HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-01-14 - Orange Coast Pilot,
I
l 1
Officers Repeat Tale DAILY PILOT
* * * 1.0' * * *
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 14, 1977
Of Longet '.Joking'
oc
Long et
'Joking'
Charged
-ASPEN, Colo. CAP) -Singer
Claudine Longet should be con·
victed of r ecklessly killing
Vladimir "Spider" Sabich
because "she had her ringer on
the trigger with the gun 2'h feet
away from Spider and pointed it
right at him." a prosecutor said
today.
Ashley Anderson told Jurors in h.is closing argument they had
been presented two versions of
how Miss Longet's lover died
March 21 m the bathroom of his
luxurious mountainside home.
Anderson pointed to testimony
from two law enforcement of
ficers who said Mi ss Langel told
them the night of the shooting she
was joking with Sabich when the
.22·caliber weapon she was hold-
ing went off .
The court recessed after de-
fense attorney Charles V. Weed·
man said his final argument pro-
bably would last "the better part
of two hours " Anderson spoke
about2Sminutes.
The two officers agreed Miss
Longet told them she playfully
r aised the gun at Sab1ch as he was
showing her bow to use 1t. One of-
ficer quoted Miss Longet as say.
ing she told her lover "boom,
boom" before the gun went off.
The other used the words "bang, bang.··
Miss Longet said Sabich told
her the gun's safety mechanism
was on, but ballistics experts
testified the safety was inopera·
ble.
District Court Judge George E.
I.ohr instructed the jury it could
also find the 35-year-old Miss
Long et guilty on a lesser charge of
criminally negligent homicide.
Reckless manslaughter calls for
up to a $30,000 tine and a 10-year
prison t erm. The homicide
charge's maximum penalty
would be $5,000 dnd two years in
prison.
Miss Long et 's trial was to go to
the Jury after closing arguments.
Singer Andy Williams, Miss
(See LONG ET, Page AZ>
SoySauce
Mu-stored
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
A Chinatown grocery out·
let owner has pleaded no
contest. lo violating stale
health and safety codes by
storing soy sauce near a
toilet.
George Lee, owner or
Easter Grocery Co., also
admitted having an lMect.
and rodent tntestatloo ln
his warehouse.
He is to be sentenced
Feb. 3 on the 13 rrusde·
mtono r counts f lied
qaut.'tt him.
VOL 10. HO U •SECTIONS • .0 PAGES
et Use Hike Backed ~
AP W1r•otwto '
RECKLESS KILLER?
Claudine Longet
Mexican City
Demostrators
Hal,t Traffic
PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexico
(AP) -Demonstrators protest-
ing alleged fraud in recent
municipal elections blocked the
bridge over a sm all river divid·
ing this Pacific resort town
Thursday night, causing massive
traffic jams and preventing
some tourists from driving to
their hotels.
Puei-to Vallarta, a city or
70,000, was jam-packed with
American tourists, who ap·
peared confused and frightened.
Nb violence was reported.
• Buses full of tourists, cars, tax-
is and delivery trucks were
stalled for blocks around the en·
trance or the bridge over the
-Uala RJver, located at the foot of
Elizabeth Taylor's house.
Porters with handcarts met
tourists and carried their lug-
gage over the bridge to the other
side of the bay and the Camino
Real. a western international
bot.el.
One woman tourist asked a
porter lf it was a "communist de-
monstration." The porter said it was just a local protest ..
"Well, they look like com-
munists to me," she said, shak-
ing her head and visibly an-
noyed.
Tbe demonstration was staged
by about. 700 dissident members
of the Institutional Revolu-
tionary Party CPRI>. which has
been ruling Mexico without inter-
ruption for almost halt a century.
They are protesting the elec·
lion as mayor of Eugenio Torres
Ramirez, a political ravor1te In
tho former administration Of
Prealdent Luis Echeverria, who
left office Dec. 1.
Witness
Tells of
Beatings
By TOMBARLEY
OltlleDallf PllMSUH
A San Clemente police officer
testified Thursday that when he
arrested Carolyn Brewster last
August on child abuse charges she told him that. she beat her 2-year·
old daughter ·'with anything she
could get her hands on.··
Detective Leonard Goodwin
told an Orange County Superior
Court jury that Mrs. Brewster, 23,
told them that when she was
frustrated she ·'took out her emo· hons on Cora."
Mrs. Brewster's alleged state·
ments to police led to her being
booked on charges of child abuse.
An interview with her boyfriend,
Camp Pendleton Marine Kenneth
Ray Bolden, 20. led to his being
jailed on identical allegations.
Both defend ants were arrested
after the unconscious child was
rushed lo San Clemente General
Hospital from the motel room
shared by the accused couple and
M rs. Brewster's twochildren.
Doctors found that Cora had
suffered brain damage from her
head injuries, had a broken left
arm, bite marks on the ten. arm,
cigarette burns on the chest and
bruising throughout the body with
the heaviest bruises found on the
back and buttocks.
Goodwin testified that Mrs.
Brewster told him that she used
her boyfriend's heavy Marine
Corps belt to spank Cora when tbe
child annoyed her.
He said Bolden admitted using
the belt on the child but denied a
neighbor's report that he had
kicked the litUe girl in the back
while they walked on the
sidewalk.
The officer testilied that Bolden
told him that he once slapped the
child with his open hand.
Goodwin testified that Mrs.
Brewster blamed her treatment
of the child on the beatings that
she and her 4·year-old daughter,
Jennifer, received from her
former husband, Frank
Brewster.
The officer said Mrs. Brewster
told him that she divorced
Brewster in Jacksonville, Fla .•
and then met Bolden in san Diego
where he persuaded her to live
with him ln a motel room in San
Clemente.
Goodwin aald she told him that
she became upset. when Bolden
(See ABUSE, Pace AZ>
GIU.ND THEFT
FAUS FUT
KLAMATH FALLS Ore. (AP)
-Local police and FBI agents
acting in concert seized four
Stelnway 1rand planos valued at
$50,000 at a music store here.
The pianos were stolen Jan. 4
tn • warehouse burglary al san
Mateo, otllcera said.
COSTA MESA WAITRESS FOUND SL'lttlN IN BATHTUB
Robyn Lynn Cox. 20, May Have Been Strangled
Mesa Cops Baffled
By W~man's Death
By STEVE Ml'IOIELL
Oltlle IHll• "llltklft
Costa Mesa detectives said
today they have no motive, no
clues, and no suspect in the
slaying of a Costa Mesa
waitress whose body was
found face down in lJer
bathtub Wednesday night.
Robyn Lynn Cox. 20, of 241
Avocado St., was discovered
fully clothed In the bathtub of
her apartment at 6: 15 p. m. by
her roommate, Carla Jean
Roden,24.
Mlss Roden ran to a nearby
apartment and asked t.ht!m to
come and "see what was
wron1." with Mlss Cox, dettt·
Uvessald.
"Evidently she only got a
glance of ber roommate tn the
bathtub and ran next door," Lt.
George L . Lorton said
Lorton said Miss Cox. who
worked as a waitress at Coco's on
Bristol Street ln Sant.a Ana, had
been dead for three to six hours
before police arrived at the
scene.
An autopsy indfoated she died
of strangulation with evidence of
drownlna. Tbe stqmgulaUon
mliht have been accomplished
by a smalJ cord arO\md the neck,
detectives said.
"We only discovered the cause
oC death Thursday afternoon,"
Lorton said. "Up unt.11 then. it
could have been an accidental
drowning."
When asked it a fully-dressed
woman in the bathtub didn't
strike him as suspicious, Lorton
(See SIA YING. •ace A2)
>
IIDpact
Report
Released
By GARY GRANVILLE
Ol llle Dally PllOIS~tt
A massive environmental till;_
pact report covering Orange
County Airport COCA) says the
airport can handle an addJtiooal
570.000 aJr travelers a year with
little adverse impact on existing
environmental conditions.
The 56S·page, $218,000 study by
the consulting firm of Daniel,
Mann. Johnson and Mendenhall of Los Angeles covers three
altemaUve futures ofOCA.
One of those alternatives is to
roll back operations al the airport "to immediately bring
OCA into compliance with ,
California noise standards effec• J
liveJan. l , 1986."
To meet those standards. the
number of commercial jet de· l
partures from the airport daily •
would be reduced from an exist·
ing average of 37.9 lights daily to
4. 7 flights a day.
I
And the number of air 1
travelers using the airport would
be reduced from the current an·
nual level oC 1.56 m illion
passengers to 330,000 passengers
a year.
The study shows that such a 1
roll back in OCA activity would
have a severe adverse economic
impact, especially on employ·
ment al the airport., the busi-
nesses that service air travelers
and travelers' dollars spent
locally.
It is the second alternative, ex·
panding the annual passenger .
load at OCA from its current 1.156
million persons to 2.13 million
persons, that the consultant. in-
dicates will have COn{>araUvely
minor impact on existing en-
vironmental conditions.
That Increased annu al
(See AIRPORT, Pace AZ)
Coast
Weather
Fair through Saturday
Highs in 60s. Lows in 405.
INSIDE TODAY
lnf eetloiu enthulicum . is •
cbaroctmaHc of Up With Peo-'1
ple. The Dailfl Pilot'1 Laurie
Karper lalb with member& of
IM 11·~-old tr~on l!oge
Cl of the WeeMrader.
.,
...
A2 DAIL v PILOT s Friday January 14. 19n
~~She Begged to Die'
Says Murder Suspect
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP> A
19-year·old Ann Arbor man said
be shot a University or Michigan
coed to death because she had re-
peatedly begged him to kill her.
Ricky Wayne Wilson pleaded
guilty in Washtenaw County
Circuit Court on Thursday to a
charge or aecond·degree murder
in the death or Jeannine Boukai.
17, of Ann Arbor.
Miss Boukai's body was db·
covered by an early morning jog-
ger Oct. 1 inside the campus'
Nichols Arboretum. An autopsy
showed she died or rive .22·
caliber gunshot woWlds.
Wilson told the court Miss
Boukai first asked him to lull her
after they met al a party al his
house. A few days later, she went
t.o his house and gave him $SO, he
said.
"I asked her what the money
was for and s he said, 'To kUI somebody.· I asked her who. and
she said, 'Me'."
Later, Wilson said, Miss
Boukal gave him a pistol, some
ammunition. a motorcycle
helmet and some marijuana. He
said she visited him two more
times before Sept. 30, when the
pair took an afternoon motorcy-
cle ride around the arboretum. a
popular student park.
fi',.... Page A I
LONGET .••
Longet's ex-husband, was in
court again today and stared al
lhe jury as it received instruc-
tions.
On Thursday, the prosecution
cross-examined Sabich's best
fnend in an effort to prove that
Miss Longet "likes to take
chances.'"
James Lillstrom. an advertis-
ing executive from Boulder. said
the affair between Sabich and
Miss Longet began in 1972 after a
gJass·tossingincidentinabar.
Anderson had said when the
jury was out: "The way Miss
Longet got Spider's attention was
she threw a glass and hit him in
the chest. and be tu.med and said, 'lguessshe wants to talk tome'."
But Lillstrom indicated An·
denoo 's version was wrong.
"We heard Spider's name
called out very loudly," he
testified. "We both turned to look,
and she <Miss Longet) tossed tbe
glass at him.
"He bad plenty oftimetogetout
ol the way. I think for dramatic
effect he let it bit him."
Anderson said he learned of the
incident through a conversation
Lillstrom had with an assistant
distnct attorney.
fi',....PageAJ
SLAYING •••
~a1d. ·'She might have been
washing her cat or something
and fallen in the tub."
He said nothing appear s lo
have been taken from tne apart·
ment. and no stru&gle m the
other rooms of the dwellmg were cVJdent.
"There were no signs of a
s truggle In th e bathroom.
either.·· Lorton said
Detectives combed ~ apart-
ment for clues Thursday and
dus ted th e apartment for
fi ngerprints. Lorton said.
Miss Cox was gTaduat.ed with
honors from Costa Mesa High
School ln 1974, school officials
!.aid today
She did not belong to any cam-
pus organizations, but she was
chairman of the Educational
Development Council while a
junior at the 1cbool.
. The 20-year-old woman spent
. la.at summer ln Europe. villtlng
•. En1land, The Netherlanda, Den-
:· ,mark and Greece, according to ~ "her passpor&. ..
"I . .
" .. .. .. ..
~ .. .. ... • . • .. .. • • . . . • • • • • • .. • • I ,. .
'. .. ~· • .. • . . .,. .
DAILY PILOT
Both had been taking "hard
drugs." Wilson said. They got off
the motorcycle and began walk·
lng up a hilly path.
"I told her I'd follow her. but
she said I should go first. She told
me anytime I felt like killing her.
I should go ahead."
The young man said his mind
wu in a turmoil at the time
because his wife hadjusl been re·
leased from jail. They had been
planning to leave Ann Arbor, he
said.
A!S Wilson and Miss Bou.kai
walked up the path. he said, she
again asked him to kill her.
"I turned around and fired two
or three times." Wilson said.
"She dropped to the groWld, but
she was still alive. She looked up
and said. ·well, I'm not dead'."
Wilson said he fired again and
her body went into spasms.
He said be left the city the next
day with his wife.
Wilson, who had no prior re-
cord, was arrested in Alabama in
early November on a federal
fugitive warrant.
Miss Boukai was enrolled as a
freshman at the School of
Natural Resources and reported-
ly planned a career as an en-
vironmental lawyer. Her friends
said she was a good student, and
was active in a local Methodist
youth group.
John Hensel, senior assistant
Wasthenaw County prosecutor.
s aid if the girl had any emotional
problems, he was not aware of
them. Hens el said Wilson 's
courtroom confession appeared
to be truthful. Officials said
Wilson had not received a
psychiatric examination.
Last month, Wilson stood mute
at his arraignment on an open
murder charge and a separate
charge of second·degree murder
in district court. But Thursday he
pleaded guiJty to the second·
degree charge. and p~utors
s8ld the other charge. equivalent
to a firs t-degree murder charge,
would be dropped. The max·
imum sentence for second·
degree murder convictions is life
in prison.
Judge Patrick Co nlin
scheduled Wilson's sentencing
for Feb. 10. He was remanded to
custody in lbe county jail.
Southland
Water Use
Cuts Urged
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Tbe
sprawling Metropolitan Water
District is urging more than 10
million Southern Californians to
conserve water so that the dis-
trict will have to Import less
from drought-stricken Northern
California.
The appeal was issued Thurs-
day by the board or direct.ors of
the MWD, whose 27 member
agencies ser ve more than 100
cities in Los An~eles. Orange,
Ventura, R i verside. San
Bernardino and San Diego coun·
ttes.
It ls the first time since the
water district began importing
water from the Colorado River
in 1941 that it has asked users to
save water .
·'The northe rn part of the
state faces desperate water
shortages unless it receives un·
usual amounts of rain and snow
in the next few months," the
MWO board said in its appeal.
"We can assist Northern
California by carefully using our
water so we can reduce the
amount we r eceive from the
north."
E'ro..PageAJ
AIRPORT REPORT. • •
passenger load of 570,000 persons
can be handled within the con-
fines of existing leases with the
three commercial airlines that
operate at OCA, the consultant
study says.
Under the second alternative,
the average number or daily jet
airliner departures at the airport
would increase from 37.9to40.l.
And the total number or com-
mercial jet operations would
climb from today's annual 40,565
flights to 40,700 a year.
The bulky environmental im-
pact report discusses a series of
proposed projects needed to cor·
rect Inadequacies at OCA,
especially if passenger activity is
increased.
Usted as proposed projects to
correct existing ills and to make
way for added air travelers are :
-Expansion of the airport's
air terminal build.ins, including
construction of a terminal annex
-Construction of two
multilevel parking structures.
-Adding 150 tie-down spaces
ror genera) aircraft, a move that
would bring the number or
available spaces f or light
aircraft at OCA up to 1,000
planes.
The major element in a noise
reduction program at the airport
cited by the consultants ls the
northward extension by m feet ot OCA 'a main runway.
Such an extension "would al-
low departing aircraft to reach a
areater altitude before overfly-
ing nolle sensitive resldenUal
are.u south of the airport ... ac-
cording t.o the report.
Other suggested noise reduc-
t! on measures Include di·
rectlng departing jet liners
north rather than south on take
off. fitting additional alrcral\
with sound reducfnl material
and changing landing altitudes.
The consultant concedes that
the coet of some proposed noise
reduction measures "is con-
sidered prohibitive."
Measures under that beading
include buying noise easements
from impacted homeowners,
acouatical treatment ot existin~
homes and elaborate land con-
version programs .
It is wben lbe third alternative
for OCA 'a fUture is discussed that
the environmental impact report
focuses on the cos tly noise reduc-
tion measures and advene en-
vironmentaJ impact .
Alternative three foresee.a OCA
being used by 6 mllllon atr
travelers a year by the end ot
1985.
While the passenger level
would almost triple over current
use, the number of night Optra-
uona would cllmb by mly about
1.8 ~reent, according tot.be con·
•Ult.tntl .
That's because by 1985 now
wfde-body jets capable of lwldl·
lq lar1er pauenier loadt wUl be
lnuae.
But before tbe new equipment
Lt available, th• nwnber ol fllabt
operations at OCA would 1n-
CruH to 54 760 &Dftually u &he
puaen1er ioad level hlt.1 an
•tl&at.ed J.t milllcn in lim.
Going along with that jet ac-
tivity at the airport would be the
dJsturbance of precious wildlife
in Upper Newport Bay. a
dramatic increase in energy con-
sumption and displacement of re-
sidents in roughly 437 homes.
Moreover, even with adoption
of the costly complete noise re-
duction program. the noise im-
pacted area would increase to an
area "not calculated" by the con-
sultants.
The report discussed expanded
airport activities impact on traf-
fic conditions in the airport area.
"Any increase in airline opera-
tions would contribute to In-
creased volumes of traffic on the
airport site." the report says.
It goes on to mention that
a lternative three. 6 million
passengers a year, will require
almost four times aa much park-
ing space as exists at OCA.
In Its present form. the bulky
study that began Jn March 1B75 is
a draft environmental Impact re-
port.
It was to be dellve~ today to
county supervlaora and the coun-
ty Environmental Management
Aaency <EMA>.
After EMA review and review
by the public, the report will go to
the county Planning Commission
ror public heartnga.
And the consultants must
respond to the public remarks or
challenge.a directed their way
either ln writing or at the public
hearings.
ll ii after those comments have
either been accepted or rejected
that the environmental Impact
report wtll go to county
supervitora for approval.
Board approval would mean
cnly that proJecta, if any, related
to the future alternaUve selected
by the board of supervisors will
be approved.
The report then will go to the
federal ofltclals for anotber ex·
tensive review process before
any rederal funds can be used in
whatever projects. again lf any,
are approved by the board .
Oil Slick
Oeaned Up
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -An
oU slick three miles wide and a
mile 1001 apread over the San
Pablo Bay-Carqulnez Strai1ht
near Rodeo as a result of an oU
spill. the Coast Ouard said .
The slick was described as a
Ught sheen and a check of the
cout showed no heavy coocen-
tratlons, a Coast Guardaman
said Thursday.
He aaid 380 gallons of oU aptlled
tnto tbe water Wednelday night
at the Union Oil Co. dock, ap.
parenUy becault ol • faulty oil
line. Tb• cleanup wu completed
by nlCbtlaU, and die ,..malni.q
°'l Jiould be d.WlpatM by the
natural aea acttoo, tbe Coaat
Guardl8id.
Pole Cat
"Tige r " si t s atop his
favorite perch on a 12-foot
pole on the farm or has
masters, JoAnna and Mitch
Jurgens of Brandon. S .D.
Tiger faces loss of his lofty
viewpoint whe n the pole
becomes just another beam
in their barn.
fi',....PageAJ
ABUSE •••
was away from home every other
day because ~ guard duty at
Camp Pendleton Md that she
began to beat her daughter as a
me&QS of quelling her Crustra·
tions.
The child ls now beina cared for in a roeter home following her re-
covery from multiple injuries and
brain surgery performed at the
San Clemente hospital.
Goodwin said he questioned
Mrs. Brewster closely about the
head Injuries and she told him
that they were s ustained when
Cora Cell from her bed onto a
Marine Corps ammwlition box
that Bolden used to store bis shoe
cleaning equipment.
She said the burns on lbe child's
chest were sustained when Cora
ran into her wh.ile sbe was smok·
ing a cigarette, the officer
testified. The prosecution will introduce
medical testimony on Cora's pre-
sent condition and her condition
last Aug. 17 when the trial in
Judge Harmon G. Scoville's
courtroom resumes Monday.
7-rig S11UU1h
Cl.oses Rt. 5
GORMAN <AP> -Seven
trucks s mashed together
on lee-s lick Interstate s
early today in a cham-
reaction accident that
blocked southbound lanes
of the major highway route
ror two hours and injured
two drivers. the California
Highway Patrol said.
The s mashup started
when one truck jackknifed
after the driver put on bis
brakes on a downhill sec-
tion of the road left icy by
last week's snowstorm,
patrolmen said.
They said the other half.
dozen trucks jammed their
bra.kes to avoid the first ac-
cident and began the series
of accidents a half mile
north of here.
s
anua
Gilmore
Invites
Gallery
SALT LAKE CITY <AP>
Convicted killer Gaey Mark
Gilmore -three days from de-
ath, barring a stay -has invited
his girlfriend, an uncle, two at-
torneys and the promoter who
bought bis life story to watch bis
indoor firln1-squad execution.
Meanwhile. the warden said be
ls laking seriously some threatl
to disrupt the Monday sunrise ex-
ecution. opponents of capital
punishment planned court ap-
peals today to stop tt, and r&-
ligious groups readied vil1Js out-
side the Utah State prison
grounds to protest lt.
Gilmore. 36. who declined bis
opltoo under state law to al.lo ln·
vite two clergymen, was ln 1()0(f
spirits Thursday. said hll uncle.
Provo shoe repairman Vern
OAm1co. who visited him.
·'When we left. be was exercis-
lnJ," DAmlco said. "He wu
standing on bis head pulling
faces (mugging) at me."
Warden Sam Smith, who
declined to disclose the indoor
site for the execuUon or names of
the five rlfiemen, said he re-
ceived telephone and mail
threats from unnamed persons
saying they would disrupt it.
Smith said he took some of the
threats seriously and would deny
demonstrators access to prison
property.
"It is our intentiorr t.hat there
be no complication or disrup-
tion," Smith s aid.
He said the outside gate ol the
prison, about a half-mile from
the main compound on the
1.000.acre site. would be closed
Sunday night. He added there
would be a short "lock-Up" or all
inmates at the time of the execu-
tion.
The warden declined to say
wheth e r h e would grant
Gilmore's request to st.and and
race the five ·man flring squad
with his head bare.
New carpet sh1pmen1s are on their way
and we're making room. We've reduced prices
on every one of Lees best-selling carpets dur-
ing LeM January Clearance Sale
Choose from hundreds of colors & styles
& patterns. Hurry, the Lees Carpets Author-
ized January Clearance Sale ends January
22nd
ONE
WEEK
ONLY!
OC, 14 Cities
Low-, Mid-income
Home Talks Open
Oranie County government
and 14 cities wlll share $4.8
lllllJioD in federal funds t.h.15 year
to belp provide low and moderate
l.ncome housing and rehabilitate
deteriorating neighborhoods.
County a upervi50r'I this week
held the first public bearing on
plans for its share of the federal
Housing and Community
Development funds.
A final hearing will be held
Jan. 2IS during the board"s 9:30
a.m. meet.Ing, 515 N. Sycamore
St .• Santa Ana.
Included tn the $4.8 million
package is $790,000 t.o be divided
among six cities along the
Orange Coast. The county pro-
jects total another $2, 175,000
while eight other cities will share
the remainder.
'.
The county's larger cities re-
ceive their own allocations under
the federal program, wblle coun·
ty officjals submit a consolidated
application for those with
smaller populations.
Reed Flory. county director or
housing and community develop-
ment, told the board the proposal
grew from more than 30 meet-
ings and workshops with com·
mu.nity representatives.
Cruising Doten tlae Ri1'er?
O.lty "'°' SWff -TESTIMONIAL DINNER HONORED R. I. "CUBA" MORRIS
Are Chief Cart Downa, Left, PreHnt• Plaque
TestiIDonial Turns
To Pot-shot Fort1m
By WILLIAM SCHREmER
Of 1M Oellf ~llot SUff
1be event Thursday night al
the El Toro Marine Corps Air
Station was billed as a
testimonial banquet for R.1.
"Cuba" Morris, who is retiring a.a director of the OrMRe Cowity
General Services ~gency.
More than 200 of Cuba's friends
and co-workers were there. in-
cluding three former county
supervisors. two current
supervhors and the upper crust
of county government ad-
m1Diltl'atloll. ' But Orange County District At·
tomey Cecil Hkks was master of
ceremonies and bis arch-
nemesia, Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich, sat at the bead table.
only a few feet away. You had to
figure there would be a few barbs
and quips.
They started the instant Hicks.
a small man. approached the
podium to begin presenting
awards to Morris. The DA had
trouble seeing over the lectern
and Diedrich rushed up, s houting
"anybody got a soapbox to help
bim up a little?"
It went steadily downhill rrom
there. Hicks look shots a l
Diedrich over past disputes and
broadly joked about the current
probe lnto the supervisor's cam-
paign l\nanclng pr act.ices.
Diedrich. who took the
microphone to present Moms
with a certificate ol recognition
from county supervisors. re-
marked that with all the current
and former supervisors present.
a vote should be taken to make
Hicks a full-t ime master of
ceremoo1es.
••Jsn't be great:· Diedrich
said. "Jt lets you know ol Cecil's
talents. I don't know ii they are
alJ lepl bul we 're going to keep
trytn1 to find that out.··
Diedrich even offered to serve
aa Hicks' next cam~ finance
mana1er .. provldmg I'm still
around. that is.··
Tbe wiaecrackina DA finally
brouaht the ceremony under con· trol 6y sl.)'ini "Boy, I'm resist· lna some lines here that you
would.o 't believe.'·
1brou1b all the banter, the
evening's honoree sat with bis
wife, Frances. chuckling at the
two-man roast and rising to ac·
cept occasional plaques and
kudos for his 42 years or public
service.
At one point, Hicks pointed to
the pile or awards in front or
Morris and said "I hope you
brought a county vehicle to haul
all those home in."
Besides the award from the
county, Morris was cited bv the
California Peace Officers' As·
sociation, which he served as
presideat io 1939 -five ye~;
8fter-1>tnfllng ~n e 1*lae as ll'
Newport Beach police officer.
He received a number or
statewide honors for bis con-
tributions to the law enforcement
and government communica-
tions fields, including recognition
from state Attorney General
Evelle Younger.
The Costa Mesa resident also
received an award from the
county Grand Jury. presented by
former county Harbors, Beaches
and Parks Director Ken
Sampson. plus several honors
from Orange County Sheriff
Bradley Gales
Motorola Inc . pres ented
Morris with plaques for his work
with the electronics and com-
munications corporation on total·
ly new systems for emeriency
communications.
After an eigbt-year stiot with
Newport's department, Morris
Joined the California Hlghway
Patrol. When be left at'ler 10
years. He was in charge of traffic
safety and public relations
thTouf bout the state and had
helped round the driver educa·
lion procram now mandatory in
all high schools.
Hh first job with the county
was in 1952. He was the lone ad·
ministralive assistant to all five
county supervisors. Nearly 30
people do that job today.
lte moved up into a job as
director or transportation and
communications In 1958 and
became the first director of the
GSA in 1975.
Morris was clearly touched by
the honors presented to him, say-
ing be was "thrilled by the
turnout" at bis testimonial.
S11nday's Offering:
Help in Emergency
Pomp and unexpected
dreumatanca will be examined
in&mda7'1 Dally Pilot.
EMEaGENCY ENTltANCE
-More than 500 Oranie Coon·
tlaoa each day netld the services
ol hotpttaJ emerfency rooms. A
1uper-crapbtc ebowln1 the
futnt route to the nearest =t.al will lead olf the YOU on.
Paan>BNTIAL PAltTY -
Al1 Mloclat.d Prea feature wtJJ
P.revlew Jimmy Carter'a
•peoptt't lnau1ural .. b~l>at· bis It wltb former Jdent
ti:hard Nlxon 't '6 million 1ala
ID 1m aM the s~arlnc·ln ot
l'vund1q Falhen who frowned
Oft ceremot:UaJ that hinted of royalt.J,
(SUND A Y'S BEST)
BLOODY MARY -'?be
famous character from the
mustcal "South Pacific" was
baaed on a real woman. She's ltW alive and ldcking up her
heela ln We.tern samoe. The~·
IOClated Pre11 tells bow she
came to ln1plre tbe raucOU5
character tn J am .. MJc~·s
wriUngs and Ulen tbemmlcaJ.
ALIEN RESTRICTION -SUit Writer Ray Eltrada looks
at a new lmmlguuon law which
t10tne attorney• feel la restrictive
to Mexicans who emigrated here
le1al!y bu\ failed to re1lster
before the first of the year.
Of the total, $2.49 million will
be spent for public works pro-
j e ct s including funds ror
neighborhood improvements to
sttpport housing rehabilitation.
Another $760,000 has been set
aside for home rehabilitation
loans, which Flory said would be
given to those families otherwise
not qualified for conventional
loans.
He noted this will be the third
year of the federal program. The
first year $1.35 million was re-
ceived and spent primarily ror
planning, he said.
Last year's $3 million alloca·
Lion is still being speot on pro-
jects and additional planning.
Included In the county's share
is $120,000 for land acquisition in
Capistrano Beach for a 40 to 50-
unit low-cost housing develop-
ment. That development, Flory
said, will be constructed by Its
future residents to replace the
sub-standard homes where they
now live.
Other projects for cities along
the Orange Coast include:
-Fountain Valley. $190,000 to
build two new streets and sub-
divide lots in the Colonia Juarez
community.
-Irvine, SIS0.000 for property
acquisition or public works pro-
jects tn reduce housing costs and
$25,000 for senior dtiiens or stu·
dent housing.
-Laguna Beach. $120,000 for
land acquisition for the Park
Mermaid senior citizens housing
proJf$\. i_. __ oo6 ~ c.... San Clemente, ~. tor
public improvements in de-t.ettorating areas. -San Juan Capistrano, $35,000
to prepare improvement plans
for the Lo6 Rios barrio.
-Seal Beach, $88.000 for alley
improvements, $2,000 for a hous-
ing information program and
$30,000 ror a mobUe home and
housing program.
Customer Hit
As G11nman
Robs Store
A 23·year-old Hquor store
customer was reported in stable
condition today after being shot
m the groin during a holdup
Thursday night, police reported.
Randall Ray Morrison walked
into the Villa Liquor St.ore, 14675
Main St.. Santa Ana, during a
lO:U p.m . robbery, officers said,
and was shot by one of two ban·
dita inside.
Officers said the two robbery
suspects had tried to purchase
beer in the market just moments
earlier, but were refused because
they had no identification.
One of the men then pulled a
handgun and took $189 from the
cash register, just as Morrison
walked ln. police said.
Morrison is being treated at
~tin Community Hospital.
Cookie Girl
Raped in SF
SAN FRANCISCO CAP)
Pollce were searching ror a
young man they said, raped a
10-year·old girl selling Girl
Scout cookies door-to-door. U. Jack Jordan said the man
hu-ed the girl into his van Wed·
neaday afternoon by promising • to pay her $5 for the cookies.
The girl, wbose identity was
wtthheld, was the YOUJ\ler sister
ol a Girl Scout, police said. The
Scoutl' cookie campalp ottk1al·
1.Y be1an today.
A towboat pushes barges through ice on
the Ohio River, moving at about one mile
an hour. as the waterway becomes in
danger of freezing over for the first time
in 30 years. Jee has formed "from bank to
bank" over m any areas of the Ohio, one
of the world's top five navigable
waterways. See related Story PageA4. ..
Sanity Hearing Backe«J·
Top Court DerUea Delay for Murder SWJpect :
Ruling without comment. the
California Supreme Court re-
fused Thursday to further delay
the Orange County Superior
Court sanity hearing for accused
killer Ken Richard Hulbert.
The decision means t.hal the
postponed pretrial action de·
signed to determine Hulbert's
mentality at the time he alleged-
ly raped and killed one woman
and raped another who was
Transit Unit Seeks
'Public' Member
The new Orange County
Transportation Commission.
which held its first meeting
Thursday, immediately began a
search for a fifth member who
will represent the general public.
ty orficialsm for the past 10 years
and cannot have served as the
public member of the OCTD
Board of Directors.
OCTD General Manager Ed
Lontz said last week be probably
would apply for the public post,
believing his experi~ would
maltehim well-quatifie3.
beaten into unconsciousness f:ap
now get under way. '
Judge William S. Lee set Jan.
24 as the dal,J! be will open the
hearing. But the dateseemedep-·
tlmislic when it was learned late•
Thursday that it may now ·be
necessary to pick a new jury. 1
Many of tbe Jurors originally·'
selected two months ago have ·now indJcated that they cannot be'
available for the six to eight
weeks that the hearing is e~J
ed to consume.
Judie Lee wlll decide if they
should be replaced or a new jury.
selected before the pretrial ac ...
lion gets under way.
The bearing was delayed when·
deputy public defender Wall.et"
Zeeb ~rotested that widespread ·
publicity at the time <:A the of.•
fe.n.ses charged to Hulbert, 2';1
killed any hope of a fair trial in
this area.
Com miss loners set a Feb. 11 de-
ad.line for receiving applications
lorthepoat.
They agreed to keep names of
the applicants confldentiai. State
Jaw, however, will require them
to select the new member during
a public meeting rather than in an
executive session behind flased·
doors. ·
But the four present com-
missioners all have said they
would oppose Loritz' selection.
Commissioners now include
Fountain Valley Mayor Al
Ht.utdden/ whd also ~ ~l~
~mmission chairman Thunday.
and Santa Ana City Councilman
David Brandt.
Hulbert, lhe son of a Fullerton
fireman, is accused of raping amct ,
killing Gina Marie Tisher, 19i of,
Whittler, on Jan. 7, ms. The vie ...
tim's nude body was found in the ·
back of a car parked in a. ~llerton apartmentcomplerJll1 .;
Resumes should be sent t.o the
commission in care ol Paul Raver
of the County Administrative Of.
fice, 515 N. Sycamore St., Santa
Ana,92701.
Commissioners said they hope
to make their selection by the end
of February.
The commission created by
state law effective this month, is
responsible for reviewing local
road building projects along with
plans and budgets or the Orange
County Transit District <C>CTD).
The only criteria for the public
member is that the person cannot
have been an elected city or coun-
Two county supervisors. Ralph
Diedrich and Ralph Clark, also
serve on the new panel.
Commissioners discussed their
new duties with state officials and
with WUUam Ackerman. director
or transportation planning for the
six-county Southern California
Association of Governments.
Ackerman said the commission
will have an allocatioo ol $106,466
in state funds to carry its ex-
penses through June 30.
Green Haven Presents ...
It is alleged that four days lattt.
Hulbert kidnaped a Fullerton
Community College student who
was robbed and raped before she
was dumped unconscious in the
Irvine area. He la held ln lb~
county jail with ball denied. •
Hulbert also races action on a
Los Angeles County Grand Jurj·
indictment wb..icb lists char&d:
related to his alleged attacks ori
six women in that area. ,
Zech's appeal was denied by
the Fourth District Court of Ap:
peals in San Bernardino and then '
on Tbunday by the California
Supreme Court.
Bare Root Roses "'_).~
and Fruit Trees
.
Get a head start on spring -now is the time of
year we have our best selection of roses -
choose from all #1 grade varieties -
non-patents for jim 2.S9, patents from 3.99,
Award Winners j\L5t 5.99 . ~
Be sure to browse through our fruit trees -all
our varieties are chosen for performance in this
area -s tandard fruit trees from 4.99
semi-dwarf just 6.99, genetic dwarfs from 7.99.
We have just about any variety you'd want -
Apples, Apricots, Cherrles, Figs, Nectarines,
Pears, Peaches, or Plums.
Wide selection of small fruits & vegetables also
on hand.
Dwarf Meyer Lemon
Excellent year 'round producer. Great for container gardening or
landscape use .... s5tt
I"" "'9 10.ft
6ERMAI~·
VITAMIN B-1
Pansies and Violas
Many beautiful colors lo brighlal
the wtnter • 1pnng 1anten. ,_, ,__ ':J 4 9c
Wandering Jew
Arrowhead
• St1m11l1t1s
root powth
·~lltnt
rot barffOOt
!'OMS, fruit
trtta, &lltdl
trMi. llfW
aeedllllP,
btddiftl
. .
KELLOGG'S i
GROMULcli i
1 I
I
I
Abortiom Blasted l ' lMlb 1peclmen1 of euy-t~arow pYftlJ
WASHINGTON <AP> -Prealdeat~leet Carter's oominee ror aecretary of health, tducaUon
aad weUare, J09eph Callrano,
58)'8 he le against abortion but
will enforce federal laws that HY
the eoveMJment muat finance
abortions for poor women.
Califano called the giant HEW complex "the dep111.ment for the
vulnerable people lo our
JOClet)'."
tDdoor favor1loa. • .. s349 .. ,.,. ""
Plnt Sltc-
Rq. 1.19
SALi
NICI
The best In outdoor planter
mixes. Excellent for bare rooc.s or container atock.
a Cu. Ft. Reg.
sa.49
IA"8PllCI
s I''
0,.. 10.,.4w•1;10 ~ h •H P.M.
2123 NEWPORT avo .• COSTA MISA .
PHONE 646·3925
' ' • • ' • • '
Friday. January 14, 1977
Fuel Need Soars I
Harsh Cold Grips Mos t of Country
By the Associated Press
.
\ 11 ANOTHER VI EW: Comes now
elJbert W. Bates or San Clemente.
':the former editorial page editor •ot this sterling joumal, who dis·
putes the suggestion that auto
:.maker He nry Ford was the
'.'father of the m odem mass pro-
clioo assembly line.
Ford was discussed in this cor-
ner the other day. in noting that
today was the 63rd anniversary
of Henry's first Model T rolling
off an assembly line.
' But in calling him the inventor
of assembly line production.
Bates says l am helping "to
pe rpetuate what the nation's
meat packing industry pioneers
have long c huckled about as the'Henry Ford Myth'."
Bates explains It this way
"HENRY IS GENERALLY
credited with inventmg the as
sembly line for industry, as you
reported. By J a n. 14, 1914, when
the Model T Fords came off his t"' !Ust assembly line, the idea for ~au.ch a line was old hat in the
meat packing plants or Chicago,
St. Paul, Omaha, St. Louis.
Kansas City and even Henry's
own Detroit.
"The only difference was that
the packers• operation was
a 'disassembly' or 'dissembl·
ing' (take your pick) line. They
started with a finished product -
steer, lamb or hog and took 1t
apart as it moved along a line or
skilled butchers.
"Henry simply started with the
separate parts and brought them
together into a smgle finished
product along a line just like the
packers had long been using, at
least in concept.
"No doubt Henry took the idea
for his assembly line from the
meat industry. In both cases, big
savings resulted from greater ef·
ficiency in processing.
"Given s uch forces as ever-
rising labor costs from farm to
table and continuing inflation,
you can be s ure our steaks,
chops, hams and bacon, and all
other meat products, would be
costing a lot more today than
they do.
"And the same holds true for
our motor vehicles.
"SO HORRENDOUS as we
think are the prices we pay for
family food and transportation,
the payout for these would be a
lot worse had not Gustavus
Franklin Swift. the 'Yank~ or
the Yards.· Nelson Morris, Philip
D. Armour and other pioneers or the 'disassembly' line and the
refrigerator car been on the
scene as innovators well ahead of
Henry Ford ... years before the
turn of the century. m fact."
So now you have another view
of mass production from San
Clementean Al Bates, who can-noc. be dlaputed on experlJse in
discussing the meat packing m·
dustry. Bates. years before he
joined this journal, was a public
relations executive for Swift. So you have to guess the ques-
tion or who s tarted assembly
lines could boil down to a....sembly
versus what Bates calls dis , assembly.
PERSONALLY, l'VE always
found it easier to take something
apart than to put it back together
again.
My experience inc ludes
faUures with s uch diversified
items as clocks. old r adios,
typewriters. automatic car
transm1ss1ons, and foreign
bicycles.
After be aring from Bates.
however, I'd like to try taking
apart a beefsteak.
If 1 could afford one, that is.
The harshest winter in years
has most or the nation in its icy
grip, forcing up the price of beat·
ing bills, shutting down factories
and schools and slowing naviga.
tion on major waterways.
The frigid cold is even driving
u.p the cost of oysters.
AND TOE NATIONAL
Weather Service predicts no big
thaws for at least 30 days.
Robert Dickson. deputy ch.iel
of the weather service's long-
range prediction seetion, said a
drastic shift in normal wind pat-
terns is bringing weather from
the Arctic Circle as far south as
Texas.
About two-lbirds of the nation
Is feeling the chill in what the
weather service said was the
harshest winter in at least five years.
.. SOMETIMES THE upper
level winds get pushed out or
kilter ln one way or another ."
Dickson said. The reasons "are
not very well understood," he
added.
The demand for more heating
ruels. such as natural gas, is
threatening reserves, orricials
say.
In Binghamton, N. Y .. one sup-
:>Uer, the Columbia Natural Gas
Company. cut orr service lo in-
dustrles with back-up capability.
'Fo reign Bit Me n '
Kissinger Threat
Knowledge Denied
WASHINGTON CAP> -The State Department said today it had no
knowledge of an aJJeged threat by Israeli radical political groups to
assassinate Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger.
Department spokesman Robert Funselh said "we have never been
informed of any threats involving Israeli political parties, or any
group within an Israeli political
party, including specifically the Likud."
IN ISRAEL. A spokesman for
the Llkud, a righlwing opposio-
tion party, branded as "disgust-
ing nonsense" a newspaper re-
port or the threat.
The New York Daily News, in a
copyright s tory today Crom
Washingto n. r e ported that
radical israeli groups had paid
"one or more foreign h.it men"
$150,000 to murder Kissinger.
The report, citing anooymqus
State Department officials, said
the assassination plot was put
together by a splinter group
within the Llkud party.
FUNSETH'S STATEMENT
was a break with department
policy, which normally holds that
no public statements will be
made either to confirm or deny
reported threats against Kiss·
inger.
Government officials in the
past have acknowledged receiv-
ing threats against Kissinger.
Vice Pres ident Nelson A.
Rocke fe lle r and Treas ury
Secretary William E. Simon, but
they always declined to discuss
the threats.
The News article quoted an W'I·
named Kissinger aide as saying
8 Murden
Admitted?
C HICAGO CAP> -
Richard Speek, who has
publicly proclaimed his
innocence in the 1966
murders of eight student
nurses, confessed three
days after the slaytngs,
says the s urgeon who
identified him to police.
In an article in the cur-
rent iasue of Medical
Economics magazine, Dr.
LeRoy A. Smith is quoted
as saying Speck admitted
he strangled and stabbed
Lbe eight women oo July
H ~t year.
But Smith aaid the
atatements were not in·
troduced as evidence dur-
ing Speck's trial because
he bad b een gi ve n
morphine and atropine
about an hour before
making them
the $150,000 "was provided by a
s mall, radical splinter faction
within Is rael's Llkud opposition
bloc, which opposed the Labor
government's surrender of cap-
tured Arab territory in the in·
terim agreements with Egypt
and Syria.
"THE MOTI VE WAS saidtobe
reven2e a2ains t Kissinl(er for al· legedly selling out Israel during
his Mideast shuttle diplomacy ..
. . "the report said.
Eliahu EHssar, spokesman for
Likud, called the Dally News re·
port "utter nonsense." Likud of.
ficials speculated that the report
was aimed at smearing the op-
position party ln the midst of the
present election campaign.
Avi Pazner. a spokesman for
the Israeli embassy, said the
Daily News report was the first
time he had beard of any such al-
leged threat. Other Israeli of·
ficials expressed skepticism
about lbe account.
The newspaper also quoted an
unnamed diplomat as saying that
"wbile Ukud includes extreme
Hgbt wingers who oppose any
surrender of territory to the
Arabe, it Is regarded in Israel as
a reputable opposition bloc
working within the democratic
system."
Price Fixing
Charge Levied
Against ADA
WASHINGTON CAP> -The
Federal Trade Commission t.o-dar charged the American Den-
ta Association CADA) with
price fixing and other unlawful
practicea that allegedly prevent
paUenta from benelltting from
competition.
The commission said that the
ADA "bas eliminated competi-
tion among dentists in the Unit-
ed States" by enfbrcing ethical
codes that bar advertising and
prevent pMce competitioo.
The 124,000-member ADA,
headquartered in Chicago, de·
nied any wrongdoln&. It said it
has "neither fostered any prac.
Uces nor engaged in any con-
duct relating to its advertising
ethics which Is In violation of
the Federal Trade Commission
Act."
Midwest Snow P .ersists
Temper9C•re. ... i.-1"11'."' ... ,_, .. ) OJ Al~rau. '° 10 "1nltlll0 0 ,,
M(llo< ... h 2l ... ,,_. 4S ~ ts 81-•<k n J . 07 9olw JI JI 0)
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Porll ,Mt. IJ ""'11tnd,Ort. " RIOfaClly JI
"'-" Rl<lllllOllO 14
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$tit 1.t-• City u s.t\l'fMKl.CO ..
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.t. trlW'*"' ed'.rl-y , ..... .._ Ill
tfft<t trom 1111nois to ••If ,,._
'"'"""'·· -lrtm ,,.. ·-·"'-IOI ... C.rOll,,. -1•111,,
"''" i..1 trom ,,.. ''"'' O\llf "°"' IOtllt _, Ml .. l•tlDt>I V•f .. y,
o.n.. 109 lw-.t '" IOflW ~ wt" Of Ille t•tn belt, Wltll Yl\lblllt ...
n.er ••ro 111 \OUllllrft lten•n •
OIOellofn.t -"'"' r •I T HH l!erly mor11l119 r14Mll~ rlftOl<f
1""11 ~ II .t HOUltOft, AM • -,lf'OD,N 0. .... 711tltlyWKI, f'le.
Other industries without such
dual capacity have been cut back
to 60 percent of the normal sup-
ply.
ELSEWHERE, FUEL sup-
plies have been increased by as
much as SO percent and more to
beat homes and buslnesaes.
Some factories in South
Carolina and New Jersey have
been idled because of a natural
gas shortage.
Government officials and busi·
nessmen from the Carolinas,
Virginia. Maryland and other
states asked the Federal Power
Commission Thursd ay for
authority to buy natural gas from
Texas that is not subject to
federal price controls.
THE GROUP, INCLUDING
Sen. Strom Thurmond <R·S.C.>.
contended that without new sup·
plies schools will be shut, tens or
thousands or workers will be job-
less an.1 public health will be en-
dangered. The cold snap is caus-
ing the heaviest ice buildup in
years on the Great Lakes. the
Coast Guard said. And In
Chesapeake Bay. five vessels
were trapped in the Tangier Bay
area near the Eastern Shore or
Maryland. The Coast Guard re·
ported today that two oil barges
that had been trapped by the ice were freed today with no loss of
the more than m !Ilion gallons or
heavy fuel oil they were carry-
ing.
Jn the Great Lakes, Lake Erie
was almost completely frozen;
Lake Michigan was in danger of
freezing over for only the fourth
time this century and a western
portion of Lake Superior was
covered with ice as weU.
THE DETROIT RIVER was
frozen from the American to the
Canadian shores for the first
time in 10 years. lee was solid
from near the Ambassador
Bridge at Detroit to Lake Erie .
Officials said river traffic had
slowed but continued to move
through the ice.
The Coast Guard said the most
critical problem could develop at
Sault Ste. Marie where four·foot·
thick ice threatened to shut down
St. Mary 's River, the major
artery of the Great Lakes
system. "Without navigation In
the St. Mary 's Rive r . we
wouldn't have winter navigation.
It just wouldn't be possible,'' a
Coast Guard spokesman said.
The Coast Guard halted traffic
along 20 miles of the Mississippi
River near Cape Girardeau, Mo ..
when a collaps ing Ice dam
separated 11 barees from a
towboat.
BARGE T RAFf1C WAS also
slowed on the Ohio, Allegheny
and Monongahela Rivers.
The potential shortage in home
heating fuels is being felt lo a
number of areas .
In Syracuse, N.Y .• the Niagara
Mohawk Power Corp. warned
that it might have to cut back
natural gas supplies lf customers
didn't turn down thermostats.
For homes , it suggested 68
degrees for daytime bou.ra and 63
degrees for overnight. For
schools and busloeMe:S, it urged a ~degree setUng for nights and
weekends.
I I
Last Man Gets Wine
Harry Fayonskv. rieht in this 1971\ nhntn vpfq ,.,.,. hntt1,.
of 1937 California Tokay wine. He and J . B. Todd, left,
had been the two survivors or a 13-member Walhalla
S.C .. "last m an club" of World Wa r I veterans. Mr'.
Todd. 86, died this week. Fayonsky, 79. says he's in no hurry to drink the wine.
Serg~ant Charged
In Triple Slaying
FT. LEONARD WOOD. Mo. (AP) -An Army sergeant was
taken into custody aft.er a young woman who said she feign.eel death
to escape an attacker directed authorities to the snowy burial sites of three companions.
The ser geant, identified only as being from Arkansas, raced
possible murder charges today in connection with the fatal shoot·
ingsofthethree Plato, Mo., young peoole, the FBI said.
HE WAS APPREHENDED BY AN Army provost marshal
Thursday after military searchers found the bodies of Anthony Lee
Bates, 18: Wesley Hawkins, 18, and Linda Needham, 16, on \his
sprawling Army base.
The Pulaski County Sher iff's Department said Juanita
Deckard, 19, of nearby Lynchburg, Mo .• was picked up by a motorist
after s he staggered to a roadway about 3 p.m.
She was reported in fair condiotion Thursday night at Pulaski
County Hospital with bullet wounds in her breast and arm.
BILL WILLIAMS, AGENT IN CHARGE of the Kansas City FBI
office, said the four young people apparently were driving through
the base on a double date Wednesday night when they were stopped
by a man driving a vehicle similar lo one used by militarY police.
Their car was disabled by lhe driver or the second vehicle, and
they were forced to accompany him, FBI agents at the scene said.
The four were driven to the southern part oft.be base, shot and
buried in snow, Williams s aid. He said Miss Deckard was able to get
away later because she pretended to be unconscious during the burial.
FDA Okays Retest
Of .2,100 Additives
WASHINGTON CAP> -The Food and Drug Admlnisrtratlon,
criticized for allowing continued use of food additives linked to cancer
and other diseases, will retest all 2,100 additives it bad approved pre-viously.
However, the agency incurred more criticism Thursday by refusing
to order off the market any ad-
ditivies until those tests are com-( ) pl~e FDA Is buyjngtimund /N SHORT
allowing more and more con-_
sumption of chemicW. that may -----------" be dangerous," said Dr. Sidney
Wolfe, director of Ralph Nader 's
Health Research Group.
•dcfl t•.,lre
NEW YORK (AP> -Vice
President Nelson A. Rockefeller.
a dominating force for almost
two d ecades in New York St.ale's Republican party, bas
told GOP leaden be plans to
withdraw from active party in·
volvement.
Rockefeller, in a letter to 600
members of the Governor's Club,
a fundralsing group be orgarued.
said, "Now is the time to really
return to private life."
Car Sales Aeeelerece
DETROIT (AP> -The na·
lion's four big car makers sold
cars at the rate of 20,539 a day in
first 10 days of 1977, an increase
of 21 percent over sales for the
same period last year.
It was the quickest sales start
in Cour years. and Industry
sources saJd Thursday that U.S.
car production would rise 5.S per-
cent this week despite six plant
closings.
..... 'to F lgltt'
PARJS <AP> -Abu Daoud, the
s uspected r ingleader of the
Munich Olympic massacre. said
today be considered lilinseU a man marked for assassination,
but that he would soon "resume
ffkbting" against Israel and
Zionists.
Daoud described himself as a
revolutionary rather than a ter-
rorist in a telephone interview
with The Associated Press from
Al F a l ah h eadquarters In
Algiers, where he was n own
Tuesday following his release by
French authorities .
British Statesman
Eden Dies at 79
ALVEDISTON Enaland (AP> -former Prime Mlniater Ant.bony
Eden died peace#UUy lo bla sleep thLs morn1n1 at b.Js cow:itry home ln
southern England after a looi ll.loese, b1s doctor announced. He wu 79 .
Eden. who u Br1tain'• forelp mbltster ln the 1930s advocated a
strong It.and a1allllt Fucist die·
tatora but failed aa prime perleaeean<tdeterrninaUon."
miniater ln the abortive&.-in· Eden'• doctor saJd he bad been
vasJ.on of ~. waa flown home sufferlna from progressive liver
from Flortda last weekend wMn failure. One Loudon newapaper
It became apparent that death reported be had bad cancer of lhe
wu near. He had betr\staylng at Juq and bone for a year and lt
the home of aenlor American had apread to the liver.
diplomat W. Averell Harriman. ln a atatement issued from No.
10 Downlbl St .. offlclal resJdence TBE BRITISH 1ovemment of Prim e Mlnlstn James
said in an offtchtl atatement afte r CalJ .. han the oovernm-t aaid Eden's death· "We mown lbe ........ • 'I' ._..
paulna of •• dl1tln1ullhed it "hu heard wllb deep rec;retof
parll amen tar I an and a the deat.h of Lord Avon. Keapent
•tate1man of exceptional ex· ~ ~~~!. llfe lo the service of 6#---STATUMAN DID
Anthony Eden, 79
I
fSfHJ,000 S r ee
Brinks Bandit
Nabbed Broke • SANTA FE, N.M. CAP> -Former Brinkspard Richard Rees, wbo
brazenly m1tde off with $.'500,000 cash from an armored car 11 months
ago, bas been captured with less than S400 in his pockets.
Rees, 27, described by police as "maybe the greatest rip-off artist of
aJI times" was to be arraigned before a federal magistrate today on a
charge of bank larceny aft.er bis
arrest Thursday by the FBI and
New Mexico state police.
The former guard had been
sought since Feb. 11, 1976, when
be asked his driver lo slop at a
San Mateo, Calif .. restaurant so
be couJd deliver a box of cham-
pagne to a girl. He stepped off the
truck and vanished with the
mooey.
TIIE FBI said Rees was taken
into custody at Villanueva, N.M .•
a small community about 40
miles north of here, following a
stakeout by authorities who had
learned he was in the area.
Details surrounding the arrest
were skimpy. The FBI s aid only
that Reese was known to have ~een camping out in Texas.
Following the theft, a San
Mateo police sergeant said Rees,
who left a wife. an ex-wife and a
daughter behind, might be "the
greatest·· rip-off artist ever.
"We can't think or another case where a single man. using
no violence or weapons, escaped
with such a large amount of UD·
traceable cash." the policeman
said.
BRINKS BANDIT NABBED
Guard Richard Reea
THE ARREST CAME a week spent more than the average
after the FBI in San Francisco man makes in a lifetime." the
was given a 17-page letter Rees letter said. "Since my money has
had s ent to San Francisco allbutrunout.lhavechangedto
Chronlcle columnist Herb Caen a lifestyle that uses Uttle -or no
asking that it be relayed to the -money. I guess 1 have sort or
federal agents. gone the way of the hippie."
In il, he described how he The letter, which the FBI said was authentic. was postmarked
Friday January 1'. 19n
State Hos pital
Mental Patknt .
Deaths Querkd
SACRAMENTO (AP)-The state's Little Hoover Commlsslon is
asking the stale attorney general lo investigate patient deaths at state
mental hospitals.
Raymond Procunier, who is heading a probe or state bospitai
deaths for Gov. Edmund Brown Jr .• sald after the commission ac-
tion Thursday that he wouJd welcome a second investigation by the
attorney general.
HEALTH DlllECl'OR Jerome Lackner told a reporter he also
wouJd welcome an attorney general's invesUgaUon. But he sald he
believed local district attorneys would be more objective, slnce the
attorney general is the Health Department's lawyer.
Proeunier bas said he has screened reports on 1.100 deaths at
the state hospitals in the last three years, and bas determined that
139 or them are highly questionable.
LAST WEEK ~unier annOWtced that all 139 cases will be
submitted to local district attorneys, although be expected very few
to result In criminal prosecutions.
He said that some employes who are cleared by disl(ict at-
torneys will be subject to disciplinary action by the department.
Tbe Commissioo on California State Government Organir:atioo
and Economy. known as the "Little Hoover Commission," voted un-
animously to ask the attorney general for the second probe on the
suggestion of Sen. Milton Marks, <R-San Francisco). who ts a com-
mission member.
Former Gov . Edmund
Brown Sr. could get bis old
job back as attorney
general where he served
eight years . The slate
Senate approved a list
Thursday of successors in
event or a disaster and
Brown was second behind
Chief Deputy Atty Gen.
Charles Barrett. Nevada and New Mexico and that the bureau had been tipped
that he was in Villanueva.
played his way through most of Kansas City. Mo .. and was the
the $500,000 through associations first word from the former MARKS SAID HE didn't believe that people can investigate
with women in Ft. Worth and Marine since be disappeared. themselves. Before he started bls probe. Procunier, who once Ei\8 1.. WATIEaa
He was arrested while at the
home or a man identified by state
police only as Kent Scott. Scott
was not taken into custody.
Austin. Tex.· and $2,000 in race After disappearing with his headed the state prison system. was named by Brown as chief depu-
track bets. box of cash, Rees said, he bid in ty director of the state Health Department, which operates the DAILY PILOT "In the last 10 months I have nearby bushes until nightfall. hospitals. ~--~~~-~~---~~~-=-~~~---'-~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~-----~----JI....-~~-~~.;.;;__;._..;.___~~
In the
$175,000 Due
Bank Hit With Penalty
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Bank of
America. hit with a $100,000 civil penalty for
false adve rtis ing. has agreed to refund
$175,000 to customers who took out auto loans
In the last half of October.
According to the agreement signed by the
bank Thursday. cash rebates averaging $85
will be paid cus tomers who took out loans dur-
ing the time the bank circulated advertising
boasting, "Our rates are very competitive."
Deputy Dist. Atty. David C. Moon. who
bandied the case, said figures supplied by
Bank of America proved that its rates were
actually among the highest in the state.
No applications will be necessary for re-
funds, be said He added. "We know who they
are."
Uttle Protest
Camarillo Eyes
Jury's Report
VENTURA CAP> -A Sf and jury report critical
of nursing care and the administration at Camarillo
State Hospital has been greeted with little protest
by health officials. who say steps toward improve-
ment are being taken on many fronl3.
The Ventura County Grand Jury, which also in
dieted eight persons in connection with patient de.
aths. said in the report Thursday that employes
were poorly trained and negledfuJ toward patients.
The hospital's inadequacy, it added, resulted from "a lack of real, formal leadersb.Jp."
Drou .. i A fd s o-.Jat
SACRAMENTO <AP> -Gov Edmund Brown
Jr. Thursday asked President Ford to declare a
state of emergency in 23 drought-stricken
California counties where ranchers are having trou-
ble feeding cattle and
( )
sheep Statf' The governor cited
agricultural loss from the
--------drought "tn excess of SSOO
million "
His letter to the President and the Federal Dis·
aster Assistance Administration seeks emergency
livestock feed and help in costs of movlng cattle and
sheep to better pastures.
s..., Ba•pen P rok
PALM SPRINGS <AP> -Heavy snowfall 1s
hampering the investigation into the cause of the
plane crash that kiUed Fran1t Sinatra's mother and
three other persons. authorities said.
Pieces of the twin-engine Lear jet are scattered
in snow up to five feet deep at the site of the crash on "'"ed San Gorgonlo Mountain, an air safety in-vestigator said Thursday.
,,_ derer C...m rted
LOS ANGELES CAP> -A 20·year-oJd
Crenshaw area youth has been convicted of robbery
and murder In the stabbing death of a physician at
his Hollywood Hills home last summer.
Found guilty by a Superior Court jury was
Allred Toliver. who was serving an lS-montb jaU
sentence in an unrelated robbery when homicide in·
vestigators linked him to the killing of Dr. Ricbatd S.Kuhn,43.
~--•BeldftlBl .. t
INDEPENDENCE CAP> -An 18·year-old
youth has been arrested in connection with a
powerful explosion that destroyed a gatebous. ud
ripped aeart a spiUgate on the acqueduct that br-
ing• Los Anaeles 80 percent of Its water.
Officials said the arrest of the youth Tbureday
culminated a four-month invesU,atioo. Since the
)'ough was only 17 at the time of the explosion last
Sept. 17, hJs identity was not released.
IX"E Pt ....... t'leloed
SACRAMENTO CAP) -The first independent
study of state school Supt. Wilson Riles' prtied E..,. IY Childhood EducatJoo program says it can't COD·
dude wbetber or not the program lmprovea t4l9t
~· But even lt ac~ don't ~o up for yean, the pro-
sram appears to be worthwblle, 1ays Eve Baker,
who led ~ $200,000 stucty by UCLA's Center for the
Stud)'ofEvaluaUoa.
''Tbe precept.I of ECE, like parent involvement
and indJvtduallzed instruclloo, are good," sh• told
reporters at a brtetlq Tbunday ntabt.
I
BuockS
Fur Caravan
CO MES TO SOUTHCOASTPLAZA JANUARY1 5 AND1 6
Mos1 womu1 would r1ladly tlirow 1h1·
hudrw1 out lhf! window for a fur
Now do 11 1 An Nll1re coll(·cuon
1·xcept1onally priced now on sJIP
Have a qoroeous new fur. nowl
Dcs1riner mink cor11<>
An u11bt • .ind1rnJ l.Oll~c11on ol 1111·
finest full length mink coms.
Speci.1lly priced. $2900 to $4500
Contemporary f11rs
A great selection of Glacraf
mink paw, natural red or No rweqran
blue fox, natural or dyed beavl•r
or mink and leather. $795 to $1995
Ft'male mink strollers
Na tural EMBA mink strollers rn
lrqhtwe1qht luxurious fl·male
r• It~. Now 1ust. $1895
Tho r ur Salon
Fur products labeled to show rountr'1
of orlgtn of imported 11.r~ use our termwav plan
Shop Mon-Fri . 10:00-9:30, Sat. 10-6, Sun. 12-5 . Bullock's South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol. Cona Mesa, phone 556·0611
I
A6·
D"ILY P I LOT 13DITORi~L P"GE
A Needed Safeguard
Orange County supervisors last week endorsed
proposed slate leguslation designed to speed up land
use designation changes.
As things stand now, the county planning com·
mission sends an endorsed series of land use designa-
tion changes to t.he Board of Supervisors as a pro-
posed amendmenttothecounty general plan.
If the board accepts all the endorsed changes, the
amendment is adopted. H not, the package is sent
back to the commission for review. Then, the pro-
posed changes again go to the supervisors. The pro-
posed legislative change eliminates the requirement
to send the plan back to the commission when the
supervisors want to make changes.
The idea or the proposed legislative change is to
save time. by law a maximum of 40 days but in prac-
tice usually only a week or two
That review by the planning commission
shouldn't be s acrificed to time and whatever changes
the Board of S upervisors want to make should be sub·
jcd to the commission's and staff review. It is a
s afeguard that should not be sacriliced lo "eHi·
ciency."
Co astal Deadline
One of the more encouraging bits or news in
mid-1974 was word that the state was ready to pay $7.5
million for the purchase or 1,345 acres of the Irvine
Company's coastal land for a state park between
Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach.
The proposal seemed to offer assurance that the
prime oceanfront property would be excluded from
development and permanently preserved for public
use Now the coastal park plan is endangered.
The state ·s offer of funding is valid only until June
30. lf the purchase cannot be concluded by then, the
process of obtaining state money for the park will
have to begin anew
The plan ran mto trouble when Irvine heiress
Joan Irvine Smith filed Muit in a West Virginia court.
attempting to block the land sale on grounds the price
was too low
But the West Virginia court decision has been de-
layed pending conclusion of negotiations for the sale
of the entire lrvbe Company and its holdings.
Now, with a sale agreement a pparently still re·
mote and the park funding dead.line drawing closer.
the lrvine Company is attempting to speed U1e ruling
ln t.he West Virginia suit.
It would be a bitter blow for those who worked to
preserve the coastal land to see their apparenUy suc-
cessful effort vanish in a legal morass. Unfortunately.
it seems only too likely.
Cleaner Cars
lnvestmenl of an extra $20,000 by the state of
California in the purchase of 10 foreign-made cars.
each costing $2,000 more than comparable U.S.
models, sounds questionable at best.
But there's some method in this particular bit of
madness.
The cars are new Swedish Volvos which, by a
fortunate accident, apparently produce only about
one-tenth the pollutants of American counterparts.
The low-pollution factor-far below California's 1977
minimum requirements-was an unexpected adjunct
to the development of a new catalytic converter de-
signed for fuel economy.
At present the converter is available only on four-
cylinder Volvos. But both U.S. and foreign manufac-
turers are attempting to adapt it to larger cars.
Meanwhile, the California purchase for the state
motor pool will give the Volvos a real road test.
perhaps contributing to further development of the
process as well as cleaner air. It could be $20,000 well
spent.
~AT A~ YOU
DOING 2
Response t o S oriet Build11p 'Wants'
Are Not
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
U.S. Retargets Nuke Missiles
'Needs'
( l'All L HARVEY J
' Pobticians have been all fall
promising us a "brighter tomor-
row"
Now it's tomorrow. The election is behind us, tbe
chores still need tending and the
hired man's stilt down on the
<·reek bank -fi shing. There are
weeds in the garden and manure
1n the barn and fences need
mending and s prouts need prun·
mg so where do we start.
H.istory i.ays that we should
start by stopping hshing.
Despite the
examples o{
Bnlam and
New York Ci
ty govern·
menu> con
tinue to lure
workers from
wo rkin g t o
mooching
The Buruu
of the Census
~ays there are 2S million poor
people m the United Stat.es.
ln the last 10 years, the cost of
social welfare programs ln the
United States bas increased by
$120 billion
H we had just dJVided that Sl.20
billion among those 2S mllllon
poor people, We COuld ti.ave f(IVCn
each or them $4.800. For a family of four that would amount to
ll9.200
And then nobody would be poor
anymore'
Instead. lhe money wenl to
90Clal workers and counselors
and planners and urban-renewal
experts and nssrstant ad-
ministrators and assistant 8SS1S·
tanl admlnlstratorfl.
Now lt 's tomorrow 'The politi·
tlans don't havt to ball tbelr
Liberty, Equality ,
Fraternity was just
replaced with Expediency
mFrance.
P.0
GIOOl'IW G•n co..,..,.•nt' ., .... _.., • ., bV
,..,cHn•,.dctonol ft•<••••rUyteff«ttM vi•~ of llH> ""'"'""""'· ~nd vour pel pH .. to Gloomy Ou>. O~lly Piiot.
hooks with handouts anymore.
Now tbey can get down to the
business of taking the profit out
of welfare.
TllB V AUD POOR we wiU
always have with us; some will
always need to be cared for by
others.
But th.is "spirit of dependence"
s hould not be encouraged by
making loafing more profitable
than working.
We should, inste~dl seek to re·
instill a spirit of inoependence,
even tbougb a percentage of
Americans will aJways fall short or that goal.
OriglnalJy. '•government
welfare" was intended to be a
form of compulsory insurance -
again.st old age, serious illness
and unemployment.
But demagogic polltlclans
sought lo expand welfare far
beyond prudent economlc UmlU
by promising that government,
in addition to solving basic
economic problems.. abould also
make everybody happy.
TREIB "NEEDS" attended,
now government must supply
their "wanu." Tbal ls oot possl·
ble, of course -but we can
bankrupt ou.rsel ves trytng.
Prof. Mlltoo Friedman, with a new Nobel Pri.ze tn add wei~t to
bis recommendations. believes
the quickest and best wQ to
relWr'e self-discipll.ne la a coo·
BtltutlooaJ amendment to ptoce a
Oxed Umft on federahpendin1.
Theo 1ovemment would be
forced to control Its own appetite
and to re-wean ua.
WASHINGTON -Stealthily
and with no public indication of
change, the U.S. ls ''retargetlng"
some of its intercontinental
nuclear missiles in a move that
quietly concedes the strategic
importance of the Soviet Union's
awesome developments in civil
defense.
The retargetlng will include
major underground depots and
manufactur-
ing lnstalla-
liona which
Moscow has
been building
for the past
stx years to
help survive a
possible
nuclear ex·
change. With
large under·
ground areas for population and
lnduat.ry available. tbe theory is
that post-nuclear war Soviet sur-
vivability would f arexceed that of
the U.S.
What 18 both fascinating and
somewhat troubling about the
U.S. response to this vast and
prudent Soviet civil defense (or,
aa lt ls known, "passive" de·
fense) ls this inescapable con·
clusion: the political leadership
of the U.S. as of today feels that
the American people would not
approve the cost of a U.S. passive
defense system anyt.hlng like the
size of tbe Russians'.
With no prospect of matching
Soviet clvll defense. the Pen-
taeoo turned elsewhere. Hence,
Soviet underground installations
are now being pinpointed, just
llke missile sites, as prime
targets ln case of ouclear war.
Tbe new admlnlstratioo of Jim·
my Carter may dedde to reverse
Prealdent Ford's conclusion (as it
already has virtually decided to
reverse the Nixon admlnistra·
Uon's abandonment of selective
service>. But for the President. al
least. the decision here bas been
to make no effort to compete with
Soviet civil defense efforts but
rather to deal with the tremen-
There's Gold in Imitations
The s u ccess or l>tople
rna~azine bas bred a number of
imitators -the lateet being tbat
new publication, Them. "U you
like People," I• its rnolto. "you'll
Jovelbem!''
On the cover of the first tSAue ls
rock aw, Glinda Glab, and ber
husband .
Vandell
Klock, wbo, ln
real lUe. Is
her wardrobe
director .
"Blr1er
Things for
Gllnda 1 ..
..,~ tbe title
of the piece.
Inside are
el.tbl pbotof rapba ol Glinda in
her nlght1own wai.rlo1 ber Boeton fema, of which abe bas 27
ln her "homey. aplll·level Park
avenue apartment."
The pereept.lve 1.82-wwd artJ.
cle i.U.a how Glinda wanta to
shed her "sex kltten Image" and
play the lead role in a new
televialon aeries, "Medea,"
which la "baaed on an old Greek
play."
Contract negoUatlons are cur·
( ART HOPPE )
renUy stalled over Glinda'• in·
slatence tbat sboounri_ be
wrapped up by 5:'5 p.m. dally ao
that abe can be home fw dinner
wtth Klock and their tbree-year-
old Afghan hound,~-
A l'UP of the page bttDP us
"allcken Every ~·· the
toucb.LD1 148-word stoey <with
four pictures ) of tbe Rev.
Lovelace Fobes of Peoria, AR .•
wbo overcame a speech tznpedi.
ment and now dellven five
sermoaa a weet wbUe mana&lnl
a chaln of musage parlon wttb
the help of 14 orphan. o( all races
he baa adol)ted from ports around
the world.
"World's Greatest?" follows.
Tbb la a bl(bly·.d.tamalic. black·
and-wldte pboto1rapb of an old
man -'th a square chln loottn1 out a window. The caption aaya.
"At 82, many crltics believe
Ha«eratoo Mowe m~ b4t Ute
world'• areatett baaaoonllt. • •
On the nut two p..-11 a pn».
lag prof\lc of movte {dot Darnih
Stack entllled, "More Than Just
a Pretty Face." In 173 words and
alx pictures It tells how Stack, a
Taurus, has a lready read
through t.wo feet, seven lnches or
Tbe Six Foot BOC>bbelf of Family
Dt1eat.ed Clasalca. "If t can Just
keep on going the way I have, I'll
read a whole another foot by
June 28," Stack predicted con·
t.ldently . Stack also coob.
ON A P AGB by herself
("Black la Beautlfull .. ) ls
Ybontan chanteuse Aspasla Ma·
awa-loa. The captlco says she
lovea beln1 black and made
-r.e.12 la.at year oo soul food
•eQCIOl..---.e-menll alone.
Tbe laaue clotea wtth a 3'7-word
plece on ·'Wonder Oog"
Abernathy, a three-year-old Msban bound who mat• '90,000
a year rentJng hJmselt out to
stan being lnterviewed by
ma1utnea.
PVBLl88ER Deaton Orang
bu hlgb hopes that. Them will
outaell People. "We print leas
about Them than they print about
People," he explains. "And
we're even nicer. How can we
lose?"
( EV ANS-NOVAK )
dous advantage It would give
Moscow by direct military action.
THE SOVIET advantage is
ominously real, according to
high military and clvillan of-
ficials ln the Pentagoo. UnW re·
cently. however, It bas been
neither appreciated nor fully un.
derstood except by a few bard·
line hawks whose voices went wt·
heard.
That may be changing now,
along with the nuclear targetlng
changes. In a revealing in-
terview with tbe New York
nmes tbl.a week, for example,
Maj. Geo. George J. Keetan Jr.,
the outgoing Air Force In-
telligence chief, claimed that
Moscow has now hardened no
fewer than 75 underground com·
mand posts for the civil mLUt.aty
leadership within ~cow's en-
virons alone.
More to the point, Keegan
credits the Sovieta with having
completed an extraordinary
number of "mesa sbelters" larae
enough to house 60 million
workers safely underground in
industrial areas that might be
targets or U .S. attack should
nuclear war ever break out.
The development of this impor·
lant adjunct to Soviet military
power started back in 1971, and
some experts here believe it was
directly connected to the
Kremlin's discovery that a secure
anti-ballistic missile <ABM 1
system was simply beyond
Moscow's technological ability.
INDEED, these experts lake
the Soviet rationale one step
further: given Soviet inability to
construct a reliable anti-missile
system. in direct contrast to a
proven American ability to do so.
tbe Soviet answer was to obviate
anti-ballistic missiles. Under this
theory. the Soviet Unioo pushed
hard for the first U.S.-Soviet
nuclear weapons agreement m
the Nixon era of strategic arms
limitation. That agreement was
the ABM treaty. severely llmillDg
antl·mlsslle sites in each eowtlrY
(now one each>. It was signed
with fanfare in 1972 -just one
year after the Russians had
launched their huge civil defense
program.
Serious debate is starting ln
the Pentagon over whether lbe
U.S. should harden -that is, pro-
tect w1th steel and concrete -
some of its industrial sites. but no
conclusions have been reached
The only top political figure
backing such a program. which
could cost billions, is Vice Presi·
dent Nelson Rockefeller. long
this country's most articulate
voice on civil defense.
BUT THE MOST critical
aspect of the growing disparity
between the U S. and the Soviet •
Union over civil defense may be
psychological: would the fact
Moecow could better absorb a
nuclear strike than the U S. work
to Moscow's advantage in a pre-
war diplomatic showdown7
Many experts here believe the
answer ls yes, despite the new
targeting of U.S. missiles against
hardened underground civtl de-
fense s1tee. Yet the civil defense
quesUon, vital as it is tn the
nuclear equation, has never once
been brought up by U.s:
negotiators in (Ive years of
strategic arms <SALT> talks
with Moscow
ffiS Probes Tax Tricks
WASHINGTON -1belnternal
Revenue Service la secretly in·
vestigating 50 or the nation's
largest corporations for tax
evasion. But many more com-
panies, according to lRS sources,
have escaped paytftg t.belr fair
share of taxes.
IRS Commissioner Donald
Alexander told us that bis agency
was looking
into serious
criminal
charges
agalnal SO
major cor·
poratloos .
Among them,
we bave
learned. are
s uch g l,a nl
firms aa
General Tire and Rubber. Gulf
Oil, McDonnell Doualu, Phillips
Petroleum, Revlon, Schiltz
Brewing and the 31'4 Company.
EVIDENCE OP fraudulent
act.lvttJes by these corporations
wu uncovered, Alexnder sald,
by his "large case audit pro-
gram." Under thla protrlJJl, the
lRS automatically audit& tbe oa·
tJoo'a 1,230 corporatlma which
have uaet.s of men the • mllUou each.
Our tP.S sourcea contend,
however, that the tax apoey
should be c:at.cblna fl'9'D mare
corporate tax evaders. One
source esUrnated then could be
JOO. ma.ybe more. lddMlma' cor-por.uon.a twna .-. tax re-
tums. In fact, the 018 audtton may not deserve all the crediL for
cakbl°' the 50 corporetJom un·
der lnve.UgaUon. In one c:ue ln·
volvlns lbe Fruebauf Trailer
Coropany. accordlnl to Rep. Chari~ Yanik, I>.-Oblo. It wun·t
the auditor11 but a canftdentlaJ fn-
formanl wbo auppUed tbe ln·
formatJon leadJDc to tbe Lad.Jct·
ma of company oftlelals on tu.
ttaudcb..-ies.
Vanlk beads the House
(JACK ANDERSON )
Ways and Means Oversight Sub-
committee. which keeps a sharp
eye on the IRS. He fired off a
private letter to Alexander.
therefore. asking how each case
of corporate fraud was un·
covered.
The commissioner ignored the
letter. which was dat«I Sept. 21.
So oo Dec. 13, Vanlk followed ~p
with another letter. There still
bas been no reply. We have
learned that the IRS, meanwhile.
tried to get a ruling Crom the
Justice Dept.. forbidding the re-
lease o! the information that
Vanik requested.
Some ot the nation's moet pro-
minent and prestigious corpora·
tiona have resorted to shabby. if
lngenlous. schemes to evade tax·
es. Of COUJ"Se, tbe taxes they
escaped pay1ne bad to be made
up by the honest taxpayers. Here
are just a few of the tax evasion
schemes, with the names omitted
in order not to Jeopardize the in-
veatigatloo:
-One lar1e cOT])Ol"8lloo paid
$2.5 m1Woo to a pUbllc rel.Uooa
ftnn, wblcb waa med aolely for
UtJcal lobbJIDI uochr tb.e
on of corporate omcen.
c:orpJraU.on wroc. ~ the
money ... bad debt.
-Anotber blt nnn bribed ltllle om.dal1 and then deducted
I.be brlbu u saleamen·s ex-
penle6.
-A mulUnaUonal corporation
deducted the ex\)en1ea of a
foreign sublldlerJ trom lts U.S.
t•x r~turn. tbenby tuegally
decreulng the am<>Ud ol tuet lt
paid.
-8TILL ANO'l'llE& corpora·
CJoo u.sed a public telaUom outfit
to dlatribute potltical payoffs,
Which would bave beerl illegal lf
the ft.rm bad made the eontrlbu·
Uom clirecU1 The company then
compounded the otf eme by de·
ductmg tbe payments as busl oe:ss upenses.
Alexander told us the IRS is
cracking down on the big cor-
porations. He has ordered hls
audit.on to ask 11 quesUons of
corporate executives. quesUons
that are calculated to expose
bribery, kickbacks and secret
foreign bank accounts. It the ex'.
ecuUves give false answers, they
would be subject to criminal pro-
secution. •
YET THE lllS intelligence
aeeots confided to us that the
crackdown bas been less effec·
Uve than lt should be. 'Ibey con·
tended tbat Alexander la relytn~
on auditors who are well inten.
Uoned but lack the investigator)!
skills of the lntelllgence agents. :
The lntelllgence agent8 argued
that the corporate books alone
seldom reveal the tax evasion. lt
takes the testimony of witnesses
to nail down the fraud. they told
ua.
-ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
R*'1 N. Wted. PubUlhn
Thomot KttlJil , f':ditQr Barbaro Krtlbu:h.
Edmmol Pog~ EdJltx
The editorial page or the Dally
Pilot seeks to Inform •nrl Ulmulate readers by presenttna
on thl11 past dlvette commentary
on topics of lnlcrcst by syndical·
td ~lumnlst and cartoonists. by
pr<wldina a forum for ~aders'
views and hy pri'J1entlng this
newap1per·s opinions and Ideal!
on eunen1 topic!! The t'dltonol
oPlnJons or the Oally Pilot appear
only In lbe editorial <:olumn 111.Lhl! lQp or the pag... Opinions CX·
preued by tho cohnnnl11ts and
cartoonlat4 and letter writers are
their own and no endorsement of their views by lhu Oaily Pilot
t.hoold be lnfom!d
Friday, Jan.14, wn
·' ., • .. ,
Frld!y, January 14. 197'1 DAIL. Y PILOT A f
Attack Evacuation Plans Eyed COFFEE
5¢ CUP! WASKJNGTON (AP) -Federal Civil Defense
olftcJals sa)' about 70 million American lives eou1d be saved by evacuaUnc 400 "high-risk" areas
before any threatened nuclear miuile attack.
Plannlni for such an emer1ency evacuation
wtll aoon start in all so states followinc completion ~pilot projects in elgbt areas.
OFFICIALS OF THE PENTAGON'S Civil
Preparedness A&ency believe lhat state and local
plann.lng, supported by federal funds, can produce a
standby evacuation blueprint within five years.
The proaram is called "crisis relocation." rt Is
based on the premlse that the inhabitants or prime
target communities can be moved to safer, llghUy
populated areas during rising internaUonal tension
expected to precede any outbreak of war.
TM 400-hJgh-risk areas are urban-industrial
centers and areas around military buea.
PILOT STUDIES WEllE CONDUCl'ED in
Utica-Rome, N.Y., Dover, Del., Macon. Ca ..
'I Found It' Blossoms
...... ............
'POSSESSION' OR NEW LIFE IN CHRIST?
'I Found It' Splits Mlnlaterlal Viewpoints
'HollyuXJO' Woe:
Big 'D' Dangles
LOS ANGELES CAP) -When the 70-{ool timbers
collapse, the 50-foot-high sign above the film and
glamour capital will read "HOLL YWOO."
Hollywood's Chamber o( Commerce toot re-
porters to the 54-year-old sign to see just how bad it
Ls. They want help from
the entertainment in-
dustry.
WI> TUE chamber's Mike Sims, "We hope
some guardian angel In
the enurt.aioment world will agree to participate
In a beoent concert in tbe
Hollywood Bowl next
summer."
Slml said it would cost
$30,000 just to put the
"D'' back and shore up
the timbers on the sign.
wbicb the Los Angeles
Cultural Heruaae Board
declared a monument in
1973.
U'TBE chamber can't
get money to uve the
monument. "We'll just
have to let It fall down.
We can't afford to go up
and take lt down." he
said.
He Gets Life Sentence
POMONA CAP> -A26-year-old u-amYlctbas
beer'I sentenced to life in prison far marderinc an
81-year-old Claremont woman after raping ber July
1, only 10 days after be was paroled from priloa far
similar crime.
Albert Irving pleaded guilty to first-degree
murder. The sentence was imposed by Pomona
SuperiorCoort Judge Boward McClain.
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi
i.f ..
• ·;o.·
·--"Call all the junior necuUves topther and tldvise
chtm that due to the mature subject matter, such as
firlna. parent.al euldance won't help!"
I NOTICE OF CORRECTION
The Aliso Water Management Agency has
. recently advertised a public heanng on a
Supplemental Project Report and
Envtronmental Impact Report on Ph•11 II &
Ill, Sludge HandNng and Inland Wasteweter
Treatment Facilities.
I :
TNs hearing was stated inoorrec:tty to be
head on Jan. 19, 1978, The correc:ted date of
the hearing shOuld read Jan. 19, 1an.
Time: 3:30-6.'00 P.M.
7:30-10:00 P.M.
Niguel Hiiis Junior High Schoof
29011 Paseo EscuN. Laguna Niguel
'Hunger:' for (;ad,
Or for 'Commodity?'
ByGEORGEW.CORNEU .,,.......,_
NEW YORK -The catchy, engimatic phrase,
"I round It,·· Is blossoming in cities across the coun-
try.
"You can find it too!" lease the bumper
stickers. billboard signs, newspaper ads, televia•
and radio spots and lapel buttons.
A telephone number is supplied for rtnding out
how.
AJiTER THE INITIAL. VEILED publicity
blitz.es to arouse curiosity and interest, the "It" sub-
sequently is disclosed with similar verve and fan-
fare: "New life in Jesus Christ.··
That is the transaction being promised in a
spreading number of cities, 165 or them so far with
others soon to be included. in one of the most broad-
scale, highly promoted evangelistic drives ever
staged in She nation.
It's called, "Hen!'s
( REUGION J Life America!·· Planned and
coordinated by Campus
Crusade for Christ,
beaded by William R. Bright, of Arrowhead
Springs. CaUf .• the effort bas enlusted and trained an
estimated 400,000 clergy and laity to help dis-
seminate the message .
ALTOGETHER, BY NEXT JUNE, they're ex-
pected to have blanketed 225 metropolitan areas
and about 5,000 smaller communities with their ap-
pe.al, contacting 60 million homes, 90 percent of U.S.
bouaebolds.
"To QUr knowledge, there never was anything
like it ln his tory." says Robert Pittenger, special
assistant lo Bright. "We're finding a hunger for God
all across the country. It re!lects a movement or the
Spirit."
Interdenominational in scope, with local
churches which choose to take part including some
d nearly every denomination, the effort has stirred
both praise and criticism.
.. THE MOST SIGNIFICANT INNOVATION in
American evangelism since the Gri!at Awakening,"
the Rev. Peter Wagner of Fuller Seminary says in
promoUonal materiah, referring to the early
American evangelistic surge of the 1730's.
The Rev. Donald E. Riggs of West Morris
Street Free Methodist Olurcb in Indianapolis says
that as a result of the drive, "We have a rejuvenat· ed. spirituallzed congregation like we've never bad
before."
But t.bere also has been criticism.
The drive's "huckstering and other hard-
sellen" tend to produce a "hardline reaction to the ~ous hypos that will reflect against religion
i , "says Dr. Martin Marty of the University of
Cbicaao Divinity School.
'l'llE REV. J. RANDOLPH TAYLOR of M~
Partt Presbyterian Olurcb in Charlotte, N. c .. says
tbe drive erroneously presents "new ll!e" in Christ
"a.a a possession to become added to other
pcllS.lelSioo," rather than as costly service.
"The glorious Gospel becomes a commodity
sold and delivered to the doorstep like a brush or bar
~soap," be writes in tbe ecumenical weekly, Chris-
tian Century.
He says tbe drive "depends upon gimmicks"
and wrongly presents Christ ln hard-sell ''im·
perialiatic terms."
Also, be adds, "the expense involved in employ-in& these techniques is astounding."
NO OVER-ALL a>S'l' FIGURES are available,
since expenses are raised locally, but with these
averacinl around $100,000 to $150,000 per city, the
total fort.be eventual 225 cities would ranee from an
estimated $22.5 millian to $33. 7 milllon.
Each city drive la launched with a week or pro-
motional inducements, with participants manning
telepbones for follow-up with inquirers. There are
~uent home visits, presentation of literature,
door-to-door neighborhood canvasses, and a five·
week Bible study course for new converts.
They're encouraged to join a church of their
preference to nurture continued spiritual growth.
TBE D&n'E BEGAN WITH A TESI' run in
Atlanta in 1975, in 19 other cities in the spring of
1'16, with~ main expansion coming int.be last two
monUill to 165 cities. with more booked in the sill
maatbs ahead.
BAILEY'S SHELL SERVICE
20ll1 •.-.St At Adams
lbltititma ~ • 714-963-4541
Duluth, Minn., Oklahoma City, Colorado Sprin11.
Tucsoo, Artz .. and Great Fa&, Moat.
The effort about to begin oo a nationwide acalo
is aimed at preparin& plam for reedina. houalDI and caring for the retueees in "host areas."
Officials estimate the plannine will cost about
$45 million to $S0 mill!oo. 'Ibey have no idea of the
potential cost or an actual emergency reloc:aUoo.
The slates would be expected to share the financial
burden.
nlE COUNCIL OF STATE GOVERNMENTS
is exploring questions of fundin& a population
evacuation and what new laws and necutive orders
may be required at the federal and state levels.
According lo calculations by federal
specialists, about 80 million peraoos out of a total
U.S. population of about 2U millioa would be likely
to survive any Sovi«. missile attack if there were a
civil defense program.
An additional 30 million persons could be aaved
by taking refuge in nuclear fall-out shelters ln the
target areas. the specialists say.
CONGRESS AUDITED $82.5 MIWON for
civil defense this year and the Ford adminlslra·
tion's fmal defense budget is expected to propose an
increase o( only about SS million next year.
Some Pentagon officials and members or
Congress claim that the U.S. civil defense program
is too small. They have ex.pressed concern about
what they claim is a massive Soviet civil defense ef-
fort. In their view, this could leave the U.S. popula-
tion more vulnerable than the RussiaD people and
undermine mutual deterrence of nuclear attack.
However. Oevense Sectttary-designate Harold
Brown is on record as doubting that the Russians
actually are engaged in a large-scale civil defense
program. Brown also bas indicated be is skeptical
that such a program would give the Russians a
significant strategic advantage.
FREERMU.S
AND LOTS OF
GOOD CONVERSATION
WITH FRIENDLY PEOPLE
EVERY SUNDAY
AFTll THI t:OO & I.SO SR¥1CI
Oturch Of 1he Resurrection
tl12H ..... llulk .. •.._.
ROBERT E. ROPER, M.D.
WISHES TO ANNOUNCE THE ASSOCIATION OF
BERTRAM H. CARSON. D.O. AOBGP
IN THE GENERAL PRACTICE OF
OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE ANO SURGERY
Hou,.. •v Al'l'OINTllOfT
1714 ) 484-1181 ...
289 LAOUNA AV!NUE
LAGUNA •EACH. CAL1'0RNl.A
ARE FUN
AT LONG JOHN SllNER'S:
Flyer Accuracy f,ompetition
Saturday, January IS
Sunday-Free Bob May Clinic
At Long John Silver's, we think weekendi are
special. And Just to show you how special, we
have some fun events planned Just for you.
Come taste the treasures at Long John SUver's
and get a treasure free. This week. Just buy a
regular Fish and Fryes Dinner for $1.69 and get
a world champion flying saucer absolutely ftee .
But hurry! Sunday, Jan. 16 ls the last day.
Enter the accuracy competlton this Saturday.
Jan. 15 at 2 p.m. You must have a Long John
Silver's flytng saucer to enter. Thma are three
age groups, with prizes going to the first, tecond
and third place wtnnen of each group. Ant prtM
winners get a $251.ong John Silva>t gilt
certificate and a tro1>hy. A SJOglft certfftc:abl ls
goes to the second place winner, and a $S gift
c~te Is the third place prtz.e. Enter the
contest and test your skill!
And on Sunday, Jan. 16, learn to toss your ffytng
saucer from Gutnas world champion Bob May .
Jofn the free Bob May C!lnlc and le.am to get
maximum distance and accuracy with your
saucer. The clinic starts at 11 a.m.
THE BEST SEAFOOD ON DRY LANDTM
Fl•hlt FryeeDl11111er •...• -"· tl.69
dvhghrtully cmp qoldtn l~ltl' Pes L..-and Fryn Dinner ... ti .59
tftotl<tlu-. ~ dlllmiUCk\
TNM9reClleM '*-t ...... tJ.99
~~C:.:: ...... 11.79
,trrpt of boneltu brUM f.a.i. Ir lryu
FtiM a.. DfliMf ••••••.... u .n
cllllM. ·~ """'.i.w l' .... U,... .............. ..
O\ltlm • frvet ·· Wllh lltw • G.w.. ,........._.,._, ... .,.
llwwnp It frtft .. Wiii "-8 .. Catch ..........••...... ts.65
I••"-{llldwn. or combo w1lh lryfl and
,i.w . fMd4 lou• °' -..... el Eliltllt ................ ..
ll ~ flth a.... •nouo" 1or ttw '"""
(f.,., s,.daKl4'1 .._.,..._ W
Oic~ •Coon U.... • ~"OOll Www
.. .
A• DAIL V PILOT
Ford Seeks Airline Restrainm Lift
W ASHlNGTON (AP) -Pres\·
dent Ford bas askfd Cooiress to
remove many regulatory con-
straints on the nation's airlinelS
and to give them new freedom to
raise and lower their rares and to
st.op or a tart routes.
Congress' Appr o val I J k ely reported record revenue$ and net
income for Its first fiscal quarter
ended Dec. 31, 1976. Revenue31n·
creased 3 .3 perctnt lo
$119,529,000, whlle net lncome in·
creased !5.9 percent t.o $11,828.000,
SUBSTITUTING FOR THE COFFEE BEAN
But What Can Match Coffff '1 Arome?
Try Sip·a·suh
Price Rules Some Out
DETROIT CAP> -People boycotting coffee because of
high prices may soon learn that except for water, tea and
bouillon, the substitutes are more expensive. .
A s urvey of Detroit supermarkets showed an e1~t·
ounce cup of coffee made from a three-pound can of drip·
grind coffee cost 4.5 cents. A cup or instant freeze-dried cof-
fee cost the same.
TEA MADE FROM A BAG costs just under a penny,
and a cup of hot chicken bouillon made from a cube cost 1.4
cents. Hot chocolate made Crom powdered cocoa. sugar and
whole milk cosl ll cents a cup; a chocolate-flavored drink
made with mix and whole milk was 10 cents; plain whole
milk. 8. 7 cents: orange juice Crom a frozen concentrate, 8.3
cents; and a cola soft drink from a 64-ounce bottle, 12 cents.
But If you want the mild stimulation you get Crom that
cup of coffee, only tea will do. Tea has the same amount of
caffeine -100 to 150 milligrams per cup.
SOME OF TRE ALTERNATIVES have caffeine, but
less. Cocoa has 50 milligrams and cola drinks have 33 lo SS
milligrams per cup.
Neither coffee nor tea adds any nutrients to your djet.
But. without sugar or cream, they doo'L add any calones
either. For a more nutritious coffee substitute, your best bet
appears to be milk or fruit juice· Both contain generous
amounts of vitamins and some minerals. Milk also con-
tributes calcium and protein. twootberessentials.
YOU CAN ALWAYS ADD A LITTLE chocolate to your
milk. but if you do you will add calories. Plain whole milk is
about 150 calories, compared with 242 in cup of cocoa.
And if you're counting calories. you should know that a
tea&poon of sugar bas 18 calories und a tablespoon of cream
will net you 30 more.
* * * * * * Dandelion's Just Dandy
WENATCHEE, Wash. CAP) -Uthe cost of coffee has
you looking for a substitute, local gourmets suggest trying a
cup of steaming, freshly brewed figs, dandelions or chicory
Figs, oven-dried and ground. make a fine alternative
for coffee boycotters. said Michael Farano, who does a
television cooking show.
"I DEFY ANYONE TO TASl'E the difference," be
said, adding that figs cost. only 55 cents a pound.
Farano said chicory also makes a good coffff sub-
!titute. Some people use the berb as a coffee extender after
drying and roasting, he said
Loma Yeager, a Wenatchee bomemaker. said drying
and roasting dandelion roots produces an acceptable mock
coffee. Uthe lbou.gbt o( waking to a cup of weeds doeso 't appeal
to you, she has a recipe. taken from an 1894 cookbook. for a
potion called "prairie coffee." It's a concoction of cor·
nmeal. molasses, flour. salt and waler that is cut into cakes.
dried and roasted dark brown.
Tbe legislation, introduced
Thursday. Is similar in purpose
to a bill be Introduced last year,
with some modiflcatioos.
Tbe plan would speed up the
Civil Aeronautics Board's CCA8)
deliberations by requiring the
board to act within certain time
limits. The legislation also would
remove restrictions imposed by
the CAB on airline routes and
would transfer the board's
authority to determine whether
airline mergers are anticom·
petitive to the Justice Depart·
ment.
Transportalion Secretary
William T Coleman Jr. said the
new bill w:is modified as a result
of information gathered during
congressional bearings on the de·
regulation proposal last year. He
predicted Congress would act
favorably on the bill early UUs
session.
1'f~o aa1 .. ou
MEXICO CITY CAP> -Me)t-
ico bas announced proven oil re·
serves of 11 billion barrels and
says it will seek to have the
figure certified by international
experts.
The figure was revealed by
Hect.or R. Lara Sos~1. a chemical
engineer and deputy director of
industrial production for the
s tate -owned oil monopoly
Petroleos Mexicanoo (PEMEX>.
"The current administration
bas decided that the Mexican
Petroleum Institute. in col·
lab-Oration with a specialized
fl.rm that enJoys prestige among
the most important banks of the
world. will certify the figure of 11
billion barrels that Petroleos
Mexicanos has noled," Lara
Sosa said.
V.S. OU ~ob Urged
WASHINGTON CAP>
Former Federal Energy Ad-
ministrator John C. Sawhill has
proposed that the government
get into the oil business. begm-
n i ng on a small scale by
establishing a national oil·
purchasing agency.
Sawhill, president of New York
University, told a congressional
bearing Thursday the agency
could start by purchasing crude
oil from oil-producing countries
S&LDisplay
Depicts '90s
Paintings worth an estimated
$35,000, depicting Paris i.n the
1890& or painted during that
period, are part of the Gay
l>nneties month at the Newport
Center branch of Great Western
Savings.
1be art show in the bank at 450
Newport Center Drive was ar·
ranged by Fred Knobloch of the
Poulaeo Galleries, 350 Newport
Center Drive.
Bank manager Sherry Britt
said the diaplay coincides with
the bank's 90tb anniversary.
'lbe art show, as well as the op-
portunity to win a variety o(
prizes, continues through the
OlODth, she said.
( TAKING )
__ S_TO_CK_
to help build up the government's
national oil atoclrplle.
But Exxon Corp. President H.
G. Kaufmann replied at the same
hearing that "direct govern·
ment involvement in the com·
merclal operations or the in·
dustry is neither necessary or de-
sirable."
