HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-02-03 - Orange Coast Pilot17
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Not many drivers can wrap theiJ: car around a pole and
walk away with minor injuries. Frink James Ingram
was one of the lucky ones in W"maton.Salem, N.C. lt t06k
rescue crews a half hour to extrJM:t 1ngram from what
was left of his auto.
Van Takes l.»l1'Pl!e
To Avert lfB W.r.eck ·
By ARTHUR B. VINSEL
Ol INOMty P'IMC IUff
A Lona Beach man cruisin&
through Huntincton Beach Wed·
nesday nilht is ?'eCUperating to-
day after a traffic accident in
wblch he and his van •ound up at
the bottom ot a backyard swim· 1mlna pool.
Ricky L. Witt, 23, soaked and
saddened at the sigbt of bis
yellow, 1974 van shimmering in
the depths, told poJlce he dldh't
remembermucboftbecrasb.
He told Officer James Sban·
clrlck be swerved and the next
thln1 be knew he iJIS sitttn1 in
tbe driver's snt With water ris·
iftg UOuhd lilm.
Investigators sa1d Wilt wu
drivinf north on Golden West
Street between Ford and Bett¥
drives at I p.m., in heavy tralftc
when 1uddent1 red taUUg~
began llptin1 up iri front Of him.
Inveati1atorc said the van jumped the westerly curb1 thun-
dered tbroulh the block wall 1n a
shower of masonl')', and did a
belly ftop into the pool at 17322
Whetmore Lane.
"ltsurecauaed abt1oll'dct:•
the police s~tion watch com·
maoder observed late Wednes·
day aftertbe mopup.
••And the people just moved out
here from Alalwlla and bouaht
the~cet"weebqo.'' ·
He said the new owners. who
were not idftJtJtltd, nienUOQed
a om e tll inc about. c r a 1 y
Callf omla divers as they numbly
surveyM tMir. once-beautiful
back yard patio and pool at'U.
But police 1tre11ect todn,
however. tbit :Witt wu not to <See VAN,~ AJ)
He cOuldn't stop in time, so be
Yanked the •tterini Wheel tO the...., . ...,, ... ~.·• left, pOticeaalcl.
Armed bandits wearing stock·
ing masks burst into a factory in
Oran1e Wednesday night to rob
17 emptoyes of their wallets and
other valuables, according to
police. •
1'bey reported two or "perhaps
ttiree•• masked robbers carrying
1uns entered Data Circuits, Inc.
at 1807 W. Orange Grove St. at 10::J.4p.m.
The 17 employes working in the
electron.ic1 plant were herded in~
to a single room and forced to lie
face downon thefioor.
Police said some of the 17 vie·
Ums wereJ01Ued and roughed up
as the robbers weJ1t about reliev· illf them of their wallets and
other valuables.
Some of the victims were
women.
Police early today bad not yet
detennJ.oed the value of the haul
made by the bandits before they
ran from tbelactory building to a
waltln1 car. ..
SAN DJJtpO ~AP) -Four
Thei:qi'1 residents are accused
of aMemptln& to• smunle 4,631
rouoda ot ammunition into Mex-
ico in an Indictment retumed by a federatarandJ~. Aatt. U .s. AttY. Bruce Castet-
ter 1aJd the cbaries stem from
the ams& ol tbe quartet by U.S.
CustomJ a1e1ata at the Calexico-
Mexlcali ~crossing.
Castetter aald a1ents were
tipped about tbe sbipment by a
cun ataoe, bat tt bas not beu d&-
ttto>tned Wb7 t.M ammunition
wuoM•IMd.
liaaker Gone
Audit Shows F~ lnuicr
VISfA (AP> -Officials of Vista National Banlc
say its $1.25 million in capital is iDtact, although bank
president Charles Wenz is missint.
"We have no word indicatin1 anything like kid·
oaping, nor any other information on where he went
after he left the bank about 8:30 Monday," said C.
Robert Allen, board chairman of the bank formed six
months ago.
Allen said an audit showed no shortages or ir-
regularities.
Sheriff's officers and the wife and daughter of
Wenz, 44, said they have no idea where he may be.
Allen speculated getting the new bank started
placed Wenz under heavy business stress.
S&LClosed
False. HeiSt -'FOil.nd
By LagUna Police
A Laguna Beach savings and
Joan mysteriously closed and
locked its doors at mid-day Wed-
nesday prompting Police to try
and get inside in a full-scale rob-
bery alert.
Only after ~ursting into the
World Savings and Loan with
·guns drawn did authorities and
branch Manager Patty
Dorohauaer -)Vbo had been at·
tending a bUsiness meeting away
frQm the bank -learn a medlcil
emergency caused the aJ>ruRt
·closing. · ·
Police were called by a citizen
who reported the branch offlce
waa Cloled when it ordinarily
would be open. Poll~e found a note on t1'e door
sayina the bank had closed .. due
to an eJllergency."
Mrs. f Domhauser was sum·
mODed from her tiU.llneaa meet-inl and aa live olficers stood with
drawn cum. she unlocked tbe
door.
Officers charged in and found
• • • an empty buildlng but no
bound and gagged employes, and
no rifled cash drawers or other
signs of a robbery.
As -dozens of curious onlookers
gawked outside the bulldh1g at
Forest Avenue and South Coast
Highway and pressed their noses
again.at the glass windows; of.
ficers waited agahi aa the
rrjanager opened the vault in
case ernployes bad been locked
inside it by a baqdlt.
They: badil '{been.·
After checking that everything
was ill its pJac& and decld1n1 no
<See CLOSED, Page A!)
Peace Tailks sei
CAIRO,' Egypt (AP> -United
NaUca Secretary·GeneraJ Kurt
W aldbeim Aid today tbe Geneva
Middle !lUt peace UIJU could_,.
reconvened b~ the end ol Marcb,
as tb• Atablbave demanded.
II
II
He Cites
.Rights o~
Silence
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of IN Dally ~llot SQff
Gene Conrad, a police in•
former.turned political tycooo.
was on hand to testify before the
Orange County Grand Jury to-
day.
But testify he won't.
Before going into the jury roo~
in answer to a subpoena, Conra~
said he will cifo his first, fift~
sixth, ninth and fourteenth
amendment rights and refuse to
testify.
Clutched in the burly 42-year;
old rags to riches police in.-
"former·s ·hand was a. writteJl
statement be planned to read t4
the jury. ~
It said, in effect, that as Ioni
as Assistant District Attornet
Michael Capizzi is involved in the
jury's probe into political ca~
paign financing, Gene Conract
will not cooperate.
Conrad is a central figure in
the inv~tigation into. financing
or political campaigns in Oranae
County last fall.
One way or another, he iS
responsible for pouring roughly
$48,000 Into various political cant
dldates' campaigns, including I
$30,000 loan to county Superviso
Philip Anthony.
Wednesday at least five peopl
involved in Conrad's politic
machln-tions testified before th
jury.
Two witnesses are ~ssocl
·with Conrad in his lo
brokeraie firm. Pension Fun
<See CONRAD, Page "2)
Weather
Fair an·d warmer
tbrou&'h Friday with hJ&hs
65 to 75 and Iowa 45 to 50. •
INSIDE TOD~ Y .
tM w.-~ /amU11 o/ ~eio Hawn, Conn .• ha.a ft
eo.n touglarr tho.-mod
ECJtHttt "1b -•he'• a iri-.
vaUd. and ta.'• out of o job. 8-• P.OO•A1.
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Deity ......... ",.....
SILENT BEFORE JURY
PoMce fnfonner Conntd
p,....pflfleAJ
="tl'\\D ·.
are flowtq eut, but UM
ifftltta cl bitW -~cl..., .,.. apreecllaa even tuttr.
Layolfl, for example, ha.e
beguu reaching lnto New
England -an area spared unW
now because lt uses litUe natural
1as.
In Ohio and westeni New York
state, two of the hardest-hit
areu, calm weather 8J)d slilbtl.Y
rilln& temperatures Wednesday
gave something of a respite to
clean-up crews and river pilots
trying to deliver fuel. (Related
pboto,M>
But a oew snowstorm, movtn1
througb the Weal, promlaed
more trouble u It beaded for the
Great Lakes. (Related story, A4)
And with an estimated 75 dead CONRAD and two million already tem·
• • • ='out of work nationwide,
of Americaofli'vttte ·< tD tlllldYI~ and
Both Harold Morr and Donald New York expressed yet another
Eckhart are shown a.s $2,500 con· worry: they fear .major fioodl
tributors to Anthony's campaign. this spring If a qwck thaw sud·
Also locked behind closed denly melts the huge amounts of
doors with the grand jury was snowaotbeground.
Robert LanFranco, owner of President Carter signed
Amco Builders Supply Company
·~~ .. -~ tfm t.be power~~
Uonal or ~al natural au
emeraectet and to order 1• movea from ltate to state to teep
homes and bolpltals warm -but
not to reopen shutdown plants.
The legislation also allows In·
tentate pipelines to temponrlly
buy 1u ln tOme cues at b1Per
91RIPPER8 00 ON DESP!'Jf COLO-A3
prices prevailing in intra.state
markets.
Even before the sianln(, one of
the bluest interstate natural gas
pipelines, Trameontlneatal Gas
Pipe Ltne Corp., reported it com-
pleted arrangements to obtain
about 130 million cubic feet of fas
a day from the Paci ic
Northwest. Some of the sas was
a1ftacty movtng to..,ard Tau,
where Transcontinental ls based by w ednesday nl&bt. •
But 1as moves at only 15 miles
an hour in pipelines, so the pro.
spect of quiet relief for curtailed
areas was slight.
of Costa Mesa.
Amco '8 shown on ~Anthony's
campaign disclosure statement
as a $10,000 donor. However, it
was revealed two weeks ago that
the donation was JlCtually made
through a cashier's check drawn
Early Aetion IJrged
b1Conrad. Tod~Yz Conrad said be has
amenoea for the second time bi.a
major political donor's state·
ment to show the Amco contribu-
tion as coming from bim.
The other two witnesses known
to testify Wednesday were John
Bat.hen and Martin Kirschner,
both of them $2,500 contributors to Anthony.
The newly elected county
supervisor amended his own dis-
closure statement this week to
show the Conrad poliUcal invest·
ment as well as loans received
from Fullerton attorney Michael Remington.
Remington is on call today for
an appearance before the jury as
is Conrad aide Loran Norton.
Conrad said he was employed
by the Orange County District
Attorney's office from 1972
through 1974 as an undercover
agent. However, officials in the
office classify him as a paid in-
former.
In 1975 be was convicted of a
felony crtme and sentenced to
three years probatim.
Pot Bill Backing
Sought of Carter
W ASRINGTON CAP) -Tlaree
members of Congress aaked
President Carter today to aup-
port the decriminalization of
marijuana possession and ita
aoaprotit transfer in small quan-
tities.
Sens. Jacob K. Javits CR·N.Y. > and Alan Cranston CD-Calif.),
and Rep. Edward I. Koch CD·
N. Y. >. wrote Carter suggesting
early action on the reform of
federal marijuana laws and the
development of a comprehensive
policy on drug abuse.
They expressed concern for a
"fundamental unfairness" un-
derlying existing marijuana
laws. They also said 'the enforce-
ment of those laws requires a
diversion of scarce law enforce-
Newport Cops
Hunt Attacker
ment resources.
The congressmen said mart·
juana policy should be primarily
a function or state government. but that it is difficult for states to
change their policies unless the
federal law is changed.
Carter bas said be supports
decrimlnallzaUoo for posaessioa
of marijuana in small amount.a.
The congressman said they
would introduce legislation in the
House and Senate to set a max-
1 mum clvil fine or $100 for
possession and not-for-prof~
transfer of one ounce or less of marijuana.
The current penalty for mari-
juana possession is imprison-
ment for up to one year and a fine
of up to ~.000. This federal
penalty could be superseded by
any more stringent state laws.
I •
In the past year bis story bas
been one of rags to riches, from a
threatened foreclosure on his
home in Anaheim to heavy cash ~~r:~:uuons to political cam-Of woman
Romantic
Pinldeys
Featured He claims bis sudden fortune is
the r esult or enriching real estate
loans brokered through Pension
Funds or America.
The company's activities are
under investigation by a federal
grand jury as well as the subject
of various civil suits filed in
Orange County.
Al Conrad's side as be waited
to enter the grand jury room was
bia attorney, Richard Donald.
On Conrad's behalf, Donald
last month filed a $170 million
lawswt against the district at·
torney's office that claimed
Conrad's civil rights had been
violated through a senes or al-
leged wire tapping incidents.
Suicide Ptret
Includes Dog
SARATOGA CAP) -An elder·
ly man sbot bis wile, tbe family
dog and then himself in an ap-
parent suicide pact, the Santa
Clara sheriff's office said.
Both Archie McCoy, 74, andbls
wile, Bernice, 75, suffered from
cancer, deputies said Wednes·
day.
Investigators said McCoy used
a .22-callber pistol, leavina
behind a note expressing the
couple's unwillingness to fipt
cHcer any longer.
DAILY PILOT
...
I
A man who hid in a Corona del
Mar businesswoman's car and
attacked her as she left work
Wednesday night is being sought
today by the Newport Beach
police. ·
Investigators said the car was
parked in a lot behind the 3100
block al East Coast Highway.
The woman told officers she
left worlc al about 9:45 p.m. and
dido 't notice anything unusual
when she got into her car.
But wben she reached for her
seat belt, she said the man re-
ached around from the back seat
and grabbed her by the throat.
Sbe told police she franUcally
booked her car born while strug-
gling with her assailant, who she
said waa armed with a six-inch
knife.
The man suddenly broke off his
attack and jumped from the car,
the woman told police.
Officers said the suspect was
described as a Negro, five feet 10
inches tall, weighing 165-175
pounds and bet.ween the ages of
35and4.5.
Balloonist
Drifts South
For Breezes
YUMA, Ariz. CAP)
BallOCXliat Karl Thomu went
"aoutb of the border" today In b1s
effort to noat bis bot-air balloon
from Califotnia to Florida.
Thomas, pUotina bis yellow
Limited Edition Sall, toot off
early today to use prevalllne
windl to blow him around the
Gila Mountains, about 20 miles
eut ol thla IOUtbweatem Artaooa cl~y.
Erratic winds blew Tbomu 80
mllea off course Wedaeaday,
forcing him to Set down ln a
nearly lnaccestlble area Just
abort of a Marine Corps l'UDJ!tl1
ranee.
Lury Wm, a apokeaman for
Tbomu, 28, aaid It was poulble
th• baUooat1t could be O\lt of
eommuniution wttb other than
Ml fli8bt cnw for almost two de,.__, bis llaico tea.
Today's Daily Pilot brings you
up to date on Romance Orange
County with a review of Valen·
tine's gift suggestions.
You'll find suggestions ranging
from ways to dine out -or in -
in grand style to where-to-find-it
hints for unique gifts or tradi·
tlonal Valentine offerings of
cards, candy, flowers and
poetry.
And, featured on the cover of
the 18-page special magazine are
famed Costa Mesa romantics
Alvin and Lucy Pinkley. Their
soda fountain baa been the
backdrop for real-life love stories
slnce 1933.
For their •tor'>'. and help with
your own love life, turn to
Romance Orange County in
today's Daily Pilot.
r ..... r-.AJ
VAN •••
blame, but only took evasive ac-
tion to avoid another certain col-•
llalon before losing control of his •
vehicle.
Witt sustained mlnor injuries
1n the episode.
lnveatlgatora said another
motorist and accident witness,
John R. Brock, 21, of 19322 Even·
in1 Hill Drive, Huntington
Beach, quickly stopped bis car
and dove intq the pool to aid Witt.
The van, its front end bubed in
but atU1 with only wbat police
termed moderate damaee, was rescued by crane.
A Hunti.naton Beach lifeguard
wltb a wetsuit and scuba diving
sear wu dlapatched to ac·
C!Ompliah the underwater lalt
hookup.
WaterUae
Cut Ordered
OAltLAMD <AP> -
Directors of the &Mt B.r'•
water aupplJ ba••
declared a "atate ol
emergeDQ'" and .OC.CS to
take stepa to reduee watw
use by one-fourth.
The East s.r 11un1c1pe1 Utility Di1tr ct, wbfcb
serves most of Alameda County and part ol Contra
Costa, acted Wednesday
night after a 3~·bour
public heart.aa.
The board a1reed to
meet TUeldaj nllbt to d•·
cide bow to implement tbe
25 percent cut 1n water con-
sumpti00-
now
& .. WI ......
GRUDGING C90PERATION
Federal Reserve'• Buma
F,...P.,,eAJ
CLOSED •••
robbery bad occurred, police U .
John 7.elto withdrew bla men,
leavtq i\ to the bank manager to
find out "by her employes bad
left.
Mn. Dornha~r would mate
no comment this mornln1. Otber
bank employes, however, .,...
telling cu•tomera tbat aa
empl.oye wu botpllallsed wt&la
an emeqency medical probMm.
Tb• coadl&ioa of t.be ....,,.
was not known.
The bank reopened at abolll
3:30 p.m .• after being cloMd tor
more than two bou.n.
Gandhi Cheered
NEW DEUU, lndla <AP)
Prime Minister Indira Gandhi
told thousands of cheerins ·~
porters today that six leaden of
ber Congreaa part1 wbo broll:•
with her Wednesday and formed
a new party were turncoat op-
portunists seeking "personal
gains whether or not it hurta the country."
Carter's
•
Program
'Prudent'
~WASHINGTON (AP> -
CbaJrman Arthur r . Bu.ru ol the
Federal a.erve Board Hid to-
day President Carter'• '31 bllllon
economic propam la an "lnetft.
clent way to stimulate the
economy," but the board will
cooperate to create Jobs and
speed economic cn>wtb In 1977. Bunw, a 72-yQr.old holdover
app9lotee of •he Nixon ad·
mlnlatratlon, mixed both praise
and crttldsm ot the Carter~
1ram before the House Ba.Min&
Committee, aayln1 he thlata
Cartercameupwtth a "prudent"
procram ~Jdertng the advice bewupttlng.
.. All In all . . . I think be bM
done quite admirably," Burm
told the committee.
But he also said be didn't think
such a proeram ls needed,
especially the '50 rebates on 19'18
taxes which the Carter ad·
ministration hopes to diapense
thla sprtna. "'I'&e 'treuury doesn •t bave
this money. 1be Treuury bu to
10 out and borrow lt," Burm
said. "It's not a 1ood babtt .•.
for our country to 1etinto."
Nevertheless, Burbs •aid tbe
money-managln1 Federal
Rese"e Board ta malD~ Ml
tareet for buie Jrowtb ln tM
money supply for tm at tbe lntl
the Carter adminl•traUoa tblnb
ls necessary to support tu ~
srama. Bu.ma' statement to the C'91D-
mitt.ee waa bia ftrst public ......
lion to the Carter economic ~
gram being debated bJ
Congress. While Burns doesn'\
need to ~rov• Carter's plan for
it to become effective, the
board's money growth polld•
will be a major \:ey toward tM
program's success, if coaar-
enactsil.
Burm aald the econom7 •
Showi.al IOOd IJ'OWth OD its ()llft
and •1t ls not clear to m-e that 8117
atlmulus ls required," be Aid. '1
would have preferred to watt a
little ... "
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-
81TOll8dUY Of tM o.f!y Plt.1141111
Wall Street an ab at Bowea I. cCoy .admitted Wednesday in 1 pranae County Superior Court
that h1s valuation ot the Irvine
mpany mleht be understated
[bY as much as $50 ~illion.
t Closely questioned by attorney
~oward Friedman. who
presents Irvine heiress Joan
vine Smith •. the consultant to
•
MEXICO CITY, Mexico <AP>
Mexico will help the United
' tales fight the energy crisis by
elling 40 million cubic feet of gas
day to its northern neighbor at
urr-ent interstate prices,
merican Embassy sources said
oday. It also offered to sell more
il.
Mexico wilt start the gas flow-
ing to the United States Monday
or Tuesday and will also provide _,,000 batTels of crude oil daily,
thf sources said. 1 President Carter said Wednes-
1 y night that Mexican Presi·
nt Jose Lopez Portillo offered
help the United States in the
sis caused by the extreme cold
ter, which has caused shut·
ns in industl'y beceu¥ o! fuel
rtages.
t he rates Mexico wUf charte ror natural ga• will 'Yllt'J from
~.90 to CU5 per British T'*1nal tJH <BTU), the embassy
°'1rces said.
, 'They said there was 1)0 fixed
nee for the crude oil but said it
Ould probably be tile same
rice paid for the limited exports
xico makes to the United
tates. That price is $12.65 per
ftrrel landed in Gulf of Mexico
rts.
·Mexico also offered to sell to ht United States an additional
million barrels of crude a
ay if American ships can be
nd lo transport the oil. The
•anned 600,000 barrels daily will
e transported in Mexican ships
r· ships rented by the Mexican
oernment. the sources said.
}fexiC!o has been HRine 1boiut
00.000 barrels or oil • day to the ._Hed States since important
oilfields began produdl'\I in
llt Chiapas and Tampico areas e months ago.
~CHOIU GE HIT
llY HEAT W.4YE
ANCHORAGE <AP) While
,each of the nation Is hard·hit by
record cold, the N atior\al
Weather Service says that ror the
11Nt time ln its 60-year history
h•re, temperatures in the
~f'Cborage area did not drop
below zero durin1 J anu1ry.
I n fact, while the cl~y·s
January temperatures usually
ayerage 12 del(ees, the service
'•ld, temperatures did not even
Stop below 14.
The recorded hllh tb1I year ns 49on Jan. 24. .
testified t.bat bb aueaament was pany tiOldllip now bein1 aou&ht
com Pl.led before tbe company put by two ftn111elaJ lnt...U u a
Its current five.year develop-•• .. top.ftlibtClfterm, that ii among
meot plan into effect. the bMt In the United States t,O:.
And he agr~ with Friedman day:•
that Jrvlne company shares will McCoy 1itJd the C\llftllt contest
be worth much more than tbe &etween tt.io bidders -Mobil Oil
present estimated $33.50 each if Company and a consortium
the completed five.year plan that headed by Wall Street financier
expires in 1981 is as successtul as Charles Allen and Detroit 'd'°
predicted. veloper Alfred Taubman -ls
McCoy praised the Irvine Com· drawlne international attention,
.
''Woli't
#
partlc"1arly ih financial circles.
Tbe future owner of the Irvine
Company wW not .be 4tcided un·
til J udge James F. Judge rules
on the merits of the lawsuit filed,
two years qo by Mrs. Smith. Mrs. Smith \Ook leaal action to
halt the sale or the foundation'•
interests to Mobil for a figure
that was then determined at $200
million.
Mrs. Smjth supports the bid of
the Allen.Taubman groui>, which
hlked its offer to 1212.7 million
lut week. Mobtl, favored by the
foundation and the Irvine O>m·
pany, has offe!'ed $281.9 million.
The Federal Tax Reform Act
of 1969 compels the foundation to
dllpose o( its 54.S percent con·
trolling iliterest in the Irvine
Company by 1983 ..
McCoy's responses to Fried·
man's intensive quealionlng in·
dieated Wed.n~day tbat MObll ts a flrm f avorlte.in the r.ace to take
over o~ratlOl\S of tbe lmne
Com~.
lie cOntirmed lor Mn. Smith's
lawyer that tbe current thinkinr
on Waieet and ln financial circles r0$S the-nation is that
"lbe 1 e.of the Irvine Company
is Mobil deal."
Mn. 1th is on record as
( HEIRESS. Pa1e AZ>
Talk' to Jtiry
He Cites
Rights of
Silence
By GARY GllANVILLE
OI tM D.illy .. U.t ltafl ,
Gene Conrad, a poli'ce in·
former·turned political tycoon,
was on hand to testify before the
Orange County Grand Jury lo·
day.
But testify he won't.
Before going into the jury,.room
in answer to a subpoena, Conrad
said he will cite his first, fifth,
sixth, ninth and fourteenth
amendment rights and refuse lo
testify ..
D.llly .. li.t Staff ....... '
SILENT BEFORE JURY
Police l~for~er Conrad • ~
Clutched in the burly 42·year·
old rags lo riches police In·
former's hand was a written
statement he planned to read to
the jury.
It said, in effect, that as long Scho 1 _'
as Assistant District Attorney 0 iB
Michael-Capizzi is involved in the
Wa1~}=&~ ~~c-&trad
will not cooperate.
Conrad ia a central figure in
the investigation iot.o financing
of poUtical campaigns in Orange
County last fall.
Merger
Assailed
One 'way or another. he is
responsibJe for pouring roughly BylULARYKAYE $48,000 into various political can· Oftllt oa11, Pli.t staff ~ .. e,•a Bulldo•nr.·· Clean· nu Su'.nPr Block didates' campaigns, Including a ucr Vice Chancellor James lr.J~ _, ~ a • --e r -$30.000 Joan to county Supervisor McGaugh recommended today
• Philip Anthony. that the proposed merger of the
By SfEVE MITCHELL families still living in the-project-Mn. Swope-says-she will not-Wednesday ar~st11ve-peopl~ engineering school and 'he
Three c;;.::-i·h~~~~~" in Cost; area. sell the house, whkh she current-involved in Conrad's poliUca( physical sciences school be
Mesa's super block fell to the Those tenants are entitled to a ly r.ent.s to an elderly couple, at machinations testified before the scrapped.
bulldozer's blade this week. and relocation fee of up to $4,SOO, any price. jury. McGaugh made his recom·
city officials hope to level tht en· DuC'!n said_. . . The city has filed a condemna· Two witnesses are associated mendation at a session of the tire block by the end or the • ityoff1cialsarest1llattempt-tionactiononlhestructure.anda with Conrad-' in his loan AcademicSenate.
mon1h mg to complete the sale of a deadline for the tenants to move brokerage firm, Pension Funds. __ ll>~ yice cllilriW.12.t..~· wo;km~ have bu-ll·d~ed -· house at 514.Center St .. owned by. out has come and gone. of America of Irvine. ed this morning that he had seen
Mrs. Ruth Swope, an 81-year-old "We're stiJI working on that Both Harold Morr and Donald "no strong support" for the sug-seven homes to date int.be super widow who lives near the.project. .<.£..a..-Bl,9GK, p..............aa> . --•c•----""sttOWa as -.-con· gested merger. from any of th. e block, bordered by Plumer and """""" ~ c. •rnw" a.... .... """ h d ed Center street.s on the north and tributors to Anthony's camp,aign. ca,mpus committees t a.t stu i
south. and Par1< and Anaheim PlJC c....-.. ... and Also locke<l behlnd closed the plan.
th t d .,........ doors with the erand jury was McGaugh announced l~t ~· avenues on e eas an west. Robert Lan Franco owner of' tober that be was considenng do·~~e~~ ~~~ ~~~e";,':,'"ues~:~i~ Amco Builders Supp.ly Company ma~ing_~pre£.es:sional-schoolof
moved. we hope by the end of the oc Off• St d of Costa Mesa. engmeenng a.divisi~n within the month," he said Bill Dunn, assls· JCeS U y Amco is shown.on Anthony's schoolofp~ysical sciences ..
tant city manager and director of . · campaign disclosure statement ~t that.time, McGaugh said he
community development. .,. as a $10,000 donor. However, it believed it would be the best way
The $2.8 million downtown pro-Lo H o d was revealed two weeks ago that to presel"\'.e t~e small school and
ject. which will be combined with we·r eat r er the donation was actually made integrate it with \he other relaled
the existing Lion's Park, has through a cashier's check drawn sct~nc~oncampus. . . . by Conrad. nowever, he received m1lia1 been on city drawing boards for Today, Cl)nrad said he hlls protest from both engineering
nearly two years. By Ml~!;~ ~em~,~VICH amended for the second time his faculty an~ stu<jents. Some or the
Dunn saldheis hopefulthatthe AlUtough many eity, school maJ·or political donor's stale· faculty satd they would look lor only structures on the block by See MERGER p At) March will be the existing Boys and business officials in Orange <See CONRAD, Page AZ) < , age
Club building and the library. County are ordering employes lo
He said there are only two lower thermostats to 65 degrees,
houses still occupied in the super others are still con~iderlng
block, and said those people whether to comply with an "or-
could be relocated, ''Jn a day or der" from the state Public
next wee~." Utflltles Commission (PUC),
The city has hired a Los
Angeles firm to find similar
housine in the area for the two
Romantic
PUr/deys
Featured
•
/
More l!hones .
