttntr\h10 J &. IC TRAILER TqANSPORT, SJ7 'nlrOUQll SI .. Ltoun• B .. ch, CA t1U1: P.O. 6ox 11Sl<I, Irvine, Ctllforro. 9'1113 J•mt\ Frdn<r\ Ounn. SJ2 Throuoft 51 L•oun~ 8ttcn CA. tlt SI Thi\ bu•lnen •• (01\dU(IOd Dy •n In ~·vld ... I NOTICIE 01' HIAlllNG Of' "l!TITI~ f'O lt OR O l!R O l ll l!C TI NG l!l!l!C UTR l l! TO CONVEY "llHON.&L fllt Ol'l!RTY UHOEll flltOeit.TI COOi SECTIO>O !O "CTITIOUU USINI H 111.&MISTATl!Ml!NT Tiit foll-1"9 "''°"' •ro d01"91Ntl· "'"' t \: Tllll D<l>tnen I\ tonoucltd by •n In· dlvl-1, OtweyO.Oevl~ Tiiis sl•ttment w.u 111«1 wltl! the (.o\it\IY Ctt•ll 01 Or•nge Count., on J_r.,s,m 1. StY•" NAICletn Thi• sttloltlent '""' llltd #llh ow Counly Clerk ot Ortnoe Cc>urllY o~ Deum11er ~.19'6 '""1 f'vblh,l\ed Orange Cou• Otll'f P1101. I J "· Oomn t T"i\ ,t.t1mt"t W•) hfld 'flll1th OW E•l•le ol !tEN~ETH R CON• NELLA Otct1H<I llOAO RIOEll "'AG4ZIHI. 1"10 , 116-7 J,,,....ry 4, II, IS, JS, ltTI ~la Pubtl'"°" Ortnq• CoaSI Oally Pllo1, Jonu.,y 11, It, '5, tft<I '•Druery I, tt71 lf.n 'CouMy Cltr~ 01 Ortno" co .... ty on Oe<tmDtr tt. 1976 """' PuDll.,..o Ortn~ Co••• o.,,1y P•lot J-ry•. II, It. H. "" II 11 NOTICE IS HEltEllV GIVEN lh•I DELPHI" R CONNELLA hn 111«1 hert1,, tit oeUtlo" for Orcttr 01rKtln9 E -ecutrl s to Con11ev Peno"•I Prcpc:rt'r unotr PrOr>•te Code S•c llon 150 ,. ... teref"ICf ti) wtuch 's m4de 'or h1t1ner GltMeyrt Strul, Slo. It II, L119UN S.t<ll,CA.tlUI Edward llOQtr Hull, Genert l ,..rt,,., •• J30 y Place, L•OUN &.tell. CA '101 Tllll bv1lnto h conducted by a llmol ..t,,.rtn•rtlllp PUBUC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE S .. MSO NOTICI 0 1" SALIE 0 1' lllAL l'llO,.fRTY -------------! ~~~:~··,:."".~':~·~~~·r;;.~~~o: PUBLIC NOTICE J.,,u•rv 11. 1'17. ti •GO • m , In lhe EdWordRoge• Hull Gt,,.rt t PutMt Thll ,,.,.,,,,nt •u tlleo wl111 111o County Cit•~ 01 Or•no• c-11 on J ...... ,.,s, ttn 5-U "''°l[ltlOlt COURT 0 11 THI S14Ttf Ofl CALll'OltNIA l'IOlt 1'NI COUNTY Of' Oll.&11101 •T f'ltlV.&Tl SALi Ho . .&·tt111 tn the SU!loroo• Court ol tM St.io OI C.lllo;l\le. lor '""County ol Or----:,.::,:-::CT=:-IT::-l::O:-U":"'.S:-1=u-,-, H_l_S_S---1 ~=~~'::";:1 g~rcr~";,~;~ ~~.;."' ..:::~ NAMI ST 4TIEMlNT •M"° C•tyol Sant~ An6. Cahlo~• Ne.A""11 in the Mentr o1 th~ Esltl• of 10\.A STEPt4EOIS ROBEllH, •"• IOL\ S lt08EllTS. Ooua~d ""-lollowtng person 1~ doing Dwr O•to<I 09< 11. 1t 7• ne>U•! WILL14MIE.stJOHN, P>i,.NTOM llEHICLI!. uo C..nttr Counly(lerk !.!•Ml Coste Mo .. CA 91617 MAHN & H4HN 11..,.rct .Jtmu Wiii uo C.nler •• l!art C.ltrHo ""~ .• hlto tOO Slrttt.Cb•l•MtH,CA t)UI fl•.-11t .C.•t110t TN' bu\lnts " C°"du t 4ttOfMYI .Of'; p.etU)6"tr <1Mou•1 ' ' co 11"1 "" '" l>utM•>ll•O Or•not Co••I O.ollr Pl•or. Ron110 J Wiii Je11 ... rv •. s. II, 1'17 H I Thi' ,,.,.,.,.," ••s fltto wjtf\ tt\c. Covn1v Cl.., .. ot Or•"Ot Count)' on 0..<tmtier 1l n i. l'Hltt PuOll•lled Oron~ C~"" 0,111v Piiot. Oll!cemotr 24. tth d f\d Jaf1v.)ry 4 , 11 II "11 SJl<l 1• PUBLIC NOTICE '9CTtTIOUS a USINEU Nit.Ml ST4Tl!MENT Thi lollowl"Q Oerr.o• '' 004"13 bull· -------------1 neu~~NfEft MEDICAL CLtNIC, PUBLIC NOTICE lllSJ Bue• Blvd , Hun11no1on llu<h, CA., ... , l'ICTITIOUS llUSINUS N.&Ml ST•TIEME NT '"" totlowlru;9 oer,,on~ art.1 doi"Q bu'l.J neu''' CLIF"WOOO, L ro , 131) E SI ... "'""'Pt S.nto An• C• O fO\ Ooft1ld Giimour. tlll P"'' L.ll!rw11.-• Pf Now po fl Bu< I> CA.,..., Jame• I! 9.,1on 1llt1 El R000>, La911N Hlll\0 CA 'l'/UJ ll~rn•y 51tln~•' •llt El S..lvi!OOr long 8oACh, CA tOSt S t'ftl\ b\ltlneu I\ c.ondutttd b't •"' 'n '''"'""•'· 8•r11ty Sleln<lol MO frrHl \tattmenC WA\ t1lt'1 Wit" ,,,. County Clerk of Or1n;e County on Oecemoer 11 ltl6 l'MUJ -11.ntd Or•n~ Co•>t 0.,1., Pllol, 0ec JI lt, IOOndJtn 4, I I. ttn Sl01°76 R1<~10 R Stcnlon Uffl Pl>t!Ollnt Or 1o11 ...... , "·•10. CAo •UIS fhh but1n''' " co111duct.O t>y .1--------------~Nrtlpa•IMrsh•O PUBLIC NonCE ,,_ l>uDll""d Orange COol Delly Piiot. Jan,..ry II, It, JS,tnd Ftb•l>fff 1, 1'17 t+11 PUBLIC NOTICE SUfllltlOll COURT 0, THa ST4TIE Ofl CALll'OllNI.& P'Olt THI COUl>ITY 01' Oft ANOE Nt,A·- HOTICI 0' Hl.<lHG 01' l'lTITI~ l'Olt l'ROIATI 0 ' WILL ANO l'Oll LITTlllS TU T.&M ENTAllY AlfO ,0 . AUTHO•llATION TO AO· Mllll llTllt U NOIER Tltl IOIOtf,.INOt NT .&OMll>llSTllATIOfl Ofl U T.&TIS ACT l,.ROIATI CODI! Stl ET H OI EsUI• of CLAIR s. 8 011UFF, Otta•...S NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 1~•1 ALICE E. BOAUFI' hn liltd htreln • oelltlon for ProDatt ot Wiii and for i. suan<.t of Lttttr\ Tt,t•ment.uy t~ tf'ilit petitioner •"CS for 11utMrh1•lot'\ to •d minister tr.. utete llndtr lllfl lr\dePt•· dtnl AOrnlnl•trt tlOll ol Esl•IH •<t (l>fobatt C°'" Stt ti \tQI •tle....ct to wllltll h mtdt tor •urll>or p,ortlculars. aNI llltt tl>o tlm<r tnd pie<~ of ho•tlng tllt -.-MS Dff• .. , for J..,...ry JS, 1'17, •I !0"00 •.m .• I• lllt court_ Of °""rtment No. l Of u to <-1. ti 700 lllOTl~S 01' ltl41t1NO 0' l'CTITIOtl flOR l'lt014TI Oii' WILL .&110 llOlt Ll!TTl•S TllT4Mallf. T.&RY .&ND .&UTHOltll4TIOtfTOA~ M t !ftfTllt U lll0 £1t THE INoC~INOllllT AOllll lNISTltATI°" OfllJ~.&lH.&CT. Esl•lt of 5T(L LA FUlLEIC MALNI URG. O•cu••d NOTICE IS MEllE8Y GlllEN ""' •it.L,... W MOFF°"AN ha•lllO<lhtreln • pet1ftoll 10< flrot>tte of Will...., for h · Wane• Of L•llor> Ttsltrntnt•rv end Aufhofluclon 10 Adm1nl•I•• .,,,_ t~ 11\dt~~nl Ad.,,1nlstra11°" ol E\l•IM A<t, r'tforente to •111<11 I\ ._ !or "'"ht' Pt n lculars, tnd th•t the ti~ -~•of heulno rt•~ ffm<"llAS!>een sttlo,.Janu•rv H. 1'1'. •t tO:OOa.m..111 tho couflroom of Oeoortment No 3 o1 Wd '°"''• •I 700 Civic Cenler O<l•t Wt •t. In 1h• City ot S•nt• An&1 C.lllar•I•. Oatt<t J.nu.,y s. •'11, WILL!Allll I!. It JOHN, Counly Cieri< MUNNS, llOfll'OltO. MOl'l'MAlll, HUNT&THllOC~llllOltTON '""'· '-·~· 11. .. 11 ... .... -. C.111.r~I• tHot Aftenoty1 fff: '"ltlt Mr Pullil\llod Or•noe Coa11 Dolly Pilot, J•nu••Y 10, 11. fl. ctn •1-11 HOiie• Is llertbf Q•ven IMI Ille ..,.. dllrs'9ned win sell •• Prlwtce wit 10 !tie llltl\atf tnd !>HI l>l-t wott<I 10 conllrmttloft ol wlo SupertOf Cour1 on Of of1or Ille 10!'> on OI JanU<1rv tt7' M Ille office at HOLMES E H08Allt, JOO Wlhhlre &Ivel . No IJOI. Lo• "~'"· CA tOOIO, Couftlr OI l o• AnQtlu , Stat• of Calllornlt "" tht ri9111. !Illa tnd lnlorot of -.10 -H >ed at the ti_ at Ottlh •no •II the rog1>1, 11 II~ •ftd h~•r•st •h•t the tsl•t• Of w1d do<euH h6s •coulreo I>• .._.,1.,., 01 •-or~,., .. other than or In -I· ''°"to llltt of uld Otetu~d •11"'" """' of dtalh, In •n<I le •II tht tert4ln r••• proe>ettv sltu•ttd In thf' County ot Of'•"91. ~t•te of C•lltornl~. ptrtk u18r lyOucrlDodUIOllOW>. lO•wlt fll<tl••d ,.. Slonto" TPO\ 'lt•lt,,,~nt ... , t ftd ••th , .. '*"'Iv Cler• 01 Ora~ '°""1• "" --------------1 Clvlt C..nttr Orlwt Wost, In !tit City 01 S...t• All•. Ctllfom;o PUBLIC N011CE P•RCEL I; Owettrno Unll 8 ln8ulfd Ing No. lOolJ, n said Unll •• ~hown on tfrWtt c1'111n Condomlruurn Pf.n et IKhed to •nd m•dt d pul ol llwl ct• lain Oecl•rtlloo of Covenant>. Cof\di· tlol'\~ and R!,trlc\lon" r-•t ord1d OocornDer 13, lt10. In Boo" .,.,., P- X/, of Offlclt l qocord• In tht Ofllct of tl'lt County lltcordar of Oranqe Counly, C.lllofnla, and • l"fth ur\CIMdod In 1.,ullnt lldloLollol TroKtNo lllftl oor m•p rt<a•o.d In BOO-. 161 Pt19f• l1 -JI, Of Mlsc;t lltneous Mac>s. on lhe office of wld county Rocoroor. - lfMI dtflftlld ., "'ConunOf\ •r•••' Oft tM -......red to C-..mlnrum Pl.., a.co-...~-"" ... .,11 Publl•M<I O<tnoc (HSI 0 .11. Potot J~4. II fl U Ill/ \JIJ.I• , __ , NOTIClf 0 " flUI LIC SALi 0 1' fllltS0014\. fl ROPS llTY IURl•wflll oew1,..,1 In ""' "'•II•• ol Dunn P.Ol>frt-.s Pl•int ti"'\ hr-t•I Inc it C.Of'OO'.t•OI". -------------1 Of•t<\'lanl C.-e N$ 1)l~H MunltoHI C""" C°""tyolOran~ Sl•lt OI C•l•tor.,lt ---:'.'-:::':'::'.":''.'.":"-:--:-----·I S1"1• of C•lll11•n•e ''CTITIOUS I Ut tHIES.S N,tl<• I• he••Dv <ilV•l'I ...... Ourw•M PUBLIC NOTICE Ill.AMI ST.&TIEMl .. T IOW<llOft ltUol l"f C·••I Code Sr.It of ,..::,•oetewlf"O "'"°" '' 00."0 tMl\I C.Htornl• '""-vnckr\ Ql\td wHt stO ~t AH 0 l I R s 8 0 A r AN 0 -1( Ult "" compellll .. Dlddl"ll .... EQUlt"M!NT SALES. llll s.,,,.,.or ~'7.!1~" :•~ 0~· ... h~·:.-:..~:~·'.,!~ -luc~. CA •1u1 -.•o o•ooerly ho i.en "°"""· Mid Willi•"' l Affl\-l)ft 'lnvt'"""" lJi\ """""" .. ,. loc•1•d •l lH E ~.th Nt•OOrt 8H(I> CA'''' 1 A"t-. Vnll 6H, Clly ol O••-· CO<X> "'~'~•':"'',..." 1t <~~uclt1'1 "'° ti\ 1" h o·f Or•"Of'• St1et ot C..IH<M'nt• tl'lit w i1u4,., l Al ti ion •W~td IOQdi, rhatt•lt, Qr ~raon.tl ''"' \t.ttt!"nef'll .. ,, fllto ._,," ,.,,,. P'f'OfrtycHscrlbedbt'o..,. COU"t' (lor-ot O••nQ• C >YfllY on \IOI II•<•• w ltaOlt lot slorfno 0o<..,.11o,,. ,.,~ ::'~' ~'::.' ;~;:,s~~"~:.~·~,:'...:'; f'H~U Per\. Elt•oll. Mr. Collet . Ont, Bo• ol l'VClllV..d °''"°" Cu•t 0•11• 11•tee, 1'"1111 '"luval•e 1111tr>, On<· Mel•I J"""••VC. II It :1 IOI >-1• Ortffl~ Hole, Ona; Ptrtltl rcu~ OI l111tr Olott•, ve"'9111 O'-'• Sh: M),. <•ll•neou' oi•ct\ of f•&itrot•u; McMd' lor tllo llObY <•I tvr•• llull 1-Meld •o• ,,,. lwn m•11 hoe ~•v•t 0-.. ~~wer•I ""''<tlt•"•Oln mold\ fo' lll'ltrOltn Dffh Wooct." be"Cll - r1c• '°' t"'t '-•"d""? 1f'ld cvtfl"Q of hDt•trn•. On. M•ld\ In• ll'tf h"'lc• tloo\,,luovenloolo•"Of •011• »?1"""" flbt•tl .. \ I( ... ••e>e Dodi PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOllS IVllNIU NAMI ST.&TIMINT ~ lel_i,. l'f•.en I\ clol"IJ """ ,..\A•\ lllO WINO flrtOOUCl lOtfS ~I F C.•r1i.t A.. •~• ... •m CA ~I. PO .. •ltMOr-C•ttMf teny '-"••It• 4104 \it•"'I'• O., ,.._..,_,kt<~ C4 •1441 T,_,, ""'"'"' 1 c-.l"liCIYUt<f b'I' ~ •n "'·-· Tto y L a.ti•• rPWt 11.at~ ••\ fllt(f • '" tf'ric c"""'Y Cl•f\ of O.t,._. COlt'\ly .., ,......,,. s, "'' fl4"7f ~1-Or~ CoKt o.i1y Pf"71 ''"·'' ce.u.-... ,, '·"" PUBLIC NOTICE r1C?n1ou s IUSINIH N•MI ST.ATIMl'fT Tllo IOltowt~ .,.rM>ll\ art dolt>G l>v•I ¥1\M " f'lt0 PltltTIE5 UNLl,,.llf;O ms E St, A,,.,., .. "1 •• S•nl• •na. CA. ttlO! Mlcllltl Hl,.11, ~I OuPol\4 °' . •rvlt1e,CA.UllS J Ml\ol C Barton, l)Jt7 l!I R-.... LAtUftCI "lllt, "" .,. u Thi• llutll'ltu " condu(ftcl lty e _ ...... lnt .. fllp J'1nt> ll. ltrton Th11 lltltlMflt Wit fllfd wtOt IN COUftt'f Clt •ll ltf Ort11oe Count• .., Ot<-f2', 1'7•. ..... l'llbllilotf Of"t1109 Cot•I 0"''' Piiot J~•.11.tt.n."n PUBUC NOTICE at4ttMINTOf' AIAMOONMlltt Of' Vft Oil "CTITl<Mn 111$1111111 .. ._. •• ,,,. ""'-"" --............ .,.. 1M 11tt el llM flclllleu' llU\lntu ~: SVlllOllllN Tltl!I Cl>Ml'ANV, 10t 06ffttl 4vt .. h l"°t bltftel. CA ..... Tiie Plaltleu\ lu•IMM N-rt· IOfflll t9 ...... WH Ill .. It! 0.-Ceul!ly Oii Htov. I, 1 '7• lredley c11ar111 'Mt•Hlo. 20> o.fftlt, ..... hi-, CA..,.., ,_....,, Olarl•• 111 ........ tll'll "-, ~~,CA Tiits ~· ••• cll\Mttd '' • ""''ti ..,..llff'llllp. l r..,,.11 Gheri., S~llflo nh •ttt.-1 .... llltd ..,, .. "" CiluM'r Clt'1L .. O••llOt Ctllflty on JM. s. ""· "'-,...,.I..., Of"111oe C:••ll Oelly Pllel, JM . II, ti, H, t1111 '•II. I,"" ron 0.1.011110111 day Of Ja•u••Y lf'7 DVM\ Pro~rl ,., (O'DOf'IC'On A&f)tf'f J F0\1•r, .,,,,t•nf Sc<r~f·~ '"'""'"' Mil. J4Cll ST.&lllL&V.AfttrlWY * WHHlll SI'"' hlte Sil '-• 4 M, C•lll.,.Wa l'\it>l•SlltO Or•.,o• Coa•I o.ity Pitel. J_,., "· "· lt1' 11~'1 P\JBLJC NOTICg SUf'l lllO• COURT OIJ T .. IE ITATS 0 1' CUI ,OltNI• f'Olt THIE COUNTV 0 ' Ollit.1110 1 Nt, 4°ftlSI HOTICI 0 " SALIE Ofl rlllSONAL "ll0 f'l •TY •T ,,_IVAT&5"Lli In IN Miiier Ol lhe htat~ Of MACI( OV'F M.&llTIH. AL!.0 ltNOWN A~M o. MAlltTtN, Al\O know" A.S "Gtl'' MA ltTIN Otuawo NOTICI IS HE I> EBY 01v,.,1Mton lonuary IC, ttn.11 10·000 clcOA.M., O' INftlfltr wltl\111 Illa llmt •II~ b¥ law, 111(1 llndtrtl-d, JOWAHNA ll, OA~IAllAA. EHtutrla of ti. Wiii Of Ille .... ,,. narnH <Hodt•t, wlll Wit 11 orl"•t• ••I•, 1ubl•ct to <ol'll•-1111!1 by ""' a1111vt tntlt1•c1 s""110• c.u,,, 11w '611owfl\O llOr\ONI P•-•IY llelor\Olno "INHttlt of 1aldde<tdt11t, t .. Wft! Gentr1I 0...~11 Liquor Lk• .... No."°'' '"" °' off .... ~· ~ 111 ..,ltlllO -mtYW m-lt• Hie pr-rtyl11wtoo11 -dellwred to t!W office Of -M· ..... 'f'S, VOUNO &. CLEAltV,JUWltst Tiii"' Slrwt, Santa 41'a, CtllfWl!la, or meylle llled l11111e 6tfl<toflflt0trltof I"-5-r~ tou.t tt •n'I' IJ--r Ille flrJI P\lllllcetlo11 of 11111 Nelke end .,. • .,, '"" -•1no Of,.,. ..... Ttrml -<Oll•lllOM of ••II! C..11 In I-Ill ..._., of the U111ttd 51.itt 01 -let ; Toi' PtrUlll 11010 It .C'- PMV tr.. ...... tnd btl•n<t to !lot Mid afttOllll,.'lwflon of ult •1 Mid ~tor C<Mlrt ~flOlll la ro .. rwd '-rtltd ally •lld I DI"' n.. Ir ftf Of lltt llWI 11 SIAlj«t lit• flllty Doller UI0.001 Tflllflt t ..... """*'I• N Ate-lie••-• c;.r.. tror Dt Clt rlmt nl ot Ill• 6i..11 ti C.lltomlt, 1u•sa11lltflltt w 11. OAflO: O.Cem"'"· m• JefltnM •• Oftl>t,.,., antutflufttw Wiii OIHld0.CtHt<I. YDUllO&Q.l4•T ........ ,,, ..... .,, llyCllWtl.•-. • .__, • ._ ••.cwtrl• .,.-...~··a....1AM,Ctt"-11tt'91 ~·I IJl4) tn-Hll l'IAlll!h..t °'"'" '"" O.lly I'll«, 1tr1-r•.s, 11, 1t11 •n OttHJ.,,Ut'Y•. ft77 WILL14M f . St JOHN. County Cl••• C. llNl>llTT JA(ll SON, Jlt A-Y•tuw we--...c.~ .. , Drive, S4olto• "'"-14tt~. C•lllor•la n ... Toi! OICI -.... -1 •~,,~ ........ P..,"ISllod O,.n~ Coul Delly Pllol, ).,. ... ,.., 10, "· 11, lt17 • to.77 PUBLIC N011CE c,..,,,. l'ICTITIOUS I USlllllSS NA.Ml ST 4TI MINT ~ tollowl119 Po"Onl •re dO!ng Du•I· MHat; suo·s Cl!HTEll. 111n Monro•I•, 0>•1• Mtu. CA. '2617 ALEJICANOl!R P. DUTHIE. 1171' Sant• Clara, Founlaln Vellt~. CA. "1'Clt H9i.n OlllMt, 17217 S.nta Cl1rt. l'ourrtflnVellev. C4 '2108 Tiiis llUllMU II COf\du(f~d "' ... \Ill• 111<9'-•t.., au<><l1t1on ot11er IMP\ 1 """""""'"· Htltll Outlllo Tiii\ \ltle-nl WH llltCI willl IN <:ountv Gier\ 61 Otano• County &t\ DK•-• 1•. lt76 ......,, ,.OllaSllOlll A L l!SC ROW M•VtCH *1 ...,_ f llttlfl Aft., ..._ • ..,,.,CA. ttrtt aacrww-..7.,t1t>-""tl' "'1tlll-o ... n~ (HSI ~ry Pll;K. DK.ll,M, lfl •• andJtll 1.11, lf71 ""1•1• PUBUCN011CE .,.,.. Mi•a•tOlt COUltTOl>TNI STATI 0,. C.&\ll'ORllllA llOft TNS ~NTY Oil OUHOI CASI 1110. 40·1"6t CITATION '" '"" M.rtter .t tllt A\IOllflon by OAVIO a AllL COllOI, rttlllolltr THE "'E011LI 01' THI STATS Ofl CALlt'OllNIA To: MARVIN CMAAT£11~ •• Ofdtf Of lllit court you••• l'ltret>• tlled lo •P.,. .. MIO•t !flt Jll<lge Pf"9•1d• Ing In Of1N1rtm.i1t If of l~I• Cbur1, TOI) Civic Golller Ori"• Wot, ""'1• AM, c.tflfMnl•. "" Mu .ch 10, 1'11, .t t100 •.m., fllt ll •M llltro le sllow GlllM, II • .,.,. v.11 !Int, why the totltlon o! OAlllO I AllL cOltOI far 11\f MIOPllOll f/f ltOHALO ~ICllt CHAllTEA .nd ~IN LISA CHAATlll, \'OUr mlror t111t-r1, alMlvfd "°'" o•..,t.41. Oaltdlhhttlldlf'M Otct ..... r, ttr•. W. E. ST' JOHN, Clfrt l y1 MAllJOlllll ltlCIMOHO 0.111111 Ck •k ...,,. .... ,..,, MtwMyttL.llw ., "'· ..._.._ ... hltt 11• AMMI!"-Gtllffftlla _, OMl-0" • ...,,., llW "'"".._~ p(jMlo!N4 Oun .. Coo l O•hv ~hot, °'"*""'1 tt. "" .,..r J l'lllllry •, II, It, ''" ill).76 PUBUC NOTICE ,.CTITIOUI IU"N .. "4AllSSTATaMa•f n.. ,.,,.._.,.,. ,.rlio\C •n llDlfto bull· ,. .. , .. : NV 9'0\'l COCICfAll UXJH08. S0:11 H911 A.,.., HllMll\OiClft ta.ell, CA ,..., Sht ttll Lu ll:flo•IH , 10 11 --'""• Nuntt ......... kll, CA"W St fld r a Lto Krl,t l, 110'1 I v•'•,.."• Hu11t1111ton .. t<ll, CA .., tllla k •lnen I• ctndlKltd -. t ~_,.."hi• .,,.,... 1.# IC11t-'" nil• Mmmflfll ,.., 111_. "'1111 t11t CMlllt't Cl•t~ .. O,.n .. ~ tn °""""' ... 1'7• • ..... f'#t .... Or ..... CMll o.llY flf14'1. Jiii. ti, tt. U,t lld ••11. t, "" .n Eacop11119 tlleretrom eny _,,.,. of SU,.lfltlDlt COU•TOl'TNS Lots A.., 8 or wld Trett No 71lt .ct STATIOl'CAL"O•Nt•f'Olt ltl"•f\Os.tldLotl. • THI COUNTV O• OllA~ Also tl(~l"Q encl .... ,., ... uMO\"- N•. A ... ,.. c;, ......... IU WCCtUOO -'"''II'" MOTICI Ofl NI .<lNO Ofl t.-..... IMth ulldlvldecr ln1.,u1 In "ITITIOtf '°" flltOeit.TI ()fl WILL w ld Lot t ........ (IUll•• .... ,.,.M• tnd .&ND •o• Ll'T'Tllti TllT~N-._.•<•u1hrt rlgMsolweyo-.-. T.&•Y ANO l'Olt .&UTNOlllZATIOH ---po;llon1ol.atdl.00u1> TO 40MlllllSTlll UNO~lt THll onwlllcllnoDulldlnQorolhertlrvcture INoe,aNOll>IT ADMINllTllATIOH has llMn trocltd !or nt<eu .... or cl<! ~ ISTATIS ACT f"ltOIATa COOi soral>le lr19,..n or tll'•H, ltlevi\lon '"IT 1101, G•Dffl. unclt•oround '"''*' Mid con lltttt Of LOTTI E M. SCHMUCl(Elt, dUlb tor •IKlrlttty, ttle,,_1 •I'd 0.CNMCI. otllar purpo,.s •net •«oulrtm;onl• NOTICe " HEIU!•v GIVEN tllel ttlolreto. MWt rl, drtln1, ... , •• ,OH • ..., LEONAllO A. RAPP""' llltd hertlll 1 " .. "' plpo, and •«outrernenl\ >ttlllOf\ lo; Pron.rt Of Will ""d '°' lllereto, and tor 'II<" rool o..,rhMIOJ IHuance Of Lefter• fellamMlary 10 Ille ..... other tntroe<llmtnll of a ll~t Or etlltl-• •nd lof authorltttlon to..,_ dlulmll•r kind: and taH"1onts on Ml· rnl11l1llf tr.. Utale unOor Ille lndoc>e"' 1-nl l..bt' Ill H id T'r•ct !or root o~r· dtlll AdmlnlUrt tlon of 1!1t.it1 4<!1 '*'91 -other encroacllme""· ol • tl'rnbtlt Code S•! el Mql, 1'14eronco tc like cw dlnl~ter lllnd, logoll'tft wl!'> whlt~ ts "'•de lo• further pe<tlalf~. !"-•lt llt to convey uld 101,,,.,,0 10 IM 111•1 tho time 1nd Plau f/f hNrl~ 111y .,.,_,firm, f>llllll< utllltv °'gov the u me II•• i.tn Ml tor J•.,...•Y H, orlWl'ltnlal bOdy. 1'77 •• , 10:00 a.m .. In tllt courtrpoM ti AIMI U<e!Kl•Q from U IO Loi 2 •II 0..perlrnent No.l of utd <Out1, II 100 oa•. oU, hydroc•rbons, mineral> an<I Civic Ctllltr Orin WHI, In,.,. City Of olht<' l\ll)ltln<.ts tyl"Q Dolow d ~~ ol Sant•~. C•lllor11la !IOO.OOlfft, lxll wllllOul tl>o rlgltl totnttr Oet9" O.Ct mbtr 10. 1'7• upon i... lU'1t<• o• '""'""•" or ll'tf WILLIAM •. St JOHN, _ ... ,•Do ... depth Of soo 00 lttl tor Count¥ Cler II •nv PMrPo•• ..,.,.hotwtt. u ,.,,,, vtO In "'"·LIAM r. ll1t1ca ~Of rtcoro. A-...yal\..t• PARCEL t· ....... c1u11 ....... '1t Mtw'°"' (tlller Ori•• ment• '°' t"'"" and ooro, l>UOll< ......,, 'a..c11, Ctllltrl\lt .,... wtltllltt, ,._,. tnd for all"""-• In T .. · 111•1.....a.. clde-nl•I tlltrtlo. lll<ludlno but not •-1•: _,_ llmltecr lollltcOMINtllon, ln•l•ll•••O'I ""1111\llM Or•~ Co.rt 0.lly P11ol. rol•umonl, rooelr. m•tl'tona•co, ~., 10. II, II, lt77 Sf.7'/ ooo••llOfl llld list Of a ll MCH ... ,, or PUBLIC NOTICE l ·IU71 NOTIUOt',auSTl&"S~ T.i .Nt. fl·ttt on ww,,...,...,. ••&ruary '· tm _. 10100 a .m. '°'AltK Pl.&C:E TltUST ~10 SlllVIC. H duly ,_._ f'rvttee llftd•f •lld "'" tu•11I lo Ottd of Tr\ISI rtcorded Nov, 11, 1'1S •• , ln\I, Ho 11t10, 111 llOtll 1 U•l, P•Ot ». Of Of· tlettt ltteord' 1,, tllt office Of tllo Coun- ty ••cord., of O••no• Couniv. C.lllt •lllt, WILL SILL AT P\181.IC AUCTION TO HIOHIST 11001!11 FOii C.ASH loey1bl• •I llm• Of"''' In l•Wlul Money of tht V"lted Slatul •I the North lftlll t ntr1no lo Ille County Coun HovM 11 700 Civic C.11ttr Otte .. Wut In lllt City OI S.,,11 An•, C.111, all rlOfll, !lllttlld IMtretl COfl .... ~dlOIM -Mldl>YllUl\Cltf U ld OMdOf'OvJI '" llw Dl'OPefl'I' •ttu•l•d In Hkl Ceullty tMSttle~crlbtdH: A ti> ulldMdH Interest 111 IOlt 2S IM M, 9 10d IS, ltttlOll a 6f Nt-1 hacll If .,., Mep rtco"'-" I• looll •. ..... n ... lllll•<ellanews Mtot ..... _.,.,,. .... (f\llltlf. TM•t-ttckl,.."tlldollltfC--.i-rfeft. ff lllY, ti Illa real pr_.,.. -.Cri-_...,. It IK'•l>t•-fe •: 111111 w ... '". 91Vd ' """'*' illetcll, Getlf, Tl\6 u11cltrsl911tf fltcl•lrn1 .,., llot1111Y '« M'r lnc.orrtclNoa Of tflt 11-t ... ._. t M tlW <-..... "-9*'.lfMy,,htwn ... relrl. SIMI Witt wlll w mttle, 11111 ~ t .... n ... I ti Wltttlllt', tljlf'HS 9' l- p1ie., ,...."'1"0 '"'•· .,.,,..~. Oftfl-.C-M(ff. it»y 1111 rem•lrll"',wl,,. <IM l toll'llOf the flOle h l U Cll•OOllyuld Ooed et Trim, 19 wit Sll,,,000, wtth clftlraDle ro..,waya, sldtw•l•1 •!Id tondults ovor Loh A. & eno C of l •.o<t Ho 11n,"' lllt Cou11ty of O••noe S111e of C.lllO<nl•, ts per mtP •«or-In ._ HJ, PtQt\ 37 and •of Mo• "II-1'\tps, 111 IM Oll~f Of fl>o County ltecordtr of U td cov,,tv -toed (Ml lttl\ OHO '' tC<fP'td -MAdl suD1ttt to t~t btNtlb -burdent l'"ooud upon tho lano dttcfl-lr1 t•ld P•rc•I I •bow for I"" rTllll ... 1-111of 11\t OWl'tt\ Ol •nv per "°"' ......... by ,,., •• (ttltlj\ Oe<ltrf lfOfl 01 Covonenft, Co•dltlo"' tnct llttlfl<ll°"' rtCOfdtd Oteomtler t). I~ .... 9oOtl t•ft, PtQt 167 of OHlclol qoco•d1 In lflt olllct 01 laod Counl• 1tecor0tr SU8JECT TC;I· •II CO•tntntt.. Condo· tloni, ,.,tfltll~t, tlt-4rv1t1on\111111c~ rlol'ls., H stmenl., •IOllh fnd rlotil• Of WtY Of _.,d. .Mott tomrnon1y •now" ••l J0».11 VI• VI••·· l.aouna Hllh. CA ftfMIM Mi. U •ll In l•wlul motley of \ht V11ll9" Sl•lff Oft COf\flrrN llon o! u le, or Pert ca'" tnG btltM• owldtlmtd b-llOI• i.curtd Dy Mort~ or Tr1111 o...i "' the oro.,.rty '°told. TM! lllaf<onl Of emc>ul'I bid lo DtdtPDSll· edwtl""d lldlor~"fobelnwrltfng....,w(ll lie reql¥ff ti '"' ttorould Offl<o •I ..,.., llnM elttr '"" llrtt llVOlkteloll ,_,tof •114 i.twe dt te Of ui. . o.t .. 1111• '"" .. ,Of o ......... tt1• ......... ,, ....... ,ll~J l-.<ut« .. lhewlll ttOUAI~ ~~1:0°:l":;t'' ... Wfttlllre .......... , .. 1 W. .......... CA ... lf . ...., ... _"'_ Flllllla!IM 0....,.. C.HI Oelly Piiot • "-rrtO, 11,17, 1971 S*-lt PUBUCNoncE l"'t-1 t!M-, t a ~·"~ I• Mid ,,..•h i. llf¥tll<ol, If "'Y· .,.,.r ,.,,. ftmn ot "" 0..d tf T"'", '"'· 1--------------1 ''*"" -.. _,., .. llM Tnnue l'ICTITIOUlaUlllllM ..... tf .... IN9'Hl'Mled•y .... o.tdof lllAMCSTATIMl lllT TN t. T"9 tol!Owlllf PtrMll It dlil't ...... n.t -..ftc1.,, 111\dtr ttld o.N « -•ti TtWt ...,..,Oflft t1teult4 Md ... THI STAND, t)t Tllt ll• St., tr.tM It "" 1111Mnl111N t wr"""' &.....-9"<11, Ctl. t HJI 0.CIKef'-tl o.t ... tt •M Denwlf,., l ... t l'Cf I), Aflf!Cord, IUI N1..CMtl lt!t, •llf t wrlt'9fl Nttl<t ef Ootllll1 ~.,:]{ fl.O. lo• Ht,~ ate(ll. ..., IM<tlflfl .... II, Tht ~ ~..._ .... let tf o.ftull ..... l!te· Tiii• """"'"-'lo Ol\CllKltd by tll I~· 1191W ltll .. M~.,.dlf lflT11t-'V Ol~t. ...,.. Wit 1'9.tf llf'tttrty It i.e.-&. •41W•l'Cf 0. lrtnct•lf 0.-OK."·,.,. Tlllt ..... _, .. ti liltCI -.... •y tt.ifltte "*""'" C:OU"'V Cltrtc of Or•n0t C0\11\IY tfl A~INdSl .... ttu,. J.,.uafiJ.1'11, 4*!111111-.C ... ary ....... ""~'"'"" Ht,_. Newt "*I-0fll'tt Cttsl O.llV "9lol, '"" 11 wlffl Ille Or•,.. QN~\ .,_,, 11, I .. U, •ncl "•brwo,., t 1'11 o.tty~ U. lt, Ui.1"6 'N1' '"'' 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 ,, 1977 DAILY PILOT' The """' M&rklt~• on 11\e Oranc• Co.ut DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Con a.II It, Find It . ( 6 4 2 &a.a ) Trade It With II Went Ad -ilVIO One Call $«vice Fast Ctedlt ApprOY~I ltMI h to!o 1000.2999 lttnt•h J000-4'99 .,tlnen, l1Wt1t_. & fw-cool . 3000-~· bal&tote HCMIH S For Sale . •••••....•......•..... •••····•·•••··········· .•.•••.•.••....••..... 1-------•1G1•r'Gil 1002 Gettenll 100 EltRORS; Adv~rtiHl't ~ check th•lr od:r. dolly and .-.port .,,.. ron hn,..tdla+•ty. The DAIL y PILOT GHUIMS llablUty for th. first In· corr.ct lnHrtlon only. es fot' Sale 1002 .•..................... AIAHDOHED PRICE SLASHED 4 IR + POOL prwate ro:tdw1ty lends to triple cur gora~E!. l:iecluded executive Ille entry' Dming entertum- m en t Epic u rean k itchen Soarin~ :.l:11rc:ise lo bedroom rctreut:. Lu~h tropical buck~ard w ~h1mmcnng ••4••·················· ·••·•·••······•······· MOWO,EH! C"tury21 S..rfR~olty HM\1°:1< AT flf(IS'f (JI. In (;Ol>tu l\lcllll -;l'C \'In~ l'l!Ktdl•flb Q( l'osta Ml·~u. I rvrn.-, N1•w11ort lll'H<'h, SO S1rntu A1111 tntcn·11.•w11ll! :ippll\·11111 r 11 r S .t I l' :-p 11 ~I I IO II ll7U Ill.Sil, till/! W llnlw1 C'o.~tn Mr~J GIORGI AH COlOHIAl SIXIEDROOM HiARIUCH ~'ormtil doul>le duor cn try lo ch1111;le nltl wurlcf i.'h:irm. l.a r~l' 111111.: room with floor to cc1lini.; hrcpla rll. Uunq11cl i1it••1! formal dining room •~ COtl\'Clll(•Otly lll'clUlfl•tl r ro m h u..: c 1• o ti nt r .I' ktkhcn f ,1mlly l'Ubual enlt:!rla1nm .. nt room 01 erlo ok:. i:ro1111 tl:. Gu1•st quarl<'l':. Swh·p ..... W llSTl .... G ing open bal\nist.o1· stmrs * ,..... " to m.1s111n• bedroom NEWPORT IEACH suites llurr) fnr tht:. OHLY $92,000 '"Guue With Tht' Wene.I · Oul:.tandini: 3 bd ru charmer. Call 963·7881. homl! for the rJm1ly wit. c•11• " • ' .. ,. 1,, 1 • luves lo JOG & bird w~l<'h tiOMl:...., D ~um11wr run pool Skmny dipix•rs d~hi;ht ' 0\\ lll!t bough! new l\Ju!lt ~l'll 'l'rv Sll!IOO total down' A 1 [~·1v1n1 [ ~ 11111 -~~w .. ~~~~:~·~:~::·: 3 + REAL ESTATE FAMILY ROOM 631-1400 Tile entry lo huge In Ing ·---------· room. Raised family L y COSTA.MESA 4BEDROOM F'anlu:.llc family home 111 Cos tu Mes a's nicest ur1.•u, 4 large hedromn~ with mao1v1.1 masl\•1 suite F:le,llant 1lin111g ll1.1i:c bnck fireplace 111 luxurious 11\'ini: room. Calf now 6-16-7171 $58,!150 lull pnee' OP(Nt q , • t ~, 11r, 1 [~-p MESAYERDE I L It's ~asy li\'ing tn lht:. Jo,·ely shk rf M V home. Lge mstr lx:I ''/atrium, 3 more bds. 2 b:i. country k1tcht'n. cJthc1lral cc1l- 1ng:. & more JU.St waiting for nAhl famil) Vcti; welcome' S.IS-9491 ----. 0 111!!1 T c L A s s I F I E D NEWPORT SHORES 2 Story A·frume ; wood hcumed rc1l1ni.:s . .i 11 d r m s 2 h u I h s !>Ccluded patio. Walk to heaeh, pools & tennis. Rl.'duce<.l to sss.1.100 associated BROKERS qfAl TORS Jor. \ltl lotbo, &11 Jt>• 1 New Listing! SSS.000 for this llir cond. 3 Bedrm. beauty. Assum a- ble 1" r VA loan or $23,SOO, Pll) able S215 total, mn 531·5800 International RHI &tat• N•twork COZY COTTAGE iti Newport HC'lghls lmai:inc 11 rocker on the big front pon·h of thi~ cute 2 Bcdrm. home Large yard, extra large f:laruge "'Ith alley access rot" R\' or hoat. $7S,OOO PETE BARRETT -REALTY- 64M200 lncomoarable!! Descnbes f111s 4 lledrm Do~r Shore:. home F"smlly room \\•wet bar 11( M i: t r !I u t t <' •• n d kit c hen \I bre.ik tns l nook all h:l ,.,. u s11lc11dld \'iCW Of l:pper Oay & s ur rouncl1ni:: mountains This homr Is h111fl around an atrium & ovul f)('l()I with rount111n & rl'lracta blc dome + h1:at1·d & filtered Jucuni s pa. xteurn hath & gard<!n Mtt<:h, mucb more' Tcr· rifle buy at $.'l20,000. room" ith floor lo ce11tng used brick fircpfuce No wax tih: in kitchl•n. 2 patios. assum;ihle V !\ , payment S244.3G µer month. Cull 9tl3·G7G7 ou·. ~·1 ,. 'r,• tif •• [®UllUI S36,CJ50 Think Future, Invest Now ! ! $12.000 for I I', a1•rl'S vit>w properly In lite Schur of Pl•arbloHsom 11 tho 1wlh of pro8rcsi. '' Lc.incu:.tcr A ~r<:at "n t• orr with a future C>w11111 111, will Px1•hu111:e fu1 here Btfl tlccor.itioi? & 111• ltghlllll bnl·k pJ\lu ;irca' c om v f 1 ml' n t th 1 ~,,~~!~~!!!~~~ sp1u:1ous 1 slur) town hOml' If you .trl.' PJYll\~ was t ed rent money , here's your ch:11\("l' to ~cl some l ax clcdul·tions & <i sa,·ings o:ict•nt startc:d Sm dn pymot pos111blc l>'6 771l ~> Walker &Lee Real Estate LUXURY IN llG CANYON Just r educed S2ll,OOO Spacious th1•ee hl.'tlroom . f1.1m1ly room 11nd 1llni11i.: room with l unlu!>lil· v ie" of th~ Newport lla rhor area as well ,1,.. n11:ht lights Hra1tt1lull) Up · gruded "1th e11l'lus c1l private p;Jlio und .illrac· li\'e lundst•upmc Now 5215.000. (;a II 67:1 K550 C'>--Hllll"i •' I, j. UPPER BACK BAY VIEW! Spacious 4 Bedrm. homl located on a !>ecfu<h-d tree shaded ii i re ct Remodeled kit rhl•n large ram il) room \\Ith fireplace. on httrd\\uod Ooors. Owner i11 ~tn\ious Price is $74,950. Don·1 wait, ca.II : 645·7221 Century 21 "Wrstcfirf' -------- Sport.man's Dr"eam R EDUCl:;U ovi-;r S3.000 Ex11•pt1on:1l custom hornl' 11u1lt h.> Lcimkc-I.1th & pl,1skr constructt11n " Tu~tin locution 11' perfr1•1 for th 816 CANYON CUSTOM SPt?l1acular 41S40 l.Q. fl I Bedroom home• 111 l1na MJl!CS of construe lion Family room and hbrar' ovt'rl11ok1ni.: i:org Pou~ pool 11rcu 1tncl g 11ll 1·ouri-.c 2 :.Ion II\ 111~ r ol)m wtl h n"""" 1 rircplal.'e and view foll 640-6161 ~ COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE , INC. IEACH EST A TE S48,250 ~lcµs tu J)(1und111g """' <111d t·ryst11l s11r11l • UutJc yard '" !Jay are:1 JllJ) grountf W1ndrnJ.? '' u111ll•11 wafk ..... t)S In ~ccfutfcd t•n try• Gourml.'l k1ll·ht'n ' l.a\'1s h l1\1ni: 1oum• S w 1.· l" p r 11 g m .1 ., t ,. r hcdroom ' :.un:.h1n ~ hrc<ikfost put w Prn1f · Jal·uu1 \olfe~ h.tll m;illl' this garden hv111g ul 1t-. lmcsl. Wnn"t last Cull 1147-6010 oPt""l~•ll\•Uf.Jf'-'f.UN I [®tijlHil CUSTOM BUILT NEWPORT "HEIGHTS You l"Ull I><' in ih1s Jll<" lure! 4 bedroom, 2 hath. with master l..edroo m on first floor Bcaml'ti cathedrul ceiling. Pam1 ly room with fl oor to ceil· ing rireplac·c. 105' fron tage. Pool s11.e lat w1t11 fire pit and wood plank<•rf con v c r s at 1 on a r c ,, . 1125.000 Call 516-2313. sportsmJn-i onl'd lorl•----------horses, v.1th ao 1dcul lot ror parktni.; It v ·,. boats. elt• flcu11ttlu :!BR. FH homl• 1-1 1 IJrand·nl'w cu11d1l1n with manr eui:.tum uµ gr a dell Sloparatt· I :fi.H workshop. Hus tl<>lcnlia for HP zoom!( on OVl'I 1.,r!l. acre lot NOW on l\' S88.000. MHO V,rd• 4 ldrm VACAN't 1"< R E/\l>Y FOR YOllH INSN:c THIN SUIH•r r;im1f.v home with Ii: lltlrm-.. dhl hr11•k f1r1•plJ<"l'. hl'l1111 r.1r11l'l ~. hl'a'' ilhuke roor. family room und 11111rh more Uc~I loeution on quiet i;trt•ct one l>lo~k tu park u nil schools . Hurry, dou 'l ~ CALL NOW mjuthlsonj!! S-16·58110 (T~ 1s2 · 7Jtsp;·~~·~1 DONALD M. BIRD -·l; ;;~ • Auteoef'!lr llH lte" 6 4 2 ~UPERB HOMES ......... 1002 GtMt'et 1002 • 5 6 7 8 r J 15" W. Baktr, C.M. Nt•I 10 Merkel BHll•I S49·16S5 IHDIAH WELLS PARADISE $205,000 Adobe woJJed r11nrh home loealed on "• .1crc close lo El Dorado & In d111n Wells Country Cluba. Mnitnltlcent be11med cetUn•s & h'r rano Cloorl!I. 4 bds, 3 balhll, den plm1 complete OUEST HOME ! Jt111t un· dcr 4.000 11q. ft. or doac rt lwcuryt 646·7711 W:tlkr:r i; lee Re11l I 1>t11t e ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• macneb I Irvine realty .l RANCHO SAM JOA'i)UIH ~ Located on the golf course w/3 private patios & many upgrades mcludlng lush carpet & mirroted wardrobes . 2BRs + den. Don 't ovedoolt this one for $92,000. lmmedlale occupancy. Lynne Rothell ~~200. (Y'71) 642·12U 644·6200 901 Dove r Drive HltbOt View Center frvlrwt •t C•mP'!S Ve llty C.nter 1.52·,414 J.::::::==::=:::=.L::~!!!!!!!!!~!!!!~~b» I SS DAIL y PILOT T~-x Januory 11 19n HCHtHI For s• ..... , For Mk HouHt Fors• ....... For~ ....... , ...,. s. ........ I . . ............................................. ······················ ....................... ······················· ..... ~ .......... !?~~ ~~~~!'! ......... !!~2 HoultsForS• ~ForS• ~e .. ral 1002 G• .. r• 1001 CotteMete t024tW...,.oahoc.h 1040 '"'-1044 -------------··----· ;;:;.;;;,;· • ••• ....... ;,;;; G;;;.d • •• •• ..... icioi · •••• •• •• •• ............ ••••• •••••••• ............................. ••• ................ ••••••• ···············::~···· OICOIATOl'S DllJGtfT Come see this ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••····· MESA VERDE V ACAHT! Forced Sunr! nice 4 bdrm. home m Corona del Immediate posiesston $69,500 Sgl story 4 br. 2 ba In Mar's Cameo Highlands. $123.500 !9 950 00 Model Home·· cond Gr.Gt Area AND. you get your very own key to Ont'otthet>Htlocot1ons Owners purrhaud the private beach an.'a. A 3 drJm. 2 Bath in 1-'ount. Valley Hord t another llome i. miut fomou:. '"T'" Plan home bel.Je\•e Ii 20x40" pool In sell' 3 Bedrooms. f.,11uy 673-4400 N<>ar ,choolll lihrory duded ror only $70.950 roonl + den. cosy .rnd cburche~ t::xlrJ Call ~ATED ~l•ce Ce.olt1l •Ir I OOJ'G1.c,.., 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S B<frms.. 41,; baths. family rm. & formal dini~. Large tile patio & waterfront deck. $275,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 34 1 Buysodt· Q,,.,.,. NB o!S bib! ~~ .......... !~~,!':~~~ .......... !?~~ WES LEY N TAYLOR CO. H £'.:A LT 0 t{ s !'-> I 111 l ' I ~ H fl llG CAMYOH CHAllSMA Elegance abounds in this 2-story beauty w/sunset & golf course view! Boasts of 3 bdrms .. form DR, wet bar . Sunken Roman tub in M. BR ste & exciting jacuzzi. Built by Deane Homes & prof. decorated. 3 Patios & lush landscaping. A joy to see! $285,000. 2111 s ......... Hih loed MEWPOIT CEMTB. M.I. 644-49 I 0 FAMILY HOME on pool sized comer lot. 4 Bedroom. 2 bath. fireplace, new carpets thruout. Boal or trailer access. Covered by our l year warranty. $49,950. BIG CANYON LUXURY 3 Bedroom and den, outstanding landscaping. 2 Jacuzzis, pool, builtin vacuum. electric control gat e . 10 1 speaker stereo system. sunken Roman tub a nd many more beautiful amenities. CALL 640-9900 Ge.rat VIEW MANSIOH OYIR THE IA Y Tasteful Kings Road 4 bedroom that has a view that won't quit ! Beam ceilings, newer constru ction. c h armi n g kitc he n (with an over-the-sink view of the Turning Basin) and an Incredible a mount or storage area. This property bas room for a tennis court. Presented at $325,000. U Pllll lf)U I: ti()MI:§ REAL TORS'. 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona def Mar also 1n Mesa Verde at 54() 5990 .1m11n1t1c:.-a lovely SO COAST DKRS ~nUon1k1 .. .!•ron"l~•_!!'!'r a.w1mm1n1< pool + a ---·-------t "~I • ,..,. ~ep.irJtl) play yard. Call Townhoulle. 9 moll old on't IHI Ions. BKR. now 2Br. l~bu, 2 car 11ur. call:W0.1'30 a;an m1 fro m bch Pool TARB81 u wia. Jacuau. wgt rm. .. 634-4440. 842 3504 by own ANYTIME CATAUMA VIEW "ti .. c .......... PnlsUge 1900. 4 Br, 2~ Ba exec home. 3 Car gar. TUl1ll IOCIC Upgraded thruout. AGT. ,,......_...._ F'tne Mesa Verde 2·story. 846·9004. Mt ~pm or New on marke t. 4 58r . 2..,ba. many amenities $96.700. Pnn weekends. Bdrma .. 2 balhl. famllf only7S1 ·3930 OWNER MOV""c-. Q t rm .. frplc .. lae. patio "'""'· we Outstandlna view of cul de sac stree t .• a; lights! Immaculate coo· 3 .DRM 2 I ,,. Bedrooms. guest dlmng, dltlon. Electronic air • A. ~try kitchen. walking mter. Close to school.I. Carpets, drapes, dbl distance to the Mall. Just Owner traasferred. Tht.. garage. corner lot. Room S6 4 , 9 5 o. , Tar b c 11 • won't last! Call for app't. Cor boats, R. V ."s, etc. Realtors. call 842~ S.139.'°° G9Mf'GI 1002 G••rel 1002 SS3.a:;Y McCw6 Pool Home DAVID D. CARLSON ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lttattor 1110 Newport llEALTOA ll).9ZtJ SECl.UDED CALL us FOR Cotta Mffo s•t-7729 In January RANCHO SAN JOAQUIN EXECUTIVE Buy now before Summer, 3 br 2~ ba, popular San ESTATE Coedos/Twnhlff prices! 4 Bedrooms. ~Rey. Vu goU couno 4IR·IEACH AREA ht Tustllt & lrviM 3 Br 1 Ba. lge back yard. family room, big 36 root & 1 a k e. s 11 s.0 o o. Arched formal two story FromS39.000lo$69.000 ~~~nd new driveway 16" swimming pool with 54'1·7044/833-3215 EXCELLENTTERMS wrue. By owner. $46,SOO. beater & filter. rlood'I---------••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• entrance to new world of THE HOMESELLERS 642-l~ lights. $78,000. Tarbell. WEU DIAUMG It elegance. Spacious sun· Realtors, can't last. call Boughl a new holpe. Will DUPLEX HEAR WATER Newport Island, 7 yr. old duplex. only stone's throw to water. Each unit has 3 bdrms., 2 baths. The top condition refleets pride of ownership. $162,000. ken living room with 752°5353 TWO ON A LOT 962·5566 sell our 3Br. 2 ba. ramlly crackling noor to celling Live In lhe superbly re· room In CALIFORNIA fireplace. Cathedral cell· TUSTIM done house & rent lhe Public Notice HOMES at a bargain. Ing. Huge family room Spacious 4 Bdrm home. olher. $75,000 tte ooo with convenient wet bar Lge lot. lmmed occupan· Government 1tssumable . 752-02s3 ~ll6Agt. hascommandingviewof cy.$60,9$0. loans . Available tvi-----·----- pool sized yard and ter· THE HOMESELLERS anyone! No new loan cos· ~ _ ~o·inill race through wall or li\llt.t.a.._. ls. Low lnt.eresl availa· -"" .-. glass. Gourmet kitchen. 752-5353 ~&.... ble, take over payments. Goff c_... View Dine. Sweeping stairs to • ~ 3 & 4 Bedrooms. Tarbell, You'll love lbe view & the 2 huge master suites and lcAoo Island I 006 ,-~1 -y· l. . Realtors. call 962-5566 goU course too! Prof. de· guest quarter . Hurry, ....................... t' ~ :c:::&S. corated 3Br, 2~ ba. won't last. $84,900 full 2ou1orside.H.I. OWNER ANXIOUS : Jua Sll9.000. price. Call 963·7881. ODen z.5 Dai~ 646-4463 $66,SOO. 3 Bedrooms. big _ oP1N1119-11s1uN10"''"'' ~iniz~ed 2 t 3 B family room. dining S-Modet [ I ng s y. rm. EASTSIDE GEM room, double fireplac1:. •il~~lillit rirk pal.Jo. 227 APolena Sharp 3 Br, 2 ba on huge Won'l last long at this A•...._ $105. ,000 --.. -:-· .. -·.·-'!~..;. A-lot. $72,SOO. All terms. price, Tarbell. Realtors. •UnderConstrucUon• ., ' -..-Hoftw1, 11~. 96.1-8377. Bkr. call842-8854 Q)ooseyourowndecor '75-6000 752-0283. 640-0166 A.gt Getterol 1002 GeMnl 1002 GtMral . 1002 GeMral 1002 A REAL IUY! CoroM cW M• 1022 In Harbor Vu Hills. See ••••••••••••••••••••••• ENDANGERED SPECIES $42,900 WINDSOR ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• WATERFRONT Pier lfloat Choice loca lion: 4 l:IR. 3 halhi.. 2 frplcs.. l)(l' palin. nl·~ dt>c. Won't IJ:.l tung ,11 !179.500 Balboa Bay Prop. R~altors • 675-7060. VA Buyers Call Now No money down. Many to choo~e rrom. Cal I for mor<' information. ., 11lage Real Estate 963-4569 • 963-1786 TUITI.E ROQC STEP UP TO First time offered! Im· HEWPORT maculate. a dult oc· HEIGHTS thi s one own e r 4 Bedroom. large ramily room with fireplace home. Quality upgrading thruout. Many more ex. tras for gracious living See to appreciate ! $138.500. 6«·7270 cupled. spbt·level family 8eaut1ru1 3 bedroom or 2 home · not lease land. 3 bedroom a nd wa lnut Bdrms .. lge. family rm. paneled den with sliding With rrplc .. formal din glass door to 10 X 20 lat· 1ng 3Car garage.rortht! tice cover ed patio. golfer, !>and trap & Completely remodeled pitching green. heall·d kitchen with Corning pool, extra storage for electnc range and AUS RV or boat. Filtered atr· oven. New carpeting le:.s cond. plus radiant heat· than one yeu r old. ing. Upgrading galore. A Formal dining room .1~~~~~~~~~ PRIVATE IEACH ACCESS 4 IR Redilced to saot:soo. The price ls right, the location Is great , the mstr bdrm 111 giant. the yard 1s pool sized. the land I S r ee, th e bathrooms arc two and the fireplaces arc too. 644-7211 real jewel ! By app't. bright and :my home l: SlSZ,,500. Fast PoSSes.s1on throul:hout with large DOLL HOUSE VETERANS Now is the possible. bac k yard. Seeing is Natural wood cabinets. best time lo buy a home ~ NIGf L BAILE r & ''S5UCIATE5 'Ille lut 3 br + 2 ba + frplc home for only $42,900. Move In tomor· row! And hurry. Please call 898-7855 MODEL The Terrace. 2 BDRM .• 2 ba . LARGE family /kitchen area opens onto your owa private covered patio. Quiet location. Iola o( greenbelts and close to everything. $68.500 c. F. Colesworthv ~~~~~~£1~.nly Sl>J.OOO :~~"a~:r'!~~a~e~~~ -'-;;;::C_A_M_E_O_S_H_O_R_ES__ ~~~ ~o ~~~n r:~ly ~~I~ REALTORS 640-0QfO QPfN1110 .11\11JN 1o 111r;trf• accent this charming Living room. separate veteran counselor. Agt. .. 523C4'4PllSh:JRVttCE [ I home. Quiel tree lined Din. 3 Br, 3 ba .. lam.rm 546-9521 i---------1 l IEDROOM e 11~~·11·~ . street near schools and Prof decorated. Pool, --------TEE OFF OPEN DAILY PLUS 22 X 20 ,.} 1 shopping. Priced to sell p;ul(like yd. St89.SOO by 4 Sale by owner $55.000 SA.M. TO& P.M. ----~-: -· in a hurry! Please call owner. 4600 Roxbury, 3br l'hba7%VA. Near golC cour se, 31---------- For e11t Ad ht w__.~. W.td Prestige home In pre· !>llgc local.Jon Secluded on quiet Cul·de·Sac FAMIL Y ROOM 842.2535. Cameo Shores Open I ·4 645-0019 after 7 pm bedroom, great location. HEW LISTIMC. ""'"1n9 .. 1\1'"""'""' 1• _Ph_644_-4_14_0_. ____ 4 BEDROOM 2,,_, Bath. Needs ten~r loving Formal or lnlormal. it's Cdl Sue '42-5671. ht. 330 TWO-ON-A-LOT l llJal:!!'lJ Harbor View HIUs family rm, Newport functionally designed, [. I your choice. with this Poncho Pizan! Tou this suptr uc1ttn1 poncllo over evtl)'tl11na. QUICK..t<NI r and beautiful too' UH synlllellc ¥10rlltd 1n 3 colors -bands of stoc~1net te. 11rttr and p1t111n 1111~n form v1v1d slrlPtd design Pat· tem 724S: Oflt ~'" fies 111. $1.25 for uch pettem. Add 35.-tldl P1\ttrn for flnt-clau '"'"'" 1t>d llllldlln&. Sttd "' it.lice Brooks Needlecrart Dept !OS Oa1lyP1iot 8o11 163 Old Chetsoa Sta New York NY 1001 1 Prtnl Name Addrtt~~ Zip Palll!fn Numoer MOii£ thin ever before' 200 dtll111s 9lus 3 frff orin1ed 111-sldt NEW 1976 HCtolfCIWT CATALOG• Hu tvt~lllna. 7Si:. Crtelltt Wltl! S.uru '1.00 C,,o.t 1 Wlrfftllt 1.00 Htr n~ Wtt• _ 1.00 ..... ~._IM "" + llillt IMl -us ..... ..,., .... _ 1.10 ""'9t C*'tt W -IM """"' Cftdltt .. '.00 .... Cttcht.... 1.00 ea~--~. ,:::: Cltliltte ::Ca.:':14 t::: 11 f'rllt A 112 aoc .... tf II hlltt fl _ '°' Ml•t111 O•llt M 12 -Mtr JI a.itta.., r.uy n _ ao, ,_ •f JI Jiffy ~'P &ec 0 M · Paftl st.rttt. Walk to schools. ne am . churr hea. parks and Two separate houi.es on a large Costa Mesa lot. Zoned for three more un· ,. £j£0J'it; Gracious 4 br Belvedere. RJ vena Condo. Tennis. beautifully appointed _ __.,_, .. -~r. 2 ba. 2 frplcs. spacious poo I, man Y extras· home. Lavish mstr. suite ram.rm, e legantly de· S6S.OOO. Terms. 642•4758 with vaulted ceil. & plush sboppin& center. Custom built 22 >t 20 Family Room with beam cell· uucs. Ca II 963-6767. Ol'fl1 111 9 • tr S •tif<I ro I I ,,..,., corated. l>l x a larm Rucker Realty SeaburyTract4Br.ctean. dressing area & deck. 4 system. Triple gar. Pvt upgraded. ask 573•500· Bdrms .. 3 ba., atrium en· WANT THE BEST? crt yd w/fountaan , pool SO. COAST Ownr. 536-Slo.5 try. $US.'°° 1l.!J. surrounded by large i---------apartment complexes. .. r;. [~dlltl 'Jlus parcel IS re11dy for development. Full pnce SSS.$00. CALL SS6·2660 C:SELECT TPROPERTIES Tbls 3 Bedroom Mesa size yd. Sl 55 .ooo PLAZA lrYfM 1044 Verde beauty has 1t! Ownr/Agnt. 759-0059 A short walk from excep· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Beautifully upgraded in· TRIPLEX tlonal 3 bdrm. huge mstr1 _________ 1 552·7000 terior Is tastefully de· bdrm, bonus rm. wet THETER., ... CE corated. including plush So. of Hwy. One 2 bdrm bar, patao, pnvate lake, . -THE · . • 9036 AIST 23"-34" r, 11f ,.._;_ 11f t.(f' .... CASI lSl -one main pall (no side WJ111$) IOI smooch. el.ls- hc war't Olllb' Whip Chem up '" wMt, blac'-IM!y totors to 10 w•I h lots Cll toC>S Printed P1ttjrn 9036 MIS1ft' W11st 51m 23. 2'-2S 26~ 18. 30 32 34 Silt 26~ la~es I J18la1ds 60 inch labrrc Send I ZS IOI eKJI P1ftein ~ 3~ tor e.tch 111t1e1n tor first c~ss ••1111111. h<lndhnc. Stlld ,,. Marian Martrn Pattorn Oet:>t «2 Oaaty Pilot 232 West 18tl'I St , Mew Yori! NY 10011 Print NAMe. ADOAl!.SS. ZIP, SIZE 1nd STY L E NUMBER lit,.. ........ 1•t. .. ttlfll llMl StN MW fir ,., ... ,, .. ""'., """"' e*"t..cli, c .. , .. 1111• ,., ''" ""'" et '"" dlllct. Stlll '151 tM•I kw -. 111111 .... Sl.21 l111t111t Ml~ Crafts $1,00 •~tt•frt ''*'" .... $1.ct l•ltlt!t kwl11 ._. St .Cf ca'"""ts and customwan Wllhhul(e mstr.&bltns .. boat dock , swimming. See this bea utiful VILL "·CE .. ·.· ·"" + 2 l·bdrm units l \11 "Cardiff" model on me n HARBOR HIGH dow coverings. Gated Blks. t.ooce~n. $145,000 sec gale. Model home jor greenbelt with UP· REAL TORS C 3 t 1 rront wall entry provides look, must see. $71,500. wraded carnots, custom•---------h11rm1n~ • ll'C room r ri d 'l 968 3371 ~•" 17,.. .,. '"'°' .