Edb .. t oT.,,A .....
Southern California Edison
Company has announced it has
petitioned the Public UUllties
·Commission (PUC) for rehear-
ing, reconsideration or modifica-
tion or the company's general
rate decision of Dec. 21.
Edison had requested a
general rate increase of $339
million in 1974. Tbe commission
authorized partial relief, then
estimated at $79.6 millloo. in late
1975. Tbe Dec. 21 decision grant·
ed another increase in base rates
that was offset by a reduction un·
der the commission's energy C<l6t
adjustment clause.
Caaacla Dot0tt SWtu
MONTREAL CAP> -Car
buyers in Canada are shifting
from big gas guzzlers to smaller
models, says Sid Hurly, presl·
dent of Chrysler Canada Ltd.
Subcompacts like the Colt and
Arrow and compacts like the
Volare and Aspen accounted for
SO percent of Chrysler's Cana·
dian sales In 1976, he said.
Pet ..its Speeded Vp
SAN DIEGO CAP) -The gov·
ernmenl will not op~e the issu·
Ing of yellowfin tuna fishing
permits as early as next month,
according to U.S. Atty. Terry
Knoepp.
Tuna fishermen. who say they
are crippled by the government
ban on taking yellowfin wben it
involves the killing of porpoise,
have been casting about for a
way to speed up the red tape in
Furniture Store
Sets FV Opening
>~U" f'C'IVltlJ>t'd • .rperd ID1~oof. llnllld oki11. & w , W·
ttrl'A 38 mo~ I.NM Cap co•t-l'l'OOO. /Uawtuo.t
Oaj -$3000. 111 It l4tf ~lui paymmt &. bCC!Mt! rn
odVOlllCC, on OWfoM CTrdlt ; f IOJ081 I We lt<Ut ell maMS
Aaron Schultz, Pioneer Long Beach f\l.rD.lture
store, will open its rll"llt major branch store this
weekend at 18218 Euclid Street, Fountain Valley.
Located in a new 31,000-square-foot functional
building at the San Diego Freeway/Euclid offramp,
& modtl.s 1 rLI ""' NAR•IS 'J.(,()1 1'1"' 1"" V ulvo / l 11yot11
UUSOl Margutrilt P\..wy., Ml~.Jun Viqu 171.&l IUl·288
the store will reature
home furniahings from
nationally known lines.
AARON SCHULTZ,
Leasing aCadillac?
At Nabers, we undersund leasing, We should; leasing
represents a substllltlal part of oor bUslness. What dou this l'f'lcan to
yoo7 It means you 'an bt wrc that you'll get the type of lease that's
right for you.
When you add our lca~ing experience to our competitive
pricing system and our fine servi« dc!parwent, we think It adds up
to the best pl~ in Orange County to lease your nrw c.idlllac:.
Come in and see us I.Oday.
Nabers cadillac
2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 540-9100
president of the firm,
founded the company S2
years ago. Stan Schultz.
general manager and
secretary-treasurer. is
in bis 29th year with the
flrm and serves as
merchandise manager
and advertising direetor.
Peter J . Gendron, con-
troller of Aaron Schultz,
ls a resident of Newport
Beach.
George Fowler, sales
manager of Aaron
Schultz storH, wiU open
t be Fountain Valley
branch lo the role of act-lnt 1tore manager, with Jay Jacobseon as assis-
tant manager.
BOTH T R2 Long
Beach store and the
Orance Co u oty
Showroom In Fountain
Valley are laldn& part tn
tbe grand openin& ar·
rangemeot.a.
More than 100 prir.ea,
are~egiven away.
The Long Beach store,
known aa Aaron Schult&
Home Fublon Square, b
located at mt AUantJc
Avenue.
( Lll.BOVD )
INFORMS In the
DAILY PILOT
volved in the government de·
clsioo on bow many porpoise
may be kllled this year The
permits were originally not be Is
sued before April 1.
~Rqen81.afted
LOS A NG ELES (AP> -
Criticism of a proposal to use Oo-
tarlo Motor Speedway as the site
COt" Expo '81 bas been unanimous·
ly endorsed by the Los Angeles
City Council.
The councll's action came in
reaction to a dran environmental
impact st.atement <EIS> com·
piled by the u .s~ Department or
Commerce, which endorsed the
Ontario plan.
But the report suggested tbe
federal EIS overlooked such
matters as the "raldual use
potential" for the proposed 1,000
to l ,SOO residential units that
would be needed to create a "new
city" at the Ontario Site.
Dfnew B i t• Reeord
Walt Disney Productions
Worldwide film r«ltals, lnchJd·
lng television, decreased slightly
to $26,1:58,000. However. foreign,
film revenues Increased 20.4 per·
cent to a record $9,127,000, wblle
worldwide television revenues·
Increased 31 4 percent to
'9.210.000
Disneyland. which ex.
perienced heavy rains during
several days of the Cbrlstmu
holiday vacation period, report·
ed total attendance ror the first
quart.er of 1,743.000. 6.9 percent
behind the p~vtous year.
tt'e9elt te 1'1eet
Tbe National Association of
Women in Construction, Orange
Cowtty chapter. will meet al the
Anaheim Hyatt House at &:30
p.m . Jan. 25.
The chapter will offer a 12-
leasoo course on basic fundamen·
Lals Of cooatructioo. Further in·
rormatloo Is available from
Kathryn Clay, at 956-9900.
Sitting Nutt y
Face-to-Face 2-seater
ClllCAGO <AP) -Uke something different for your
ll ving room? Try a Peanut love seat.
The Peanut, with cushions that look like peanuts in a
shell, was the big attraction at tbe winter home furnisbings
show this week. Tbe two-seater ls 89 inches long, with a back
rest oo each side so people can sit facing one another.
THE PEANUT, PRODUCED BY A 71-year -old Berne,
Ind., firm. was an idea that grew out or last fall's face-to.
face presidential debates and President-eleet Carter's
peanut business. sald Jay Yager. a Berne official.
"We've never dooe anything like this before," be said.
''The rest of our line is completely traditional.''
Yager says the sofa's fabric is 100 percent nylon and
flame retardant in case political disCUSSJOOS get too hot.
They retail for $929.00 and there is a month's wait for de-
livery.
O ,·er Th ~ Counter
NASO Listinqs
MUTUAL FUNDS
Vp • and Do..,,..
.,
,.
I
I
•'
.,
I
Friday"if
Closing Pric~s NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
.
I
Friday January 14, HJ77 l /N DAILY PILOT ,tf)
Salt, Sulphur, Etc.
Car Corrosion
Can Be Avoided I
8ySYLVJA POlrl'ER :
llalf the can ln the United Stain arc in areas whuo
CIOltly corrosion co.n be 11ttackin& doo~. front and reat
quarter panda, rocket panels, tenders, tho back window•
eYeD under the vinyl top on the roof. •
Snow tan•t the only probl'1n. Salt and sulphur -the lat,
tt:l'ftom sea alr -maybe the culprits. So may air polluUo~
So may exhaust fumes.
And tl\is is no minor expense. RI.lit and corrosion call
COit you more than SLOO a year \n automobile d~preclaUon:
But the e xpense oeed not be endured. PrevenUve treat•
ments during the first 3.000 mUes after purchase c~
eliminate the danger.
Countless thousands
0( ID-to 15-year·old cars
are still giving their
owners good service and
abowlnc little evidence
ol structural deteriora·
Uon. Equal numbers,
Money's
Worth
le. than 10 years old, are in junkyards because rust has
eaten them. Between the extremes, warns the Department
orTransportatioo, are uncounted thou.sands more that have
5\lltained varying degrees or structural decay -some
merely unsightly, others actually a threat t.o Ute and still Oil
the streets.
i\N'f CAR CAN RUSf. The problem defies cheap Te•
medy beuuse auto owners frequently fail to recognize It iQ
time. But it ca.o be averted.
Treatments for the area within the walls or the auto'$
body ('an run from $70 to SlSO. Treatments for the exterior
can add $115 to Sl50 to the car's irutial cost. Mer three
years. a treated car int~ snow belt may be worth $30().$500
more than a n untreated car
Traditional optional auto widercoatings do not prevent
corrosion. s.ay industry leaders. They serve primarily to
deaden sound.
··No rustproofing compound will protect swfaces caked
with dirt. nalti~. rust. ""8ter-soaked crevices or mlssed
areas." says the Corrosion Engineers Assn. "If (compound
is> not thoroughly applied, the protection will not be
achieved. The results are no better than the skill of the
;nechanics. ·· Here aTe some suggestions:
-Check the firm's reputation with the Better Buslnes~
~au before having the car rustproofed .
.. -Note the clauses In the warranty, particularly in re.
gard le.' J1Ubsequent responsibility for exterior rast.
-Defore buying a used car, examine it tarefully for
rust. Be alert for s igns m repainting and body putty lha~
ntight dis., uise arus Where rust already has damaged lhd
car. I
-aEMO\VE THE SPAllE 111lE AND examine the tir1
well m station wagons. Lift 'he mat on the floor in the thirq
seat area. chec).. ror rust and metal weakness. ln other can,
lift the mat in the.trunk. carpellngi.npassenger areas.
-Drive lbe c1•r through a car wash to spot leaks.
-For periodic \-naintenance, keep the car clean, wash it
at least twice a year., hose down the underside twice a year
in areas where sand oad salts are used on roads. In sandy
country. flust\ the ''~cle's underside. Keep drain boles in
th~ bottom of the car doors open. Alter washing, leave c,ar
doors ajar for a f ew mimnes to permit water drainage.
-Write for "Auton.•otive Rust -Its Causes and
Prevention." Pa mphlet Nu. 501E. Coosumer Information,
Center, Pueblo, Colo. 81009. 1~ 's free.
\.,
Doubt's on Interest
Hit Stock Mm*et
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock ma-it~ wag nUxed to-
day, held back by doubts about 'the int~ rat.e outlook.
Tradlng was active.
The Dow Jones averue of 30 indwitri.'6t stock&, Ill> 7.90
on Thursday dropped 3.99 points to972.16.
Gainers held a 7..f> lead over J05ers amo.">C New York
Stock Exchange-listed issues.
Weekly statistics issued after the NYSE clO\le Oil1 Thurs·
day showed a sharp rise in the nation's money supply.
Analysts s aid some investors saw &he tiao.res as a
negative omen ror Federal Reserve credit policy, i.Uld thus
as a signal that short-term interest rates might SQCIO turn
upward.
OoarJ ones1l v~rage•
New Yor-CAPI R,,.l l»#·J~ •-119"
STOCICS
30 Ind u~'n" '1~1N° '~~; ~°"j'._ ~ 20 Trn "' U 23S II 117 )() '3U6-I ct tS UU 107'5 IOI .. 10104 1 .. 11• Olt
6S Stk "' u uo.n i•~ •s 31a.10-o _. ·~ l>)t,.ac> fr~ J.(S.500
Utll• :111,DCIO 6S SIC.. 1.310.100
A •t-rkan ~eader•
Wliat Stoclu Did
N£W YORI( 1AP)
s,, .....
,4J0 DAil Y PILOT Friday. January 14, 1m
hM.Bogd 'Clark on
Marijuana
Wonder Drug? I
A r~eaTcber who makl'$ it b.la business to
keep up with all the latest medical discoveries
taYI be bas read during the last month 18 new
reports about marijuana. Half of them in-dicate the weed ts not just useless medically
but potentially dangerous. The other half sug-
aest lt could be developed into some sort of
wonder drug to relieve hlgh blood pressure,
treat migraine headache. and reduce fever.
And to that lengthlng list of never-die one-
ltners add : 1. Old teachers never die, they're
just degraded. 2. OJd
clerb never die, they're Just deflled. 3. Old cowboys oever die, they're just de·
ranged.
Only one out of every
100 stowaways is female,
don't forget.
APOUSTER
Q, "You're always
quoting the pollsters. I've
never seen one. What's a pollster look like?••
County Supervi10
Ralph Clark w.s •P·
pointed this week t<>I
hia seventh one-year
term on tbe Orange County Transit Dislrictj
«>CTD) board of direc·•
tors.
Clark ·s appointment!
came as Orange Countyl
Board of Supervisors'
Chairman Thomas Riley
announced 19'17 work as~
signments lor the five
county supervisors. •
NAMED TO the transl~
district board along with
Clark was newly elected
Supervisor Philip An·
t.booy.
Riley also named An-
lhooy and himself as the
board of supervisors
representatives on the
county Local Agency
Private Contractors
Save County $184,000
Ron Novello, an
., • ..,, .. pllOOll \~ ... ~ .... ~~-....... .
•""'-••.wt•~~l"'°'rf't
A. Typically, though with numerous ex-
ceptions, that pollster is probably a mi~dle·
aged woman inconspicuously dressed with a
blue and white button on her coat and with a
pencil and clip board in one hand and a folder
9f interview sheets in the other.
Orange County of-
ficials believe they have
saved $184,000 the past
eight months by hiring
private contractors to do
routine maintenance
work.
lant director Of the COOD
ty Environmenta
Management Agenc <EMA) said that .
May the county has ·
ing, along with main-l\CNIUOIYSTRAICHT BOURBONWHISl\(T llOPllOOf 01~11lllOAH080fllCOBV tenance of curbs, gut-________ _.::.JAN.f.:::::.;:s~s..!:8{~~~01S1='L:.:llHC=::CO::..:..::.Cl~l.::.:RM::.::O::..:.Nr;..;ac:=AM::"::'::::::::::=======--ters. flood control chan·
U talking to your house plant doesn 'l
tnake it perk up, you might try repotting it in
sterilized dirt. What you do is bake the new .eotJ tor JO minutes in a preheat.ed oven at 180
clegrees F. to kill the fungi that sometimes cripple such plants.
GANGSTERS
A man who has tended bar professionaJJy·
over many years in big towns too numerous to
mention here says bis lavorite customers
have been gangsters. They're more dignified,
better dressed and higher Uppers, be recalls.
More. better and higher than whom? Than
stockbrokers, certainly, he says .
Stockbrokers laugh too loudly at dirty jokes.
Lawyers are good humored, but patronizing.
Doctors pretend familiarity, but become of-
fended if not addressed by title. As for actors,
they're impossible, on stage all the time. just
never s hut it down.
Most brides would rather shop in the big
supermarkets than in the neighborhood
grocery stores. It's not just a case or more
choices and lower prices, either. Marketing
men who found this out say they've learned
that brides oftentimes aren't sure of what they
want. The self.service supermarkets let them
browse without the embarrassment of having
to ask clerks naive questions.
Addre" mailto L. M. Boyd, P.O. Boz 1560, Costa
Meta.~.
Deaths Euewhere
LOS ANGELES (AP) lional Foundation, d_ied
-Funeral services will Wednesday at a ho_sp1taJ
be held Saturday for syn-here alter suffering a
dicated arts and crafts hearUttack.
columnist Mildred
Gibson Claarclalll, 77 .
trbo originated a project
that provided more than
three million self-
1mprovement booltl to
underprivileged
children, Peace Corps
YOlunteers and military
families. Mrs. Churchill
diedWedbesday.
IALtz.naaH.oM
rutaAL. HOWi
Corona del Mar 673-9450 Costa Mesa e464424
181. llOAOWAY
MOITUAH
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
&42-9150
W.COIMIC:a
MOllTUARllS
l..llguna Beach
41M·IM15
Laouna Hills 788-0933
Sen Juan Capistrano
495-1776
PACflltC YllW
...OIJALPAU
Cemetery Mortuaty
Ctiapel
mX> Pllclfic View Drive
Newport,
Callfomla
~700
PmPA.Mfl.T
c:.o&.OMAI. NBM
NOMI
780t BolN Ave. w .. tmlnsttr
893-3525
M1MS' MotTUAIY eu Main St. Hui1tlngton Beach
53H539
INmt TVTHILL &.AMI
OUI ~CHA ..
llllol1Ullf)' •• 848-4888
427 E. 11th st~ ec.taM ..
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.
(AP> -A memorial
service will be held Jan.
19 at Massachusetts
Institute of TecbnoJogy
for Prof. Ban•·Lakas
Teaber, 60. a leading
behavioral scientist who
apparently suffered a
heart attack while swim-
ming in the British
Virgin Islands. where be
was vacaUoning.
In a reporl lo
supervisors this week,
30 firms to provide som
street sweeping, tre
trimming and park mow-
County Endones
Library Funding
1 An application for $91,500 in federal funds for
two library programs has woo the endorsement of
Orange County Supervisors.
The funds will be sought through the Santiago
Library System. a joint agency which includes
county libraries, along with those in Huntington
Beach, Newport Beach and six other cities
COUNTY OFflaALS said $63,000 would be
used to supply library materials to 23 community
centers operated by various agencies throughout
the county.
The remaining $28,500 would be used to prepare
slide shows and other materials encouraging school
children to use their libraries.
Photo, Poster
Contest Slated
A photo and poster
contest is being held in
conjunction with a Pet
Faire at the Orange
County Fair and Exposi·
ti.OD Center Feb. 4 to 6.
The contest is open to
50 Free
Lectures
On Card
More than SO public
lectures, most or which
are free, will be offered
during the spring
semest er at Orange
youngsters between five
and 18 years old and the
subject matter must per-
taln to animals.
eoastCoJJege. F~-11 ton The lectures will meet uuer
nels and rights or way.
IF mE SAME work
bad been done by county
employes, Novello said,
it would have cost an ex·
tra $184,000.
Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich said EMA of.
ricials should be en-
couraged to look into
other areas where COUO·
ty dollars could be saved
by hiring private coo·
tract.ors.
NOVELLO SAID the
county expects to save
another $87,000 this year
by using add1Uonal con-
tracts, and officials
would continue seeking
other areas where
money could be saved.
The program since
May bas eliminated six
positions that would
have been needed for
William Mason Regional
Park in Irvine, Mile
Square Park in Fountain
Valley and Rossmoor
Community Park in
Rossmoor, Novellosaid.
Associate
Appointed
for four sessions each. •
Topics include: "Slart· Man Guilty ing a Business," "Real ~
Estate for the
CoMumer," "Cardlo-In SJ • Pulmonary Resuscita-&ymg jt
t.ioo," "This Month in 8
Your Garden," "Women Ao Orange County 0 and the System," Superior Court jury baa
"Landscape Painting returned a guilty verdict ~:a.c
Workshops," .. Antiques in the murder trial ol a
a n d C o l I e c t i b 1 e • man wbo used a oine-
Cet'amics," and "Slim inch lmile to kill another
Chance in a Fat World." man wblle they argued •
A Ustofthe lectures of-in a Fullerton apart-~
fered is in OCC's sJ>rini menL ~
claaaschedule. For more Judie Lester Van ..J
in form a t I on • ca II Tatenhove accepted the ~
556-5880. verdict of second degree 1
murder and set Jan. 2S ! C11P E..,(1111, u the date be will sen-~
...., tence Aniseto Alomo v
Acosta, 23, Fullerton, to •
S MOU MONTHS OF SKIING
SNOWNOWf
&IJSGO
SKIING
2411M SIOW PIOIE Ml·M
..--~-..~-..
'300 Sii PICUIE SPECIALS
FREE
WHnlSTAG
SPEEDO SWll SUITS OiacAI li:wd c*t
Hotol .....
..... $1100 Giia .... '3.95
... "suoca.,. ..... '2.95
···"Pr'.......... • '-610 ..... '1 &3 --~ ...... .... t.u2AO • ....,me .... .,.,
=~~... s17ase .... U0.00 .,--
-~ .............. ~......, '163• ..... ~ .......
... t.2n.AO
NSTAllWID
1m .IACI lllCIUll
GOLF SET
3 WOOOS$11!.MI 8lRONS UU--
.. ,.a1Um&mllT ::..~f ...... .... :.=-..... ....
SPORT SllOIS " HEUOUAllEIS ..•. .-.......
•.-i.L ·--·!ml .........
of
re
Sc.L -J. ·l' _ J wbat could be a state .,,
'TW(,IU, ~ prlaon term or five years ~
Applications for theol· toUfe. ~ ficer entrance examina· Acoeta was arTeSted·
tion are now being ac· last Sept. 3 alter Amado
cept.ed by the California Federico Orozco, 24, ol I Highway Patrol. Men Anabelm, was killed in
and women from ages 21 Acoeta 's apartment..
toatareeUgible.
A.n open house to dis-Grant N ed
CUIS career OP · am ~
portunities and answer Dr. WUUam A. Onnt • . SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS
questions wUl be con· of Garden Grove b tbe ~
ducted by Officer John new president of the ~
Galvan at 7 p.m., Fri~ Southern Callfornla ~
at tbe SaDta Ana offlce, Veterinary Medical Alr !f m E. Santa Clara A.e. IOd8tiob (SCVllA). •
SENIOR CITIZENS low Off All m JV Pare••••• l.\'Cft1qt4 o'".lc. ·~UKtt~c.~Td~OJ:~~ •LAH .4hodSlno"VW.' ;:f ll Pn·hll U ........ H-4 I.ALU
• a ll ege Ph;lr m·a cy!
. .. . I := PUSS
•
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C1ooN from •tl«fed groups from~. H"""'1f, ' Hlftrcdon. AU ~U r-.c.d ra:::'!::.: ~~ fvndhlr9 °" .. '° -bldt ~ ~ Oii .-...... ~°' Wood~ S1wmll, II~ CorlM, SIGllCOft COOS*, & VCll!QtlOrd.
Stop '1111010 to v'.w Uw ~.orrar ol <l'IOUtu ~· rfdvced ~ JOr p.
Free Delivery and Design Service Avallable.
7d "'°" ~e#lett, 1~#
fORRAlllCf ue•e HMlllOIM 01~
12131 )fl. 1270
I ltM' furnlrul'I' ~•Ill l111~rlur IWjn
NEWPORT BCACH
1727 We11d ltl 0..
17141 642·2050
Al.l STO'IU ~DAV THfllU aATVfllOAV -t AM lO I JO""
1.AOUNA BEACH
J.4!1 NMdl CCIMl Hwy.
17141 A04'6M1
•
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,(
Riches to Rags to • • •
By DENNIS McLEU..AN
Ol IM 01ily ~ii .. SUtl
Whal do you do if you 're a
UCLA graduate with a masters
in business administration and
you've reached your goal of be-
ing chief financial officer for a
major company?
And all this by the age of 30.
If you're Jeff Welles or Hunt·
ington Beach you sell your house,
car and other assets, take a
$20,000 pay cut and get a job as a
dishwasher.
It isn't as crazy as it sounds.
There was a method to Well es'
madness.
While he had attained one am-
bition, be had another dream: To
go into business for himself. ll
wasn't unti I he was vice-
president and controller for
Specially Restaurants that he de-
cided that the business would be
restaurants.
Although be knew the financial
end or it thoroughly. he knew
nothing about the day-to-day
operation
"AFTER THINKING it over, it
became clear the only way to get
training is by going out and doing
it." says Welles, now 32.
The president of the company
thought he was "crazy" when
Welles told him he was leaving to
work as a dishwasher.
But learning of Welles' plan to
buy his own restaurant, the pre-
sident offered to give him the
training in return for his agree·
ing to manage one of the com-
pany's restaurants for a period or
Lime. Agreed.
The die was cast: Welles
turned in his pencil for a scrub
brush.
He reported to work at the
company's restaurant on the
Queen Mary. F or three weeks he
wash ed dishes a nd cleared
tables. Next he moved up to mak-
REA ANDERSON, Editor
Friday, January 14, 19n 81
ing sauces, salads and desserts.
Then he advanced to line cook.
During the next six months he
worked in banquet sales and
served as bartender and butcher.
"I HAD A hell of a lot of run,"
he says. ·'I learned a lot. Looking
back, I really couldn't justify go-
ing into the business without hav-
ing that detailed training."
He acknowledged that many
restaurateurs start out on the
ground floor and work their way
up. But someone in his position
normally would invest In a
restaurant and pay someone else
to run it.
As his part of the bargain re-
quired, he spent the next nine
months managing one or the
company's restaurants in Dana
Point. He also used that time for
looking for a suitable restaurant
to buy.
H.e looked at 53 different loca-
tions, finally finding one he felt
suitable on Bristol Street in Costa
Mesa. But he did more than
change the name to Oliver's.
A thousand square feet was
added to the former soup and
s andwich operation. (Welles
served as general contractor.)
IN CRJ;ATING the homey al·
mosphere he wanted, 60-year-old
barn wood from Oregon and'
Washington was used for panel·
ing. Century-old ranch shingles
were used in the lobby.
The dinner house decor was
completed with lattice-work,
wallpaper, old schoolroom lamps
and antique photographs. His
wire, Lynn, made the seat
cushion covers and the couple re-
finished the oak chairs and table
tops.
With Rod Clark as chef and
Caron Coache and Philo Mlller
aiding Welles as managers, the
restaurant, after five months
work, opened several weeks ago.
Looking back on bis decision to
give up a high-paying job and
lairing a chance in a business
where, be claims, nine out of 10
restaurants fail, Welles says:
"People thought we were
absolutely crazy because 1 really
had an Ideal job."
Although he ignored the
criticism, he allows that because
he reached the top of bis field so
fast, it wasn't quite as traumatic
to give it all up.
Had he been In bis 40s and
spent 20 years working for ~hat
he bad, be admits, he might not
have been so willing to give up
the comfortable life.
Yet, says the father of two
young children, "it really was
tough the day the moving van
pulled up to the house."
He recommends that others
not put off doing what they really
want in life, providing "you have
the guts to stick it out."
"If you're a husbarid and
wife," he adds, "it will only work
if both are equally committed to
the struggle. It is just as bard, if
not harder, on the family. I could
never have done it without a good
woman."
Besides, as he thought at the
time of making his decision, the
worst that couJd happen is that
they could lose all their money.
"It's only money."
Then he would have to go back
to work as a financial officer. But
at least two or three years of talk·
ing about going into business for
himself would have been put into
action.
Artwork Changes
0.H• ..U.. .._._, "•lr1<• 0'-11
Restaurateur Jeff Welles pours
coffee at Oliver's, his · dinner
house in Costa Mesa~ He
gave up a job as chief financial
officer to go into
business for himself.
. . • #
~
. • • . . • , • I
i ,. • , . •
Colors Her Trademarl<
0.11,,. .... _.....,,,\.ee .......
Artist Tuzette Palm(j]r paints with impressionist style.
By MARCIA FORSBERG
Of 1M 011" ~flet Slalf
While other children were dol-
ing out their spending money for
candy, Tuzelte Palmer saved her
allowance for pencils and paper.
Her favorite hangout until she
was 10 years old was the sta·
tionery store near her girlhood
home on 24th Slreet in Los
Angeles.
"I remember one saleswoman
in particular,•· she said.
"She took an interest and gave
me an insight into what paper
was all about. We went into the
supply d epartment and she
brought out different types."
Miss Palmer recalled saving
for a large piece or expensive
Strathmore paper.
"I was mainly a copyist then,
reducing and blowing up pic-
tures, making them exact," she
noted.
Today . at 37, she is the painter
she has longed to be all her life.
She Is modest about her work,
admittin g. "I didn't ever
think I really would be<:ome an
artist ...
A one-woman showing, featur-
ing 38 pieces of her recent and
new work, is on display through
January at classical music radio
station K FA C's Skinny Art
Gallery on Wilshire Boulevard.
Miss Palmer's lmpreulonisUc
style is characterbed by dabs
and strokes of both vivid and
pastel colors.
A mNT of van Gogh, a touch of
Cezanne. a trace of Gauguin
might be r ecognized, but her
style is str ictly her own and
never a restatement of earlier
artists.
''I'm impressionable," she not·
ed. ·'so I intentionalJy have never
studied the actual works or any
other painter.
"I've read about various
artists. I know van Gogh's life
and feel like I know him. But I'm
afraid or copying."
Her work has undergone a
series or changes over the years.
"I was a Norman Rockwell
idol, tight and very much an ad·
v~ate of sticking to traditions of
form and realism .
"I'm still involved with form
a nd s hape, but it's dirferent
now."
Miss Palmer confessed that
she was ''scared to death of col·
or" for a long time. "I was con·
sumed wlth how to convey
something just in black and
white."
All her paintings were done in
light shades, and "rather than
use a real, bold, pure color, they
would be washed down with
turpentine," she added
ONE CHRISTMAS morning
she went to the Uving room,
looked at the clutter and chaos o(
ribbons and wrapping papers
and "went all the way over-
board.''
The breakfast ti~e painting.
that resulted hangs 111 the entry•
hall of the Corona del Mar home:
she shares with her mother.
"I was experimenting with
how many colors I couJd put
down," she realized. The finished
product is a big, fearless canvas
rioted with vi bra ting brillfance.
"The colors started to now in
my work," she said. "It was the
rainbow for me. After a drab and
dreary day, the sun came out and
there was color.''
Miss Palmer has no reslric·
tions on subject matter. "I paint
anything and everything. My
people aren't partraits. They are
more like statements that are, I
hope, valid.''
SHE USES acrylics to fashion
"people I've seen and places I've
been in my mind," she said.
Miss Palmer revealed tha\
"the inner m ind is full of thing!'
that I've collected. It can be a
library, or a museum."
The artist celebrated her 18th
birthday in the hospital. A tumor
in her spinal cord has resulted in
wheel chair living ever since.
During a rehabilitation period,
she was awarded a full
scholarship to the California
Institute or the Arts where she
graduated with a bachelor's
degree in 1966 .
·~Divorce: ~ Time to Build Anew
•I ...
1 ••
..
By BEA ANDERSON
0t111e 011ty ~• ... sea"
Dealing with emotions to get
on wttb a more positive lite is the
focus of an ongoina four-part
seminar, designed to help people
with divorce problem5.
Offered by the FarnlJy Service
Aaociatlon or Orange County on
Saturday momings, Ule course wu written and is taught by John
Taylor, MSW, Ucensed social
1'0r'ktr and coWU1elor.
In ht. introductory remarks.
Taylor, who was divorced and
now remarried, dispels many
11\)'tha about divorce and uses
blmaell as an example that "you •make It throuab."
"Sure, ad.JwiUng to a single life la scary, but it dot8 h.ve a de·
flll1te eodln1," Taylor assured.
"It's difficult because getting
used to being part of a couple is
done so quickly and easily."
ln a couple relationship, he
said, feelings of aelf-tdenlily,
esteem, want.a and needs usually are set.
"It's hard to 1tart thinking
about what ls best for you ... to
become selfish and develop a
new self."
Other myths and comments in·
elude:
-Unable to handle rela·
tioMhlps. "It is troe that you
were unable to handle this
part.lcuiar one, but you handle
others with family and friends
which proves you are capable."
-Lou of friends. "A certain
percentage will drop off -the
altuaUon la scary to lbem, too,
because they don't know how to
. .. . -
treat you, and they may feel
threatened that this could happen
to them. They don't want to loot
at that possibility."
"About half will stick with you
if you don't put them In the mid·
dle. They want to be friends of
both.
"11\,ere's some reality in the
single peraon being a th.real, but
not if the couple bas a good mar-
riage."
-Monetary fears. "Most work
out an equitable agreement, but
even lf you lose everything It doesn't have to be permanent,"
be told male particit>ant.s.
"Wben you get over the
divorce and have a ha~y ainale
U/e, )'OU let all thote I back.
"For women.'' be sal • ':Jt ls
an Ideal lime to retu,n to or belJa
a career .
"For both, it is a great op-
portunity to build an emotionally
sound life. Ways to do UU..," he
aa1d, ''are pursue the hobbles you
ba\te always put ott.l._ t~e ~
some kind of aporta, nna wlMlre
your lntereata are and are not. It
is as important lo know 'fhat you
don't like as what you do like.
''And.•• he augeested,
"cbangu."
''U a move to a new locaUoo
Jan't fee,slble or •PP"llng, at
least change the furniture
around. Make your home you and
get rid of the 1host.s.
"Changes ln •J>pearance allo
are beneffclaJ. Go on tbat diet
you bavt always promised to
do. • .get a new bait style. • .or
newelOlbtt." -You're not thlnldna about the
cblldttn. You're ruln.lq thetr
Jives. "These are only half
truths.
"Of coune you think about
them. And, yes, chUdn!n do have
a bard lime, but remember they
are a lot more elastic tban.
adults.
"The biggest thing you can do
for them 11 to get out of your blue
fUnk and get on with your Uvea.
1be IOODer you do, the SOOGel' the
children will too,•' be promised.
"It's bard not to talk about
divorce wh•n that is the biggest
thing going on ln your life. It's
good to take a break from the_,e
thoughts. Give yourself
permiallon.
'1Practlcal Issues take your
tnind off lbe hurt and pain."
Ta1lor empathi&ea over the
difficulty of rlddin1 emotions and
recommended "experiencing
and expressln1 them. If yoo do,"
be promlled, "they will tend to
dlJslpate."
However, he cautioned, there
lt a fine line between '3Cperienc-
ing and dwelllnt whlcb abould be
avoided.
Other pltf alla to •void Include:
-GeneralluUona. 'l'bey lead
<See orvoacs. PllelD
-·
R OM. Y PILOT Friday, January 14, 1m
Habit Cures Leftovers Problem (Ann Landers ~
DEAR ANN LANDERS: WUl
you tell me, pleue, what ii tbe
maUer with an adult wbo a!mply
MUST bave a taat.e of what.ever it
on tomeone elae's plate? Both
mY bmband and bla brother are
like thll and it aDDOYI me ter·
ribly. '11lanb for any lnatgbta
you micbt bave on tbia revolting
habit -F . L . OF WELL ·
INGTON,KAN. .
........ .-aQ:r .......... .-..an..,_.11 .. ...-ea.1r , ...................... ....
"'.necdl9 to ... I• a &Me. A,.._ wllo-.NOl'f_,
h1eedl1 wW DOt .... C-.erweb'.
die .............. r..-. Jhlq
1'CJU H id. But painful -DO.
I had the operation 18 months aso and experienced very little
dlacomfort. Wllhin 30 dayg I was
back on the tennis court feeling
like a mllllon dollars.
And there we re side benefits I
didn't expect. Getting rid of those
pendulous breasts gave me the
impetus to go on a diet. (For
years I felt like a cow and I ale like one.)
operatioo for any womsn wbo
has the problem. Ky M-year-old
mother bad hers done sill weeb
after l did mine. Sbe now PYI
it's the best thing that ever hap-
pened to h er . -SWEATER
GIRL-AGEt2
Toni&ht five of us girls who wort
ln the same building bad dlnner
t.ocetber at a good restaurant.
(Dutch treat.) The (ood WU ex·
cellent and so waa the service.
from you? -STUM PED
DEAR ST U MPED: Tbe
•altnu wbo served yoa dkha't won len bard because )'Oil ~
female. Womea aboa.ld Up for
llel'Vtces a1 weU aa men.
DEA& F.L.: 'Rat "aetoWDS
lta•H" I• a .. aa1o•er from
eMIAud wltea klD med &o aay, •'Glm•• a ~m." I am especial· ly latereate4 la 1acll people
beeame I am OH my.elf.
a ..... doee ... feel Meedl7
&owanl U.. pe ..... wM ..U.
SlaartnS la wita.t flfee Mlp ud
io.e are all abMt. (P .& I ,... bablJ &old 1• aen tllaa ,..
wuted &o bow ud r. 811'1
aboaUlaat.)
'Jbe beat news is that my in·
surance policy covered all CIOlts.
I was able t.o prove I needed the
surgery to ellmlnate back and
shoulder pains. It wa.s not simply
a "cosmetic" procedure.
DEAR SWEATER Gl&L: ft'• DOt posalble lo ....... pe.la.
Some btdh1daala cu ..,.. a
creat deal -otllen. V«J bu.le.
Yoa. obviouly, are a ftr1 '** lady.
Wben it came time to pay our
checks. I started to figure out
what to leave the waitress.
One of the group (well-traveJed
and sopblJUcat.ed> loaisted that
since we were all women it
wasn't proper lo lea~ a tlp. Two
of us felt she wu WT'CJO&. The
other two didn't mow for sure
but were inclined to side with
"Miu Well-Traveled."
Don't get burned by a "line"
that's too hot lo handle. Play It
cool with Ann Landen'• guide to "Necking aod Pettlnl -What
Are the Limits?" Send your re-
quest to Ann Landers, P.O. Box
1400, Elgln, Ill. 60120, enclosing
50 cents In coin and a long,
stamped . s elf-addressed en-
velope.
DEAR ANN LANDERS:
Usually your advice Lt rtcht on
target but your comments oo
breast reduction SUJ'lery were a wee bit off. It IS expenalve, u
Moel wometa HJ tlile.,......
18 paJahal bat ~y acne M II well
wortll &be dl9c:omfort. 11t.aBb fw
t.be testlmoalal.
J ~~at adwlta wM mat
tu&e ... , .. 00 &be plat.es of Pleue. Ann, recommend this DEAR ANN LANDERS: May we have the final word
Beauty Multi-faceted
By lUDITB OLSON Ol-D.ity~ .....
Lisa ~I. as a na-
tiooal traloing director
for Estee Lauder,
t r aveled th e U .S .
teaching women bow to
be be.eutiful.
She found that "the
Ame rican woman In
general doesn't like
herself. She is in a rut.
She wants someone to
shake her up. Women
are basically insecure."
Ms. Borel ts more than
ready to ·'shake up" as
many women as pout.
ble, to teach them that
anyone can be beautiful
wlth just a little
knowledge and lnapira.
li<ln.
The Huntlngtoa Be.ch
resident ls an inspiration
herself. sum and simply
dressed, she looks much
loo young to have a
daughter who is a rum
star in Rome.
or fruit Ju.i« when they beC1n tbeir treatmeata or conaultaUona.
"Tbe number one lh1nC ls wat.er, though.
and you 3hould drink
mineral water." Ms.
Borel llresaed. "I doo't
believe in coffee.
Anythlna that can create
an acid reactloo in the
body should be avoided.
"A person shouldn't
eat too much fruit. I ad·
vocate a blgb-protein
diet. But no meat. I don't
believe It's necessary for a woman's body.
"I llke seafood. I've
always been 011 the slim
side and I attribute it t.o lack of meat.··
Watu additionally is
import.ant to a wot:QaD's
beauty regime. Ms .
Botti asserted. She ad·
vocates b a ths over
showers because they
have a calming effect
and off• an opportunity
for a thorough cleansing.
"The American
woman doesn't UD·
deratand this. She
abowen in a hurry.
womeo bow to apply
make·up properly and
bow to dress smartly. ''1
don't want a carbon copy
look." she said. "1 help a
woman get a look d her own, with what she bas.
"Women think they
need 10 diffe r e n t
dresses. They only need
four basic sulu to ac-
cesaorhe.''
The Zurich-bo rn
esthet.ician alao will br·
log in a skilled haircutter
ii a client wants a new
colfture. and she bas de·
veloped her own line of
make-up.
She also is learning
reflexology (the study or
feet and bow they relate
to the rest of the body>
and offers "therapeutic
pedJcures."
Finally, Ms. Borel is a
crusader against smok· ini· "This is the No. 1
cause of aging," she as·
serted. "Sun is the
second worst.••
Ms. Borel la excited
about her work and
"This program ap..
peals especially to the
business and won:t.na girl wbo faces competi· •
tioo. 1 want to educate
them.
"I WANT TO teach re-
verence for the body. A
woma n s ho uld care
about her body and be
proud of it.''
Since the door to of Ms.
Borers establishment la
tucked away beb.lnd a row or offices in Newport
Beach. It offers privacy
to those who come, in·
eluding several pro·
fessionaJ men who slip in
from time to time <ooe
t e nni s pro gets a
pedicure every week).
Ms. Borel would like to
h a ve more men a s
clients bec ause she
believes they need the
relaxing treatments just
as mucb as their wives.
For anyone who's
down, a vi.sit to Ms. Borel
la a guaranteed tonic. "I
love life," ahe proclaims.
believes she bas a good ---------
future lo Newport r--.m~nll"1m.--.
0.lly Pllol """911Y &.l.Mf'r(M
Lisa Borel teaches skin care, nutrition.
A former bigb fubion
model and modeling
teacher, Ma. Borel
studied skin care and
beauty at Lancome in
Part.a. then married a
Swiss diplomat and
traveled extensively.
Aft.er living in Holland,
Germany, France and
Greece, Ms . Borel
moved lo the U.S. and
s tarted her be auty
''I DO A LOT ot DlY
be auty things in the
bath, such as facials and
cleansing of tbe skin."
Beach. "Women here
need someone to explain
these things to them, to
help them become more
secure and self·
sufficient.
UPHOLSnRY
Ma. Borel alao teaches
W...Y•W• .......
t'22 ....... ~ c........_ Aquarius: Tension career. ---------~---~~~--~-~~-----~
SATURDAV, JANUARY
IS
By SYDNEY OM ARR
A&IES <Ma r ch 21·
April 19 ): Accent oo
journey, writing that at·
tracts more·than-usuaJ
attention. Open lines of
communication. Partner
or mate 1ets favorable
report conce rn in g
pouesaions. finances.
TAURUS (April 20· )(~ 2JI)): Costs. produc-
tion Ume, creative eo-
deavon are spotllgbt.ed.
Key DOW ts diplomacy,
especially where family
i.I coocemed. Go slow.
Uatm, observe.
GElllNI (May 21..June
20): Anawen come from
wttblD -be quiet eoouab
to bear your own VOice.
J!:mpbula OD legalities;
cooperaUve efforts. com·
mltment to one wbo
aided you tn recent put.
CANCB8 (.June 21·
July 22): Bulld, or·
pni.&e, brtq priorities
into focus. Accent on
service, e mployment,
gene r a l well being,
health . Mo deration
should be keynote . Avoid
extremes.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Creative juices now: you
shake o ff l e thargy.
Fini.ab assignment. task.
ne loose ends. VlllGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22): New approach wins
pl a u dits . Express
yoorself. Refuse to be in·
tlmidated by tradition.
Relali ve conveys good
news. Cbect calls. mail
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct.
22>: You are sensitive to
moods of others, more so
than us u a l. Relative
could confide about
security or lack of it.
Trust your own intuition.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23.
Nov. 21 ): Emphasla on
collections, payments,
rwcovery of stolen goods,
loat o:Jne:ta. You learn by as -thus, give
Weddings ~
and Engagements
To avoid disappointment. prospective
hrides are reminded to have their wedding
stories with black and white ~lossy
photographs to the Daily Pilot People
D.partment one v.eek before lhe wedding.
Pictures r ecel\t.'CI aftN that time will
not be uud
For engagement announcements 1t is
imperative that t he story, also ar rom-
penied by a black and white glossy pie·
ture. be submitted six weeks or more
before the wedding date : otherwise it will
not be pubh5hed.
To help fill requirements on btlth wed·
ding and engafement stories, rorm:> are
available in al Dally Pilot offices. Fur·
ther questions wlll be answered by People
Department starr members at 642-4321.
Inte rested in every
full play to intellectual behind scenes.
curiosity. AQUAKllJS (Jan.
facet or a woman's loob,
from her make-up to ber
wardrobe and welpt,
Ms. Borel helps women
solve their problem.a in a
pleasant, class-waJJed,
plant-filled Newport
Beach studio.
SAGITrARIUS <Nov. :!G-Feb.18): Accentoore-
22-Dec. 21): Break with lief of teMlons, standard
tradition. Rebuild on agreements, wish fulfill·
your own time and ment. romantic lo·
terms. Your posltioll is terlude.
stronger than mlgbt. be PISCES (Fe b. 19·
apparentoosurface.Cy-March 20 ): Refine ~~ ~~ your liming techniques, methods -
eliminate wasteful pro-
GOOD NUTllmON ls
the first ingredient far
good looks, she believes.
She puts ber knowledge
Crom classes al UCLA to
good use in this area.
CA P8JCO&N (Dec. cedures. Key now ts to ~Jan. 19>: For correct streamline -see as is
answers, visit one COO· not merely aa you wish
fined to club, home, in· places and people might
stitutioa, hospital. Check be. Patrons are offered
herb tea, protein drtnb
From81
... Divorce Myths
to more depression and box you
in.
-Predeatlnation. If you
believe, even at a ncn-consclous
level, that somelb.ing will hap-
pen, somehow tbe belief will
m.akeltao.
-6earcbing for the Holy Grall
<being tbe perfect mate or
J)U'ellt. .. forever young). It OD· ly leads t o d e preaaion and
withdrawal.
-Real life soap opera. People
enjoy talking about the grim
lbinp ao they can escape deallng
wtth emotions.
-Martyrdom. Although you
get sympathy, it is totally COD·
SALE
EnllN 9todt of:
suming and inhibits building a
newllfe.
-Running away <drinklne. af. fairs, living your life for others).
Tbe toughest things are to deal
with loneliness , develop your In·
terests and live for younelf.
Taylor said one d. tbe bluest
needs ls getting emotional sup-
port. "Learn how to me friends
appropriately. Relatives can
make us too depeodenL"
Aa Taylor talked and called for
group sharing, it WU obvious
participants began to relax and
rapport was built aa comments
touched on similar problems.
... They weren'talooe.
WINTER SALE
20%-40% OFF T
s... • Sectf ... • T..._ • a..tr. .... ......,,
o .. •ca• a c.... , __ cu.c:."'
l.IUI c:..llleC o' t .... S..Ja.C.ltft-
IM THIS.. ..... , .....
In Celebration
of Our
FIRST ANNIVERSARY
INVITES YOU TO A
FABULOUS JEWELRY
SAT£
:Vs OFF
Sale Cuidluuw ~ Sacunta1, Ju. 11
AD 8aJel Ji1Dal
smVlaLldo
Ne~ Bead&, Ca. m. 1
Ci• I., ...... " ~~
..
• .,. .... 'P ....
BOOMER
W(LL. L MAOi. ·•;. ...
-w~o'J w~lo 1 ' )
IN A~u::~1<.A" /
AvAJN 1
' \
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
GE.1TIN& HIM 10 SPEAK H~
UX:O..O REAU<,.> ME.AN A l.f5T
TO 1lnsE. KIDS AND 1HEIR
PARENTS!
by Tom Batiuk
frldl'(. January 14 19n DAILY PILOT 0
THE VIRTUE OF VERA V ALIAHT
1 WANT )OtJ TO 6TAY
llfltf, Wfl&Y, ~ •1'1P ~HLF IN TIE YAllAMf
fAMILY 6£5TAL TI
DOOLEY'S WORLD
--~
-HOW COULD H£ POSSfBlY HAVE A
R. ~IFLE RANGf IN '-¥ING! THERE ?
~ HAve At-J OFFICE 11-.1 :T'He
t..SAl'-J ING -rowe~ OF
P ISA ..•
by Lee and Sprin~r
~JllE lOU!tMATllUOi,
fAY OE~ IMO\IGtl f'lll Ole
/lfN) Of !Hf W~LC1~
&IGGfGT lY NffWO~IC •
NfXTI ST11ANffn, NO~!
by Rod9er Bradfield
by George Lemont
·:
.• 1 .. .: . ..
T AMK Mc HAMARA by Jeff Miller & Bill Hinds
.--.~~~~~~~~~--.--. GORDO by Gus Arriola _.:
NANCY
OH, DEAR··· I FORG".)T
TO STORE MY
B IKINI AWAY FOR
THE WINTER
Gl\?0~77, 1'~ N~~
~£hl A ~ FOOTSAU..
PLAYfR ...
D ON'T WORRY···
..JUST WRAP IT
AROUND A
MOTHBALL
TODAY'S CIDSSWDID PUZZLE PEANUTS
UNITED Feature Syndicate T~~rad•v 1 P11u1e so1vtd.
ACROSS
1 lce,,.an ,
necess•y
6 Serpen!s
IO····On tM
back
1 4 L•teless
Aicf1a•c
1 5 Paper Quan·
t1ty
16 B1b1tut
~me
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medium 2
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21 Bats hr st 1 7) Piano. drum 1 :! Naut.c;,t 4 6 APlllY. as
words ~nd su. dorect1on POWder
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::'5 Nee<J1r9 Dfet , 18 Slow-mov 1es Slang
water 7 S Bangs m 1ng people 5A Cold man·
26F11thy ptace 22Ch1nged ner
2 7 Cooking the col()( 55 Means of
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• 29 went 2 WOtds cornpllsll-
Qu1ckty 1 ScoU•S"' U Nu1sa11ce ment
JI Aoptv t aos 28 U1scetl1ny 56 ttall1n
stitc!W!s 2 leave Qui JO Procrastinate vlotinmaker
33 Samuel's J Noner1$tence 32 F1nislled 58 Old
teacller 4 Search lirst womanish
• 34 Forefather bhndly 35 Incoherent 60 Uan·s neme
MOON MULLINS
L,ADY PIS
HOM E FRoM
1Me HOSPITAL?
by Charles M. Schulz
RJ~ A ,\\0.1'.E.\'T ... ,.,£~£ :
14~0 .'•\r:. cR,CK WOR~1E:' .. ,___.,.....--·,-~
' ~ .
by Harold Le Doux
.. 36 Rations 5 Plndarlc odo person 62 l.IOfeover
· 40 Broods section 37 .Alcon novel: 63 Ending with TUMBLEWEEDS by Tom K. Ryan '42 Until now Z n Circle part 2 words lele or radlQ
! words 11<qunt1c J8····Kaun 65Stratont ----------SHE'Ste'f'AJJOOi ..----~-----_, HOW SW!trOFVOU10KEEP
, .. .,_. __ _ ·--
THE GIRLS
' I gavt my husband a g10 ccr1ificatt for (hri\tma~ and we're ~hopping around for some things for him."
DENNIS THE MEMACE
j 44 Alr1<:11n rivor mammal Movie VIP Prefix 10 SNARi!! Mf! WrrH AN E:YE: ON rr FOR ME! .< 45 Acted •dty a Turned 39 Rehg1ous 66 University ~ l
4 7 On no occa-white grouo tacully ~1' OW ~ICK
SIOfl 9 Sta,..der s '1 G1a11d 89 Snow run-• 49 A twitching 1 o Timetable secrfllior-ner °' 50 Transpartahon abbrs Prel1r ~ ve111c1e t 1 R1verolNew AJFramean
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C:'OCT'O~ ...
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by Mell
1-111
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DAILY PILOT Frldey. January t4. tm
~~ f, r
Collector's WaterltHi Trouble
May~~
Illness
~ , ,. Texas BO..-parte Fan Mhta~ Ont on Hat
' From AP Dt.fpetdlel r,. Eaal THIS rancher Oaarlea Crulol'd la a blg ~fan of Napoleoa Boaapuce and baa 1pent ! thousands of doll an to prove lt. ~ Cranford, 35, ls the proud owner or the •~
~that once belonged to Ule French em per-or. He
· bought tt sight unseen. by lcing dlslance.
ln fact, Cranford ran up a $40Q phone bill Juat
•t.abliabing credit and btdd.lni for the sword. wbkh
waa being auctioned at an art gallery tn
SWit.zerland.
Cranford also wanled Napoleon's hat, but it
sold for $32,000, and stopped bJdding at $20,000.
* California's Ooal in Jimmy Carter'• Jnaugura·
lion parade will have a theme cloee to Gov. Edmud
Brnwa Jr. 's heart, conservation, the Sacramento
Union reported.
The float will feature a stucco house with a
solar energy collector on its roof. and hall a dozen
people in pioneer outfits, the newspaper s~id.
It said the cost ot the $15,000 float will be paid by
the Solar Energy Industries Association.
* The CongresajonaJ Medal of Honor would be
restored posthumously to the ooly woman recipient ot the medal under a me~
introduced by Rep. Les Aspla
(0-Wls.).
President Andrew Jobason
conferred the award in 11166 to
Dr. Mary Edwards Walker, a
Syracuse. N. Y., medical-school
graduate who servedias a doctor
in the Union army during the
Civil War, was a prhoner for
tour months or the Conled.eracy-
ASl'IN and later a crusader for
women's rights and civil liberties generall)"'.
In 1916. the medal was revoked -by a review
board that said it could find nothina Jn the records
to indicate the exact reasons ror awardlng Lt.
* President Ford will take part Jn a series of
classes and informal meetings with •tudents and
faculty at Yale University next month. Uae White
House announced.
A spokesman said
Ford, who leaves office ( ) next week, accepted a PEOP,LE
Visiting Chubb
· Fellowship at the un· --------
1 ve rs it y 's Timothy
Dwight College.and will be on the campus Feb. 6--8.
Ford will participate in a series ot m~tings
with history and law classes, informal sesllons with
students and discussions with faculty members. • Republican Sen. Dewey Bartlett of Oklahoma
entered Memorial Sloan·Kettering Cancer Center
in New York City for further
• • tests to determine whether a
spot found on bis lung during a
routine phys ical exam was
cancer. the hospital said.
The spot was discovered on
an X ray at Bethesda (Md.>
Naval Hospital, and a subse-
quent biopsy was described as
negative but inconclusive.
A hospital spokeswoman
said the senator would be
hospitalized several days. •
.. Jimmy Caner "is the first president to clearly
• declare his faith in God, which should meab a better
America," says evangelist BWy Gruam.
Graham began a five-day crusade in Sweden
• before a crowd of about 10,000 in Sweden's second
$ larsest city. Organizers said many had come in
• charter groups from all over Sweden and Scan·
• dinavia.
Carter, a Baptist. bas frequenUy emphasized
tWi strong faith.
* A Judge in San Otego dismissed a $300,000
slander 1ult filed by .lack Scllrade against Sen. Bob
Wl1'ee (D·La Mesa), who ousted Scbrade h'om the
Legi.slat.ureln November.
SUperio!' Court Judie Wt&&o B. BaUenaor. Jr.
aald what ~brade describi!Jcf u defamation of
character was merely a general accusaUoo or mls-
cooduct. not an accusation ot crimes.
Scbrade was a state senator troi:n the 39lb dis·
trict before losing re-electlon to Wilson. then a state assemblyman.
* A state appeals court rejected baa Garcia., bid.
to move her second murder trial out of MonteNy
County.
Mrs. Garcla. accused of k11.l-
lng • man she S8.Y9' held ber
while another man raped ber, is
scheduled to be back ln Superior
Court ln Salinas Monday tor con-
tinued questioning of prospec·
tivejurors.
The state Court of Appeal
cleclined to b~ar ber request for
a v•ue change, which defense
ouc:1A attorneys sought on grOOnds that
pretrial publicity and community prejudice made a
fair trial impossible.
* Chase Manhattan Bank chairman David
Rockefeller was guest ol honor at a banquet In Pelt·
iDC given by the Chinese
People's Institute of Foreign Af.
fain. Peking's official Hsinbu.a Dew• uency reported.
lo a broadcast monitored in
81 oa. 8TEINCKOHN
Dear Dr. S&etDcrollla:
We have fOW' children -
three daughten and oil,U'
7.year-<>ld aon. He's the
black sheep of our faml·
ly . H e's the
troublemaker.
My husband has
puniahed hlm. So have I.
But nothing seems lo
help.
WE GET repeated messages from school
s ay i n g be i s a
troublemaker. He bas
trouble reading. He can't
sit atilt. His legs are
always jiggling. At times
be will suddenly jump up
and disturb the other
children wble they are
doing homework.
My husband tries to
get on bis good side by
playing catch. But he's
so clumsy be can't bold
on to a baU. He ties his
atl>elaces like a 4··Ye&r·
oltl. HJs playlllates on
our block aren't really
playmates because they
won't let hlm play.
Tokyo, H.s"-bua said those at-SO ALL HE does is tending the banquet included Ko Po-Dien, vice president of the Jn. come in and watch TV.
stltule; u Cbaan, vtce chairman He plays stays up late
ol the China Council ror the against our wishes. He
Piomotion of International gets little sleep. He is
Trflde, and Taul Plng, deputy •OC1l•••u.«• disrupting our entire
general manager of the Bank of China. family· As he hasn't been
Hsinhua said Rockefeller arrived in the physically ill, we haven't
Chinese capital at the invitation of the institute. It taken him to the doctor. gave no further details. Do you think that this • * mighlbelp? -Mn.G.
One def,ndant in the Chowcbil.LHcbool bus kid· .
naping was slugged by anotJMio inmal-e at the countf COMMENT: Yours as
jail for "boggin~" a te!ep&ooe. -edutles s aid in ~ an example of an inner Oakland • c e n t c h ll d b e i o g
U . Fraak Mann and IUdtanl Sdlleetlfeld was punished by innocent
not aeriously hurt and "admits be sot what he ~ked p~rents. You think of for." . , him as bad, unmanagea.
Munn said the incidentoccu~dW'ing visiting ble, rather than as sick
hours when the inmates talk with their vtslton via a -which be is. . lelephooe. Make a personal visit
*
Fonner Oly mpic skier Tl&o Ponto.•nune-year
fight with Heavenly Valley Sid Resort over access
to tand be bought in its ski area ended with a
Nevada Supreme Court rulingl.n his favor.
Pordon, who s kied for Italy in Olympic com·
petition, wiped tears from his eyes after the sur·
prise decision.
Pordon said be felt "very good." and hoped to
go ahead with plans Cor a lodge on bis six acres in
mountains just east of Late Taboe.
• Police SaJ tti\.tp have ~ important notes
Crom an Italian 1cientist who had been doing cancer
research at the UC Medical Center in San Fran·
cisco.
The report said Ollvtero Varnlrr, 28, of Padua.
Italy. was attacked by three muggers as be waiked
to h.ls room in the Forest Hill area of the city.
DOCTOR IN "'
THE HOUSE
to talk 'With bis teachrer.
Also, wltb the school principal and school
psychologis t <if there is
one).
tJext, take him to bis
pediatrician, He wW .et
the dUgnoatic aftd
therapeutic. machinery
in motion. <Assuming, of course, that your son tru·
ly suffers from dyslexia.
Sometimes called MBD
<minimal brain dysfunc·
Uon>.
'Tis Mailing .Season
I
He may n ee d
specialized treatment by
eye and ear doctors; by
pgychologi.ats, by speech
therapists -and others.
1'1RIJDrY SU1eep1takss Draw Top Respome Your sou's problem is
not an uncommon one.
Learnine disabilities
Officials of the Federal Trade, Commission sup-may affect as m~y as S
_.;
BJTbe Aa8oclatedPrma
'Twu the month afta' aui•teM and all
through the nation. naany t1Wa w.n JWIDI up, as
was a1sravaUon. So thToulb tbe malls were sent
many sweepstake aiveawaya, to people ID need ol
cash soon aft.er the bobda)'S.
It'• no accident thM for several days, millions
c:l Americans have received t.nvaa1loM to whl u
much u $1.25,000 for merdy llcklnt • eevelope.
mallln1 it ln-and reading an advfJl'tillnl meuqe.
AT LEAST FOt1a JLUOa companleJ cbc!ile
the month after Cbriatmu to make their 1pitclaes
and sent out more than II) mlllloa pteeea of mail.
''Through these mat~a oY« tbe y.-n, (he
beat mallinl period by far, u far u J'4ell)tQle is coo-
ce:rned, is right aft« auutmas," .said Karen
DeGraff. direct mall 11,\U~er for Downes
Pubtilbing Co., wblcb pabUabes Ladles' Home
Jo.anal and American lbae macutnee.
"My opinion ii that people bne blown so mucb money, they say. 'WeU, tt'I onJ¥ a few more dollaris
ror a subscrtptJon.' Also, ldt« Cbrtstmaa, people
oeedmoney.'
"WE'VE ALSO FOtSND TB res-ponae to anJ ~ ': t)'J>el ol mallin& la~ beUet' iD Jama~," said ti J m Lyles, a aPOkesman for the Exxon a .-.vel Club
In Houatol1. ''lknow l've received l'JIU.f' ••~pat.akea
mallinp in the p•t few days myself.'•
• Reader's Olgett is offerina 1 itcso,ooe stveaway, back by a natlCJnal advertiJlal campalp
that oae source estimated cost u much as the
prises. llore than 84,000 people will 1bue the ta>.ooo. Prizes ranp from a top of '50.000 to ~
earh to 21.000 reaf°°'leuts. • Publltbers cemtna House, a Port Wublqtoo,
N.Y. firm that sdla cut-rate aubscrlpUons to maculnes, ls otfertna $125.000 caab ln a $400,000 atveeway that will include 80,000 winners.
TBE TOP PIUSB IN'l'BB Buoll Travel Club's
Sl00,000 sweepstakes ii a vacation bome, car and
other prbea, or '5(),000 ln cab. About UIO people
wUJ lb.are the prizea.
Tbe LadJ"' Home Jourul aad American
Home are dlvldln~,000 ltllOftC 3,100 winnen. Top prise la 1 new or fn ;OeO. · 1'be Slveawaya won In basJcally the same way.
A coml)Uter eeleets wlmdbc num~ before tM
numbered ai>pllutlom are .ven tn the maU. The,.._
dplent ~W"M 1 form, end the rlnn bopet It lll·
cJ.se. en onter for tbe macutrie or product. When
\be contest ends, entrants who beld wlnnln1 num·
ben are notlllfd.
IW A WINNING N\1llBSlt IS lbron awar-
end thousand.I ue--nU>er than the prtte money be-'
tni retumed to the~, It ll atven ••ty tb.nlNh a dra•ll>• f:t kllinl eatrtea. n. ~ HJ' all .. are awarded and all en-
tr"lllb stud ID equal ehaDoc to~ .......... Cl' DGt tbey ordend the product.
• (
port those cJ.tiP1J. milllon children in the
"Wehaven't bad awealthofcomplaintsontbis United States. One
type of thin&," a aid Noble Jones, a Cleveland-based estlmat.e ts that about 20
attorney for the FTC. "It's my feeling that there are mllllon Americans have
very few abuses in these sweepstakes." grown up to be functional
Ricbarcl Gat.el.ey, another Fl'C attorney. said illiterates. ·
tMte at. no specific rules governing sweepstakes. There is much you can
The PTC tao .-ct onb' when alleged abuaea fall into do to help. The earlier
the agency·~ general category of unfair trade prac· the ~. Special drug$
liner. • and aptcial diets will
• . help your son's behavior lN ll'll, READEll'S DIGEST signed a~naent and learning ability. ~g.W halt what the Fl'C 06lled mi.stead· ~· The aaency charged tti.at r,om lteno SUUesUon: No mere
, 1'eeder's Digest did not Ii~ •••1 an aft· punishment. Com· '1!1ttJsec1 priJes and required Its winners to stgn ad-# paaioa and undenrtaDd·
vertblng waivers and take other actiODI that were Ing are essential in.cre-
nat Included Jn the ortatnal oftertna. dienta of the treatment
Why do companies try ao bard to gtve mcmey formula.
awa.vT 111~ 1 u a&tefttkll-= cte.vtce," said Louis
KllD. prtstd•t ol Pu Clearina House. "It
,_ ~ to,pay'nlore at&enUoD to.the malllDga. lt •t\MID toopen the~..'·
JOP•'I ¥RM DOSS ftaTU.tU.Y all ft.a t.lneM ~orders generated by the sweepstakes mt.ntnp, KilUk said about 20 percent of the people
wbo reeeiv• offen eend back entries and more tban , Mlf of'iheee ... ee onlen. He. bid thit OM•out,oJ
every, 320 people who receive the offer 11 a sweepatates wlnne,r.
llBl)ICALE i l'ES
O..rDr.~:I
am az years old a a
lump wu ~covered tn
my breast durinl my
latt examination. My
famlly physlclan says all
1 have ls a UWe fibrous
cyst. He says It la not
mallpant. l'nutW CQO·
cerned, but l bate to hurt
bis feelings. l 'd feel bet-
, ter ti I bad an additional medic-' opinion. Am I
WUJecHsarily worrted?
-.... G.
Bert Johnson, 16, ol Mlami woo $55,000 in a
Ladles' Home Journal glvea1"a)' 1everat years a&e>·
Jobllaon. a rec?tnUv retfred ~t for 'raclio sta· Uoo, said the money helped llQ>POl't b1a retirement.
He previously entered several 1weepstakea, but CO MME~: Forget
never won and never ordered a product. the doctor•s feelings and
"I ordered the magazine after I ·~ thaulhJ~ WnJt of your own. U
be aald. "I ftiared it was the least I couJd do.'" •, u-e Is any d9ubt (re-
' aonable or otlierwiff,
Deadline Nears
For Solvang Trip
Wednesday is the deadline to l'el\ster for the
Feb. Strip to Solvang and Hearst castle, apon.sored
by &be San Juan Caplstrano recreaUon prolfam.
The $4S ree Includes round·trtP bu.a transporta·
tlon, overni1bt lodliog Md Tour 1 or Hearst's Cas·
tie. ~al It.ops wUJ be made at ~l.qta of ln·
Wrtllt, old Tom Baker, recreatlon coordµ,ator.
'lb• tour wUl leavo San Juan et 8 a.m. Feb. 4
and r«um au p.m. the next day.
AddJUonal lntormaUon and repttaUon are
anilabte .i d~ ~' lltoO P-.o ~-to. pllone493-l1 Tl.
that you may have
cancer) aak for eonaulta·
tlon. Too many suffer
needleuty because they
don't want to bruise the
doctor~ e10. • ••
Do not feel you are
botberina the doctor but
ste him about any
symptom tbat bothers
you and let him dedde
the importance, HYI Dr.
Stelne1"0hn lD bis booklet,
"When To See Your Doc-tor." For a copy wrlte
blm at th1a paper endoll·
in1 50 cent• aod a amped, ..U..addn.ed
envelope.
_..... __ _.._.. ..................... _
For the
Record -
Long Alternaatla
Jeannene Richey, 35. remains unable to
walk and confined to her a partment four
years after a mugger knocked her down
nine steps in front of her San Francisco
home. Police still have not ldentif ied or
caught any of the three muggers who
·ganged up op her.
'Ladies Only'
Menu Fading
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The old restauranl
custom is rad.lag, but not fast enough for those
women who want to know if chateaubriand is going
to break the Ir escort. "It's just a matter c:l haute cuisine and savolr
faire, not women's lib," says Bernard Jacoupy.
food and beverage director at one posh downtown
restaurant.
A FEW SOUTHERN CALIFOKNIA
t"eStaurants still give women a menu without tbe
prices listed. It's an aid ~an custom1and still
ls prevalent in Paris.
It happened ln Palm Sprtnp and the woman
was not amused. She was, in fact, offended.
"I immediately called the waiter over, pointed
to my husband and loudly complained that here I
was, taking my lover out for dinber, and theJ had
given him the menu with prices,•· said the woman.
who asked for anonymity.
"MY HUSBAND WAS BOllllll'IED. but the
waiter rather qulcltly brought me another menu. l
know it's supposed to be b1gb clals, t>.tt J guess l tm
just not an elegant lady."
Bt!Sides the Palm Springs restaurant, tbe custom is practiced al Cbez CllT)' in Orange, the
Ambro&la in Newport Beach and Bernard's in
downtown Los Anaeles.
1be purpose, the managers say, is not to .. in·
coovenlence" the woman witb such matters as
prices. It might also encourage them to order a
more expensive dish If they doa't know the price.
BUT BERNARD'S IS On'EN visited by
women executives and atlol"1eys and the practice is
nol appreciated. they say. 1 Sacoupy sald "some women lawyers" who dine
there get menus with prices -and any men with
them get menus without prlces.
At Chez Cary, manager Mary Lou.lse Frazier
said, "We do not trouble our ladies with prices. We
try to pamper our ladies."
GE&IL MULLER. OWNER OF the Ambrosia,
said, "It is very rude to be a guest and have prices in
front of you. You never show a lady the priceotwbat
she orden. A lady is a lady and should not be in·
volvedinprlces."
But what Uthe ladyobjecta?
"What ii there to be offended about?" Muller
asked. "Uthe lady feels olfended or discriminated against. tough tuck. She can go elsewhere.•'
Muller added, " You can put down that we are
most stubborn about this issue."
TllE WOMEN'S LAWYERS Association of Los
Anseles al.so admits to being stubborn about the is·
sue. Lelia BooJg Jabin. president, and Carol E.
Schatz, recordin& secretary, slid, "We find the
pracU~ olfenalve and hope those involved would
think again about the lnt.elllgence of the custom." .
Red Cross f laru
Move of Office
1be Amet'ican Red~ 90tJtb county service
ceater bu annottbced it will move Jte offices /an. 31
·from 31882 Camino Caplstrano In San Juan
Capi.atrano. Tbe center will open Feb. 1 at 800 S. El Camino
Real in San Cletqente.
llOSIE MARTINDALE SAID THE Red Cross
staff hopes the new location will make the center
more ylllble and elicit greater volunteer response.
...........
Otft•rrt.fle
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HOl.OWll.1., c;ary M. -T..i
•IC ; l'AllHAHl(S, JOll" W W
"-• AM . HAltOlt~T. OIHI M.
-'°r9drk ll " ; OE LAP~. 0..... AM .,,_ CAff Wn .... IUUCl'OM>.
Polly UIH4'1fW -Moc-4 ~; H Ml'l.8, Mart M .,.d ~M I WATSON. SMll•v M w>d ~
Al*ll. SMltH, N-1 J. end eai-c; TMUHYATAl(VLA. 00.-elld s.;r-. weee. o.11n•• OM11 ..,., liJl,tron Kay
LE IS, Jevne Merit end JoM ....... 1
WliAlH!Reee. Jeffy -Sfwrf: Fl!A81!R, Eva Gene a"4 IUclW'd Jay; Ml!LHUK. C.ry Me.,..... eftd
llobtrt A•C flertl. VAN LAN• DIHGHAM, Judith P eftd Jim .... ;
VRAOEH8URG. Oo"ald It •"d
Jlldltl\ " . ELLIOfT. ~ H MCI
J-c; ; OEWYER, TNdY I'. -
JolW\,: 111. Sl881!TT. ~LY""
-A-• ""'"' SWITZ••· .-end Je_, R
HUHf . llevmond L .. •nd SVl•I•
Jean, 0 1\ACIA, llk11411rd T-..... Or-f • ..... PHILLIP$. POnlly '-'
-J-\ M .. UTZ, C.rOI L.. .ill! , _,, E-; SCMMIO, Wett.r L..
..... Edlll\. WAf10H. ICMifl J . .ill!
0.vla H ; WINSLOW, Me ..... C. -JolW\ H , LtH08LOM, We,,..e V ...0
E,...Yfl M., STEVENS, ...... M. -~ EUQene; LIGON, i..o.AWfY .,.0 UMl.,.I O.
POPt<EY, MIChMI 0..-Md
,5'.w'1'1tko; CAR8EllllY, )OM .......
end Jud4111 Ell*": HOLN1a1, ~
L. Jr,e""J•rll'/'ft M.; GUIOllY,_,,
.1a .... ,,., Ol••lff Lff; 111.QWCM.
C•l h•rlne J. e nd Wlltt•M A ••
HERN•NOEZ. .I<* IAftl end UM;
BENSON. Sl•PMt\ •ctweNI •fld
Sllarllyt\JM". ...... ~"
AR HOLD. Heteli. O. -Ml'" L I ARNOLD. Mllff t.. •fld ........ D.; ZUHOE. Con\t..-C• LM aNI f'r-
Eart, SANCHEZ. Effie Men. -CrlltOIMI H•rr•r•: l!SCAMILLA.
Liiiian ..-d Sel"4tclc>r L.; MOONEY,
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It wU1 abo be a more convenlent location for U ·
Rltln1 senlcemea at Camp PendJet()n and their i..mwes. The Martoe base is located juat south of
Su CleD:lente.
Tbe south county cent.er ~es real$lenta of El 1'x'o, Million Viejo. Lapla'HIDI, Laguna Niauel,
La(Una Beach, Dana Pdnt. Capistrano Beach, San
Juan and San Clemente.
AllONG ACTIVITIES coo•DINATED throu8h the center are bloodmobilee, diluter train· m,, babyslttlnl cluaea for students IDd ualsWlce
to mllltary famWtt. BloodmobUea acbeduled ID January Inc Jude one at the E1k1 Lodle, "°5 N. l!!l Camino Real lD San
Clemente Jan. 18, and IMtber at Mlsslon Com·
munity Holpltal, 2'1a Puert• Real Hwy. in Mi.salon
Viejo Jan. 24. ....lu Both bloodmobUee ,.u be opei from 2:30to1
p.m.
MdlUonal informadoD on 1\ed Cros9 toU\b
county servtc• r. available by caIU.nc-...it.
..
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.. DAILY PILOT Friday, January f4, H117
Greemrood Stan
Bruins Survive
Cal Rally, 82-7 4
BERKELEY <AP)-UCLA
forward David Greenwood scored
a career-high 34 points and team·
mate Marques Johnson added 20
u the 1.2tb ranked Bruins defeat-
ed California 82-74 in a Paclfic-8
baalr.et.ballgameTbursdaynight.
The 6·9 Greenwood, a ·
IJOl)homore, also grabbed lS re-
bounds and Johnson, a6-7 senior,
bad eight rebounds to dominate
the UCLA offense.
Ray Murry bad a caner-bigh29
points tor the Bears, hitting 12 of
18 shots from the floor and all of
bis five free throws
Gene Ransom was c redited
with 11 assists, a Cal single-game
record, and 17 points.
UCLA moved to an early lead,
bitting its first nine shots from the
field and was never beaded. The
Bruins led 47-35 at halftime, in·
eluding 17 points by Greenwood.
Kid way through the second
hall the Bears began chipping
away al the UCLA lead, hitting six
straight points to within seven
polnta with 8: 51 remaining.
With just over two minutes to
play, UcLA·s lead was down to
76-72. Then the Bruins' guards
went into ball control with&-foot-2
Roy Hamilton scoring the next
four points for UCLA and an 80-73
advantage with 1: 12toplay.
Forward K.iki Vandewegbe
sank two fr~ throws with 51
HCOOds left to wrap up the vie·
tory.
Guard Jim Spillane bad 11 as-
sists for the Bruins1 plus six points. The Bru.ios 1ed in re-
bounds, 47-40.
UCLA's record moved to 12·2
overall and 2·1 ia Pac-8 play. Cal
ls 2-10 and 0-3 ln the league.
Bruins coach Geoe Bartow said
he waso 't surprised by Cal's man·
to-man defense. "I imagined we
might have seen some zone, but
we cou.ldn 't break away from
their man to man. so they stayed
in it," Bartow said.
"This is a good. solid Cal
team," Bartow added. "For us,
Greenwood and Vandeweghe
played very consistently ror
young players and Marques, as
usual, was superb."
Greenwood said Cal was the
first team this year to run a man-
to-man defense against his team
and it surprised him but "because
of our height advantage, it did
help us sometimes to get open in·
side."
UQ.A 1121 -Gl'ffflwoocl34. ~ 20. 54,... 7.
T-ftd 4, $CMtlane 6, Va~ 6, Hamll!Ofl 6, Vrom•n 2, Hofland l.
CALll'OltHIA 1741 -Murry 19, Tru~ t ,
S<"""'"''I""" 4. c.aniil 4 RilMOm "· F•uefl• 4 Miiter t. Whlttleld ~
H•lltlrne· UCLA 47·3S. Fouled out -Jol>Mon
Tot•I Fo.t•l -UCLA 19, Callforn11 "· Technlcal -None.•-•.600.
DOUG WIDTFELDT IS HEMMED IN.
Oregon Wins, 72-68
Beaven Ral,ly /or Vietory
EUGENE, Ore. <AP> -Seo.lor
foreward Emle Kent scored nine
ltralcbt points, six in overtime,
Tbunday nigbt to lead 20tb-
raDked Oregon to a 72·68
Padftc-8 Conference baatetball
Yict.oey over Washlngtoo.
Tbe victory, coupled with
WatblD8tOD State's Joss to Oresoa State, gave the Ducks
80ie possession of first place In
&be l>ac-8 wUb a 3-G rt!COl"d.
keeps as the Beaven posted a
61-58 Pacific-8 Conference vie·
tory over W asbington State
Tbu.rlday night. ....
Smith Jed all scorers with 22
points. Steve Puidokas led
Waabington State scoring with 19
potnU.
A successful free throw by
Stuart House cut the 59-57 advan-
tage t.b~ Smith's field goal gave
the Beavers, but Geoqe Tucker
bit two free throws with 25
MCOOds remaining to complete
the acoring.
APWI~
Athletics
Revision
Proposed
NEW YORK (AP)-'lbePresl
dent's Commlssion on Olympic
Sports laid out Its blueprint
Thursday for r estructuring
81Dlteur athletics In the United
St.ates. But the group apparenUy
hasn't been able to secure
wholehearted support of the or-
ganizations currently running
t.bose sports in this country.
"We bum the parking lot. All
they have to do ls bring their
cars," Bill Toomey. an Olympic
gold medal winner and com-
mjssion member, said of the
groups now in con\rol.
Toomey lives In Laguna Beach.
After 18 months of study. the
22-member commission recom-
mended that a new central sports
organization be established by
Congress. The new body, struc·
lured along the lines or t.he exist-
ing U.S. Olympic Committee,
would be direded by represen-
tatives or the 30 a mat.eur sports.
LA'S MIKE MURPHY (RIGHT) SCORES PAST GILLES GILBERT.
The commission also proposed
guidelines for athletes' rights, de-
signed to protect the competitor
from being penalized by one or·
ganlzation for participating in an
event s ponsored by another.
Guidelines also were suggested
for, among other things. financ-
ing amateur athletics, developing
world-class athletes and improv· Kings Defeated Again, 4.3 ing sports medicine. ·
Michael T. Harrigan, executive
director or the commission, told a
news conference that the panel
had received encouraging sup-
port from all the major multi·
sports organizations but admitted
that "the NCAA might have pro-
blems oo the section on athletes'
rights."
BOSTON -"I just happen to
be in the right place at the right
time," said the Bruins' Earl An·
derson, who bas scored six goals
in his team 's last 12 National
Hockey League games.
The Bruins beat the Los
Angeles Kings 4-3 Thursday
night, and Andersoo produced
the winning goal.
"I've been getting a lot of' good
breaks," said Anderson, who sat
out most of last season with a leg
injury. "Most of my goats have
been the result or someone else's
work.'"
But Bruins coach Doo Cherry
Trojans Bow
At Stanford
~STANFORD (AP> -Senior
guard Mike Bratz scored 21
points, including 15 in the second
half, to lead Stanford to a 68-64
Pacific-8 basketball win over
Southern California Thursday
night.
Bratz sparked a comeback that
saw the Cardinals rebound from
a 31·28 halftime deficit t-0 take the
lead for the first time with less
than five minutes left.
With the score tied at 58 and
three minutes remaining, Stan-
ford scored slx straight points -00
lay-ups to take an insurmounta-
ble 64-58 lead.
Junior forward Jeff McHugb
scored 16 to help teammate
Bratz. while Paul Heodersoo bad
16 for the Trojans and Marv Saf.
ford added 14.
UK (Ml -Por1 ... U. H-l6, -lnCllOOI
•. Salton! 14, .io-. I , Wldtt9kll •. Gwflfto I.
STA .. POllD C .. I -Bellon '· M<HUQI> 16, $(_,,....., 1. ,......, "· 8'.U 21. ,.._ 4,
~s . .._tnl-: USC lMt. FOUllld --.+lal1!f'(llofl,
.icio-. k ,,_lrr1td,. ToCel l'oul• -~rn CAI n. ~lantonl II. TKllnl<el--. A-S.~.
79-69 Verdict
For Anteaters
UC lrvl ne guard Louis ·
Stephens poured in 27 points, 19
in the second half, and the host
Anteaters (6-8) pocketed a 7!M9
basketball decision over the
University or M lssourt <Kansas
City) Fighting Kangaroos Thurs-
day night.
UCI took the lead on a free
throw by KJrk Cbri.st late in the
hall and led 34-31 at intermission.
The Ant.eaters expanded the
lead early in the second half with
the 6-4 Stephens cocmecUng for
nine poJnt• in the first five
minutes.
Stephens blt 12 ol 18 field goals
for a 66. 7 percent shooting
average and a season high.
UCI bJt 29 of 49 field goal at·
tempts (59.2 percent) and con·
verted 21 of 33 free throws.
UClnllle("I 19",.. 6 ) I UOONaler
' 0 2 • "'"°"' ) S 4 tOWftt
11110K~
11 J I fl T-1 0 J 1 I
Melft-: VCl.M-ll.
"ft,.. J , 4 1
I 0 I 1
0 1 1 I t 0 , 1
2' JI JO ,.
was not so pleased with the club's
performance.
"The first two periods were the
worst two periods we played this
year. Luckily we wote up in the
third period: They better be re-
ady for the next two or t.bere'U be
trouble," said Cherry.
The Bruins entertain Min·
nesota Saturday njght and Mon-
treal Monday night.
.. Anderson a lways seems to
have open nets when be puts
them in," said Cherry, agreeing
with the forward's comments.
·'The other guys bang and bash
and he puts it it."
Sports in Brief
The Kings lost their fifth game
on their current six-game trip.
Kings coach Bob Pulford said.
"l think we outplayed them in the
first two periods. They got a goal on their power play and we didn't
oooun. That was the key."
Marcel Dionne scor ed the
game's first goal, his 2Ath of the
sea.son, with only 13 seconds gone
In the first period. Veteran wing
Frank St. Marseille bad the
Kings' other two goals.
Terry O'Reilly and Johnny
Bucyk each bad a goal ror the
Bruins.
The National Collegiate
Athletic Association, which con-
trols collegiate sports. declined
comment on the commission re-
port until its lawyers were able to
study It ln detail.
Gillman to Bears;
Miley Was Drunk
The U.S. Olympic Committee
said immediately that it is best
equipped to head the proposed
new central sports organization.
Similar sentiments were beard
from the Amateur Athletic Union,
a strong foe or the NCAA which
bas locked horns with the col·
legiate organization for many
years.
"We feel the USOC is fully pre-
pa r ed to assume the re-
sponsibilities set forth in the re-
port," said Don Miller, executive
director ofthe Olympic group.
On the other band, AAU
spokesman Peter Cava said, •'We
represent people in 21 sports,
eight of them Olympic sports, and
58 organizations along st.ate lines.
The AAU ls recognized by the
world governing bodies in sports
as the offlci al American
representative In those eight
sports and we don't see how the
AAU rould be ousted by the Presi-
dent's commlssion."
CHICAGO -The Chlcago
Bears of the N aUona1 Football
League hired 65-year-old Sld
Gillman Thursday as alfeosive
coach.
Gillman coached the Houston
Oilers. the Los Angeles Rams
and San Diego Chargers. In 18
years be complied a coaching
record of 122-99-7 and woo slx
championabips.
Mletfllep9rt
BATON ROUGE -Mike
Miley, former Calllomia Angela
shortstop and Louisiana State
University quarterback, was
drunk when killed In a car
wreck laal week, the IAuisiaoa
crime laboratory reported.
The lab said Thursday that lta
tests found a reading ol .23 per·
cent alcohol in MUey's blood. A
reading of .10 la required for a
person to be considered legally
drunk ia LouisJana.
Miley was killed Jan. 6 when
his sports car missed a curve
and bit a culvert about a mile
from the LSU football stadium
where be starred in 1m.
Peanea SU.sin
RIVERSIDE -David
Pearson, winner of the last two
stock car races at Rivenlde In·
t.ernational Raceway, turned ia
tbe fastest practice lap Thurs·
day u the road course opened
of!lclally for the Winston
Western 500 Sunday.
Pearson's Wood Brothers
Mercury wu clocked at l:at.ns
• on the 2.62-mlle course, an
average speed of W .338 miles
per hour, somewhat short ol the
112.us m.p.b. by Bobby Al&on
last year.
Six-time champion Richard
Tonight on TV
6 p.m. CS> -NBA MSKE'I'·
BALL -The Laken taboo the
Spun at San Antonio, Texas.
Petty was second fast.est in his
Sf P Dodge at 110.flll m.p.b.
Mrf'.U.,71-81
Troubled by a tough zooe de-
reose and cold shooting 1n the
second half. the Southern •
California College V angu.ards ol
Cost.a Mesa bowed to visiting
Biola College (La MiradaJ, 7Hil,
tn non-league basketball action
'lbunday night.
s..a.c:-... "",.. s 2 4 12 -neecr
4 0 I I O-
S 0 f IO Pmf"fmM
4 ~ 4 13 TCMAI•
MaHtl-: SCC, M-a.
.. ..... 4 •• 14 1 0 0 • 0 0 • 0
14 tl "61
Unlike the present USOC, an un-
wieldy body made up of hundreds
of orga.nUatioru. the proposed
sports board would be composed
exclusively of nationaJ governing
bodies. Each would be required to
have at least 20 percent athletes
among lta dJrectors.
I .aga1na's Tapie Tied
For Tucson Lead
TIJCSON <AP/mi°'» Wat800 made a scramb · par on the
f10al bole just before darkn(!SS
halted play Thursday and joined
four otben tied for the lead at 67
in the uncompleted first round of
the $200,000 Tucsoo ()peo golf
tournament.
Tied with Wataoo at five under
par were non-winners Dr. GU
Morgan, Gary McCord, Laguna
Beach's Alan Taple and Andy
North, who held lbe lead alooe
unW be bogeyed bis last bole.
Craig Stadler was alone at 68,
four under par, on the 7.305-yard
Tucson National Golf Club course.
The start of play was delayed
more than one-baU hour by tro&t
and frozen greens and 3' of the
153 players were unable to com·
plete their round before darkness tell. They wtll complete play Fri·
daymomiag.
Nooe of those stranded -00 the course appeared to have a shot at
tbelead.
Johnny Miller. the British
Open champion and winner of
thls event the last three years,
continued to have bis putting pro-
blems and went to a 74, seven
shots back.
Of the five leade rs. only
Watson bas ever won. He took the
British Open and two other titles
in 1975, didn't win last year but
collected more than $138.000 with
coosi.stenl fin1sbes lo the top 10.
* * *
Fl~I r'OUl'd "~' Tl>IH'\dey Ir\ "'9 U00.000 Jot
Oer119lol•Tuuon Oclen OOll --°" .. 7,301 n rd, -)6.~I) T liCIOfl Nelio...I Golf OW (_ ...
TomWetloOfl Al..,T~e
MOyHOr'th
GllMoroan
~-41
J>-)441
3)-,,._.,
Jl-l4-47
3'·U--.7 ,...,.._..
,..,~
JH 1_., •»--.. ,..,,._.. ,,......
~IO
U.»--10 3'-)6-10 ,..,._,.
Kllrt appeared to win t.he game
for Oreaoo wbeo be hit a t.Jine.. DOillt play wt th aeven seconds left In replatioa to put the Ducks
abead 65-a. But Wasbingtoo's
7-fopt center, James Edwarda,
t.oolt a hall-court pass from Steve
11.-i and bit • baseline Jumper wid two seconds remalnloe to
lcrOe tbe overtime.
After Edward.a bit one ol two
free tbrn'I, Gre1 Graham Iced the~ with a free throw '1rit.b
17 aecoodt left.
Wasn't Paid, Says Damillf;oaeh
Gerv Mt C.Ord
Crelci Sladl•r
Jottnm•n
TommyAe<Of'
Jlml>enl
RlkMMseftOel•
,'9frylil(0..
Al1Wllll
lloOlll'Wtcl-lm .Hff-S ~Cooclv
Bruce Lletne 0....Hlll ~Al'CMr
Oon•ln Jim~•
Glllby GllDel1 R C.8-MOft o. .. StocklOft
~
.-JO J>P-10 J.141-tl J4.J1-ll
JWS.-fl
•l$-fl
11~1
U s.-41 ~I
>4-11-11
:»-Jj-11
u..-tl »*-fl .._,, Gres Ballard led Oregon with
20 POinta, while Keat added 14.
Tbe victory sn:i:,:
1
:: WaahioP>o '1 10-1ame
streak. 'rbe Duca are 12,2. The
Ruaklea fell to 10-5. y
Beavers Win
CORVALLIS, Ore. -Rocky
6alb'1 baslttt wlt.b 1:15 left
&•ft Orecon State Lhe lead for
CINCINNATI <AP> -''They
promiaecl money that never came true." Nid an an.-ry Carlo Fusi, explainln& wby be bu
aued Olympic 1htiG8 sold
medal.lat Dorothy Hamill and ber
parents for $88,000 lD allecedly
unpaid fees. tual, wbo coached Hamill and
Peg&Y Flemin• to ice skaUng's
pinnacle, lashed out biLterly
Tbunday wblle lD ancumau for
tbe Midwett~m Skatlns Cham·
plonsblpe.
"It botbera me that abe tell.a
People Maaulne that she's PAY·
tu •.ooo a rear for t.r.inlna." 1a1d rust " don't know where
that moae1'1 1olq. I never saw a peony.''
Fuai, 47, alleged that be bas
not received $9,018 for lessons,
$3,205 for travel expemea and •.ooo for what be considers bis
15 percent for bis role in Hamlll 's
mllUoo-dollar contract wtth Ice
Car,adea.
' I'm not really all that con·
cemed about her contract, but
I'm really bitter about the other
thlnp. They (Mltt Hamill and
her parents> promlMd money
thAt never came tn.e. Tbey pro-
mised me for four yean. Now, t.beJ don't want to admowltdp
me," said P'aHJ, a t~Ume
I .
. .
European lk•tlnl cNrnp4cm da:r· tng the mld-1950s.
''We never signed a COlltracl. I waa used to deallag wtth people
like Peggy Fleming. I never
siglled a contract with Peggy and
I never bad any problem witb
her. She waa like a gentleman.
She paid for all her JessoDI u sooo as she turned pnllesalonal and also took the time to belp
101De of my ska ten."
But, Faul emphasbed. "I will
lmllt on a contract from"°" oa.
1 don't mow lf that ls pennlttAld
m the amateur 1•"1 er net. But I
willlnl.lst.''
Tbere waa no Immediate
response from Dorothy Hamill.
Fred Skidmore, a public rela·
Uona man with Ice Ca=i said. ''At thla point, Miss
baa not been served wltb
anytblng legal, so there can be no
.u&ement at this Ume."
F'ual .aJd be bu tried UDIUC·
ceutully to reach Hamill and her
parents.
"I'm naUy kind ol stunned,"
be said. "I don't knO'fl what's
happened to ber. U this is the
Dorothy HamUl that she really
ii, I'm eony Dianne de Leeuw
didn't wlD the OJymptcs. ·•
""'' Rodge,, 0...llullef'
LY!'l l.ott .......... .,
l(M'lftlt~
lluld! l!lalnl
Al~ £dS......
911tMelloot
OIMLITllW
Homtf'e 111-.,
lldS-°"°""*'-1 MWrl1H~llll't Joe,..,~
0'1tf.ltMt Wally Arm'1 ront
Al1 .. McHl<klt &o&LAtnn
llOtlll\I Hlcllol• Mlllt_...,
LMTY""-MlkeWll\fMI
IWuA-Pllll~t .. .,"""" ~lNUff
···--... --··
-.u-41 .....,,
J441-fl
ls.II~
IW7-lt U.,-tt .......,,
J1,Jf-n
J~-ft •»-n l1·~
11..as-tl .......,,
~ ~ »..-n ~
JNO-n
~ "~
Coastal
Fives Vie
Tonight
Tbe Coala Meaa lHJb Muat.anaa. pre-season choices to
ftn1ah second 1n the South Cou~
Leque .basketball race. bld to
break a two.game losing streak
toolgbt when they l.an&le with the
Corona del Mar Sea Kings,
Orange County's No. 2 ranked team and a nemesis ror Costa
Mesa over the past two years.
Tipoff ia at 8 at Corona del Mar
Hlgb. Other clrcuil games, also
at 8, are San Clemente at Laguna
Beach, Irvine's University High
at El Toro and Dana JD.lla at Mls·
sioo Viejo.
Larry Sunderman's Mustangs,
operating with a solid front line
but lacklog a pure guard, have
dropped two straight and a loss
tonight would just about knock
Costa Meaa <1·2) out ot the title
chase.
Corona del Mar, meanwhile, is
3-0 in league and 1().4 overall, and
while n ot playing up t o
capabilities recently, the Sea
Kings still have three of the
Orange Coast area's top players
i.n 6-7 Alex Black, 6-6 Jack Tut
and 6·2 Paul Akin. They are
averaging 19.4, 18.1and8.9 points
per outing.
Also, the Sea Kings seem to
have a hex over the Mustangs,
who dropped a 17-16 football de-
cl.alon last fall and suffered 47-46
and 55-54 basketball losses last
year. The Mustangs will attack
bebind a front line ol 6-3 S«!ve
Parrino (18.2 average), M Gary
Wt.lls (15.6) and 6-3"'2 Stan Miller
(10.4).
Like Corona del Mar, San
Clemente is 3-0 in league and ii
guard Tim Dunham bas ooe ol bis good stiootlng nights, the
Artiala Cl·2>, who usually play a
1·2-2 zone, could be 1n trouble.
Dunham ta averaging 16.6
Polnta, while 1-7 Ted Hettinla b scorinC 12.4 point.a. Hettinga'a
counterpart, 6·6 Ben Bacon, leads the Artists with a 17.7
average.
El Toro, 9-4 overall and 2-1 ln
league, rates u a su,trt favorite
<Ner bard-luck University, which
is 6-10 and 1·2 but a loser ot tour
games by three points« less.
The small Chargers are led by
S.10 Bob Charles (18.8) and 6-1
Mark IUll (15.7), while the taller
Uni Tn>Jam are sparked by M Bater Poirier (16.0).
ute University, llfiasion Viejo,
N ID leaaue. baa lost aome close
oaes, dropping their circuit c: by a total "'10 pointa. H1l1a LI 1 ·2 and both acboola
match up in Ille, U neither team
bu anyone over 6-2.
S . .
WllDIDIDg
Results
WAll\ITY a1T-ll«7> ,_, _
• ........,,..._I £IT-I~
lllO....._I. a. lllcftlt c111·!11_.,t.....,11-
<C11·ou1111c~11E11·-...
100 IM-1 T"'11e Cf.I t :ls.9 t. 0••••-
CEI f'IS OJ PW! fl) 2 D t '° frw-1 WI,_ llEI J4 .. ; t. ._. ta) H.t t
!cir-IO i. I IGaflY-1. Smllll IEI t·OUl."'°"' (ti MJ.01
9.lllc .... CIEI 1·1~0. .. ,,_, Wl'-CU SUI. ........... fEl -..
:1.w-111 s1.1.
100 .,__1 OMl<N.iwt-un ' TU a """""
!l:IS.• U '""' (El61tU 100 l>Hll-l •lclltN ..... 111!1 1•06,0 2
McGomllO Ill I Ot..J .a..ae~ •11>1 IU IClll-1-1P•IIll1 IUJ --IEI
1·1u1u.._..,,,,,.~
• ,,.. relo-1. IEJ T-<wlltM. e. lllcNe,
--1, 0. •ic-1 J.~ I
PltOttt•'°"" 11T-m1ca1.,...... • ......, .... ,_I IEIT_, .....
• ..,__, J ...___ llEJ t .-CIJ l. o..eoi1•1 ,..,.,J:ll•.
-,_, ~· ,., t J ~ Ill l1-, ., ..
• ..__l~Cll JICloltl&IJ~
{II Tr-t1 s
•tty-1 H19'1MIE11-(IJ1 ....... 'I
Ill Tl-·I l•S
• ....._1 0.0-!El t ~ 1111'*"" (ti f ..... : l •G I.
.. tiKJl-1 J A~ CIEi t """"°" !El 1 ..,._ 111. ,._ 1•1J.A
• .._._. 0 •--ll)t u.eo Ill 1 ~uu.n-.1111
•trwrelft-1.alT-t.I ~~
........... ~l •UJI.
BVC, Uberty Play
The Oran1• CoMt area's two CU' l·A baahtball leams-
Ubert,y Chrt.IUan ol Huntlnlt.on
Beaicb ed Newport Belcb'a HUD· tl.alion Valley Cbr11U~ ln llCdoa tonllbt.
Ubert.y Cbrllttao wU1 travel to
Calvary Baptlal of LaVeme.
While B1mtin.ioa Valley Cbrls·
Cian ia al ADabehn•a Heritqe.
Botb1am•areat 7:30.
Coast A r ea
Wrestling Report
YAllSITY
M-.11M<11 (*21 (!J)Mariu '1-.--0049< ..... l:MI. IOf-J. klMolr <Ml de< C. l..od<M<t U . 11.....e. Un IH) plNM<t AalWI .... MS. in-*'-IHI lied a.-n.
11'-8. LOc•llan CHI tledT,.lo~S.
1'5-0. "*-IHI dee M<Oarwld•l.
140-«. ~ (Hl!Md "'°'1>2-2.
IC-O. llela119er IMI dee 11,-11-1. l~._..,CHIOKP~~?
161-wl._ (M)-)Oftft 2·1.
ln-McOoNld IHI -byforf911. lt>--R-(NJ clK ICll~J.l.
Hwt-<:Mrrt IHI pl""9Cl E-l:OO.
DMe Hiiis Utl CUI C»lta ~ '1-Mcc.t>ft IOI PIMed Ari,,.. a(. lO.
IOS-lmoyo CCI 4K Oulolt lk
11...._.rreola IOI Cle< 8""*-IU.
122-Urwood*< lmolo .. J. 1-T. McCMll IOl pl.....a l(alncold 1 · lO, ~ltlum CCI cleC AUQ91~ ~3.
,...._._IDldKT.8--IM.
ICJ-1( ........... (Cl de< Romo S.O.
1,.__._klve CCI dee llober1s 1-'
161-aaotenb'f IDI dee~·~ 111-61-10) cleC T .. cfl IM.
~•·H IQll-.11 o.i ... no·J1 Hwt-C...11 ICMI olllMd ~11:U,
••'-le<•> 1221•1,...... ,,_.,,_ IEJ plllMd Poyef' f:OS.
~ Ct:ldK l~...,10-4.