Than 'E?eople
lnNeKp!r.t
'Chat ~ Change
FDR's Son Recalh Original
President Jimmy Carter's reV1va1 of ttie fireside chat
Wednesday nieht was not completely in keeping with the
tradition t>tiun durint the Depression by Pre1ident
Fra11klln Roosevelt. (Related story PaaeA•.t
F DR•a eldest so~, J ames, a Newport Beach resident,
said today be noticed one 1Janlflcant chanae during Carter's
"chat" with the nauon Wednesday nlibt...:.. the fire in the
fi~epJace wulll.
t
Al OAllYPlt.O'T" c
9y Tbe Attoclated Prep
New 1uppUa of natural au
are already nowlna eut, but the
eUect.a of the bitter winter of 1971 are 1preadina even raster.
Layoffs, for example, have
beaun reachlnc Into New
Entland -an area spared unttl
now because It uses little natural
gas.
ln Ohlo and western New York
state, two of ·the trardest·bit
areaa, calm weather and aUghUy
rlslng temperatures Wednesday
gave somethlna ol a respite to·
clean.up crews and river plloli
trylnc to deliver fuel. <Related
photo, A4>
But a new snowstorm, moving
through the West, promised
more trouble as it headed for the
Great Lakes. <Related story. A4)
And with an estimated 75 dead
a nd two million already tem-
porarily out of work nationwide,
officials an Pennsylvania and
New York expressed yet another
wor.ry ; they !ear major noods
this spring If a quick thaw sud-
denly melts the huee amounts or
s now on the ground.
President Carter s igned
emergency legislation approved
hr Congress Wednesday giving
lum \he power lo declare na-
tional or reelonal natural gas
emergencies and to order gas
moved from state to state to keep
homes and hospitals warm -but
not to reopen shutdown plants.
The legislation also allows ln·
terstate pipelines to tempor4rilY
. * * *
Fro.P age Al
COOLER ...
through this winter's deep
freeze.
If followed, the restrictions
would mean Californians may
Jive "below the comfort level,"
s aid PUC President Batinovlch,
but the hardships will be minor
compared to other areas of the
country.
A random survey or South
County residents today revealed
most homeowners are complying
with the PUC's reques t.
Bud Hopp, plant operations
director at Burrough 's Corpora·
tion in Saddleback Valley, said
t h e e lectronic co m ponenls
manufacturing firm has lowered
thermostats to 65 degrees. He
said all gas-related equipment i1;
shut down at night and that the
company has been on an energy
conservation program for the
past two ye~rs.
School district otricials seem
h esitant abo ut lowerin g
classroom temperatures . While
thermostats have been lowered
an the Capistrano Unified and
Laguna Beach Unified Dlstncls,
officials for the Newport-Mesa
d111trict said thermostats would
remain at 70 degrees inside
buildings and between 76 and 82
m swimming pools unless the dis·
trict 1s forced to comply with
PUC requests.
The PUC has requested that all
"luxury" uses of natural gas be
halted.
••'~\
\
\
TONIGHT
COASTUNE CC LECTURE -
··successful Preretirement Plan-
ning Semmar, ·· Hoar Memor1al
Hospital Meeting Room1 A and
B, 7 p.m.
"OLD TIMES" L South Coast
Repertory Theater, Tuesday·
Sunday throuizh Feb. 19, 8 p.m.
FRIDAY, FEB.4
'"PLAZA SUITE" -Costa
Mesa Civic Playhouse, Fair·
grounds. Feb. 4 and 5, 8:30 p.m.
KIWANIS TRAVELOGUE -
"Alpine World. USA," Eric
Pavel lecturer, OCC Audltorium,
8p.m.
OAANOlCOMT c
DAILY PILOT
n.. Or ..... ~ 0911'1,. ....... _,._ .._""'"'"' ~" ,,,.,...,."'"'"°' ..... ~-ttlll~~-........ -... ~-~"'~~:..=~~= lalft Vt ltty. Int .... ~..-.-Valin fftd ~ .. llCll•-c.M\l.A ........... 1-'*" -'-~~ ... ~'M """'"' ... ""'"' .......... -W.'11 ..., l4rwl CIMt;e Me ... c.itMr .... --.. ........... ~·-.... ·---·~ Vitt llf ... ldolll tftd C..-.. ~
T-"ll""'4 ···~ ~ ............. .................
cMrtltM.L.-IMC .. ,, ......
4.-IM .... Mt~ltl .. I"*'
buy cu Iii 1ome cuff at bllhU
prlca preva1.lJAI lD intrastate
markets.
Even before the sltnln•, one. ot
the biggest tntel'state natural fu
plpelines, Tran1contl.oental Gu
Plpt" Unt Corp,, reported lt com·
STRIPPERS GO ON
OESPiTE COLO--A3
pletecl arraJ\lement.s to oblaln
about 130 million cublc f~t off as
a d1y from the Paci le
.Northwest. Some of the gu wu
already movtns towhd Texu,
wbere TramCCl\tJnental ls based,
by W tdne.<tay nlght.
Bui tu moves at only 15 mUes an hour in pipelines. so the pro-
apect ol quick relief for curtailed
area• ~u •Utbt. •
Gaa companies served by the
Columbia Gas Transmission
Corp.1n Qhio were told to extend matnt.e~ level curtailments to tnd ital and commercial
custom for at least aoolber
week •
Reserve Board Chief
Vows Aid to Carter
~
Burns s11id the economy is
showing good growth on its own
and "it is not clear J...o me that any .
sUmulus is requlred, !'he said. "[
·would have preferred to wait a
little ... "
Gas T anker Moees Out
The first of 12 giant liquefied natural gas
tankers floats out under ita own power at
General Dynamics Shipyard in Quincy.
Mass. The ship wil_l be tested . before fi ve
•
850-ton atummum spheres are put in place
to hold 125,000 cubic meters of gas .. In the
foreground is the b arge used to bring the
spheres from South Carolina.
WASHINGTON <AP) -
Chairman Arthur F. Burns of the
Federal Reserve Board sa.id to-
day Praident Carter's $31 billion
economic program is an ''ineffi-
cient way to stimulate the
economy," but the board will
cooperate to create jobs and
speed economic growth in 1977.
Burns. a 12.year-old holdover
appointee o! the Nixon ad-
ministration, mixed both praise
and criticism of the Carter pro·
gram before the House Banking
Committee, sayinl he thinks
Carter came up wlth a .. prudent"
program c<;>nsidering the advice
he was gettlng.
'Baby Maker Wanted'
·•All in all . . . I think he has
done quite admirably," Burns
told the committee.
But he also said he didn 'l think
s uch a program is needed,
especially the ~rebates on 1976
taxes which the Carter ad·
ministration hopes to dispense
this spring.
"The Treasury doesn "t have
this money. The Treasury has lo
go out and borrow it," Burns
said. "lt"s not a good habit ...
tor our country to get into.''
Nevertheless. Burns said the
money-managing Federal
Reserve Board is maintaining its
target for basic growth in the
money supply for 1977 at the level
the Carter administration thinks
is necessary to support its pro·
gr am s.
Bums· statement to the com·
miltee was his Cirst public reac·
lion to the Carter economic pro-
g ram b eing debated by
Congress. While Burns doesn't
need to approve Carter's plan for
it to become elfective, the
board's money growth policies
will be a major key toward the
program's success, if Congress
enacts it. ,
Fro.Page Al
CO NR AD •.•
ment to sbow the Am co contribu·
lion as coming from him.
The other two witnesses known
to testily Wednesday were John
Bathen and Martin Kirschner.
both of them $2,500 contributors
to Anthony.
The newly elected county
supervbor amended his own dl11·
closure statement this week lo
show the Conrad political invest·
ment as well as loans received
from Fullerton attorney Michael
Remington.
Remington is on call today for
an appearance before the jury as
is Conrad aide Loran Norton.
Conrad said he was employed
by the Orange County District
Attorney's office from 1972
through 1974 u an undercover
agent. However. officials in the
office classily rum as a paid in·
former.
In' Ur15 he wu convicted of a
Celony crime and sentenced to
three years probation.
Jn the past year his story has
been one of rags to riches, from a
threatened foreclosure on his
home In Anaheim to heavy cash
contributlona to political cam·
paigns.
He claims his sudden tortune is
the result of enriching real estate
loans brokered through Pension
Funds of America.
The company's activities are
under lnvestlg1Uon by a federal
_,and jury as well as tho subject ot various clvll sulta filed in
Oranae County.
At Conrad's alde as be waited
to enter the grand JUI')' room was
bl.I attorney. Blchard Donald.
On Conrad's behalf, Donald
Jut month flied a $170 million
law1uit a1aimt tbe dla\tlct at·
torney'• office that claimed
Conrad'• civil rlsbta bad been
violated throuth a aortea of al·
le1ed wire t1pplna lncldenta .
DEARBORN, Mich. <AP> -
After two miscarriages In 11
year1 or marriage, a Detroit·
area husband and wife have de·
cided to pay someone to have tbe
baby they can never have
together.
Over the past week, advertise-
ments in several Michigan col-
le&e newspapers have sought a
"donor" to carry and deliver, tor
a fee. the artificially inseminated
child of" Al and Betty.'' who wish
to remain anonymous. They said
they used the college press •
bee a use several large daily
papers refused to carry their ad.
An only child, Betty says ~ot
F ro• Page A J
MERGER •••
jobs elsewhere if the professional
school lost its status and was re-
dpced to a division of another
school.
McGaugh said the plan has
been studied by the Educational
Policy, the Graduate Council and
the Budget Com miUees of the
academic senate. •
Each of those committees sent
Mc:G augh a report staling they
were not in favor o( the merger,
he sa1d.
The plan was also reviewed by
the executive committee of the
academic senate, the committee
of industrial associates and both
'the graduate and undergraduate
councils.
None of those groups favored
the plan either, he said.
Although McGaugh is suggest·
ing that the merger be scrapped,
he said he will recommend a few
changes.
First, he said he would recom-
mend that an advisory board on
engineering be formed and that it
report to him. Such a group
would consist of faculty mem·
hers from several related schools
and also some external mem·
hers. including at least one from
the industrial community.
McGaugb said he would also
ask the engineering dean to work
on an academic plan for the
school wruch would take into ac-
count that it will always be a
small school, with no prospects
for great expansion.
However, McGaugh said he
will allow the school to fill the
two full time teaching positions
that have been frozen and might
be able to add more positions in
the future.
r ..... r ,,.Al
BLOCK •••
one," Dunn said jOday. •'It might
take some legal action, bot we
can't l\ave an old house sitUnC if\
the middle ol the project."
The downtown project includes
the constnactlon of a $500,000 two.
story fire ataUon, planned for the
southeast corner of the block.
City olftclals are also re·
furbishing the old Boys Club,
and WOt'k on that $40,000 project.
11 expected to be completed by
the end olth15 month.
"We've rebuilt the gyrn noor
and paf.ated the tn1ide of the
building," Dunn aald, adding
that some exterior work la a1ao
belnt-done on tho bullcttn1, wblob
will becofVe a communfty center.
..
hnving children has been the
"biggest disappointment of my
life. When you are in love w.ith
someone, it's important to give
that person a chtld. · ·
A University Hospital doctor In
Ann Arbor has agreed to perform
the insemination, and several
prospective donors have already
inquired, asking fees ranging up
to $S,OOO. including expenses, ac·
cording to the couple's attorney,
Noel Keane of Dearborn.
Keane said the action seems to
lack legal precedent In Michigan.
It may be the first time in the
state that a couple have made a
public plea for a woman to sign a
contract to bear their child, he
said.
"The legal questions we are
cerned about is paying. a f~e. to
_.,
/' , -... -
' .> .,,.. ;:r../. ·..:{
I ,,. .·
1 ·-=-. ..... .. . ..
" '
,
I I
I
' t.
. .., '
now
compensate someone tor aomg
this as well as assuring the donor
follows through on giving the
child up after birth," Keane said.
Keane said he assumes Al and
Betty would forma.lly adopt the
child after its birth. But he said a
"legal vacuum" exists in the
area.
Michigan Atty. Gen. Frank
Kelley has refused to give an opt·
nion on the matter.
··At first, it seemed bizarre and
far.out, although we imagined It
had been done quietly before,"
said Betty. "But all our friends
and family reacted nicely and
wished us well."
Al and Betty, a middle-class
couple in their mid-30s, contact·
ed Keane last September, after
several years of efforts to ar-
range an adoP,lion failed and Al
still had a desire to "have my
own child."
''He (Al) feels strongly about lt
being hls ba by and at least this
way it will be his," Betty said.
The only res\.J"i chon on a donor
is that she be Caucasian,
a lthough there are health and
other {actors, Keane said.
A fmal selection .. has not yet
been made, be sala, but a mar-
ried woman with children is un·
der consideration. Betty said she
prefers a donor who is already a
mother, so ''natural maternal iri·
stinct won 'l be a problem when lt
comes time to give the baby to
us."
The couple say they will tell the
child, when It is older, that Betty
is not its real mother.
·y ou can · _
o ut wi.t the net work s!
watch your favorite show while you record that progra m
you hate to miss ... sony beta.ma x:; d oes it all I
What happen• when your watching so you can 1ee It Hf' dl890f'lal Trinltron ecreert~
favorite TV ahow Is on at the agaill as often aa you like. So. with the Hme tharp, crisp
seme time as your wife"• or suppose you're watching a color whether you·re watching
your kids" favorite TV show? great program and the phone the actual at\ow or • tape. You
Or when the networks put two rings or company comer or the can't tell the difference!
great programs on at the same sink overflows ... Just pre1s
time? Somehow, you always the "record'" button. But what
mill 1omethjng. No more. if nobody's home •.. ?
Sonv '• revol utionary r· -··-==.i new TV re c ording system-Betamax~-rec;ords I ·;~ .. '!=I•
program• off one channel ~ ~-~ IT'S I.SY TO IUtL.D
white you"re watching another
channel. So whenever you
want. just pr.., a button and s•• the ahow you
recorded-the one you 1lwaY1
miased beknl
-.
... ~ °'\ • I (t• t
A VIDIO U fll UlliRY
llCORD WHIM HOIODV'S SQund hard? Ira not! You1t
MOMI With Betamax• you no q\llckly tee Bttamax" Is as
longer have to choo•• easy to oPtrat• u an audio
between your child"• school cassette ,.co,.der. And )ust
play and a special program. Ilka a CMMtte recorder. ~
Because Betamaic'9 hH an can u98 the blank cat1ettes
automatic; timer you Mt luat . over and over-we've got
like an alarm clod<. It'll start eJCtru rigtlt here In our TV = Wl'\enever you want. department. aut 1011'18
up to an hOur and lhut caaaettee you'll want to kMP.
ncOIDWMATYOUMl f off. Whtn Yo\J get~. your Programs Ilk• the moon
AMD WHAT YOU DOM"f Ill taped program la ready. to pl'y landing or the flrat Sup..-
~
Of cQtff'le. Betamax can 1110 b1ckl Belt of all. you ••• Bowl. Afld who knowt wtllt
record th• 1how you're ev.l'Ythll'IO °" Sony'• bnlllant Wiii b9 on TV rn v-ara to ootnel ~ ....... __,._.IMIWlllnMlllft!B'CPIR"""
r
275 East 17th St.
Costa Mesa
Mesan Gets
Sentence
In Slaying
A Costa Mesan who ended a
quarrel with bis girlfriend by fir-
ing four bullets into her head was
aentenced Wednesday to bet.ween
three to five years in state prison.
Orange County Superior Court
Judee Frank Domenichini or-
dered the prison term for Charles
Edward M08telle1. 44, of 2182
Rural Lane, after a jury in his
courtroom found the defendant
1uilty of v o lunt a r y
manslaughter .
Mosteller was booked on
murder charges last May 20
1!'hen police called to the home
found the body of Sblrley Mae
Forman, «. sprawled in her
bedroom.
Police said Mostelle r told
them: "The truth or the matter is
I shot the damn broad four times.
'm just sorry I didn't kill her
ith one shot." They said he had
een drinking heavily in the
ours before his arrest.
Mosteller 's lawyer told the
ury that hls client acted in self
efenaa when he saw that Mrs.
orman was armed with a knife
ith which sbe in!lictef•a cul on
s right cheek.
Mosteller is expected to ser.ve
Tbe eommlt••""' wu mml4
b1 ~ IUt fall to •WdJ tlae Probleml that have artaen since
tb• Po1Ul Servlee ••• •tabtlibed • yean aao .. a
IOHrGIDSlt torpol'&Uen •. It It
boldlnl a Hrt" of biartn11 around the coa.ntry.
One ot the only soUd recom·
mendattoaa came from the
Greater San Francllco Chamber
of Commeree. wblcb "'C that 12,440 post offices be e ,
2,000 others be cloud or con·
aolldu.d and that mail be de-
Uvered only on weekdays ln
cities and twice a weet ln rural areas. The chamber also aug-
1ea ted that a uae~· fee be
chareed for dell very to the door.
There were few bright spots in
the testimony.
Ethel Simon, office manager
for the Callfomia Federation of
Profess ional and Business
Women's Clubs, said she bu
oft.en paid the 25-cent fee for mall
marked "undeliverable as ad-
dressed," only to find that the
item was addressed property.
She also complained that let-
ter& mailed in Oakland, only a
few miles away, took as long as
nine days to arrive here. When
she complained to her letter car·
r ier. s he says be told her,
"You're damned lucky to aet
mail at all today."
Floyd Matson, a reUred busl·
nessman, told commissioners he
has been tmable to shut off a flood
of request.a for donations. He said
he was forced to ask California
Sen. Alan Cranston for help after
h~ got 183 such requests last
year.
Philip Steinberg, a shipping ex-
exeutive, told the commission his
firm uses a private air courter
because lbe mail can't guarantee
prompt delivery of important
shipments.
Problems facing the Postal
Service are legion. A huge deficit
continues a lthough the work
force has been slashed by S0,000
and the price of a first-class
st amp has risen from six cents to
13cents.
In addition, private couriers
and delivery services are gnaw·
lng away at it.a customers and
future logses to flectronic data
transmission in place of mall are
estima ted in the billions of
dollars.
bout four years in prl~o on~ fl anslauahter convic "tb4t t
xact span of time not be
. hSpored
Chilly End nown until tbe new determinate
enteaclng law takes effect July .t.
Marine Killed • I'!' lo Hit, Run
~ ~ Tbe U S. Marine Corps says a
l arine killed in a bit-and-run ac·
dent at Camp Pendleton was a
.year-old Wisconaln man.
~ The victim of the mishap ls
C P e ter T . J ohnson of
lld.i.son, Wis . A 6CCOod alaHae.
. Kenneth Scbwtllkert, 19, ol
ctor. Minn., it lo satiafae\Or)'
diUon In the ~e hospital
Ith injuries from the Tuesday
t,ight incident.
,. The driver or a van, PO 3 C
Gary A. Waller of lhe am -
fbibious cargo ship Mobile, wu
tater arrested in connection with
e accident. as was a shipmate
ho was n dlng with Waller.
RICHMOND, Va. CAP>
-T~cal flab have been
spared a nea r-certain
death-by-thermosta t in
Virginia .
Gov. Mills Godwin. pro-
c I aim Ing a n energy
emergency in the state,
last weekend ordered most
busineaes to operate no
more than 40 hours a week
and to set tb•lr
therme>1tats at no more
tbu • dearee:S• Pet abop
owners proteated that
froplnl ftah would perish it they had to follow the
tovemor"a orders. State officials said Wed·
neaday that busineasea
whose inventories would
be adversely affected by
lowered temperatures
may le1ally exceed the
85-degree limit.
Slaariag tlae Be~la
It was cool eltough for a coat, but warm
enough to wade, barefoot, when this
Orange Coast woman went for a stroll on
the beach Wednesday evening. Sea gulls
didn't seem to mind sharing the beach
wtth her.
Grove Owner Gets Wish
But Preserve Cancellation COata $155,500
The owner of a 33-acre El Toro
orange grove, who fi rst tried to
have his Jand lifted from an
agricultural preserve six years
ago, gothia wish Wednesday.
But Powell West wasn't over-
joyed about an order by Orange
2 Arrested
In Laguna
Drug Raid
Two men were jailed by
Orange County Sheriff's officers
on drug cha rges Wednesday
night after a raid on a South
La1una home whlcb .alleged!)'
yielded cocaine and marijuana
valued at $CO,OOO.
De pqties said they werA
backed by narcotics offlceitl
from Oxnard in a raid that led to
the arrest.a of Forrest Cenyon
Ludwig, 28, of 31835 Hedae St ..
South Laguna and David Binford
Henry, 29, of Tustin.
County SUpervtSors that be pay a
$1SS,500 penalty -half the land's
assessed value -for canceling
the preserve agreement before
Its 10-year expiration date.
The grove ia located near El
Toro and Trabuco Roads and ls
bisected by Aliso Creek.
West's attorney, Cecil Wright,
asked tbe board not to impose the
$155,500 penalty, contending
West never enjoyed the property
tax benefits to which he was en·
titled while 1n the preserve.
County Coumel Adrian Kuyper
said county officials erred in not
extendine those tax benefits, but
supervisors, by la w. couldn't
rescind the penally.
According to s late law,
agricultural preserves are al-
lowed lower property assess-
ments ao their owners can cot>-
tinue farming.
Without. those benefits, the
led Would be asaested at lts hlghest and best uae, county of.
flcials explained, and would
make farming Wlec<>nomlcal.
Wrtabt explained the PreMrft
agreement started in 1988. But by
1972 development began occur·
rine nearb.I1 creaUng drainage
problems, wrtgbt continued, and
West learned of county plans to
extend Trabuco Road lhrougb b1a
land.
It was then that be sought to
cancel the agreement, Wright
said.
Al the same time, be said, the
county assessor refused to re-
cognize the preserve agreement,
conteoding it did not meet the re-
quirements, and property asaesa-
ments increased.
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich
said West "certainly had some
unusual treatment" and indlcat·
ed be wu sympatheUc.
But Board Chairman Tbomu
Riley said the board had no
choke other than canceling the
preaerve and Imposing the
penalty.
DAILVPfLOT
Causes
Analyzed
A MtuloD Viejo earth 1l1de that
ctoaed two lanes of Trabuco Road lut week IDd forced tbe evacua·
tlon of ftve families may bne
1eolo1tc cauaea, an Oranse
County tolls ~said Wednel-
day.
Rick Mun.son, couhty chief d
earth lde:nces, told county plan-
nlnl commtutoaen It appears
tbe allde may bave beeft caused
by vertical ~k fractures that
left tbelOU Ulistable.
And tbe problem likely was q -
gravated by residents watering
their lawns along Via San
Gabriel on the hillside above,
Munsooaaid.
Misaioo Viejo Company of·
ficia.la, who called the Jan. 2S
slide the worst in t he com·
munlty's l~year history, earlier
blamed the slope failure on re-
cent rainfall.
Mumoo said that still may be
tbe cause, or a contributor, but
be said be believes the failure
was. the result primarily of
vertical cracks 'in underground
rock.
Munson said a company COD·
sultant ls now studying the cause
of the slide along with the area's
geology. And be told 'Com -
miasiooers it ls likely the rock
strata pattern covers a large
area dtbe hilltop development.
He was quick to note, however,
that ao far there bas been no
evidence of danger to any of the
lots or homes.
Apparently, be continued, aoUa
engineers and geologists were
unaware of lbe underground roct
problem when the development
was designed or the slope could
have been shored with pillnp.
Repair work on the slope Iii
.iow under way, Munson said, and
be complimented the company
for ita efforts. While both the"COm-
pany and county offlclala agreed
on the best method of ~.
Munson said ther e still Is a
"calculated risk" slides could oc-
cur again.
In the meantime, tile five
famWes evacuated from their
homes are being housed tem-
porarily by the Minion Viejo
Company at Laguna Hilla Holl·
day Inn.
Disaster Told
SACRAMENTO CAP > -Presi·
dent Carter baa declared 14 more -
Nortbem California counties dla·
aster areas because of drought
damage to livestock rangea,
state olflciah said today.
Officers said they found five
ounces of cocaine and 20 pounds
of marijuana in the Ludwig
home. They said that they also
confiscated $5,925 ln cash.
Semi Annual Sale!
Both men were Identified today
as suspects !Ong sought by Ven·
tura Q>unty lawmen for their aJ.
le1ed involvement in the beach
dru1 trade in that area. They are
held l,n the county jail with ball
set at $50,000 each.
Oil C1aim Filed
CARACAS, Venezuela CAP> -
Occidental Petroleum Corp will rue a legal claim for $27.6 million
ln compensation for oil the com-
pany discovered prior to the
takeover of ita holdings by the
Venezuelan government al the
beginning of 1976, a Caracas
newspaper said Wednesday.
INCLUDES BEDDING BY '
The Goosephnple Girls
Strippers Chilly in PIUlly
PHILADELPHIA CAP> -
Baby, it's cold inside! Nobody
knows that better than the strip.
pen at the Troe Theater, who are
takiq it all oft thae niOsti In
se.desree temperatures.
• 'Somebody ouabt to 10 out
there in a Mt of tbermal un-
derwear wlth a drop teal and
strip out of them,•• 1u11eated Lee Ann, one of tbe entertalneN at
the 110.yeu-old burlesque boule.
"Maybe we could dance to ·rro..
ty the Snowman.
"I caupt a reallr b~d cold the
ftrat .two days they turned the
beat down," said strlpper Vlrso
Lamcat. "I came oft after my•~ and I wu sweating. ti.n I felt
the cbW. I started 1nlffUD1, tberi
anefflna. I .miaHd a abow and
had to go to the doctor's to eet a
, shot."
Troe manaeer Bob Stephens
: said that to save Oil oatu.ral il,U,
be bu Ht the .tbennostat as ow
•• he darea. A newsman'•
thermometer rttd ~ at the end
of the sianwty where the lf.rla
peel chl1Kn1b' baH.
· • t •m deptndln1 on tbe au-
d leoce to prqvlde tbeJr own
beat,"~aald.
Few pt tho Htlm•t•d ao
patrOM GD band for an ~
abow th week t.OOk thtlr coat.a
off. The lobby was 51 decteet.
LaJt weekend, Mt11 AD.ft~
... id tbit a• there wu a
t
s ize crowd on ha nd , "but t
couldn't see anybody. Then I saw
the y were a ll in the back
·aathered around tbe radiators."
Miu Lamont, who also
manages the dressing r oom
a rea, said the elrls "arc all pret-
ty aood sports about ft" and have
tound ways to compensate for the
cold.
••You're hesitant about taking
the nn~ece off ... s he said, then 0 we're uat sbalcln ' a UlUe bit
more. en we come off the
1ta1e, we just ioom into the
drcaatna room•." she s aid.
Jn the main dressing room, '
situated over the Troe 's boiler
and a coiy 74 degrees, Mlas La·
moot and Mila Ahn huddled wttb
a newsman curious about how a
sbowtJlrl keeps trom 1ettln1
i()C)Jeb\lmps wblle 1rlndin1 in
such weather.
The Troe ll heated by natwal
1u but dldn 't close last weekend,
d"plte emerae{lCY orders from
Mayor Frank Rizzo that non-
es1entJal •--·heated establlsb--
1nenta abut down.
Stepbens aald the gas company
''eallid me up and said when are
yqu ioini to close. and t told
them 'J>mt)' IOOn '."
Boalneo drop~ off 30 to 40
percent. Stephens aald. bec:awte
nel1hborhooCt ·re1taurant!J_ wboae
patrons Often fiocli to the 'HOC for
dM.ert. lbut doW~.
You won't have to think twice when you see the special prices we have
on Alreloom mattresses. Right away, you'll know that these prices are
unbeatable. Alreloom ts famous for fine, sturdy construction and
carefully-crafted quality. We have these mattresses specially priced for
aJlmited time only. So If you want a great mattress to sleep on, come in
to see us right away. Don't sleep on tt.