-Wllh hardwood floors, (In or P vacy 1.1n secun Y' Oceanfront rental. 3 Br. · or ..-.v· .... drapes a nd shades, stun-OPEN a big lot. f"ull price ~=U~o~~~4~~1573•400· 3ba. $1200 -nlng entryway and large 5332 Royalle $59,500. Spruce up und ORAHGE COAST workable kitchen. A 2 '"The Ranch" save! CALL 7St·3t01 REA64L4~4s1T4A8TE . ~:'s72.~ath home at :to~~~ ~ ~~~;! t: SELECT m qu.lck-$83,'°°. 3 car T'PROPERTIES CostcaMHCI t024 ________ ga.r -fenced -trees. 1002 ~ 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUST SELL! Quintard Realty&73-32SO ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••• ••••••••••••••• Mesa Ve~e 4 ~r. 3 ba, 3 Bed.rm. cream puff with SELL idle 'ltems with a ~~..!.~~ IAll IA YNOMI' OPPOlrTUt4fTY Waterfront condominium with 2 bedrooms & den or 3 bedrooms, 3 bath. 2500 sq. ft. or sure luxury bayh'ont l iving, featuring enchanting •day & nJght views. Never occupied. new carpet & drapes & leveJors. Only $185,000 Fee. , A C0&.0WBJ. ..... CO. "I 644-1766 21f1 MHJOAOUINHILLlllO. \... IN ~TCINTER w, SlllC & FINlf THE STONES D l I H S T 0 A S 0 Y A T R S H R E T M H S E R T E R A W E N 0 T S W E F A R A 8 V S T 0 H E M 0 U H T A I N 0 H F R U S 0 S F H F I L R A H R 0 V K F ELRTTTL U ESNO~SR LP~A H A S 0 T 0 N B H F S T H W E P E A R 0 N-1 E 0 H N H A H A G E N N Y E J C T~OCUE~EOR S C HHLE S S N A M F Y S H E C R E S A H Y T E E N L S T 0 E N £ 0 T W V R 0 C N 0 Y H A R L N E N G E E L N H 0 T N S T 0 H A G M 0 U T T E A T S 0 M E S R I V £ R T 0 T A 0 T S £ R E Y 0 L P E N 0 T S S P P T E N 0 S K C A J l L l H E N 0 T S INnrU<U-1 Hldd!lll -m below.._.., forwlfd, ti.:11· Mrd. uo. ~or dlegonClfty. Find Hdl Ind bo• It I"-~ Stone Age Stone Crab Harlen F. Stone ~ Ston e Fly Stone Stteep Stone Mounteln : Stonechat Stonehenge Stone Plover • • Stoneface StOhlWare Stoneh111 Tomorrow: Sh•k•sptarean C~~r1,t1rs ---------fam/dln g & llv rm. 261 pool. New rugs and l~~~~~~~~~~pO~ai~l~Y!P:!:ll~ot~C~l~au~if~led~A~d~. REDUCED sq.ft. L~e 1Sx40 pool paint. Ready ror oew l· ~"",000 w1Jacuu1, coverd patio. townbouse'owner. Many ~ 3 car gar. >tint schools. extras. All for $.')4,990. This btn 3 bd. 2 bath Ownr, by appt. 556-1434. 645·3474 home Is now priced $120,000. ..~...,- oolow mrkt. Cozy cstm HEW LISTIHGI I I· I a ~~'. G~e~~~r~!~'&.~ MESA VERDE 4br, 2ba . 1 '. you believe SS4,9SO? ram.rm home on over-~-~=~~~-~;=-~~ ~·9491 sized corner lot In xlnt ~ Walker & lee Real lstate neJghborbood. Priced lo quick sale al $67,000. West.aide fixer-upper. 3 Br l Ba, den. lge rncd yd. 1929 Republic. $46,SOO. P c1ul W B,,,,ttf11·ld ,, r. "' ,,.12 · 8'.J~O ~-~-----~-~~-~-----1_IJ19~·-5'7SS~-~---- OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE CAPTIYATI.._ •CMDMC>Oa 111 IN llG CANYON Luxurious 4 Bedroo~ on Extra Lge Lot. Glazed Ceramic 'nle En- try, Wood Pegged Floors & Thick Carpeting. Expensive Wall Cover- lngs. Exquisite Draperies. Every Room with View of Lush Gardens, Fountains. Pool & J acuui. Overlooks Fairway. $295,000 116¥14~ IUDO ISi.i Of9t DAILY ltOO .. MOPM Make an offer on this adorable 3 bedroom today. Happy. sunny atlDOS'phere. Tastefully d~ated, entirely remodeled and Just waiting for ne" owners. Large pat.lo ror e nt ertaintn~. Immediate occupancy. $14.9,500. Fee. 11 I DOYll OllYI . I S@\\~~-s· Tltot lnt1i911in9 Word Gome wiflt o Clt11dle ~-~~-14'1o4~C~~~'OUAN~~~~- I ' I Houses f1W' s. tto. ... Fol' s. ......... Tu.!!y. Jenu!fY , 1. 1m DAILY PILOT ~ For S. Hc.N-t Few S• • •• •• •• •••••••••••• ••••• •• ••••• •••. ••••••• Red &t... W..t.cl 2900 ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• ••••• •••• •• ••••• •••• ••• • ••• •••••••••••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .._... Uafwi '*1 d .._.. Uafwa hh d ......_. U•fm.._.d ' tnt.t 1044 ~leoc~ 1041 H.wportlffdl I06' S-Clftm• 1076 •--rro-~., 2000 Wantedbowsie.unltt from ••••••••••••••••••••-••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ -r-• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •U•••••••••••••••••••• ........ ••••••••••••••• OWMr for pnvute party C:..M.M JZ.24 ,....,....,,_.._.. 3240 n-. 3244 11.1111 EXCHANGE v ... ~~~.!'".ooo lnceme Units TRl·PLEX. ult 2 BR. gd La&una. Newport ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Trlllde your Income pro-111"" _. • rental area. Asking -....133 ~EISldeZbr.dee , cpt, LEASF.SAVAILARLt; pen.y for thui 3 bath. 2 View Newport Bay to Hr • ..a.. .. Ocean $ 80.000 Ail-64$.llal drp1.1ar. hied. yd, pallo. FOR LEASE: 3 bedrm. 2 Li ve to trvtne Vlth&Jtt> batb contemporary wttb Catalina! Iron gate en URS '' ...... Mat. a4Jt.s. 646-1019 ba, brand new, 170hq ft. We have homes avail. for WOOD.RIDGE a.o«eanvlew.$125,000 try Mommoth living RISORTPROP-••••••••••••••••••••••• Landing home w/3 c:ar leaaelo •• " room with vu~:w• Mar 6 UN ITS ON THE ..., UNITS on 4 acres In 0-_-...._. Condo. 2br. t ba. paU ... Id w 1 utSquart' Pl •cE MORIHS REAL bl"' f1'replac ... Paneled BLU"'F-Winlcr •-~-·m -r-..._.... N ...... -gar. -2~1mo. inc: g n-~h. n Cal l .. o--1.A "' " " •"" dowutown BIG BEAR :i ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1111~e. o ~-· --· ,.~r No pets ""·-• ··~~ IY OWHY * 494-1057 • formal diru!ll room. Wet m~r rentals Good an blkll. from tuke. lncom~ lalMe Pul a• 1 107 mo.151~ ro:a LE.Ast: 3 ~nn. 2 0ot-rf1\:ld Univ I'll bar S§>:tcious kitchen & vestmtint pro perty. Is SS0.000 yrly Sales ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ,.,..., ... VER"E 3 br + ba ..___.. 1900 ,.. Culverdalc Col.Pirk ~ll'Grttabriarplan 1 .. GU..... pantry. Extr11 large ~000 ,.._. ., ,.,.....,.new iq.u . ·rurtleRock " ..... _ f I -"" 1 GI d ' pn<.-e as S2iO.OOO I '60 .. OOO 5ri:ci"' ... 4 Br 2 84 ocean· ra.mllv, 2 ba, dbl. "•r.. • --11~1 botn .. wtiortnal L • ..... ma + am1 Y HID~ .. W .. Y master w ng asse do Sell II "''"" ., .. ,_._... " 2 bdrm. your cbo1~ <JS 3 nn,2bathl.NY.-t to lake ~ " view patio. Loads of 2 UNITS NEW, nenr wn. er wp 0cury root bme fi)>lc. wihr, ~.b paint. Al cond. cllo. rm., f1m rm. we rrom~toS.OO ~ lmmod1ate occua>uncy. 2 Bedroom & den 10 litorage. 3 Car garage ocean 3 BR . 2 HA baJance •l ~· whner dryr.dshw1hr.2car&ar. S48-7729ReaJtor bar.$S7S./mo. inc ldfl Jbdrm,yourrholce 14 SU0,000. 586·363'7 ufler Can.yon w/secluded reur CaJI now for personal OWl\\!r's unit. 2 BK. 1...., desg:rate. n c•s or S760 mo. Avail. Apr 1· aardeoer. No~b from 1335• to 1475 Spml Prtnc1pala only· yard. Patio. terrace & preview. 752· 1700 BA rental unit. $102.800. lru e. .1. June ts. No pets. &44· 3 Br 2 Ba Condo. Enc loberh RHlty 4 bdrm vour choice of 6 • tree hou.se. One mile to Ott"'"'".''S1111'1•0.i 1v.1• JAYW YEATS CAU.645-6641111 an7PM ~uo. fljr. adulta only. 1~1611 rroml450to~ II .I t.own&btlucb.Alllhl8for [9'll~lll~I REALTOHS 499-22.37 ~ fi€HIG€ Im. llU s:_.r::· S81~1. ev1. Nol<"e(>s I II onlsee~Atf'u5!1· CAii now to . , , I ~. HOMet ••••••••••••••••••••••• RAMC55H1.~0E.A00LTY ~ .,.........,.., 200oOcfllllView ~1 READY TO MOVE JN4Br,2ba,Famrm.rrm 3Br.denor !houseavaU. 4 _ b ed 3sr 2ea fncd yd gl'dnr Din rm. lovely area, 2 blths. c'()tS. drpa. Bltna _______ __.._ :.i:>si,~Ef;~eJ. €HIG€ t!-.:r~t~k:c· M 1nc1'.. chlidren. pe°u OK. view. nr. bcb. s1so. m>.9&2·3.\33 IRVINE oceupaMy.Luxury2BR, HOM €~ NewportSlloNs Costa esa $475mo.~-089htt8PM l·~~ 2BRCond(),superclean. 2 BR.1 .... Bll ....... $37~ Jl)lrary. Rancho San Joa· A home to remember' 2 s...... FOURPLEX Mtwport ..... 3169 Men Verde 3br. 2ba, crpts. drps. pool & club ~:~·a: ~~~ quln Condo. Pully BP· 300 N Newport N B Bedrm and dcn. l:V. bath ,.~.....___ I 078 ••••••••••••••••••••••• clean & pretty. $41.5. 31 house. $260. 979-1'888 ' · • polnled.1ncld a1r. · ' C Ill . ld ._..,...n-3Bedroom.2balhand2 1 SamoafU4..J.838, 3BR,2Ba ...... S395/600 ~-*1 or aft. 5pm & 1411,500 Lovely 2 br . apt, <>~P e e Y c arpe e . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bedroom l bath units Bayshotts: year ease. • 2 Br. $285. Yard. Kida & 3 BR. av, ba ..... ~ .imda544-S7CK Oen side ol llwy. Views Atrium vi t;w fro1t1 Will conSider excban11e: l ·BR. & bunkroom: Split 4 BR, bltns, cov. pets OK. Nr schls/park. 4BR,2'r'!ba.furn .. $595 ' ... w"'Y wt·Jl585/494-6320A... bedroomh& hvmgtbrm, Charming 2700 sq. ft Private patios extra comp.fum.$42.S Montb petio.$UO.Rels.839San 962·3S33or536--0.121 4BR.2c,<,Ba ..... ST95-800 ._ 6 ' EnJOY t e w arm o BR • Reallor~ •4·-Rd .... ".......... 4 BR 3 o -$600 wood and charm or mar· 4 , on approx. \"t acre large units. 9 real mvesl· .....,..v . ,,_,,_ . 3 BR. 1~ BA. frpl, fam. . ..., . . .. TOWHHOME MONARCH IA Y rors. Obie gar w taut Formal dm. pan'ld f:tm ment potential. lJdo l•le bayf~t. ~BR .. Duplex 2Br, ba, cl>(I, sml room. lmmac home In BIG ~AN YON rfw Lake & Night Light 11owner opener.Ownerneedsfast rm w1wet bar. Prof'ly 6 ba .. 2·stor1es. S18 toed yd, gar. S2SO+dep. idnt. area. Nr. 1cbJ1. 3 BR.2~ · Ra.Gebo San Joaqwn 3 br •IONDREALTY• • ...,.... famtlyon1¥ Views. Most popular Lovely Br. 2"'1 ba. fam sale.Call540-1151 ~pdgrounds.$164,500. I I ..... _., ~ Mo .. aMuallease.Singl Nopets.645-1184 M2S.~1866 plan. uncompromlsed rm. large laving room & GALLERYofHOMES . fllam. • Aoenttrra-7300 CONDO· 2 BR. 2 Ba , 4 Br home attau from , separate dming room w I ~ ~ _,. •-1-.. -·ed d view rom ~ery room. beamed cCJlinos. Healed 1714)111°9411 · clean, bltns. refrlg, ..-•"' .... e . .,.,."' Y • '20,000 in custom up ,,.. 7'2-1920 2Br. l block to beach. .....110, poob, nr O.C.C. dbl garage, cpla, dprs. gades. Wood ceilings, ~set in ocean view. MOOOuA1Ut.H1WfOl!Tt1ACM mo. tease. (213) 281H7 Sii>mo.646-88URltr. LaeS395.53fl..Z315 :security system. custom cellent condition. 2 Bdrm Kome by owner eve. a~~-8600 wood entry. Ultimate Guar~ed ~[~~a~~o co~ FHDTHEDUCKS Lg lot, beatu lndscpd on 16tO160 UNITS PIO. 3 br. gar. Kids. pet.s, Bel~~cbarmer f'5· ~bf, ~ Rancho Home. $125.000. muni y. • . from th ... I g e I d ~ S"'8 500 u.-......~ ·~-L......a anlpolt. Fee k ... /peu/sag •· ee. Wkdya 752·0206. eves· 499-2'7lS ~·aterfrontd~k~ 2 sty., s ~~i'188sa, · " ' · fi U ~.~=:.... M'ainReotals.~5310 MalnReat.lla,S..0-UTO wkndl m-11182. EMPTY DESK! BR & ptayrm.; 3 ba. 11er puers Gew al uo2 klde S220 z br garage WALK TO OCEAN z stY. 3 'f523 CAMPUs~ hMfft TURTLE ROCK We have on opening for a Xlnt cood. Walk to pools. $75.000 OK. Nickerson f aD.s· Mix ••••••••••••••••••••••• kids olt F~ • ' Br 3 Ba. fam. rm. frplc. OPEN DAILY UlR.. family rm. Plan I, real est11te salesperson. tennis &ocean.R~;.500LTY 4 Bdrm. 2 bath\ dfam~I~ ~ ':l~ 16• ~· 3,!ei40• 1r· Country Howse for tent, Main Ren~la. 540-5370 Dtw. $495. 714-~or 8 A.M. T06 P.M. srut vu. Lots of xtras. Must be willing to work CAYWOOD ~ nn&lgecoveroo ec · • • uru s .. ua Y Ortega Hwy, must be £Sl-9545Agt.NoFee By ow n er $91 ,500, full time. We furnish •548·1290 • Mile to Manna. 32891 wehavetwo80unatco?"· harmonious w/other OC· 2brbowtelncourt.oompl. View, Turtlerock Terr.,) M4-4e46 ff' f llif Calle Migue l. SJC plexes;on~has~our20s: cupants on property. refurbished. No pets.CLEAN4Br,28a,(rplc, Br & Fam Rm, beaut . plea~ant o ice ac ies. BIG CANYON View of 493-3307 ~e other five 16 s-Ow'!er 714-678·1300evs. $!80. SCB-6173 cpt, drps. S360 mo. $800mo. 752-0617 D'EERFIEl.D 3 Br. 2"11 ~~~~sn la~ 0e~c:al~~ Golf course & lake, 2 br 2 wtJI sell or exchange m· nc-963-4569 or 531.9545, 1..;. _______ _ ba.hm.1826sqft.,covr'd step-ufe commiss ion ba. upgraded. $120,000 dividuallyorincombina· lcAoolsland 120 3BR.2ba,famnn,trpl. Agt.NoFee 2Br2Ba.luxa!>'.over· P.tlO aprlnkJer sys btfl ls /opt Steps to Tenn SGlfG Ana I 010 llon. Exchange up oow-•••••••••••••••••• •••• comp. lndscpd, fncd yd, 2 looking Newport Bay. crpt,' cln, well kept. scbedu e. Contact Dee e · 1 · z1 ec' ••••••••••••••••••••••• By appointment in our HOUSE w ANTED. yrly car gar .• cu( de sac. $600. CLEAN 3 Br. 2 Ba. cpl, with balcony & fplc Francis. crt, poo • Jacuz . s . office only. PS: We have Ba. charm. furn/uni. 845-2978 drps, 2 car gar. $350 mo. 833-9ZJ4 $18,000.SSZ-0593. OolphinRHIEstak 644-5441 VETEUANS. Now is the smallerunitstoo' 600 Adlt f 714-983-4569 or £51·9545.1...;..;__ ______ _ llmdoS-Jooquift LCICJllllClleac:h SPYGLASS HILL ~J ~~o~nbup~!t~~~l~ · S mo. s. re · E-slde beaut. 3 br, l'h ba, Agt.NoFee Turtlerock Glen. New3 Br Condo on the golf course, 494-8581 675-3'0l newly decor. Altrac. yd., on best street $725/m o aear pool. view of Brand New 4 br, 3 b11, now. ask fo r yo ur I m jQuail ~ lcAoaPetlillMla l20 paUo.$395.M&-2389 ADAMS-BUSHARdD 4 Lse.Agt631-l400 Newport Center· Up · MOVE IH HOW! ~;:;~';~. ~~:se/opt. ~e~~ counselor. Agt. Pr• Pl~ • ...................... DELUXE 28t'. 2Ba Con· :%8~.~·l~~~~j~f~69 "":~ Woodbridge Estates. Up anded 2 br. den W/WCt• 3 BR 's, 2'h bath with ap .. ··-2Br1 Ba. stove, ref. yrly. do. blt.ns. pool, $340 mo. 531·9S45.Agt. No Fee grd'd 4Br. 3 ba, fam rm bar. 1st Ttme offered fireplace and lg. dbl. "E" PL.AH Wn..._ter I 098 7Sl·l920 No pets. Mature adlts on 546-Q99orSS1-0848 Dul>lex. Pvt rear ya~. Owner/Agent. $98,500. garage. Canyon pnvacy, Comp. redecor.: on cuJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1~ OUAllSt. NIWPOeUlACM Jy $275. IMC--0997 SLATER · G 0 L DEN Avail 1/20/71. $1600 mp. ~-ocean view. $126,500. de sac. 1st Time offered Peninsula Point 2 br, 2 b REDECORATED 3 Br. WEST SUper 4 Br, 2 Ba. lse/opt avail. 754.~ \>r W 0 0 D 8 RIDGE . Agent.673-4$45 for sale.3BR.Jba .. ram. J BEDROOM + J & 18 New Units r 1 2 g ge deo, d in. rm .. n ew frplc, D/W, cpt, drps. SS!-068l .....;:;..._ _______ , rm. Firushed & paneled w/ rp c, car ara kitchen. $375. 714·9G3-45611 $425. 7U-963·4569 or•--------- BeauUful 2 story 4br. 3ba Beautiful lot complete garage. Sl34,750 0 C ~ stv & dsbwbr. Days til 5 orS31·954S, Agt. No Fee 531.9545 Agt. No Fee Greenltei!: 3 Br, 2 ba. by ownr. Will sell or lse w I p 1 ans • s urvey • CORllM ASSOC f~ilv + Pool rano-e OU 87S-67o.1: eves 673-2545 ba h fam. rm .. rrpl. 2 Car gar wJopCiontobuy.640.0696 geologist report & • ••ntJ. Stilltime'tocboosecoors MesaVerdeJBr.2 .new3 Br. l ba. 6 Blks be · Nr.scbool.$460.552-7490 .--------t engineering. $55.000. RHlton 759..0226 'Ibis 3 Be(jrm .. l V. Bath, and options. Excellent Hones Uwfwlll•1d cpt.s/drps, bllns, frplc. Fncd yard, Chlldren ok. eves HOWARDJOJINSON '8.rm style home has a areas.W'illexcbange. ••••••••••••••••••••••• blgyard.Verycleanl'SO S37Smo.536-481l. ---------Woodbrfdoelomdf REALTY warm paneled 18x 18 £1 mo. See to appreciate. Sunsblney Sharp Eal.I Owners of this huge S •!n-l?44 CAHHEttYVILLAGE fami,Jy room Kitchen is IJ!I Qual~I Coro.tadelMcr 1222 Open hse J an 15/16. 3br.2ba.bonusrm.Cpts, Condo. 28r, all bltna. Bedroom Greentree 2BdrmbouseinC·Jzone. filled w it h Early Iii Plam ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642·8826 days, 751-31 dprps,fenced.$395. encl. gar Comm. pool Hampton mdl .. are re· S6S,OOO American honey maple ...__...U-)) eves. 968-7146 Close to frwys. No lw ady to move in March LOlgllM Hilts I 050 UDO ISLE cabJOets O~at storal(e ..-• _,..1.s2-1920 S32S 552-4.201 T h is professionally ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Bdrm.+ den: frplc . i in gar. Ideal for the hob· i.ooOUA1ln Nf 'UACM Mee& del Mar-New palnt, --·------- landscaped home w1th4 BR house for sale _hy patios;beamed cell.hv. byast.Rurry,jusllisled! BEACHDuplex.2_18r,l In/out. 4 br. 2 ba.1Wi!4fott 1---.------mountaln view from its owner. 2 BA, family 000 lam.rm. epts. drps . .....,Dir 3242 *RENTALS* Spacl ........ mast"'r bdrm. as room w/wet bar & frplc, i.ngrm. Sl4s. · SPANISH Ba. units. Has S4xl~~ --bltns. frplc, dbl gar, rncd ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BR den ..... c .,..... ... d I f ed ft . tot w /room to bwld d ·-ll lW!O A965 B 3 ba lo .. A • • ••••••••• ....,,, the lowest priced on crpts, 1"1>6. arge enc lfAClf.NDA ooemoreunit. IO%dwn. RENTALS Y .,.pa o . ......,.... 3 r . wo ...... use. 2BR,2i.tba ......... S$0 market! Start the year yanJ. Call 830-4034 for f 1 . $7SOOO Prt VP 1 ,_ ... 3 B 1 Sparkling new cond. 3BR,2ba ........... $400 ll 1 u I pnce , . n FRE.5HL a n...:v r, t4TO. Call .. Lila·•, R b olfrighl-u : app . VAorfHATerms only, pls. Kent Rogen ba, fam. rm wtfrpl. Lg. '84tH37lor846-545eeves. 3BR,F ,2\l:a a .... $4.W Red ~ealtor Beautiful courtyard en· Rlty. 848-8300 ~~ii?u~ 3 c~~!" ~~~f fenced yd. Detached dbl. 3 BR. FR. 2 ba. • • • = ~~~~~~~~~!~~:'! Mi«JIM I 052 try leads t~ 1850 sq. ~t. of COVINGTON BROS. in all amenities lncludlng 2 gValctr wl/w/rPlcl. shopa. NNro. $8700.bomo. 3Hubn\ln2gtboan : :~ }~·3 b~·. '. ·. '. '. '. ·. ~5 ..: •••••••••••••••••••••• gt"acious hvmg. This 4 Anaheim. Century 2l, sun decks, courtyard en· or a at'enUi · ar ur, r . ' Plus approximately ---------1 SELLER Bedrm. 2"'2 Bath has Sparow Investml. Div try, wet bar, lots or doi(s. $395 mo. 546-58&0 hcuul. By owner. 30morelnlrvlne a.allocaffow everything. Including 963-'7866 clasets & storage. Jncls AskforLeslle _846--3409~--------t T11rtlerock 2 + de n MOTIVATED overs ized Mstr. s uite . use of pOOI, tennis crt.· NICE E. Side toe. Nr 3BriBa,upstairi,coodo. lliabt on large Green· REDUCED TO h°:;:11mn~·~~m~~';1,-: Di"'" Pro m 1 1acuui &sauna. Yrly lse schools. newly decor. 4 All elec. W/W cpta, e.nc belt. Gives you the ad· $121,500. clean'g.oven.Alsoanas· s •~1· ~. Br 2 Ba, t1C. ~.No garw/boatsllp.$575mo. •ant.age of a large estate Lovely 4 bdrm bomc. 1 1 t VA I can find it for you. pets. 548-0lll!J CaU Darlene ~3 but Y'O'I don 'l do the up· heated pool. Situated ln a suma ble. ow nteres Beach area speciahst-JASMINE CREEK· S Chris ClawtOD, 835-711111•-------- keep. Lovely in ever· beautiful, private area. HARIOR VIEW loan . Owner wishes Probates, forecl~ures. mos( popular model. College Park ~ Br 2 Ba, forappt. red hill .£ 552-7500 rway-including pnce. Tennis,JQZ. rec. center, M"~O speedysaleat$67.500. Ba.nkruptcies.Dlvon:e. Plan 2 with 2 bedrms & 5440 per r:no mcl grdnr. ---'-"--------iO>llege Park 3 br. 2 ba.. C..llqui~kly! Beach. Buy this s uper "'"'...., • lovestmeotpropettles. den. A bargain at S68S AvaiJFebl,673-5$22 den, din rm, lge kitcll. RedCarpelReallor home & enJov the good 4BR. 2BA. wet bar. Raberts Belowmarketprice. permlh.onyearlylease. . ............... 1244 cul.<fe-sac.5'$0.SSl-312' ....,. ...-.. ' Shows like a model. Pro· .,_ .--.._ •-L In lud u ·t·-3Br, 2 ba, patio, lge yd. ~ ....,....,,_,. life "Cft--. ~er c es a ameru i..... ... Bltm primeloc. $375. No ••••••••••••••••••••••• JB'r. ZBa. fncd yd, grdnr ~~~~~~~~I C:::::CURnSllfWll.EY f'ly. ldscpd. VIEW, -Realty eaumc)673-454S Clu~e. pool JacU%ii, slngles.9S2·736S incl., children. pets OK Beaut dramatic JBr by CO...AUUOAS VIEW, ~~~';60 I 1e41....., •.c. t.eMi5 courts. COLONY M25 mo.~ aft 6PM owner. forced sale. nvr _~_=-_R_· •_:-_ ~_lff-__ '*584_ .......... --.._.._ ._.. ITS Vac..JBr Twnbse. dbl ~cl 3 Bdrm 2ba comm poof .._. ..... Exel Tu.rt.le R-0ek u--i.....-_ y•~ llEACH UM 0 N LARKS p U R •. 2 gar, 2 yn. nu, kids OX, tennis. faniahed gar. c..; • -hacll 3248 -~..... ~ -5 Units, blk. to the ocean bdrm. 2 bath. no pet.a, S33Smo. ~ be ~1......... •u ,.... __,...... Glen. $122.000.,75l-Ol58. DOLLHOUS! 48r, tam rm. 2(rplcs, din in Huntington Beach. one car gar. $375 per ......,.......... mOI& .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• UNIV PK. Vlllaae 111. Open Sat/Sun l·S. 4Br. rm, wet bar·Uke new. VETSSPECIAL '175.000 mth, yearly lease. Very 1 room bachelor tiouae. 833-20t8a.t\Sonrknda. HOMESFORRfHT ,. -•-• 'l 3 Br. pool home. hvy Stanton! end urut. 2050 2ba, view, Ten ..... & swim g. aYat . shake roof. Spanish slue· nic:e. AlJ utJI pd. Sl~. mo. No T ... ltodt.... LAGUNA IE.ACM -.• 3 Br, DR, FR. + 3 newly decorated. 24602 Pricetd to sellA. sekl,ler """f1'iush pn'ced at only -~ T 0 N TR E dogs.MS-6680 ...... ru ' 8r + fam. 3 BDRM. newer hom~ -· Los Serr anos $79,950. mot valed . s g . w • R l G H n.... ' I t d · p t f l ba. 187•950• Owner. $1'0,000. PACIFIC ~.S00.960-338Sagt. BEACH -ON BIG 3BrIBa,S32$.AvaU2/l/. ~moleue.~ oca e 111 or a no 8D-U03or552·9503. ~or831·27008kr. .. --..!.._ Re bll Kida/ ta Laguna. 2 Baths. ~:..::::..::....::::..:.:::.::...--r~~~~~~~~~l REAL ESTATE. Gene --CORO NA BEACU· 1Q PU c. pe LSE $495 gp.c aancbo nreploce, ocean view •-.--------l..!Hll.=l:..:,842-0200::=:..=::._---lotherRedEstah ,.. ..;:;;;:~ B R E A K E R S OK.m-.s7ss San ,Joaquim pentbse. Excellent lam. home <at CWverdaJe. by°""'er UP·1• ....................... :t' zr==ti:t'-DRIVE .. Fabulous View. UIO degree vlc:w. 2Br, $S50Mo. =P~:r~~t fr';,I!: Th~~~r'~!u r 3~r~f::~~':~Y MoMForlt..._Hom11 1100 2on1ftf1id&..N.L 1 bdrm & convertible 0-PoW 3226 deo, 2 ea, luxuey living -·-•-k1•-.. -n. 1' .... b", I tbed al II • P t -646-4463 den. $650 per mth. Year· •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• nr schls. golt & UCI. ........._, ~""' .... .. bedroom, ocean v ew ca r ce mg... ~ •••••••••••u•••••••••• ly lease lmnied Call Pal walking d.latance to priv. home ls within walkl11g clubbse. pool, tennis MobUe ModuJar Home Iii MCYI'EL On Lake. Just re· · Dana Ught Condos. 2 Br, occup. leMi&. swim ml~. park, d.latuce to the beach. cm. Priced for lmmed Build~ Deli er Set· duced. owe at 8% 26 ON 1sr. AVENUE, in old 2 b a • l e o n I s . Fry 83l·N32. & clubboute. 584,950. EnJoy private communi-sale by ownr . f19,990. up & Servlc; l.;5.7570 Units + 3 Br. bome. Corona del Mar .. 2 bdrm washer/dryer. etc. klbll ~1911 ty bvtng at $129.500 Prin only. 842-5887 aft 5. roi free est. or 1~0 Pool. Bkr. 963·7866 unit w /garage, laundry S:JU/$.125. 4~ Agent . WOOO•IDCN BESTBUYlnBigCaQ)'on SELF CONT'D, Sx2S. full MINI Wa.rehouse. _New. facilities & refrig. S4 Tennis, Swlm'c. pvt ~condo bl ownr. 3 br. M1.a8t sell. fl35,000. Plan bath, just refinished in-Gd. location. 616 units for per mtb. Yearly lenae. comm. 2 Br 2 Ba condo. ~ lftft 2..., ba, 2400 sq n. View. 3 Monarch Bay Plaza l1 Broadmoor hb1~. 4 Br .. ,de "ht up with awning Sl,333,000. Bltr. 963·7866 ON BEGONIA CORONA DtW. wshr/dryr, S31S. •m;. I k 211!r Ba, nr 7th F1urway. " ·.xi 8311618 ~=======~~ library. 2 car. nt a e. Laauna Nl~uel 71~1837 for 91~. By $1900. SCB-6173 SNOW is here! Big Bear. DEL MAR. CharmJng --·-------1-Sl25,SOO. Eves, C2 t3) .119.1.71 12 Ill 0136 .,. bdrm o I t N n.....mauc 3 Br never oc ~398'1 .. -..., • Owner Beuutlful 10x42' large l~ased laundromat, or-on c mer o .. r.wt• f..a-3234 ., ... , • ~~~------~~~~~~~~~·-----....,---0-0-1 bedrm ba liv rm Adult f1ce, 2 apts. Income $755. pets or children.1350 pe ••••••••••;::]••••••••• cup. Exchaive Turtle -SEAVJEW BY BR A · · · • ~ 500 month. Rock Glen. $800. Call •----1041 ~vt-1.. 1067 MOOR Bund new 2 pk.Nopcts.Renlal sp~ · 3BDRM.l~Ba.Prestt,e 7$1-0158. ~=•••••••••• ........ ::~•••••••••• 5torY 4br. 3bA by ownr. mo. FUm. Cash $8500. COLEOFMEWPOIT area. $400 mo. Agt. ---------1 2 BDRM. HOME. lg1" sundeck w /ocean view. Uv. rm. with fireplac('. W /W carpet thruoul. Kitchen W/range &oven. $42$Mo. C BDRM .• 3 BATH. Good ocean view. Liv. rm w/f1replace. Btll·1n kitchen. Fenced yard S:100 Mo. MISSION REALTY PHOME 494-0731 Nt"W Castille. 3 8R. lots of Sale or lse W/QPtlon lo Ans5erv673..m7 REALTORS 962-44'11, 546-8103 Woo4bridge Madison I uplradu, '-'lt'w Im b"Y.640-0696 Mobile Home for s ale. 2Sl5E CstHwy,CdM. super 3 br. upgraded, Leg.GHHlt 3 250 0..-nr. Wh ~~water, Bil( mediate oct"upatH'Y Over 1700 sq. ft. Pnme ... •w 675-551 I tlwl .. •leact. 3240 ~~~ti~·::~ea ..................... .. C~ View. Neares,t Owner/AR\. Ph· 586 3Br. 289. RU!Uc lg. tam loc a t100 . 581 ·28 18, HUGE.....-••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br house. Immaculate hM 2dlrtct100.ls600 . sf'ter6PM. &hvrms,d1nTm,c1tm 768-4420. IoCostaltfesa.Onlyone2 Bedrooms, large open 3br,(gefam.rrn. l ~ba,COLLEGE PARK·4Br Close to shops. Gooll F\1.11 lnll.h of hse races ------avail. Lots oflawn, bllns, beamed living room, frplc:, $340. mo. Mlle t near new. dep. & refs re neighborhood. $350/lsc vlo w . A 11 r ooms FAMILY DELIGHT ~ttch, pool & guest hse. Cu u•rclal aprnklrs. p e rf. loc:. large family or dining be. b Huntlna&on Con· quired.640-0074 494·0122 wti.Uwater.,3 br. 2'~ ba Speelal In every way! immac cond. Upper Pwoperly 1600 Owner asking $137.000. room. dishwasher tic Uoental Twnhme Ne>N . a--------d- M1ny xtru. + buildable 2·SlorY family oriented Back Bay area. $110,000. ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• or make offer. Income bulll·lns. fireplace. cpt'I ac paint tbruout. TURTLE ROCK Gle n, ~~w ~~ndod upgra tedj lot llelll door toward home with 5 sp11cious 645-2545 $805 mo Was her & dryer In-C •II A t L r Plan U 4 br fam rm r. a. en, cen ra ocean w /same view. bdrms., 3 blllhs, formal klbll · SOUrn COAST eluded. Good loc:atlon. .J...,1 in • a r Y Tenn. & ~. area. Avl. all', view, clb house tac Unobatructable view. dlnln~. 2 frptcs .. coty INVESTMENT ~-month. 640-11358 • 2 / l • J o 2 5 w/pool, MOO mo. 49S-51Sll SJ38.SOO. 494-0508 or family rm .• g;irden LIDOISU 645-1103 KU N,T l NOT 0 N 5'7-7°'4/833-3215 ~----- 48'f.18l5forappt. kitchen & a dellghtlul, 123 Vlcz..4ch ~· lftft L.:;!:c:~a~::a::,P~':_ HARBOUR A~EA, 3BR AVAILABLE 3 Br 2 Ba.~ Lc9MHIC)Ulf 3252 Top Of The World. 4 spacious ynrd with Unique & unusuial 1-.;. 2-4rLEXESH.I. ~le, gar & ynrd. Xlnt Z BA w/hf.e .(•~lly (pie's, sngl fam home, ...................... . • ~."'10"1 br'• W/2 ba. handsome covered paUo. w/brick. stained alass, Old t good et eet •"""/ 0 Ph rootn. nre ce, Near ..... 5 6'1"' "'...,l Dollhouse. 4Br. 2bo , "" .. Amusltoseeul'l95.000 Mexican tile, hardwood $65,00o C·l Proporty. own arn. q str ·..,.,., m · 1cboOl1 S4 /mo. 18152 .. , · .._ view newly decorated !1~~;, 1:e~uP~!a'!! Pt!lC floors, many ~re ~·.c()Stas Meu ~~· ~::·~3~~8M'~r 6.11-1400Agt. Melod,r. CALL TOBIN Attractive\)' decorated 2 $42S/m o. 495 ·4653. view. Wrought iron ent ~· t:P& amenities. 2 br. formal AskforNancy nt 5.111-264-4 Super 2 Br. playrm. REALTY 846-1371 ... WE BRCoodo,2ba. R1ncho 831·21008kr. w/Uled Foyer, Rraclous · ~~ din.rm. $128,000. Ownt 968-3301 days; or home Priv. paUo. Ocean ALSO HAVE Olber PIO· San Joaquin, nr pool back paUo overlookl~ ..... __ ,,.,,. u 673·2006 eves 963"'888 1 _.... £--. ..,_,_ .. 200 view! $650 Mo. Agt . pert.le& for rent. Homea, area. J!olf coarse. tennis 2Br.2ba West Nine Condo a.: --•·-1 .... '"""' ~.._. ~ ..., 840-7000 Apta.&Condoa club.~· mo. Shown by Avail lmmea. Submit L.B. • Cll'4WJ• sla · •-res•11lt 1076 .__ ..__ -. 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l40-l'l12 hlJd/ t 1375 Pvt. Pty Call c11c> .---"°'""' E A 4 Rr coodo. •uper clean. apPt. c F r us·T ... VIT ... U e•5·43IO 9.5 OT (7l•l ... ..,......_. 1069 .............................................. ON KAT LL -near 1 ._ ._ ._ _,.UJ2eves:Aslt for Bill ••••••••••••••••••••••• Builders special. 2 Ad.la· C 11 br r\. C . G .• C · 2 OCEAH VllW cpta. drps. lat. ast & uBrand New 3 BR. 2 bo, Rtaffor 4,9•2241 cenl marina. oc:esn view U itsl U it I 1yox100. '\O stores eac:h A bullder-owned home dep. $350. 9'79·1888 f1m-rm.. cf1)t, frptc . fed. --------TRAD=:;::E:;/S;;E;;LL-;-::43:M::eq:w:-.I 1--------•l lots In area or largo R • n $. sade -$54,llOO ' with over 3800 sq. rt .. tn 3Br. 2 ba. cpt.s, drpg, $SO(). mo. 798-0547 SIA TYIACI '1 M.l·A J>l'Opertf near PR.IV ATE ISLAND custom home $81 ,000. 4 Pl.EXES LJOO ISLE -113 Via CdM. Separate enter· bltns. new paint, cln. Nu ex~ 3Br, 2Ba hme, to TOWHHOUSE ~ ol i.aiuna Beach 30' BOAT SLIP X1Dt terms. ~~eJ8£~c8ttS1:'i.~i.a tal.ot,ng area with lge. S 3 '1 5 . 8 4 1 • 2 1 6 O . excluaive WOOdbrldfle. Super oceoJ\ view 2 Br. 11'19 lonly lBR bome "'' N.....,LYC Bdrm Llabra -ioov200 C·2 ram1ly rm .. frplc. & tveatwknd• lake for boat'g/rirh'g l\o\ Bii Pvt community lrl yd.. may be Wied for """ • .. modern ~ltcben. A areal ... la J nl ..... 10 1• _, atnice butlneu or tSCOLLINSJSLAND AMCMOU.. Sl!l&.500. axetutlve home with ABSOLUTELY Spotle1a. ,_., poo • acu • .. tennis couru. poo , HsJd•n~. "Z" Rltr Tradels/orl'inance IMYISTMINTS SILVERADO CANYON ~.Sl.200Permo,ycar· charmln&. 3 br, 2 ba. 6op.(7t~>-2710 Jacuul. ~ l308.000 -49x 100. $7,950. 1 ~ aso. near scbooll l uhopp{ng. 1\utlef'Oek Glen Plan 4, CUR.!!I!.~ ---------1 mmo 658-8723 1114) 496-17&1 Acres -Arch Beac:h HU. rcmlal1 avail. In Pvt courtyard entry .sbr, 3 car aa.r. pool, ten· ~~.....,.. • ~~~ ... ~--~~~~~~~~~~~~1==;:.=;~~=;:~;=~1 -Laguna -wh.lt&w1ter CdM ..,. Newport Beach. Showl Ute a model. '3711 n13 . S7'9$. mo.t40-1044. .. /Ol an ~·1 hl EC.TAT~ ' ' \I •11• LOCATION Few abort biles to tennl1 C'Ourls with co un M-vtJoped acre1 btblnd a prtv1w patto. Ckn & city ... 1 Bdrms. ltn,500 M.lTFFS • Elegant 4Br, 3Ra. den, fam rm, ownr 840-8717. 752AW6 LOVELY 5'AMISHHMa Coomer lot. 4Br. 380. by ownr, o.1UiOUlJ 1140,500. 842·16'f SPYOLASSHILL lll'andnewJBr2 Be. P'R, DR. By0wner.64CMlS\ lllA THT AICIMe vu -$119,500. QW.ntard c.11 Barbara or carol. mo. m.2038 or 11 N8.aa&6 --------1 View from this pam· ~ty~ BAY le BEACH MustukforCam. Terrac& 2 br. 2 ba, up• .. ..._ VMfo 3267 .....--c .. -auty. a Br. 2 ba, REALTY 75t~l 0 ~aded 'Cardiff. Av all. •••,•••••••••••••n•••• .,.,. ~ "" Sacrmre 2 choice lot1. 2 sroih $31$11sooitess2 1750 Sq n. Formal din P•cirtc View Aiktna b ., .,_' .. ~h. 'JP""'I l>. 1. No pel.$. $400. Brand ncw4ftr. !''am Rm. rm .. nchly paoelod dl'n. f botb S48-80M r. • .,. near '? • h vv · M0-0 cpta d.rp1 patios sutc men lcurt:d grovuds 5'50 or . . *Charmin& small l 8r. 0\1lnl free t~n me, . sprnklrs • $3'76 Ownr w/aecludcd courtyard RHl&tett. frJ>IC/palLo. Ulll pd. $295. WaUr to '"~101 4r 3 ·FRWYS CLOSE. now ctlleollect 213.377-4628 8%VAterm11con11idtre1d l.S UNITS. Costa Mesa. lbchan!p 2100 Nope~ 833·89'74 1choo1J. 979· or II 2br. 2b.a, comm. l>OQI ........ ______ _ N~llft!!lgat$:9l,OOO Xlnt t'ond 92 br, 2 ba, ....................... 8411·8866 mu1l aak fot Jac .. tonnit,S375.833-0la8 He~t .. odt 326' IStTHA H&e!JV 6-lbC'. Inc 1.16.800. Pnc" 2 houses on lot. Bulboo The f1u11.est draw In the Clam. OMENTREE4 Jlr 2 8a, .-.................... . llALTO&S $320,000 l'rln only Penln. S37 ,SOO cQulty West. .a DaUy ruo Pab. adlt 2br, 2ba condo. fple. •(am rm. clbet lo 3 tlR, den. dlnana. f1m 2l5DelMar,SanClem. please. Ownr /All Prl11 only, ownar. Claaattled Ad. Phou. a.c. uea. ~mt beach. acboob. no pets. Lae. rm,2 tpl,pool.$4'15 4Ho.4 t 2 I 642-9666 &M-008'1 ~ves 842 5618. Oar. $300. &40-~ WO Incl 1r<lnr. 64s.-8'f.!!_. 6'7MMW 873·8100 t; I i 8J• DAILY PILOT Tuosd1y. Janu11 I 1 1m Apartmonh u.funa. A,pcriMHh ~ Apwtmetih ~ Offlu Re..+all 4400 ~ ... Trwt • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • h.d&istri al • entcd 4 5 0 0 D"4i !I 0 JI Cotto~ 3124 Coda Meto ll24 ,...wport hoch 1169 •••••••••••••••••••••n ••••••••••••••••••••••• H,eHa Unfumi.a.d COftdoftllah•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ttlll'd .,......hUntwe. 3425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• •• ••• •• •• ••• •••• • •• ••• ••• ••••• • ••• • • •• •• •• ••• • •• ••• • • •• • • •• • • • • • • 4..000 S I"" l& per S t' lOP M-rf l•-h l "6 • •••• • •• • • • • • •• • • •• • • • • ....... __ l•l .... d 3806 I ·--,.--.. -,. -· PARk MIWrORT con<. many um{'nJt1to1< •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l)\~tCP..lhll"f;T~·l4l7 SICOHD TlUST DllDLOAN5 $10,000 mulmum Com· l'flUllvt• r1ttes for good crt-dit uvpllcanlll. II ARD T 0 FIN Sprt1n.d out ~ ~r . rl'· 3 BR .~ bll .101t10. upper ArARTMBffS .:t,~.-i--1.i 5a----4550 Elllilblu!f f:xec" hom\' decn d wshr. dryr. <>tv. duplex Ste"'-to twoc:h l or28edroomi:.and ~:-:.., .... _,. <tbr, 2hn. fnm rm So di.hwahr Pool11. lflnllli. Adults. v;i;rly leuat•. Tl>wnhouset1 '%,.... ....,~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• wnter N<'w crplll. drps c rt 11 • PI a 'I" r n ti ~· $4:'!0 Month. 673.7849 A Winning comblnotton From $2411 SO .,_ -_.,... StoroQt GanMJH MORIHS UAL TY •494-1057 • 1111int Walk lo schooli1 J:W11mo owner 536·5837 of odull oportmenl homes Oven 9·6 Otilly ., ...,. -"'" -..-12JC24 · Ntlw a&. Sp11cea l>hOP1>. l f'nniir. c lut> or968-0779 A11t .oo(t>e. ~luxt< 1 l>r a"\ vll Th~ Sp11·PoolsTennl11 .I'....,.."°"'.,. Available 2140 N\'w•"'r1 " wllh luxury oppojn1men1s and ,.... 1750/mo L :.e Rl'fs W'.,-'DBRIDG"' • c (ir11ncl Can1tl. Little Acron from Jo'u~h1on Blvd CM. Cull ~.74lT G40-6775or645~0 vv .,.,mw on &lboti lslsnd $."!7$ Yrly superl>recreollonoropremlum lsh:ind at Jumboret1 on nr~~l LOANS9°' ---------1 do. n·nt or lcmsc, 2 Br 2 lease: Call 11 rtcr spm IOcOtlon Tennis • gym • lheropy Sun Jooqwn ltills Road. ---------/0 11\I Hm11. Carmel 3 B 81. uparadcd thruout 67HOH8 spo • SWlmmtna • Ollllords · 17 I 4J 644-1900 •l MO FREE RENT• Abo 2ttdTD Lemit t FR. nr p11rk & school CI06e to lske. 2 car iiur. -o &T 8,.,. 0 -1·2·3 Rm offices from lllslMSt/ln•Ht / FuireatT~rm11lnCA1l~ SMOmo 7S2.0fil7 ~per mo Btwn 5 & 7 IGl>ooPtttlnsulo 3807 ne WO ""'rooms. neBoth ~ •DIWXl• $12S per mo Auj a..-• .. ...,.._~Co. l'M 67• 11117 (i},fo.r-oorm-.;;o.....•"30. ~ ~ Vi1sKi. _ rm-~ ...... ---"' • •••••••••••••••• ••••••• ....,.....;.. ti -.. ,.,,_._.,.~ii"""' ~· Eiu>lblurr 3 br. 2 bn Alrport..-r Hott'!. Nu le11:111 •••••••••••••••••••••• • 642-J 171 545-061 t Blulb I level 3 Btt, 2 bu T w1lhou $210 mo Nlc" I Rr nesp IA111stl Incl 11puc ma1>ter rtlCl. 8.13 ~Zl Til noon ~' Lovely greenbelt & pool 0u_._--~~&.-d 35.,5 permantlnt udlls no i550Poulorlno Ave .. Co110 Mno 751·8995 1 J •· dbl -~-u. S"'VE$$ $4911Af(tM4·1133 n.-wi-' O' n . A. --·-.. ., .su1 e. <1n rm "' 60-PIERS~FT -,......,_,...,y 5005 ~ ----••••••••••••••••••••••• pet!<. I G..,.......ay ve. ========~~~=====-====-ll garage Auto d oo1 ,., w~ "'FF NB ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pnva~e anywlUbu.y •HOWAVAIL.• 8RANONEW3Br 2~~811. Ball>0ni.>cntn CottoM--38l""~on .. ochll40 O(lener &vatl Pool & wl7 ...,,.,LI . C _,_. _ _. 1 1 yo T D&U~T3 ....... .. ....,.. rt."0reut1on ~r"". '"dull" AGT. S41-:I032 Oft>n••nftCJ a Ut ur · · · THE BLUFJo"S, $500 lo fplc. ~,ml from l>ol'll"ney Near water St75 Ulll ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 011·lv Nopei.;' f;0 "r'>.,,.~ Ov er SOO Ad1ve lot' al Allnounc._llh/ $195 per month St. Och & Dun a Wharf paid. Stv/refng. Fee Adult i bedroom beam New JU)( 2 br. I l>a. bltM. ~ 865 Amlg. os w";y.,.,.,., 150 I WesfcUff Dr. bus h:stin.:~. Please l'llll Pet"SOMl1s/ BIG CANYON . $750 t $450 per m<t G34 8282. Main Rcn\::ili;. 540·5370 ceiling no "'"ls 1200 5'"' !i275 mo J br. 2ba. ~""'s. or s•op by tor t~ 111(0 """"" M E .. ~ uo ""'' Manaaed by New""rt Financlnl Ctr • •"" · ~t Is~_... .,..., per month 8-5P . !WH012 v11 ~ ia.och ll 1 W Wilson inq apu; ch Id I s m I> el 0 K "" ""' All categoru's •· ty""s .._ ........_~ I Granada M"mt Co. •-'-Office Spoca "' "" ••••••••••••••••••••••• HASTINGS & CO. . •~ 1·826·6916 .. .._....., .. We guorante~ lo Pleasl! Re 11 G4(). WOOOSTREAM 3 br + ••••••••••••••••••••••• CallonSltc Manager you Anltounc..,.fth 5100 •ors bonus.2ha l yr.oldmdl 3 er. ~ean view. frplc .... wTowahouses I Ur ... $215 & 2 Br .. $2~. IAYFIOMTHOME 17141642·31Uext246 751-3741 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lliR C.:i n)•on 2 Br Twnhse Back Bay Cpts. drps. Near everything $37$. lr1st1.1nt move-m. 2 BR. Ul1 I pd. 2 blkJ bt'h. SCRAM-LETS Fantastic view Will de ~n1sl,,. 14 25 645·9543. No""t.s.•9J.A900Ron IL b th d Dshwhr/displ , c pls. 4BR.4bo $2000Moyrly I! You Noecl A. Stuffed & UN ITl<.:DBUSINESS .....,.. .,.. ..-.. ., 1.,.. a · patios. air. e· STEPS TO l!ACH Furnished Ortlce. call INVESTMENTS ('()rate to suit. P vt comm eoro..ockf Mar 3822 luxe. adults. S21!0/mo. _d_rps.:....:.....:..536_:._·.:..36.:..l:...:.l_. ____ THE Ex EC UT 1 v E tS25 Mesa Vt>l'de Dr E ~.mo &42-0346 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I 919 An ah e i m St NEW 1.2 & 3 er. apts. 3 BR. 2 ba., unf. $i12S SUITE. Rc:nt includes <across from Kona Lns l ANSWERS "--Ill Fu I ... _d ~4141 Mgr Dave 3 BR. 2 ba . unt. $400 >BT.2baw1fencedpat1os.-..-·-' m1.... ---------•l.i_.. ___ . __ . __ . __ I Various H.B. locations. (/Ume rccept,, phone & Sultel06.CostaMesa Twenty-Mange - 8-t locallon. SSOO/mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Klds OK. Rents t225 to mall s ervice. utll & um 0pen7days Pause -P°rf.lln - Al-1400 !\Jrt lc6oa Island 3706 r6' ""v 2 BR. cpt. drps. Kids OK. $350. Kent Rogers Rily. janitorial Secy'.s & ofr .,,... "' $8000 G PAV ME TS ••••••••••••••••••••••• '[) No pets. S200mo. &18-.8300 equip av oil. Newport .-,..,_. • r Thereasooseat bells are KSPECIALLY LARGE Yearly. 2br. furn. $325 ,. ~ 548-0483 ---------1 Center.640·5470 Franchise type store. Installed In cars Is to 4 Br + Oen. Front vie mo. No children or pets. 3600 Sq. ft Seats 160. keep people alive until ofwater.boats&closet 873-5009 -Z BR Garden apt Frplc. •OLIVEPARIC• Prime location in Hun1 Growth area Try they make their la&t ~verythinit' $S75/mo •---------CORONADELMAK <tshwshr,pool,pvt.patio, ... PTHOMES ington Beach ol'I $15,000.down.Agt. PAYMENTS. Agt631·1400 IQl)ooPettin .... a 3707 2 Br Townhouse. frplr nr. Irvine Ind Area A OCEAN VU. yrly 2 Br l Brookhurst. 800 square UBI 751·3741 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pool. tennis. Some oeean 557.2341 Nu 2 & 3 Bdrrn .. blt·ins, Ba dplx. patio & yard. feet. Single. garden lYPC? Lott Ir FcMlnd 5100 w .. tchff beaut. 3 br: 2 bu, 2 Br. 2 Ba. incl ulll. Nr & Catalina views. Close cpts, drps. encl. gar .. all $350 ·mo. 644·6180 or st.ore or ornce Good ex· Cutlery & Girt Store 1n ••••••••••••••••••••••• g:hl. sphaotksS4. 50M 1164r61~23e8r9 beach. $325. HLS w .. Bal. toshoppmg & fine beach Adult E-Side 1~ br apts nu. (7141 847-7566. lOam· 642·3639 posure. assigned park· CdM. 3425 E. coast Hwy, LOST, Sm. brown Poodle. . . Blvd 1162.0505. Winte r 644-2611 Encl gar. patio, pool 5pm. 7dys. ----------mg. Call Mr Plummer $3000. + Inventory. name .. Coco", Reward. S.US . 2 br TH. Pool rent i---------• Like nt:w , no pet s . Surf&sand.2br$340.Util 96.1-6767 673-8033 llunt'g Harb.840-l•l9 644~8 pd Kids /sngls Fee. Singles ok. Fee. Nea r ocean $140. Util ----$175. 2 br. pool Garage Main llentals M0-5370 DELUXE OFRCES Main Rental:;. 540-5370 paid. Fee EMJOY 1977 New Twnhse Apt Frplc, K1dsok. Fee Comm! & indstl spaces, BOUTIQUE Lost. Dec. 30, altered Prime Newport location, male Beagle, choke Irvine Co. lse. Ready t chain. Vic CdM beaches. go muslsee. tl0.000 +In· Ans's t o "Eagle". ventory. 640·1232 days. Reward fo r retura HARBOR VIEW 5 Br. Main Rentals. !>40·5370 In lhis exciting new apt.~ pool. Jacuu1. 2br. H~ba. Main Rentals. M0-5370 2 Br. H'I ba towt1house 200 to 2000 sq. f\. As low ba,onpark.nrpool,huge Spacious 2 bdrm . 2 patio & balcony. gar Near beach. 1 br $160. style. Adults, no pets. as~sq.ft.LagNiguel & yanf. $795. 640.9256. BAY /BEACH/PIER b<llhs .. frplc . Deep brown w/washer , dryer hookup_ Child olc. Fee $235. 548·2682 Mission Viejo areas. ---------• Patio 1 br 1325 Util pd carpeting. Modern 11unny Adults. $375. lOam·Gpm, Main Rentals. 54().5370 3 br. 2 ba. spacious upper Handy to S.D. Frwy 644· 17SS eves 714 /613·2352 · Om frnt at Wesl 9th. 48r, 3 03 E Edge waler kitchen. Lgc. pri vatl" 646-20lO huge master br, deck Call: 83H400 2Ba. dbl gar, yr lse, S9 i.g?J.2866 sundt?<'k Surprising view 2Br w/gar $215 Nu cpts Hunt Hrbr area. Btfl lux gar, nr ocean. $425. 491 l&inpn S2500 +Net Reward. Off wh\ shaggy mo 645-9336 Meta l 724 of Newport Hills & just water pd 1575 .. c··· aptw/bllnsincldshwshr. RiverRd.673.8701 CdM 390 to1050sqft.Cpts, Freestandingcornerl~. dog, med size. Loet on l ' blk t l> h & • Lovely pool w /btfl'y drps. A t C, janitor , Originalownerof 7yeara New Years Eve, Harbor IA Y FRONT CONDO FOR LEASE 2&, 28a. decorated, s lip •vail. '60CI unfurn-$750 furn. &12·2800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ s. 0 eac Orange. Ph btwn 1·5 · park'g.Masters673-4LZO needsrest.Thisoneha View llillsarea.644-5859 $40.00 WIBC & UP shops. Adults only. no f131>.4120 lndscpd crtyal'd. Adlts. 3 Br. 2 ba. new paint Studi •-RA pets please. $425 Mu.. 1714>846·1755· crpts, ~ blk bay & bch OFFICE SPACE. N.B. itall.Agt. 751 37 .. 1 LOST:. REWARD For • o"' l B pts tease BAY MEADOWS •A"" yrly lse "AA t 103 UBI .., •TV & Maid Serv Avail Spac. cheery & cozy 2 Br 4 Hr t ~ Ba. bch t_wnhse, '""" ·.,........ 1649 Westcliff Dr. Air, • 'Thomas, male Siamese ,.. •PhoneServ, Htd pool (f). -~de/ ul{m, apts. encl gar. close tc new cpts, pvt pallo. ten-4 Br&den. 2 ba, sun deck pvt. toilet, etc. Two units MANUFACTURING Seal Point1 d isappeared 2376 Newport Blvd. CM {!>Of ~· beach & college, Avail n 1 s . S295. 963·2532; steps ~o bch. Free cab! 400 sq. ft. ea. S200Jmo·no Patented (tern at Olympic Dr. & In 548·9755or645-3967 .. ~ Feb. 1st. No kids or pets 536-1461 1V. ~ yrly. 645-4166. xtras One unit 1300 sq. l U1\ique piece or equip terior Ln. H.B. Jan 4 Harbor View Monaco. 3 rt. 2 toilet s. as is. . 963·7623 Br2Ba,adulls SSSOmo. SUSCASITAS 67.J-8494 -Fr S220.646·-0073 Steps to Beach & Back S400/mo. P 1\C I F I C m e nt proJectcd neti--------- 644·4211 or&-14·1666 Minutes lo NB. 1 BR Beautiful brand new 2 br Bay, volleyball, jacuzzi, 3876 REAL f:STATE. Gene S280.000 this yr. Present L 0 ST : f' . M i n 1 furn. Adults. no pe ts. Deluxe 4 !Jr , 3 ba, all elec, 1 ba. Beamed ceilings, pool, l Br condo + ~orm Hill, 1142-0200 owner unable lo handle. Schna uzer. gray, Nr H V Lovely J br. 2 ba. 2J IONewportBlvd.CM. dbl garage. Ocean view free stand'g frplc, bltns. dl!'e· Call ror more mro. Can be r e located . Oso, M .V , 830-%754 :aa~e~~~.~5~~e:esm. ----=-------• ~/mo.673-6992. Many windows. $295. M1ke847·6010 Al~~~~-r':~~.' ~~~~2T~ biaeragew/29?51~3741 _R_E_W __ A_R_D _____ _ 1 BR Furn $206 Zbr. bltns. frplc, pool, 645-8256. g-rg.3375 8 NEW Units, l br $215 up. ~/mo. Doyle 548-0479 FOUND : Sm . gray Luxury spill level condo. 2 Lots or bltns. pool. walk patio, .sundeck. $295 New. Eastside. 2 BR. 1.,., Encl gar. 7911 Stark. oH •TRAVEL AGENCY• Schnauzer. M. vie. Holt Br 2 Ba. 2 car ..:ar, vault to shoppina. \."J mi beach. Adults. no pets 673.1418 ba .. frpl. prlv rear .vard. Beach. 894·5158 3878 Exec olc suites overlook· Gross $1.000,000 + real btWn 4th &, 17lb, Tustin. ed ceilgs. wetbar, gas . .., lng fabulous Np Harbor money maker. highest 838-0646eves. logs, run rec lacil. tenni•. 931W.19;~"S-04t.92 ~ ~ds. !:,~07m000$3n61.gOhtsA~~;, 0~~7ys Tired of tired apts? Try a Br condo. 2 Ba. fp, d /w, &, lhe PacHic Ocean. Lux commissions, no re. FOUND r 1 d ed pool. etc. \'iew. S475. ......, ""'. · .....::· JH newly decorated condo. 4 disP<>Sal, gar. avail now. urn incf'g secretary & l'eivables. xlnl location. . ema e og r · M.S-8277 2 & 3 UR apts available. E-Side new deluxe Br, dshwsh.r, wshr/dryr 833·0983 reeepl, from $385. No lse. SIOS.000. 