114--«-(EM) Cle< lllarln 14-1
tt)-Ue lfMI CM< DllOQer •·lW ,,..._.~ CEMIO.C Phllll~S.I.
f~-11 IEMI dee IUley 10.o
14--'1111-IEMI dee H-M. Mr-41eite Cl!I plflff ... fJl·.tl. 1..-1uo.c9oo11-1~.
141-'llcunt CEI S*1M1 Elr\chl.10. ,,,_.,.,.,(If,,..._,. J:ts.
~(Ill,._'"'""") JS. ~ ...... IEMl-by~
.._(")(JI)._ I I
'1 •to SI a (W) ,.._ SMcNl I :AS.
ios-<;...,.., llE1c111Cura~1
1..-0.. llfl 111......i Cbawr s·Jt.
1n-<:edll9fl (WI -T..,!Or s-4 ~<WI Pl"'*' Ya~le S ,._ .,,._..._!WI de<.....,_, W.
l~IElcle<c..tnl,.1<>4
10-&nid< (Wl plnMdTHMS:J7. 1• Sladl~<El OKOOIM
IU~IMo (Wl-ll<~W. ,,,_._...,(WI -t>ydol!...it.
~ IWl-b'ltorlelt ---1-ylEl-M<GallftlM .
~ <•) (ti) s. a.-.llt "~ "' .. -~0:11. ~cs1-0rrw.
II~ 1Sl 9K lt.,.n 7.a. I~ ICl pll'IMd~J:IS. m-o-(Cl Ill"'*' GI-S:4'. lai 5hepeod !SI 9K •llM>-1
1'9-6mlfll <CJ pl-M<Otnntll I· 1'-
14P-<l9ti• ICI die 11.,,.. .. I. l~(Cl-t>y~
147-4!v-(Cl dee 1.W-'Ml'll\116'0 tn-o.nwtt ICl 111-•~l:U.
l"'O U I <CJ pl ...... llllftJ:IS.
-..-1 C<;>Pl•w*'C:.tleY2.M
........ ..... ,., (fl Ultl
'7~CMIW<Jt9-M. ._.,,..._(Ml ,, _ __..,>:J).
l~kfllMI IMI -llY fofitll l~tdlt"l IMI 9K C.M»~l. ~,.,.,_,.......,,..
U$ ..... t (Ml _lty..,...._
I• -.,....,CMl-llY!Ottell \O..._..lll (Ml91_.~J.U. I~ (U) "9t OCllOA•I
~(Mldlc5dlwf••'11H.
117_...,., CUI 01< lfft-~S.. "9 ... l .. 111w1ao CUI-OW.UM --0.-(M) -11Yleff9lt.
.._., IMI (111 ...._ \'....,
"~ (Nlde<S.W•f'llt ... ~ ... ,,,1-~ 11~(")-by 1~. PlO'IG9 00 -""'I~ 21-1. ,,._......(NI lllfWWd h9J:lt. t~c,1 ci.<11r-1•u
140-<JIMt (P) -11. Plult.e tW. IO~(H)Wc~IN.
1~ .. 00 pl""" 0, ......,,,,,, ......... ....., ,,,-..,....,.,, 7
,~,,,_.., . .,..
~ ... l'l dKa&fW•1. ~llllQ '"' _..., foneft.
JUN1ott WAMITY .. .._ aM<ll ( .. I 141 MWtM
.,_.,_. (H) 911< $1rlla )7-1 .. .....,.wit 00 lllMed W.00. li*i.
11._.._ (HI ........ l'llllKll•:D.
tft-0, Ull (Hl dK Hllf!U .. I.
nt-wocld(Mld!K ..... lo-4. 1~ai1IHI111Med511-J•IO.
........... 1MldK~1.0, 10~ .. 'ICH>~llll~l·IO
I~ OO~fllt«twfl:U.
ltl .......... CHI -ll'ffOtttlC, t11-4Kll..., IHl -t>ylwfllft. ~ !Nl -llYl..-it.
-Our....., plM*J9tW1•:U.
~(ltl !JtlS...~
'1-199111• CSl-byforlell ~-· ISi ,.,....., ..... lttO:& li.-«ll'lllCI dk llll>~llM.
ID--tt CCI dK IC'"*ll I04 t~ICldK ,,.._. .. yM.
l~lemlfl9 ($)-byforfelt.
l~ICl_llY,._...1.
t•l-0-(Sl OKH~..O.
l~IClcMc~--•t.
"1-&enciftlll (S) -by~. 117~ ISl-bl'f-1. m ISG .. """'1$1_...,~ ..... OollGM forlell.
Ml ......... (N) ct! Ulll
'1~~ CMI -Wtomll. IOS-8¥11et! CMI _,by,,,,_
l~lalMl-bylon.11. IZ2~1*1 CM)decWOOlafYMI
m-Plke CMI -bl' tort.II. l~CVlclec Plpt-S-t. l~(M)de<H0419"MI 1'7-T,...!t IM) -bl' ,_II,
1-•lnt CUl_H_•·t. 147~ IMl-ltyfOrltll.
117-ic-111111lllllMCI11¥-1 l·Jt. l~IUlde<MhltY .. I.
..... ......_.,.!Ml -llY lot'Nll.
....,_, C1'l CO )"""-..,.....,
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ll~Ullert 11'1 plNINBartooc1•tt
111-olN (Fl OK R~ ...,_
l~uyll-1 CNl _,by_...,
l»-Ouftc.all ")ff< ltll•)' 1J.S.. 1<0-#all IP' I OK 8lal111-0.
1a--i1'°" '"' -..., c1e1111111. I~*" (10 pl!WMf~l:&
..,-W-(Flpl-Y-111:-.
117-~ ,,, .i-Sdw911ts> ,,, m -QMan1P1p1--t:CJ. '--o..tlle forfeit. a-.. m (SS) W-al-'1-0e ...... <Wide< ,,...,....H. m-o-IW>de< 1.18-M.
IU.....JoftM.1 <W) de< QolMllYllle 10'9
112_.,_ll <WI de< IC..c>'l S.?
11'-<>wl• 11!1 -M<Oennotl~ 1»-0-!WI-......... ,
t--.w:G¥rl' IWI 9111Md L ...... 1:40. IC1~11 (W)-llyf0< .. 11.
l,.__.,,.r I El OK SdNlllt-l. ~-w.i1ee• twl ~s-o·r1. In-El-IW) pllWWd tt..WO:& ~IW)O.CYan~1'·1.
HM-GI_., (W) 0'-1-0:SS. . .._ .. _.., ___
O-Ml"•IJtlCl11C..-
,,.OSN40f'M
""-IM( .. )(111 .......... lllllO
'1-Morl"'"-CMI dee llef'Ql<"•t. ~•1111110 Cle( Tr11j1110S.t. ll~!Ml pl ....... lt-2:!0, 122-Hllltft CMldt< Inn-HI. '1t-4.lw9b IHI plllMCI ~ 1:1S,
IH-Uwla IMI p1...,..i CMMll I ·as,
M0-6liMr 111111 plnnect ""-0:'2. 141--eos.terlno (HI clec Mec6Y'f\'ltYdl ~
1»-Ucy IMl de< MelloU, 167-wv<m P+llMd lloclllln 1 :10.
117-G<lftln CMl cle< l•\trdHllYM. ~OWlllflt (Ml plllfltd P-trl:O. ._--o.-t CHI OK r:.nlt~1.
C*ll (II I <•1 SMOMllltlt '1~ ($) _..., lorf9ll.
tlSOo• ...... ICl-c.r.-112'1. I I.__,,.. CSl _...., torlell. 1n-<ewv ca ~Meo-,:•
~ICl~H-'112:41.
.. ... _,Cl_t>ylllrtll!t.
1~ ICI ll4fWIH b.....,o:u
\0--Qefw\la (Cl ~ c.uedy J:a 1~~ IS)_.., lorl941.
161-o.r.n. <Cl_.,, ctet...it.
l~CSl,..._.~o.n. m ._._CCI...., t>ylotte41..
..,,,. lec:ltlO'I ($) -by IOlftoll
O.. ...... CJSI 11110.-...
'7-oe.lef.,._IC ~ L.wwoocl IOI plflMd OMllleel 0. II. 11~101~uret:Jt.
1!2-U.101--l"Oll•y .. S..
l~alOlclecHtedM I~ ~ COi OK McClr1llY IH.
I ........... IOI OK '""1110.0. 1'7~.,.. 10) dee T•r191t ~ 1,.._.llQ41atl ICl -by lomll.
W-4ff#ert (c;l-l>y 1~1.
117-t.lolta CCI -IW torltlt. "' .... _ 101-by !Omit.
-IMlcll •
.._117lllOW ae1 1 a
'1-IMHl&>oeclCl°""tt.1.
!Ot-Ola¥e& 1Wl dK Mllmt *1.
11 ..... y• NI OK Slldl•I •&.
tD-0-1&1 pll!MfCI.,..,.~:". l~CWlttecT.tevel4.
1JS.-6Mtt IWl dee l"rwta •1 .
tAO M9fll9'I' (W) """'"Mat1 l10 . 1'1~ CWI ~11_.,2:&
l~l•l decW!lll-H. ~--wiu...-cw1 ....-~?1> ~,... c•>Pl-'0""41:M. ~1•1-~•t. ......... <•l-t>ytet'91\.
Ba8ketbaD Resal18 ,---iMTaoD~Y-o;;a---1
f MORM'SUfiTDot.ur I
~---·-~--
I I I ..,tDa htw$)4' I ._, l1ut-..Tlflt .. IJ
., A11 t•Y_..._ .... _.~
f
-Offer Good thru Jiln. 31. 77 -
• 0,. l iJO a.a to J ,._ t ...,_W ,
l . "Whet'e,OualltyKnow1NoCompromlff~ I
6t1 W. IMSt. CAttf.•1•81 c.e.Mete I ----------..... c~ ~-----..--•
Frld;8Y. January 14. 10n
Dolphins Area Cagers
To Host B acon Takes
Mat1nen
More than 200 blgh
school wrestlers will
compete in the Dana
Hilb High InvitaUooa1
Saturday begiru:li.oa at 10 a.m.
Scoring Lead
The championship
finals of the 16-team
tournam en t are
acbeduled to get under
way at 6:30 p. m.
Olympic gold medal
wrestlers Ruaa Vls (1924) and Tetry
McCann (lleO) will be on
band to present awards.
Orange Coast area
acboola participatinc in-
clode EdJson and Marina
<JI Huntington Beach, El
Toro, Huntington Beach
and bolt Dana Hills.
Featured in the t'r·
pound competition will
be Dana Hilla' undefeat-
ed Sean Mccann <12-0>
and Jlike Provenzano of
Bwrt1ngton Beach.
And in the Ula No. 1
seeded Rudy Arreola of
Dana Hills could meet
Beo Un of Huntington
Beach.
Terry Mccann is
seeded No. 1 1n tbe 12.2-
pound clau, but •Wf op-
poeiUon ii expected from
Junie Robinson of Bunt· inatoo Beach and Tooy
Ippolito of Katella
(Anaheim).
There figures to be touCb competition in tbe
147s where Marina's
Doug Belanger and ffun.
tingtQn Beach's Robert Ross will see action.
Belanger is the No. l seed.
Other seeded com·
petitors include Brad
Lockhart (129), Don
Thornton (135). Randy
Roth (193), and
beavywelgbl Carl
Cherry of Huntiqton
Beacb.
At Home
Laiun• Beach Hl&h'a
Ben Bacon baa taken
over the top spot ln total acorini for Oran~e Coaat
area prep basketball
players with 2M COW'.l·
ten.
Topi In avera1e ls
Corona del Mar ffllb'.i
Alex Black, with a 19.4 mm.
C.-... MHlfMI
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W...Ylelt(M)
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scored two goals and Sue
Walker one as the
University High of Irvine ::!:';M
girls field hockey team P. o.ca-
opened ClF ph~yoff ac· Hvlf,.,,.,,
tioo with a 3-0 home field ~.=.,
Victory over La Qu.inta ol K,,._
Garden Grove Thursday. =-
.. Ml It "' '·' .. .. " 116 • ?
1) )I tJ .. "" I• 11 I SO l.S
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tts•M •.O u <• ' n i.• IOIOSllSU
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Beach defeated Kennedy s.o.--111-1l
High, 4--0, with Raedean eur.r..,,. 1~ ~ ~ :. ~
Rona scorln~ three Ht11tnoa ., " 21 "' 1u go a Is a n d Sh e II y c..-u .., n m ""
Holm ,,,.,,. 11 JO 10 111 u · an one. woo..a1c1 ., n '° " so University 03·0·1) ~ 12 u " 64 u ~Colton (13-0), win-=i :~ ;: '! : ~-~
ner ot the San Antonio ,,,.,,... > • • 11 1.0 League, at 10 Saturday .-• t 1 • 1.s
at University.
Edison is at home to
La Habra, the top-seeded
team in the playoffs wttb
tbe game alao at 10 Satur·
day.
First round scores:
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GWFaces
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Colton 3, Gladatone O;
Footblll 1. Westmloster O; Sonora 4, Lowell O;
Garden Grove 1., Buena
Park 1 (GG advancs on
penetration time);
Olarter Oak 2, Tustin O;
La Habra O; ClaremOQt o
<LH advances on
penetration Ume).
Golden West Collece'•
ba.Oetball team nma in·
to lta toughest obstacle at .....__ Soccer the uaaon tont1bt (8) • a~ when the RusUen tangle ..,,..._'"
with "-resl Coll-e ln a L.lllillt r2I l6I LA,_ "11' ~eo &..atcor1ft0: we!Ooft, ~ Southern California Con· Ju1tt0ttvu11n
f e r enc e 0 am e at ........ 191 uu.a ,_ • ~ltOIM-eo.M
Cypress. ..... .... '" 1t10c.--.
DAILY PILOT •t
5 S11nset
Outfits
.-... Tune Up -...
Sunset League bukel·
ball teams will be eouis
through tbe6r f inal tuneur. to clrcull acuon ..
t 0 D I b t w l t h • ~ ".
doubleheader at Hunt-.... .· mgtoo Beach High top. •'. '•! ptna the slate. . , .,,.
Huntington Beacb
Higb's Oilers and the .• ~
Edllon Hieb Cbar1era • • •
trade Wednesday's OpPOo neata-Ediaon meeUni ,• •
IJnwOod High and lts 1-2 .-.: .. •
punch of Tyreo Naulla ' • 8Jld Tom Free1Du at ' • 1 •
6:30, followed by an 8:30 ;•
clash between tbe Oilers ,,. ,
and Warren Hlgh of •'
Downey. • ,,•t A1ao in acUon tcm1gb1
ii Orange County's No. 1 .,. ••••
prep quintet-Fountain
Valley. in addition to · 1••••• Huntington Beacb'a .,.._,
Marina and Newport ....
Harbor.
Fountain Valley, 13-1.
coocludes its non-lea,ue :
ICbedule with a trek to
Cypress where the 9-S ..
Centurions await. It's an ,.
8 o'clock tiff. as are ..... cluhes al Marina and ,
Newport Harbor where ' Kat.ella and Saddleback ,..,~ "
in d .,"':' va e. --\ The Fountain Valley · • "·
Juuemaut features four '
players scoring in double
figures with George Bar-;.
rioe (16.9), Scott Ford ·=
(18.3). Roger Holmes.;~'
(15.S) and Bret 'i·• WU!ttnaoo (13.0> paviq
tbeway. .. ~ Marina la trying to ·
snap a three-game las
streak a,ainat Katella, ·
while Newport H~
gets a rematch with Sad
dleback. an 8·3 out.flt
which nipped Newport
earlier. 52-49, and la on a •
flve-game winnlnc
streak.
The Oilers, who have
won six of their last seven starts, have been
Sl>U'ked recently by the
play of Mike D'AlesaU: .
dro. who baa averaged
12.4 in the past five pme1.
Edison's gamtt •
featw:es a well·roundect-, ~
attack, but the Chargen' • ~
have not been able to put ~ ;
together back·lo-back • ..;.
Victories. Tonight's op-.,
ponent won the CIF 3-A
championship in 1978. · :
Estancia
Meets SA
Santa Ana High'a
Salata and the host •
Eltancia High Eagles ot
o.ta Mesa, both a game
behind Santa Ana
Valley, club tonight at8
ln a crucial Century
League basketball test.
Estancia, llM, ia led
by guard Ray Orgill and
forward Pete Neumann.
Santa Ana, also sportio&. • a UM overall campafp.;-: •
baa met two teams com..:::
mon to Eatancla. ~
Santa Ana baa split •::..
with Foothill of Santa : ~
Ana, losing, 62·50 and .....
wtmdnC in league, 52·SO,
ID addiUon to a 72-M lou ,, to Lc>e AlamJtos.
Estancia nipped Los
Alamftoe. 59-56, aod de-
reated Foothill in league,
5-55.
little League
Signups Set OWC's Rustlers come Ha-11to: ~.
into the game with a H -;:=::::;;;::============;;;
circuit mark, but coach dYa Ji • Signup datea have
been set for the Greater
Irvine Little League
South 's upcoming
bHeball season and
Saturday will open tbe
sllll1JP aessiona. January
29 ls the other dale.
Dick Stricklin '1 club will l I
h a ve to get its top aramoun~ Q ''-'01· H performance of the P
season to defeat the 11EVERY1HING IN TENNIS'' state's No. 5 ranked
team.
Three Irvine 1rea
market.a -Alpha ~ Albertaoa's and El
Rancho -will be attes
for signups. Inteteated
youths should be accom·
panled by a parent md
proof of birth date.
Registration runs from
1oa.m. to2p.m .
Kida who will be 9 after
Aug. 1 or 15 before Aue. 1 are eliglble.
The Cbaraen. Jed by
W Tyrone Branyan. are 3-01n cootenace play IDCl
ll-tfortheaeat0n.
MDinAetion
DOWNEY-Mater Del Hleh'• Monarcba open
tbe um AD1elua Leaiue
basketball campafgn tOfti&bt at Plus X Hith wtth tbe Upoff slated for
1:ao . . .,,.. .............. ..
CHlllOOK
sests
For the best choice In Chinoob,
eelect from the large Inventory 11
J
I
Marquis Motors.
Come In
IW'!!!!!J!i!eri..tod.ayl
PBIMYELL
TENNIS
IAU.S $~c:. .................. n.w•-,.,··-·
. .
p DAIL V PILOT Friday. January 1'. 1917
BOllOltd• R~e Altered
'"I' Transpac Handicaps
To Undergo Change
• .. ' r-. ...
Drastic changes in t.be baodicap
rule for the 1977 Transpac race from
Los Angeles to Honolulu have been
announced by the sponsoring
Transpacific Yacht Club. '
In bis wlnler newsletter to TPYC
members and prospective entries in
the race Commodore Peter Davis
aald:
"TPYC has taken a completely
fr9b look at handicapping the tm
S.Wlulu race. Tbe -startl.Qg point
•• the International Offlbore Rule,
• United States Yacht l\acing t1*lon time allowance tables and the
. mass of blstorrc data from prior
races."
~ ONE OF THE M~· drastic ehanges was the splitting of the fleet
into two divisions which ln effed
will create two races in one. There
Ill be classes within the two
'-'dlvtaioos. '· ~ There will still be a trophy for the
fti-st yacht lo finish and trophies for
llrat overall on handicap time in
Tax Breaks
For Boaters
New Bill .
California boat owners may be in for
a break on their taxes this year lf an As·
sembly bill introduced by As ·
semblyman Dixon Arnett CR· Redwood
City) gets out of the legislative hopper.
Assembly Bill 130 would replace the
current county-by county form oftaxa-
Uon on boats with a uniform statewide
system.
•I!• 11 ARNETI' IS PROPOSING the an-
nual boat tax be setall.5percentofthe
,11 111artet value of each boat. Th.is rate
: .. *oold lower the tax rate in SS of the
.i 1 atate's 58 counties -including Orange ,,, County.
1. The bill would also require that 70
, , percent of the tax monies collected
from boat owners be used for projeets
1 ielated to boating. Currently. truces
levied on boats are placed in the county
, general funds and used for a variety or
1, projectsatthelocallevel.
In Orange County boats and yachts
1 • are taxed on 25 percent of the market
•alue multiplied by the tax rate and
'faries according to the area in which a
boat is kept.
VIC MARESH, MARINE and
aircraft assessor in Orange county.
• said the proposed bill would definitely
benefit the boat owner and that he
favored the bill.
Maresh saJd the bill would place
boats and yachts in the same tax
category as aircraft which are now
taxed on 1.5 percent of the market
value.
He pointed out, however, that both
boats and aircraft are highly mi-
gratory property and t.bat the fair
market value might vary from one
eounty or one area to another
eacb diviaion, but there will be no
trophy for the overall balldlcap win·
ner of the race.
The di visionlng ol tbe neet will be
dased primarily on the displacement
ol length and t.he sail area to wmsbt
factor s, the two criteria that
significantly measure running abili·
ty, according to the report.
THE HONOLULU RACE is
dominated by running before the
wind in a fresh breeze, making it
primarily a "horsepower" race.
'lbe division would also, hopefully,
reduce the disparity created a few
years ago by the ultra-light displace-
ment downwind "sleds" which can
surf down heavy following seas as
fast or faster than the much larger
displacement yachts.
Another drastic change is in the
handicap d'stance of the race.
Heretofore, the race bas been han·
dicapped for time allowance
pUrpoSes on the actual distance of
2.zzs miles. This year's race will be
handicapped on a distance of. l,B619
miles -75 percent of the actual slls·
tance.
Tms CHANGE IS apparently a
bow to owners and skippers of large
Oaaa A yachts who claim \bat lime
allowances based on the longer dis·
taoce gave them virtually no chance
ol winning overall honors. Their on-•
ly chance for hardware was for line
honors in the first to finish race.
Another sign.lficant change is in
the sail area evaJuation. Fore.
triangle rated sail area bas been in·
creased 24 percent to "more fairly"
rate the area of spinnakers.
bloopers, etc., according to the re-
port. Sail area to displacement has
also been calculated.
One of the big controversies in the
1975 race was the banning of
··bloopers··, also known as
"streakers" and "shooters". This is
a large light-weight sail flown
downwind on the weather side of the
spinnaker to fill in the dead space .
TWO YEARS AGO TPYC ruled
that such sails were unsafe in the
event of a man overboard as they
would involve too much sail handl-
ing before the yacht could be
brought about lo pick up a victim. '
But sailmakers and other ad-
vocates of the sail contend that it
makes the yacht more stable when running downwind in a s trong
breeze, thus making it safer for
those working oo deck.
Davis said TPYC is al.so planning
a "race home" for those skippers
who would like a little competition
on the return trip. 'Ibe plan calls for
a race from Hanalei Bay to San
Francisco in mid-August.
"EVERYONE HM TO GET their
boat home anyway, and such a race
would add' a ·safety factor to the
return trip. Jt would also get the
boats to San Fnnctsco in time for
participation in St. Francis Yacht
Club's group of races in Sep·
tember." Davis said.
Del Rey
.: Si,te of ,.
Meeting
Weekend Offers
Wmte~ Regatta
The United States
Y acbt Racins Union,
primary governing body tor yachting in the U.S.
will bold ita annual meet-
ing in Karina del Rey
Jan.19-22.
Balboa Yacht Oub again bolds the spotlight.
ln yacht.ine aclJvity this weekend with Its Winter
Regatta for all cluses Saturday and Sunday.
Dana Point opens its tm racing schedule
Sunday with its Winter Regatta for Pacific Han-
dicap Racing Fleet yachts racing over courses
outside Dana Harbor.
Only other activity schedoled in Southern
Callfomla this weekend is Long Beach Yacht
Club's lnvitallonal Regatta on Sunday, and Navy
Yacht Club of Long Beach's Commodore's Invita·
tional for centerboard boats on Saturday.
• .
TllE t'AMIL Y CIRCUS. Dy Bil Kenne --------------------------
"You've. gotten big, too."
.
Olive Oil Company .
Sued Over Claims
LOS ANGELES CAP) -The New Jersey.based
Sunshine Short~ Corp. is accused in a su.it of miarepresentallon m its claim that its "Mama
W. Olive Oil'' is 100 percent pure olive oil. Actual·
ly, claims the suit, more t.han 40 percent was
chea_per veJetable oils.
Dep. Dist. Atty. Gilbert Garcetti flled civil suit
in Loi Angeles Superior Court for an i.ajunction to
prevent future misrepresentation and unfair com-
petition and for civil penalties of $2,500 for each al·
Jeged wrong act in the past. Howard Rtzky. food and drug inspector for the
California Department of Health, s aid state and
federal tests showed that the product contained less
than 60 percent olive oil with the balance composed
ol vegetable oils.
..
114"-3/I" lllYE 21 PIEG
n...a.istrea~
DtAR PAT: Will you please gjvt
me a rundown of tbe various mall or-
der drug rlrma, inc:lucllng "mem·
bership' ·firms l 've beard about.
K . Y., Fountain Valley
Tbe NRTA·AARP <Nattoeal M ·
aoclatloa of BeUred Teaeller1-
Amerlcaa Aaaodat.loe of aeUred
Pertoa.1, l7M K St. N.W., WlllMagtoa,
DC ZMM> Plaarmacy Service la for
members or the above ~ There
LI a aomlaaJ membenlalp fee. ud
posta1e II paid oa all otden.
Pastor's ls localed at 1.26 S. York
Rd .• Hatboro. PA Ul040. It charges for
postage, but bas no membersbip fee.
Pharmaceutical Services. lnc., is
located at 6427 Prospect Ave .. Kansas
City. MO 64132. PSI grants a 10 per-
cent discount to members of the Na·
tional Education Association. PSI
does not.charge for postage or handl-
ing and there is no membership fee
for non·members ofNEA.
Federal Prescription Service, lnc .•
2nd and Main Sts., Mad.rid, IA 50156.
sells to the general public and does not
charge postage. Gi!U Prescription
Co., 916 Walnut St.. Kansas City, MO
64199. also sells directly to the public.
Discount mail onrer drug prices
average about 20 lo 2S percent below
chain store prices, according lo!! sur·
vey. These firms speciallie in ~gs
for chronic ailments which require re·
peat orders. They also sell non·
prescription items. but do not sell
narcotics by mail.
An ..... C..11eetlea
DEAR PAT: I have bad asthma
<~ 11 problem• ?"lw'fl ~If' 1(1 Pol f>wnn POI W1tll
C'kl ttd IOI* "'"'"ii Ilk' 1111SIL"'" QM ncll(/f\ II°"
fW'.-d Ill &<>11•,. 1n,.qu1ll<'• '" {IOt"t•r11"11'lll ll"'1 °""
"'15 Moil I/OU' <JU""'"" ,,, l'al °""" Al YOlolt !W>ru< 1• Orange Coast f>w/11 f>llCtl r 0 8o1 IS60
Cotro M1•1a CA 'ltwr. lndudf IJllU• tl'lrphclrit'
ryimtlt'r Thlf C'llll'"'" upp;:ar. dn1111 , Jrvpl Bc.1urdG~1 • I
for yea.rs. I've alwa.ys taken asplrin
for relief lrom aches and pains, as
most people do. A friend of mine sald
that she'd read that aspirin can ac-
tually induce an asthma alt.ack. The
only problem 1s that my friend
couldn't couldn't recall where she'd
read Uus, or how it was backed up
Can you check it out roe me.,
8.C .. San Clemente
ct.eek with your owa playaldan
regardllll your penoaaJ coadJtJoe
aad follow profeaalou.I medical ad·
vice recardi.D1 any Mlf·acbalalltered
medlcattoD. ne oely recetlt lalorma· uoo AYS coald ftDd ftltUDc'..-to udama attacks wu bued Oii a f.kree.
year study by a •ecllcal panel for tbe
Food ud Dru« Achnbdatradoll. nta
study, llowe•er, was mainly coa-
cened with procbacta Uaat claJm to ~
Ueve the common cold.
Paael cllalrmu Dr. Fruela C .
Lowell. former cblef fJI the allergy U ·
I& of tile MaHaclaaseUs GeneraJ
Hospital aad usoc:late profes90r' at
Harvard Medical Stboel. debaaked
commercial cold medications and
urged the FDA to adopt strtctn COii·
trol over products that claim to be ef·
fectlve ln treating eolda. Th1a study
toacbed oa tbe uselessness of Vitamin
C as a cold care, bat no verdkt wus
submitted as to its efftdeacy ta cold
prevetaUOD.
Tbe es-perts Involved also wett
coecensed aboat uUuna attack.a fa.
daced by uplrtn. They recomm~
that coep and cold eomblaatloe pro·
dacta coatalalng uplrla be laWW
with a wU'llla1 ror udrm.atks. Agabl,
dleck wttb yoar own pb.ysldan.
lllUPAMll
3-SPID Slmlll
1t maru the first Ume
the austere body,
fonnerly known as North
American Yacht Racing
Union (NA\' RU) bas s;;::::::;===:::=::::::==~:;;;;;;;;;::~;------
beJd its annual coadave
S.A.E.
SOCKEISR ...
in the west.
THIS COUPON GOOD FOil
25°/o OFF
OM Llfl AC:IYUC WOODSTAIMs ~ ._ CWI 141·11
AMO MUCH. MUCH MOU
Lllltt.a Oua1111t .. s All ..... FIMI
S.le l!flllt 1..tl-7?
OPIM7D4YS
140 I.· t 7tlt -Coeh ....
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JACKIE HYMAN, Editor
EEKENDER Arts I Dining Out--!'. .
Entertainment
How High Is Up?
On Top of
Tlw Worl~
Singers Say
By LAU,RIE KASPER
Ot ,,,. 01ily ~liot Stoff
A 21-year-old visiting Orange
County from the suburbs of
Chicago believes people need to
both get away and come
together.
Terri Diamond believes they
need to forget the daily r<'uline of
their lives for" a while, relax and
meet with their neighbors.
She finds all this somewhat dif-
ficult to explain in words but she
The group has circled the globe, with
performances in 36 countries on six
continents during its 11-year history.
The singers have also toured prisons,
schools and Indian communities.
hildren's Stories
orne to the Point
Two popular children's story
allets will be presented by
allet Pacifica in the "Ballet for
'ldren" series this month m
e Festival of Arts Forum
eater. 650 Laguna Canyon
ad, Laguna Beach.
"The Enchanted Toyshop,"
th music by Joseph Bayer, and
P eter and the Wolf," with
w;ic by Prokofiev. can be seen
day, Jan. 23 at t :JOp.m.
CAST OF "The Enchanted
oyshop" includes Chuck Colgan
s the Toymaker. Kr isti
tephens as the Fairy Doll,
ulse Frazer as the Spinning
op, Louis Carver as 'Harlequin
nd Carrie Kneubuhl as the
Mama-Papa doll.
Featured in "Peter and the
Woll" will be Randy Barnett as
Peter, Roger Faubel as the Wolf,
Chuck Colgan as Grandfather,
Molly Lynch as the Bird. Kathy
Jo Kahn as the Duck and Eve
Henderson as the Cat.
TICKETS at S4 for adults and
S3 for students and children will
be on sale at the Forum box of-
fice one h our before each
performance if any are still
available. Reservations may be
made by calling 494-7271 or by
mailing a check to SaJly Reeve,
P ,O. Box 241, Laguna Beach, CA.
92652. Group rates are available
for 1S or more tickets purchased
for one performance.
has an answer ... Up With Peo-
ple. a traveling group of young
people which will be performing
in the Saddleback Valley this
weekend.
THEY WILL present a free
concert tonight at 7:30 in Laguna
Hills Mall. .
A two-hour concert will begin
at 8 p.m. Sunday in the Mission
Viejo High School gym.
Tickets ror this concert. which
is sponsored as a fund-raiser by
the high school 's Keywanettes,
may be purchased at tbe door.
Admission is $2.50 for students
and $3.50 for adults.
The show will be put on by 50
people aged 18 to 25 who pay a
tuition fee to earn academic units
while traveling with the troupe.
LAST WEEK, the group
performed during the NFL party
before the Super Bowl. After
their appearances here, they'll
go to Hawaii.
They are just one of five casts
putting on the s how around the
world.
According to Up With People
literature, the organization was
formed in 1965 to establish a
"creative framework for com-
munication and inter action
between people or varied back·
grounds and across all barriers:
age, class. race, nationality or
political point of view "
It also is aimed at developing
responsibility, decision-making
skills and a global perspective
among young m en and women.
Educationally, lt was formed to
combine academics and ex-
perience in a ''relevant" social
context, a coming together or the
student and the world.
THE SHOW they perform is
described as a "kaleidoscope of
original and contemporar y
music and dancing, includinf
Kristi Stephens
Louise Hazer wlll dance the role of ble Spinning Top
Friday, January 14, 1977 DAILY PILOT
Enthusiasm ;~ one of the trademarks of Up With People performances. ti
American and international
folklore."
Members say the show crosses
generation gaps and can be en-
joyed by anyone and everyone. ln
line with this. they're putting on
two closed shows, one for the
high school students and another
for residents of Leisure World.
BUT ELLEN Clougtl, an 18·
year-old from Cleveland, said.
"It's more than just a show. It's a feeling ...
Whatever it is, Up With People
has r eceived raves in most
places it has traveled.
The two young women promot·
ing this weekend's performances
also rave about the program ...
but for something other than the
performances.
They're grateful just for the ex-
perience.
Only one of every 18 youn g peo-
ple who apply is accepted. Even
with these odds. Miss Diamond
said. "If you don't do it, I think
you'd be dumb."
One or the performers last
year. she was asked to return and
work in public relations this
year.
Counting a sense of
responsibility as one or the
greatest personal bcnefiL<; of the
program. sbe said. "'I've found
that 1 've really changed. I was
lazier before I got intotlus. · ·
Participants. she explained. do
mor e than perform. They also do
their own stage sets, Ughting and
advance publicity
''WE DO EVER\'THINGthere
is to do with a show. J think we're
the only road show who does
everything,·· said Miss Clough,
who is now taking her tum with
the off-st age work. , 1. •
Her favorite part of Up;Jtlth
People is staying with .iaost
families. She said staying th
people In big cities and ahiSl
towns, urban areas and 'rurat.
communities has given her ao tn:.
sight into the views of others. :
"I've learned why people lblnlt
the way they do,'' she said. ,., :
Miss Diamond agreed that 11hci
feels like a more broad-nUnde<.t
person. '
But they say there is still mor~
to the show and their work in it;
Although they admit it soun~
idealistic and too good to be.ttu
they say the s how, wb~
celebrates people in its songs, ac-
tually brings people together.
''You feel right nowthat)'oO're
helping America," Miss
Diamond said. ..~
Miss Clough quickly add"'&
"helping the world really." •, . .:~ -~~
-'J .
' ~;~
It's a Mystery to Bim;t
1 ~ Robin Huber bas become a
confirmed fan of mystery nov·
elisl Agatha Christie, the late
"queen or crime."
A theater arts instructor, he
will direct Golden West College's
production of Christie's murder
mystery, •'The Mousetrap,''
which opens an eig ht -
performance run Thursday In the
community theater, 15744 Golden
West St., Huntington Beach.
Shows will be Jan. 20-22 and
27·29 at 8:30 p.m .• with matinees
Jan. 23 and 30 at 5:30 p.m.
UNTIL "MOUSETRAP,"
Huber had never read Christie,
and not many mystery novels al
all ··because I'm not good at solv·
itlg them." he said.
But to prepare for his direc·
torlal stint, he devoured five
Christie novels in several weeks
to get a sense of her style and ap·
proach.
"I am utterly amazed. This
play Is so skillfully written, there
are so many layers of meaning,
that even a bad production would
have something going for it.
"It is a masterpiece in the
craft of playwriting. All the ele-
ments are there -plot, interest·
ing characters. crisp dialog,
theme, music, and spectacle of
costume and scenery.''
THERE ARE writers of good
plays who flaunt the rules, Huber
pointed out, but the question ls,
'will they endure?
"Mousetrap'' bas endured.
Laat month at St. Martin's
'!beater in London. tbe present
cut and management celebrat-
ed the 25th year and 9,97Sth
performance, making "The
Mousetrap" the world's longesl-
nuutlng play.
Dame Agatha herself did not
live to see the silver jubilee of her
durable whodunit. Sbe died a
year ago this month at 85.
For Golden West's production,
Huber bas assembled a cast or
experienced players in collece
and commWllty the~ alone with newcomers to the stage. M•mbera are Sandy Fremen,
Ken Cope, Warren Sater, Joan
Haserty, Pan Ostro, Barbara
Gibbs, Steven Durbeck and DoUC O'Connor.
SVPPOK1'1NG them ls a slia-
blt te~hnlcal ctew, including
pest cottume det\lne.r Bonnie lloncayold~ a 1radu~e student at
Cal State Fulltrton; Dave.
Tidwe ll, scener y designer :
Steven Craig, lighting designer;
and Carolyn Dennison, makeup
des igner . who works as a
makeup artist at KOCE-TV,
Channel 50.
Adding a playful note to the
show. the audience is being invit-
ed to play detective and guess the
murderer. Ballots will be pro-
vided at inleqnission, and the re-
sults posted at the door foll owing
the final curttin.
"This Is alM> a good device to
test the actors' ability to keep the
audience guessing." Huber said.
Since joining Golden West in
1971 , Huber has been known
primarily for his scenery de-
signs. which won national
awards in 1972, 1974 and 1975. His
d.ire~ting credits at GWC have in:
eluded ·•wailing for Godot," and
·• Androcles and the Lion." ... !'.!'1 j
He is currently compl~
doctorate in theater arts
Uni versity of So utb~r·
California. t •
Tickets are available in the cot?
lege bookstore al $3 general adf
mission, or $2 for students an4 I senior citizens. · ~ •• •
Ken Cope and Ba~bara;~;~ 1
Gibbs play leads m ~ ! . .. .. GWC's 'Mousetrap. ~ .. ·
Miss Gibbs is the
daughter of
Huntington Beach
councilwoman and
former mayor
Norma Gibbs.
\
The Arts in Brief
Dances Diverse
From the traditional to the highly unbsual, two
ballet companfes will be giving Southern canfornlans
a wide variety of offerings to choose from this month
and February.
The American Ballet Theater will include "Les
Sylphides'' Cleft) among its presentations Feb. 7-27 at
the Los Angeles Music Center Pavilion. Tickets are
available at agencies or by calling (213) 626-7111.
Other full-length offerings will Include "Swan
Lake" and "The Sleeping Beauty." Evenings of short
ballets will also be presented.
The San Francisco ballet will present "Shinju"
(right), with music by Japanese-American compaser
Paul Chlhara, plus a full-length "Romeo and Juliet"
and other works Jan. 20-22 at UCLA's Royce" Half.
Tickets at $6-$8 ($2.50 for students and senior citizens)
are available at Mutual and W~ll ichs-Liberty agen-
cies.
Concerts to Jazz Up Coast
Jazz buffs can enjoy both local and interna-
tionally known jazz bands at Orange Coast
College concerts next week and in March.
On Jan. 23, three college bands will play with
guest artists Pete Christlieb (tenor sax), Carl
Fontana (trombone) and Bobby Shew (trumpet).
Admission will be $2, with curtain time at 2 p.m.
in the OCC Auditorium, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. Tickets are available al the
bookstore or by mail <payable to Orange Coast
College) from Charles Rutherford in the Music
Department (zip 92626).
As part of the OCC Jazz Festival, the follow-
ing concerts have been scheduled: Matrix, 8:30
p.m . March 24 ; Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Band,
8:30 p.m . March 25; Shelly Manne-Ray Brown-
Herb Ellis, 3:30 p.m. March 26; Bill Waltrous
and the Manhattan Wildlife Refuge, 8:30 p .m.
March26.
Tickets at $4 for evenings and $1.50 for aner-
noons will be available Feb. 1 by mail, payable to
OCC Jazz Festival, from the festival at 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. A self-
ad~ressed stamped envelope should be enclosed.
Watereolor Soddfl E.rhHlltf011
Information about the Hoth annual exhibi-
tion of the American Watercolor Society. with
cash prizes totaling $12,000, is now available by
writing Exhibition Secretary, American
Watercolor Society, 1083 Fifth Ave., New York,
N. Y. 10028. Color slides wiU be accepted, with a
deadline of Feb. 11.
Santa f'e Opera .sea. ...
The Santa Fe Opera has announced its 1977
season beginning July 6. Scheduled are "The
Italian Straw Hat" (American premiere) by
Nino Rota, Verdi's "Falstaff," Debussy's
"Pelleas et Melisande," Mozart's "Cosi Fan
Tutte" and .. Fedora·· by Umberto Giordano. The
season ends Aug. 27.
Ticket information is available from The
Santa Fe Opera, P.O. Box 2A08, Santa Fe, N.M.
87501.
Dree Concert• hi Cflp~
Three concerts have been set for Cypress:
Cal State Long Beach's Jazz Ensemble, Feb. 25;
. . .. ....
. • •
tome drive
the Orange County Master Chorale, March 25;
and the Montagnana Trio, AprlJ is. All
performances will be at 8 p.m. in the Cypress
High School Theater, 9801 Valley View St.,
Cypress.
Tickets are S2 general, $1 for students and
senior citizens, with series tickets $5 and $2.50.
Information can be obtained by calling 821-9500.
Saturdafl, Sunclafl at VCLA
This weekend at UCLA : At 8 p.m. Saturday
in Melnitz Hall, a symposium will be held on
"Sex, Poraography and the Movies." with direc-
tor Alan Pakula and others. Admission is free.
Jose Ferrer will give one performance only
of "The Art of the Monolog" Sunday at 8 p.m. in
Schoenberg Hall. Those holding tickets for the
previously scheduled matinee performance can
exchange them for the eve.Ding performance or
obtain a refund at the original place of purchase.
Natalie Cole to tlle PamUon
Natalie Cole wiJI give a concert Feb. 1 at the
Dorothy Chandler Pavilion of the Los Angeles
Music Center. The daughter o( Nat King Cole,
she received a Grammy in 1976 as "Best New
Artist of the Year ." Tickets at $6.50 to $8.50 are
on sale at Mutual Agencies.
Vnll'enal Seeks a.derefla
In honor of Universal's new musical "The
Slipper and the Rose," Universal Studios Tour is
having a contest to find a Cinderella to reign over
Valentine's Day weekend. Women over 16 in-
terested in entering are being asked to send their
name, address, phone number, age, dress size,
glass slipper sjze and a recent phot.o (black and
white or color. but it will not be returned), plus 25
words or less on "What being Cindrella would
mean to m e" to "Cinderella Contest." Dept.
"C," Universal Studios Tour, P.O. Box 8620,
Universal City, CA 9lro8.
Deadline is Feb. 3. Minors must have con·
sent of parent or guardian.
El'ftlts at C'o111't!lltloll C'eater
Dave Mason will give a concert Jan. 23 at the
Anaheim Convention Center, with Mac Davis
lhe Mercedes-Benz 450SEL. for you ... for your passengers~ ..
it's a world unto itself.
There is no other Sedan like lhe 450SEL.
It 1s the premier Sedan in the entire Mercedes-
Benz line. With its extended Wheelbase. 11 has
more interior room than any other Mercedes-
Benz available in lhe United Slates.
Its extraordinary engineering and its host
of soj:ilisltcated biotechnical ideas all com-
bine to make this car a unique experience for
bveryone Who rides in it.
The 450SEL comes to you with a comple-
Jnent of safety. performance and com fort
features-as standard equipment-that is al-
most unheqrd of these days It 1s fully equipped,
nght from the start. and priced lo reflect its
essential honesty
What ffffl Items of optional equipment you
might consider have more to do with your own
sense of aesthetics. rather than engineering.
The 4SOSEL is a very special (A
world unto itself. For you ... for every \
passenger. Call us today. A convinc-')
ing demonstration is easy to arrange. '· . ·
scheduled to appear Feb. 27 and the Harlem
Globetrotters on Feb. 2. Ticket information ts
available at 635·5000.
Enchanted Hllage W'hlter Boan
Enchanted Village, which features animal
acts. is now on its winter schedule, open 10 a.m.
to 6 p. m. Saturdays and SWldays only. Admission
is $3.50 for adults and $1. 75 for children 4-11 . with
free parking and unlimited admission to all ma.
jor shows included. The Village is at lhe former
Japanese Village location in Buena Park. ·
Met A'"'"'• ... DeadUae
The first Metropolitan Opera Auditions.
Orange County District. will be held Feb. S-6 at
Santa Ana High School. Applications must be
submitted by Jan. 22 to 0 .C. District Auditions,
P.O. Box 4610, Irvine, CA 92740. They are availa-
ble from music teachers and schools.
·compltt• co-•r•1• of couftt1 ....
-9overnm• •nd court1. .. .. ~, ,./;
everyd•y t r .1 l·"I• I I I In th• ! l • .
THE UHIVHSfTY Of CAUIOIHIA. llYIHI
COMMITTH FOil ARTS P'lUEMTS:
MUSIC
FOR A WHILE
FRANCO.FLEMISH
MUSIC OF lHE I 5th
AND E~RL Y 16th
CENTURIES.
Tmnday, J....-y II, 19n, 8:00 p.a. UCI
COK.rtH ..
General Admission Sl.00-UCI Stvdents SI .SO
Faculty/staff $2.00-0tfter Students $2.00
Tlcbh GYallab .. at ASUCI lox Office, Gat.way
Co••ons, Flr at Floor, (7 I 4t 133·5549,
MORday-Frlday, 9.,..4:30p•. For further
.... lofts. ,.... cal Cou•llllt... for Arts at
8JWJ71 •
Polynesian Trip
Airs Next Week
Re-enacting a feat of
the ancient Polynesians,
adventurous m odern
Hawaiians undertook an
epic journey In search of
Marshall, follows the
3,000 mile voyage of the
60-foot doubl e-hulled
canoe from Hawaii to
Tahiti. their heritage ---------
This epic sea journey
~ vividly presented on
the Natiooal Geographic
Speciai "Voyage of the
Hokule'a," airing on
Channel 28 al 8 p.m.
Tuesday and on Channel
SO al 9 p.m . Wednesday.
The special will be re-
peated at 6 p.m. Jan. 22
on Channel 50 and at 1
and 9 p.m. Jan. 22 on
Cbannel28.
"Voyage of the
Hokule'a," hosted and
narrated by E . G.
"'"""._ ..... _...,. ...... ,, ... _ .,_.,.... ~ ··--.......... -.. ..... °""""' ............. _
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more about VIDEO INTRODUCTIONS ....•
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Seafood Comes Ashore
Alona with the New Year u
number of new din.in& estAbllsh-
menta are In the process ot lak-
lnc rool hereabouts. We'll be
chocking them oul 1n I.he weeks
immedtately ahead but a brier
rundown seems In order right now to acknowledge rirst thtngs
in the first month of lm. ••••••
DROPPING ANCHOR in Costa
Mesa New Year's Day was Long
Jobn Sliver's, Orange County's
tirst outlet Cor tl)e country 's
Jargest, fastest -growlng seafood
restaurant chain.
A full month of festivities is un-
der way at the restaurant -3905
Harbor Blvd. (across from Fed-
co), 979-6696 -to celebrate the
~rand opening. Hours of opera-
tion are 11 a .m . to 10 p.m . daily,
and until 11 p.m . on Friday and
Saturday, seven days a week.
The schedule of opening events
throughout January includes
puppet shows, cartoons. a pirate
magician, a frisbee throwing
competition and clinic featuring
Bob May, Guaness Book of World
Records frisbee throwing cham·
pion, a fi sh eating contest among
local high school football teams,
free gifts and money-saving of-
fers.
Special free gifts for the kids
include helium-filled balloons.
pirate doubloons, world cham-
pion frisbees, Captain Kangaroo
records, pirate T-shirt iron·ons,
and pirate boats, m asks and
comic books.
Long John Silver's menu
features fis h fillets, chicken
"peg le gs" (m i niature
drumsticks>. chicken "planks"
(boneless breast slrips), clams,
oysters and shrimp, all of which
are prepared in a tempura-type
batter, the exact recipe of wruch
is a closely guarded secret.
Still more menu offerings are
french fries, corn on the cob,
fresh cole slaw. hush-puppies
and desserts, a special blend of
hot tea, soft drinks, Coors beer
and lnglenook wines. ••••••
SfAND BY for the opening,
any day. in Huntington Beach or
Maxwell's, an Orange County
edition or the highly acclaimed.
likenamed restaurant in Beverly
Hills.
Owner Charlie Rivezzo will
open his new place on the historic
pier in Huntington .Beach, bring-
ing with him the same m enu
that's made Maxwell's Beverly
Hills a popular spot with
Southern C:t'.ifornia diners.
Formerly the Fisherman. the
Out 'n' About
Norman Stanley
seaside reataur ant has been com
pletely redecorated to cmphasl1.e
the st.riktne ocenn view outside
the picture windows
As In Beverly Halls. house
specialties lo be featured on the
extenslve blll of fare include the
Mulberry Street seafood feast,
broiled fresh stuCfed fllet of sole,
live Maine lobster and fresh
eastern scallops.
The phone numbers for in-
formation are Beverly Hills,
(213) 276·2327, and Huntington
Beach at the pier. (714 ) 536-2555. ••••••
COLON Y FOODS, Inc ..
Newport Beach-headquartered
operators or more than 75 Colony
Kitchen a nd Hobo J oe's
restaurants in seven western
states, has just opened their
newest (and fifth) establishment
lll Orange County.
Latest in the local lineup is a
Colony Kitchen in Laguna Hills
that sports both a restaurant and
cocktail lounge. allhougl1 they're
calling the latter a "pub".
Located at 23701 Moulton
Parkway (in the Moulton
Parkway Plaza>. 581-1800, the
New Colony Kitchen ls open
seven days a week, from 7 a.m.
to midnight. fo r breakfast, lunch
and dinner.
There's entertainment in the
pub. Tuesday through Saturday,
from 6 to 10 p.m. Happy hours
~olden ~~~ ·~~
Z;;;;ragon . --~
GENUINE CHIN~ MANDARIN DISHES
Specializing In Chmese A Lo Corte Dishes
are• to 7 p.m .. Monday through
f'rtday. durlna which au well
drinJcs are served double for the price of pne.
For those on the anti-cigarette
warpath there's b reassuring "no
smoking" area in the dining
room. Facilities are also avaiJa.
ble for banquets and private
parties. ••••••
MARK NEXT Thursday, Jan.
20, on your "futures calendar."
Arriving on the Orange County
dining scene that day will be
Houtihan's Old Place restaurant,
located at 4777 Von Karman, cor-
ner o( Campus Drive and Von
Karman In Newport Beach.
One will reportedly enter
Houlihan 's through heavily
carved oak doors into a world of
period antiques and decorative
objects ranging from Victorian
to Art Noveau: stained glass,
heavily c arved woodea ban-
nisters, lush greenery, specially
designed fabric ceilings and a
collect10n of original pub mir-
rors.
Menu highlights. we've been
told, will include such dishes as
mushrooms stuffed with crab-
meat or escargots; ham, crab-
meat or shrimp quiches; a varie-
ty or omelets including gaspacbo
and arUchoke; Kansas City
sirloin strip steaks. French onion
soup; foot long hot dogs; chicken,
shrimp a nd crabmeat crepes.
Specially prepared dishes that
will be served after 5 p.m. in·
<See RESTAURANTS, Page C.)
Active A ctre••
Fans of Jean Marsh will
have a field day this month.
She returns for the final
se a son of "Upstairs,
Downstairs" at 9 p . m .
Sunday on Channel 28. And
she's starri n g in
''Travesties•' a nd ''The
Im portance of Being
Earnest," in repertory now
through M arch 20 at the
Mark Taper Forum of the
Los Angeles Music Center.
LUNOi•OINNER CAIL Y
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OCEAN VIEW
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KITCHEN TtlE C:ANHIRV
PROUDLY ANNOUNCES
THE OPEHIMG OF ITS HEW
RESTAURANT & PUB
IM
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F.ialulng
BREAKFAST • LUNCH
DINNER • DAILY SPECIALS ..... , ... ,, ...........
T..-Y ..... W..,6p.-.to 10,...
HAPP'i HOURS '4to1 P.M. MON.-fRt.
Sen Ing Al W• DrW&a
DOllble For the flrice of 0...
BANQUET FAOLmES AVAflABtE
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THIN
VIEW' IT-ON KOCl·TV1 CH SO
?.30PM 'WlIIESmYS
3010 LaFAYRr, ftSWPORT llEAQ(
71•-CS7S-5777
•
Friday. Janu .. ry I 1. l!l77 CJ;, L. V hLOl C:J
Times/Places
The 'King'
And lee
Set Tonight
TONIGHT, JANUARY 14
'KING' -Film in honor of Dr. Martin Luther
King's birthday, 7 o'clock tonight at Santa Ana
College Phillips Hall, 17th and Bristol streets.
Free.
'HOUDA YON ICE' -Al lhe Inglewood Forum,
8 o'clock tonight : 1. Sand 9 p.m. Saturday and 2
and 6 p.m. Sunday. $4·$7 at Mutual and Ticketron
agencies.
ISRAEU HUMOR, DANCING -Wlth actor
Shalom Sherman. 7:30 o'clock tonight at UC
Irvine's Mesa Court Gold Room, part of Israel
Awareness Week. $1.
COMEDY ACT -Richard Curiel, 8:30 and 10:30
o'clock tonight and Saturday at UC Irvine Stu-
dent Center 1. $1:
MODERN DANCE CONCERT -Students from
seven Orange Coast schools .. 8 o'clock tonight in
the Huntington Beach High School Auditorium
1905 Main St. $1. •
ORGAN CONCERT -By Justin Colyer and
Margaret Ballmer, 7:30 o'clock tonight at the
First Presbyterian Church. on Euclid Avenue
north of Chapman Avenue, Garden Grove. Music
by Vivaldi, Bach and Handel. Free.
AGAPELAND -Family musical, 6:30 ond 8:30
o'clock tonight, 1 :30, 4 and 6:30 p.m. Saturday
and Sunday a t Knott's Berry Farm In Buena
Park. $4.50 adults, $3.50 children tonight. Satur-
day and Sunday $6.501n advance or $7.50 at door.
which wilt include unlimited rides.
PIRANDELLO PLAY -"Six Characters in
Search of an Author." 8 o'clock tonight and
Saturday in Orange Coast College Drama Lab
2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Free. •
'THE HOUSE OF BERNARDA ALBA• -
Spanish tragedy, 8 o'clock tonight and Saturday
at Fullerton College Studio Theater. 321 E . Chap-
man Ave., Fullerton. Free but tickets required.
871·8101. I
'!P WITH PEOPLE -Contemporary and tradi·
tional songs, 7 : 30 o'clock tonight in Laguna Hills
Mall. Free. Also, 8 p.m. Sunday in Mission Viejo
High School gymnasium. $3.50 adults, $2.50 stu-
dents at the door.
Drop By El Maiador
Say Heflo To Marcial
TRY ORANGE COUNTY'S
FINEST MEXICAN FOOD f ,. fr--! Now Serving Amencan & Mei1can l Breaklast lrom 7 A M Sat & Sun
LU..CHIOH c~...-. C"'"''"'" • 8Ht ,,.., Sl'fCIAL TKO."-" oi .,.._(JI R-ce
®
Ope" 7daya
crijiirie
Ne~Orleans
Dinner $4.95
Chicken Gumbo Soup,
Shrimp Creole
and for dessert
tbe Southern Prallae Crepe
with vanilla lee c.-am
and bot praline sauce.
Costa Mesa: South Coast Plaza, 556-1225
Open until 12.00 midnight Friday· Saturday
11 .00 pm Sunday ·Thursday
Arcadia: Santa Anita fealllon Park, 445-3115
a.v.rtr Hiii•: Camden and l rtghlon War. 274-11223
Otendele: The Qallttl•. 243·3111
Woodland Hlll11lllal>romenllde,194-7225
BtnlcAmerltnid-M111e1 Cn1111a-Amerlc1n E•P•t~•
JOHN STEWART -Tonight through Sunday al
The Golden Bear. 306 Paciflc Coast llighway1 l
Huntin(ton Beach. s:t&-8800.
•nfE JlAJNMAKER' -8:30 p.m. Prtdays aoa:
Saturdaya, now th~ Jan. 29 at Watmlnstei:
CQmm\lnity Theater, 7272 Maple S t ,, •
Westminster. 893·11e28.
=~ 'OLD Ttal£S' -Pin~r drama, now thn>ugh
Feb. 19 at South Coast Repertory. 1827 Newport .
Blvd .. Costa Mesa. 8 p.m. Tuesdays-Sundays and.
3 p.m. Sundays. 646-1.363 after l p.m . dally.
•SOUND OF MUSIC' -Now through March 6 t,.t ...
Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouae. 140 Avenldi •:
Pico, San Clemente. $9.50-$13.9$. 492-9950. •
CONTINUING IN LOS ANGELES -"The . •
Guardsman," through J an. 29 at the Ahmunson ·:
Theater: "Travesties" u.nd "The Importance ot'1l
Being Earnest" throu~h March 20 at the Marlt
Taper Forum; "V anlties." Indefinite run al tho We~twood P layhouse: "h Chorus Llnc," in-
definite run at the Shubert Theater.
SATURDAY, JANUARY lS
WHALE WATCHING CRUISES -Now throueh
mid-February at Davey's Locker, Balboa
Pavilion, Newport Beach. 9 a.m. and 1 p.m.
Saturdays and Sundays. $4 adults, $2.50 children.
673-5245.
CIDLDREN'S THEATER -"You're a Good
Man, Charlie Brown." 8 p.m. Saturday and 1 and
3 p.m. Sunday at Santa Ana College Phillips Hall.
17th and Bristol streets. Sl adults, 50 cents
children. 835-3000 weekdays between 1 and 4 p.m.
'UNDERGROUND' -Film about Weathermen,
8 p.m . Saturday In Orange Coast College
Auditorium. 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $2.
Benefits scholarships.
COLLECTORAMA -Gun show, 9 a.m . to 5 p.m .
Saturday and Sunday at Orange County Fair-
grounds on Fair Drive, Costa Mesa.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 16
BENEFIT PIANO CONCERT -By Dr. M'lou
Dietzcr, 3 p.m . Sunday in Room 101 of Christ
College Irvine, 1~ Concordia (near Campus
and Culver drives). $2 a dults, $1 students.
Benefits scholarships.
MONDAY, JANUARY 17
PIANO CONCERT -By Thomas Schumacher.
former soloist with the New York Philharmonic,
Monday in the Laguna Beach High School
Auditorium , presented by Laguna Beach Com-
munity Concert Association. Ticket information,
Caroline Clark at 499-3630.
YESTERDAY & TODAY -Plus Van Halem,
Monday at The Golden Bear, 306 Pacific Coast.
Highway, Huntington Beach
TUESDAY, JANUARY 18
MUSIC FOR A WJULE -New York group
playing Renaissancemuslc,8p.m. Tuesday at UC
<See TIMES, Page Cl)
Real
Cantonese Food
eat here or
t•ke home
STAG
CHINESE CASINO
111 21st Pl., Newport Beach ORlole 3-9$60
H-to Mi•icJtit D9ily-W~ u..tll I :00 0.111.
O•U U YUU"' HAllOll AIU
LUNCHEON and DINNER
RESEAVATIONS HONORED
Phone(714)644-1700
~j;;;)e(JfiY~
1107 JAMllOrta ROAD• NCWPOlfT BEACH, CALIFORNIA
MICllSll
MEXICAN RESTAURANTS
OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO
''YOUR BIG
PAR1Y
IS OUR BIG
PLEASURE"
COCKTAILS
MEXICAN REST AURANll
11. COSTA MESA • 290 E. 171hSt.
HU.LOREN SQUARE• MS.7820
#2. BALBOA• 105 MAIN St.
BALBOA PIER • 87Meo0
8AN1<AMEltlCARO. MASTERCH~ltGl ond AMUICAN EXPlll!SS
• C4 ' DAILY PILOT Friday. January 14. 1971
DINNER SPECIALS "
NIGHTLY
RESTAURANTS OPENING.
<From Pac~ CJ)
• •
pols a.nd kettles
__ TA_U:/1kWHAtE 1 ·
elude beef tenderloin sUccs, a
fresh sealood s~lalty of the
day, end roasted boneless duck
with a delicate orange sauce.
A1 at other J olly Roger spots.
the Lake Forest menu offers
patrons anything from a ham-
burger to steaks and seafood plus
a variety of salads and specialty
items. Breakfast is also served
dally.
The new restaurant opens at 6
a.m. every day Service in the
dining room continues until 11
p.m Sunday through Thursday
and until 12 p .m . Frtday and
Sat\lfday. The lounge has enter-
tainment Tuesday tbrou.&h Satur-day.
Ill
'I lo
~!1.'..,::11:::m:m:iK::11CS:::s:lS::llCS:K:llEllCK::K:lEllCK:s::IEllCE~
Houllban's Old Place will serve
lunch and dinner. Monday
through Thursday, from 11 :30
a.m. to midnight, and Friday and
Saturday from 11 :30 a.m. to 1
a.m . Sunday brunch will be
served from 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.
and dinner until midnight.
'MouSe Club' Returns ~~;. ,6;~\un flJOIJwn CROWN HOUSE es. ~" 4 t RESTAURANT .,,,
l'J
'I
32802 COAST HWY.
LAGUNA NIGUEL
(Al C•-Vall.., l'ot ....... I
499-2626 496-5773
'VY HOUSE
RESTAURANT
314 FOREST AVE.
LAGUNA 8EAC ..
tl•'llte~etdl
Ample flee Parl<ing
494.9491 752-8558
. ......
MARKING the 45th addltion to
their ever-expanding restaurant
chain, Irvine-based Jolly Roger,
Inc. has opened its newest
establishment at 22873 Lake
Forest Blvd. in the Lake Forest
area of El Toro.
The new Jolly Roger is a re·
creation of an Old English coun·
try home with a massive stone
exterior, sky-reaching red brick
chimney and long sloping roof.
It is designed on three levels.
· The upper level features a
formal dining room with exposed
A special preview of Walt Dis· eluding jau guitar, Kunc Fu.
ney Productions' "New Mickey trapeze acrobatics and table
Mouse Club" hosted by Annette tennis.
Funicello will air tonight at 7:30 One of the features of the old
o'clock on Channel 11. . show was Its different themes for Th.~ ','Ne w ,,Micke}'. ~ouse each day of the week. The "New Cl~b with 12 New Mice pre· Mickey Mouse Club" will also
rruers Monday at 5 p.m. on Chan-have themes for each day, but
nel 11. The Mouseketeers were they will be updated 197'7 themes. selected f r om over 6,000
youngsters across the country.
The new generatio n of
Mouseketeers excels in fields in-
The show ls co-produced by Ed
Ropolo a nd Michael Wuergler for
executive producer Ron Miller.
Truffaut in LA
wood beams and a 10..foot·long Director Francois
1•...!!!!!!:!!~~~:!!!:!21!~~~~~~~~~~~~ fireplace. Directly below the din-Truffaut will make a
ing room is the cocktail lounge, rare guest appearam:e
pearance as part of
"Renee Valente's New
Film Seminar," which
Ms. Valente will mod-
erate.
, ..
•'1 :1· ,,
Op('n i Days
ALL ~TS EVENTS
GIANT 7 FOOT lV SCREEN
Mon .. Thur. ll·JO o.m. ro 10 p.m. Hot Dogs 30<
Fri. & Sor. I I 30 o.m to 11 p.m. (()(KT AILS Sunday 4 pm. ro I 0 p.m.
.f t
f
9093 E. ADAMS. HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-7911
which resembles the interior of Monday for Sherwood
anoldpirateship. Oaks Experimental
Beyond the entry is a more College as a kick-ofr for
casual dining area that has been their winter session of Sherwood Oaks Ex-
perimental College is a
nonprofit educational in-
stitution located at 63S3
Hollyw oo d B l vd .,
Hollywood. For further
information, telephone
(213) 462·0669.
decorated like a cozy English film making and related
kitchen with a variety of copper classes, which will begin
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Monday.
Viii
"\urhru
SMORGASBORD RESTAURANT
IANOIJ(T 'ACIUTIU -IWTO IOU•(Of'\.£
NUNTINOTON llACM • COflONA OU MAA an MAIN IT ., "" _ ,. CO.Ul NWT
Truffaut's new film
''Small Change" will be
seen prior to his ap-
A PAIJANA t!/:i:
AWARD WINNING ~
RESTAURANT~~~"'-.\ AUTHENTIC CU ISINE ~
OF ~!:s7a;,~~mT~~~~~e~t'ST
and Russian spec1all1t~
Continent al Clusme Also
Luncheon -Monday thru Fnday
11 .30 a.m to 3 00 pm
Dinner -Every Evening
from 5.00 pm
r:>enw an-11
l~•"Ol l....-v•Ml $1(Ur0.V
600 Newport Center Drive
across from Fashion Island
Reservations honored -640-7502
CHIC•IH
tMn.IPOT
lllllH
lHf POT
$3.95
$4.25
T'Hl OHL Y PUCI TO GIT GU.AT HIW YOH DW rASnA
COlMID IHf • LOX ClUM CHHSI & IAGIL
SfMclal Sat. & S-. Only
BAGELS 99'l DO~
o,.. 7 -to I 0 ,.a 7 D.ys
421 L I 7Hll St., Cost• MtM U l-2120
PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES
HAVE CHANGED A LOT Take A Dining Trip On A Train
lNCE THE OLD DAYS
Get the Pizza with Plzzaz
Lltnchton from $1.95 served d•ify 'til 4 P.M.
Prmt• Parw f 1eilitia to 300
3901 (.COAST HWY -C°*'ONA DU MAR
RESERVATIONS 17t4) 17&-0900
16271 PACl'IC COAST HWY ••
HUNTINGTON 8EACH
RESERVATIONS 12131 &llM321
For a unique dining adventure, come aboard
the glamou r train . Lu nch, dinner and
Sunday brunch. Savory entrees include
Roast Prime Rib of Beef, Rack of Lamb
& Chesapeake Bay Scallops. Grand
Central Station Lounge with Chowder Bar
and Di ning Cars located in South Coast Plaza
in Uista Mesa. (714) 540-8822 C.Ome relive the past.
Inquire about our specially-selected
-~'-wine of the month .~
A New Supper
Experience
I For cocktail or dining
I Se-rving late for the "After" Crowd
• I Crepes and other u1tiquc di ht~
I Wally Ruth :at the piano bor
I Comfortnblc , informal. with 1111 octan vitw
Pk~M: rnuk1: rc1'\n-:itlon~ by l"Jllln11. 1 14/t'l~ll 401111
~~~rt Beachtt® ~orrao ltOlrl
BE'WJ'Ol('I'. OlllfTllll fl()cJ N"'"°" C~111tr 0.
Double Play
Rich ard Chamberlain plays the two
characters shown above in the "The Man
in the Iron Mask" at 9 p.m. Monday on
Channel 4. Above, he is France's Louis
XIV; below, the swashbuckling Phillippe,
U>uis' identical twin brother.
Sr ox
lv"ctt •~tfll .. r
<t<kl .. h • U flC•f\t
1 lOS HSI katetta IVt.
1111he1m (114 I 639·l tU
LIVE JAZZ
FOR All AGES
Sunda\-s-.ipm-llpm
feawring l<>ff Har11i.
in the View Louni::e
Special reque~ts welcoml"
(\\ 111 nol appea1 t•nuarv lf.o. 19; 7)
lJittor J1ugo Jnn
P.tnaurant
(714) 494-'477
361 Cliff D11vc>.
Laguna Beach 92'151
Need
transportation 1
For Classified Ad
ACTION
Call a
Daily Pilot
AD-VJSOR
642·5678
NOW
A TRULY
SENSATIONAL
SHOW!!!
B
0
B
WHITE
Formerly With
THE PLATTERS
AHL
R
A
y
LOW DON
ENTERTAINMENT
AND DANCING
Tuesday thru
Saturday
9:00 P.M.-2:00 A.M.
OUTRIGGER ROOM
KONA
LANES
2699 Harbor
Costa Mesa
545-t 112
TEMPLE <;ARDENS k. ; ctJ'NS~ Re5tnurnut .• \"•~?5
LUNCHEON AND DINNER DAILY
Speciof Luncheoft Mf.t
Monoay rnru Frid11y t I 30 tr I ·11
RICKSHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE
Featuring Ernllc Tropical Drink'>
1500 Al>AMS lol Horborl
COSTA MESA
540·1937 S40·t92J
Artd. In Gor~11 Gron
12201 IROOICHUltST
tAt c 11op-11t u 1.1020
What CAN You Get
for a dime
these days??
COMPLETE
LOCAL
SPORTS
REPORTS
642·4~21
. .
DAILY PILOT
~V DAILY LOG
FRIDAY l
aVRlllNG
..
mo• ...
-10:30-m mm .... m1er .. Dr11U
11:00
••• lllJ .... D Cf) CJ.QI tJJJ (J) lltft G 13) (121) (})) Lowe bltrk111
$tylt
( ll Sill<s llltdl Up
O lllotit: ·~. '"°' TluM" (tom) '61 -lamu Cagney. Arlene rran<1$,
Hont lluthholt
m MMJ "'rt"'"' 11111 "'rtN" m Sera-1 811to
(UD Cl)) f1111 futvre
-11:30-
• (ITT.I 0 ) ClJ C8S Ult .._.. ~ "ltt Sllboll Zttw1" (dll) '69-
llock Hu4$0n. Ernest Borcn111e. 1111'
lkowft
D <ft1 CV ®I m.._, C:.-
((J lllallir. "flicM ltme" (dra) ·~
lol11 l tsht, fonts! tucker
8 (9 (f)) Qtl S.W.A.T.
11"9w
O)Tlllellolley ... lrt
Clil 100 a.a
12:00
0 llll " Clwdlo mei-Wlb
0) lllo.le: ~ "A Very rrin lt
Altair" (dra) '62-Br1a1tte ~rdot.
llbittllo lb$tl0tann1
fD l..-C ti Synt .... y
-12:30-
0 All·lllaht Show: "Wlltre the
Mitts fly," "T °""' let urns," "T1le
Hudl• Clltlt" DS..-ThatTt m llloM: "BhMburd's l• .._,.
-" (tlOr) '60-Georce Sanders, Cor1nnt CalveJ. Jtan Kent.
1:00
OTalu~
B fl1l ({) (J~ llidniaht Special
Pau.1 Anu 1$ host and gunls include
[ltOfl lohn, Tht Carpenlers and loan
BHz
2:00 D O.~lll11t1re 110\'it: "Wllistlt
Ollll'I tM Wln4," "Sll'lllald"
-2:30-m M-llCM si.: .... , 6ir1 r~"
"Tlle Ult °"' °' Dolwytl" -3:05-
D Motie: ~ "Tiie lil111ifitut
MIWot" (lltl) 55-Alllboltr Qu11111.
Malltffa O'Hara
SATURDAY J
MORNING
" ...
-11:30-
• (<UJ CJ)) (J} M II e O())IDe ...... • .... ('C).,... .. ~ .......
_.. (ICIV) '!IZ-Hffny 11\ift!JT .u. ..... ............ a n....._,..,
I
Bailey's em.edg
Robert Engman and Julie Haas Garvin
are featured in "For the Use of the Hall,"
a comedy by Oliver Halley that will open
Tues day a t the Laguna Moulton
Playhouse. The play will run through Feb.
5 with curtain time at 8:30 p.m. Tuesdays
through Saturda:ys.
'Doom Seeken'
At Space Theater
"The Doom Seekers" -from astrology to
astronomy -opens today at the Reuben H. Fleet
Space Theater in Balboa Park. San Diego.
How a horoscope is read and the charac-
teristics of your sign in the sky are all part of the
new starfield show that will run in tandem with
the 70mm Oscar-wtnnl.ng fllm "Sentinels of Silence."
• "The Doom Seekers" turns the Space
Theater's planetarium hemisphere screen back
to the sky as the earliest astrologer-priests
viewed it -to the time of the Stone Age when an
entirely different star was the North Star.
"Sentinels of Silence," a wide-screen film
narrated by Orson Welles, is the winner of an
Oscar for the best live-actioo short and an Oscar
for the best documentary-short.
Show times for the double-feature program,
"The Doom Seekers" and "Sentinels of Silence,"
are Mooday through Friday: 1. 2:30, 4. 7:30, aod
8:30 p.m., plus on Friday an extra show at 9:30
p.m. Saturday: 10:30 arid 11:30 a.m .• 1, 2, 3. 4, s.
7:30, 8:30 and 9:30 p.m. Sunday: 11:30 a.m .. 1. 2,
3,4,S, 7:30and8:30p.m.
ADMISSION prices are: adult -$2.50;
junior (10..17) -$1.75; andcbJldreo (4-9)-$).25.
, ~~~~~~~~·.6l'JlllJ~ ..
"K·BIG MUSIC LINE"
ANY SONG HEARD ON
KBIG ... JUST DIAL
(213) 851·KBIG
K-BIG FMI04 I JIJ)t bcJuhlul mu~
CMAl'IWIAVE ... U .FWY
OflAllOl ·Pl·2Hl
Clll TMttre Of~ Directory fOf Sltow limn
Friday. "-"u•ry 1•. um DAILY PILOT (S
, ·'Rainmaker' Enjoyahl~
Ensemble excellence is an
elualve commodity in communi·
ty theater. given the varying
degrees oC talent and experience.
yet "The Rainmaker" at the
Weatm Ins ter Community
'!beat.er is quite rich in this re-
gard.
Director Doris Allen's &lowin&
l'e\'tval of the N. Richard Nash
romantic drama underscores the
basic humanity of it.s characters.
It is replete with conllicta. yet
contains no truly unlikable
ch8J'acters: rather Its lnhabl·
tanta each pursue their separate. sometimes identical, goals from
different perspectives -and
make these pursuits extremely
interesting.
THUS, YOU sympathiu both
with Lizzie's Cears of Impending
"THI ltAlltM.Altl_.'
A1 ... yb'(N ltk Nl'ONHll,cl--.tllyOorllAI·
left. -.CS bY ltOft l'lllW\. wc!WUI director
Jim Wrlolll. IOUllCI ... o Ml clellon .... Aon
At1M'1w11, proented l'rlda~ -Sal-YI
lfWougll JMI. " at Ille Wntml•.,. C.ommunlly TIIM~. Tm~· St .. WeltmlnAt<. A_,,• llcftl~.
THI CAST
8111 Slar1)udr ••••••••••••••••.• --HMdrlclltoft
UoleCurry ................... Monte.Wyatt
-Cuny .. .. • • • • • .. • .. .. ..... Cllutlt si.....n JIM (Urry .... , ••• , ...... ., .. , .. ,, • ..Jolln AollfY
MC. Curry .... ,... .. .. • • .. .. •. , K ..... ltlMl<lt
°""'1Y l'lla .. , ............. J, ~ Jol>Moft -ttt n.ornu. . .. .. .. .. .. ....... Ron Alba<'1Mft
spinsterhood and her brothers'
bumbling attempts to remedy
the s1tuation. You side with the
con man who promises to bring a
cloudburst to the arid rancbland,
yet your practical side ls in
agreement with the elder brother
who opposes the venture. You de-
light in the stolen night of
romance between Lizzie and
Starbuck. yet your empathy lies
with the suit of the embittered de-
re;::~ 1
puty sheriff.
Ml.ss Allen bas captured the
positive facets in each o( her
characters, and her Westminster
production is a celebration of
these virtues -a bit old
fashioned, but bigbly ertjoyable
and entertaining. Her capable
cast responds with gusto. at once
reflecting the overriding tension
and the understated affection of
tbewestem family.
If one must choose an in-
dividual sta ndout, it would be
Chuck Stanaert in the role of the
no-nonsense older brother Noah •
a character who might be easy to
disllke. yet in Stanaert's bands a
man of warmth and humanity .
stanaert's abundant talebts give
dJmension to this supporting
role.
Monica Wyatt ls excellent as
tbe plain spiMt.er Liuie. convey.
ing in carefully modulated inflec-
tions her inner panic as she pre-
sents a strong outward figure.
Equally impressive is Mark Hen-
drickson as the ''rainmaker"
Starbuck, a spellbinding intruder
played with layer upon layer or
supreme confidence.
THE BRA.SB younger brother
Jim ls splendidly interpreted by
John Autry in a highly physical,
pugnacious performance. Ken·
netb Mlck deftly underplays the
role of the passive father, though
a bit more backbone would not be
out of place. J . Thomas Johnson
is believable as the emotionally
insulated deputy, while Ron
Met Star
Robert Merrill, star
baritone of the
Metropolitan Opera.
will give a concert at
8 p.m. Jan. 21 at the
Garden Grove Com-
munity Church with
the Long Beac h
Symphony. Reserva-
tions are available
by calling 750-7000.
. ....... ··-··-~1111 JIU lltHH
ilmK . UAflUIH . rHH
•• 11 ·~1m1 !llUf, .~ .... ::.11 ... mlltl MdOOUN.-.. ................ ,.._., ..•.
... ~···--··· .. -·-·····
AJbertaen revels in the srnauer
role of Lbe sherlff.
The lone drawback in an
otherwise superior productlon is
the stationing of actors. usually
Stanaert, downstage for pro·
looaed periods. thus mask.inc the
action upstaae ln the borse.boe
theater. A bit or rebloeldng c»uld
do much for lbe overall ~oy-ment of the show. .,,
"The Rainmaker" continues on
a Frid ay and Sa turday
schedule through Jan. 29 at the
Westminster theater. 7272 Maple
St. Reservations are belng taken
at 883-8826.
Mark Riasell .
HoalA Come4r
SpeciaU
Political satirist Mark R.uell
will bring bis special brand of
topical humor to television on the
First of four ''Mark Russell
Comedy Specials," airing on
KOCE·TV. Channel 50. at 10:30 p.m. Wednesday.
Russell baa a couple of tldngs
in common with President-elect
Jimmy Carter. Both men bltve
come from relative obscuritj t.o
national prominence during tbe
last year and both have mad~the
pages of Playboy maga.zin~·-j ~ Russell has cut three reoord
albums: "Up the Potomac
Without a Canoe.'' ''The F•ce on
the Senate Floor" and + + Wlld
Weird . W i r ed World of
watergate."
• .
Cf DAILY PILOT Friday. January 14, 1977
A Look With Wonder
At Top '76 Discs
By MICHA EL PASKE\'JCH
OfU..0.llf .........
Whenever Stevie Wonder re· leas~ an album, it automaUcally
warrants consid,eraUoo as the
best of the year. 1976 was no ex-
ception as Wonder released
"Songs in the Key of Ufe,"
(Tamla Tl3·34002), after close to
a two-~~ar delay. .
"Songs" is a work so rich and
varied that it's almost over·
whelming, and, although it
sometimes belabors its musical
points, "Songs" is un epic work
(21 songs clocking more than 100
minutes) that realflrms Won-
der's position as America's r esi-dent pop genius. ·
Despite the virtues ol Wonder's
muterpiece, however, there can
be only one "Album of the Year"
and the title for 1976 goes to Boz
Sca&gs for his exquisite "Silk
Depees" CColumbiaPC-33920).
AfTER establishing legen·
dary status in the San Francisco
Bay Area since the fmal days of
Fillmore West, Scaggs began his
self-directed transition from
melodic rocker to blue-eyed soul
exponent with the release or
"Slow Dancer" in 1975.
Blending the impeccable pro-
duction of Joe Wissert and the ar-
rangement wizardry of David
Paicb, Boz's unerring feel for
lyrical moods and his smooth,
ever·improving vocal delivery
peak on ''Silk Degrees." From
the dream-like ballads ("We're
All Alone" and "Harbor Lights")
lo the disco-tinged soul or "What
Can I Say" and "Lowdown,"
"Silk Degrees" reveals a classic
knowledge or the commercial
elements needed for s uccess
without compromising the
artiatic quality of the fa.nal pro-duct.
Rather than fade after repeat-
ed listenings, "Silk Degrees"
4i,,."THI ADYINTUlH OF n41
,"f'WUHHISSF4MILr (OJ
• "fACI TO FACI" (II
I C NTRE
ORANOE •532-6121
S.A. "'WV lMANCHfSTEA E")
G.Q. fAWY (CITY OA. EX I
"CAHll"
"•OLLHlALL" (R)
A "TEXAS CHAIN SAW Y MASSACIF'
"TOUO"llJ
A -SHA6GYDA" ~ ..... A WU POMY" 161
"AOVINTUltts OF
'THI Wl\.DBMHS
F/Ji4fl Y" IGI
matures into a work of expanded
vision and intelligence.
In alphabetical order, the rest
Of the best for 1976:
STANLEY CLARK, "School
Daystt (Nemper~r NE-439 0698)
In the rapidly growing field ol
jazz-rock fusion, 2S·year-old
bassist Clarke stands alone. A
virtuoso musician, be is also co·n·
Unuing to improve as a composer
and "School Days" features
great backup from Billy ,CObham
<drums ), David Saoclous
(keyboards/guitar) and Ray
Gomez (guitar).
TOM JANS, "Dark Blonde" (Columbia PC-34292). The
sleeper of the year -Jans bas
broken the confining "follde"
mold wiUra spirited folk /rock re-lease highlighting his notable
writing skills. As with Scaggs,
Joe Wissert adds the extra pro-
duction punch.
BOB MARLEY AND THE
WAILERS, "Live" (Island
ILPS.9376). Now available as a
non.import, "Live" captures the
dynamic reggae philosophy with
infectious energy. If you've ever
had doubts about reggae as a
vibrant musical force, ''Live" is
guaranteed to turn you around.
PARLIAMENT "Mothership Connection'' (Casablanca
NBLP-7022). Inspired lunacy
masterminded by the iITepressi-
b le George C linton ,
"Motbership" introduces the
world to P -funk (the ultimate).
Sly, engaging and beautifully un-
derstated, it's witty funk at its
best.
THE RAMONES, "Ramones"
(Sire SASD-7526). A crude ex-
periment in three.chord power
rock minimalism (less is more),
this is one of the most important,
it bothersome, albums of the
ALBUM OF THE YEAR
BozSc•gge
year. lrteslstlble fWl and most
likely a trendsetter for 1977.
STEELY DAN, "The Royal
Scam" (ABC D-931). The eccen-
tric writing talents ~Becker and
Fagen f"mally showcased ln a
steady musical Stln'OlUlding. The
best album from one of
America's moat underrated
bands, "Scam " is vague yet pro-
vocative with humorous creativi-
ty comparable to the best of
England's lOCC.
WEATHER REPORT, "Black
Market," (Columbia PC34099).
WR remains at the forefront of
the avante-garde modern jazz
movement with an accessible yet
richly rewarding effort. A con·
sislenUy intriguing and talented
group of musicians producing
sounds that so Car haven't been
imitated successfully.
STEVE WfNWOOD, Stomu
Yamashta and Michael Sbrieve,
"Go" (Island, ILPS-9387) A stun-
ning and ambitious journey into
space rock from a well-
integrated trio of talented
performers. An experimental
album that cries for a sequel;
Winwood's vocals have never
sounded better, Shrieve'a
percussion is stellar and
Yamashta bathes the sound with
a dauling array of synthetic ef.
feels.
The Adventures of the wn.mms rmT
--·--.... ,..u.n ........ __ .,.
tO.~fH.tllJ
>·
WU911SS fAlllY"
C.Ml ___ .... ,..
Open Daily 12:30 pm
hll .... : .. 9Jtt
DmlYt,... T11Ar
OUT II( WAS A UCtOlf
t•"9ttt••
[ L M.BOYD )
INFORMS In the DAILY PILOT
S'>UTll consr
-TMIAftE I
WOODYALLEN
''THE FRONT"
' COlOllNt
-l'HIATRI II ---
"MARATHON MAK' ....
3
DAYS OF
HE CONDOR
COl.Ol Ill
.. • "' •• 11 •11ttto , ....... ,_....., _, ......... ti,
..... ,.. ... x-·--• '""14A0 .. ... ....... --...... __ .. : .. .. -· 1
"ONE HUNDRED PERCENT
ENTERTAINMENT ..• a case.of an
ingenious novel being turned into a terrific
movie. A lean back and Jovelt Jule that is a
practically incomparable family mm ... a
garland of cheers." Gene Shalit, THE NB~ODAY SHOW
"Nothing less
than the most
exhilarating
entertainment
of the film
year to date.
A colltttor's
item in terms
of performanc.es."
Vit1tf1'tl Canby
NEW YORK nMCS
From IM •I Bat&lli~ Nowl
11An ingeniously
conlrlved spree,
with one of the
wittiest wrap·ups
of any mystery
movie."
Pauline Koe/
NEW' YORKER
THE SEVEN.PER-CENT SOLUTION
A HCRBCRT ROSS F'llM
Al.ANARK1N•VANESSA RtOGRAVE,ROBERT DUVAU•and MCOL WJLLIAMSON .. s.,,..,,.11rn111 "''"'•llw\-· "'°' w .• ~.. , ... si...iu.u•,..,...
In "THE SEVEN·PER·CENT SOLUT'ION"
-. .,.,,.,, LAURENCE OUVJER .. ~.......,. ~~ .... ~n· JOEL GR£V ·SAMANTHA EGG AR
CHARLES GRAV• GEORGIA BROWN• REGINE •and JEREMY KEMP
~l'llNICHCXMMIM.11 8-d'"''"""'wltf'llHl('llOt.AS~l(Y[Jt ~""' 0-1«11-vH1'118£1ll llOS'i ...._..,,JOHNADOISON ~"""'""""RL~sa.1m ..... Atoc~v rRr--.~.., ··1
A"'l>flt1tl'mdorftSTAl'UV0100ll AUNM.R.$"1.llll.U-<.t ~CHNCOU>R"'IV•ou r "'·''~..;,;.
Photo Proeesses Shown • . .. 'PBOC~ IN PllOG~· -And "Proaresa In ,~----------------....'I
Galleries/ Exhibits
Process." tradltlonaJ and nontr~tlooal photo-
graphic techniques by Orange Coast studenta.
Saturday through Feb. 28 at Mills House. City of
Garden Grove Art Gallery, 11391 Acacla
Parkway. Panel discussion 8 p.m. Jan. 21. ..... ...J
Hours: noon to 4 p.m. Tbursdaya·Mondays. -------------------
Free. CAIJFOllNJA ART -"California: Five Foot.
notes to Modern Art," Tuesday through April '1A
"111.E SPANISH WEST' -Exhibit honoring Dr. in the Contemporary Art Gallery, Frances and
John R. Hilsabeck; reception 7 o'clock tonight at 1 Armand Hammer Wing of the Los Angeles Coun-
Bowers Museum, 2002N. Main st., Santa Ana. ty Museum of Art, SOOS Wilshire Blvd .. Los
Angeles. Also, new paintings by Norman Zam.. ·
'A WOMAN'S PLACE IS IN mE WORLD' -mitt and photographs by painters, Tuesday,
Paintings, drawings and sculpture by seven through March 27. 10 a.m. lo s p.m. Tuesdays,
women, Saturday through Feb. 13 al 201 Fridays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Snturdays and Sun. Frankfort Gallery, 201 Frankfort, Huntington days. Free.
Beach. Performance by Terry Platt and Nancy
Angelo during reception, 7 to 10 p.m. Saturday.
Hours: 1 to S p.m. SatW'days and Sundays, 7 to 9
p.m. Thursdays. Free.
COUllT ILLtJSTRAnONS -By Billie Rash or
the Sirhan Sirhan, Charles Manson and
Watergate trials, now through end of January at
Huntington Beach Center Library, 7111 Talbert
Ave. Free.
RECENT COLLAGES -By Vladimir Sokolov,
Saturday through Jan. 30 at Wood's Cove
Gallery, 1857 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach.
Reception 7 lo 10 p.m. Saturday. Hours : 11 a. m.
to 6 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturdays and noon to S p.m.
Sundays. Free.
7BJNGS THAT ARE GONE FOREVER' -Oils
and pencil drawings by Thelma Paddock Hope.
now through end of January at Mutual Savings
and Loan, 2867 E. Coast Hlgbway, Corona del
Mar. Free.
SCULPTURE EXIUBIT -By students of Dar·
rell Ebert, Tuesday through Jan. 28 In library·
reading room at Golden West College, 15744
Golden West St., Huntington Beach.
VIOLET PARKHURST WORKS -Saturday
through Feb. 12, with reception for artist. 3 to 10
p.m. Saturday at Pomeroy Art Gallery, 5651 Lin·
coin Ave., Suite A, Cypress. Free.
PORTRAIT DEMONSTRATION -By Miguel
Paredes, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Murdy Park
Recreation Center, Golden West Street at
Warner Avenue, Huntington Beach. Presented
by Artists Association of Huntington Beach
North, open to public.
AIR BRUSH DEMONSTRATION -By Brad
McMahon. 8 p.m. Thu.raday at Niguel Hills
Junior High, Niguel Hills. Presented by Niguel
Art Association, open to public.
A different kind of MOTION picture.
Filmed In Celifomie, Mexico. end Hewell. • s .. rflng • Slt-boerelln; • Snow·Sltlln9 • Lllnd S.116n •
• ... , Slcl• • K•v• Adlfentvtlno • lledlpedtlng •
• lllcvci. Motocro• • Motorcycle Mo1ocro•• •
• H.,.gllclin; • ""mo' • HobM C.ia • end morel
SURF THEATRE
5ftt St. & Coast Hlghw.,, lluallMJfo. IHdl
7:00 & ,..30 HIGM'R.Y
CORKY CADOU 'S SURF IAHO
Pl.A YING IEFORI EACH NUOIMANCE
ADMISSION: Sl.00
Featured Soloist
Pianist Valerie Miller. a sophomore music
major at Orange Coast College, will
perform Maurice Ravel's "Albarado del
Gracioso" as part of tonight's 8 o'clock' ·
Winter Music Concert in the OCC
Auditorium, 2701 Fairview Road, Cost" ~
Mesa. Miss Miller was one of 10 finalists
in the recent National Pianist competition ..
-~A·n
THEATRES-ORANGE COUNTY
MAJlll'S
SO. COAST PWA tllhllHI llltltirttl
"'1111
MlllM'S
SO. COAST PWA
C:11hllti1
:Nit lrirttl ~&-1111
MAJlll'S
SO. COAST PLAZA W)~ ~ID»
Mlllll'S ClllUIAUMO
1414S.-lu-
USIA!
MAllll'S
ClllEMALJllO
14MS. ...... ....... m.iwt
MAllll'S
ClllEMALAllD 1414 St .....
A-.ki•
lll·IMI
.. MARA THOM MAH'fii
71Jt UTf'\116-4:-1&
"3 1AYS OF THE COHOOr .,,,. UT~Ull-2:DW .... t .. 1&
lllfl , ........
"TlfE SONG REMAllCS TifE SAME"
lltlO-"'ATf'UM l•IN:l._l .. IO
''Tit£ PINK ftOYD"
7-lt·OSAT,_tlMtt
l'lfttW•
"ROCKY" ........ ~,, .... "'
Hf 141-1 J .. J .. t0-4 ... 1 .. lt
"KING KONG" fPGJ ,_ .. ,.
UTfSllW-1 uo.n._,_,., •1-1..s
'1ltE SEYEN-PUCOllSaJITIOlf' "' , ... '"'"~_,,,.
''MAU Tillf MAH" tM UT/1--INl-l:ff. .... ,.,., .... ,
'1M SEARCH Of HOAH'SAU"
WMl!OAU 7-41-19:M
UT"llM.-lll)0.1-IM ...
1:41-M•f'tl-t 1:00
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Git~• ~unfhtw••• ~, •• ..,..,
Cn,1~ Mr"' • 549·3352
l~1tbo1 Dou••••"' nor MeF!ldd111
~hntaAn•• 531 ·1271 ......................... 11S ......... ....l .......... 1111111F==alliift' ........... ~ ... iiii' ................ .
Jl r ....
. .. ..
'OMES, PLACES.
<From Pase Cl) .
...
• •
ltvine Flne Arts Village Concert Hall. S3 aeoeral,
S1tudent.s. 833-6378.
GurTAR AND STRING ENSEMBLES -Direct·
ed by Ruben Delgado and Joseph Pearlman.
noon Tueaday in Orange Coast CoUege Fine Arts Hall 119. 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Frff.
JEPF AND ERNST -Comedy team. with Kip
Addotta, 8: 30 and 10 p.m. Tuesday through Jan.
Z:S at Laff Stop, 2122 S.E. Bnstol St.. Newport
Beach.
WA&SAW QUINTET -8:15 p.m. Tuesday in
lA.guna Beach High School Auditorium. 625 Park An.. presented by Laguna Beach Chamber
llutic Society. 499-3106/54S-7SJS.
'IOSTBE USE OFTREllAU.' -Oliver Hailey
CJOmedy, 8:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays,
'I)Mlld. ay througb Feb. 5 at the Laguna MouJton
Playhouse. 606 Lagwla Canyon Road, Laguna
Beach. 494-0743after1 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY It ...
'D IDI' -New production. 10 a.m. and noon
\ti4nesday through Feb. 4 at Ambassador
Ailditorium, 300 W. Green St. Pasadena. $1.. (213) ~ll or. ror groups, (213) 577-5515 . . :,.
::...; THURSDAY, JANUARY ze
• •·P
J6nry WITHERSPOON -9: LS p.m. to 2 a.m.
~ay through Jan. 23 at Hungry Joe's Jazz
Clish. 1506 Pacific Coast Highway, Huntington
BMeh. $4 plus one drink minimum. '· 'oftJf; MOUSE TRAP' -Agatha Christie
m;.iery, 8:30 p.m . Jan. 26-22 and 27-29, and 5:30
p.m; Jan. 23 and :.> at Golden West College
Theater. 15744 Golden West St.. Huntington
Beach. S3 general, $2 Gold Key cardholders.
nckets at bookstore.
BA.ND CONCERT -"The Contemporaries."
coocert band, and the Symphonic Band. 8 p.m .
Thursday in Orange Coast College Auditorium,
Z701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Ftee.
11A.D BA'Tl'EB'S MAJUONETJ'E SHOW -Pup-
pet.I at Huntington Center. 1m Edinger Ave ..
liuntington Beach. t. 2, 3, 4 and 7:30 p.m. Jan. 20
and21; l , 2, 3 aod4p.m. Jan. 22and23.
'BV'ITE RFUES AKE FREE' -Comedy at the
Sao Clemente Community Theater, 202 Avenida
Cabrtllo, San Clemente. 8:30 p.m. J an. 20-Feb.
U; Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays only.
492.-0465 . . ~N MULL -Thursday at Tbe Golden
B,H:r. 306 Pacific Coast Highway, Huntington ~h. 536-9600 . . ; ~ :·; ~-FBIDAY,JANUARYZl
*'8ERT MERRILL -With the Long Beach
Sjjnpbony, 8 p.m. Jan. 21 at Garde!> Grove Com· ~ty Church, 12141 Lewis St .• Garden Grove;
atio. Jan. 22 at Long Beach City College
Wtorium, 4901 E. Carson, Long Beach. (213 )
... 7953.
W KAHAL -Jan. Zl at~ Golden Bear, 306
P.iicific Coast Highway, Huntington Beach .
• 9600 . .
1'WO ONE-ACT PLAYS -"Moon Dance•· by
Gafeia Lorca and "Twitch" by Richard Cordery.
8 p.m. Jan. 21 and 22 in the UC Irvine LitUe
Tll!at.er. Room 16lofHumanities Hall. 7Scenta.
•,;.uA SUITE' -Comedy at Costa Mesa Civic
}>l-.ybouse at Orange County Fairaounda oo
Falr Drive. Costa Mesa.Jan.21-Feb. ~556-5449.
'Uf'O's ARE REAL' -Slide-lecture, 7:30 p.m.
Jao. 21 at Santa Ana College Phillips Hall. 17th
and Bristol streets. $L
... .. .. .
Frld!y. Januaiy 14. 1977 DAILY PILOT ct \.
Snwoth Road/or 'Rocky' (A Quick Look at the Mo3
ByBOB11IOMAS ~ ..... '"""'"""
"ROCKY" gives the movie season a
shot of adrenalin. As modern as today. it
la nevertheless made like an old
rasbJooed movie. with vitallt)' and heart.
Sylvester Stallone wrote the st.arrioa
role ror himself. and be gives a once-in·
a-lifet.Une performance as a boxine bum
turned contender. Talia Shire and
Burgess Meredith also shine. A real up.
per in a year of downers. Rated PG.
.. T H E SEVEN·PEll ·CENT
SOLUTION" is a trio.mph ol premise
over content. The premise: Sherlock
Holmes and Sigmund Freud combine in·
t.ellecta to solve a mystery. Tbe stunt ls
bandaomely executed but the mystery -Barbara Eden stars
in ''Stooestreet." on ( •m•a CAt:~ )
"NBC Movie of tbe -· --------Week" Sunday at
9:~ p .m. on Channel 4.
0:-'wrHESHAOGYO.A."
•MJftMTUUS Of n. WILDaMISS FAMILY"'
'"TMIMTr
"'MOMTY "'"°"AND ntl "°" y MAI. M
. ·CARllruu
"'THIA Ta OF ll.000"" CRJ
abduction of an opera singer -seems
unworthy or their s ktlls. Nicol
Williamson (Holmes>. Alan Arlt in
<Freud) and Robert Duvall <Dr.
Watson ) are s plendidly stylis h :
Laurence Oltvier, Vane58a Redgrave
and Joel Grey are wasted in small roles.
Rated PG.
''THE ENFORC.ER" brings Dirty
Harry CaJlaghan back for a thJrd war
with mindless hoods. brainless superiors
and a venal city administration. As
before. the San Franclsco homicide de·
tectlve deals with such problems with
his customary disdain. Violence is un-
stinting, but the sharp dialog and fast ac·
Uon are well-direeted by James Fargo.