IODY IRACER SLEIP SITS
111 a Matbess & Box Sprint Set SALE PRICED 159.
nu. sm Mlltim & lo1 •Sit SALE PllCED 199.
llDl IZI MatblSS & Bix Spdq Set SAi.£ PRICED 269.
m sm Mattnu & Bu Sprlh1 Set W.E PRICm,359.
~
,
( IN SHORT.)
The Judae said ball was denied
because the charge was a capital
offense and the state bad abown
"proof ts evident and preswnp-
tlon great" that Dunlap and
Robison were S\liltY of the ~barges . Arraignment was
scheduled Feb. 10.
... -.P .. TnC
WASHING TON (AP>
Automatic pay raises of nearly
tU,000 a year for members of
COQgress and other top govern-
ment cftlcials are a step closer to
,.ality.
The Seaate voted 56 to 42 Wed-
nesday to kill an amendment • y
Sen. James B. Allen <D·Ala.> to
block the increases, which would
boost the lawmakers• pay from
$44,600 to $S1,SOO.
The bikes for Congress, federal
judges, Cabinet members and
other top· government officials
were recommended by former
President Gerald Ford and sup-
ported by President Carter. They
' take effect automatically .Feb. 3>
unless the Senate or House in-
tervenes.
C...,T1WF.U.
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia <AP)
-An attempted coup against
Ethiopia's 28-month-old Socialist
government was foiled today
after attackers tried to surround
the ruling milltary council's
headquarters, Radio Ethiopia
said.
The radio said there was scat-
tered and sporadic gunfire in Ad·
dis Ababa, but the city was calm.
, It said the military government
bad extended an exlatlng curfew
to 11 p.m. untUSa.m.
.41.W.• St-Set
DAR~ SALAAM, Tanzania
<AP> -Andrew Young, the U.S.
ambassador to the United Na-
tions, new into Dar es Salaam to-
day and then beaded ltl'aiCht for ta.e island ot Zamibar for meet-
. lDC• wttb TanUnla Preaident
Jalius Nyerere and other African
beads ot state.
Tbe4t-year-old black Gto111lan
arrived in the Tamanlan capital
after a tf.bour stopover in Lon·
don for brieflnp on southern
Africa by top Brttiab officials.
. &fl8•• ..,,,_ea ..
LONDOND£1lllY. NortlMrn
Ireland <AP> -Police laid today
tbey bad no clue. to the identity
ot a 8UDJD8D wbo shot and killed
DuPont's top man ln Northern
Ireland, Jeffreys. Al•te, .. be
walked down bla driveway to
tloee tbe sate.
A1ate WU tbe flnt lenior in·
dutrtalt.st to be UIUSinated
llnce Nortbem lrelud'a sec-tarian~.._. out in Loo-
doadeny in Aucult 1• wltb • el•H rights demoutratloo by Roman CatboUca.
Trail Bla:ers
After five days of isolation in what is not really a winter
wonderland, residents of rural Lewis County, New York,
finally are freed from the 10-foot drifts that shut their
roads. A Griffiss Air Force base snowblower and county
plow open Route 177 to the Jefferson County Line.
......
#
€h.at: (jGood iloll'
'II ASHINGTON <AP) -Hany
C. Butcber. wbo eolned tbe pbraae "flre.tde ebat•• for
P'rukliD D. ltooleveJt 44 yean aco. liftl bllh marta to Jlalmy . carter·· 11'1'1 "1'11on. ... ~ ... dJd • hell ol • fOOd Job.' Aid Butcher. "Ob.-lou'slJ'~ =be WU not U
dramatic u J\ooeevelt~ tie la not = tbe .ctor. But I tb.1nk tb4' ldent did a very aood job ()(
puttln• rltbtr eomplex
leclti.t.tve ~ms ln llmple
terms."
8trl'CllB& WAS IN the White Rouae as a broadcast newsman
wben .RooleYelt delivered bis
first llres1de chat over radio in aa.s. For Carter's debut Wednes·
day blaht, Buteber wu ln his
home ln Santa Barbara watching
televlsion. -
"I notice be bad a fireplace
right bandy.'' said Butcher with a chuckle.
Indeed. the audience could see
the fire u Carter sat ln the
library of the White House,
dressed comfortably ln sweater,
tie and alacks.
TBEaEIN LAY TOE dif-
ference between Roosevelt's first
talk March 12.1933. and Carter's.
Then, the audience could coly
hear Roosevelt's studied oratory
and imagine the scene. Wednes-
day. people across the land COU)d
1ee every Carter 1mUe and every
tlme he laced bls fln1ers or
touebed Illa cbln in thouahtfUl
1esture. \
Butcher. now 7S and rettred •
Hid he cannot understand why
the Carter administration is
seareblnl for a new phrase for
the perlodlc ttpO?ta Carter-plans
to make directly to tbe people.
"Wby do they object to the
'fireside chat' slogan?" be said.
"We've been uaina It for years."
BVTalEa WAS MANAGEa
of tbe Washington bureau ol C~
in the 1930s and handled
.Roosevelt's broadcasts for the
network. Before t.be second talk,
Butcher Inserted into an announ·
cer's script the words, .. from the
fireside of the White House to the
fireside of the nation."
Finside chat It became and
fireside chat it stayed. despite R~evelt's objection that it was corny.
Carter's first address, ranging
over national concerns. re-
sembled a state of the union
message. Roosevelt's was more
that of a teacher.
.,,You peo~le mu1t bave
faltb. . . . Let UI Ublte In
banlsblna fear," Roosevelt said.
'lt la )'OUr Pl'Obltm no Je11 tbM lt ls mine. ToleUler, we cunot fail ...
And Carter: ''Wltb faltb and
confldence lD each ~er, our dll,
ferences can be a tource of
personal f\lllneu and naUcDal
stren8th, rather than a cauae of
weakness and dlvblon. If we are
a united natlcm, then I cu b9 a cooct president."
Roosevelt dellveMd 26 flnllide
chat.a in bis 12')tears as pr~t.
He was workina on the 21th on~
day tn 19'5 when be died .
Dog Saves
Girl, Dies
In Blaze
ST. JOSEPH. Mo. (AP> -A
dog saved the life of 14-year-old
Lisa Danbury when fire roared
through her family's home Wed-
nesday, then perished in the
flames, firemen said.
Conspiracies Alleged
CARTE& SPOKE OF coopera-
tion, modest sacrifices, learning
to live thriftily and remembering
the importance of helping
neigbbon. His White House staff.
he sald, i.s leading the effort by
shedding such trappings of office
as chauffeured limousines.
"Government officials can't be
sensitive to your problems if we
are living like royalty here in
Washington," Carter declared.
He said he will demand the un·
thinkable: that government re-
gulations be cut down and writ-
ten in plain English.
Lisa was asleep in an upst.air&
bedroom of her mother's home
when the fire broke out shortly
after 8 a .m. She was bome from
school because of illneu.
FIREMEN SAID TOE dog ap-
parently JIJD'lped on her bed wi.en
he smelled smoke. Lisa woke up
and Jumped out a seeond-1Story
window to the roof of a porch.
Prober: Kennedy, King Killers Had Help
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
chairman of the House As -
sassinations Committee, given
two months to prove bis panel
should stay in business, says be
has new evidence that indicates
the kllle~ of John F. Kennedy
and Martin Luther King did not
act alone.
After.the House voted Wednes-
day night to continue the panel
through March 31, Rep. Henry
Gonzalez <D-Tex.), told re-
porters be has ne w, uncor-
roborated evidence of con-
spiracies in each assassination.
"WE BA VE THRESHOLD
evidence, not yet completely cor-
roborated and cross-checked,
that indicate the strong possibili-
ty that James Earl Ray did not
act alone" in the King slaying
and that Lee Harvey Oswald was
not alone in killing KeMedy, said
Gonzalez.
The assassinations panel was
established last September, but
controversies developed over its
request for a budget of $6.5
million a year and its chief
counsel, Richard A. Sprague.
The tw<>-month extension was a
compromise, and Gonzalez will
have to work with $84,000 a
month.
Gonzalez s aid the new
evidence bad developed since the
committee issued its preliminary
report in December. He declined
to elaborate, saying it might
jeopardize the investigation, and
he stressed that the leads still
have to be checked out closely.
BIS REMARKS conflicted
direcUy with a Justice Depart-
ment report leaked earlier Wed-
nesday that concluded Ray alone
killed King. ,
After a 11>-montb investigation,
a team of Justice Department
lawyers rejected theories that
Ray was only a cog in a con-
spiracy to assassinate the civil
rights leader.
The report, completed several
Youth Freed; Judge
·Queried in Sentence
COLDWATER, Mich. (AP> -A l&-year-old youth bas been freed
from the Branch County Jail aft.er serving five days of a 30-day sen-
tence given him for lying about bis age. .
District Court .Judge Earl W. Bennett, under invesUgation for al-
leeed misconduct in previous cases, refused comment when as"ked
W ed.nesday why he bad sent the
youth to jail for contempt of Jan. 216 to 30 days in Jail on a con-eourt. tempt charge by Bennett. Tbe
THE Yount. identified only
as a resident of Homer, Mich.,
was ordered freed after a hear-
ing befon Circuit Court Judge
Thomas Megargle, who said be
neverabouldhavebeenjailed.
MegargJe cited two sections of
state law: cme '1vtnc the Juvenile
dlvbloa exclusive jurlsdlction
over anyone under 17 and the
other requiring that courts pro-
mptly tnnafer to the juvenile
dlvl1lon any cases involving juvenlles.
The youth bad been sentenced
judge said that during arraign-
ment CJD charges of careless driv-
ing and driving while intoxicat-
ed, the youth falsely claimed be
was 21 and bad an Ohio driver's
license.
WREN IDS TRUE age was dis-
covet'ed Monday, the original
charges were turned over to
juvenile authorities.
The county's sheriff and pro-
secutor said they questioned tbe
Jail order, but carried It out for
fear they too could be charged
with contempt if they ignored it.
weeks ago, was withheld from
formal publication so it would not
infiuence the House vote, Justice
Department sources said. But
opponents of the assassination
committee cited the report Wed-
nesday. Supporters sald they
found the timing of the leak sus-
picious.
"I find it very irregular I
have not been able to see the re-
port," said Rep. Yvonne Burke
<D-Calif ..
Butcher. a Republican, said,
"Carter got across the words and
the information .... That's a
quality Roosevelt had , too,
altbouab be frequently took a shot at the rich and the powerful.··
DESPITE THE differences in
generations and concerns, the
first fireside chats of the 32nd
President and the 39th ended on
a similar up~at note.
She tried to coax the dog to
follow her, but be refused. The
dog died in the fire along with
another dog and two cats.
Lls a was the only one home at
the time of the fire.
Firemen said the fire was
caused by faulty wiring in a
kitchen appliance. The kitchen
was extensively damaged and
the rest of the. house sustained
water and smoke damage.
Western Federal Savings Presents
a Definition of Savings:
Snow Ealls Over Texa:s
What you do when you have a Western Federal
savings account of $1,000 or more. Western Federal
Capital aub m~mbers enjoy every free Western
Federal service plus members-only free offers, spe-
cial travel opportunities and discounts on products
and services. Ask us.
~ ,. . • '
r.
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PWa.w 'P..tiN'
Lynn Barillier, 13, of Glen-
dale, shot herself to death in
a fit of depression aver the
suicide of comedian Freddie
Prlnze. She left a note \n
which she said "If Freddie
bad lived, so would I."
Pilot Killed
POS'OON, Artz. (AP> -Pilot
Robert ff. Wooten of Ripley,
Calif., was killed when bb CJ"Ol>-
d ustlng plane crashed and
burned on the Colorado River In·
dian Reservation, authorities
said.
Thu
BEo~ Likened to Piper·
Gavemor, Democrall Grruled, Low by ADA
SACBAllENTO (AP) -Gow.
Edmund Brown Jr. 11 "th• Pled
Piper of Lowered Expeda.Uoaa, ''
and II le•dlnt tbe 1tate lecblablre awa1 fr'om lta natural
ltbel'al ._nJnp, Americana tor
Demoeratlc Action H)'I.
The ADA puhll&bed a ''mid·
term reDOrt card" Wednt!lllSAy in
wbleb rt 1•ve t.be Democrat.le _.eruor ooe A, two B'1, a C·
mloua and two P'•·
Democrat.I ln the Califorala
Le11atatun ncei•ed their lowell
Communist Cleared·
In Campaign Issue
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Tbe state Fair PoUUcal Practices Com-
mlsaloo says a Communist candidate for the San Francisco school
boarddoesn 'tb1ve to publicly ll8IQe allolbls campaian contributon. Tbe commia&ion voted 3-2 Wednesday to agree with the conten-
tion of Michael C. Miller that bis cont.rtbutors would probably face
reprlaalalf tbelrnamee w_eremad&public.
Mlllerfinllhed13tbinafieldollllnlutNovember'saeboolboard
electlao. The race wu nonpartisan. but be campalped u a member
oftheCommunlstLaborparty.
Tbe U.S. Supreme Court baa ruled that candidates of miQor
parties could be exempt from public dl.sclosure tf they show lt would
subJecteootrlbuton to harassment.
FPPC members Carol Brosnahan and Richard Carpenter and
chairman Daniel Lowemteinaaid, in part:
'"lbose who are publicly identift.ed u Communlata have a re·
asonable probability of being sub.Jected to barusment from the FBI
and other organizations or indivicluala, to problems in their employ-
ment and sometimea to pbyalcal violenceorthreatof violenee. ''
But Commlssloners Anthony Quinn and Patricia Lapan said
Miller failed to make ''afactualsbowingoftbreataorbaraaamentand
reprlaala."
er~ ln alx ytar• from ADA for the 1976 lelialaUve aessloo, but
tbey at1ll vote Wltb ADA tMee
Um es as ofteo u Republlcana.
The telislaUve acores were
bued on ftoor votes oo 20 lasuea.
Tbe ~called report card for
Brown was baaed on a combl.na·
lion of his slgnln,s, vetoee tpd
p11bllc statements:
Brown's grades, ln ADA's
eyea:
Anticapital punishment: A.
TuJuatlce: F.
Collective baraalDina: B.
Civil Uberties: B.
Education: C.minus.
PrivacyprotecUon: F.
ON THE legiala\ive scorecard.
Democrats earned an averaae
llberal quotient or "LQ'' grade of
74. Republicans averaged 2$.
Assemblyman Art Torres. ()..
Loa Angeles, scored the only 100
oa tbe ADA scale in 1976. The
preYioul year, eight Democrats
-1lx ln tbe Assembly and two in
the Senate -scored 100.
THREE REPtJBLICANS
scored zero : Sen. H.L.
Richardson of Arcadia. As·
semblymen Mike Antonivicb of
Glendale. and Bob Burke of Huntingtoo Beach, who was de-
f eated laatfall.
Figure skater Peggy Flem-
ing and her husband, Dr.
Greg Jenkins, are parents of
an eight-pound, 10-ounce
baby boy, Andrew Thomas
Jenkins. The former Olym-
pic figure skating gold
medal winner gave birth to
the child at Stanford
University Hospital.
Bodv DiBcovered
SAJ" DIEGO (AP> -Tbe lower half of a man's body wu
found floatinl in San Dte,o 8Q
Tuesday. AutborltJea said be
may have been the saUor
knocked off a tugboat wbeo a
tow line from an aircraft carrier
snapped Jan. 17.
A. Wate Outlook
. Said errifying SAVE -$140
SACRAMENT CAP> -A federal official is
calling Calllornia 's ater outlook "terrifying."
He says rati could become commonplace . throughout the stat wing the year.
This assessm t came Wednesday from
Robert Burnash, · ef of the National Weather
Service's River Fo ast Center.
"Soil moisture the lowest of record re-
servoirs are the owest of r ecord, and' the
snowpack is the I est since surveys began in
1930," said Burnash.
Tee.a Bdd fa et1t .... Datt ..
LOS ANGELES AP> -A 17-year-old'youth is
being held in tbe be g death of a woman and her
three daughters, pol e say.
Police said w. esday the boy, whom they
would not identify. ved in the neighborhood and wu booked for invqatioa of murder oo the basis
of statements be made.
Blllie CoWer and her
( State )
daughters were found de-
ad in their southwest. Los .... _____ ~,-An1eles bome Jan. 2a
J
when Mra. Collier's
estranged husband and
her mother knock~ on the door and were met by
2-year-old Celestine13lihop.
lt'mer DI~ Ol•lln•etl
SAN FRANciko--(AP> -The $235 milllon
federal project t4 divert water from San Lu.ls
Reservoir to San• Clara and San Benito coun.
lies ts being cb~ed oo grounds an environ mental impact re rt is inadequate.
The opposiU is ouWned in a lawsuit filed
Wedntsday ln U. District Court by the Environ
mental Defenae d, SlerTa Club and State or
Caltfomla. Def ants are officials of the U.S
Bureau of Reclamation. which plam the project.
2 0..r9NJ ta • ...,. 8•.,..11••
SAN DlEGO<AP> -Two men are charaed in
a new ~Y to amuaie 10,000 forbidden
Laetrile ptlla in" the U.S. from Mexico.
Federal pr'(lfecutora said Francisco Camarena
Luna, 22, of the ~er city ol Calexico, and Myron
Adam Knoepfle· of Stockton, Calif .. were ar-rested by U.S. tom1 hupeetors at Calexico u
they tried to over from Mexlcall with 500
vialt ol liquid etrtle and the pills bidden under tberearaeatol aar.
T-.~el2KWI• ..
SAN FRAN~lSCO (AP> -A San Francisco
1 teen-a1er wbo police said confessed to two
murders was c•victed of the sl8Yina• after a thne•y SUperi r Court bearing.
The 15-year d boy was found guilty Wednes-
day by Judie cia Mayer of the gunsbotslayings
last. November insurance executive Edwin T .
Golden and Oowe market manager Donal E . Smith.
I Cba.raa are ding a1atnat 11·year-old ·twin
brothers bl them
\
'
Simmons Mismatch
mattress set sale
$ 5 5 Twin, each piece.
Don't be frightened by the word .. mismatch". It
means that you're getting quality mattresses
and box springs with covers· that might not
have the same fabric. Simmons still puts the
same care and fine construction Into their
mismatched pieces. And, you spend a lot less.
Once the sheets are on. who will know? In:
Twin, each pleoe, $56 Full, each piece, $76
Buttery-soft queen
sofa sleeper 'in vinyl
$ 4 5 9 Regularly $599
There's lots of fashion in this piece of
furniture. Like intricate gathers for detail.
Round saddle-arm effect for a soft look ot
comfort. Plus. the long wear and good looks
of saddle tan color vinyl. Shouldn't you buy
now while the price Is so excepttonal?
Ask about our Termway. Sleep Shop
~~mMtS1~King~eset~~~~·~2;6;9~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~ 5'eep Shop ~
,
..
tlODI SUtiCOiDmlttee OD 'Militjiy ConatrucUOQ which
uuaualb" proceaea $3.5 btWon ln apendjngrequeeta.
1be vc>te came lD tbe face of vigorous oro-Slkes
Jobbjiq by defense eontracton, naval ancf mllltary
bue employe'IJ'OUps and ~en anxious to
push tbefrown 4Jstriets 'pork bari'el projecta.
lleanwblle tbe CommfnSon on AdmtnlstraUve
RevteW ii reac:l.JrtU ff!COID""ii>d.ttlona ln several ma· Jor areas of ftnuClal etblW riform lDcludlDI ftDan·
cial disclOIUl'e, outside income, acceptance of alfta,
foretan travel and use of tbe franking privilege.
fbe Sikes ouster, heavily 1upport.ed by the 128
new Democrats elected to the House In the lut four
y~an. may be indicative ii a new climate on Capitol
Hill and new hope for passage 8.nd enforcement of
some real reform measures.
Poinileu Risk
Once more a high-speed highway cbaae by
laW)Den bas resulted in ~tragedy.
Hope for Reform?
This time the chase was COnducted by Bcl'der P~trol officers pursuing a vanload of suspected 11·
legal aliens on, of all dangerous places, Ortega
Highway.
The injured vicUms were three South County
teenagers, aged 17 to 19, whose station waaon was
smashed head-on when the Border P~trol vehicle
crossed the center divider in pursuit of the van.
Action of the House of Representatives in strip-
ping~.~.: L.F. Sites (l>-F1L) of a key com-
mJtteec · hipralaesbopethattheHouseatloag
last may be ready to do something more
stringent than Jub offending members with a wet
noodle.
The young J)e9ple wound up in hos~tal. two gravely hurt. 'lbe aliens were appiehended. lkrt was it
worth risking the lives of innoceDt highway travelers?
The Border Patrol explains lts cars have no direct
radio communication with Sheriff's Department cars
that could bave beeft alerted to intercept lhevan.
Last year the House Ethics Committee cited
Sikes for us!ng bis office for personal gain in deals in·
volving Jand restrictions and a bank charter.
His punishment then was a reprimand by the
House.
But now a party caucus vote of 189 to 93 bu re-
moved Sikes from chairmanship of tbe Appropria.
That's too bad. Radio equipment is not that costly
and it probably should be installed. Until it Is, the
Border Patrol should take its chances on losing a few
of its quarries.
A Quiz
On People
And Places
(SYDNEY BARRIS)
Today's quh ls about
"dimensions," to test your
perception of populations and
sises, in terms both of people 'and
places. Half right la a commen-
dable score.
1. What are the five lldllUJllea in. the world bavtng the most
8"akers?
2. Comtime tbe populatlons ol
Europe, tbe U.S.A., Russia,
Africa, and Latin America; bow
does Oaia tatal COIDpaN with the population ol Asia? J. Wl111t are tbe most populom
cities oltheworkl, laorder?
4. What are tbe ftve lariest
countries In the world, by po-
crapblc .rea. In order?
5. In tbe U.S., <•> what la tb& pfoporUon of whites to DOD·
whites ot all other nffl; <b> tbe
proportion ot DOD-fum to farm
luiillea; (C) the proportion of
widowed males to widowed
femU.!
t. Bow would JOU rm Uae followlq lllaDdl la the world In
order ot de8eendlq abe: Cuba.
IHlaqd, MadatHc:ar, New
Zealaad.MdCeyllnT
1. How would JOU rut tbe
m•mberlbl» In the prinelpal re-UPm of tie world. ID~ m1ord•! • Combine tbe IUD bomiclde
rata ot Aultralla, Canada Den· mark, En1land and Wales,
France, Welt Germany, Inland,
and S.u.rtand; bow does tldl
total compare with the IUD
a.Gpaic:ldentelntbeU.S. f t . WbJdl ot tlile .-.. ba <•> the ~belt total crime rate; (b) tbe hi.,.. mardlr rate; <c> the
hi•btat nte Of rape: Cd) tbe
Deari
Gloomy
Gus
It is always irritating to
read columnists such as Norman Cousin-a calling
for extension of the
American demoqacy. He
seems to forget this la a re-
public and that many founding fathers con·
sldered democracy the
, equivalent of mob rule.
T.L.
blshest total rate of property
crime?
,10. Can you name the states
ba'finl tbe larlest percentage
1ain in populatMin tbe Jut half·
dosm years, in order Of rank?
ANSWEU
1. Cblnele. Eqllab, Rwsalan,
Spumb. Hlndll, I
2. 1be population ot Aala ls one.
quarter larsv than all com-
bined ••
I.~ Tokyo. New Ycft.
Pekblf, IADdon.
4. Ruasia. Caaada. People'•
Repabllc of adaa, U.S.A., and
Brull.
5. (a) IO pertent to 10 percent;
(b) 16 percent to' percent; (c)
aearly six tlmea aa many
wldowecl females u widowed
malel. •
6. • ... =ar ii larjer thm an u.. eemlliDed; tbm
follow New Zealand, Cuba,
lrelud, and Ceylon.
T. Christian, lluallm, Hindu,
Confucian, Buddblat.
8. Tbe U.S. sun homicide rate
ls nearly three UD* all the other
comblaed. t . <•> New Yen 11-te; <b> Oeor1la; (c) Alaata: (d)
Arb.ona.
10. Arbona, Plarlda, Nnada,
10.bo, Colonldo.
WASHINGTON -Hlih above
America's last untocubed wilder·
neaa in Aluka, oil company
planes are flying reconnalamce
mlssloos in search of a vast new
reeervolrotbldden oil.
Oil already bu been spotted
seepin1 out of the 1ound in small
pools, accord·
ln1 to our
sources, on
t b e
windswept
tracta of the
A-t--~ t l c
Wll.Slife
Ran1e. Tbe
oll companies
be1eve there
ma~ be aa
much additloaal oil underneath
the range u already bu been
t.pped for the Aluka pipeline.
Tbe bl&h.ftyint 1eololista are foeuam1 on a mauive, dome-
shaped ltrhcture underground.
which may be bldiDI a 1reat pool
Of valuable oil
Eavlroameatal 1roap1,
m•••bDe, me also been alert-ed ud an DND8tlnl for an epic
battle to aaV. the wlktemeu area from develapmmt. Tbey want to
protect tbe caribou herds, llant
polar bears and nockl of
wildfowl that m.te tbelr home
GD the Wlldlife Rani•· Meanwbile, U.. oU com~
are qw.tly ~ t&e IJt-
terior l>el'L. our 1oqree1181, to
OP8 up tbe Wlldlif• Baqe for exploratory drlllina. For the mo-
ment: the oll liants have nm Into a wad. Our sources llY the In·
terlor Dept. baa refund to con-
sider any leaslna of the Arctic
Ru1e because lt may be de-•tin•ted u a wildemea area.
Tbe declaioa ls now up to Cecil
Andrus, the new Interior
teeretary, wbo wu a champion
of envlronmentallsta u aovemor
ottdabo.
(JACK ANDERSON)
The oil companies turned to the
Wildlife Range after disappoint-
ment in ~er area of Arctic
Alaska, the Naval Petroleum
Reserve No. 4. 'lbe oil barons had
hoped to flnd bUllona of barrels of
oil there, but our sources say
some of tbe IDOlt promlatng sites
bave now been drilled and found
dry. Tb.is caused the Industry to
send ltl = over the .Arctic Wildllfe e. where another
battle la aha g up between the
need for energy and environmen·
tal protec:tioo.
PANAMA P&OPAGANDA:
The U.S. embassy In Panama
may be letUnl ready to prepare
the reaideats Cl the Canal ZOne
for a transfer ot sovereignty to
Panama. At least an Internal re-reeommendl that the State
W8" a propaganda cam-
to sell a new treaty to the
Wed residents.
We recently cited clusifled ~te Dept. cables which report-
where he will au.ct a dlnner-
party rlvalln1 any held in
WMblnltOO or.lll New Yort.
A\ one such party, llveo by a w~ahbJ Palestinian bust· neumu, LebaMM ~ a touch Ol European breedlnl bl their
blue eJeS CODVerMcl ln Fnncb
wUh well-edueated lraqia ~ fl'om UMir' land by tbe JlevolU•
tlonary Command Council.
llrttilb dd Amerle• cliPlomatl, an aHlaltect , a cbtld·
~Arab.ommwbo
DeYer ~velll • aow Paril'
belt ~---bit IOID4lbow eome ~ In Abu Dbabl to
bilP :s tlata 4*11 pltmttlve
tnW ,.. • ---utkJn illllbe piiddfcwMr....._.
ed that the economy bl Panama
la "fiounderlng" u a result of in·
ternal mismana1ement. To
divert the pe0ple'• attenUon
from tbeir growing economic
problems, Panama •a military dictator, Omar Torrijos, la ex-
pected to beCiD clamortnc more
loudly for sovereignty over the
Panama Canal.
President Carter, who wants to
sign a new treaty in the exploslve.
Canal 7.one. will find hlmwJf
walkin1 • diplomatic ttchtroPe between Panamanian demands
and U.S. expectatiolll.
Most Canal Zone residents, the blt~rnal atudy reports vie• the
State Dept. with 0 1uspicton, mis·
trust, and resentment." They ac-
cuse lt ol ''selling out to the gov-
ernment of Panama."