29'h> down. dish color. small amount J Br 2 Ba, mmi view, out-S~'.0. Bachelor 4·plcx. .depetsonly Availnow Singles o k . Beach· S600 Agt 6'1 2.4603 comber.rceS15.631·2011 645·9950 I d meld. Tennis crts. pools, PH: (714) 675-4030. Agnt 558·8534 of blk on back. Approx 20 mme 1ate occupancy. townhouses. Frplc. encl & playgrnds. S350/mo. nh ftlrnlshed · lbs. <Springdale near S340·$495permonth.Xlnt gar. 2 br & 3 br. 2 bu o 536 5837 orUnfarn.lth•d 3900 Ground Floor &/or 2nd SUPPLY SALES Westminister) 8117·1840 location. Close to shops & from $325. 642-1603 w n er · 0 r floor. Next to Sec. Pac 7 o-."" beach. Ask ror Ml.ssi, 968--0779Agtno fee. ••••••••••••••••••••••• EZ short hour operation or 51 . .,...,., Nal'I Bank. lnclds util. --------- 2 Br condo. cpLo;. dtp!I. nr Hoag Hosp., 1st, last & dep. S350 mo. 979-7888 675-2311. 3 Br. l ba. luxury twnhse L.ge 3 br, 2 ba, '{rplc, bltns, THE EXCITING Ample prkng. 188 E. 17th can prove $25.000+ + FOUND longhaired blk & I ldnn Trfr New shag & kit appl balcony. encl. guraKe. PALM MESA 4PTS. St, Costa Mesa. Ph: net. This one for real. wht cat. Wht collar. at· ~~~os~~?~~&;;~tE~ -THEIASILLEAF ~'j'i~;~s~:~;:~~fc. ~~;1 ~~~~-$335 · MINUTa~lONPT ~-421o. ~~:rorappt.~~·~·3~~i ~h~~i~~H.~~Jt~~~ 16lhSl .. C.M.642·t.265 Newly redecorat ed 2 . Bach,1&2BR. NrMarinersMile Eastbluff Condo Twnhse.I•--------bdrm. I ba apt. Pool. Sl8S. 2 br tn-plex. Yard. Ocean view 3 br. 2 ba, from $195. IEERTAV C.M. FOliND: Samoyed near JBr. 2•-, ba. patio. frplc ....... 1..._. .. -... 3740 Near beach. Adults. $300 0 Ider c PI Pref· garage. Avail. MO. $33.5. AduJt.s. No Pets SNtEWPO&~TnBESuA~H Netsover$2000. Mo. Heil & Newland 12/30. nr pool. 1495. 640.0633 ,... '"'I"°" -.. mo Beachcomber• fee $15. 5364508· 846-9088 1561 M~sa Or. ores vi ce •les Ideal location, parking Call 842-6034. ••••••••••••••••••••••• · 6J l 3190 631·2011 · • (S Blks East of Newport From $300 26lOAvon St front & rear. fuli kitchen ~ . _ ~stblulf hmc. lsc or rl'nt SMALL BEACH HOTEL • 1&2 BR, NEW /DELUXE Blvd.) 642·1194 &675·6Ul6 not reallzatlon oC Cull FOUND: Ladies watch. J br, &den, $60().1mmac, RoomsS30wk. •Or. 10a. w/guest rm & ALL $295 MO. Huxe pvt pat.los/adults. 546·9660 Free office space in ex· potential. owner a nx-Npt Bch '?n 46lh St. Call rompare!759·<W48. AptsS130/mo.636-70S6 bath, nr bch. s hoppi·ng. Brandnewtownhouscs.2 Hunttnglon Harbour ious! · to 1dent1fy. 549-09'1S . ., 1· B I change for telephone 1370 mo. Is~ 67S·150l ur. '2 a. nstant move-area. apts, in Laguna. steps AGT 837 eves. Lovely Exec 3 br. 3 ba. & LocJ-aleodt 3748 1n. Pets & infants ok. 16885Lynn 846·3Ml from beach. Walk to answering&Ugbttyping --------- poof hme. Cliff Dr. l600. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~w 2 br. l ba. frpk. Fenced patios. encl vlUage. l Br: $295 unf, 644-G883ot645·6710 TENNIS AHYOHE' FOW1d: Young male Irish mo 67S· 1617 eve or Sun & swim. $195. Util. bltns. garaRe. Adults, no garage, dishwashers, air BLOCK TO BEACH $325 furn. 2 Br: $360 unf, Modem 2 room suite. nr MJSSION VIEJO· Setter. Brown leather t 7'84·0Ml day. paid. Ft1! P8U. $350. 640-1640 cond. 1922 Meyer St. See 2·1 bdrms $185. 1·2 bdrms $ 3 9 5 r urn . Ca 11 oc Airport outside en. Pr a ct ice machine , ~~~Irvine Ave, CM. l::XCITiNG--Main Rentnli1. 54-0-5~ mgr. or call 642-6612 $22.S. Access to pool. 220 714-623·3827 an 4:30. try, uir cond, Parking I es son s , r e pa t r , --------- l::XE<..: RENTALS •-HfUi 1750 THE•""YLl:"-f Huntington St . Mgr R spaces. suitable for at· sportswear. equipment. FOUND, blk Lab puppy. L· bl (( b _,,..... ,..__._ M 1 382"" ~ -SJ6.3Sl9 ooms 4ooo lorney, accountant or ttr t t ' I "' ' VJ r.a:1t u -3 r. 2'll>ll. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .... •a .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• very a ac 1ve erma ma e, 4-... mo .s. c. super b!Hkbay un A.UCIA~A ••••••••••••••••••••••• l & 2 Bdrm. water pd Deluxe 3br 2ba, condo. ROOMS S25 wk up with consultant. Use of law AOT 837· NwptHtsarea.548·2586 obstructed view. Oc-, M . , BeautifuJbrandnewlbr. PromS230 Childrenok.Cptd,drps, ka't'"hen ....... 50 ~k up tollbmra0ry.oPoSr.!'!~lwe./S2ise~.~,e; DElJ-ElTORO LOST·. Sm wbt UaJ•-~ tupancy Peb I S675 Scenic ountain\1ews free stand 'g frplc . Beautiful. spacious new bit Ld I $350 " ..,, " ~ ......,,. ,.. _.,., LellH Large. dlx adult 1&2 d.'lhwshr. many windows. apts. Pool, pvt patios. 8!n~512 ry, PoO • · apts. 548·9755 Campus Drive, NB. Call SS.000. PER MO. dog Lido Isle. Reward. Harbor \'te w Knoll-~m Apt.s. Furn & un· adults, no pets. $235 Adults,nopet.s. Unfurn l g . room 979-0751btwn11·7PM Real sharp, Catering 673·7671or675-4837. Newports newest de-urnp00·1 Jac\l .... i Billiards ~. 979-3376 329/wocado. C. M. Cof!dO, l story. 2 br, $350 /kit h · k ' operation expanding, _1 Cock t· 1 b'""' ~ment w1Cape Cod • .... · 631·3190 mo. Call Kay, 963·0841 w c en pnv. wor mg Cannery Village, space fasl, tremendous polen·""" a ie hu, gray 11r<"bltecture & chiirm. 581-4151 or581-6130 CASA VICTORIA day, 968-9952eve. M/F . $120mo. 839-0965 for office or small busi· lial not yet realized. yellow & .orange, !lays >br. 2...,ba. pvt tennis 25211 Sto<"k port. Lug l & 2 BR. uni or rurn. gas Tnplex. 3Br. I ...,Ba. frplc. . CDM Hideaway ror sngl ness. Approx 150 sqft. terms Ctuco. lost m FV l /8. SlOO rourt & pool Occupancy llHls & wtr pd. Adlts. no pets. sundeck, no pets. $280. Near Pacific Cst Hwy .& person. Cls lo bch, un-67S.2916or646-4801 Agt UBI 837-4200 rewal'd. Call 962·1915. Apnl I $700 Lease Surry, no pets. Pool. rec rm. sec. gate. 4g-r.2237 att 6. Golden W. 3 Br, 2 Ba. dm furn w/frpl. $200. Call Lo t blk/ ht S . 525 V'ct ,, ... 0 ""0 area & fplc, gar incl. ...... _ron"H oc:73·, 615·2311 .......... Rental 4450 FAST.Costa ...... -·o s . w pringer KNOLLPROPERTlES Mewportt.odt 3769 1 onu."'"'"'"' 3Br2Ba,upper.nopets.2 1375.84&--0814 .,..,. ......-.. ....................... 8 "'"'• SpanJelmale.Sun.mom. 640-7462 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Casa de Hermosa ~ok. $265.1027 Valen· R..tabto~ 4300 • .A.a.1 l!.A. EQu~i~~iE' Vic. 19th & Monrovia, Courtosy to brokers IEST IUY 2br apt w/f1'replace, 11• caa. 546-9080; 546-6985 ~-..MA l'°""CH . CM 645·2511 Reward ,~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Owner going into new · Some people say you get bath. range, oven, dis· 2 Br, :! ha. Mesa Verde. *BONUS* Roommate Needed. M/F. RESTAURANT'. business venture. must Lost male Silkie Terrier, S-J.-. wbatyoupayfor'. We or hwa~her, $320. Also 3 br !"IP , d /w. enc gar. Brand nu 4 plex opts. Sharerent$137.50.Nice2 Old Wor~ Char~ with liquidatefast! in AlisoBcharea.Ana.t.o C-.i,.___~ 3271 (ermore !\ndtheprtceol1i fsep.bldg>$370. Adult11. no pets. $275. Appl. cpts. drps, 2 & 3 Br.CM.645-4093Charlle. ocean .v1ew·dln1ng & AGT 837·4200 "Jimmlny ... Reward . ..,.. ...--tus. MemberAl'lip In a tGOW. Wilson 546·1081 bd M · b J cockta ils . Excellent. 499-4792 ••••••••••••••••••••••• u~ulth Club A tenn11 rhms. 0 00ve 1fnffi Y an. Quiet work'g fem want.ed leuet.erms $130 ooo •LIQUORLICENSE• ---------tbr lb.t Condo Clean. club Free tennis lessons l.f(e 3 br, 2 ba townhouse LGE 1 Br. very cln. gnr. 20t • getS-l 0 irstmo. to share 3 br hme. In· ' • · Orange Co. On·Sale LOST : RE W A RD ! w..!3hcr. tk)'t'r PoOI. n. Biiiiard•. Swlmm ina . inqul4:tcomplex.Garage no children or pets. <714>847•7566 lOam·5pm, d i vidual life styl e. General. Samoyed mix, cream. pet.a SZ'iS ot!M·OJlS Golt Driving Rang~. & patio. AduJts only No Quie~. mnture sngl or 7dys. Kitch/Laundry priv. "COCKTALLS." curly tall, yellow eyes, I Snuniu + /ireal ac· pets $32~. 645-3381 or marned cpl only. Refs l165.~2930afU1.am EM.ERGENCYSALE! crooked ear. losl since Cu.-"ltm F.xec 4 Br, 3 RR, ~ c11r aar ranoramlr Vu l(rdnr. no PN& $575. d:l-61:1'1 ()f'4!)3 4109 ~arkllng 2 br. 2 bo. fom rm. renced back yd. jlar l"nn1!( S200 mo .t!I'.! !.nt t II Su "BQ 837·9517 r-uested $200 +cln ree 2 Br Condo newly de New Year's Eve. 642-8766 lvi es· nay u s. ---~... . . c 0 ra t 'ed .· n r"Complfum,avaUimmed, NEWP0°TBCHSTORE MAKEOFFER! or642·7249 Parties with llve bands 2 Br. niC'~ & clean, close to &45·34117. ni ...... ll I B b 0 ---------Free Su d b h Brookhurst/Adams. ce • ..., n oc, rt a. 2630AvonSt.·S270Mo. Harv <2131272·42'&9Col n llY rune · shopping. Adults only. Lge 2 br. 1 ba cottage on Patio & carnnrt, avail $195+ 'h util. 632-1685 Jerry Wyon 1213)477-7701 • REWARD Your -n• dollars go "''·en No peu. ~·8939 E·s1de Costa Mesa. No • .. ~ MEXICAN REST. LOST: White Whippet , .. , on kid:S ir pet . S300 immE'd. 1215 mo. 631·0383 RESP. LADY to shar 700 Sq, Ft. ore. tivl. Pac NET$2000MONTH w /2brindlespota675-3681 furtht'r•••A terrific Large 2 t>r, 1 b11 cottage. 548-sao:i s . eves. ' home for lite duties. Cst. Hwy. Newport Bch. Free standing bldg or6J8.6427 nuuntc•nancr crew, pro-Encl. garage. East C.M Good offer II you enjo S200 C II R bbl 1----------fe&slonal management Adults only. no pets. LARGE 1 & 3 br apts. NEW 1 br, frplc, beam nlcehome,rreedom.an S48·07~o. a : 0 e wt prknK 011 around. LOSTlsraeliPassport.ls· W....,...ter 329 start that carcsl and $300, 548-S300 Dshwhr, pool. Adults. ce1I, bllns, pool, volley low expenses. Nwpt Bcb. Perr setup .r~r family sued to Yotef carni. tf ••••••••••••••••••••••• frlc dly n I ho Fr ball,gar.S23S.842·6934 642·3481 BalbOa Island; re tail, operall?"· Living qrtrs (oundcalllMI0-1212 llEU.-NEWLANO 3 Br. Mod:is open ed:lly ~~~.Nie~ 1 'br, frplc, Pool, 77Ro~oftl~l~~ft<;.~!c~~: ~Oft commerc or o{(Jc(! attach d. So. Ori? Co. ---- 2 Ba. frpk . D1W. $:175 Sorry, no one under 21 & adults, no pets. S230. mo. tlo.642·5073 HorbOw 3842 Cutdow'9 space. Off.street park Good l e rms. Agent LOST: Poodle, black • 71Hl63-~ or 531 ·9645. no pets Roommate &48-4757or646·3'198 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LivlngExpettses! ing. Approx. 500 sq. fl , 751.1400. whit e. Tag •No . 1\g\ NoFC'<· servlre available. Mon· 2 Br. 1 ba. children and N R Sh e ho 0 pt t prlv. rest room. Rltr l~R~l .... ET"'V 625122.Vic. l.a Esperanie tMo month occupancy. pct ok. Loe nr. So. Cst $330 r . Harbour. JB ar a me r a men 644·2343 Mon to 1-·r1. 9.5 " A • area Sgn Clem. Yellow tto...n Funtilhed °'" Plaza. f17!HS77 28A Triplex. Bef Sam or ~E-Cib.ru l1NuMrra> N • $2000 MONTH collar, yellow bow. Ans Uwfwfti~ 3300 OalcwoodCard•nApta af\6pm.2l3/592·2666 Ule~~~,.. Store $275. 20xti0, ex Newly remodeled beau· t.o"Joni"falthfulcomp1t· •••••••••••••••••u•••• $195. 1 br. rcfrli.t. range, OCEAM t!t~ lJoJ~o1...q J)08ure 65,000 cars daily. ly Busy all the time nlon JO yrs. Pleaae help llACHRINTALS 880 1 1 Ghl enc.gar.E.Bay.Vacant. VIEW °" ............ 2334 Nwpt Blvd. C M Rentonl.yS200mo.Busy find her. Reward rvlne l\tl l Nopet.s/chld.S4l ·~331 Lge,newdlxc~ndo.lbr, Forover Syrs,832·4134 Pkn" frnt/bk, FA h"ut blvd I()(' Terms. Agent 4"""""-" WlNTER SUMMER 1714J~-OMO r dl S " ,-...,..""..., YE R V orm n. tep .dwn liv Roommate, over 2l. t IQIJ 2 r estrms. c1>ld. 75H400. ---------A l. l Sr I Ba. new cpts, adults rm, fpk, jacuzza, tennis, share 281' Zba in C M 67$-'1788 : Lile blue jewelbQx Ptaperty Mana~ement 170018th& <at Dover> no pets. Fncd back yard. 2 patios. Nr boat d~ks. .,40 C 1154·,. ,,.,.10 · · Want lo sell your Busl-containing gold charm BurrWhitcRl•altor <714)642-8170 548·429lor548·SS27 $325. <2131598·171.5 •• · a """"' ..... trialllftltal 4500 ness" Uae my 30 yrs ex· bracelet. Rewar d . ZSIO~~B.~~~vd Oct11n/nmt Garage Apt. 2·11----------.11 Br. 1 68, + rc(rig, also 2 lnhMt 3844 Rbdoommhate to s b 8 ar 100 e •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• pertence 751 l25G Newport vie. 675-8952 Br. I ba. no pet.5. utll pd. liwofOtongeCount(S Br 2 Ba. both w 1W cpl.JI, ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm om~ onJ a a 1600 1q. ft.29$5 84£ Ran· tmn._... LOST· 1/6/77 2 Sml dotl• --------•I Avail now to 6130. $325 moetbeCl'*UiopolTITlent drps, bltns~ tots OK. WOODORJOGE Island start.mg an.11th. dOlph St, C.M. $288. mo. Opportwiffy 50t5 femblkw/wbtemrkftla· U • R tal m<>.64&-~lO communlles.ArelOXklg Reas. 1100 'olock Vic· PINESAPTS StSO mo.+cleaning dep. 646-2130or679·3'109 •••••••••••••••••••u•• M b e a g I e : maue en s STEPS TO Beach. 3 br, 2 MlllngWlttsteoms, tori a. 646-ll095 eves; l. 2 & 3 bdrm units, 675-4074 IOIOS.-.Feet FOR SALi brwn/blk/whtt. 17th I& Nc~1i Sho~esS450/mo ba. W\ntef . $3$0 wotlcfots.ondmojeSftc wkndstosee. Designed like early 2Br dpl.x,pvtbnth,phone, SanlaAn Lnguna8eachMotel Nwpt. CM. Reward. ka~~Sa~lnaJS4on75qtumino _2_u_-eee-__ 3804 __ :_21_3_-728 __ -3CIOO __ , tr111S.FeolUrlngpools, California bungalows. sioo mo Incl utll. CdM OffGra~d t!:ween 20UnlL". Contact -~-·_397_4 _____ _ .. ._.,,... IOUOO 11~ ,.. __ p-• llZL F r o m $ 2 7 O . I I 5 640-~94 I!' .. ,_ ' ,._. ..... R ......_ • _ __. • $4~.mo 1190. l br. apptns. Slnalca. .......w..u, ' ......,.,.,, -.,.nt " Plnest.one. Ofc hrs 3-5;30 ""'""Mer& Warner. ~--•-·1 rtr"IUWWI .,JIO 8aJslde Dr. 1650t mo Beachcomber. fee Sl5. orl2 axcttlng Wbhouse ••••••••••••••••••••••• wkdays. 9-S:30 wknds Male/fem! to share home 67S-2160l Mr. W R. Beck or Mr. A. ••••••••••••••••••••••• UNIQU£HOMES.Rltrs. il.1l·201l wlhsoclollMIOlt.TennlS, Sunny, sparkling clean I ssz-0400 In exclusive Bayahores. For lac 1400 "fl N J o hn:son . 17141 Orinklngproblem! 615-6000 gym,oncholeybalat Bdrm. bltna. gar. ocean Own rm . pvt bch $150 • 5 .., MIH701. Call Alcohol Helpline --------•ISoulla~ 3786 lhlVIO,,. Mortel. view, ad Its/no peta L..-ohach 1141 mo. t0am·4pm or art warehouse office+ 4000 ?AhnedaySSS..3830 ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• .,... S2JStmo 493-7231 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7pm 631.1998 sqft storage yards In Moneyto&.o.. 50251------''-----Caltdoinlul•• 2 8R 2 b ~you'rtlOoklng · · · lrvtne Industrial com· ....................... PREGNANT! UftfwtlflMd 1425 Fiim . ..,:,.;~"!.noc=: b . F\mlurels<JWICJt>el. S51f5·.,1St~di~, a~I ut~. Roommate wnn~cd. feml, plu. lncl'n8 key lock, ht, 2MI & lrdT.D.'s Carini; confidential ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tolalsecvri~.elevetora, Ontond'P.w8ecftoorn ""..a&....ACMa..ch 3840 n,. e 0 • eac non smoker,:? blks from gasoline pump." & vchl· LOANSAVAILABLE counseling & re ferral. New Tua tin patio hme. nic. facU1tlet •~2835 MAii ~;:;~::-; •••••••••• ••••. ~mber. fee u5. S3l·20lt Bch. 2 Bdrm. Call Erica cle wuhrack. National Credit~ Important Abortion, adoption & 3br, 2ba, olrium, yd. AC. 1. ,._,._ ~. 9.JV\ Ne.-a_.,_ Pn l bedroom Adults. No ~ 9438. Svc. CO. 840~ 673-4883 Broker keeping. Microwave, tennla crta & ~= lwllt1 "'..._open 1vv llO 6:00. -peU Nice view l\PCARE :W'r·2S&S more. Adulla, no pou. u.twlll•d Now l'ldng. ~blluxe !t br. 2~ ba. att. · · 497.zz:n Lrg 3 br twnhse In M.Vle· Mod~~dn ;ont.r~~on otc r#l&rff$ 1---------•Ts, ~·4$48. I •••••••••••••••••••••••l"-...... --;;;;._----'I " gar .. patio. Crplc. 1713 jo to share. Laund. pool, wt""' .. pav~, storage ~M *SH .A.RON'S* _ 9,.,..... 3IOZ Alabama , 53&·346S or leach 3l69 ten crta, view. Unfum. yd. ~sq.ft build'& 4c HOMEOWNERS " 2 Br 2 Ba In Jrvlnc. Applic. ••••••••u••• •••••••••• ~1718 S2001mo + sec depoa 8 5 O o s. q . ' t Y d . 11 • b k t borrow OUTCALL MASSA Gii; :~ct~~:.~~~-·;:: Jluf I WATllFIONT 3 br, 1~ ba, Crplc. patio, YEARLY RENTALS ~~~~om,. 5'9-1319 ~A~~~~a:~· $1. :Ou~;tO~~bt~~ pe:yl~-~~~. 4~1224 O\O, Call Marjeanno. s. ltlnl. ci•· drpe. a.. encl. gar. Avail Jan.t. .All slLcs, near or on the tak.-a vacntton. room . ,...._,.. 8-Q b•u•.. ck "•ra1• ........ ~990 ..,.ach. No fee. Prona ... y "'=-w1.__ ..... 4150 lndu.aUial Unit zoned addition. awlm pool, pe.v l:fave something YoU wan .....,.....21. ll·9PM sus'. ....... '.... · ..,.,., ' House Rcalton642·38's0' =::-.~.:::.~......... tor Flberatua work. o!t exi!\UnR 2nd or any to tell? Classified ad• lMMAC. 2 Br 1 Ba. srrs. _,, P1NLB'Y AV8. N. 8. Lge J & 2 Br. 2 bo. Apctultls -0 a r a ll • ' 8 a k e r & ~ 1930 purposo. It well. 6G•S818. No pe&a. Wahr, dryt, JACOISll,M.TY o nly, no po\1 oo •Try a Dally Pilot Fairview. Coata Mesa. ..1 MICHAMICS SELL ldle itoma with pool. 4tf·0315, SJC 61M,10 i:~~·a~~. :,i:,0· Cluallled Ad lO bl.!1 • Hll bt & Jut mo. $30 mo. SeU ~lna1 rut WIU> Di.ily NATIONAL liNK Dally Pilot Claull14MI Ad or Nrll aometh!nf(. m-8204 PUot Want Ada. t7t 41611-3954 8'2·5618. ' f I ------------------- C C~ORY Plumb 1l. •. Patc.n 1t...P 1pe 1t ... Ke.moae1 1t ..• ~ i l1'CIO n ... 8 uild lt...Dlaper lt...Hammer it.I .. aMrpet SERVICE I IRE Roof it ... Landscape it...Tlle lt...Trlm it...Sew !t. .• I tt...Cem ent lt ..• Wl. re it ... Hoe lt ... Clea".' t... ove u 1 't Add It Pl t it Alter it Learn 1t l .J~t ••. ~.P~r!e!ss!,Jjlt~ .. J.P~a1~n~t~it~ .. ~.N~aUll~it~.~··EP~la~s~te~r~1~t-.. ~.F~l!x~l t~.~··:.....:::=::..:;r;:::.:~~~=-.::::.;:;:~--.=:::...::..::...::~::;:=::~~;....~..;;;;;r:;::::::::-....:.n~a•u;;.;..•'•····;:::=:·~ .. ;p::a:n.:'.·-··-,;;::::;:·~··-------.. -· .. ' -.. -""' " ... +st a ,...., e.,.t Service Cautt actor ••• Gwr• Slt"Yicn ~ ................ ~~••••••••••• ~•••••••••••••••• • ..---.-;~~~ •• ~::: ••••• : •••• !.! •.•..•.•.•..•. ........... •••••••••••• ••••••••••• ••••• ••••••~ ••••••••••••••• • •• • • •••••••••• ••••• ••••• •• • •• • • , PAINTING Bookk 1n Servt e&,,,.iManwlllloyyouM uGeorgePtlmer&Son" llANOYMAN ·Jlomc' & 11.a\.lllng.movlng,clunup E xpr d l.anda<'llptn. P'riendly MorinttCo. f.fft Bo:it.s Homa·l>ocks HOME SAVERS PLUM eep a ~ i R i • Adda1Rmdl1Pa1nt1Pl:1n1> Apls <.:onsc1r nt1ous S7rup Treework Se>rinklers lnslall & re-cient. frl~ftdly tenlce. FrEs 615-3175 v BING&HEATING. 1-'ro~ s..ll 8uame115 Accounu or~ ne. , epa rs-~ Sm1 Job8·Llc·d~7-6932 CrattSman Pb 6'15()3(12 Rt!as.rast.free~l pair. Concrete dt brick Lo •eal po aa r a t .ti l e es e$l. SIO Hr. llonesl & Reaa rates 848·<>921! clo11nm1 too. Guo.r wor. --8'2·459'1 work 6-IS-7978 art S. 847.oll82 WOOD STAINI NG & Reliable Serv. llofA & Arcltltedtlal al bi&1eruvln&a.t'resi LntenorPlant Serv1Ct' Malone PAINTING. Qual work. M:strc hg. 847·0383 & ••••n ••••••••••••••••• "5--364e BARNWOOD f'OR SAL E Oe:ugn, Salt!~. ~faint, Gt.-t n d of urusiithlly trash .. -t. P~/P...,tRCJ &31·2898Dan '7Sl·3ts0 we care Carvel Cleaners F R 0 M M T S 0 I" Con s u It 1 n .: . <.'o m . & debrts. Colll•ge stu. t.....t1n•c• ....................... -----· ----·l'."""---------Atthlteclural & Struc -""4amCl»anor5.ham COLORADO. ( 714 1 merc1al/Rei.identi1.1l Uy dent Sl.2 1oad.~·642.8 •••••••••••••••••••••••Don't be hornswoggled a .-1-&y C ...._ ltooftng tura.I Plans. Rmdl & or ~ ~ lPQC. """-c1 "ftll Hod o Handym"n e•per In I ,......,.. OW° otnw ••••••••••••••••••••••• R ld Alw U hohlte All wor• ...,,......., · -Y ges. rname11 • · 4 For nn1i qual. paint ng & A E 1 Stry $345 oew ~~ruc'!son ea j guarK~s/M3'.Frcc csl a.ctriCG11 tal ll o rt1 cu l t uri s t ~ homem..lnt.No jobtoo fair price~ t oo call ;~~~~ntr$45rm Repairs & ConlPoSlllon /Co m I /I n u str la Re~R.tes -645·3716 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 838-5822 ••••••••••••••••••••••• s~ll.Hcaa.rates.Free Richard. f hl·preuure Prlces lncl matr'lllabor Shlngle11. In11pect lon• M6-7000 , ,. , . llOUSECLEANlNG pa.anting est. 847·3779 etcan tlrst , do they~ TedS2'M900orM2.0134 lnsrd/Ued. I.ow pricc11. tr Architectural Designer. Sleam Cleanln&. Uv·rm ELECTRICAL SF.RV!CE Piano Tun1n1t Repairs. By reliable couple , . . Uc/ln!836·5MS est83().S02Qor541·~ Expr. i n C us t o m din·rm & hall, avg rms CALLS SlS/h r Ca ll t'te\! E:ll .. n eg. G.ulld Rcls 963-58l3 Cleaning. Res1dt~om l .._..../R.,.W ~ential Re models & S30. Free Deodorant 8'2'8233 mem~r L\'one Piano -a~ rug shampoo ng • OriCJ SuPft9\8Mc• ....................... T,.. 5-rYk• Addltions. 6'5-5869 Crpt repair, dellea & de G.•l!Mg _St-rvice. 768·7906 a~W~~~;~~~J:pt ~~a~a~':~· Fr ee CUstom M'urelsdw.sss VERY Nt AT PATCH ..................... .. odort:te.15Yraellp.Gooc ••••••••••••••••••••••• Takea HEAL 011yOff Good n:ferencesS36·7711 __..,..S P'"'l~l .... I'!.. JOBS&TEXTURK Removals. trlmm1n~ • ....... 5-n'k rcfs.53t.otot WEEDING-CLEANUPS Let a resp. rellable. MasoN y ruuo. ~ "' ...... Fr~Esl. 893·1439 pruning, frtt est, U c d ....... ! ....... ~••••••• c..wt/Cotter'9h •Weekly Maintenance• wo ma n bt1bys1t ·dean-KJNG.~Ca_rpet &Cleanin* ••••••••••••••••••u ••• ~:~r·~~t.RC8:u R0~C:e PATCH Pl.ASTERlNG F\llly huured. 642·21624 TYJ)ing at home any kind ••••••••••••••••••••••• Free Est 642·9907 wash·lron·chauffor. shop Co. WE DO IT ALL Free Est· Blockwalls. ~-0458 ••ALL TYPE.~·· . Rea&~ rates, WtJl pickup SECURITY BUILDERS Experienced Gardenin11 fro~o.'tr~~u~r ~~ait 835-3.~H ~eus~~~~~~:I b~le~~: . . f'reeest. ~ ~v~~~~::!C:ad'! &del.S4S-54'l. ~ ~~:=e !,':;:! t1;,k Service&Cteanupg .Qual yourself or a rne~d. Xtnt H00U S~CL.EANIN~ i1~ Uc 328.WI. Bob 7so..9354. P;~~f~a~~~~::~!l Homes-Additions. Restuc· It weil ~Call NOW. Bond. OHice hrs 6 7:3< work. Mike548·2049 refs.548·2598 Ja~ce'iu~ng~~y A.!ns IJIM).3963 eves. l stry $100. 2 atry co .over blk walls. Free 6'2..:5678. ~.r.!'!:!............. am, 4.7 pm. Ph 645-2031 Lawn & Garden Ser vice HANDYMAN: Carpentry. 67~ · Fireplaces· Planters SlSO. BorA. MC. ~31 est. tow rates SRG-4892 1~-_-_-_-:,-.-.-.-.-.-. -. -. -.-. -.-,. J"INISR REMODEL & ,.~ _ _,. Mowing. Edging & Weed Plumbing. Electrical. ~ Brick Concrete Patio ~ u ..... -D-'IJ °"' ..... • ..,_....-~or Removal. C h eap ! AMtoS PM .8'17.2787 • Dependable lady w/expr. · · PAI NTING. lnt/E xt .·--OWOJ ""'" -.. ._ Rpr. Small jobs OK.••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-125:> wants house<'leaning on Block Wallll BBQ P1ts Reas.dependable. Free ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Fut Rel\llt'' ~ . _ din!dary. Yow servtce ls our apeclalty. Rea.a. m-0379 LEE M J ARVl S Haulinq regular basis. 847·3637 Rers. Esta.~ est. Call Jay MS-7965 PLU MBER· Repair. re· lla•ter C ra fts m a n . Addlllocu &Remodehn~ Havesomethingyou want ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXPERIENCED Depen· . pi pe, In s t a ll atio n Specialty finish r e· llC-~73 l..JcJI7856 tosell?Claulfiedadsdo YOU llAVE!TREADY Classified Ads sell big dable. refs. H~t'g lkh WGu~~ ::;,;;~es. G. G idley, 111ode ling & r epalrs.P'\nd what you want ln it well -Call NOW, l'Ll..llAUL ITAWAY items. small Items or only.960-5352 lntr/Extr.FnleEet. ----·------1 Reta. -4~3105 O.ily PUot ClasslCleds. 64.2·S678, Tl M 548-6306 any It.em. 642-5678. Want Ad Results M2-54rT8 2S yrs Ex pr. 8'2-0295 Claasified Ads 6'2·5678 Call M2·~ n t . m '"THE EXPERIENCE.. Ad~inistrati ve 16ABYCARE. Afternoon. C00k5 (ZJ FACTORY WORKERS Housekeeper. Part time. Adult motet. C losed . secretary , 2() bn wk. Rererences BOYS A.HD GIRLS Days or evenings. Apply Ski Mfg look ing for MS·0681 or let 645·1874 Libr~ HllrM/COfllfmMM. rittuit TV. For Rescrva-Dultness ofc. 12 mo s. 8 please. 644·5891aft5 pm (Of' Daily Pilot routiis in in person, Beefmasler hardworking factory ling IOtimes. Strong and capable of tions ~ 3967 w day. S893 to '1085 mo. Ar ch Be ac h area of Restaurant, 3010 Harbor WOC'lters willing to grow We need en rgetic , caring ror pleasant semi· • • +fringe benefits . Sh tlC BA.BYSITT ER for 2 Laguna Beach. Must be Blvd.Costa Mesa. with new company. HOUSHEEPIR arti c ula t e people tn valld. Cook . lit~ * 1"'111 * plJ district otc, Laguna w~lklng distance from Phone 00.4321, ask for Cooks. Experbreakrast& flbe rglau m e n , in· Father. son & dog re· I.bat we can train lo In· moephere. ~5067 btwn KARE~·s lwpm, typing60wpm. Ap· children .. your home. at least 10 years old. Some Jobs Cor expe r Lge Beachaide home . w/dynamic personaJIU" bsew"rk. live in. nice at OUTCALLMASSAG E beach Unified School Lindbergh School. 4·5 Circulallon. lunch. Apply m person, lervlewlng Mon. Wed, qui re F/lime live-in. troduce our product to 6-7prd. ePM·2AM 838·1780 Dbtnct before t /13/77 Days p/wk .. 3 hrs 8 day See Gabby an 3:30pm, Fri .. btwn 11-12 only. 183S Rets nee. Drivtna, abop· customers in Caur. &:~~~~~~~~~ ---------j1---------1 2·5PM.113HU49aft.5. IOYS '"' ... DGIRLS Beach House Inn, 619 Wbillier , Bldg B·U , " Arizona. Work 6 hrs al-AIORTIOM "'" ping, et.c. Call 846-2289 1tu fDE ,.,,.,. T Sh 1 Babysitter full time 10 to 15 years F:a rn Sleepy Hollow Ln. Lag. Costa Mesa or call ans, day, perm. in out om~ MU0R~IDERAUE$S/ Counseling & Referral 1•muate ax e ter ' "'ftf · C"' t s mo ey $2() t Bch 648-8244 ---------near O. ~· Airport In rn,g. lest-ava1. w n s •mgwy__,.. 1131 0169 S40 per wet•k selling sub· G rd 1 . HOUSEKEEPER. live In. I ea r en Y o c at· Day Shift. E x per·tt n-. 'I k d Dl·-•-n ....... __ ._lfi days. my home. "'"' . req. • .. ns ma n . o . d I r t di f 24 Hr Helpline547·9495 P'UL.LOR PARTT ME · scriptions to the Daily COOKS WA.MTID a e~ng/l\ a mtenance. working mother & grown mospbere. Creative op· Bayview Coov. Hoapit al, •SPIRITUALREADER Bachelor Father nreds Pilot. Transportation Lunc h tdinne r s hift ~~Vg1~rn:tN~~~~·i:!!t son need help. Lovely ~i..ror men &hwomento 2055 Thurln Ave. C.M. · We are now a ppointing Ptt1me babysitter ror 3 provided. No dehvcries p1tlmc. Ma Barker 's, 212 · · home near O.C.C. Room. m .... e as muc money aa 642.3505. Fully Licensed distrlbutol'fi for ramous yr o Id d a u g ht c r or <'Ollcct ing. Phone E. 17tliSt, Costa Mesa. per hard worker & h~ve board & small salary. you desire while relaln·1--------- 18W EICamlno Real •ame brand g um & Enrolled in pre school, 536-9712 COUNTER •·COOK Pt· rers. Call Robert Gn m· 546-5704 ing a n xlnt base salary.•--------San Clemente. For appt. breath · ts r t ring b Id l'k h t 1 "' mick. 642-5735 Cbet lOam ---------Perm. """'lions availa· OFFICE 4112·9034 492·7296 WRJ G ~E~ ·s e~ u T I C ~~':°: da~ ~r ~r~/w3i BOYS AHD GIRLS time, morning, a fter-&Uamonly.> HOUSEKE EPER want· ble. Adv';ncement t o MASSAGE TACS. You may keeJ1 Would like someone with Mission Viejo . El Toro ~~·M~·eMa~P6~n~~dC:: GARDE.Nat ed. live-In ~or elderly manage ria l position NEEDED your present job and t'tlr to sit in my home in area. Earn your O':\'n l6S66Beach Blvd H.B. Perm. Position. Older ~!~ee':1~~~;isure available. Work eves or NOW!HI RGURE MODELS ~.';_.Pltl'r~ & efpanddto N w p l . C a I I J l m money sellln~ subscnp· • person pre.I'd. Apply in ---·------1monunt.erv·ngs,·e~· !..onrtapect~oMn~ •••• ESCORTS ,..., ime 8 er 1 you e Raymond 612·7840 dys· tJoosafter school. Form· COURT DIRECTOR ex-person, no phone calla HOUSEKEEPERneeded. .. w TEMPOHAS OUTC '"''L 0 ... LY 11noor·re. Gofethili!l on thlt'! gr.o1u1. nd 640-9245 evs. · ' formation. call ij3().09t3 per 'd !or new Tennis p I ea 5 e. 7 a m . 3 p m , 1 child 6 yrs. rm & brd, + Rossi 833-8096. Time Life OPENINGS FOR: ,_., " s mu i·m1 100 Club. 536.8832 ask for ,., Libran· .... Inc. Equal O"-IC ...a....._= ~a • Ind try w f h BANKJ G n--.. r k ,,ewpo rter Jnn. 1107 $200mo.lrv.~1·5486 .. ~. ., 1,,_auec.:caor1 631 ·~ II us . e urms N on: .... aslcoo partllme. SandyorTonyorlS42·7747 Jambo..,,.. Rd . NB. Ask ---------por.Employer = ---------1 all ret ail outlets . To TELLER $3.00 p er h r . The ....... HDOORPLANT l~~~~~~~~~~DldPIXtVL•_1 '1 RELAXING MASSAGE qualify you must have E:tper. pref'd. Apply 10 Beachcomber Coffee DAV HELP wanted, Hrs for Clay Ellis. EOE. I AU 0.-rd- BobJames-Llc. Masseur auw. a few hours spare person. Manners Sav· Shop. 642·8475 Uam·3P!11 Mon thru Fri. GENER/\L Ok. Ftlime. S SPERSOH LIVE IN for Elderly Cou· SeQtt.t" w /tla Outcalls9-9,494·5111 time and $4000 cash in· ings & Loan 1515 Ca t Id I I All positions open tm· Must deal w/public EXPERIENCED pie. Some Housework. f......&.M ---------1 ..unenl. For morl• in· WestcliHDr,N 8 : re or _e er Y coup e. med. We nd y ·s Old t ype. de pendable & F/time Thurs thru Sun. preparing meals, prac· rr••• ·~~~:i~gAr~;:; ~lion ~r:it.e lo Dis· Equal Oppar Employer ~~~!u~~1 0~1;0~!~~a~~ Fashioned Hamburgers, mature. Work weeknds. go~act ~~Roger's ~~!1i~~~~ge~~~rt~~ ~~ Past.prese nt&future ~~u~. ~:~~~'~"i\ :z6'ii BANK bawork . Stale pa\d. 2640S. BnstolSt.SA. ~l~ewpo rt Dune s ens, · rum . medical, Ph : Local Areas Llc <213>69-4·1350 l'PLEASE I NCLUDE TB.URS& 75.2-7230 _Deliveryman ror LA · 545-2572 TEMPO --------·rPffONENUMBER. PROOFOPERATOR CASHIER Times home dellv. No Generalofficerrecept.Ac· Industrial LYMl·ll:l O TemPoraryHelp Pdioperty A~alksis ror ~~~~~~~~~ Experience Reqwred soliciting or collecting. ctg. background pr e r. MEW YEAR· 17802Sky Park lrvlne .., vorce or an,.ruptcy. C1't1-.~"· Bank of F/time. Econo. car re<fd. Adull11 8:30loS.675·7611 NEW JOB Charge Nurse & Medlca-c• 540-4455 ,,o cost or ob 1gat1 on. AssistantCookTrne <K'•..-. Growth Com pany only. 2 Hrs per day. tion. F /tlme. /\pply : ..,~ IOp E 1 ReaJ Estate Network. Cle.ancut·Career Minded Costa Mesa SLocaU00&.0ver20 We stm /HB a r e a . GeneralOffice Parll Superior. 1445 ""fua Por mpoyer C.11897-1375. Energetic 5411·7948 <7141 979-4200 We Train 63&-01216 AOVERTISIMGDEPT Supe r ior Ave. N.B .i--------- Aak for Gloria. 9am·lpm MetroCar Wash Req's accur ate typing WOMEM-MEH 642·2410 PARKING LOT ATTEN· UOTICGIRLS AsloclateRep on ly . Equal Oppo r 295Q HarborBl,C.M Debvery.Sandwichshop. SO+wpm,able lo handle TRAINEES --DANT SUPE RVISOR. Mysage & Modeling II OR OVER Employer ----..-9:30·t2:3{) Own trans . details, work under min Private Club, for in· OutcallOnlyS-12-3169 HOEXPER.MEC I EAUTYOPR ---~ Slart17.SOhr.63l·282:8 supervision. Duties In-ASSEMBLERS LYN terview,call644-S404 LI K E T O M E E T No follow. nee. Exper CIRCULATION DELIVERYMAN ror ear· elude typing ad copy· 111i...1vE11i...1TORY Weeknds 7·3. Xlnl work· ,_..._ A.ttewclclftls P E O PL E . P L A y 11 )'OU're new lo Orange pref"d. Call MS·l050 ly morning L.A. Times memos · corr e s P · • f"'lll f"'lll -~ C RDS Ol., tem porarily dlscon· TRAINEE route. No collecting 2~ various reparts, phone ingconditions & benefits. Full or p/time. Must be ~dgesi~~~f~~~~~3\~ tJnui ng your Mucation, Beauty ....,._. __ _____._ Hrs daily. 546-4481. folJowup. Apply National PACKAGERS le•wfyMmor 18. Day or night. Apply. rece ntly dis.<'harged ....... .,EUP .a.RTIST ,_ ... nmmw Syst e ms Corp., 43Gl ERS Cony.Ho•--"_. 353 E . Coa st Hw y, ly sessions Sr. Cilue ns r th f f9UllU\IO A COLLAT .,...,"' N rt Be b b rom e service or or 'The Dallv Pllol has an DENT A L Ex p · d . Birch Sl. N.B. (Near 4010 VJ...,.t--ad. ewPo ac etwn play for Sl.00 on Thurs at •nv reason seeking tem· & Cosmetic Salesgir l . t h . 1 ,........... As t t"" 0 C Ai rt 1 • '7-" 4.J>nm. 675-8611. 11. Lessons also offered. -.. ""-el 642-6164 N operung m t e c1rcu 8 · v•uouuoruc s . wan ""'· . . rpo . 111i...1SPECTORS Long Bch (2J3)426-03!H -.... o R A N c E c o A s T parary or career e mploy-.,_pr pr · wpl Uon department for a Top pay ror right person. ---------f"'lll '1--------- BRIDGE CLUB. 145 E. ment, consider this um· Bc:h beginner to manage a C.M.546·5170 DRIVERS -Part-tJme phone work & l9thSt.C.M.S48·3302 queappor. You caneam Beauty smalldislrictof boys and "'-"alA.uistailt GIRL FRIDAY MAIMTEHA.MCEMA.M deli~00~~~~~·63y ---------1 HAIRSTYLIST girls. delivering, collect· """" Oay.Week·Month Plumbing. m inor re.1---------lemdiM GI-'-$196 PB WEBC in g a n d s e I 11 n g needed for very busy GENER.AL OFFICE Or Longer pairs. palntin~. P/Time. PEOPLE PERSON na wltb Following. New newspapers. Full time. group specialty practice. Full·tlme. Perma nent It's Your Decision Apply in person onty No Exec needs p /time a11 Would like lo meet Based on your prdduc· Salon Newport Bcb. permanent position with Gd oppor for right girl. position. Exper. necess. YOUDOH'TPA.Y calls. Ali Baba Motel. soc.inwhslesupply.Ful· ~entlemen for day or eve t 1 v i t y _ C o m m + M2·6164 regular raises and Cull fr· Only e:tper'd need apply Typing, adding machine, WE PAY YOU! 22:iO Nwpt Bl. CM. ly capitalized. 673-2223. _un_._535-_~------4 infentives &extraprofil IOOICIEEPER ingeslncluding pers<>nal Non ·s m oke r . Cal l lite bookkeeping . ah CallOrCome lnToda y Shaklee for better health Jt.banng bonus. On the Job use of company auto. Al>· 644·0C>9S. helpful. Must have ex-M AT U R E W 0 M A N P.st Co.drol T.ch t . . T d Ute for busy single ore. I . M" ---------I I h .,ELLY ti t I & environment. Davi raining. remen ous Must be exper 'd & well PY tn person to tlan Dental Assist. Chairside. c e e nt t e l e p one n p r me o Wt! com e Steady job for r igM 492·.5412 before 4pm aft. 8 po t e nt I a I I o rea <' h Leavitt. Daily Pilot •. 33-0 1 f:r mi· 11 ex per. H.B. personality. Salar y open. SERVICES neweomers & contact person. No exper needed. & qualified. Phone alt 7pm, w 8 s ,._ Pho F 1 m h t Fl bl h ...._... ha pm. superv1.sory mana~e· S823 Mesesla ay treet, ..,.,sta Sa ary open. 002-SS45 ne or Appa ntment. 833•1441 ere an s. ex.1 e rs. .-.uut 5 ring & group ---------1 ment pos1tmns Must bt! _7_5_1· __ . ------Betwecn 8:30AM&4PM Need car. lite typing. health. Apply F ri-8·12. I J:'::=:! ~rsonablt> & t1mbitious. B o o K K E E p E R £qual oppartunity DENT AL ASST COMPUUTE 547-3095. Uoyd Pest Control, 566 t or appointment only FrCharge restaurant ex· employer CORPOR.A.TIOH ---------1 Dyer Rd. Santa Ana. <"all per preferred. position ~ CHAIRSIDE 111w.17th Street INSURAMCE/Sdy MECHANIC presently available, ln,·--------•1 Exper'll only. Short work Building F·U Fire &Casualty Agency Working or not. check the City or Westminster.'' wk. Benefits. Busy prac-Costa Mesa P"rsonal Llnes this xlnl opportunity. SllM702 CLERKS llce.H.B.962·2436. 6 .. 11:1501 "' Automod biles.ClassA lic. ..,.,. Robertson Insurance r eq' . s4oo +pe r wk WOMEN •Auto Mechanic. I n· loold&Hper/M~ INVENTORY DENTAL RECEPT. Corona Del Mar J>OsSible ror good man. TIAIH FOR terv1ew Mon·Fr1. Ack·!i For small pvt tennis f or busy general prac· GUARDS WANTED 673-3850 Fl-ont end align exper., IA.ITIHDJH(l, Coast Garage. 412 No club . Sal ary com · t OayAssignments tlce w/frlnite benefits. P U k d 1 .•. l~~~~~~~~~~l twieups,elec.exper etc. TWO WEEK CLASS Cat Hwy Laguna Bch. t J 6 M 2pu sen d r t! 5 u m c t 0 : I me w n s. rvine "' 1.._.SUR .a. .... CE Call 581-8764. me nsur a e w1exper . anlS. A to "' Anabeim.Age2J &over. " "" NATION WIDE JOB Automotive Harbor area. Reply to S2.50Perhour Class1r1ed ad no. 813, c/o Ma t ur e m en pr ef'd . OROUPHEALTH MECHANICS PLACEME NT New DetaH Shop neros Classified ad no 814. Clo CALI.TODAY! Daily Pilot. PO Box 1560. Uniforms furn. Car & CLA1MS EXAMINER Reftent ex per . Appl' "'SSISTANC E .. _I I> lly Pilot PO Bo I"'"' Costa Mesa. Calif. 92626 " ~ .. .,.p, a · x """· phone net'. App ly Expr :At leastl yr. Shell Station. 17th ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7005 5l9·118l MEN ••••••••••••••••••••••• PHONE SALES Phone Sa les people. male or female, 16 to 65 yean or age. Guaranteed wages or commissions. 250 East 17th Streel, Suite 0 , Costa Meaa, between S:OO & 8:30 p.m . 646-4223. GOODJOB Top wages paid. Engine CotltaMesa.Cahf.92626 ~Q~ office • DISHWASHER Universal Protection Salaryopen.Phs.49·1767 lrvine.Nwpt.Bch. OP!?!.TUNTTIES Steamers. eng painters, BOOKS O 0 l d Over 18 full or p/time Ser vice, 1226 W. Sth St.. 1----------JCA.H bufrers & poliahcrs. UP· ve r oa . . Santa An11. lntervi11w JANITOR n~ed ror pre· MEO IXEC/StCY I A. I T t N D I R 5 holatery aha mpoocrlj. Studttrh AP P I Y , G r i n de r M. F t 0 . JO n o on & school, M·F. 2:30pm to Typing & insurance ex· SCHOOL check out. ~ick·up & de· HouHwl•H & 557-0061 Restaurant. l400 W · 1 ""•·.,,,.im 7·30pm $2 60 per hr to F.qual Oppartunity Employer livery •nn y at H---~ lnterv1ew u -9.3·.30 Pac if i c C$t Hwy . ;...,....~, . st'art.Cans4n4751. perience required. Call ---------JlOt E 17th St SA '~...... ,..._ ru" N wport Be h .,. 495·1060 9am to noon Phone Sales: from your ~1960 •• 2059 Harbor Bl.CM Miiiion Do ar corp. 3723 Birch St, N.B. e ac · Hairstylist wa nted. 3333 Jlt '"'CCOU...,...'"'...,... wkdys. home, your a re a. a ll ScboolaCoaatToCo88t 64S-l030 nt.'Cds men & women or DRAFTSMAN. Ar ch. BnstolSt .. C.M.540-8888. A "'~"'' leads rurn. Reputable a ny age who enjoy Type 5 exper .. rast. ~pply In person. Mgr P1t1me. Send resume to MEYYHOF'S com pany, Call Jean Jdl.W-.cl, 7075 AtltoP..tsDrinr speakini;wtothers &who CLERK TYPIST Trainee Builder. Costa Mesa, h tar. Lawyer's Tax Service. Ne eds Crle n d ly en. 821-3618 (714) ••••••••••••••••••••••• Female. over 18. )(ood are bored w/the average for Insurance i\gl!ncy · 642-4907 days PO Box 2802, Newport thuslaslic people to work ---------NEED drtvinl( record. Apply, rwiotlhemilljobs. NewportBeach.645·9000 Hair s t ylis t , bu11y Beach. Call(, 92663 or lo ourlrvtne roodaervice PLANTSMEN needed fnr BA.8VSJT11NG JlEl.P Beacon Auto Parts. 480 Coclrtall Waitre!ls for new DRIVERS ~~~l~~~lo~e;,~'k::Oll. call64~·1573. prog ram . M Id Da y Installation & malnt or ON YOUR 8KI TRfP:> No. Newport 81• N.B. No a ctual selling in· lounge The Brother in· Roy Carver Rolls Royce -----·--·---,, _________ , hours • .S days. Ideal for lnt pla11ts. Must have exp ~pooslble colle"e stu· S.S.U33. volved & no set.Ung ap· I.aw·s. call for aµpt aft is taking appllcatlons for LA.MIHA.TORS housewives. interesting & xlnt driving record. dent wUI babysit your pointmenl~.Workw/one 2PM84o-1989 qualified drivers for .....,IUSIOY work. Good f.ay. Exper C&l l Ma r ga r e t a t children ~eoin°& and ol the most popular & _ _ _ ---=-pickup & delivery or Westa&il Corp. has Im· not ne<:. You uat need to 768-0541. .. AUTO SERVICE -----slr!"I' UPM....... med . vacancies for -------help with housework in auctessful products on -------------Rolls Royces Apply to .. • • """ molders & loucb·up peo-love rOOd. Call 5S7·6ZJ2 PRINTING excb ange lor room . the market today. An in Collections Lo $1000 Dar rell Sickle a t Roy Needed for banquet dept. pie W/at least 1 yr ex· u .. mt Tme, perm. Earn PlllSS OPIRA.TOR board and access to ski expensive product who's Sales Reps $700 Car ver Rolls Royce & Expr nee. Must speak "'6 alopee dwing days. Call J.C..PB4HIY CO nome l!i a hou11<?hold Jr.Accountant $75() BMW, 1540 Jamboree English & Spanish. App. perience In bonl3. Apply S17S·$200 wk. F u ller Prefer exper. on Solna Corulie,8S7·9670. 24 '-"'-l"-d wort! l.ht\IOut the world. Secretary /Bkpr toS750 Rd . Nc wnorl B1:ach ly in person at the sales to the Security Guard. Brush Sales, S.54·'7851. 12S·single color. 4 Day W k I he I t vi Pe 1 A '' olfl bt 9 275 McCormick, Coata wk .. gOOd co benefila. LEARN PIANO TUN IN,.. Mtwporf leoct. nr n a yuul u , r nc rsonne gency 640-6444 ce wn am Mes MODEL A 1 N 1 1 S v HM•noponingfor· friendly ntmosphcn• & 4ME171.h CosLaMeso · Alrporter lnnHot.el 8 · PP Y atona · ystemll Urnfted Openings. grp '"'.......____....-• have run while you earn SUlte22-I M2·t470 Electronic Suo,:rly Store 18700 McArthur. Irvine Fem for spa & pool ad-Corp., 4361 Birch St, N.8. aeuions atlow ratcs. __.... y 1 d t <NearOC Airport) PlANOCARK ~1·0911 s.ntc.Penoft top pay. ou ri?CC Vl• a ~~~ nee s t!Xper coun er LEGAL Sect'y, part-Ume vertising, gd pay. Call . . . )luaranteed salory + ex . salesperson. 646-4892. w/at least 5 yrs e.xper 00·5353 , res 642·3297 or M.le nu·-e, companion, tremely liber al c:om Qlmpanlon, middle ;iged B.EC ... O .... IC HOSTISSIS w1g"ncrol ptactice H.ra ~o ,,.,.,,, ~" Experience required mlasion & bonuses. Con· lady. alert. Spm to flam~ "' " t o I,~ ;rra n11ed. tor •_.........,..., ___ . ______ , ~:ren~!.s~~. day, OuLstandingcobenerits tests & other Incentives. all day Sot/~un lo sit ASSEMIUR ~~P ,t'g;o~Jnfh~::°~5 mutual convcon:nce . MODEL · <Clgure ) needed Xlnt worklng t'ondjtions Xlnt 1.1 dva nceme nt w/sernl invahd. Room. Electronics Mrg.has lm· PleaaecallS73·2.8l3 76ll-7171 by Laguna artlat, part- PRODUCTION WORKERS s I!: CU R r T Y M A N Apply in person PoSsibilities for both me n brd & S200mo. 6tt2·32711. mmed openillg!I for elec· time. call 8AM·t IA'M. w/Callf. license. Clean. lOamT0 4pmMoo-Fri &women. COOK S:,,_, tronlc a ssembl ers . Housekeeper wanted . LEGAL SICllETA.RY 499'4430 West Coast l ar ges t reliable. expr'd, looking EquaJe>ppemployer mtr llamto7am;,;rn.· Soldering, stuffing, PtC live-in. Room. board & For N B Ja w ofc 1----------1 furniture manuracturtntc for day shift employ. No exper. nee. \'ou re· DISHW'"'~HIR board req. Xlnl benc In· small sal11ry . Spanis h Corporateexper helpful. MOTOIROUTI company needs skilled merit. Gd refs. SS1-oo42. ceive Cull pay while being "'~ cl ·g med/dental lruir. In· speaking OK. 2 children 6 Call Krrry 540·5400 Dally Piiot deltvertei. in Production Wol"kcrs with, 1---------•I trained. Yuu can work 7am to3pm shift. ter vlc w Tuesr We d t· & 8. Call eves. 97().0175. ---------1 Newport Beach, Moodily experience in case goods Expcr remodeler, w/ AVON momingort1ve.hrs.On UdoConv.Center Thurs9am to3pm.Ohic <Yorba Unda, Am1hcim Legal Secretary tr1nnee lhrouah F riday arter· ass e m b ly . 11an d lng. tooh & reh se e ks ly 10 mln b1 Fwy. from lMSSuperior Ave Instruments, 102 Ba ker IUlh area.> or up to l yr e.xper. noons plus Saturday and packlnc. and milling ~r. contractor. all surr ounding com· Newport Besch 646·776'1 s t Costa Mesa Ph: Strong typln1 ma o · Sunday mominp . Grows mach in e operation. •Ptt for work. Ry hr or WW A.a..a....ss munltles. You owe it tu 979-5300 E.O.E. 1•11•0-.. •s• ... -K•E-... -P•E-R•·I d11tory. S.A. Attorney. ms per month. l50 caah Previous rurnlture e x Job. f orms, footln,111. """" y91-tn1elf to :at lt"••t In COOK 2MD "' "" "-W.9'32 depaeit requJred. Phone perience ls preferabla. framing, dry wa ll, tlnlah, W'HhMf Gt¥1ftt vcst11111te this unusual D EC. SICRITA.RY LfVE·IN --------1 642·4321, ask ror J im J>leaae apply ln person dtcks • P. coven. 11~t Up Yow oppor. Contact Renee ~:I~~~~ 1£Q~~)tl;~pn~~l. TO PRESIDENT Fash Must. have 10<:al refs & Lie. lndscp architect Parkaln clrculaUoo. bc:tw.,.-cn the b0tJrs of 1 Ule Ii bnck work. ste~c •= ·-r Roql,"~"""". ,, bl Flnanclal Set v. rlrm 1ood driving record. Prt-·ry bek"rnd In de· a.m. Mondoy thro ugh .... ........ -°' ..,,,.,., e mploy e r Apply In .. _ .. v•~ Let AYO abow you bow ix:rMm Oood career oppor Very Small ramil)'. l>vt room & Sillft ~vclopmcn\ & Pro• MURSIS A.IDI S Friday. ffou.'\ttlcaqlng, reasona• to build It run your own Don't flV\• up the sJup! Vidor HYl)O '"" chaUen11na. XJnt skills bath. Jcct 1N1napmen1. Con. txpcr. pnit'd. Wiii train bl•, rella blt', n f 's , b1t1lne11. Control your "Ll11t' tt In claastrled. 361 Cllrr Dr. Leauua req'd. 75 wpm typing, 100 ~-M35«W833·tUO tact Rlch11t'd Ro)'. (714) 1f nee ruk Superior B p John • 0 )'time. M t 6 p M. own houra, own Income. Ship to s hore reaults ! " _ wpm !