Another winner for Cliot Eastwood. Rat·
edR.
''KING KONG" offers some or the best
special effect.a and most stilted dialog in
memory. Kong is a superb mJme. and
Jessica Lang plays the impossible
romance with appeal and rare beauty A
roualng spectacle in the best movae-
ma.kiog tradition. Rated PG. but it will
give nightmares to impressionable
youngsters.
"A ST AR IS BORN" is a surprisingly •
affecting re·do of the twice-told tale ol
the superstar whose career ls eclipsed
by his wife. The new film. transferred
from the movie world to pop music. COO·
veys more emotion than the earlier
versions starring Janet Gaynor and
Judy Garland. Barbra Strelaand is at her dynamic best. Rated R.
==----~~~~--====--=--===========================
WEEKDAYS
CINEMA WEST
7:()0..8:50-10:40
SAT.-SUN.
1 :30-3:20-5:15
7:15-9:15
11 :15
WESTBROOK
WUTMINSlBAl llOOllHUIST
GAaDf N GaOYf 510-440 I
EDWARDS
Hl\RBOR clr:l':A 2
WEEKDAYS
CINEMA CENTER
7:()0..8:50-10:40
SAT-SUN
1 :30-3:20..5:10
7:00-9:00-11:00
WEEKDAYS
7:00-9:50
HARBOR BLVD. AT WILSON ST. SATURDAY-SUNDAY
COSTA MESA 646·0573 1 :00-4:00
2 MILES SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY . 7:00.10:00
..........................................
A OAIL v PILOT Friday. January 14. 19n
F~!~Y Leader Doubles Up
On stage they wear flowing blond wigs, nine·
E. ch platform boots, batwing costumes and
· ather outfits dripplng with roxtails. They refer
themselves us "afro-nauts" and descend on ~ge in a giant, silver spaceship. They make
Kiss appear tame.
Who, or what, is Parllament/Funkadelic?
Parliament/ Funkadelic are 10 black musi-
cians in two groups who record for different re-
C()td labels and maintain separate musical iden· 'ti ties.
George ''Overlord" Clinton and his 10·
member band ("Sting" Ray Davis, Jerome
''Bigfoot" Brailey, "Magic" Mike Hampton,
Clarence "Fuzzy" Haskins, Cordell "Boogie"
Mosson, Gary "Dowop" Shider , "Coolman"
Calvin Simon, "Shady" Grady Thomas, Bernard
·•oa Vinci" Worrell and Glen "Gone Gouster"
Goins> are like no other group performing today.
• THEIR ACID-TINGED, s pace-influenced,
t'heatrical act gave th,,m an underground follow·
il'lg at first. Then with best-selling LPs like
"Mothership Connection" <Parliament), "The
Clones of Dr. Funkenstein" (Parliament> and
the latest "Ha rd core Jollies" < Funkadelic >.
!>/Funk got the money to create a full-scale pro-
Greorest Discovery of Our Tim•
· ln~af ~~ Paabs Hrk ,, ·
I• High orop o mou,,101n '" ~
£011•1" T urll•Y u o
910nr ~ 000 Y•Ot old
wood•n i.l\lp
con•0•"'"9 hund1•dJ
of sroh o"d cog•'-
1} IT HOAH } AAA>
.......
1 t<"""'_,.. ;.o., "°' Jo1119oQl'I. °"'AO W,liilGU.. 0.-tc•.O ty JA#I\ L COfl'VA'f ~"'•"-•Co..r•<°"""""" t tt1' ~ty~LiCWO A
~ rom lh• 1.nchwttrwa NW boo6i:
"In S.nd1ol Ho.l"" ., •..
2ND FEATURE AT AU DRIVE-INS
"lliE ADVENT\JRES OF
FRONTlER ~EMOHT"
arh.tot, s.n, •• ,,.
Lido. N•wPGf'1 8H(ft Mir•m•r-. Stln Cftmtntf' Chum•t•nd, A1Uht1m
CyP<•n. C1pron C1fttm.1J. Minto ... Vl1to
C.tM>m• Wt i.t, W•\tm•n,t•r
£1 ~ml,.., Tv>lltt
SEE DIRECTORIES OR CAll.
TMEATRE FOR SHC7NTIMES
S00-1444
•IJ.USO 02.005' US·lt01 .,..,"°
tl0-6-..,_ .. .,
Ou~ M<ill, O••tt<ie
F-t•l" V•lln O•·ln. l'ount.oln V•lt.y Ron_., \ol Buell
w..., ...
W.0340 .. ,.201
4l0-041' • ., °'" '14 UJI Fuhlo• Sq~··· L• H•llU At.ftdr~. c.trrno1
LHtc:Olf'I 0,. '"· fhl•"• ~., ..
1.0 Mlr•d• O• In. l..t Ml•.td•
n111n ....2.00
.,,,.,.., memMr-,· Vow,....,. wm .Mtm" you~""'' t•m••J
ONLY SUNN CC*PUMEHTAAY PASSES ACCEPTED
Paul Simon
is preparing
anew song
for the
pre-inaugural
ceremonies.
duction (designed by Jules Fisher who did the
sets for The Rolling Stones, David Bowie and
Kiss).
And they have found a mass audience to go
wild for their spectacularly flashy, and funky,
show.
According to George Clinton. who dresses
nearly as outrageously off stage as he does on,
"Blacks have never experienced a really loud
group, let alone the theatrics. It's never been
done except for Earth, Wmd and Fire, and even
they have only done a little stage propping.
"We've done theatrics on stage for years."
says Clinton. who wrote hits for a number of
2 r.ous SOUTH Of SAN DIEGO FWY.
WEEKDAYS
7:15-9:45
SAT-SUN
1 :00-3:30-8:00
8:30-11:00
Don't drop the ball' Get a
Job with 3 low l'O~l Daily
Piiot Cla:.~1 f1cd Ad
Phone &12 :xi71S.
Motown artlats ln the 1960s. His Funkadelic, with
their bizarre stage show, wa.s one of the first
black·rock acts to appeal to a whJte audience.
"But until we could take the step ~d equal Alice
Cooper, The Rolling Stones or Kiss, I dldn 't reel it
was worth doing.
"WE'D ALWAYS been popular as an under-
ground group, now l felt it was time for blacks to
get that kind of s how, a big production.
"At first I was worried that someone might
say what we do is pretentious. At this point, I
don't care. It's funky, and that's all that counts."
Clinton admits that having the two groups ls
"schizophrenic." But It's interesting, it's like
sever al personalities. And it's a competing kind
of thing. Of course, the music is different with
each group. Parliament has more horn and vocal
arrangements, while Funkadelic ls more rock,
lots of guitar a nd perhaps a litUe more bizarre.
"We're a little more loose with Funkadelic.
With Parliament J plan out a little more."
AS FOR WHETHER one record company
thinks he's saving his best stuff for the other
(Parliament records for Casabl anca,
Funkadelic for Warner Brothers), George
laughs, "Yeah, they both thought that. But now
that everything is hitting, it doesn't matter
much. Parliament fans didn't used to like
Funkadelic, and vice versa. But now they realize
it's cool to like each group."
Future P /Funk plans include their own com-
ic books. "Dr. Funkenstein" and "Captain
Funk," done by Marvel. After that, anything
METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER SORRY,
presents HO PASSES
(R) FAYE DUNAWAY
WILLIAM HOLDEN ·
PE l"ER FINCH
ROBERT DUVALL"'
''NE1WORK"
• WEEKDAYS: 7:15-9:30
SAT......SUN: 1:30-3!50-6:1N:30-10:50
edwards BRISTOL CINEMA
BRISTOL AT MACARTHUR
540-7444
BARBRA STREISAND
RIS KRISTOFFERSON
(Rl
WEEKDAYS
6:00-8:30-11 :00
WEEKENDS
1 :00-3:30
6:00-8:30-11 :00
EDWARDS CINEMA tUllto9 6 f ..041111\ cost• .. n• ,,._,,.,,
.. .: .. . ~
could happen, given Clinton's imagination. "l'vt !:
got a few personahties I haven't used yet." h• •:
says, "but I need a couple more groups to pu( .•
them out." • •. ::
PAUL SIMON, vacationing ln Barbados. It ::
working on a new song he'll premiere at the J an. •
19 pre-inaugural ceremonies. (He's aJso recentl)t ~:
recorded some songs he may use in a futu,... .:
musical.> .. .In Caerphilly, England, mother• !;
ringed the ha ll where the Sex Pistols wer ~
performing, begging kids not to go inside. ~ ~
•/ ......__._
WEEKDAYS: 7:15-9:15
WEEKENDS:
1:00-3:00-5:00-7:15-9:15
PLUS
RIDAY l SATURDAY OHL
11:00 P.M. (PG)
, .
NEW 1977
FORD
F-150
PICKUP
NEW 1977
PINTO WAGON
$
2300 cc 4 cylinder engine. 4 speed
transmission. steel belted wsw tires. deluxe
l)umper group, tinted glas<> complete. Ser.
250 NEW
CARS & TRUCKS
TO CHOOSE FROM!
NEW '76
MAVERICK
#7R12Y101712.
2 door. 250cid 6 cyl. engine, white side wall tires.
POwer steering. deluxe bumper group, AM radio.
interior decor group, tinted glass (6K91L195671 ).
$ ·n
MAVERICK
77
MUSTANG II
·n
.GRANADA -
NEW '76
MUSTANG II
MPG _$3688 $3688 $4288 $2988
Stallion Group, steel belted
radial tires. front and rear
bumper guards. AM radio. dual
color keyed racing mrrrors
(6A02Y 172858)
WA•OM
v~. auto. trans . fact()(y air
cond1t1on1ng . power
steeri ng, power disc
brakes. rad io. heater.
wtutewall tires. tinted glass 'ii'
• 172 PINTO
IUHAIOUT
Auto trans (504FLXJ
$1191
PARTS
DEPT.
NOW OPEN
SATURDAY
8 A.M. to
1 P.M.
FIRST IN SERVIQ .
• FIRST IN SALES
2 DR. '7to 250.A
2 door. 250 6 cyl engine.
au1oma11c trans fronl and rear
bumoer guards
C7K91L 1181821
•.T.
4 cyl . 4 speed . radio. 4 cyl . 4 speed. radio,
heater. vinyl interior, mag healer whitewall tires
v-a. 8 trans. lac. air. p.
str . p disc brks. stereo
rad, htr, vin. rl. Int. gls.
Landau tp. vnl Int .. ral
whls. cmpr shl. (S2493X).
Wtieels (732KLG) (015NLN)
'1077 s1577 '497
'73 FORD L.T.D . HEV.
11CAMIHO TOllMO 2 DI. HOTI'. V-8. auto. trans .• factory air.
p0wer steerlrig. power disc V-8. a trans. lac air p str,
brakes. radio heater. p disc brks. rad, htr,
whitewall tires. vinyl roof. wsw·s. vrn rl. tnt gls. whl
Fully factory equipped. 2300 4
,cyl eng 4 spd trans
(7F02Y136800l
2 door. 250c1d 6 cylinder
.engine. automatic trans. sleet
belted radial tires. delu>ce
bumpe r g r oup
(7W82L 140509)
'72 FIAT
DfLUXf aso Sf'OST am coun
V-8. auto trans . factory 4 speed (816FOYJ. V-8, a. trans .. lac air. p. str ..
air conditioning. power p disc brks, p. wind, slereo
steering, radio, heater. rad, wsw 11res 111n rt. Int 91s.
whitewall tires. vinyl whl cvrs. landau top, vin int,
MUSTANG
V-8. auto. trans • factory air
cond1t1onlng. power
s1eenng CXJJ633)
roof C99718AJ. buc sis. (556POM~
s1577 9 14191 s4995 $1291
'76 MAVER.
4 DOOi Lll(I HIW v-a. e. trans. lac air. p str.
p. dose brks. rad, htr.
wsw s. vin rt. tnt gls, whl cvrs. (679NJO)
'71 FORD
CUSTOM4 DR.
V8. a trans. fac air. p sir. p.
disc brks. rd. htr. wsw s, tnt
,gls, whl cvrs. (892CHll~
'69 CHEV.
MOVA 2 DR.
A uto trans . power
steer Ing. rad 10 heater.
whitewall ttres. tinted glass.
mags. (YRU518)
BUICK
SKYLARK W~M.
tinted wass. wheel covers cvrs (8570EV~
$ 395 •1195•3395 •1•91 •1195
V-8 au10 trans., factory air,
oower steering. power diS<l
brakes. radio, heater. whttewall tires. tinted glass.
wheel covers. (ZPS678J.
I t995
..................
• • •
••
I
•• DALYPtLOT Frl<Hly Jen'*Y 1• 1tn
PUBUC N011CE
PAULJ SMETTLEl'I
E-Uto-Oftflewlll
Of Mkl oec10.n1
TMOMAS M. 01 l!SElt
Vlln'Ull & KM ECK, INC. .,...._, C...r Ori••
....,..._,c AnMt
PUBUC NO'nCE
PUBLIC NOTICE
.. ICTITIOUS aus11••ss
NAMESTAT•ME'"
"'-IOllowlnq °"""" h dolllQ lllN-"""'' "'' INTERNATIONAL Cl'IEOIT
SVTI'EMS. 610 NewPorl Cenw Orlw, MIW00'1 Beath CA '2~ .\Uch·~· P•l'1Clt Hou ....... UA
Sur1\lda Ave SurltlO., CA 'I07'3
Tho\ """""' I\ t O'IOIKlt<I IPI M I,._ di ... _,
Mklw<tl Palrldr. Hot le< ... _._ Ot'-C~Sl Olilty PilOI,
JM 1, 14, 11, 1'. 1'71 ™• ,,.,...,..,, ••• meo w.111 '"' ,, n °""'''a.rt. r1' Ot'..,99 County on OK
-------------· 11, lt76 ....,,. PUBLIC NOTICE PllalkMd 0r-99 0)8'1 o.11v Pfloe, -------------4 o.c ll. 1976-Jan 1, IA, 21. t9n NOT'ICE TOCIUOITOltS
SUl>llltlOltCOURTOlfTME
STATE OP CAL.,OltNIAA>lt
Tl4E COUNTV OP Ott~ MO.~
1.-ofJllMESO MAT'MENY.eM
J.O.MATHENY, 0Ke41Md.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN !Otto.
•nclllor\ Of .... -118--.... All e>e<wnt .,.vlnq claims -'"It
h Mid --• are .-.quired • tilt ...... wit~ IM MCOu.rt ~!fl h Ofta ol IM Ci.rt ol IM -.... ~( ....... ., .., __ , _,, ...,,.,,.
~-.cll9n..to-~
M lb Trutt OejNrt,...nt. BANK OF
AMERICA NATIONAL Tl'IUST °"'0
SAVINGS ASSOCl"'TION, 801 Nor111 .._.., SilA>et, Sant• A"a· c.tlf"""• •10t ..... I< .. ,, .... pla<t Of ""5lllesl Of
.,. -.iq!Wd lo •II mattrn !*'\...,.
Mo •"-.. t•ot UldCIK-.,--., -~lfttllr>I~ ·--... o.<IJ ... U¥Y•.tt77
BANI( O F AMERIC A NAfl()llfAL TRUST &
SAVIHGSASSOCIATl()I<(,
Attft Oorl•Jotepll,
Tnn!Offl<.,
E-utor Of 111~ w 111 Of
ttw-11•m<!ClcH<-O.ytOSTEltLINOTINOLEA
-...~.-..C..-::"''c..tw Orin
............. CA.t'tMt ..... , 11141-..IUJ ......, ..... _
,,_,I_ ~noe Co.II Diiiy Piiot,
~1.1<,11.n1•n ~11
PVBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
Slf>ol.76
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC N011CE
PUBUC NOTICE
PICl'ITIOUS aUSINHS
NAME STATEMENT
Tiie lllllow""9 per~11 I• c1o1nQ blnf. _,,.,
MC CALLUM ANO ASSOCIATES CERAMIC Ot!SIG ... CRS, 111 E. lllAl-.<;edaMew CA •'6l1
.JDlln C:-oot M<C.11""', 111 E •
WlllO'I. C:0.11 ~.CA 9M77
Tiii\ -1..u 1, c~ecJ b'f.,, 1 .... ........
JoM c. Mee.ti lllm
nn u.i-w"' "'-' w1t11 '"' Q>uMy Cl"'1< ol Ora119e Coul'lly on
Oeatmbet70, 1'16. ..,..,
Pu1111-~ co .. 1 0..1, P11o1, Doc. Mo Jt, ,,,. •ncl J.., 1. ... ltn
JJ06.)f.
PUBLIC NOTICE
"Cl'ITIOUI aU .. lllUil
MAMlnATIMINT ..:-~ lol IOw 1119 -......... f"ICI 11141
COMll'U·ICl!!V, 31 CllaMlll Md., UOo ....... ltew_, 9"<11 CA.~
.,..,..lnC.."""1, ~ l1 Al90r<te. Oil\C.~,CAtUJI
MlcJIMi II'. 1491..,, 111 Lido> ......
:., 5119 ""'· -llCH'f llHCll, CA.
wa1i.r " M Tya11. JOI» e. o .io Pl,. Oref\99. CA~
llft4.tamw Wol<h JICl\eNlll,U. ,,....,., _ _, lleKll. CA tM6>
1114\ -.,,1,_u '' C-ctad bot a _., 1»r11Wn11lp
Wllll-W Wtlcl\
N • \lat-I w•~ Ill.cl -IN CllMlnly CJtrk Of Ora111111 c;ouoty on ....... '· ''"·
ll'lollll1"4CI Or ... CO.al o.Alt:::
""" ••.11 •• -,...., •• 1"'7
PUBLIC N011CE
PtJBUC NOTICE PVBUCNoncE
PICTITIOUS •uirNeU
lllAMI STATIMl!N1
""-.w1ow1no--.. ••• c»11911ut1--·
,.ICl'lllOUS aU\INl.H
NAMl ITATl.MENT
'The IOllOWln(i --~are <»oil'O o..w.
\.IM~HAW ASSOCIATES U''
":::...'::CAA;;,;, No. I ... Hli"llllQIOll --li>t,.ANT t>USMER, U4 W ""'SI
CO.la,,....,(•111 t'tUI
0 Ll110le1 HtMY, •ut Warner :a:, Hit. \M, H-lftttCMt 9HcJI. CA
MlllO H.i i..o.., Sa.I W. ltttl St. C-MHA, CA
..,., i..u. sa.w. '""" .o..t. ..... CA • ~·w 1h001iY. 2IM t.. .,,_
Or ~•-.CAtl,.1 .. :::,..--.. 1,~., ......
""·-1·~· ........ _ ..,....,_.,... •.clMlott OllW -a ""'1na""'8 () u......, ... .....,
Tiil\ ,,_. ... t11eo ""''" ..., ~v c~ .. ~~on.-..
MlnoMllel~ ~" a11-...n1 -f lltc! ..,. f11o °"""'' , ....... Of .. ~ .. HNMNll.ltn. ..,..,
IUlll-Or.noe 0..1 Dally .......
Jlft.11. 21.-Ft11.4. "" '•" ..... ........ 0..,...0... Diii., ...... , __________ _
.. '4.tl ........... ~,.,,
"~" PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUSaUSl .. HS
MAMISl'ATIMI MT
Tht followlfll l*Wnj •re_,._, __ ,
•1.00Mf'IELO HOMIR ,_, ~~ .... ~· HunUl>qlOll ....,,,
PHlll .. H McNAM•E, 1IOI
s.nw on .... cmt• -.... ~ ...
DALI! SIMBAO IUI ~C. ::r-· OW.. 0.1 Mar, ~
'nllsbWl-l•<onduc'-f111¥•illtntt· «tpa~IP
""lllPH McName. ~~ -t ... "'-' -""' ~y Cler11 ot OranQe Q9wrllv ...
~1."11
PUBUC NOTICE
PICl'ITIOUS auSllU!SS
NAM E $TATEMENT
lllelollOWll>Q pefM>n~ aroOOl"O~· -.. $£A BREEZE, U1 W -SI., Olste MAW!, CA mt7
ltobert R. V•n Drlmle11. 212
AiX"'"'*r SI .. CDflll Mew. CA. tw7
Olano E. Ven Orlmlen, tn ~""le< St . Cost•""-• CA.~' .. =..-•"'n ll t~ bV., ,,...
Robe<'! R II•" ~ .......
lllk ~,.._, -~ .. ..., wrtll °"' eo...tv c ...... 01 o .. noa CiDody Oft
~1,1'11
.. ICTITIOU' ll\ISlMU$
NAME ST A ftMIENY
,, . ..,.,
TIM to4'°"'1"41 Poanon '' CIOll\Q .....
__ ,
THE EASLEY COMPANY, 1t110
o.fl 9t.. SUit• 1«1. Newpon llNclo.
~
Devld w. l!flltt. 202 ADelOfte,
..._. llM<'ll. CA. --~-•I•~.,. ... ~
o...ldW Efltn T!IK Ill'!-Wff 111.0 wl!~ IN
O>wlty Cl>erk ot Of111ge 0.-v °" .......,.,7,ltn. ..,.,. 1'111111'!!"! Or-C-o.llV Piiot,
Jell. 14; 21, .... o "-b. '· lffl
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC N011CE _,
ll'ICT'fTIOUS aUSINES$ NAME STATEMENT
'~"
'nle ~-Mo__,, -d(l;ng IMl· -"'' MESA ~OPPING ~It -EAST', 279l WHI Ball Road, lilwllll"1.
C.l"Orlll•t'llOol Amold o. Feuernein. 10 'S. .-
Sfrwt. LotA-lt1, Call'°"'l•'GllDI ~M. Feu .......... I~. ~.Ca41tomla'°'91
ElllOI Feuer-n. J1W C ~ •20, San Dtaoo. QI ..,.
ttmerta Ftwntalft, 143 5 June SllN«. LOSA .. IH,Celilenlla~
I.Awl\ ~r$talll, ,.,_ •I.-.,. +40,
8tltt-lltow. Catitot'ftf~ 9'*
K. l'lalpll Lo-.tl, ?4.91' '-r!cllde = &\~ lAo..,.. N~. Otlltom4a
Tllli l><IMMi\ I\ CCN!Cluclad 0¥ a _ .. 1»'1 .... •Vli.
AnlcllklD.FHeNi•
Tilll "·-· ... Ill• Wiit\ , .. Olul'C Y Cla'* OI Ol'ln9' c:.o..t y Oii
OKM!llff 211, ltt• ,.,,..
Pullflslled O<tnQI! C-0..Uy Pllo4.
Jen. 14, 2 '·a, and ~b. •. 1911
11&11
.......................
BllOU: Ad•...tiun G.....S t002 ......., c:Mcll ,...., eds ...................... . ._, -..,.,. ~ ,... , ......... The
MILYPtLOT-1 ~ ............
c:GIT'KtlllMlrtlell Oftly.
JM ....... Maitke: ~·1••1;1 ,, •. l·f ~" '~~-l ··'' ... •
All reaJ estate advertised
an this ~wapeper is sub
ject &o Ute Federal Fa.Ir liAl.flt I'\ ISl,A~O
Housl•• Act of 1968 • 673-4900 '*
wblch makes lt i1Jega1 &o~~~~~~~~ advel't&ae "any pre-1-
ference. limitation, oi: 'f'WO STo.T
cliacrimblaUon t>,ased on t ••IDITN nee. color, re~~on, sex, Gr .. -... m ... -or nalioaal ongm, or an __. ~•• iDleDUon to make any Formal entry Into ~
such preference. limlta· Uvlng room. Formel dln· Uob.ordlacrtn:alnation," Ing room. gourmet
nua ~will not
lcnowbtg&y accept eny
advertiaing for real
estate wtucb ls in viol•·
t.ioll oflhe law.
(i()LF COUllSI
YllW
Btnly upiraded, very spacious borne on golf
course. 4 bd.s, muter down. 2~ ba, f'rml din,
lge fam rm. wet bar &
expansive view. 5'5-9.sl.
~
Walke1 f, I tm
Rt nl tstutc
1/JACUPOOl
UTAn $67,560
Secluded cul-de-sac
sheltered by tower ing
pines leads to this ell·
ecvtive double door en-
try to lavish living room!
Separate family room
with Palos Verdes stone fireplace! Epicurean
kitchen with dining!
Sweeping mas ter
bedroom retreat + 2! !
R amb ling ~ acre grounds with fenced
chlld·safe pool! Owner
says brin& an offer! For
kitchen wilb breeltfa.st area. Ruge remUy l'OOm
wlih cr•ckhng llreptaee.
Walk·in closet In mldler
tlllte. Owner will help
ftoance. Try $9,000 down.
CaJJ 963-6767.
SPARIUNG
POOL 1181£
Beauliful 4 Bcdrm . home. Great localk:m
near Costa MeN }i.igb
and Orange Counly
College. Fantastic pool
with jacuui. Outdoor
heaters. eas BBQ.
Secluded coart yard, en·
try with tisbpond. See
Uus unique home today.
$76,300. 640-6"' ·~
COATS &~llllACf
RE.M E~T.t.Tt It-.(
RAMCHOMISA
HEW VA
OR ASSUME
Vf!r/ tastefully decorat-
ed 3 bd, 2 ba home In
good area. Fam din, FP,
lge t'Ov patin. VA terms
avaUable. New!y offered
at tell.950. 5'5-9491
~
Walker f; lee
Rr.al f s;tatP.
qaiclt appoiotment callr---------
841-«)10. ABlllDOllED
3 Bedroom. 2 bath, with a free-form pool and an
owner that needs to sen
fast. Great for a home or
S9'£9 U an investment. One just •...,... PTO like It sold fol' $56.tOe. MEWPORT lasl year. f'u II price HEtGNTS ISl,500. with an assuma-
BeautifuJ 3 bedroom or 2 ble loan. CALL Qwc~.
bedroom and walnu '151·319'1
paoeAed den with sNdln • SELECT
glass door to 10 1t • lat PROP tice covered p atio. E~IES Completely remodeled
1
________ _
kllcb~o with Corning u-...a...-¥.. .... electric range and gas ~ oven. New carpeting less Shows like a dream. Oitt
than one year old owner. Many extNs.
Formal dining room . cust-Om carpetS, dra~.
brigbl aod airy hom wall covenngs. 4 Bedrm,
lhroaghout with large lge ra~uy room 'llN/fplc. back yard. Seeing 1s Bltn kitchen w1tb pass
believing oDly $93 ooo tbnl window to patio •M 0.11546-2313. ' · beautifully landscaped ()ll(N1119 ·11HUN •o~1N"'I' yard wilh spnnklers. A !ll:Dll ~·, '°' $l3•.~
1002Gw•al tOOI ..............................................
macnab I lrvlna
realty
.... & PUASUll
Pride lrl ownership & pleasure ln
living in this charming 3 yr. old
Country F'l'encb home on a sleepy
cha.me) where the ducks ~ s.nm-
miQI by. Used brick -leaded gtus
-marble llreflace m,ake this 481\1 2"°' bath homt SPSCIA1.! "'101,500. Bob Owens 8'2-823.5. M 4)
I
J
~.~~ ...•... ~~!!!.~.~~ ....... ,~!.~.~ ....... ~.~~.~ ....... !~:!!.~.~ ....... .
G ... ral I 002 ~rol I 002 G~ I 001 GeMral I 002 GeMral I 002 .................................. ············ ······················· ······················· ....................... .
F41ULOUS
DU.Ml HOME ) .. 1JUJlrer11 2 ~111ry w J tu.ce bcb. 3 llw.. fum rm
& r rml clan rm Proless1onall) lndi.rpd lmpress1\f• court yd en
try Blll tocauun 1n l:ilit a pprec1a11ni: an •a
646-77\1
~ -
WONDERFUL
WESTCLIFF
Priu RHuc:tlon! Top notch decorating
Expanded 3 Bcdrm . fam ily room hom1• Ta.stefolly 1nv1t1nl( wtth lovely wallpapt•r•., ~ooJ
and llle. on se('IUdl'd street. away from 1raf f1c. Now Sl34.500
1206 Eun. M.&.
TWINICUE BRIGHTS
Inside a nd out ! The panoramic view
twinkles at night and the warm. inv1t
ing decor sp arkles by day. This top-of-
the-hill 3 bedroom in Harbor View
Homes is on the same street as the
communit y tennis court a nd pool
(Sea view Area). Every extra and
very e xciting. Presented at $136,900.
U~l()Ut: li()~t:S
HEAL TORS ', 675·6000
:M43 Eas1 Coast H19hwav. Corond rJel Mar
11"41 "tv'l1 .. ,.1 Vn1h .11 &'1G !.1990
co rr Camllr1d~~ & • I Lleghland ) GeMral I 002 GeMral I 002
OPEN SAT SL'~ 1 !"l ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
PETE BARRETT
-REALTY-
642-5200
EHTERTAIN
ALOT7
Whether for fnc·nd:. or Just t.•very<lay fom1ly 11 v
in~. you will Im l' th1:.
l(rac1ou~ h<•mc 111 Ir-Irie Terran'. Corona !11•1 Mar. Four l~'<lroom~ 11-fa m ii y room J.HJ!t•
lulchen ~•th calm)( urra. lovely pool ••nd pal10 Pncc IS SH2.0IJO (';ill for appo1n1 ment to sec
61.1.&.50
FOUR STARS • • • • Llke a great
movie. this 1s a rare "hit." with one
great featur e :.irter another 5 Bd r m s .
3 car garage. 40 ft. heated pool. dog
run. Really pos h. by gooh ! And. only
•rl mile from beach. $118.500. And. oh
yes. a bag P J\ RK in the rear instead of
ne ighbors
673-4400
NEW LISTINGS
CDM -589,SCO
Warm and <:OlY l bdrm 1 ha home on
quiet street w/another bdrm & bath
underneath R 2 lot with plenty or
room for <tdd1t1onal n<!w u.mt. Walking
dtslance lo shops & schools
CDM -$96,500
This ('harm tn ~. totally remodeled
Cape Cod 2 bdrm, 1 ba home has large
back yurd w/plenty of room for 2nd
unit for income. Even comes with
plans for tha t 2nd unit. drawn up for
current owner ! Pnnciples only.
CDM -$117,500
Warm a nd cozy with custom extras.
vaulted ceilings. free standing frplc &
heated patio plus more. A cozy at-
mosphere -charming 2 bdrm. 2 ba
home in prime area or old CDM. 1h blk
to view of bl ue Pacific anu bay Open
house Sat & S un 1-5 p m.
CDM -$149,500
Triplex investment delight, just one
block from ocean. An unbelievable
price for today's mvcst ment in tomor-
row's income
EAST SIDE CM UNITS
7 new units under construction soon.
a nd to be complet«.."Cl rnid-77. Fine
townhouse design and weJJ located. A
very wise purchase for the investment
nundcd. $297.500
EAST SIDE COSTA MESA
Fine custom r ebuilt 2 bdrm. 2 ba
home w/new cabinel5, appliances &
carpet. ALSO has choice large Jot
w/lots of s pace that's ripe fo r con-
struction of adwtional units on rear
lot. Priced for good investment in
good location. $61,900
"'tfJ'l1'1 • ,.,, '. ,.,. t [~Bl G._::•lsloo of ~=:-Co. E. SIDE CM
Beautiful 3 bdrm home on lg lot w/doll
1002 house in rear under huge shade tree.
Use any lender of your choice but do it
qw ckly. Priced to sell lhis weekend at
$61,900
NEWPORT BEACH
VIEW
Sperl arularly In<' at crl a n d e l e~llnllv rustom11>'d hnm1 1n Eai1thluff offc>rNI ,11
Sl&S.000 Thrt't' l1<'flroum'
in 3 tranqwl M!llm..: w11h
mesmeriz1ni: Vlt:"' 111
mountain~. 11.ttib .w<l upper bay Ju!>t "'a1llnl(
for you C:Jll no"' 673.llS50
,,_,,, '' • ., • t I '• • ' •. r
·•···••·•·•····•········•······•···········••·
S Bdrms.. 41'2 baths. family rm. &
formal dinin~ La rge tile p atio &
waterfront de('k $28.5,000.
. BI ([.y~ a·u~"·b~,: ~~·~ L r~.R '·
34L.Bay\ide Ori.,e . N .8. • '615·6161
IRVINE ECST ACY!
Garden home on green belt! 3 bdrm,
2 ba w/patlo kitchen. 2 atnums. wet
bar ... fa ntastic! Pool. schools &
shopping near by. And in Irvine! Get it
' BALBOA PENN
'ouplex ! Summer/winter r ental de·
IJght an prime area Live m 3 bdrm. 2
ba unit & rent bachelor loft. A wise
and promising invest ment for a young
family.$ I 09,500 l~lllD _ GMHal I 002 G~Mt"al 1002 BLUFFS -GREENBELT VIEW!
61EOROOM
GIANT S75,500
I) bedroom. 3 b;ith homr· With over 2200 sq rt Jd jucl'nt to Mil\~ Sc1u.irt Park. ~olf l'Oursc <1n<l country cluh Ni>~ h1~hl}
upgraded r;irpl'l" anti dr ape" C.: •> m ~ii l'l l'I) pa1oled lhroughout
Seller neecls l.m o lier home sm<.'e 1he1r £am1ly
has l(rown u11 You ~•II love the ne11(hborhou.t
C-a 11 r o 11 ,. r l 1 1 I 1 1
SU 2S3S
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gr acious family li ving at a fi ne price! UPPER SANTA ANA 3 bdrm, 21h ba w/formal dining, fami·
SAVER-S49,950 l y rm . fr p l c . p rivat e pati o.
BAVCIEKWBA·' Y Stiper~~e'; ~~~;YELo live hiP.<>s>l/hlou1ngeh. 15 acreal1pa1rk. pbresc8hool.
in family home tn dt•!>1r.1 SC 00 • S Opp&ng C OSe y . ring
ble areJ Vi\tFllA terms ck forS 105,000. Sp1mous 4 13edrm home localed on J !iccluded tree shaded street Remodeled ktt <.'hen. large £llmll)' room With r1replace. on hard~ood
Ooor~ Owm r 1s anxious Pnrf' I!. $7t 9SO Don't
~all C'all l>l.> 7221
untx>hevable that this •~ ~ ~y under $.'J0,000 C:.i II tool.I)
64&7171
,,_,,, ,, I • I •1 • t•I I
0.\IL y PILOT D:J
~~!!.~~.~c:':' ........ ~:.~.~ ....... ~~~!.~~~ ...•••. 1~~!!.~~~ ...... .
I OOZ Ganerol 1002 G...,.. 1002GetWf'GI 1002
HARBOR VIEW
Exquisite 3 bedroom Monaco with
custom interior. cer amic tile entry.
fi replace with white brick hearth.
charming sheltered patio. pool-sized
yard. fruit trees and u beautiful night
llght view
CALL 640-9900
Burr White Realtor
,.-2901 Newport Blvd.
I Newport Beach. CA 92663
CANNERY VILLAGE
2 STORES + LARGE APARTMENT
$12.5. (XX)
\.. 675-4630
1002 G.-rat 1002 . ............................................ .
GREAT
FAMILY ROOM W11h open ~a m ce1hng,
bobby an<l sew1nl( ar<.'a 3 &>drm . ;! B;ith with lols of e Ktra • L1kr 2
PATIOS. £1rcpl <1CI' &
garage door opener Top value at $64 .900. C<ill
!>10 1151
·~HERITAGE ·~· REALTORS
COSTA MESA
EASTSIDE
4UNITS
$128.000'
WATYFROHT Pler/Ooat Chmre loca-llon. 4 BR, 3 baths. 2 frplcs . li:e patio. new dee Won't last long at
$179.!>00
CCWOftO <let Mar
Twin rluplt•xes. $93,000 E;ich lietter hurry on
lll<.'Se' ~~~~~~·I Bal»oo Boy Prop.
Rfflftors
•.•••••...•......•.•..•..........•......•...••
NEWPORT ISLAND!
Well ma intained 7 yr. old duplex. only
stone's throw to water Eat'h umt has
3 bdrms. & 2 buths. top condition 111
aJI respects $162.000
BAYCREST 4 BR.
Elegant hom ll : 4 bdrms., 4 baths,
formal dining rm. & 3 car garage.
Good area -it'!' t.he Beverly Hills of
Newport Beach . $179.500.
WE'VE MOVED!
Visit our sple ndjd new quarters at 450
Newport Cente r Dr. (ma in noor ).
Phone 759-0811
1 002~ 1002
··········•·······•·•··········••·••••··••··•·
HST RACH IUY!
Gated atrium entry. sets the st.age for
this impeccable 3 Br. 2 Ba. home
within STROLLING DISTANCE TO
SURF & SAND. Cedar shake ext.
wl south brick patio. Frml. Din. Rm.
has cu s tom bltn. buHet -kitch.
features breakfast & sep. lndry. room.
Kingsize m str. s uite w/dressing area &
his & hers clos et. Qualjty Lyons built
home. UNBELIEVABLE PRICE OF
$75.900. Ca ll Phyllis Salyer
962-4454
Coots 1r w~ led E:titate. tt..t. 1c11.
1002 GeMrol 1002
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
OOUHOUSE
NaluraJ wood cabinets. no wax noon. lots of wall pap('r and wood panel.mg acc•ent this charming home. Qwet tree lined
street near schools and shopping. Pnced Lo !>di
m a hurry ! Please call
842·2535.
ut'tllf '" 0 ·Ir \ fl""4 t('\pf Nt<I •
CUSTOM BUILT
NEWPORT
HEIGHTS
Vou can be In ttus pie
ture' 4 bedroom, 2 balh w1lh master bedroom OD first fl oo r Beamed cathedral ceiling. f ami ly room with Cloor to ce1I
init £1replare. 105' fron tage. Pool SIZC lot With
£ire pit and wood planked
conversat io n area
S12S.OOO Call 546-2.'JIJ HUMTIHGTOH
HACH
GREENHOUSE
BEDROOM
I e 1a111 .............. " .... .
i-OPEH--S·A·T-./·S·U·H-1--5· UR~1E~~ffS ( ~ IW&!il
3122 BROAD On the bay-front row
• 675-7060 ..
4 Twin s1i.ed bedrooms 1nclu d1ng one with skylight. Ideal for grow-ing plants. 3 f'ull baths. lung.sized m:ister suite Sharp-freshly pamll'<i
Prt>mwm wall covenn~s lhruout. Bike lo beach Full pnce $68.900 Will
lrade CALL962·77!111
~ KEY
REALTOP.s ii
Newport Heights. New 3 <.'enter. Deluxe end unit TWO·ON·A·LOT
& 4 bdrms . 2"'2 baths. Franciscan model. for one with ~•cw' Must see extra privacy 3 Bdrms.. Two separate houses on to believe! Pt ck you r 2t,.; baths. fomw l dinJng, a large Costa Mesa lot carpets extra secunty system Zoned for three more un VIEW DUPLEX Elegant decorating its. surrounded by large
Bay & Ol'can. old CdM t hruout . By app't apartment complexes 'J'tus parcel IS ready for Each 2 bdrm . 2"'2 ba.. SlS0.000 developm enL Full pri~
crp1c .. beamed c-e11. bll· C. F. Colesworthz sas.soo.cALL~2660 ins, dbl i:ara~e. 5 Yrs !p SEL
old $189.SOO REALTORS 640-00 O ECT
OPEHSAT/SUH 1-5 PROPERTIES
221 POPPY. CdM Gewrai 1002 ~ 1002 Ct·ntul") :>l Wrs1rhrf"
.. ,.,, I •
WESTSIDE
SLEEPER
•$52,500•
G~al I 002 GtMral
1002 , ______ _ Charmin,:: Old Corooa •••••• •••• •• ••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cut.le. J bdrms . 2 ba .. den. So pauo. S.142.SOO VA Buyers
Call Now SPANISH VILLA No mont>y rlown \tJn> to
$49,500 • IEACH C'hoo'l' from (\.111 £or
3 l\r. 2 Uu. horn\' LI\ &.
dJrun~ arna Frplc. Jbl
(:ar.Jf<!C l,g Morage bldg
W 1nd 1 n i.: w .a 11. ~ ,, \ nl'Jfl' mform.;111111
lhr()\.l){h Cast1llJ.1n c <•url l' yard le.l<b tu uuth\·11111
M6 39'l8 ('\'\)'< 646 l&-13
laclienm·yer 1llage Real Estate
red. hie roof und Span1,h 963-4569 • 963·1786 balcony' St'<'ludl'<I 1•11tn · Realtor
t.o RanC'ho 11,·mi.: mom• f)<'St.i d 101ni: 11lu~ \'Jn --------1.;;;;;;;;.;;;-. __ j
Lina bar and ~1111rmt'I
k 11 r ht• n ' • : m 1 I,.' Io poundm.i: I' Jr1r11· 1'1.1<11 plus tenn1\ m;ik,• th1~ ,::nrden hom(' h\ 11w .l l it&
hnellt' Try $4 %0 l ol
I.Jn' f or quirk appmnt ment ull 1147 0010
t •; ~ • I I I
ATTIHTIOH
INVESTORS
14 UHITS-OCUN
SI00.000
Dt~~~~~~!~~~J!m
Ou' n ~horu, hc>m~ Fun11ly mom .,.. 1A<1·t ltar
h: M str ... 111t•• .sniJ l.11 <'h t'n "' hr1 ..il.fJi.l
~ ull haw J i.ph•nrl1d \ 1ew ol l IJll<·r 11.iy 6-<.uf ruund1n1t rnou nt.itn :-
Thu hum•'' hu1 1t arounrl
an .1tnuni l'1 "'.ti rwwx with lountam .~ rt•trn<'I.; hll' flf1m1 ~ h1•all'd &
HOW OPEN!
Ctftfvry 21
Surf Rflllty
BAKER AT BHl~IOI. ln Co5la Mc:.J ~rving rcs1dt•nt:. of
CO!St 3 Mt!S0t, Irvine.
:"lc~port lkach.
So Santa Ana lntl.'n'll'wlnK app1Jc11n ts
lor sales po~1t10n
lfi'J.1050. ti88 W Uttkcr
Cc>Ma M~a
flll•'rl.'d JJC'uU1 spa. --------•I alf'am hath ~ t:.trdl'n Mu<'h, mlX'h mor .. • T .. r nhc 1111~ JI mJ.Qi)'I TAKEOVER
3 bl~k'I to h1·.Hh 1n ~ establl&hl'd ,., 11Jt of UPERB
ownership \>t!;ich rnm QMES munlty H11th inromc· will
GI LOAN
On th1.s spacmws 3 bd, 2 bu POOL homf' New crptll & rre::s h paint
thruout Payments ue
$338 mo 1nrludtnR taxes when you purrhai.e sub
JCC1 ln ex1:;t1nl( GI loun 646-nn
show resh flow with -· ... I 1555W Ball.er,C M owumum r('(lutrt·u 1 own ,..., to Merll•t BHllet payment F:xrl"ll('nl tn· S49· 86SS
vestmt>nt Ol)l)Ortunlly for1---------~ handy Will show 1m mediate :iprret'IJtwn
with a little sprurmi.: up Hurry for th1, un1<1ur property <.:all ror more m!orm:itlon on 1h1s pro-~rty i\l!!o other nut standing Investment:.
963-7881
(.'IPfN Hf 'I• H \I ff.J '"''' r-. I
1·•1111
RAMIUMG llAHCH
F1XER ·POOL
$64.990
AIAMDOHED
EAST SIDE -COSTAMtSA
2 HOUSES-I LOT . Super starter invest· mcnt 2 spac1ou:i homes ---------1 for lhe pnce of <>ne 1n fan-___ ..., ____ •I
tast1r East Std(' Costa NEWPOiT SHOR!S Mesa You <.'an 't do bet· ter 1han lh•s Murh too 2-Story A·frame. wood mU<'htodescr1bt!,soitlvt• bea med ceilings; 4 usucall 6467 l7l $9l .950 bd rm s. 2 ba t hs . ruJ~nce• seduded patio. Walk to l ®'iMlil ~~J:~.~, ..... associated
Bll Ol(f ll S-·l>[Al T0 11S
:Ol\ ..,,,, l fllb eo , 11 tti6 r -. -.. Cl r e u I u d rt\~ t o Want Ad ~ult.s 642·5678
dra1n11tlc home b~ilt on sl.ngJe level lfuitefam1ly G.Mnal 1002 GeMrol 1002
sized hvtng room Coun· ••••••• •• • •• ••••••••••• •••••••••• •• •••••••••••
try ldtchen. Dine. F ami
ly entertainment urea overlooks covered PavUlo>o unrl sparkllnll
pool, Separate wmg for
massive master lluih•
and chlldrens qunrtt'rs Tremendous boraaln for ~ handy. Hurry won 'I
last. Ca 11 96.1 7881.
oPfN hi <h ti\ II.JN It• ~I 11< r lelilHI
O&NtfHld Ads 642·5e'711
,,
Ull A MODB.
Better than lhe model. Elegant 4
Bedroom and family room .
Separate dlnlng. Many upgrades.
Plush carpeting and drapes. Large
patio area. $129,500
L l ~ S K '8 I~ f· ,\ 1. l-Y .
'.. '' I I. 'I I> I . ' I /... '.. ,\ • J II ( " I , . , .. .
..•.•.•.•.•.••..•••..•.•.......•.•••....•..•..
W ESL EY N. · .
TAYLOR CO.
REALTORS · '..sin ce 1fJ46
BEAUTIFUL SHOUCUFJS -$235,000
Real r a re rustic charm ! Impressive J
BR Engli sh style home with pool.
Ocean view fro m upstairs mstr. BR .
2 I I I Se11t JoaiPt Hils Rood
MEWPORT CEHTB. M.I. 644-4910
I lave "°methinit you want TilC fast.est draw In lhe to sell'' Cl:.t!>.Mf•~·d nils do West ... a Daily Pilot
it ~ell &12 567H <.:lass1f1ed Ad 642 5678.
Gewerat I 002 GtM1"al 1002 ..............................................
UMIYEISfTY PARK TOWNHOUSE
Rutgers Plan in Popular Vill age III
location near park. pools & tennis.
Very clean & neatly landscaped for
minimum m ai nte nan ce. 3
bedrooms. fa m ily & dining rooms.
$86,950 includes land.
A COlDWIU. IAHICB CO.
644-1766
ne1 S.AHJOAOUINHILLSRO.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
o ~j::,'t~.v--mtc r, I' 11 I' I' I' I' I' r I
Uri' ....... ,,, 2> 111 •1 1 1 1 1
New Listing!
SSS.000 for llus a.ir cond 3
Bedrm. beauty As.,uma
ble 7' .. V ;\ 1011n of S23.SOO. p.lyable $215 total /mo.
531~)
lntemaffonol Reol
Estate Hdwork
Want Ad R.esult.:; 642·:>678
----4 ? I I I
l)Olf Y. f)UXKl.O<
I RE:Jll. TOM ' 32!0EC.0.....,
C..-Oll-640-7000
1002G~ 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
CE
110111 BLllRS CD.
OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE
LOYI A SPICTACUUI Y11W1
DOYll SHOllS llAUTY
Luxuriously Appointed 3 Bedrooms
in a Neighborhood Where Pride
Shows in Every Home. Forma l
Roman Gardens With Old World
Elegance. Dramatic Day-Nile Bay
& Ocean Views. Make Plans to See
Today. $289,000
I 16 VIA QUITO
UDOISU
Ofllltt DAILY 1:00 to 5:00 PM
Make an off er on tbls adorable 3
bed room today. Happy, sunny
atmosphere. Tasterutly decorated,
entirely remodeled and just waiting
Cor new owners . Large patio for
e nt e rtainin g . fmmediate
~pancy. $149,500. Fee.
... DOYB DllYI 631·1800
. ' -. -. .. -. ..,. . -.,,,
~II. mecneb I Irvine ?--realtg
FINER HOMES
FROM $215,000 TO $1 ,200,000
llG CAHYOH B.EGAHCE
Custom-d ecorated Versaille on golf
c ours e . Used bric k e ntry &
courtyard w/pool & jacuzzi. 2-story
living room w/marble fire place ;
formal e ntry; lg. dining room on
view-s ide; sunny gourmet kitchen
w /brkfs t. are a ; d e n /s tudy
w /fi r e place: m ast e r s u i t e
w/elegaat bath & dressing area.
Largest Deane model -4 BRs. 4
baths + powde r room. $350,000.
Beverly Morphy 642·823.5. (Zll >
PAHORAMIC V11W
Bay. boats & city lights. Dra m atic
Dover Shores 2BR + den wood &
stone ho m e w/spacious private
courtyard. pool, jacuzzi, garden
lights & maint-free landscaping on
Jg. comer lot. Features 2 fireplaces,
lath & plas te r. beautifully crarted
built-ins + deluxe security system.
$215,000. Marjorie Mahon 644-6200.
(Z12>
NOMOMTOttY IA YRONT
Newly built -JBRs, den, lg. f amlly
room, beautiful St. Charles kitchen
& lg. deck. 3800 sq. rt. Sauna +
jacuzzi. Dock priv. $375,000. Roy
Romey 642-8235. (Zl.3 >
sura CYNESS SHOUS
Be a lucky one & buy one of the last
Ocean View lots in this area. Nice,
big corner lot w/approvaJ to build
2nd story. Private beach, park &
security guarded gate. $70.000 -
will trade. Lynne Rothell 644-6200.
(Z14)
IAYMOMT LOT
Lg .• welt located lot on Promontory
Bay. Bulld your dream home or
bold for appreciation. 624 Harbor
lsland Or. -adj. to residence at
618. $198,000. Cat.by Schweickert
642-8235. (Z15)
642·8235 644-6200 90t Dover Orlw Harbor View Center'
lrvlne '1t ~ V•lley Cen-.r 752·1414
D4 DAILY PILOT
HMMsForW. ••••••••••••••••••••••
,. .
-tr Ft1day January''· 19n ~.~.~ ........ ~~!!!.~.~ ....... ~~!.~~.~«!: ....... ~~:!!.~.~ ........ ,~~~!.~.~ ....... ~!~.~ .......
Hovsff For S• HCMtHt For SaM ---..1....y I 1M 104"" ........__ .............................................. CottaMe.o 1024 ~ 6y 1034 ~CMtleach 1040 ,..,, ... ,..,._ 1044 •--teect-1041
I 00 1c6oa ll&and C,._.. ~ M• t 022 •••••••••• •• •• •• •• •• •• • •••••• ••••• •• •• •••• •• • • ••• ••• ••• • ••• ••••• •• • •• ••••••• • • • •• • • •• •• •• •• • •••••• •• •• • •• • • •• • • •• •• ....,....._,
'006 ...... vn..-....w ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• •• •••••••••••• H1W USTIM~I Condo ror 1ale. 4br. atw, .......................
CALLUS FOi
COftdot{!WfthlM
In T111tlft Ir Inti.
From $39.000 to tts.000
EXCELL.£NT TERMS
THE HOMISELLHS
752·5353
•• ••••••••••••• •••••••• M £SA Vl!:KDE 4br 2b1 165011q.fl nr Mlle Square ILLNESS
WANTED ram rm home on over. r11.rk (;re;!nbell " c:om
ailed comer lot In xlnt moo pool & rec $6"900. FORCES SALE Harbor V• lro a~ Df' nei""hborbood. Priced (or Ron EUb SINGLE SWINGER qukk sale at $61,000. H B. Realty ~~ Thi~ lo\'ely 4Br, 1 •,A11 H Hoomy 4 Bedrm, 2~ With;il1tlh•mooey 8ath,2ftplcs .sep.bm. SPACIOUS M~11 dow . Homke(,n\•cd& JU llt1tlc
T() auy 1 •· j Ya.truly home, 3 Br 3 "a. wor OD\'Cnll'ft y c ui;c rm .. cusl. poo .. ICUZ:U. u to s l l h I k Balbc>a Isle Doll House Prof. la.nd.scpa. Avl. Im· den, dining. Cplc. new ~~;~ ~~~le~. ~ ~ Fu &In W..Sa' , 2Br, l Dis l bou.'4! nwd. Submit, $183,950. cpts. lnd11cpng, man) · r bo 1
1 en wr 0 ~ 875-6900 xtras ~ lo upprecaute o cup 111"( space
Wiil.iT JU[ BEST?. Drive~i;,~:~~rkAv UTILEREDllOUSE MESA VERDE fSu~·1?s'PM.~=~~ --~~~~-r --
M JI &422800 Bkr 2Br2Ba,S.ofHwy.Ooly Marino Cr or cal l OPEN SAT/SUN 19932
. . will thoroughly ~oy this 4BR.
FR home in the prestigious "Ranch"
of Irvine. The water is sparkling clear
in its beautiful pool. Enjoy its child's
play area, fifth BR or den. and formal
dining. Many upgrades. Just a s
minute wa lk from Los Naran~os
Elem. School. A Don Bird Exclusive ror only $92.000.
NORINS
REALTY This 3 Bedroom Mc•s& $98,500 PBul Martln !9 950 968--7079or~·2877dys. Piceadilly Ln. Hunt'". Verde beauty has at ! lcAoa f'enlnaila I 007 Keal F.alAte 644 7383 "
BeautaruUy up11r11ded In· ••••••••••••••••••••••• -----A 3 ' 2 8 th ...... IMJonhoch 1040 Bay off Adams nr.
tenor IS, ta stefully de ••Pnm~oceanrronl2 Br, TRIPLEX ramouse.4~~~n ho:.e. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~f":r~bh~glt~o~. PIUMK COMM ERCIAL
LOTS m Vlctona 8ot1<'h
area on C.oaat Highway
On1i of the last &ood busl ncss localJOl\li lo l.&J(una.
Two C t lots Ml $48,000
each. three R i lol.3 at
$4.5.00Q en ch
corated, 1nrluding plush 2 patio, firnllnce So.or llwy.One2bdrm Near schools, library •SAVEMONEV• PriceRllyS48-m • · carpets and custom ww $J$-O,OOO. Call 673 t402. with huge mstr & bltns,, and t'hurcbes. Extra •BY OWN Ell•
dow cuvenng11. G~ted 5'!Q W Oceanfront + 2 l ·bdrm units 112 umenllles -a lovely Bell Meadows, sprkliog IY OWHER
front wuJI entry provules Blks to ocean $145,000 swimming pool + a pool hm. quiet cul-de 1 Mile rrom beuch, 4 BR. forp1nvn1.cy-~nd sc$7cun00ty Caplsfraltolcad11018 1 8 separal.eplay yard. Call 11uc, cmplll'y upgrd'd, 3 Ba, lge ram.rm, kin1< .. ~~.,j CALL NOW 752-7315 New y 1st .. .,,. at 3.4 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oceanfront rentn • 3 r, 3Br l"'·Bu (um rm For
ca11now!54&4141 1--------1 '""·""" &;a apP1"'.' e42 29,.; ., i::.::r;.. ;;>;:::;-,.T,;; DONALD M. BIRD I I ROOM OUMGECOAST 541 -3200. Open hs e lndsq>g st 10.000 A • I
FIXER UPPER REAi.ESTATE • Sat /Sun 10·4. 17391 982-3935.,nnc ortly ~-!!!llb~~~ss~OCJ~~a~t~e~s~.R~e~a~to~rs~~ ~ * 494-1057.
Classic Spa rush be:iuty 644-4848 Caspers Cir. ------..:..-__ ,
on Bluff!., overlooking ---------1 ANYTIME S&S R al s '"'• I 044 lrrfee I 044
Dana Pt. Jlbr 6 Udrm. J DUPLEX 4 or s :U.! ~~~!j!~ai~· Irv• I 044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ba. game room. library, Beamed ce1hngs. new~~~~~~~~~I Is 968 ' •••••••••••••••••••••••
COATS & WALLACE
REAL ESTATE . INC.
LAGUNA
HIDEAWAY
study, frml. dining rm. t'arpet1drapes, heavy s~'!:::=n Pro~es 1111111111111 ---------1 hand-painted beamed shake rc>or. South ot TUl1LE ROCK
$122,000 WITH LA.MD
OPEN HOUSE IY OWNER
5-day. J._-y 16t'-
2 Bedroom & den in
Canyoo w/secluded rear
yard Patio. terrace & tree house. One mile to
town & beach /\II this for
only Sl64.500. Call now tu
St.'t!~
ceiling. Fi r eplace Hi11hway $129.500 VACA~•. Enclosed courtyd In ROGER Li\ULE n 1
eludes lg. heated pool, 640-9300 640-9608 l~mmediate Possession WOODBRIDGE Buy Now!!
sep Jacun1. r1rc pit, out WALTER s. klHG Sgl. story 4 br. 2 ba Ill
WHI LE l~TEKEST doorBBQare11 $205,000. AndAssociales "Model Home" cond PLACE
RATES ARE DOWN & By owncr1Agents call Realty Brokerage One or the best loc:H1ons /(' fR€HIG€ HOME:~ MON EY IS p LEN 673-3620or496-8723 m Fount. Valley. Hard lo IY OWHER
TJFUL' l~~~~~~~~-1 SPYGLASS HILL believe a 20x40· pool in· Popular Creenbnar pion
2 Story. 6 BR-Plan 7. Giant wood
beamed st ep down living room w/floor
to ceiling frplc. Formal d ining
room. family room. kitchen w/nook.
Beaut. landscaped, low maint. yard.
Secluded master bedroom, lower floor
rooms open to garden & patio areas. 3
Car garage, ab\.D\dance of storage &
manyextras. ltlSZSllneC--.9" .
,._ ~ M I 022 B f I ,,. ID-RM + '""-OL eluded for only $79.~. with 4 bd.rms + ram11y ~....,. er 5 r + game rm. rm ..., rv Call: 545-8424 rm, 2 baths. Next to lake
I\ super l>uy on c•oun ••••••••••••••••••••••• dine. sep ram rm. 5 Ba. $68,500 ASSOCIATED Immediat e occupancy trysade estate Large \'1ew of ocean &c city lites. SO COAST BKR $1 0
~N Newport, N 13.
EMHALDIA.Y
By Owner <Uc. Bkr I i11de yard ror pcol or boal $229,000. By o wner. Outstanding location. · S. I .ooo_. 58(i·3637 arter
or both. A gracious home 640~25. !'ear schls & shop'g. For HOME & 1 NCOM E ! 2 6pm. Pnncipals only·
for entertainin~ f'ormal ---------t into. call houses on 1 lot, 3 Br & 2
dmmg, a spacious airy 673-7601 Br. Try $10.~0 dw!l· 11111 · 11 Whitc-watf'r ocean view
Open-beam celllni;s
Fred Briltgs AIA Des. kitchen. larl(e fum1ly $98 500 full o-; ..,......,...... H,.. ... . . pnce . .-.. n room with wet har and " .. ~,.... • 7s "'rea only, pis. Kent Rogers 1----"-.;;;;.....;.:;;;;;;;:;;.;==
2n d r are p I a l" t' 4 ---------• 3 Bdrms. 2 ba, excellent Rlty 848-8300 PRICED TO SELL b
Bedrooms. :t•---------i condition. N~w carpel· owner S8S 000 lm~eJ C• D• Old714J 133-9609 or
1714) 751-4642
Dining room, Den
2 Bedroom 2 Baths
Lrg lot-t"m lo expand
PRICE $189,500 400t17"~• fOR.~wll SPYGLASS RIDGE ing, lundscaped, fenced BEACH Cottage. only 9 occup~ncy. 'Lu~ury 2 BR: CM ·-"" •F1·rstT1·m,,Ofrered yd,2car gar.Lg~corR·2 blks. to oc~an, $5000. library RanchoSanJoa . ~· -·. · .. · ,_._-... _ .. lot nr schls. shop g cntrs, dwn, full pnce $45.000. . c' _r ._ Largest lot on the lllU busses. Pnced to sell ! Pnn. only, pis. Kent qW!l ondo Fully ap M,_..._nCH I .6.Y
Moretha.n200ft stfron· $74950 Art 4 pm call JWgersRlty.848·8300 pointed, inc ld air 10"""" "'"-.,,.
Call for appt. 494-83TI
lage. Room for Lennis ~7ozj 547 ·3987 or aft, Spm & nw. I 044 .,..._ ...,.. 11 OWMr
c rt/pool. See lo ap. ---------Spac 2 sty. 1 yr old wkods544-5704 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lovely Br, 2~ ba. ram
predate this beautirully TWO OM A LOT Laodmarlt hm in pre-FAIRWAY Culverdaie, by owner Up RID UC ED · SAVE rm, large Uvlng room &
tlecorated 2-story Burl· 2Separate houses on lge. stJge area. 3 Car gar. < graded thru-oul. pror. MONEY separate dining room w 1 BIG CANYOM mgame. 4 Br, 3ba+lge lol; paint outside & pro-Br. 3 ba. Uv·rm w/frpl. TOWHHOMl Absolutely the lo t beamed ceilings Heated bonus rm . $187.000 ram-rm w/bar, ceramic Lake & N1ghl Light landscaped 2 BR. frplc, , wes 1 EXECUTIVE ~8'1~11t!ll!!!ll fit. CalJ Smlho' Melvyn country Jcitchen. JI<\ ba. pnce. J>OO set 1n ocean view HOME lse/opt.Owner6«·2869 at tile entry. Cstm int de-Views . Most popular walkmgd1stancetopnv 3 br. 2\12 Ila Rancho Son Excellent cond1llon. 1~~~~~~~~~1---------t l\lannersCoveRealty signed tbruoul. Open RaocboSanJ oaqwn 3br tenrus, swimming, park. Joaqwn. Guarded priv .. te com ~~~~~~~~"~::Jc~ Br, 2~, CAMl!JO SHORES Fine Mesa Verde 2-slory. 646--4463 house 12·5 Sat/Sun. 17962 plan, unromprom1sed & clubhouse. $64,950 Open house Sat 12·5 munaly. Sl6•.soo Ph l.lvinit room separate ---------Dellglen Cir . Owner view from every room cco 5199 31 Montanas Este 499-2716
Open Sunday 12 4 · 5 B r . 2 h b a . m an Yl•--------1 84.2·1T16 S'l0.000 in custom up ~ 559-4S5S -------#6 Rur Verte, N B Dm. 3 Rr. 3 ba · fam-rm. amenities S96.700. Prin MESA VERDE · grades. Wood ceilings, WOODIRIDGE ~n PRIVATE 0 RIVE -DRAMA.TIC ATRIUM Pror det'orated Pool. only 75l·l!m IY OWMER securily system, custom N d b b .:;; Ocean view. immac 2 Br GARDEM HOME parkbke yd Slll4.500 by ---------t 3 Bednn., ramlty room, Landma rk 4 BR, RV /trlr wood entry . Ultimate ew con ° Y ownr. 3 r. +den, 2 Ba, frplc, 2 car
o1rner 4600 Hoxbury Costa M~sa I 024 carpet , drapes, fresh access. Immediate ""'SS Rancho Homo ..,,..,.,000 2•12 ba, 2400 sq.ft. View. Untrg el~ "nr Lrg lot $129,500. Pnvacy & seclusion are __ J1h 1>41·4140. ••••••••••••••••••••••• paint. patio, la""'e yard. "" ' .,..., library 2 car nr lake E ., 0 Yours tn this 2 Hr, cten 2 • ., ~.900. Open Sat & Sun. Wkdys 752 0206, eves · · ' N W 11 ME under con College Park. 3 Br 2 Ba, Fruit trees! f74.ooo. Call"'"' '"'19. w"--'·· 1•" "1"". s125.5oo. Eves, <213 I EAL ESTATE st ruct ion A II wood. b11 single fa mily hornd m SPYGLASS f!JLL R M C c1e """'""' ..... ~ .... .., °" ~3987 lheH1llsoflrv1nc 1111 Tiburon Bay Dr. new cpt, drps, roof & oy c OT ---------peoplt> ht1li11r1g peop/r. ocean view, 3 Br. 2 Ba .
Gn .._.._.D VISTA Panoramic day & night paint. Spac lut. w/bltns, Realtor 1110 H•wport TEE Off DEERFIEL_U 3 Br, 2'.l'i Surround your.self with purchase now &c select
"""" view 3 Br Portsmouth. sep clin, encl yd & palJo. Costa Mesa 548· 77 29 ba, hm. 1826 sq rt .• covr d I t.s C 'd t . b 1--------..i your own choice of lite & REALTY 768-1212 S51i,9SO. Ow o r / Agl ·l•--------1 Near got( course. 3 patio, spnnklt•r sys, btrl Pan · ov a n um r· DEERFIELD ca.rpet. This home is de-Open Sat & Sun 1·5 557-7648 tied.room. great location. crpt, dn. well kept l~RS.th~outdoors ln.3Br. TOWNHOUSE s i g ned &c bu1 It b y --------llf $225,000 Ownr640-8077 ! Bt Home, den w /pvt en-Needs t ender loving $711000 SS2·05!i3 f R, 2 Ba, low ma mt yard urehitects Oslrander &
LGE COR ... ER LOT --· -· · w/lge trees. Nr pool & Just listed and 1s 1l " trance, 2 car gar , frplc, j ...,, 000 55 5038 Kish1·yuma $175 000 R ho r -J -.J ac .,., I sharp' Three s·pac1ous · · · Like New 48i:, 2 ba, ram air cond, newly decorat-CRC .:>-. oa..,...n · · · PRlVACY-Oulstandin..:
rm, liv'g rm, frplc. AP· ed. pool si lot. orr street Condo on the golf course. QUIET/CO MFY /CUTE bdrms., 2.,.. baths, dmmg while water coastal view
proxl800 s qrt.Dbl gar. access (RV Parking>·=========rneur poo l. \'1ew o r 3br,A/C,RV pad,tile area,t'ent.oircond .. up· from this magnificent
Nr all schools . 630 W. quietcul-<ie·sac,close SeaburyTract4 Br.clean. Newport Center. Up-kit., patio, super loca-~d~~~~~e~:rftr: home that mus t be
Wilson. CM. $63,500. everylblng prln only ded k s73 500 graded 2 br. den v//wel· tiOll $62,000. , .. _. t A be Uf 1 Pl seen-the amenJties are
n..,. S t/C'.. 10 S Pb ...,.., .-~"'Ju,.,. · upgra • 85 • · bar. lst Time offered. PROPERTYIJOlJSE uu uou · au u an far too ex•-nstve lo list
A COH\'OllCNT 9"0WINC A
9'WIHC GUIOl f'Otl lH( 67"...,3 ,!1.,,., a .,.,n . . • .... ,...,.,.~eves Ownr. 53&8105 . Owner I Agent $98,500 3 and only 7 months new ()v .., --~-------• 3Br, 3Ba home m College 675-6366. 6'2·31150 645·4264 Hurry oo this one ! er2000sq rt. SZ19.ooo
CAl OH lHC GO 3 BT l Ba, lge back yard. Park. Cul de sac. Asking Priced ••rat -D-E-ER_Fl_E_L_D_p_ol-lO_h_m_2 Woodbri~ $71,750 brand new dnveway 16' $65,000.Ageot646-1896. --Aift.~~ For• Ad i1t w_..•, Wortd wide By owner $46 500 2 ML from ach Br. + den/bdrm. rrplc, A home that is l· e '"iLU.Uiil
00.1659 · ' · .. 2HOUSES0 Don't waste your time l.rg pallo & rear yd Nr. away from 30 acre lake ~------CCII~ UZ.5'71, ht. llO $85.500 by ownr . with overpriced houses. pool. Pncedto sellqu1ck· wrth fishing. swimming, 1020So.Coesit+wv494·8519
So Versatile!
Lt>ok t>uulllully drtud 1n
.i ny Crowd 1n fllli tw~j)lrt
ior1111 outltl Shapely drts\ 15 10CIC*l by t~sy a1d1pn with
snrt "8m1na det11I
P11nttd P1ttwa 9413. M1~· Sm 8. 10. 12. t•. 16. 18. 20 Silt 12 (!Mt M> drw 2 Jds. •~nctr. JKlill I ~18 Sdd $1 2$ for ucb patter11.
AdlS J5t IOI e~h pett.m fOI Int dlss llnftlt~ llllldliq
.... '9;
Mattan Mllrtln
,,_.em Oei>t 4d
O.lyP1tol
232 West 18th St . ~
York, NY tOOt 1 Print
NAME, AOORESS. ZIP.
S I ZE ind STY LI! NUMBER Dt,.t•••tal't• .,. ""' ,... ... ,,, .. ... ,.........., "'""' Cltaltf-cl" Cf.,.. lllJI .. ,.,
"-~"' tf ,.ur c"ln. s.d Htl l!t•I :,;t ~.... n·zs ... Crin• 1.01 ..................... ... s. ..........
Color Dramatics! EASTSfDE GEM seperate houses on nus home Is appralsed ly 166.900 By owner boating. Fantastic view ~~~~~~~~~~!_:====:.:.:::.:..:.::..:....:=
Sharp 3 Br. 2 ba on huge 60xl60' R2 lot. For mor al S63.000. CuslOm estate 551-1706. ol lake and mountains!
lot. $72.500. All terms. 1nfocaU 960-3989 on manicured grounds. -------.--Quiet cul-de--sac location. VERSA.TILE *•LARGE LOT 963-8377 8kr. ---------1 Quiet. Lush. Fee. Glen-W 0 o, DB It I D G E . HIGHLY upgraded. 2 ... floor plan; library, Preleveled Pad
Put On Your
Sunalasses! You1t~ ~auled by the
beauty of this Sp~nJsh
l{laot! About 2200 sq
feet. 4 Bedrooms, 3
Balhs. big 20 foot family
room , PV stone
fireplace. guest dining.
Pool-sized lot. $89,500,
BKR. call S40-l720
F.'TERANS Now is the
tK-st wne lo buy a home
,.,,th no down pyml. CaU
now, ask for your
veteran counselor Agt.
546-9.521
ABANDONED mar. See for yourself. Beaul1ful 2 story 4br. 3ba BDRM .. 2 BA. Ready in sewing rm .. mu.sic rm.. N T
Dlv--CE Hurry, please call by o~r Will sell or lse thespnog office or bdrm • take ear own & Beach
FOR"'c"'ir.s 191-7855 w/opUontobu.y.640-0696 your choice. but como CouotrySelting
5 see this beaull(ully SZ:J,500
S .._ 1 11: lndscpd. & decorated 4 "Z" REALTOR
.,,..... (or 5) bdrm, 3 bath ____ •94_-86_1_1 __ _
Spacious 3 Bedroom hom e. t he n decide home + den. Large liv· $89,900 IEST VIEW
mg room hosts massive EMERALD BAVSTEAL
brick fireplace. Full _________ , ~ fiOOOSQ. FT.
price 165,500. 10% down 552 7000 Best Financing
or ? Tuke advantage, GI TERMS TH.E ·-. . ·.· .. _ HELEN COFFEY call· In 1 llwlie4• t.ach ROVALi:?~ERTIES MO-DOWM 't573CAMPU5Dl!fRVltfE VILLAGE. · . .-673-1514
--------• Buyer h as bou ght OPEN DAILY __ REALTOR-"-_S ___
11
___ 6_7_J._l_8_6_3 __
By Ownr. Choice E-Side 4 another aadMUST-SEL.L 8A.M. T06 P.M. _
br, 2"'2 ba, fam/dJn.rm, professionally decorated SPARKLING CLEAN 4 DELUXE exec u~l ve
copper plumbing, pvt yd 3 bdrm. l:it.ba home BY WE'REDEAUMG !! B I b d home, prestige: pnvale
olf master bdrm. $73,900. TIUS WEEK-END. Huge ----------• Bought a new house. Will r n · e 8 u t. con · Irvine Cove; oeautlful
646-6149 Wtished bonus room aod UNIV PK. Village 111 . sell our 3Br. 2 ba. family ~~ ( r u • l trees· 4G12 beach. 3 BR .• 3 ba., den. --------~ many other amenities. Stanford end unit. room in CALIFORNIA c a r ngck Dr. 166•900· dining rm., lovely
MESA VERDE Price just reduced lo sqrt., 3 Dr. DR, l"R, + llOMES al a bargain. r!!.1. ollect. 674"2101 secluded patio with pool. ""J~· 67....019 Evs. 1714 > 3 Garage. $225,000 4 Br. 2 Ba, lge din.rm. $168.800 ba. $87 ,950. Owner $00,000. ., .... , beaut pool & decking, INT'L R.E. NETWORK 8J3.1103or552·9503 7S2-0283,640-0166Agt "1"be Ranch" 3 BR. Uv-~,Clemente; 2 BR, :?
prof. lndscpd This pro-CaUnow! 962-7751 ---------4 rm, din-rm. countr y ba., den, frplc. Choice
perty shows p ride of B forced Sale•. S. Joaquia kilcbJram r m. frplc, locatJoo, OCHA side or
4Salebyowner$55,000 ownership $85,000 yOwner:cstmbome,nr GoffC:0-..¥5.w lndscpdw/shadedpaUo bw)'.m .500
3br1"'1baassum 73 VA 6'2-4758 Lake Park. beaut UP· $69,500 Vou'll lovetheview&the ~Yl .2.!ne r . $74 ,000. REAL~~ALL~·7578 64S--09L9afier7 pm lbtdt« D~ graded, 3 bdrm. paUo, 2 golf course loo! Prof. de ..., ._,,, ---------• ---·r ca.r aarag~ + 3 car Great "'-a •---------• t095N.Cout,La1una
M F.SA DEL MAR by BY QUA.tER garage, many features, ~ corated 3Br. 2112 ba t"MllCKSAU! owner. 4 Br 2 Ba, com· "" msl see $86,000. Call Owners purc h ased $119,000. .,.. ...
pletely upgraded & de· .c Br. Rumpus rm. din 536-9583. another home & must ColOl\Y 100. 3 Bdrm, Fam
COJ"ated. Move in cond rm, bllns. Mesa Verde ---------• sell! 3 Bedrooms, ramlly S.. ~ nn, prof decor. all beaut Ful~t!·~-Nr &,500. Appl only, pnnc area. Xlnt rood. Priced Towards the beach. by r oom + den. cozy .., _........._SIOr. 000 upgrd's. Park. pool, len-7263 only. 7Sl·S926 roe quiet &ale! owner. 3 BR. 2 Ba OD end fireplace. Central air ~·-V t nLs. $73,900. Qualified Noageou 1 cul-de-sac lot. $61,500. conditioning & beaUn1. •UoderCooatrucUon• prln only. By owner.
twn. Trade r« new home
or other in bcb area
Orm! Agt 48&-0142 I'\ n B 3 Br 2 Ba. ll!e rooms. ---------8451 Reilly Dr. 536-2959 Sprinklers front & rear. Cboo&e your own decor S58-0U8eves/wknds. / .... t-flld .8, 964.500 0-PoW 1026 Won't last long. BKR. 752-0283,'640-0166Agt JUST LISTED Sturdy "'I .. l 545-6891 ··-····u••••••••u••• Save Money-before listed. call S40-l 720 OPEN ue. .... TH , Span bm w twd nra & 1---------t Must see 4 BR. 1~ Ba, nsA E ARK beam celllnga. 2BR.
Beat th R nt Xlra lge lot; by park. 4br, cust rrplc. Open Howse TARBIU. 5332 Roynlle Buy now before tHe lBA, din rm w /Ocean
$per\ sepatates Wtlll ltlis 8 e 2~ba, ding & fam.rm, Sat/Sun 10-5. 68S2 Shan· "The Ranch" homes npprt!Cillle vlew.$98.500.
Wbrrnt, side-slit toP04111I frplc, ceramic We lnl. non Dr. 892·6909 4 bdrm & den -:? beyond your means! The SPACIOUS. Fam hm
AllrKl all eyes _ crochet RAP v11ulted ceilings, e x· "*I C .. story-2100 aq ft-move "round's bee b k r / 1 r top 111 FIVE COLOllS of wonted. tensive wood paneling. 58l2Venluri, ll.U. " In aiifonia in quick-$83.500. 3 car .. n ro en or w v ews rom every rm.
Very tiS1_111 single and ... inth1sbandsome38R, a ,soo.496-3597 846.9157. 3br. l "4.ba, .iar -Jenced-trees . the new ReaJon11l Ptirk must see to apprec. •
dollblt crochc't. Ptittem 726J, 2 BA fa mi t y h ome •t 500. Open house 10-5 RANCHO Si\N J OAQUIN Quin ant Real 613-5250 and is bound to ''pop" the $139.500.
cMrt. directions for M!sse~· w/rustidireplc &formal FMwt.a.1Valtey 1034 J an J5 &cl&. ' 3br, 21" ba, Popular San t ly prices on lhia 3 Bcdrm. A'M'RACTIVE 2BR. 2
Slzu g.19 l1ttluded, din rm. All you need to do ••••••••••••••••••••••• Luis Rey. Vu golf course College Park 4 Br 2.,., Ba, and den, squeaky cl~n BA. manor in Leisure
$1.21 for ~ pattern. Add ls move In, tnclude a ..._.. m.a,IS flats" BY OWNER near beach, 3 & I a k e S l l S. 000 rptc, DR nr park pcol tiome. Callqwck' World. Mu t'h 1ou1ht 35f e-'Ch pattem forflrst-clut plush w/W crpu. stove! Wlldl A ff Br, den, formal dining & 547·70U/833·321S 552.1621 eves or wknds. Red Carpet Realtor after Cusa Bhmca mdl.
airmail Ind llandlifll. s.M tl1 0 /W, wshr &c dryr. You'I llvlng room, 2 fplc'~. 3 833-3380 &tal4uale. $31,500.
Ahce Brooks }ust love this one. ONLY H. m 8 w 0 r t h car gar. $112.500 557.9793 nlM I 044 ........ I 044 ·---------· Com~ete Rental Dept.
Needlecraft Dept 105 S56.900. N«e: lovestors. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••··~••!'••••••••••••• By ownr. 4 Br, 2~ Ba, SID D REAL ESTATE
o.ttyP1101 you're welcome loo call to10007. BY THE SEA Univ. Park. 2 f~lcs, nr 4'4-8083
Bo.x 163. Old Chelsea St& too. Hurry, please call ~"1 r """'• t---•-r c •• .. _,. New Y0<k. NY 10011. Pnnl 5.aAJ66 We mlabl enumerate I Very lovely 3 Bdrm a1~w~~ .....,...., "'""""• a _.,....., • ..,,... 6 1000 It l detalls aboul the h o m e o n p r o r parks, school.I. •hop'a. --~;:,· N~~~as. Zip luxurlea found bere . landscapedloUeaturina :J1~0~1s;~· 0011· (PLACE REALTY~
MOH t1'lln ""' blfoff! 200 Cuatom deall(oed es-plush carpeting, custom C'OS ·eout ----=·=_;...! =~1"tt~l'':t~ =~11:>~•a::,::.a°! g~~~~'ic 1:1~\~[!b1:0 U Woocltridp/lnlM S119.500-3Br/2Ba·OCVu
CATALOG! HaMtytlli"I-15r. handsome famH)' rm. w/lols ol windows. Sep. Braod ne w <Ondo. SlU.000-Com'l/5\lnit.
Crtelltt w!UI S.•rn _.J1.• Brand-new cout:rucdoo, fam-rm. rear patio. Only one new t'lome lell In 11'.s Odulf· t 80~~ d ct~d v~ b ~; Sl.5S.OOO.ZHoma-OcVu
Crtelltt • Wa~"llt -SUI proreaatonally decoral· ldeally s ituated on a 011en1ed golf cwse ~ 0 " rue ew Sllll.000.3Br/2Ba-OcVu
lllftY. n~ tlllts 1 .ot CM FIXER eel. But Wh}' not ~ee r private Quiel lot. Short A Complel~ lllT'llsned 2-bedloom model mounta.ln!. Cheri~ of t!OI· SUl8.000.3Br /2B•·lkhsd
_,.. ~t l.GI a Bdr. homa nearCoUqo 1ounelf. Hurry. pleue distance to St. J udl' watn a gott-cwse view $97.000 o r scheme. •112•000· $.'IOO,OOOorS3'75 000 r.:.t,.='.:r a: Park. Cathedral ~lln1 call C h urch & sc h o o I Gong 10$1 Co11 todoV (Tl4 >&40-4734 an. '1 pm. 2 ToChool5e From
n.m credlttl••• -~'·°' llvln« room . coat ltl-7155 ScP.U~1es to Edison High lony Gleoson (7M)l52·0831 ...... .._.. 1041 ~~!1~·~~r
"""'' Ciwlltt 1M11 _$1.DI al•~. blend for a '""' · $74.500. Coif ....................... -... ....,
1111t111t Creclletteell ~.OI Ufe lb ocean alr CURTis;::.~1;,ESTATE lfvtn(i Poo~~~v~ eomoonv OCIANFRON1' MOllUHOME ::~ :::-:.:--~::: ta Mesa. Priced ai n '\ncho Laauna Beach locom. Large. 198t Star mobile
C1111pltlt llft W .$t1oo ::ooo. VA or Conv · CHOICE loc. lntredJabJe, KQ Par• b I e s It e w It b home. 26x0. In Wllllll
C1t11pltt1Aft11Hslt4 St.Gt n. 64s.1474 3 Brw/hugealrlum.This Ptomon.toryWood.sCove Boc h . Lar1e lo,,
12 Prllt AfPaH ~12 501 BY OWNF:R one won't laat. $69.900. s '\n 11"\~1QU1n ~ Mou Cove. Lar1e M!Cluded a. <tulet. Moun It•• et ti lllftt I I -SOI TlBURONTO~'l .. OM• Opeo&.in Bkr. 847-1209. " J~ home I Joo tain views. $13,000 MHO• llllltM IL -501 .... , • L ,.,_, h~ ... tlDllllttfttlodlf n Sh Twnhme, 3Br, l ~Ba, ONU..park.nearta.lte,4 ""1~Vl)1JV11~
l9ll tf fl JlrfJ h(s _.,, f•m rm1• nu c:pta/paint. BR. 2 BA, h'J)lc. At1aume ~ EQu.• 1..., .. ...,.
,_ .. Open H ae Sat/Sun 8~ Vf\. $66,900. Call w ~_;;;"' • ISM&MafUPM. 538--31111.
I • '
t :.• t h ' I I I I I
AJ E'UJ El..1_ . " . . .
Ho.nu Nr S• Housu for S. ~OUMS For Sale HotnH For Sale I ~ lttal &t... ....,., ••··••••·····•······••• •·····••·••····•··••·•· •....•....•••...•....•.••......•.•.••......••. ······•·····••••••··•·• ..•.........•.••.••••.. Frtday. January 14 1977 DAILY PILOT D5
LO!pMI••• ho~h I 048 ~ •• '"' •• port. 9-och I 06' Mewpoti ~ I 069 ~~.~ ........ ~?!~' ~~~.~ .. ~?.~~ ~.~~ ...... ~:.~~~ .... ~-~~~ .... 1~~.~~~~ .... . ·•·•••·····•••····· ....•.••.•.•........•..••••••...•...••••
COZY IEACH HSE
2 l:kltm, 2 Ba Only 4 blk
to bt!11ch c,·nlr 111 Jin um ht~ bock y,mJ rr11h
~.$00
DOLPHIH R.E.
C .. 494.a58t
BY OWNER
Move in now' 3 Udrm.
CA.MME.RY VILLAGE
:. ll(trm houi.e In C I zone
~uuo
LIDO ISLE
' fld1 rn + tlt!n frpk :!
1111ll0!>. bcumt'<I cetl hv
11111 rm SJ 4 !11100
LIDO REALTY
:u77 \in I "'"·' It. I *673-7300 *
212 B<1th ~1th f1repl.1cl!j·-~~~~~~~·j und lg dbl ~Jr<IJ:l' CJ
nyon 1>r1 Y<ll'V ol't':111 \iew. Sl2ti.~)\) b•J l:.ubor
673-3620
Xtra Nice 2 Ur l.llJl &
j)OUO, O<'n ~1111• or II"'\'
&l]}.500. "li'l Jilli!'>. lf).1 63.ZO
i\gt
NATURAL
HARIORVIEW
MOMTEGO
.ifln, :!BA. Wl'' hdr
Show-. 11!..1· ,, 1111iJ1·l Pro
t IY ''"l'l'li \.tl-;W v11-;w v1~.w
673·7601
NORI NS
R EALTY
VETEHANS Nmw .,, the leoch...,..x CodoMeto 3124 toM.H lZZ4 CottaMeso 3224 Hi111H190.le9'.lit 3240 bt~t tune to hu\' a home Orct-an vtew Jbr 3ba &t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ··==······••••••••• 1111th oo down p~tllt <.:1111 3-2br. 2ba 1 · blk 'of( t:.: ~I~ 12~ L'lll pd I br MESA Vf.RDf; .l br ~ Mc.,.,1 V<'rd" 1 ... t J llr nu,_ _______ _
now· ;u k tor Your ocean. 14th S t H ~ k.ubok he t•mily I. be. dl>I 11ar cpb. p.unl. "'" dn ~vn. roR LEASE J bedrrn.'
'ctt-rQJl rouMelor i\ict $136.5 gros1' $194.500 Main R'ntlil~. 540-5310 fresh pa1nl A I rtmd !Jee yo rd S400 ~5~11 ~ b.1. brand nc...,. 1700 "Q ''
546 ~1 Call Ron ~llis . 3br. 2ba. µnml" locallo-; $425 $48-7129 Re11itor XTRA NICF. J Ur 1"• Ba. l..J.nilin)l homt: w /J t a1
SouHt LOCJIMO I 016 H n Realt_t SJG~ S42S mo l604 White Oak Br. 2 ba. Fam rm. frml f P1<'. nr s Cou~t PluJ »J I ss:i .. 1 mo 1nc1da
••••••••••••••••••••••• TRJ PLEX. ull 2 BR. gd ~3834 Oin rm. lovcly .irc1. RV pkr11i "430 17141 gardener i'lo ~lb
$125.000 Oen vii:...,. by r<'ntal area. Asking Lefilltoleoch 3148 vll!W. nl' bch $750 ~f\891. l2l3Hlal 315b FORLEA.'lt:: :Jbedrm . .!
ownr, (7111 4!19 1169. $80.000 Agt 645 ll03 •••••••••••••••••••••u 1 ~ l50tl eASTSID~ pool hou,.l' !>...brand new 1000 'ti ft C\'~. 3~ Totn Lomo ---------b d f I LIAnchnR home wltormal ' -RESORT PROP Vl_.orla Beach charmer pl1l A BR. bltns, cov 2 r. en. rµ c, ~ mo. dl f ....,, <Up Wt•).( St lo the "'"' · ·• ?•t 1767 11 1m. am rm. 111•t·~ V,., d an r I • ' 2 br furn cottage. S3SO ""llO $410. Reis 839 San-" . h w J 01 '· :n1.1. rp t, 32 UNITS on 4 uc-rcs 1n mo Yrly ug McAulay .. -• .r .U7~ /mo 1ncld1t
liv rrn, <frr.1. k1l«h. till· downtown BIG BEAR 3 Pl3ct (2131927 9449. Uago Rd. 545·7359 Jr Extc MesJ Vtrdl. t1W'dcner No pet11
roof. Wild < yn. :J 1>lk11 t11 blks. from lake. Tncome 497 3886 • Duplex 28 r. ba. cpls, :iml 3Br. 2 Bu. 1cc·mkr equp R*"' Realty
bch. JO.!'fnl old. lot -<t 1~ ~.000 yrly Sules --------(ne<I \•d. !(Jr S250+dep. frpll' ~fJJ~ Andro!\ 841·1611
SPY GUSS HILL ~ Shown by "P~ pnce ts $240,(IUO. t $60.ooo Newport leach l 169 No pets &t5.fll84 673-6039 ~~~~~~~~
C ·' I T• ... ttn I 090 down. Seller will cllrry ••••••••••••••••••••••• -2 bt. l bo . w11•hMr dry0 r1-uinmanuing cousta .... b 1 t ev,r o 9 h 1 CONDO 2 BR 2 Ba ~ ~ ~
\'1cw Newport II arbor •••••••••••••••••••••• • a ant'e a • wner ays ores: year case. . b I . . ( I . hook up. fenrt>d patio. l 4 B<lr rondo. ~1,v b., C'1>ls.
Catalina & L.A llghll'I. TUSTI... de6peratl!. nei:ds cash or I BH & bunk room • cle,an. lln~. roe Cr g . car ~anii;e. <'xtra s~uce ,•~ ..... "aro"A· p~t1c1, "''"I . " lrade. com1> furn . $42S Mooth patio. p<>o s. nr · .C k C . •. ,, .... ., '"' u rvv 2700 hQ. ft of luxury II\ Spac10~ 4 8drm honw CALL 645·6646 Renltor548·5S27 S300mo. 64bS8ll Rltr for par ing pt..;"' rps. $'.JS() 838·4127 to~. •I Bdrm~. 2 •, bath:1, 4 e lot Im med occupun _ _ _ szso mo Oriv•• by 132 __ . _ _ 1 _ __
1hrung arcJ. furn1ly rm 2 ry. $60 Boo ~ 2Br. l block to beach. S300 2 br house In court. com pl "B" & i211 .. ,. ... W 18th Fa bu lout .idil 2b1 . 2bu
""'Places. wet l>Jr & 3 THEH. OMESELLERS [R€HIG€ mo lease 1213>286·1798 refurbished No pets St.No.C ALS0 2br.lba condo. Rec are11. 1, m1
cur garage. Pnv J)OOI _ _ HOM€S eve $280. $48·6173 apt w rerrl~ . upst11m1 beach. Gar S300. 640·~ "" 1a1·uLzi & la rgl· g .. me 752·S35l -$225 Cail646 L.24b - - - ----srs IOO 3 flll. 2 ba. ram rm. rrpl. --------Cln J bdrm. I·'• ba. cprs.
are: 494.aos 7 * ~.~~••••~•••••••'••0•9•1• Real Estat. COW1selor HouHs Uftfwnished comp tndscpd, fncd )d. :! 3 Br. lg yd...,. :.wini::. Rr~. dl"J)5. bit Ins. d1shwsbr, f>rofes 1nvestmenl ••••••••••••••••••••••• cargar .culdc saC'.$$00 stove ..... J .. hl r Avdtl laundl")'rm,lcfencedyd.
analysis. appraisals. tax GHtetClf 3202 645-2978 no.... SJ4Ci o-l~ 2G2Z. $)65 mo Cnll 968-~
& ext'hange advice ••••••••••••••••••••••• . 6750023 llGCAHYOH .. VIEW -$2 I 5.000 Wd & .:toss, l'Ounlry PRIVATE ISL.AMO Vie14 Newport Bay to k1Le hl'n. hdwd rir, s kylight" loft. stamt'd Cilalma! Iron gale en I 30 1lOATSl.IP Lr) Ma mmoth ll,1ng
save SSS On Pool
"lh1 ... :s Ocdrm .11 ~ A:llh
rarm style home hab a
warm paneled lh:l8
family room. Kitchen 1s
rilled With ~arl y
Amencan honey maple
cabinets. Creal storage
in gar. Ideal for the hob
by1&t. I lurry. Just listed'
Spec1al1i1ng •n Reh Country House for rent E,1debcaut J br.l ~,ba. -----XJntb1k1:Lo bch.:I Brhm
multt-plex prnoerlles Ortega 11...,.,y, must be newly decor Allrnc. yd .. J Br. 2bbaalhNew Twr. Ilse <! $385 + SlSO refundable •
Sellers & Buyer-. ..ivatL harmoruous w toth'r oc patio. S395 &46·2389 Br. dwn:.tn. l Br. deposit. Owner 963·<i980 .
g ass. ocn vu 3 btlrm:-NEWLY 1 Bdrm ruom with VIEW• Mar
Sl04,950 ~11 l'Ol.l.INS ISi./\:-. D blc r1 replace . Pant'led
t::1ll Ro11 r.111., c upants on property DELUXE 2Br, :m.1 Con· ~~· ~:~~~. d~~,l~~· d~~~h _842 __ 1J9_1 ___ _
II R Rt ·111 > 536·6S6S .2_l4-678 1300 evs. do. bltns. pool. $340 mo. Deck , y .. rd. p ., t 10 • 3 Br like new. Inell :yd, Hard To Find 'I rad•• & !fir Fioam·e formal dining room. Wei
Thls 4 bdrm home 1~ $308.<XIO bar. Spacious kitchen & Costa Mesa BELMONT SHORES on 540-6299or557-ll&l8 fenced. No peL'I. $4S0Jmo ~ per mo. Jst. ir '-l lit
water. Cape Cod. sun· REDECORATED 3 Br. 642·2741,642·9l2S dep.962·SOS0&963·132A
FOURPLEX dec:k 3 Br FR. fplc SS75 den. din rm .. new 1 Br house •r: blk shop $230 2. br T ll Pool.
tt/3 7770 5~·8723 l L' I I qwelly situated <il th\• pan ry . """ ra arRe
end of a fanta!tt1(' vu cu1 l•---------r masll'r wing. Gl11:-:.ed
tle sac l"l 1.'bhly painted LOVELY \ 1cw patio. Loads of
$132.000 SP ..... ISH HME sloragc. 3 C<ir gariJ.1!£· Nothing Down To
Vets
mo (213 ) 69l·5331. lutchen. S375. 714·963-4569 cnt.r. $150i mo k1ds/pelsok Fee
3 ~room. 2 bath and 2 004·1828 or 531 95i1S. /\gt No F'ec 642·i834 Mam Rentals. $40-53'i0
llcdroom. I bath units. lalM>a lalelltd 3206 ---Will considrr exchange Mesa Verde 3Rr. 2ba. new New Span apt hm.:; SPAC S29S 4 br T II Pool.
Private patios. extra ••••••••••••••••••••••• cpts1drps, bltns. frplc. Br's, SUNKEN II\ rm. K1d!ltsngl.:>Ok f'N•
""" Call now for per:.onal ~ 11'1'.. Cl>rncr lot. IBr :111:.i. by pre1iew. 7~:! 1700 .,,,,/T(16*""& ownr iinx1ous $M!l.SOO "'"' ,. • "·· • ,, •
REAL ESTATE «>O Gl~nn~r<' St.