Therefore, Americans living in
the Canal Zone "represent one of
the most volatile anti-treaty f ac-
tions.': 'lbe clilftate In the Canal Zone, the report contends, is
"tense," "fearful" and fraught
wttb "unceriainty."
The averaie Canal ZoDe resi-dent, the study says1_ "does not
like to reaard blmaeu aa an ex-
wn ln national '
-which, un-
blm, be la. Given
um~emcJUonal buildup,
cooditiom and the · latlon, violence possibility to be ..
-·
' ,
State Dept.
tbat tbe re-
by an intern
influence '
.S. policy. The
ey, ii tbe son
NEW HAVEN, Coop. <AP> -The
cold winter has been• toup on .lean
Rogers, but her warm amile aUU
glows.
At 32, the mother of three teen-aae aons ls an invalid 1uffertna from multiple aderosls. Her hoaband ls
Jobless. Tbe latest blow came when
heroldestson, Wayne.18. wulaldoll
from his construction job because of
the weather. He bad quit school to
help the family.
TllANKSGIVING AND Christmas
were bleak at the family's blue CClt·
taae in ~rue old Saybrook on Lone Is Sound. Tbe llvinl room sofa and chairs were ,.-orn from age.
There was no food. no fuel, not even a
telephone. A CB radio WU there for an emergency. ,
Just before Thanksgiving, Mrs.
Rogers' husband, Waype, 38 lost his
job working on a fishing ~at for
another man who died suddenly.
Rogers said they had planned to
become partners but the boat owner's death came so unexpectedly the legal
wort never got dope.
TllZ FAJID.Y'S INCOllE from
•elf are and Social Security was $3'6 a month, two-thirds of It gotni for rent.
That left a little over Sloe> for food. fuel
and other utilities. It w9uld not stretch that far in the coldest of Winters.
Some women fro~ the cburcb
· brought food, turkeys tor 'lbanbgiv·
ing and Christmas. The Salvation
Army chipped in.
"We were out of mobey all winter,"
said youq Wayne Rogers. "We
burned firewood in the fireplace for
. '
three months. We got lt from trees we
cut down In my cousin's yard."
WAYNE, ms FATBEa, and two
brotbers, Tony. 15, and Jobn, 13,
alternated lltaying up nlgbts to keep
the f"are going and Mn. Rogers warm unW a tew weeks ago when the town
purcbaaed fuel oil for the family.
Roaen and his sons fed her because
of the IPMIDS in her bands.
Mrs. Rogers Just underwent an
operation at the Yale-New Haven
Medical Center to cut cords In her
spine to release her legs which bad contracted to her stomach.
'"Tiii: DOCrOa TOLD me she ha.d
pain, but she wouldn't admit It at
home," said the elder Rogers aa be
held his wife's hand at her bedside.
Wbile be was there, somebody bad
called bi.I brother about a possible job tor him.
"It's pretty bard," be said, "but
we're getting by. Anyway, we're all
together'. We're still here. That's one way to look at it." .
THERE JS MO&E surgery
scheduled for Mrs. Rogers.
"Bat I'm IOiaa &o eo)lo1X1e. first." she said softly.
Missile l.aanclied
V ANl>ENBJtllO AIR FORCE BASE (AP) -A llinuteman m
llltercmtinenta ballistic missile
wu suceessful1y test launched
bJ tbe Stratealc Air Command
here Tuesd•y Dleht, the Air Foree said.
Nears
Sporting GOod8
is now located in the Newport Beach rI'ennis Club with an
expanded pro shoP
Try out any Neah demo racket on I.tee ball machines.
Open to the Public• Come on in and browse
The Newport Beach Tennis Club Teaais TeadWw Center ls
open to the public off ertng Group Lessons Private Lessons
Adult & Junior Programs
Ball machines and video tape
analysis with
all lessons
Cocktail lounge &
dining room are avatlable for
after lesson
relaxation.
Pb hUndreda o1 other IBDI a fumitWe. oo.. d'a1t, etc.
Merchanch9e ~ from out-of.pawn, bankruptdaa. oourt~?dered
RCA'e molt uomattc TV ..t
Automatic contraet/colof
. "tracklftg "' circuitry UH
brfghm.e, oontrmt and oolot togettw eo that atl ttN'M ..
balanced eimutttneOUety. 100.
IOlld ltat8 ~for reuablltty 80 no tubes bum out
· FREE ADMISSION
RCA .15" {diagonal
COLORTV ·
100% dd ltSe. SuP« AccuOob-bla nwrtx PtCture tube. Acc:uMltlc
IV one button control of cob' ttnt. brightnw Md oontrat. Aulomlac fine tunfl)D.
• ,:. ..
·i .
,
.. ....
COASTLINE COMMUNITY
·.COLLEGE
10'l31 Sldfer Ave.
Fountain Valley
963-0824
ln-daSs registration
untl dass full -or
teacher halts enrolla.nt.
TV courses: registration
acc,.,ted through March 1_8
Now -Fel.wuary 18
MDn.-Thun. -8:30 a.m •• 7 p.m.
Fri. 8:30 a.m. -2 p.m. ·
C:OUnsetang/ Adm. Bldg.
. . '
•
..GOLDEN WEST
COLLEGE ·
15744 Goldenwest St.
Huntington leach
893-6581-82
Fri., ·February 4,
9 a.m. -12 noon
c:ollege Center :
Feb. 7-10/14-17 .
10 a.m. -8 p.m.
Administration Bldg.
'Consider Television Courses
For Credit.
Ten Select Ions.
Telecourse Refi1ISfratlon Open
( .
' f • "
Through · March . 18th .. . ,,
At . Coast llne q~mmunlty College
, .
963-8824 '
'• .. It
t
j
A . ~ .
IEIRUARY 7th •.
I t
Got a problem? Thftl wrUt to Pat Dunn. Pat 10iU cut red tGJ)!t, gtttinq the~· and action you
need to aolve 1nequttie1 In govern~ and biui·
neu. Mail ~' quationJ to Pat Dunn At Your
Berviu, <>range Coast Daily PUot, P.O. BOz 15'i0,
Co.ta Meta, CA 92Q6. lnclucU ~' telephonl
number. The ·colu"J'ln appear• doilJI except
Satutda11i.
D&AJt PAT: I bne a dulliCe to iDYelt in a 4'peddnko'' P1Dblill macblne Wta a frleDd ot inlnie.
He telll me that thla would be a lood inveatment u
far aa tuea are concerned, ancf tbat eam1ncs are
nry IO()d. Is tbiltnie!
· H.W.,JlisslonViejo
Pnbably aot. ne State AUoney Getleral'• Of·
Ike recently fUed nit •CalMt Manna hderaa-
Uoaal, Ille., allealag t.laat Wa firm ud l&I put ud
prnea& pnslduta made fa.lie or mJsleadlq nate-
mentl to lnvettor-parcbasen al their eleetrollle
pacblDko macblnea. Tbe 1alt labeled u etttaer fabe
or m~ lta&emeata t.bat o.-.nlllp al the
maetdaa for bulaesa parpoee1 woal4 provide tu
eumpt advuta1e1 and tbat tbe Income from
eperatlag the macblnea 11 not greatly affeeted by tbe
ba1laeu receaioD.
TM M*Dey General ukecl &lie C09J'& to eejolD
tile ddendutl from m akJag uy fu&ber alle1edly
f me or mlllead(Jll 1ta&emeat1, &ad to levy civil
peaalU• ol SZ,511 for eacb aacb atatemeat already
made. Tbe Hit also claims Ute defeada.Dta P'OSSIY
exaHerated the po&en&Jal lacome Ute macltiHs
eoald generate, Hd falsely repc-'eleated the firm as a
rapidly growlDI baterna&lonal eompaay. Tbe
pacldnko macllJDes, wblcb l!IOlcl from t8t5 to St,•
eacb, ue vertical plaball macblnel wblcb bave loDC
been popular la Japan.
Treat Pol11settfa Uglat ..
DEAR PAT: I was glvenaCb.Aatmaspoinsettia
plant in early December, and it's atill bloominc.
What can I do to pl'olong its life, and la it possible to
keeptbesameplantallveunWnextCbristmas?
J.H.,CostaMesa
Experts advlM keeplal a pOIDlettla plant la a
very UC)at area (not direct nnUgbt), away from H·
ceHlve beat or cold dralta. Wa&er oace a day and feed IDOlldaly wttb a water-aohable plut ferUllser.
WJlea yoar plant ttoPa Oowedal. C1d tile stema so
Uiat only six 1.aebet of tlle plant rematu. Keep It
' among your Other .,1uta, and placlt off any new
-.O&s that appear la Aap.storearly September.
Pat tbe polasettla oa a careftdly timed nUoa of
Ugbt beg.lnnlag ID mld·Odober. It sboaht lane abcMrt
14 boan of darkness every nlgbt. U can be kept oat·
doors daring tbe day, and la a doset or otber totally
dark place at nJgbt. When December roUa aroud
again, Id tile plant have more light and it wU1 bloom
for Christmas. Once this polasettla ls established, It
also can be b'IJl.lplanted oat.aide ctarlDI l&I clormut
seasoo after JOG cat back the stem1.
Callffl 11.U Ad1'ertun1e11i•
f DEAR PAT: Isthereanywaylcanstopthefiood
·of advertisements that are mailed to me? I would do
anything to have this mall discontinued and I have a
hunch that my post office would like it just as much
as I would.
G.L., Newport Beach
Write to Direct Mall Markdiac Anotlatloo.1731
• K S&. N. w., &tlte tis, WasllJDgton, DC z:1111, ud re·
q.eat a 0 drop form." FW It out and retuna to DllMA.
Tlall trade uaoclaUoa tben wU1 uk Its aearly z: ....
member compaDJH to atop aendtng yea ad1,
eatalogl aad sollcltatlou. Since two-tblrdt of all
•direct mall advertisers belong to DMMA. tills move
·011yovpartahoaldellml.DatemoetolyouuwHted "mall
BEICON BAY ENTERPRISES
Announces its Newest Auto wash
GRANO OPENING
OF
COSTA MESA AUTO WBI
BRING THIS AD FOR A
FREE
CARWASH
(NO MINIMUM)
Frtt Coffee, Cookiet,
Punch, Balloons tnd lollipops
. GET THE ANSWERS AT OUR
·FREE LAWNOWNER'S SEMINAR
CONDUCTED BY A SCOTT'S FACTORY Rl!PRESENTATIVE
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11th 10AM to 2PM l
... and . we will be giving away ( ~)
FREE <8 SPREADERI AUlliORIZEDRETAILER
dlChOlidrl'S
but frllnd I hllU bugs I good news
weedl get out for dlcllondr1
Scott• Super 8onu1
for Dlehondl'a doea a
lot for your lawn. Pr ..
vent• undealrable
winter weed• from
aproutlng, dearl out
weed• that •• already there and control•
many troubleeome In·
HCtl. Reg. 18.95
1411
I
bigger tools
tor better grooming
Deluxe oversize garden tool•.
Choose cultivator, tranapl1nter,
trowel or weeder. Tough pollahed
steel blade• end wOOden handlea.
Reg. 1.n each. ' ....
99° ....
Scott• Super Hatta
Plus take• a no non-
ae nae approach to
things you don't want
In your lawn. It almply
ellmlnatH the ex-
istence of unwanted
weeds and bugs. An
ex<*lent product fOf
grass and clchondra.
Reg. 9.95
711
Just a llttle .
around the edges
Anvil style pruner keeps eve~hlng
loot<lng neatly groomed. Comfor-
table grip. euy to use to there's no
e11cuH for notdolng the Job. 13532.
Reg. 2.99
111
llnotty, but nice
Accent a favorite houae plant with a
be1utlfully mid• macrame hanger with
bead• and tUHla. Hold• up to an·8
Inch pot. 1989 3••
bangles, beads, buutlful
A hand woven wOf"k of art to provide a
cozy home for a apeelal houM plant.
~a atrong, hold• up to a 10 Inch pot.
1994 5••
If you love your
dlchondra lawn, and
who doesn't, treat It
with Scott9 Bonu• for
Dlchondre. Your
reward wm be a rulh,
thick, green lawn fre;e
of apotted apurge and
crabgrasa. Control•
weed•, d~'t bum.
Reg.10.45
711
native ceramic pots Y•. the.. t>Uutlful creation• are
made right here In Callfornla. Aa-
aorted a1ze1, shapes. eolora an tex-
turea to ahow off your favorite
plan ta.
3~
' MLUU <AP> _.,Tb• ... , •• ,.old wldow or
• World War I tblD• IC•
'Eddie Rlck•nbacttr
• 1bot beraelf to deattl
Wedlieeday nllbt. Police
• ftPOl't. AutboritJea Hid
• A•etalfie aicbi•eeker bad been depreued
about herfalllD& health.
TACOMA, Wub. <AP>
-Col. llano. c. Aadl'1ll,
84, who wu tn charge or
iHeurttyforthe Ned war
criminal trials at
N...-.mber1, died Tuea· Ye.r's Jled day at Mldl1an Army
;Jledlcal Center. Terry Grant, Costa ~ -Mesa, has been
• PITl'SBURGH <AP) chosen Pharmacist
· , -Judie 8amael A. of the Year by the
.; WelN, 74, who served in o r a 0 g e c 0 u 0 t y Conir-a and worked as Ph . :a profesalonal football armaceut1cal As·
referee before taking a eociatioo. Cited were
; place oo tbe Allegheny bit activities in or·
,county Common Pleas ganizing six special
'bench. died Tuesday. programs for the as·
' --soclation. • NEW YORK <APJ ----------
Edward AJbert Tbom·
mea, 58, the actor and director who ta11gbt ~Carol Channing and
!Faye Duna·way, died
Tuesday. ..
: PALM SPRINGS (AP> ~ -Vera Fos Blamber1. =~•dow or the forlJ)er
:boa rd ch at rm an or ~UDi versal Studios. died
: TUeaday at her home ln
~e exclusive restdentlal
: area of Rancho Mirage
~oearbere . .
' .
rpeakers
:service Set
,I The Orange County
Trial Lawyers Associa·
Alon bas organised a
t.peakera bureau to give
lectures at no cost to In·
·terested groups
h hrougbout Orange
County.
Attorneys in every
field of law will be
available to speak. For
, rurther information call
542·7104.
Death Noilre•
llltANT'Z
HARPER W l'RANTl. ••Iden! ol
Le V-. Ce : tanner rH!d9fll of 402
Cerlotte, '"-1 11 .. c11. CelHomle.
9orfl ,,_., I, , ... , 111 Mt Pll4tr-. ·-L P....., _ • ., l'e~y 1, 1'7'
''" W0041 M•mMl•I Co•IV•ln <•nt •H09oltal In LA Verne. Ce. Gr-.ted
,,,_ ...,_ Co119911 end recelwcl
olller 0.9r..-lrom Ille Univ 01 0¥<.., Mel ... UN¥. of Celtfwnl•.
llWll*ler. TllUIM et LA v.m. c.I .... tow_.,'""'-IWl4I' ID ltl7 Wflefl lie
...,.... .. .,. ........ City~·
tit ... , 111 *1,. -ci lo Htw00<1
a.Mii ""'" -~ 990 Member Of Ille ~.n.,, Olun:ll In Newport •e.e<lt He..._llft ....... Mn l'.,n
I' r eM2; --...:itrten llleeft Eno\ ol S.tft ltef•I. Mn. "°°"'10 111-.,e al
.
County Nixes
Park Purchase
AND WIBLE CLARK AllGUED THAT theeell·
ing price was a good one and a fiM chance to retain
the area as open space, Supervisor Laurence
·Schmit said there probably are better spots ln tbe county for park sites.
"1 am just not going to vote again for a park
just because It b a good buy today," Schmit said.
"Somewhere along the way we are gotn1 to have to
draw tbe line about what this county can atrord ln
piltk maintenance."
Supervisor Phil Anthony argued, "I Just cannot
find the information here tbat convinces me that
this ever could be very high on our prlortty of parka
in the county."
CLARK CONTENDED THE SZ MIWON sales
price offered by the land's owner, Interpace Corp.,
is $750,000 below its appraised value.
He said the area could provide a trail network
into the adjacent Cleveland National Forest and
provide needed campsites.
But Supervisor Ralph Diedrich observed that
county reports indicate no mare than about 45
campsites could be developed on tbe billy terrain. ·
AND GEORGE OSBORNE, DOlECl'Oa or the
count.y Environmental Management Agency, said
the area would be an "adequate but not outatandln1 wilderness park.·•
Schmit also argued the county should not
purchase any additional park land unW county of·
flclals complete an already-approved study of coun· ty regloqal park needs.
Torr•11<•. •-\1911Cf.vtfll•n '°'"·r.....,~_...._,..._.."',......_... ........... ._.-.... .......... __..._..., JHnne T ec>1*1 Of SOii M« lfto, Mn.
Mery ltOCJe<n Of l'uller_,; '*9PIOll
c;.. .. eoc... al Sen Mef-. ,_ -
i.rt "'"-RJllll ·-of M1<111 .... ; 'Mn . l'idell• SI~ GI Atbuquef'Qw,
H--•ICO; litlelft trOlldctllldr ... S•rwlce' wlll I>• lleta 011 llrldey,
ll'ellruory •.et 10 JO AM In,,,. Qwrcll
of TM ·-· 9onlt. a IE Strwt. L• v.,,.., CetKOtnl• Services IWlll con· < lllC!lt In lfla thurcn. Private -OM!>-
"'•"' I• P .. •d•n• Me11101oum,
Alt ... "'Ce TOCldnwnottll(hepe41fl
t i.or .. Oii •"'~"" -mOf'l•I c-1l111wtlllns tD Tiie AIMflt.,. c-...
So<Hlty or LA Yeme Col ..... I.A ~me.
Celltof"fllo, t11!0.
SMITMS' MOITVAIY en Main St
Huntington Beacn
53H539
,_,AMAT
C0&.0Nl41. llVMHAI.
NONI
7801 Bol .. Ave
Westminster
893-3525
'AClfllC YllW
NINOllA&.'.U C.met8f')' Mottuaty
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Dnve
Newport,
Clhfom•• G44·2100
NeCOlwtell
NOITUAalll l~naBHCh ·~9415
Ltg"na Hiiia
788-0935
Sen Juan Capistrano
496-1778
L.ft.Boyd
Words From
Our Sponsors
Wh7 don't those big compan.ln that ad·
vertiae on television sponsor more appropriate
shows? The Olla Elevator
Company, for Instance,
should buy tlme to put on
tbe movie "Shaft." Weight
Watchers ought to pay for
''1'be Thin Man." Dutch
Boy should sponsor "Paint
Your Wa'~m .. Others; Clairol, " poo." Mat·
teJ. "'Vatley of the Doll.a."
Arthur Murray Dance
Studios, "Lul Tuso tn
Paris. 1' 't'llat 'a not my ic(ea. It's tbe 1uaeat1on
ofa4vertialngmanSanlordTeller.Anyothen?
Amoaa the new nominees ror the 1'My
Name la a ~m" Club ls Bonni• IM Connelly
ot York, Pa. It •in••· wbatT And leave ua nay
for1et Myrtle l:rdle, last NllOl'ted somewhere
in Callfomla. As for Clair "blalr, be'• eUll ln Iowa.
U you ticked off one ~um~r per lfCQGd ln
order to eouot to a mlllloo, U wOUld t.akelou
11 ~ da.n. A1' f Ol' a millJon mlnutel, they ad &al)
toDearl1two yean.
I CONVENIJ:Ntll
Q. "U 10U want to wbUe awQ IA mtena~
(nf tJow", Lou.le, makt a lilt Of every eon••
nlence In YoUt bouae that you d.ldn't have u a
cblld."
A. All n,bt, starUna .·With the bat.tiroom
. . . .. Never mind, lh1I would take mon
t.ban an hour. It's far e_,.Mt to UH tbe eon..
Ditnc• that were at bUd ,rQ baCk t.Mil, la It
ao4.? Jlunnlna lfa&er, bl•• and bb, a *bive radio. Qu.Uon ai'illl~lli to which Ult
,would bit Joa&er, tbl tlMri llitortbenow Uatt ~
I'. Q. "Does Julla Chua cook wlth a
mitrowaveoveof" •
A. Some. Hot much. Site says ahe.,... lt to
melt.butter, tbaw v•1•tablt1, Uaataortof Udb1.
I
~--------------....... ---•
(714) 962~7938 I
I
(714) &7004 I
DIAMO'!\DS • Gl!MfiiTONF.8 U14)96H851 I
Jewels by losepht ts Mlt'Chlng for dltn'Oncls end
QWn8tones from e><lvat• IMMdullt and ....._ oet.tut exmminatton and evllu.tton by our ~ ~
Pricet paid. Call 54<MIOe6 to.e dally. Slturday '\<M. &Inda)' ctosed. aak lor Mr. Joaeph.
.._ ____ ....... ___ ...... __________ 11
jewels by loseph
0 PAINT. Mstoltes and Mismatches.
T ~Test. Qdde,, & Bet.
Plus IOStans ...................... tt'~ l.ffW.
0 INSNCERATOR GAABAGE
DISPOSN.. 'h 1-bsepower ...................... 34.11 0 TOO. BOXES. Lage '>IOriety.
Most Sies. A real bargain .................. ZI~ OflF 0 UTilE MAC by Ham1ton Beach .......•...•...•.. I I.II 0 OOJBLE MAC by Homt1ton 8eQch ................ Z I .II 0 PRESTO I HAMBURGER C()()(ER .......•••...... I I.II
[J PRESTO II DOUBLE
HM'&JR<B COOKER .............•.......... JG.II
[JT<XX..S
Vice Gips. Sizek 7" and IO" ................ II~ °"
&t-Mng_ Hoi111~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••• II~°"
Fuller ~ Wrenches .............••.... · · · al"9 °"
[J MA1.$U by h1termotic O~ LON VO...TAG Lnm-G SET
6 ~ Set with rimer .......................... .,_.
8 RED DEVIL CAULK ................•............. 49"
R8) DEVIL LATEX CAW ........................ 79"
[J GUcaN PAINTS
Interior ond Exterior ........................ ~ ORI D BIO'Q.E ~ 1..orQe. Wilt\
block W¥ coatinc;J • • • •••••.•.••.••••••••.••. : •.. ,,. 0 MR. COFFEE #I .•.........•.......••.•..•.•.. lla
0 MIAA~ MAllC Automatic (~ ............................... .. CJ l(wtKSET qn I inch throw
OEAOOO. T. "'1rr. finish in cu ltoCk ..•.••••.•..•••• I la 0 CEMENT TOOLS.
Professional <;Nolity ...................... · • _,., 0..
IB_OWS. EDGER BRICK TRONB. l.Jt6S 0 TRASH CAN LIDS. For 32 Gd. Sm •.•••.....•••••. JM
a·~~1~~·~.21":4.24" ............ ~cw ~ W.0NG DISCS/3M. S-6-7 *hes ............ 214Mt Ollf ~acx. ........ , ....................• IM ~ a.EANeR_ 16 OL ••••••.••••••••••••• t.at 81.AQ( & DECKER WOfOOMTE. 8 orlJ.t ............ ... ~cx:K\W.L roa.s:
3/8" M . #4100. 16 ooly. ~ 14.qq ...••.•.....•• I I.ff ~So.. #4309. ~cny. R99-14.qq ....•...•..•..•. 11."
'h '()ii. #4200. .. 4 onty. ~ 22.W .. , ............. It."
Orbitd Sander. #44Q"j. 5 c#t. ~ 24.W •......... IL"
ROIHr. #'4600. 4 cri.f. ~ Jt.99 •••.••••••..•••• It."
Saw. 1w· #4511. ~ °"Y· R-.. 14.99 •.•••••••••••• 11.n
Saw. 7'14' •EOO. 2 ~-~ Z199 .............. 1Ut asn. TOO.S 3/8''V~~o.l•I~ ~ 16~. ~ 19.~ ... ,: ......................... "
Otied Siirdlr. •"59 .... ~ 2U• ................ It." Ce»N«i JAAS 4 •
P'ft'L ~ 12 ............ ~ t. t. . . . . ........... ,.
°'°1'L (CM 12 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~
CTRU VAUJE PKXUP TRUCXS
Al Meta .•...•••.•.•.......•.••••.•..•.•••.. I.It
BARE lA008t 2 StOl"f-'1eel & chain •.•••••.• , .••• II.ti
KIOOE ARE EXTINQJISHERS
#110 1-AIO-ae .•.•.•.........• : •••.•.......•.. ta
8~~~~ATIERN ................. Z3.81 .
HARDWARE.
Towel 8cn · T.P. Holder · Soop OiV..
Front Door~. too. Top Ody ........ 1°'9 0..
CALL SCOTT Ff:RTIUZE:RS
a~~ER ·eoo·NC;· ·· · · · · ·····.aft°"'
a~ ~°toNC:Rm ·s-rAiNs' · · • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 4..-
~ ~~-···················~°" §MASKI~ TAPE. All Slies .................. 21.,,_ ORI
HOSE ltiiS. ~216. Wd.t ~ ...•.•..•......••. I Z.U
TRU.TEST A.AT WAU. ANISH
White cm Postel'-A· T7 /Y ·I. ................ W. J.11 0 ~ DCAl. Oscillating T LA~ SPRINKLER ~ 2-4~ .•...•..•.••...... 1111 a NAlS .•. Odds 'n Endt
v~ tiles. Umittd ~ ..•••..•...••..•.. Jr .. 0 WATER PIK Q'CJI ~
C=~K~~P.' ...................... ll.11
Bcm.y ()perat.d. #I~ ........................ 6.11 C SC).I) STAN..Es'S STEB. FN..TWAAi
S pc. tet. SeMce for 8.'lb ttp. I Surp
and l1butt• ................................ ,, ... CM SHAKEA81.ES. Salt & Pepper.
RClre Zli:Jra .xx:I . . .. . . . . .. , .......•..••.... 1..4' ,... C B&\N POTS. West Bend. Use°'
Q slow c:oobt ................................ .... 8~~Eis!;;~······· ........ itwll"
type~e. ,.,, o. tnsootec:1 Bdslcet ........................ '·"
2 Q. lnli.bed Basket •.••••••••••••••••••••••.. ,.., . C PRESTO CcntiuM Clean 9«:.l.t/
oven Presto. #01 ~ .••••• , ••••••.•.••••.•.. 16.11 CHOse. '~'tSJ ft. Cl~~~~oCiS····· ·~······ ...... I.II
• ftcaid ShcJ..oel. Model SI.RCS • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • ••••• J.,.
• ~ ~ Model SL.SC:S •••••••••••••• t ••••• I.It
• ~ J.\cxWSB l<S .......•.................. J.Jt
c~~~ ............................ ut
~Sl"MN .•••.••••.•.•••.••.•••.• lftolif CWESTllBiC9~~.·"468 .............. 7a
\YEST~ 9 c..., P•c:dator ~71 ..•.......••.. I la
c=fu..~ ............................. .
r:l''l:Jt/'. 16"JJ:l". 16"a25'', l4"d0'', IS''-2(1'
c~!:~ar:w.~
I
I
lft Tim ltrrll AND JAii' fpUode Of ''The Mart 'fyllir Moore SboW ... Alt#~ bit llllODI and a ,._. of SrDmy •w-., ell' ll'f*d· brtaldil lert•'•lilil u umnantld ca.retr woman ta n1m1n1 tta nnaa.·1' •
Hallid u one fl TV'• belt-~ OOIDtdill, It
laid to felt tbe mytb that aucu.rie. wouldll•t •ctetPl a 1ltcom tnvolvtn1 a woman· uDllu lhe •u mar· rted and burned d.lMer at leut ODt Dllllt a week. Jtl aucceu enabled lt to do IDOtblr 1ullqut Wni -cause two 1plnott aert ... eaeb about a oU'ffr woman, Oft• named Pbyllle, the other llboda, eacb
of whom atlU 1et 1ooc1 raUqa for CB&.;
ITllL ~ MOO&B .. 80llH lD Brooklyn
and Riied here lnlllY ;b; 9"11' eoMldtHd tbe 1bow that startle\ It a&a :8feven a io..u,. piOOeer Of
•bat wnten, ua~ liqJwrlten, 4!all Womea•a Llb on TV. '1' IMit it all,•• lbO ~llld In a pbODe cbat. "In
fact J~ a."" t.btMllllt ot _,..., aM womu •'-ea ... • m~~--.._ .. Dlla&4 k,.«llf}li __. ,,_,.., fiib; bJ read-
l Art.lei. about tier alliow Md lta l'Mllltle depte-
U o.n of a modern woman. ''that I've real·
ly bePD to baYe I ~DM
of bow Important it's
been.