\h. 3'l) San Miguel 41)4..at, c 0 n v H 0 5 p . l '4 5 • • M!-7430 To find out about thi11 042-SG?ll. Dr, N.8. Suite ZOO. Equal ()ppor Emplo}'er Supenor Ave.. N.B. .2001 E.st Dyer Rd dwllenging eamlna OP· Don't drop the ball! G\1t A ,:;;., ra3tt!\t d..-w In th.t> HaV\l 110meU11nJ you want Santa Ana, CA 91703 r.c. ~kpr, 30 11'1 exp. J)Ortwut.y C.ll l<t0·7041 or Clas61flcd Ad& 11ell bl!{ job with a low coat Daily Wost. .a 011lly Pilot t.o sell? Cluslfled adll' do 1lle wt.est draw In t.bc fbvc 11omc01in1& you want &Qual Opportunity ~mporory l\o 4 monW Zenith7-l~. lh>n~s. s mall Item~ or l>llot Clustr1t1d Ad . Cluglflcd Ad Phone It well -Call NOW. Wat ... a DaU}' Pll04 '° seJl? Claa.1fied ada do Employer 6'&48IO i--------•I aizy •te'm "42·~ Pbone &t.2 !Wf/8. M2·S6711. M2·56'7& Clanined Ad. ~-W.8. It w.-11. 64.2·$618. I rf!1! DAil. Y PtlOT -W..tM 1100 ....................... ... P/T~ortw.l_ty 0 "aEtL~ f'ubaon• needs Styll5\S In th•a • atta. Nodellverlng. earn dothes ror your family + profit chllcka Car & phone nee. Call for in tervw appt. 963-1470 or ~5663. Pl\ Sales. $40-$70 wk up Meo. ladies. students. Eves/Sat. ~54 ·1851. 8»-196. Rul Estate ..W. Y O/l/lf' Hew Y •• reeo.luUon now! Did you make the$$$ you project ed for yourself? Have openings ror 2 he'd salespeople, full comm , free advertising. Call · 646-3928 eves· 673-i577 Lachenmyer Re.iltor RECEIVING INSPECTION S m all electro mechanical 5wllch manufacturer hall 1m· med. openings In receiv· lOg & preclinon 1nspec tion reqwrtng proficient r-.y. January 11, 1m Schools and Instruction This variety of fine schools could introduce you to a new tomorrow P'ar fWtber information regarding placement .i• adver1isu1g in the Daily PlJot Scbool.s and Instruction Directory CALL 642-56 78, EXT. 325 use of precision measur· .. ---------------. mg instruments. Work· ' 1n g kn owled~e or d1mensionol toleranclng or spec Y14.5 rcq'd an precision inspeclion & desirable in reeeivlng in· 1 ~pectlon. , ST ACOSWITCH IMC ' 1139 Baker Costa Mesa 549.3041 F.qual Oppar Employer RECEPTIONIST i\ttract1vc. over 18. for HEALTH SPA. We wlJI train right person for easy run JOb. Mr Gee. 124.hrs) 752-9!i81. RECEPTIONIST Accurate typist SO wpm. Must have xlnt phone • personality for our ore. t Contact U t, 1133-8190 ,. La Reinders Agency 4020 Birch St. N. 8 . RECEPTIONIST for small sailboat co. in • S. E. Santa Ana. Bkkpng · & secretarial skills re· q'd. S560to$650 mo. Send resume c lo Ms. Maueo. 1810 E. Borchard. Santa Ana. Ca 92705 RECEl'TIOtitCST Pash Isl Financial Serv firm Recepl Secy fronl desk. Expcr Refl> req'd T~ 60 wpm. 36'9 San Miguel Dr. N.B. Su1le ax>. RECEl'T /SEC'Y P ume 9-lpm U you en· JOY people. have lypmg & :.b skills & CDJOY detail work. we're interested In vou ! CaJI W D. Polick at irvine Colleg~ or Bw.I· ooss. tel. 556-8890 for an 1mmed 1nterv1ew ! CALL NOW' lt1Clf'110HIST N 8 . law ft rm req ·s in lelllgent. veri.allle penon to handle recep· Uon & various ofc duUcs including pbones, typiog, mail etc. Accuracy & neatness neceu Xlnt bene Call 644·93ll for 1n tervw R.E.SAW Newport Air Associates Right School & Flying Oub LEARN TO-FLY $650 ft b ........ * FAA APPROVED * c-........ >5 Hours flight hme m Cessna 150 s w1tn 20 hollt'I dual 1nstruc1ton. Oub membership Free dues lnd1vlduat 1ns1ruct100. tailored to YOUR ID .. ty 20 AIRCRAFT AVAIL.AILE AT LOWEST RA TIS IN 01ANG-E COUNTY "--9 to tty NW --.it ..... f9! • Special R.ttt fOf' C •• au clal or .... , •••• s .... Far Co•pllt• Defcils CGI HOW 979-1155 I 9711 Airport Wfllf s.th .......... , ........ .._ OP-.. C-'Y..,.... Anna's ~o~ ~rl.llV\I "'·~ Pre-School Ages 2 tbru 3rd Grade Open 6 : 30 AM thru 6 PM ......... ....,. leiag Acuphd for ~-" ..__. lrd. Hot L.c• & s-cb Clrealifast if n.aNdt ...... Ir McA Stttued .... Le~ "'OCJl- PllMlcs 511 a:wtd Arh &Crofh ..... S,...AdMHw C...YleltO.Wn I t C .. For AH I t .. ?1 10 Thurin Awe., <:osta Me1a Phone~''" e<:.t ~©m ~-®<Ge atilchft'• endAdult9' a.-· ..... ' .. ... Tep Jazz ..._ DeaeoeMqn T~ ~IE .. rdM ...-..eom.cty CAU FOR FREE BROCHURE ~ aa .. vrep Comll6Nillon Q 27SO HARBOR BOULEVARD. SUITE 7-B COLLCGE CENTER.COSTA MESA, CA 92626 Phone· 714-540..5953 MICROWAVE COlllNG CLASSES NEW CLASSES STARTING MONTHLY ,.,..... .... , .... ca ...... s ... dfGI Mierow ..... ~ 'tan ta rally ISi JM •lfllSM lhlsWll~ w. tndl n•rr ptiase et 11CtOWAY£ come Meats .• Fish .. Poultry .. Vegetab4es Candy .. Party Foods •• B BQ •. Sauces Bak ing •. D efrost •• B r o w •i •g Recipes .• Etc. COMPUll 7'/J .... l W ... C..... Aft•uwlil• L ii ONLY$30 EHROLLMENT & INFORMATION 768-5011 1400 t Aldo PllJ. Wte 226 (Up•talr•) MISSION VIEJO I I Ott."• of a ... No. of Gei.co .. .uc ......... c..... Short Term cw Year Q>urse tor Associate tn M s Degree -~lnanclnoAvallable ""'ui 200 Newport Center Dr Su11e200 N&WPOrt Beach. ca. • Phone 640-0500 D61Gn l>LAZl1 1>€SIGO PLAZA D61Gn l>LRlll 1>€5Kll PLAZA Irvine College of Business l •1p1nf1nc•..., Ca•tec• _..,..... wttt. •Wee .... w.e ,.w ~.,.,..__.c ........ ,. ................. ,_....,,_ .-.. ....._ W•'I....., ,_to .......... Ttilt• fow dtolce of c....-.! SICUfAltY • •ec.noMST STINC)(iUPfB • IOQUl8'B GB•AL OHtCI ASSISTANT eietCAL-LIOAL SNaAUZATIOM TY" ... • SHOlmWCt lllUSH.41P DAY AND EVENING PROGRAMS A ............ cOfftCt l l ........ I .... loc.t.4 .......... of .... MewperMtt ......... cmd .......... C ..... a. Jolt ,._, I I AEEhl-•1 Most .... ....,, ......... II .......... 400 • ,, , •• .... ,. ..... 41 ....... ~ .... .. Cal MOW fOf' _.. illf•.alio. mc1 broclllns. 1700 E. GARRY AV. SANTA AMA 92705 ,......,.. '-'· .. Oyw ... , 556-8890 learning Problem? ·-.. -~ C? leeming • become OOtttueed..... ~ • daydr911rn in IChoof ..... klllt ... • feel like a fatture • hwe poor QredM ·~16owty WE SPECIALIZE IN DtSCOVERING AND HANDLI NG THE BASIC BARRIERS. TO LEARNING. ~. '---( .. . we can help ca.w. Mow ra As; ForT.-liAdllh For ......... c. THE STUDENT IMPROVEM ENT CENTER Call 642-9088 17141640-1710 17141640-171 2 901 Dovel' Drive Newport Beach FINP "tlr ABOUT A ~&WA~PIA.16 CA~e&te /IV ~~ A~ ·om~ #Ave-1-Er ~A~ 6#0W YO«#OW! 4. ~""' Piano ~66ond by ......... 1 17 Y .... T .. t' J.,.•ri•c• ) Have You Always WanNd To learn To PlA Y THE PW«>? •leom Any Kird of Music •Classical •Populcr ~ •Church •Improvisation l'rf•Clfe or a.. lad udlua ~ -..WllHMM"'1• 9• ......... Localed ............ ofC...MeM ~ '~ ....... •ll•al 646-0311 ~ ~:£: ~~~!~;r:: ~!!~ ..... !!~!~!.~~ ..... !!!~ ~~~ ..... !!!4! ~~~ ..... ?!~.~ ~~!.~~ ..... !!! ~.~~·~r·!!~~ .. ~~~~ ..... !!!4? ~~~ ..... !!!~ HB f' Vallt!y aru . ~~......-... SALES-Secretary/Exec . SECRETARY/ SECRETAIUES SECRETARIES ATIONERY Store in 848-l322 MAMAGEMEHT WilDam Fawc•tt loot<ICHl'EI $700te $1 200 Mo. LA based sub61d1ary hos CdM. n~ Saleslady. RE SALES· N.......,.rt ASSISTANT MGRS Acheriising Wi~h a pleruianl phone Many Co's Need now relocated to new F /time, 5 days. Xlnt WENEEoi(r.·'lr! REAi. ESTATE We need (3) sharp guys la Hiring voice for a Laguna YOUTOOAY ! Cacillties in Costa Mesa. workingconds. Especial· S m a II o rrlce~orgt! w/ol leasl l yr cxper. in A person who has il "all Beacb reallor. Employers Pay All Fees 3 Positions avail. All re· ~a~~~.Or1;~~:11~io~~; 'olume. Lelli talk. A:ik CONDO CONYEISllJN sales & mgmt of men's together" & wants to do NORIMS REALTY Uz Reinders Agency qwre accurate typing pt kr Dtck 64Z3920 &Port.swear & clothing. morew/her llfe. William * 49 .. •057 * 4020 8lrch St.Stel04 skills of 55+ w pm ,1--'ap-'-.------~ · ", SP£CIAUST Call for appt. & interview Fawcett needs an Ex~c. _ ...., Newport Beach 833-8190 transcn bmg machine ex· SToctt CllRkS Restaurant lf you have substantial experi·ence m' Mon thru Fri 9am5pm, Secreta r y. One who etu"'RETARY Callfor Appl/Estab'65 per .• good organJzatlon. WAltlHOUSI New restaur a nt 10 54().450() knows bow lo m ake """"' Mio. 2 yrs recent exper. Newport. Beach. now In all phases of condo conversion and are THE LOOK Lhings happen. Outgoing O•DB ENTRY App(y National System• lnterv for l e r v I e w l n g f 0 r prepared to become Vice President or personality. Good skills. Sharp, phone pen1onall· SECRETARY Corp., 4361 Birch St. N.B. ~~ym;rrn~rr· waltre11e1, bus boys. d · .... RA1.. 'th SALES TRAINEE writing ablllty helplul. ty. typing SO wpm. Com· cNear O.C. Airport I in.s · eoob. Contact Mr. Lib 8 ynamtc, ex.,a.uuu.g company WI To sell supply items to Super exciting, agency puter order processing. STENO No Experience Nee. by, 213-862-0223 spectacular growth in the investment super mkt chains & pre· environment. New po. r t Shipping coordination. Se<'t'y/Recept for small HAMDYMAM CORP. fleld (Salary & profit sharing), Write mlum users. Some travel Beach. Please call only Letter l yping & filing. 8:30AM ~S: LSPM N.B. Law Firm. Good 25310 Marauerite Pkwy a..taurant Don Berman. President. QUAIL involved. Salary com· betwnlhehrsof3&5pm, Applyln person,CPDln· Monday t.bruThunday skills, mirumum 2 yrs MiaaJoo VlejoV)jCtr Coob PLACE PROPERTI~. 1400 Quail menauralc w J abilit y. Ask for Pat ror intervw. dustrtes. 2100 E. Wilshire S:30PM to&PM general olc exper. Com· 768-5061 Walten Ir Waitr.un rN ( -0100 A b..., J_. s A Sa l An p e n s a ti o n C o m · Street , New part Beach, 714 1131 · ppts sc .,..u "" 4· pm ve. n 8 a. FRIDAYS mensurate w 1skllh1 & ex· STOCK ROOM CLERK ~~~eirt ~~~k~~· SIAMSTRESS dally. 1714)833-0888. SICHTARY ~ w.fcsm ty~I~ End per. Paula. 752-5522. Muslworkwknds.Crown ..... -.. toam--m. 1801 ~.......,_ Youno experienced to SECRETARY Insur. agent needs a de· 11 .tabe rfi~-I_ ro' m!: Hardware, 3107 E. Coe11 au..... ...., "' I h ce en ne ..,.,.p .,. unty Hwy.CoronadelMar. BaysldeDr,CdM. 1 work in sail lo<l.Pau1son Busy growing N.8. law pendabfe person w l Uooaloppartunllles. Need 8 RELIABLE . . MIAaW..e.4 7100Ht4pW..ted 7100 SailDeslgn&u-5675 firm seeks sec'y w / good, basic secN)larial GUARD wit h Calif.,_ ______ _ RETAIL S~ES In MIS· ~;:-••-••••• .. •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• superior sltUls. Hlgb ac· skills. knowledge of the ~ 1 .. ,.,.._to license? Experienced, SJUKUTS a lon V1eJo & San __ ~ ~ _ _ __ _ _ curacy, neatness & or· Insu r ance business 1 11 ble. lookl UUtl C1emente. Approx 20 hrs ~~----------~ SECRETARY. Exper 'd. ga.ruxaUoo necess. Le"al helpful but not reqwred. ... ftt J-IOft c ean. re a e. ng ~ N P bl l " fC 8 k ............. I 0 & 3 for day shlf\. Gd rera. Regular or Reoccurring per wee.. o exper nee ll MAllA"EMnrr.. ersona e, accura e exper. pref'd, but not Contact: Jc a er _.,...,..., ... P"' CaUS51·6042 p/t1me work. Hrs 2AM· Muat be avail between a UU typist. Some dictation. nee. X.lot bene. Send re-5142WamerAveno2()8 UAM or SPM·l2 Mid· \OAM-7PM. Apply at Ncwportarea.673-6733. sume to: Law Corpora· HunUngtonBeach SEC•Y BKPR Ht nds P'oto-Mat Corp. 768-4171 Vice President opening exists for ag-Uoo. 610 Newport Ctr Dr. 846-$548 BANK Of /. nlgh6.~i~mm~tatety or~-3950. gressive Apartment Management pro-SECRETARY s.e 1220. Newport Beach. Equal Oppor Employer Typing, h •vy bkpg.. 557.006I r .. LESLAD Y E 'd fessional. Must have managed over ADMIMASSISTAMT Ca92660. SIC•IT"'ltY AMERICA answer 'g. phones. ror """ · xper · 2000 ··-~.. be ready to -o e up to To SS50, sm all plant, --------,,.. Real Eatate favamt 0 i Mature, f/tJ me. Apply in '""~• •u v lrvlne . Need Rood or SEC•ITARY/ Exper. Cull time. S7~ firm. Hunt. Deb., saJ•rY ~ ~ o f f ce • pel"llOll, Buggs tnt«rna· Presidency of oompany quickly and 1anizati0n, typing, SH. 1tc.-nOM1ST startlol salary. \J1ua1 500"-..,....CtrOr. comm. w/exp. Call Scott 0 over load tion1I 01<\ Shop, 2043 have a following. Salary plus proril Ute bkpog, knowledge or For real est.ate co. near 1>ene<1t1. Accurate Cast Me---6 leocil at: 98i-4567 Westclllr Dr. N.B. sharing. Our staff knows of this ad. purchasing & .shipping 0 c Al .. ,._,. n1 1 typist. knowledge or bk--r-· Submit resume to; Ad #812, Daily procedures. Supervise . . rpo .... ...,.....e • kpn1. fllln1. Send re-Equ•I Oppartunil)' rvlce Station Allen· "tn.lerview Hr• a.3:.30 SALISMAM Pil PO B 1560 CM C -<Mt productlon.Sendresume otmo&pbete.Oood tkJUa sumcto Ad.No.805,Dal-EmploycrM/F dacit, exper 'd. Day & 37Z3Bln:h St,N.8. K.nowledfc of plwnbln1 ot.. • • OX • · ·• a. P"1WR o recfd. $S.*i0mo.833--9293. po Bo \"""' l•-------•I Eves. Full 4' p/Ume. Ap---------& l F tJ to box Ad No. 8'11, ally ly Pilot, . . x ......,, p supp es., I me . ._,...._..._~~--------Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, SIClE1'A.IY Coeta Mesa,Ca.92626 SICllTARIAL f~J~Statlon, 17th & &.lpplement your income. wrc~fn~: ~:r ~3variie: --------. .w.n.•n-Costa Mesa. Ca. 92626 Oood typlat, Ut~ bkkpng. SICllTdY p IT Ge n e r a l o t CI c e · Ex~. nds part lime M · t ..... 1758 t Girl ofo. N.B. Call / • responslblllties, Division Service Sttt\loo Attcn· 80. S.l. open 645"1l82 men · .._. · Selllna anYt.hing with a 541J.2888. ~7p~s&!~~:s7'ilpm. saltldeJl\. dant. uper'd. Full or -------- T t Y a D 1 ti y P ti o t Dally Pilot Cla111F1ed Ad ROSAN, INC part·Um " Apply Arco SELL Idle ll~ms with a Cluairled Ad to bu1.11tll !-a simple matl.:r · · SELL Idle iterna with a iuve aornethlnl to tell! 2901 W. Coott Hwy, NB Stnlion, tTlh & Irvine, Daily PUotClualftedAd. "'rent. eomethlnj JI.Ill call M2 SG78. Dally Plklt Clualfied Ad. Q ual1'ed adt do It well Eq\161 Oppor Emplo:rer CM 642·5'78. -I 8050 Mitc•llCIMCIUS 8080 Mltc ..... OUI 8010 1cMitt. Sail 9060 Tuesdey.January 11, 1'117 DAILY PILOT •fl tt.t,W.ted 7100licyc:~ 8020Furnff..-. ·········•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••·v-9570Aat.K.1"'~ l•p•,.._.. ··••···••····•········• ....................... ....................... .... ,.......,.. ...... •Nt:W ·USED BIKES• 1l1dc u·Btld. CCl'l $390. WANTED lllnc~s rorc<'r. Irvine Cousl ft.r.'J t:nu.-1lng Ketch. <!I' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• S".' • •11~ <Aili Jellver L· ll 00 t 1 r r roomy 1wod ,., i 1., & . • • . . Capri 971 S Mlrcedet.... 9740 Buy.Sell·T r11dr. c..ww" • TOP CASH OOLl..All ,am Y nwm r> i 11 11 rood ~1600 196.8381 63 l'vi'\I vun. &1289 Vs ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• TeHht:r -Prt School , certificate or ex~r. $3.SO l)el' hr &fO..ll820 Purt...; & Rcpuirs .564·4700 PI\ I 0 F () ll Y 0 U R ~11lc Make otfl'r 673·2332 _ . •lt<rt'O. rn.111~. e11lm Int 76 C/4.PRI l9$2 M BZ 3005 Cluslc Skateboanh JEWELRY. WATCHES. or673-3907 ERICSON 2ll • I· ti II $1300 ofr Mil 7816 Coupc:·Oneofonly86pro· Telephone Work at home. ~r;~~ t,~o.'~:i~"J)Ort **I BUY** AR'f OUJ.:CTS. GOLD crm~at·c. S21.000 ofr W.t.d 9590 !ni~J~~~~e~~u~~t·i~~ ~~~ dU({'(t thut yNir!, Mui.I u .so br. +bonus . Oood UJC<l f'urn1turc & SILVER SERVlCI': Mi'cellaneoui ti'75 l83Qev&wkndl\ ~ "A ''\"'""K .,.. 1 .> see 10 apprccl11le. Pri. ...,..148. ftA.-80 .. 0 A"~lla11ces -OR I will f•tNE FURN & AN W.t.ct 8081 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,..,r u 1 "'"'"' "~" -... 7440 __,.. .. ~:'1 or SELL for You TIQU ES. 00-:!200 ...... ••• ••• •• ••• •• •• •• Snowbird w/trlr c ..r H FOR CARSI $]8 86 ~ ·~·---T......._ Optt ator uu••••••••••••••••••• a.-29 ~ Mat;:n::.rson ne4'ded O O c:; 0 B E D I EN CE MASTlttS 14.UC TIOH LUGG ... ~ET ... GS S$S CA SH FOR ~50 ~IO 0-5 Top S Doll11r $ paldk Co UaH .... ··~ c· A"'<' t() !!tart Wed. Jan 64M686 & lll-9625 ,... "' 6-~ ~·1 I clcnn U:ltd C~l'!I, true II .... _ u--...1 lor•tockbrokerageflrm ...,...,.. lromyourbusinesscard Good 1L~ed furl\1rc-h1~s -~·~P' 9070 <.:nrvettes. /\sk for Puu nwW • .wv lnNewportClr.Tele!Ys>e 19,7·30pm.Nwptllrvine SAVE! JAN SALE. N;; Send <Int• l'llfd for e,1ch fnn>&10lOV<'~~6·0768 Docks ()'Neill OV!R 100 e •per n""" ,........,. fnnge area 546"4928 J. l " I . > 1r' \"n --• •••• ••• • •• •• ••••••• • • • Hou. "'ltD C .. -v .... let CEDES A • ~ .... UY<"' • & used furn. app s. u,,.. P u:1 one :11.1 ", h Wirnled. f"arrier loolx, nn "'""' ,.... ..... MER · beneflls.644·2442. SCOTTlSll Terr. AKC. l! nusA. Wi1:10n's Bar"aul return permanullly I (or"" h<1r•ushous l:Ju:sinl'i.i>m Jo dl''>ll c~ Do &Q il"'l ' " l & vi "'' '" ~ Ncw1>0rt Sh11 for 27' S;itl v~ ua ~ 8' OH DISl'LA Y TB.l.H yrs. ma le. show qual. Nook. 2 Store5-S45 & 814 seated attractive ai: l'li'y cai;h C JI I ev c lioJt. ti7:l 00147 cv c:1 . NEWPORT BEACH 74 •···prt 2000 , ~or llrl>. S M.S-Ul67 w l9th c M 6112·7930 & strap, mecitmg 111rllnc St 1 """ ;""'. ...,.. House of lmaorh HEW ACCOUNT · · · · I O reqwreml•nls. Pre-an ey"""' v""" 54i; ll02Qcxt 371\duy:. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR AC. St1C'k. Xlnt eontl. AUTllORJZtD P ttlme, Perm. Typing AKCSllEPllERDPUPS $-Sll-J262 vent Joss & theft! F'nr 11 Mutlcal ----f'ORTOPUSEDC/\RS S2800 17141493·1~1 MERCEDES DEALER r eq · d. W 111 cons ld e r SUlO 673· llGS 6 Pc Liv Rm set. contem· persona hied taabcn~tos<1 lnstn.nwnb 8083 ~~fl~ ~~\J~ ~;''¥[ !t'OREIGN , DOMESTIC DcrtMln 97 2 0 68&2 Manehester. trainee. Call for appl. Work642·633S po butcher blk arms. wallpap1:r. fa ric or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.,.,,,. ..... 7.,,,.,.36 orCLASSlCS ••••••••••••••••••••••• UuenaPark M I S . " & Loan t II 4""' H30 "D GI ,. ""r • we .,.... '"iti6. \1 ., • .,.,. eve I ulua avin,.s • . mus se · ~ ay o pa,..:-"' Conn Min·O·Matic elcc Ir your car 1s extra c ea DRIVE A 523-7250 Joan Marselle. 493-5651. Golden Retnever male. I will b k & tnm your d d I 570 Camino de Estrella, yr w1papers. Must find a ac organ. excellent con i ~I 1p '>pace av ;11 I L1 o scc us •~t. On the Santa Ana Fwy. S•ft Clem. Or BUI Kull. hme 842-6803. 642-2649 WHY RENT t.ags. Or try two card1< tlon, fi600. P.P. S32·1l59 Vi I I a Se Cc n t er BAUER BUICK LITILE .... back to buck. fib~rglu~s sails only 2925 Harl.><>r Blvd. ••• Clanlc Mercedes 675·5010, 2667 t:. Coast M'ln ialure Schnauier FURNITURE?. PRICES: Accordion, xlnt rond ~.SO/ft.675-7100 C~ta .Mesa !179 SAVE A LOT 1970 2805 E Cnvt. xi,nt Hwy, CdM. Equal OpPor Puppies AdorableAKC. 3 $2eiaor 3/S.S w / case. 3 2 0 base cond. $17.~. ss 2 7091 Employer. males, 2 frm. Reasona-BUY 3 COMPLET E 4/S\,ags$1.60ea. ampllfied 10 optional in· WANTED 20· TIE UP. WE BUY SHOP&COMPARE rooms of ALL NEW 6MagsSl.50eo. s ltum ent sounds. Dock Spare. etr. for 814.llWICKD/4.TSUH TB.UIS ble. 962·~JJ. all 5 · furniture. lOor more $1 40ea. 640-8622. sailboat. 496,8381 CLE/4.H CA.RS San Juan Capisll'ano Full & Parl·Time, Border Collie Pups. Reg FULLPRICE SalesNOTaCxAl:JcDl~.1dcd Di--&"'--.. 8090 W:int-'for"mos.:Wshr> &TRUCKS 831-1375493-3375 Branch ofc seeks bonda· Bst of blood tme!i. Sl!>O. " ,.., --· -· ..,_,., ""' " hie tellers. Exper. pre· C7H)62'7·1226 ONLY $399 Draw your own or send ·:•••••••••••••••••:••• Cor Mal Walsc.h Sloop. 4SO SL 1973. Xlnt COfld. Blue w /ivory Int. C&ll <714 > 64s.:m:i. f'd. Contact Hilda Ter· NoCredli Credit Needed nami.'. address, phone & Piano, solid oak. upright Plt>ase l'all 8.13-6006 & Ive ranove (714) 644·72SS 7 Week Old Male Irish Set Easy Terms Ava11al>lc we'll make one card pet $400oroffer. ..:.m.:.:.e.::·s:.:s.:.a~:::.e.:__ ____ _ CONNELL CHEVROLET NEWPORT DAT SUN '75 . 2:100. fully eqwppe<t. xlnt cond .. elec sun roof, xtra tank, $9350. 644·757'\ Western Federal Savings ter. $50. FREE DELlVERY tag. Add 25< each. 673·7293 2744 E. Coast Hwy, CdM Call 751·2710 **SEE AT •• Send rheck or money or· ---------iTraMportotion SPECfALS ·ss 190 Sf •. Wht 2 top. Orig, Equal Oppor Employer E--to You 8045 CURTIS der to ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... _ rl--Fu-.... ·-PILOT PRINTING HAMMO ... D 9 ti 0 T he New port Beac h••••••••••••••••••••••• ......,. ,..,....,,.. J"'111 Aircraft 2K28 Harbor Blvd. 8210 4 Door. 4 speed. b e a u t 1 f u I co n d . r a d i o . <097PKE 1 < ,.; y F 5 9 4 J 1 P b Sporting House. NewPort Spayed fem cat. :I yrs. & lnteri P.O. Hox 1560 ORGANS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beach ·s finest athletic Perfect for single person ors Cost.a Mesa, Ca. 92626 TAX SHI::LTER club is now arrepllng a p-645-3650. 1865 Harbor II, CM n~-rdrarter. holds i. Ken COMPLETE LINE 1976 Cherokee 140. COSTA MESA 546-1200 MOW $2895 1213137_6-8115_1 ___ _ 888DOVESTREET MB "/l 3UO SEL 3 5 h ·t· C-'1645-6151 """" "' •NEWORUSEO• Collins ''"w'pped,$4500& plicallons Cort e pos1 ion . U1 of beer. new "Ond. $200. --. • B Y F'e Poodle trained " Buy witb Confidence a vsu me f"ll n . < 714 I o r Food ex everag ng m. · 673-5276. Call aft HAM. o _, v TOP DOLLAR PAID IMMEDIATELY FOR ALL FOREIGN CAl\S CAI.LOR COME IN TO SEE US NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100W. Cst Hwy, NB 642-9405 Neer MacArthur Classic. Snrf. leather. & Jamboree Road,; SlO 700 ft rm 646-1766 Manager. A background Loves kids. 1 Tbl 1' ------f' r om l h e Id es l 636. 0408 O y s; Ev s In natural foods is desira 962·7989 Murrey Poo .. cust. Authorized HAM MONO 64$-6565 David Robbin:1 833-• JOO . .=.:.:'___;,__' -· ----1---------250 MB. Sdn. '72. Dark Sofa. Gibson Refrig. & CUSTOM DEALER rn Orange . ble, but not nee. /\pplica-Fumitur-. 105 Sep. Fzr. Mur h more. WOVE.._. WOODS County:: We will nol be Motorbed l tkff 9140 lions will be taken betwn 644-09'l7 644 1621 " knowingly undersold!! ••••• ••••••••••• ••••••• hrs of JOam & 2pm ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' . 50%T080% OFF TOP BUYER bm. xlnl cond, hke new. See us first. & last.! Top 56.000 m' · $7 .ooo. dollar paid for imPorls. 034 SL W Pvt · Pt>'· Thurs. Jan 13th. Ask tor Beautiful sofa & loveseat. Horws 8060 O\er40ln·stock patterns Stop in or call JAWA Moped $275 Mr. Er nst. <N360o PJhone Earth tones. Inlaid w?OO ••••••••••••••••••••••• Also MINI· Blinds 644·9200 545·3223 COSTA MESA. _962_·83S_t ----- DATSUN 1968-250 SE, xlnt. cond. 1 calls please.) l am game set w/matchmg . ho ~ 833·9770 Motorcycles/ boree Rd, N.B. SPortUlg server coffee table wall For Sale: 2 ponies & s w ScoofffS 9150 Houses of. America, San uni l .' II er cu 10 ~ 0 r quarterhorse. RAD LO Control Electric H/4.MMOHD ORGAN •••••• ••• ••••• •• •••• ••• WE BUY •USED CARS& TRUCKS• Ork. Brown 4 dr .. $4,500. 284.S Harbor Blvd. 642·5200or548-6646 Costa Mesa 540-6410 MG 974 z: Diego, Calif. naugahyde sofa & lov-Call 84H09l. Model PT Boal, over 3 rt & PIANO CENTER Kaw;isak1 750 Mach IV. ---------1 eseal. Wing back cut long, siren. water can-2854 E. Coost Hwy xlnt Mild, w11.1 few xtras, Come in or Call FREE Appralsol Groth Chevrolet 18211 Beach Bl vd Huntington Beueh 240Z ·R ed ·30m mi .••••••••••••••··~···~· AM/FM stereo t<.1pe, new -: TRUCK DRIVER Fult-tllM, rMftOnent position for d river with r•cent ex· perience and volld Closs I license. Mud pas i c ompany physical. bcellent benefits. Appflcatiom Acc~pted Mon. fhrv Fri. 9:000.m.. to 3:00 p.m. Or phone 1714) 540..5911 DELLY FOOD CO. 17872 Carlwright Rd l"iM,Calif. veJvet chairs. Kng or Qn Jewefry 8070 non. 2 speeds, etc. Very p sz bedroom suite with ••••••••••••••••••••••• sophisticated toy. Over Corono Del Mar 979-65211urt2 M. armoir e, matt resses. A..aTED ~1800_ replacement ~~~~~~~~~I Yamaha 250 f'l;it track patio table, Oak & glass W J"'lll Sucnftcc SSO<!-lnct~des Story & Clark upright racer. Disc brks, extra table. Lamps Xlnt cond. TOP C/\Sll DOLL/\ R ~verythmg. ti75-3662 or piano. $300. tram+morc parLs Very ~760 PA I D F 0 R Y 0 U H &l5-2200 :>40-7180 fast $800/bsl orr 645 9473 JEWELRY. WATCHES, , bl •k ---------1 Chair & ottoman S10. drop ART OBJECTS. GOLD. Gourmet butcher oc Sporting Goods 8094 Motor Homes, leaf table $50. walnut S ILVER SERVCCE. table.neveru~cd, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sol~/Rent 9 160 chatrSZO.overs\ulf chair FINE FURN & AN · 8.1l·l6l2 SCUBA Tunks w /'76 •••••••••••••••••••••~• $35. swag lamps 12 ) $35 TtQUES. 64~2200 RADIO Coolrol Model 12 hydro dates. 72's, BO's, 26' G MC MOTOR HOME pr, Wrght iron barstools. meter Sailboat. 6 Fl. lwn 60's. v ... N2. Farmer Sips G. Wntr rates. Pvt please call &15·7857 art Yfttodl 8075 loni;\. sails b<•autifully John w /jrkt for 6' 1110 lb pty 833-2616. 6 pm. •••••••• •• ••••• •• •••• •• :\lake offer or tr ado for? male. SS7-00l5 642·4097 Nwpt White baby armolre. $125, Reg. Morgan mare. broke 675.J6620r64S·2200 S*°". Restaurant, GMC Late '73, xlnt cnnd, 6x9 Oval rl'd rug, $..5, tall to ride & drtvt, .blk Tiffanys private Disro 8or 8095 sips ti, SlR ,90,U 1238 andirons. S25. redwood parade Morg11n g·:lding, membership & S250. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Polans. NU 1133-2616 1squarelpat1o laulc.SJO. Eng Wt:stern <7 14) • ...,M<><• SJti-6751 . tJ ht ( 1 1 673·4749 338-1011 .....,..,._, 5 . png re njt w g ~ss S J .t: l!J71 Americana. ---------i ,.....__ G S I " shdt• drs. -1 & ll hole ice 24X64'. s St:ir Adult Pk. 5 Piece bedrm !>Cl ~. Border Collie Pups. Reg. , .... arage a• crm frzr. ;wto meat l,o ren\al S25,000. Ph RCA 25" color TV SIOO. Bst or blood lines. Sl.5-0. Clothes! ClothH! slicer. bakery rack 492.!}8.11•493.25u cvcs. 847-6087 .. 549-3331 TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR CLEAN IMPORT CARS ALL MODELS ~ 18835 BEACH BL YD HUNTINGTON BEACH 84:?· 7181 540 Q.l.J:? mags, r uc111i,: shocks, sport pkg. 1 Ownr. S4800 • ' 9684198 ,,. 1<4>SOOI" 8AU 80UUVAJIO • ~£• '73 Dats un 240Z. Xlnt 1u~JGN00•11~-H1• cond. Automatic. Must over so used Jaguars • sell Call 673-2872 MG ·s. Triumphs. All im· 75 Datsun 8210. need to sell. xlnt cond. lo mi. S2700or best ofr. 497-3120 Evs/wknds maculale. Call today for exciting Lease/ Buy Plan. Sensibl e pay- ments. MGI 9744 '73 240Z. AIC. mags. 35M •••••••••••••••••••••••• Gd cond. Asking $4700. '67 MGB GT. Xlnt cond. Call55l·ll67 low m1 .. wires. radials, '67·1600 Rdstr, eng body & new cpl & paint. $1450/ int solt d , nu lop , ofr 497·3965, $1300/bsl ofr. 673-4908 bpel 9746 • '73 Datsun 510, 4 spd, ••••••••••••••••••••••• radials. good cond, $1950. '70 Opel GT. MS-1844 Ml 4pm <714 1627-1226 •NontlNG ov ER S-5• w /trays. popcorn ma ch, ---------1 17160range.Corner 1~ cup cof maker. Mon. '73 APOLLO ====--..::..:...---l.76280Z2+2. Air. mags. 4 ·73 GT . top cond. orig Queen sola lJt•d w /blln MisctU ... ous 8080 Orange & l7th. Open Fn !l-5. Call 979·6400 26. Motor Home, Dodge sp<I. Whtlblk, lmmac. o~ner. new shocks, rad tli~'.~~!1;~;, L~~;e~~h ••••••••••••••••••••••• ever~· Wed /Thurs / Fri TY, Radio, V 6. auto, p 1S. p 113. Autos, lntport.cl ~, 892.5137 tires. 4spd. $2900/ofr. 962· l926 afl 3, Gd cond $1595. 846·0816 Style 7 drawer desk S225. Open mouth mate lion 10-4 _ Hlfi, Stere-o 8098 s t c r e o. d as h j i r , •••••••••••• •• •••••••• • Ftot 9725 1 _833-8 __ 14_6_. _____ _ 673.3924 rug, S15()() or best offer Moving: Malt/bx spr~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• generator. root air. rack GeMrol 970 I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Porsche 9750 67 3-392.t ""'5 2 Cof tbl/mat en "•"ZenlthelrTV Hemote & ladder . awnin.i:_. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '69 Fi'at8SOCpe. Lo mi's.••••••••••••••••••••••• Cnpl~·n Ne mo Water bed .,, • ..., I d "' <070KH MI /\ ,al King size. 2 mos old, B~unt O range me t al tbls.marble tops,lamps, control, xlnt cond. /\sk oa e,.S 995 re RARE'62 Runs great. 30.4-0 mpg. '76 9llS. Black, 7" whls, makeofr. 960-1193 aft 3. fireplace. never used. ~54:°fa+misc furn. ingS235.8'16·4822 bu~E~~4Ncv MOTOR MASHA.Tl $895.644·5836. sunrf, Koni shocks. Ania f':qualopportumty , __ __:_ _______ , SBS.673·7293 Sanyo Stereo. AM 1F M llOME RENTAL J500GTCOUPE ·74 Fiat 12:1 Spyder. conv. exhaust. Britannia str J M /I'~ White Kel vinalor. auto r I usR t t ble ? ,,.... N I I bo Bl d S A Bo "'M Gd d whl whale tale. $2000 empoyer defrost w /freezer. S90 25" Color TV. UHF, xln~ PlnballMachint•s orirne. rcvr. o urn a · ~ ""' ar r v, · · 5 SJ>ds. new tires, r· AM/r. stereo. con . cassette stereo syslm. ~~~~~~~~~Yellow vinyl recliner rond, $165. Wet & Dr> all coin operal<?d . GXT spkrs, Xlnt, S50. ••581-2503•~ roru_w1rewhe_els,(uelin-$3,SQO,besloCr.496·4!>88. AM/FM, air. Pin stripe UTOTEM chair w1ottom<.1n; $80. Sh~r ... Var u um Sl 8 . "FIREBAaLkL ", c~ae~J~ 979·2112 '71i SMS 19'. AC. PS, PB. jectton. aluminum body; 73FlAT128SLC by Sbakey Jake. Perilli RETAIL CLERKS 540-0592 aft 5:30 646-......, money m. er. Bocrh & Marine ll&H. ~elf contained, like ~.~ 'r:lr~roovi~(to~a:,;;. Reblt en? .. only 10.000 tires. 1 odr a kl~d1 -63Sl19~. Wanted. Opportunities d tbl s Tu D E NT o E s K ~~g~~ r~~~n .. ~~1 °; 1°~ Equipment new 11.uoo m1, $9995. PP. w 1 f e . T rad e f 0 r mt. New interior & cpl. Serv rcr s ava1 · """""' <or ad vancement avaif.13pc; m~nl(rms~t: . + Clfi\IRS. suitable for HOCKEY" xlnt cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 968·171>8 somelhin!! tamer. Pan. Flared whls. Ferrari '66 912. 4 Spd, nu eng. Openings m Co:.ta Mesa. 2 leaves. h hi-bk t hrs. 2 schools. or home study ssoo. And factot·y new ~al 9010 Aut Set-vie~ Porb tera. Lotus. Etc or ?7 Ma.gs. ~ear molded clutch, interior. Clean. Anaheim. Ganlcn Grove pr china c:tb1111:t. xlnt $18. each. or $9()(). for six· cond. "SPACETIME" 4 ••••••••••••••••••••·~· &o"'cc•'"sorles 9400 Pvt pty . 675·3662 or SPoller. viny! top. SPol· Ask $4800. ph 5S1·1167 & Westminslcr S450. 6-l2· 3767 Ch I 1·k • 5 o RADIO ,.A t I I ctr c ~ ~.. 645.2200 less-new paint. 645·7588,1..:..::.:.:...:...;.;;.:..:_:..._ ___ _ 6 .. 2•7702 ty. a rs are 1 e new. p I a y e r , ,. 5 . ....._.n ro e e 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,. Used green &. yellow hardwood seal, formica "SEEBL'RG" Jukebox. Model PT Boat. over 3 ft ---------aft5PM ·74 914 Porsche. blk, ----. 1 C -k-.1-couch for sale . Looks desk top, steel frame . poor cond. S250 or offt•r. long, siren, water can VW ENGINES MOVING ·MUSTSELL . 75 Xl 9 Fial Convert. Xlnl xlras, mags. Wn1lress, i' ()()( oc lai s. new. Sl25. Call 673-5322. Call btwn 11·5, 979-0751 Jerry, i>56·0421. 11-9PM non. 2 speeds. etc. Very USED · REBUJLT '64 Vette. mlnl cond. cond. Chocolate brown. 675-6265aft. 6 Apply af1 .tpm. Blue sophi!!tlcated toy. Over 40 HP.1300, 150o. 1600cc. '71Men·edes220. ...". 82 FM Beel, 107 2lsl 1'1 NB Dinette set. $35, mens 3 Carpet, shag, nylon, burnt .. Avon" collect a hies, s 11100 r ep 1 ace men l . Dual Ports ~30-fil:l40 '74 Mu.d a RX4. ..,...,....1 '75 914 2.0 Litre. AM/ - -. spd bike, SJO. rhllds orange. very gdcond.130 "Ha r vard Cl:isslrs', Sacrilice 5.500. Includes DER 13UGGYSllOP ANY OFFER HClftda 9727 stereo. appear grp. Waltress f"oocl1<:;oc,klails. dresser. $10. <'OU<'h & 2 Yards. S2 .50 p /yd . ''Royal Doulton '' everything. 675·3662 or CONSIDERED ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mags. metallic copper. Apply arl .\pm. ~1<1 11 Blu chairs. $10 496·0al3 6'$().1066 figurines. Crystal ware 64~2200 ----"'·"'os •or Sal• PP 54-0-7198 Super clean, 646·0484 Beet. 111121st Pl. N B. 536-0636 ...._, T' ... Brand Mew '77 ----IUD .. : A·BED $100., round 6S yds rarpet blue shag. RADIO Control Model 12 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Audi 9707 1974, 914, 2.0, A M /FM WAITRESSES frultwood tablt• with 4 good cond Sl.50 yd. Carpeting l30 yds, s hag. meter Sailboat. 6 Ft. 14.ntlquH/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• HONDA' Cars stereo, mags, 26.000 ml. P 1timc. n1~hl shrf\ Ex chairs Sl5-0 .. .'Wod quality S48·8300<tnyt1me. gm/blue S195 3 Sets drps Ion~. sails beautifully . Clouics 9520 71 Aud a 100 LS. needs MA.NY xlnt cond. $6800. 548-892\ ver tJ Appl~ Ma bunkl>ed $l'tcpl SlOO . w 1s hecrs & r ods, Makeofferortradefor ••••••••••••••••••••••• somework.besto!rover ToChoos.From! RetlCIUlt 9755 14arker "· 212 ~: 17U\ St. flower cart SIOO Aft 5 30 Coffl'e table, end table, purple/bluc/orani:e ??ti75·361i2or645·2200 Great 111,·t•stmt•nt '57 $500. 714.493,3294 ••••••••••••••••••••••• (;M 5411~ hassock. Cryst.al chandelier S60. • Ch u\' "l -ltion W••n al U ... 11VERSITY -675·0798 Nile s tnd Med It S20. Boots, Mo1ntenonc1c Perf'ect " ... _:lv ,\sis ~/2 14.ustfn.He ey 9709 f"IJI • '68 RS. runs xlnl. GS,000 WHERE ARE ~--· 020 ""' · •••••••••• Ofdsmobd~ Mi, xlnt cond. $600. Tra,,_ "O''r old stuff for Kenmore washer .. gas 831 317:,J. .K"J'YIC~ c n g S d l' S600 I h s l. ••••••••••••• G C ""' J " -'-· SISO d tl ••••••••••••••••••••••• 63l-3321l '73 Jensen llealey. Xlnt HQndo Cars • M 67S·8920or642·'1718 YOU?? new goodies with a ""'er , new ane e Ladies 10 sp<I bike~. Ski YACHT CARP ENTRY . cond. Lo mi. $4.500. firm. Trucks Rolb Royce 9756 . Clas.'lihedad.642·56'78 :set Wf6 r halrs s2oo. boots sz 8 & _6. Lge N"w''onst.Sp"c'ialtv f'·IOO ·~.i Ford PL' i\!1 """-1532 2850H bo Bl d We v(• .io1 1.1 Joh for you --· 631·2418 eve • ~ " .. .. " "'"' ar r v . ••••••••••••••••••••••• worlon.: out or your own Sellin~ anything with a custom sora, spinet or· Oay :>48·814!! Eve 646·6382 stock. runs fin•' ~.!'>00. IMW 97 I z Costa Mesa 540·9640 #1 DEALER IN U.S.A. h l''ed Ad 3 PANEL d I gan S300. 640·5296 : --. orofr !>HJ.1206 hom<'. w11rk1111: I rs a Dally Pilot Cla~s i staine g a11a 586-6600. ask for Ann. Boots, Marine _ _ : ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jaquar 9730 ROY do> ottvrin 11 c.-har11e oc is 8 simple ITlllller . 1111ndow. 6 ft x 8 ft. See at Equipm!nt 9030 4 ~·I Dnves 9 550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IRR eounts for rclall :;lores & justrall642-5678. 42731st NB 673-6597 Want Ad Help" 642·5678 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . 73 X.J I:! , 1 dr. white CARVER you ran m11k1· s:J·SS hour --· \ ROLLS-ROYCE comm Whnt arc you 8' Folding Mahogany bout '63 Dodge Power V.igo,11. w/blu~ leather int. full wo1l111~ for~ ,\OS. t21.Jl ladder. SSO. several used "•ton l'l' I W D · 3111 \ H. pwr & air. 40.000 Miles. :!~'::.":11 9'l5·391ll old sails, SlO. 24' Bahama sno tires, '\Ira hcdVY rlu· Perl. cond. orig. owner. ..._ ----4~~ sutlhoal rover. $30. lY sus11 & lx>dy Stl50. Contact UaroldStandish. ClOSED~NOAYS Wnmi•n, 2!'> & older lo 1175-4002 fi42-7i!IH 'JJ BMW Custom Weave Carpets, work Cor Hous<·clcaninK 20 HP. 2 cyl Bukh marine Trucks 9560 S htwn 8am·3:30pm Mon· !964 Rolls Royce "SJIOW svs, 1'11p $, l(tl hrs. deisel. practically new.••••••••••••••••••••••• Fn 9fl2·884l CAR". Top cond. 31.300 tn~ ---TO OUR WOMEN IN BUSI NESS S'l()()O. 5S2·9262 1975 CHEVY HERE NOW 'U>s 1-.11.1~uar :is Drop mi. Take over paymcnlll X·RAY TE<.:llNOLOGIST COMING Sunday January 23, 19n 9040 >;,.TON PICKUP hl·ad C'pc. I o .... ncr 61.000 or purchase. 759•0779 /Female/ Necd1·d tor In the Dally Piiot ~;!.~:.-:': .......... With Westwood Camper. m1 Ong )<cttts 'C:Pl. npewh Toyota 9765 radiology nfficc located Automatir + factory ;11r BMW RESALES t o p < L () C 11118 I ••••••••••••••••••••••• in N.8. Mu~t be ARRT & 1974 Boston Whaler, l I '3". cond. tS6u 4z 1. · 7 0 2 8 0 0 c s + 1,; _1:.:1~376·~'>7 ·-. __ CRT, 642 fl.164 for appl. '75 15 h.p. Johnson m11lor SP 2 35CFS 1 with only 10 houri. $MOO 5 9 9 5 . ., · + 1 • Collc<·<ors il('lll 1965 3.H::> '11 TOYOTAs ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........, 1005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wonderland Of Antiaues! U UOF. wadih ouse cr&mm~ with over SOO music boxei;, n1ckelo· deon pianOll, cir<'US or· sans. wall clocks, 1randfathcr c1ocks , fasclnntlng antlqoe11 Over SI .000.000 Worth Americnn lnlt!rnat1onal 0Rllerles: 1802-T Ke tter· tn11 Sl .. lnrne. Tel. 7M·1777. Open Wed thru Sot. !I AM lo4 PM. Visit! Antq Mnhogany vanity. Betit ofter C811 646-5613 aft4pm. CHARLES WALLACE ANTIQUES Wtllsc to the tradr. 18430 BandllicrClr. hn Vly 002·4665 AppiaRCH 10 I 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• REFRlGERATORS WASHERS ORYF.kS Reconditlons-Kepro~ ~ t'rgt Oumol(e. Gunr/Ot>l 211Yr:i111 Ora.na(/ Co DUNLAP'S , 181$ Newport 81, CM CALL MS 7780 A TRIBUTE TO ?ME ORANGE COAST'S SUCCESSFUL WOMEN BUSINESS PROFESSIONALS o. ...._IO,..._ 9lld ,...n•IOMt W-le •n ••~•I oti9011Vnlty to ~ • -0r-...... _..,...to tM '*"'-of m. Of•nt• Co111, oo to llaMf ..... Clf ...... •14 •. Don1 Ml .. N""9 '*' of !Mt ~ .a-ti ..... oppotttmlty. 0Hdlln• for ,_...... "P-19 .lefl, It. C.. tod•YI 1 DAILY PILOT 642-5678 firm, Replaccm <'nt value ,7 .. 2002.A .. <53SRKK>. s1lvt·r .... ,rl'd lthr In t. $2100. Call 642·4482 1 u.+sr1 C:.:llll:: 7 3 3 · ° Cs · 4 8 P · · needs brk work, '*"l ofr. 1'111111111!" ~ ~967KLM 1. . 6757985 for Sulc J.197•1 Fa ntasy ,_......_,~-73 Bavarin ·4 11 p . ------------·- PG. 17' Tri llnll. elec C'oltw Melll 540 "'""' <680PPM >. karmannGftla 9735 powered boal!i compl ·74 Bavarfa .. 1 SIL ·••••••••••••••••••••••• HERE NOW h & <348Lf"MI. d w1Ball c argers nu '6.1 Dodite Power Wu gon .. 752002.f\ ·t034J) '6.'i Ghi;1, runs 1(1.lO • covers $5,UOO . '"~tonPU . .iW.0 .318V8. G ir~llow , ~ood paint. •MEW COLORS •MEW MODELS <7141673-4300 snu tires, xtra ht>avy du· '75 ~lA0~·J~A.~VK 1' £~!~!~~~~6·\I~ JET 801\T, 427 L -88 ty susp. & body. SllSO V/4.LLEY IMPORTS '58Karmn nn Ghiu ~~11gre· C h e v Y • h I g h ~·72M 831•2040 495.4949 ccmtly reworkt'd. Runs performance, At:ro •70 CHEVY good. ~tbst. 962·6E}!_ H11,gc Savlng:s on ALL Ni· m olnlng new 76s &c DemOB. equlp'd. Headers. dual • axle trlr. $4500. 496-4639 V-8 RHtsect. Mcnda 9738 Pickup, ~ ton. Custom ••••••••••••••••••••••• CREVIER The Better Bargain MAR(i)UIS TOY OT A MISSION VIEJO 831·2180 495-1210 loah, Sall 9060 c41mper Special. AIT. ••••••••••••••••••••••• PIS. 'P/8 . AJC. bumper. Kite with dolly. yellow top shape. (760571" I Sult XI n l co n d . S 4 5 0 price $2,49S Weekdays8U8·879'7. REGENCY MOTO!l Hobie 16, lrlr. new trans & more. $1,'12S. 646·8255 or HOME RENT/\ I. 92.5 N. R4J'b0r, S /\ ••531·~·· 581·7505. --------- '68Chevy PU. l\l.c lon. mus1 HOllEC/4.T l .SM""' sell. leoavlog stllt+: < ll ~41 ft. s roaller version •193-6050 or Hobie 16 & \41 Like V _..;._ ______ 9 __ 57=0 new, oolo~ sQlls and CMS extras. Orea~ for boyi1 •••• •••••• •• •• •• •• •• • •• first rat. Very fa!it. SGOO '72 T'rnvelnll. A/C. r11"lo G7~·36G2or&i5·2200 t ow 1 n g t'<l u I p P ~ d . S2G001orr. ~3149. uft l pm . 26' Endeavor w /Mooring 67~-008.5 W 62 Dodiic Step Van. 17' O'Day Daysaller, '74 convt'd llvlna. 4 mil + lo &I Sf 6 UOAOWAY UIUA AHA 835·3171 THI ULTIMA fl O~IVIHC MACHIHI •USED BMW's* ·73 UuvuriA Auto1Sunroor.OOGLVY '69 16004Br>d ZXX866 '7<13 ocs,\ S/R 7~1.WB '75200'.!S/R \112NB '16 20(Y.! St R 0325 CIOHd 0.. Sundays ORANGE COUMTY"S OLDEST '74 Cclte!tl GT . 5 spd, A~ nt. good gas ml. $3400. PP963-St 40 ----· ....... ·---- '70 Corona Di x, Auto traNJ, 1 ownr, xlnt cond, ---------1 $1 175. Aft s. 644·0287 i4 Mazda RXJ Coupe. 4 Triumph 9761 s~. und~rnty, very ••••••••••••••••••••••• c ean83'T· •73 Triumph Spitfire Convt Lo ml. magi, Mlrc•dH a.a 9740 radials, $2995, evu ....................... lMIJ..1990 i J 281$E 3.5 Cpe. Sunr·r. ~~----- ltnmnc, Sl4.000. olttwtlellft 9770 '71 250C. Red/blk Int . -··••••••••••••••••••• Rare. fuel lnj beauty. ·ss $quareback. 4apd, w1wlr e whltL 16200. overhauled motor. gd Cuddy cabin. roomy askl~ 2 mu. 844·'7461 sa1cs.Servlce·Ll.l11smii cockpit, stoo5. G4S·500S '67 vw van. Snrf', Bit Roy Caner,lnc. Don't pve up the abtpt ·oo VW Camper, 1600 cna, P-Otl w1traller. Dlue over xtru, ready for cnm Rolls ftoycc BMW "Usl' ll 1n cla1tlrled. w /oil cooler & filler Weekdays 898-8797 cond. $800. l'.42·4945 wf\Jte. suoo. Weekdays Ing. S950. 546·9222 1540Jamb0ree Ship to shore raultal Runs aood . SI 700, 898~. _4_97_·_3M_l ------t Newport Beach 64{).6«4 &U·M78. 1_54WM9 _______ _ aJ .f DAIL 'f PILOT A.llfot. UMd Mtot. Ua.d .....,._ UMd A.tot. UNd A.tot. UMd ....._ UM4 .•.•..•.••......•................•••.•••••.... ···················•··· ······················· ............................................. . ~.~~.~ ...... ~·.'.~~ ....... ~.~~ ........... ~=~ ........ !!~~ ~~ ......... !!.l.~ ~ ............. !!~~ ~~ ......... !!.~~ ~ .......... !!.~~ ~~ ........... !!.~~ Vollswogett 977 ol•o 9772 AMC 9905 '74 Corvette. Loaded. •66 Galaxll' Gd rond Ne1A. ·70 l\tav~rtck. Forest gm, ·75 MU!ltana II. hardtop, '7~ Grand Prix. All xt.raa •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 Montl' Carlo Dix T ·top,$6800. pnint Sacrth('e 1~00 6cyl.newl)rblteng,new only 8,000 D\1. $3,400. In Xlnl mcrh. ~100 Call 64 VW Sqb1>ck. ReblHn& '76 AMC GREMUM AM FM • At<:. hit whl l2UI 592·2983 6Jl·3320 battery, R1H. rUN xlnt mint rond. Pvt ply. 1W0-0383 trans. xlnt rond lhruout 17 6 C r d tom tic Swvl scat $4200/o(r $000/ofr 67~19 644-958:?atl 7 PM. -------- $B0010Cr 494 21\~. tra:s'~i!!lo~~ radio. ~~ Cougar 9933 71 Ford LTD 48,000 mt. Mere 9950 Must sell'73 Firebu~ 400 Volvo heater. power slecnng & "7~ Novo 2 dr 40,000 mt ••••••••••••••••••••••• very good cond $1700 lll'Y PWo 9917 P /$, Pi n. tiuto. mia NEW•VW'S OVER75 IMSTOCI< All Models Colon brakes. IW' cond1uorung Good c 0 n d S2 90 o '76 COUGAR XR7 Mlke:>56-1009aft 6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• whls. 24.000 mi 's, Xlnt roof rack 64G-Ml67 nn 9 30PM Comes w 1 l h V · 8 . '76 MOMARCH ONE OWNER um Pinto cood. S3700 640 6091. HERENOW A6M65Et~ automatic. radio & 1975 FO•o Co m es with v .s . Runabout.lngoodcondl ·oo.PonUacCatallna $2686 72 Monte t'arlo $1700 heater, power steering & " automatic. radio & Uon green exterior & in StauonWagon • .._.EW COLORS PS1PB. utr. l1lt whl. 66M brakes. vinyl top. air GR.AMA.DA heater. power steeung & terior. Will sell $1400. or ~IHl(i(Midays. " &W 0033 cond .. looking good! vs. automatic. stereo. brakes. alr rond. Look al best o!fer. Low mileage. ---------•HEW MODELS Yours ror immediate de· crwse control & vinyl lh1s pnce' Yours tor 1m-After $ weekdays & 'Ill i'"lrcbird. Good c<>nd, ~~ Jl~c aa vlngs i>n ull re· 1974CHEYY I 1 very. (Ser . roof. I mmaculate mediate dchvery. IL1c. anytime weeke nd• $1400. See a l 1TS~2 malnlng new 7tis & IMPALA CUSTOM 6A93H543713). thruout! 1832LWE>. 8S4NJA1. MWU7. Gothard, Hunt. Bch. Pll 1'llOO We•tmfnater Blvd. Wntmlnster 893-7551 Vemosin stock. $5486 ONLY $4399 $4486. 841M!06Saft~pm. M.ARQUISVOLYO • '74 Sta. Wgn, AM /FM, 4 ~ 9970 MISSJON VIEJO Wck 9910 11pd, 6 cyl. 33.000 Ml. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 846-6419 aft. 6pm 831·2880495-1210 T·Bird. '12. stereo, auto. 1 USED * vw·s '72 LeSabre. Oriit own. '76 Pinto. 2 dr. PB. AC, A/C. many xlras. New OVER 50 ORAMGECOUMTY ~~;,.~~a~s.~unnmg s.ooo ml, $2895. PP. steel bit tires. Reg gas, VOLVO 9611-1768 496-9643 IM STOCK EXCLUSfVELY VOLVO '75 Buick Regal 2dr, PW. 9940 '75 l\1erc. M~at<'h Ghia. Plylllouth 9'60V -191------9-9_7_• Herd to fillcl Largelil Volvo Dealer AC. red w /wht top & wht ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brown, tun inter. A/c, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ftl0det5 1n Orange County! int. $3850. 