_...·947) )41>·0.l10
DAHAPOIMT
:1 Units 1.ov .. ly old
Spanl!th bldt-: with luti. 1Jf
charm & t:har.il'lt•r
Thn•r· I bdrm , I IJ.1th un
1ls w1lh beautiful Ot'f•otn
\ ICWS & mudt'rlllfl•d
kitchens A II 1 h1:. "° ,1
large corner 1111 "'11 h
wl'll c&lahh~h<'d t>l;rnt
1n.:s & p.ilm lrl'•''
$145.000
MYSTIC HILLS
lleaullful hu1lrlal•I\' """'
lot . ('nmvh 11• "11 h
ar<'h1ll'('lur;1l 111,,n,, lly
Jim L<1:.hll'.Y Siil.SOU
LAGUNA NIGUEL
(;real ll'\ cl \ll'~ lol 11)
prr:.111uou~ :lton.1rrl1 u,.,
T t• r r a 1• <' 0 111',, o n 1•
avali<1hlt'' S!l5 oou·
4i!l.!~~·· 1105 N.CooHHwy.,loguno
494-1177
li42 rn:w [ I Beautilul courtynrn en·
I ~~DV~ol~ch ~ lfiliHftl ~f J!~~ ~~":1~:1h~~:{
\ 1111111t• & unu s ual cverythini:. includinR
w1 hnck. !-.l;111wd Ala~s. ---------1 vvt•r slzed :\1 <;tr s uit<' r.k'<kan ull-. hardwood Mewport Shores 1-iirmul dining. fam rm ..
l'l'I! nnor~ rn.on> rnorc A home to rememhcr' :! rin•plui'l' Jfld .>c ir
Jmt'mt1r-; 2 hr, fo rmal l.lc<lrm and Jen. 1 •1 uath clean'i:: 11v,•n. Also an a:s·
drn rm Sl28,000 Ownr <.:omplctely <'ilrpetcd :;umabll'. low Interest VA
fi73:itMlh Atrium \llew lrum loan Owner wishes
bedroom & 11 vm~ rm spe\.-dy sale at $67.SOO
8. C ~:nJOY the ~ armlh of II I~ anvon wood and c harm "' m1r Roberts BEAL:'i'Y 1rtn :.ep rors Obie gar w.auto
ma\ll'r "uil•'. lrg II\ elm opener_ Ownrr needs rast .. Realty
& l.1m rms •m1m pool "all' Call$40-115l
J a,. u 111 6· mas ~ 1 v l' 11:',:;ill•rTTf.'liati~I 11241 a-~ 11 .. :~::~;:;,..~!m~~:.::·•~ ~11a~1:1~1 : , . , .... lltl(IM lut•
n .... n.•r \14l:nl ~12,00U -;tJ~r!~t;=_ VETS SPECIAL
lar~c units Great invest· HOUSE WANTED. yrly 2 big yard Very ('lean $4SO w/MASSIVE hnck frpl. Mam Rentals. 540-S3ili
mcnl potent1ul ll? · charm. rurn, unf mo S<!e to .ip1)ret'iate OPEN HF.AM c e1hn~ . • --;
$600 mo. J\dlts. ref Open hse Jan 15/16. Vacant S-ISONofee.Cal::l Br.c:ha.newrpt .. _d'l! ..
t75·3401 642·882fi days. 751 3189 54.H171 or993.9977 bltns. N~wport We~t; l~.t. l .. Quail ·~ Waterfront 3 llr.-2 Lia eves. --la:.;t. $425/mo. 644!·37-la. Iii IPlac• , Adu 1 t ., !Io o '~ N Mesa del Ma r-New paint. o_,, Poent 3226 aft]pm __ ----Prop•rti•• Bayfronl.646-7213 in /out , 4 br. 'ba . ••••••••••••••····~ .. •• ::or.21~balownhouscro1
7S2•1920 --ram rm. l'Pts. drps. Dana L1~ht Condos.<: Br. tcai.l: Walle 10 beach
1•00 ouAll sr NtW'°41T 11•c" lalboa Peninsula 3207 bltns. frplc. dbl gar. fncd 2 h a • t •· n n t ~ . to'ull rec rac1l t;nique mt
••••••••••••••••••••••• yd&p11lio.9GK-4005 was her/dr)f'r r tc Avail F"eb 1st $SOO mo. 16 tO 160 UNITS New dpl)( lower. C!Hr. 2ba. fRESHLY Painted J l:Sr. 1 S3l5/S32S 496-S980Agent 960-1430 ____ _
lndry. gar . avail Jan ba fam rm wtrrpl Lg Tennis. Swim·~. pvt ••4 Brhomeacro:.s lrom • Fixer Upoers !~~3 ~:;:>9~ ::~i;ia( riSj'> re~ccd yd Det~rhcd dbl comm. 2 Br 2 Ba condo. park & lake. Fenced yd,
OK. Nickerson f ans' Mix 862 1633. Mr Hammon ~~~t0;,~~~~~c~~~fa. ~o D1W. wshr/dryr, $3lS. dbl garage. Cpts, dill'.
or maLl·h 16, 20. 32. 40, 48. tree dogs $395 mo S4o·S880 83l 1678 L6e. $395. ~-23iS ~.: 64ha'vROe lwunoi80ts.uAnc1ll~oalml~ &iboa Point. e.xc(•pllonal Ask for Lesbe e Toro 3232 :l BR, crpt, drps. bltns .... ~" ~ •••••••••••••• •• ••••••• lach. dbl gar. red yrd. nr pl exes. one has four 20 s. executive home on 2 lou.. College Park 4 Br 2 Ba. Lake Forest choice brand bch. schls. shop'g $360 the other h\'e 16's-Owner for lse Spar1ous lmng. $440 per mo Incl grdnr
Wiii Seil Or exchange i'n· sun & dining rms. 4 Br. 3 Avail Feb l. 673.5522 ne~ 2 story lake front 4 incl grdnr 962·9'i5b Ba t rd 1 hr. J ha w /bar. fprk. --------dtv1dually or in combina· .. e evato~. g nl>. enc l room bachelor house. A 1C Much more SS2U. Condo. 2Dr. 1\~ bo. frplc.
t1on Exrhani.:e up now-patio. magnirieent All ulll pd $145 mo No l>ay5 171-11994 !60!. patio. new cpt:· $295.
lllG C'ANYON View or Uy appointment in our panorama or bay Sl.OOQ d s $48-5680 . wknd!I 1213)661·466.;. i688266or49':-39i6 oCflre onlv PS We have _m_o 67S·9428 ~-------Jcrrv (;oir 1•oursl' & l~lk<' <! hr'.' • 3 8 Ba S3''• A I 2 t .. J d r
' '"' '"" li600 J Br. po111 nnme, h \'}
:.hak~ ruol . :-.1.1.ini&h ~tut
co finish, pnl't>d at only
$57.500 960·3311!1 ai..tt
48DRM +POOL
$68.500
smaller umts too• c--... _,Mor 3222 r I . ""' va1 I I _ LaCuesta, 400 y s rom bJ . upl!rarlcrl SI Ii ~00 ---"""" 1929 fl bl' K d / L be L r I l l S I I• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 ,_. ,.,7,~~~,c51c 1 s Pe s lmmac J Br. 2 ba. in !>uper ach. 1v rm. w/ pc clot Sl' Oj) -le!):. " <:nn " " " .. ., El Toro ne1ghbrhd Cor din area L11e kit wtfam
<·rt. p.)l)J, ;al·u1.11. sr·" OHier Reai Estate l&tJQuail ~ )) 4 BORM~BATli--lot. bltns. C'pls. drps. re· Jrea I Br. :: Ba. lgc
fi.l.t $4 ll •••••:••••••••••••••••• • Plac• F<1m. frpk, cpls, dr~. Jrly ror lmmed occup bonus rm $.'>SO mo. Incl
"E"PLAH MobileHomH Praft•rti~is bilns. fncct yd, fruit S601J mov e -in. only grdnr 003·627!'. (• m" rcdecor n ul For Sale I I 00 1s2-1920 Al &rec~. walk to schools & S4001mo. Call SS6·7ii7 OP~ ... Sat(Su" ,0_,. O .., • \I C •••••••• ••• •• •• •• •• • •• • 1•00 OUAll St NlWl'Oaf &I.-,(" f k f eo.. s;n ' --. rlc s;i(' Isl Time nlfered . _ _ :.hop'g rk s $415 mo.~ __ · _o_r_.~ __ c_____ R
tor :.ale 3 BR. 3 b11 . ram Mol11lc, Modular llomy & RENTALS !'>4&·7913. Mll-7295 -Fcuttoin Volley 3234 1603 A IA
i'111 -111nct1nu l •J<'.n l1'lr~. rm. F'm1o;hed & paneled Ilwldmi:, Oehvl.'r). ·-~ct J & 18 New Units ,._ l Cl b VIII M tBolsaCh1cn1(o;d1nger1 ' · " ·• ' " p & "~rv1 67" 7c7u ""'un ry u . a. , <'Sa ••••••••••••••••. ••••••• "llr. ll)a, lov"ly re~•d'l fl I, E ,\ ·1· 11 I' \ • I 1,· •11 " "'Ills & :-hun" Vin l!an1ge Sl:14.i~I ru ·, ~t \'C f ,,. ., Vc•rtlc Condo !llr 2 .,133 3 BDRM 1:1 Oa Prestiac " hi' •-... ' " ,.. "' CORBI ... "'SSOC. or r('('cS orm 0· Q C ~ C1\NYON Cl'EST N"w · · ·· · • " nrea nr sc s "'2 mJr OCF.1\:-.I VlbW frnm Ir~ 111111 t.111 ..., *" ranee oun beautiful J bdrm mod'Ct. rrpl, patlO, pool. JllCUZ7.t, area S400 mo i\gl shop··~ areas Close to
lllr Iba h11m1• " rm '"' 6 71-760 I R~ors 759·0226 2h 18 F'uquu 2hr, I b.i St1ll time~o choos« co ors all amenities inrludlnn 2 ad Its S500 mo. 003 4003 962·4471. 546-8103 f r w y S38S/ mo Ca 11
,\la n v \lr .r!'. ma f.. i• i l H.1 \ \ ro .. , l ~ o u 11 tr> 1,()'<'ly Newport hm. 511r sel up El Nido Pork 11105. arras Will exchani;t•. ~un decks. courtyard en F'rpk. 2 l'ar gar, ,ivail Nice Jbr. 2ba. blln..". cov-M i\ N i\ G E M ~ 111 T • 11oull~1hir-in huhhv 1111 • • awnm11. skirtmi:. pon·h. and oj)llons E xct•ll<'nl "' XLNT Clean3kr.2ha . I TOBIN PROPERTY
~IX'rtal&i rnlri.ihli• F1·1·n1h L•11111•r l~t «ul 3ha. dinin!! ram rm San Juan Cap Open try. wet bar. lots of SJ!Y.l.fl73.5775.6447lll ered patio. Roat door ';H /84613ll or John -
. dt· •JI'. r1•1 3hr ;!• .b.1 ... 0 .J l t R v ,1 re u hOUSl' Sun .Ian 16th. (2131 clO!;ets & storu~e lncls S375 mo 534 Ol lC 8111 I ,,. .. , ~l>l">1100 1.1nl11!2 " 1£ I r 1 • l::·sldeZbr.S225KidsOk · · McKlney.71~·~1~ A r I' HU '('II I "c. 5-18-3168. 69913\llor t-~ve,693·0321 Quail ~ w.e o ~. temus c~. F<'<' Brand new 3 Br.' ba. 2
l'fo:R FE(llll'll 10 d•"·11!11I•--------•1 BLUFFs -Elcgan~ 4Br Ac,... for sale 1200 • Plac• ~w :.Ju.nu Vrty se Miun Renlals. S40·5Tt0 l·ar gar w 1dr opener OPlH SAT. I 0.4
If.. <1uaht\ :!Hr :!h.i Flt ' EXCLUSIVE :!Ba d c •• •••••••• •••• Prapwti&ta - -across from Mile Sq Pk 15052 CA,ETOWN li•>nu' rm <:u1· ... t h •· ··.en. am rm.o .... nr ••• ••
0
••• JAS 'tlN"' ''REL'K 'S 5260.JhrT ll Pool Kids & o"Olf co11rs 0 ~47"' CBOLSA&EDINGER1 "' Fl' an•t 1t.o1i•1,.1 Lu h Jl.!~T LISTED! 640-87\7, 752-IC>Sli 7Sl•l9~0 ., "' "" "" F ~ .. v
I ll 29 PALMS 1•0000•1lsT NlWPOlltarac" m11st po pular model ok Cl' 552·4138 days. 833·3000j SBr. 2ba. lovely fam ltht "'' "' "'.11<· rf J II ~ "" •1"""'' n1 or nag ... f' I ..., .,,... I t-CI nt 1076 • --I"-'\t Plan 2 with , "~·•rms •· 111311\ ,enta s.S405.,,o e)(tJ4Janfipm hme Brand-nu paint. pone! It 1111 •I I •li• '"'"' 2 ~ Hiie ~ .,.,._-alN ""IWl'l'n ::inn• OEACH Duplex 2-1 Br. I -""u "'
'Wf/ I( f • t • '\. IV!\ 11.•• tW a·: r. re,
/ ;•/ ,,. >#/.;
J "7 1751 ..........
HI< • , , 11· 'f'I' ••• .. ••••••••••••••••••• base & i.iolf l'Oursl• Ba. units Has 5'txl.271 t den. i\ bargain at S68S $300 J br Kid~ pets Twnhs Bd b
1
1 crpts lhruot:t, F /P. mod
1111111!1\ r 11•' J1<1t111 BREATHTAKING 1193+ac-re~ off<'r<'d al rt Int w room lo bwld permth onyearlylei.sc stni:lesok f.'t'e · ' 4 r.21• a.2car kit, Ir~ hk yd Very nr
' ,,. • '" tll••I \111111 rou \'rt•w rrom lhl' i>am $100.000 Coll Frank liall. one more unit. IO'"< dwn. lnt'iudl'S all umemt1e:. ,\1a1n Rentals. 540-5370 ~iati~~1 IX!l'. mo s hop')! ccr.t & sch I~
I 11' """'1 m11?hl lloag M I llosp l I Clubhou:.e. pool Jacuu1. -... _.,., c ' · Close to lrwy ~';Simo I'" '
1 l•'r pered beaut) 2 Hr. 2 bd, • emona 1 a full pnce $75.000 Pnn lennisftou ... •. 3 Br ... ha condo. bltns. CallTOBl:'li PROPERTY <nn-..1t1i:r ll".i ~· "°·"l' op li:iO Sq rt F'ormal dm l'n.-sbytenan 645 8600 for only. pis. Kent Rogers ~ •.., cpts. drps, pools. Near ~Oft .. oc:h 3240 MA r.. AC E M EN T
l11•nor c,chan1;<' ~.500 rm.nfhly pancll-'dden. mlormaUon RILy &i8-8300 ON LtiRJ<SPUR .. 2 OCC54583S4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7\4 18461311 or John
1-ordlJl'l c.all m.in1c ur<'d grounds , JB d o ~h use II cKI I """'"'• GLODEHfAY w secluded rourtyard •·-:-.....-.._ _._ 1400 HOME & INCOME. 2 bdrm,:: bath. no pel.5. 2BrcottageE-sideCosta r. en r o ava · M n e!'f.7!4/...,.,..,.19
Fal\lJ,\lt' 'h'"' from Jbr REALTOR 6 42 5333 , . . -wwss '"~ houses on 1 lot. 3 Br. & 2 one car gar. S37S per Mesa f'tpl. beam ceil. 2balhs, cpts, dl"J)5 Bllns.
:!bJ • ll·e.1nl l'nd unll • 11 ' VA terms considered ••••••••••••••••••••••• Br. Tr)' $10.000 dwn, mth. yearly lease Very encl gar No kids or Sl:iO. 962·3S33 2 IDRM. I-Story
lwnhme 1:;s7 ''l 11 &.. J11 l•--------•1 New listing al $91.000 Furniture & Decorator $98.SOO. full rince. Pnn nice. peL'l. $300 548-5300 2 BR Condo. super clean. ADULT oncntcd Condo
tht1on:.il 1100 ru ft un 5"YGLASS HILL BERTHA HEHRY store ror lease or sale in only pis Kent RogPrs rpts d 1 & 1 w/ tennJs, pool, clubhse.
finished Jn.,1 1 ·11l!rJ<h.•d 0 ........ S "'T(SU.._. 1•5 REALTORS prime corner toe. Corona Rlty'. 848·R31Ju RIG II T ON THE 4Br. 2Ba. gar .. rncd yd. c · · rps. poo c u $395/per. mo.
thrul\i1t . f u1 mal 1·nlr> n ;n "" "" 215 Del Mar. San Clem del Mar Cull 837·1136 or --------BE AC ll . 0 N BIG 944 W. 19th St. $37S. house. $260. 979-7888 2 BDRM. l Story near
w sk yllj:hl1•d t'l'1l1111:. 2SGO ETA 492·4121 675·1600 COVINGTON BROS. ln CORONA B~A C H · fM·1528or640·4035 Beaut. new 3 Br 2 Ba, llunt'g. Harbour $2SO/
frpk :! t•ur 1'11·1· A:lr M,\GNIPICENTon·an & ---------Anaheim. Century 21, B R E A K E R S w/bonus rm, blt.ns. close per mo.
Mu"' 1n 1111 w 0111) b11y,1cw' New 4 BDRM 200°0ceanVt.w ~al 1600 Sparow l nveslmt Div ORIVE .. F'abulous View, tob<'b.898-2989<714J NELSONR.E 846-1305
Sfi:S 1100 I.av. & i\o; 1fnn~ •. 11}wr,'.~1•ml1;1frnrnl1'3llcd"lsnn J llr, den. newly redec .•• ;;."':'::::~•••••••••••• 963·7866 l bdrm & convertible t 2 BR • ..., Ba fed yrd im t.0t·1al1·"· •l!Jb •127:! kkr ,. ~ ' ---------den S6SO per mth. Year· 3 BR, 1:v, BA. rpl, fom. · • ·
<·oml' .ind ~ec th111 Ont' Own 498·l 936 &5:io 2972 By owner Ml 1.0ned 2625 ---------lylcase 1n:M.TYCO~IP/\l'Y room. lmmac home in med orcupancy. $3SO
hN sq.rt Lot 7700 sq rt Dis~ss Property! xlnt. area. N; schls mo. 5'16-8609or962 7787
MERRRL REALTY Income Units M:iny xtras Pnnl' onl) I can find itror you. ON IST AVENUE. In old NEW REHTAL $425 !163·7866 ., BR. 2 Ha, ll{e fam·rm .
675·7900 S86.000 a.JR 32"' ,'.~;h~:si:cf::.:::i~:~~. Corona del Mar. 2 bdrm EASTSID! WALK TO OCEAN 2 sty 3 cov patio. close lo bch
1052 ...••.•••••••..........
DOLLHOUSE
l'Pf'n ~11 ~Jn I ~ 1nr ON THE CAMAL
'bJ 'II"
Nr. the Ocean Cottdomlftiums/Town· u,11.11.ruptcics. Divorce. unit w garai:ci laundry 3, BR charmer ~tdbl Br. J Ba. (am. rm. frpk. S42S. mo 968·9976
Ii ll N r'rc; ON T it E housnforscle 1700 ln,estmentproperues facililil's & re rig $400 garuge Lg private 0 1W $495 714·963-4S69or b b Su ---
nt'"'" ilt•111r.11t-1I •11;.11 ~SI\ ~1 HU :J b.1th~ · 1i la\rm l.nrl(e
Ul.l'l-'I" Wmti·r & ~urn ••••••••••••••••••••••• Below market pnce per mth. Yearly lease fenced yard Bu1_l~·1ns s:ii -954s Agt No Fee 3 r. l''J a rfs1de Condo
Sep lciun<1ry far1hl1es --Frpl r pool. patio mer rcnlnls Good in CONOOMl:-JIUM Keta Joflnson. lroker ON BEGONIA CORONA Pnme lcx:ation 1375/mo CLEAN 4 Br. 2 Ba. (rplc. 831-!l875orS36-1827 1,,.., St•1ro1 ni" "714· :i:>u w alt' d ron t lli'c k r or ~!15 ~or K;ll !ilMI Ukr rluck wutchlnlt ' & re-vestment prO!X'rly SPE<;IJ\LIST Call 1714 )673-4S4S DEL MAR Charming 2 <Zl61 cpl, drp' $360 mo ---
S24S.OOO /\GT !168 2297 ~~~~~~~~~'bdrm on corner lot. No Lynne Rothell644-6200 714·963·4569 0 ""l·~$45 HEIL EDWARDS 4 Br.:! Ja~atlon ' Wulk to pools, ---------4 t!'nni'I. ocean $96,500 PIUVACY &
JAY W YEA TI> ----h r ..., · Ba. rrpl. O/W. cpls, drps REALTORS 499-2231 lnconw Properly 2000 pets or c ildr<'n $3SO per Agt. No Fee SJ7$ 714·963 451111 or --------••••••••••••• ••••• ••••• Units• Units' month. 38 d ""1 ""'~"' Agt F
COMVEHIEHCE
~ICIOU$ 2 bedroom. 21 I
bath to""nhomf' "" 11u1et lane 111 couotr) '11lagc ~cllin)I Walle to r1v1r
<•cnlrr, shol)pmJ.:. bulles,
l<'llrus & golt rluh. 167,000
CD Col~ll Bonker . --
• • r + en w/pvt en· CLEAN :i Br. z Ba. cpt. "" ~ . no cc Super View! 2 Br Condo MOTEL On Luke. Just re· 4 Pl.EXES COLE OF NEWPORT trance. frplc. 2 car gar. drps. 2 car gar. ~ mo J Bdrm Condo Deck & paUol. 2 car gar. duced. owe at sq, 26 lg. yd, quiet cul-de-sac. 714·9634500 or 531-9$45. ~CJ\ WESTCUFF SB.5.000. Ph•96-0426 Units + 3 Br. home REALTORS S4SOmo S46-0403eves Agt N F ....,...
Pool Bkr 96.1-7866 $84 500 251S E. CstHwy, CdM. · ' 0 ee (213 ) 691 76l!i aft fi
BVOWNER 2~+Dttt . ' 675-5511 Mesa Verde uec. home. SLATER-GOLDEN 2Br ZJJa LU;\UQ' Condo. 178' lot, 1 blk to beach. 2 or 3 or 4 or 6 or R or lllf----------1 Prof. decorated. 2 s tory. WEST Super 4 Br. :? Ba. 3 HOvSES FOR LEAS£
pnc-ed to sell. $61,900. Best resldenllal area. 8 UNITS units. We have them all La rge 2 Br+ fa m r 4br. 3ba. formal dlning & Crplc. DIW. cpl. drps. 4 Bdrm. 2 ba. 5081 Qu111I Best buy in Newport. SSS.000 Open HOWie Sat ..... l A "" 2 bd avaJlloday In prime ren· w tdecora tor a pp ts u f t b S395/mo. 540056 J"5PM, Sun. l"JP". 218 oun a na. rive rm laJ ... k U F 1 •-rd XI v rm, am rm. we ar $425. 714·963·4S69 or LANDMARK 4 Br. :?\., ---c" 1 R ""v'1" & 3 l·bdrm. Prime pro-barelas. ,,.a el yodourse rp c. gar"' ya . n &. frplcs, J car garage. S31·954SAgt.NoFce ba,2·S'"".3caraar
CAYWOOD REAL TY
• 548-1290 .
WantloHuy a le oca s l a . perty. $l25,000. 15% lie .P easecal t ay quletslreet.SSOO/mo.P rov'dpatio.('ardenerln· -----"'------1 w;r
Hnrl>or View Knoll C'on "92·0098 Down 198-71SS,S40-3666 631-1400 All\. cl. No pets. $900. unfurn. 3 br.:? ba. bonus rm Cpts. 2027\ Brent.stone $4SO 3 Monurrh Hoy l'la111 do f'nn onlv 644 6156 Over 1.6 Acres llLL GRU .... DY L B b $1200. furn. 557·8968 or dprps, ren<'ed $3!15 20.111 Brentstone $495 Lagu1111 Nlt-(m•I ' 1 Blk to beach. Good "" rg 3 r. 2 a. in Old CdM 644.3545 968 7146 Agnts. Stan 968-7307 496--7222 u1.0U6 wlcd)''I ocean view Oil wooded llALTOI 675-6161 2-Car gar, bllns. 2 sty . ---------i NEWPRIME canyon. Best Rl area of I ~ cpts. ~ mo 640·1308 AVAi i. :"llow F:astsldeo J Br. I ba. 6 Bike bch 3£.;57~~·~u'i W ............. ~ Co_ ... _ San Clemente, $99.000. u ..... 7 ! m~'~i ~~ eves1wknds. Dlpx. :! hr. l bo. (ncd. Fncd yard .. C~tldren ok. C'"'-K"''l! MICE 4 BDRM lllTil'l"Tnnl1' -Good l d NITS ANYOm; --.--,··--.. --,·-· 3 BR 1 Ba ., "ar a yd .. Cpls & drps. gar. SLV $375 mo 5:16 48.3 """' U4 2Bt . .i-st,y tri·level Frml Wrms or ra e. H ave some JC o o d • •• · • ~ ~ .,ar, J<lds pet OK $325 !st & Hunff 2 both with larRe pool, dine rm. li-0' Rout s lip 492--0008 Eattsl<feu.nlts.pnnc.on· • bcachs1deofCoostHwy. last .Rlck6"6.7632 H V NT IN G TON ncJtCNI
1242 private rommunil Y S.!20.ooo •,•2.1091 S.Juan ly!\skfor8elty6459161 stove & refrlg Vrly HARBOUR AREA 38R HarbOur
Walk to hent'h & lcnn1~ r-istrano 1071 --15 UNITS, Costa Mesa. lease.Silro.mo 498·2647 College Park spotless J ~ 8A iv1huf!t family •••••••••••••••••••••••
courti1 sm.500 ._..,... COSTA MESA Xlnl cond. 9-Z br, 2 ba, ---------BR frplc lovely yard room & fireplace Near 3 Br , 3 ba townhouse ----~RJ~ Eur1:!~e~8k~~~rated ;·~:~:·:::;·;;·~;v·1~~~ 9 U.._.ITS t~:~:o~no~· r,i~' :n~~~ ~~~~f~: Jc!~n4v1~~. _Le~e MtS.646-7528 • :~:~ S::~L~0~ci~\S~ ~f:~kl~!11"0 \,c1~~~.
4110-4584 3 bdrT'(l.,"hllyfro,11 with 2.orw!d lor horses. 2 br 1"'111 please . Ow nr /Agl ~Mo.Agt.640·7000 4Br.2ba.closetoshops. REALTY l4tH:i71 .. WE 84&-L3ilor846-S456eves. -°'~96:3151\ water view &13<!.:,00 Or r • n c b h o u sc w Ith 1262.000. Income $29,250. 642·9666 scbls, beach. Call aft 6 ALSO HAVE other pro----------Mi&Noft vi.u.. 1 06 7 167S month work' ho~. s u r a I e . enclosed garages. 7 (3 OM OCIAMAOHT pm ""1. 557 .3225 pertles for rent.. Homes 3 BT 2 Ba. upstairs, condo.
1-An l '"'()."c.>/\ Owner asking '295.000. br), 2 (2br> Pline. only. 2 • 4 PWES H.I . .. .... •-,..~ .. --· W /W c""•. aar w/boat ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~en '" ........, MllkeoHer Mel, Agl. 751·2223 Old town a rea, good Gr eat opportunity to . Mesa Verde 4Br, 2~ ba, ,,.,_. "'"""""9. sll p. fi7s mo. C1 II
New Castille. J BR. locs of cooct. S!.19,900 ea. Agt. spend your days rolJlck· lormat dining, huge fam 4 Br condo. super clean. Darlene 556-4393 or Chr1:.
upgr,udes, view. Im · By ownr 1 yr new. AMCHOIAM Su p er 8 unit Apt . PTln only . 963·7866 or 1.nglnlhesand &ocean. rm, study. sundeck., nr cpt.s, drps, lst. last & Clawson. 835·761\ for
m ediate occup11nry SeawindCondo.W1Jkto INYISTMan's Compl,x. nr Dana Pl. ~2GU A ch arming• bdrm. MesaVerdeCC.tncludes dtp.$3S0.9'79-7888 appt.
Owner/Agt Ph 586·"260 bch. 2 br, 21., ba. plush 17 I Marina. aocl.000. Oana house with 1 sep. water, 1ardet1er. new -.;...;.._ ______ _
alter 6 PM cl)t$, t'ustom drps. frplc, 14 496-7711 Uarbor Realty. 4"·2790 HUGE4-PLU playroom & beth; cell c pts t drpa. $850/mo. 3Br. 2 ba, cpta. drpa. tNM )244
tr t1 s h compactor. Ask (or Jeck Martin. In Costa Mesa. Only one for hutbor det.alla. $46 1213 bltns. new paiol. c ln. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0,... Su" 12·5 <bhWllhr, washer /dryer. $75,000, avail. lot$ of lawn. bltns. We have a.oxlnl selection S 3 7 s ~ 4 7 2 7 6 O AV All.ABLE 3 Br ~ Ba. :? 2ll52Vlo0da•o 2 c:11r gnr S69.900. Open 4 Bdrm. 2 balb. ramlly 11prnklra, perf. loc oircnt:ilt .. HONEYMOON Eves/wlmdt ~lc's. s ngt tom home.
fl.SOO Rf'CSucUon ' Now a hOU'IC Snl/Sun tl s. 7 rm &c lae «>vered deck. l N.B. DUPLEX Owner aakiog $137 000 UAY & 8~ACH CO't"l'AGE•• $475 1175-~I
real hargaln. 4 br. P• bn. Senscapc, N 8 GU-2J92 Mlle to Marina. 3?81>1 SUper cleian 3 br &c t br. or make ofter. tnc0mc REALTY 7Si-0811 1 B r. t ma II den . ARSOLU'fEL~ Spolloss. · ------
Barcclono t-'ore11t llkr ------Ca ll~ Mlguel. S J C . you own tbe land . $llOS mo breaMastnook.verypvt. charming. 3 br. 2 bu. WoodbndgeMadison :iBr
setting nr ni:w Ml!1•11on U~i\Cll llOUSE 493-3307 $126.SOO will buy il . .SOUTH COAST Freshly painted. wtr pd. neur llChooll & sb()ppl.r\1 3 Bath Spanish Uh: i:nt •
Viejo Lake. Now unly 2 i;tory 3 hr /\·frame Propfrty House842 38:50 INVESTMENT story, 3 br, 10,, ba, 2 car No doss. l2SO mo. S60C> Pvt. courtyard t>ntry OR ha• "•lllled cetltnas too.~. Ownr wlll \'Un w .I .\Cu it I 183. 900. OPf:M SUM. l·S &tS-ll03 aar. So. of PCH. Bllns, move.In. 2231 Pomona. Show11 llkf' a model ST.9 Kit. nook & huge corner
sldc-r ior; down M111ht <'oMider IMe opt 3190 I PASIO CllLO MlNI Warehouse. !llcw. 2.000 aq.tl 675·7t37 or coll 960-3989 mo. 979-2038 or If 848·8866 Fam Rm fill! ot wlndow!l
8111 Thvm ll8n» Rt-11lty toll rrop~·rt Y If ousc Lovely custom 4BR. 11un Od. locaUon. 67& unlta for 673-M23 Mustask (or Cam to 1111rdcn view Br1ck 4,.. 0 r.42 ~ k I l $1,3331000. Bkr 1113·7866 ._ ... La....... 2 Sty. 4 Br. ht~ bonus rm, -FP dbl .... •lr huo "" 187 on I v n1 room. family -.. ........., Like new 2 DR & Den. :: or schoot11. &Hebo. 144$ : S'T'ORV f.315'' SpoUc.11 2 · ,..r · ...,_. H. h SPYGLASS HILL roomw/wet har Prates·. , ~ 2100 fUllbtath's.aAT. vlew.~un mo Open Hse Sun. br.:? bu neor heh Poot. tvaro ~any ictra1111'. 21"t wporl och 1069 ly ldscpd. APPROX t~ ARAQ8 SALE ad1 In••••••••••••••••••••••• dt1ck, new ctpl~. t11c l~3PM,646·2700 tnlllnt tr'"e •wnhnt "11t" L p . StiOO
••••••••••••••••••••••• H111ndn1•wt•x111•4HH,3 ACRE. theDallYPllot brln1h•P 2 hou on lot Bolboa cellcr.$62S.mo.675·~ " WeJl< to libopp1na Ir Ownrt brkr640-092e
M11R111ficlet Vu38r 2 8a BA . film .rm . pou IOHDIULTY 1>Yl'elults Toplaeeyour Penin. '37.~oo equity. •••3Rr.~Ba.bonrm.1 • 11choole 979·2038 or lfCOLLEOR PARK·•Br
FR, on. Dy Owner lsc/opl. ll y owner. 714 /lll·t•l I drawln1t card. phone Prln only . owne r Have M>methlna lo sell• nc pines, park. ardnr. 84S·88M mual Hk for oearoew ·dep.•n:tare: 84().17~1 7S2·~1. 6'2-51178 today 644 <Km tvts Cliwlrled itdll do it well M25. 838 7488; ~·3863 Cam quired. '44)..()(Y74
..... , •• ~..,,,., ... ...,.~ , ...... .., •••• h •• ,,, ... ·-··~ ..................... .........
..
'•
D8 OAIL Y PILOT f<lday. January 1•. 1911 Hout•• U1tflnftliecl ..... fL1th ,_.*cf ~ta Unfwa. ~h 1WWa. Apcw haeccfa Uwfw,.. Aparfni.1th u.fwft. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... U1tfumiahed Ho.Ms u ....... llNd I Hcaute1 u~ ... ..,.,. IHch 3269 Co.ta Mao 3724 Coronet ct.I Mor 382 2 C•to Mno 3124 Costa M4tto 3124 ....... on .. och 3840 ······················ •...................•.......•.•••............ , ··•···••···········•··· ••••....•••.•.•..•..... ·•·······••••·········· ....•...•.........•...•.••••...••••.•••.•.........•..........•...•.. '"* 32441,..lne 3244 L.,...a hoclt 3241 Popular Newport H(llahts. $40.00 WHK a UP Beautiful br•nd now i b1 , · 1001 FULLER'l'ON 3 br. 1''1l ba. frplc. put10. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cbarmloa rental n!Cent· •Studio& l BR Apb IEHJOY 1977 l bu &11.me<i cc:1lln11s.. Qwut 1 t)l, i.dull:i. no On<'I. g~r Avail Jan I
LEASES AV All.ABLE OLD£~ beach hse ln Ca· ly redec:. New cpl11 & •TV & Muld Serv A villi In this exciting new 11pl. • Cree ataod g frplc. bltru;, f)(!ts 1200 bT3.6312 ~. 846 499()
l.ive in Irvine V1Ha11e. NEW U f' 1'0WNllOMI!: flYotl, 2 Br. child, sml pet flooring, big yd. 3 b~. 2 •Phone Serv. Hld pool Spac1ou11 i bdrm . 2 Many windows. S2DS. ----
We have homes a vail. ror Never llved in Peters OK. 437 Canyon Acres ba. $ISO mo. 645·2216 or 2376 Newport Blvd. CM b1tth:1, trplc t>ecp brown ~-8256. 979·3376 l br. pvi patio lll)l Quiel. Cotido .• 1 lltor) · 2 hr. $3!.0
lease In•• T 111. Upgriaded 48R t'R Dr. See Sat. & Sun. only. 540-2:334 eves 548-975Sor 645·3967 cal'tx'ting Modern sunny . ll'llllurc udull. 314 Ogh.-. mo Call l<u)' 963-0tMI
WalnutSquare OR. mkro oven. ix)o1 & Big Canyon prestigious kitcht'll Lice. priv;itc D~2brVIEW$22S. Cilll67:'>~for oippt d1Jy.968m2 ev~---
Ranch Cal.Home panoramic vu $625 mo. 3 Bdrms . ~· ba .. some Broadmoor home. 3000 Completely furn. I Br. sundt!Ck Surpnsln~ view ~:'8b~i ;:~f.' ~~~~~ N~w Jtlr-:-ii'ba. cpts. drPl!. Ne1tr P11c1flc Cst Uwy &
l>eerfltild Univ Pk Agent, 7:52·7315 view; lge. bv. rm. w/fpl. sq ft. bat'k bay view, 4 br, adults. no pets S145 or Nt•wport Hills & Just t 1 ti b I .,.." ('r0ldon W 3 Br. 2 Ba, din
Culverdale Col.Park ram. rm., lge. fenced yd. 2~ ba, film rm. 11200. 646-7&83 L3l F1ower. I '"I blkl! to beach & eve Ill_ C' w;pa 0 ll cy ........ un•u & fplc. gar incl
Turtle Rock 5475 Month. 673-4437 ~1714 • shopis. Adult.s only, no New. Eaatside. 2 BR. 1 ~ 2 car &tar. 631 3900 $37!1 S46-08l4
2 bdrm. your <'hoire of AttraC'Uvely decorated 2 B Ba ......... •ach 3'740 pets please $425 Mo . bll .. frpl. priv. rear yard. THE DAISY ------from $340to $400. BR Condo, 2 b11. Rancho l! r 2 ,· 2 d11r gad. '1e~n Big Canyon I uxurlouis ••••••••••••••••••••••• lease From $360 Agt. days
3bdrm,yourcho1cc ofl4 San Joiaquln, nr pool view, nc yar • pc, customhome.4000 sqrt STUDIO Ma·?OOO:njghts5S2,0S07
from $33S. to $47S areu, gotr ''Ourse, tennis $400 mo. 1122 Cortez. Go!! course frontage. 4 ~OtlHla de/ .,/((m FOR KIDS AMO
4 bdrm your choice or 6 club.~. mo. Shown by 982·l0'14 m4> br. 4 ba. pool, game rm, ''FroM$55 W..atly" 611 ~ -·~:A,, MESA VERDE area THEIRPARDITS!
lrom$450toSSSO appt.640-8772 LcllJ!maHlls 3250 !am rm. $1500. mo 1'\lllkitchen&TV -~"'v17w1.u~ Home atmosphere 2 &3 •Swi....r1t9Poof
No Fees ••••••••••••••••••••••• 640-1714 Unens & Utllities ~ 6~"'-B/-'M brdeluxe apts. 546·10M •2 •clrocMM RAMCH REALTY ••Brand New 3 BR. 2 ba, MlLETOOCEAN •t.J .,VY fam·rm, crpt, frplc. fed. 3 Br house. Immaculate. Townhouses. Park Lido, Royal S.ltfl Motel 3 Br 2 Ba nu paint. bltns. •Tot Lot
551-2000 S.'iOO. mo. 768--0547 Cl?sheboloh sodhops$3. Golod nr. Hoag Hosp. Adults 727 y.......L..1......-llvd cpts, patio. lplc. S300. Patio & fenced yards
---------1nc1g ro · 50/se only.3BR.2ba .. 3car -"""' .. " 2 &38Rapts available. 25 1S Orange. CM . 687W.18thStn .. -et
Brand nu 4 plex apti.
Appl. <'Pill. tll'Jlfi, 2 & 3
bdrrns. Mow 1n by Jun.
20th, get SHlO off fi n t mo
(714)847-7566 10am·5pm.
7 d,ys.
1 JRVJNE Nu exec 3Br. 2Ba hme. in 494-0122 gar. $400 mo. Also. 2 BR. Beach Blvd nt Yorktown Immediate occup1.1n('y 673-0053 Comer of Pomona ~BR. 1"" Ba .. ··· .... S375 exclus ive Woodbridge. 2 ba .. spe>Uess! $350 mo. 536-0411 $340-$495 h XI t 63l 3515 2 Hr Condo. newly de· ~BR.~ Ba .... SJ~/$350 lake for boat'g/Cish'g. New Condo, upgraded. Will consider least/opt. location. gr~~~0!h~ps l ~Side MW deolu•• · r o t a t <' d . n r
2BR.2Ba ....... $375·S25 pits, pools, Jacuzzi, $410 2Br. ~Ba. den. central on the latter. Realtor VILLAPOMONAAP1'S beach. Ask for Missi. townhouses. Frplc. encl. ~vely, new l br Lari;e llrookburs t /Adam" 3 BR, 2 Ba. · · · · $395/600 &up (714) 968·2710 air, view. clb house fac. 642-5333 Fum 1 bdrms from $215. 67s.2311 . gar. 2 br &. 3 br, 2 ha. t:pts, drps. gar Adult!;. Patio & carport, avail 3BR.21"2 ba .. S425·625 w/pool.$400mo.49S·St.S8 Qulet,adult complex.No ._._--___ -fromS325G42·l603 no pets $20() t !J80 immed.$275 mo.631-038~
4 BR. 2112 ba, furn . $595 Turtlerock Glen Plan 4 alt6PM 8 Y P 0 P U t. A R pets. Pool. 1760 Pomona ~~ · , Anaheim Ave :'145·3229, eves.
4BR,21'2 Ba ... $71l5'800 5br,3cargar.pooJ.ten·N 3 b 2 b . I DEMAND·HARBOR Ave.C.M.642·2015 THEIASILLEAF Large2&3~rapts.2 ba. 646-3160 NEW 1 br
4 BR, 3 Ba ... , $600 nis. $795. mo. 640-1044. ew r. a singe V f E W H 0 M E S Newly redecorated 2 pool, exercise & rec rm. . frplc, beam BIG CANYON story, 2 car garage. up-S p A C t O u S &..ogi.ca leach 3748 bd . 1 b j)l p 1 s auna. 288l Bristol St. New dlx twnllse. 2 Br 2 cc1J, bltns. pool. volley 3 BR. 2~!1 Ba ........ $700 Terrace 2 br., 2 ba, u,P· graded. (714)840-1987 •• p 0 R T 0 F I N 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• N ~mbe. haAda llS $30000 • Ba, gar, pvt yard. Child ball. gar $235. 84.2·6934
g;aded Cardiff. Avail. La• Hill cod 3 B 2 MODEL" 3 br. ram.rm Onthewater,Woods Cove ear ac · u · · ALLS295MO. OK.$325.util pd.645·3356
Feb. I· No pets. $400. bf com~ ~I 0S:J2s r. + bonll!I room, 4 ba. $750 Area. newly decorated. mo. 6 3 1•3190 Brand new townhouses. 2 "'--p ......
3826
2,. !~~z~i l:Jrst~·:l' Ba;l'r,f2· 6404639 833.1568 · 8JO-l786 mo n l h . F e rg u s on lBr. util pd. $300 mo. 154 Br I '"I Ba Instant move· uunu °''" · · 0 •
3 FRWYS CLOSE, new Realtors 833·3821 Pearl. 831-1676 Charming lrg 1 Br Stv & in . Pets & infants ok. ••••••••••••••••••••• •• wsh~ & dryr hkup: Newly
I L.oc_ptaHlguel 3252 Fenced patios. encl. 2 Br:! ba lwr dplx. patio. cpl d & decor d . Nr 2br,2ba.comm.poo , LUXtwnhse3Br21~Ba0ceanlront2br Iba refr1g.cptstdrps/frpl. d'h h . cts t N bea•h ,$2811.0ys , · l · $375 833 0138 ••••••••••••••••• •••••• · .,'6 ' · • ' garane is was ers air nu p pa1n uar r ' Jae · enms. · · nr new (pie. patio. gar. $395. mo. Ulil incl $285/mo.640·7622 " · · · · 0 · 759-6067 Evs 673·6i04 SffTerroce pool,bch.~.536-8226 494.06870r 536_0321 cond. l!rll Meyer St. See bch. Lsl , las t , $250. ----·------
GREENTREE..J Br 2 lla, JBr. 2.\,a Ba, good ocn 2Br. 1Ba. w1guest rm & mgr orcall642·6612 838-0193 \": Blk to Sch. 2 Br. 2 ba.
rplc, & fam rm. close to view, $450 mo. $495. Bluffs. 3 BR. 2'h Ba, LCICJllllO Hills 3750 bath. nr bch. shopping. 3 Br 2 Ba. deluxe duplex. 2 adults. S285 mo. 124 20th
schools. no pets. Ls e. HOWARD JOHNSON cpt, dps, D/W. lease/op. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $370mo. lse. 675·1501 me81iB.AU car gar. bftos. no pets. St 536-8149. 't5Z3 CAMP\15Dl:ISMNE $450 incl grclnr. 645-8781 REAL TV lion. 573.9139 ALICIA PLAZA Bachelor apt. no pets, $200 Tustin 838-4949 -N-e11_r_be_a_c-h.-$l_OO_._l_b_r.
NewPatio Home.2br,2 49'1·1744or496·7718 n~st Value 1·n Bluffs ScenicMountalnV1ews month,utilpd.Ava112-l APARTMEMTS BT 3831 childok.Fee OPEN DAILY
b S . · °" L di d It 1&2 3 Br, 2 Ba $345 Ot"O 8A.M. T06 P .M. a + xt~as. wimming. 4 Br. 2 ba executive hse. Super c.lean 14Pgraded 3 arge. x a u 675-4174 ..,30 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MaJn Rentals. 540·53'1'0 ---------1 tennis. Jacuzzi. Adults. 5 l 1 $450 B 2 ~ b f $48 Bdrm Apts. Furn & un· l Hr -
View. Turtlerock Terr. 3 Lse $375. mo. sso. dis· pee · v ew · · r. ' a, am rm. 5 furn. New 2 br. J ba. lrplc. Bachelor $195 NEW 2 Br-2Ba or 3 Br·2 $175. 2 br. garage, pool
Br & f'am Rm, beaut. {'()unlforJan.1/524·9634 mo/lse.494·0122 mo.54o..st4s. Poot.Jacuzzi. Billiards bltns, garage. Adults, no Adulls,nopets Ba, cpls. drps. w /gar. Kids ok. Fee
S800 mo. 752·0617 Mission Viejo 326 7 l:Ml. Carmel, 3 br 2 ba, 581·6151or581-6130 petis. $350. 640· 1840 131 E. 18th St Open Sat/Sun 12·4 PM. Main Rentals. 540·5370
Lovely 3 br. 2 ba, <'.OMM . ••••••••••••••••••••••• D/R, F /R. grdnr. rec 25211 Stockport. Lag 646-6816or642·4005 23143 A. Sai;uuro or.1---------2 Br 2 Ba. lux apt, <Over· POOL, country kitchen. Near new 3Br, ram rm, 2 rac. Nr bus. $600. 640-1377 Hills 2 br. ~ ba. remodeled . 846-746i· 586-81.:li 2 bdrm. 2 ba. fireplace, 1,
looking Newport Bay, bltns. frplc, dbl gar. ba. fr le air cond. . Sorry, no pets. Sharp. $.tOO. mo. 3~r2 Ba, upper. nopets.2 ' mile from beach. l year
wilb balcony & fplc. Atriumoffmasterbdrm. $3951nf0 'Nr Crown Udo Isle, 4 BR, 3 ba., h L 9 673·16S8e\•es k1dsok.$265.1027Valen·HuftHnc10tlleach3840 oid.$285.960-4603
833-9234 $450. 14761 Deerpark. v 11 & Fr. ·827 38 mstr suite upstairs. $69S Newport leac 370 cia. 546·9080: 546-6985 •••••••••••••••••••••••
---------1 Mll-4471 or631·2246 a ey wy. .JS Mo annual lease •••••••••••••••••••h•• N.cr LClke Park l BR Garden Apt, adu1U. Turtlerock Glen. New 3 Br . . . " 1 E T UY Coda Mesa 3824 Redecorated. $185. Lge 1 Deluxe 3 br. 21h ba, all. 7942 Holt. ~O!l mo. To on best street $725/mo For lease lo a family. Ex-3 Br, 2 .ba Aliso Villa Con-Udo Rea ty 573.7300 I S I ••••••••••••••••••••••• br w/pool, walk to shops. dbl gar., patio. frplc. 1713 see. 549·9658 . 613-0289 lse. Agt 631-1400 ec. Turtlerock 4 Br 2•,; do, single ~tory • AC, S..,,.._ Some people say you get Beautiful brand new 1 br Mature adlts prer. No Ba formal dine & fam cpts, clrps. view & pool. Capiitrono 3278 what you pay for! We of. r t d · f 1 • ch.lldren no pets. 1887 Alabama, 536·3465 or Bch twnhse. 4 Br l'f.! Ba.
Woodbridge Estates. Up· rm'. 833.2657 No pets. 830-5085 ••••••••••••••••••••••• fer mort>. And the price is ~h!s~r ~nygwind~wcs. Monrov1a. 548.7924 536-1718 new cpts. pvt patio. rec grd'd 4Br. 3 ba, fam rm less. Membership in a d Its · $235 · • fac11 $325. 963·2532. Duplcx Pvt rear yard. 6 MO. LEASE Avail Now. 2600 sq ft. new Health Club. A tennis a u . no pets. . 2 Br. 2 ba, Mesa Verde. Lge 1 & 2 Br. 2 ba, Adults 5J6·1461
Avail 1/20177. $600 mo, 5 Br, 3 Ba. kids. pets. IMCHARMIHG club.Freetennis lessons. 645-8256,979-3376 F /P . d ;w , e nc. gar. only .. no pets . Pool.---------
lse/opl avail. 754·3694 or 2 br townhouse. $345. ~k~~ lf1~4)terms. OLD SAN JUAN Billiards. Swimming. CASA VICTORIA Adults, no pets. $275. J~~~M· Fro{j' ~20 ;;:· 4 Plex nr beach. super
55Hl681 Pool. park. immed. ' · This c h ar ming 2 Golf Driving Range 1Br&2 BR.unforfurn 546-lOl!l 1 agno a. ·l clean upper. 2Ur. lBa.
---------• possession. bedroo 2 b th •-d 5 , ... ..A Adi · B gar. no pets $250 mo. Groves Sec ured comm Newport •ach 32'9 m. a "" en aunas + great ac gas °" wtr .,,.. ts, no LGE 1 Br. very cln. gar. 1 r ... $215 & 2 Br .... S2G5. 544_1020 New. cnr. lot. 2 br. 2 ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• home has plush carpel· tivities Sunday BBQs pets. Pool, rec rm. s.ec. no children or pets Ut1I pd. 2 blks bch.i---------
d I d ~ I' ARD T 0 Fr ND ing, fireplace, built·ins,& Parties with hve bands ga. t e 525 Victoria Quiet. mature sngl or Dshwhr/d ispl. ept s. ~on cpl, rp, c ec. gar. r 2 g W 't I l """ Su d b .. "-"' 8970 .-1~ ~ opener. Steps to pvt. tenn Eastbluff Exec. home. car gara e. on as nee n ay rune,.. ""' married cpl only. Refs ""'..,. 536-3611. ~ long! C1dl 646-2158 days; led ~00 I f ~~,!lr537t 7Po0kl d& Jacuzf"t1 • 4br, 2ba, lam rm. Soft 493·0588 evenings & Vourrenldollars goeven Casadellermosa ~~7 · +c n ee. :! Br. 2 Ba condo. Quiel. ••••·:~··•,••·:~••••••n••
,,_. w n s. or a · water. New ~rpts, drps, weekends further-••A terrific 2br apt w/rireplace, I'':! • Adults only.'Pool & rec $330 ·~r farv.>ur, 3 n
l 30PM wkdys paint. Walk to schools , · maintenance ('rcw. pro· bath. range. oven. dis· Lge 2 br 1 bu cottage on C'lr ~5 mo. 552.3290 2BA Tnplex. lk f flam or
S h Si.. E cl shops, t ennis club. 2br. lba, Condo. Clean. fessional m1.1nu"ement hwas her. $320 Also 3 br E d c' t M N aft6pm. 2131592·2666 uns incy narp n $750 /mo. Lse. Refs . washer. dryer. pool, no " (Sep. bid(!> $370 kt·s• c os a ' esa 0 NEW t.2 & 3 Br. apts --------
3842
Condo. 2Br. all bllns. RAMCHREALTY 640-6775or645-2240 pets.$275.494-0315 staff that cares. and l60W Wilson d s or pets . $300. Vanous 118 locations. OCEAHVIEW
end g:.ir. Comm. pool 551 2000 friendly neighbors 5''8-5300 Kids OK Rent.:; S225 to Lge. new dlx condo. I br
CI05e lo rrwys. No lse • Bluffs 1-level 3 BR. 2 ba. Custm Exec 4 Br. 3 Ba. 3 Models open daily l0·7 Lge :i br. 2 !Ja townhouse LARGE 1 & 3 br apts. S3SC) Kent Rogers R:ty. form din. Step dwn ltv
SJ25, 552-4201 COLONY 3br, 2ba, c:umm Lovely greenbelt & pool. car gar. Panoramic Vu. Sorry, no one under 21 & in qwet complex Caru>-?c Dshwhr. pool Adults 848·8300 rm. fplc. jacurn. tennis.
pool. tennis . $375 lse. $480 Agt 644·1133 grdnr. no pets. S575. no pe t s Room ma le & patio Adults only No f'rom $210 mo Gus pd. :! patios. gar & storage ---------•I r k d -493-6138or4934109 service available. Mon· t $325 ·~5 3~"1 S325 (2l.:J>!>98·lil5 •RENTALS• 833-2048at6orw n s 3Br.2baw1rencedpatios. th·lo·monthoccupancy. pe s I> • o><> or 178Scott Pl .. off Placcn· *OLIVEP"'RK•
2 BR. den . -S385 Woodbridge Broadmoor Bcsl location. $500/mo. Spark.ling 2 br. 2 ba, ram 837·95i7 tlll 642·5073 "' l,.,rine 3844
2 BR. 21 ~ hu.. . .. s.550 Plan E. 4 br. 3 ba, fam 631·1400 Agt. rm. fenced back yd, l(ar, Oakwood Gurden Apts 2 Br, ni('e & clean. d ose to 2 ur. 1 ha. children and APT HOMES ••••••••••••••••••••• ••
3 BR, 2 ba. !,!~ rm. din ~m. 3 car gar. Westcliff beaut. 3 br, 2 ba, tennis. S290 mo. 492·5771. 880 Irvine (all6lh J shopplOB Adults only. pet ok. Loe nr. So. Cst Nu <! & 3 Bdrm .. bll-ins, WOODBRIDGE
3 BR.FR.2•:bu .. ·-:; .... Prof l_ndscpd. Upgraded nr. s hops. Mariners New luxurious 3 Br. 21~ Nopels.645·8939 Plaza.97H877. cpts,d.rps.encl.gar .. all PINESAP'T'S
3BR. fo'tl.2 ba. ·~>IV cpts, t1I~ & drps .. Pool & SchL,park.~.&46-2.389 ba ram rm Pool frplc 2 (714 >645·0550 nu. !714i 847·7566. lOam 1. 2 & 3 bdrm unit~
'I BR.2ba. · · $150 lake pnvgs. Avail 1115. • · · · Nice 1 br. frplc. pool, l Br. I Ba.+ refrig. also2 5pm. 7dys. OE>s ign ed like eurt y
4 BR. l''R. 3 ba. . $595 $.525. mo. to resp. purty. BLUFFS, georgous 2 Br. 2 car gar· boat· RV 170016th St lat Dover I adults. no pets. S230. mo Br 2 Ba. both W /W cpts, California bungalows .
Plusapproximately 752-7576 Ba view cust. decor storage.$495.838·9318 (7141642-8170 54H-4757or646·3798 drps. bltns, tots OK Fr o m $2 70 t l ~
JO more in Irvine t'b b'lt I TV ' t--"-•--3280 Reas. 1100 block Vic· Hunt Hrbr area Blfl lux Pinestone. Ofc hrs. 3·"."'" we ar, n co or • .-nu -Ocnfront Gar Apt. 2 Br, 1 ant w;bltns incl dshwshr v ""' Supe~ 4 BR, 2 ba., pool & $500. 557·1700 x2356 dys; •••u•••••••••••••••••• ba no pets uti'l pd Avail N T h tori a 646·8095 e ves· "' · wkdays, 9.5 30 wknds
red hill ~.:.
55 2-7500
tenrus. Colony area 640-242Sevs/wknds E Sh . . . -ew own ouses wlmd~ losc..>e ' Lovely pool w /btfl 'y 552 0400 $475Mo Agcnt644·7383 · NO FE Nr: opping to6/30.$300mo.646·25l0 Instant movc·in. :! BR. lndscpd crtyard. Adlts · ___ _
---------iHARBOR VIEW 5 Br. 3 Warner & Bnstol. 4 Br, 2 Soultl L a 3786 w, bath. patios. air. de· Bedroom W/loft. frplc, 1714l846·175S PARK WE'ST APTS LOCJIMClleoch 3248 ba onpark nrpool huge ba.$395mo.549·8655 OCJllft luxe. adults. $280 /mo. encl. gar. applns. pool & 1 r ~~~~~~~~~~!••••••••••••••••••••••• ' ~ ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• t91 9 Anah e im S t . Jacuzzi. Adults only Lge3 br.2 ba.rrplc.bltns. Adut & amtly apts. -HOMES FOR RENT yard. $795. 640-9256. Sauth LOIJllftCI 3286 2 BR. 2 ba on the ocean. 5464141. Mgr Dave. S260 6454411 balcony. ent l !la rage. from S24S. Tcnrus, healtll
3Br. 28a. fncd yd , grdnr Oen fml at West 91.h, 4Br. ••••••••••••••••••••••• F\Jm. $700 .. unfurn $600. · 1411 Alabama $335 C'lub, garden view 3883 incl • children. pets OK. LAGUMA IEACH 2Ba, dbl gar. yr. lse. $'950 HILLSIDE HIDEAWAY Total security, elevators, ,. 2 Br 2'r.i Ba, fplc, cpts, 846-9088; 846-4990 Parkview Lane. Irvine.
S425mo.5S9-0892aft6PM J BDRM. newer ho_me mo.645·9336 Small house w ;view. rec.facilities.499-283:> 2BR.ept.drps.1<1ds OK drps. ds hwshr. gar. Owoed & managed by
located 10 Portahno S325. incl. util. Agt. No No pets. £200 mo. pallo. tras h/wtr pd. $280. Ocean view 3 br. 2 ba, The Irvine Co .. S52·9200
Turtle Rock GIH
Plan Ill. 4 Br + fam.
S7SO mo lease. 640.2666
Laguna. 2 Ba tbs. Luxury split level condo, 2 fee.642-3850 ~nts 548•0483 544·5100, 772-B. Joann. ~!:'~508ge .• A84v6a_t9088L 1·10. $.135. •--leach 3848 fireplace, ocean view. Br 2 Ba. 2 car gar, vault· UnMnisMd .....,..... ~-Excellent ram. borne at ed ceilgs, wetbar, gas CORda1t•lhwn6 ....................... 2 BR Garde n apt f'rp!c, l &2 Br. bltns, D/W, cpts. . ...................... .
TURTLEROCK 4 Br, 2
Ba. Fam Rm. den. patio.
waterfall. nr park. pool.
school $545 mo 640· 1714
~Mo. logs, lull rec facil, tennis, u.fllnlished 3425 ~ 3802 dshwshr: pool, pvt patio, drps . gar. adults, no 1&2 BR. NEW /DELUXE LIVE rN A CASTLE Widt'
pool. etc. view. 5475 ... ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• nr Irvine Ind. Area. pets.548-4291: 645·0527 Huge .Pvt patios/adults. Ocean Y!ews. lg. l br apt.
2 BDRM. HOME. lge. 645-8277 3 Br 2 Ba, 2 car gar, fully ZIR WATERFRONT 557·2841 ...,_;5 2 B I"'· B ed Huntington llarbour hi ce1l:ngs . Gardens . sundeck w/o<:ean view. cpt'd, Kntg Sch. Call . . _.. -. r. " a. r ec. a.r-ea. po ol Ne ar beach
Uv. rm. with fi replace. Dix 3br. Jba condo. 1 Kathy. 84~1 or Helen. Bwltln.s. crpts, drps. B-Adult E~Side 1~ br apts. patio, adJ. shops. adults. 16885 Lynn 846·3541 Mature professionals
Uni ver s ity Park 2br,
frplc. encl gar. pools &
tennis, $350 ~-8138
W ;W carpet thruout sq.It. Children/pet ok. 846-4413 .S.Q, huge deck. garage. E~cl .,,ar. patio, pool no pelS. 213.592.5227 BLOCK TO BEACH $390 t;!lO· 494-4tiS3 or
Kitchenw/range&oven: Lse $500 mo. Agnl $4M3601.FJNLEVAVE NB ~k~8oew , no pets . l BrORANGEST 2·lbdrms$185.1·2bdrms 494-601• $425 Mo B!M-6435 lMMAC. 2 Br l Ba, $275. · · · · · r..,... A ---------
MISSI. oa..aR~ ... LTY No pets. Wshr, dryr, JACOISRE4LTY Qwet&clean. carPort. & ~· t•cess to pool. 220 t bedroom Adults No " ..,... Nwpt Hgts or Cliff Dr. pool 494-0315 SJC 675-6670 2 Br. I ba. I story, shag, can furn. Adults, no pelS. Huntington St. Mg r pets. Nice view
Woodbridge . Brand new, PHOME 494--0731 Br 1 Ba. lge lot + l Br 1 · · _ dl'JlS. patio, frplc, beam S210. 673-6372 536-3519 497.2231
fully lndscpd, air cond. . Ba, guest hse. $475. TowtlhoaH llB $1.50. bach . .,., util. 2 !'e1I , d s hwhr. gar. ., rnv11te home 2 Br. den. Top-0£-the·World 4 Br 3 s.ns7 Unfwniah.d 3525 blks beach l\dults. $250. 2650 Elden, Lge ~ br studio apt. 2br. Deluxe 3br 2ba condo 2 br, 2 ba. dlx. dbl gar, 4
nook , :itnum. pool, b<'h Ba. FP. F R. nr scht. ••••••••••••••••••••••• NB $150 ·bach /\JJ utll 537·3125 2ba, qwel bldg, $2SO. mo. Children ok. Cpt'd, drps, blks ocean, cntr of town.
cluh Li>c Avallallle AvaU 1·17,$SS0.494·3094 3Br2Ba,minivle~.out· BRANONEW3 Br2''°'Ba, Pooi+si~gles · · 2Brw/ arS2lS Nuc ls LgeBachelor,$185.Mesa bltns. I.dry, pool. $350. night lights view. $385.
M41.1'r.JSorM4·M32 3 BR. 2~, BA. oceanvu. 51~r-8A00~-~~~1~;~:3 fplc.•,.,.mlfromDohe ney H.B. $165.11 br, 'It util. watergpd. 1575 .. ~·< delMararea.998·0859 892·1Sl2 963-9744
Turtlcrock Glen. Plan move in now! $475. Call: :.S.995o g · SL Sch & Dana Wharf. Kids &pets. Orange. Ph btwn l ·S. Costa Mesa 3824 Costo Meto 3824 Costa Meso 1124
II 4BrFRTenn&rec 499-1566or673-3620 $450 per mo .. 634·8282, H. B. •ss. 2+2 4·Plex 636·4120 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ' I 2 S62S · 2 Br cood pts drps S...5PM, 524·1012 Evs. Kids or singles.
S.1'1 ~f~· Av . /1. m.:i21s "'9wporf leodt 1269 Hoag Hc!i,~. tSt. last~ WOODSTREAM 3 b IEACHCOMlf.R BAY MEADOWS --Jijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil.•li•il•il•li••ii•ll•il•li••ii•ll•iii•ii••ii•···••••• dep. $.150mo. 979-7888 r + r.. SIS 631·2011 Spac. cheery & cozy:! Br ---------i bonus,2ba. lyr.old mdl. apts. encl gar, close t
macnab I lrvtna realty
HA.llOR YllW HOMIS
3BR Monaco w/bon~ room & bath
over garage. Lovely tow maint.
ya.rd. Near comm. pool. $675/ mo.
incl. gardener. Cathryn TeMllle
644-6200. (Zl 7)
MEWPOltT"S AttEST •
Brand new 3BR townbome ! The
greatest view in Big Canyon! Love.
ly carpets & drapes. Guarded gate
community! The amenities include:
tennis court -pool -jacuzzi.
Lease 6 mos. or longer -S!nS/mo.
Bob Lane 644-6200. (Zl8)
TWIS Pl.A Ya'S D&MtM1'
Beautifully appointed condominium
in Newport Crest. 38Rs, dinlnf.
room, 2'Aa baths. Overlooking poo •
jacuni & 2 lighted tennis courts.
Fully J>uilt·in kitchen -wet bar -
dbl. garage w/opeoer. $550/mo.
Holly Markas 644-6200. (Z19)
Uft OM THI GOlP couasa
Brand new. sparkling McCla in
townbome -best location on the
6th fairway. Private dbl. garage.
All PQ6sible amenities. Immediate
occupancy. $650/rno. Martha Mac·
nab 642·8235. CZ20)
.. 2 .. U5 '44-6200 '°' Oowr 'Driw HMbol' View C.nter
Irvine al campus Valley Center 152·1414
Eastbluff Coodo Twnbse. Back Bay. Cpts, drps, lc:AoalslmMI 3806 beach & college, Avail
3Br. 2~ ba, patio, (rplc, ~~~6' $425. 64S·9543, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Feb. Isl. No kids 9r pets.
nr pool. $495. 640-0633 3 BR .. 2 ba., patio; upper Fr· $240. 646·0073
Eastblufl rune, lse or rent . .,._ah "'"911Md duplex. Steps lo beach. THE I .a.y LE "'F
3 br &eden S600 immac •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• Adults. Yearly lease, "' " com'pare!'i~. 'laltoal"-d 3706 ~Month.673-78"9 1 Bdrm,waterpd.$230
1----------t ••••••••••••••••••••••• Deluxe 1 br apt on The Beautifp ul1• spacious new Love~ ExecCW3 bfrDr, 3 b!~ Spacious 2br In the heart Grand Cao a I. Lit tie apts. oo , pvt patios.
pool bme. . ..,.,.,. of Balboa. $250. mo. 1st & Dalbo J I d $375 Y I Adults, no pets. mo. 875-1617 eve or last mo req. 575.6238 or 1
8 Cs ~n1 dl · s r Y 329 Avocado, C. M.
1"784.(X;Slday. 673-4U9 ~~~~ a er pm ~
EXCITING lllM»a '-"'Mio 3707 lllM»a ,........ 3807
EXEC RENTALS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Eastblull-3br, 2~ba, 2 Br 2 Ba incl utll Nr r · super back bay u n . ...,._' h ..,.,~ 1115· w ·8 1 $175. utU pd. Stove, re ng.
b t t d · o ....,..c · ~. · 8 · Singles ok Fee o s rue e view. C· Blvd 962·050S. Wl.nter Maino-· -•· :wn ...... 0 cupancy Feb I. $750. rent ...,-nt..,,., v-..,...
Lease. Chlannln9 18r, Bch , Harbor View Knoll BAY /BEACH/PIER shop •g. St ove re frig,
Newporh newest de· Patio 1 bt $325 UUI pd, $225mo/yrl)'. Resp. cple.
velopm.ent w /Cape Cod 3 0 3 E Ed g e w a t e r No pets. 6754349 architecture & charm. l-8'71·2866 -~,;......._,;....... _____ 1,..---------11
3br-. 2...,ba, pvt tennis · CClpidrmohoct. 3111 ~ofOrongeOOU~s
cow1 & pool. Occupancy Near water $140. Ulll ••••••••••••••••••••••• mostbeaullruloporlment
April L $700. Lease paid. Fee s Br ocean view frplc communltes. A relomg
KNOLL' PROPERTIES Ma.In Rentals. 540·5370 Nea'r cvcrythln,i. $175: selllngwllnstr&oms.,
eoun:o-lo4t2rotters OCEANFRONT a br. new, No pets. 49M900 Ron WOlelfolls, ona mo)eslle
Y 1 g e, d l x, ft PI c. eor.. .. M_. 3122 1rtes.Feo1Uf1ngpools,
s BR.2~1 n, ~~..:,_fam. ~;Mf',j~~~~~~tl~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jocuzzl.souno.bllolds.
rm, •r • PC>O•· -0 1""· · .,......,, •-------ai11 o""' exctll"" ...,,......._._ $175. 8'1J.0852 June 30. $500. mo. '"' "•""'"'""""'1 ·-------i '1M8tO ~~ -• wlh90Clolewn19. lennk.
VllWH-...... CottaMfte 3724 11 gym.onoV01e't4><>1ot ..,.... nie Vllage. MOft of Newport Relghta ••H••••••••• • • ••• •• • • • ~)'oo're IOoklnO
2 BR + den. Newly re• SUS CAllYA.S CORO~N .. DEL MAR f«. FumlUrtlsCMIOblo. decoraud , Ava il. Mlnutea to MB. l BR " lmrotd.1§25.M2~ furn. Adu.It.a, no pets. 2 Br Townhouse. frplc °""onoJ.WBecmlom
2110 Newport Blvd. CM. Pool, teMb. Somo ocean MIA LJWtg.
& Cat•llna views. Clot(! OlllQes-9:00!06:00. Nwpt Shores, C Br 3 Ba, to shopping & fln11 beach, "'Y""' ~. ten.nts, 1 blk to bch. 1BR11\arn $205 644·21611 NOW r8fllln0. ~.Oya rrt-1'33t Evs. 28RF\am $23$1~~~~~~~~ 6'6·5161 ask for John Lota ol bltnt . pool, wallt 1~
Lonctelll1$ toahoppln11. h 11\I beach. mg 2 br, all bltn.4' .. refrig,
BOAT SLIP W/CONDO' ,. 9.11 W. l9lb Sl. new pnlnl, new crpt.a.
" 548-<M92 Nice!! Pvt bench acceaa.
BR, 2~ ba. Lib n"1·-------• $375 .. mo. yrly. No le1Ae 9$. Aftt. 8'4-1138 or Coea. AJ(t. 644-8561
Newl,y decorated 3 br. 2~ 1 Br Unlu.rn Apt z Bl', \ ba 11u apt. Now
Adun Apartment Homes wtm o Winning Utestyle. Choose
the best oombinaflon of superb recreation. premium
IOCatton, ond all Of !tie aPPointments you desire to make
your !Ke complete.
• Alr-Oondltloning
• Butlt-4n Appllonces
• PrMJte Pollo or Balcony
Leisure Ute AlfrOctlOnS lnctuoe:
• SWtmming Pool & Therapy Spa
• TWo lighted Tennis Courts
• Clubhouse with Areploce, BHllOrdS, Gym, and
Party Kltehen
~~ One and lWo Bedroom.
One Bath. No Lease
:'fMMEDtATE OCCUPANCY
A'om $230.00 faPk Mesct, Vdli1s
550 Poulartno Ave .. costo Mesa (7l4) 751~995 ..... ~~.!!)
•
ba, f'l'J>k. pool. $6.11/rftO. Nochlldrcoor~t&. cpu, d.r1>e. $.100/mo. Call
.. :.'--...:::!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:==~648<0~~1~"1~~======:;;=1.==~~67~~~7~~==~141).:~ll808~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==============:::::================:i:::~==========::J.
y
Friday. January I•. 19T7 DAILY PILOT D 7
lt ... Bulld 1t. .Diaper 1t...Hammer it... Carpet tt .. Cem ent It ... wire lt...Hoe IL.Clean it. .Move
lt...Press it...Pa1nt it... Nail 1t. .. Plaster it...Flx i I. .. SERVICE DIRECTORY P umb 1t .. ate 1 ••
Roof 1t...Landscape 1t Tllf' 11 Trim 1t
Haul 1t... Add 1t. .. Plant 1t . Alter 1t
•cc .... c..,.t.ter eo..trodor i<i•Mral ~lcH ..•....••.•................................... ···············•·····•· .••..............••.•.• HouHel.aN119 MmldHwe hlWifllC)/P.,.,tllC) PolnH1WJfPGf>4tMnq "ff ••••.••••.•••.........•..•.•........•....•...• ••·•···••·•····•·•·•··· ...•................... •••·•·•·•···•·····••···
Doolitllttptng&!rv1cr Room ddillons.carport& t.EEM JAttVI::, llANDYMAN lfomc~ & llOL:Sl-.:CL .. .,\,l,ti tlJnth'mnn 4'Xp(•r 10 UOn't be hom11wo"1tlrd PAINTING lnl ~>.l Pl..UMllF.H lh•1n11r n •
Smtll8usine3sAcc-ount patio cvvt'r) t::xperl Add1lloru&Ht!mcxieho1l Aplll ('onH1rnt1ou' D>n·h:ill'4·rn1111lt· hon11 m111nl NnJObloO Furf1ne1.1uul 1>a1nt1na& Rt•'1l! d\'l>\'nO•hl(· .. 'rce PHH'. 1n)l 1tllu11 11n
fteu rlte$ M80928 ~raftaman, 1>m111l or 962S.S73 L1c3118Ml Crathmnn Ph ~0302 Rt>f~ ~163~1J i.n'lllll lkas rall'l> Frt.•c riur pn1·cll lOO. eall ~t Ca11Juy64579& ""rv1rl'" <.. Glellf'), ~ectur-.1 ~~~~~-~~ loo u Geori<e P1lml'r & Sons lntenor l'lant St-rv1ce •llOM E<.'l.t-:1\NINli • 1>atnlinl( t•i.l K47 3779 -~1'::~~ir!t htd~r~~~;~ WORK GUARANTl'.l::U M2·9ll~
••••••••••••••••••••••• Adds, Rmdl l'111nl1Planll Dtmgn, Sal1•s, ~hint , Sy ReVable Marned rpl C'l1•.in1n1: He111<1 Com I, 1.ac:/lru836-~ lotr1 E~tr trl'e l::bt HOME Si\Vt;Ks l'l.l \1
Arr tlitectural a. Mr uc C..,.t ~Ice SmlJo~ Llc'd~7 6Un Cooi. u I l 1n11 <.:om Goodrcfercnccl\536-77\l :alMJ r~ 'h.inwoo1n~ & 2.'lyr; F.xpr M2 0295 IUNc; & 111-;i\1 l~G !··.,,.
tul'al Plens Rmdl & or ••••••••••••••••••••••• merc1al, Rei.tdcnt1a1 Uy JlOUSECL EANI N<; 15 !!,~t·uRn·~~~·lt1!u~~A". 1-'r t-e _<>rhJ Supet gJ"ap'-lc.' --PAINTING l'~l SIO fir Hnnc-'1 Ii:
new construcllon. Resld Carpel Manwllllayyours HF:MOOELS ~1/Y 1111':1rgtcl!\~~1:'~';'1 .. ,ni Our Busine.ic; Call _ .. _ ... _ .. u J ...,.,.,... tu11~~ali>~~ Uouls lloml'!I Uo<-ks ~~~:~~l~ll~~~7 ~~~ !
1Com 'l/lndu,t r 1al or mint'. Rt'paltt & Al>DITIONS IS.18-5&22 Jimlce's Raggedy Anns MatcMry PETERSrAJMTIHG FrF~t li7~:lt7~eves 7~13150 Ml).~ cleaning too! liuor work Ac<'ent Bldg'!! I 778 1764 bi~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• E 'd Re Rate WO -~Mo"-.. at blgger &11vtngs Yresl 1·634·2078 Lc328l07 11J\NDYMAN Car""ntry, I" E 11 l icpcr • us II 00 STAI NING & 10'' orr w1lh lh1:. ull _,_,,...,. 645-3646 p ""' 1-:Xl'El<IENt'EU. Oe1~n n•r ~l 1 V('l<wa 1"· Fret> Est . Cull Gene-Pi\JNTING Qual work ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• C h 1 lumbing Ele('tr\('al. 9 !!lump11 tnn ... lHick s.s20.S8 631 .....,..0 Plumb1n11. w11l,'r i.v><,
W C C Cl ustom ome M your ot AM LOii PM 847 2787 t.lalll~. n•r!> lluut'i: lkh llu,.111 Co1111r1 'I l'"U". ."'°"'° an. leak:\, l.Juthrml•nt•I Hilu:. B&bysittmg ·My Met.a e art< arpet . taners or remocfol existing hme. ' only. 960-5352 ~., " J Verdehomic days SWamClcan?r::itlampoo 30 yrs exper, custom ~ Lie 328.'i86 &h 7:i()93M, Exprt Painting & Paper· PalfttYoerC tie IQ2-:~lllH
___ P_h_: 546_·7887 AlsoUpholKltr~ All work bldg. Llc No 213494 Jot ••••••••••••••••••••••• p r o f C /\ H I' E T 9tiO:nlS.1 ~~~kl:(+-nlat~n~I:. ~o y~ Averugt< Exlr IS~ 1345 $ewlnq/A.lteratlon1 •--t-...11 •~tc• ttuar RefsiMC Fr<'eesl Thorman 640·1671! VOU HAVEIT RF'ADV CLEANING.noor&win F1rcplun•i. Planter'< n•~r. rP(nrence s 2.Stry."'65.lntr.S.ISr,m ••••••••••••••••••••••• -.-.rr Reas Rates ti4:,·3'7l6 ' · • dow care. Dutrh M,1111 '~ r rn ••••••••••• ••• •• ••. • ••. . Bectrical I LL ~UL IT AW AV tent1ncl' SerVIC't> ~17 1508 Unck Connell' 1'11lm Ric• nrd 000.3361 ces met ma tr I l..i:ior C ustom Mode
Typing nt home. any kind Steam (;leanlng. J1v·rm. •••••••••••••••••••·••• ~-0306 ------U10<·k Wall:. HIHJ Pits Guar. msrd. frt-e est & ......,.atlOftl o--s r ,,.. w 11 Pl L din rm & hJll uv" rms Janiton"-' Refs Ests 641i 0464 l'ainllng lntr1Extr Ex Ted 627·7900or 55:? Ot:\4 ... 11 n .. 11n1 .... d ,1..., nco a ~0 1 C',.up , . " ELECTRICALSERVll'E ltaulmg,movlng.cleonup 111 --·-·----'d I A t •---'" uu ~.,..,.,,.,..
&del ~54-11 $30 fr<'e Deodorant CALLS $15/hr Cull ~/up Treework ••••••••••••••••••••••• MoYlrtCJ ~~c~:.c,c:t~v ~~ ~c~~;; fltottet-/Repoir TI~ Crpt repair. dt>flea & de 8'l2 823.1 Reas. fast. fr~ est Jarutonal SerVl('t' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..U\ o-rA ~ .. c c.Ao>-6731 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• odonielSYrsexp<i<>Od · ,,A2.Ac"" Lowestpncl'111 ••""""~·'"'.,,.., V"'RYNE1 ..,,,.. eb !IJI OIOI ..., ...,.., MOVING~ X Allied mun r, A 'l'A .... II ·1m Ml<' TI 'I r · OrJngeCo lnsrd :sl atev.1de1locul J08S&1'EXTURE l • 11• • 1 '' t•w "' GatdtNncj SoMy & Jer. !''REE haul Res1Comml s.56-2681 Fr~~t DaH•493 SIO:i Fust expert paper hang. f'r\•c Est 1193 1439 n•nl()(!cl fir t'llt :.ml 1111.>:
F INISH. REMOU~L &C-flt/COftCrfl• ....................... 111g, rleanup. trel' work l...CMCbc...J... 1nft by l he lady welC'ome5.'J6 2~26ufl ~
Rpr Small Job:. 01' ••••••••••••••••••••••• WEEDINC·CLEANUPS for usable items. Fen-~":II specull~l PATCH PLASTERING Reu 979-0379 SECURITY BUILDERS •Weekly Malnlcnunce • ces/bldgs removed ••••••••••••••••••••••• MOVING HAULING 7 14/847-1 1'7 ••ALLTYPt:S•• T .,_ • F'ree Est 642 9907 5.$7 ~ Expr 'd Landsl·apers Anywhc•rt'. irnyllmt.' Free est ~O 682S ,... _..vice
Master Cra ftsman
Specialty f1n1s h, re
modeling & repairs
Refs 499--310.S
All phases. Block. bnck · Spnnklers Install & re. 1-'dsl. expr. very rcas QUALITY palnllng w1gd · ••••••••••••••••••••••
& concrete work! Lie/ Expenen('ed Gardening Gi!t. nd of unsightly trash pair. Connele & bnck Fully encld 21' truck local ref. rasl. neat reUa· Homes·Addiuons Rc:.tuc l{(•mova ls. lr1mm1n~
Bond Office hrs 6 7 30 Service &Cleanups. Qual & debris. College stu· work 645-7978 a rt s w lift gall.' ble $45 avrg. rm Fr est co over blk walls Free prurung. free est t.1r •
am. 4 7 pm. Ph 64S·203l work Mike 548-2049 dent. Sl2 load. s.Ml-6428 Malone Wmton !)46 J0.18. 673-4714 642·3194 est. low rates 586-<4892 l'Ully insured 642·26?.A
~!~•:.~ .... ~!:.~ .... ~~!!~.~~ .. ~?!!~ .~~!.~~~ ..... !~.~~ ~n•est/ ~'!!!.~~~ .. ~?.'.~ ~!.~.~ ..... ~?.~~ ~~~ ......... !!.~~ ~f.~~~ ..... ~!.~'
l.oguno hach ' 3148 H.wporl Be ach 3869 2 Br dµlx. pvt balh. phUlll'. OFl''ICE SPA(;!-;, N D ~:_:~••••••••••••••••••• Pvt pty wan~ lo purcha~e FOUND Blark & while
••••••••••••••• ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• S200 mo tnC'I uul CdM. 1649 Westclirr Dr. Air. _.ness . small tl'lephonl• answt'r spotted female do1;t. v1r SCRAM·lETS t\ssl Bookkeeper $1~ Wh.itewat(•r vu.:w twnhs. 2 BO lockl'<l gar. no pels. fW0.1594 pvt. toilet. etc T wo units Opporlunity 5005 ingser v 642 J.4:11 Nwpt Blvd/Bay. C.M ~ no children Old<'r i•pl 400 sq. ft. ea $!00/mo-no ••••••••••• •••••••••••• --645.3225 ANSWERS ln:11de Salt'~ S!.IK ~ ~~~; b~pts\vd;1f~~:r prderred.1i240 S-48 4922 Malet!eml to shun• home xtras. One unit 1300 sq Cont.iderincJa l us7 1"~-ity 5015 Call ." I lnexcluSIVl:' H11yshOrt'S rt. 2 toilets. llS Ii;, Over soo Active local -"""'·-· FOUND,blkLabpuppy, Wondl:'r -Demoo -64''5"11 3Br. 2Ba, crpl!> & drps Own rm. pvt bch SlSO $400/m o. P A,C l flC bus. hslinRs. Plcllse<'all ••••••••••••••••••••••• malt>, 4·5 mo·s. Vic Wafer -Nlrl'ly
Ocntal/Chr.sd $ti:i'
l:llcrow Officer $13K 1
II vine Pl'rsonnel Ageoc:
LGCJ1mM1 HIC)Utt 3852 Walk to boy & ocean mo. toam·4pm or ah REAL ESTATE. Gene or stop l>y for free info FOR SALE Nwpl lits area. ~·2586 l,AWN MOWER
••••••••••••••••••••••• !7,~·~293 ask for Fred. 7pm.63J.1998. H.ill.642·0200 All catet.{nnes & types. Lag.una.Beach Motl..'1 FOUND. ladies wrist It's very easy to slop
4811 E 17th Costa Meas
Suite 224 642 147
1>el 2 b l T....,.,,. w t I 20 u t c your kids from borrow ~ uxe r. poo , rec. Lrg3br twnhse1nM.V1c-APPROX400sq.ft,C·2at eguaraneetopease rus. ontact wulc h , Vic Ba lboa ing theC"ar Pul handlcs
room. Lovely loc~t1on. Npt lfts 2 Br. 1 bu. JO to share Laund. pool, 1~ E. l?th St. Soite p you. Corporate Realty lsland.675·7013 on it and call rt 8 LAWN tlract1ve girl, part llm :sou Aloma otr (;~own heams. patio. gar, S27S. ten crts, view Unfurn. Sll5/mo.Doyle~·0479 751·3741 Mr WR 8e('korMr A.. MOWER R E Ofc. 1'yp1n Va lley P kway 1-rom Nopels64~·1682 $!00/mo + <.{'<' dtopos. UN ITEDBUSINE::iS N . J ohnson . 17t<ll FOUNO LgemaleDobie. ----·------+clcncal. with mttore~
S28S. 831-0857 Call Mr Morm. 5-19-1379 Mr Mcwf....,.. Ml.. INVESTMENTS 558-1701 Vic Bonita Canyon Rd. Ea\=.t & in .~ales career. Send r• Mt ·'-VI 1.. 3867 YEARLY RENTALS or 768 :i6zl . NEWPORT Bfo~ACH 1525 Mesa Verde Dr£ ---Ver Y r r 1 en d l Y & affOft sume ln Ad 815, Th ,_ e.., J\JI sires. nnar or on th . t ....... fro K L 1 Owners of leased Irvine HUNGRY. 640·9235 Da ly Pilot P 0 Bo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... Stores & Office So1tes ac ....... s m ona ns I d 'I *"-<" 000 bid . •••••••••••••••••••••• • I • . . heach No fee Properly~ adults, 2 children hv1ng Fr S So1le 106 Costa Mesa n uslr ..,.,.,. g FOUND , h' B' <t-&..--•· • 1560. Costa Mesa, C;. 2 Bl'lcondo$. 2"'1lds ok. no llouse Realtors 642-31150 In cooperative life style om S300 2610 Avon t UBI ' Open 7 days want le> trade up for •. N,s ikl icycle, ~--:i-9'l6Z7 pe '· ~ / mo wish to expand Pref M2·l19'&6?H106 same OrOran"eComa owner identify br size, ~'""" 70051----------
Ph .&U·3485 or 837 6050 Beaut view apt on 7th nr_ couple or sngl woman, Free om ce space in ex MANUFACTURING JOr shopping ctr Pn nc spd, color & sen a1 no ••••••••••••••••••••••• ulO Body man. ex per'
ul S16-Sl7 George Wllhamson. Rltr child welcoml' 751·4996 change for telephone l'atenled Item only. Reply ad '794, Dai Date & lo<.'. lost. Call MEN WOMEN '+ ex pc r . d sander
M.>IS64 646 1671 aft5PM answenng & ltghttyp111g. t Unique piece of eqwp ly Pilot. PO. Box 1560. H B. Pohce Dept. pro-TRAIN FOR 842-~2 •----------1 •>AA ~"or64~·67l0 ment p roJ·ecl ed ne l Co6ta Mesa.l:a !rlti26 pertyofflcer.53S·S62l l"'•Tlb...IDl .... G -----Mewportleoch 3169 IUCHYEARLY Grad student wants rem .,........,.,., ..r ""ft~ " •Auto Mechanic. It
••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 hr. 2 ba & 3 br. 2 ba to r;hare oew 3 Br condo. $280.000 thls yr. Present Money to Loan 5025 LOST male lnsh Setter TWO WEEK CLASS terv1ew Mon·fo~ri Ack
•D .. 'UXE• duplex units w /OC'can Irv 1 ne. S 175. L1 nd a Modem 2 room 5Wtc, nr ocwner bunable Ito hand Ide ••••••••••••••••••••••• De<: 18th Slater & Euclid NATION· WI OE JOB Coast Garage, 412 Ne ""-OC Airport. oul.'l1de en an e r e o cat c vie. 968-6159 i'l..ACEM ~NT ,. H L Eutblulf 3 br. 2 ba view ~lep-. 10 bl·h Call 5.2·4171 try, u1r cood Parking Leverage w/29~ down ht, 2nd& 3rdT.D.'s ----------1 ASSISTANCE .. st wy aguna Sch
Lease lnrl spac master Debbie. d..iys 53! l0\2. spaces, swtable for <it· Ull 7 5 1-3741 LOAN::iAVAJLABLE Found· Beautiful Orange GOOD.IOR utomotivc.-
au1le. din rm & dbl l'ves~·4912 AVOID INCOMPAT!~LE torney, accountant or Cred11 notimportanl & While male rat :I OPPORTUNITlt;S New Ueta1I Shop o~
garu11<' Auto door SanClemtnte 38 76 ROOMMATES consultant Use of law BEER TAVERN 673-4883Drokcr Months Can't Keep HB AMERICAN help.
openl•r ... va1I P11oodl 1& ••••••••••••••••••••••• T~.,e~~1;';.~37 4 ll4k libraryposslble S255mo Costa Mesu [)36...4997 1 ARTE N 0 ER S Top wa1-tc~ paul. F.ni:m
rern•allon urea. u b? BR 1 BA 1. t b h URH 1mr wvesswor to mo or S25() wtlse. 44o0 NeLc;ovcr $2000. ~o. $CASH$ Stcarncr!'>, eng pa1oler:
(Inly No pell> ~'rom $36(). ~hopping. Av~ "'2,1~ $2~5· Out Of Findinq campus Dnve, NR. Call Ideal location. park ml( FOUND. small blk/Wh l SCHOOL buffers & Polishers. UI
81'>5 J\Jniitos Way 4117 :kr79 TilAT RIGIIT P t::RSON 919-0751btwn I1·7PM rront & rear. full k1tch1tn llOME OWN EHS borrow cat . fem. Vic· Golden 1104 E. 17th St., SA holst~ry ~hampooer·
Mana)!edhy "'-$Sb otL--' 1 t r r II atlowb11nkrales tocon· L antern. Dana P t. 834·1960 ''ran"da M"mt ''o r·-o:..... 3890 ~ .. e y MWUOftCJ Cannery V1lla"C, scact' nol rea u:a 100 IJ u . I d b 493.9479 check out . p1ck·UP & '" u u .. " _.... ... potential. owner anx solic ate e ls. pay taxes. Schools Coast To Coast livery. Apply at
••••••••••••••••••••••• Park Nwpt 38,. 21,ua. for office or small os1 ious! take u vacation, room FOUN C 2059 Harbor Bl. ('M 2hr Twnhse S32S. Tenms, furn twnhse. Chen e. ncss Approx ISO sqft Ull 2 addition. i.w1m pool, puy 0 : Dog, ockapoo. Conversatlonal Spanish. 645 1030
8332900d '"01673 673-2918or 646-480t 837-4 00 orr existing 2nd or unv re m . Call Mc N ally F rench or Knl(l111 h1---------PoOl.school &parkC'lose · ay..... eve ~ School, CM. to ldenU.fy. guaran teed m 20 lessons NOW
YOJ CAN AFFORD
NEWPORT BEACH
Park Newport
l,l,"XURY APT LIVING
C}vttlooktng Thr Wull'r
t-;n)ny Si~ 000 heJlth •pa. 1 ~w1mming poob. II
hl(hled <"ourts. mile~ ol
hlkl! trails pullinl( ~hut
flel10al'\h
Jr l !>lrom~U !J() mo
,\l!Ul 1&2 bdrm 11lc1ns
O 2 ~\Ory townhou,~s
Ell•c kllch 1•n'. palloi-
& ba lC'O nlt'l> I', pl!'..
draperies. par!.lng.
elev awn
Opt.Iona! maid !l<'f\ 1cl'
Ju•l north of r .• ~h10
l1'111nd at Jamt>orc\' S&n Jo.Qwn Hiiis Rt.I
f'ur t~rutn1t tnform.1llon
714/~· I 9CXJ
IA YROMT HOME
4 BR. 4 ba $2000 Mo)'Tly
STIPS TO IEACH
3AR.2ba .un f "25
:t 11n. 2 b.1 . unf $-100
associated
Yd for pct 5S9·S012 or are ocean fronl home layfT'Oftt Offices TEHHIS AM YOHE! P~E.CHAMICS ~3450 on one lo one basis ~4<UIO S275mo. Avail. 67~·8141 Pra~~~l~N~~~Jh~nc . HATION.ALIA ... k FOUND: lnshSetterfem. CaJl l714l~·J029
~lllbfwnilMd 494·69-ll Ex~. o re Spectacular I ess on s. r eµ a 1 r . l714t638-l954 approx I yr.old. Nolags. JobsW..tect. 7075
orUnfumthed 3900 w k lad lo h , 2 view or Newport Har b. & sportswear, eqwpment, -----VI c. Bush a r d and ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• ••• ••••• •••••••••••• or ing y s arc .,.,, S •-.... __.. T t w p v """"""" bdrm apt with snmc ocean . .-urn ; ecy .,. veryallracuvetenns! ~· nas am er, · .~T,1-NEED
TiiE EXClTlNG si4o mo Inc uUl. rd recpl. ser vices incl UBI 837·4200 DHdl 5035 LOST : Ma le Al askan Bi\BYSJ'TTlNG HELP
,ALM MtsA AP'TS, S4R--020tl Pnme Lldo VUlage loca· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~f ala mu te b lk /w ht. ONYOURSKJTRIP•
MINUn:sTONPT lion DB.I -El. TORO SECOHDTitUST h ea r t b r 0 k en . Responsible college slu
BCll NEWPORT Cr~11t. share U OO BUSINESSCNTR SS.000. PER MO DEED LOA.HS REWAR0' 497 2186 dent will babysat your
AUTO SALES
Excellent opportunil
(Or YOUllli: mun WI(
limited s ales exi>enen<"•
We w1l1 tra1n for the 1n
port car markel E·
rellent fnnge henefits
opportunity for future 1
high p,1y10j( field St
Dick &>ach lmport.c;, H
Dove SI . Newpo1 B.ich. 1&2 liR 3bd Condo tennis. pool, (714)675·4030 Real s harp. Catering SJO.OOO maximum. Com· ----·--·----1 children evenings &nd
rromi195 pvt. ba. S2<XI &12 3:>60, ~Sq ft Ne port Bl d operation expanding pclltJve rat~ for good Lest. Irish setter. male. help with housework In __ _ ,\c1ults.NoPelS (2131481·7030 l"'eal re· w lvl rast. tremendous Polen· nreditapplfAan•-. 1·11 ·77, So. end Laguna. exchan ge ror room .• ._ _______ _
&-ach 752 O<.x>O
AYON 1561 \lt>sa Or " 0 ice or re ai l1al nol yet reallied. '" ~ ""' Reward.4~137 board aod access to s k11• '~ lilk"' t;a~tor Nc11>port Share beautiful homt' on Complex adJ Cannery terms. MORIHS REALTY slopes dun ng days Call
llho 1 Lido Isle, ~our rc.!lt V1lla~e 673 0284 UBI 837·4 200 * "'-9"'-ao57.., $50 REWA RD for th e Conrue.837·9670 tnl+1"1 ulll 67S97-lS ---------"" ..._ '" h bo C Bl ~ 9860----i~ature. non smok 1011
3 ~ii:sR:!i. 7J!n ~ie~I FASt FOOD -------3---• ~[=~ ~~e~y 3lm~:1:s __ E_C_U_R_l _T_Y __ M_/\_N Build A lutfftff,
PRlVllWIHG amsuan lady to share Except loc & parking Costa Mesa LOANS 9 Lie. No. QHA 308. Last wtCa.llf. license. Clean. Without Cii'flncJ
2HD UHIT hst<. Lag Cyn urea ·137 Call <2l3I 268-0086 an s BUY FOR A.I ZndTO seen in Buena Park. GG. reliable. cxpr'd, looktnl( Up Your Ca A 0 EQUrPVALUf:• 50 Loans Santa Ana areas. Please for day shift employ R~crJobl the Beach HOUS8 Sa~~~n.rres r . !Ice lutiM11 Rental 4450 Owner going into new Fairest Terms since 1949 contact Glena or Al aft ment. G<S refs. s.51·6042. ---------1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• business venture, must Sottter Mtc). Co. 4PM. 714•640·2325 E d 1 / Let /\VO show you hu CoThnter~~. lrouf1!.,~~1><t11"rolt1} Junior Colle11e i.:irl wants NEWPORT BCH STORE Uquldale fast! 642·2 I 7 I 545·0611 p--....t. 5350 lxopoel ~ r&emroe r~ esr;. e"'k a tbo build & rcun your 014 ~ ' ~ J toshar<'anotherstud<'nts ~ \vonSt $270 Mo Ull 937 42oo -J ~ ~ u~inc:.:. ontrol yu1 good hf<' t p It Bo 111 1 • • • A.nno41nc:ernenh/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• homeowner, contractor. own hou~. own incorn •n..·amt!<l ""lllrl"" ;.ip ;i er1>on " ' .Jerry Wynn (Zl3)-t77 770I p----' / Ori k' bl ~ e......,. for work By hr or To f111cl out 11boul tl1 """' "' ... Pannmlo(,Ca 1114!1-756:> •LIQUORLICENSI''• .......__, n ang pro em . ~..--' •2 pools & rec ecnll'rs 700 SQ fo'l oft' ,ivl. Pac Orange Co. O~·S.al~ Lost & FoUncf Call Alcohol Helpline 'rroabrru. nF~rdmrys.w1r1011or111nn1gshs. ehallcn~lnA e<1rnin1t ,, •Pl1111h t·rpts &dr.a~s Ft:malt> rofJmmJle to Csl llwy . NcwPort Brh General ••••••••••••••••••••••• .24 hrsaday8J5.38JO '" · • Portunity Call 540·7041 •
•1\nd :.o muC'h more share hom\.' 111 L:igunu S200 mo. Coll Robbie "COCKTAILs .. Lmt & Found 5 100 PREGNANT? decks & . P. covcp,~ (•Xl Zemlh 7 L35!!.
!'Um \lacht>lt1r S230 Sul' 497· 1167 , 640 53tHI ~ U757 SACRIFICE; ••••••••••••••••••••••• . till' & bn ck work. Slcvc:l•--------Unfum t br S255 ----------1 Caring c onflde n t1a l 67J..S064 ----HURRY FOR 2 Bdrm. 2 bolh a111 llR Bui boa Island retail. MAKE OFFER '. LOST. Sm. brown Poodle. counseling & referr al ---------Babyslltcr. full l1m.
I T Call 848 ~ blwn 12 l or · rr name "Coco". Reward. Abort ion adopt1'on •-HoU!lec:4eanlng. reasona days, my home. Rer. re~ ES SELICTION · commcr<' or 0 ire llarvC213l2724249Col ' "' lt33Supenor 5-6pm space Off strel•t park Hunl'gHarb 840·1419 keepmg. bll'. rPl1al>lc. ref 's, 631 Olf~
Newport Beach mg Ap1>rox SOO SQ rt · Want to sell your Busi· Lost, Dec. JU, altered _A_PC_A_R_E ___ 54_7_·_2563_1 ~~!~~e · Aft 6 P M· Ba-l-1y-s-1l-lc_r_ro_r_m_y_2 k1\1
6 4W453 OHJc.Rental 4400 priv rt•st room Rltr . ness~ Use my 30 yrs ell male Beagle, choke SHAROllo...l 'S --------Ages 7 & 2. p/trmc 1
----------••••••••••••••••••••••• 644 2343 Mon to Fri, !I!\ penence. 751·1256 chain. Vic CdM beaches. * ..,. * (;dM. 615 6926, 631 O!llll
ltoon. 4000 Ston• $275 20'(t;O, ex· H D Ans's to "Eagle". OUTCALL MA.SSAGE Nursew/refs.
••••••••••••••••••••••• posurt! 65.000 <•ars daily ~r .. ot 09 Rewar d fo r r etu r 499--122A Lave .. 1n $200 BANKING
SIHplng rms $60 5105 mo 2334 Nv.pt Bl vd c M Franchise. E·Z help run 7141673·2352 Hohhett 963·7346 TELLER
All sso wk Share kit!· $1500 + mo. net Plu:. '11~E EXPERIENCE" "'X'"'' "f"' ... I -~ Pkn).( frntlbk. ~·A heal· h ,.. und y n I I h Adull motel '"losed SR Cl typ1sl·l6 yrs Hvy ,., .,..r pr .. u nPP v I hath Shown Mon.Sal ""~::-"',....."' lnit 2 rcl>trms, rpld, munyot 5ersto1nspeet o oun,.. ma e ns TV L' R'-T I l PR 60 WPM pt'rson, Mariners ~n · "onl} CJll 8 n lpm /',_ 675 7788 7 1-3741 Setter Brown leather c1rcwl .or cserva· e coun er ini?' & L n.in. 1 'II
R<'fll req'\1 5S6 OOS8 or ../Nt --• UNITED DUSI NF.SS collar. Irvine Ave, CM tioru.,645·3967 ~920 Ev/wknds Wc!!tchrf Or N B.