"And t Ar. 'tbe
allow,': not me. Im Jun
part of IL But lt realb
baa lllftetecl 1 lot ot ~ · pl•. all to uae IOOd!' J'or OM Wq, 11M •aid, •1lt11 mMe ieooM
ltulh at Wllll ~t alto maae them tblnk . .......... .tu.J
10t of ...... MIDee wbo were UhailMd ot belD&
MOOR. alooe ad da&el111 Oft
Satutdat nliht auddenly
Yery happy '1Jitb tbemHIV91, C'CllMnt to be alone, if
• Uiat 's the way it's eoln1 to be.
B1~llAID. ELIAS
One advant.R ol Calllornla llvlq UW'I often :noueect ri&bt away by travelers fnm ebewtlere ls
.the low price of getting around the state by air.
By comparison wltb flllbts ol •lmllar length in
other parta of tbe country. caJlfonlla trips are a
bargain. with some fares only about baJf those for
cbmparab&e dlstan~ on iDtentatefUptl.
TWS MAY BE t&ANGING, AND soon, 1
however. on routes flown by airlines that fly in
other states at well as California -United, Hugbel
Airwest. Western and tbe like.
For the federal Civil Aeronautics Board, whlcb
Jets air fares on int~rstate fiigbts, bas ordered ln-
ieratate airlines to bring fares for flights within one
st.ate to the same level as they would be If tbe in
terstate fare formula ,.,.---SO~Uf..,.,...H_E_R_N __ were uaed.
CALIFORNIA Tbe intent of tbe CAB Focu S order is clear: In some
-------··_, states, lqcal regulators bave been euy on the
Jlrllnes. ~ them to charge excessive rates
for sbort,1n1'astate hops.
·Not aoln California, where the Public Utilities
Commission regulates fares on all intrastate
·ntgbts.
''TllE EFFECI' OF THE CAB order," the PUC
said last mootb, "would be to increase fares on in-
tra-California routes on the order of 50 percent in many~ases."
Only routes wltb bo competition between airlines are aUt:ctect
1be PUC, several alrllnes. state Atty. Gen.
Evelle Younger and tbe national association of
state regulatory commissioners have au appealed
tbe CAB ruling, which ls to be effective this monya.
The airlines are involved in the appeal because
~e federal order affects only those wltb operat1<1111
botb Inside and ou1aide California. It leaves lines
like Pactflc Southwest <PSA> and 0r8llle Count~ ..
bped ~ Callfornla with tbe same fares they have.
MD> DAVID ROLME8, li'O&llE• president of
the atate PUC. ''.The net result of the CAB order la
contrary to the oriP,naJ intent of the com\)lalnt'tbat spurredtheruling. •
Holmes, a Madera resident. had more cause fear
concern than residents of bli cities w~ fly mqal!y
on competitive routes wbere the tower state-
regu)ated fares would remain in effect.
Under the order, first dass fares between Los
Angeles and Oakland, for inltanee, would rile from
S32 to •· Coach fare between Sallla Barbara and Los Angfteis would jump from $13.99 to $19.12 and
the El Centro to San Fr-aDcisco coacb rate would
cUmb from $S5.85 to $M.t7
PRICES WOtJLD USE SUIIIA.aL Y on other runs between ,man clU.S or from large clUel to
•mall ones whlcb caa never expect to be served by
more tbao one alrli.ne.
The state comm.Wion pointed OPt that tbe rat.el
set by the CAB an baled on an industry cost· averaatna ~and not on the Individual car·
rler'a CCltl, u la done by the PUC.
So tf the federal onter ltanda, fareis bet,ireen.
for Instance, Los A.a&el• and Eureka. wW be baled
partly on What It eotll a1rtlaes to f1y between
Detroit and Kauu City. Tbe PUC queetloal
•bethel' um ts fat.r.
TBEaE 18 8'l'ILL A P068llllUTY that the btJ
alr fare 1nen:aMs cu b9 averted.
Tbe PUC and otber coatmner advocates, In·
ctudlne Ralpb Nader, the CA.B's own Offtce ol
C«asamer AdYOCaCJ' and Tbe Texas Aeronautics
Comndll• bope • federal appeala court will •· def a delay. '
BC bow klaa'a1 delay milbt. lalt la q....uon.
ble. Par DO (IOe doubta.tut t.ofedenl laws ,..ct
ta ta .ad UISl Clve the CAB all tM power lt Meda
to ovema&e deciaiont ol atate n:p!MIOl'I when tbey
affeet~alrlblta.
So ..... tbe CAB ltlelf can be ooa~ to
cban,. ltt mind -lbmetblOJ the PUC and otbiers
tried tDUCee1Sfully to do Wt fall -It appears Uke-1' tbe new ra&es are inevitable.
IZ-.14'1"'
1r.1rr lr.t"
IZ-.1 l'r
YOUR CHOICE
Nylon hi-lo Ot Myton 1Weed SMo. a.-. from predlc::el, IOll hdng colors . 1 • :=:=s3ee ea. 'tb.
D ,,,
........ ....... ........ ...................
IZ-.llT' ._ .. a...
1r.1rr ......, .. ....,
·~ ..............
IJ"lrt"6• ............
IJ'dft • ..,._
......... Wire tM6T'..,._ ...... &.-. ar.u-•·..,... .~.~~ .., ... . ,,....,.. ..,... ......... ..... ,
. . ''< ,, •. ·T •·'j 'I'
MUL n.ColOR HI-LO
Md~~ '1 • l/tulot :=::. I~ = Pote nWin pee, floni
' ==--.s4• '
l<),YQ. ·~ ' .. , ,,,, .. ,.
NYLONPWSH • 11
A ti{1ltly twlliad MXOf1V pll.tl = . I•· == .. $599 I'·
from nine vivid rnuftl.oOIOrall,
'J~:.~;.
-· ,. .
1•
YOUR CHOICE
YOUR s4• CHOICE ~'PO.
Select alttw a brtghl cut & loop• ot nytonpjlalnelght~•,. Of
' i'S S6!@ ll
.
.. .,_,_.. ala Dampf In
1r.1rr ~Oii.. ...... 1r.1r1• ~Swtfttl&..w 12 .. 17" w.... ........ •rs••·•· ....... ..,c.t .. ....,
IZ"lllfT' .......... 12"1111" ..... T_. ....
IZ"llf"I• ............. lr.llT' ......... 12"1111T ,..... ............ :~:~ ~~Wire IJ'lrl 1' ....,~ .. &-. =::.•L-. IJ"lrlr1• ::r.:.. .... IZ-.14T :: ...... ~ •r.•ra• ll"dOT' •
556·8287
'
Mi,ss Capistrano
Entries sought
Entries wm t1' accepted tbroulh Feb. 11 ln the .U..1 San Juan Capiltrano contest ill which coates· t•ta wtn be jucfied on poise, appearance and
ott,loaall~. tonm are available from the Chamber of
Commerce, 31882
Camino Capistrano,
Suite 105-A. said Mary
Ann Hanover, publicity
chairman. Completed
entries can be delivered
or malled to Chamber of·
flees.
The winner will IUC· ceed Anita Bea Muller.
Mn. Hanover said
the competition ls not a
bJtblng sult contest.
Miu San Juan contes·
tantl must qree to be
av a liable duril!J the
next year to represent
the city at civic events. AHITAllULLEft Pre-judgtnt 11
sc~ti Mardi I at 3 p.m. at the Capiltrano
Depot. hul Judlbll"will be March u at 1 p.m. at a
lunebeall and fubioll ea.ow acheduled at the-El ~ ti8tam'ant. A~tl informattoe on the coat.eat and
ticbta to .. lacbeoG la available by cabin& the Cbamw.•••·
' QCC Dand:lag Clid1 Set
Square dancln• will be offered aa a clus for
flr'tt time at Orange
Coast CoUese WI 1pr-
ln1.
Tbe claaa will meet
Friday evenings beeln·
-
tUDI Feb. 11 from 7 to 10.
It ls open to 40 st\adents of alias•.
Ope NlbtratJon will
eonUDue toach Pel>. 18.
Por re1l1trat1on ln•
formatioD call_....
? . •
E•.cutlv• Otllc.s: 7812 Edl~r Av• .• Huntington Beteh, CA 92M7
SoutMrn C.li,off1/1 "-Qian•/ Ottlc.s:
•4140 Long O.ach Blvd .. Long e.ach. CA 90801 8955 Valley View St., Buena Petk. CA 90820
20715 S. Avalon Blvd., Carton, CA 9074e 1001 E. lmperfel Hwy., La Hebre, CA 90831
1095 lrvlne Blvd .. Tu11Jn. CA 92'89
235 N. Citrus Ave .. w .. t Covin•. CA 91793
Power tOols fOi" perfettioniSts
Precision and dependability are built Into these
quality Skil powertools. That's exactly what the
do-it-yourself er wants-and needs. See for
yourself. And feel free to ask our tool
specialists any questions.
A: SKIL DRIVER CRILL
. Features varlabfe speed forward,
reverse. Model ~1788 .
22;88
.'
B. SKIL DELUXE 2-SPEED
DOUBLE INSULATED SABRE SAW
Low, 2800 strokes per mlnut' for
hard materials. Model #496.
Reg. 39.99
29.88 .
C. SKIL 6-1 /2" CIRCULAR SAW
Rugge~ 1 Y2 H.P. motor, 6000 RPM
cutting speed. Model #534.
Reg. 37.99 32.aa·. . '
D. Sl<IL ROUTER
2t.OOO RPM With safety eye ehleld.
MQdel#549.
Reg. 44.99
34.88
•• !lo
----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--......-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
HolelnMY9ft
Cul a~~ In...,,., dllfef'ent alz• With Ht Greet Ntck Hole Sew. At. any electrlo dr111. lethe or drtll presa. PerfeOt olrcte blade• are
made of electric fumeoe eteel. Cut• holte i• to 2)1t·· 1n wood, metal
ot l*sti~ MOdel #HC-70.
DE!P HOtf SAW,
~.1.29
U8
Get an angle on close quarten
Now you can drtn In clott quarters -Jutt lltt8Cfl this right angle drive attachment to yoor electrlc
drlll. Heevy·dutv tool Qonetructed i>r yeara of
setlsfactory .. rYict. can chang• your drtU IPMd from hall to double. Use tt for high •P"d
aandll}g; drtlllng masonry end ateel.
Mod•l#3SO.
AACO RIGHT ANGLE l>lfNE ATTACHMENT.
Reg. 6.49 a•
' Screwy Uff for a drill
Put your power drill to \VOOc aa en automatic
eorewdrtver, wtlh this pbwerf\ll Sc~auc •ttectwnent. "Non·•llP" ln<1u•tr1a1 type clutch rtte any Y• ·or llfger elec1rlc dr111 or dr111 preaa
lnclud• bits f01 llottecl and Phillipe type
ecrtwa. Drives up to #14 tcrewa. MOdel #710.
ARCO SCREWMAT/CA1'TACHMENT,
Reg. 7.29
4.88
By DENNIS MeLELLAN
Of ... .Deity ........... I Part ~Y through Jerry Len-
ingt<m'a coune, TV: the First 25
Years, stlidenta view a kinescope
of the)9M show "Strike It Rieb."
Contestants who told the sad-dest bard luck story were re..
warded by the emcee and
viewers who called up on the
•'heart Une. 0 •
Students get a kick out of hav-ing a fintlumd look at the old pro-
iram. but few recogniz~ the tall,
lal\((Y 17-year:<>ld con,estant.
It's nOl:M! other than Lenlngton
b i msell, now 38, bearded and a
good deal more hefty than the
teenaget who hitchhiked to Ne~
)' ork from Ohio to get on the
show.
A member of Pacific Pioneer
Broadcasters, Lenington usually
takes a handful or students to lhe
meetines in Los Angeles. Some of
the broadcasting greats they
Jerry Lenlngton
meel just might end up as guests
in his classes.
uyou CAN SHOW tludenta in-
terviews on video tape, but it
doesn't have the give and take. It
makes the textbook come alive.•• <A member ol Bois Village, be
made the trip to publicize the or-
phanap.)
''Strike It Rich" is just one of
the oiany ldnescopes and tapes of
televi.s1oo's varied fare that sup-
pie ment the Orange Coast
Collegeclus. Cit begins at 7 p.m.
Tuesday, Feb. 8.)
LENINGTON HOPES the
video history course will give stu-
dents-many who weren't even
around for Uncle Miltie and
Edward R. Murrow-a new ap-
preciation of television's past.
"It helps you to be a bit more
discerning today. TV is going to
perm~te our lives even more as
time gQeS on.
"I think il helps to know where
we come from, for the same re-
asons we study history. But aside
from the educational values, I
think the class is fun."
Much or the run comes by way
or the guest speakers, who in the
past have included Edgar
Bergen, Dick Lane, Art Llnklet-
ter, Mel Blanc and Jackie
Cooper.
Lenington, who grew up with
r a dio ("Dick Tracy," "Jack
Armstrong," ''Suspense"). rirst
heard about television when he
was 7, shortly arter World War
II.
A playmate said, "I hear
they're going to have a machine
that when you tum the radio on,
you 're going to see pictures on
another box."
His ftrst view of the mysterious
box finally cam e outside a
neighborhood tavern. "That's
wheTe people wel\t, or if someone
bought a TV, everybody tried to
get ao invitation to watch."
The influe nce of early'
television and r.adio <He also
teaches a class on radio's golden
age), is evident when you call
him on the phone.
Ir he's not home the caller will
be greeted by the taped strains or
the "William Tell Overture"
and a "hearty hi-ho, Silver!
Aw aaayyy,'' followed by a re·
quest to leave your name and
number.
A tour or his new home in Foun-
tain Valley reveals not one, not
two, but three television sets. He
also plans on turning his garage
into a television-movie theater.
LENINGTON, HOW~VER, is
not completely addicted: He is,
like he advises his students, dis-
cerning.
"I live alone and the first thing
I do when I come home is \urn on
the lights, then the TV. I love
television. but I'm selective."
He really doesn't have much
time to tune in. An assistant pro-
fessor teaching film-making and
cinema as literature at Rio Hon·
do College, he a lso teaches
several continuing education
' ..
classes at other colleges. ...
As a teacher, Lenlngton1 aft.er
a varied career, seems to have
found his niche in Ille, •
Arter two years '"spinnina my
wheels" at Ohio Stale, Lenin~
at 20 was asked by a friend what
he really wanted out ofllfe.
"I said travel. have adventure
and live like Errol Flynn," re-
calls Lenington.
He succeeded (in at least twopt
the three) after deciding the means to that end woulp be
through Ute lens of a c•mera.
HE GOT A job as a freelanc;er
with the International Press, a
high point of which was in-
terviewing Fidel Castro in lhe
kitchen of the Havana Hill.o~
shortly after his take-over io
1958.
Fifty states. 35 countries and
some 30,000 sllde~ later, Len,
ington found him s elf in
Califonlia where he enrolled jn
Orange Coast Cof\ege.
He viffs the day he thumbed
through the Cal State Fullerton
catalogue as lhe turning pointjn
his life: Re saw "Communica-
tions" and went on to get his BA
and MA in that major.
Women Pri~sts: A Price
By JUDITH OLSON
OftM o.i1y "llot St.it
Last September, the 3-rnillion-
member Episcopal Church voted
to ordain women as priests fM
the first time in its history.
Since then, the ehurcb bas been
torn with what tbe Very Rev.
David B. Collins, vice president
of the House of Deputies, CJlled
••that most vicious of divi.aions
for which there does not seem to
be an answer."
Church members acknowledge
that there are deep hurts Ob all
sides because ol the decision but
acceptance of women priests
seems to follow no pattern in age
or sex. acrordlng to a random
poll of church members.
A young minister from Lagmia
Hills said be thinks the new rule
ls "great" and that there is more
approval on the part of younger
priests than older.
Yor the aider men. the change
means that an era has passed, he
auaested. He did not th1nlr a
wooian would assume parish
leadership before at least
another four or five years.
Within the Episcopal
Churchwomen, the official
women's organbation of the
church, there also is a difference
of opiltton.
to wome n serving i n the
priesthood primarily because of
the faOlily.
••1 see it as a problem area.
There are no 40-bour weeks. You
have a woman who ls called to a
parish-and lel'a face it-not
every parish will take a woman.
••sHE MAY HA VE to go a long
way. That would mun tak,ing a
husband and children. n would
be a destructive thing for
families."
Mrs. Bylin countered, "But
you 're assuming that all women
will want to be parish priests.
Many I have talked to have that
as the last priority.
"They're more interested in
working in hospitals, juvenile
facilities and otber special areas
where the fact that they're a
woman will help."
Women worklng as deacons in
these areas have bad to tall in
men to J1ve sacraments and
absalut.ltn, so tbelr wt will be
easleroaw, Mn. ByUnaald. ..... ~;"*'eel tbli was tra. ''1 alH •e have
ordau.t too may prtestl," she
said. '~Only 1n th.• ptit llx years
have we,ncogniHd .. milllstry
of the 181 person ...
Both Mrs. Connelly and Mrs.
Bylin were at U>e September con-
vention where the historic vote
was taken.
"People didn't go out shouting
about it. There wasn't a sound af-
terwards," Mrs. Connelly re·
called. "There were lots of tears
on both sides.
••THEKE IS A deep hurt
among·a lot of people. I hope we
can minimize it. heal •t With our
Jove. There is no place in lhe
body of Christ for all this hurt.
But I feel strongly that we have
violated tradition."
The Rev. Collins, of AUanta,
who introduced the resolution
which led to the vote in Sep-
tem ber, agreed that love wlll be
an essential ingredient in healing
the wounds.
Speaking to more than 500
members ot Episcopal
Churchwomen during a luncheon
in the Hyatt Regency Hotel in
Los Anaeles, he called for recon-
ciliation and renewal.
In describing the drama sur-
rounding the vote, he said his
major cc:ricem at the time was
"not how we would decide it but
what wduld happen afterwards.
"We're not sure about whether
J
God cares what sex priests are,"
he asserted, "But we are l .000
percent sure that God'Wants us to
love each other.•• ·
He said he had asked for f~e
minutes ol silent prayer before
the vote was taken. It waS very
late in the afternoon when the
convention finally got around to
it and he kidded that he had
thought most of the delegates
would be more ready to rush off
to their "Anglican adjustment
hour" than pray.
Delegates told him later.
though, that it had been the
shortest Cive minutes in history.
REV. COLUNS stressed that
the church must reconcile itself
and be a model for the world for
love. justice and unity.
He acknowledged that it would
not be easy. "Reconciliation has
a big price to pay-death lo
myself and my ideaa."
Mrs. Bylin, in an interview
before the luncheon. also
stressed lhat lhe church must
change and build new traditions.
"If we truly believe it's the
spirit or God that comes down
(during communion>. then it
sboul'1fl 't make ~n,y dlff erence
what · kind of body it COJl\e&
through any more than what cOl-
or the hands are that serve it."
"I ~oy communications so
much it dawned on me that
teacbirig f¥Y be ~ b..,t of all possible worlds,·· he rec:allS, ad dins )'le .wui. worklli1 itJi )'~
people and still has auaunon
free for travel.
A job as photo&raWlel'. p..btfc
information ~fltee~ And
JCJQm~ teacher for QalOUl
Collegt's W6rld Campus Aflc)at
was next. He made th~ trfps-
oround the world.
.. IN 1'731 suddenly had to go to
wort agau, ror: real. The Dis--
neyland life bad ~.J~
He tried unsucceslf~ly to 1eta
f'411-Ume teaching job. He was
out of worJt 20 months, living QI\
fQod stamps and pawning ev-
erythioghe owned.
Then be realized be could teach
if he took on parl-tilJ}e jobs
through adult educatibo.
His frrst course1 The Golden
Age or Radio, was at UCl. Stu-
dents turned out in droves to slgn
up. The next class \¥BS rv. then
.. r
' t' -
plaotosr-p6y, mass commUDica-tton. "''whatever they needed.,.
lt 111usbrtamed to the point
th•t he"'as &.aching 12 classes at'
ix dllf~ colleges. •'I was just ~g the'rulber offiJ>y car."
BOTH HE AND his tar were snecl by the full-Um~ teaching
olf er !roaa No Hondo College.
Leni.ngtQn s,r>eaks en-
thuslast.UlJllf about bis Cal State 1"'111~~· cootin¢ng education
c»urae,l'be Malcffig of a Legend:
The FUtns of.John YI a)'ne. which
begln$,ftb. ~. ·
· The ~e·blinaett.!i•clteauled
to appear alonf "1lth Hveral or
his co-staft. For a kki w'bo spent
Saturday .it~rnoons• •t .the Str~ Theater in'·Y0""8to'fVJl
watchlilt cowbo~ p~tbreet, Len-
in,tbo -s~. it ~hard tq"P'~lr
·that Jobi\ Wa;frie ~ ~ l:omi.nl
to his class. ' or 'hiS Ute \oday, Leninltorl
says, "you're loolting at a bapp::
oiaP.. I'm dolbgiwhat I w~ to~ .'do., ...
.. . ,.. .. . ..
_ ...
. •:
-BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Thursday. February 3, l~77 Bf
.. ., . -.
' . . -
Pain, Joy
J
DEAR ANN LANDERS: After rMdJna the
letter •lined ••Friends of the ¥oob" and 1our auw•, l bad to write to you.
So )'OU oever beard OJ a boe~t.al that allows
children to watch tbe birth~• babJ lilt« or
brother? W~ -let wttb I~ MadaJ;D.
Here are jUdt a few: Tbt Cbildbearlni
Center In New York City, Southwest.em Matemi-
ty Center In Albuquerque, N.M ., i,avinia
Maternity Home In Euaene, Ore., the ll'aternlty
Center at Port Bra11, and Booth .Maternity
Centertb Pbhdelpbia.
•Many couples opt for home dtlherlea
because they want tbe birth of their ebildren to
be. family affair. u cblldbirth ta pnsented ...
normal and natural occurrence a ~t &al of
psycbalollcal trauma will be avoided. SlbJJnas
welcome tlMI new arrival (imtead ot barborina
feelings d rivalry and Jealousy> because tbey
were permitted to participate in the baby's ar-
rival.
There's a whole new warld 04:1t there, Ano. I
In Science Labs
School Tops
What happens when a small New
England wome n 's college tac~lea
Berkeley, Cornell, Harvard and more tban
100 other American colleges and un-iverslties?
It comes out first, if it's Mount Holyoke
College in South Hadley, Mass., and the
competition takes place in the science halls and labs.
A recent study published in Science
magutne found that more women have
gone on from Mount Holyoke to earn PhD
degrees in physics and chemistry than
Crom any other institution.
Written by Dr. M. Elizabeth Tidball and
Dr. Vera Kistlakowsky, the report wu the
first to list the undergraduate oriJdns of such a fertile ground for future Plil>'s by sex.
Why is Mount Holyoke, a liberal arts col-
lege wJ¥>se enrollment ls 18SO students,
such a fertile ground for future PhD's?
According to the authors oC the study, It.a
success is a direct result of its being a col-
lege for women, where m any highly
motivated students seriously pursue a variety of fields.
For a woman with scientific interests,
whether formed when she received her first
chemistry set in the Cifth grade or more re-
cently acquired, it's a comfortable, sup-
portive environment.
'. Mount Holyoke College's sci~nce balls and
labs are turning out more women who go
· on to. earn PhD degr ees in physics and
chemistry than any other i.nstkution.
A student who agrees with the study is
Belinda Beezley of Huntington Beach, who
received her masters degree in biological
science from Mount Holyoke this past June.
She currently is a research assistant in
immunology at Yale Medical School and
happens to be working under another
Mount Holyoke a lumna, Dr. Nancy
Hartman Ruddle, class of 1962.
Miss Beezley said she bad found the at-
mosphere at Mount Holyoke very challeng-
'Serenade' Unwelcome
ing. She was pleased to see women wortfng
together, as she was used to being one of a
very few women in her science courses.
Miss Beezley added that the level of wort
at Mount Holyoke was high, as illustrated
by the fact that all students were allowed to
use very sopblatlcated equipment that
normally would not be available to under-By EBMA BOMBECK
The loudest snore, according to
tbe Guinness Book of World
Records, was measured at ee de·
cibels at St. Mary's Hospital In
London.
UnW last night.
The record was broken in the
bed next to mine by my husband,
who sustained life at a rousing 72
declbela. <Seventy-two decibels
d the equivalent ot bavtng a can-
non 10 otf ln tbe seat bext to you
in the Astrodome.)
The following are tbe only
methods of relief that have
worked for me:
Cbuge beds: Get the snorer
out of .bis own bed and into a
strange one ... preferably in
another state. ·
The pillow technique: Get a
large fluffy pillow. When the
breathing becomes deafening
put it squarely over every open'.
in.I In bis f•e and bold there un-
W some demands are met.
AT
WIT'S
END
graduates at larger institutions.
Miss Beezley, a graduate of Callfornia
State University, Long Beach, came to
Mount Holyoke on the advice of Dr. Eunice
M. Wood. CSULB professor, who also is an
alumna of Mount Holyoke.
The Massachusetts college bas been
educoting women scientiats since 1837,
when $100 worth of equipment served the
first student.I.
Now, more than a quirt.er of a million
doUan worth of highly sophisticated equip-
ment Is available to undergraduate
to get to the root of a husband's cbemlstryatudents alone.
reason for snoring. It bas been And, a Mount Holyoke chemistry pro-
s uggested a p e rs on s nores fessor, Dr. Anna Jane Harrison, recently
because he is troubled, his den-was elected the first woman president of
lures don't fit properly, be in· the ll2,(J()().member American Chemical
dulges in excessive smoking or Society.
drinking, bas swollen tonsils or For the authors of the study, the result.I
suffers from old age. were a surprise. Both scientists, they also
IMIOA ISi AND call M2-H7t. P\ttafew..,... · '°'""for ..
d401Le/Jm,_~~~
\
BRIDALS AND FORMALS
MESA·V!RDR CENTUI
2701 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
SPECIALISTS IN 8AIOAl.
ANO FORMAL fAS1QHONS
AD
t --· 146-tat ' ~
Aae(O
ByShlree11
BA~er
I Thia testimonial from one of our ~
customers was unsolicited. We inYtte you to
come In and see for your'Mlf. We·re light
across Irvine Avenue from Westdltt Ptam.
SUNSHINE INN' s
Container Gardening Cent•
~ East 17th StrMt In Costo Mina
(714) 631-1282
Y oa would expect the snorer to
¥ve aome eompdslon for tbe aaoree, but tb1I ta never the case.
A.Dl17 rebU of, "How do YOU
know I'm mort.q?" bave to be
documented by lamp1hadea
blown off the bue, ptttures
blasted otf tbd.r boob UICI ~
las farm animal.I as Br as 50 mll•away.
Prolonging sleep: This one
works as well as any I've tried.
Just aa you are both climbing in·
to bed, 1et every nerve in his
body on alett by offhandedly
mentionhlg. 'arbe IRS called you
today, but will call you back
tomorrow,"· or, "You seemed so
th:ed today. I bdpe you don'thave
Ute 1ame tblnt the late Fred
Wltherall bad." My husband doesn't snore for j.;ar~e~Mjiountijiiffol~yjok~e~gr~a~d~u~a~tes~-:__-----~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!~~!!!~ any of those reaaons. He snores
for one thing alone ... to annoy
me. M. I yelled to him the other
morning at 3 a.m., "You'd do
anything to keep from talking to
P'ranldJ, I'm sick of all tbf
t.hrap&at remedl" tbat never
... m to wcwtr. like Mlf·b1PDOlls. earplQll and ro8'Jl1 the anonr-otl bis beck. •
Humiliation route: Place a
ta~ recorder by bis bed and the
next niCbt when be is watching
TV, play it and tell hJm someone
t. stealing bis car.