640·0945 .73 Monte Carlo /\/C lop ONE OWNER 1972 Pinto '75 LTD w /sunrf & cruise stereo. Rlue Bk S.1100. Vega GT Sta Wgn 1974 BUY or LEAS£ '62 Bwck Skyla rk custom. co n d $2 4 O O. o'a Y . Runabout. In g<>C?d condi· contrl. S37SO. 545· 1493 ~~~~7 $38()(). 499-3908 or ATLAS Sporty duh w IR PM: WITlllll . DIRECT 111r. PS. radials. bucket 821·4230/Eve 556·18SS Uon green extenor & tn· btwn8&~pm. · mag whls. auto. AM /FM /J ~'~Mlt~~E scats. l ownr, ulwayi. , tenor. Will sell Sl~OO. or 66 4 dr Galaxie runs ·m Mercury. Top Cond! ChryslerjPtyMouth stereo, 47.000 mi. $1~. ~e1r.v~r ,, ~araged, only 86.ooo m1 5!~t~"~:~~i. best offer. Low mileage. gOod good ures $2so or many xtras! Call Rod Open Daily & Sun. 'ttl 10 640-1075: 548-~. 7IOOWHtmlnsc-e1Vd. - --~~-• ~ S.500/bestofr 646 !1582 l7lh St. Dayi.. or cal ~~;;::~~~~5~:5~~ ofr.646.L998afl~PM Sl6-090'1 afi6:30PM. PM 2929ffarbor Blvd• i4 Vega. Below Book Wfltlftlnst-'93·7551 Ccadiloc 9915 7~1·9488 Evs. MmtClllCJ 9952 Costa Mesa 37,000 m1, xlnt cond. --------1 ~~ 750 2011 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..__1 '69 Country Squi re. ••••••••••••••••••••••• s.11.L 1934 $1~. 499·3636 '69 VW. Sunroof, aul l'VIClr""'" -C ... ,,.er 9925 loaded. new tire:;. S900 LMcoan 9945 9 USTA G ,..,. shift, gd cond. $000. Call -• ••••••••••••••••••••••• firm 540-1532 557·5616 I 75 M H II 73 Vega OT Wagon. AC ~c.0402. I 971 VOLVO · ' · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 cyl., stick shift, radio & 73 Fury 111. loaded. excep· Must sell! $1100. 546-~ """' X.LNT BUY '75 G d Oh' St '7"' ll ... COL.... he •-<ATV""'•> N I 42 E SEDAM It '68 4dr Chrys Newport. rana a 1a. ereo. " ""' " a~r. .,... · ow tionaJ cond. New tires. or Lonrue, 894·7521. '72VW WestphahaJ>Opto Pwr AC Xlnl con snrf, silver w1b1.1rgundy TOWMCOUPE reducedto $2,075.492·1181 camper. towner. $3700. Automatic, air cond., lhruo'ut .... .;,..673-0I"" inl. Sharp ! $4300. · OHLY$2695 '75 Hatchback, 4 spd, 960-1430 tape deck & leather in· _,., "" 64H 755eves. Full power including '71 Cricket . good gas AM/FM. $2000. ---------1 te nor. (810DFX>. Now I vinyl lop, till wheel. mileage. $650. 675-8490 71 VW Bus. AM/FM. xlnt reduced to l.968 Dodge Monaco. fol '75 Granada. Blk. 2 dr. 6 cruise rootrol. AM /FM S48-6255 cood. S2400or best ofrer. 0.._.LY $2995 equipped. xlnt ml'c cyl. PS/PB. auto, reel· tape, air cond., looks 1974 Vega Hatchback . 494·3432 " Nabers rond. SSSO 642·7743 in'g seats. AM /FM. air. good! <Llc.087REC> '67 Valiant sedan. $495. 6 custom ext. 4 spd, 20.000 ----Xlnt cond $3995. Call $648/.. cyl. Great eng. Tight ml, xlnt cond. Make olr. 69VW.sunroor. Cadillac Contlnetttal 9930 645·2205aft6pm body, bruised fe nder 673-893levs. good cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-7788 -------- 833-0l92 Evs. 1974 Mark IV, pvt ply. Classified ads sell big Selling anything with a •68 vwn g 11 000 i Q rtya dPr'ce $6900. Wkdy ~ 5·9, items, 'small Items or fastest draw in the Trade your old s tuff for DallyPllotClaaaifiedAd n e w e ~g· &0 tr'!'n~~ 0l;~ara~reed1 714·549-8010: Evs/Wknds any ltem. Just call West ... a Dally Pilot new gedoodles with a j~.1,,8alim1!.'~..=tter · · · $1.200/ofr. ll68·0901J 496-7966 642-5678. Classified Ad. 642·5678. Cla.sslfl ad. 642·5678 ... ~... -·-•o. Leasing Spcciali\I \ '74 vw Westphalia .. AM/FM R trk. lmmac. 75 Volvo 242 ~L. Low Full gear . Bs t o rr. mUe.,racto!)'~•r.stereo. Preferred Rares Alltos, N•w 9100 Alltos. New 9100 Aattos. New 9100 Alltos. Hew 9100 Alllof. New 9100 Alllos. Mew 9100 Large~t Sdec11on or New & Used Cadillac~ in Orange County .......................................................................................................................................... 673-2934 Uke new, ms1de & out. -~. 495.5534 ·73 Super Bug. Superb cond, 40.000 m1 , new Autos, Used brtcs, xlnl tires, radio. ••••••••••••••••••••••• S2275. 644-0094 990 I '69 VW . Auto. Clean, Days, 548-7333. Eves , 645-3728 Kevin or Bob. 'OT VW. 1 ownr. Ex c:ond. Nu seat covers. & ml.If. n er. ssoo. 548·3875 _____ , Open SundJy udillac Master Dealer 2600 Harbor Blvtl. Co~t.a Mesa 540-9100 Nabers Cadillacf '68 VW Bug . C us tom fiberglass F ende rs. !\lags, 8 trk tape. 104.J<.. ~5. 581·9005 66 Chevy-SYS.S72·S499 197 4 CadlUac 6lTBird·FWJ088·s.599 Brougham. Metallic Yol•o 9772 66 Ply.Cpe .. 630JSH-$699 blue. vinyl top, blue 68 VW Bug-374MXM899 crushed velvet inlenor . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1973VOLVO 70Toyota-683CDl·S999 LOADED . Full Powl'r . 67Cad.SD·IJ20BSW·S1199 Low mileuge! S8.000. 71 VW Poplop Camper. Days, 630·1710 -Eves. F 1.1 I I y e q u I p · .,.,., """• Pr! t 164 ESEDAH Automatic, !.wr. steer· m~. air <'on . & leather interior. <969GMQ ). Now ped·062083·$2895 _.,,,.,._,_"""'-· --· P_Y· __ _ CALL 642-0795 I 972 CADILLAC OMLY $3995 Mf\RQUIS MOTORS ... ~r.. v. :. "' ' f" t f ,._ ./'J ' ') ), I' o,.. I ' Y \I• ,r4 ,,,. j4 Don't give up the ship! "List" it in classified. Ship to shore results! 6'2·5678. Classlfied ads s ell big items. small items or any item. Just call .. 1 ~ ,.. l V , ' -========--t 642·5678. ......... -~-..,.-----:-:~ 'IOC~lol. New 9IOO LUY THAT LU V ! Loek! BRAND NEW CHEVY LUV 1/2 TON Pickup! No 225273/39'7 w~th radio. Mik8d0 equlpt . steo bumpe<. heater. etc. Nows99 ONLY DOWN Ate s99 ONLY MONTH! That's nghll On aPOtOWd credit only •99 down en4-only 199 month fOr only forty.eight months. 'Total ca.sh cirtoe Including tax and Ncense Is only •~99. Tent defemld pnce Is only l4851. APR 14.37. BIG STOCJC ta# OtEVY LUY PKXUPS PRICED TO SEW Trade yow old vehicle now, paid for or not! HOWARD Cllewaolet Dow .... 91111 Sh. MllWPO«t~ C*-MIM_. I Q wt 833-0555 COUPE DEVILLE (090Hf'W>. OMLY $2897 M l\R QUI S MOTORS i1~0~¥"5h.JIA•H Pl'Wt '), ri . , , , . ,,. , .~... • l . , ¥t'i',1(._l~ '\ll(JQ ~ J' -2~ti0 49'; -1710 9917 197SCAM.ARO VS. automatic, pwr. steering + brakes, a1 cond. & SJ>Ortswheels. 1S02MCE). Now reduced to OMLY$4595 Mf\RQUIS MOTORS _to,.n. M.'l'1<.Utf1 rt p-..w, •,, • ' 'IV •• --,,. "'~···. I.,, • f\/11'\jl:')t, .1110 II :,Ii/'!~ ol'.l' .'•ll '74 Camaro, p /b, pis, a ir. Xlnl cond. $3695. Call 549-2539. Mike. '71 Camaro. fcty air. 8 trk s t e reo . xlnt c o n d . $2450/bst ofr. 494-3432 72Z283SOStock. reblteng, cpd. 68.000 mi. S2800/bst of r. MS-9746 ~·roWt 9920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1975CHEVY MOHZA2+2 AutomaUc with radtn & heater. 1980LWA>. Now ONLY $2695 Mf\RQUIS MOTORS 01 .. ,), ~:.w1,l1tY1U ri .. IN, 1.' l .... 11 .• ,1 •• ¥•, 111"'4 vii JO I 1 ,''\i"(l 1C,',. J,l\t\ 1975CHEVY MONTE CARLO Automatic. factory air cond . & vinyl top. (~LPQ>. 4495 ·70-9 pass Chev Stn Wgn. AT. PS. PB. foe AC. 4 nu Ures. Sl,0001ofr. Ask 'g 962..3931J '72 Chevy Station wagon. 3 Seats. auto. air. $1850. Call 559-0737. '13 CbeV)' Malibu. Extra clean. Blue. blue in· terlor. Air condillonlnll. Stereo cassette opt1onnl. $1600. 551·3855 arter 6PM or640.3'1S4 Day. Classified ads aell big Items, 11m111l items or an y i\tm. Jus \ call 6'2·5678. Don't drop tbc ball! Gel a Job wllh A low.cost Dally l>llot Classified Ad. PhoneM2 S678. CASH REBATE ON ALL OF THESE REMAININI '76 Oltlu110lalles and GM( Trucks & Vans 0icl'ltfW' t3DOnllC10121ifl 2901T STARFIRE (Xl010IJCIOHlll 3140T STARFIRE (3007&ec:101171l tQLDSDEMOMS1'RAf01$ 2583 STARFIRE !30010llCl00&1'9l 261,f EoLD )!IRE 2614 STARFIRE l10010llC10194ZI 2911 STARFIRE 1Xl010IJC1091461 29A6T DB.TA 88 13H6~1 2987 STARFIRE (30010IJC10T'Ot6) 2994 STARFIRE l100l'OllC10T43> 3004 STARFIRE mvroec1or-i 3110 STARFIRE r.ID010llC1088'1) 3172 OMEGA BROM 1-.111eot1 3173 STARFIRE 1$TOTOICll 10861 3178 STARFIRE (3T07C8CI 1109~1 320'l STARFIRE C30010llC1oe6'el 32Z[ s~]FIRE ~"' • :All 1~[s<>U~ 10044 TERRAVAN (l~5CXJOWI 1 Ol~o"!)~ UP m -~' 10199 PICX UP moJ2"8U0'9121 IGMC bEMO@STRATolSI 9544 JWSVAN (TGVWMJ,.,IM81 '11'111915 VAN (TGY1~50447•1 10150 ~TON PICK UP cTO. .. ez~1 10160 !-7 TON PICK UP (TQ.1"8la010llOI 10'111 PICK UP moJ 148ZIC*>llN WEEKEND USED CAR SPECIALS '72 TOIOMADO 74 POMTIAC VIMTUU 74 TOYOTA COIOMA '72 POHTIAC ARBllD 74 CHIVY t/1 TOH \11"'4 -atereo Pl. ~ ok -ttlf ..._ -(15Cl€Y£) Qoe e ~ OAS SAllOI -..., _,11 .. 11') eo..o. • ~ OAI SMllR. -· 4 -111..-p IOUMCH! II.. ""o . P S , P B .... oond -::=, v• -=-o.-. -~-I~ 'O.-• llal41 ···~ •79!' ·-~ •10>!.9 I ::..-... ., .. c... .................. ........ tlM c..i..-•ntWllli•W.•-.. ,,.,,..._..,. .,.. ~~-----·-. =::-.r....:=.:-t.::-.~·~"::'.:: ...• 1-.......... ,....AP•M...._ ......................... .._ ... , .. ""' ..... ................ 4#ft ..... '73 OLDS OMEGA 72 POHTIAC U MAHS '740LDS .. '7l OLDS CUTLASS '73 GIAHD Pllll ~"'l'~;o"· V-4. -PS PB.• !:°'R~l~:i'r;ri .,_,PS PB. =-~tl~~;_,~· PG .·--w;"Vf roo. I'&. 1'8. '"'-, :::.i.. t;rJtr;, .. "· "'' "'-· ,.,,.,. ••2~ .. ,~ ··~ •121~ ._ ......... o.-,,_ • ..,,.. •••• _.. ........... _ ..... p ....... :.:;-.:--=..:-:1::-.~~.::. -• :=....-=..-....::.:~,;:-.. ':'!~-:.: .... =:t..:-....:=.:-:.r.:-,.·m~.: • • • 71 AMC JAVBJM 74PIMl'O~ll '71 OLDS '8&.S '73 CHEVY 1/J TOM •75 OLDS cun.ASS .... --::'lri --.....,. too =· 1<1'l::i.7"" -,.,,.. -QDo9e ~ ... .,,-.. ---. ...... =i:----e.ior.QM 119 -·ris Pl ... tap, l'W< --( l llC>wl ""' ,...,, .. ···-.. ----. .• -........1.-ci R&H--\»*I (NeQWWI . ···~ • .,.1~ ··•·i •100~ •121~ =-.,.._,.......:.= ~=.:~.-:~. u. • ::::-._r ..=.:-..a::..~-=.:' ... =--::.:-.....:: .!-' ..::-.. ~.-:-.:: ••• ... _,.. .... c.-,..-tfllil'\,,,__ .. _. ....,._..._. ........... ,_# ........ ::... --...-...=_!-...:-..~--:.& ...• INnll llew 1977 HO•AS llow 111 Stoclclll lnat, Se1Ktle11 e UAMEDIA TE DELIYEllY UNIVERSITY SALES & SERVICE Oldsmobile • GMC Trucks • Honda Cars 2850 Harbor Boulevard, Costa Mesa • 540-9640 .. ' D~tington Beach Fountain Valley ED IT ION * A[te .. noon · .Y.Stueks VOL. 70, NO. 11 , 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1977 TEN CEN Growls Aside, HB to Put Bite on Dogs • Huntington Beach has found ! that the business of going to the dogs isn't half bad. Jn fact, the city is going lo do It for another year despite growl· ing from some residents. City Treasurer Warren Hall said the city can expect a profit of about $6,000 out of dog license revenues for fiscal 1976-77. He expects a surplus of $10,000 in 1977-78. The city has been colleeting dog License revenues for seven months with part-time people surveying neighborhoods for un· licensed canines. • • During that tirtie, they sold 16,200 licenses and expect to sell 1,500 more before June 30 for a total of $140,089. The city pays Orange County $11,000 per month for animal con· trol services. It also had $15,000 in licensing expenses. Hall.said the city expects t.o in· crease its effectiveJ)eSS next year to 20,500 licenses or about 80 per· cent of the dog population. "This will give the city an estimated $165,000 in revenues with expenses expected to be about $155,000," he said. Licenses for unaltered animals cost SlO. The fee for spayed or neutes:ed dogs is $5. There is a 50 percent penalty fee 30 days after the licenses are due. Hall said that some of his in- spectors have been accused of us· ing "Gestapo tactics" by some residents in their efforts to ferret out unlicensed dogs. "Sur e, we've looked over fences and we've asked people if their neighbors had a dog," he said. "The plain fact, however, is that some people simply don't want to pay for tbe licenses and have their dogs protected against rabies," he said. "We're giving our collection people more training and in- structions on how to deaJ with people from the knowledge that we have gained,·· he added. City council members have voted unanimously to continue the program for one more year. The city got·into the business when its contract with California Animal Control was terminated. The county provides animal control services while the city sells the licenses. ' !Court Scuttles L~w-inco1ne Zoning Long et Blasts Officers ~. ASPEN . Colo. lAP> - Claudine Longet said she resent- ed the altitude among police of· ficers that she was guilty of a crime the night her lover was killed. the jury in h er manslaughter trial was told to- day. Al'Wlr'9flelo WEEPS IN COURT Claudlne Longet Councihnan iQuits With !Ire Flaring Leisure World resident Harold Holden. 82, resigned rrom the Seal Beach Caty Council Monday rug ht. Councilmen said they will In· lterv1ew two other LetSUre World )residents to r eplace Holden whose term of office would have I expired in March of1978. I Holden told the council Dec 'l:1 lhe would res ign if Les ter 1Marshall. another Leisure World man, was named his replace- 1ment. The former c-ouncilman !blamed 111 hen Ith for his decision to leave the counc11. But the council balked at ap- pointing M nrshall to succeed llolden. Holden. not present l\t last night's meetmg. filed his let· 1ter of res1gnat1on anyway after labehng fellow councilmen "a bunch of weak-kneed, politicaJ cowards" last week. "J'm not trying to dictate my own successor.·· said Holden In a telephone interview today. "I thought I was helping the city out" by savmg the cost of a special election. Councilmen s aid last ni ght they wlll interview Marshall and George Telford, a former Drake University professor of political science, within two weeks. If no agreement is reached as to which of these men to select as Holden's replacernent, coun- cilmen said a special election -will be held May 31 to let the voters in the former coun- cUmen's district decide. Telford pr.esented the council with a list of about 100 Leisure World residents who favor him .as Holden's successor. Sources said today Mayor Tom Black and Councilman Russell Gray are supporting Marshall t.o nu the vacant council seat. Marshall reportedly has the • s u pport of most of the nel&hborhood "mutual" or sub- dlatrtct presidents in the coun· cllmanic district served by Rolden for six years. Cons Seek Union I SACRAMENTO (AP> -A prisoners' right.s ll"OUJ> trytng t.o or1anlze Callfornia prison ln,. mates.into a labor union toot Its case and pctiUona to Gov. Ed· m und Brown Jr. Monday. Pitkin County sheriff's deputy Mary Wi ggins said the defendant was distraught and cried softly the night Vl adimir "Spider" Sabich. a champion skier, was tatally shot m the mountainside home he shared with Miss Longet above this ski resort. Miss Wiggins also said Miss Longet. a n ex ·showgirl and former wife of s inger Andy Williams. wa s advised three times of her legal rights after be- ing arrested. but still answered que3tions from law enforcement officers . Miss Longet was asked how many times the .22-caliber pistol that killed Sabich was fired, Miss Wiggins said. "She made a comment to the effect she resented the question. resented the implication there was an ulterior motive." Miss Wiggins testified for the prosecu- tion. which said it hoped to close its case with a rew witnesses to- day after calling 11 persons to the stand on Monday. In his opening $t ate ment, Deputy Dist. Alty. Ashley An· derson said Miss Longet "raised the gun. pointed it at <pro- fessional s ki e r Vladimir ) "Spider·· Sabich. Jokmgiy said 'bang-bang', at which point Spider Sabich fell to the floor, dy· ing." As s he heard de tail s of Sab1ch's death, Miss Longet, 35, broke down twice. Once, she buried her face in her hands and cried several minutes before becoming com Posed again. The first day's only surprise wa.s provided by the seeurity t'h1 ef for the exclusive sub· d1Vlsion where Miss Longet lived· for two years with Sabich, a 31· year-old professtonal skier. Roy Griffith said that as he ar· rived at Sabich's $250,000 moun- tainside home, he warned a Pitkin County sheriff's officer about Miss Longet : "Now watch it, th.is gal is ringy today.'' (SeeLONGET. PageA2) Oiler Band Plays The Huntington Beach High School Oiler marchlng•band will present Its winter concert Jan. 20 at 8 p.m . in the campus auditorium. The event, the band's last concert of the school year, is free and open to .. the public. 0.lly 1'119' Stall Piiot• MRS. PEEBLES LISTENS TO THE MUSIC BOTTLES AND VOICES MAKE She's All Bottled Up By P ATRICK O'DONNELL °' u.. o.11r l"flol "'" Nettie Peebles of Huntington Beach But making her tree a musical instru- has a Brazilian pepper tree in her yard ment is not the primary reason for hang- that bears unusual fruit. Hanging from ing bottles on·it. its branches are more than a hundred "lt 's a great conversation piece," bottles of various shapes, sizes and col-Mrs. Peebles explains. "Almost every ors. day som eone stops to ask me about my tree." "WHEN THE wind blows my tree sings me a song," says Mrs. Peebles . 317 California St. IN THREE years of bottle growing that ·s a lot or conversation. HB Me eting On Attorney I ssue Delayed A Huntington Beach Personnel Board meeting lo consider a grievance dispute between City Attorney Don Bonfa and a deputy city attorney has been delayed a week until Jan. 26. The board at that time will de· • liberate on a grievance brought against Bonfa by John O'Connor over a performance evaluation written in December of 1974. City Personnel Dlredor Ed Thompson said the meeting was delayed because of the volume of materials n eeded to be reproduced for review. He said there are nearly 650 pages of material, including a transcript before a state hearing officer, post-hearing briefs and numerous exhibits. The personnel board is the final step in the city in grievance matters. SI00,000 Bail HB Death Suspects Remain in C~tody Two s uspects in the New Year's Eve rifle slaying of one man and the wounding of two others outside a Huntington Beach home as a party broke up remained jailed today, following their Monday court arraignment. Thomas Joseph Stack, 20, of 9593 Pettswood Drive, Hunt- ington Beach. and Richard Leo Bradley, 21, of 10601 Lowden St.. Stanton, were transferred to Orange County J ail with bail set al $100,000 each. They are accused by police of complicity in the shooting death of Brian Lewis Schneider, 20, who was gunned down with two other victims at 20712 Goshawk Lane. Stack, the alleged rineman, Is s p ecific ally charged with murder, two counts of attempted murder and firing a weapon at an occupied dwelling. Bradley is charged as an ac- cessory to the crimes allegedly committed by Stack, following an earlier altercation at the par· ty on Goshawk Lane in the city's Pacific Sands tract. The killing of Schneider was the third homicide to occur on the short street in one of the city's ea rlie st f as hion ab l e neighborhoods withln the past five years. His companions or bystanders at the lime, John Arthur Hunter J r., 22. and Bradley James Gillespie, 21, both of Huntington Beach. were seriously wounded when the gunfire broke out short- ly before 2:30 a.m. New Year's Day. Hunte r today is listed in satisfactory condition at Hunt· ington Intercommunity Hospital following surgery Sunday to re· move a bullet from his body. Gillespie was earlier released to recuperate from his wound at home, hospital spokesmen said today. . Civic Center Sinking lnvestigators said the victims were hit by a fusillade of rifle fire blamed on an earlier quarrel at the Goshawk Lane address as New Year's Eve celebrants Jert thepremlsea. Huntington Mall Area Brrekles Five lnclws A portion or the mall area between the Huntington Beach Civic Center and tbepollce build· lng has buckled and has sunk as much as five inches, cityotficials said today. Public Works Director Bill Hartge aald the problem has been dJscovered ln a 500 to 900- square-root area of concrete decJdng near three towenna na,, poles. Ht said the subsidence bas been confined to the flag pole area and that there seenu t.o be no dan1er or it occurring un. dernealh the civic «ntcr and police bulJdinlf which were com· pletedln 1974. Hartge reported that work .. crews have been removing con- crete around the nag poles alter bucklinc and cracking were de- tected during the rains or Jut week. He said t here were fean at first that one of the poles could have been toppled by the soil dis-" turbance. Martie said tbat work crews have found that the poles )Jave • solid loundaUon and that fhey are now considered t.o be sale. The basement of the civic centel" also haa suffered from flooding conditions from a leak· tng plpt.llnc in lhe aame area and crews have pumped out water Lo prevent any damage. Range soid t •• e buc~1Jn1, and I subsidence has been caused by an a ccumulation of rooisture seeping underneath the concrete mall. • J "lt probably has f>een ac- cumulating moist ure for a couple of yean but reached a saturation point ln last week's storms," he said. Hartge said the wet son will be removed and replae«i with aand before concrete 111 required. H•rtco said the subsidence has no l'el¥Ion to the two buU~s. ''Thb are supported in part by pllin,. and the foundations are . very aubst.a'htlal." heaaJd. He uld the buildings are placed on local soil conditions comprised primarily ot t+l•y. The two suspects vanished, but were surrendered five das later by their attorney, Pete N«'C'on, or Newport Beach Rape Victim Sues ~tment Owners A woman who claims she 3'1as beaten and raped in her Hunt· ington Beach apartment a yciar aeo by an unknbwn intruder bts sued the owners of the building ror $60,000 ln damages. · The woman alleges In her Orante County Superior Court. lawsuit that a faulty lock on her rur door enabled the rapist. t.o gain entry • 5-3 Vote Reverses Bias Case WASH INGTON (AP) -Com- munities are not required to alter toning laws to provide housing for low-income families, the U.S.: Supreme Court ruled today. ~ The court's 5·3 ruling carrie far-reaching consequences fo many of the nation'~ suburban areas now closed to blacks and other minorities. In an opinion written by Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr., the court said predominantly white com- munities do not bave to make cer· tain allowances for integration unless there is proof of purposeful racial dJscrim ination. The court reversed a decision by the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- peals that the Arlington Heights. 111., board of trustees was guilty or racial discrimination when it re- fused to rezone a lS·aQl'e plot for a low -income housing project. "Dleproponionate impact is not irrelev an!. bLltit is not the sdte'" t.ouchstone of an invidious racial discrimination," Powell's opi- nion said. Today's court's ruling limits how far federal courts can go in helping blacks and other minorities find housing in pre- dominantly white communities. If the circuit court ruling had been al lowed to stand, other municipalities could have found themselves facing legal tests about their decisions. Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Jus tices Potter Stewart. Harry A. Blackmun and William H. Rehnquist concurred in the majority opinion. Justice Byron. R. White filed a dissenting opi- nion, and Justices Thurgood Marshall and William J. Brennan Jr. dissented from a major por· lion of the majority opinion. Justice John Paul Stevens took no part in consideration of the case. The court's majority depended <See ZONING, Page A2) SONAR SPOTS NESS OBJECT EDINBURGH. Scotland <AP> -Scientists hunting for the Loch Ness monster say sonar detec- tors spotted a Jargc object on tho bottom. They said it was either a sun- ken boat or the 30-foot. carcass of the monster. Coa!tl We athe r Chance of fog early Wed· nesday, otherwise fair. Highs in the 60s . Lows in 40s. INSIDE TODAY Co/fee price•. are ~ginning to drop .cu bo11cott efforts grind.olong,.according to con- aumer groups hoping to Jtabtliu the market through. reduced demand. StOTJI. P.age A4. l•dex ., .. 1 .4 2 DAILY PILOT H/F Tuesday. January 11 i9n Spill Threat to Grow, Prober Says WASHINGTON (AP) -The senator presidin& over heanngs examinln1 the rash ol tanker ac- cidents and oil spills says the en- v1ronmentdl threat posed by the hig ships is going to get worse. Sen. Warren Magnuson, cbairman of the Senate Com- merce Commilh'e, says the lraf- . fie in bulk oil carriers increases daily in coastal waters, harbors and inland waterways, which are already congested and crowded. .. lbose of us who have studied this area feel the worat Is yel to come." said the Democrat from WuhJngton state. "Thls country bas just wit- nessed the worst rash of tanker accidents ever, and on top of that, last year was the w~.rst !n history for tanker losses, s:ud Magnuson in a statement pre- pared for hearings today aJmed at maklng oil tankers saler. Fifteen· tankers were lost last I sn 't T hat Duc ky? . Jack Anderson, a \'Olunteer fireman in Gladwyne, Pa., holds a decoy Canada goose that h e .and other depart- ment members spent }wo hours rescuing after being called by a citizen who thought a real bird was in trou- hl<' neur a dam construction project. Valley Sets Night School ·For Parents Thl' Fount,un \';.die\ School District will open re~1strat1on Wednesday for a scnes of adult evening classt•s for parl'nts "'llh school agcd·chlldren. The e1J!ht ·"' l'l'k rourc;es 1n math, reading. study habits and d1sc1phn<' will bc~in J.m. 24. dis· tnctoffic1als said. The classes are part of the dis. 1nrl's Community School Pro- i::ram which also offers extra- P u r r 1 cu I a r courses for 'oungsters. Parents and lhl•ir children m ay rei:ister at the school dis- trict offices, at the corn('r of Tulbl'rl J\\•t•nue an'1 Newland Street, between !l a.m uncl ~ p.m. Monday through fnd '·' Rl'~1c;tration closes JJn 21 Self-hypnosis ' 1Course Slated /\ course m self-hypnosis for sl'lf-1mpro\•ement ·vtll be offered Thursd.iy night .it the I lunhngton Beach Fountain Valley YMCA, 7262 Garfteld Ave , lluntin,l?ton Beach The first hour of the course is free and open to the public. The <'ost of the rema1n1nit thr<'c meet· ings will be $35 for Y~C,\ mem- bet:-s and $38 for non-members Frank Genco is the instructor. More information can be ob- tained by calling the YMCA at 847-9622. O"AHOI COAST i; f DAILY PILOT ~~::t.~~~.~'r,:::.:=::~~~ CM\t Pubf'"'l'"J Cnmp""' ,....... ... HMOCW'I\ i'• ~~'"::.:~~".c~" .. =i,..;.~!~~ ~::: ••'" Vtllt'f lt'l•ll\• \•OOltM<.ll V•ll•y •"'Ct , ... Ul'\a .. e(h \htflllC.O .... t •• .,,.....,...~ .... t•llln I\ ""°'l\l'lif'O ,._.,_,,d4t\ And ~f\ IN lt"•N.:tNf 9'il9H"'l"t Olt•O h et l_, \Wj.1 f!Yy '''""·GMu MtU C•tt•.,,.,,.,.,. hMrHl- _.,,.\lllrfoj\t •fltd ~'"'"' h <-111 ,_., \f-c• Pt .. , ... ,..,.,.,..Gif"H•tM.1""4t .,.. ~., ... rit , ... .. T-•4~~M!l•"'O ldttw CMrto• 11 l-·-f> ... ,, • '"'''~' llMl\I•'"' l.•ter\ ._...,_ .... ,o._c...M•f"''~ ""lltlllllton ••lldl Office 11'1Jfe .. c~......_• Mam ..... ,. .. r o ... ,., .,., .. OlflCH ~.~ ~~ ;-~'::;':~"· ~l•boc• V•llev: llltl 1.41 ... 1 ltOOO Oll ... 01_,,_ Ttlephofte(714)~1 CIH•lfled ActYtltftlng .U-Mrt ,.,...,,_1110 •• -~,c-.-m .. '40-1UO Fro na Page A 1 LONGET ... Neither the defense nor the prosecution asked Griffith to de- fine •·ringy." Anderson told re- porters. "Let the jurors decide." Griffith described his entry In· to the home. "All at once, Miss Longet ap- peared in the hallway," he said. "She was holding her hand to her chest. and for an instant. r thought she had been shot ... l said, 'Claudine. who shot who?' and she said. ·1 shot Spider'.'' H convicted of the reckless manslaughter charge, Miss LOnget could receive a max· imum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $30,000 fine. She con- tends Sabich was teaching her to use the pistol before going out of town when the gun fired acciden- tally. The prosecution case appears trimmed without the use or a diary Miss Longet kept or medical tests given her the night of the shooting. Pitk10 County DlStricl Court Judge George E. Lohr withheld the tests on grounds that authorities had no reason to believe Miss Lon&et was under the influence of drugs or alcohol when the shooting oc- curred. But under questiomn~. a sheriff's sergeant menttooed the tests. With jurors excused, co- defense attorney Charles Weed- man objected that the reference, "simply is going to lead the jury to speculate what the results of the blood and urine tests might have been." Anderson said the mention was an error. GWC Aide Joins Panel Sheldon J. Nyman, assistant. chairman of the Golden West College communications division, has been appointed lo the Orange County Citizens Direction Finding Comtnisslon. Supervisor Lawrence Schmit, who made the appointment, said the commission studies long- ranae policies for COWlly govern- ment. Nyman, who lives in Hunt- ington Beach, has been active in Common Cause, Southern Pover- ty Law Center and Environmen- tal Action, Schmit saJd. He alao was given an Outstanding Young Man Award last year by the U.S. J~cees. Teachers To Vote LOS ANGELES (AP> -Near· ly aG,000 lHCbera WUJ be«ln VOl• ine Wcdnead1y for the union lhty want. to represent t.bt.m, lfteor a Superior Court Jud'e rejected a bid by one ~acbera IJ'Ol.lP to d• I~ the ballotinr. year. Since Dec. 1!5. when the Argo Merchant hit a sb<>Al off Nantucket, 13 freiJhl vessels in- cludini tanker• and b&riea have been involved ln incl~ or lost at sea. The latest sinking occurred Monday when the empty American tanker Chester A. Pol- ing broke up in a winter storm off M;-.saachusetts. <Related story,' A4) · The hearings are being helct to 200 Flee Pre dawn Blaze PALM SPRINGS (AP) - About 200 guests fled their rooms as fire damaged the fashionable Canyon Hotel before dawn today, firemen said. OHicials said 13 people were treated for minor burns and smoke inhalation. No serious in· juries were reported. John McClelland Jr., publisher or the Long View (Wash.), Daily News, and his wife, Burdette, were evacuated by ladder from their room on the third floor, as were 100 others on that floor. The fire was conftned to the third-floor lobby and hallways. None of the rooms burned, firemen said. The second rloor also was: evacuated. Among ~c forced to temporarily leave the three- s tor y hotel were Arthur Sulzberger, publisher of the New York Times, and his wife, Carol. The blaze apparently started when a cigarette was dropped in a sofa in the third-floor lob- by, firemen said. There was no immediate estimate of damage . The McClellands and explore what safety standards may be set for foreilJ)·re&istereo vessela wtucb carry~ percent of the oil to lbe United Stales. Ten of the 13 incidents involving vessels including tankers since Dec. 15 have involved vessels of foreign registry. Maritime specialists say several foreign naUons have re- latively loose shipping regula- tions and that some vessels are registered in those countries to avoid complying with stiffer rulee elsewhere. Another aim ot lhe bearings ls to gaUler testimony on prospec- tive legislation to increase the . liability of ship owners for oil spill damage. The bead of the Environmental Protection Agency testified to· day that the United States should be more aggressive in sett.ini standards for foreign oU tankers to protect American shores and lnterests. EPA Administntor Russell E. Train said the United States traditionally has sought intemu- tional agreement• governing construction, operation and maintenance. But Train said this approa('h bas largely failed. "I t'annot overrtress the eirtent to wblch the U.S. hu had difficulty in obtain- ing serious consideration of Jts positions . . '• A,.WI,......_ BLIND PHYSICIST MICHAEL HINGSON OPERATES CONTROLS OF READING MACHINE Inventor Raymond Kurzwell Watchea Former lrvtne Student THt New 0.¥1ce SuJzbergrs arrived at the hotel· D e D B k Ch Monday night for.a meeting evice oes 00 ore there of the Associated Press · board of directors Wednesday and Thursday. Other AP directors who were guests at the hotel but whose rooms were not in the burned area included publisher Richard Steele of the Worcester (Mass.), Telegram and his wife, Louise, and publisher Robert White II of the Mexico (Mo.), Ledger. Panel Formed To Study HB Fourth Parade A new city committee has been formed to study the possible con- tinuation of the Huntington Beach Fourth of July Parade and to oversee other civic celebrations. Joe Whaling, a member of the bicentennial commission and chairman of last summer's ''Orange County Olympics" has been appointed conve ning chairman. Other members appointed by Mayor Harriett Wieder include Carole Wall, Sal Sallman, Emerson Moran, Louis Csugie and Laurie Hill. The committee's first meeting will be held Wednesday at 7 p.m. in room B-7 of the civic center building. The Fourth of July Parade came under fire last year from several city officials when city ex· penses were listed at slightly more than $50,000, well over budget allocations. HB Stude nts' Own Plays Go on Stage Marina H11h School's drama department will present a series of student-directed and produced plays this month in Room 325. The Marina thespians will pre- sent two one-act plays directed by students Bill McAdams and Mona Cr aigmiles. at 7:30 p.m . thJs Fri- day. On Jan. 20, 7:30 p.m., Mitch Untch will direct a dramatic piece and on Jan. 28, 7:30 p.m., Tracie Fristoe will direct. another Broadway hit. Admission for all plays ia $1 for adults and SO cents (or students. Tickets wlll be sold at the door . For more lntormaUon concern- ing the names of the plays, con- tact Steven Schwartz, drama te~c-~~~· at897-6342. Science Fair ·set The Ocean View <elementary) ~hool Dlattlct in Huntington Beach wlll hold Its Social Science Fair Jan. lt from 6 to 9 p.m . at Vllla10 View School, 5381 Sluon Dnve. Top 1tudent IOclaJ •clence reaurch proJecta Will be on dla- play at the fair. Awa.rdl wlU be prtHnted •t 8 p. m . Aid R eath for Ex-UCI Blind Student From Wire Services Former UCI physics graduate student Mike Hingson, 26, has become one of the first blind peo· pie to work with a new com· puterized device that translates printed ~ords into sound. For its public d ebut, the Kurzweil Reading Machine took a printed copy of Abraham Lin- coln's Gettysburg Address and read it aloud to reporters -with an accent. Dr. Kenneth Jernigan. presi- dent of the National Fcderat1un or the Blind. promptly hailed lhe. computerized machine as one of Valley Men He ad Lodge Two Fountain Valley men have been named chief officers of the Huntingto n Beach Masonic Lodge. Manuel Alarcon, a former Fountain Valley recreation com. missioner, will be installed as master of the lodge Fnday at 8 p.m. in the Masonic Temple, Lake Street and Palm Avenue. Hunt- ington Beach. Fountain Valley School District board President Roger Belgen will also be Installed as senior warden. Oerks Plan Strike OAKLAND (A P) Supermarket clerks ln eight Bay Area counties have set a Thurs- day midnight strike deadline un- less employers meet contract de· mands, a apokesm an says. technology's greatest contribu- tions to the blind. "This thing really works." he declared. Then he joked, "I think its accent is Scandmavian. It pro- n ou n c e d m y name as 'Yernigan'." Hingson, who graduated with honors from UCI in 1972 and is now a physicist in Santa Ana, joined inventor Ra y mond Kunweil Monday in Des Moines. Iowa, for a demonstration of the machine's effectiveness. Jernigan said the machine will greatly speed availability of new publications to the nation's 450,000 blind people when it goes into full prOduction in about a year. F ronaPageAI ZONING ••• on a 1976 decision that official ac· tion wi II not be held wtconstitu- tional simply because it results in a racially disproportionate im- pact. In that ruling, the court said a qualifying test used by the Washington, D.C. police force was valid even though more blacks than whites failed the Lest. Jn the ;oning case, the Arl· ington Hefghts trustees in 1971 re· fused to rezone a vacant property surrounded by single·family homes to allow construction of a federally su bsidlzed developme.nl of 190 town houses. The Metropolitan Housing Development Corp .. a Chicago- based nonprofit organization set up to build low·income housing, •sued the board. Hingaon, for example, said he\ ii using the· machine to read Arthur Schlealoger's "The Im· perlal Presidency." He would have to wait two years to get a copy in Braille, he said. Unlike other reading aids for the blind, the machine does not require extensive training to use, Hingson said. It look s 1i kc a copying machine, with two box-shaped units. each about two feet square. and a panel with about 30 but- tons. But instead of reproducing print. the machine pronounces It. thanks to a computer pro- grammed to recognize printed characters and transtorm them into sounds which are then fed in- to an.amplifier-speaker. "There are 1,000 linguistic rules built into its memory and 2.000 exceptions to the ruJes," Kurzweil said. "The reason for so many exceptions ls that we are dealing with the English language, which is one of the world's most complex." Even with all those exceptions. the computer voice sounds in- tangibly foreign and makes plen- ty of mistakes. "Des Moines," for example, is pronounced ''dess moines" rather than the correct "duh moyn." But the computer's voice Is programmed to avoid a dull monotone by giving Inflection and emphasis to its words. And ir the Uatener doesn't catch a word or phrase, the machine can be asked to say it again. It will even spell a word on command. Kur.zwell said the first model cost about $50,000, but he believes the cost of regular production models can be cut to around $.5,000. Supreme Court Ba.cks .Edison Plans Hinshaw . c;,nviction ~:!.~~~sh~d ., Former congressman Andrew materials in his successful bid the Edison lllgb School reading J . Hlnshaw's appeal that hJs con· for election t-0 Coniress. laboratory Wednesday, 7 p.m., in stitutJonal ri1hta were violated The ex-congressman earlier Room 206 of the Huntington prior to bis second Orange Coun-had bei?n convicted of bribery. Beach campu.s. ty Superior Court trial was re-His lawyers are also ap~aling HU11Un1ton Beach Un.ion High jected Monday by the United this conviction. The FoUitb Dis· School District Superintendent States Supreme Court In trict Court of Appeals is expected Frank Abbott will be present to Washington D.C. to band down a ruling within the talk with parents of Edison High The decision meant that the ousted Newport Beach Republican's subsequent convic- tion on charges of petty theft and mlaapproprlatlon of public funds wU11tand. The Alaoctated Preu lncor- rectly reported Monday that the· Supreme Court action was on Hinshaw'• Feb. 7, 1976 bribery conviction. , The actual hlab court action in· volved Hlnshaw's second convic· Uonoo mlsconducl ln office wben be wu Oranee County assessor lnltn. Klmhaw. 54, was C<JOvtcted o( ualn1 county manPowtr and next four weeks. School freshmen. A jury found Hlnahaw guilty of Reading teachers will also be bribery in the llrat trial af\er preseit to ask j>arents for su,. llstenin1 to testimony that be ac-gestions to reinforce the school s cepted campaign contributions proiram. and stereo equipment from the Tandy Corporation and an officer ot the company while he served Office B u,r,,.1 a.-ized aa aueasor. &- Hlnsbaw'a lawyers araued alter the second conviction that his righta were violated durini Oranae County Grand Jury de- Ut>.raUont lhaL led to bis indict- ment. Judgo Frank DomenlchJni re- jected the ar1umtnt bd<>« t.be trial began. The hllh court up. held that rullnl MeocSaY. Stereophonic sound equipment and furniture valued al rnorc than $5,000 haa been atolenfrom •Hun· Unit.on Beach otrlce building. the victim told pollae Mond•Y upon discovering the bur.ilary. IUchll'd Rule, operator of Ru.le International, 5078 Warner Av~ found t~ intruder• broke through the celling • 17 ! I . - I t Irvine E DITI O N * VOL. 70, NO. 11 , 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES . . ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A Toduy-s Closing N.~. Stoekti TUESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1977 TEN CENT~, ~~~~~~~~~~~~------------~--~~~--------~--------~~~--~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~...;__~~~------~--~~~~-....., Irvine· Colllpany Fights College Site ' .. By WILLIAM SCHREIBER O! Ille Delly .. 1191 $tefl The Irvine Company made an unexpected , last-minute bid Monday night to scuttle Sad· dleback Colleae's chosen site for a 26-a cre s econd campus in Irvine in favor of another loca· t ion abOut three m iles away. The sudden turn of events dis· mayed college trustees. who sharply criticized the company for railing to comment on the pro- posed campus site months ago. Gordon G. Getchel, the com. pany's manager of planning ad·•• ministration, said naws have been found in the parcel selected by the college at the comer of Culver Drive and Bryan Avenue. He said the 'company is wiJling to make an attractive offer if the college instead will consider buy. ing a site at the intersection of Jeffrey Road and Irvine Center Drive. Gelchel s aid the otrer could be drafted by early March but an- gry trustees gave him just one week to come back before them with "the guts of a bona fide offer for the new site or forget it.•' No price has been fixed Cor the Myford-Bryan site, though an ap- praisal ot the property has been completed. The college has re· served $1.3 million in next year's budgt't to buy the land and pre- pare it for dt!velopment. Trustees were on lhe verge or giving the final go-ahead for negotiations with lhe company and. in fact. approved an en- vironmental impact report on the site Monday night. Getchel conceded that he was counting on a delay of four weeks or longer in preliminary develop- ment of the Myford-Bryan site due to ongolJ'lg sewer and water service studies for the proposed campus. But he was informed by college officials Monday that the Irvine Ranch Water District will com· plete its report within two weeks, clearing t he way for fi n a l purchase negotiations and initial development work. According to Getchel_. the site ,chosen by the collel(e last yeac wi ll cost more to improve with new sewe r and water linei• lllrainage sysfem s, roads and utilities than the actual cost a( the raw land. He also said that within tho past few weeks, company ex- perts have decided that the cam. pus would be lncongl'Uous with the agricultural uses surround· <SeeCAMPUS, Page AZ> !COurt Scuttles I , !Jncon1e Zoning Irvine Firm Illegal Alien Suspects Held More than 100 suspected illegal aliens we re rounded up early to· day at Laguna Manufacturing Company, a furniture manufac· turer in Irvine Gene Sabin. an off1c1al at the Los Angeles immigration office. said he believed agents picked up ahout 117 employes at thc- company. He added that he could not be certain until the agents re· turned to Los Angeles. Ten vans and 24 imm igration 1 agents were used in the 9 a.m. ....,eep at the company at 17622 'I Von Karm an. Company spokesmen had no comment on t he action today. Sabin said the bulk of those picked up are probably illegal aliens from Mexico but that some may be from other countries, too. . Immigration officials made an earlier raid Friday al three com· panics, including ones in Irvine. Santa Ana and Anaheim The Irvine company was Califoam Corporation of America. 