!1"48 59$4 '}--Machine shop for r~nt. INVESTMENTS S48 3087 Hefp Wanted 7100 Equal Op~r Emplo\<'I
ROO--MS-~-w-k_u_p_w-1l-h1 .1=.-:....-. 21" MonSiek1 lathe. etc 152S Mesa Verde Ur F. Lost Cockallel bird. gray *KAREN'S * ....................... hEAUTIClANS wanh
•
--------• k1tch"'. S37 so wk up Fnt. Valley 003·7010 Suite JOO.Costa Mesa yellow & oran1te. says OUTCAl.L MASSAGE AOVERTISlNG m· le o r lh
-
---------_a_Pt5 __ 54f!l>75.5 _____ ,__________ UBI Open1days ChJco.loslln FVl/8 Sl 8PM·2A M 83111780 N U Ad Agency seeks w~th ot~l ec~;e~\l.1 ;
- -lnduatrialRental 4'500 AMUSMENTCTR reward.Call962·19l5. ...IORTIOM paisle·up. p roduction Westcurr lla1r f'ash1on
Bil '.,I.. ". '• '(1(1«;
J(,. ... • 1lt • • • •
Spac to us n.:w 2 & Room· Laguna Bch, pvt •1 MO FREE RENT • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ba ,.... G ""' per.IOn. 20+ Hrs/wk al 1701 Wcsklif( Dr N J Bd rm~. 2 bath units entrance. cooklnl{. nr l 2·3 Rm offices rrom 1000 SQ rt.29S5 B&C Ran· tung .,..ges, amcs. REWARD Coun.<1ehng & Referral S3 50/h r. Call Ms Sink. 642 6&7 • acr0&s from ocennfront lOwn 497·2014 SUS pe r m o Ad j . dolph St. C M $2811 mo all E·Z run & run. Netting LOST While Whippet Prel( test 11vail. wknd5 54().{)141
m·w r1ty recreational de -------• Alrporte Hotel No lease 646-~.000. yr. w /no promo· w/2 bnndlespota615-366l 24 HrHelphneM7·9495 ---------IEAUTYOrR
velopmcnt tmml'd oe Nwp Bch G u~l hsl'. IRr. req IS33-bT11.noon __ 21_30_o_r6_7_~_·37_ou ___ tealonlt.ro$1rd9e,sootallsfull pnee. _o_r_638-6427 _______ ... -.-:s::.,-::l::R::l=T=-u~A-:L-:R::-::E:-:A-:D::E::R::-1---------·I Need 12> Asslslant.s. It
c11pancy. Fa milies ba . no k llt'h $135 F o r I 1400 rt r Atflllate I R f 5 e · sq Ull 751-3741 FOUlld M Iris h Seite r. Vic Fully Licensed work for eolorist. & I t 1Jet:1 accepted. ~ up. tat/ ast. t• s 646·2193 60• PH SQ FT warehoU&c office + 4000 r Jlrb •-M V d R Tax Shelt<'r work for lityllst. F lllm•
61S-491 1 Brkr ____ -JG-lr-1 11•udent or em-p-ly-.d-. 1611 WESTCLtFF·NB sqfl storage yards In---------o r "' esa er e l8155EICamlno cal Rlchurd Ouul\ctte Sa.Im • \CT c~1 ..,.,.., Irvine lnduslr1'"I com · ,._. 0.r. 64s-3400 or 556·6639 San Clcmenle. For appt ftt .&...JL.~Lf " l.1 00 ISL E WATER no !'lmokcor dn nk. BtO 1 ........ ........, plcx. Jncl'ng k;y lock, $27;,..-..000.GH. Luune 411'i·9034 , 4927296 1nlm~p <lOO Newport Ctr Dr
fo'KONT 3 Ur. $6SO mo furn N.R. Pool use $l20 lff N IJ. Lease. 673-8886 (;.till6'4-4053. 150 I Wffk Of'. gasoline pumps & vchl· 2 Yr. new. Mission Viejo. FOUND, 1rlsh Setter . MASSAGE ------
---__ =rtFinanclalCtr cle washrack. National Onlyal 30%of potcnu al male. 115/77. Vic Bur· ruLL ORl'ARTTIM I:: BOAT
OCF.AN Vl'. )'rly 2 Ar 1 Voclltfolt Retttal1 4250 Offlc. Space Svc. Co. 640-8250 $40,000. yr. net.. now F.·Z roughs Corp .. Jeronimo. RGURE MODELS MAN\.ll"ACTUR 1-:Jl
dplx. patm & ~ arrt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call on Site Menatter lndustrinl llnlt 7.oned Don't miss. Mission Viejo. 586-6722 ESCORTS We are now oppolnllng N ~ .i-; l> s Too LI N 1 ~O m11 Ii" 6il!O nr Blr.AEl\RLAKEFRONT t?Hl6423lllexl2AG Ull 751·3741 eves dlslr\b\.itors for ramous SANDF.RS f'i42l639 Cabins 17141 &16·TIOl forFlberl(lllsswork. ---------1 OUTCALLOHLY name brand gum & Apphcal1<>"3 now l>cin
h b 4~·9721or839·~173. If You Need A Staffed & ___ &i_~_._19_::io ___ 1 *LIQUOR• FOUND· Sml black dog, 631·3811 breath minls fe11turin11 ucc<'plcd Apply •
3 h~~ ~:re~c~~!l d:r~ Siu It, while llS hert' I Br -r'H'E'l'~~ ~g~~ I ~~ ·c~~.F~!~ypt':;c~il1~ * LICENSE* -:~: i:n::~:~~~~~:y _n_E_LA_X-JN_G_M_~_S_A_G_E_ rA~G L~~ '!a~ :e~~ ~nfcso~l ~ AC~l~1• ~;;
.:ar, nr ocean. f42.5 491 & lof\. buch penlhsc full}' SU.ITE Rent Includes ~C.M. loc6"13.1417 ORANGE COUNTY City. 898-1144 8obJames·Uc Masseur your present job und Doore Ave. Santa An.
River Rd 61i.s101 ~wp'd wk/undnreal ,,~~ riume recept .. phone & OFF·SALE l.-OST 2 wht Samoyed __ o_u_tc~a_l_la_9_·9-'-.-•IM_-5_1_1_1 _ start p1Ume & expano lo 1NO PllONECALLS>
Westcllffs new 2Br. 2Ba. aysor w e s.call ~o mall service. ut ll & l200 s q .rt. M·l spac:e OENERAL''CLEAN". dogs.llgemale,l )'rold •PALM READER• ~~.tg:~t!:'~!rJi~Yg~oudned
frpk. refng. ice maker. 8682110· Janitorial. Secy's & ofc wtrront ore. lge rear Lo'tlltestPY'tc:.ln trem.4mosold.548-M44 SlOreadin&fOT SlO noorofth\Jmulll mllllon :::~~·~r/P~t~:rn~
wnr1dryr. pool. udlts llror41r equip avail. Newport door. 223 Phase SIBS. T 1~ 500 Pa:it.preaeot~future $$ induatry We furnlJh pets S385 mo 675~ Center.M0-~70 m o . Un it 10. &29 own -•t LOST:Slamese mati.col· LJ dub. Sa l •r y rom Rcnul unfurnished Terminal Way. :M().~710 HARVEY <21.31 272-4249 lar w/nomc tag "Kung ___ c_l2_13_>_54_·_l350 __ •1 all retail outlets . To m ensurate w 1expe1
3 Br. 2 be. new pelnl &
a-pta. \., blk bay & bch.
MOOyrly l11e.&44 ll03
wanted by tamJly of' & Prime loc:aUon In Hunt da)oa. 646--068• eves Col. Fu ... Vic Mias Viejo, ir.vOTIC 4 IRLS quality you muat have tlarbor an.oa. Repty 1
am. obedient p0odle. I n gt o n B e a c h o o ----------1---Trabueo &: Lo3 All&<>s. lliA w auto. a raw l\OVMI spnrt Claasll\ed nd no 814. r H.B. area. pnifer hO\lle Brookhurst, 800 squa re h• 4510 ~tab. Boutique. Prime ~ Massage&:Modellng time and $4000 ~Hh In · Dally Pilot. PO Box I~
or Condo. COO to 12'1~. feet. Slngle, garden lype ••••••••••••• •••••••••• N.B. loc. SJ0.000. + iov Out.call Only 542·3169 veat.ment. 1''or more In Ca&ta Mesa, Calif. 92S2r.
4 Br & den. 2 ba. sun deck, ~79evH. st«o or offk~ Good ell· Smsll bosl & lrallen. ren· 64()..1232 or644-l7Meves. SSOO REWARD fom\llt.lon write to Dia 111~ to bdi. Fret! cable s;:e. asshined purk tel spaC'e. tJ.00 per foot. .--..-for jeweley 1tolcn. from L l K E T 0 M E ET tributor Dlvlaloe P.O.
1VSS25yrly.145-4le6. Lake Tab ou Inclin e Call Mr. Plummer Limit tcn~th 22·. 1819 '-•nSftWAHTID Baysjde Dr add rc11. PE OPL E. PLAY 8olls.18,8ru .CA 92Ql IOYSAMDGIRLS -------• VlUa1e. 2 Br 2 Ba Condo .,... M c u <>~ Active womnn lntcrated J "W"'t Ad N 808 CARDS• New dupl.lcate p L"' •s.,.. IN c• u o"" t o 1 "I I 1.100 ISLF. BAVFRONT Alpi c. compl tum, lnd v• onrovta v•. "'· ~ In a new arn gallery. o"::i; pjj0t P.O~.B<>~ be1d1tcstudloorrcrs2da1· PHON,.ENUMBER. "' ~c h81lc~~~ ~;~ 1
With ftpectacular view. lioen1 Sauna, Jacuul, DB.UXIOfftCIS Mgrorca1IS48'8627 Loe. Newport Beach. In 1560,Cotlln McsaCa. ly aetelons. Sr. ClllzcnAl•--------1 Laguno Beach Must b
2Rr. 289, will decorate to "'" ahuute to aid area. COmmJ & Inda ti 1pacca Storllgc Garage. $30. 1959 vmment" bW1intu exp piny for $1.00 on Thurs et at least 10 ye-ors olt'
flu.It tcnont. t or 2 )'r A••ll wknd~. wk\)' ' 200 to 2000 1q I\ Al tow Ma p I c Ave. C M . prer. Phone Mr Smith 1-·ou N o : l ·4. m a I c ll U:ssona also offrred. Animal Hoapltnl Phone 642·4321, aik re
leue. $G1S mo. <7 U > moothly.7l4·&47~S8 u JS<1q.l\.Lal(Nl(lutl" Manager In apt S PU: MonfH2,67S.3080 Cblh u a buM , flo ppy O R A N O E COAST IA.THltl·IRUSHIER Circulallon.
673.1233 ...,.toSIMre 4300 Mh 11lon Viejo u .. a . ~ BuslncA for u tc : Dl'Cllll cared, rolle r tag. Irv BRJOOE CLUB. ld E. f'WIUme G«·S460 -----
WESTCLJFF 2 br. 2 ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~w~~ .. ~~.J l> J"rwy ....... W..t.d 4600 shos>. ltd location 16.500 552'1732 l9lhSt..C.M. $411.-330~ ASSIMILll.5 IOYS AMD GIRLS
ashwshr. Adultic. oo Ptt•· Fem Comp! furn. nice ' ....................... 963-5ll2 ClauUlcd od11 sell bl~ ••HM Girt. Ex~r'd. lo wo rk on ~i!!1~n E~~~o ;0~~ ~~
1290 Inquire 110 T\ultJn loc, pvt Br tba,CdM380tol050aqn Cptt,Wkoa. cpl. 2,klda. pel.Trade)'ourold slldffor Items. small llcma 0 Would Hi• lo meet smallasscmbl.y line.C11l monytelllnaaublc:ni
Wc11tclr ff Vr l\pt l8 "1'70+-.. uall &.i2 l~; drp~. A t C. Janitor. wanUBrbMC.M tos.isc> ne w good ies with a any Item . Juat colt &tntlcmon'rordayoren Mr. Early, Wlnfl•ld uonaanorachool. f;'ot ll ~mt ~ ~~~~~MM1~ ~~1~1 aft ~ C1~med~a~d~.~~~~~8~~~=·=~='=~====~~-~=='~~~====~-~===~-·=·=ln=c=·=~~~~~~~·~~=L~==tJ:~=·~c~a~ll~~~~J~
...................... -.......... .,,.. ... ~. #It>. ___ ,_ ....... -·-....... _ ........... --·--· .___...._ ...........
. . .
De DAILY PILOT Friday.January 14. 19n HtlpW•tltd 7100,.W,W•hd 7100 .... Wonted 7 100 ~r.~~~ ..... ?!~~ ~~.~·~.~ ..... ~!.~~~~~!:~ ..... ?!.~~I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• UT()~ .....,w...... 7100twpWGlllhd 7100 HetpWClll!hd 1 100 ~-... ........ ~ RfCEPTIOHIST SALESLADY SECRET•••AL RETAILCL£RKS
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• · NB law firm 1eq·s In Perm.into\ P 1Tlme Gen .. r.11 offll'• Wooled Opportunltlt's
IOYSAHD GIRLS lmmed opening ror lYPf! KIL ESTATE 1 tl!lllgent. ver11alile Womens Rudy Weor r'HpooslblUUn 0 1v1111on ror advan<'em nt avail Exper & lnexper setting 4' pasteup. Exper RUt .,erson to handle rettp l.:inz 644-44JJ saJes((ept. ~n.1np ln Costa Meaa. btr::'t~!s ~~~ ~~~ Satl Maken. only llluat be ablt! to CONDO CO NVERSION \Jon & van~ ore duucs , , ROSAN . lNC Anaheim, Garden Grove
S40 per week selling sub &U 7238 ~~a~c J:mrnuJ::t~~!~ lncll.ldlng phones, typlng. ~1.r'EPl<ESF.NTJ\TIVE 2901 W Coa!>t Hwy. NB &c Wtstmaosw
serfpt.IOM to the Dally FACTORY WORKERS Trader 2710 So Grund, SPECIALIST ~~·:n:!~ ~~~~~Jc~,:: 1-;xpenencoo ln'bwldinf Equal Oppor Employer u2._.1_1_0_2 __ _ !:,!!ov~dedTraNn1>spd°..r,,t: .. tr11~~ Ski Mrg looking for Sant11All117513034 IC you have substant1"aJ exn...r1ence m bc·nr/1tb Send re-um(' lo dlstnbuttonG~f bood~foo Secretary. must be neut V1'..iERINARYRECEPT ..-~ • ~ • ~w hardwork1 nR factory -Low CorporJllon. 610 ll'll1Kt11Jllet. roun h r Gd typing, h11ndwnUn1o1 t'ttlme. 11ome wltoda or collecl1ng Phone worke~ w1lllng to grow a.JI phases of condo conversion and are Newport n r Dr Me opportunity with aul or & ten key udd machine Mu.'ll huv" min ol 11 n>«HS ~9712 with new compt!l'IY IHSURAHCE/Scty prepared lo becom e Vice Preside nt of 1220 Ncw~rt ~a~h CJ 01 world fumt' Contutl &kills 2030 hr!I per wk cxpcrmvrlennaryhosp
Some Jobs ror uper f'ire &Ca:cuulty Ai:eO<'Y 8 dynam ic. expanding company with ~ Mr Wnl!ht ,64)!M9'l $3 $4 dcp. on cxper 8ni;l ol Ve terinary
I USI OY ~!~v~!!:~tMn:,~~ ·w~~. Ro~~~~1n1::,.~~ee s~tacular g r o wth in the in vestm e nt SEAMSTRESS S49-3.144. anytlmc CUnac. 3713 S. Brtatol.
Heod ~ ,...,. t"r1 . blwn IH2 only. IKJS Corona Del M11r fteld (Salary & profit sh aring), Write Restauran~oob For Swhn11ker. exper"d SEC'Y/BKPR Santa Ana. 979 3080
tor banquet dept Must Whittler, Bldg B·l:l. 673·3850 Don B erm p ·d t QUAI L prcf'd, but will triun Waitress FoodtCockta1t. apeAk Spamsh&Enghsh Costa. Mesa or ca ll a n , r es1 e n • Waiten&WaitffHM n ghlperson Mus t he a Typing; huvy bkpg .. AJ>plyart4pm.Sld's81uc
Only experienced net>d 6468244 P LACE P R OPER T I ES, 1400 Quail r /time Work wknds. Per (er 11 0 n 1 st & a nswer,11. phones. for Beet. 107 21st Pl. N.D. apply. Apply IO person Insurance orrtce !Ft Street. Newport Beach. Apµly In person. Wed· hardworking. Call for Reul !'.slate lnvs mt. ---------
9am to 5prn Mon lhru Gar<lcn1ng1Ma 1nh:nunce. Vly), needs part llOH! Thurs .. 1011m-3pm, 1801 appt Gn.2140 firm. Hunl. llch . salary WAllHOUSE
F'rl. Afrporter Inn Hotel, Full lime. NpB<'h Xlnt Secretary. Prefer s r\ ~~~...._._. BuysldeDr.CdM comm. w/exp. Cull Scott Vel\lcleMillnlcnance,
111700 MacA rthur Blvd, work'g cond. Musi l>e ex lied. mature person. Wiii SECRUARIES al: 963-4567 Dellvtirle!I, assem ble
lrvtne per hard worker & h:ive tram. 963-5688 art. 3 s>rn MM.. W CMhd 7 I 00,H..&.. w -..a.......1 7 1 OO Service Stal ion Allen· drapery hardware. Good refs. Call Robert Gnm-Moo-Fn. ....,.. .....,. _._ RETAIL $700 ~szo 000 yr d I I d heav CA FETERIA Salads. mlck. 642.5735 (bet 1oam ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • danl. exper'd Day & r v ng recor • Y
l\ h F 6 l .... Sua• .... CE ---------.._..,... Manyco·sNeed Eves.Full&p/umc Ap· llrtlnii Nonsmoker. 1 on t r u r
1
a rn & I tam only l " """"" •w•~•·n---~------~ YOU TODAY' ply, Shell Station. ITth & Start S3 hr + overtime 2
30pm Call 5'10 31\04 GHOUP HEALTH R.l MANAGEMENT.· F:mployf•rs Pay All Fees ltvme. NB Interviews Sal 8·12. App CASHIER ~ARDEHER CLAIMS EXAMINER BOY'S WEAR Ut Remdeni Agency ly 1n person, 3195 D F Perm pos1l1on Older Expr· Al least l yr 4-020 Barch Sl. Sle 104 SHEET MET AL Airport Loop Ori ve.
Growth"c'Jllome puny person 1Jref'd A1>1>I Y in Salary open. Ph S49·l767 Vice P r esid ent opening exists for ag-SAUS/MGR/IUYER New~rt Beach 833-8l90 Weld.mg & wood s hop ex· Costa Mesa.
u norson, no phone calls g r ess1·ve Apartm ent Man!lt*"em en t pro-c I r A t/e>·t b '65 -----
5 Locatmns Over 20 Pieo'iu. 7am 3 pm . fession a l. Must have mMaged over AT EASE in Newport o or .. pp ""'" per helpful Pleast-apP·wAREHOUSE MAIL
WeTram Newporlcr Inn. 1107 IRVIHE UHIFIED 2000 unl·ts. be ready lo move up to Center. Newport Beath. Secretary/Receptionist & ly .. 2031 S. E. Main St• CLERK & Women's Ap·
MelroCarWash Jamboree Rd. NB As k SCHOOL DISTRICT has an opportunity open Dental Assistant (or Irvine ~2901· pa re l Ols trl but or
2950 Harbor Bl.C M for Clay El!Js EOE. Accepting apphcatu,ns Preside n cy of comp any q uickJy and Cor someone with ab1hly N ew po r l 8 e a c b Sb1pp1ng & Rece1v1ng FtUme. 979-t~
CLERKS
INVENTORY
G _....__ ... _._ ror Food Ser v ac1. have a following . Salary plus p rofit in Sales & Management Orthodontisl.642·461L clerk. Fl.Ill lime Exper Women.
25
& older to ~ ·~· Subsl1lutes, On Call s h aring. Our statf knows of this ad . Our present boy's section nee Small Mfg hnn in
645585Saft6pm h d $3 lO S ubm1·t r esume to·. Ad *812, Daily managertbuyeris.sadto SECRETARYP/T : work for llousecleanlng basis. 2·6 rs a ay, " !.!:'~Call Mr. Riley svs. Top s. gd hrs G"""""ERAL OFFICE hr Apply Pe r sonnel Pilot. P .O . Box 1560, C.M .. Ca. 92626 ~yb, leavmyg th.ids harea In CaS3 75 Per hr
93
9am
1
1pm. "'J"V<IOU ~ '"" Services, 29-11 Allon Ave. r e ruary. ou ave to p1strano 4 -257 , ________ _
Developer needs sta~ Irvine. ~..__,_......__~ love kids. love selbng, SECRETARY E pe 'd STATIONERY Store In X·RAYTECHNOLOGIST 1 Day Assignments
Jan 18. 6AM lo2PM
S2.SO Per hour
CALLTOOA\'1
pleasant person w/g Equal Oppor Employer love manaiung, & have · x r · CdM. needs Saleslady. (Femalel. Needed for
lelephone voice & frontl~~~~~~~~~jH<lpW-.cl 7100 ........... w-.1......1 71 OO abibty tor desire I lO buy Personable. occur.ale F/llme, 5 days Xlnl radiology orrlcl' located
ore appear ance OC.1. ·~ ._.W'U boy'swear:&you'dhave typist Some dictation. work.tngconds .. Especial· lnN.B Must"-ARRT •· u .. "''"5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• ••• •• •• h -. h h Newport area 673 "733 "" "' Airport area ,,..., ""7V _. _ lo.,., a ard worker w o · ""' ly (u~e cllentele. Ph. CRT 642.6464 ror appt.
LAMIMATORS NURSES AIDES P/T O~ likes being with other SECRETARY Francis-Orr, 67~·1010 for1----'·----~-~o~ o ffi c e • GIRL FRIDAY Westsail Corp. has 1m Exper.pref"d W11ltraln BEELI NE Fashions hani workers. & you'd ADMIHASSISTAMT appt.. Merc'-'dise
l d Xlnl ty111sl. good teleph me d . vacancies for if nee. Par k Superior needs Stylists 10 this have lo love working for SI'OCK ROOM CLERK ••••••••••••••••••••••• n o ver o a 1>ersonality Non· molders &touch·up peo· Conv . Hos p . 144 5 area.Nodehvenng,eorn the greatest customers To $850, s mall plant, a..u-.. 1005 !\/ ,moker Call for in · pie w/at least I yr ex· Su 0 A e N B cJ-·'"-for yourfama·ly+ in the world . U lhat·s Irvine Need good or· Mustwork wknds.Crown ._ .. ...,... .. ~ pen r v · · · ""'....... ''··-'ware. 3107 E. Coast •••••••••••••••••••••• • 557-0 061 tl•rvlcw, 556·6981 $135 penence in boats. Apply profit checks. Car & you, then send a resume, gamzulion, typing, SH, cu.u"
Jntcrv1ewllrs9J30 WK loslort to lhe Security Guard. Nurscs i\jde ll·7Country phone nee. Call for in· (Pleasedon'tcnll)lo: Utebkpng,knowledgeor Hwy,Corona del Mar. Wonderland
• ..;:n:.:;23;.;B;;.ir~th~Sl~.~N;.l;,J_.j•-•-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.;;;;~~.-~.---.1, 275 McCormick. Costa Club Conv. Home. Call tervw appl. 963·7470 or AJ rll'( purchasing & shippini; . •
M 549·3061. Santa Ana. ·uw procedures. Supervise Supplement your income. Of Antiques! ~ -GIRL FRIDAY esa. ---------1...:530-=.;5663:::::::·______ 44 FCllllioft l"-d production. Send resume Exec. nds part .!lme As· HUG E w a re ho us c Companion, middle ageli NURSES AIDES/ to box Ad No. 807. Daily so. Sal. open 645 U82 crammed with over 500
lady. alert 8pm tollum & GEHERAL OFftCE Lie. lndscp architect. ORDBUES Real Estate Sales HeCWai'f*f.ri
92
..
66
ac
0
h Pilot. PO. Box 1560, TELEPHONE from your music boxes, nlckelo·
aU day Sal/Sun to sit Full lime Permanent Primary bckgrnd In de· Day Shill. Exper 'd. GET INTO CostaMesa,Ca.92626 OWNllOMEoHenngour deon pianos, circus or·
wfsemi mvalid Room. pos1t1on. Exper necess sign development & pro. Bayview Conv Hospital. Affft: Miss MIU... business service. No sell· gans. w a II c locks.
hm &$200mo 642327
fi Typmg,add1ngmachme. ject managdemRoenl. c7on· 2055 Thunn Ave. C.M. REAi.ESTATE I~~~~~~~~~ E mg.Noexpnec.Callcol· grandfather clocks,
COMPANION 1Dayl1mc> Ille boolckeeping, s h tact Richar y, 1 14 ' 642·3505. •Freelicensetraining I· Secretary/ xec lect. (2131532·2104 rasclnatinganllques. ror Alderly womun Lite helpful Must have ex 4~n"653610. E I ---------t •Freesaleslraining WillamFowcett Over Sl.000.000 Wort.h "' cc 11 e n l le I e "h o n e ..,..ua ppor mp oyer RETAlL SALES in Mis· "'.L...~..-... TELLSt ~--'can lnlernaUonal hskpg & meals 5 dy wk , " •Right start program "'"'"..-"--=ii "''""" CdM loc I 'rd onC' who J>Cl'l>Onallty Salary open lJVE IN for Elderly Cou Nursing *Earn wtule you learn s lo n V 1 e Jo & Sa n Is Hlnng PIX OPERA TOR Galleries. l802·T Keuer·
drt\•es. somt• r"Cpr PhoncForApPomlment pie. Some Housework. NH •NationwideAdvts'g Clemenle.Approx20hrs Apersonwhohas1l "all Work in friendly at· ing St .. Irvine . Tel. w/elderly rcq 768·0l45 l.letween8 JOAM &4PM prepanng meals. prac R 6 •National Reio service per week. No exper nee together" & wants to do mospbere. Co.mpeutave 7~·1777. Open Wed lhru
ror 1ntcrv1cw appt COMPUUTE \Jcal nursmg ex pr de· •Guar. Sales progTam Must be avail between more w/her hfe William salary & benerlts. Ex· Sal. 9 AM lo4 PM. Visit!
CORPORATIOH sirable. Living quarters •Cholceofprograms 10A M·7PM. Apply 3t Fawcett needs an Exec. per"d only. Call Person COOK. exper '" huffct 7ll W 17lh Street furn. medical. Pb. ).11 :3 ICU ** JOIM ** Fot.o-Mat Corp. 768-4171 Secret ary. One who nel. 645·5333 for appt . PUIUCAUCTIOM
type service . 1s rcqwred Building F-l2 545-2572 RH $6l or492·3950 knows how to make Bank of Newport. MANY FJNE ITEMS OP
for well known & unique Costa Mesa ---------• 3·1 l ·.30 MED"".. The Fastesf GrowillcJ RUllE.B •RESS things happen. Outgoing EquaJOppor Employer ESTATE J E WELRY, 1.-stabllshmenl Apply al 64r 1501 LUMBER Loe lumber yd. "-" 0...,.Co.Hetworil '""" personahly Good skills,1-.......:..... _ _.:..;. __ """"--"--ART OBJECT~_ AN·
Sabasl1ans We"I 140 ~ F ttime pref incl mosl The HOftle Sellers O'fl.ATOR writing ab1hly helpful. TIQUES, FINE l"URN .
Averuta Pt<'O, S.in Clrm 1----~~·-•_-_•_•_•_-t_ wknd.'> Saw exp Gddnv· AIDE ~2 2nd Shift. Co. bene. Will Super exciting, agency Ta1.IR ETC. PHONE FOR IN
aft!PM 01 Girl Office S.S75 per ing rec. Call for appt 1~~~C~·~7~5~2-~5~l~S~l~~f lraln. 962·6648. betwn environment, Newport FO & BROCHURE . mo. Mus t have some 549-3073. 1. 9am-4pm. Beach.. Please call only MEW ACCOUMTS 645-2200 Cook.Ex.,.,-secretarial exper. Type1---------r ).11 :305 AFF REALESTATE --"""'"-------! belwn lhehrsoC3&5pm. P/lime. Perm. Typ1ng 1---M-h----1-Lunch ordmner mm 60 wpm. Some sh or LVH 3·11 :30 LescoullesNurses Saleslady.women's wear Ask for Pat for intervw req 'd. Wiii consider Antq a ogany van ty.
Needed a t f' o Pu I Jr s P e e d w r i l i n g . Charge Nurse & Medic a. Rejl1stry SELL HOMES Mus t be ex per. d & Appts scheduled 4-5pm trainee. Call ror a ppt. Best offer. Call 646-5613
Walerfronl restaurant Everythmi: rrom recep· lion, F /lime. Apply . 351 llospilal Rd, Ste 119 mature. Approx. 25 hrs dally (7l4)83J.-0888. Mutual Savings & Loan. ,_aft_4....;.p_m_. _____ _
Call rorappl 640 5123 t1on lf> order taking. Par k Superior, 1445 Newport Beach LEARN wk. Call 963·750J ----------Joan Marselle, 493·5651.
_D_utr_y_·s_ttestaurant California T ·Shlrls, Su pen or Ave, N 8 &U-995Sor5"0-99S4. SECRET"'RY 570 Camino de Estrella.
646·1787 3sk for Evon. 642·2410 ~ San Clem. Or Bill Kull, coo1<s c2 t Investment Sales SALES. uusy growing N.B. 1aw 67~10. 2867 E. coast
Days or evenmi.ts Apply GUARDS omce/Cuslomer Ser v. ()peningsexlslin Oronge MANAGEMENT firm seeks sec'y w 1 Hwy, CdM. Equal Oppor 1---------
1n person. Beer master Full & P/Ume. El Toro & MACHINIST Person Many benefits. and Newport Beach for ASSISTANT MGRS superior skiJts. High ac-Employer. AnUque English Side . Restaurant. 30\0 Harbor Lag Och areas. Car & Equal ()ppr. Employer E x P e r i e n c e d We need (3) sharp guys curacy, neatness & or.1---.:.--=-------Boards $180. & $120.
Blvd.Costa Mesa phone nee. Uniforms Good genera l bac k · Slavick's Jewelers. Cati Salespersons Interested w/at least l yr exper. In ganliation necess. Legal Chinese Chest. SUO.
Coob. Exper breakfast & Cum Please phone for ground. Set·up & operate Bill Munson for appl in Investments. We sell sales & mgmt or men's exper. pre('d, but not TYPIST 675-0SSS I h ,. 1 appt Mr n...vcr, '7l<\) variety of machines in· 644-l380 and 118. l $3 lo-. milllon sportswear & clothing. nee. Xlnl bene. Send re· P/timeperm. N.8 . Legal
UJlC nPP y in person. ..,.,.. \ eluding lurrel lathe. -ca11 ror appt & interview sume to· Law Corpora· or esc.row exper pref'd. Gtmdfather Clock See Gabby all 3 JOpm. !$_s_m_i ______ 1 verticle & hon zonl al Pcstdnq AH..clonls dollars per month. SaJes Mon lhru Fri 9am·5pm, lion. 610 Newport Ctr Dr, Mall resume to: PO Box Circa 1900 Oak case
Beach House Inn, 619 mills. punch presses Fl.IU or p/lJme. Must be quadrupled last year 54G-4.500 Ste 1220, Newport Beach, 1991, Newport Beach. Ca wJcarvlng. 6' Tall. S635. Sleepy Hollow Ln Lag GUARDS Small precisjoo "&rls, 18. Day or ru"hl Apply. Ptesl.lgJous offices, 60 lo THE LOOK Ca 92660 ,..,.,..., 642-8845 !kb Costa MHG ., 0 70 to 100 % commission,_________ · .......... smallshop.Daysonly. 353 E . Coast Hwy, spht,videoandpersonal COUNTER GIRL. part Permanent. FUii & Part STAC O SW fTCH, Newport Beach betwn tr8Uling. Write to Don
tune. exper Appl~ Cap llme Phone & transp re· IHC. ~pm.675-86ll Ber man. Pr esident,
\aUl Mike's f1<1h 1-'ry 815 q 'd Re tired welcome 1139BakerCosta Mesa •ax ... _ t-Quail Place Properties,
W 19th St C: M Call 546-0274. ofc hrs l0.2. S49-304 I .--. ~. 1400 Quail St .. Suite 135,
CIOMdWednesday. Equatn-porEmployer P /T , eves, Includes N----Beacb Callr COUNTER & COOK Pt vv wknds Paid while tram· .. -.,.... • • ·
time. mornini:. ofter GUAADS WANTED lng.t;46..8000EOE Real ~late Salesman
noon. eves i\pply Tues P/tame wknd5 lrvme & •!:'b:"rn""-r rator• •ax ... _ t~ Opr IMDUST'LPROPHn J 4P M Mac Donalds . Anaheim Age 21 & over -11-vt11 .-""'°....,..,,
l681!6Bearh81vd.H B Matur e m en prer'd. Will tram. S Mfg Co Exper'r pr ef'd. Will Uc'dsalesman.Moreac·
----Uniforms rurn. Car & Call 631·3600 tram. All shifts avail. SA Uvily than our present O.U•ery /.Wwtpapff Phon e n e c A P? I y•---MTEH--AH-C_E_M_A_M-1 area. Call belwn 10am. stall can handle.
rermanenlpartllmeJOb Universal Protec\lon MAI . 2pm,558-3711. ~Oy.Me~'l~i deUvenngearly morning Service, 1226 W Sth St .. Plumbing. minor re
LA Times to homes m Santa Ana. Interview pairs. painting. P (rlme. PEOPLE PERSON
1rvtne1NA arl!as Must M-t· 10 30-noon & Applympersonooly. No Exec needs p/lime as·
be reliable & have depen· 1 3CH JOpm calls. Ali Baba Motel. soc. in whsle supply. Ful·
dable transporlJl1on. · 2250Nwpt81.CM. lycopitallied.673·2223.
Salary~ mo 546 0235 HOU S E K E E P E R MAINTENANCE MAM
OELIVERVMM~ for ear LIVE-IN Laguna Hiiis area.
ly momm11 l. ,\ Time:. Must have local refs & Retired service man pre·
route No collt•cttnft 212 11ood drl vlng record. !'d. Phone Mon betwn
llrada1ly ~4-'111 Smallfam1ly,pvtroom& 10-12.~3321
Dewtal Auistant l>ulh Mamlen.ance & Cleaning nc-~ed for 'cry busy 644 8435 or 833·9'10 Person for pre-school. 4
1troop 11pec11alty prarll<'" Hrs per day ~
~ <>ppor for nitht 111rl Hou,ekeeper live an 2 MAT u R E w O M AN
Onlyc-xper"dn(!(_•dapply S<'hla11ech.ldm Bch tise. p /tlme to welcome
!"on s m oker C all 11al SlOO wk +rm & newcomers & contact 644~ board Call 847·8567 men:hants. Flex.Ible hrs
Housekeeper wanted: Need car. lite typing
PHONE SALES
Phone Sales people.
male or remale. 16 to 65
years ofllge Guaranteed
wal(es or comm15slons.
250 Eas t l7th Slr eel,
Suite O. Costa Mesa.
between 5:00 & 8:30 p.m.
646-4223.
Equal Opportunity Employer Ue11UI /\ssist Cha1rs1de
Exf>"r or profess school
646-3.S.15
Competent. eoergeuc _547_·3005 ______ -l
woman for housework & MECHANICS ---------•
some b•bysltUng 5 days, Recent eitpcr. Apply PHOHE DEMI' AL ASST 7 JO am to 11 30 am. $200 Shell Station. m b & SOUCITOIS
CHAllSIDE ::._2:,r:: smoklns. CaU lrvine. Nwpt. Bc.h. Easy pleasant evening
Exper'd only. Short worll work 4·9 Mon.Fri. Need 5
RECEVING
INSPECTION
S ma ll e l ectro
m ech ani cal s witch
manufacturer has Im·
med. openings in receiv·
ing 4: precision lnspec·
tion requiring proficient
use of precision measur
Ing instruments. Work·
i ng knowledge or
dlmensJonal tolerancing
of spec Yl4.S req'd ln
precision inspection &
desirable in receiving in·
specUon.
STACOSWITCH IMC
11.39 Baker Costa Mesa
549·3041
Equal ()ppor Employer
RECEl'110MIST wit. Bener1l3. B~y prac Housekeeper· Raleigh Mechanlc. Serv. ~aUon. people 18 or over lmmed
lice. H.8. 962 2438 Hills Hospital. 1501 E . Cl~ A 1tnol Uc. oec.. Cati art 2Pm. Mon·Thurs.
l6th St NB645-570'1 Minor repair. Great op (714) 540-5464. Attractive, over 18, for DENTAL HCEPT. -' por. Apply 2590 Newport ._:__.:..... ______ HEALTH SPA. We will
f'or busy ttt'nerel prac· HOUSEKEEPER Uve-ln Blvd. Cosl3 Mesa POSITIONS a~allable at train right person tor
tlce w /fringe benema. Nwpt Bch . Must berella· M /U f r LA SailmakJng Firm. Some easy fun job. Mr Gee,
send re 11 u m e t o · blti.. •r>e•k Engl ls"' $400 Tien. pe~. P d!!'tt !Y In! ;aewt;;;n:g;e;xp~.;r;eq;.;548;;·3464;;;j·~tuhrs~~)~7~52;;·;956~1.:;;;;;;;--j
Cla1111lt.'<I ad no. 813, c/o "!o. 644·5560; 673·?57! ~W:rt ~Coalav Mesa.I• RECEPTIONIST
Daily Pilot, PO Box lseG, e 1 Musl have del)Cndable Production Assembly
Colt.a Mesa. Callr 92626 ~c & be reliable. $275 to For our olc. Xln t phone
DRIVERS HOUSIPAlltfTS S3SOmo. 541H740 Immediate opening on personality. Good at de·
---""'--M our lst !lhln for a Core tall. Will consider Bright Roy Carver Roll• R....,.... '""' ""'l'artrnt.ot OI cm u11.-HOF'S Beginner . .,...pe •o wpm. " "7 --'al l l•allh In Orange ..,... '~ Re-work Speclahsl. Must •1 11 takln1111ppllcallons for ' "' Need s friend ly e n · have 8 minimum or 2 UzRe1ndersAgency qua lified drl vers ror County haa Immediate lhuslastlc people to work 4020 Birch St. Ste 104 pickup &t dell ver y of openlf\ili In Costa Mesa, tn our Irvine food service years recent experience Newport Beach 833-8190
Rofl• Royces. Apply to Laf una Beach and Sad· program M Id Day re-working core stacks. CalHOt AP'l)tt Eatab '65 Darttll Sickle al Roy dleback ValltiY Co r hours. 5 days. ldcal for Muslbecapableof dolng
Ca n -11 R ... ~· e P A r o n ls -1 1 other re-work to Include RECEPT10 N1ST/TYP1ST rvc r ...., a oyce • ~=ate 8 housewlve~. nterest og ... U N BMW, 1540 Ja mboree t ou•..rvl.-. work Oood pay. Exper lOUCh·uponthenssembly $1. p/ur. ~ Ume. eat Rd N 8 h u• -... Ji need level. must know color appearance, poise, lyp-~ ewport eac · Home fo r pot ential not ~y~ll~~.ezs2 to code. W• can offer the Ing abUlties essential
' nanaway I lnconiatl>Ja. love f . a qualified candidate an Amy tn person. Robert Dnc Clerk wanted, full or Juvenllet with worll woek Mtml Tme, perm. Earn excellent starting salary Be[n, William Frost. &
part-time. Costa Mesa . conslsUni o( nve M hoor 5175.5300 wk. Fu lier with excellent company Aaoc. 1401 Quail st. N.B.
Calls.o..atll ahtfta. Salary approx· Brua!l8'1es,$M-7851. benefits. Please apply lo --------i 1mately $718 ror each1---------1 UCB'T/fYPIST
Electro nic assembly pa.mil al\cr deducUons MODl:L. (figure) needed person M.t,Jor div. ol NYSE co t1111nee. Mature fem for ror bollllnt ft mula. by Lapna al'till , part· aeeka froral olc recepL
-.rnbly ol electroruca. Marrla1e 11ceoM re· time. u ll SAM 11AM. ST AND ARD Good tylli.nl •kills. Type
Afttt tra1n1111 can work qgred. 'For hlrt.her ln· ~ 60-70 wpm.IBM Nor-eko
part lim e In bome . lonnaliof\ call or write: -;::======::-! MEMORIES, trantcribera. Apply In _845-__ um_f_or_ap_pt_. ---• N'Wr Foreman l~C penoo, 2DJ Ooor. CPI
Eltcrow om cer & Auls· DEPARTMENTOF TlllllllltD• " • Building. 180 Newpert
tant. Good beneflta. M600ENTNAL.8 HEdALTH ft...... ZZ'llSoulhCAnneSt Qr Dr., N
12
ew'Pol't Beach
T ri~ NI 1 •93 •• ... 1 · ~ way Santa Ana. alll. 92704 M F'9arn· . &M-080 • .,.. una 1ue · • • .,_.. Santa An•. Callf. 927()1 1!11D All. If us
or 1-1.234 <114) 83t~ n111 An Equsl UC., f""ST
IX.IC. SICRITARY AnAftlrmallve ()pportun.tty l':mployer Good .Pbono ~nee a.
TO PRESIDENT Faah ActJonEmployer • otc atcllla to Join out · ~~c•a!!!_aJroS.~f:rv. lvli:'!'.:l~~~~~~~~~j -P11 Sales, $40 $'70 wk up, ~~tlr~fl~C:. b~{{',.1;,
_..... ~ n ···, Men, lad lea. studenta. 8tt'l'fte 55&820() ehilltnRlna. ot aklU1 Don'ldrQPthe ball! Get a Evas1Sat. 5S•·T85t ,1---·------1
req'd. ~wpm \)'pin. g, JOO Job Wllb ' IOW>tUl-O.Uy &W-7006. _nd what t;ou want ,A "llfft ah. 389 San Ml1uel P iiot Clu1Uled Ad. Urei911W.. ,,, ... Dr, H.B. @ulte200. Pboneau.N'11. Want Ad Help? 6'2·5111 Dalb' PUot uaJfk'd.11 .
....
how's your
nosefor a
b • ~ arga1n~.
/
(f 1
'"
People turn to th~ Daily Pilot whenever
they have something to convert
to cash - a used car, sofa, boat,
camper, washer or dryer.
And, people throu9hout Oran9e C.ounty
turn to the people s market p ace·
-Daily Pilot classified ads -whenever
they are looking for bargains.
On Saturdays, everyone turns to Daily
Pilot DIME-A-LINES. That 's where the
biggest bargains -items under $25 -
are to be found.
The best place to buy or sell in
Orange County is the Daily Pilot.
.... .-c" 10 I 0 Ftnlhlre 1050 Geroge S. IOU Mlac.a-.out 8080 Mlac..UC..O.. IOIO Mlac.a...ous 1080 F'rldDy J11nu11ry 14 1~77 DAILY PILOT ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
REFRIGERATORS **I BUY** PUIUCAUCTIOM WA~TED WGGAGETAGS CUSTOM MJacellantou• 8000 MiKellanl'OU$ 8Ci~O -.::~~ llc:nctOUs 8080 •
WASHERS-DRYF.RS Good uaed FurnJture " MANY FINE ITEMS OF .... from your business card wovlb..I WOODS ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• kecond1tions.Repros Appliances-QR I will ESTATE JEWELRY, TOP Ci\Sll DOLLAR Send one card for each ~
t'rllt Dam»ge Guar1Del 11 1 SEU..C y ART OBJ ECTS AN PA I D F 0 R Y 0 UR tag plus one spare We ~,..~ TOllO'l OFF Illness for<'es lrv1ne Coast Pedestal Dinette. Iii srJ. r ... nmon "':ii.her, u• 29 Yrs 1n Oran1eCo se orT-or ou TIQUI!:S FINE PuRN JEWELRY, WATCllES. r eturn permanently Over..Olnstockpatterns Family members hip for Bdrm Sets Den furn. dryer SIJU. new dineue Du~LAP'S ~,-.,s,•,uc3.,.r9io,~5 ETC PHONE f'OR IN. ART OBJECT'S. G-OLD sealed. attractive tag & Also MINI Bl&n(U sale Makeoffer.6i3·2332 garage llghu. recorder. !>\'l w 11> tha1rs 1200.
""' ---6 FO . & BROCH UR E S ILVER SE RV ICE strap, meettnR airline 645-8950 8339770 oc6i3-3907 sham~r 581 G:kl GlllA18t>Vf
1815Nt-wport81.CM SAVE• JAN SALE Nt-w &&S-2200 FI NE !-'U RN & AN ID reqwrement.s Pre·---------
CALL ~·771l.I *· TIQUES. 645 2200 vent los!' & theft• For a Aartos, Mew HJO Alltos, Mew '800 Alttos, Mew H C) Alltos, New 9100
---Gl used fur~. appl '~· "nrf' chains 5k15 hshld -----personahz("'d lJP (10('10Se ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• G E Washer . like ne l'N4<' Wilson s Bargain H 1· • c " ~. N~~ Gu' Drye N~.2~H~S&S~ 2020 11 man tr .~rm~ b~cher ~o~ wallpaper. fabric or l•~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~· ~. Kl•nmore wa11he W 19th CM 6'2·7930 & Orange. Nr Santiago & table.neverur.ed. "Day Glo" vaper & we EXECUTIVE CAR Ah.ID DEMO $7S. Klll'h Aid Port Dis 548·3262· · · Lin<'Oln 831 1612 will back & lnm your f""llll
h h G d I tagr. Or try two cardi. s ws r SISO. uar I e 6 Pc Uv Rm set contem· Garage Sale. Fri. & Sat TREE SALE . 5 gal $4. IS back lo back e LE e 546.8672 · only! 4 poster dbl bed, ~a l Sl5 24" box $65 PR CES -----po butcher blk arms. rancy dresser. old up· shrubll 5 RBI S3 1 11a1 75' 1 Refrq~erator 1975 Ad muslsell.499-«30 right Philco radio. qld Hrs "'·12 S I S 2'"" S2 eaor 3~ mualt7cuft.P11ld$400 1 . T 'l " 8 un """4/5taic:.Sl.60ea.
S175/flrm 642.2519 ·Queen sofa bed w/bltn ~e carnage ypewn er . Nwpt Blvd. Costa Mesa. 6/9tags Sl so ea. LOW MILEAGE '76 61 O's and 71 O's _ _ AMtFM radio Like new hrde-a·bed Couch, old <behind Harvest l\nli lOor mor~$l .40ca
l"reestondlngCopperton $275. Quality Fre nch Health & S tre ngth ques)556-83JS SalesTax lncluded COUPES, 2 DOORS, 4 DOORS AND STATION WAGONS fr1g1dolre Flair DI Style 7 drawer desk $225. magazines. udult rain ---NO CARD?
Elec slovt! 111 i:.patles 673-3924 boots sz 15• masc. items. ~~ 10•8.pd bike $50. Ski Draw your own or send LOADED WITH EXTRAS cond. Compl automatil', 496 CabnlloSt C.M. s. s .. 8 & 6. L~e dd h &
dbl chrome lin(.'(I ovens. Clptam Nemo Walcrbed c~tom sora. spmct or· name. a ress. p one HUGI SAVI IMl.tD aa1 stand incl 40" wide 25'' King s ize. 2 mos old, Huge Household Sale. 500 gan $300 fi40·5296. we'll make one card per R •II
deep, lop lo floor si~, .. makeofr.960-1193aft3. ~~lt!:g~::t~~ ~V.~· 586-6600,askfor Ann ~~l~~e~~:c~oneyor
_P_h 644~252 Apt Full Of Furniture (10-4) king bed & .bx' Open mouth male lion der to ON ALL MODELS
Refngerator freeier 21 SleepmR couch. coffee sprgs. sofa _& chairs. rug, SlSOO or best offer PILOT PRINTING PRICED TO SELL cu ft good cond. S8S tbls, SO metal folding desk. toys, gamei., el<' 673•3924 PO Box 1560
646 2700 c h ri.. n au g cou c h. 50< to $200. Costa Mesa. Ca. 92626
---recliner chr. lamps. Sun For sale Sanyo auto phone g s Ke nmore Wa s her . only 25pm, 4000 Park Sat & Sun. 9-4PM. baby answenn~ machine S7S Beerdrafter.holds ''•Keg :111 tt-DAT UN Avocado Sear 's Best . Newport, apt 408. Jam· f urn & c lo thes. gas like new Eve ning~ of beer. new cond. $200 e g e
Excellent i.hape, $50. boree Rd .. N B mower. 8 MM camera. 963•7567 673-5276. Call aft llAM . ..,._ .,, • ,..,
67J.5988 ---------t decorator items. books. ---------1 ~VES -------~M atching Naugahyde records & much more. Carpet, shag, nylon. burnt PUIUC AUCTION ./ CHECK THESE PRICES 5 Yr Sears rerng. mov1n Wing back sofa . chair 843 Sonora Rd. I Mesa orange, very gd cond. 130 MANY ITEMS OF FINE
SIOO Call ottoman Like new. sad· DelMar)CM. 751·5926 Yards . $2 .SO p /yd ESTATE JEWELRY, II Maatlt ''"'/, 6420973 die color . $500/o fr . 640-1066 ART OBJECTS. AN· AlllAIMMltOtr 11 W......ty ~ ~9-2l32 Estate Sale, furn. applic. T IQUES. FINE FURN , -e•• 771t •41-0••2 ~~ .&.-..:~ 8015 t1· es a t1q e c h 6S ds bl ETC • notU .. ~· • -• -· •A''' _.._. - -------. r . n u 1na y carpet ue shag, . PHONE FOR IN --· ·•
•••••••••••••••••••••••Dinette set. $35, mens 3 closet. m1S<'. Sat & Sun good cond. $1.50 yd. FO & BROCHUR E . • IHUl11~~~~!.•:.~~~!.'~~'!~.1~1t• :!'~:;;::,:_:.,:_-:
•PUBLIC• s~b1kc .m,c hil~ 9-~M.~J~1nn ~ ~-~~~rm~ ~~ I~••••••••••••••••~••••••••~-------~ dresser. SlO. couch & 2 HB. --1 1 •FURNITURE• chairs. S40. 496-0243 . Alltot. N•w 9100 Autos, Mew 9800 Autos, Hew 9100 Alltos, Hew 9800 A.dos, Hew 9800 Autos M•w 9800 • •UCTION• --Moving Sale' Freezer.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• .. •••••••••••••••••
I
~ QUEEN sz bed, comp/ rerr1g. sofas. chairs. •Tonffe 7:30 PM* mattress. box spr . tables, new I.Ires. tools. ~~~!!!~!'!!!!!~~~)
• • 11:--'I Est-"-• hdbrd. sheets & spread. carpets. AM /FM radios. ~ """91 v•w Like nu GE Auto/wash TV's. bar stools. lots of •Consignments• S<IS-3079 junk, everything ~oes! •Stock di Fu & 3344 Nevada. CM. Mesa M . "'· Verde. 549.2509 Uquidcstion * Access. Whse. Sale Decorator in trouble. Super Gar~ge Sale. lg~ •Dealers must sell everything in Walnu~ end table. SI°:°· Welcome• ~tock Liv rm. din rm. Spanish octaRonal
SS SAVE SS SAVE
Lovely sofas. lovcseats.
h1de·a·bed, Occ chairs.
recliners. rockers. coUee
& end tables. TVs.
lamps. pictures. <'hinas,
bdrm. wall decor aplen· cocktail table. $150. Red
ty Cpl remnants. All velv~t decor chair, $75
qual mdse! Priced Danis h stereo cab
super lo! Hurry ror best AM/FM. $75. Baby
selection. Cre·Jo-Son Int. equip. clothrng. misc
540-5871, 3029 s. Harbor 1te~. 9-2PM. Sat only
Bl , S.A. 130 Via Lorca. Lido Isle.
tables. bedrm funuture. 3 Pc. Bedrm furn Dura· 4 Fa~1ly Garager. 2 color
dressers. chesh. mghl ble metal frame TVs. antiques. etc.
slands. headboards. for~ica top. $7S.842.2468• Sat1Sun . 4818 Surry,
chest beds, bunk beds, 1-iiiiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiif !Cameo Highlands> Cd M l\rmorres. refngl'rators.'" PLUS LOTS & LOTS OF B E A U T I F U L ! SUPER Garage Sale ,
NICI:; MISC QUALITY' furn, lamps, appliances.
DON'T MISS THIS F\Jrruturc. whole home clothes. books, van seats,
f ood available on the full Must Sec' Lll<e new mag whls. Sat & Sun 10.S,
premises Items subJe<'I 8364170 1845 Port Barmouth Pl,
to pre:-ale We honor!~~~~~~~~~~ _N_wpt-'-_B_c_h_. ____ _
Bank of Amcrira ~ Blk N:.iugahyde Furn-7' 13471 Balos Dr. Garde MasterChar~c. <::.ishicr s rouch $7S Redyner SSO. Grove. <Trask & Beach Checks & CASI!. NO u. h b k I h · PERSONAL CHECKS nig ac ounge c. arr _Th_r_u_Su_n_. 534 __ ·2962 ____ ,
PLEASE! fa~Jl~~odi~~0~f!~ 1~o~ Moving.everthinggoes. 9'
MASTERS AUCTION Swdg lamps $10. ea. Cof. Blue/grn sofa , 2 chairs. 20751/2 Mwpt. Bl•d fee tbl SIS Frigidaire 7' Gm sofa. 6' oval bluet
COSTA MESA stacked washer·dryer gm rug, 5' oval tbl w/
833-9625 646-8686 220 volt, like new, $250 leaves & 6 chairs. Lawn 963-2887 eves. mower & edger. Misc. 1· J. 8020 5"·$200. Sat/Sun 9·3. 1821 •eye s Solid Rock Maple Bdrm Newpor t Hills Dr. E . ••••••••••••••••••••••• furn. Dressers. night N.B. 644·1717
•NEW·USED BIKES• Libs. dbl 4 postered bed & ---------1
Ruy Sc>ll Trade Twrn 4 postered bed. Beginners Dark Rm set. Parts & Rl'pair~ 962·0873 incl enlarger, $7S; DeJu
Skateboards --------f enbrger, $50; 110.12 volt Cyl'le & Co. 2488 Newport Kmg sr.ie bed, everything PA system . $50; & misc.
Blvd. C. M 642 7910 incl. brass hdboard. fur 2583Sant.a Ana Ave, CM.
Sch --1-spread. leather sofa. w1nn 10 s peed . x nt 1194 3633 GfGAHTIC SALE
All new merchandise.
Wrangler wear & access. jewelry. Contents of
Western J eans. re
asonably priced, mak
cond. access inc l S75
hrm Phone897 3461 Henred.on Side Tbl SSS.
Rcbll guarn rentals. rl'
pairs. rt'l>torallon~ EiC<'
trostat1c pa1nt1n g
N ew u 5ed wh b .
part.'-access Trade~
OCEANFRONT
BICYC.:LES
Balboa. 675-6510
Teak CoHec Tbl $60.
En~h~h Side Boar ds
Chme!>c Chest 675-0MS
Decorator has brand new oft. 449 Seaward Rd,
decorator sofa, beautiful _Cd_M_. 67_~_2022 _____ 1 <il'ftff designer fabric, JAN 15th. Hair dryer
'9{)0 retail. Will sell at household items. 202
rost $4~ 67J.286S Hillman Cr. Orange
SCHWINN Girl's Bake. 2 Almost new game set, Fri, Sat & Sun, Must sel
yrs old, lille nl·w ~spd. smokeglass top,$395. everything. leavln
S75 S52 5748 751·3755 state. 503 E. Bay, Balbo
c.c...-m & Loose pillow cut velvet or _P_e_n_._laJ_le_y_l _____ 1 Eqlll....... 1030 herculon sora & loveseat. CIDNA, St.ainleu, Pyrex
••••••••••••••••••••••• Parquet wood game sett· Bowl & Casserole !lets
Compl darkrm Omega motr hinR corfee tbls laqua/wbt>. Misc krtch
enlarger. much more, Isl sofa tabll'. wall units, items Fri. Noon·4, Sat.
S350takes all.~ 3398 an solid Oak roffec table, 10-4. 1986 Orang!! Ave.
spm l(ng or Qn Bdrm set, C.M !.l62·1968or~-4984
-----riuttressc s. lamps. ---------1 Cab 1015 Black Glass top dmelle. Leaving state. must sell
••••••••••••••••••••••• bootcas~. Naug 8' sofa. all hshkl & garage items
lumavlJan kittens Cf'A All rn xlnt cond ~-4760 Ski equip, tools. l20cc " • · · Suzuki, romb TV & ~&f'. ~!~ & Seal. S2:SC Antq poker tbl $350 9Xl3 s tereo. guitar amps.
P 552_ _ ___ Oval braided rug S2S macrame. styrofoam.
Oocp 1040 8xJ01s':e rs1an rug S2S rum. water beds. etc S
••••••••••••••••••••••• Call 6503 lo Brookhurst & Ba n
DOG OBED I ENCE s.f~ 8055 mng. Look for signs.
CL.ASS to st.art Wed. J an ••••••••••••••••••••••• _968-__ 3930_. ______ 1 19. 7.30 pm Nwpt,Jrv1n Moving 111le Kmg & twin Sat & Sun 9-5. Used rum.
area S46-4928 beds. n1te stands, bar priced to sell rmmed.. s~. sewing machine. (we're cramped > Couc SC'CYM'ISH Tem t-r AK dinet~ set. F~_rberware SlO. 2 chrs $S ea, Ol·
2 yrs, mllle. show quail rolluene, 76 custom toman. end lbl, cor tbl
ty 545-1867 t'ab1net stereo. outdoor cmplt cor twn bd set, tw
Golden Retnever male, 1 fu r n · m 1 s c Ile m 5 · bd xtra long, bt!1 brkfmt
yrwtpapen; Must finda Sat/Sun 9·S. Westvlew w /bevld glss. 32
hme. 842-6803. 642 21649 Apts. Eastbluff. NB. 741 Larkspur. CdM. Amlf!OS Way rear bldg,
Golden Retriever male. nr CdM Ka Sch. Take Sid boots, toaster oven.
mos old blonde. AlC Domingo to Amigos. H. sngl bed, girls clothes. s:i
$100 581·7\33 Chapman. 640-4781. 8-14. 20102Crater.Cr. HB.
Male Dachshund pup, GARAGESALE _962_·8946 _______ 1 playrul 7 wks, must fin WED·THlJRS-FRI Honn
a home $50. Call 848·2209. Oiest ol drawers $15 up: ••••••••••• ••••••••••••
console TV. B41W remote For Sale: 2 ponies & show Ge rma n s hort·hair ed
pointer . lem l, lree
obedience trruned 5 y
old. pa~rs. 846-2S9f.
m. steamer trunk $15; quarterborse.
•lei> tables SS up; high Call 847·1091.
chair SS: tow·bar tllO: 10 ---------1
1peed bike $&0. P lus J.W9lry 8070
---------.. ml1c. Items. tOS Mor· ••"•••••••••••••••••••• AKC Alaskan Malamute remale, 3yrsold. riltown Ln. Colla Mesa. w· ....... ED 7SHJS3 A .... I $75. 145---------1 TOP CASH DOLLAR
IE-...-toy 1045 Sat. Sun •s p A I D F 0 R y 0 u R .,.... °" '18SPaula.rino Ave. ......,.,.. 0 Y, WATCHES. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -C#"~
Golden Retriever' 1 1r ___ Coata __ M __ es_a ___ I ART OBJECTS. GOLD,
old. fem. Very fnend[f Garaae Sale. Sat UMPM SILVER SERVICE,
6'2·1MMM furn, lampa, misc. 202:9 FINE FURN & AN·
Swan Dr. Costa Mesa TIQUES. M$-2200 Lovable orange a1t. Lil· ---------1 Ue. Ulln u a pendl. 1 yr Moving Sale. Sat • &an 2lilt Black Star Sapph"'!.
old. s hots, haebrkn IOAM·4PM. Household V~ valuable. In mans ~3218 effects. Kenmore sewina gold hlting. Sl.000 or
Black fs white male
Husky, needs goat home.
about,.,., yrs. 847~
To good ho m e ,' Win
haired Terrier, male.
s payed. &4M818
machlne <Portable) trade f or very Id
toaaler oven <Proctor shotgun. Pvt. Pt1.
Siiex ), touter <Sunbeam St&-tlm 'l'hlnllne>. bacon fryeru. --,-.. ----....,,--8-07_5_1
band mixer, "Tody" ;o/. •••••••••••••••••••••••
feemaker, blender <Vlt. Ref. Noraran mare, broke Mlx I. Pyrex ware. to ride Ii drive blk
Relrig, steam Iron:. pie· parade Moqan 1eidln1
Female Calleo &urea, crockpot (uetty Ena. Wea tern (714)
very friebdly & C), boob 2 am.It tables, 331-1011
wks, w/abots~ Zenith color 1'V 21 ", '.""·-· -:"::--------1 ____ __,__.,;...__.., m • ho 1 a n Y • t ere o Mec•lsary 8071
St. Bernard puppJ', 4 mos. 1y1tem, tape recorded •••••••••••••••••••••••
female, AKC. Champ lotludC'd, F1eld u mera MachlneShopfOl"rent
blood line. To Cood home. (BlsW>. movie camera, 21 ·• MonSletj laUM, ate.
557 3391 "'11c. us.-Otl3S. Fol. Valley, OQ.7010
.. ---· . -
MARK II WGM.
.... 19-07' 193
"ulO'l'l*llC
'"' ... Co"<l Powe< Sl-·"O
4x4 WAGOH
F.1!>~1146
•5-R.oo0 ......,,.,_,., ..
55719 55874
SERVICE POLICY.
CREDIT
UNIONS
WELCOME!
. ·-
• •
2·YEAI
24,000MfU
SERVI(! POUCYI
Cit' MOST US9 CAn
BANK
FINANCING
O.A.C.I
AT
EARLE
IKE
IMPORTS!
C~SHVE MOMEY "°9q ..... COllMt'Yi119 CJlllolM h .... •••ff crt lstt ..
....,.,.. for 1977. --of •Y prohulo•ol
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dlfftrt11t woy1 we c•
NM Y• llMIMY·
• AU WITH AUTOM,t.TIC TIAH$MISSIOHS
• AU WITH All CO,.,DIT'Of41NG
• AU WITH AM UOIOS
• AU WITH LOW Ml LUGE
4 ~~~$3699 YOWCHOtCIE
SER 0\61$/0 61982 ~, 6273~
6 .c~s3499 YOWCHOtCIE •
SER ••6WJ 161196 1Ml09 161911 161Nl9 •6716"
3 2c.:~. s3399 YOWCHOK:IE
SER •• ·-11 1ee1ee 1116209
HURRY THEY WON'T LAST
'72 P1MTO
Automatic s 1599 AM/FM RldiO
1322FYB
,
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tl•ti •Jf DAA. y Pit.OT f"rlday J.,, e 14 1'1T7 ~1l•1aua 1010 Office .......... & "CMOl la °'9w 8090 loGft. M.nM loah. WI 9060 Trallen. T,....et ti 10
._L,11_..,_:;...;;;.__;;;___.....;;_ ______ ...;•_...._~..;..· .;...;;;....;;.u..;;.ry~.....;..· ;..;__ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..._.,_.... IOIS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~,_.. 9030 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
•• ... ~••••om 8010 Mlac•••IMtS 8010 ~ 1010W 11111 in Ro c er 1 ....................... Piano. Cable Nelson ....................... Kite with doll). yellow "10 TT lier. 30'. 1ell con\ ,,;;: ........................................................ n•••••••• SUverplate by Oneida. 8 IBM Mod· B • E • e c Console Xlnt cond '97S HP marine dsl. lOObrs. XI n t con d S 4 So ~ ciu.h. It~. TRADE Coto de Can Place 1etl101 w/3 pc. typewnter. under serv IM&-6072. · $1750/ofr. Mus t sell Weekda)s898t1797 ~8063 ~JllXS7 wwn JDOWer, e· HAMILTON Professional Membership ror Balboa aerv1n& set see>. new. contract. $150. 837-1060 MZ-9262 --------t fobo11••. I 40sU drafllng board/lable BayCluborBigCanyon 642.&MS Peh 1017 Stor.,Rn._...., Hob1el6,trlr.newtraru.di
• ..,.,.. 1 cord o( wood, w /Vemco uutrument. 640-80:Slor6"-5642 ----••••••••••••••••••••••• lcr 1095 ExCftSlve Inventory sale more. Sl.42:1. ~or S..k •• P ....
>Oall: 6 eucalyptus. J'ine cond. $295. Call NewStandan:icar Mob1ll" Lf ••••••••••••••••••••••• or Mas t & Sail Boat 5817S05 &Acce110rie1 9400
-.r.o4118attSPlll -..&4GO,aft7PM Couc h . 2 chrs. bed . Telephonf'. VHI-'. Solid HA MOON 5. Upnght re(ng w /atass lulrdware Chain plates. Pea --1 Bl -, ••••••••••••••••••••••• dresser. TV. side by &de SUtr S850 Cost ll200 PARROT slide drs 4 & 8 holo ice head slays. bow spntes. · . t w trai t'r ueova Nt"t.'lkd vw cng '60 '66 or [~ PANEL swned &lass Palmere\le ladies glf. ref rig .. lam!>!>. dm. set Phsi&-2775 Less than 1 yr uld Bird crm rr~r. auto meat mast extrusion. blocks. while. '1300 Weekd1tys ror ule '62 vw Van body.
wtndow,6f\x8ft Seeat dbl ou w/beg $200. 4x8 7Sl·9747 S it 1 e, M 0 v 1 n . SJO. Cage $30. or $.SO. for slicer. bakery rac k ~aves. etc X Caliber 898-879_7 _ )(!ntrnnd M2·358'7.
42'7 31st N.B 673-6S97 ~ tbl $'15. 548-0645 al\ 6. Truck h r used E thin ~ both. w Jtuys pc>prom ma ch 216. Morgan 27 & Mariner 11' O'Oay l>11y~a1lcr '7' ---
I "'.-_ 91 •...a.-.N 9IOO . 87cSa11'::'snev:id $39• Ltt'l aR'foos.-.t,ereo. 675-3662 IOOrupcofmaker.Mon' 36 Ketc h. complete Cuddy cab1~. ro'om y4Ururoyul4plyroint1res. __ New 00 _,_ ew sue x · • P urn. P anu. F · 9-S Call 9'19-MOO masts Sat/Sun 9am· k 1 ll~ 64 905 L71HS 100 mi $2S ea Ph
-··••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• seUS30.751-4198. nusc 675-2312 ____ Planot•OnJ-t 8090 " 3 30pm. Super Spar. coc p1 _. __ s ss -646-4244 .
328 Alva Ln. CM Sat 9-41 Vinyl ll<Jfa & chr 1 lg.••••••••••••••••••••••• 6'check~twrapcounter 15678 Graham, Hunt. ERICSON 29'. 1-'ull £ AJ'ltiq gas st.ove. snow walnut coffee lbl. SIOO. FIELDSWarehousesaJe S175. 5 glass she Ii Bch. crselrace. $21.000 oCr. ifor Sale
, ~·mower, Treasures ~rree tbl S-50. 2 end tbls. 400 pianos &. organs, :~~~~r $100. Uke American Source Marine 675·1830e~_llt"knds __ •••••••••••••••••••••••
; &mt5C. wmgedbuckchr.potbel· ne w /used . Splne!5 • · Equlp.atdlscount. CLIPPER 26. 73. Full A.l'lti~/ J Lido Isle Sale. Boy's& pc. ly stove lamp. SSO. SI~· Grands, Pia.yen;. Going TV, Radio, 64.5-7280 galley. head. 7.S Suzuki Clintk1 9520 J bdrm set . $225. Teak tbl, mons yellow cnb. anh-~ul I~~ busrness. Ren.t HiR, Stereo 1098 tmmac xtras. $5950 •••••••••••••••••••••••
• 6 chn cost $850 Sell $3 qrewhlcrab.4C'arseats. sf\ buy a ~~wa1 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 213·S92·S793 Grt>at Inve stm ent ·s1
l $325/~tofr.lOs.bulters, pa~n.2 curbeds,car-Ch~c~:rTX· aum':'~~· 25"ZenilbclrTV.Remoteloah.Power 9040 ----Chev Station Wgn
12 .. x7'8". B~ue/grn ~£~ high chairs, Kimball. ~rlYir <714 i control. xlnl C<>nd. Ask·••••.••••••••••••••••••• S..Owblrdw/trir Perlect .~Y· ~!I is w/2 i crystalchundeher,wool ----638 .2770 . 1 2072 lngS23S.~ E1 BOAT. 427 .L-88 $250. _ 640-0295 e.ng S a c $600 /ht i US_.-. MOTORHOM£S Spanish bed spreud. Qn. HOOVElt UPRIGHT. Brookhurst.GG Brand new Medl.lnd 23B Che v Y • h 1 g h Clipper 26 ·73 Galley. 631 3.'lro
I W 675-7086 ---~1al-0·mat1r~ucuum,all CBRadio.Mdl#13-8838. perf<?rmaoce, Aer o head.OB Exllas.S57SO 4Whff1Drhes 9550
MOVING t ell 19.. attach. SSO 549·0133 Bo ht 10 d h equip d . Headers. dual ,2131592.5793 •••••••••••••••••••••••
TRUCK & CAMPERr _A 4 mus s -HAMMOlllJD ug ays ago, as axletrlr 14500.496-4639 ' ~I S color TV. couch. $25. Ma· Don't hnve a i:uru11e sale 1"'111 been used l lime fortest · 19741&.AZER OVE/l 40 IN $TOCK pie tablt> & 4 chairs. & ( P A s s 1 T o N > ORGANS mg Cost new Sl49 99 "75 Fibrdorm. 22 n. cabin 1~~~a~~!!.50~nr~1~~~!1 c II Ev EN NE 4 x 4 misc. 675·4266. 434 CONSICNMl::NT Open A.slung S96 or bst ofr cruiser. Dual stations. naker & launcher. 11400 Automatic, air cond .
f
Femleaf. CdM. 1ng f'eb 1 1n K· Mart COMPLETE LINE 752-5599 full arcom .• Pinta O.D. or offer E\S 631•0383 stereo, mai:s. roll bar.
Shop'g Cntr. 480 Cam mo •NEW OR USED• $8000. 847-9873 All 5 PM blue & white extenor, Exercycle· Vita Master de EBlrella, San Clem Buy with Confidence Stereo. cstm 13' cabnt, l6. Hobie Cal. full race. luw males & extra clean' S speedometer. odameter Wtll be open Jan 15th 9·S From the 0 l des l replacement $3500. w1tra1ler $1500 or !Jest (472JSQ > For sale al e tension AdJ. like new $3S torece1vesalc items. Authorized HAMMOND $1200. 675-CMS. offer. 20· Tornado. best $4995 Cort Fox Leas· 548-5798 DEALER in Orange , . . .. ..11 67"S976 .,co" N rt Bl d -Misceac.eo.. County!! We will not be BOTH Rd cond. 23 .,. er. .,.. mg....,.,., cwpo v ..
GARAGEDOOR.u:-.cd. Welllhd 8011 knowingly undersold!! ~leTVcolor$7S. B& Fumno.S7·SSOO Costa Mesa.6'5-3661 .
Goodrondition ••••••••••••••••••••••• F R E E 0 R C A N w 12 Port. sso. 546-4283 9050 without lrlr. $800 with I 974 DODGE
557-464! CLASSES loah & MCll'iH ••••••••••••••••••••••• 962·0772afl 6pm R.AMCH.AIGEtt
Earth Worm sale for ~=!~~/~~s Mon. ~vf"Everyone Eqyl,....t DON'T IUY Automatic. air cond.
.garden. Let the worm fnrs &stovesS46-07S8 STOP 1~~~CALL ••••••••••••••••••••••• A IOAT Boats, Slips/ pwr. steering. special
help you cultivate. 1000 644-92()() loah, Ma111tewwe/ JOllllJ Docks 9070 rrwgs & only 20.000 miles. S4. 3000 $10. Also worm Recent set of En Service 9020 n ••••••••••••••••••••••• t68SLRYJ
castings. B ·s WORM cyclopedia llrlltaolca. HAMMOND ORGAN ••••••••••••••••••••••• AJI new. exclusive CLUB Private dock for pc>wcr SADDLEIACK ~ABR:; ;;4~2 Gothard, C&U7Sl-6503. & PIANO CENTER Prof wood & glass boat JONA. Calif·Hawa11. boat to 41'. $2 2.r; per rt VALLEY IMPORTS
. . . . Mlallcal 28M E. Coast Hwy rprs. Renew tanks or CI u b h ouse. part Y. 642·9666. 673·6336 eve 831·2040 495-4949
Industrial Steam Cpl IM"-nh 8083 Corona Del Mar ~ads. Reas rat.es. Call Cr~~~ENTAL FEES Slip space avail Lido .. cleaner w1equ1p. Heavy ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bill S48-4315or 545-7877 • v I I I a g e c n n l" r 6J Dodge Power Waii:on dut I t d c•a 1518 FREE Sailing lessons. • • ~ t PU 4 w D 318 V8 ~ n con ·'""' Conn Min·O.Malic ele~. Story & Clark upright YACHT CARPENTRY Umiled number charter Fiberglass l>a ils only. 4 on · · ' •
' ..
~
J 1974 OPEN ROAD s7795 f YOU'LL LOVE IT!
l6AOlGU)
' ELMORE TORS ~ ...
~ 15380 f ACTrllfr MmlOllf'Z[D .. WClllLYD. 1010TA OfAWl •. aM-3322
Find whal you wunt in ~rgan, excellent cond1· piano, $300. New & Remodel mt'mbershlps available. S3 SOJft 675 7100 sno lires. xtra heavy du·
• Daily Pilot Classifieds. lion. $600, \>.P. S32-12S9 540-7180 Call Eves 646-6382 CALL NOW (714 )491Hi681 · ---ty susp. & body. $l l50 ~ WANTED 20' TIE UP. 642·7204
mtlllSTB 839-2482
-! Auto1, Hew 9800 Autos. Hew 9100Aatto1, Mew 9100 AMtoa. New-' 9100 Autos. New 9800 Alltos, New 9100 Alltos, New · 9100 Dork Span'. etc for '76 Ford F250 ~.ton. w;; r-••••••• •• •••••••••••••• •••••• •• ••• .................................... ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• sa•lboal. 49&-83Bl ranty. Pt1ust sell~
" sa· Newport Slip av::ul 646-6426aft. S
.• Jan, Feb 5411·8149 or..,,. W ~ ~ R •: 640-6123 '" agoneer ... +... uns , T k h gd. Gd tires. $1100/bst a e t e MoonngAva1lablt> olr.642·2520
Newpart Up to4s· --------
Call S4i-422!1 Willys wagon, 1951, VS. 4 spd w/overdnve. xtru.
Pnvate dork ror rent. body good. $1125. S48-8673
. •
(
• .
.
~
' :
. • \ )
I l • }
j
I • J
SOUTHERN SAVINGS ROUTE ~~~~~e\~~:ut:;~o --
Preva1tmg rate 821 0230 Trutlu 9560
.'
(7141. (213l924-44!ll •••••••••••••••••••••••
1976 LUV TRUCK
Transportati°" W /6 Pock c_,.,.
YOU ARE FREEWAY CLOSE TO s·ouTSTANDING AUTO DEALERSHIPS
0 FIAT & Mission
MERCEDES BENZ ~&ts
SOUTHERN ORANGE COUNTY'S
GROWING AUTHOIUDD
DEALER
26701 Marguerite
Parkway.
SAN DIEGO ~
SI ~
LAGUNA BEACH
SHOP & COMPARE
OUR LOW LEASE RATES
BARWICK DATSUN
Mission Viep
714/831-1 740
714/495-1700
MISSION VIEJO IMPORTS
E)ptttLLIPS BUICK, PONTIAC & OPEL
GALLEN OLOS-CAOILLAC-GMC
8SADDLEBACK VALLEY IMPORTS
SHOP&
COMPARE
IN
SOUTHERN
ORANGE COUNTY
SAN JUA
SAN JUAN
CAPISTRANO
0 .,,
~ ~ .,, ! ~ ~· ;<
Find what
you want ...
Buy it ·for less
DANA
POINT
CAPISTRANO
BEACH
DRIVE A LITTLE
-· ... -:-...... ·--
• • •
~THEALL ~NEW
'77sARE '
HERE
lZOl Ir 530I
ar...,. eo.t(1 Most Mcntu• IMW Oeder
FACTORY AUTHOIJDD SALES. LEASING Ir SEaVICE
Good Selection or Excellent tr8d•lns available.
OP£N W£EICO.t.YS 9 9, S.t.TURO.t.YS 9 t>, !>UNO.t.YS 10 o
197J POKTIAC
~LeM99 AutOMattc. pwr •t••ttno & -.. , cono. v....,• 100 ' .....,._Cee30WWI
lt74POHCHI
9141.0~ '"'"'•~u11tel Aoott1t•,,c•
9roup AM/,M c11tette
lllDUl231
lt76 'fW IUS 7p...._.Me4ef
4 "-' AMt'°"'4 r. only 3000
M ... l~FOt
24111 AUCIA nwY.
LAGUNAHIUS
s5995 s4995
837-2400
0 ALLEN OLDS-CADILLAC
"We Sel Trucks & Vans Too!!!
THE TRUCK LEASING SPECIALISTS
1977 GMC 3/4 TON PICKUP
~:a-'~:'7.oo':'.: s 122ss ITMC.AX. GVW tttO -& r. 10 ~ (TCl.2'7Z5003ttl MO.
c.c> OON -aeooo inc. '•• R•••du•• -'37~0 3ft
....,.,. ... -~ .. -'" _"',.....'~e""'" t•••• oeoo,11 oo•n •• M ltll&
SAVE A LOT!
·--
•••••••••••••• ••••••• •• 4 speed. i.tereo. sto"e. :.ink & rernn. <1814070 >
SA OD LEIA CK 9110 •...........•..........
TAX SHELTER Y ALlEY IMPORTS
83 I ·2040 495-4949 1976 Cheroke~ 140 ,
Collins eqwpped. f4SOO & . a ssume l oan (714 1 6.1 Dodge Power Wagon
836-0408 Dys. Ev ti ~.tc.nPU.4W.D ..• 318Vll.
64.5-6565 David Robbin:. sno tires, xtra heavy du·
C~.Sale/ Refit 9120 •......•....•.•........
Mini Truck Cabover
Camper. Near new. Dix
w/twin sink. stove. wired
for DC & AC. ong co~t
$1500. Will sell tor $975
incl eamper JJcks
64.2·~16
"10 VW Camper Pop Top
Rebll e ng. We stralld
ty susp. & body. Sl150.
642 72(>1 ------'70CHEVY
Y-8Rfftside
Pickup, ~ ton. Custom
Camper Special. A/T.
PIS. P/B. A/C. bumper.
top shape. (780S7F> Sale
pnce S2.495.
RECENCY MOTOR
HOME RENTAL
925 N. Harbor. S.A.
"'•531·2503• •
mdl. Xlnt cond. Muke '75 Dodge 8100. Lo mi.
ol.r. 493-4803 >dot cond. 6 cyl. radio.
'73TOYOTA
Chinook Cemper
4 \PHO. ~IH•D T ~ov
TiK-Wllffl• IU 31011
'3995
Lerg• Selection of
Compact Cemper1 In
Stoett
BILL MAXEY •
TOYOTA
11111 .,..th l•·d 1411 \\
uv .. TlifC.TONllACH
'75 Datsun 7' Pickup
w/Penis Vly overhead
camper. Both truck &
camper have every ex-
tra. Camper used twirc
S5000/£irm. 731·2992 or
581-6873 art 7 p_m_. __ _
Motorized likes 9140 •••••••••••••••••••••••
VffPOM•d $27S
auto. S3995 l1rm. 494.243~
Sacnfice. 'S8 lnl'l
11ton P/U. Pvt. Pty .
S500 645-8203
l96ll Manx Dune Buggy.
ready lo go. except for
VW cng. S500 631·3696
VCMS 9570
···········•·•···••···· 1974& 1975
FORDVAHS
at Kelly Wholesale Blue
Book '74 has only 26,S04
actual miles! Must sell'
Cort Fox Lcasing·2S86
Newport Blvd .• Costa
Mesa. 645-3661.
1975GMC
SURFIRVAM
Autom:ttrc. air cond .
sunroof. Portholes. de
lu\e tnm. chrome wire
whl~ls & 8 track stereo.
<07491
SADDLBACIC
VALLEY IMPORTS
831-2040 495-4949
675 1431 'T.! Travelall. A/C, radio.
----------lOWIOI( equt pped Motorcoof!l!s/ S2000/0Cr 556·3149. aft 6 Sc 91 Sel pm. ...................... ...;._ _______ _
·7s Yamaha400 Mono
Many xlras. S9SO.
Cull 545 1002. ----
'75 Norton 850 Cornman
do. 4000 ml. windJummer
fatrlng. K·Q seats, like
new $1200 963 59611 ---Vespa 150 Spr1n1. 1750
miles. ltke new
496-6476
Motor ...... W./Rattt 9160
····•··••··•·•·····•·•· ·~'CMC MOTORllOME
Sips 6. Wnlr rates fvt
pty 83.1·2.s 16.
642-4097 Nwpt
'6.1 Ford van, '68 289 V8.
sterro. ma.1111. cstm int.
$\:.IOI ofr. 546-7816 ,_
NEW
'76TOYOTA
Mini Vin
• 'P••d. wrrlde cttromt
""'"''· •-oeo. ""'"'" """' & l11ttrl0< I• Sllll
WH$5"7
Wtekend 9cMct•I
$5282
!Jill MAXEY
TOYOTA
, ,., I ..... I•.\ • • • ' . ....... , ...... , ..... " ..
OMC Late '73, xlnt cond .. Dodge Step Van. k1tcbeo.
s ips 6 , SlS.900 12311 sle•plng. many xtras
Polaris. NB. 833-2616 _!!2~1 644 7_46_1 ___ _
73 APOLLO '741/2 Dodtt ,,_ Winctow Van $4600. 26' Motor Home. Dod11e R o a I Sporle man .
V-8, auto. P IS. P 18 . Om "'ht. 9 poss .• mag stereo. dash air, generator. roof u1r. nick whl 644 Sfh1 ____ _
& l:addcr, awn\nJl. Wanltcl 9190
loaded. (070KHM l 1\ real •••• ••••••••••••••••••
bu.Y at SH.995. C SH FOR CARS!
RE0£NCY MOTOH 1'oJl Dollar Spaid for HOME RF.NTAI.
925 N. Harbor Blvd , S A eltull used cara. trucka & **"'D1.2503.,. Corvettes. /Uk ror Paul "" • O'l'\e\11
2S'OPEN ROAD
Fully sclr·conl
Winter r ntl'll M4 838.'l
HOWARD Che•,..
Oo\IC & QuaU St.a
NtWPOR'r BEACH
Aaltot, lMport.d A.tot, IMport.d AMtot, IMpori9d A.tot, IMporW A.uto1, IM--Md I Frlrlay January 14, 1977
•••••••••••••••••••• r-·
DAILY PILOT DJ J
••• ••• •• • • • • • • •••••••••••• • • • • • • • •• • •••••• • •• •••• ••• • •• • • • •• • ••••••••••• •• ••••• ••• ••••••••••••• Alftrot., Hew 9100 A.utot, New 9100 A.to1, N•w 9100 A.fo1, New tlOG
A-. W.teci 9590 CGpri 9715 Datlun 9720 DatMM 9720 .,..,..... 9730 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ······················· .•..••••....•................•..........................•.•..••.•.... ···•·····•·•··•··•·•···
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR '76 CA,RI TOP IUYER 1975 Dat!'u~ 2tl0l h 2 '73 XJ 12 4 dr. white
FOK TOP USED CARS 4 C> tinder grul gas See w. first. & lai.l' Top ~O AD f, D h M3J1a 111 c w1blue leather int . full
FOREJGN. DOMESTIC m1le1t&e. ready lo i:o dollar paid Cor1mports 1 rown t:.1 NEW' eAi~ pwr & air 40.000 Miles
oc-CLASSICS Ser GAECSK 24S42 COSTA MESA enor5671
1 e p :s Pen cond. ong. owner
tr your rar i.s extn cle11n $3886 tni; >O rt Pl} Contact Harold Standu.h
seeusnrst DATSUN Siil 7!1'JI Custom Wt>a'e Carpet11.
IAUU IUICK 21S45 Harbor Blvd I 973 D T U blwn 8am·3 30pm Mon "~ta ~1es<1 S40 ri<110 A S N f'n 962-8841 GUSTAFSON '
LINCOLN MERCURY
16800 Beach Bl~d liuntinglon Beach
~Harbor 81\d ...,..., " 6t O WAGON ------
Costa M~ 979 2500 With roof rack A mct' ltt
WE BUY
CLEAN CARS
& TRUCKS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
282.11 llarbor Blvd
C~IA MESA
546·1200
TOP OOLLAH
PAJU
IMMEDlt\TELY l''OHALL
FOREIGN CARS
CA.LLORCOME IN
TOSt-;EUS
NEWPORT IMPORTS
JIOOW Cst Hwy.NU
642-9405
842-8844
Coprt. 73, V6. 4 !!pd.
AM /FM , orig ownr
Good core S2.200 or best
olr 714-894-#1190
9720 •••••••••••••••••••••••
DRIVE A
LITTLE •.•
SAVE A LOT
SllOP&COMPARE
IARWICK DA TSUH
San Juan Capistrano
831·1375 493.3375
NEWPORT DATSUN
'73DATSUN
t10Wagon
.. ID9e(I f.clOflf' air \lffO ,_ ,.~"
$2399
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
1e111 I •c ~I··~ 14' I\\\
HU"'' H(,fO .. llA(H
1975DATSUM
12104DOOR
tie wagon• (14811NY 1
$2195
BILL YATES
VW-PORSCHE
S11n Juan Capistrano
837-4800 49l-451 I
·n ~oz. S2500 firm
Needs work
BRITISH CAR CO.
213/990-2525
7141694-2854
:76 J~ Exec Car Sale!
XJ 12L s. XJ6C. A II It
mtle a nd pampered
Buy /Lease Sensiblt
payments. Call for de·
tails
___ 6_75_·_1411_3 ___ Collectors tlem · 1965 J.~
FftTari 9721 silver w/red lthr int
••• • • • • •••• •• • •• • • ••••• ~ brk work. best orr
1968 DINO FIAT
SPIDER ROADSTER
W1lh a f'E RltARI
ENGINE• A Ltmtted
pr0docl1on model w/V6
en~tne & 5 :.peed In
~uperb t'ond1t1on '
1453EXOI
67S·798.5
SPECIALS 4 speed. radio. moldings. undersea! & heatl.'r WE BUY 6210 4 Door 4 speed. DEMO. (67001 •IJSEU CAHS& radio 1097PKE> Q~lY 52795
SADDLHACK
VALLEY IMPORTS
811-2040 49S.4949
BRITISH CAA CO.
213/990·2525
714/694-2854
Sports Car Center Select
from over 50 quality used
models -Triumphs.
Jaguars. MG·s. Man)
More Buy /Lease. sensi
ble payments
TRUCKS• MOW $2895 " Fiat 9725 Ja&uar XJ-6. '73. lo m1.
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1mmac M ust se ll
·75 Xl9 l"tat Convert Xlnl S77SOtofr. Bayshores Come 1norCJll 888DOVE!>IREET COSTA MESA
FREE Appraisal Near MacArthur DATSUN Gfooth Chevrolet & Jamboree Road~
Ul.211 Beach Blvd 833-1300 2845HARBOR BLVD
l'Ond. Chocolate brown :>48-6318or646-0t00.
IW<Hl82 l(..,....Gllia 9735
Huntiniiton &dch . CALL 540-641 0 ·73 l''tal 1211 Spider. stereo. ~··•••••••••••··~•••••• 847-6087 * 549-3331 67 1600 Rdstr. en~ body & -.--------t mags. rack. 25.000 mt. 00 Karmann ~h1a Con
-----1 n l s o Ii d . nu to P . Bil mint S3200 833 1709 vert. New radials. paint.
Sl:nl/bstofr _67_3·_4908 __ .. ~~~!! rblt eng. AM /FM. $1950. TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
1"01{ CLEAN
IMPORT CARS
ALL MODELS
~
1 B83S BEACH BL VO
HUNTIN<>TON BEAC14
842· 7781 -S40-0442
Autos. Imported ..•.••..........••.••••
G1nerd 9701 •••••...•........•.•.••
1966SIMCA
Great rond 25,000 orig
miles Xlnt m1leaRe
Tires ltkc new S600 best
_otter G4S·l620aflf.'r4pm
Audi 970 .......................
1974 AUDI FOX
Automatic .. pwr brake.~.
l\M/f'l\I :.len.•o l<iPl' &
!.unroor A vt•r} nice car•
(659631
ONLY $2995
NEWPORT DATSUN
888 Do\c Strcl't
NEWPOHT tH;ACll
833-1300
IMW 971 ••••••••••••••••••••••
SADDLEBACK
. BMW
'77 BMWs
HERE NOW
IMWRESALES
·10 2800C::. 4 sp
<23M:FS1
'72 2002 A <SJSRKKI
'73 3 OCS 1 s p .
<9e7KLMl
'73 Datsun 510, 4 spd,
radials. good cond. Sl750.
962-1926 aft 3 ----
'76 280Z 2+2 i\1r. mags, 4
spd Wht/blk. 1mmac.
$61()() R!l2·5137
·71 Datsun 8510 AIC.
radio. cln. xlnt cond.
$1500 645-4616 aft 6pm.
Oat '74 260Z. Gm. 4spd.
AM IFM. Magi-, 29M,
MIO P P &10 1346
Sed1n
tr•ns . H•rd to ••nO c"r -i1000 fU 31031
'895
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
11111 l••<•l r•d 141 I \\\
HUHf lNU IOH It 4 l. H
'71 ISSO SPIO f:R. nu eng & Ph 546·4253 or 54()..0432.
clutch. Perl 5()M . Sl700 ...,._..._ 9731 ~,R66.'J, 497-~!14 --------•..••.••.•.•..•.....••.
1970 124 -Sptd l'f Only
Xl.000 mt. by or1.i: owner.
Xl nl l'O nd , $2400 . 646 2560
miracle
· mazda Hondo 9727 •• ••••••••• • • •. •. • •••• • 2150 Hart»cw It.cl
Brand Mew '77
HONDA Cars
MANY
To Chooff From!
Cotta MflCI 645-5700
'74 Maida RX3 Coupe, 4
spd, under wmty. very
clean 837·3202
9740 UNIVERSITY -_.illl .. liiilllliilia~ '76 2soz. xlnt cond OldsMOblle
...i1 AM FM • air. 10.000 mt. Hondo Can • GMC
•••••••••••••••••••••••
196 7 MIZ 2SOS
Aut.omaltc. pwr. brakes,
heater. whitewall Ures
w wheel covers. AM/FM
stereo & very low milt!S.
MINT co n dtlton!
(VVN370)
7.1 DATSUN
2 Door510
lake over lease at SIS!I Truck.s
mo 548·1320 ask for Sue. 28SO Harbor Blvd
_d_a.._ys _______ , Co6tu Mesa 540 9640
·73 240Z. Must sell SSOO =..:::~n~r,';!~;:on "" Refinance $3700 1131 1617
aft 5
'7S CVCC Halchhack.
21.000 m1. 'Clf8\ $2900 or
IM'sl nHt•r 673 4079 or OMLYS4195
NEWPORT DATSUN
888 Dove St.reel
NEWPORT BEACH
833-1300
$1295
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
• ••• I .... , .. "·4. •• , IS\'
, '1UHflHG.JOH HACH
·10 240Z. rebll trans. 673 3891
ma~!>. yellow. blk tnl. JCIC)UClr 9730
S3l.25 645-4518 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'71Datsun1200 51 ,000 m1 00 Jai.: Mt.: II 3 8 Nu lar
A/C. new tm:s ~13!lS <1ucr. intl.'nor. t('IJ> t•nd 1968-250 SE. xlnt. rond .
Wkd y 6~4 \JUJU, very dean SJUOO Drk.Brown4dr .. $4.500.
wknd.o;/cvl's &W 8293 675 5495, ~ 5544 642·5200 or 548-6646
Autot, Hew 9100 AA.rtos, New 9100 A.uto1, Hew 9100 Autos, Hew
GOOD
TO BUY AT
, ~, ..,,. _,. . .... ._.. ... , .. .,.._-, .. .,_.,, .... '·" . . , ""' .. -'·• _.,.~ ........ .,,...,~. . .. . .
UN IVE.RSJTY SAlJES & SE I<\'ll--F
· l)ldsn1l)bjJc • C~:\·1~.,Truck.~ • } ~ 1nd~1 ( ·.i r"
Brand ew
I
0
STOCK • Great Seledlon
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
1•· ~---..... al--
'73 Bav<1rta I :.p
1680PP.M>
'74 8 0 nir1a 4 ~P <~LPM >. HASSLE FREE
'75 2002 ·A. · <034 U
i5 S301A A (906M VG I
SADDLllAQC
'I AU.IY IMPOITS
Ht-2040 4tMt4t
CREVIER
•USED IMW't*
'7J D11vur1a
Auw/Sunroof·906LVY
'81) UIOO 41pd ZXX866
'743.0CSA SIR 7"6LWB
·1s2002s1R 1112NB
'76 2002 s IR 0325
CloMcl On S..'*" _
ottNfGE COUNTY'S
OLDEST
• • Saln-8ervlco-Lcas1na
11.vCcner,IK.
.: Roll~ ftoyce BMW
:. 1540Jamborec
:• Ne~Port Beach 640·6444
:: lt76 IMW 2002
,• Blue metalli c
.• Automatic. air cond .
:: sunroof. stereo & ONLY
• 4000 MILES! (MVIUU
~ MISSIOH VllJO
.• IMPOITS
:: Avwy ftwy . ..S.D. Frwy.
• 21'10lllarsuerite Pkwy.
tJf.1741
• BMW 1 '7~2082. Auto, rac
air. AM/FM. Ideal exec
commuter-owner retlr·
Ing. 4112-0184
OMI OF A IUMOI
1974 IMW l .OCS
COUPE. ONLY 3000
original mllu 1 I n ., abeolulely concours con· dWoo. (3'1RD0)
SAOOLllACI
V Al.UY IMPORTS
IJ 1·%040 49S.4t4f
n:LL Idle Items with
'· D.i'1 PUot Cl ... lfled Ad
1 WE MAKE YOUR SElEC I ION
EASY EVERY DISCOUNT PRICE I~
CLE1'Rl Y M.A.Rl<EO ON THE WINO
• SHIElO Of EACH NEW & USED
VEHICLE.
2.
3.
WHEN YOU ARE READY OUR PO un SALES PEOPlE Will GIVE
YOU. ntE PLAIN FACTS. ON EN
GINE EOOIPMENT ANO PERF-Olt·
MANCE•
'REE APPRAISAL ON YOUR PRE·
SENT VEHICLE WITH A8SOlUTH 'f
NO OtlllGA TION TO YOU
S.JlllVICE D~l · f
BILL BARRY PONTIAC
4 WE'LL HAf'Pll Y SHOW YOU THE
l(Elt EY BllJE 800t< F'ttlCE ON A.NY
USED CAR IN STOCK I •
5 YOU'LL HAVE COMPtETE f'ftlCING
IN~MATION 8EfORE YOU fill
OUT A CREDIT APPLICATION Oft
• SIGN A THING.
&. BOY WITH CONFIO£NCE ... AU N£W
& USED CAR WARRANTIES ARE
POSTED ON THE WINDSHIELD~
YOUR INSPECTION'
eependab .. new manaoemen
-BIN Pll-9-Ull-941.MOl'U AF.,,,_--··· I f k
BILL BARRY PON11'1AC
See for yourself ... We're Now the S-0 ,.~~;J
Dealershi that is Different! 2000 E. FIRST ST. SANTA ANA
At the San!• Ana Fwy. 553-1000
t i
_,~-··---·-···-···--···-... ,. ---.... -------
R. V. CLEARANCE
CHOOSE FROM: PACE ARROW, WINNEBAGO
TIAGO, HARVEST, SUNLAND, DREAMLINER
BEA.VER, MIDLAND, MAYFLOWER! I!
ALL PRICES MARKED ON WINDSHIELD!
, .. -,... .. ..__ . 1•'70/Ch
""' 1972 COIU
UVl IU'ltL TUllll .....,,.... .. ~.,.,,,. .... .. .. -.... __ . .__. °"''_ ..... _4't ~,.-:-,::. ......... ,,,-
lf7HllY" U.U.
WITll I n. CMOWI ~--~.,_.. .,,.._ ,.... ....... ......_ .. .., ..... _.,_
--·~·
All BEUS Sia 11 P'lll SM(. ILL ..U PUS
IAI I I.Ila
tf75 n DOIADO .. ,nn.-.
"" ......... -~-............_, ___ .,..
-o ...... ,_._ ......... _,.._ ......... , ........ ·----·· ..... ......... ~~ ...
..... ~ ............ h .......... f __ , ..,..,.._..,..,..,. ......
~·~·IJ
''"' 1976 CASUAL 1974 SPAITAH
17\lt "· .. ,. "· """" MO~ TUIUI "--' .......... -_,,.,. .... ... . ..... .._ .......... .... -.. .......... --........... ...... ..,. .... '"'_.. ._ •....-. ..,. ....... <Wt •VII'• 1--.•1
''"' . ,.,,
t9740MC » n MOrot NOMI ""' ....................... ....... .. -..... (mt ....... .. =~ ....... _.:. "''""'''
1973 CHIV ~,.,.u.
.,..~•-.o -..c__.. ..................... ..... -•--•h••\•• ..... ,,,..,. ..
21 fl .... ---:.r.::. ........... ..... ., .... '12.ltl .,,. .. .. . ...... ..... ...... ....._. .... ..... --
•12,191 •11,111
Bill BARRY
R.¥.
CENTER
-COl1fS lBST!