Otlier experta bell eve you have
me."
I thought I saw him smile.
OFF
A group of American Indian teachers have s'et
up a one-room schoolhouse in a teepee.
No · Resel'Vation
SC:hool Chief COnCern
OAKLAND (AP) -A group oC American In-
dian teachers, calling public schools •;a RQlitWU
weapon against our children, .. bas set up a one-J'OOm schoolhouse in a teepee.
Classes began with a Sioux song and the pass·
Ing of a peace pipe among the 20 pupils who take
their lessons on the dirt floor of the white teepee,
which sits on a grassy plot in the city.
.. The public schools are a political weapon
against our children, our people,·• said Blll
W ahpepah, a director of the school. "They destroy
them ~ulturally, spiritually and sometimes
physically."
Indian leader Dennis BanJcs, a teacher at the
new school, blamed a high rate of su,icide and
alcoholism aioonilndlans on racism in the public schools. •
. ''These are some of the pit/alls thateari cause
l II Native Americans to commit suicide at an early
age," he said.
"Alcoholism comes from going through a
system not designed to help us buttooppress us."
Pupils in the new school, which bas no formal
grade structure, range In age from 6 to 18,
although most are girls of junior high school age.
·CALENDA.R
A free hour lecture and demonstration wilt
serve as an introduction to a four-week basic
course in Self Hypnosis for Self Improvement.
The session will take place at 7:30 p.m. Fri·
day, Feb. 4, in the YWCA, Orange.
Instructor is Joseph R. Ross, hypnotist,
author, lecturer.
Preregistration JS advised because of class
size limitation. More information is available by
C'alling Ms. Phyllis Anderson at the Y, 633-4950.
PARALEGAL ASSOCIATION: Orange
County Chapter will meet at 6 p.m. Tuesday,
Feb. s. in the Carrows Hickory Chip restaurant. Santa Ana.
CHBISTIAN WOMEN: A demonstration
from a representative or a San Clemente ex-
ercise and body improvement establishment will
be the program for the Saddleback Club at noon
Tuesday. Feb. 8, in the EJ Adobe, San Juan . Capistrano. ·
COURSES: Nine six-week sessions in as-
1ert1Ye trainin& will be offered throughout the aprtn. semester at Golden West College. A190 oo the spring schedule will be \.wo
speefal claases, designed to help students make the tramiUon to college work.
The are Writing Essay Exams, a lhree-weet laboratory course, and Ubrary Research
Prepantfoo.
l'\lrtber information is available by calling
the eolleetatm-1111.
TESTING PROGRAM : Orange Coast Collep wilt offer educational. vocational and
pldame testini on Tuesday, Feb. ts· Wednes-
d.,, ~b 18~ Tuesday,.April 19, and Monday.
Ka711; ~persons may reelster in the col-l•I• counsellnt center. Further information is ••ailable bf callln1556·585.5.
VALSNTINE aEGATl'A: Lido Isle and Balda CGdn.Wan yacht clubs are co-sponsoring
the annual resatta and dimier dance on t.he weekend Of Feb. lt.
Followtni tbe nea on Saturday, the party will take place In BCYC, becinntne with coektaill at 7:30 p.m.
Awarcb will be presented after races on Sun·
d•J·
It is not clear yet whether teepee school will
meet legal rN.Yir.ements !or-educational ibstitu·
tioos.
-Oakland public schOGls spokesman John
Lievore said the district has tried to find more
Native American teachers, has hired teacher as-
sistants and has improved curriculum to meet the
American Indians' objections.
"There is a concentrated attempt to
represent every ethnic group properly,'' be said.
Wahpepab said the idea for the school has
been growing for some time. He said plans got un-
der way last fall when he returned from a Min·
nesota conference or the Federation ot Survi.val
Schoob. ,
• He said the school is the first of its kind in
Oakland, but other such schools are springing up
across the country.
"We understand that the struggle to begin is
very hard because we probably wUI have flak
from the authorities," he said, "but we want our
children to be taugh&..correctly."
He s~d teaching "correctly" means teaching
Indian history and culture from the Indian r,int of
view. He said the school also will teach baste sub-
jects such as reading, writing and math.
Wahpepah said the school Is operating on
what little money he can spare f1"9m his &alary as
director of the federally financed American In-
dian Adult Education program in Oakland.
But he said donations have started to trickle
in and the school's directors have applied for
grants.
"This is not an act of withdrawing chiJdren
from public schools to keep them away from
' education,"' Banks said. "It is an act of putting
them into an aJternative school designed for basic
needs for the Native Americanstudenl"
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· ABC D 8:00 -Welcome Back Kot-
ter. Ih W. •~lal. bour·IQPC e~e. H~ diaappeara on the eve of bis bi~ IChcJ9l tbeat.rlcal de~ then returns
to ~ce that be'a diOpptna out of
1chool,
NBC8 9:30 -.. Yestentay•s Cblld ...
A new TV movie about a 17-year-old girl
clalmtns to be ttie daughter of a wealthy
family wbo was ktdnaped .i the ue of s. Shirley Jones, Claude AklDs and Rosa
Martin ate featured.
KTLA.1110:00 -UCLA Basketball.
The secona-ranked Bruins meet the
W aablnl\on Husk lea in a conference
game ta(>e;d earlier ln the evening.
: I THURSDAY I
: IL....:i~v~il===*ll=:~-11
10:00 8 ((fl) CJ)) Cl)......, .... A
war ·SUrTtd Yttlll•• ntt11n
becomes the patsy la a murder
com.mrt1ed by his best lnend who maks lht mentally dlSIUlbed tt·CI
tlllllk ... it ~ble tor Ille dutll.
Peter Colh41d. Rennt mttt. Jffrt Oolltllt lftd Robeft Yan llll5l a UClA ....._. Wtshllt• at
UCl.A. • <•Cl)) • Sb-. " Ill Fralldsu "Who Killed Hetu
Frllldlr A woman's mys!tllous dis-
'Wtlllnct and ~· dlSCOWIY of Mood mm In llet tiomt lead Stont
end Robbins to 111spect lll'llrder nbl
cWln bemlna clues tuin up. Marlytl
Mason ptSts. ...... a ..,..
-10:30-
CI) CeWlrtlJ ..... .........
flll*-""--
11:00 aeCl>ID._
D UOOIIllJI .... ..... CD Mae o.lalll Htf * UttTtLM &libfy Getsa .. -.r..itt .. ..., ........ ...,, ......
muse......._.~
(\11) CJ)) :i= .. ®Wei m11a,_..... ... ._
(QI Cl)) ........ Sl1't
-U:JO-
fJ <cm CI>> <1> as Liii ... O =>Cl>9G.._,C.. ()) ni. Pfl a.
• (QI ())) • .,...., .... Sf9dll "Dtoa JIN" .... QI n. ,. a.II
12'00 ...........
..... ...., ...... (lh)
'67-Mant kMiotL SYtw llaldla. .... ..,,. Cllllill ,......
(sci.ti) '56-Patl OotCln. ltsllt
PllihlCJI, ha llertok.
-12:30-
• ...._ SllM: .... " .... lltA... ... u.. .... " "TM ~llllllMlrtt . .......
Shelba Robl1on, director of Saddleback cou ..... flad•H~vlroammtal stud.lea Pl'OIJ'UD,
conalden South anfe ~ty an ideal open air laboratory f« study o the colllak>D between nature
and urtMm development.
.. BYery envlroamental Pn>blem and c:oodlUon
In the world can be found 1n tbe IOUtb county area."
ahe•akt.
.,.ANDIO llANY Ot:CISIONS OE beiD1 mlde
now bJ &oftrDment that people can get involved ln
tbe whole~ If they mow what ~y are deal· lnl wlth ... &be adda.
Tbla eemeeter, student.a wW have inatructlon
from two former Orange County planning com· milalopen, the bead of a major environmental coo-
'°!:~;ompany and the Irvine Company's two pl manaaen.
Sadclleback'1 effort ( J to draw tocetler such an ECOl.LJC"f
eUenalve fleld of stddy la
unusual for a two-year
colle1e.
group, the procram ta aimed at four bulc 11"0QP1 of
peoplt9 locludini: -au.. ~t, th• tnowleds• and qperliae requited to Wort tba •11\eUl and u.n4entud
the coqlllextu.. of modem devtlopm•\ plannl.Di
and dedalCJo.maklq.
-P1DOfU IN OTB&& noralllONI tqot •
lna for a •11 to •et lDto IOllMtblaa eLM.
-CltJ ud COUDt1 fOTer'AllMllt ~ t.blwt into roles --.·envlronmental plumen wWaout pn-
paraUon or adequate tralnlq.
-TradlUon•l 1tudenta Jooldn1 for pre· unlven!ty cltue1 to ready theJD f« a four.year
pro1rain alter aradu~tlon from Saddlebaok. "M.Y concern la to orient llWI ~am to the
local community," •flld 111. Robladn. • Sucb pro. gra1111 at other acboola are not cotna ln with tbe ldea
of coanectlq to declalODJ betnc made now and tbe
declalona yet l9 S>e mad• by &ovtnUDent."
·so SEES ua P&OGMM AS a brtd•e betw._ 4evelopment interest.a and envtronmel\· tallatl. . •
ANO lllVINB CO•· P8Dy Pl&Dlter•
Hardy aroder and David NMb wtl1 teach another section of ~ 1ame elua (!'(MD a dlfrere1tt penpec-.
Uve.
111. Robl.Dlon 1ald atudentl will also be expeeted
to 10 Into' envlromental .,endes to leana ftnthand
bow theyopetate. Ms. Robllon. who prefers that deslpaUon, said
few COllllDVJUty coUeces have embarked on an area
normally reserved for four.year lnatit\ltiom.
"Tbe pl of aucb a eo,nmunlty-ftntered instltu-
Uon la to provide middle .IX'CJQlld," Hid Ila. Robison.
"Our role is to., out ~;.brlna people tocether to
lootattbeproblemsobjeeuftly." r===============~ A blihlllht ot the current semester wUl be an
TBE lllSSION VIEJO SCHOOL offered its first
two environmental studies classes during the fall
semester. But It wasn't until the current term that
the framework of a fUJl-scale course of study
institute of environmental studies, belna planned
for March. It will feature a ''think-tank" of eount1
decision makers and practiUonen and will be open
to the public.
WHALE WATCHERS!
E-v ........ rifttJ-..,., end 111•'*'-Y I-it .......... .. o....,·, LodlM will offer 2 wi. Wetdoiltt T npt llCll drt ........ I •
be1an to take abape. -
lb. Robilon assembled a 40-member citizens
committee comprised of representatives of school
dlatricrts, developers, environmentalists, di.strict
llllt 1 I"" fnlm tt. ...,_ Pwilloft, 400 llWn II., lalloe. T.,,._
l714167J.124S F-: $4.00 Adults; '2.50 Ottldnn 12Md11ndlr Classes being offered in the Saddleback pro-
gram examil\e forces affecting the air, water and
land of Orange County. ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~::==:;=========~
residents and others. · FOR EXAMPLE. FREJ)ERIClt SAWYER, ex· (JACI( ANDERSOi.)
According to the goals establlabed by that ecutive director of the Reynolds Environmental REVEAL.$ In the DAILY PILOT
It's Rancho Las Pdlmas Counttv Club.
In jutt J 1hort month. we IOld what -bid
planned to tell ln J yean-a tocal of OYer 750 fairw8y
condomlnJwm with a value tn eueM of $SJ,OOO,OOO. We
don't lu.ow of anochn new community-of any kind,
&J11Whete-tbat hu met with dW kind of tuecete and
bu~ accepcance. Htte'I whyt
Ownenhlp/Mmlbenhip All In One
Rancho Las Palmas Country Club uffm all the aJvanra11t>1
o( bduna•na m the finest private ll'ilf club anJ tennis duh plu5
ownenh1p of a btaurlful 1an2le-stury condominium on ftt lanJ an
a pte·iiuardcd communary fnf rhe price ul cunJommium
uwncnhtp alone.
!u an uwner you r«tl\IC proJ>rlerary membenhip riafm In
both the iulf and tennis club actlvanna your playnlK pnv1I~
for annual dun only. Tnere are nu miriam1n fen. 1l\C
membenh1p ri&hts remain with the ownenhip ul your
condominium. Thls 1s an 1mp.>nant a$St'Mu the value anJ
1«urity of your invttfment.
Goll
Rancho Las Palmas C-tlllnrry Oub ulfen <'Int ci the rnc.c
bnurlful Ted Ri.lblnaon.Jeslane<l ttRUl1t1l1>n 18-t-.ik coune1 ytJU'll
~r att. Abundant lakn 1nJ tTBpi, mllanii anJ mounded
.,., .......... '"
m,.,. i.,. """"' 101..-t l<l 1u 11..-.. 11...,,llWttcllu M,,.1 .,,,, ltj1 "" "'" Ht.,., 0. ..,...._11, 1 "I ''"'" Fu" """' ~. II'" 111 '"'"A In < Hoipr Dr • lcfr tu t'lln.
fairways JnJ mahlcureJ 1(1'1:tn5 stretch uwr 6.100 )'llrl.fa to ctt11re
a challenglnR par 71 C•11Jr1e.
unnla
Sptet.iculor! fourteen cuurts, six lighttJ fnr nl~hr pl.JV, a
championship exh1b1rk1n court with butlHn box wars. a
St:pdl'dle tennis clubh111Jioe nnJ cunuol ccnr:tt w11h 1he mo6t
suph1s1lca1nJ cl1~J circuit relev11k>n 1tann1ng anJ vlJeo tape
sysrem an tennl• all.' all hell.'. A complete tennis pn• dll'('I.
cla~m1•m. l;11JnRt anJ oh5crva11on h~r mab: rh11 ••ne u( tht
Jesert's fin~t f.Ktlitlcs
Sinpe-story, Low Oentity Luxury
?-.c•tleJ al;•nll 1hc r11llang fairways, mantcurcJ grttns anJ
sparkling lakts are rht must be1!utlful cunJumlnlum l'll>mea e
Sunn1e h;u _, Jcsll{ntJ Each phai.e wi!h lrt •1Wn bcau11fully
lanJscapeJ 1w1mm1n1t anJ companion rh<rapy puula anJ
1unberhmg Jeck. AnJ. 10 makt Rancho La. Palmas 1n -n
~arer value. your home 111>0 /u lanJ. Tnene ane nu lanJ leax•
hell.'.
Act Now
Tht JemanJ 111 R1nc"41 Las Palmu C.lUTlny Oub hat bttn
•-rwhclm1nii. If $.1lca conr1nue 1t the Jlfttcnt rate, wr cxJUIJ be
llolJ out before rhc enJ of this 1eaa>n. [}un'r mla uut on the
lll\>st fantastic value wu'll ever fanJ an 1ht Jeacn. Vi.lit Rancho
Las Palmos C.1untry Club now.
fumilhed Moddl Open IOun di Ou*
TMl 1nJ thttt be..lmucru frnm
$73,995 .
A ~t ol SwuW COfl)Of111ion
•U-000 Bob Hope Driw, Rancho Minae. Cal.ifom.ia 92270
'Wephone (71.f) )46-0651
\ ..
:: .• .. ::
Pri1'ate ~es
Diana Rigg and Tony Britton play a scene
from "Public Lives," a spoof on Noel
Coward 's .. Private Lives," m which they
enact Elizabeth Taylor and Richard
Burton. The six-part TV series is being
filmed in England.
Pleasance in 'God'
LOS ANGELES (AP)-Donald Pleaaancetakes
the role of a paycbotheologtst who interviews John
Denver about bis conversations with God (George
Burns) in Warner Brothers' "Oh God."
Colf.ege· ShOWs Opening
ADCJrillpa1 muaical r.we llDd a <Jecqe 8erurd Iba• comedy, botb coll~ ~. make
tbelrdebuta alq the Oranie Cout lb.ii week.
The musical ls .. Ml.nor. Mln'Ol'" by Saundra
Katbtwa·Deacon. who Abo la d1rectloa tbe show, at Saddlebaek Collece. The Shaw comedy ii ''Anm,
and the Man" at UC ln1De. Both play tonlsht tbroQbSaturday only.
Tbe Saddlebaek 1bow featuret akttcbea.
mODolOIUell, pantomime, pUppetry end musical
numbenooa••women'aldeodl.Y"tbeme.Castmem·
bera areSuaan KWioD, Sbeny Kratt. Rachel Arocme.
Sande 8'nltb. Deborab Kllcbell, mualcal directOr RobiDFredertckandthea~
PB•FOaMANCES WJU., BE elven at8 o'clock
tonlebt throu&b Saturday ln Buildlna R on the Mis-
s ton Viejo campus. Reaervatlona 831·9100, extenaloo263.
Graduate atudent Cbrtatle Mu Williama la 1tag-
ln1 "Anna and tbe Man" at the Fine Arts LltUe
Theater oo the UCI campus. CUrta1.n time la 8 p.m.
with Ucket information avallableatm.es11.
Four local productions are ringln& down their
curtaim Saturday ntcht -"Piasa Suite" at the
Costa Men Civic Platbouae. "For the Uae of the
Hall" at tbe Laguna Moulton Pla,ybouae, "When You
Autlwr of 'Roots'
Says Effects Good
MEMPIDS, Tenn. <AP> -Tbe author of
"Root.a" aaya the televised version of bis best.,
selling book ''might create some incidents here and
there," but in general will have a good effect on
race relations.
"It la rather like openlnc up an old boil and let-ting the pus out," said Alex Haley.
"Roots," which traces Haley's family history
and eraphically depicts the mistreatmeat of bis an·
cutora at the bands of white slaveowners, bas
drawn record televlalon audiences. It wu telecast by ABC on eight consecutive nllbta.
THE SERIES HAS PROMPl'ED strong reac-
tiooa from many viewers and bas been blamed for
racial tncldenta at schools in Haniaburg, Pa.,
Detroit and Hot Springs, Ark.
Haley, in a telephone interview from Laconia,
N.H ., with the Mempbla Commercial Appeal, said,
"We have long in this country committed the error
of trying to bide or obscure slavery like it never
happened. But we should acknowledge that it did
happen and go on and live with it."
Haley said the proeram "milht create aome in·
cldents here and there, but on a scale for the entire
nation, and the poaitlve response registered by the
millions, certainly that Is not with factual basis.
The overwbelmin8 majority looks atlt favorably."
TUB 55-YEAR·OLD AU11IOR. who grew up in
Henning, Tenn., said he wishes more time had been
devoted to the life of Kunta Kinte, the African
tribesman sold into slavery, who is one of the main characters in the story.
But "I don't think I would change anything,"
said Haley. "Given the circumstances of only 12
hours of rum and the compression we bad to work
with, we did the utmost we could do."
The author said be was Inspired to write the
book by bis grandmother's front-porch stories
about the family tree.
"I think it will give all people, blacks as well as
whites, a refreshing and certainly enriching new
look at the history of black people," said Haley, who
for the past year has been on a speaking tour of tbe
country.
'Supercops' Set
MIAMI CAP) -Terence mn and Bud Spencer I
have begun tum.Ing "Two Superei>pa" with locations
in Miami and other areasofF'1ortda.
The rum, which reunites the two actors, Is the
story of two would-be criminals who are drafted into
a police force. Alter eight weeka In F1orlda, the ei8ht
weeks In F1orlda, the atudlo work will be completed in Rome.
THE GOLDEN BEAR Hwl'*'•leadl ,. ......
..._ 4 6 t• MICHA&S
PLUS IOY PIAT. JISSI ID DAVIS
.._ I 1·13-SOMS Of CHAWUM
PLUS SftJT IMI
... 16-17~0I & ........
AUYIPUY
fB. 1 ... 20 llAIAPAMA
DIMIM• • COCXTAILS • MO AGI UMIT
.._. .... hCwhtfefC.... ....
306 ,ACllllC COAST HWY. IJ6-f600
lluM ........ (AcrwfromPlwl
Inter 1 nlasion
Tom TitUs
Plnmme~
Joins Cast
LOS ANGELES <AP>
-Cbriatopher Plummer
will ioin the cast or •'The
Disappearance," which
ia DOW being filmed in
Montreal, Canada.
Others In the film in·
elude Donald Sutherland,
David Hemlngs. David
Warner, John Hurt and
Barbara Parkins.
Plummer plays the
head of a mysterious
agency who ts somehow
connected with the dtsap·
pearance of Sutherland's
wife, played by Francine
Racette.
Tyrrell Cast
LOS ANGELES <AP>
-Susan Tyrrell will play
a prostitute turned school
te acher In "Another
Man, Another Woman,"
Claude Lelouch's
wes tern.
" ... Nothing less than
the most exhilarating
entertainment of the
film year to date."
v... rn c "'"" NEW YORK TIMES
SOii i'ii rons 1
IG CIJ
f OUt-.l AIN ~ VAii £\'
(')f..ll'vl ••
CUNf UPW009
1MI INJCMtCll111 ......
SHADOW Of TMI HAWK '"'
,..,.., "'""' ..... "" IN SIAICM Of NOAH'S All ... P\UI
ITS11llS FIOM llTOND UITMte1
llDO l'OlUl e PUA IAIUT
NOIMAN. .. IS TMAT TOUP 1Nt PlUI
SUNSHINI IOYS1Nt
IKMMO Nl'OI e MOllOI CMUN
CM WASH'"1 Ill.US
SIOICAI UCHS..01
-ILOW!lla.-•-Y ... flll •nnm MOM UTOND ume """' 1M1 u rXHDmON ..
... .-o •.Kon~
1MI WT TYCOONINI
PUii f MAMI Of TIMllNI
'* '"INNOQNr •llTIU SLUMall 'AITY '57 i-i
P\W
THI HAPPY MOOKllCll>
lMI -...ocllfr ""'" ILUMlll ,AITY '57 • '"'. THI HAPPY HOOlrD1111
... --• al cu. ....
SILVll ITIUJ(<Nt
9'UI
DUCl9SS & DllTWA111 FOX'"'
.. iii 1.n::.~c~~ .. ~)IMNll=~:: ...
PUBUCNorlC&
PICTITIOUS 8UllMIM MAMlllT4TSMllMT
TM ......... ...,_ Is Oolllt blltl-....... : . TMe SUll'eft SAHOWICM, tJS
ll'wt ... hw.C.-. MtM. CA. •• ~.,... ....,, mlllermont
Aw .. ~O..CATltlt--...ls~llY .. ..._
dhrkhott. "--0.-"rr Tltlt ......_.. ... filed •ltll .,. c-tv ci.ni .. O.-•• C-tT °" ,,._.ty JI, "'7. PJtns
~..,..I> .. OllM1 o.lly Pilot,
~..,,,..,.1, 10, ''·"' "n -.»
co.st 0.0y Ptlol. 1,1,, 1m 4tS.71
SACltAMDl"r'O <AP> -Un-len tbe caner adlDtniltl'a\,foa
taket ..,._ nuet.ar ~ potley
1tand.t, the '1rlt and only auei....
pe>Wer Afety Ian bi the COWdr7
lD&1 bedoomecllnCdfomlL
OJlo Calllonala l:DerlY Coln·· mm.on membet', Bob ltoc«t!.
.says tJiat 11 what will ba~. either became federaJ lllaetlon
will make lMm uoenforcuble,
or If the letblatute repeals them.
And otber' coaunll1loun Ire'
worried about U..am• tblq.
poi• a mcwatorham oa a••
nucl...-power plant eons~
ID Ca.lltornla unW tbe le81.al.ature raun. eommiaaion flndi1lp that
the ttdenl io•emmeal hu ap-
proved demonstrated tecb.DQloo to reprocess fuel and atore wutee ~inally.
The federal plan doesn't call
tor• wute repository In use unW
1985. and utility arid Industrial of-
fielall said regulatory uncertain·
ty, With perhaps a year-loni re-evaluation ol reprocesstn1 spent
fuel, could further delay ap-
proval of a reproeesstn1 plant.
•
..... .. DON~ DO lt in tome: I
ttmel)' fulilon. I'm aure the. ,
l•Clslatwe 1nll react and take • J ••• , our ,...~iblllu.·· ....
"~· ~ llorettt aaAd Juae II 1TUmely ~
fuhlon" to avoid • leaJalaUve: :
move to take tile matter out ol s tbecomm1Nl0n'1ban~. ~
"We will bav• to 10 back to the ~
te1t1lature ud 11y, 'Tiit, we · !
can't do wbti t.be law uys we •
have to do. Do ~ want ~abut ! down nuclear JIOFier. declare ·a
moratorlum. alve the copi· ·
mllaiQD Interim authority, or re-~
peal tbe bllll "' • '
Three-ftftha of tbe commlaaion
llsued •Joint statement Wednes-
day to •blcb U.ey eald lt wu
. possible, because ol federal level
uncertaioti•. that no Ume)y ac-tion could be taken on the
Callforola laws.
AN JNFO•JIEDSOWCB uid
tbree membert of tbe e~'!'.-' ·
mlukln -Moretti, Varanlnl ana
. . : . -JIOllBTl'I MID RE favors in-\ :
terlm l!or'qe ol waata wiUl the '
federal fovernment decides ;
whether l 1'&ftts to reprocea It ~
for pluU>Qiumfuel. • .,. ............
P,..,.a.ed Pipeliae
A pipeline that would bring Alaskan
natural gas across Canada and into the continental United States has won the
backing of a Federal Power Commission
administrative law judge, the first step
toward approval. Backers say 30 percent
of initial supplies would go to California.
8 Banks Named
In Trust Suit
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The state banking
superintendent and eight major Calirornia banks
were named in an $18 mUlioo antitrust suit filed
because of the state-ordered takeover or First State
Bank ol Northern California.
Plaintiffs are the former bank and principal
shareholders Tbomaa Lucia, Edward and Gerald
Bevilacqua and William H. Ahern. First State bad
two branches in San Leandro, one in Hayward and a
fourth at the Oakland Army Depol.
DEFENDANTS ARE CARL SCIDOTI', state
superintendent of banks; Lloyds Bank Call.fomia,
which~ over State's operations; Bayclays Bank
of California; Chartered Bank of London; Bank of
America; Security Pacific Bank; Wells Fargo
Bank; Unit~ California Bank and Crocker Na-
tional Bank.
The suit claims that five banks control 83.3 per-
cent of the bank dollar deposits in California, while
189 others share the remaining 16.7 percent.
First State Bank had deposits of $56.7 million on
June 30, 1975, making lt the state's 51St largest in
deposits. The takeover came last May.
THE SUIT SAYS THE PLAINTIFFS were or-
dered by ScbmiU to dispose of their bank holdings
within four days, but that this was impossible
because they were worth more th.an $6 million.
The suit adds that an effort was made to sell the
assets but Schmitt ordered liquidation with no legal
cause before the sale could be completed.
The suit alleges that Uoyds, Bardays and
Chartered conspired to insure a closed bid and that
Schmitt accepted Uoyds bid or $2.01 million for $57
million in deposits.
A Superior Court order was obtained .. through
deceptive, illegal and fraudulent means" approv·
ing the sale, the suit alleges.
But . unlike the weather. you can do
something about It. Even
thou1h the human body
can take a gre•t amount
of abuse. It sometimes
calla for help When 1t
develops minor pain or dlacomfort that goes
awa1 but returns, If you
suddenly begin lo lose
weight or enet'gy: these
sre denier signals.
Without delay visit a
pb11lclan ror • health
checll·up. I\ tallea
medical koowled1e to
nod out what ts wrong
iutd how to properly help
our body enjoy better altb. Your phy1lclan
lbla ability.
OU OR YOUR DOC·
R CAN PHONE US
n you need n 'do-y. We wlll deliver
ptly without extra
•· A 1re11t man)' rely on ue for
ttealtb need1. We
e reque~ for <M· -rvke aod ch.arae ec«*-
Petitions
Received
'l'he following people
have filed bankruptcy
petitions in Santa Ana
rederal court:
-M•tOOfteld Chevrolet, IOS E .