16661 Von Karman. Sabin said the raids are made on the basis of complaints about illegal a li ens, primarily from people who claim they cannot find jobs because of the number of illegal aliens being hired lo work for lGwer wages. Irvine police s tbod by at today's raid but Lt. Gene Norden said everything appeare<t to go smoothly. Laguna Manufacturing wa..-; the subject of a raid last Sept. 23, when about 100 suspected illegal aliens were picked up Brokers Report Industrial Land Booms in Irvine By HILARY KAVE ' Ol llM D•llY l't191 St.ti There's been another land rush ij Irvine. but this time it's Car in· dustrial land. not houses. Real estate brokers are lining up f()r mdustrial parcel$ just as homeowners clamored for new h<>mes 1n lotteries last year, ac· cording to both Irvine Company officials and brokers themselves. They both point out that it'11 a sure sig n the economy is boom· ing. Forty-two parcel11 in t he Irvine Industrial Complex. near Orange County a1ai><>rt. just of- fered fo r sale, are amon1t the last small sites left w1Uun the com· pl ex. A trio of brokers -Al Davison, Marty J ones and Ronald Malouf -parked a mobile home In the parking lot of the Irvine In· dustrla l Complex building on Campus Drive on Fnday. Dec. 31. Intent on being fi"'t in line Furniture Destroyed By Blaze when sales begin, they rotated shifts manning the mobile home and did not leave the parking lot until Tuesday, J an. 4, when of· ficials of the IIC building finally took their names and list of cUenls and told them to go home. ''I'm totally ronvinccd that the brokers would have stayed in out parking lot for two weeks, unt11 the sale date this Friday, if we hadn't taken names and told them to go ho me." said Dick Cannon, president ofthe I IC. "I've never heard of this hap- pening an>'where with industrial properties and I think It points out several things,'· said Cannon. -First. he sai~ it signified a tr emendous confidence in the economy. with greatly increased capital investment spending. Second. he insisted it showed the excellent location and value of the proJSerties. which are in a 1115-acre site north and west of Main Street a nd Red Hill Avenue, next to the Newport Freeway. The sites range in size frofn .7 to 2.4 acres, with the cost.ranging from $2.65 to $2.BS per square foot. That m akes the average p a r cel somewhere around $100.000. About 10 brokers began wait· ing in line Saturday, quickly join- <See LAND, Page A2> 5-3 Vote Reverses Bias Case WASHINGTON (APl -Coin· munities are not required to alter zoning I aws to provide housing for low-income families. the U.S. Supreme Court ruled today. The court's 5·3 ruhng carries far-reaching consequences for many of the nation's suburban areas now closed lo blacks and other minorities. In an opinion written by Justice Lewis F . Powell Jr .. the court said pred om in a ntly whil e com· munlties do not have to make cer· tain allowances for integration unless there is proof of purposeful A .. Wlr ..... I• BLIND PHYSICIST MICHAEL HINGSON OPERATES CONTROLS OF READING MAtHINE Inventor Raymond Kurzwell Wetchea Former lrvfn• Student Teat New Device -racial discrimination. The court reve rsed a decision by the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Ap· peals that the Arlington Heights. JI!.. board of trustees was guilty of racial discrimination when it re· fused to rezone a 15-acre plot for a low-income housing proJect. Device Does Book Chore' "Disproportionate impact is not irrelevant, but it is not the sole touchstone of an invidious racial discrimination,.. Powell's opi· Aid Reads for Ex-UC/ Blind Studem nlonsaid. Today's court's ruling li mits how far federal courts can go in he lping bl a cks and other minorities find housing in pre· dominantly white communities. • If the circuit court ruling had been a llowed t o s t and . other municipalities could have found them selves facing legal tests about their decisions. F rom Wire Services Former UCI phys ics graduate student Mike llingson. 26. has become one of the first blind peo- ple to work with a new com- puterized device that translates printed words into sound. For 1ls public debut. the Kurzwell .Reading Mactune took a pnnted copy of Abraham Lin coin's Gettysburg Address and read 1t aloud lo reporters with an accent. Dr . Kenneth J ernigan, presi· dent of the National Federation or the Blind, promptly hailed the computerized machine as one or technology's greatest contribu- tions lo the blind. "This thing really works," he declared. Then he joked. "l think its accent is Scandinavian. It pro· no u nce d m y name as 'Yernigan· ... Hingson, who graduated with honors from UCI in 1972 and is Chief Justice Warren E . Burger and J ustices Potter Stewar t. Harry A. Blackmun and William JI. Rehnquist concurred In the majority opinion. Justice Byron R. White filed a dissenting opi· nion. and Justices Thurgood Marshall and WilliamJ. Brennan · Jr. dissented from a major por- Irvine's Olds·ters Sought for P 'rogram' tionofthe majorityopinion. A senior citiiens committee in J ustice J ohn Paul Stevens took Irvine is trying to stir up interest no part in consideration of the among local seniors for activities case. and services. The court's majority depended The committee meets the fi rst on a 1976 decision that ofricial ac-Monday of every month at city lion will not be held unconstitu· · hall. but so far there have been tiohal simply because it results in" rarely more than two or three a racially disproportionate im· seniors in the audience al these pact. _ sessions. , In that ruling. the court•said a Recreation Supervisor Froome qualifying t est used by the Gayle, who oversees the five· Washington, D.C. police force member senior committee, ex· was va lid even though more plains that the group is now try· blacks than whites failed the test. ing to attract more interest from ln the zoning case. the Ari-. the roughly 2.700 senior citizens ington Heights trustees in 1971 re-in Irvine. Seniors are considered fused to rezone a vacant property . those past the age of 55 surrounded by s ingle -family "W.e know they're out there - homes to allow construction of a primarily in the Me adows mobile federally subsidized development home park a nd in University ofl90townhouses. Park -a nd we can plan ac- The Me tropolita n Housing tivitles and ser vices to assist Developme nt Corp., a Chicago. them," says Gayle. baaed nonprofit organization set "But we really have no way to up to build low-income housing, r each them since they don't ·sued the board. come to the committee meetings and tell us what they want," he adds. According to Gayle. seniors can have an active voice an Irvine government and can rind many benefits within the city if they just speak up. He· pointed out that many seniors need t r ans portation services, sotj;ll _~~livitie:; and a common meeting place. IC the elderly residents request these things, money can be taken from the city's overall activities budget. Gayle said. Beginning ne xt month, the committee will take its meetings into the community in the hope of drawing more audience mem· bers. And. they plan lo make the meetings more attractive, such as adding coffee and cake sessions. The next m eeting will be Feb. 3 in the multipurpose buJlding at Univers ity Community park. <See SENIORS, Page A!) now a physicist in Santa Ana. joined in vent o r R aym o nd Kurzweil Monday in Des Moines. Iowa, for a demonstration d the machine's effectiveness. Jernigan said the macbn1• will greatly speed a vailability of new publications to the nation's 450,000 blind people when it goes into full production in about a. year. Hingson, for example, said he is using the machine to r ead Arthur Schlesinger's "The lm· perial Presidency." He would have to wait two years to get a copy in Braille. he said. Unlike other reading aids for the blind, the machine does not require extensive t raining to use, Hingson said. It look s Ii ke a cop ying machine, with two box-shaped units. e ach about t wo feet square , and a panel with about 30 but· tons. But instead of reproducing ptint, lhe m achine pronounces it. thanks to a computer pro- grammed to recognize printed characters a nd transform them into sounds which are then fed in· to an amplifier-spe aker. "Ther e ar c 1,000 linguistic rules built Into. its memory and CSee TALKS, Page AZ> Coast Weather Chance of fog early Wed - nesday, othe rwise fair. Hi.ghs in the 60s. Lo~ In 40s. Unfinished furniture valued al $1,000 was destroyed Monday when lacquer fumes ignited at a furniture manufacturing com· pany In the Irvine Industrial Complex. Fire Chier Lew KJIUon said the fire began shortly after 10:30 a.m . at Laguna Manufacturing, 17622 Von Karmann. Riley Agrees to Delay Pick~ INSIDE TODA. V Co/Jee prlus. ore beginning to drop .a.t bo11cott efforts grind.o.long,.accordbig to con. sumer group•· hoping to $fobtliu the market thrOtAgh rtductd demand. St01JI P.QlJc The blaze begalll inside the furnace dryer, when furniture just sprayed with lacquer caugbt on fire. Killion said there ap- peared to be little or no damage to the furnace beca~ employes acted quickly in exUngulsbing the names. . He said that when firemen IT· rived, employea had already" emptied lS fire extlniuishers and the sprinkler ll)'&VJD lnJl~ lbe furnace bad acuvatild. I 8y GARY GRANVILLE Ot -Dally ,., ... MMt M the request of former board chairman Ralph Diedrich, Orange C ounty Board or Supervisors Chairman TIK>rnas Riley delayed appointing his fellow supervisor to their 1877 work tuks today. Riley had ready for aubmlss1oo for Cull board approval this momln• a llat. ol appolnlments thatlncluded assigning: -Supervisors Philip Anthony ) and Ralph Cfark to the Orange County Transit District Board of Dlrectors. -Diedrich and Clark to the new County TranspOr\aUon Com- JDiUlon. -Hirnnlf and Antbony to the Local Aaency Formation Com· miuion. -himself to t~e county Legislative Planning Committee. the committee that reviews pending lealslaUon aftectint the county and proposes new legtala· Uon. J 1 -Supervisor Laurence Schmit to the South Coast Regional Com· mission and Southern California Air Pollution Control District. -Diedrlcb and Schmft to the county Cr iminal Just.ice Council, and' Arterial Highway finance Proeram Committee. But JUley set aside hJs assign· ment llst at Dledrtch's request so the assignments could bo r e· viewed. lf the Fullerton aupcrv\sor has any objections to what has in· formt11y been agreed on among the five s uJ.>ervlsors, it is expect· ed to be Riley's choice of himself to serve on the legislaUve com· mittee. That post, which has by custom gone to the board chairman, was the topic Jaat week ~a proposed s wap betw e en Riley and Diedrich. The swap would end with RUey on the Transportation Com· m1ssion and Oiedrlcb in charge a&ain of the committee dealJng wtth le1islaUon and lhe county'a tecis1atori in Sa~ramcnto. ' Af. ' ( .. .. I• J il DAILY PILOT TUOtday Jal'luary 11, 1977 ·Brown Aids Revolt $480 Million Surplus to Taxpayers? LOS ANGELES (AP> -Gov. F.dmund G. Brown Jr. gnve a I ••response to the taxpnyers· re- 1 volt.'' today, oulllning a plan he ea.id would give $480 million or stkte surplus to tnxravaged homeowners and renters. <Reial· ed story, AS) Under Brown's plan, the state would pay 75 percent or any pro- perty tax that exceeded a certain percentage of a family's income and would affect about half the lJState's 3.8 million homeowners. A family making less than 1, $10,000 a year would get a rebate U property taxes were more than 1 three percent or their income. A family making more than J30,000 would have to pay more jhan five percent in property tax- • es to get a rebate. -l The maximum rebate in any 'Fast' Tale ~Denied by ~Ex-hubby ... ~ ASPEN, Colo. CAP) -Singer Andy Williams, testifying at the manslaughter trial of his former wife, Claudine Longet, denied to· day that he ever said she "is a itrazy gal that likes to ski fast, · drive fast and likes to take • ehances.'' Williams, in dark blue slacks and sweater, was called by the J)rosecution about a statement he allegedly made to neighbors of Miss Long et and her lover. • Vladimir "Spider" Sabich. The ·--.kl champ was fatally s hot March 21 in the mountainside home he shared with the enter- tainer and her three children by Williams. A prosecutor said he wanted to question Williams about the al· Jeged statement made to the .neighbors the day after Sabach was shot. "I wouldn't say she was the type to take chances." Williams said. "She was especially careful around children.•· Before Williams took the &Stand, two prosecution witnesscs clashed over whether Miss , Longet had been told by her lover that the safety mechanism was , in place on the pistol with which fie was fatally shot. ' Aspen police detective David Garms said Miss Longet told him t he night of the shooting that her lover indicated the gun would fire if the trigger were pulled. But Pitkin County sh('rirfs depu· ty Mary Wiggins said she heard :Miss Longct tell Garms she thought the safety was on. , Garms said that after discus:. lng the safely mechanism, Miss Longet •·indicated s he playfully Fro• Page A I SENIORS. • • Seniors will have a coffee and cake session. a tour or the new park and then n business meet· ang. "H that meeting 1s better at tended we"ll have the next one at the Meadows and then rotnle meettn~s betwe<'n those two loca· lions," said Gayle. 1 Seniors will have their own meeting place sometime this summer. when the multapurp<>sc buildillg nt Rancho San Joaquin is completed. And a second one will be bulll in Hent,age Park, Gayle said. But until then. >;eniors should attend the monthly commillee meetings lo find out what's going ()n and lo offer suggestions for what is needed. lhc: supervusor »e>inted oul. He said that anyone who needs .a nde to the meet\ngs should con tact him at citv hall and hf>'rl hPln find transp(>rtation. His phone .number is 754·3641. <>f'ANGE COAST DAILY PILOT lfk•"'"'~'~" ~.::: .. __.. '-••b ... 1011« c~ would be $700. Brown said to ma,ke the tax re- lief last over the years, he w;.il\t~ to freeze the ratio between whut. businesses and homeowners 1>ay in property taxes at the level 1 l · ;ttlains in 1978-79. Splitting the tax rolls in this fashion would halt the recent pileup o r tax burdens on homeowners and would apply limits to the ways local govern- ments can tax them. he said. About $400 miWon would be given back to homeowners by the plan and about SIK> million to about 416,000 senior-citizen ren· ters, with individual rebates ranging from $15 to $288 a year 1r the plan is approved. he said. Brown was criticized Monday because only senior citizens would get renter aid, and at his AP Wl'""°IO WEEPS IN COURT Claudine Longet pointed the gun at him and gestured al him, saying 'Bang, bang·." Jn her testimony. Miss Wiirnins said Miss Longet told her she re- sented lhe attitude among police officers that she was ,llUalty or a crime. Miss Longet was ;1skcd how many times the .22-cahbcr pistol that killed Sabich was r.n.'<l . Mas:. Wiggins said. .. She made a comment lo the effect she resented lhe question. resented the implication there was an ulterior motive," Miss Wiggins testified for the prosecu· lion. which said 1t hoped to clo:.c its case with a few w1tne~ses to· day after calling 11 persons to the stand on Monday. In his open1n~ statement, Deputy Dist. Atty. Ashley An· derson said Mi ss Longet "raised the gun, pointed 1l al (pro- fess i'o n a I s k i er VI a chm ir > ··spider·· Sabich. jokingly said 'banJ! bang'. al which point Spider Sabach ft'll to the noor, dv ing .. As she hcarli details of Sabich's death. Miss Longct, :is. broke down twice. Once. she buried her face in bcr hands anri cried several minutes before becoming composed again. The first day's only surprise was provided by the secunty chief for tbe exclusive sub· d1v1"ion where Miss Longet ltved for two years with Sabich, a 31 · ye3r-0ld professional skie-r. Roy Griffith said that as hear· rived at Sabich's $250,000 moun- tainside home, he warned a Pitkin County shertfr's officer about Miss Longet: "Now watch It, this gal is ringy today." Fro• Page A I TALKS ... 2.000 exceptions to the rules.·· Kurzwe.il said. "The reason for so many exceptions is that we are dealing with the English lan1uage, which is one or the world's most complex." Even with aJI those exteptions, the computer voice sounds in· tangibly foreign and makes plen- ty of mistakes. ··0es Moines," for example, is pronounced "dess moines'' rather than the correct "duh moyn." But the computer's voice is programmed to ttVold a dull monotone by giving lnfiecllon and emphasis to Its words. And If tht listener doun 't catch a word or phrue, the m achin can be asked to say it agaJn. It will even spell a word on command. Kunweil said the llnl model coet about $50, 000, but he beJJeves the cost of regular production models can be cut to around ~.ooo. ' airport news conference thls mon>ing the governor was uked 4.lbout the criticism. ··1·vc tried to target renter re- lief to those who are on fixed in· come bec~use they are the least able lo pay," Brown said. "As for lhe others, it's a matt.er or bow much the Legislature and the people want to spend." Brown said the state surplus stands at $700 million and, aside from tax relief, will also have to pay ror the revised state school finance system made necessary by the state Supreme Court's Ser· rano-Priest decision. O.Hy ~I ... Slatt ~· A Serrano plan to equalite the funding that poor and rich school districts receive annually has been formulated and will cost about $220 million, be said. MRS. PEEBLES LISTENS TO THE MUSIC BOTI"LES ANO VOICES MAKE Fire Routs 200 Guests In Hotel She'S All BOttled Up By PATRICK O'DONNELL Of .... o.lty f'llOt Kllff Nettie Peebles of Huntington Beach But making her tree a musical instru· has a Brazilian pepper tree in her yard ment is not the primary reason for hang- t.hat bears unusual fruit. Hanging from ing bottles on it. its branches arc more than a hundred "It's a great conversation piece,'' bottles of various shapes, sizes and col-Mrs. Peebles explains. •·Almost every ors. day someone stops to ask me about my tree." PALM SPRINGS CAP) About 200 g uests fled their rooms as fire damaged the fash io nable Canyon Hotel before dawn today, firemen said . .. WHEN THE wind blows my tree sings me a song," says Mrs. Peebles, 317 California St. IN THREE years of bottle growing that's a lot of conversation. Officials said 13 people were treated for minor burns and smoke inhalation. No serious in· juries were reported. J ohn McClelland Jr., publisher of the Long View <Wash.), Daily News, and his wire, Burdette, were evacuated by ladder rrom their room on the third floor, as were 100 others on that noor. E'ro• Page Al LAND •.. ing Davison, J ones and Malouf . Three or four had campers or mobile homes, accordmg to Can- non. Supreme Court Backs Hinshaw Conviction The fire was confined lo the third-floor lobby and hallways. None of the rooms burned, firemen said. The second floor also was evacuated. Among those forced to temporarily leave the three· story hotel were Arthur Sulzberger. publisher of the New York Times, and his wife, Carol. The blaze apparent!>" started when a cigarette was dropped in a sofa in the third-floor lob· by, firemen said. There was no immediate estimate of damage. T he McClellands and Sulzbergers arrived at the hotel Monday night for a meeting there of the Associated Press board or directors Wednesday and Thursday. Other AP directors who were ~uests al the hotel but whose rooms were not in the burned area included publisher Richard Steele of the Worcester (Mass.>. Telegram and his wife. Louise, and publisher Robert White ll or the Mexico (Mo.), Ledger. Police Move Closes Down Substation The old Irvine substation in the Irvine Industrial Complex is no longer open due to the recent move of the police department to the industrial area. Lt. Gene Norden explained that since the new Irvine Police fa cility is at 17200 Jamboree Boulevard, Jess than a haJr.mile from the substation on Skypark Boulevard, there was no reruson to continue operating the smaller raciLily. The Skypark building operated on a part-time buis. Office!'$ provided protection for the in· dustrlal companies and some police services were housed in that building. Now. the protection services have been shifted lo the main st.a· Uon on Jamboree Boulevard and some of the other services, such as crime prevention. have been tranaferred to the original facili· ty on Verano Road across from UC Irvine, Norden said. The company will officially re- ceive letters of intent from clients for specific sales from brokers, on Friday. ··u won't be until Friday that we'll see how many of the brokers come through with how many clients," said Cannon. ad· <ling that some clients will be un- qualified because they are either speculators who will not move in· to the entire building or want to use it for purposes other than in· dustry. Davison said he. Jones and Malouf have letters or intent from S3 clients, but admitted that due to the rigid specifications of the Irvine Company, they may get only 20 lots among the en Ure 42-lot site. "But we're not complaining. That's a pretty good share." Davison added. Davison said that one of the re- asons the parcels are so attrac-· tive is that the complex has not orrered new small parcels for several years and that there has been a huge "pent-up demand." Cannon explained that about 90 percent of the complex near the • airport is sold out. However, he added that the company has other Industrial land for sale in Tustin. SONAR SPOTS NESS OBJECT EDINBURGH, Scotland (AP) -Scientists hunting for the Loch Ness monster say sonar detec- tors spotted a large object on the bottom. They said it was either a sun· ken boat or the JO.foot carcass or t.hemonster •• Rape Victim Sues • Apartment Owners A woman who claims she was beaten and raped in her Hunt~ ington Beach apartment a year ago by an unknown intruder has sued the owners of the bull<ling for $60,000 in damages. The woman alleges ln her Orange County Superior Court lawsuit that a !aulty lock on her rear door enabled the rapist to gain entry. Silver Lame Protest Former congressman Andrew J. Hinshaw's appeal that his con· atitutional rights were violated prior to his second Orange Coun· ty Superior Court trial was re· jected Monday by the United States Supreme Court in Washington D.C. The decision means that the ousted Newport Beach Republican's subsequent convic- tion on charges of petty theft and misappropriation of public funds will stand. The Associated Press incor- rectly reported Monday that the Supreme Court action was on Hinshaw's Feb. 7, 1976 bribery conviction. The actual high court action in· volved Hinshaw's second convic· tion on misconduct in office when he was Orange County assessor in 1972.: Hinshaw, 54, was convicted of usin~ county manpower and 'Fort' Aids Sought for Playground A new adventure playground will open next Monday in Irvine's University Community Park and city aides are scr ambling to gather enough material for the playsite. Pat Fiero of the city's Tecrea· lion department said materials are still needed to assist children in their "fort-making activities.·· The object of the playground. which is surrounded by a berm and fence, is to allow children to olay in a "Tom Sawyer" at· mosphere -building forts and having run in a supervised area. Materials such as lumber, hammers, nails, saws, Jogs. ropes and pulleys are need~ for the children, Mrs. Fiero said. Those who have building materials may phone 754-3639 and request a pickup. Mrs. Fiero said the materials are needed both from individuals and from companies willing to donate sup- plies . Once the playground opens, hours will be 2:30 to 5 p.m. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays; and 1:30 to 5 p.m. Wed· nesday. It w Ill normally be closed Sundays and Mondays. but the opening Monday, Jan. 17. it will be open from3toSp.m. System Nets Cold Feet Counc\lwoman Trudi Rogers wore a pair or silver lame ski socks and long underwear to Mooday·s Newport Beach City Council meet· ing.· SHE SAID she bou&ht the socks on the din· ner break between the councu•a artemoon study seaalon and the evenln1 businells meet· int bee.use or a problem r,1agulng city or· ficials -the heating s)'jtem n the city council chambers haa broken down. The year-old s~tem completely broke down la.at Thursday during the plaMlnl com· mla~ion meeting and. was only parUally r~ 'paired in t.ime for Monday's councU meeUn1. MRS. ROGERS said she was unprepared for the cold during the afternoon session ''and I nearly froze." Mrs. Rosers wore her sld sodts and long Johnt for the evening mtttlng. No one else complained or the cold, but Councilwoman Lucllle Kuehn came prepan!d with • pair of heavy wool tocks and a three· piece wool suit. CITY MANAGER Bob Wynn wore a 1weater under his sport coat. "Whal I wanl to know," asked Coun- cilman Don Mclnnla o< the bundled up group, "ls what people did before central be'aUng?" mate.rials in his successful bid for eledion lo Congress. The ex-congressman earlier had been convicted of bribery. His lawyers are also appealing this conviction. The Fourth Dis- trict Court of Appeals is expected to hand down a ruling within the next four weeks. A jury found Hinshaw guilty or bribery in the first trial after listening to testimony that he ac· cepted campaign contributions and stereo equipmcpt from the Tandy Corporation and an officer of the company while he served as assessor. Hinshaw's lawyers argued after the second conviction that his rights were violated during Orange County Grand Jury de- liberations that led to his indicl· ment. Judge Frank Domenichini re- jected the argument before the trial began. The high court up- held thal ruling Monday. Fro• Page Al CAMPUS •.. ing it.. "The road system in the area as. narrow and extremely dangerous at several intersections,·• Getchel said. . "The by -products of agricultural operations; the odor of organic fertilizers, the abun dance of flies. the presence or slow, noisy farm machinery .•. will all have adverse impacts on academic operations." Getchel a lso warned that the school would also "adversely af- fect" the company's farming operations due to increased van- dalism. damage to irrigation systems. reduced crop yield and interference with traffic or farm machines. The latter contentions drew the ire of Mission Viejo Trustee Don- na Berry. who verbally blasted Getchel for using "scare tactics" to force the college into sub- mission "I resent the company coming to us like this when they didn't speak up at all during the hear- ing when we decided to buy the site." said Mrs. Derry. "I don't buy it." she continued. "They arc doing the taxpayers a disservice. I am su,.,pklous of their reasons and I had a great. deal or faith in this operation up to now." Getchel denied any ''ulterior motives" in the company's offer of an alternative site and said there would be no nero to dislurh the district's "time Un~·· for de· velopment of the second campus. "We're saying we may be too late tn this but we are raising the question before funds are ex· pended," he said. "Unfortunate- ly. that puts the company In the position of looking suspicious." Oetchel said the company·. favored site at Jeffrey and Irvine Centet Drive would be much easier to develop becouse It already has all the necesnry uUlltles "on site." He agreed that the raw land would C03t more but the savings would be reall 2ed in development · and site preparation. He also said the company would more re· adlly accept the distrlct'~ ap. pralaal or the property's value. Laguna/South Coast ED ITION * * * VOL. 70, NO. 11, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA T U ESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1977 ·'(ternoo11 N. '\'. Stoeks TEN CEN~ Wave of Thefts · Continues • m Laguna ·~ A wave or burglaries in Laguna Beach continued unabated Mon- day as eight burglaries or at· tempted forcible entries were re· ported. Monday's score brings to 31 lhe commercial and residential burglaries reported in the last week. The crime surge has upset the Laguna Beach police depart· ment, currently in the midst of a burglary prevention program. "We are working these things every way we know how," Detec· live Steve Kirsch said today. • • IC there is a solace for the police. it Ui that most of the crimes have involved minor amounts of cash with the thief, or thieves. al times passing up vaJuablc property lo take only money. In many ins ta nces. an 1n terloper after gaining access to a building will take nothing leaving Of'ly pry marks, dismanUed win· dows or disturbed papers as the only clues to the visit. Businesses along Coast Highway have been heavily hit. One, :Another Happening, 448 S. Coast Highway, bas twice escaped burglary. Police report- ed entry was foiled by the strength or the business' door and locks. In one case, believed related to a safecracking ln a neighboring business. a burglar broke lllto Laguna Stereo, 1020 S. Coast 1-Ughway and took only a ham· mer and a hacksaw although stereo equipment was in the store. The hammer was later found at the Colony Kitchen, 1045 S. Coast Highway where a safe bad been broken Into and S28S ln cash stolen. The remainder or Monday's re· ported burglaries include: -The theft of $2 from Carolyn A. Uhrich of Laguna Canyon Road. Several drawers were searched and entry was via a re· arwindow. -The tbeft of $110 from the Plant Place, '2088 S. Coast Highway. Entry was forced by prying the business' door lock. -An attempted burglary at lhe home or Joyce H. Strafford on Mountain View. Entry was believed to have been aborted when a dog began barking. A window screen was damaged as a would-be burglar tried to pry it away. -A burglary. but no loss at Betty's Beauty Shop, 1158 N. (SeeTHEFTS, PageA2) '/ Court Scllttles lncollles Zoning D••IY Pilot 51Atl l'llolo MRS. PEEBLES LISTENS TO THE MUSIC BOTTLES AND VOICES MAKE She's All Bottled lJp By PATRICK O'DONNELL 01 lhe O..lly Pilot Slifl Nettie Peebles of Huntington Beach But making her tree a musical ins tru· has a Brazilian pepper tree in her yard ment is not the primary re ason for hang. that bears unusuaJ fruit. Hanging from mg bottles on it its branches are more than a hundred "It's a great conversation piece, .. bottles of various shapes. sizes and col-Mrs. Pee bles explains. ··Almost every ors. day someone stops to ask me about my tree." "WHEN THE wind blows my tree sings me a song," says Mrs. Peebles, 317 California St. IN THREE years of bottle growing that's a lot of conversation. Pier Tunnel Proposed Ckmente Hears Revised Entry Plan By PHILIP ROSMAfllN Of -O•oly ...... S:.ff r Pres 11n~ their argume nt against a grade-level safety gate I }ledes.trian cros sing in San Clemente. attorneys for the San· I ta Fe railroad produced their own plan Monday for a tunnel en-! try under the tracks lo the city pier. A Santn Fe architect testified I about the plan as Public Utilities the crossing bee a use they say the existing tunnel underpass is shielded from stree t view and so invites crime. They also contend that the two sets of stairs at either end or Lh<' tUMel are loo steep and bar the handic apped . elderly and cardiac patients from enjoyment of the city's main beach aUrac· lion. City fathers have rejected plans for gradt>·Separated cross- ings that include or not the exist· ing tunnel. because of greater ex· pense. Santa Fe, the state transporta- <See TUNNEL. Page A2) By Irvine Company 5-3 Vote Reverses Bias Case WASHINGTON (AP) -Com- 'munities are not required to alter zoning laws to provide housing for low-income families. the U.S. Supreme Court ruled today. The court's 5.3 ruling carries rar-reaching consequences for many of the nation's suburban areas now closed to blacks and other minorities. In an opinion written by Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr., the court said predominantly white com - munities do not have to make cer· lain allowances Cor integration unless there is proof qf purposeful racial discrimination. The court reversed a decision by the 7th U.S. Cite ult Court of Ap· peab that the Arlington Heights, 111 .• board ortrustefl was guilty of racial discrimination when it re- fused to rezone a lS·acre plot for a low·income housing project. "Disproportion ate i mpacl is nolirrelevanl, butllis not the sole touchstone of an invidious racial discrimination:· Powell's opi· nions&Jd. Today's court"s ruling limits how far federal courts can go in helping blacks and othe r minorities find housing in pre- dominantly white communities. l!the circuit court ruling had been allow e d to s tand . other mun1c1palities could have found themselves facing legal tests about their decis ions. Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Justices Potter Stewart, Harry A. Blackmun and William <See ZONING, Page AZ) I Commission hearing.! reqpened to debate the merits o( a city ap. plication to build 11 track·level crossing off Aven1d ., Victoria. The hearings continued today and were <'Xpected to conrlude I Wednesday or Thursday. PUC Examiner Norman HaJey. who is conducting the hearings. predi<'l College Site Opposed eel he would have a recommenda· t1on by Friday When the hearings conclude, the full c-ommlssion will consider the San Clemente-.pplication. San Clemer1lc officials wanl Or :::~as t Weather Chance of tog early Wed· nesday. otherwise fair. Highs In the 60s. Lows In 405. INSIDE TODA~ Coflee prtcea. are lH!{dnning to drop .at bo11cott ,lfort1 grind. along. according to con· 1111ntr group• hoping to ltobiUu the market through mfuctd demand. Storti P.aQe Af. l•dex By WJLUAM SCHREIBER Ott ... O•ilf "il.iSutt The Irvine Company made an unexpected. last-minute bid Monday night lo scuttle Sad- dleback College's chosen site for a 20-acre s econd campus in Irvine in favor of another loca- tion about three miles away. The sudden turn of ev'ents dis .mayed college trustees, who sbarpl.Y criticized the company for faifing to comment on the pro· pol!ed campus site months ago. Cordon G. Getchel. the eom- pany's manager of planp.lng ad· ministration, said flaws have been found in the parcel selected by the college at the comer of Culver J)rlve and Bryan Avenue. He said the company is wilJing to make an attractive offer if the college instead will consider buy ing a site al the intersection or Jeffrey Road and Irvine Center Drive. Getchel said the offer could be drafted by early March but an- gry trustees gave him just one week to come back before them SONAR SPOTS NESS OBJECT EDINBURGH. Scotland CAP) -SclentJsu hunllnf for the Loch Ness monster say sonar detec· ton apotted a larae object oo the bottom. They said It was either a sun tttn boal or the 30 foot carcass ot the mooster. with "the guts of a bona fide otfeT for the new site or forget 1t. · • No price has been fixed for the Myford-Bryan site, though an ap- praisal of the property has been completed. The college has re- served Sl.3 million ln next year's budget lo buy the land and pre- pare it for development. Trustees were on the verge of giving the final go-ahead for negotiations with the company and. in fact. approved an en- vironmental impact report on the site Monday night. Getchel conceded' that he was counting on a delay of four weeks CSttCAMPVS, Page AZ> Laguna to Hear Krishna Zone Plea /\ zone change which would aJ. low churches and church-related activities in Laguna Beach's ligbt manufacturing zone will be considered tonight by the plan- ning commi.!sion. The amendment to Ute city's zoning la~was requested by the Hare Krishna sect to accom- modate property the religious group has at 2515 Laguna Canyon Road. The commission will hold a public hearing on the matter at 7:30p.m . The planning commission earlier refused to consJder the lmendment to the zone atan· Ciards. bowev er. that decision was overturned after the Hare Krishna addressed a letter to the City l!!ouocil explaJnma it.a posf. lion and its desire to relocate in the Canyon area. Any alleraUon In the ione stan· d3rd$ would apply to all 1rHA zoned property alt~gh the re-f quest is prompted by one case. Much of the city PrQPerty along Laguna Canyon RoaM is zoned M-lA. The Kriahna have had continu- ing disputes with neigh.bots and city hall over activiUes at a tem· pie, 641 Ramona Ave. The sect is under a court order tq cease all church-related acUvtt.h at lhc bon'le there. Other business to be mulled by the planners Includes: -Amendment to the city's M·l zone to perm I l pl'esence of "clubt1 todies or rratttnJties." -Aadltlon of details to the clty'1 "Protection ol Significant Natur9l V{atercounes" laws.to be corftldered when COMtrucUon u undergolnf design review. -Review of a 12·uniL lract (9334) l~atcd on a prorolneot rldaelloe between Arch Beach Heiaht.a and Top or th World. , Ford Urges Energy Bid WASHINGTON <AP> President Ford proposed today setting up a cabinet· level energy department, banding key federal a(!en- cies with the aim of boost ing the U.S. bid for self sufficiency in fuels. He sent Congress legisla- tion setting the basis for a bipartisan approach to one of the country's most urgent problems. President-elect Carter also has said he favors establis hing a single energy department that would bring the Federal Energy Administration FEA -and the Energy Research Development Administ.ratiop -ERDA -under one roof. Child Abuse Jury Picks Postponed " Jury selection in the Orange County Superior Court child abuse trial of a San Clemente woman and her Marine boyfriend was delayed today when she renewed her earlier de- nied motion for a separate trial. Judge Harmon G. Scoville agreed to hold a pretrial hearing into the issue but warned lawyers for both defendants that it will be limited to fact.S that have arisen since the earlier ruling. Superior Court Judge James O. Perez ruled last Dec. 17 that Carolyn Sue Brewster, 23, and Camp Pendleton Marine Ken· neth Ray Bolden. 20, should race trial together for injuries al- legedly inflicted on her 2-year- old daughter Lawyers for both sides told Judge Scoville today that each defendant co ntinues to accuse the other of inflicting injunes on Cora Brewster They were ar· rested last Aug . 17 alter the un · conscious child was ru1>hcd lo San Clemente General Hospital. Bolden failed to appear for trial at the scheduled time Mon· day and was sent lo jail. He even· tually joined his lawyer in Superior Court. lie had been rree on his promise to appear for trial. Bolden and Mrs Brewster face trial on three felony counts of child abuse. ft is aJleged thal they were responsible for in juries to Mrs. Brewster's child that included cigarette burns. bile marks on the arm, a black eye and mulliple bruises. The child. unconscious on ad· mission to the hospital. remained on the critical list for a week. She Is reported to be recover• from her injuries and is ~'cared (or in a foster home. Metal Fireplace Blamed for Blaze A metaJ fireplace which radJat· eel heat into tho floor below ll waa blamed for a post-midnight fire today at t.bc home of Or. Michael Farrell, 489 Alta Vista Boulevard, Laguna Beach. Laguna Btacb Fire Capt. Jerry Johnlon said rtttmen halt· ed the burolng before striou.. damage could occur. structural loea wu placed at $50. 1 200 Flee Predawn Blaze PALM SPRINGS CAP) About 200 guest s fled their rooms as fire damaged the fas hion a ble C any on Hotel before dawn today, firem en said. , Officials said 13 people were treated for minor burns and smoke inhalation. No serious in· juries were reported. John McClell a nd Jr., publisher of the Long View <Wash.). Daily Ne ... s. and his wife, Burdette, were evacuated. by ladder from their room on the third floor, as were f'(jfJ others on that floor. The fire was confined to the lh.ird-floor lobby and hallways. None of the rooms burned. firemen said. The second floor also was: evacuated. Among those forced lo temporarily leave the three- s tor y hotel we r e Arthur Sulzberge r. publisher of the New York Times, and his wite, Carol. The blaze apparently started when a cigarette was dropped in a sofa in the third-floor lob- by. firemen said. There was no immediate estimate of damage. The McClellands and Sulzbergers arrived at the hotel Monday ·night for a meeting there of the Associated Press board of directors Wednesday and Thursday. Other AP directors who were guests at the hotel but whose rooms were not in the burned area included publisher Richard Steele of the Worcester (Mass.), Telegram and his wire, Louise. and publisher Robert White ti of lhe Mexico (Mo.), Ledger .,. Clemente Fire Insurance Bill May Drop25o/c Fire insurance premiums on San Clemente commerciaJ prc>- pert y may b e reduc ed arr average 25 percent as the rf'~1.:1 of improved city fire ratio&::.. Fire Chief Ron Coleman said tb· day Coleman said the new rating~. issued by the Insurance Services Office of California ClSOJ reflect improved fire protection. ISO has rated San Clemente a Class 5 city. Coleman said, two steps up from a Class 7. The average rating In the county is Class 4. Coleman said the impact of the improved rating will be mainly on mercantile and commercial properties. in terms of reduced fire insurance premlums. Coleman said the 25 percent average decrease would depend in individual cases on building construction. occupancy loads aod other factors. However, Coleman said. seldom does an improved city fire raU.ng have an impact on homeowner fire insurance rates That'S ~cause, he .aaid, most homea are insured und~r generul homeowner pollcies tn)t Include a number or coverages, such as theft or catastrophe. In those cases, fire insurance Ii. just part of the pr mlum, and usually a small part. (SH RATES, Pa,e ,U) ... \ h DAILY PILOT use Long et Criticiz es Officers ASPEN , Colo. (AP > Cluudine Longet said she resent ed the attitude among Pohce of ficers that she wu gwlty of a crime the night her lover was killed , the j ury in h e r manslaughter trial was told to- day. Pitkin County sheriff's deputy M.ary Wiggins said the defendant ~-distraught and cried softly t-e night Vladimir ''Spider" Seblch, a champion skier, was tatally shot in the mow1tainside botne he shared with Miss Longet above this ski resort. Miss Wiggins also said Mi!