I
D 12 O~IL v Pl1..0l F11d11y J•nuary 1•. 11m Aalto1, l11tporhd Allto1, Imported 4.uto 1, l•ported Autos, lmporhd A..to 1, IMporled ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
AMtot, l•pon.d Allto1. lmporftd Autos, Imported Ponche 9750 Toyota 9765 Tritnpft 9767 VcAtw09" 9770 Volvo 41772 t90 I ·••••••··••••···•·········•··•················ .....................••....•...................•...•.........•...•...........•.•..•..•....•..............•...•..... ····•··••·•·······•···· ...................... .
Mire ... l ..w1 9 740 Men:edH lea 41740 Merc .. 1 a.m 9740 '611 VW Bug {;u::;tom
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••PORSCHE 1966 912/4 '77 1976 TRIUMPH fiberglass F'endt>r'I, '11
VOLVO
1974 MII 280 .SO SL 1973 Xlnt eood. whllctlan super <"lean. •1.7 Mags, 8 trk lope, 104K. one own A M·l''M ,,
Sed an . Tohncc Blue w /avory int Michelin, Konr, $6200. TQYQJAS 6cyl 4:1iiee<t.AM/FM $!17558l-9005 brown/bamboo lot1irlor. (714 J64S-3323,673·516Sev. 1142.9333 :.t ereo & only 12,000 ·65 Squarebark 4spd. Full power & in im· 1 maculale condition! '72 HERE NOW miles lmmacu ate' overhauled motor. gd HERE NOW !383RLV) • 1S MBZ 3000 74SWUI MG 9 742 914, appearance group, <"8SNPJ ) coo<l. $800. 642-4945
Very clean s<'ns1ble pay' ••••••••••••••••••••••• $4300. ~ ~~ ONLY $4995 ·ro vw Cam~r. -1600--e-n-tt ..... EW COLORS
1974 MIZ 4 50SE
Blue/blue 1nter1or In
mint condition w /lo
miles' (l28PMV).
merit:. • 72 MBZ 280St -~-· ._.. ..J ~ • . •NEW COLORS HEWPORTDATSUH w/Oll cooler & Caller. " 45009'!1'A,Veryclc;rn • • '~i~ 71 · 911T Targa, arr, 8880oveSlreel Huns good . $1700. •MEWMODEl.S 73 MBZ 450SE 960Jl.W, ~ .,/ • • mags, mint cond, xtrus. •NEW MODELS NEWPORT BEACH ~9 Huge savings on all l'f'·
$10.49U. Lease/Buy, ~7855 HugeSuvingsonALL re-83).llOO ---------sensible payment'> • 72 malnlne new 76s & . 7 0 v w ca m P e r . mainlng new 76s It
MBZ 350SL 11H:AM ,..,=s;,;.~~·~.·&Ac. 1975PORSCHE Deln06. .74 T R6. 2s.ooom1. Westphalia Like new. OeMU~lnsUtlO<'SkVOLVO
Clean, ConcoW'8 <.:ondt '7 7 MG B 's Fr e"' 91 ... 2.0 LITRE The Better Bargain M/FM ~ .... te A·k· XLNT S31SO tJ bl ts " A CllS""" . ...., mg ' xtras Ml ION VIEJO Avery Pkwy. S I.) Frwy on. sens1 e paymen ' Syr /50,000 mi ext. warr With AM/FM & air cond. MAR9UIS TOY OT A $4600, P P. fl63..2268 eves 8»5190 831•2180 _.95•1210 2.8701 Maricuente Pkwy. • 76 M BZ 450SL Cpe Wlth 77 MCB purchase Low Miles. (977NZA). MISSION VIEJO "'
MISSION VIEJO
IMPORTS
77 "Mix.le" Blke-S128
77 Jawa Moped·red-~
7:S S uzuki
GT550-4V79'19·S715
72 Honda Z·Olll28·$11~ 72 Lin c Mir I V -
975MXlH2575
72 E co n ol1 ne
Van-IA37956-$2275
7 1 Suz u ki 831-1748 roadster . Lease/Buy, Choose one of our 27 BILLYATES 831-2880495-UIO '68BUG,xlntrunnin11,g -----____ sensible payments Both Buy I Purchase Plans . Ure:., auto. shift. $900. ORANGE COUHTY
1958 MIZ 190SL tops, wires, lo·m1. stereo. A L s o N E w M G VW-PORSCHE 6'13-8587 VOLVO
TS12S-~18·l145
72 MGB-164CIM·S2'175
Cou,ERO"DSTE·R /\M -f'M $17 ,99!1 MIDGETS ON LY SaoJuan Cnp1straoo EXCLUSlVEl.YVOLVO "' 1032'J'QL) $74/mo.SerNo80617.cap 8 37 -4800493-4511 69 VW Bug, AM 1-'M, Hardtop & soft top 54318. red $398_ Res _ ____ mags, run.<;, looks >:ood. l.clrgesl Volvo Dealer
Ongmal' W11h radio A S2352.4048mos0EL 57S~t\'r Sharp. 77 TR7 $4995 + P.O E Sl.000. 675-4266 & 434 inOrani:eCounty'
classic! OTX775l - ----Bsto£rovcr$7500. 1976 sticker price re FernleafCdM BUYorLEASE
SADDLEIACK MGI 9744 t73-m4or673 8458 duced $6S4. Call today Cor DIRECT
831•2040 49s-4949 !SS5t'OF> S799'J. l'llo;tn • '67 MGB GT. Xlnt cond . 71 !.114 Sharp blk on blk. •71 TOYOTA Buy/Lea!ie Plan. Semu· Of -• --- - ---
71 VW Comper-Pop
Top.062083-$2875
71 Nova-789CRB-Sl27S
7 1 Toy Wan
281 DLS-$l27S
VALLEY IMPORTS • 72 MB Z 250 C pe ••••••••••••••••••••••• -details on exciting new '67V:64~5tu_12354i··r~rt~a-s. ~·,·~· .[~afi~.·~
-----• 74 MBZ 280 1272LWHl low mr .. wires, radials, lluns Xlnt. Nu brks. lAfldCnlfHr blepayments
.71 280SE 35 Cpe Sunr'f $7999. Clean• Check this new l'Pl & paint. Sl4SO/ S419S.646-6458wknd • cyt. ••4-0r•"~ Petnt -· ----•73 Super Bug. lmmac
immac. $14.000 price Many other dean ofr 497-3965 I'""' Po-che, t14w ··•n"., r'u1!'.'!.,w11u • •·W•"'"· Yolkswogen 9 7 70 New brks. xlnt t ires, 'VV'>c S. Manchester
70 Toyota-683CDl·S975
iO VW S q bk .
6.lK:ZW ·$1'75
OOLTDSd..470MXT-S8i5
68 VW 8ug-:t74?tf XJ.S9i5
68 Pont.W gn.-
938CZW-S975 250c ll··"Jblk 2tlll's • 75 280 Cpc Stk """ ... ~ ~ " -· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... ....,., of "'"" ~~...: 750 2011 '7l . "" mt 5746 $11,995 Clean' • 76 1976 MG 8 , xlnt cood dutch, etc. ~ :.pd/mags. '2995 '72 VW Westphalia pop top raUJO . .,.,,sf r 644""""" i·'\nan u1m -67 Cad. Sd.·920BSW·Sl 175
66Chevy-SYS572·$499 Hare. ruel inJ beauty '""' MBZ under 10,000 AM/FM stereo tape $S800.673-1658 eves $3700 w /wire w hls . $6200 '°"' d k f camper. 1 owner. . '76 Con vert . ~000 mi. w kd 898.a797 miles, very c l ean eek, clean. ma e o r. ·73 914 2.0 AM ffM. Ora. !J00.1430 AM /FM ster eo cass ..
ee ays (744NZD). Lea!oe/8uy -714-552-36&1; :!13·~824l Li:t green. A ppr grp, c-oc.·oa mats, cover. Perl. BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA sens ible pymts. p ..... _ ... _ 9750 SS2<l0_675_400_2 iO VW Pop Top. Reblt 64().7561
... ~me" eng. New tires. paint. ....•....••.•••.•...... ••••• •••t•l l•d •••• , ...... $2500. (714)631 0048
Lease
Hew-UMd
OVER I 00 1971 Porsch. 9 14 ReftCIUlt 9755 s speed, AM/FM 8 track ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------l973 Bug. Yellow. xlnt ~-~-'~~ "V"'' '"'Vf0Hlt• tt
t ...... , .... ,.,
'7 l Westphalia Poptop
camper. Xlnl eond. Pvt
ply. 646-UIZJ.
MERCEDES stereo & low mileai;c. 'GH ll8, runs i.lnl 65,000 '70 Corol_la 4 s pd, r /h, ~f;ti2~if32~~~:.fJ;;M ·
OH DISPLAY 1952 MBZ 3005 Classic Excellent C'ondition Mi.xlntrond $600 74,000 mt, xtra cln $925. --·--------VW '68 Bus. 7-Poss. reblt House of lm~I Coupi• One of only 8ti pro. $3900. Pri. pty 496·3KHO 675-119:..IOor642·4718 C81l IW6·2901. '68 VW Bug ll.000 mi on enjl, lo mi, gd cond. 4.
duee<t that year' Must --------e K & l r :.pd $1650. 673-7320 aft
1971 VOLVO
142 ESEDAN
l\utomallc, air cond .
tape deck & leather m-
66 Ply Cpe.·630.JSH-$499
61 T· Bird-FW J 088-$499
CALL 642·0795
tenor. (810DFX>. Now Car for sale. Needs some
reduced to light body work. For inti>
ONLY $2995 ca_ll..:..646-~2538-. __ _
MliRQUIS
MOTORS
A.MC 9905 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
'76 AMC GREMUH AUTllORIZ D see lo appreeuik' Pn '74 914 Por:o.che, bit. Rolls Royce 9756 i3 Toyota Corona Dix. 4 ~torr" 968-0909 a 0 s 5pm
• MERCEDES DEALER pty.S81·7'46. xtras, ll'l<l.ll' ••••••••••••••••••••••• dr. auto, arr cond. $:1750 i---------
6862 Manchester, ---675 6265 aft 6 #1 DEALER IN U.S.A. 673-5258aft S 69 vw Auto. Clean. 1969 YW Auto.
Sac. cln. 675-7792
~1807MAll(;U(ll1fl <>•WT
'<'"'O•r''''''#liJ -h ~ •. ,,.,, 1
Ml~\ION \Ill JO
6J1·7660 49~· 1110
6 Cylinder, automallc
transm1ss1on , r adio,
heater. power steenng &
brakes. air conditioning.
roof rack.
.. Buena l'ark ·~N> c full --~ 523-7250 IJ ~L . lmmac roof '7S 914 2.0 Lttn· /\M/FM m ROY ·71 Corona, auto. arr. very Days. 548·7333. Eves,
power. leat~er, sun 1' stereo. ,1pp .. ar J!rp . R lo mr, new radials. xlnl 645·3728KevlnorBob.
On the Santa Ana Fwy, stereo, crwse. conlro . Mags, metallic copper. CARVER cond. 496-370.5 .67 VW. 1 ownr Ex cond
_.. MB Sci •72 Oar other t·~tras. ~ng. ow~er ~""r (')l!an. ,~16 04iw r R1.~.LJl~mRbO~ye~[ _., · 0 · · t akrni.: deli ver y 77 ... ~ -.... • . • '74 Cehca. AIC. landau Nu seal covers, & muf
'69 VW Bus. Custom paint lntenor Por:.t·hL• wheels '75 Volvo 242 DL. Low caps all nu $MOO. 496·2258 mile . flll'lory air. s tcre<> Like new. inside & oul
$4900 495 5.534 : ~·0~~l ~~~· ~~~ c~g~· 45051.l: SIS.900 WISGO L974. ~11 t. 2 o. t'\M 1-·~1 IW•llO"I ~.,,, top, new radials. xlnl fler. S800 548·3875
·n 4sLW. l'vt Ply I 111115.56-65919am Spm stereo. tnJ)!'>. 2ti.Uoo m1 -.-. rood 7:t7-3672, 751·2800
66 VW. good rond nu rear
tires $600. 557 7337 aft 5. 642-S678 Or646-930l, Laz. wkday~ xlnl cond S6!IOO 548-8921 ClOSED ~UN DAYS Glen Sell Idle items
---
A6A46SE188350.
$2616
GUSTAFSON
t '44-7619 -
>Mfos, Mew 9800 A..to1, New 9800 Autos, Hew 9800 Autos, Hew 9800 Autos, Hew '800 Autos, Hew 9100 Stroker Crank 11150 CC.
.._.••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnl cond,$1200.
1973 VOLVO
164ESEDAM
Automali<', pwr. steer·
LINCOLN MERCURY
1 680r Ck•"-'' B1,, ,!
Huntongtn n 11,.,,. •,
842-88'\4
. .
..
4 . . --
CASH REBATE
ON ALL OF THESE REMAINI• '76
Oldsmolllles and IMC Trucks & Vans
o~ls'l\i1f&RY 3004 ST ARFIRE 10204 PICJC UP
1:no1c:ec101.ae1 IOW100l'J<i1-I
~101*1 3110 STARFIRE 10226 PICJC UP
2901T STARFIRE (l007C8C10GG731 Cl1QJl-1n.le91
3172 OMEGA BROM 1 ~oU>J.~ UP IX'Ol'Q!CIO~t l
3140T STARFIRE (3Bl9.Jl!l.lllQI
la>011MIC101 I Tl) 3173 STARF1RE 1031 '!J.ou;r< 1&61 DBtOMSTRA TOI~ tll'oTC9C1 I 10061 CTIWt -3178 STARFIRE 1 C1.JT1 SIERRA
2583 STARFIRE (3lOTcec1I10061 IOU7S»01Mel
llD010IC10Ga791 320'l ST ARFIRE 10379 SIERRA 261,~~RE 1Xl070i!C10&M8) tllEUl8VI02.40:S)
32Z[soLD }FIRE (GM~ BEMOHSTUT~ISI
2614 STARFIRE 131 ~) 9544 1975 VAN QD010ICI01W • GMffiiMVEHTORY
2911 STARFJRE (l0~1$llll) 1 11(so~ 97C111975 VAN IJ0010IC1oe1~1 ITGYt~ec>M141 2946T DB.TA 88 10044 TERRAVAN 10150 Y2 TON PICJC UP ~I c f()IJ:IMIUllO)()Ofll !TCL t•el'l089061 'Ml STARFIRf 101~0~~ UP 10160 V2 TON PICJC UP 3001Qlft010<,, IT '.II ITCl.t46Z607D<MI 2994 STARARE 10199 PICX UP 10211 PICK UP l30010IC10743:11 !Tllln48l~19«11 mtol-IOI0191
WEEKEND USED CAR SPECIALS
72TOIOMADO
.,.,... -•-I'S, ..._ "'
____ ,,__,
7J OLDS OMEGA
0.. Y.4,-.vtfty!IOO I'S PIL.bve>tl __ ,~_, ... _,
_,..,,,...,.. •l'' c:... ..... ..,._. •
---.............. ··-· 4 •tl It -
'73 AMC JAVBJN
···~
74 POHTIAC YENIURA 74 TOYOTA COIOHA •72 PONTIAC RREllRD
···~ •79~ ·-~
72 PONTIAC LE MAHS
.... ._ .... , .. c...,.. • .ett,,.__ • ._ .. ...... , .... ......., ........ .-...... _
74 PINTO SQUIU = IO"';:_l.':'°' ,_ __..,., l'llflO
._ __ -c-.... .-........... »
....................... u .... ......
'74 OLDS 88 '71 OLDS CUTLASS
• t1not v~ -'fl ,00 11, ....., . p s po ~-~~.'.. eu17~nlNAOP a1 Pa. .. CIOnd. .... o Rl"4 !~Mt13&1 ·.--~• < .• ,~ ··~
'73 OLDS 98LS '73 CHEVY '12 TON
eo..i.. ,......e • .,_ ""--!DO "INfM llef90 w "°"". -!5350WWI
····~
•74 CHEVY '!J TOH
-... .. ~-~-----••330161
.. __ .,... ~ c,...,...,,,. ....... -.. --,...__..,.,.,. ........ ,.. , .. .....,
7lGRANDNIX
,._ ~~ too. PS 1>8 P.......,.... =-rt::~c:,···· "" _, ···~
'75 OLDS CUTI.ASS
8tlcw> Coe V9 --,. .. ,. ......... too ---··u-. •12s~
Brand lhw 1977 HOlllAS •• Ill Stocklll
lnat Selection e IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
UNIVERSITY SALES & SERVICE
Oldsmobile • GMC Trucks • Honda Cars
2850 Harbor Boulevard, Costa Mesa • 540-9640
,
. . . . . . . . -.
557-827\
·m VW Bus, xlnl cond.
MUST SELL!
642-S439 673-2872
61 VW Ca mper Van. Pop
top CRolled>Westphalia
cabrnels, 1500 e ng.
Compl. $495. 646-6458
wknd
in~. air rood. & lcather1.;::~=~....;::.;._, ___ _
intenor (969GMQ>. Now Well 9tl0
OHLYS3995
MliRQUIS
MOTORS
llilh)l M,\RuUiRll! PKV. V
'>unO•t·uofr wy-A~~,.,1 •• t
Ml~\ION VII JO •
HJI • l ftbU 49~ • IJt(/
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
76 Buick Electra Umited.
24m mi, metallic blue.
whl Landau top, has
every option incl elec
moon roor & bltn CB
radio. M.int cond. Pvt.
Ply 714-759-0890
. -Super Cherry cond. '73 70 VW Coovert New top '70 V_?lvo 161. rlean. Century Coupe, auto,
& tires. 996--3929 eves & AM I f M. arr. PS. Jthr mt, pwr, vinyl top, till whl,
wknds. 979-3051 wkdys. 642 0735 art 6PM xlnt tires ht1s had 1m
1971 hi~ VW. i91s Volvo 244GL. xlnt ClUIC care.'$2800 559·5457
Clean. cond. loaded, sacr1f1ce· '76 Eslale Wagon. all
$1000 673-6216 640-473R xtras. Lake new. 9300 mt.
------74Wstn Faclair.4-spd. $6SOO.S40..7007
Sqback '66 • rack, stereo. lo mt SELL idle Items with a
Good cond. X Int con d . S 4 i 0 O Daily Pilot Classified Ad.
Best ofr 673 U721 962· 7022. 642-5678.
---~ utos. Used Alltos, Used Autos, Used .•.•....••....•.............•..•..•.•...............•••.•..•.........
OFFER
ENOSH7-77
1973 Ot.DS CUTLASS
JDll.CP.
v~ a.uto "~ t..-: ,,, ,..
.._.. p Che bfllll lt .. M $ 3495 •eO'O Malet «IW .. ,.,
.,.yl •ool Ml•d 91011
--.1&31HTY
1976 MERCURY MONARCH
4Dll.$0 v 8 •uto t1a1u fl
~,,.,.... ..... 1 ...
•1'1111 c.ower ' ,,.,,,,..,
_.Maroon 1nl1t10r O,,ly
1900 ....... i&*'AI
1972 MERCURY MAlt;MllS
IRGH. a•a . V.. auto ''""' 1.,. .,, tun t1Wf radH> ,_,,,., ""'*' ,.,,,. "'""1 root "'"••• _.,. (161FVlll
1975 MYCURY MAlq&llS
llGH. J.._c:P
AT
JOHNSON & SON
111 -v auto ttaM flC.tOtY •" tun oo.,. 1tffe0 t.Ot0.
"••'•' wor "''' v1"'f' '"°' i••1e<1 o•-. -(;0-Ylfi; o•••" m1telt1c: tuu1ft Qretft te•t"•' . ' 1976 LIHCOLN
COUN
s4295
V-1 MO tftna tactOt'f e1t
'"" OO•er •t•eo racs.o
...... .., .. IU•t. •••ti $ 9395 rool hf\~ QIAJ1 Wlll'IM f
CO'lett w h•ll •lmltOOf'I -..,,..,°' IOOSPl\CI
1975 MEICURY MOMTMO
v4. euio ..._ llCl"'Y ••·
tlf#I ~r •1•.0 t•flO ht t•.. ••• ,.,.. •tf\fl
•OOI tt•1ted OIMt. •hMt
-.OMLl.L
$ 5495 :~ ~tory "" "°"'" $ 2995 t~ r•rflO Mtleif' ·~• -CIOMNOI
1tn MacuaY MOM'llM> v..._ ...... ,_,,,,,.
11111 -tltf.0 flChO ....,., --·· ,.,.. fl""
root, lim.cl 0-•-cow.,• OIOWflll f'l•t•fH• i-. .. I ... lnl ... O< I-$4495 1-~ s2595 v .. t.tl\O 1.-ltCIO<'f ....
OO•t• tttttl,,O t10IO,
-..... -.(202.IEOL
OLN lt7J CAPRI 2600 COlft
V'4..--lodofy ... '~" ,......, ·-tH le. s 2695 ~ ~-,,, .... .;;.::: -!.'\t:--·-· S2695 ~IOltC' tM•uor '
Johnson & Son ·
I* = • •' 2626 Harbor Boula•atd :I • Costa Mesa • (71 4) 540-5630 ~
I
...... UMd Alltot,UMd AaltCH,Uaed Alltot,Uaed A.toa.Uaed AMto U d Friday.January 14.1977 DAILY PILOT DJi •••••••• ••• • • •• ••• • ••• •• •• • • • • • • • • ••• •••• ••• • •• • • • • • • • • • • •• ••• • ••••• •• ••• • • • • • • • ••••••• ••• • •••••••••••• ••••••••••• •• •• _ __._;..;...~~. '-..:....:.~-----..,.---!=::!:~::.:.::::::.:..~~-• •• • • • • • • • • • ••• • • •• • • • • ...... t............ ~ .. ~!! .......... !!.'.! ~::!'!':! ........ !!!! ~-····-·· ......... ~-.......... !!.. ~!.-:'~ ......... !!~~ Mlllhmq 9952 ..... ~·.~~~ ........ -•• ~.-.. -·-=-~ ...... . ... Font WalOfl, tm M&Yeriek Crabber ....................... PWo 9917 .., tt M'JG
1975 CHIYY ..,, Torino Wp .• pu.M, R1'0Cll ~. •• MW pmat. x.Jal ln· 1975 MUST•~ ti .......................... -..-----~-..-----.. --··· MOMZA2+2 raek,newracilab,34,000 &:U.-3318 SJde fl out. ADA.o trans, 4cy1.sllcksh.ilt.radao& L97SPtntoRunaboul.fuJ.ly "7.4PtyaOllllo.Mr.A.ll ft11M"•D
Au&omatk wtth radio & nu. Clean S2t60 6'G28:111, • very ail)W. $UllO firm be.al« <ATVo:M>. Nov. equapped. 700mi, xtru, a.teo mi. XW. ...... ,... 'blatll w/Ma~k ~aw.(•LWA).Now 673-3430eves fr1 Ford V-8 Wea. lo m1, ...... reducedto 1175-l106 ~ 1--foc. Barel" llHd OMLY..,695 P/S,P/B.l>Htofr.Call "'-U•Y$269S -------.._. " .,. '75 Granada. Blk. 2 dr, 6 913.l4&7 '72Gnbbtr.Gcyl. loaded. ~ 'i• P\At.o Runabout. ,._._ t"'6 w 101ll1 12.$31 a etual
OWUty and Price -· Cuarantffd
l~sfng ~llfhts Pr~''" Rates
l~st Sel"'tion o'f New & Used Cad~lac\ in
Or111nge Coonty
Open Sunday
Ca dill at MaS'ter Dealer
2fiO() Har'boc Blvd.
Costa Mesa 540-9100
Mf\ROUr s ·
MO TOR S
·~ 13 ' "'I I• ~ .. ,., "
• 1 -Awt I·
-., '• I JO
• Jb .. I I• 1]10
ey.I. PS1PB. auto. reel·-. ----pvt pty. $H'5./otrer: mi. swuf. AM /f'M. dlx -··•··--·••••• ... mtltt All extra~• .. 11eats.AM1FM.a1r 75GranadaGh1a.Stereo. 493-~ lotr de extr macs "lSOrand'PnA.. ... J (llQLPIU.Leuoor&uy
Xl111 cond $3t95. Call elec snrf. siher Sharp' 9950 r adaals. UTOO . Pb Qiipper mb&. Pl&. P/B. Cort f'()l( Leuin~·25&6 MS-22MaAS.m S'31119.644-1T75eves Metcwt ~0 P/snu 6 tod.s. • r . NewPort Blvd .• C:O.ta
-··-••••••••-••••••• AM/FM tlffff t'l'QI -._-.-1.
'66 Galaxie. ~d ~·New "IS Gran Tonno 8 pass. '72 Rwuibout. 28.000 ml. co lr\. d•c•r' pk I .
paint Sacnf1ce ~00. Waaon, all pwr. x\Tas. 1973 Mercury Colony epd, 2.0C>Oci: eo.a. radJo. MOO/t.t e&. ~:(TU)
631·3320 SJIOl.ftrm.8911-3197 Putt Wagon·Like NEW! 30mpt.$2.000.M0-5976 $40.'la.Uena..Plll.
1975FOID
GRANADA
U.. '945 = ~ ~ 0~ '75 Mus~& 11. hardtop. '74 Pinto Runabout M• '74 Gft.ANt> PrU ~ -·-·••••-••-•••• pty ~ · · ~ 8JIOO ml $3.400. In brn.auto.air x.tnt. coal. Lo ;.u_ M~t-,.;------,.-,.-
va.. automatic, stereo,
75 Malibu CL. 4 dr. air, er~ eonlrol & vinyl
radials. to11 cond. Ownr. r oof· Im ma c u I ate tllruout! (8321..WE).
'70-9 pass Chev Stn Wgn.
AT, PS. PB, fac AC. 4 nu tires. $1.000/ofr. Ask 'g
962-3938 '7SUMCOU4 · · mint cond. Pvt ply. 493-8628 •P'Y!:!!;·:,!i7W*=:=:=----.... 1"_,,_,..._••••••-TOWMC_._ 76 tc..-....o&•cH 6M-9582 af\ 1 PM. 1-~s ~ . Plywmuftl 9960 '70 GTO B & H p .S. p .8 . GT Sl11 W1n 1974. Full power Including Comes .wi th Y·8. 65 MU4lani289V8.auto. ••••••••••••••••••••••• A.T. Nu pa!Jal ele~ .. Sporty clash w/ltPM. vtn.yl top1 till wheel, a utomatic. rad~o & PS. AC. raelry mags. S18:i05S7·3909 .., Dllwh)g,aut.o.AM/'111
auise contl'O~Allil/FM beater. ~er steering & sliver/red. Sharp! $950. ATLAS . aereo. 4'1,900 ml. SlQO. 13•595· 9112-0tCM ___ , OMLY $4399
'75 Nova 2 dr 40.000 m1.
Good cond. 12900.
&46·5967 aft 9 JOP_M __ _.
'72 Monte Carlo. $1700.
PS/PB. a1r, llll whl. 66M.
840-0633
Mi\RQOIS
MOTORS
tape. air c .. looks ~: atr cood. Loo~ at 497.3965 1971 GTO Convertible. IW0-1<115' s.8·~·
&ood! lU c.087 EC> Uus pnce! Yours Coram· ~ler l,., ltt AJC PIS P/B AM/FM • $6416. aned:&ate delivery. (Lie. ~ 9955 ~ ·ty'•:'J*~. 10 u.w!d gbss. WJeJ whls: '75 IUtc:bback. 4 apd. ~JA>. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~n aa .. Sun, ... xlbt cood. 1 owner. (213) AM /FM • .COOO. $4416. 1968 Olds mobile We n. 2!129Harbor Blvd.. S -1349: <714)Ml-JS14 6'15-MllO
PJS. PJB. A/C, radio. gd "-ta ... _.. b .. -a. cond. S800 / bsl o fr. ......., ,......,.. '58 Catalina. llut .ell. 1974 Vee• Kale .... c ••
G JS ... AFSON
•_· 'i•: : ~ ... "1EF1CURY GUSTAFSON 531-2267 546-1934 S150 or make otr. Aft 4. cUlltom m . 4 spcl, 31111000
'T3 Monte Cnrlo. A/C, top ~~ mi. 11.lnt cood. Make olr. c o nd 12400 Uay . . '7201ds Cutlas:. SUpreme. 73Fury 111. loaded.e:iu:ep-673'883lew.
lddO] MAllvUflll II PN W'
)<noO•t>'fuf•w) -A.,:. '•·•
Mt'J~IOfllic Vl(J
dJ1·18oC. ~<I~·•.•;
· :i.1 •. •: 3,. i.:·~ e:.ct
~ .. ~· ~;•:-,. Seac.1
· a.i 2.aa44
LI NCOL ~ MERCURY
16~00 B•ach Bl•Cl Hun1°nglon 8"'ach 821-4230/Eve~·l85S '75 LTD w/sunrf • cnme ;o ContinataJ Cpe. All sharp. PP. $2200./bst orr uonal cond. New ~. '10 Grand Prix. all pwr. 842-8844 --------1 contrl. S3750. ~S-1493 eqp.xlntcond.Must sell. 551-4100 $2.075.4.92·1181 good c:ond. Ftrst Sl!MlO 71• .... '71-i
'89 CheyY Impala. make btW1'18&5pm. houghl new car. $1600. 'IB Mercury. ToP Cond! PWo 9957 .67 Vall seda S49S 6 laltes.544Hl131 llteO. 7~ev
•ood 2nd C'ar $450 Coft•1d-r ..... c"'up part many ·tras' CaU Rod aol 0• · ""'""'-'-'--" """'. ,..,
.. -·----
•74 Veta Htcbbclt GT. ~3121 . . '70 Ford Galaxae 4-dr. "" "' ... , • -· ••••••••••••••••••••••• cyl. Great eng. Tight """ron::~...., .... 1974 C..-.C Xtras incl air. 300 ene. trade Days. $46-8833· 53S-090'1 aft S:30PM. '74 Sta. Wgn. AM/FM. • body. brwsed fender PIS. P/B. allto. tact air. Ma1 whls. new t:lrn.
All/Fll ndlo. air, mt toM. 28..5IO 111i. Mltiq szm. IA-67lt
Broutham. Me tallic 57Chevy, runs good. body Sl200 Ph 540-1548. Eves.641-222& "70 Mere 4dr. Pwr & air. spd. t> cyl. 33.000 M1, 67S-1788 $1NeedalOCDedOl'k.
N ... vtnyl top. blue ;;ood SOOIJ Sec al 390 E . .,.__. G ad '""' 2 dr • 11 LJncoJn. 4 dr. good new tires. 996-3929 eve & ~19aR.6pm 72 "-·-·-6 PIS. OOO.SM-3306 gpm. ~ vdlvel lnterior 17th S1 Da)s. or call ruau ran a '"· •" cond Loaded leatbe wlmd.s ~1 kdys ..,.......,. • •uto. · · · l..OAD£D . Full Power 751 9488 Evs cyl. auto. air. p/b. p/s, S2 ooO i1S.023? • r . • w · . '73 Pmto Wgn. AC. 4spd. R/H . rac air. good tir~ IB Fi~bird 3:50, •pd • ........ b .. , ... , a..t,.. ads doJaw.U. Low mlleaae' S8 ooo R&:H. 7*>0 Illa's. SUOO. • · Sell things Cast with Daily dxl int, 1 ownr. Xlot & baU. elec Ip. 42M m1 great coad. new&. Ir 1>911, 630-1710 ·-£ve1, '14 Impala 4dr. A/C. n 536-0449. Want Ad Help~ 642-5678 Pilot Want Ads. <'OOd. $Z200.8J0.5033 Sl~. PP640-f78L brb.aMJM
-. ..... Prt.•pty. ~~~·~\~~~~~w ~Mew AMfos. Mew 9800 Autos, New 9100 A.lllol. Hew 9tOO Amlos. Mew tlOI ...._..._ ... ...._Mew
I f72 CA.DILL.AC ••••••••••• ••• ......... ••• • • ............. • •••• ••• • • • • • • • ••••••• •••••• ••••• •• • • • • ••••• •••• •• • ••••••• ••• • .......................... ·---·
Co•-iDlvlW ·71 Impala. 2 dr. Cstm, _. "' pwr. air . very clean .
(OllOHFW). $1400. art !1:30. &.42-t171
OMLYS21t7
Mf\ROUIS Mo ·r a Rs
,,. "' ,/J .... ""' ' . . . . . .
'I\ \I "1 I 1
•' tlC ''•
'73MAUIU
SACllFtCE
Air. Radio. St e r eo
Cassette lit mileage, ex·
ccllenl eond. Will sell by
Sunday .SISOO firm.
~1·38$5 after Spm or
M>-375.4 during day.
DbNM forces sai.. •73 El '78 Monte Carlo. P /S,
Dorado Ca briol e t. P /B . A/C , AM /FM U , o o o J m a k e o r r . sterl!O, $4800. m-~ _-. __ 1ea.s_. ______ ,·llG Cbevelle V-8. stick.
1911 C.dlllac, Coupe de NOO. VW.. D"Elegance. Brand 831·3388
:.,~.ne;e~l:ee~~::~:: .• CAMERO ~ cood, 'JZ1
DtMount price Call eni. nu tires, air. AM/ ... _... C --P1& stereo radio & A· -nc.. • r--track. 567..SUl:l/ DIG-7122 751'8910
1974 CADILLAC
COUPI DIVILLE
VS. automaUc. ractory
air cond .. full power inc.
ateer1n11. brakes. win dow9 & seals, wsw tares
wfwbeel covers. vinyl
roof, Unted glass. leather
A trulse control . <_,lKLI).
OMLYS5295
.-wP<>ltT DATSUH
888 Dove atreet NEWPORT BEACH
ll:J-1300
.......................
1.968 Dod!ite Monaco. rully
equipped. xlnt mee
cond ~. 6'2-TI43
11176 Cordoba. loaded. sood C()ll(i. 95500.
6'5-0556
'7S Cordoba, orig ownr,
prof. serviced, many
11tra1 Incl AC. lo mi.
$4811&. 7118 St697' 557. 2611
ffJO
"15 CDV Ork. Green. It. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1m. l*lded cab top. CIC AMll'M sU'.rl!O, lift whl. Mart IV lt'U ~~ft' bt· Mal tit.es Auto dr. lodi. t /at, fully eqwp d"*"'
leatb. 4JM frwy. ma rl. etc. M700. !!Yes. M4H. US-1313 daya. _Wr_nM __ . ____ _
~ev .. fswknds ~
'flf CdV. 2 dr brdtp, Xlnt •••-••• ... ••••••••••••
allape. Runs ad
11000/tlrm. 1175-3122.
MW'716
''fl CdV. Loaded. HW
U19. lllnt COl'ld. 17000.
Al-SUI
c • ......................
lt71CAM.UO
VI. automatic. pwr .-..tna + brakes. a1
eood. 6 aport1wheels
(JlllllCI:). Now reduc
'° ONLYS419S
M /\R Q DIS
MOTORS
,1 •• , ••
·' ..... ""' .. ' ,
•. l
~ ------
tt14CO.Hi IE
T·TOP
AUlomaUc, aJr cond. fs
o nly 34 ,000 miles.
(llOKKP).
SAOOlBAQC
VAWY IMPOITS
IJl-2040 495-4949
·5 Corvette Stingray. 2
~. ortlot paint. red. Ulte
,...., 360. AMtFM. ruu
pwr, '4'00firm.117~7473
'86 Corvette 4 27 .
96000/bst Needs litUe
wwk Dys 754-21'6, aft ~.
~'~
iS Corvette. rull pwr "
ab'. Low ml. pitrf. eood.
Dest orrer Ask for Bill
l.ogue. 540 2660 or
640-t3a ~p_t_y. __ _
c..,..
'Tl Carnaro. t~)' air. 8 trk •••••••••••••••••••••••
attru. xlnt cond. '76COUGARXR7
GUO/bet afr. *·Ul2 Com~' with V -8 . 11m•9'oc"· i.blt eng, aulomalae. radio .It
--aaooo I --.. ..._ heater. power ateerlng • •...&lr• m · _./,~t brakes. vinyl tOJ). air
cond . loolt:lng eood !
'17 C.B'Mlro, t t)'I. 3 on the Yours ror Immediate de-
t•lll m n. lld rond . ll •e r y . <Ser . •"-t. ....... 6A9:1HS43713).
C_A_M_A_R_O-lt-T-2.-JIO--V-i $1486.
GUS TA FSON •lllll1ftiaUc. Newly paint· «l "1~• wtth mase. new NCUala. ll'fOO. 130·4727 lftlt4:.,
'Tl C.ftlaro, f<ty alr. 8 lrk
L lt i :'Jl I• ~M 1ir -.!fl'
1(.r,· ~ R• ,c~ f']I,.
H , "11'1''' r.dl l\o 11 '
H4 / 88·l·l
ateno. alnt cond. ~ 9935 .. ,bit otr. 41t"'4aa ;;;;r. ••••••••••••• -••
ttilc:....t. SIJOO. "71 Clsalk!naer. air. R/H.
,.... top, mat•. Uret. m-48, I tpd auto. 48,000 a... . ....-n Ml. a.per Clean. RIOO.
---------· IC'7·91181 1-~--~--~-au w •• HIO ':!a'=1••.._t~· perf . I..................... ' up.-.,.~,, I .,. ...._ carao. aow ml ~
...-. N.w .U., blue DoUe Owler, &lat .,.. vt.11 '--ll1IO. cmd.Siwt.obelieve. "75 • ..,.. .. MMtso •ueo
TRUCK SAVINGS-
BRAND HEW 1976
COURIER
PICl-UP
'3337 ~~&~~
lnc:I. l 800cc eng., soft ride option,
hnted ~ss & mo<1t. S-. # 50IO. Stt.
#TU38)
BRAND NEW
1977 PINTO
2 DR. SEDAN
ONLY
s3372 Plus to11 & licwlw
Including 4 spd. trans., front disc brakes, vinyl budtet s.eon,
mini console, electric rear window defogger, steel rodiol
tires, wheel covers, front & rear bumper guard,, tinted glol.I
& more. Ser. # 10722, Stock # 237
EW '77 PICKUPS BRAND NEW Ind. steet rodiol tires, wheel ~
1977 GRANADA brigh~ ext. mouldin_g , cut pil• "ntady to roll" COf'Ptthng, woodtone inst. pon•I,
pwr. steering, pwr. front disc
CIKIOll
f OUllll
SAYINGS
4 DR. SEDAN brok~~· ~Ix. bum~r g.roup, air
cond1tion1ng, se4ecto1te, tinted glou
&more.Ser. #09-43,Stlc. :::153 .,s3772
from light pickups to custom heavy
duty models we can serve you best.
LEASING?
ORDER YOUR 77 MODEL TODAY
FOR EARLY DELIVERY
FORD• GM• CHRYSLER
ON DISPLAY FOR IMMEDIATE
LEASE DELIVERY
COMPARE OUR COMPETITIVE RA TESI
LAST CALL FOR 1976's!
WE STILL HAVE A LIMITED
SELECTION OF NEW '76 MODB.S
AND 197 6 STAFF CARS TO CLEAR
AT
ONCE IN A LIFETIME SAVINGS:
s.otl()ft ~ outo "'""' • oow ~-"""'···-,-1 ............ rool •od.. 10,000 ""'-' \9)1N0 N)
7<fo ~po-.-1f'111· _,,.....,_& ........
tOUJSGI
2999 ~~ 3699 l'\US TAX s5499PlUS TAX & LICENSE & UCENSE s2499 Pt.US TAX & LICE NSE
'76 CHIV
LUV P.U.
~ •• Oj)CI . '°""'· ......... -.Mt & ..... ,. t~ fkt'*"· look\
.. .,..,, 14,000..,,i., (IC88901
'75 FO•D
GRAND TORINO
'73 CHEVY
IMPALA
... """""'-· A.M.I, .. -· ....... '* po--..., ' btoh ,, •mr4 '°"' · -.. .... (100he11
'74 FORD
THUNOEUMtD
2c11o.1.11i>.-""-·-·°"·""' "'II• -· btdott, ....cl., .,.,. "'"' •-W.1jld.t0fllool."'°'P"" 11271HN) s4999PlUS TAX & UCENSf
........ ' ~-
'74 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX
\1.8. OVfO. ou. ~ '°. dh
bto~"'· l>W' •"'II • -"· 1aN1ov ""'· """' t970lo\101 s4499 PWSTAX & UCENSt
...... ,.._
Ind. ~ ~-troM., diac brabi. b.c:W
teats, cut pile carpeting, SOl>nd insul. pkg.,
~~-,.. & '-mp. gaugn, ff-ont &
rear bumpel-guardt I. more. Set.
#9747, Stott #0235.
'72POmAC
QlfAUM 2 •·Ill.
s199 DOWN
'51M MOllTll
J 01., outo., fod. oor, PWf *•
,.,, bro'-'. I~. •1111. c:o"4..
(JSIEJP)
'73 FORD
PllTOWAGOI
'73 FORD uu1••2•.n.
s199 DOWll
'77,.MONTR
2 ............ '-' ~· '"·· ..,. ,.._ llH, ., cOMI. f16JOMI)
'nFORD
PINTO~
s199 DOWN -'199 DOWll .
'11" llOll111 'IS" ••Tl
' •pd., •odlo, lleolw • ..,...,. o.411a ••"'1et, ~,,.,.. ,_..... '*"" (525Gtvl .,... & ..... INOJr\'J 'I" -Mt'',.. -lot,.-· •••-..U1•-"' __ _, ~ ... __ Pin..,-~ -•u.aa __ ..,...,,",. ·-.. ,,,.. ____ ... _ ___ ... _,, ... ..,,..
. -· . ·--
-
8 cv' Aiut'> ,, • .,. •v-tl)"V )4r ('Ol'Yt!H)l',,.fliQ O'JW"'lf
'-~"'O oow~r bf'lllr"' 'Mk> ~-._,.. '""
'llUC•al "'"" •• ,,.,. 100 locenH Ho :l'Je "'~
9 3791
1973 CHEVY
MOtfTI CMLO LA.MD.AU
"" ..... t,_ ... ~"" tf1'C> -.. -,,~ ----.--lluc.""'----""¥foe Llnft'9 No ~HTT
'2691
1972 OLDSMOllLE
CUTLASS COWi
V-8 Mitt> ,,.,,, ~ ~tttrlnq ~ twtk:M rMS'1) ..,,..,M MW"''" Ytnyl too Mtt •<Y.!02t
'1791
• cvt • •O'Md '•dH"> ne1ter t·~ r.ck. I re.,_,.
Ne )JJf'...0
.s1295
197 6 PLYMOUTH
FURY SA.LOH SID.AH
v..e t!Jt? '''"" •acto,.y au condtt'°"'no ~ ~""Q ooweir ~ ... ,__ r-.oio ,...., ........ llf'M..
_.,. IC>o "!M -ngt l~•-No 322 PEC
s3795
'75 TRIUMPH
TR-7CN.
• "'""'°"' • ·-At.A/FM ,.,,., c010ette. """"'· bue~ ....... Ll<lente No 818 NllS
s4295
......... -...
..
Outstanding values on
every lrand New 1977
Chrysler and Plymouth in
Atla1'1 Huge Inventory!
See Affas now for J..uary
Cl..-ance Savings!
I BRAND MEW 1977
VOLARE 2 DOOR SEDAM
lncudes· 'aut Seat. ctorn & omat/c trans
BRAND NEW
1977
ARROWS
HERE NOW!
v.a auto ,,.,. r-ld-o h•~. ~ "1Mf1"Q. OOW"ef' bt•••• wt• urea 11r conf1tton-no L•c.rtM No 070HWA
s1795
1973 BUICK
B.lCTRA SID.AH v.. IUIC> 1tan1 foCIC><Y "" -~IOnlnQ. -
·--· br•kel -... -°""""' setll AMfFM lle<eo rodlo. l'leoler. ....., 1 '"' ...... IC>o er~•• tOr"l1'0t. tllt 1teer1n9 wheel, Lie&ns• no
229NBC
$2691
1976 PLYMOUTH
VOL.All' SID.AH
e cvt . auto ,,.ft,, ro<110. "-'"' oo-r ,,_,no.
~ bt1~eo wsw "'"· air conootiorllng, 1ttnv1 '"° l1Ctn.e NO 734PEC.
$37.91
'""YI stee1 llllssron
. belt&(1 rac1;~ ~~~kes. POwer steer1
rnore. ""· bencn
IRANDHEW
1977 VOYAGERS
OH DISPLAY,
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.IMMEDIATE
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1974 FORD
l'IMTOWAGON
$1691
1975 DODGE
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'2691
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Fountain Valley
' EDITION
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""'N. ~. Sto eks
* OL. 7~, NO. 14, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 1977 TEN CENl'sl
Mangers Unveils Wetlands Buy Plan .!
By ROBERT BARKER
Ol IM 01lly "llol Statt
Assemblyman Denni s
·Mangers ( D-Huntington Beach)
today unveiled plans to buy 800
acres of Bolsa Chica marshlands
'for preservation of a natural
wild-life habitat.
Manl?ers said he will seek to
acquire the acreage from the $200
million in Prop. 2 funds that wen•
passed by voters last November
Bathtub
By STEVE MITCH.ELL
Ol ltt. 0111y Pilot St.Iii
Costa Mesa detectives s aid
today they have no motive, no
clues, and no suspect in the
slaying of a Costa Mes a
waitres s whose body was
round face down in her
bathtub Wednesday night.
Robyn Lynn Cox, 20, of 241
Avocado St., was discovered
fully clothed in the bathtub of
her apartment at 6: 15 p. m. by
her roommate, Carla J ean
Roden, 24.
Miss Roden ran to a nearby
apartment and asked them lo
come and ''sec what was
wrong." with Mass Cox. detec-
tives said.
''Evidently 's he only got a
Jtlance of her roommate in the
bathtub and ran next door," Lt.
George L. Lorton said. \
Lorton s aid Miss Cox. who
worked as a waitr ess at Coco's on
Bristol Street in Santa Ana, had
been dead for three to six hours
before police arrived at the
f!cene.
~n autopsy indicated sh• died of strangulation with evidence of
(See SLAYING, ~Al)
Huntington
:Goah OK:
I' Historic'
Huntington Beach City Council
embers bave adopted rive ma-
or goals to pursue
Mayor Harnett Wieder called
he action historic.
A spokesman added that this
as the first time in the city's
'story thl' council and staff have
et general goals to pursue in
1ldin~ lbe annual budlet.
The five goals include:
-"To adopt realistic goals and
pbJcctives by establishing
pnorilies based on city needs and create a long-range fiscal
plan of implementation."
-"To provide for the housing,
rducation. recreational, loc1al
nnd cultural needs or the
citizens ...
-"To insure safety and welfare
for all citizens.'·
-"To acb.lne and maintain an
efficient. effective and reliable
complement of sentces on an
equitable basl& for all in-
dividuals, residents and busl·
nesses in all secUoos of Hunt·
ington Beach.
-"To adueve and maintain a
total environment in which to
make Huntington Beach a de-
sirable place to live."
One suggestion, apparently
(See GOi\LS, Pa1e AZ>
Co ast
Weath er
Fair through Saturday.
Highs in 60s. Lows in40s.
I NSIDE TODA 't"
Inf ectlous enth!Uiann if
cbarocteristfc of Up With Pto-
ple. Tu DoilJI Pilot'& Laurie
Kasper toJlu with member& of
the JI-year-old troupe on P.age
Cl of the Weekender.
Jadex
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"There are indications that the
legislation stands a very good
chance or get:.ing through, .. he
said today al a press conference
in the Huntington Bebch Library.
He said the 'price per acre is to
be determined by negotiation
between the state and the prin
ci pal I and owner. Signal
Landmark, if his legislation is
successful.
Mangers s aid the primary goal
of his bill, which he intends to in-
troduce on Jan. 26, is to acquire a
• .230-acre parcel of land in the
Balsa Chica that is now leased to
the state.
He said be also will seek an ad·
ditional 553. 7 acres in the marsh
area which will provide a buffer
against urban encroachment.
The proposed acquisition in-
cludes marshlands from the bluff
near Huntington Harbour to
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
O.lly """' ,,.,, .. _
ED TIETZ, 14, CHECKS OUT DYING TREE
The Green Has Gone Out of FV Neighborhood
Citizens 'Burned'·
Over Clailll Denial
By RAVMOND ESl'RADA °' '"• oa11y ,., ... si.H
Some trees are not so green in
Green Valley. a Fountain Valley
residential development.
The 183-member Green Valley
Homeowners Associaion is hot-
under-lbe-collar over the city's
denial or a $20,000 claim for
damages resulting from an Oct.
28, 1976, fire on La Rosa Lane
which pttched 21 trees.
The Fountain Valley City.
Council denJed tho claim at theif-
Jan. 4 meeting. Horneowner
group and city officiala agreed M>
bush up the incident soon after it
occurred, according to Han
Tiet~. of 106~8 La Rosa Lane.
Tietz said the fire was caused
when a sealer, used to coat the
newly resurfaced street, Ignited
and sent 20-fool names-inM> the
air. Tbe only structural damage
reported was a few walls wttb
bliStered paint, he said.
But the heat from the flames
virtually destroyed 20 pines and
one birch ttee, city offi<.1als said.
Expense Cuts
• In Huntington
Schools Eyed
Trustees have announced the
first step in a major ad-
ministrative sbak~p aimed at
cuttin1 expet\ses in the Hunt-
ington Beach Union High School
Distrtct.
"This ls a part of a major dis-
trict reorgaruutlon," said board
President Helen Ditte. "The rest
~the chanees will be announced
priorto March 15."
Trustees named Jack Gyves as
assistant superintendent of in·
structlon. Gyves was promoted
from his former posl as district
direct-0r'oflnstructlon.
''The actual cause or the fire is
unknown," said a report from
Larry Williams, city field
services superintendent.
"However. matches were found
In tbe area where the fire
started."
The fire started about 2 p.m .
before youngsters had returned
home from school. Tietz said.
"About a week after the fire
the \fees and shrubs began to dry
up and die," said Tieu.
Public Works Director Wayne
•Qsborne told the contractor,
Des~rt Const ruction Company.
al\d tts insurance firm 21 trees on
La Rosa Lane required removal
and replacement due to fire
damage.
CSee TREES, Page A2)
Ship to Shore
another bluff near the Seacliff
Country Club.
Mangers announced he also
proposes to acquire another 16.3
acres in the northwest area near
Warner Avenue to protect the
bluff area and to provide for
public access and observation of
the marsh.
He indicated that construction
development would occur
between the 16.3 acre-site and
Warner to the north. Controversy
has been going on for many years
over the 1,604 acres of property
lying east of Pacific Coast
Highway and south or Huutingt-0n
Harbour and consisting of
lowlands, bluffs, oil fields and
estuaries.
The Bolsa Chica area has been
recognized by the Coastal Com-
mission as the largest and most
ecologically valuable restorable
marshland in Califorrua.
County Supervisor Larry
Schmit says he. is in full agree·
ment with Mangers· proposed '
legislation and he will seek
purchase of county park land
linking Bolsa Chica to the Hunt-
ington Beach Central Park
through a system of trails and
walkways.
Huntington Beach Mayor Har-
(See BUY, Page AZ)
Longet Joking?
Officers Repeat 'Playful' Tale
ASPEN. Colo <AP> Sanger
Claudine Longel should be con-
victed of recklessly killing
Vladimir "Spider'' Sabich
because "she had her finger on
the trigger with the gun 2',, feet
away from Spider and pointed it
right at him ... a prosecutor said
today.
Ashley Anderson told jurors an
his closing argument they had
been presented two versions of
how Miss Longet's lover died
March 21 in the bathroom of his
luxurious mountainside home.
Anderson pointed to testimony
from two law enforcement of·
ficers who said Miss Longet told
them the night of the shooting she .
was joking with Sabich when the
.22-caliber weapon she was hold-
ing went off.
The court recesst!d after de-
fense attorney Charles V. Weed-
man said his final argument pro·
bably would last "the better part
of two hours." Anderson spoke
about 25 minutes.
The two officers agreed Miss
Lon.get told them she playfully
raised the gun at Sabich as he was
showing he.r bow to use it. One of-
ficer quoted Miss Longet as say-
ing she told her lover · 'boorq,
boom,. before the gun wenl'off.
The other used the words "bang,
bang.1•
Miss Longet said Sabich told
her the gun's safety mechanism
was on, but ballistics experts
testified the safety was inopera-
ble.
Non,. Teaching
Empwyes Get
Pay Hike OK
Huntington Beach CHy
(elementary> School District
negotiators reached tentative
agreement Thursday calling for
a 6.2 percent across-the-board
pay hike for 398 full and part-
time non-teaching employes, of-
ficials said.
Don Slaven, president of the
employes · union which
represents the district's bus
drivers, custodians. secretaries
and food service workers, said
the ten tali ve agreement by-
passes mediation by a state·
appointed official.
up to a $30,000 fine and a lO·year
prison term. The homicide
charge's maximum penalty
would be $5,000 and two years in
prison.
Miss Longet 's trial was to go to
the jury after closing arguments.
Singer Andy Williams, Miss
Longet's ex-hus band, was in
court again today and stared at
the jury as it received instruc-
tions.
On Thursday, the prosecution
cross-examined Sabich's best
friend m an effort to prove that
Miss Longel "likes to take
chances."
James Lillstrom, an advertis-
ing executive from Boulder, said
the affair between Sabich and
Miss Longet began in 1972 after a
glass-tossing incidenlin a bar.
Anderson had s81d when the
jury was out : "The way Miss
Longet got Spider's attention was
she threw a glass and hit him in
the chest. and he turned and said.
'l guess she wants to talk tome'.•·
But Lillstrom indicated An -
' derson's version was wrong.
APWlrepl!Oto
RECKLESS KILLER?
Claudine Longet
District Court Judge George E.
Lohr instructed the jury It could
also find the 35-year-old Miss
Longet guilty on a lesser charge of
criminally negligent homicide.
Reckless manslaughter caJls for
Countg Airpot:t
"We heard Spider's name
called out very loudly," he
testified. "We both tu.med to look:-
and she (Miss Longet) tossed the
glass at him.
"He bad plenty oHime to get out
o( the way. I think for dramatic
effect he let it hit him.•·
Anderson said be learned of the
incident through a conversation
Llllstrom had with an assistant
distri<:t attorney.
'More Travelers'
In Impact Report
By GARV GRANVILLE
Of Ille O•Hf Piiot Si.ti
A massive ertvironmental im-
pact report covering Orange
County Airport COCA) says the
airport can handle an additional
570,000 air travelers a year with
little adverse impact on existing
environmental conditions.
The 565-page, $218,000 study by
the consulting firm of Daniel,
Mann. Johnson and Mendenhall ·
of Los Angeles covers three
alternative futures of OCA.
One of those altematives is to
roll back operations at the
airport "to immediately bring
OCA into compliance with
California noise standards effec-
tiveJan. 1, 1986."
To meet those st.andards, the
number of commercial jet de·
partures from the airport daily
would be reduced from an exist-
ing average or 37.9 flights daily to
4._7 flights a day.
And the number of air
travelers using the airport would
be reduced from the current an
nual level of 1.56 million
passengers to 330,000 passengers
a year.
The study shows thal such a
roll back in OCA activity would
have a severe adverse eeonomic
impact, especially on employ-
ment al the airport. the busi-
nesses that service air travelers
and travele rs' dollars spent
locally.
It Is the second alternative, ex-
panding the annual passenger
load at OCA from i~ current 1.56
million persons to 2.13 million
persons. that the consultant In-
dicates will have conparatively
minor impact on existing en-
vironmental conditions.
Thal increased annual
passenger load or 570,000 persons
can be handled within the con-
fines of existing leases with the
<See AIRPORT; Page A2)
Man Sought
In BB Heist
,
·~
An armed bandit wearing a red l
ski mask toolt-$317 from a Hunt-·
iQlton Beach department store t
Thursday ni1bt, police said. '
GyvelJ replaces Howard Roop
wbo goes to the newly-created
poet of assistant s\,IJ>erintendent
of personnel.
Deputy Superintendent
William Settle. who formerly
supervised tbe personnel depart-
ment, will rem aln ln charge or dis·
trfctoperatJons, officlalssaid.
UCeguards rescued three people w~ were
aboard this 24·foot cabin cruiser that drift-
ed onto Balsa Chica State Beach Thursday
aflernoon. Boat. operator Charles
Freeman, brother of the owner, Hugh
Freeman <?' Par(µTIOWlt, ,Id lifeguards
the v~el. "Ah, Ship," developed engine
trouble during cruise from Wilminaton to
San Diego. He said he threw out sea
anchor to no avail. Ufel\lardS said there
were no injuries and the boat was hauled
off the beach Thursda~ evening.
Police detectives are seeking at
caucaslan male, about 23 year111
old. six-feet, two inc~tall, who 1 wttnesae:s said bra.ndisled a .45 '
Colt automatic pistol and robbed
the K-Mart garden shop at 19101
Magnolia St. at 9: 16 p.m .
Wltne8ses told police the sus-pect stuffed the loot in his picket 1•
and ran from the scene. ; . .,. . .
A2 DAIL y PILOT H/F
CHECKS INTO HOSPITAL
Actor Sterling Holloway
Wistful Actor
Hollowa y in
OC H ospital
Sterling Holloway, the man
whose wistful !>cralchy voice
becaml' idcnt1f11·d with s uch
characters as Winnie the Pooh
and Jiminy Crickl't, ha:-. been ad-
mitted lo South Coast Communi
ty llospilal for <1bs1:rvat1on,
.-.pokei.me11 :.ay.
lloll owt.1 y. who tumL'<i 72 loday,
wt.1s admitted Thursday for tests
after suffering C'hesl pains. Chief
nur:;e Lois Kirwan said he was
alert and 1n :.al1:.foctory condi·
lion lhas morning.
"[ think it's his birthday," she
said.
He was born Jan. 14, 1905 an
Cedartown , Ga.
Holloway, a resident of South
Laguna, is known lo million:; of
children around the world as the
man who made Wanrue real.
He also narrated or voiced
characters for c;ever al other Wall
Dis n ey fc•Jture:., includ ing
.. Bambi," "Dumbo." "Alice an
Wonderland," "Jungle Book"
:.md "Peter and the Wolf "
Assemblyman
To K e ynote
Mesa Meet
Assemblyman De nni s
Mangers D·lluntington Beach
will be the keynote speaker at the
one-day "campaign college" for
potcnllal cand1dat1.•s in ci ty,
county. school board and state
elections. Saturday at the South
Coast Plaza llotel 1n Costa Mesa.
The non partac;an conference
will. feature 111rormat1on on how
to org:rn1ze and run .i campaign
Tt ,., .,pnno;on·d hv thr Orange
Count) Ch.iptcr of the California
F.Je('ted Woml'n ., ,\.,l>OC1al1on for
Education and Hl''l'JrC'h
'>orrna (;1bb., ll unt1n~ton
H l' a c· h 1 1 t \ c· nun c 1 I" om an.
Orange Count) :;chool board
member'I and professional cam·
pati:n cnn ... 11ltant 'I art> all
... chl•dull•cl t 11 t .ik(• part 1n thl• con
ft•lt'IH'I'
Hcservataoni. a rt> rt'<l't1red and
th•• attcndanre (('l' t~ t.8. f'"or
more 1nform.Jl1on. l .ill Marv
"Wilham-. .it 52 1 2919 or Gaby
't •nor at 552 9500
Swdoon Bow
.UJ111,ains Oil
H! >STO '>; , AP 1 The <>unken
how c;ccltnn of the wrecked
tanker Arjlo MerC'hant may still
<·ontaan up lo 1 3 million gallons
nf heavy 1111. the C<ia..-.t Guard
'aid Thunda_\' Tht> Argo
MNchanl. i.,11lang under the
I Jherian flag, went aground on
:-hoats 27 miles '\OUtheast or Nan
tueket Island Oec 15. Th<' :;hip
hroke up a wet>k later, spilling
.m09t nf lls caqw or 7.6 m1lhon
.. gallons or No. 6011 intothesca
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Friday. January t4, l9n
f',....Page A J
AIRPORT •••
lbtee commercial airlines that.
operate at OCA, the coosultant
study says.
Under the second alternative,
the average number of dally jet
airliner departures. at the airport
would increase from 37.9to40.1.
And the total number of com·
mercial jet operations would
climb from today's annual 40,565
flights to 40, 700 a year.
The bulky environmental im·
pact report discusses a series or
proposed projects needed to cor-
rect inadequacies at OCA, •
especially if passenger activity is
increased.
Listed as proposed projects to
correct existing ills and to make
way for added air travelers are:
-Expansion of the airport's
air terminal building, including
construction of a terminal annex.
-Construction or two
multilevel parking structures.
-Adding 150 tie-down spaces
for general aircraft. a move that
would bring the number or
available spaces for tight
aircraft at OCA up to 1,000
planes.
The major element ln a noise
reduction program at the airport
cited by the consultants is the
northward extension by 737 feet
ofOCA's main runway.
Such an extension "would aJ.
low departing aircraft to reach a
greater altitude before overfly-
ing noise sensitive residential
areas south of the airport," ac·
cording to the report.
Other suggested noise reduc·
lion measures include di ·
reeling departing jet liners
north rather than south on take
off, filling additional aircraft
with sound reducing material
and changing landing altitudes.
The consultant concedes that
the cost of some proposed noise
reduction measures "is con-
sidered prohibitive."
Measures under that heading
include buying noise easements
Crom impacted homeowners.
acoustical treatment of existing
homes and elaborate land con·
version programs.
It is when the third alternative
for OCA 's future is discussed that
the environmental impact report
focuses on the costly noise reduc-
tion measures and adverse en·
vironmental impact.
Alternative three foresees OCA
being used by 6 million air
travelers a year by the end of
1985.
While the passenger level
would almost triple over current
use, the number of flight opera·
lions would climb by only a&ut
13 percent, according to the con-
sultants.
That's because by 1985 new
wide-body jets capable of handl·
mg larger passenger loads wall be
an use.
But before the new equipment
1s available. the number of flight
operations at OCA would in·
crease to 54, 750 annually as lhe
passenger load level hits an
estimated 3.9 million ml~.
Gomg along with that jet ac·
t1vity at the airport would be the
disturbance of precious wildlife
1n Upper Newport Bay, a
dramatic increase in energy con·
s umption and displacement or re-
sidents in roughly 437 homes.
Moreover, even with adoption
of the cos Uy complete noise re-
duction program. the noise im·
pacted area would increase to an
area '"not calculated" by the con·
sultants.
The report discussed expanded
airport activities impact on traf-
fic conditions in the airport area.
"Any increase in airline opera-
tions would contribute lo in-
creased volumes of traffic on the
airport s ate.·· the report says.
It goes on to mention that
alternative three. 6 million
passengers a year. will require
almost four times as much park-
ing space as exists at OCA
rn its present form. the bulky
!ltudy that began in March 1975 is
a draft environmentaJ impact re-
port.
It was to be delivered today lo
county supervisors and the coun-
ty Environmental Mam1gemenl
Agency <EMA>.
After EMA review and review
by the public. the report will go to
the county Planning Commission
for public hearings.
And the consultants must
respond to the public remarks or
challenges directed their way
eJther In writing or at the public
hearings.
It ls after those comments have
either been accepted or rejected
that the envt.ronment.al impact
report will go to county
supervisors for approval.
Board approval would mean
only that projects, if any, related
to the future altematlve selected
by the board of supervisors will
be appro\'ed.
The report then will go to the
feder al officials for another ex·
tenslve r eview process before
any federal funds can be used ln
whatever projects, again If any,
are apprond by the board.
CIUND mEFT
FAfU FU~
KLAMATH FALL..'), Ore. !AP)
-Local police and FBI agent.
acttn1 in concert sel1ed lour
Steinway 1rand planoe val~ed at
$50,000 •ta music store hen.
Tbe pianos were 1tolen Ian. '
In • warehouse bur&lary at San
Mateo, ofncert a&Jd.
SLAYING VICTIM
Robyn Lynn Cox
Fro•Page A J
SLAYING •••
drowning The strangulation
might have been accomplished
by a small cord around the neck
detectives said. '
"We only discovered the eause
or death Thursday afternoon."
Lorton said. "Up until then, it
could have been an accidental
drowning."
When asked if a fully-dressed
woman in the bathtub didn't
strike him a!. suspicious, Lorton
~aid, "She might have been
washing her cat or something
and fallen in the tub.'·
He s aid nothing appears to
have been taken from the apart-
ment. and no struggle in the
other rooms of the dwelling were
evident.
"There were no signs of a
s truggle 1n the bathroom,
either," Lorton said.
Detectives combed the apart-
ment for clues Thursday and
dusted the apa rtment for
fingerpnnts, Lorton said.
Miss Cox was graduated with
honors from Costa Mesa High
School in 1974, ~chool officials
said today .
She did not belong to any cam·
pu.5 organizations, but she was
chairman of the Educational
Development Council while a
junior at the school.
The 20-year-old woman spent
last s ummer in Europe, visiting
England, The Netherlands, Den·
mark and Greece, accordfog to
her passport.
Fro.a Page Al
BUY •••
rielt Wieder said she was caught
by surprise by the size of the pro-
posed acquisition. She said she
had no idea it would be as large
as 800 acres.
She told Mangers that "You
ran with the ball ahead of us.''
The ctty has plans to annex the
area and Mrs. Wieder said she
has concerns that Mangers'
legislation would preempt the
city's local control over the area.
Dr. Kenneth Martyn, president
of the Amigos de Bolsa Chica,
s aid the mayor should not have
been surprised and that the city
staff had been involved in all pre·
vious discussions.
He added that it would he very
important to present a unified
front for the acquisition.
Mangers said he intends to
take his plan before the full city
council for support.
Huntington
Names .2 to
School Posts
lluntmgton Beach Union mgh
School District trustees have ap·
pointed two new personnel com·
mission members.
The district personnel com·
mission hears grievances from
non-teaching employes .
New commissioners are Frank
Vervllle, B California State
Employes Aaaoclatlon represen-
tative, and Scott Flanagan, Sr .. a
former district assistant superin·
t.endent.
Flanagan's appointment was a
60·day Interim measure until
trustees find a permanent com·
mla~loner. district ofrlclal11 said.
The two vacancies on the
three-member comm1Hlon oc-
cul'l'ed thlt month when mem-
bers Jam ea I. Wise and Gerald
Murphy 1ubmltted their reslgna·
Uona, official• aatd.
Wiae realgnod due to Impaired
health.
Murphy had to rest.en because
hlJ new residence lies outside tho
territorial JuriadlcUon ol the blah
school dJatrkt, otnclals said.
OV Registration
Tbe Oce-.n View American lJt-
tle League will hold sl&nups at the
board room of the school dl!trlct
olflce at Bench and Warner In
H\.antin1ton Buch Saturday and Sunday.
Saturday'• atanup will be held
fl"Qm $to l u d SWlday from u to a. For f\lrlber lnlormatlon call ~·7538.
f',...Pa~A l
TREES ...
Rut the terma of the city's con·
tract with Desert Coostructton
say Fountain Valley is not ob-
ligated to pay for any damaies
caused by the street resurfacing,
said Bill Ackerman. a city
spokesman.
"The city told us to sue the con-
tractor," " said Tietz. "The con-
tractor told us to sue the sub·
contractor. But the subcontruc·
tor is in Colorado."
The homeowners' group
spokesman said, ''We're tired of
the run-around we've received on
this ."
Tietz added, ''We just can't af.
ford to pay the $20,000 to replace
the trees. It would break the as-
sociation."
Mayor Al Hollinden said, "It is
the best course of action for the
city and r esidents of Green
Valley for us to work closely with
our insurance company. They
have to go out and settle this
thing.''
7-rigSmash
Closes Rt. 5
GORMAN (AP ) -Seven
trucks smashed together
on ice-slick Interstate 5
early today in a chain·
reaction accident lhal
blocked southbound lanes
of the major highway route
for two hours and injured
two drivers, the California
Highway Patrol said.
The s mashup started
when one truck jackknifed
after the driver put on his
brakes on a downh.ill sec·
tion or the road left icy by
last week's s nowstorm,
patrolmen said.
They said the other haJf.
dozen trucks jammed their
brakes to avoid the first ac·
cident and began the series
of accidents a half mile
north of here.
Mexico Crime
'Exaggerated'
By REBECCA STRICKLAND
O! IM O•tly '91ot 5t.tH
The Members of the Com-
mission of the Callfomias Thurs-
day accused the U.S. press of
greatly exaggeraUng the pro-
b I em or crimes agains t
American tourists visiting Mex-
ico.
Enrique Sanchez Mayans,
director of Tourism for the state
of Baja California and represen-
tative of the governor of Baja,
made the accusation at a press
coMerence during the annual
General Assembly or the com·
mission that was held in Costa
Mesa.
"We believe that the Stales
want to keep tourists for their
own areas." Mayans said.
He denied the existence or a
serious crime problem against
tourists and said that the press in
this country had been influenced
into over-emphasizing the pro-
blem by vested business in·
terests. He particularly cited San
Diego as an example.
"I don't believe it is a con·
spiracy, just a matter of busi·
ness." be said.
According to Mayans. more
than eight million Americans
crossed into Baja during 1976 and
his department received only
1.100 complaints of small pro-
blems, assaults or robberies.
Costa Mesa Mayor Dominic
Raciti who was there lo welcome
the commissioq echoed Mayans'
feelings, saying\ "Jf U.S. citizens
are caref1,1l and respect Mexican
laws, I don't believe there wiU be
aproblem."
Lt. Governor Mervyn Dymal·
ly, also present at the meeting,
said the North American cont·
ingent of the com mission agrees
with Mayans. As a solution, he
said representatives of Mexico
should meet with San Diego of-
.
fleials and others to work out the
problems of this natw-e.
Former Baja Lt. Gov. Fran·
cisco Santana Peralta, another
member of the commJssion, said
business in Mexico had been af·
fected very serious ly . The
seaport city of Ensenada had its
worst tourist year ever In 1976, he
srud
The other major topic dis·
cussed al the meeting was the ap-
pointment of Peralta as the new
director of CODIBAC, a Mexican
commission in charge of develop.
an-" tourism in Baja.
Peralta and Oymally both
emphasized that there will be a
new thrust to develop tourism in
BaJa and to promote foreign in-
vestme nt in e ntertainment
establishments there.
Fro• Page Al
GOALS •.•
submitted by a councilman in
Jes t , urged and end to
"bureaucratic bull-.''
The staff wlll consider pro-
grams to attain these goals dur·
ing the coming budget process,
according to City Administrator
Hud Belsito.
A public hearing is expected to
be held in mid-February in which
residents can tell the council
what programs they feel are
needed and which ones they think
can be reduced or eliminated.
Residents wishing to comment
on goals and programs can also
direct letters to the mayor at
P.O. Box 190, Huntington Beach
or bring written comments to the
Public Information Office in the
civic center , 2000 Main St.
anua
learanc:e a e
Save 15% to 25%
New carpet shipments are on their way
and we're making room We ve reduced prices
on every one of Lees best-selhng carpets dur-
ing Lees January Clearance Sale.
•
Choose from nundreds of colors & styles
& patterns. Hurry. the Lees Carpets Author-
rzed January Clearance Sale ends January
22nd
••• •
, • • • • lf'•Ulill!OH"-••T --------------------~
ONE
WEEK
ONLY!
DEN'S •••••••••••••••••
...... H ..... ·Installation· custom draperies
linoleum • wood floor
1663 PlAC!NTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CAllF, 92627 • PHONE 6'46-4838 -646-2 35.5
f I Irvine
I EDITtON
L. ,70, NO. 14, 4 SECTIONSr 40 PAGES
. '
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Today's Closing
N.Y, Stoeks
FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 1977 TEN CENTS
JUry Asked, 'Hold Longet's Hand'
ASPEN , Colo. (AP > -
laudlne Longe t's trial for
anslau"hter wenl to the jury to-ay after her attorney pleaded
· ·th the panel to "hold her hand"
entally as they judge.
Attorney Charles Weedman, in
emotional hour and a half
ummation, told jurors: "This is
just a name on a piece or
aper. This is woman who is Uv·
, breathlng and suffering.
•
~ oDian ~Iain in
1!Bathtub
I By STEVE MITCHEU. r Of 11•• O•llY Pl ... SUff
; Costa Mesa detectives said
today they have no motive, no
lues, a nd no suspect in the
layin g of a Costa Mesa
aitress whose body was
ound fac e d own in her
athtub Wednesday night.
Robyn Lynn Cox, 20, of 241
vocado St., was discovered
ully clothed in the bathtub of
er apartment at 6: 15 p.m. by
er roommate, Carla J ean
oden, 24. ~Miss Roden ran to a nearby
artment and asked them to
me and •·see what was
ong," with Miss Cox. detec-
es said.
'Evidently she only got a
&lance or her roommate in the
bathtub and ran next door," Lt.
George L. Lorton said.
1 Lorton said Miss Cox, who ~orked as a waitress at Coco's on
Bristol Street in Santa M a. had
been dead for three to six hours
befo~~ police arrived at the
autopsy indicated she died
lrangulatlon with evidence of
wning. The strangulation
tnlght have been accomplished
by a small cord around the neck,
detectives said.
"We only discovered the cause
' eath Thursday aftemoon~"
on s aid. "Up until then, it
d have been an accidental
wning."
en asked if a fully-dressed
an in the bathtub didn't
strik~ him as suspicious. Lorton
sai~,1 "She m ight have been
wasrung her cat or something
and fallen in the tub."
He said nothing appears to
have f>e.e n taken from the apart·
ment, ~nd no struggle in the
other rooms of the dwelling were
evidtmt.
"There were no signs of a
struggle in the bathroom,
either." Lorton said.
~tJves combed the apart-
ment ror dues Thursday and
dust ~d the lipartmenl for
finge,.Prints, Lorton said.
Miss Cox was graduated with
honors from Costa Mesa tligh
School in 1974, school officials
aaldtoday.
She was a member of lhe
school's schola rship society and
w.as chairman of the Educational
Development Council in her
junior 1ear at Costa Mesa High.
She ia the da\fgbter of Neville
Cox, of CoKa Mesa and Patrtci•
Cox, alao of Costa t.1da. 'lbe COU·
pit ls dtvorced.
Miss Cox is also aurvtved by
three brothers and si.sten.
A younger sister. Tammy, .uld
Robyn was worktna a a waitress
to raise money to go back to the
(SffSIAYJNG,hleA2)
Coast
1Veajker
Fair tbrwo Sat~.
Highs in 8Cla. Iowa ln 408.
INSIDE TOD"-"Y
Inf 1ctio111 tnt1*dclrm ii
cbaractmrttc o/ Up WW. Pft>. f'lt. Tlw DaUJl.PfloC'a tawie
Koq»r lolk. to'flh Mfmbm of
Ow Jl-JIM1..old trotq>C Oftt1oQe
Cl of the Weekt'ndn.
• latlex
''Do aot be afra.id to look at
her. You ate going tobe called on
to judge her. When you decide,
h old her band and ask
yourselves, "~uilly or not? ..
Miss Longet wiped away tears
as her attorney concluded. and in
the spectator section, her ex-
husband, singer Andy Williams,
cried.
The jury-seven men and five
women -retired to considt>r
AP----
Pole Cat
"Tiger" si ts atop his
favorite perch on a 12-foot
pole on the farm of his
masters, JoAnna and Mitch
J urgens of Brandon, S.D.
Tiger faces loss of his lofty
viewpoint when the pole
becomes j ust another beam
in their bam.
•
Man's Death
'Sad Thing'
Says Utility -.
MANSFIELD, Ohio <AP) -
The cue of an elderly customer
who ltoie to death alter his
power was •abut orr is "a sad
thjng" -but it may happen
again, aaya an electric company
executive.
''Of course, we didn't the know
the old gentleman was Ul,"
added Malcolm E . Cab, head of
Ohio Edison operations in the
Mansfield area of north-central
Ohio. "If ,we bad knowll, we ob-
viooaly wouldn't h4ve cqt him
otr."
Cash aald, however, that "re-
gardless of the safesuards we try
to build into the system, I cbi't
know what kind ol policy we
could Implement to prev~t this
from happening again sometime
1n the future."
Meanwblle, a state senator
said M la drafting legialaUon to ~ent uUlilY alautntrs ln cues Where they e<>Wcl meq death.
Eugene J, Kuhn, 74, who lived
alone and bad no immediate
lanilly exce.Pt an WLrm alster,
wu IG\rnd dead In bed in hia old
home in a rundown Mlebbortiood
on Manafteld'c aout.hweet&dc.
His electricity had 1-l tqt off
eight daya earlier for failure to
pay an f18.38 electric bill. Police
said the temperature ln the house
waa II degrees, and Coroner
Raymond Thabet ruled death wu caused by expo.eurc. .
An electrtc company 1llcker
tlvlnt a flve-day ~of abutott
atlJl wu attached to tbe front
door~ and In the mallboz waa a •uncauent nodee, ...., wffh a
w.lfare department i.tter advla· Int Kubo th.at .be micht be ellli·
bJe tor financial Mll•taoce to
.P&Y the bill.
-:;;---::----:::==.::::::.....-~<8ee noztN, •••• AJ> -
their verdict ju~t before noon.
The last argument they heard
• INaS from the prosecutor who
urged them' to find the former
s howgirl guiJty of reckless
manslaughter.
Ashley Anderson told jurors in
his closing argument they had
been presented two versions of
how Miss Long et 's lover died
March 21 in the bathroom of his
luxurious mountainside home.
Andenon poinled to testimony
from two law enlo~ment of.
ficers who said Miss Longel told
them the night of the shooting she
was joking with Sabicb when the
.22-caliber weapon she was bold-'
lng went off. • .
The court. receased alter de-
fense attorney Charles V. Weed-
man said his final argument pro-
bably would last "the better part
of two hours." Anderson spoke
about.ZS minutes.
The two omcers agreed' Miss
Longet told them sbe playfully
raised the gun at Sabich as he was
showing her how to use it. Oae of-
ficer quoted Miss Looget as say-
ing she told her lover "boom,
boom" before the gun wenl off.
The other used the words "bang,
bang."
Miss Longet sa!d Sablch told
her the gun's safety mechanism
was on, but ballistics experts
testified the safety was inopera·
ble.
District Court Judge George E.
Lohr instructed the jury 1t could _
aJso find the 35-year.old Miss
Long et guilty on a lesser charge or
criminally negligent homicide
Reckless manslaughter calls for
up to a $30,000 fine and a 10-year
prison term. The homicide <See LONG ET, PageA2>
A~ort U s.e Rise S~en
Litde Harm Expected From Increase
By GARY GRANVJl .. LE
Of Ille O•llY Pilol St•ff
A massive environmental im·
pact report covering Orange
County Airport <OCAJ says the
airport can handle an additional
570,000 air travelers a year with
little adverse impact on existing
environmental conditions.
The 565·page, $218,000 study by
the consulting firm of Daniel,
Mann, Johnson and Mendenhall
of Los Angeles covers three
alternative futures of OCA.
One or those alternatives is to
roll back operations a t the
airport "to immediately bring
Cop Says
Beatings
Admitted
By TOM BARLEY
Oft ... Oally Pl ... Stoll
A San Clemente police ofCicer
testified Thursday tbal when he
arrested Carolyn Brewster last
August on child abusechargesshe
, told him that she beat her 2·year-
old daughter "with anything she
couldgetherhandson."
Detective Leonard Goodwin
told an Orange County Superior
Court jury that Mrs. Brewster, 23,
told them that when she was
frustrated she ''took out .ber emo-
tions on Cora."
M rs. Brewster's alleged state-
ments to police led to her being
booked on charges of child abuse.
An interview with her boyfriend,
Camp Pendleton Marine Kenneth
Ray Bolden, 20, led to his being
jailed on identical allegations.
Both defendants were arrested
alter the unconscious child was
rushed to San Clemente General
Hospital from the motel room
shared by the accused couple and
Mra. Brewster· s t wo children.
Doctors found that Cora had
suffered brain d•mage from her
bead injuries, had a broken left
arm, bite marks on the left ar m,
cigarette burns on the "chest and
bruising throughout the body with
'the heaviest bruises found on the
back and bullocks.
<See ABUSE, Page AZ>
GRAND THEFT
FAILS FUT
KLAMA,TH FALLS. Ore. CAP>
-Loc:al pqJice and FBI agents
acUng ln concert seized four
Steinway ~rand pJanos valued at
$50,000 at a.music store here.
The pianos were stolen Jan. 4
tn a warehouse burglary at sa'.n
Mateo, officers said.
OCA into compliance with
California noise standards effec-
tive Jan. 1, 1986."
TQ meet those standards, the
number of commercial jet de-
partures from the airport daily
would be r educed from an exist-
ing average of 37 .9 flights daily lo
4.7 flights a day.
And the numbe r or air
tr avelers using the airport would
be reduced from the current an-
n u a I level o f 1.56 million
passengers to 330,000 passengers
a year.
The study shows that such a
roll back in OCA activity would
Cyrus Van ce, defense and
foreign policy adviser to
Democratic presidents since
admlnistra~ion of JFK, was
today e ndors ed by the
Senate Foreign Relations
Committee to -Succeed
H e nr y Kissinge r as
secretary of state.
Acwr Peter
Finch Dies
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Actor
Peter Finch, s tar of the ac-
claimed movie, "Network," died
today after collapsing at a Bever-
ly Hills hotel, "Network" direc.
tor Sidney Lu met said.
Richard Green, spokesman at
the UCLA Medical Center. said
the cause of the 60-yl!ar-old ac·
tor 's collapse was not im·
mediately known.
But a spokesman at the Bever-
ly Hills Hotel said it was believed
Finch s uffered a heart attack
while sitting in the lobby waiting
for a breakfast meeting with
Lum et.
Chlld Stiars
t
Fillninaken VU.it SchDol
BYIDLARYKAYE OfltltD•ll; .. INtSIMI
Movie cameras whirred Thurs·
day in a rint grade classroom at
Cwverdale School in Irvine, as a
crew of Japanese filmmakers
abot a day Jn the life or an
Amertca._1cbool child.
· Scenes were s hot in the
classroom ot Betty Stephenson.
out.aide on the playi'fOW'd and
ctl.ll'tn( lunch period. Special ln-t~ewa were done, loo, with Jiu. Stepbenao.n and other
teaehen attheachool
'lbe movie ts expected to be aho!im •Feb. ? on Chaopel 52, a
Japanese t.elevilion atatl()('l ln Loe Ana•· < for t.b6M ha Irvine
unable to pkk up the UHF' statloo,
It wUJ alao be taped by Commun!·
ly Cablevi1lon and then shown
latfr oo the Irvlne cable tbanne1. ·' . --
Aller its Los Angeles viewing,
the film will travel ~J'apan,
where parents and )'OW>gJtera
there wtll be able to aee"fbal an
American flrataradtr does at
school. .: • According to Culver.We Prln·
clpal Betty Gratn1, the rtlm Js the
result of Mta. Stephenson's trip to
Japan last summer a.a part of a
Japanese Trade Council ex·
curaion.
Nine teachers from Los
Anaetea and Oranae CounUea
'joumeytd to Japan Lor 17 days.
Tbey vflite41chool1. temples and
abrJan. accCJrdlnJ to MTa , ~ Nlvmed. eachr/us p~;r;;.;, do IOplfthfatr .. ~p
the t.r'adt -,:ouncn. roc\ b.y part,
I rm l«tlf11. tltem flln\ n\y ctaaa," ~J!A PqeAZ)
have a severe adverse economic
impact, especially on employ-
ment at the airport, the busi-
nesses that servi ce air travelers
and travelers' dollars spent
locaUy.
It is the second altemat1ve, ex·
panding the annual passenger
load at OCA from its current 1.56
million persons to 2.13 million
persons, that the consultant in-
dicates will have conparatively
minor impact on existing en-
vironmental conditions.
That i n creased annual
passenger load of 570,000 persons
can be handled within the con·
fines or existing leases with the
three commer cial airlines that
operate at OCA, the consultant
study says.
Under the second alternative,
the average number or daily jet
airliner departures at the airport
would increase from 37 .9 to 40.1.
And the total number of com·
mercial jet operations would
climb from today's annual 40,565
nights to40,700 a year.
The bulky environmental im·
pact report discusses a series of •
proposed projec~ needed to cor· '
r eel inadequacies at OCA .
<See AIRPORT, Page AZ>
Company Pays Top
County Tax Bill
The Irvine Company main-
tained its position as Orange
County's largest taxpayer for the
third year in a row, county Tax
Collector -Treasurer Robert
Citron said today.
The company has a lax bill of
$12,743,256 for the 1976-77 fiscal
Press Rapped
On·Mexico
Tourist Woes "
By REBECCA STRICKLAND
Of'"° o.n, PllOI itMt
The Members of the Com·
mission of the Califomias Thurs-
day accused the U.S. press or
greatly exagger ating the pro·
blem of crim es again st
American tourists visiting Mex·
ico.
Enrique Sanchez Mayans,
director of Touclsm fOl' the state
of Baja California and represen-
tative of the governor of Baja,
made the accusation at a press
conference during the annual
General Assembly or the com-
mission that was held in Costa
Mesa.
"We believe that the States
want to keep tourists for their
own areas." Mayans said.
He denied the existence or a
serious crime problem against
tourists and said that the press in
this country had been influenced
into over-e mphasizing the pro.
blem by vested business in-
terests. He particularly cited San
Diego as an example.
"I don't believe it is a con-
spiracy, Just a matter or busi·
ness," be said.
According to Mayans, more
than eight million Americans
crossed into Baja during 1976 and
his department received only
1,100 complaints of small pro-
blems, assaults or robberies.
Costa Mtsa Mayor Dominic
Raciti who was there to welcome
the commission echoed '?tjayans'
teeltnga, saying, ''If U.S. citizens ~ careful and respect Mexican
laws, I cSon't believe \.here will be
aproblem.··
Lt. Governor Mervyn Oym'1·
Jy, also present at the meeting,
said the North Americ~nt·
fnlent oC the commisaion~ea wfih 1Way,.ns. As a aolution, he
said reprtsent1tlve8 ol Mexico
should meet with Sin Olcao or-
ficlala ind otbera to work out the
pl'Obltlba of thia nature. ·
year, up $918,000 over a year ago,
Citron said.
Still in second placi'on the tax 1
collector 's list was Pacific
Telephone which received a biU...
of $12,529,441, a jump or $1,376,000
over last year.
Southe rn California Edison
Company which was in first
place for several years was in 1 third place this year. The firm's
laxes were $11,224,172, up
$588,318 over last year, Citron
said.
Citron said the top ten tax
payers pay a total or ~7,915,000,
a little more than eight percent of
the county property tax bill or
$686,627 ,000.
Rockwell International was the
fourth largest taxpayer with a 1
total of $4,156,869 followed by ,
Standard Oil with a .bill of
$4.065,624.
The other members of the top ,
10 include General Telephone al
s;t,555,452; Union Oil at
$2,570,285; Aminoil USA, Inc.,
(formerly Burmah Oil Com·
pany) at $2,398,791; Disneyland
at $2,350, 767 and McDonnell
Douglas Corp. al $2,320,835.
V andah Cited
lnlrvineWater
Damage Case '
Water damage estimated at '
more than $500 resulted at
McGaw Laboratories in Irvine
Thursday morning when fou r
press ur e valv es wer e
mysteriously turned on.
Irvine police said today they
s us pect vandals because the f
valves are rarely turned on
purposefull y ,and they need to be i
turned on manually. '
The valvea are located in the ~
upper "cat walk" area above lhe
regular area of the laboratories, I
at2525 McGaw Ave.
Water ran through the pipes for
about 10 minutes at 3:30 a.m. I
before being spatted antt shut ofr I
by nlghtahitt workers. The water
soaked the suspended celling, 1
walla and parta or the noor.
police said.
Apparently. none or the pro-
ducts lo the laboratory were
damaaed, but clean•up work was
necessary to a large area and
some r~pair work will be needed
to repair the ceiling, officials
aaid. Form~ Baja Lt. Gov. Fran-
cisco S.ntano Peralta, another mcin~r ot the commission., said
bualnesa In M.oxlco bad been ar. Boo
fecttd very seriously. Tb~ k Fair Slated
seaport city of £nunada bad Its 'lbe public la invited to attend a
worst tourist. year ever in 1m. he --. ... f 1 f ftt
ald """""' a r, rom 9 a.,.. 2 p.m.
s · Saturday at Turtle Scbool The otbtr major lopJc dis· tn Irvine.
cuMed Ill t.be meeu.nc wu tbe ap-ProceedJ from the new and
polnttllent ot f>eratt.a u the new used boott aales will IO toward
d1rectet of CODIBAC, a Mexican J)UtCbulnt boob for the school
commbafOll in eharceofdovelop. library. The 1ehool IJ locatA!d at
1Dc tourllan in Baja. • _ .... ~~---Am= aW Drive. .' .. ., _.........,
• I
At DAIL y PILOT
: llla11 Coale ••e•
ANN ARBOR, Mich. CAP) -A
19-year-old Ann Arbor man said
he shot a University ot Mich.igan
coed to death because 1he had~·
peatedly beeged h.lm to kill her.
Ricky Wayne Wilson pleaded
guilty in Washtenaw County
Circuit Court on Thursday to a
charse of aecond·dearee murder
in the death of le&MJne Boukai,
17, of Ann Arbor.
Miss Boukal's body was dJs-
covered by an early morning jog-
ger Oct. 1 Inside the campus'
Nichols Arboreturfl. An autopsy
showed she died or five .22·
caliber gunshot wounds.
Wilson told the court Mills
BouJcai first asked him to kJll her
alter they met at a party at hls
house. A few days later, she went
to his house and gave rum $50, he
said.
"I asked her what the money
was for and she said. 'To kill
somebody.' I asked her who, and
s he said, 'Me'."
Later. Wilson said, Mi ss
Boukai gave him a pistol, some
ammunition, a motorcycle
helmet and some marijuana. He
said she visited him two more
times before Sept. 30, when the
pair took an afternoon motorcy-
cle ride around the arboretum. a
popular student park.
Both had been taking "hard
drugs," Wilson said. They got off
the motorcycle and begun walk-
ing up a hilly path.
"I told her l 'd follow her, but
she said I should go first. She told
me anytime I felt like killing her,
I should go ahead."
The young man sald his mind
was in a turmoil at the time
because his wire had just been re-
leased from jail. They had been
planning to leave Ann Arbor, he
sajd.
AIRPORT ..•
especially if passenger activity is
increased.
Listed as proposed projects to
correct existing ilia lnd to make
way for added air travelers are:
-Expansion of the airport's
air terminal building, including
construction of a terminal annex.
-Construction of two
multilevel parkln1 structures.
-Adding 150 tie-down spaces
ror general aircraft, a move that
would bring the number of
availab le s paces for li1ht
aircraft at OCA up to 1,000
planes.
The major element in a noise
reduction progr am al the airport
cited by the consultants is the
northward extension by 7:r7 feet
ofOCA's main runway.
Such an extension "would al-
low departing aircraft to reach a
greater altitude before overfly.
ing noise sensitive residential
areas south of the airport," ac-
cording to the report.
Other sug1eated noise reduc-
tion m eas ures Include di·
re~llna departlnc jet liners north rather than south on lake
off. nttlne addJtional aircrart
with sound reducing material
and chanainl landine aJUtudes.
The consultant concedes that
the cost of some proposed noise
reduction measures "Is con-
sidered prohibitive."
Measures under that heading
include buyln1 noise easemen~
from Impacted homeowners,
acoustical treatment ol existing
homes and elaborate land con-
version programs.
Jl is when the lhlrd alternative
for OCA 's future is dJscussed that
the environmental impact report
focuses on lhe cotUy nolse reduc·
lion measures and adverse en-
vironmental Im pact.
Alternative three foresees OCA
being used by 6 million air
travelers a year by the end ol 1985.
0 .. ANQI COAST
DAILY PILOT
Frld1y. J111uary 14. 19n
91 ••
As Wilson and MisS Boukai
walked up the path, he said, she
again asked him to kill her.
"I turned around and finM! two
6r three times," Wilson saJd.
"She dropped to the ground, bu\
she was still alive. She looked up
and said, 'Well, I'm not dead'."
Wilson said he fired again and
her body went into spasms.
He said he left the city the next
day wi th his wife.
Wtlson, who had no prlor re-
cord, was arrested in Alabama In
early November on a federal
fugitive warrant.
ABUSE ••.
Goodwin testified that Mrs.
Brewster told bicn lbat she used
htr b01trited'J bu., Marine Corps belt to 1puk Cora when the
chlld annoyed her,
He said Bolden admitted using
the belt on the child but denied a
nei1hbor'1 report that he had
kicked the lltUe girl in the back
while they walked on the
sidewalk.
· The officer te1tlfled that Bolden
told him that be once slapped the
child with hi• open hand.
Goodwin testified that Mrs.
Brewster blamed her treatment
of the child on the beetin&a that
st.. and her 4·year-pld daucbter,
J ennifer, received frorn her
former hu1band, Frank
Brewster.
Miss Boukai was enrolled as a
freshman at the School of
Natural Resources and reported-
ly planned a career as an en-
vironmental lawyer. Her friends
said she was a good student, and
was active in a local Methodist
youth group.
O.lly PIM4 IU.lf l'MI• CULVEROALE FIRST GRADE,.S SINO FOR FILMMAKERS OUTSIDE CLASSROOM
In Irvine, a View of Amerfc1n Schoot Ufe for the Folk• In J1p1n
The officer said Mrt. Brewster
told him that abe divorced
Brewster in Jacksonville, Fla.,
and then met Bolden in san Dieao
where he persuaded her to live
with him In a motel room in San
Clemente.
John Hensel, senior assistant
Wuthenaw County prosecutor,
said if the girl had any emotional
problems, he was not aware of
them. He nsel said Wilson's
courtroom confession appeared
t o be truthful. Officials said
Wi lson had not received a
psychiatric exam ination.
Last month, Wilson stood mute
at his arraignment on an open
murder charge and a separate
charge of second-degree murder
in district court. But Thursday he
pleaded guilty to the second-
degree charge. and prosecutors
said the other charge, equivalent
to a first-degree murder charge,
would be dropped. The max-
imum sentence for second·
degree murder convictions is life
in prison.
Judge Patrick Conlin
scheduled Wilson's sentencing
for Feb. 10. He was remanded to
custody in the county jail.
CHECKS INTO HOSPITAL
Actor Sterling Holloway
Wistful Actor
Holloway in
OC Hospital
Sterling Holloway, the man
whose wistful scratchy voice
became identified with such
characters as Winnie the Pooh
and Jiminy Cricket. has been ad-
mitted to South Coast Communi·
ty Hospital for observation,
spokesmen sa y.
Holloway, who turned 72today,
was admitted Thursday for tesL'I
after suffering chest pains. Chief
nurse Lois Kirwan llaid he was
alert and in satisfactory condi·
tion this morning.
He was born Jan. 14 , 1905 in
Cedartown, Ga.
Holloway, a resident ot South
Laguna. is known to rnilllon1 of
children around the world as the
man who made Winnie reaJ.
He also narrated or voiced
characters for several other Walt
Disney f eatures . Including
"Bambi," "Dumbo," "Alice in
Wonderland," "Jungle Book"
and "Peter and the Wolf."
STARS .•.
she explained.
One of the reasons Culverdale
School was as ke d to send a
teacher on the all·expenses-patd
summer trip was the relatively
high number of Japanese stu·
dents enrolled at the school and
the bilingual education program
there.
Thirteen J apanesestudenta are
currently enrolled at Culverdale.
When they first anived, most
spoke no, or little, English, Mrs.
Gralflssaid.
Ch.ildren receive special bil-
ingual help in "English as A
Second Language" classes and
extra tutoring each week from a
Japanese-speaking aide, Mrs.
Kikue Hausler.
The reason frvine's Japanese
population is growing is the in-
creasing n umber of Japanese
firms moving to the Irvine In·
dustrial Complex.
And, many of the new Japanese
residents live first in the
Parkwest apartments, which Is
within the Culverdale attendance
area.
Fro111 Page A l
FROZEN •••
Officials said Kuhn, a retired
Westinghouse employe, was not
on welfare and r eceived a
pemion of about S200 a month
plus Socia) Security benefits.
The welfare department
became involved when the elec-
tric company. complying with
state law. advised it of the cutoff.
Cash said the company could
notify the welfare department u
soon as a five-day notice is post-
ed, but he said he doubted that
would help because, "they can't
even handle the case load they
have now."
He said he learned later that
Kuhn apparently was ill Dec. 28
when a collector went to the
house and no one answered the
door. A day earlier, hes.aid, a gas
compa ny r epresentative In-
quired at the house about a late
bill and Kuhn "was too weak to
sign his name."
Cash said Kuhn frequently dJd ·
not pay his bill until a company
representative showed up at the
door.
F rot11 Page Al
SLAYING ••.
Orange County College of Court
Reporting.
"She went there for a year and
then had lo quit whens~ ran out
of money." her sister said.
She said R o byn and a
girUriend went to Europe last
summer. vlsitine England, The
Netherlands, Denmark and
Greece.
Her •later said Robyn worked
at the Santa Ana restaurant for a
little more than a year, and wu a
secretary al J ensen Marine
Corp. in Costa Mesa while at·
tending the court reporting
school.
IRS Backs Off·
Tui,tion Tax Break Stich
WASHlNGTON CAP) -The Internal Revenue
Service said today it is Withdrawine a proposal that
would bave required collere and other school
employes to pay taxes on free tultJon 1ranted their de· pendents. ·
The move ended a broad attempt by the IRS this
year to expand taxation of fringe benefits tor college employes and workers in other areas.
ln a notice published ln the Federal Register, the acency Hid that hearinu on the free tuition issue
pointed out several probfems associated wttb taxlnt such ~netits.