M•rtpou. $•ft Clemeftte. thted
Heblllllet ot UOt.11•. Lawv..-s tor
compeny wtlt •llP'ter llefore J.,. A.
I( PtwlPt. -a ...... ,. T1'omH J-~
and Ill' wife, UJlll ~Pl•tn Ortw.
leoun• 111111. lltl llablllllu of , .. s~. Tr.. llM(ino ll•s _,, • ._
tlO"ff toJudgt Pllter Ettlotl. _,,...,._ ~ RvflaiclW.1..Aftcl
n~11. US Et ~ Aft .• HeWPOr1
a..c11.aftcl11lut11eMar•l\'llMve HU·
"' llabllltlK Of \210.111. Anet~ ¥e
11\ted at \I Jutl9t Peter Elliott llH
-11 •nl911tc'1101M taw.
-Aul Hl•t• .... _ TllomH
Ol"O;;ql\t ~ M'll Ills w1t. J-.
'411 t strMI of 1M ltlllly Lanle'1'1,
Oa,.. POlftl A'Mtt .,. Its ... .s '200.
Ll•llllltltt .,. llMtc:I •1 M,J50,""-Ndgl A. IC ,....pa_..,..._itMCI
•ttwceM -,.,.,.,,., m111e .. r Wlltl•m
CIWlrtes W.Chl, ~ .. HIN 8tvd.,
...... pott lllectl. lies lflted -" of U."5 elld ti.1111111 .. of tlS, ttS. JuOoe ,..,., •nto« 19• bletl ••IOl*I to tlle
CaM. -•1Cr• offl<M , • .,. 1.a-
W.tHI, 1141 SMOy Dr .• MUfttlllQtoll
8N<ll, 1111 llltld ll«lllftl9 of SIS, IH end ...... OI \I,~. Jl!dQt Pitter l!t-
llott l!e• llllft ettl(llllCI to 1"9 , .... -°"'9t Al'fOld GuMll•, _.,.. II CeNO Clrtle, Follntelf'I Vllley, llM
titted llellllltlet Ol StOl.171 M4t .. ,.,,
Ol '1•, 141,JUllllA,I(, ............
•MI0!1tCU1tt-c...
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In JuPe, tbey will J)feSellt an In·
teri,m report to tbe leglslatare.
Unless President Carter's ad·
ministration deeldes to 10 ahead
with a policy on reprocesatna
nuclear fuel, the commlaslQf:l
cannpt make the required recom-
mendation to the le(ialature.
FEDE&AL INDECISION on
regulations for reproceasiq fuel
and designating a site for perma·
nent stor•ge of nuclear wut.es
makes lt impossible for the C!Om·
milsloa to carry out the lawa,
Moretti said.
"It apPean we ma)' be making
a decision that doesn't exlat" UD·
der the laws, MoretU said during informatlmal hearings on bow to'
implement the la••·
"I feel more and more u YoU
do," Moretti told Commiasl.ooer
Gene Varanlni. "We'll have to go
back to the le&Lslature and let
them make the decision they
want to make" and deal with
political realities.
llOllETl'I SAID THE dllem·
ma probably would be dumped in
the legislature's lap in June, and
repealing the laws would be one
option. The comtnisston will con-
duct more bearings ao that it can
give the lawmakers a complete
report, be added.
'!Vi. "'8 eta•'C ... .,..,, . ..., .... .,.
.. eecede.' ..
Alan Pastemak -will vote to go
back to the legislature in June.
The other two commissioners.
Chairman Richard Maullin and
Ronald Doctor. were both skep-
tical that the commission could meet its schedule of reporting to
the legislature in late 1978 or ear-ly 1979.
Doctor. a nuclear power foe.
said the only recommendation be
could foresee in 1979 would be a
continued moratorium.
The laws require a positive re-
commendation tllat must be re·
Jected by the legblature in order
to continue the moratorium.
V,\llA.NINICALL£D Moretti's
comment "speculative at lb.is
time" because mor.e bearings
are scheduled and future Carter
administration decisions may
change the picture.
"What would the commission
do if it can make only one flndinl
and by law that fmdlng doeln't
exist." be asked.
"But the la•s don't allow that ~
option. So what are we sotni to ~
do'!" · ~
Earlier, Dr. Walton Rodger. a l
former general manager of the 1
West Valley, N.Y .• reprocessing
plant no tonger operatiJll, said . ~
federal-level uncertainty is
blocktni the existing technolocy ·
to do the job and meet ~
California'• mandate. ~
Barton Shackleford, senior ~
vice president of Pacific
Gas & Electric Company. said
the plants affected by the new
laws -plants built or operating
under construction have exemp-
lions -wouldn't need to
reprocess f~l unUl 1995.
Hearings Slated
On Environment
SACRAMENTO <AP> -ho
state agencies have scheduled
hearing., almed at "stmplifytng ·1
California's environmental re·
aulatlons and stlmulatlnl' IOUDd
economic growth."
The laws passed last year im-
That's the "dilemma UM eom-
mlssion ls wrestling with, tx6
individually" and as a bodJ,
Varanini 1aid.
The bearln1• by tbe Air
ReSOU?Ca Board and the Waw
Resources Control Board will be
beld Feb. 11 ln San Francisco ud . :
Feb. 18 ln Loe Angeles. :
NEW YOAIC IAPI ~p~ lWt J?\'J
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MUTUAL FUNDS
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~SE C0MPOS~E TRANSACTIONS
SIM Hori ~ llol ", \1'cloi 0-("9 , t ,,., (low ('19
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'nlut!d!t, ~s. tm l/N OAILYP1LOT
It Shoe Fits._;.
Domest ic Jobs
Linked · to Cost~·
B1 MILTON MOSKOWITZ
Which would you t-lber bavo -lower prtcea or m~
maoulacturln&Jobt t~ American workers!
It has come down to that th a own~r of fields as lJnportl
have soared, caualng U.S. plants to abut down or reduee
employment. · ~· . ~·.
A CASE IN POINT IS THE SHOE lpduslry, wbe~
amployment haa declined from %40,000 ln 1968 to 170,000 to-
day. Nearly 400 million pairs of shoes rnarcbed Into the Vntt ..
ed States last year, up one-third over the imports of 11Y75. Tbe
biggest shipments came from Taiwan. Italy, Spain, Br._
and South Korea. •
ResPODdinJ( to pleu of prot.ecUon trom the domestic ab~
industry, the U.S. International Trade Commlsslon .,..
recommended that Import dutles be raised. Jf Presldeht
Carter aeceptl tb:.at ttcommendaUon, you will beconhoot.ed
with bigbersboeprices.
Products made
abroad have achieved ·
some significant market
penetrations. In shoes,
the foreign cut is ap·
proaching 50 percent. In
Money
Tree·
-·
sweaters, it is 50 per· ' .
cent. In typewriters. it's 30 percent. In radios, it's above 60 .
percent. In automobiles, it's 15 percent.
EXCLUDING PETROLEUM IMPORTS, which have
soared out of sight because or the lethal price hikes,
American purchases ot imported produc\.s have gone from
$23 billion in 1966 to $85 billion in 1976. To be sure, our own ex-
ports also have skyrocketed over that sa~e ~riod, bu~ '°
significant chunk of our sales to other countries IS represent-
ed by (arm products -and an Increase in that sector does n<?t
produce many new jobs .
The television set, a fixture ln virtually every American
home. has become the Coe al point of a raging controversy in
the foreign trade area.
Black-and-white TV recei•en made abroad, principally
in Taiwan, bave captured more than 70 percent of the U.S:
market. U.S. manufacturers ~re ready to concede the
black ·and· white market to the ilnports but they were not pre·
pared to give up the much more prl!itable color seamenl-
and that ·s wbatis beginning to happen.
JN 1975; COLOR SETS MADE ABROAD comprised
a bout 15 percent of the U.S. market. Last year their market
share shot up to 40 percent. About 90 percent of the import.$
are coming from Japan. •
Zenith, the leading U.S. producer of color sets, bas aC·
cused the Japanese o! "predatory" pricine, meaning that
they price thelr sets below or close to cost in order to take ove!
this market. Zenith esUmate1 that over the past six yeaA
100 ,000 American jobs have been lost in the manufacturing¢
TVandstereosels.
Coming Glass, a leadlng maker or television tubes, ha~
joined Zenith in this proteaL The company has asked fo:
quotas on color TV imports. Otherwise, warns Corning, thr·
U.S. television industry is doomed.
THE JAPANESE DON'T QUITE SEE it that way. Son:
is one of the leading Japanese makers of TV sets, doing mot"'
than half of its business outside its home country. Sony~·
chairman. Akio Morita, bas defended the company's export
as follows. '
"We spend a lot of lime and money to develop the bes'
products for the American market. We work hard lo find ou
the designs and features the customer wants. We don't tak•·
three-hour lunch breaks here ...
Stocks Hit Aga in
By Twin Worries
NEW YORK (AP> -The stock market slipped into a
steady decline today, faced with cold-weather worries an<2
uncertainties over government economic-stimulus plans .
Treading was fairly active.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks, ort 5.ST
polnts to an early-1977 low Wednesday, was down anolh~
5.6S today to947 .14.
Losers held an 8·5 edge on gainers among New York
Stock Exchange-listed issues.
Analysts cited lingering uneasiness over the potential
impact of severe winter weather on the economic ouUook.
They al$() reported concern that Congress might resist
tax breaks for business and add additional spending pro-
grams as it considers PresldenlCarter's economic-~Urpuhu
package.
.i:g,:, ~~':t:.-~:s~·':<1rv!<•
A-•1<1111 Sloe-Ead••ll9e luuat. lredl~ ...C.lon<olly et more IM<I JI,
Ota11 Pal • • .. .. • 111.000 6'11 t t "fottf Pll NA......... '2.SOO I'"'+ ' HouOllM • .. .. .. .. • 1UOO JS~+ II ~:~:~em·: .. :.: !a: m:: ~ AltldOtwo •• . •.• 61.200 1-.. .. ~
lmperOll A ... • • • • 51,500 Ulh • l ''"'lrCll Lt........ S7 .100 14 + \ 1~11 tnkllOI...... ... s>.000 :iv ••.•. Newbery En........ 47.JOO U~+4~
lt'laat Sto r lu Did
NfW YC>f'I( fAP) ,.,..,
Todty d .. Sf!. 7t *" n. •S6 .. "" , ... 64 • 11 t:.
WHAi .AMEX 010 NEW YORK IAPI
D01elone•~ .,erca~
t#rtJi.tlW>I 1>111e1 ~ '"'19"
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•••••• •••••••• •••••••• I, ~ ........................ r.t= UUlt ,....................... SUM u ., •. , ........................ t.JSJ ..
·-.
. 1
..
'' . '
•'
DM.YPK..OT
The car: Chevrolet lrhpjla Wagon. the standard-size 6-passenger Impala
The star: Dodge Aspen Wagon. wagon.t
* Price: The Aspen wagon is priced * C.omf ort: Aspen has more front and rear
several hundred dollars less than Impala~ hiproom and front legroom.
* Re-sale value: Aspen has a higher re-sale * Cargo space: Aspen has 83% of the cargo value~• space or the larger Impala .
* Roominess: The compact Aspen has
almost the same to!al passenger room as
\
The car: Nova Concours 4-<loor. • Vislblllty: Voiar! has big-car visibility-
The star: Pl~th Volare Premier 4-door. 275 square inches more glass area.
• Price: Vo~re big-qr qualit:; 1s pticed *Suspension: Volar6hasC~rystcr's lsol~ted less than Nova~ Transverse Front Suspension for a "big car" ride. Nova still has coil spring * Re-sale value: VolarE has a higher re-sale suspension . . value than Nova~·
•"Roominess: Volar€ has mote hiproom,
legroom and headroom.
• .. .
When you compare a cat to a
star, there's .no comparison. -
And stars like these are the·
reason why over 3~0,000 pec?ple
. .
...
a
The car: Ford ThWlderbird.
The star: Chrysler Cordoba-the most
successful new personal luxury car in the last
five years. 1
* Price: About the same for this Cordoba S
comparably equipped.*
* Size: Cordoba has a longer wheelba~e.
The car: Ford Granada GhJa Z-door.
The star: Dodge Aspen S.E. 2~oor.
* Price: AJpen S. E. with automatic
transmialion ls over $300.00 las than
a comparably equipped Granada Ghia.•
• Re-sale value: Aspen hes a higher re-sale
value~• "
* Options: Cordoba offers luxury options
that Thunderbird doesn't-like the 60-40
reclining front seats for both driver and
passenger, the T·bar roof, Aramid fiber·
belted radial tires for lighter, smoother
riding with the strength of steel radials.
* Roominess: Aspen has more interior room. * Suspension: Aspen has Chrysler Corpo-
ration's lsohlled Transverse Front
Suspensfon for a ''big car" ride. Granada's
.suspension is nothing like it.
switched from GM and Ford to
Chrysler Corporation ID 1976.
Join them for 1977. Get out of a
car. Get into a star.
' I
•
CHUCK KNOX
LA Meet
Draws 3
Area Stars
LOS ANGELES -Terry
Albritton, Steve Scott and
Charlie Christensen will be the
featured competitors from the
' Orange Coast area i1l the 18th.
track and field indoor invita·
lion~ Friday evening at the
Forum.
Action gets under way at 7 with
the pole vault competition and
concludes at 10:25 with the one·
mile walk.
In between, Albritton of Stan·
ford University will compete in
the •shot put that starts at 8:20;
Christensen of Edison High in
Huntington Beach will challenge
top high school stars in the two
mile at 9:20; Scott of UC Irvine
will tangle with world record
holder John Walker among
· otners in the mile at 10: 15.
Albritton, ex-Newport Harbor
High standout, has thrown the
shot 71·8"2 and is coming off a
68-2 indoor performance last
week when he defeatea Al
Feuerbacb and Mac Wilkins, two
of his competitors Friday. The
other is George Woods.
And that 68-2 mark is the best
indoor toss ever recorded by a
collegiate shot putter.
(Jp f or Grabs
Ancetes. 1be newspaper said
Knox was scheduled to l'hake
an announcement of bis
withdrawal soon, perhaps t.o-
da_y.
However, the News ·quoted
another source as sayhag
Knox still wished to join the
Uons if a compensation ar-
rangement could be worked
out. The source told the News
neaotiations bad reached an
Scott, who startled track fans
with hJs 3:59.7 third place finish
in a recent indoor invitational.
could lower that mark Friday.
Only a junior, Scott figures to
have a strong kick in a race that
s hould be a sub-four-minute ·
mile. John Walker (3:49.4) and
Paul Cummings (3:59.3) are two
of the top runners.
Huntington Beach High's Mike D'Alessandro (34) and
Tony Sprow (30) reach for a rebound as Edison's Mike
Mccourt (23), HB 's Cairy Burt (42) look <>n. Huntington
Beach, won 54-53. For complete details on the game see
Page C2.
Christensen, the CIF 4-A cross
country champion, doesn't run
the two mile too often, but bas de·
feated most of his challengers in
cross country.
Fight Aftermath:
Among the cballenaers is Mis-
sio n Viejo High '• Mike
Walterbouse, who hasn't come
close to matching his 9:09 two
mile as a sophomore.
Varied Views ·Told
The favorite figures to be San
Pedro's Ron Cornell, who
clocked a 4:16.1 in winning a mile
race at an earlier indoor meet.
defeating San Gorgonio's Dave
Daniels (4: 18.8)
Daniels is also entered, as is
Dos Pueblos' Jeff Coffman and
Crescenta Valley's Dave Eagle,
who ran 4:17.4 and 4:11.4 in in·
door competition this year.
Eisenhower's Frank A.numma
and Chuck AssUmma clocked
9 :09.2 and 9:20.t'ln an indoor two
mile, while Artesia'• Brad
Kester ran 9: 20.S.
Other Orange Cout atea en·
tries are UC Irvine's Ralph
Serna, Cta.l& Russell, Casey Cox
and Richard Grout in the two-
mUe relay and John Konl.Dgh and
David Bernstein in the "Devil
Take the Hindmost" mile run
which begins at 1:35.
Sports In B rief
' By LAURENS KEYS Of._ o.lty Pli.t Suff
No discipliDacy action is being
taken against either of the
olaven involved in the fight at
the recent Corona del Mar High-
Laguna Beach basketball game.
The fracas occurred· when ai
CdM starter punched a Laguna
player seconds after the game
ended. Laruna won 41-39 in the
final seconds.
Lacuna Beach coach Ed Burl·
ingbam restrained the Corona
"Player. But the Lagun11 athlete
retaliated by shoving the CdM
player as b~ left which brought
the fans omothe Ooor.
Corona eqach Jact Errion said
that bis team felt badly about the
fight.
''The te-.m realizes that the in·
cident wu not in the spirit of the
same ... be says. uwe are doing
all we can to see that it does not
happen again."
Rams Assistant
To. Join Atlanta?
ATLANTA-~manBennett, . blem Nleaainl Sloan from h1I
wide receiver coach with the Los contract to take tbe coachin& Job
An•eles Rams. bas become the at Evansville Unlyenity.
leadlnc candidate for the vaunt Jl,d.-.., U tf)le1 bead coaebing job with the AUaa. _,_...,..
1-Falcons of the National Foot· SANDIEGO-Dr. Ken Karr,
ball t.eacue. · the atbl«ic ~tor., says San
Dan Reeves, an assistant with Diego Sttte I.I unclertah\ ~etber
the Dallu Cowboys, announced tbe Alteu , are interested tn
Wednesday that be wu rejed!ng momberihlp overtures bJ tbe
.an offer to become the FalCOM' Western Atbletlc Confetenff.
.fifth bead coach in 11 years. · · AriloD& and Arizona Stato are
Bennett apparenUy wu sum-droppinl out of the Western tn
moned to Atlanta for a meettg favor ol tM Padllc I, re.suiting in with Eddie LeBaron, hired u "8 a deci1(on by )resident& of
club's general manaier Tu•· Westenuchoola to sollciheveral
day. schools as poss ble replace-
menta. SI••• C• Ce..e• Karr 1 other" ,.POssible ~ew
cmcAGO -Jerry Sloan last mem.,.,.mclud• San J~ State.
of the orisinal Chicago B~ of Loni 8-th state. Utab State, the National Buketball Allocla· ~':.i:=:O::::':.HawaU, Boise
Uon, beaded for Evansville, Incl., · •
today to work out ftnal detaUa foi-ID -...
becom1n1 coacb of till alma OMAHA-UC lr'vlne'• baik-.. m;t!!n. w~ f~ 11 NBA HUCIGI -ball team rww ~ aub-avo t.etn·
Hpretented tbe epitome ol a de-peratunl and • of tbe better
feulve basketball player, met bull_,... tuCDI ln th• naUon
ltb tbili Bulli' PrlDclpal OWDlr,• ~l::t.r. (9-10) take OQ
Arthur Wlrtl, We'dne.da1 Dllbt. Crellbton Unlveralt,Y (15-a) m
Wirts said ther, will be no pro-tht 10,000.IUl Civic Audltortwn.
a.. ""' .. • .. • • : ~ . . . .. .
Errion says that while the
game was very physical he does
not know whether the Laguna
player actually provoked the
fight.
"You can't go along with fight·
ing, but I can't honestly say what
I would have done in a situation
like that," says Errion, referring
to reports that the Laguna player
provoked his player with foul
language.
Corona athletic director Ron
Davis felt lt was a case of bad of-
ficiating and a tense game.
"I do not feel the officials dld a
good job in controllJng the game.
The two boys were at each other
all night and nothing was
called," says Davis.
"They are two tough kids and
strong competitors and the emo-
tion of the game got the best of
them," adds Davis.
Dick Walters and George Ter·
reri were the officals.
"The fight was a direct result
of the game being called so loose·
ly,'' 1ays Davia.
But in Laguna, Burlingham
and athletic director Norm
Borucki saw it differently.
.. I don't think the officiating
had a whole lot of bearina oo the
fight," says Burlingham. "It was
an aggressive game, but I
thouabt the officials did an ade-
quate job in keeping control.••
Burlingham feels the\ bis
player did not. provoke the
Corona player into throwina the
first punch.
''If in fact be did, and I do not
want to lend credence to that, lt is
still not an appropriate way to
act, "saya Burlingham.
"I did not s,e what started the
fight," says Borucki. "But
wbatever provoked it was un·
fortunate.'
"I ~leued by the way the
Corona lnlatraUon controlled
the c "adcb Borucki.
I
impasse between Carroll
Rosenbloom, the Rams'
owner, and William Clay
Ford, owner of the Lions.
Ford reportedly has been
trying to work out a deal with
Rosenbloom that would send
Knox to Detroit in exchange
for several Lions players.
Knox still has four years
left on his coaching contract
with the It~. Los Angeles
• .. ID
-:
hired Knox four years ago Angeles had mentioned ~
wben be was an assistant un-K n o x i n c 1 u d e d , t h e
der the Uons' coach at the newspaper said. The News
time,JoeScbmidt. said Ford was reportedl.Y
The News reported that the sweetening the otter 'Wltb I!
Rams scoffed at the first list second presentation. ~
of players offered by the The Uons are lookinl for JI
Lions as compensation for replacement for int,rim
Knox and some Los Angel~ coach Tommy Hudspeth.~
players. · took over early last sealdn
The Rams regarded tbe list · following the resignaUoo --6f
as not worth the players Los ltick Forzano. .
Htl8 Best Game .. ,.,...
Jardine Is Bae~ ....
To Sa:ve Eagl~ ...
By GLENN WBJTE
OIU.Ollllyf't ... htff Doug Jardine, sidelined for
much of the season with
mononucleosis, came into stride
in the nick of time to help his
Estancia High Eagles team-
mates outlast the El Modena
Vanguards. 42-39, Wednesday
night before 1,000 at the winner's
gym.
The triumph gives coach Dave
Carlisle's forces a one-game lead
in the race for the Century
League basketball cham·
pionsbip.
It was the third straight three-
point game for the Costa Mesa-
based Eagles.
Jardine played magnificently.
He shut down highly touted
Steve Trumbo as the two 6-7
juniors matched talents with
Jardine coming out well on top.
He kept the ball away from
Trumbo. He blocked four shots.
He forced four turnovers. He
picked off six rebounds. And he
scored a season personal high of
14 points.
Jardine's supreme
performance kept Trumbo, who
had averaged 25 points per
game, at bay. The El Modena
earller loilel to Notre Dame add
Oregoa.
Bat tbe Huskies taan mor:Mll· tum 1o1DCforUMm, too. With cent« Jam• Ednrdl
leadioi them, tbe Huakl11 have
lot\ but OM aft.er dropplDJ tbelr
first four 1ame1 of ttie aeuon.
Bartow predicts a nacsecl'
1a.m• ... loll tM llu.ikles, wbO
plaJ a 1J)b71~~•!1 d1man4ill• brand olbalkeu>all. . ·:wublnlton •• a fl.no t.eam, ..
whiz had to settle for 12 points and
was never a serious factor in fi
Modena 's offense. •"
"It was Doug's best game, by
far.'' said Carlisle. • 4~
I\ was Jardine's sbot~i 13·
footer from the baseline-wUtwl
minute to play that lifted FAMan-
. cia off the floor. •
At that juncture the Eagleajrad
hit one of their last 17 shots and
,weretrailing,39-35. . • r
However, Jardine's ef(oµ
trimmed the gap to two. 'l'bin
Ray Oraill made a perfect PISS
to Pete Neumann under .. tbe·
basket 12 seconds later. :
Neumann's shot was J)el'fect
and Jie was fouled. He bl\ the
ensuing free throw to give Estan-
cia a 4().39 edae.
El Modena still bad its chance.
But the Vanguards missed three
consecutive inside shots apd
finally the clock had worked ils'
way inside 10 seconds.
El Modena got the ball to 'J'rpl,p-
bo. But be had trouble h~4 as the Eagles exerted trem
pressure. He dribbled OI\
baseline and Estancia was
awarded the ball out of bounds
with : 04 showing on the clock. · .
Estancia was able to inboUnds·
the ball and Orgill passed 1o
Jardine for an easy shot at the
buzzer. ·.
Neumann and ureg Krotmfeld\
played solidly for the EagJes,
who could only click on 30.9 per-
cent of their field goal tries. · .
Orgill, although short of llflt ,
usual scoring output, bad ~~
steals to help keep El Modemrofl
keel.
E st1n<la 1411 ''""Ip Neum..,n 7 7 I 6
Orqlll I 1 4 4
Jerdl,,. () 2 I 1'
l(rohnl.idt S 0 0 10
Price 7 2 I 6
Corbell 1 O O 1
Tot•ls 11 a 10 •2
EIMMefle(lt)
•• tt "' • Sowell 3 0 t 6
York 3 0 3 " C. Sh911lro 4 0 4 I
Trumbo 4 4 1 11
•J. Shapiro l 1 2 •
Tot.ls 17 ~ 12 l9
Score by Ouar1on
El Mode,,. 13 I 1l • "°""
E\l•ncl• 10 17 o 11!.c
Goring Powers
~ Kings' Victory
Ove r Capitals· ·
LOS ANGELES (AP~ -Center
Butch Goring struck for three
consecutive goals, including' two
power play scores, and added an
assist Wednesday night to lead
Los Angeles to a 7-2 National
Hockey League victory over
Washington. ,
The victory snapped a four,
'game unbeaten streak by ~e
Capitals and raised the Kings lie·
cord to 19-23·10. Washington's re-
cord is 16-29-8.
Marcel Dionne chipped in with
three assists for Los Angeles, tir·
inging him even with Montreal's
Guy Lafleur for the NHL scoring
lead, each with 79 points.
Goring, a 5-foot-9, 27-year-:ofd
center, now has scored th ....
goals in a game seven times \D•
hia NHL career. He scores hlll
first on Wednesday nl&bt at 10!49
of the first period on a defiectidn
to complete a four-goal outbunt
by the Kings 'agains\ goalie J1on..
Low.
Vic Venuky, Don Kozak and
Glen Goldup collected the first
three Los Angeles tallies. .
The Capitals drew to within •
two goall ln the second period o.o
tcores by Craig Patrick and
Blair Stewart. •
Oottng then drilled bis 20th.lit
the aeason on a Los · Anae\M
,power play, marldni the sixth
consecutive season be has COD·
nec:ted for at least 20 aoala.
. . .
Bl' caAIG 8REFF ... .6iifj ...........
RIVERSIDE -Sad· d~ Coll•Je•a b alJ tHlll pla7ed
odt:W lta poonst l•lnff
ol dt4i HUOb Mre Wed· ~ mat -but •WI •HPtd Wltb a 68-tl M11·
•Jaa c.cnterence l'ln over
Riverside Clty Colle1e.
'l'.h• win kept the Gaucbol (8-1) one came
~ Palomar. a 80-•
vtctot' over San Die10.
Saddleback woo il with
a wild 1COri.nJ blit.& •ith thrH minutes to 10. •Jtb the acote de-•cf locked at ~8. the
G•ucboa outscored .RCC.
12·2, in the next 2:56 to wit ileolnl away. lta~ Robert Earl a=· *11 atartecl the spree, int ceptinJ a paas and
bi I an easy bucket. Te~mmate Buck Day
then bit from In close and
aft,r a nsers basket,
Tim Shaw and Brown
•ctded two rree throws
each, Rieb McElrath bit
a Jumper from the free
tbt.ow line and Dennis
Sndttl acond oo a hook ·~· lll•t made it 68 58 with fo«ueodds left and the
G•boa had their 16th wtii'!O 24 games.
Bµt it didn't appear
II~ would be the ou in the tint half
u Gauchos hit only .r•t ol 32 shots (2S per· cent> and turned it over
1J Umes. But Riverside
played worse -and that
w9• probably the dif-
ference.
!'We couldn't have
plaJed worn than we did
in -the first ball . . . and U. HCOOd ball wasn't
antch better," said
Gauchos coach Bill
Mulligan. "But anytime
yCJb can win here it •s a
1GOCtwin."
The loss wa s
Riverside's fourth in
seven Miuion con -
ference games -and
M'ulligan couldn't recall
when that happened last.