>S ~nget, an ex-s howgirl and f1'rmer wife of singer Andy WiJliams , was advised three limes of her legal rights after be· ing arrested. but i.t1ll answered <i.!1.~stions from law enforcement q&!icers. M iss Longet was asked how many times the .22-caliber pistol that killed Sabich was fired, Miss Wlggins said. "She made a comment lo the effect she resented the question. resented the implication there was an ulterior motive." Miss Wjggins lesti!led for the prosecu· tion, which said it hoped to close its case with a few witnesses lo· day after calling 11 persons to the stand on Monday. Jn bis opening statement, Deputy Dist. Atty. As hley An· derson said Miss Longet "raised the gun , pointed it at (pro- fessional skier Vladi mir> "Spider" Sabich, jokingly said 'b~ng-bang', at which point ~!~~r Sabich fell to the floor, dy- i~. As s he heard details of Sab1ch's death. Miss Longet, 35, broke down twice. Front Pag~ :l I TUNNEL ... lion department and PUC staff me mber s h ave opposed the grade-level crossing on grounds of decreased safety. The contest . grade-level vs. grade-separated crossing. has been going off and on for the past dozen years. Early last year iL appeared the city might have won, whe n Examiner Haley wrote a recommendation favora· ble to the city application. But a last-minute city call for public input on the crossing backfired on city planners when local building designer Eric Boucher devised a pl.ut for a crossing using spiral ramps con· nected to the existing tunnel. The Boucher plan. produced 1n the midst or previous heanngs, was quietly rece1\·ed and flied. A brief attempt by city officials to insure that it be kept qwet was aborted when an angry Boucher released it to the press. PUC staffers became aware of lhe plan. argued that the city had not considered all altemal.lves to an at-grade crossing. and the city apphcallon was remo\•tod from thecommii1S1on agenda. Boucher 's plan meanwtule was studied for pract1rri!.l· by both city engineeu and .i private engineering ('onsulltng Clrm, J•mes M. Montgomery, Consult· ing Engineers Inc. of Jrvme. Both studies reported that Boucher's ramps were too steep to meet requirements for Lhe handicapped Rape Victim Sues Apartment Owners A woman who r l1.11rn<0; ~he wa., ~ten .md rapt'd 1n her llunt mgton Beach a partment a year .1go hy an unknown Intruder has <0;ued the owners of the bu1ldmg for '60,000 1n dam age11. The woman alleges in her Orange County Superior Court lawsuit that a faulty lock on her rear door enabled the rapist to gain entry. OfllANOI COAST L 1c DAILY PILOT ~Ot•,_.. (•u:, h•llr Plftt .. , .. ..,.,f""<°"" blfWd '"" ,...-' ,....,, h "vtJ4'''-" h l~ O·~ (°"\t lilvbl1Vt4ftql G~Ot" ... ,...._, ... Nlf~ •'• '°'IMI~·~ MtMAY ""f'oVOliri l'tt ... fft' (O\f• Niltw .........,., & • .., .. Hv.,tl"'l'kw\ a."" r:W"'I t•ln v.11 • ., frVl'°lf \•Cldltb .. O, Y•ll•• •f'IJ :-.::~=~~~~~~'~::t~·~:. :!:.:~~'~:.!i.~1't~~'_..~.:_,.uo ...,,, h w .... ,,H ...... ,.,,~.""' •4'd ."°',..,,... , .... ,..,..., YIU l'<"llM~I •"'9 c;. ........... _, "_,.._ •• 11 .. 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BLIND PHYSICIST MICHAEL HINGSON OPERATES CONTROLS OF READING MACHINE Inventor Raymond Kurzwell Watches Former lrvfne Student THt New Oevfce Device Does Book Chore Aid Reads f or Ex-UC/ Blind Stulknl From Wire Services Former UCI physics graduate student Mike Hingson. 26. has become one of the first blind PC<l· pie to work with a new com- puterized device that translah.·~ printed words into sound. F'or Its public de but. lhc Kurzweil Reading Machine took a printed copy of Abraham 1.in- coln ·s Gettysburg Addrcsi. ;.ind read 1l aloud to reporters -"1th an accent. Dr Kenneth J r m1gan, pn·s1 dent of the Nut1onal Federntion of the Blind, promptly hajled thl! computerized machine as one of technology's greatest contnbu- t10ns lo the blind. "This thing really works," he declared. Then he JOke<l ... I think its accent is Scandinavian. It pro· nounced m y nam e a s 'Yemigan'." Hingson. who graduatl'd with honors from UCI in 1972 and 1s now a physicist 111 Santa /\na, J 01ned 1n\ e n tor H a~ m ond Kurzwe1I Monday 1n Oes :'11oincs. Iowa, for a demonstration of th1: machine's effectiveness. Jernigan said the machine" 111 grcaUy speetl ~n-;1ile1b1llt~ of new publ1c at1ons to the nation 's 450,000 bhnd people whm 1t goes into full produt•t 1011 tn about a year. Hingson. for example. s aid he 1s using the me1 chinc II) rrarl Laguna Lauds Two Outgoing City Employes The Laguna Beach City Coun- cil, br unanimous resolution, bas commended Stanley Scholl, former city mun1c1pal services director, and Bob Ingram. municipal servlce!t department project coordin<1tor &-holl, who ha'l worked on 15 major city projrcL'l during h1'l three ~ t•a rs "1th the c1tv. left h14' c.-1tv post for e1 pos 111on with th£' c•1 ty of Santa ~tomc.-a lnl(ram a cit v ernplove for more than 23 years. has heen hm'd by the City of lrvtne as a<o· slstant cngineer Both men were lauded for their service to the citizens of Laguna Beach and given "best wishes" at their new posts. Fr-one Pag~ A l RATES ... But for homeowners who carry straight fire insurance Policies. a break may be in store. Coleman said that on a lypicaJ $.50,000 home with such a policy, the owner might expN't a $13 a year reduction in his premium. The fire chief was opllmistic lh•l enoucb improvements in fll'e protection service can be made within the next s ix months to gain an even better rating at the Class 4 level. He said San Clemente is just short of the bet ter rating. The city Is allowed to request a re-evaluation before r1n al publication o( the ISO grade. Coleman said already planned Improvements In fire h.ydrant maintenance and equipment, plus h>8tallatlon of low-water alarms in the city water re· servolrs will make upthepoint1'. "With a Uttle bit of study, and quite a lot of effort," he sald, "we can eUmlnate t hose Points.'' Coleman is prepartna a de- tailed list of his rccommcnda· U.ooa to &i ve the City Council. Arthur Srhlesinger's "The lm- pcrial Presidency." He would have to wait two years to get a copy in Braille, he said Unlike other reading aids for the blind. the machine does not require extensive training to use, Hingson s aid t t look s I 1 k \' a copying marhtnc. with l\\O box·shaped units. each about two feet square, and a panel with about 30 but- ton!. Rut tnstead or reproducing print. the ma chine pronounces it, thanks to a computer pro· ~rammed to recognize printed characters and transform them into sounds which are then fed in· to an amplifier-s peaker. "There are 1,000 linguistic rules built into its memory and 2.000 exceptions to the rules," Kurzweil said. "The reason for so many exceptions is that we are d ea Ii ng· with the English language, which is one of the world's most complex." Even with all those exceptions, the computer voice sounds in· tangibly foreign and makes plen· ty of mistakes. ··nes Moines,'' for example, is pronounced "dess moines" rather than the correct "duh moyn." But the computer's voice is programmed lo avoid a dull monotone by giving inflection and emphasis to its words. And if the listener doesn •t catch a word or phrase, the m achine can be asked to say it aeain. It will even spell a word on cbmmand. Kurzweil said the fi rst model cost about $50,000, but he believes the cost or regular production models can be cut to around $.5,000. E'ro• Pa~Al CAMPUS OPPOSED . • • or longer in preliminary develop- ment of the Myford·Bryan site due to ongoing sewer and water service !>tudles for the proposed campus. But he was informed by college otftc1als Monday that the Irvine Ranch Water D1slnct will com· plete its report within two weeks, cle aring the way for final pur<'hase negotiations and initial development work. According lo Getchel. the site chosen by the colleg~ last year w11l cost more to improve with new sewer a nd water lines, drarnagc syst ems, roads and u111t11es than the actual cost or the raw land. He also said that within the past few weeks. company ex· perts have decided that the cam· pus would be incongruous with the agricultural uses surround· ing 1t "The road system in the area is narrow and extremely dangerous a t seve ral intersections," Getchel s aid. ·The b y-products n f a l!n cultural operallon-.. the odor of organi c rcrt1ltzers. the abun· dJnce or n1 es. the presence or s low, noisy farm machinery . will all have adverse impacts on academic operations ... Getchel a lso warned that the school would also "adversely af- fect" the company's farming operations due to increased van- dalism. damage to inigation systems. reduced crop yield and interference with traffic of farm machines. The latter contentions drew the ire of Mission Viejo Trustee Don· na Berry, who verbally blasted Getcbel for using "scare tactics" to force the college into sub· mission. "r resent the company comine lo us like this when they didn't speak up at all during the hear- ing when we d ecided to buy the site," said Mrs . Berry. "I don't buy It," she continuc<i. "They are doing the ta><payers a disservice. I am suspicious of their r easons and l had a great deal of faith in this operation up to now." Getchel denied any ''ultertor motives" Jn the company's offer or an alternative site and said there would be no need to disturb the district's "time line" for de· velopment of the second campus. "We're saying we may be' too late in this but we are raising the question before runds are ex- pended,'' he said. "Unfortunate· ly, that puts the company In the position of looking suspicious." Getchel said the company- favored site at Jeffrey and Irvine Center Drive would be much easier to develop because it already has all the necessary utilities "on alte." Supreme Court Backs Hinshaw Conviction Former conttrcssman Andrew J . H.lnshaw's nppeal that ltis con· stitutlonal rights were violated prior to his second Orange Coun· ty Superior Court trial was re· jected Monday by the United States Supreme Court in WuhJngton D.C. The decision means \bat the o u s t e d Newport Beach Repubhcan's s ubsequent convic- tion on charges or petty theft and mJsappropriatlon of pubUc funds will stand 'rhe Associated Press incor· rectly reported Monday that the Supreme Court action waa on IUnshaw's Feb. 7. Url'6 bribery conviction. . The actual hiah court acUon In- volved Hlnshaw's second convk· Uon on misconduct In otnce when he wu Oran1e County aaaessor ln 1972. . mnshaw. 54, wn convicted cl UJiDI county .oan90wer &lld materials in his successful bid for election to Congress. The ex-congressman earlier had been convicted of bribery. His lawyers are also appealing Ws conviction. The Fourth Dis· trict Court of Appeals ls expected to hand down a ruling within the next four weeks. A Jury found Hinshaw guilty or bribery in the first trial after Usteninc to t eatlmony that be ac· cepted campaian contrlbutfons and stereo equipment from the Tandy Corporation and an officer of the company while he !le.rved as assessor. Hlns haw'• lawyers araued after the second conviction that bis nshts were violated during Orange Count}' Grand Jury de- liberations that led to his lndJct· menl. Judi• Frank Domen!chlnJ ro-Ject.tcf the ar•ument before the trial betan. Tb• bJMb court up- held that rullnS MonClay. For Capbtrano New School Lines OK'd The Growth Planning Advisory Commisaton (GPAC) of the Capistrano Unified School Dis- trict voted unanimously Monday to recommend drawing new Junior high school attendance boundaries, ef£ective next fall. The commission's tecommen· dation will now be presented lo the board of trustees. The school board will bold a public m~ng oo the boundaries ~mmended by GPAC before taking finaJ ac· Uon. Seventh and eighth graders in the Capistrano district currently attend Marco Forster Junior High in San Juan Capistrano or Niguel Hills Junior High in Laguna Niguel. In September, Shorecliffs Junior High will open ln San Clemente. John Murray, growth trend consultant to the district, told com miuioners at Monday's public hearing that Shorecllffs is expected to open with about 700 students. If the G PAC recommendation ls approved by the school board, Shorecli(fs will draw students from San Clemente, Capistrano Beach and the Alto Capistrano area of San Juan. The comm ission recommenda· lion for Marco Forster is that its attendance area include San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point, the Sea Terrace area of Laguna Niguel and the Spotted Bull hous- ing area, just north of San Juan. Murray said enrollment nt Marco Forster lJt September ls expected to bo about. 930. Cur· rently the school has about 1250 students . The NlgueJ Hiiis attcndunce area approved by GPAClncludes all o! Laguna Niguel e><cepl the Sea Terrace area, as well as Mis· slon Viejo. September enrollment will be about 960 at Niguel Hills, Murray said. The school currently has about 1.100 students. Manuel Puentes, GPAC chairman, said one advantage or the boundaries to be recom· mended to the school board is that they keep alt elementary school attendance areas intact. A fourth Capistrano Unified junior high is planned for Mission Viejo, said Puent.es, but it w1ll not open for at least three years. Fro• rage AJ m .EFTS •.. Coast Highway, where the in- truder apparently squeezed through a 12·bY·24·inch bole he created in a door by removing a wooden vent. -The theft of $70 from Margie 11, 1920 S. Coast Highway. A de· termined burglar unsuccessful at· prying open a door succeeded in break.Ing out a window to gain ac- cess. Bro~ers ~eport Industrial Land Booms in Irvine By HILARY KAYE Ot IM D1ilr ,.1191 Si.ft There's been another land rush in Irvine. but this time it's for in· dustrial land, not houses. Real estate brokers are lining up for industrial parcels just as homeowners clamored for new homes in lotteries last year. ac· cording to both Irvine Company officials and bro kers themselves. They both point out that it's a sure sign the economy is boom· ing. Forty-two parcels in the Irvine industria l Complex, near Orange County airport, just of· fered Cor sale. are among the last s mall sites left within the com· plex. A trio of brokers -Al Davison, Marty J ones and Ronald Malouf -parked a mobile home in the parking lot of the Irvine In· dustrlal Complex building on Campus Drive on Fnday, Dec. 31. Intent on being first in line when sales begin, they rotated shifts manning the mobile home and did not leave the parking lot until Tuesday, Jan. 4, when of- ficials of the IIC building finally took their names and list or clients and told them to go home. ''I'm totally convinced that the brokers would have stayed In our parking Jot for two weeks, until the sale date this Friday, if we hadn't taken names and told them lo go home,•· said Dick Cannon, presldentofthe nc. "I've never heard of this hap- pening anywhere with industrial properties and I think it points out several things," said Cannon. First. he said it signified a tremendous confidence in the economy. with greatly increased capital Investment spending. Second, he insisted it showed the excellent location and value of the properties, which are in a .as.acre site north and west of Fro.Page Al ZONING ••• H. Rehnquist concurred In the majority opinion . Justice Byron R. White med a dissenting opi- nion. and Justices Thurgood Marshall and WilliamJ. BreMan Jr. dissented from a major por. tion or the majority opinion. Justice John Paul Stevens took no part in consideration of lhe case. The court's majority depended on a 1976 decision that official ac· Uon will not be held unconstitu- tional simply because it results in a racially disproportionate im- pact. In tbat ruUna, the court said a qualifying test used by the Washington, D.C. police force was valid even thoueb rnore blacks than whites failed tbetest. In the zoning case, the Arl- ington Heigbt.s trustee!! in 1971 re· fused to rezone a vacant property surrounded by tin gle·famlly homes to allow construction of a federally aubaldbed dtvelopment ofl90towo houses. The Metropolltan Housing Development Corp., a Ch.lc•10- bued nonprofit. or1a.nisaUoa set up to build low·lncome bousin1, • a\Md the board. Main Street and Red Hill Avenue, next to the Newport Freeway. The sites range in size from .7 to 2.4 acres. with the cost ranging from $2.65 to $2.85 per square root. That makes the average parce l somewhere a round $100,000. About 10 brokers began wait- ing In line Saturday, quickly join- ing Davison, J ones and Malouf. Three or four had campers or mobile homes, according to Can· non. The company will omcially re- ceive letters of intent from clients for s pecific sites from brokers, on Friday. ··n won't be until Friday that we'll see how many of the brokers come through with how many clients," said Cannon, ad· ding that some clients will be un- qualified because they are either speculators who will not move in- to the entire building or want to use it for purposes other than in- dustry. Davison said he. Jones and Malouf have letters of intent from 33 clients, but admiUed that due to the rigid s pecifications of the Irvine Company, they may get only 20 lots among the entire 42-lot site. "But we're not complaining. That's a pretty good share," Davison added. Davison said that one or the re- asons the parcels are so attrac·· tive is that the complex bas not offered new small parcels for several years and that there has been a huge "pent-up demand." Cannon explained that about 90 percent of the complex near tbe airport is sold out. However. he added that the company has other industrial land for sale in Tustin. LB Winter Recreation .Signup Opens Registration for the Laguna Beach winter recreation pro· gram is now open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays at the dep11rt· ment or Human ACfalrs. 515 Forest Ave., Laguna Beach. The winter program includes classes in tennis, golf, karate, coed volleyball, ballet, ballroom dancing, dance therapy, Jau an<l modern dance, belly dance, "dancerclse" and games and rhythms for preschool children. Other classes include bridge, chlldrcna arta and craf\.s, fiber techniques, horseback rldln& and lunchtime exercise. Special winter quarter ac· tivltlea lncludo the Win\er Festival Doubles Tennis Cham~ pionships Feb. 26 and 27 and March 5 and ti; a learn-to-ski lee· ture 1erlea and m ountain anow trip, kid's dos show; bo)'S and girts track: and swimming. Leaaue adult basketball boys j unior high basket ball and buketball for girls in the flfth and alxth 1rade• ,,.. al.to on t.p. Further lnformat\on ls avail•· ble by telephonlnc the Human Al· fairi Department at 4!M·lU4A f Orange · Coast EDll'ION * * VOL 70, NO. 11, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ,, ·Today's Clo lug .Y! Stoc"'s TUESDAY, JANUARY 11 , 1977 West Newport Studies Summer W:o·es Easter Week Js no(Jonger the headache it used to be in Newport Beach but residents of West Newport say summer -and particularly the Fourth of July - ~ can be pretty miserable. Representatives of the West Newport Beach Improvement Association appeared before the 'City Council Monday to ask for some help in "cooling down" summer hot spots created by short-term tenants. John Shea, president of the as· sociation. explained that his members we re asking for threeo • things -an ordinance requiring that tenants be notified of city laws when rental agreements are signed; passage of a noise or- dinance. and "a change in pr iorities" in police enforce· ment. No form al action was taken because the discussion was held duri ng the council's study session. Councilmen, however, indJcated they would not be will· mi to institute either of the laws sought by the association. In the case of the rental agree· ments, City Attorney Dennis O'Neil pointed out that historical· ly, the council has refused to become involved in mandating rental agreements since such mandates could be seen as in· terfet-ence with property rights "There is a question of the 1m· propriety of the city government involving itself in contractual agreements between private parties.·· he explained. But councilmen s aid they would be more than willing to take the points the association wanted included in the rental agreements and devise a pam· phJet to be given volwttarlly lo short-term tenants by real estate people and landlords. The noise ordinance also met resistance from councilmen after City Manager Bob Wynn explained that a survey of cities using such ordinance shows it to be ineffective in controlling par. ty disturbances. His report was backed by Police Chief B. James Glavas who aald he doubted such an Ol'- dl.nanee would be usefW to police. City Councilman Don Mcinnla, a reatdent of West Newport. atreed with Wynn and Glav• and su11e1ted that alternatit means be explored for controU• inJE l>nrlY dlaturbances. , Citin.J the riot ta-at occurred 1811 July 4, Mcinnis suggested deploying all of the police depart• (See SU Mll Ell, Pa1e AZ> '(! 1.COurt Scuttles Low-incollle Zonin~ j And~ Williorns Singer Denies 'Wild' Tales I ASPEN, Colo <API Singer ! Andy Williams, testifying at the , manslaughter trial of his former wife, Claudine Longet, denied to· I day that he ever said she "is a crazy gnl that likes lo ski fast, drive fast and ltkes to lake chances ·· Wilhams. in dark blue -;lacks I and sweater. was called by lhe prosecution about a statement he allegedly made lo neighbors of Miss Lon~et and her lover. Vladimir "Spid er" Sabich. The s ki champ \\a:. fatally ::.hot March 21 111 thl· mountainside home he shared with the enter tainer and her l11rcc children by Williams. A prosecutor said he wanted t<l question Wi lliams about the al 1 ~eged statement made to the ~eighbors the day after Sab1ch I was shot. "I wouldn 'l say she was lhe type to take chances." Williams ' said. "She was especially careful around children ·· Before Williams took the stand, two prosecution witnesses clas hed over whether Mi s:. l..onget h:1d been told by her lover I that the "afel> mechani::.m v. as in place on the pistol with \\ hu~h Riley Delays I Supervisors' I Assignments Ky GARV GRANvtLLE Ot , ... O•ltr ,., ... $1.tlf Al the rcQU{'!>l of former board \ chairman Ralph Diedrich. Orange Count y Hoard of Supervisors Chairman Thomas Rdey de la> ed appointing his fellow supervisor to their 1977 work tasks today I Riley had ready for subm1ss1on I for full board approval this morning a list or appointments that includNI assigning Supervisors Ph1hp Anthony and Ralph Clark lo the Orange County Transit District Board of Directors. -Diedrich and Clark to lhe new County Transportation Com· mission. -Himself nnd Anthony to the Local Agency Formation Com- mission. -Him self to the county ugislaUve Planning Committee, the committee that r eviews pending legislation affecting the county and proposes new legisla· tion. -Supervisor Laurence Schmit to the South Coast Regional Com· mJsslon and Southern California Air Pollution Control District. -Diedrich and Schmit to lhe county Criminal Justice Council. and Arterial Highway Finance Program Committee. But Riley set aside his assign· ment list at Diedrich 's request so the assignments could be re· viewed. U the Fullerton supervisor has any objections to what has in- formally been agreed on amohg the five supervisors, It Is expecl· ed to be Riley's choice of himself to serve on the legis lative com- m ittee. That post. which has by custom gone to the board chairman, wu the topic last week of a proposed s wap between Riley a nd Diedrich. The swap would end with Riley on the Transportation Com· mission and Diedrich In char10- n1aln or th~ committee deallna •with lepbbtlon l'nd the county's Jegtslators in Sacrament(). °¥;I ·-J . , he was fatally shot. Aspen police detective David Garms said Miss Longet told him lhe night of the s hooting that her lover indicated the gun would fire if the trigger were pulled. But Pitkin County sheriff's depu- ty Mary Wiggins s aid she heard Miss Longet tell Garms she thought the safety was on. Garms said that after discuss- ing the safety mechanism. Miss Longet '"indicated she playfully <See LONGET . PageA2l Delly Pit~ Stiff -to Newport Fireworks Pay Nixed MRS. PEEBLES LISTENS TO THE MUSIC BOTTLES AND VOICES MAKE She's All Bottl~d Up , By PATRl{,1(0'00NNELL Of lllt Deity 1"1191 Stall By JOANNE R EYNOl.DS Of, ... D•llY PilOt SU" Nettie Peebles of Huntington Beach has a Brazilian pepper tree in her yard that bears unusual fruit. Hanging from its branches are more than a hundred bottles of var ious s hapes, sizes and col· ors But makin g her tree a musical instru- ment is not the primary reason for ha ng- ing bottles on it. Led b) Councilwoman Trudi Rogers. the Newport Beach City Council reversed its previous position Monda~·. voling 4·3 against spending $6,000 on a Fourth of July fireworks show "It's a great conversation piece, .. Mrs. Peebles explains. "Almost every day someone stops to ask me about m y tree .. Mrs. Rogers. who had agreed lo thP proposal last month, cited a series of problems she said would result Crom the proposed city· sponsor ed display and suggested "lhe money could Ix' diverted to more productive uses such as ATSC <Assessment and Treat ment Services Center>. the senior citizen center or some other cause more lasting.·· "WHEN THE wind blows mv tree sings me a song, .. says Mrs. Peebles. 317 California St. I N THREE years of bottle growing ·• lhat·s a lot o f conversation . Her stance provided the swing vote on the issue which was brought before the council by the city's Bicentennial Committee in December. The committee in 1976 worked out an agreement whereby the ci- ty paid $4,000 and the balance was donated by the Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company to pay <See FOURTH, PageA2) . Dnun Set Stolen At Harbor High Music students al Newport Harbor High School are without a set o( drums today after thieves broke into the school's band room over the W'eekend and took a set ivalued at$000. Music teacher Ric h ard England reported the theft Mon· day morning. Police said they could find no evidence of forced entry into the room Englpnd said was locked Friday night. Industrial Land Booms in lroine By HILARY KAYE Oltht D•lly 1"1'91 SUtt There's been another land rus h in Irvine, but this time it's for in- dustrial land. not houses. Real estate brokers are lining • up for industrial parcels just as homeowners clamored for new homes In lotteries last year, ac· cording to both Irvine Company officials and brokers themselves. They both point out that it's a sure sign the economy is boom· ing. Forty.two parcels in the Irvine Industrial Complex, near Orange County airport, just of· fered for sale, itre among the last small sites left within the com· pl ex. A trio of brokers -Al Davison, Marty Jones and Ronald MaJouf -pJlrked a mobile home in the parking lot of the Irvine In· dustrlal Complex building on Campus Drive on Friday. Dec. 31. Intent on being first in line when salea begin, they rotated shifts manning the mobile home and did not leave the parking lot until Tuesday, Jan. 4, when of- ficials of the IIC building finally took their names and list of clients and told them to go home "I'm totally convinced that the brokers would have stayed in our parking lot for two weeks, until the sale date this Friday, if we <See LAND. Page A2 ) Rape Victim Sues Apartment Owners A woman who clrums s he was beaten and raped in her Hunt- ington Beach apartment a year . ago by an unknown intruder has sued the owners of lhe building for $60,000 in da mages. The wom an alleges in her Orange County Super1or Court lawsult that a faulty lock on her rea r door enabled the rapist to gain entry Silver Lame Protest System Nets Cold Feet Councilwoman Trudi Rogers wore a pair of silver lame ski socks and long underwear to Monday's Newport Beach City Co\lncll meet· ing. . SHE SAID she bought the socks on the din· ner break between the council's afternoon study session and the evening bf slness meet· Ing because o( a problem plaguing city of· ficials -the heating system In the city council chambers has broken down. • The year-old system completely broke down last Thursday during the planning com- mission m eeting and was only partlally re· paired In time for Monday's council meeting. MRS. ROGERS said she was unprcl,,ared for the cold during the afternoon session •·and I nearly froze.'' Mrs. Rogers wore her ski socks and lon1 John!J (or the evening meeting. No one else complained of the cold. but Councilwom an Lucille Kuehn came prepared with a pair of heavy wool socks and a three· ple(e wool suit. CITY MANAGEk Boh Wynn wore a sweater under his s port coat. "What I want to know," asked Coun· cllman Don M<!lools ot the bundled up group, "is wh11t people did before «ntral heatlng?" • NB Council To Consider Pier Work Newport Beach city coun- cilmen indicated Monday they would consider remodeling the concession st ands on lbe Newport and Balboa Piers in order to at· tract someone to run them. Councilmen asked city staff members to find out how much it would cost to bring the stands up to city building codes. The stands have been closed since early December because the previous concessionaire. Noel Phoenix. was declared in default of his lease with the city. At the lime. councilmen put the concessions out to bid with the provision that the new lease would havetoupgradetheslands. Bob Long, administrative as- sistant to the c ity manager, told councilmen Monday that no bids were received because potential bidders did not want to have to do the remodeling. He said they were put off by having to gel permits from the state Coastal Com mission and the state Parks and Recreation Com- mission. While council men asked for the cost estimate. Councilman Paul Ryckoff also asked the staff to consider leaving the s tands closed. "People could b~ their bait or whatever on sho~~he ex- plained. Councilme n Lucille Kuehn and Ray Williams bolb indicated In· terest ln revitalbing the pien. Said Williams. "I think we have found a place tC1put the fireworks money," In reference totbeSS,000 they earlier decided not to spend on fireworks. Com Seek Union SACRAMENTO' <AP> -A prisoners· r11hU group tryln1 "to organize Cali(ornla pri,on ln· ma.~1 into a labor uruon loOk Its cue and petitions to Qov. Ed.· mund Brown Jr. Monday. I 5-3 Vote Reverse~ Bias Case WASHINGTON <AP> -Com .. munities are not required to al~ zoning lawstoprovidehousingC. low-income families, the U. Supreme Court ruled today. The court's S-3 ruO.ng carries far-reaching consequences for many of the nation's suburban areas now closed to blacks and other minorities. , In an opinion written by Justit.e Lewis F. Powell Jr., lbecourtsaid predominantly white com· munities do.not have to make cer• lain allowances for integration wtless there is proof or purposeful racial discrimination. The court reversed a decision by the 7th U.S. CircuitCourtof Ap- peals that the Arlington Heights~ Ill., board of trustees~as guilty of racial discrimination when it re- fused to rezone a 15-acre plot for a low-income housing project. - "Diaproportionate impact is not irrelevant, but lt is not the sole touchstone of an invidious racial discrimination," Powell's opi .. nionsaid. Today's court's ruling limits how flir federal courts can go in he lping blacks and other minorities find housing in pre· dominantly white communities. lithe circuit court ruling had been allowed to s tand. other municipalities could have foW'ld themselves facing legal tests about their decisions. Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Justices Potter Stewart. Harry A. Blackmun and William H. Rehnquist concurred in I.be majority opinion. Justice By~ R. White filed a dissenting opi~ nlon, and Justices Thurgood Marshall and William J. BreMan: Jr. dissented from a major por- tion of the majority opinion. Justice John Paul Stevens t.ootc no part in consideration or the case. ' Buckner Traded For Rick Monday C HICA GO (AP ) -Tf\e Chicago Cubs traded their home nan leader. Rick Monday, and pitcher Mlke Garman to the Los Angele~ Dodgers this afternoon. In return, the Cubs received first basema n Bill Buckner, shortstop Ivan DeJesus and! righthanded pitcher Je(( Albert. Coast Weather Chance of fog early Wed- nesday, otherwlssi fair. Highs in the 60s. "tows in ~. INSIDE TODAY Colfte prict1.are beginning to drop . .. bo11co1t tf/0111 grlrtd.. ol.ong,. accotding to oon- 111 mer group• hoping lo ltobfltie the morut through rfdvctd demand. Story. I?oge A4. l•dex .. _.A% DAILY PILOT N Tuesday, January 11. 1gn ... n ~pill Threat Grows 'Worst To Come,' Senator Says WASHIN~TON (AP) -The senator presiding over hearings examining the ras h of tanker ac- cidents and oil &pills says the en- . vironmental threat posed by the big ships is going to get worse. Sen . Warren Magnuson, 'chairman of the Senate Com· I 'merce Committee, says the tra!· .fie in bulk oil carriers increases I daily in coastal waters, harbors and inland waterways, which are already congested and crowded. i .. Those of us who have studied tthis area feel the worst is yet to t:0me," said the Democrat from \Washington state. _ "This country has just wit- 1111essed the worst rash of tanker 'llccidents ev~r. and on top of ~ that, last year was the worst in 1:.history for tanker loss~." said · Magnuson in a statement pre- pared for hearin~s today aimed Ford 'Vrges Energy Bid WASHINGTON {AP) - President Ford proposed today setting up a cabinet- Jevel energy department, banding key federal agen· cies with the aim of boost· ing the U.S. bid for self· sufficiency in fuels. He sent Congress legisla· tion setting the basis for a bipartisan approach to one of the country's most urgent proble ms. P resident-elect Carter also has said he favors establishing a s ingle energy department that would bring the Federal Energy Administration - FEA -and the Energy Research Development Administration -ERDA . -under one roof. F1re Routs 200 Guests In Hotel PALM SPRINGS CAP) About 200 guests fl ed their rooms as fire da m aged the fashi onable Canyon Hotel before· dawn today, firemen said. Officials said 13 people were treated for minor burns a nd smoke inhalation. No serious in· juries were reported. J oh n M cClelland Jr .. publisher of the Long View (Wash. l, Daily News, and his wife, Burdette. were evacuated by ladder from their room on the third floor, as were 100 others on that floor. The fire was confined to the third·floor lobby and hallways. None of the rooms burned, firemen said. The second floor also was evacuated. Among tho.;f' forced to temJ'orarily leaH· the threc- sto r y h otel were Arthur Sulzberger, publisher of the New York Times , and his wife, Carol. The blaze apparently started wben a cigarette was dropped in a sofa in the third-floor lob- hy, firemen ~aid . There was no i mmediate c'\t1mate of damage. The Mc C leJlands and Sulzbergers arrived al the hotel Monday night for a meeting there of the Associated Press board or directors Wednesday and Thursday. Other AP directors who were guests at the hotel but whose rooms were not in the burned ar~a included publisher Richard Steele of the Worcester (Mass.), Telegram a nd his wife, Louise. and publish'er Robert White 11 of \he Mexico <Mo.), Ledger. ORANOECOAST N DAILY PILOT Ta.. 0.-Co"'t o.tlly l'llo4, Wi°'l-11 ft " r-~ tl"f Ht_,.,...,.,,. t1ovtM+v.rbvtNOf1t~ Col"' P\lb41V.tno Corno•f'IY ~.tie l'dltton\ 11rto ,:Nbll\nect MoM•Y ''°''OU4" Ff'I ... ,,,, Co, ... ~~·v~~.:~~,~!!~· ~':'~::t~ ~:~~:~':i L•fl'jna& .. ch/SwthCcNnl All.,.i.-lf4• 11on t'\ ovb41~flwt.t1 S-At'i'"•tv\ fond ~··~ Tf'I• CJl'"fft<IOtt PuOtiiP\1'"' tft l"lt I\ -t )JO Wl\t .. y Shttt. CO\tt """"" C111tornl• t>•h .......... ·-.,,,.,.oent .tnct PYOll'M' J•<-tr ... C•rtn VluPretlcMnttndO.Mrtt~t T ...... f \ICH .ft ldltO< .,..._ ...... _ ... IMMf1"9 mdlto< CllttlO "·\Mt ltl< ...... I', Moll As>llteflt IM""11t"9 fdllcln •• at making oil tankers safer. Fifteen tankers were loot last year. Since Dec. 15, when the Argo Merchant hit a shoal o!r Nantucket. 13 freight vessels in· duding tankers and barges have been involved in incidents or lost at sea. The latest sinking occurred Monday when the empty American tanker Chester A. Pol· Ing broke up in a winter storm off Massachusetts. <Related story. A4> The hearings are being held to explore what safety standards may be set for foreign-registere<t vessels wh1cn carry ~5 percent or the oil to the United States. Ten or the 13 incidents involving vessels including tankers since Dec._ 15 have involved vessels of foreign registry. Mariti m e s pec ialist s say several foreign nations have re- latively loose shipping regula· tions and that some vessels are registered in those countries to avoid complying with s tiffer rules elsewhere. Another aim of the hearings is to gather testimony on prospec- tive legislation to increase the liability of ship owners for oil s pill damage. Essentially, damage liability is currently limited to the value of the vessel itself after the a ccident. The head of the Environmental Protection Agency testified to· day that the United States should From Page Al LAND .•• hadn 'l t aken names and told them to go home," said Dick Cannon, presidentorthe UC. "I've never heard of this hap· pening anywhere with industrial properties and l think it points out sever al things,•• said Cannon. First, he said it signified a tremendous confidence in the economy, with greatly increased capital investment spending. Second, he insisted it showed the excellent location and value of the properties, which are in a 45-acre site north and west of Main Street and Red Hill Avenue, next to the Newp0rt Freeway. The sites r ange in size from .7 to 2.4 acres, with the cost ranging from S2.65 to $2.85 per square foot. That makes the average par cel som ewher e around $100.000. About 10 b rokers began wait· ing in Une Saturday, quickly join- ing Davison, J ones and Malouf. Three or four had campers or mobile homes, according lo Can· non. The company will officially re- ceive letters of intent from clients for specific sites from brokers. on Friday. "It won 't be until Friday that we 'll see how many of the brokers come through with how many clients," said Cannon, ad· ding that some clients will be un- qualified because they are either speculators who will not move in - to the entire building or want to use it for purposes other than in- dustrv. Davison said he. Jones and Malouf have letters of intent from 33 cUents, but admitted that due to the rigid specifications of the Irvine Company, they may get only 20 lots among the entire 42·lot site. ··out we're not complaining. That's a pretty good share," Davison added. Davison said that one or the re- asons the parcels are so attrac.