'nle IRS said it was yJeJdJng in favor ol • con· gresslonal study ol the broader Issue of acholarshf ps andfellowahips, ,
The tuition ~ ..t.Jmated by trade u1ocla· t10111 lor unlver1~ pro(~n and otbera 1t coeu.n,
$10 mlWon • year ~taua. hid been opposed by tM prolesson and several untvenlt.1•. /
NB Man Indicted
For Big Hash Haul
A Newport Beach man who al-
legedly had hashish valued at
$500,000 in bis possession when
police searched his home was in-
dkted on drug charaes today by
the Orange County Grand Jury.
Superior Court Judge J ames
H. Walsworth immediately ar-
raigned Robert Edward Smith JJ,
27, of 4091 Seashore Drive, and
accepted his plea of innocent to
charges or possessing hashish for sale.
Oerks Re ach Pact
ALAMEDA CAP) -A ten-
tative agreement was reached
between the Retail Clerks Union
and the Food Employers Council,
narrowly averting a strike·
Smith was ordered to face trial
April 18. He ls free on $25,000
bail.
Smith was ar realed Nov. 18 by
Newport Beach police who said
they found the hashish in his
home while they were investigat-
ing what they at first thought was
an attempted burglary at the pre-
mises.
They said a man they spotted
tampering with the door knob at
Smith's home told them he wu a
friend of the occupant. To prove
it he led them into the house.
OCficers said they were in·
troduced to the startled Smith as
he allegedly sat at his living
room table packaging some or
the 1.20 pounds of hashish they
claim they found in the home.
anua
Goodwin said she told him that
she became upset when Bolden
was away from home every other
day because or guard duty et
Camp Pendleton and that she
began to beat her daughter as a
means of quelling her frustra-
tions.
F rom Page A l
LONGET •••
charge's maximum penalty
would be $5,000 and two years in
prison.
Singer Andy Williams, Mias
Longet 's ex-husband, was in
court again today and stared al
the jury as it received lnstruc·
lions.
On Thursday. the prosecution
cross-examined Sablch's best
friend in an effort to prove that
Miss Longet "likes to take
chances."
James Llllstrom, an advertis-
ing executive from Boulder, said
the affair between Sabich and
Miss Longet began in 1972 after a
glass-tossing incident in a bar.
t
New carpet shipments are on their way
and we're making room. we·ve reduced prices
on every one of Lees best-selling carpets dur-
ing Lees January Clearance Safe.
Choose from hundreds of colors & styles
& patterns. Hurry. the Lees Carpets Author·
ized January Clearance Sale ends January
22nd.
ONE
WEEK
ONLY!
1663 ,lACINTIA AVl!NUf • PHONE 64'6·4838 -646-2355
L
t
I
Laguna/South Coast
,/ EDIT I ON
OL. 70, NO. 14, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRI DAY, JANUARY 14, 1977
Aftern oon
.}C. Stoeks
.
' TEN CENT$
·~ Airport Use Rise Seell
•
·· Litde HaTm Expected From Increase
Utility pol~s and wires cluttering tbe view of the Laguna
Beach Festival of Arts will be goin~ underground in an
F.dison Company funded Laguna Beach project. The job
will eliminate the poles and· wires along Laguna Canyon
Road from the Irvine Bowl tennis courts to the intersec·
tion of Forest and Broadway. The job will take about
two and a half months.
By GARY GRANVIi.LE
Ot-. O•llY P't ... Maff
A massive environmental im·
pact report covering Orange
County Airport COCA) says the
airport can handle an additional
510,000 air travelers a year with
little adverse impact on existing'
environmental conditions.
The 565-page, ·$218,000 study by
the consulting firm of Daniel.
Mann, Johnson and Mendenhall
of Los Angeles covers three
alternative futures ofOCA.
One of those alternatives is to
roll back o pe rations al the
airport "to immediately bring
OCA into compliance with
Witness
Tells of
Beatings
By TOM BARLEY
Of Ille Dally "lle.SQtt
A San Clemente police officer
testified Thursday that when he
arrested Carolyn Brewster last
August on child abuse charges she
told him that she beat her 2-year-
old daughter ·'with anything she
could get her hands on.··
Detective Leonald Goodwin
told an Orange County Superior
CourtjUO' that Mrs. Brewster, 23,
told them that when she was
frustrated she ·'took out her emo·
tions on Cora."
Mrs. Brewster's alleged state·
ments to police led to her being
· booked on charges of child abuse.
An interview with her bo)'friend,
Camp Pendleton Mmineltenneth Ray Bolden. 20. led to his being
jailed on identical allegat.ions.
Both defendants were arrested
after the unconactous child was·
!Laguna. Homes,
I
1Businesses Entered • rushed to San Clemente General
Hospital from the motel room
shared by the accused couple and
Mrs. Brewster's two children.
Burglars hit four more Laguna
1 ach homes or businesses In
• crimes reported to police Thurs·
I ay.
In two cases, a window smash
t the Spinning Wheel. 219
C)ltdway. and attempted forci·
e entry at Nova Travel, 1027 N.
asl Htghway. it appeared no
perty was taken.
At Npva Travel. the double
lted and chained door frustrat·
attempts to pry entry.
~An Wllocked door at the home
Susan L. Walcott on Lower
ff Drive afforded entry for a
er who stole $4.S from Miss
IWaJcott'1 purse while she was
,away.
.A thler who pried out a louver
wtndow pane and then reJccbed
ugh, to unlock a d* at
e's Beauty Shop, 375
adway. got $99 worth of
en carved artobject.s.
I Laguna Beach police Chief Jon
t
Sparks noted that none of the
businesses hit in the recent
burglary spre e have been
equipped with alarms which he
said would aid the department in
the capture of the burglars.
Man's Death
'Sad Thing'
Says Utility
MANSFIELD, Ohio <AP) -
The cue of an elderlf customer
who froze to delth after his
power was sbvt d1 ls !'a a.a thins" -but it mil) bappen.;
acain, says an eleetric company
executJve.
Doctors foond that Cora had
suffered brain damage from her
head injuries, had a broken left
arm. bile m~ks on the4'eft arm,
cigarette burns on the chest and
bruising throughout the body with
the he.aviest bruises found on the
back and buttocks.
Goodwin tes tified that Mrs.
Brewster told him that she us'ed
her boyfriend's heavy Marine
Corps bell to spank Cora when the
child annoyed her.
He said Bolden admitted using
the belt on the child bul denied a
neighbor's report that he bad
kicked the little girl in the back
while they walked on the
sidewalk.
1be officer testified that Bolden
told bim thal be once slapped the
child with his open hand.
Goodwin testified that Mrs.
Brewster blamed her treatment
~Qf the child on the beatings that
she and her 4·year-old daughter.
(See ABUSE, Page A.2)
California noife standards eflec·
tiveJan.1.1986."
To meet those sta{ldards, the
number of commercial jet de-
partures from the airport daily
would be reduced from an exist·
ing average of 37.9 nights daily to
4.1 flights a day.
And the number of air
travelers using the airport would
be reduced from the current an·
nual level of 1.56 million
passengers to 330.ooi> passengers
a year.
The study shows that such c.
roll back in OCA activity would
have a severe adverse economic
impact. especially on employ·
CHECKS INTO HOSPITAL
Actor Sterllng HoUoway
W-utfw Actor ·
Holloway in
OC Hospital
Sterling Holloway, the man
whose wistful stratchy voice
became identified with such
characters as Winnie the Pooh
and Jiminy Cricket, has been ad·
mitled to South Coast Communi·
ty Hospital for observation.
spokesmen say.
Holloway, who turned 72today,
was admitted Thursday for tests
after suffering chest pains. Chief
nurse Lois Kirwan said he was
alert and in satisfactory. condi-
tion this morning.
"I think it's his birthday," she
said. ~
He was born J an. 14, 1905 in
Cedartown. Ga.
Holloway. a resident of South
Laguna. is known to miJlions of
children around the world as the
man who made Winnie real.
He also narrated or voic;ed
characters for several other Walt
Disney features, inc luding
··Bambi," "Dumbo," "Alice in
Wonderland," "Jungle Book"
and "Peter and the Wolf."
Road Jobs md
"Of co~e. we didn't tlle know
Ule okl gentleman was ill," added Malcolm It. Cash, head of
Oblo EdlsOll operations in tbe
Manalleld area of north-central
Ohio. "If we had known, we ob-
viously wouldn 'l have cut him
off.''
No Clues, Suspects
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
Sacramento firm, Teichert
Construction, apparently sub·
mitled the lowest bid, $6.6
mllllon. on the seeond of three
aecmeots of the Jut gap in In·
terstate 5 between Stockton and
Sacramento, state tfan.aporta· tion officials ,_,.
Coas t
·We athe r
Fair through Saturday.
Hl1hs in 80s. Lowa in 408.
Cash said, however, that "re-
gardless of the safeguards we t.ry
to build into the system, I don't
know what kind of policy we
could lmpltment to prtVenl tbis
(rom happening again sometime fn the future."
Meanwhile, a state senator
1akl be is draftlng legilllaUon to
prevent utility sbutoffs in eyes
where they could mean death.
Eueene J. Kuhn, 74, wt.o lived
alone and bad no immediate
family except an lnftrm sister, wu found dead in bed in hls old
(~ FaOZEN, Pare AZ>
Thieves Take
Respirators
Thieves broke the ral' window
of American Reaplralory
Therapy Services, 212 N. El
<Amino Real. San Clemente.
1blrlday and stole thousands of
dollars worth of rftplraton and
oxy1en ta.nks, police said.
An exact loa. fieure ia pend.lne
an invtlltory today.
Police believed Urie bur•lan
were hi1htened away b)' some
aou.nd before they completed
tbelr crime. A number or
calculator&, typewriters and
04.W elect.rlc ap~ances were
unpluged and •t.acked in tlle
middle ot tbt omce.
Costa· Mesa Girl
Slain in Bathtub
By STEVE Ml'IOIRLL
OllMO•ll't .. it.lliMtt:'"'
Costa Mesa detecti¥es said
today they have no motive, no
clues, and oo suspect ill the
slaying of a Costa Mesa
waitress whose body was
found face down in her
bathtub Wednesday night.
Robyn Lynn Cox, 20, of 241
AvocadO St., was discovered
fully clothed in the bathtub of
her apartrpent at 6:15 p.m. by
her r oom1nate, Carla Jean
Roden,24.
Miu Roden ran to a nearby
•partm.ent and asMd t.bem to
come 1Dd ''aee wbat was
wroa,," wltb Klu Co1r. delec· tlvenald.
~Ideally 1be OIUy got a e ot lier roomrute in the
tub ldld ru nut door,., Lt.
rse L. Lorton eald.
Lorton aald lllaa .~. who Mll'ktld as a wattnma aQM!o'a cn
Brtatdl Street ln Santa Ana. bad
been dead for three to lb hourt
before police arrived at lbe
scene.
An autopsy lodlcat.d alle died
ol ttranrulaUoo witb ~ ot I
drowning. The strangulation
might have been accomplished
by a amalJ cord around the n~k.
detectlves said.
"We onl~ discovered the cause
of death Thursday afternoon.·•
Lorton said. "Up WlUl then. it
<See SIA YING, Page A!)
Clem ente
I Cleanup Se,t
Next week b .cJeanUJS
week In San Clemeita.
Startin( Monday and
COcttlo®.la tbrou1b Frid.,..
city crew• wm plck .up
overtl&e article• of trub
or Junk not handled by the
rep.Jar trash collector.
IWltdenu ma)' Ht out
1ucll ttem• u old ~·t·
t r•••••, w a1bt n 1
aul'!h1nes, refrl&eratora
llMI tbe like on the same ay a their r.,uiar trub
dckup. There la no max· lmum aln. ac~dlni to cl·
tyball.
ment at the airport. the bus1·
nesses that service air travelers
and travelers' dollars spent
locally.
It is the second altemative, ex·
panding the annual passenger
load at OCA from its current 1.56
million persons to 2.13 million
persons, that the consultant~ in·
dicates wilt have conparatively
minor impact on existing en-
vironmental conditions.
That increased annual
passenger load of 570,000 persons
can be handled within the con·
fines of existing leases with the
three commercial airlines that
operate at OCA. the consultant
study says. a. J
Under tne second aitemative,
the average number of daily Jet
airliner departures at tbe airport
would increa11e from 37.9to40.1.
And the total number of com· •
mercial jet operations would !
cUmb Crom today's annual 40,565,
flights to 40, 109 a year.
The bulky environmental im-•
pact report disc\Jsses a series or
proposed projects needed to cor-
rect inadequacies at OCA,
especially if passenger activity is
increased.•
Listed as proposed projects to 1 correct existing ills and to make
<See AIRPORT, Page AZ)
A rsoa 'Certaia' J
Four Laguna.:~
Fires Probed · ··
A series of rour fires all occur·
ring within an hour today are un·
der investigation by the Laguna
Beach Police Department and
Fire Marshal Jim Presson.
Arson is virtually a certainly in
three of tbe fires. one of which
destroyed a $6,000 sports car
parked in an apartment carport.
Presson said.
A second car was hit as v.ell.
but there is a chance that fire
could have been accidental, the
fire marshal said. The other two
fires involved trash containers
set aflame.
The Incidents occurr ed
between 3: 30 and 4 :30 a.m.
Fire set inside the passenger
eompat'~ent o! a sports car
owned by William M. Palmer,
1027 N . Coast Highway,
destroyed the convertible car.
Presson said no immediate de-
termination had been made as to
the cause . although
circumstances indicated it was
deliberately set.
A fire in a sedan owned by
Tony J: Sartori. 20432 Laguna Ca·
Vehicle Rips l#
~Beach
Gas Main Cap
A contractor 's backhoe sliced
into the 12 inch high pressure
natural gas main for the South
Orange Coast area Thursday in
Laguna Beach.•
The incident knocked a one·
and-a-quarter inch cap off the big
main and sent gas shooting into
theairwith a roar.
Lag una B each firemen
evacuated several residences in
the vicinity of the incident in the
2300 block of Glenneyre Street.
Police blocked access to the area
while repairs were made.
Ray D yer. gas company
division superintendent. said re·
pair did not require shutdown of
the maw which would have left
many South Coast residents
without service.
· Dyer said gas company repair
crews first rethreaded the filling
and then screwed a valve over
the opening. When the v-.tve was
in place. ii. was closed and lhe
escaping gas stopped. Later. a
metal covering was placed over
the valve a'ld the enclosure
welded shut.
The break occurred at 2: 19
p.m. Repair was completed al
about 7 p.m .• Dyer said.
Restaurant Cash
Taken by 1bief
A total of Sl,400 in cash was
taken from a Dana Point
restaurant by a burgf.who
forced open the front 9Indow
alter the premlaes bad closed ror
the night.
Or anee County sberlfra of·
ftcen aaJd the then. was rePorted by Patricia Runyon. operator or
the Harbor ·Inn, 340!M Pacific
Coast Highway.
Oerlu Reach Pact
ALAMEDA (AP) -A ten·
t.atJve a1reement' w-. reached
between tht Retail Qerka \h\Son
and the Pood Employers Council.
nam>wl)' *"•rtini a at.rill• wblch w• thrutentd for toda)' a1alMt
163 Saf•way itores in tllht COUil· u.. .
-
nyon Road, wasdiscoveredbyoCf-
duty Laguna Beach Policeman
Mark Everton. •
Officer Everton used a garden
hose to knock down the flames
before the arrival of firemen
aJready occupied on the other
fires. The car was locked and
there did not appear to be
evidence of forced entry.
Trash fire incidents occurred
at 721 N. Coast Highway and al
l83 Boat Canyon. There was no
significant dam age reported.
Upgrading
Urged in
Laguna
By JACK CHAPPELL
O!-O•llV ..iietstttt
-
An audit of the city or Laguna
Beach financial and management
operations bas res4!ted in '7 re-
commendations for improve·
mentsorcbanges.
The recommendations ranged
from the minor - such as writing
petty cash disbursements in ink,
to major ones such as establishing
a central purchasing department.
Many of the recommendations
were designed to tighten up·
security and cash control,
auditors from Price Waterhouse
told Laguna Beach. City Council
members Ulis week. ,
The controls will lessen tbe
possibility of misappropriaUon ~
funds. the auditors said.
They did not. however, repcll't.
any instances where funds had
been misappropriated.
Many of the recommendations
have already been acted on by ci·
ty management.
Some others are awaiting Qty
Council approval. and still others
involve philosophical or manage·
<See UPGRADE, Page A.2)
Mrs. Faulk's
Final Rites
Held Today
Services w~re scheduled today
for San Clemente resid ent
Elizabeth f aulk at San Clemente
Presbyterian Church. Mrs,
Faulk died Tuesday. She was 73,
Burlal was at El Toro
Cemetery.
Mrs. Faulk was the wire or
Wendell E. Faulk, put president. or the San Clemente Rotary Club'
and one-time distrjct governor or
Rotary JoternaUonal. They
celebrated their 50th wedding anr
nivenary last J une.
Sbe was bom Jan. ~. UQ.1~
Galeaburg, Ill. A gadua{e
Lombard College Coaeerva
of Music. 1be once sq on rlldio.
She wu a student and teecw ot
ballet for 12 yean. •
Mn. Faulk wu actlve in the
5an Clemente Woman's Club an~t
ID tht Pr•b)'teriao Cburcb. t
She la aurvlved by beri
h1.11baod; IOlll Wendell E. FaWkl
Jr. of Ramona and ~ory N.
Faulk of Salinas;~ \llbt•rs
Ellaabetb Tittle of artlnu,I
cal.ll., and Diano Sinor and ~· 1
dJ St.randtmano, both ol ..,_
Dle,o. alaters Helen Bemer ud 1 I>orOtbl' Briel' of llllnoU. *" srandchUdren.
A_2 DAIL 'V PILOT l /SC Friday. January 14, 19n
l'ro• Page Al I . 1!~RPORT REPORT •••
way for added air travelers are:
-Expansion of t.he wrport's
air terminal building, inclumng
cooat.rucUon of a terminal annex.
--Construction of two
multilevel parking structures.
-Adding ISO tie.down spaces
for general aircraft, a move that
would bring the number of
available spaces for light
aircraft at OCA up to 1,000
planes.
The major element in a noise
·reduction program at the airport
cited by the consultants Is the
northward extension by 7'n feet
ofOCA's main runway.
Such an extension "would a l-
low departing aircraft to reach a
greater altitude before overfly.
ing noise sensitive residential
areas south of the airport," ac-
cording to the report.
Mangers Eyes
IKJO.acre Buy
For WiUllif e
By ROBERT BARKER
OI tf!o Dall, 1'11"4 Si.II
Assemblyman Dennis
Mangers (0-Huntington Beach>
today unveiled plans to buy lklO
acres of Bolsa Chica marshlands
lor preservation of a natural
wild-life habitat.
ManJZers said he will seek to
acquire the acreage from the $200
mimon in Prop. 2 funds that were
passed by voters last November.
"There are indications that the
legislation stands a very good
chance of getting through," he
said today at a press conference
jn the Huntington Beach Library.
He said the price per acre is to
be determined by negotiation
between the state and the prln·
cipal land owner, Signal
Landmark, if his legislation is
.successful.
Mangers said the primary goaJ j of his blll, which he intends to in·
1 troduce on Jan. 26, is to acquire a
23>-acre parcel of land in the
Bolsa Chlca that is now leased t.o
the state.
Other suggested nol6c reduc·
lti>ft meuuree ioclude dl-
rectlnc departing Jet llnet1
north rather than .out.b oo take ott, filling addltlooal aircraft
wltb 101.LDd techaclq material
and cbanaint laodine altitudes.
The consultant concedes that
t.he cost of some proposed nolse
reduction meas ures "ls con·
sidered prohibitive."
Measures under that heading
include buying noise easements
from impacted homeowners,
acoustical treatment of existing
homes and elaborate land con·
version programs.
It is when the third alternative
for OCA 's future is mscussed that
the environmental impact report
focuses on the costly noise reduc·
lion measures and adverse en·
vironmental impact .
Alternative three foresees OCA
being used by 6 m illion air
travelers a year by the end of
1985.
While the passenger le vel
would afmost triple over current
use, the number of flight opera-
tions would climb by only about
13 percent, according to the con·
sultan ts.
That's because by 1985 new
wide-body jets capable of handl·
ing larger passenger loads will be
in use.
But before the new equipment
is available, the number of night
operations at OCA would in·
crease to 54 ,750 annually as the
passenger load level hits an
estimated 3.9 million in 1980.
Going along with that jet ac-
tivity at the airport would be the
disturbance of precious wildlife
in Upper Newport Bay, a
dramatic increase in energy con·
sumption and displacement of re-
sidents in roughly 4'n homes.
Moreover, even with adoption
of the cosUy .complete noise re-
duction program, the noise im-
pacted area would increase to an
area "not calculated"" by the con·
sultants.
The report discussed expanded
airport a ctivities impact on t:raf·
fie conditions in the airport area.
. (
Pok Cat
"Tiger " s its atop his
favorite perch on a 12..COOt
p9le on th~ farm .or ..his
masters,· JoAnna· and Mitch
Jurgens of ·Brandon, S,,P .
Tiger faces loss of tµs lofty
viewpoint when the'·pole
becomes just another beam
in their barn.
He said he also will seek an ad·
ditional 553.7 acres in the marsh
area which will provide a buffer
against urban encroachment.
The proposed acquisition in-
cludes marshlands from the bluff
near Huntington Harbour to
another bluff near the Seacliff
Diesel Fuel Spill
Ca~es Spirwuts
. Country Club.
: Mangers announced he also
propose$ to acquire another 16.3
I acres in the northwest area near
Werner Avenue to protect the
, bluff area and to provide for
public access and observation of
the marsh.
He indicated that construction
developm e nt would oc cur
between the 16.3 acre-s1te and
Warner to the north. Controversy
has been going on for ma.ny years
over the 1,604 acres of property
lying east of Paciric Coast
lnghway and south of HU11tington
Harbour and consisting of
lowlands, bluffs, oil fields and
estuaries.
The Bolsa Chica area has been
recognized by the Coastal Com-
mission as lbe largest and m~t
«ologically valuable rest.orable
marshland in California.
Thief Takes
_ V al.ued Caps
• Twenty.four antique radiator
caps valued at SS.400 were stolen
durlnc a nighttime bursJary at
· Movieworld Cars ol the Stars,
Buena t>ark police ~rted to-day.
Officers said the burglary was
reported Thursday and occurred
sometime during the rughl Wed-·
nesday.
Police said they believe so-
meone remained imlde the build·
. log at 6920 Orangethorpe Ave
-when It closed Wednesday mght
The burglar escaped through a
display window, otrlcers said.
The most valuable cap report-
;ed missing, police said, was a de·
· corative one from a La Salle
:automobile. It is valued at $500.
DAILY PILOT
A diesel fuel tanker truck
s pilled 40 gallons of fuel onto the
San Diego Freeway in San
Clemente Thursday causing exit·
ing cars to spin out of control into
a busy intersection at El Camino
Real.
Among the first to notice the
hazard were a pair of reserve
San Clemente firemen driving
down the offramp. They missed
the stop at the bottom of the
r amp and ins tead skidded
sideways through normally busy
El Camino Real.
Their car was not hit.
Fire men r e ported seve ral
other spinouts, but none resulted
in a crash.
Firemen closed the offramp to
traffic and heaped s and and
chemicals on the diesel fuel.
which extended a block down El
Cammo Real, to absorb it.
The driver of the truck, Vito
Fas one, employed by Aries
Transportation Co. of Santa Fe
Springs, was unhurt, and steered
F,....PageAJ
UPGRADE. •
menl disagreements which will
have to be thrashed out, City
Manager AJ Theal told the coun-
cil.
Putting into practice some of
the recommendations would re·
quire additional personnel, TheaJ
said. A staff report wilt be made
at an upcoming City Council
session.
Councilman Carl Johnsoo, who
with Councilman Jack McDowell
worked with the auditors, said
the report was "superb."
Among some or the major re·
commendations were:
-Development or better cash
forecasting to enable more city
fU11ds to be invested. Jn fiscal
1975-76 the city earned a 4.9 per-
cl.!nt on its average daily cash
available for investment. Better
forecasting could enable the city
to take advantage of longer term
securities with higher yield thus
picking up an additional percen-
tage point ln Interest equalling
$18,000.
-Alternatives to the city's cur-
rent computer time-sharina ar-
rangement. The city spends
$2,650 monthly with three ven ·
don for payroU, commercial ac-
counts, business Ucense and
crime data proceasinl. A city
"mini-computer" sntem could
c°"t less, the auditors said.
Other recommendaUons In·
eluded closer communication
between the plaMlol depart·
ment and tbe municipal aervicee
department, revlalon ot the city
general plan fonnat. Ind lire d•
tecUon and auppNlllon equip.
ment ln' ell¥ rec;ordJ •lora.c• .,. ....
the rig into a service station.
Firemen used redwood plugs to
cork the leak in the fuel line
which drained the truck's re-
serve fuel supply. The leak did
not involve the cargo of fuel.
Fasone was unable to explain
what caus ed the mishap.
Cleanup took firemen two hours.
Frora Page AJ
ABUSE •••
Jennifer, received from her
former husband, Frank
Brewster.
The oCficer said Mrs. Brewster
told him that s he divorced
Brewster in JacksooviJle, Fla.,
and then met Bolden in San Diego
where he persuaded her to live
with him in a motel room in San
Clemente.
Goodwin said she told him that
she became upset when 'Bolden
was away from home every other
day because of guard duly at
Camp Pendleton and that she
began to beat her daughter as a
meaos of quelling her frustra·
Uons.
The chlld Is now being cared for
In a foster home following her re-
covery from multiple injuries and
brain surgery performed at the
San Clemente hospital.
Goodwin said he questioned
Mrs. Brewster closely about the
head injuries and she told him
that they were sustained when
Cora fell from her bed onto a
Marine Corps ammunition box
that Bolden used to store his shoe
cleaning equipment.
She said the burns on the child's
chest were sustained when Cora
ran into her while she was smok·
ing a cigarette, the· officer
testified.
The prosecution will introduce
medical testimony on Cora's pre-
sent condition and her condition
hut Aug. 17 when the trial ln
Judie Harmon G. Scoville's
courtroom resumes Monday ..
Cyclists. Hurt
In Collision
Two San Clemente teenage
brothers were injured Thursday
when the motorcycle they wen
riding on North El Camino Real
at.ruck the rear of a car.
PolJce said Crate Box.berser.
19, told them he looked behind
him to say 1omelbln1 to hi•
brother, Jerry J . Boxber1er, 18,
and 1Phen he looked *k to tbe
road tt was too late to avoid hit· Una a alowinl car.
The brothen, who u .. el 143-A
Avenlda Granada, ~ ~
for cuta and brulsea md ~
from the hospital.
1be dri,;er of th4t ear, Jtoee
Mary Olamendl, 28, ~ Uated
btr addres1 11 920 N. El C&mino
Real, Olamendl '• Restaurant, wu not tnJurod, poUctMld.
'Hard· Lal>or'·
A blaclt Marine who pleaded
guilty to a raid on a group of
whites at Camp Pendleton Is be·
ing broken in rank, fined $300
and sentenced to three months
confinement at. hard labor by the
C(>rps. '
The punishment was handed
out Thursday by a special court-
martial which heard the day·
long trial of Cpl. Dea.A Edwards,
20, one of 14 black Marines
charged with assaulting seven
whites Nov. 13 in the mistaken
belief they were breaking up a
Ku Klux Klan meeting.
Meanwhile, military police re-
ported the burning or a six-fool·
high wooden cross early Thurs-
day at a spot. on base about five
miles from where the attack
took place.
Fro. Pafll! A J
FROZEN ..•
home in a rundown neighborhood
on Mansfield's s outhwest side.
ffis electricity had been cut off
eight days earlier for failure to
pay an $18.38 electric bill. Police
said the temperature in the house
was 9 degrees, and Coroner
Raymond Tha bet ruled death
was caused by exposure.
An electric company sticker
giving a five-day notice of shutofr
still was attached to the front
door, and in the mailbox was a
delinquent notice, along with a
welfare department letter advis-
ing Kuhn that be might be eligi·
ble for financial assistance to
pay the bill.
Officials said Kuhn. a retired
Westinghouse employe, was not
on welfare and received a
pension of about $200 a month
plus Social Security benefits.
Base security officers, who
put out the fire, said they were
holding a Marine for invesUga.
lion. They saJd the incidents ap.
peared unrelated.
Edwards was the second of the
H blacks to appear in a court-
martial trial.
Like Cpl. E .F. Henry, who
was the first, Edwards pleaded
guilty to a reduced charge or
assault. Initially, he'd been
charged wtih conspiracy and as-
sault likely to produce ~evou.s
bodily harm.
Both be and Henry were re-
duced in rank to private. The
trial saw Edward$ testify lo
participation in a meeting or
blacks at which they decided
they would take action against a
Ku Klux Klan cell at the base.
Edwards testified he was a
backup man who stood al the
door of a barracks room to keep
whites from getUng out. Six of
seven whlte Leatheme<:ks in t.he
room were hospitalized with in·
juries from the attack.
Also testifying was Edwards'
mother, Eloise Edwards Valley,
who journeyed from her home at
Bay St. Croix, La., on behalf of
her son, who she said had never
been in any trouble and joined
the Marines to help s uppott a
big family at home.
Pretrial hearings are eof\&u·
ing to determine if the te'1a,io-
ing 12 black Marines also ""U
face courts-martlaJ or le~aer
pW'llshments.
In a related development
Thursday. an appeal for dona-
tions to a "Catnp feodletoo 14
Legal Delena, Ftmd" was issued
by the San Dteco ebapter of Peo-
ple Unitdd to Sive Humanity,
also known as Operation PUSH.
The group estimated costs for
each of the black Marines will
total $10,000.
anua
7-rig Smaah
Closes Rt. 5
CORMAN CAP) -Seven
t.r\lck.s ama•hed loCetber oa tce-slJek fQt•rsut.t 5
early today ln a cha in·
re action accident that
blocked southbound lanes
of the major biabway route
for two hours and injured
two drivers, the Callfornia
Hi&hway Patrol said.
The smashup started
when one truck jack.knlfed
after the driver put on his
brakes on a downhill sec·
tion of the road left icy by
last week's snowstorm,
patrolmen said.
They sald lhe other half·
dozen trucks jammed their
brakes to avoid the flnt ac-
cident and began lbe series
or accident.a a half mile
north of here.
f',....P.,,eAJ
SLAYING •••
could have been an accidental
drowning.''
When asked lf a fully-dressed
woman in the bathtub didn't strike him as suspicious,' Lorton
said, "She might have bNn
washing her cat or something
and fallen in the tub." 1
He said nothing appears to
have been taken from the apart·
menl, and no struggle in the
other rooms or the dwelling were
evident.
"There were no signs of a
sVuggle In the bathroom.
either,·• Lorton said.
Detectives combed the apart-
ment for clues Thursday and.
dusted the apartment for
fingerprints, Lorton said.'
Mise Cox was 1raduated with
honors from Costa Mesa High
School ln 1974, school officials
said today.
She was a inember of the
school's scholarship society and
was chairman of the Educational
Development Council in her
junior year at Costa Mesa Hi.ih.
New carpet shipments are on their way
and we're making room. We've reduced prices
on every one of Lees best-selling carpets dur-
ing Lees January'Clearance Sale.
Choose from hundreds of colors & styles
& patterns. Hurry, the Lees Carpets Author·
rzed January Clearance Sale ends January
22nd
..
'
ONE
WEEK
ONLY!
DEN'S ·········••\••••• ·installation· custom draperies
linoleum• wood floor
1663 PLACl!NTJA AVENUE • COSTA MESA. CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 6'46·4838 -646·i355
..
l
l
Orange (Joast
' EDITION
'l 'oda.' ·, ('losi11p.:
'· \. S• oc·I~~
OL. 70, NO. 14, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE C.OUNTY, CALI FORNI A FRIDAY , JANUARY 14, 1977 N TEN CENTS
J-Ury Asked, 'Hold Longet's H and '
ASPEN. Co lo. (AP) -
laudine Lorrget's t.rial for
~anslaui;chter went to the jury to·
day after her attorney pleaded
f' 'th the panel to "hold her hand"
entally as they judge.
Attorney Charles Weedman, in
emotional hour and a half
~ummation, told jurors: "This is
J)ot just a name on a piece or
paper. This is woman who is liv·
ing, breathing and suffering.
•
WoDian
Stain in
Bathtub
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of IN 0•111 Pilot Staff
Costa Mesa detectives said
today they have no motive, no
clues, and no suspect in the
slaying of a Costa Mesa
waitress whose body was
tound face down in her
l)athtub Wednesday night.
' Robyn Lynn Cox, 20, of 241
Avocado St.. was discovered
fully clothed in the bathtub of
~er apartment at 6:15 p.m. by
her roommate, Carla Jean
Roden, 24.
Miss Roden ran to a nearby
apartment and asked them to
come and ··see what was
wrong,·· with Miss Cox, detec-
tives said .
.. Evidently she only got a
glance of her roommate in the
bathtub and ran next door." Lt.
Ceorge L. Lorton said.
Lorton said Miss Cox, who
worked as a waitress at Coco·s on
Bristol Street in Santa Ana, had
been dead for three to six hours
before police arrived al the
e.
autopsy indicated she died
rangulatfon with evidence or
drowning. The strangulation
mlgbt have been acco'!'PJ1ahed bY a small cord around the neck,
cletectives s.aid.
"We only disc?overed the cause
(}f death Thursday pternoon."
rton said. "Up until lben. it
ould have been an accidekital
. owning."
When asked if a fuJly.<Jtessed
oman in the bathtub didn't
rike him as suspicious. Lorton
aid. "She might have be'en
ashing . her cat or something
fallen in the tub.··
He said nothing appears to
ave been taken from the apart·
ent, and no struggle in the
rooms or the dwelling were
vident.
"Ther;e were no signs of a
truggJe in the bathroom,
titber, "·Lorton said.
l Detertlves combed the a.part·
Jbeot for dues Thund•Y and.
4'usled the aparllnent for
ll111erprint.s , Lortonsald.
.lliss Cox was graduated wilb
tp,ors rtom Costa Mes• lllgb
~l in 1974, school officials ~to<hly .
She was a memw of the liOhool's scbolarsflip ·~y and
WIS c'bairman or the Ed~aUonal
l)evelopment Council 1n her
jQnlor year at Costa M~a High.
She is lbe daughtel' of Neville
C.ox, or Costa Mesa and Patricia
C'A>x, also or Costa Mes.-. The COU·
ple are divorced.
Miss Cox is also survived by
Utree brothers and sisters.
Ayouncer sister, 'tamrny, said
IJobyn was working as• waitress
to raise mon~y to go back t.o the
Orange County College or Court
Reporting.
"She went there for a year and tMrt had to <tuit when she ran out
of money,'' her sister said.
"Do not be afraid to look at
her. You are going to be called on
to judge her. When you decide,
h o ld h e r hand and a s k
yourselves, "gpilty ol-not?"
Miss Longet wiped away tears
as her attorney concluded, and in
the spectator section, her ex-
husband, singer Andy Williams,
cried.
The jury-seven men and five
women -r etired to considt>r
thetr verdict just before noon
The last argument they heard .was rrom the prosecutor who
urged them to find the former
showgirl guilty of reckless
manslaughter.
Ashley Anders on told jurors in
his closing argument they had
been presented two versions of
how Miss Longet's lover died
March 21 in the bathroom or his
luxurious mountainside home.
Ande~'ion pmnll'd to tl'sllmony
from two Jay, l'1tfurn·mcnl of-
ficers who said Miss IA>ngct told
them the mi;ht of the shooting shl·
was joking with Sabich when the
22·caliber weapon she w;,is hold·
mg went off '
The rourl rN·cssed ufll'r de.•·
fense attorney Charles V Weed·
man said hi s final argument pro·
bably would last "the better part
of two hours.·· Anderson spoke
ahou1 25 m111ut1..·:-.
The twu uff1n•rs .1grt>t"<l Miss
Long et told I ht:m sht• playfully
ra1s1:d the gun at Sah1C'h as ht-was
show mg her how to I.I.St' 1t. One of~
firt•r quoted Mts" Longl'l as say ·
mg shl' told tll'r IO\cr .. boom,
boom" befun• tht· gun went off
Tht• other used the words "bang,
bang "
Miss Longet saitl Sabich told
her the gun's s afely mechanism
\
w<Js on. but ballistics cxperu
testified the safety wus ino1>era·
IJh•.
Dist net Court Judge George E.
Lohr instructed the JUr)' it could
also find the 35-year·old Miss
Longel guilty on a lesser charge of
criminally negligent homicide.
Reckless manslaughter calls for
up to a $30,000 fine and a 10-year
prison term. The homicide
<See LONG ET, Page A2)
Aiqlort Use Ris e S~en
Little H a rm Expected F rom I ncrease
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of the 0•111 P1fo1 SUff
~ massive environmental im·
pbct report covering Orange
CoWlty Airport <OCA) says the
airport can handle an additional
570,000 air travelers a year with
little adverse impact on existing
environmental conditions.
The 565·page, $218,000 study by
the consulting firm of Daniel,
Mann, Johnson and Mendenhall
of Los Angeles covers three
aJternative futures of OCA.
One or those alternatives is to
roll back ope rations at the
airport "to immediately bring
* * * Airport's
Foes Will
Wait, See
City officials in Newport Beach
who have fought airport ex-
pansion in recent y~ adopted a
wait-and·see attitude toward
news of the airport's en-
vironment.al impact.
OCA into compliance with
California noise stundards effec-
tive Jan. 1.1986 ...
To meet those standards. the
number of commercial jet de·
partures from the airport daily
would be reduced from an exist·
ing average of 37 .9 flights daily to
4.7 flights a day.
And the num ber of air
travelers using the airport would
be reduced Crom the current an·
nual level of t.56 million
passengers to 330,000 passengers
a year.
The study s hows that such a
roll back in OCA activity would
have a severe adverse economic
impact. especially on employ-
ment at the airport. the busi·
nesses that service air travelers
and travelers· dollars spent
locally.
It is the second altematrve. ex·
panding the annual passenger
load at OCA from its current 1.56
million persons to 2.13 million
persons, that the consultant in·
dicates will have conparatively minor impact on existing en·
vironmental conditions .
T hat increased annual
passeng~r load of 570,000 persons
can be handled within the con·
Third Y e ar
fines or existing leases with the
three commercial airlines that
operate at OCA, the consultant •
study says.
Under the second alternative,
the average number of daily jet
airliner departures at the airport
would increase from 37.9to40.1.
And the total number of com·
mercial jet operations would
climb from today's annual 40,565
flights to 40. 700 a year.
The bulky environmental im·
pact report discusses a series of
proposed projects need~ to cor-
rect inadequacies at OCA.
<See AIRPORT, Page A2>
.l
Firlll Again Pays
County's Top ~ax
of $12,529,441, a jump of $1,376,000
over'last year. ...a
I I Pete Barrett. mayor pro tern,
The Irvine Company main-
tained its PQSition as Onnge
County's largest taxpayer for the
third year in a row, co\Ulty Tax
Collector-Treas urer Robert
Citron said today.
Southern California Edison
Company which was in first •
place for several years was in
third place UUs year. The firm's
taxes wer e $11,224,172, up
$588,318 over last year, Citron
said.
"Tiger" s its a top his
favorite perch on a 12-foot.
pole on the farm of his
masters. JoAnna and Mitch
Jurgens of Brandon, S.D.
Tiger faces loss of his lofty
viewpoint whe n the pole
becomes just another beam
in their barn.
live-in ·~uard
Schoo1 p1ap ~· ·
Repo.-. Asked'
• #
With incidents of vandalism on
the rise in the Newport-Mesa
Unified S'chool District, tnmee
Don Smallw~ sayS' he'd like to
see more schools with live-in
caretakers.
Smallwood, president of the
Newport-Mesa board of trustees,
has uked the district staff to pre·
pare a report on tbe economl~
feasibility of his Idea.
SmaUwOQd.noted that lhillre ate
"three or fotr schools" lh~ ~
t.rict where district employesftve
and "the staff tell& me that incl•
den ts of vandalism ate
noticeably lower at t h ose
schools." •
He said be would H~e the
trustees and the atalf t.o make a
full study of the 41lstrict.'a •an·
dllli.SIJl problems to see wh•l can
be done to reduce the economic
impact of lL •
"We're just getting bombed, ..
be aaJd, li1ting a Mries of van·
dati.ma topped by .the recent" at·
ttckl at Rea Middle 'ScbOOl and
Pomona Element ary Sthool
w*b be said will run mon than
$20,000.
Ke also pointed to fi• •l
Harper and Marinen ec~ In
lbe past two yean \htt have each
caused damage in the S20,000 to
$30,~ range.
Smallwood noted that tn Idell· lion to the hll'ge cua there ls. a
conttnuJn1 problem d UIW and
lt!Qer dam&1• in lbe dlatrict'a 37 acbools.
While dlacuastnc UM caretaker Idea, SmaUwood aald be 'NOUld
ltke to aee a study made ol a
variety or propouls lncludlna
roving aecurity patrola and the
poulbll1lf ot sell Insurance for
the district.
said he could not make any sub·
stantive response lo the report
Wltil he has bad a chance to see
it.
But Barrett said he personally
would not like t o see ~ of the
three alternatives ouUined in the
EIR put into action.
"l personally feel there should
not be a reduction in the existing
number of fijghts," he said. "At
the same time I oppose any in-
crease in flights and any in·
crease in the facilities."
City staff member Bob Long,
who bas been ;;tudying the
airport, said the caty's position on
the airport bas always been
based on noise level&.
Elldorsed
Cyrus Vance. defense and
foreign policy adviser to
Democratic presidents since
administration of JFK, was
today endorsed by the
Senate Foreign Relations
Committe e to ~succeed
Henry Kissinger a s
secretary or state.
The company has a tax bill or
$12,743,256 for the 1976-77 fiscal
year, up $918,000 over a year ago,
Citronsa1d.
Still in second place on the tax
collector's list was Pacific
Telephone which received a bill
~
~overage Opposed ·
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -
California Atty. Gen. Evelle J.
Younger, a leading advocate of
the death penalty, said Thursday
he is opposed to televising exeeu·
tions. He attributed San Fran·
cisco's unfavorable crime image
to its increasing "weirdo''
population. •
Citron said the top ten tax·
pay~rs pay a total of $57,915,000,
a little more than eight percent of
the county property tax bill of
$686, 627 ,000.
Rockwell International was the
fourth largest taxpayer with a
total of $4,156,869 followed by
Standard Oil with a bill of
$4,065,624.
The other members of the top
10 include General Telephone at
$3,555,452 ; Union Oil at
$2,570,285; Aminoil USA, Inc.,
(formerly · Burm ab Oil Com·
pany) at $2,398,791 ; Disneyland
at $2,350, 767 and Mc Donnell
Douglas Corp. at$2,320,835.
He said that a bt;et ~iew of
the ~ee alternatives contained
in the report-reduction of jet
ntghts; increase flights within
limits of existing leases, and
lu.age increase in jet flights-did
l'lt>t indicate any alternatives that
would be immediately accepta-
ble to the city.
Marshland .Buy Viewed
Mangers Says He'll Seek Prop. 2 Funds
"We have always felt that the
county should be working on re·
ducinl noise levels before they
constder any expansion," said
Long: .
He pointed out that the city has
long p~hed ror use of commuter lligh~ to Los Angeles Interna-
tional ,AJrporl aod Ontario as w.p .. ~tabllshtn«lt of a good
~unty mass transit syatem to ._
Ont.arlo to encourage use of that
facility.
Both men said they are looking '
forward to reacting tbe EIR '
although they noted the ~ty
bu not informed theO> .\fben
~es will be available.
By ROBERT BARKER
• Of Ille Dally .. llot'laff
As se mblyman Dennis
Mangers (0 -Hunlington Beach)
today unveiled plans to buy 800
acres of Bolsa Chica marshlands
for preservation of a natural
wild-life habitat. •
Mannrs said he will seek to acquire the acreage from lbe $200
million in Prop. 2 funds that were
passH by voters last November.
"There are indications that the
legislation stands a very good
chance of getting through," he
said today at a press conference
in th~ ltuntyigton Beach Ubrary.
H6 said the price per acre ls to
be de~rmined by ne1oliatton
NB Man Indicted I
In Hashish Baul !
, A NIT:rt Beach IND who al· lt1ed11 ad hashish valued at
ta00,000 bit poaessioo •hen
police aarchecl bis home was in·
dieted on druC charpa today by
the OrNlt O>unt1 Grdd Jury. SuMrtor Court Judje James
. ·)I •all•orth lmm«Uately ar·
niped Aobert Edward Smith ll,
27, of 4081 Seashore Drive. and ·~ his pin ~ innocent to cbarce• ot possessing hashish for
•ale.
Smith was ordered to fac~ trial
April 1e. He ts rreo °" 125,000
ball.
Smith was arrested Nev. 18 by
Newport Beach policl l-ho sald
tbey round tbe bashisli ln hi•
home while they were lnvesUgat·
Ing wh•t they at fitft t.hou,gbt waa
an attempted bU,r&lary at the pre..
mises.
They said a man they spotted
timpeting with the door knob at
Slnlth't ltome told them he WN a
lr'iend d Ult occupant. To Pn>v•
it he tel'tbem into the house.
omee~ uld they •tte lll·
troduced to the startled Smith as
he aUetadb ut '' bAit Uvin• room table paclaging some ol
the uo fOUhdt of bashWa the)' I c.lal" lbe11 round tn the ....
between the slate and the prin·
cipal land owner. Signal
Landmark, if his legislation is
successful.
Mangers said the primary goal
of his bill. which he intends to in-•
traduce on Jan. 26, is to acquire a
230·acre parcel of land In the
Bolsa Chica that is now leased t.o
the state. ·
He said he also will 400k a.n ad-
ditional 553.7 acres in the marsh
area Which will provide a ~uffer
agairult urbl\n epcroachment.
The proposed acquisition in·
eludes matsblands from the bluff
near Huntington Harbout to
another, bluff near the Seaoliff
COunt.ry Club . ·
Mangers announced he also
proposes to acquire another 16.3
acres in the northwest area near Warner Avenue to protect the
bluff area and to 1provide for
public access and ob6ervation or
the marsh.
He indicated that constaltion
development would ~cur
between the 16.3 aore-sJte and
Warner to tbe north. Cootroversy
bas been going on ror many >'ean
over \he 1,604 acres or property
lying east of Pacific Coast
Highway and south of Huntington
Harbour and con1isun1 or
lowlands, blu.ffs, oil fields and
estuaries. The Bolaa Chica area llas been reeo«Nzed by the Coastal Com· mwlon as the lar1est and most
«olOJlcally valu81ble re.storable
manbland ln California.
County Supervbor Larry
Sctamlt .. ,. he ts ln full acreo-
ment with Mangen• propo1ed.
le1i1la\loo and ho will •eek
purchase or county park land
linking Bolsa Chica to the Hunt·
ington Beach Central Park
through a system of trails and
walkways.
Huntington Beach Mayor Har·
rlett Wieder said she was caught
by surprise by the size or the ~ro·
posed acquisition. She said she
had no idea it would be as large
as 800 acres.
She told Mangers lbat "You
ran with the ball ahead of us .. "
Co ast
Weather I I
Fair throu1h Saturday.
Highs in 60s. Lows 1n40s.
I NSIDE TODAY
Inf ectfout ftlthu~m ia
cbaroclmatlc of_ Up WllhPeo-~
pl«. TM Do1?11.J>Uot'a Laflrte ·
Kupn tolb wUh mmber1 of
tht ll11fm'""Old Cr°'4Pf on P.OQe
C1oftlwWHlcnder.
CM Al M "" at.a
"' ...., ... .... cs CM M A• C1 ...
A2 DAILY PILOT N
Press Accused
By REBECCA STBICXLAND °' '"' o ... , ~, ... SUfl The Members or the Com-
mission of the Califomias Thurs.
day accused the U.S. press of
greatly exaggerating the pro-
b l e m of crimes against
American tourists visiting Mex.
lco.
Enrique Sanchez Mayans,
director of Tourism for the state
of Baja California and represen·
taUve or the governor of Baja,
made the accusation at a press
conference during the annual
General Assembly of the com-
mission that was held in Costa
Mesa.
"We believe that the States
want to keep tourists for their
own areas," Mayans said.
He denied the existence of a
serious crime problem against
tourists and said that the press in
this country had been influenced
into over-emphasizing the pro-
blem by vested business in-
terests. He partlcularly cited San
Diego as an example.
•·1 don't believe it is a con-
spiracy. just a matter of busi·
ness," he said.
According to Mayans, more
than e ight million Americans
crossed into Baja during 1976 and
his department received only
1,100 complaints or small pro-
blems, assaults or robberies.
Costa Mesa Mayor Dominic
Raciti who was there to welcome
the commission echoed Mayans'
feelings, saying, "II U.S. citizens
are careful and respect Mexican
Jaws, I don't believe there will be a problem."
Lt. Governor Mervyn Dymal-
ly, also present at the meeting,
said the North American cont-
ingent of the com mission agrees
with Mayans. As a solution, he
Sports Car
Dimers Told
Of Ripoffs
A recent rash of Porsche wheel
thefts has prompted Newport
Beach police to caution sportscar
owners against parking their ex-
pensive automobiles on the
street.
Del. Ken Smith said about a
half dozen car owners have been
victimized in the past three
weeks.
"We are reminding Porsche
owners that it's not a good idea to
park their cars in the street over-
night," Smith said.
The thieves usually take all
four wheels a nd tires, the detec-
tive sajd, except in cases where
the car is parked so close to the
curb they can't get two or the
wheels off.
Smith said the thefts have OC·
curred all over town.
"We are also asking Porsche
owners to be extra alert and call
us if they see anything sus-
picious," be added.
A set of Porsche tires and
wheels can cost more than $2,000,
according to reports filed with
police.
NB Burglar
Bags Jewels
Thieves who apparently broke
into an Irvine Terrace home
through a slldinl glass door took
jewelry worth more Ulan $:5,600,
Newport Beach police reported
today.
Marily Wilson, 41, told officers
Wednesday sbe discovered the
theft after returning to the house
Jrom a five-hour absence.
Listed arnong tbe missing
items was a diamond and
platinum ring valued at $1,200,
policesald.
OltA..O.COUT H
DAILY PILOT
·-"··--.. , .... _,_
,_ .. arrtty
Vl<t ~I.,,. o.-• """-'-" 11-....... ...
n::::: •. :we·
o-t.t ... "-.._,,~ -"'"'4 ............... _
Friday. January 14, 1917
• said representatives d Mexico
should meet with San Diego or-
ficials and others to work out the
problems of this natW"e.
Former Baja Lt. Gov. Fran·
cisco Santana Peralta, another
member of the commission, said
business in Mexico had been af.
fected very seriously. Tbe
seaport city of Ensenada had its
worst tourist year ever in 1976, be
said.
The other major topic dis-
cussed at the meeting was the ap.
pointment of Peralta as the new
director or CODIBAC, a Mexican
commission in charge of develop.
inst tourism in Baja.
Peralta and Dymally both
emphasized that there wiU be a
new thrust to develop tourism in
Baja and to promote foreign in-
vestment in entertainment
establishments there.
Two Newport
Fire Tabs
Hit $3,000
Newport Beach firemen
estimated today that two recent
fires in local homes caused a
total of $3,000 damage.
Fire department spokesman
Art Morton said a garage fire
which broke out at about 9:20
a.m. Wednesday at thehome of
Suzanne Calendar, 423 Orchid
Ave., Corona del Mar, resulted
from the breakdown of an elec-
trical circuit board.
Damage was listed al $1,500.
An identical damage estimate
was made for the borne of John
Vizirgianakis at 453 Vista
Grande in the Bluffs where fire
struck at about 7:30 p.m. Tues-day.
Morton said Vizirgianakis'
children were heating oil lo make
popcorn, when the oil erupted in-
to flames.
The kids doused the flames by
getting wet sand from the garden
and dumping it on the flaming
pan.
Morton said the smoke from
the fire damaged the hood, fan
and ltitchen cabinets near the
st.ove.
No one reported any il\.iuries in
either of the mishaps.
Thie/Takes
V a/,iwd Caps
Twenty.four antique radiator
caps vaJued at SS,400 were stolen
during a nighttime burglary at
Movieworld Cars of the Stars,
Buena Park police reported to·
day.
Officers said the burglary was
reported Thursday and occurred
sometime during the night Wed-
nesday.
Police said they believe SO·
meone remained inside the build·
ing at 6920 Orangetborpe Ave.
when it closed Wednesday night.
The burglar escaped through a
display window. omcers said. .
The most valuable cap report-
ed missing, police said, was ad~
corative one from a La Salle
automobile. It i.s valued at $500.
Officials P r obe
Trash Can Blazes
Newport Beach fire in·
vestigators are probing a series
of trash fires that broke out
around 3 a.m. today in Irvine
Terrace.
Fire department spokesman
Art Morton said the damage
from the three fires was
minimal.
The fires were reported, at
Kewamee Dr ive and Avocado
Avenue, at Altura and Angdlta
drives and in front of the home al
1821 Bayadere Terrace. I
E'....,P-JIJ
AIRPORT •••
-~ lf pweaeer aetivtty ls 1ner.....s. ~·u propoeed project.a lo
correcNxllUnc ll1s and to make
-wa.y fol'acldedalr travelen are~ -Bvaatlon ol tbe alrpcwt •• air unnlbal bu.ucnnc. lkfudiJaC construcUon or a termlnaJ annex.
-Construction of two
multilevel parking structur.es. ·
-Adding 150 tie-down spaces
for general alrcran, a move that
would bring the number of
available spaces for light
aircraft at OCA up to 1,000
planes. ·
The major element in a noise
reducUon program at the airport
cited by the consultants is the
northward extension by 737 feet
ofOCA's main runway.
Such an extension "would al-
· low departing aircraft to reach a
greater altitude be(.ore overfly.
ing noise sensitive residential
areas south of the alrporJ.," ac-
cording to the report.
Other suggested noise reduc-
tion meas ures include di-
recting departing jet liners north rather than south on take
off, fitting additional aircraft
with sound reducing material
and changing landing altitudes.
The consultant concedes that
the cost of some proposed noise
reduction measures "is con-
sidered prohibitive."
Measures under that heading
include buying noise easements
from impacted homeowners,
acoustical treatment of existing
homes and elaborate land con-
version programs.
It Is when the third alternative
for OCA 's future is discussed that
the environmental impa~t report
focuses on the costly noise reduc-
tion measures and adverse en-
vironmental impact.
Alternative three foresees OCA
being used by 6 million air
travelers a year by the end of
1985.
While the passenger level
would almost triple over current
use, the number of flight opera-
ti<>M would climb by only about
13 percent, according to the con-
sultants.
That's because by 1985 new
wide-body jets capable of handl-
ing larger passenger loads will be
in use.
But before the new equipment
is available, the number of flight
operations at OCA would in·
crease to 54,750 annually as the
passenger load level hits an
estimated 3.9 million in 1980.
Going along with that jet ac-
tivity al the airport would be the
disturbance of precious wildlife
in Upper Newport Bay, a
dramatic increase in energy con·
sumption and dis placement of re-
sidents in roughly 437 homes.
Moreover, even with adoption
of the costly complete noise re-
duction program, the noise im·
pacted area would increase to an
area-"not calculated" by the con-
sultants.
The report discussed expanded
airport activities impact on traf·
fie condltions in the airport area.
"Any increase in airline opera·
lions would contribute to in·
creased volumes of traffic on the
airport site," the report says.
It goes on to mention that
alternative three, 6 million
pas!H!ngers a year, will require
almost four times as much park·
ing space as exists at OCA. ·
In it.s present form, the bulky
study that began In March 1975 is
a draft environmental impact re-port. .
It Wat to be delivered today to
county auperv®rs and the coun-
ty Envtrorunental Management
Agency <EMA).
After BMA review and review
by the public, the report will go to
the county Planning Commission
for public hearings.
And the consultants must
respond to the public remarks or
challenies directed their way
either in writing or at the public
hearin1s.
It ls after those comments have
either been accepted or rejected
that the environmental impact
report will go to county
supervisors for approval.
Board approval would mean
only that projects, if any, related
to the future alternative seleeted
by the board of supervisot's will
be approved.
IRS . Bae ks Off
Tuition Tax ·Break Streb
W ASlllNGTON (AP) -The Internal Revenue
Service said today it is withdrawing a proposal that
wQuld have required college and other school
employes to pay tues on free tuition granted their de-
pendents.
The move ended a btoad attempt by the IRS this
year to expand tuation ot fringe benefits for college
employes and workers in other areas.
In a notice published in the Federal Register, the
agency said that bearings on the free tuition issue
pointed out several problems associat~ with taxing
such benefits. ·
The IRS saJd it was yielding in favor of a con·
gressional study of the broader issue ot scholarships and fellowships.
The tuition proposal1 estimated by trade aasocia-
Uons for university .PJ"Ofesson and others as costin( SlO million a year in taxes, had been OpPQled by the
protessors and several untvenlUes.
...
Golf is Their Bag
Led by tournament chairman Dick
Robinson (on car), members of the
Balboa Island Chamber of Commerce pre·
pare for their hole-in-one charity golf
tourney scheduled for Valentine's Day at
the NewPort Beach Golf Course. From left
are William Hadley, Bob Yardley, Mac
MacormJck, William Walker, Hank
Bucher, Paul Nicoletti, Lew Akerman.
Robinson, Cal Schmidt, Larry Vaughn and
Rudy Bukich. They want more golfers to
join in the fun. To enter the charity event,
call the Balboa Island Chamber, 675-6870.
f'ro• Page A l Protesters Block LONGET •••
charge's maximum penalty
would be $5,000 and two years in
prison.
Singer Andy Williams, Miss
Longet's ex-husband, was in
court again today and stared at
the jury as it received instruc-
tions.
Bridge in Mexico
On Thursday, the prosecution
cross-examined Sablch's best
friend in an effort to prove that
Miss Longet "likes to take
chances."
James Lillstrom, an advertis·
ing executive from Boulder, said
the affair between Sabich and
Mi.ss Longet began in 1972 alter a
glass-tossing incident in a bar.
Anderson had said when the
jury was out: "The way Miss
Longet got Spider's attention was
she threw a glass and hit him in
the chest. and he turned and said,
'IJuessshe wants totalktome'."
PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexico
(AP> -Demonstrators protest-
ing alleged fr aud in recent.
municipal electlons blocked the.
bridge over a small river divid-
ing this Pacific resort town
Thursday night, causing massive
tramc jams and preventing
some tourists from driving to
their hotels.
Puerto Vallarta, a city of
70,000, was jam-packed with
American tourists, who ap-
peared confused and frightened.
No violence WflS reported.
Buses full of tourists, cars, tax-
is and deli very trucks were
staJled for blocks around the en·
trance or the bridge over the
Vala River, located at the foot of
s
anua
Elizabeth Taylor's house.
Porters with handcarts met
tourists and carried their lug-
gage over the bridge to the other
side of the bay and the Camino
Real, a western iotemational hotel.
One woman tourist asked a
porter if it was a •·communist de-
monstration." The porter said it
was just a local protest.
"Well, they look like com-
munjsts to me." she said, shak-
ing her head and visibly an-noyed.
The demonstration was staged
by about 700 dissident members
or the Institutional Revolu-
tionary Party (PRI).
earanc:e
Save 15°'6 to 25°'6
e
New carpet shipments are on their way
and we·re making room We've reduced prices
on every one of Lees best-selling carpets dur-
ing lees January Clearance Sale.
ONE
WEEK
ONLY!
Choose from hundreds of colors & styles
&·patterns. Hurry, the Lees Carpets Author·
ized January Clearance Sale ends January
22nd.
Saddlebaek \a·• c•rnoon
:'\. \. Shte·l~s LOI I ION
* * roL 70, NO. 14, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES
Wolllan
Slain in
Bathtub
nv STEVE MITC11ELL
.. OtUH Oili1tt P1lot \l.tlt
Costa Mesa dt•lc(•tivC's sa1c1
t oday thl'y have no mot1Vt'. nn
dues. and no suspct.'l in tht·
!->laying o f a Cu::.t::i !\lC'sa
waitress w ltosc body was
found fa ce down 1n he r
bathtub Wcdncsd:.iy night.
Robyn Lynn Cox. 20, of 241
A voe ado 'St.. was discovered
fully clothC'd in the bathtub of
)1cr aparlml·nt at 6: 15 p.m by
her roommatl', <.:aria J ean
Roden, 24
Miss Roden ran to a nearby
apartment and askc.'<1 thl'm to
c o m e and ·•Set' what was
wrong," with Miss Cox, detc<.'
tives said.
"Evidently ~h<• only ~ol a
~lance or her roommate 1n the
bathtub and ran next door." Lt
George L. Lorton said.
Lorton said Mi ss Cox. who
worked as a waitress at Coco·s on
Bristol Street in Santa Ana, had
been dead for three to six hours
before police arrived at the
scene.
An autopsy indicated she died er strangulation with evidence of
•rowning. The s trangulation
Jt\ight have been accomplished
by a small cord around the neck.
detectives said. ·
"We only discovered the cause
cf death Thursday afternoon,"
:Lorton said. "Up until then, it
'could have been an accidental
drowning."
When aslced if a fully-dressed
,woman in the bathtub didn't
I strike him as suspicious, Lorton I said, "She might have been
washing her cat or something
1 and fallen in the tub."
: He said nothine appears to i Eve been taken from 0.. apart-
1
nt. and no struggle in the
er rooms of the dwelliJll we~
mdent.
11 "There were no •Jot of a
ltruule In the bathroom.
!either," Lorton said.
Detectives combed the apart-
ent for clues Thursday and
usted Ute a p a rtment for
mgerpri.nts, Lorton said.
<See SLAYING, Page A2>
Yountsters who finished in the
five places of eveot5 during
he Saddleback Valley Cross
try Trarlr Meet Jut week U compete In the Orqe Coun-
Y Municipal Athletic .U.OC1allon
mpfoosblpe S.turda¥ at UC
ne.
More th.an 135 bo)'I ml tltta.
1throuah14. partidpe(td tA
meet whkb wu ~JIOQlrded
the S,ddleback Vlll'1~
ool District Rec-:eanon
artmcmt and the Mb:dtlD Vie.
tJmlsts. •
Fint place wlmtenlntate~·
divisk>Q were Tricia Or ilaa,
Lori WhiteJy, Christiana
Swecllow, AWaon Rupp, MetiaA
SmJth, Paula Myers, 8eth
Bercan and Tami Darr.
ntst place wln.nen 1n the boys'
divillon were Steve Davis, Jerry
Grote, Howard Guaer, Bill
CbriaU, Jon Mehr, Scott Montoe,
JWbert.Gard• aodTroySells.
Coast
CM "' •• Alt •M "' 9W .. ... ,
Cf c~ •• 'Ct-t ·~
Pole Cat
"Tiger" sits atop hi s
favorite perch on a 12-foot
pole on the farm of his
masters, JoAnna and Mitch
Jurgens of Brandon, S.D.
Tiger facef loss of bis lofty
viewpoint wheq 'l~e pole
becomes just an6ther beam
in their barn.
I.Dng~t Said
'Was Joking'
-Officers
ASPEN, Colo. CAP) -Singer
Claudine Longet should be con·
vic\ed of recklessly killing
Vladimir "Spider" Sabich
because ·'she had her finger on
the trigger with the gun 21h reet
away from Spider and pointed it'
rtpt at bim," a proeecutor said
today.
AJbley Anderson t.Qld jurors in
his cloetng argument they had
been presented two versions of
how Miss Longet's Jover died
March 21 in the bathroom of bia
luxurious mountamside home.
Andenon pointed to testimony
froat \WO law enforcement Of·
n~ •ho sp.id Miss Loaget told.:
ttifm tbe 1.lilltt or t.besbootina she .._., Jdldnl ~UI S.bicb when the
.22-UJ.lber weapon she WU bold·
1-wentoff.
The 1ourt recessed after de-reme attor.ey Charles v. Weed-m•umct hl4 final argument p~
bably woQJd last "the better part ot r.o bolus." Anderson spoke
ab(jart ZS mlnutes.
the two officers agreed MJas
Lonfet told them she playfully
raised the gun at Sabich as be wu
showing Mr bow to use ll. One ot-
f'icer q~ Mias Langet as aay-
lpi ahe \old ber lover ''boom, boom" before the gun went off.
1be other used the words "bang,
bans." .
Miu Longet said Sabich t.oJd
her the sun's safety mechanfsm
was on, but balllstics experts
tatUled the s.afet.Y wu inopera-ble.
' 711ief'Toke•
V al.ued Cap• .
TWenlJ·fOW' antique radiator
c~ valued at $5,'00 were stolen
durinc a nltbWme burCJary at-
Mmeworld C•n ~ tbe 9ta1'
Buena Part police ~ to-
day.
otftcen said the burglary was
repotted Tbureday and occurred
IOIGettme durinl U. nJCbt Wed· nesday.
Police 111d daey beUe\'O 80-
meooe remained lnalde the bulld· tnc at $820 Oranfetborpe Ave.
1¥btn it elOMd Weddmday nJ1ht.
The bUrcJar escaped throulh a dllOla) wlndow,_o(tk:cuald.
".ftle lnott • thaabllt ClP report-ed llillllnf, poJice1afdtwu ad•
e«ative one from a La Salle
au&cDoblle. Jt II vaJaed at *500,
OR ANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN IA FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 1977 TEN CENTSj
Airpo~ U·se Rise See~
.. Litde Harm Expected From Increase .
By GARV GRANVIU.E 0t lh• 0•1ly PH01 St•tt
A massiv e environmental im·
pact report covering Orange
County Airport IOCA> says the
airport can handle an add1t1onal
570.000 air travelers a year with.
little adverse impact on existing
environmental rond1t10ns
The 56S·pagc, $218,000 study by
the consulting fi rm of Daniel.
Mann, Johnson and Mendenhall
of Los Angel{·s covers three
alternative futures ofOCA
One of I hose alternat1 vcs il. to
roll back Ofterat1ons a t th<.·
airport "to 1mmedrntely bring
OCA inlo complia'nc{' with
California noise standards effer·
ti vf.'J an l. I 9R6."
To mcc•t those standards, the
number or com mcrr1al 1ct d£ ..
parturcs from the airport daily
would be reduced from an exist·
mg averngc of 37 .9 nights ti ally to
4 7 nights a day
And th e number o r air
travelers us in g the airport would
be reduced from the current an
nual le vel of 1 56 million
passengers to 330,000 passengers a year.
The study shows that such a
roll back in OCA activity would
have a severe adverse economic
impact, especially on employ-
ment at the airport, the busi-
nesses that ser vice air travelers
and travele rs' dollars spent
locally.
ll is the second alternative. ex·
panding the annual passenger
load at OCA from its current 1.56
million persons to 2.13 million
persons, that the consultant in· •
dicates will have con{>aratively
minor 1mpact on existing en·
vironmental conditions.
Th.at increased annua l
passenger load or 570,000 persons
can be handled within the con·
fines of eidst;ng leases with lhe
three eommerct•I ilrUnes that opetate at OCA, tbe consultant
study says.
Under the-second alternative,
the average number ol dail)" jet
airliner departures et the airport
woulct increue from 37 .9 to 40.1.
And the total number of com-
mercial jet operations would
climb from today's annual 40,565
flights to40,700 a year.
The bulky environmental im-
pact report discusses ~eries or
proposed projects needed to cor·
rect inadequacies at OCA,
especially ii passe'nger activity is
increased.
Listed as proposed projects.to
correct existing Ills and to make
way for added air travelers are:
-Expansion or the airport's
air terminal building, including
construction or a terminal annex.
-Construction of two
multilevel parking structures.
-Adding 150 tie-down spaces
for aeneral aircraft, a move that
would bring the number of
available s paces for light
aircraft al OCA up to 1,000
planes. •
The major element in a ooise
reduction program al the airport
• dted by the consultants is the
northward extension by 737 feet
olOCA's main runway.
Such an extension "would al-
low departing aircraft to reach a
&realer altitude before overfly-
ing nolae sensitive residential
areas south of the airport.·· ac-
cording to the report.
Other 1u11ested noise reduc-
ll on measures include di ·
recline departing jet liners
north rather. than south on take ott, fitting additional aircraft
witb sound reducing material
a.nd chan1lng landlng~Utudes.
The constiltant concedes that
the coat or IQllla proposed noise
reduction nfeasurt.•s "ts con-
sidered prohib1t1ve ..
Measures under that heading
include buyrng noise casements
from impar te d homeowners,
acoustical tr eatment of existing
homes and elaborate land con
version programs.
It 1s when the third alternative
for OCA ·s future is dis<.'usscd that
the ennronmcntal impact report
focuses on the costly nmsc reduc
tton meas ures and adverse en
vironmental impart
Alternative three foresees OCA
being used by 6 million air
CHECKS INTO HOSPITAL
Actor Sterllng Holloway
Wistful i\.c,or
Holloway in
OC Hospital
Sterling Holloway. the man
whose wistful scratchy voice
became identified with such
char acters as Winnie the Pooh
and Jiminy Cricket, has been ad·
milted lO South Coast Communi-
ty Hospital for obser vation ,
spokesmen slly.
Holloway, who turned 72 today,
was admitted Thursday for tests
alter suffering chest pains. Chief
nurse Lois Kirwan said he was
alert and in satlsractory condi·
tion this morning. •
"I think It's his birthday," she
said.
He was born J an. ·14, 1905 in
Cedartown. Ga.
Holloway, a resident of South
Laguna, is known to mHlions o(
children around the world as the
man who made Winnie reaJ.
He also narrated or voiced
characters for several other Walt
Disney features . including
"Bambi." ''Dumbo," "Alice in
Wonderland," "Jungle Book"
and ''Peter and the Wolf."
GR4ND 'FHEFT
FALLS FUT
KLAMATH FALLS Ore. (APJ
-Local police and ~Bl agents
acting in concert seized four
Steinway grand pianos valued al
$50,000 at a music store here.
The pianos were stolen Jan. 4
in a wa~ebouse burglary at San
Mateo, officers said. ·•
travelers a year by the end or
198.5.
While the passenger level
would almost triple over current
use. the number gf night OJ>('ra-
llons would climb by only about
13 percent. according to lhe con·
sultan ts. \
That's because b~ 1985 nf.'w
wide-body Jets capable of handl·
mg larger passenger loads will be
muse
But before the new equ1pment
1s available. the number of night
operations at OCA would in·
crease to 54,750 annually as the
passenger load level hits a11
eshm<ited 3.9 mil hon in l~
Going along with that jet ac
t1V1ty at the airport would be the
disturbance of precious wildlife
in Upper Newport Bay, a.
dramatic increase in energy con-
sumption and d1splaccment of re-·
s1dents in roughly 437 homes.
Moreover even w1th adoption
of the costly complete noise re.
duct1on program, the noise im.
pacted area would incr ease to an
area "not c11lculated" by the con·
sultants
(See AIRPORT, P:age A2l
Testinaon Reveals
Woman Told Cops·
Of Beating Child
By TOM B.i\RLEV
Of Ill• D•ily PiloU~ff
A San Clemente police officer
testified Thursday that when he
arrested Carolyn Brewster last
August on child abuse charges she
told him that she beat her 2-year-
old daughter ··with anything she
could gel her hands on."
Detective Leonard Goodwin
told an Orange County Superior
Co urt jury that Mrs. Brewster. 23,
told them that when she was
frustrated she "took out her emo·
tfonson Cora."
Mrs. Brewster's alleged state-
ments to police led to her being
booked on charges of child abuse,
An interview with her boyfriend,
Camp Pendleton Marine Kenneth
Ray Bolden, 20, led to his being
j-11edooid•ntleal allegatiool.
&th detel'ldan(s were arrested
after the unconscious child was
rushed to San Clemente General
Hospital from the motel room
shared by the accused couple and
Mrs. Brewster's two children.
Doctors found that Cora had
suffered brain damage from her
head injuries. had a brt>ken left
arm. bjte marks on the left arm,
cigarette burns on the chest and
bruising throughout the body with
the heavlest braises found on the
back and buttocks. #
Goodwin les4ft4!d that Mrs.
Brewster told him that she used
her boyfriend's heavy Marine
Corps belt to spank Cora when the
child annoyed her.
He said Bolden admitted using
Blaze Fails
To Halt Bingo
While the c lubhouse roof
burned, Laguna Hills Mobile
Homes Estates residents con-
tinued their bingo game inside
Thursday, unaware of the fire
burning over their beads .
Firemen called to 23301 Ridge
Route Drive. at 8 p.m .. when a
passing motorist spotted smoke.
esti mated damage to the
clubhoUAe at $10,00Ct
"It only took us about JO
minutes to put out the flames."
said a spokesman for the county
fire departme nt, but the fire con· ·
tinued to s molder under the
Spanish tile roof. The big job was
removing the tiles to c~ase the
fire around the roof."
Firemen attributed the fire to
an electrical failure iD.the 1Wim·
ming pool heating duct. No one
was injured. ,
lhe belt on the child but denied a
neighbor's report that he had
locked the little girl in the back
while the y walked on the
sidewalk . ..
The officer testified that Bolden
lold him that he once slapped the
ch1ld with his open hand.
Goodwin testified that Mrs.
Brewster blamed her treatment
of the child on the beatings that
she and her 4-year-old daughter.
Jennifer, received from her
former hu s band , Frank
Brewster.
Man's Death
'Sad Thidg'
Says Utility -
MANSFIELD. Ohio (AP)
The case or an elderly customer
who froze to death after his
power was shut off is "a sad
tbing" -but it may happen
again, says an electric company
executive.
"Of course, we didn't the know
the old gentleman was ill,"
added Malcolm E. Cash, head of
Ohio Edison operations in the
Mansfield area of north·central
Ohio. "U we had known, we ob-
viously wouldn't have cut him
off." .
Cash said, however, that "re·
gardless of the safeguards we try
to build into the system, 1 don't
know what kind of policy we
could implement to prevent this :
from happening again sometime
in the future."
Meanwhile, a state senator
said he is drafting legislation to
prevent utility shut.offs in cases
where they could mean death.
Eugene J . Kuhn, 74, who lived
alone and had no immediitte
family except an infirm sisiC1_{.
was found dead in bed in his Pld
home in a rundown neighborhood
on Mansfield's southwest side.
His electricity had been cut off
eig'ht days earlier for failure to
pay an $18.38 electric bill. Police
said the temperature in the houle
was 9 degrees, and Coroner
Raymond Thabet ruled death
was caused by exposure.
An electric company slicker
giving a five·day notice of shutoff
still was attached lo the front
door. and in the mailbox was a
delinquent notice, along with a
wellare department letter advis·
(See FROZEN, Pa1e .U)
7-rig Smmli
Closes Rt. 5
Youth Dance Taught
GORMAN (AP) -Seven
truck& arnubed together
oa lce-aUck Interstate 5
early today In a chain·
reactlolt accident. that
blocked IOUtbbou.nd lanes
of the m~or hlshway route
for two hours and injured
two driven, the Callfornla lnpway Patrol aaJd.
Tbe smubup atarted --one truck jackknifed
.,.... tbe driver put co his
brakei OCl a clownblll •tc· I Uon ot Ute road left Icy by
1 .. t •Hk '• 1no-.torm,
patrolmn aaJct.
ftey Hid the other half·
do&en ~ka Jammed \heir
braktt to avold the fin' 1c-
ddent aftd be1an tho aeries ot 1ccldtota a ball mJJo
north of here.
.
By Viejo Resident
81 LAl1RIE KA.SP'& Of 1111e oan, ~ ... twt •
Lynne Morl'ia could b&pkina
with top proleasionall on
Broadway. i' But the Mfsslon VieJQ'resldent
prefers trainlne 500 f ntx·
pe:rleoced )'OUJ'll .l)eOple In a abort
time to perform proleulonall)' In
a traveUn1 show.
She la choreofrapl\eJ' for Up
Wltb People. a ll'OUll with llx
casts p.-.1tnt.ln1 CODC?ttt.I of
music and danc. around the
world1 One of th• east.I i•
Ptfformll'\I ln lhe CounlJ tJm weekend (Related S&ory, P.,•
Cl). . 11l create what J'OCI -.. ,. •
Nld duine • break trOilterracst
I aad mea.reb whidl Md to ~.
... ill &.be -.on ...... -.,..
home this week.
She la responsible la-the
placement of bod1es, or&tl"a, Ughling and mlkes on the at.ate
aa well as where all this 1&
~· .. "and theft I do all the c ,-rapby and then I train
evel')'body."
M.s. Morris t.1cbes the 500
performen -a ditfeNIJl IJ'l)Up
every year -all at one..
Som• are talent..t, de said.
But toe• bad never~ and a
few even lacked coord1Dat10o
before they joined 'the abow. Dance aod muictl 1dUOJ11 are
be&d only after the "'1onntr1 are accept.eel into tbea'how.
Yet abe l*Achet the ll'OQP Md
1et1 U>em ready to IO an tbl l"Old
ut-VD101 Pa1eAa> .
r A2 DAIL y PILOT s B
Mexico
·'Crim,e'
Studied
JJy REBECCA STRICKLAND
OllM O.lly P'IMC~
The Members or the Com-
mJJsion of the Callfomias Thurs-
day accused the U.S. press or
sreatly exaggerating the pro-
~l em of crimes aaai o st
American tourists visiting Mex·
lco.
Enrique Sanchez Ma yans,
director of Tourism for the state
of Baja California and represen-
tative of the governor of Baja,
made the accusation at a press
conference during the annual
General Assembly of the com·
mission that was held in Costa
Mesa.
"We believe that the !)tales
want to keep tourists for their
own areas," Mayans said.
He denied the existence of a
serious crime problem against
tourists and said that the press in
this country had been influenced
into over·emphasizing the pro-
blem by vested business in-
terests. He particularly cited San
Diego as an example.
"l don't believe it is a con-
spiracy, just a matter of busi·
ness." he said.
According to Mayans, more
than eight million Americans
crossed into Baja during 1976 and
his departme nt received only
1,100 complaints of s maJI pro-
blems, assaults or robberies.
Costa Mesa Mayor Dominic
Raciti who was there to welcome
the commission echoed Mayans'
feelings, saying, "If U.S. citizens
are careful and respect Mexican
laws. I don't believe there will be
a problem."
Lt. Governor Mervyn Dymal-
ly, also present at the meeting,
said the North American cont·
ingent of the commission agrees
with Mayans. As a solution, he
said representatives of Mexico
s hould meet with San Diego or-
ficials and others to work out lhe
problems of this nature.
Former Baja Lt. Gov. Fran·
cisco Santana Peralta, another
member or the commission, said
business in Mexico had been af-
fected very ser iously. The
seaport city of Ensenada had ils
worst tourist year ever in 1976, he
said.
The other m ajor topic dis·
cussed at the roeeting was the ap·
pointmenl of Per alta as the new
director of CODIBAC, a Mexican
commission in charge of develop·
tn«i tourism in Baja.
Peralta and Dymally both
' emphaslzeQ that there will be a
new thrust lo develop towism in
Baja and to promote foreign in·
vestment in entertainment
establishments there.
Oil Slick
Cleaned Up
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -An
oil slick three miles wide and a
mile long s pread over the San
Pablo Bay-Carquinez Straight
near Rodeo as a result or an oil
s pill. the Coast Guard said.
The slick was described as a
light sheen and a check of the
toast s howed no heavy concen·
irations, a Coast Guardsman
.aaid Thursday.
He said 360 gallons of oil spilled
ioto the water Wednesday night
at the Union Oil Co. 'dock. ap-
parently because of a faulty oil
Une. The cleanup was completed
l)y nightfall. and the remainfog
Qi] would be dissipated by the
oatural sea action. the Coast
Guard said.
Lsue Pushed
RICHMOND, Va. (AP> -The
ltev. Clennon King, wbo has
failed so far in attempts to join
Pres ident-el ect Carter's
hometown church, says he Is
willing to drop the matter if
another black person is accepted
aa a member this week.end. KJng,
Cli6, warned be will resume the
bJtUe if his condition is~ met'.
Friday. January 14, 1917
By WJLLIAM SCHREIBER Ottlle o.lly P'llMM.llff
PLANNERS, BE THEY public or private employes,
have an almost unnatural affinity for statistics, numbers
and computations. .
The Mission•Viejo Municipal Advisory Council got a bt-
lle taste this week or what It's like in the world o!
mathematical wizardry, where just about anything can be
figured out given the right numbers and a pocket calculator.
A representative rrom EDAW, lnc.,
the consulting fi rm that planned two
new community parks, attempted to ex-
plain bow it was determined_ t_hat 59
p~king spaces would be sumc1ent to
serve visitors to one of the parks.
He said we must nrst figure that an
average family group consists of 3.S peo.
pie. Then you presume that only three of
the park 's four baseball dJamonds would
be occupied at a ny one given time and
that each diamond would contain 60 1 sc"u1u11 players.
Of those 60 players, the planner guessed that half of the
players or family groups, would wal_k to the park and half
would drive, making~ spaces a requirement.
Then, with the diamonds full, there would be about
231,000 square feet of space !eft in the 9.S·acre park. If each
family group requires a minimum of 1,600 square feel to
move around in comfort, only about 145 such groups could
use the park at any one time.
The planner then assumed that onl~ 20 perce~t of those
groups would drive because the park ts primarily a local
facility. That yields a figure of 29. Add that to the number
needed for the baseball players and, presto, you have the
magic number of 59 parking spacc;s .
•••
WE JUST RECEIVED the official publication of the
Saddleback Stamp Club -"Gummed Gossip." It contains
what most such leaflets contain, including information
about officers and upcoming meetings.
But it also m akes special note or club member 129, a
chap by the name of Gerald Rehart, who has round a past· time withµ! a pastime.
He collects "HiUer stamps," which are presumably
those little stickers printed by Germany before and during
World War II. bearing a heroic portrait of the Nazi dictator.
Mr. Rehart says he's looking for others with similar in-
terests. You can look for him at the club's next meeting on
Jan. 26 at the Los Alisos lntermediale School Library. ....
AN INTERESTING little segment or the Irvine Com·
pany's bid this week lo sidetrack construction of a second·
Saddleback College campus at Myford Road and Bryan
Avenue was the firm's contention that the site is prime agricultural land.
Jn fact, it is planted with th~ company's blue-ribbon,
high·ris k, high-yield crop -asparagus -which takes five
years to mature.
Now, the company stands to make between $800,000 and
$800,000 by selling that 20-acre parcel to the college, so you
would naturally assume asparagus must return pretty big money.
For a field crop, it does. An acre of asparagus yields 160
crates at SlS per crate. That works out to $48,000 a year for
the 20 acres the college is interested in.
By my figuring, it, would take the company about 15
years to make from asparagus what it could make from a
new college campus in one fell swoop .
•••
WOULD THEY BE the Capistrano Valley Cobras?
Cougars? Conquistadors? Mar auders ? Ma{ador s?
Stallions? Or perhaps the Golden Eagles?
A cross-section or students who wm attend the new Mis-
sion Viejo higb school next fall met with parents and Prin-
cipal John Smart to pick a school mascot and colors.
"We wanted forceful, striking colors that would show up
well on uniforms," Smart said. "For our mascot, we were
inclined toward an animal native to this area.•'
The cougar won the competition and the colors will be
black and gold. By the erid of the mont.h, football and band
uniforms will be designed and ordered .
F,.._PageAl
AIRPORT REPORT. • •
The report discussed expanded
airport activities impact on traf-
fic conditions in the airport area.
"Any increase in airline opera-
tions would contribute to in-
creased volumes of traffic oo the
airport site.'' the report says.
It goes on to mention that
alternative three, 6 million
passengers a year, will require
almost four times as much park·
E',..,. Page AJ
FROZEN •••
lng Kuhn that he might be eligi-
ble (or financial assistance to
pay the bill.
Ofdc1-la said Kuhn, a retired
WesttncbQuae employe, wu not·
on welfare and received a
peMlon of about $200 a month
plus Social Security benefits.
The welfare department
became involved when the elec-
ing space as exists at OCA.
In its present form, the bulky
study that began in March 1975 is
a draft environmental impact re·
port.
It was to be delivered today to
county supervisors and the coun-
ty Environmental Management
Agency <EMA ).
Alter EMA review and review
by the public, the report will go to
the county Planning Commission
ror public hearings.
And the cons ultants must
respond to the public remarks or
challenges directed their way
either In writing or at lbe public
hearings.
It ls after those comments have
'either been accepted or rej~ted
that the environmental Impact
report w i 11 go to county
supervisors for approval.
• tric tompany, complying with
state law, advised itolthecutoff.
Board a pproval would mean
onJy that projects, i1 any, related
to the future alternative selected
by the board of supervisors will
be approved.
The report then will go to the
federal omdlia ror another ex·
tensive review process before
any federal funds can be used in
whatever projects, again if any,
are approved by the board.
Casb aald the company could
notily the welfare department as
soon 8$ a five-day notlce is poet-
ed, but be aajd be doubted that
would help because. "they can't
even h1ndle the case load they
have now."
He said be Jeamed later that.
Kuhn appuently w¥ ill Dec. 28
when a collector went. to the
house ..t no one anaweACI &M
door. A daf earlier, hesaldta , ..
com pany r epreaentatln "-
qu.lrecl at tbe house about a lAte
bill and Kuhn "was loo weak to •lln hi• name.••
Cash said Kuhn f~ly d.ld
not pQ bl• bill until a company
repr•entative abowtd up at tbe
door.
r -
, ..... P-.e ..tJ
SLAYING •••
Mtu Cox wu 1rlduat4d with bonon trom COila M•a HJ•h
School hi 197~, •choot o(ftclals 1aldto4ay.
Sbe was a member Of the
sc:bool'• 1cholarshlp aocleu and
wu chairman ott.M BltutaUoul Development Council la ber
Junloc>'nr at Cotta Mtu~
Fr-. P.,,e .4 J
v.IFJO DANCE INSTRUCTOR. • •
in a rew \Ueki.
Her task ·,seems dirricull,
almost lmpoqlble, but the key ls
cliscipline. Sbe tella them.
.. OltQ. we're 1otni to do this. And. you will do tt." .
Soon, they'~ doing things their
bodies bad never done before.
And this euites the choreo-
grapher, who ran a danee school
in San Juan Capistrano before
she joined Up With People six
yea.rs ago.
In addition to teaching, she had
worked with the Lyric Opera or
Orange County, Festival of Arts,
San Clemente Civic Llght Opera
Association, Junior Miss
pageants "and all the local
stuff."
She also dJd the choreography
for Mother Earth when It o~ned
in San Franc isco and on
Broadway.
It was then that Up With Peo-
ple officials hired her to work
with 250 students in Warwick,
New York for six weeks. They
kept asking her to stay another
week until she actually joined the
program several months later.
She bas a contract to do more
work on Broadway. But she
hopes she is n't called upon to do
this for awhile, at least unlll her
daughter, Melissa, who's a junior
at Mission Viejo High School, Is older.
"Up With People ls a very
positive thing to do," Ms. Morris
said. "I wouldn't have left my
family to do anything else."
She's able to get home about
every other week and takes her
family with her someUmes.
She considers herself "really
fortunate to find something
where I can use my talent con·
structively." While explaining
this, she searched for a word that
didn't sound 10 "tacky" or
"sticky."
Up With People's show Is
meant to be enjoyable but more
than entertainment. It comes
with a purpose and a musical
message about people.
Ms. Morris was with one of the
casts at the 1972 Munich Olympic
Games. After the terrorist attack
on the Israeli compound, which
resulted in 11 athletes and
coaches beini killed, the
youncs ters put on speclol
performanca tQ help pick up &M
spirit or the athletes .
·'I dldn 't tblnk of what we were
doing at the lime and I clidn't
think of the impact it bad," she
recalled. But since tbeo, people
who were there have told her how
much those performances
meant.
"That's a thing that happens
with the show." she said.
But Ms. Morris alao speaks at
length -as both a tea~her and a
mother -about what the pro-
gram does for its young partici-pants.
Both or her sons, Rodger and
Bob Mohme, who attend UCI ,
were accepted into the program
under a different name so no one
knew they were her soos.
Rodger was witb the show last
year. Bob is in the cast which will
be performing in the Laguna
Hills Mall tonight at 7:~ and in
the Mission Viejo High School
&YmSunday atap.m.
"It's tbe best thing that's ever
happened to either one of them
really," their mother said. She
boasts that the audience will see
her son, once "the ultimate
kJut.i," dancing with the best of them.
Another boy, who never sang
before, solos in three major
songs "and he's great. Great!
That's exciting," she said.
They gain confidence as they
learn to sing and dance and com-
municate with each other as well
as an audience, she said.
The 500-member international
group is itself a "microcosm of
humanity " with varied
Weather Stagnant
By Tbe Associated P1"eU
Northern California remains
on the static side as a warm, dry,
stagnant high pr~ure system
presses eastward into the state.
No rain foreseen through the
weekend, but overcast skies over
the lowlands and fog oo the coast.
economic, cultural and social
backgrounds, she s8ld
They also stay with a wide
variation or boat families.
Rodeer went rrom a governor's
mansion into a black ghetto last
year.
They're all scared when they
start, Ma. Morris said. But she
tells them, "be nexible" and
"Push yourself as tar as you can
and, whatever happens, you ac-
cept it."
She believes, ''After a year
with Up With People, you can do
anything."
Mexican City
Demostrators
Ha/,t Traffic
PUERTO VALLARTA. Mexico
<AP> -De monstrators protest-
ing alleged fraud In recent
municipal elections blocked the
bridge over a small river divid-
ing this Pacific resort towa
Thursday night, causing massive
traffic jams aad preventing
some tourist& from driving to
their hotels.
Puerto Vallarta, a city of
70,000, was jam.packed with
American tourists, who ap-
peared confused and frightened.
No violence was reported.·
Buses full of tourists, cars, tax-
is and delivery t rucks were
stalled for blocks around the en-
trance of the bridge over the .
Uala River, located at the foot of
Elizabeth Taylor's house.
Porters with handcarts met
tourists and carried their lug-
gage over the bridge to the other
side of the bay and the Camino
Real, a western international hotel.
One woman tourist asked a
porter if it was a ''communist de-
monstration.•• The porter said it
was just a local protest.
New carpet shipments are on their way
and we·re makmg room. We've reduced prices
on every one of Lees best-selling carpets dur-
ing Lees January Clearance Sale.
Choose from hundreds of colors & styles
& patterns. Hurry, the Lees Carpets Author-
ized January Clearance Sate ends January
2~d.
ONE
WEEK
ONLY!
DEN'S
:iiisiillatiiin\:·custom draperies
linolemn • 'wood floor
1663 PU-CENTIA AVENUI! • COSTA MESA. CAlr,, 92621 • PHONE 6'46··'838 -646-2355
Friday's NYSE COMPOSITE ' TRANSACTIONS
. Mterooon Pr(ce.
s DAILY PILOT ,4'
s..;:: .. ~:::sion l
Can Be Avoide
87 SYLVIA POft'Ea
Hall the can Ln U'9 United Stat. a.re ln areu whet
eDltly C'On'OSioG eaa bt lttedil\I doon. t.ront alld re
QUart.tr panels. roc:Ml ......... fmden. the badt window even uncfel' U.. ~tap on tbe roof.
Snow i1o 't U. OIQ orob&em. Salt and aulplNr -t.be la
t.er from sea air -IDQ bet.be culprits. So m11 alr poUuUon
So may exh.ult twna.
And this la DO mlnol' ~ Rust and COft'O&ioD c eOllt you more tllQ SIGG a yur Ln automobUe dep'ecta
But the expeDM ne.I not be eecttared. Preveotlve tnat
menu duriq the lint &.000 m1la after purchue c
ellmlnat.e the daDps'. CowiUesa t.bouNnds .
of 10-to a-year-old cars
are at.Ill Civin1 lbelr
owners lood aervfce and abowtnc little evidence
d atructural deteriora-
tion. Equal numbers,
Money's
Worth
less than 10 years old. are in junkyards becaU5e rwil b
eaten them. Betllieeo the extremes. warns the l>epartmen
ol Tramportat.loa, are uneounted t.bousaads more that bav
SUltalned varyln& ~ of structu.ral decay -som
merely unsightly. others actually a lbttat to life and aWl on
the streets.
ANY CAJl CAN RUST. The problem defies cheap re-
medy because auto owners frequently tail to recogniie it
time. But lt cao be averted.
Treatments for the area within the •alla of the auto's
body can run from $70 to WiO. Treatmeata (or t.be ext.enoft
cao add SUS to $150 to the car's i1Utia1 cost.. After ~i
yean, a treated car in tbe snow belt m~ be wor1b $300-$1500
more than an untreated car.
Traditional optional auto undercoaUnp do not prevent
conosion, say industry leaders. They serve primarily
deadenlOUDd.
"No ruatprooflng compound will protect a11rfaces caked
with dirt, flaking. rust. water-soaked crevices or missed
areu," says t.be Corrosion Engineers Assn. ··u <compound
is) not thoroughly applied, the protection will not be
achieved. Tbe results are no better Ulan the skill of t.be
mecbanJcs." Here are some~:
-Cheek t.be ftrm°S reputation wtt.b t.be Better Business
Bareau before bavtnc tbe car rustproofed.
-Note the clames Ln the wUTanty. particularly in re-gard to subsequent respoosibilit.y for exterior rust.
-Before buying a used car, examine it caretully for
nwt. Be alert for signs~ repainting and body putt)' that
mlgbl disguise areas where rust already baa damaged the
car.
-aEMOVE Tll£ SPAU 11JlE AND examine the Ur
• weU in ataUon wagons. Uft the mat on the noor in the third
seat area. check for rust and metal weakness. In other cars,
Wt the mat in the trunk. carpeting ia pasaeneer areas. 1
-Drive the car through a car wash to spot lealcs.
-For period.Jc matnten•nce, keep the car clean, wash it
at least twice a year. bole down t.be undenlde twice a year
in areas where sand and salts are used on roads. In sandy country. fllasb the vehicle's und.enide. Keep drain boles in
the bottom of tlle car doors open. After waablng, leave car
doors _,ar Cora few minutes to permit water dra1nage.
-Write for "Automotive Rust -Ua Causes and
Prevention," Pamphlet No. S>lB. Conawoer lnfonuaUon Center. Pueblo, Colo. 81009. It 'a free.
Firm Class Opem
Eyes for Buyers
CLEVELAND (AP> -KathJ Lee says abe ~y bu.y teu
cotfee since learning from a company.sponsored aeminar
bow prices are puabed up by atronc demand for a product J
that's in ahortaoppty.
"Not becauae I don't want to apend t.be ~ but because I don't want to push the prlee up stlll hl&ber." she t
explained in dlacuaam, bow the TRW Inc. economics coune I
bad affeded ber out.loOk and understudins. I Mrs. Lee, whose husband is ooe ol the ft.rm ·s attonaeya,
was amooa t.be about 370 TRW employes and family mem·
bers who took advantage of a (ree seven-week procram here
and at five of its otbercenten.
TRW spokesmeol
( )
say the company in· f
stitut.ed the economics, CDNSUMER education for ita
employes and their
------------spouses ln response to'· what lt views as a need
. for better underst.and· ln.i ol business and the economy generally.
A~ TRW SAYS 1'BE JlB8ULTS IU~~ expandiJag tbe proeram iD 197'1. Over a five-year pert ll hopes to...,
acb •.ooo to 5,000 employes. n.e 1978 progra cost the firm atpJt $1J,OOO.
"llan1 times wbea thlnp went awry · the ecooomy,
I tended to feel tbal Ilia-money people we more influential than they really are," Mn. Lee says. "When I read an arti·
& now tbat bu to do With economics, I have more of a
perception aa to what It'• about. "The coune alaomade me feel more reaponaibJe in the
'flay I conduct myself ln the marketplace. Like UlinlC leas utllitiet."
EDITll FEIKErl', AN EXECUTIVE secretary at
TRW wbole buaband Gene jolned ber in t.akin& the course ..
says they thou&bt they'd be able to handle lbe1r finances •
better ll they understood some of the basics about how ~e j
S)'ltem works.
Sbe 1ay1 •.be can' pinpoint boW It aJ~red ber practices 1
1 but that ebe ~s lt eJ{enid the way abe feel.I about thin ...
For lnttuce, lhe says: "Now I know •"1 prtces. rise, •
and I know lt'a not Jumt aomeone 1ouctn1 YoU· ••
OTBBas, TROUGH DECLINING ldtn ·
WkaUon, aireed. .. Had I prevtoua tnowledf• of taxes
and ftlcaJ oc>Ucy, t m1llrt have voted dJlferent.ey oo some re· fenmdum,"'·~oae Hid. "I'll 19-op men wist}}'," aald another.
Harriaon R. J~ ~·ie director d employe I eomnum.lcaUoaa wbo developed tbe procram, •IYI one key I la bavtq tta cGnU!llt and presentaUon handled by a third
s-tJ. ? "Credlblllty of bus1.Dea being at a rather tow ebb, peo-~ SIM woo't believe what loctuatry says about ltaelC," be ex· 1
plalned. I
ANOTBEa an BB 8AID. ""' a1c•U1T1NG I "saptntar'' J.Ucbln ?n;i; ~c faculti• to make the
lectarel .. tnlereltinl as palble becaUH "God bowl, ; ~4!1 ls• dull.qmce.• l