- tive is that the complex has not ofrered new small parcels for several years and that there has been a huge "pent-up demand." Cannon explained that about 90 percent of the complex near the airport is sold out. However, he added that the company has other industrial land for sale in Tustin. Bridge Work Moves Ahead Work is moving ahead on the Coast Highway bridge over Up· per Newport. Bay, according to Joe Devlin, director of public works for the city. Devlin told city councilmen Monday that the Coast Guard, which issues permits for struc· lures to be built across navigable waters, has sent out its notice to mariners. He explained that boaters have 90 days to respond to the proposed bridge plans before the Coast Guard permit is issued. SONAR SPOTS M:SS OBJECT EDINBURGH, Scotland CAP ) -Scientists hunting for tbe Loch Ness monster say sonar detec· tors spotted a-l arge object oo lhc bottom. They said it was either a sun· ken boat or tbe 30·foot carou of tho monater. be more aggressive tn setting standards for foreign oil tankers to protect American shores and interests. EPA Administrator Russell E . Train said the United States traditionally has sought interna- tional agr eements governing construction, operation and maintenance. But Train said this approach has largely failed: "I cannot overstress the extent to which the U.S. has had difficulty in obtain- ing serious consideration of its positions ••. " Fro• Page Al LONGET ••• pointed the gun at him and gestured a t him, saying 'Bang, bang'.'' Jn her testimony, Miss Wiggins said Miss Longet told her she re- sented the attitude among police officers that she was guilty or a crime. Miss Longet was asked how many times the .22·caliber pis tol that killed Sabich was fired, Miss Wiggins said. "She made a comment to the effect she resented the question, resented the implication there was an ulterior motive," Miss Wiggins testified for t he prosecu· tion, which said it hoped to close its case with a few witnesses to- day after calling 11 persons to the stand on Monday. As s he heard details of Sabich's death, Miss Longet, 35, broke down twice. Fro• Page A I FOURTH ••• for the bicentennjal fireworks show. Thecommitteesuggestedthata similar arrangement be made for 1977 and urged the council to ap· prove the contract as soon as possible even though the source for the $2,000 had not been found. Three councilmen -Lucille Kuehn, Don Mclnnis and Ray Willi ams -opposed lhe original suggestion, pointing out that the display would be wasteful, that it would only create more traffic problems and that it would pro· bably tend to encourage the ii· legal private fireworks displays on the beach by attracting people to the city. · They were originally overruled and the city st arc was instructed to draw up a contract for approval Monday night. Mrs. Rogers c hanged her vote, but the fireworks supporters, Councilmen Pete Barrett and Paul Ryckoff and Mayor Milan Dostal, remained in favor of the· proposal, noting thatit would be a good way to celebrate the nation's birthday. But Williams, who questioned the wisdom of sending city funds ··up in smoke," declared the fireworks display a "questiona- ble form of patriotism. "We have many more impor- tant tasks to address," he said. AP Wlrepl\01_, BLIND PHYSICIST MICHAEL HINGSON OPERATES CONTROLS OF READING MACHINE Inventor Raymond Kurzwell Watches Former Irvine Student Test New Device Device Does Book Chore Aid Reads for Ex-UCI Blind Stmknt From Wire Services Former UCI physics graduate student Mike Hingson, 26, has become one of the first blind peo· ple to work with a new com- puterized device that translates printed words into sound. For its public debut, the Kurzweil Reading Machine took a printed copy of Abraham Lin- coln's Gettysburg Address and read it aloud to reporters -with an accent. Dr. Kenneth Jernigan, presi- dent of the National Federation or the Blind, promptly hailed the computerized machine as one or technology's gr eatest contribu- tions to the blind. "This thing really works," he declared. Then he joked, "I think its accent is Scandinavian. It pro· noun ced my name a s 'Yernigan'.'' perial Presidency:• He would have to wait two years to get a copy in Braille, he said. Unlike other reading aids for the blind, the m achine does not require extensive training to use, Hingson said. It looks like a copying machine. with two box-shaped unjts, each about two feet square, and a panel with about 30 but- tons. But instead of reproducing print. the machine pronounces it, thanks to a computer p ro- grammed to recognize printed characters and transform them into sounds which are then fed in· to an amplifier-speaker. "There ar e 1,000 linguistic rules built into its memory and 2.000 exceptions to the rules," Kurzweil said. "The reason for so many exceptions is that we are dealing with the Englis h language, which is one of the world's most complex." Even with all those exceptions. the computer voke sounds in- tangibly foreign and makes plen· ty of mistakes. "Des Moines," for example, is pronounced "dess moines'' r ather than the correct "duh moyn." But the computer's vofce is programmed to avoid a dull monotone by giving infl ection and emphasis to its words. And if the listener doesn't catch a word or phrase, the machine can be asked to say it again. It will even spell a word on command. Kurzweil said the first model cost about $50,000, but he believes the cost of regular production models can be cut lo around $5,000. Hingson, who graduated with . honors from UCI in 1972 and is ! s c B ks ~o~ a p~ysicist in Santa Ana,: ur;pli'n»'He ou•t lllY~ JOtned in ventor Raymond · te:;;••fll •, ~ Kurzweil Monday in Des Moines, . Iowa, for a demonstration of the machine's effectiveness. Jernigan said the machine will · greatly s peed availability of new publications to the nation 's 450,000 blind people when it goes into full production in about a year. Hingson. for example, said he is using the machine to read Arthur Schlesinger's "The Im- Worker Killed VAN NUYS (AP) -A con- struction worker was shot and kilJed as he left his apartment to go to work. ............. Hinshaw Conviction Former congressman Andrew J . llinshaw's appeal that his con· stitutional rights were violated prior to his second Orange Coun· ty Superior Court trial was re- jected Monday by the United States S upre m e Court in Washington D.C. The d ecision means that the o u s t e d Newport Beac h Republican's subsequent convic· tion on charges of petty theft and misappropriation of public funds will stand. The Associated Press incor· reclly reported Monday that the Supreme Court action was on llinshaw's Feb. 7, 1976 bribery conviction. The actual high court action in· volved Hinshaw's second convic· lion on misconduct in office when he was Orange County assessor in 1972. · llinshaw, 54, was convicted or using county m anpower and materials in his s uccessful bid for election to Congress. The ex-congressman earlier had been convicted or bribery. His lawyers are also appealing this conviction. The Fourth Dis· trict Court of Appeals is expected to hand down a ruling within the next four weeks . A jury found Hinshaw guilty of bribery in the first trial after listening to testimony that he ac- cepted campaign contributions and stereo equipment from the Tandy Corporation and an officer of the company while he served as assessor. Hinshaw's lawyers argued after the second conviction that his rights were violated during Orange County Grand Jury de· liberations that led lo his indict- ment.' Judge Frank Domenichini re- jected the argument before the trial began. The high court up· held that ruling Monday. Fro"' Page Al SUMMER ••• ment's manpower on Indepen- dence Day to handle problems that occur that day or using man· power from other departments. He noted that the decline of Easter Week in Newport Beach c"'"e about because of the at- titude or the residents. "People here made it clear they were sick and tired of that crap and ,would not put up with it. They backed the police in what they had to do, and maybe that's what's needed here," he said. Glavas, who had been discuss- ing police m anpower before Mcinnis spoke, added wryly, ··1 think this is an excellent time for me to ask for 30 more officers." In a more serious vein, Glavas warned that to put all of his man- power into West Newport or uny other "hot spot Min the city would be to depr ive other areas of police protection. "I don't think there will ever be the millenium when the police department can completely take the burden off citizens in solving these problem s. "Residents who are disturbed (by problems caused by summer tenants ) must come forward, they must complain and they must be willing to testify In court." Council Action In action Monday night, the Newport Beach City Coun. cil: WEST NEWPORT : Declined to take action on a noise ordinance proposed by homeowners but agreed to print a pamphlet outlining city laws for distribution to summer ten- nants. FIR EWORKS: Reversed a pre.vious stand and refused to approve a contract for a $6.000 fireworks show for the up· coming Fourth of July. INITIATIVE: Set for study on Jan. 24 a proposal to in· crease park land in new develooment.s. ~o Easg Bider PIERS: Asked city officials to estimate cost of remodel· ing the concession stands on the Newport and Balboa Piers and agreed to consider doing the work with cl\y funds. ATSC: Approved an agreement with the Assessment and Treatment Services Center in which tho city will pay t.be center $90 for every juvenile referred to the center by Newport pollce tor couoaeling. Bob Kish or Phoenix, Ariz., is recovering in the hospital today after his not.So-happy New Year's celebration. Bob tried to ride the rhinoceros at Phoenix City Zoo. He failed. ' l Saddlebaek ED ITION .\•·t~rnoo11 N.Y. Stoeks l ~V~O~L~--1_0,~N_0~.1_1~,_2_s_e_c_T_1o_N_S~,_2_8_P_A_G_e_s _____________________ o __ R_A_N_G_e __ c_o_u_N_TY __ ._c_A_L_l_F_O_R_N_l_A __________ T_U_E_S_D_A_Y.,_J_A_N_U_A_R_Y __ 1_1._1_9_n __________ T_E_N~C_E_N_T_S Irvine Company Fights College Site By WILLIAM SCHREIBER 04 tltt O•llY I'll .. Sa.ff The Irvine Company made an 1 unexpected, Jast·minute bid Monday night to scuttle Sad· dJeback College's, chosen ~ite for a 20.acre second cam~s in Irvine in favor of another loca- tion about three miles away. The sudden turn Qf events dis- mayed college .trUJtees, who aharply criticized the company for fa1Hng to comment on the pro- posed campus site months ago. Gordon G. Getchel, the com- pany's manager or planning ad-•• ministration, said flaws have been found in the parcel selected by the college at the comer or Culver Drive and Bryan Avenue. He said the company 1s willing to make an attractive orrer if the college instead will consider buy. mg a site at the intersection of Jeffrey !load and Irvine Center Drive. Getchel said the offer could be drafted by early March but an· gry trustees gave him just one week to come back before them with .. lhe g uts of a bona fide offer for the new site or forget it." No price has been fixed for the Myford-Bryan site, though an ap· praisal of the property has been completed. The college has re· served $1.3 million \n next year's budget \o buy the land and pre· pare it for development. Trustees were on the verge or giving the final go-ahead for negotiations with the company and, in fact, approved an en- vironmental impact report on the site Monday night. Getchel conceded that he was counting on a delay of four weeks or longer in preliminary develop· ment ·or the Myford-Bryan site due to ongoing sewer and water. service studies for the propc>sed campus. But he was informed by college officials Monday that the Irvine Ranch Water District will com· plete its report within two weeks. clearing the way for final purchase negotiations and initial development work. According to Getchel. the site chosen by the college last year will cost more lo improve will\ new sewer and water lines, drainage systems, roads and utilities than the actual cost or the raw land. He also said that within tho past few weeks, company ex· perts have decided that the cam· pus would be incongruous with the agricultural uses surround· <See CAMPUS, Page A2l I r Court ScUttles lnco1nes Zoning o ••• , Piiot Stoff Plloto 5-3 Vote Reverses Bias Case Ford Vrges Energy Bid WASHINGTON .<AP) President Ford proposed today setting up a cabinet· level energy department, banding key federal agen- cies with the aim of boost· ing the U.S. bid for self. sufficiency in fuels. MRS. PEEBLES LISTENS TO THE MUSIC BOTTLES AND VOICES MAKE WASlllNGTON (AP) -Com- munities are not required to alter zoning laws lo provide housing ror low-income families. the U.S. Supreme Court ruled today. He sent Congress legisla· lion setting the basis for a bipartisan a pproach to one of the country's most urgent problems. She's All Bottled Up The court's 5.3 ruling carries far-reach ing consequences for many or the nation·s s uburban areas now closed to blacks and other minorities. President-elect Carter also has said he favors establishing a single energy department that would bring the Federal Energy Administration - FEA -and the Energy Researc h Development Administration -ERDA -under one roof. By PATRICK O'DONNELL Of Ow O•oly P1101 Sift! Nettie Peebles uf Huntington Beach has a Brazilian pepper tree in her yard that bears unus ual fruit. Hanging from its branches C1rc more than a hundred bottles of various shapes. si1es and col· ors. But making her tre(' a musical instru- nwnt is not the primary reason for hang- ing hollies on it. "It ·s a gr c al C'Onvcrsation piece," ~trs. Peebles explains. "Almost every day someone s tops to ask me about m y tree." In an opinion written by Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr .. the court said pre dominantly white com- munities do not have to make cer - tain allowances for integration unless there is proof of purposeful racial discrimination. The court reversed a decision by the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Ap· peals that the ArHrfgton Heights, Ill., board ortrustees was guilty of racial discrimination when It re· fused to rezone a 15-acre plot for a low-income housing project. "WHEN THE wind blows m y tree sings me a song," says Mrs. Peebles, 317 California St. lN THREE years of bottle growing that's a lot of conversation. F1re Routs 200 Guests In Hotel ·Appointments Delayed "Disproportionate impact is not. Irrelevant, but it is not the sole touchstone of an invidious racial discrimination," Powell's opi· nionsaid. Today•s court's ruling limits how far federal courts can go in helping blac ks and other minorities find housing in pre· dominantly while communities. Uthe circuit court ruling had be<!n allowed to sta nd, other municipalities could have found themselves facing legal tests about their decisions. I Die~h Asks Postponemem of Riley List I By GAR v G RANVlLLE PALM S PRINGS (AP) About 200 guests fled their rooms as fire damaged the fashionable Canyon Hotel before dawn today. firemen said. I OI "" O•••Y ,., ... """ I Al the request or former board I chairm a n Ralph Diedrich. Orange County Board of Supert1sors Chairman Thomas ' Riley delayed appoinhng his fellow super visor to their lm work tasks today R1l~y had ready fop submission for full board approval this 1 morning a list or appomtments that included as:o11~ning : Supervisorii Philip Ahtbony and Ralph Clark to the Oranit<' County Transit U1slrict Boarcl or Dirtttors. -Diedrich and Clark to the new County Transportation Com m1ss1on. -Himself and Anthony to thP Local Agency Formation Com· mission. -Himself to the county Legislative Planning Committee, the committee that reviews ' pending legislation affecllng lhc county and proposes new legisla- Uon. -Supervisor Laurence Schmit to the South Coast Regional Com· mission and Southern California Air Pollution Control District. -Diedrich and Schmit to the county Criminal Justice Council, and Arterial Highway Finance l>rogram Committee. But Riley set aside his assign- ment list at Diedrich's request so the assignments could be re- viewed. Jt the Fullerton supervisor has any objecUons to what has in- formally been agreed on among the five supervisors, it is expect· ed (o be Riley's choice or himself to serve on the legislative com- mittee. That post, which has by custom SONAR SPOTS NESS OBJECT EDINBURGH, Scolland (AP) -Scleoliats bunting roe the Loch Ness monster say sonar detec· tors spotled a large object on I.be bottom. They said it was tither a swf. ken boot or the 30-foot carcasa of the monster. : ... s ' gone to the board chairman, was the topic last week of a proposed swap between Ril ey and Diedrich. The swap would end '4ilh Riley on the Transportation Com- mission and Diedrich in charge again of the committee dealing with legislation and the county's legislators in Sacramento. Officials said 13 people were treated for minor burns and smoke inhalation. No serious in- juries were reported. Teachers' Average Salary Ga~ns 7. 7o/tJ Chier Justice Warren E. Burger and Justices Potter Stewart, Harry A. Blackmun and William H. Rehnquist concurred in the majority opinion. Justice Byron R. White filed a dissenting opi- nion, and Justices Thurgood Marshall and William J. Brennan Jr. dissented from a major por· lion of them ajority opinion. John McClelland Jr., publisher of· the Long View <Wash.), Daily News, and his wife, Burdette. were evacuated by ladder from their room on the third floor, as were 100 others on that floor. The fire was confined to the third-floor lobby and hallways. None of the rooms burned, firemen said. 8y LAURIE KASPER Of'"• O•lly 1'110! $1•11 The co-called •·average·· teacht'rs', salary in the Sad- dleback Valley Un1f1ed School District will inc rease 7 7 percent as the result of trustees· thaw of the salary freeze and award of four percent cost·Of·li ving raise last week. In m onetary terms. the average teachers' salary wiU in· crease from SlS,300 to $16.480, ac- cording lo Gilbert Moreno, the district's business manager. He said this increase includes the cost-of-living raise and in· cremental raises for one year of experience and four graduate semester units. • Moreno noted, however. that the average teacher is a .. mythical" figure compiled from statistics. Although all teachers wtll re· ceive the cost of Uving raise, other salary increases depend on the individual's movement on the district's salary schedule and graduate e ducation units taken. Although teac hers were given a four percent raise, he said, it is only being given for six of the 10· months they work. Thus, be ex- plained, the effective cost-of. living raise figures out lo 2 4 per- cent Thia raise wm cost the district about $.130,000. It la in addition to I.be $12.7 milUon prevtousl)' budgeted for tho 700 teachers' salaries, pay. ment of subsUtute teachel'S and htnn1 of teachers needed for 11rowth ln enrollment, be ex· plained. Moreno said 1nother $4M,000 h8d been budgeted for lncremcn· tat raises. which were also given teachers last week. A majority of the trustees also agreed lo pay the inflationary costs in insurance benefits. Moreno said this will cost $198 for each teacher covered. Currently, he said, 648 teachers are insured, althou~h all teachers are eligi- ble. Before the trustees' action, the inflationary costs of the benefits are being d ed u cted from teachers' paychecks. Teachers had been working since September without the normal incremental raises or a cost·of-livlng raise. Although pleased to be given the money. some teachers have (Sff RAISES, P•ge A%) Justice John Paul Stevens took no part in consideration or the case. The court's majority depended on a 1976 decision that orricial ac- tion will not be held unconstltu· CSf>eZONING, PageA2) Toro Tools Stolen Tools valued at $SOO were stolen from an El Toro home by a burglar who ransacked the garage while the owners were absent. Orange County sheriffs officers said the theft was report- ed by woodworker Earl Elmer Evans, 37. of 24271 Fordview. lie was away from home al the time oflhe break-in. Third Ballot Ele«!tion The second floor also was evacuated. Among those forced to temporarily leave the three- s tor y hotel were Arthur Sulzberger. publisher or the New York Times, and his wire, Carol. The blaze apparently started when a cigarette was dropped in a sofa in the third-floor lob- by. firemen said. There was no immediate estimate of damage. The M cC l ellnnds and Sulzbergers arriver! al the hot Monday night for a meeting there or the Associated Press board of directors Wedne$day and Thursday. Price Will Head SACC Robe rt Pri ce. lop ad · meone else had casl the needed A former city manageAc has ministrator or Laguna Hills sixth vote for Price before he had been the ad m intstrator al Leisure World, was elected pres!-voted, he said . ' Leisure World aJnce 1964. He dent of the Saddleback Area Mrs. Phillips cited• the split plans to retire ln a year. Coordinating Council Monday on vote as a healthy sign ror the um· He also Is a founder and past the third ballot by his fellow brella organization or Sad· pr~ident of the South Laguna directors. dleback Valley civic groups and Hills Homeownera' AssoclaUon It a,pparently was the first Ume homeowner aasoclaUons. and a member of the Laguna a SACC leader has not been elect· Other officers elected Monday Hills Rotary and Torch Clube. r, by a unanimous vote. included Bill Monoson. lint vice AddlUon11ly, he ls a candld1te Tbe nrst two ballots resulted in president: Mra. Phillipe, second for the Saddl back Community a 5-St.ie between Prtce Md Mary vtce.prealdenl; MikeClance.y, re· Colle1e Olstrlct Board of Phillips. It was broken only COtC1l9I secret1ry; Jim Bone, Truetees. alter• Rick 8obay, out·101nc treuurer, and Irene Puhlman, Before Price and Mrs,PhllUrit, SACC preai~nt. was appointed ~pondln1 secretary, · who la a candidate for'lhe Sad- as the 11th memr>er of lhe Ex· Prlct hall been involved ln dleb1ck Valley \Jn1lled. School ecutive Board. SACC alnce It.a inception eight District Board or Education, He said later, however, thal be yurs 110. He bas served on the were nomln1tecl, two dJ.rec1.on wu not the d4:.:lding. vote. So-I boardforatlbutoneyear.. ~SeeP&ICE.PageAJ) ' r S4CC Opposes Remap Saddleback Area Coordinating Council directors will oppose any change in boundaries of the coun- ty's supervisorial districts that would split the Saddleback Valley. Reacting primarily to one re- districting proposal which would divide the valley. directors voled Monday to inform county supervisors or their opposition. They said they also will ask: that redistricting,, which the state says must be done by 1981. be delayed awhile and that supervisors authorize an obj"' live study, including community input, on the issue. In a related action. directors agreed to solicit support from homeowner associations anti community groups for a study or incorporation of the Saddleback Valley. The-action was proposed by Rick Bohay, outgoing president or SACC. He objected that the re• districting proposal made re• cently would s plit the valley between Super visors Thomas Riley and Ralph Diedrich. Since Diedrich was just re· elected to a four-year term, he said, area residents would not be able lo vote for their represen· talive to the only government with jurisdiction in the area. Incorporation may be one de• fense against this, he said. SACC previously asked the supervisors to give funding to the Local Agency Formation Com· mission for a study or f\lture gov~ emment alternatives for the Sad· dleback Valley. Supervisor Riley, however , has suggested that the funding for the study come from local county service area budgets . SACC directors agreed to s~k support of this from local homeowners. Com Seek Union SACRAMENTO (AP> -A prisoners• rights group trying l<> organize California prison in- mates into a labor union took iL<i case and pclllions to Gov. Ed· mund Brown Jr. Monday. or::c;_ coa~• -= -""!.-~ Weather Chance or fog early Wed- nesday, otherwise fair. Highs In the 60s. Lows in 40s. INSIDE TODAY Col/tt price1. ore beginning to drop cu boycott eflort1 grlnd.o}.ong.o.ccording to con· aumer group1 hoping to atoblll.t.e t~ market through reduced d~crtd. Story P.o{Je A4. ... .. I ' f DAil V PIL01" SB* Long et i Criticizes Officers ... ASPEN. Colo. (AP) Claudine Longet said she resent· ed the attitude among police of· ficers that s he was guilty of a c:rime the night her lover was .kiJle d, the jury in her manslaughter trial was told to- day. Pitkin County sheriff's deputy Mary Wiggin1> said the defendant was distraught and cried softly the night Vladimir "Spider" Sabicb, a champion skier, was latalJy shot Jn the mounta1nside home he shared with Miss l.onget above this ski resort. .Miss Wiggins also said Miss l..onget, an ex·showgirl and former wife of singer Andy Williams, was advised three times of her legal rlghts after be· ing arrf'.sted. but still answered questions from law enforcement officers. Miss Longet was asked how many times the .22-calJber pistol that killed Sabich was fired, Miss Wiggins said. "She made a comment to the effect she resented the queslion, resented the implication there was an ulterior motive," Miss Wiggins testified for the prosecu- tion, which said it hoped to close its case with a rew witnesses to- day after calling 11 persons to the stand on Monday. In his opening statement, .Deputy Dist. Atty. Ashley An· derson said Miss Longet "raised the gun, pointed it at (pr o- fess ion al sk i er Vladimir) ''Spider'' Sabicb, jokingly said. ·bang-bang'. at which point Spider Sabich Cell to the floor, dy. ing." As she beard details of Sabich's death, Miss Longet, 35, broke down twice. Once, she buried her face in her hands and cried several m mutes before becoming composed again. The first day's only surprise was provided by the security chier for the exclusive sub- division where Miss Longet lived for two years with Sabich, a 31· year-old professional skier. Roy Gri((ith said that as he ar- rived at Sabich's $250,000 moun. tainside home, he warned a Pitkin County sheriff's ofCicer .about Miss Longet: .. Now watch r it, this gal is ringy today." Neither the defense nor the 1 prosecution asked Griffith to de- 1ine "ringy." Anderson told re- porters. "Let the jurors decide." Griffith described his entry in-to the home. .. All at once. Miss Longet ap. •peared in the hallway," he sajd. '"'She was holding her hand to her chest. and for an instant, I thought she had been shot ... l 5aid. ·c1audine, who shot who?· and she said. 'I shot Spider'." JC convicted of the reckless manslaughter charge. Miss Longet could receive a max- imum penalty of IO years in pnson and a $30,000 fine. PRICE ... questioned whether political can- didates should serve as SACC of- f icers. They said candidates will have little time to devote to SACC dur- ing their campaigns before the ~l ection. Both nominees, however, argued that they will have tim(l to serve the organiza- t ion Price said he never consider~d seeking the presidency before because of the Lim" demands of }tis job However. he said, a new manager will soon be hired for the pnvate retirement communt· ty so he will be doing IC'Ss this year. "The potential of SACC is un· l imited ... Pncc said. adding that its only limitation 1s the hours volunteers can spend working for it. •·The president is only one person." he said. "Success is .achieved by the full board." OAANOE COAST Sii DAILY PILOT TNOrMHJit C!M'-1 O•UY "'t-ot -"'"-"•< .. I' c°"' ""'"d'"'""-,., ... ltlMlllll_.,., .. °'_ (M\t ~•V\•"4 Comofltny ~M•t~h«W\,. .,.., ,Wltm.ct Ment.Uy O'"°""' '""°'' tor C~\t• Mtw Mf•Mrt .. H", ~·~&riKt'i '°""" 1•1ft Vellt'r, lrwtn•, !.•d'Gltt>.teil. V•llO •M ~"'•"'"°"'PtCo•tf A,,,...~ltidt t!OI\ '' O"OH\lwtd !.·OUrO•" ~ """4.fV\ l .... l'riMtoet outltt"'l"Q D\eftl ., •t JJ0 'WHI &., ~fftl, C..t• ~1e. (e1Utt~a"1t1t.. .,._..,,,_ Pn"\ldifnt •l'WI ~'"""" Jte•-c .... ., Vt<• flrn~f'll H11C1 Gf,_...•tMil~r '-···-E:•ttef" ~fN,.~ Mt-•"9Cd•I« °'""'"" "-• ............. " '"" .. ""'Ml ......... .... a.dchbacll Valln Onie. 2Sl'tl.Al'ttll-•t'-'~'·- Offlctt C...'-""'"' l>IWt••e.v~ """'""'"" .... ~ 11111 .. .oc•-.... ,., "-.... h 11 .. o--... \lrwt Ttl~M{T141~ Clauffi.d AdY..tlelfll IU·N11 S--~Yot1•v....,.<>mc:o .. , .. ,,0 ....... ~,....... APW1t..._ .. WEEPS IN COURT Claudine Longet KKK-Marines Attack Called 'Natural' Act By Aaaoclated Press A college psychology professor says black Marines who attacked a Camp Pendleton barrack~ room of whites may have acted naturally because the Marine Corps allowed the Ku Klux Klan to operate. "Among blacks you are taught at an early age you don't turn the other cheek but fight back," Dr. Charles W. Thomas said at a pre- tnal hearing Monday. Thomas. a professor at the University or California at San Diego, was called to testify as an expert witness for the Marine Corps. The hearing will decicde if Sgt. Herman Fletcher of Huntsville. Ala. must stand court-martial trial or whether charges of con· spiracy and assault against him wrll be dropped Meanwhile, the second or 14 blacks named on thooe charges was ordered to stand trial Thurs- day. He is Cpl. Dean Edwards, 20. of Bay St. Colfax, La. In the first trial, Cpl. E.F. Henry. 20, or Ivanhoe, N.C., pleaded guilty to assault and was sentenced Dec. 30 to three months' imprisonment, $600 In pay forfeiture and reduction in rank to private. Lt. Col. F. Latimer Gould, the military judge who liccepled a pretrial agreement in Henry's case, will conduct the special court martial or Edwards as well. The blacks claim they attacked a barracks beer party which they believed was a meeting of the Ku Klux Klan. Six whites were hospitalized briefly as a result of beatings and stab wounds. Marines later acknowledged Klansmen had used. a nearby room. Capistrano Distri~t Fletcher's civilian attorney told the hearing that Klansmen carried knives and cards with racial epithets and were involved in confrontations with blacks on the Marine base. "The general tendency ts to fight back," Thomas testified. "Fighting would not be unusual. 1t shows manliness. It would be considered normal under the conditions described." Junior High Lines Get Bid to Move F ront Page Al 'Sorry, Wrong Number' Dally f'llef°\ull Photo Bill Seanick, on the telephone, and op~rators ~am Mabrv and Julie Ris try to unscramble their phone lines in "Sorry, Wrong Number," one of the three one-act plays which Mission Viejo High School's Drama Workshop will present at 7:30 p.m . J an. 20 and 21. "The Bald Soprano" and '·The Proposal" also will be present cd during the dramatic trilogy. The Growth Planning Advisory Commission (GPAC) of the Capistrano Unified School Dis· lrict voted unanimously Monday to recommend drawing new junior high school attendance boundaries, effective next fall. The commission·s recommcn· dation will now be pre~ented to the board of trustees. The school board will hold a public meetmg on the boundaries recommended by GPAC before taking final ac· lion. Seventh and eighth graders in the Capistrano district currently attend Marco Forster Junior High in San Juan Capistrano or Niguel Hills Junior High in Laguna Niguel. In September, Shorecliffs Junior High will open in San Clemente. John Murray. growth trend consultant to the district. told commissioners at Monday's public hearing that Shorecliffs is expected to open with about 700 students. If the GPAC recommendation is approved by the school board, Shorecliffs will draw students from San Clemente, Capistrano Beach and the Alto Capistrano areaofSan Juan. The com mission recommenda- tion for Marco Forster is that its attendance area include San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point, the Sea Terrace area of Laguna Niguel and the Spotted Bull hol.l,S· ing area. just north or San Juan. Murray said enrollment at Marco Forster jn September rs North State Weather Fair By The Associated Press Most of Northern California will continue fair through mid· week after the passage or a weak weather system moved through the extreme North State, scattering showers that were heaviest in the northwest. The Central Valley Y.rill have variable cloudiness. but the Sacramento Valley could get some showers in the northern portion, the Weather Service said The Sierra and northe rn mountains could get snow showers tonight and Wednes- day. Overnight temperatures have been dipping mto the low teens in the Sierra. Biting Horse Quarantined PHOENIX. Ariz. CAP> -/\ stallion who bit two people at the Arizona National Livestock Show last week has been located in San Diego and placed in quarantine. livestock officials said. Super Sable. a Jeopard Ap- paloosa, was named most col· orful horse at the show. He win remain in quarantine at the San Diego Estates Equestrian Center until Jan. 20, trainer Richard Atkinson said Monday. Livestock o!ficlaJs said the horse grabbed two spectators by the throat during the stock show. p ,...popAl RAISES .•.. questioned the pay raise slnce. they say, negotiations are conti- nuing. 1bey aald the trunees' action took one of the m~or i.asues off Ult bar1atnlng table. expected to be about 930. Cur- rently the school has about 1250 i.tudents ZONING •.. tional simply because 1t results in a racially disproportionate im- pact. The Niguel Hills attendance area approved by GPAC includes all or Lacuna Niguel except the Sea Terrace area, as well as Mis- sion VieJo. September enrollment will be about 960 at Niguel Hills, Murray said. The school currently has about 1,100 students. Manuel Puentes, GPAC chairman, said one advantage of the boundaries to be r ecom· mended to the school board is that they keep all elementary school attendance areas intact. rn that ruling. the court said a qualifying test used by the Washington, D.C. police force was valid even though more blacks than whites failed the test. Jn the zoning case, the Arl- ington Heights trustees in 1971 re· fused to rezone a vacant property surrounded by single.family homes to allow construction of a federally subsidized development or 190 town houses. Supreme Court Backs Hinshaw Conviction A fourth Capistrano Unified junior high is planned for Mission Viejo, said Puentes. but it will not open for at least three years. The Metropolitan Housing Development Corp., a Chicago· based nonprofit organization set up to build low-tncomc hou::.ing, •sued the board. Former congressman Andrew J . IUnshaw's appeal that his con- stitutional rights were violated prior to his second Orange Coun· ty Superior Court trial wa~ re. jected Monday by the United States Supreme Court in Washington D.C. Al'Wl,.._to BLIND PHYSICIST MICHAEL HINGSON OPERATES CONTROLS OF READING MACHINE Inventor Raymond Kurzwell Watches Former Irvine Student Test New Device Device Does Book Chore Aid Reads for Ex-UCI Blind St~nt From Wire Services Former UCI physics graduate student Mike Hingson. 26, has become one of the first blind peo- ple to work with a new com- puterized device that translates printed words into sound. For its public debut. the Kunweil Reading Machine look a printed copy 'or Abraham Lin· coin ·s Gettysburg Address and read it aloud to reporters -with an accent. Dr. Kenneth Jernigan, presi- dent of the N atlonal Federation of the Blind, promptly hailed the computerized machine 33 one of technology's greatest contribu- tions to the blind. "This thing really worl<s, •• he declared. Then he joked, "I think Its accent is Scandinavian. It pro- noun c e d m y name as 'Yemlgan'." Hlng1on, who traduated with honors Crom UCJ In 1972 and ls now a ph,ysit'lat in Santa Ana, joined inventor Raymond Kurzwelt Monday in~ Moines# Jowa, for a demonstration of the machine's effectiveness. Jernigan said the machine will greatly speed availability of new publications to the nation's 450,000 blind people when it g~s into full production in about a year. Hingson, for example. said he is using the machine to read Arthur Schlesinger's "The Im- perial Presidency." He would have to wait two years to get a copy in Braille, he said. Unlike other reading aids for ·the blind, the machine d<>e!' not require extensive training to use, Hingson said. It looks like a copying machine. with two box·shaped units, each about t.wo feet square, and a panel with about 30 but· tons. But instead of reproducing prlnt, the machine pronounces It, thanks to a computer pro- grammed to recognize printed cbaracters and transform them into sounds which are then fed ln· to an amplifier-speaker. "There are 1,000 linguir;lic rules built into its memory and 2,000 exceptions to the rules," Kurzweil said ... The reason for so many exceptions is that we are dealing with the English language, which is one of the world's most complex." Even with all those exceptions, the computer voice sounds in- tangibly foreign and makes plen- ty of mistakes. "Des Moines." for example, is pronounced "de9s moines" rather than the correct "duh moyn." But the computer's voice Is programmed to avoid a dull monotone by giving inflection and emphasis to its words. And if the listener doesn't catch a word or phrase, the machine can be Mked Lo say it again. It will even spell a word on command. Kunweil said the first model cost about $50,000, but he believes the cost or regular producUon models con be cut to around $5,000. The dec1s1on means that the ousted Newport Beach Republican ·s s ubsequent convic- tion on charges or petty theft and m1sappropr1ation of public funds will stand. The Associatf.'d Press incor- rectly rcportl'd Monday that the Supreme Court action was <Jn llrnshaw's f'cb. 7. 1976 bribery conviction. The actual high court action in- volved Hinshaw's i.econd convic· t1on on misconduct in office when he was Orange County assessor In 1972 .. Hinshaw, 54, was convicted or usin~ county manpower and materials m his successful bid for election to Congress. The ex-congressman earlie r had been convicted of bribery. His lawyers .are also appealing this conviction. The Fourth Dis· tnct Court of Appeals is expected to hand down a ruling within the next four weeks. A jury found Hinshaw guilty or bribery tn the first trial after listening to testimony that he ac· cepted campaign contributions and stereo equipment. F ront Page A l CAMPUS ... ing it. "The road system In the area is narrow and extremely dangerous al several intersections,'' Getchel said. "The b y-products of agricultural operations: the odor of organic fert11i.tcrs. the abun- dance of flies, the presence of slow, noisy farm machinery ..• will all have adverse impacts Ol\ academic operations." Getchel also warned that the school would also "adversely af- fect .. the company's farming operations due to increased van- dalism. dama·ge to irrigation systems, reduced crop yield and interference with traffic of farm machines . The latter contentions drew the ire of Mission Viejo Trustee Don. na Berry, who verbally blasted Getchel for using .. scare tactics" to for ce the college into sub- mission. "l resent the company coming to us like this when they didn't speak up at all during the hear- ing when we decided to buy the site," said Mrs . Berry. "J don't buy it," she continued. "They are doing the taxpayers a disservice. I am su.<ipicious of their reasons and I had a great deal or faith In this operation up to now.'' Getchel denied any "ulterior motJves" in the company's offer of an alternative site and said there would be no need to disturb the district's "time line" for de- velopment of the second campus. "We're saying we may be too late in this but we are raising th• question before funds are ex· pended," he said. "Unfortunate- ly. that puts the company in the posillon or looking auspicious." Getchel nid the c:ompan~. favored site at J effrey and lrvffte Center Drive would be niuth easier to develop because it · already has all the necC$saJ1 . utiJIUes "on site.·· "' , .. ' t ' ' I t ·-J, Tue1day'1 Afternoon Prieea NYSE 'COMPOSIT£ TRANSACTIONS Fol' Clul\tled Ad ACTfON Calla Da.llyPtlot AD·Vl80R ea..,.. s Quaker Barks I Alpo 'Bite' Challenged ' By MILTON MOSllOWITZ ~ Alpo beeamo the beet-aelllna canoed dOI Cood m the country by empbui&tng it wu 100 ocrrctDl meaL Penuaded by Ulla empbaala were t.be dot ownen, not tile does.~ there's no evidence that dop can u.aderst.and \eltvt.aloo commercials. Tbore'a also no conclus1•e evidence that •• all·mHt food Js the nulritionaJ sa vatlon of. docs. But AJpo certainly &ot pet owners to accept tbat tb.eslJ. It made the . ownert feel good to teed t.he.i r docs AJpo. Some yeara ago, after Allen Products. the maker of Alpo, was challenged on lhls all· meat braigadocio, on the ground lbal Alpo coolained low·arade or- gan meat.a, the company Money Tree altered it.a pit.cb sUgbUy to aay that Alpo was made ot • 'mtal and meat byproducts." ("By products" was uttered sotto voce.) LATBll ON, .lFl'Ell YnAMINS, 11.INEllALS and soy nour were added to Alpo. the pitch was changed qaln to say tha.t in addition to meat and meat byp.rodueLl,_Alpo bad "balanced QUtriUon." That lut iqredlut, "balanced nutriUoo," was a throwaway line. What still came up strong on the volume meter was the lbe macho meat claim. Her~. for example, is the typical AJpo comm~lal, featuring lbe old ''Booanza" star, Lorne Greene, sbown wilbdoga: "Look at them. Every natural lDsU.nct tella them that they abould eat mea.L And you know somethl.Qg! 'Ibey are absolutely rigbt because meat ls good for docs. It's full ol pnitetn, enern and nourishment. I feed my dop Alpo ~ chunk dinner because it's meat, meat byproducts and balanced nutrition. Alpo's all a dog ever Qeeds t.o eat. And there's no better dog food in tbeworld." IF ANY PAllTY IS lllRITATED BY TRIS commercial, It's good old Quaker Oats, the maker of Ken·L-Ration dot food. A cereal-based product, Ken·L-RaUon was the doml· nant brand ln the cllllned dog food market before Allen Products acquired the financial backing it needed for its telerision assault oo pet owners. Allen late bed onto this baclcing lo l&N when it sold out to ctgarette maker Liagett & Myers, a company that saw a better future in doe food tban tobacco. Between 1964 and 1918 Alpo sales zoomed from $18 million to $12S million. They are now over tbe $160 million level, fat ahead of the t80 mllfion done by Quak:er'sKen-L-RaUon. Quaker bas "successfully" complained to advert:isin& industry regulatory bodies about tbe Lorne Greene com- llleftial cited previolsty. Qualter's argument la that no m~t t.er what the words say, the impression left by the com- mercial is that AJpo is an all-meat product when ln fact lt Ls not. Quaker also alleged that the commercial implied that Alpo la nutritionally superior to other doe f ooda. TO PSOVE ITS OONTENTIONS, QUAKER surveyed 1!W canned dog food users, finding that most of them bad re- ally been hoodwinked by the Alpo commercials. Tbe Quaker Oats compJalnt was "successful'' in that a National Advertising Review Board panel accepted Quaker's evidence that the AJpo commercial was mislead· Ing pet owners. And Allen Product.a, while lt disagreed with tile ruling, said it wouJd therefore modify lt.a advertisin1 to reflect this decision. ,: What it will come up with this time, I don't know. First it was "meat byproducts." Then It was "balanced nutri- tion." What eupbemlsm will it extract now from the copywriter's klt bag to satisfy its critics and retain Its "aJJ. meat" story line? One source ll wUJ certainty not use is Thomas Whiteside, a writer wbo recently dJd an insilhlful portrait of tbe pet food ind'lltry for The New Yorker mqa&ine. WhitesJde reported t.bere that at the U.S. Department ol Alricultun. the meat and mut byproducts that 10 iDto pet (ood are known aJm~ as "4-D meat" -that la, "meat from dead, dytq. dlieued or disabled animal.a.•· Six-year Test Guess, '1y Golly, It Might Work B7~NW18ehlee SACRAMENTO -~ the stock market by random guea may beat the best advtee by broker&1e houses, ac- cording to an assist.Int profeuor ot acncultw'al ecooom.lcs at the University of Califcrnfa. "Stocllts recommemded by m.ior brokerage houses coo- 11.steotly u.nderperformed tbe stock market as a whole," durinC tbe laat six-year period, said Lawrence Shepard, wtae findin&s appear l.Q the JOW"Dal of Consumer A.fraln and Lile JOW'Dal of Portlollo Manqemeat. SBEPBA&D'S SIX-YEAa llESEAllCR project showed:- -At the end of the flnt alx months, atock recom- mended by Barron's outperformed tbe marnt. Stoett SUI· lest.eel by Dow Theory FOC"eCUtl t,yplcally lost about 4 per- cent. Value Lines recommendatJooa were down nearly U perceot In relalJon to the over·all market. -After one year, the 1tock1 recom· ( CON SU MER ) ::!4;!.,!~ :~~~-:.~ _ . vestment advlaory service pertlatently Ull· derperformed thtt market. -For the thtte-year period, •~lta abowed ne11t.1ve rates ol return for all ll"OUpl ot acMton atudled. INVE8TOl8 WRO amso ON ADVICE ot broker ... boutl9, t1'e ftaanciAl PAM md adrilory service pcabllca- tioal would ban lost t .61percentto14.'15 ptrcent over tllree )'tart, Sbepard •aid. For bit rweardl. Sbepud Mlect.ed two stock ~bue reeoauntbdatlcma from eacb al the three major l)'I* ot ad· \/See~. Tbe,perfonnuce al eacll stock was checked after abc cnontbl, ooeEa.r and three yean. The pro eet. sampled ad.tee offered by oaUonwlde brOt«&P .I to noo-lmtltut:iooal c&11tomen, atocb feMured ID BarTOD 'a. 1'll'bes and the Wall Street JounaaJ. Md U.. recommmded by three lnffpendeat tnv•tmat edritory Hr'Vic•: Dow Tbeor)' ro...ecut.1, lloody'a Stodt Qney and Vah .. UM lnvtltment Baney. ...