And be should know
sfpce be iulded the
Tifen toftve tiUes before
comlnc to Saddleback
latse.uon.
tt was a1ao RCC's Ont
Ion at borne this season
-after eight wins. The
n1era are 21·2 at home
ia two years -both
io.aea to Saddleback.
Mulligan particularly
•inlled out the play of
Sbaw, who led all
acoren with 22, getting
ll in the aecood half.
"He played
magnificently," said the
Gaucbos coach.
a no 0 1•1 .. " .. -... lrlltll J J l It .... • 4 l tt ..... ' I l J ...... s 0 , IO ........ I I , J 0.. l 0 I • --~ ... 0 I I I ._ I • I I T-... • ,. .. ..
Nefft!IM ~II.Utt
73-62 Win
ForOCC
Tbe Orange Cout
Collete PiratH out·
scored the Gro11mont
Orffflna 1~2 mid •• ,
t.broulb the second ball
and recorded a 73·92
Sout.b Coast Conference basketball victory Wed-
n.-ctay night at Oranse
C&elt c.otle1e.
'l'rallinc U ·4S wltb
1J:2e left to play, the
Pirates went on their 19-2
•"1rt. Latins a 64-53 lead with 4 :39 to go.
-From that point, ~ge Coast went into Ila ucllberate offense.
Joa Holland (20 P9fbta), Jett Golden 08),
Phil Bolden (12) ano
M'8rk Oman (12) ~keel occ·. wln wlt.b
lloNen addlns nine re· bwnd.I and Golden "'-ht. The Plratea shot 58
Ptrtent frotn the floor
a.Ml wne 1S ol 23 for i9
~ent In the ncond
.... ~c..tl " ..... , . . ,. . . . ,. . . . " • • • 11 • • • I
1 I I a • • • • T .... 1 It f1 11 r.I ~fti-: o....._. ~tt. IMt.
l.
87 SOGU CAaLION Edlaon took the lead
Ol ........... 99'! (4t-48) with $:56 '° 10. Dean Owen. playiftg in tb en IL be cam• a
placed the lnJW'ed Gary .iruelln1 nip-and-tuck
CoDtnru. came up with a ff air a a t be t w o
a •teal wltb •l1bt jockeyedlorposiUoa.
•ecoodl remal.Dlns Wed· Tom Put oles l • 1 nead•J i:tl1bt aod tbe bucket and two free
HuntJnaton Beach Hl1b · tbrow1 by Mlke D'A·
Olien ~eel a M-53 le11andro .. v•-HB-a
Sunset Leque buket-52.49 lead, then tbe
ball triumph over vlslt. Char1en rallied •lain
tnr l!:dilon. on Herson'• 10-footer,
The Huntington Beach-then John Herman •a baaed Edlaon High basket from inside after
Cbar1era bad battled a pass from Henao with
from an J.8.point deficit 1: u to go.
in the flr'lt half and were Burt was fouled and bit
Oft t.be verge of putting a pair to live HB ill $t~
the Oilen eompletely out lead with S3 1ec0oda to
ol the race for second go, tben both teams
place. w uted opportunities to
Be.bind the sharp cbangetbesituatkla.
•booting ol Bob Henon., Clark Sims came Ul»
Barons Run Wild
Past lions, 68-46
By BOWARDL. BANDY OI tllt Deity ...... ltllff
Off to a slow start but
never in trouble, tht:
Fountain Valley High
School Barons basket-
ball team breezed to a
68-46 Sunset League vic-
tory over visiting
Westminster High Wed-
nesday nipt.
The Barons ran their
season record to 19-1 and
S-0 in Sunset League play
with a convincing full·
eomt pressing defense
and a releoUesa scoring
parade that aa~ 10 ol the
:H memben ol the team
dent the scoring col· umna.
the final quarter when
Westminster had 13 of its
36 sbota from the noor.
Roger Holmes led the
scorin8 for the second
straight game with 15.
/
... tlftlllltw c .. 1 """• Soddert ' • 2 CJ SI-. J 1 J I p-• , , 10
Klrll\ara 0 1 O t Fotter 0 J ) )
lll•ld 1 ' 0 •
Kerl"'•'° I 0 0 I VlllMffl 0 1 1 I
TOCA!& 1' 11 ti ..
.......... Vllla9 1 .. 1 """'• Wlllll-J J 1 I
Nol-a 1 I I IS
S..Calad I 0 t t ,._ •1•u
e.N... ' 0 ' 10 ....... .-.. , 0 , '
Allll• 1001
..... 0 0 t 0
Cerr'Oll l 0 I 6
lloltold I 0 I I
...... , , 0 0 •
Tot•a n • • .. lc99..,a.-...
Wwtml,.I• I If U 1)-
... _alAVlll., 11 n '6 1._..
•
wlt.b a key rebouDd with
18 aecondl to 10 an.-an
Edlaoo abot m.iaaed from
10 feet. Sim.1 m.laHd bis
hee throw attempt after
he waa fouled, but then
Owen came tbrou•b with
bl• steal wltb eight
aeeonda left as Ec:Uton
tried to go inside and the
Olien found tbemselves
back ln tbe race for
second place-a same behind two olben.
Eclllan out-Abounded
tbe Olien, 39·31, with
Henao and St.eve Davit
leadlnl t.be way with 10
each, wblle the Oilen'
leadl.na rebounders were
D' AJeaaandro (11). Burt
(9) and Simi (8).
In retrospect. the blJ· geat blow to the EdlaOa
cause was its flrat half
performance. mlaslng li
of 28 from tbe field.
The Chargers flniabed
with 21ofS6for37.5 per-
cent. a tick ahead of
HB 's 20 of S6 for 35. 7 per-
cent.
Contteru mlased the
acUon with a sprained
ankle suffered in prac·
lice Tuesday and la ex·
pected to miss Friday's
same at Westminster.
Burt led all scorers
with 20, Herson bad 18
(10 in the last quarter). ..... , ...
.. " IJf • M.,._ t 0 I 11
0 .. 1. , , ) 1
c;.nlty I 0 0 2
MCCooi,. 0 0 3 O ... _ IOfl
Wllll9ft'lt 0 I t 1
9ell S I S II f'ldoow I 2 1 • kil-S 2 I I
ToUM • • " ill .. .._ ... _, .. , ...... 190
.. Ill IJf .. ,_.._ JOt6
O'A..._. S ' I 10
...., 76410
11 .... 144\0
0-t 0 t ' ~ t 0 0 ,
lc>row I 0 1 1
ToC-» H tJ S. ._..,~
I~ 1 U 11 U-SJ HWltif'QICMtMdl tt 11 t e-u
Basketball FV's . Kelly
Ree Dita . • Shiites
For Area
NtftOltYAll'StT'f • .... 1imcn1.._,.._. 111.,111 1111 fl (ISi ~~
F .............. 1111"-111
In 2 Swim Events
Tv1-..a1io1 c c11•..t.. Fountain Valley
,......._ c.1 G m c.-Rlfb'a Mlk• Kelty aoored it~"::'::..:: ie11.!!',=-:'. a 1t111tnc double with
Mlnff t. v-1 a. 11...__ i. win• tn tbe JOO freestyle "•-•••11•11 s. 1111., ...... ,, '· and•-ioobac'-·•-'-• u T-llMM I,!( ..... t . tnMltl t. MIJl:I -l.nllll
"•11t"'-:-.t.laots. tho vlll~B..-ooa fell to
..._ V...., (NI C•l......_._. 8 111.. 11116 ~ in Allee• 1111 ,. m ,._, o....... , _...... a
11111H 111 " 001,.., • ., non-I•=• awl.m meet TM!• 11tl C 111 ~~ w~--•-~ si-m o . .,,,..1... ~ .,w ... ,,,.,.:a.
o,_c ... 1101 o m IMttln X • 11 y • a n A 1 I ·
"v 1e11r111, t11••: 'l"1••t• •. American ln events, the ~~~::..:'-~~~ .....
1
' ouaclJltanced cballeo1er
"•""'"'' flll • ..,... Robert Menzie, pottlnC a ....,,!':r"' ett~ mi~ 9"Wl!I fut 2 :01.5 ln the lndo and
MMe'tlell 1111 F lttlCI-a 54.1 lD the back. =~~1 ~ 11!~'J::! And In South Coast .. ........... 1 o 11•1 _. ... 1 1Aa1ue~21 action,
"" '"' "' .... , ""'"''" · Steve ol Corona -:.'~":~.... del Mar eel tbe school
• .. _....., CA11 .,..._ retord in tbe 50 tree witb
~ ui. " t101 LA11e a 22.4 and PQ9ted a $7 .Sln ~=nlJll ~ u.w:i::: the 100 back for bla c.a"i. <11 o "'Mef1e¥ second victory. MNOotll 1111 0 Ill WIU!elftt ,. ___ -t OD to de• Nelltllftr. l1t111ei._a.1t. ~ w-. '°""*°•• feat vtstUnc Unlvenil1
,,..... ue1 U11 oc-vtew HJgb ol Irvine, 1~. °'*" 1io1 " 11t1Aftdr.-Univenlt.y's Bl'\lce All· ~ 111 ..-im Mtoftlll!OIOllt .a~-and Steve B•aun Nk"-m C (tl~I V'l'ntUU c0
c..onndoc101 o cm '*""'1"' eac'" scored a double. Mllft•--OS! G 111 Nett~ "f ov .c°""' tu1t: H•11191 s. Andenoa woo the 200 la. """.,..., ov . .._ do and 100 breastltroke
....... .-et11 1u1 ..._ wblle Braun• captured
WllltMY 101 F 0 41 .,_ the 200 and 300 frees. El~lO..IJtl " OllMrQlll • ., ... cm c <101 ........ YAlllllTY
TAfl ... (ltl G 111Hel• c.et1MIU(90C"la.....a..c11
GllM Ul G ltOI Oold!Mrt 100 IMdlllf , ... .,_,, 1.19UM llNd\
f.41toft -·ftQ wbt: ¥c00.Wld l. 1:51.0. Rl'IOOH!. 100 ...._,,, fllc~ttt CCI 1: •• 0 !.
HelltlUM: ~II. Al'Mld ICI t :Ot.U. P. SMen:oa. c.
..... , .. u.,11111 Ma...... 200 IM-1. MArll WflltMo•• CCI
Slr•I lltl " m lllOH ~~:,_ ~Cl~~~~l<ll (LI t: tU •.
Bleck (01 F ltOI llylOt IO 1,_1_ OalM ICI ..... 1 1 ..... _ Gll"llllltll (10) C IOI ,..._. .., "'
Oelllel nu G (ltl 0•..... IC) 1A.U.UMteetw ILi .....
llllbllflll•121 G COIHll-100 fly-I • .,_.k ll (LI l·OIO I. korlne .-: ~111 • .., t . ._.,,._..1 cu 1:0..s J. °"~"' 1c1
1 .. tJ.IMr~r2,Molmeal. t;t1.J. HelfU-: MwlM. •n. 100 ,,__,, ~ WN-· CCI n.a
lll9< IJI• 1111 II~ ~~:.. _.,_.. ICI ia.l l. ~i.t11r
IC .... ctl I" IOI Tedd M t,..._.i Dal IC .......... ft! F co Vllllll• · t11 I l :OU t. fl. Prt-111 C CO w--·~I ~f ILIS:lr.rl."""*' ICI J:,. O. -_,.._.._ 100 ea.a-1. "<-CCI t:Ol.A 1.
HI-IOI 0 ltl lfll<ll Ladw-(U t:•.I l. Pelt-CCI V-...1 !Al G IOI l'rltcO 1:11.0.
lstMCll '-1llO ..-; Ol10ir 4. 100 .,,_.._., ..._ CLI t·•.t t.
R ........ 2. ,,.._..,, CMcoft CCI 1.tt .. l. ~ ICI Hellllftw: lhlln<le, 1.... 1 14.J.
,,,,...(Jll(tll~--......... .,.....Cal\l ..... J:-.0.
Oddlft ctl I' IOI KwOde M ........... ue .. 1611 S. a..-Joyc1 IOI fl 141 ... ltOlt JIO ....., ,..,_,_,, Ml•• Viejo
Hk ..... 1 10 C ltllMtllo 1:4'.I.
C:-Vtdo Ill 0 1101 Cl..,.Clll -.,__1, .... la,\I 1 ,..,. t. .....
,.,.,.._,..1121 G ftOI L-111t llll:M.O&.Hlll ~11:1'A. lrvlMICDf'lllO~: Joftn2. Wiiier 200 IM-t. V. VHMllo CMt 1.
t .1tret111rt. o•o.r-Cll !:•.• l. e.r111coet Helfll!M: 00, »·11. IMI
* ...,__\. oe--CCI It I t.
o.itar (Cl sua. tll\le ICI"' ,_.._._,, .,._.. IC> SI• 1 • ._ ..
(Cl•U.~(Ult ••· MO ,,.._., tr-CUI t•tt I t
Cll91'11Mll CCI J:U .I l. li'l"9r ICI S:J7,L
100-.-1-1 . .,....,_CUI 1·•0
t. ~CCII. W.lw CCI 1 tt.t. 400 ,,.. ,....,._,, ew-... ...., ,, .....
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J·oa.1.
200 IM-1. Venwy (01 t· tt. t 1 Tiii· tw 1a1t:1i.n • .....,..... 111 t:ti.s.
90 "--1. Mc('.lttlll (0 1 M U Cito -'llltftC.11 •• , )4.1 ... Mlye" 101 ....
OM,.._. ........ t. (01 t. ~
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1• trw.-t. Wll-Ill U 0 1
Mcc:arttll lot SU I, tlllftM IO I S. 1 •!Nt-t.~(01 110 11 t . tlkfltl t•I J .... t I. 0. lllk!M 111 ,,,1,1.
tit Mell-I. ~111<1 II! I
1·ot.41 • ...,_ IOI t :OU '-e...-IOH:M4
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WI....,.,, 11111 l:AI J. NllMd 11111 1:54.t .
IOO I,..__... KltlY ( f' I t:OU t Mltlrlt
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Olvl119-I. Wit-UU t. GI-11111 ...~,,. ..
tOt fly~. OW 1111) "I t . A14'1<11
lf'I S1.JJ. WllODOl (JU .. t.
100"-t. LMr!iy '"I ft.st • ..._ lf'I u.tJ. ........ llllltU.
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t.Hellttd 11111 S:•.u . """fl' IS: It.I IGO--.t-l.*'-1 (l'I I.Ott 11 IHlll 11111 1:01.S J. c...,....,,, CAI
1101.1.
400 Ir• rei.1'-1. ltolll..q Hiiie 1:19.J.
'uili6'i YAillTY Fla. V....., IHI CHI ........ Nltts
JOO -"' ,...,,_,_ "'"' v ... .., l :U ; JOO 1,.._t. .......,.., .. 11111
J·Ol.t . IOO IM-1. ltvcw..,la 11111
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MMl-lltl 1:0l.t: 111119<11-t. PIQll fl'I a.6: lfllwMollt-t. "-Cf'I «> O;
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tu ••n-t. ••'•"• cc• t. Mc.C-IO. IUI J. .._ (UI. Tl-: . ......
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ICI) 0-Cll CUI
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IOI). Hll(IMI CU . Tf-· Sl t.
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1.10 '· 100 brH"-1. •o.d• 101 I .
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O..dllllw IFI. Tlnw: n l.
5111,-1. ltoclten IFI t . .,_ •1
J. S<flllrr 11111. n nw· Ill 1.
But the defense, with
George Barrios and
Scott Ford on the point.
forced Westminster's
Lions to commit 10 fint
quarter turnovers and 15
in the fint half.
Although tbe Barons
could hit only one of their
fint 1even shots from the
field, they picked up the
tempo as the game pro-
gressed and ended by
hitting 32 of 69 attempts
for a 46.3 averqe.
Newport Collects
47-39 Cage Verdict
f'ta. Val..., 1'11 Cftl """"''"'"° 90 ,,.._,, J, ~ IMI tU J, P. Sloll CO F llOI M<Wllllema ICOfllr'-t (Ml l. Gr.-ISi.
Cow111 Ill F 1101 ~""' 100 11,-1. --(Ml IU t . Art
E-IMlmer 1111 C 111 Wellltr IM I 1 :00.71. "-""'"' ISi 1.01 O.
Ae11l•l'ld CIOI G COi Perldo 100 lrw-1. J. kOI-CMI Sl.O'
A•,..fAr 11'1 G Ill MAKI.. P. Kontrll"IWI IMI SU l. O'Gotme11
FV HOrlf'IQ ,Uba: li•••o• 10, ISi "·'· Pollllretl' 2, Hlll>Oerd >. E'l)lnore 1. 500 lr-1. Hew CMI •·s1.1 t, ICalllt FryJ. CSIS:•O> U.IM,,:tO.O.
MIHIMVle .. (ill! CM) S.oiC!etMiot• too 1110-1. v. v ..... 1o (Ml M.• t .
• ..__ ..... I Otl ..,....." , too mtcll•' reee.,-1 111et1tl• 2:00.i. 100 ,,.._, MllllA IP'I 1 .._...,,
fFl l. 0-.11 IEI. Tl-: 1:90 O.
2001M-4. Danowll Clll f. ~
(Fl S. "°"'"'"'Cf.I. Tlnw• 2.10 I. '° lrH-1. ee ... eld "' t A""' Ill ,_ Miiierd Cf'I. Time: n.1.
100 fr-'· ~ lltl t . ,,...,._
11'1 > Mec--llTI-: M.I .
SO blc•-1 ..... Cl' It. GlrdlllMf
IF I > o._., IFl. Tlnw. J2 I.
j() brelll-1. Nlllle CF If. T--..:
CFl l . Jo!NIOll IFl. Tlnw: JA.>.
100 ,, .. reley-1 . ......,, .. " v .. ...,
I.SU.
Tbe game was never
close after the flrst three
minutes when the
Barons erased a 4-2
Westminster advantage
and moved in front. 13-8
at the quarter.
Tbe 2-3 zcae defense
emplo1ed in tbe
backcourt by the Barons,
limited shooting at·
t.mpta by the Lions who
bit (our ol five in the first
period and only bad 3S
attempts for the game
rrom the floor, canning
14.
With tbelr a&gJ"eSSlve
play on defense. Barrios
ud Ford each picked up
four fouls Jate tn the
third period. But Barrios
bad four ateala and Ford
three befOl'e leaving the ea me.
Coach Dave Brown
emptied the bench in the
second half with re-
aerves pl8)'ing most of
Girle Sports
JYt •n
C... .... '1'1ftSITW .. ~m '" 1t1,,...r1n ..... "Ill ... 121 Pllll~ ICnti ...... IUI C IJJ u,,.,,.,..,
'hllkl\ 161 0 I Ill Giii
L.awlt fJI 0 l•l ....... It C:..c. _ _,...,..,. ... I
NalflifM Cll\1111119._,.lt-
By ED BURG ART °' .. Oelf' ..... , .... The Newport Harbor
High Sailors lived up to
their new nickname
"De Busk's Demons"
Wednesday night, lead-tn1 mostolthe way to de-
feat the host Marina Vlk·
inga of Huntington
Beach, 47-39, in Sunset
League basketball ac·
lion.
It was the fint time
since 1971 that Newport
Harbor baa defeated
Marina-If you don't
count a 2-0 forfeit victory
in 19'75-and the win
comes under tint-year
coach Jf!!:rY DeBusk.
"We played outatand-
lnl team defense," said
DeBuak. whose Sailors
are tied with Edison for
second place ln the
Sunset Leaaue.
Van LlelO. llSI F 1241 Sutton Bar11lcoel (Ml 51.J l. Berf'la IMI defense, and the Vikings Hu11m.., m F 1111 OUlllvlf'I 1:00.1.
e .... dl• cm c m F~• 100 11rM11-1. a.,,,... IMI ''°'·' t . d tdn 't score another S<11,..1c1t ,,, G m O'Hauor.. eore 1s11·ot.0l. .__ cs11:u .o.
point until four seconds Strewtflef Ill G 141 Mllc,,_11 400 h'• 1'91alJ'-1. Mluloll Viejo
alned MV kOtlnQ SUl>I: Ocl>OI I . Hem· J.JA.1. I rem . maf'l l.~ICOl'lftQ\W: Perller S. •9'-tl ltl (Ml.,....._
Cage Starulings
In all, the Vikes only H••fll-:SC.11-11. 100-..,,...,-1.Foot111111 ·•• A99Ula11of'I .._.II JOO lr-1 .... ..,.. .. Cl'I 1·'9 0 '· SO TM connected on two of 14 in · s1rec11t11 1"1 1 '9.4 J. T•rrv '"' u CDASTCC:"~·::c• ,.A
the final period for 14.3 ~, ... v.11;~~~~:,+'~,..1...,.,. 1 ~'·iM-t. ~1• '"' 1 02.• 1. F1111ett°" \ o ,..
percent C-1nl161 F IJl"'relf SlnllAlle S s• ... • ~ .., HarP1r 11"1 1 Ga.• l. YIM•Y' IFI G•rTIM ' 1 01 M The Tars Only hit OD IJ'ftOfd\ IJl F lJI G•llflll\ 2: U I. Or ,. __ ,
,..111 C61 c 111 a111 so ,,_1, o... tf'I n.o 2. Otll• (El ..,..,..... 1 • 1" • two of 10 shots for 20 per-Emera~• 101 G lll 1...1.,...., 13u.o.n1.,.11"1u 0 :,; ~artlO 1 4 4111 ~
C nt . th final art COOl>Om !ti l"O W ~ 100 llY-1. ~''•"'" (f') SU 1. MtM 2 • JllJ 411 e U1 e qu er, FV ~°"._ ··-~ .. 1,_ '· A .. ,. ft IF GrouMOflt 1 s * ... ~ • .,, -........ ~ " .. eynoldt I S. O J. O•rllno CFI .... but got the Crucial field l,Kerc-.. 1tJ,Smlt11•. 1 otS. o. .... oo=~U
'4oal on Rob Gal • }"' H1lltll'N· FV.11-18 100 f,..._t Gertwl 1..-1 '9.2 t . Oltle ey s .,. Endof,_.llltlOfl·l1·17 IEl n.oi.~cFIU.O. F11ll ... -M.s-1 .... n
ooterwilh2:10left. 1 .. _ .. 1111 <•lllMMeu '°° ...... 1. ,.._ 1"1•w1 2. MLs.=;~=--" That gave Newport a L1rlm ... 111 .. Cllkert ... GtOOMIFIS:Ol.7i.Tern-CFIS.t0.4. Ml SMAl'Canloet~ ..... 45 37 l d d G I Camo 11'1 F "I -11 100 blcll-t. Y-.c..., I Fl 1 ·00.1 t. , 11....,.i !>tll DI . ea• an aey VenHom(IJI C COE<111i.1,. O .. n CFl 10l.0Glle.1"110tO. Gu --w sank two free throws 1Crct1111etc111t1 c; 1101 o.W011 100 11r ... 1-1. OOllcGflW 1F1 1:ou 0:.:00~~"'°'
Ith 54 .a. · Rllmfl 121 0 10 81<-UIH 1. He--"I I: 10 1 J. w seconuo r emain-Eaten< II ~.,, .. tllllt• 'ln\ltfl 2. tOO ,,.. .... ..,...,. l'ooWll J·J'.ol, MIUIOM COMf'UtlNCa log. ~l"91Y,Rltey• u.._w1Yt•lltt1ICd'll W L P" PA
CllfTUlllY L•a.ue
W L Pf/I flA C!'ll111<l1 1 t ._, ~
TWll1t 6 J tn JIJ
El ModllN I 4 -.ri
l'ootlllll s ' --S-t1All9 s ' • m Slf'lt1 AM VMla., S 4 ,_ "' Vlll1 f'-l • M ,._
Or..... 0 t 1111 .., . ......... ~
lhl-.1142, Ill*-,. F-11111 n. OrtllQll,.
S.11t1AMn, Vlll.e Per11W IOTI
T11t:lln ... SAV111..,u ,.,._., .. .._
Or1110tet lb-.Cll
Foot hlll el Setlt. ,.,..
EIM-etSA\1111.,
VIiie P811l 11 Twin
But N wp rt' l H11nim.:11 ...... 11.,.. J011 _., , ..... -1. eor-0.1 .. _., 1 o ., m
I e 0 S 15 ar DHIMlntl•ll•Jllllll'IOWlllY Mert.'6.t, s.dcfC-.Cll • t '11 SU OAlllOINottOllELIAOUI Was eapiDg Steve Tim• Bertrel'ld 1101 F 101 M<Cw JOO h'-1. er-IUI t·U.• 1. Cllrw 4 ) '" "° W L f'f' PA mons a 6 4 forward Wll-Cttll F IUIAJll-~· CCI l:SU l . c-... CCI Alwin• J ' ,,. '°' ~.!~~:.. : ~ = :~
t .wh b-d 14 l .: M1t11i.u ce1 c llllW-11\QtOoo t ·ot.1. S1118tr...,.,.., J ' M1 s.o A111<1\oAf .... lb ' J SIO •u cen er o a po n ... , co111n11s1 0 101 e·-· 200 1-1. Mder'tCln 1u1 i·oe.Ot 1. Sow•-•n J n1 ,.., • ~~ Cll If Glrden eor-J , as .,_ ~lgbt of which came In a Crett COi 0 101 TI'IOrOI s.m011-CCI,, •.• J. WlfW t: l•.O. • ..., I stJ "" Peclllc• 1 • ... ,.~
I l hi d . 011'1• Hllh s<orlno "'"' CtOWOM '° ··-'· Wr1Qll4 CCI U.• HI.. S.1101-I • '" •st Slntl•oo 1 • '14 •JI cruc a t r quarter n. M111 ... '· ;r...., 2, ""°'"°" 1• ~c1too1-ora11. Gr-m cut tu i. ....._.,-.1e.,., • when Marina closed to s"'"" z. KlltNI t. VIII scorine '"°'' S11v11c1>A.t. S-ttbeck61, A1wrttdu1 L•Ou1"'• 1 1 "' s• I bin with left TllomP-IO.w.t-u. 100 fly-I, Heck 1c1 •1 t JHtlllM P110rnerto,s.n01-n &oh• ~-'~!ce;:-A•--W t 34.33 2: 12 H11n1m1: 0....Hllll, i.-1•. (Cl 11.1 l l..llNr !Cl 1:00.1 Cllnl1,.,s.n .. r ... rdl"" IS ..
before the fourth period. "•· 8Mc11 '"1c•i1,._ Sovt"'":':' °""""" Lo1 •m1p•. c... °"'"'•" . T bat's when Rolf M. T11n.r<e1 F 1'1 8'1\h S•" e.,..,,...,.,.,~,•=~" S.nlleootJ,f'allk••
that preffl'Ved the win in Schwalbe hit a 17-footer ~~~~ m ~ 11lf,' ::,:-.: Girls Sports Oii....," ,._ e01u0t=·~= the flnaJ period ror the with 2;02to10. Timmons Klno "" 0 IOI TlllWN RlverslOtetSoutllwlll•rn G•rdell ~It L .........
'And it was that out·
standing team defense
Sailors, whose players. added a rebound basket con1rernm G 1S1Mo11111 01111uutetneALL Cflrv.utSenDleoo L•Ou•nt•1ts.it1191 were like de 0 s 1 EdllOfl-1"9\Wt: lllrOfendf. ,, •••• ,.., IUNSITLIAOUE m n n wttb 1: 10 remaining and ao,.r s. c-.-.. 1M1 1111 T..... w L "" "" f'•H•av LHeuE bustling for rebounds Ron Craig scored a layup oc .. 111 m F 111 M~..... "-.1oive11.., s o •• ,., • L "" PA and loose balls. with 50 seconds left ,,,, 1101 F c11 veck•tt ed1-, 1 ,.. ,.., L-•" , • ,,, ..,.
f • Pro Scores O•H• Cll c fJI CM"9 __. .. _ l 1 no ,,. ·-...... • J -_, A t e r R a n d y sending Newport ahead aeur 111 G 1m "°Ill..,. """'......,. 8Mcll 1 1 111 m s.-., Hit'• , , m .,, Heidenreich blt an eight ' """' F'""'"' io1 c; 111 ore&m ¥er1111 1 1 m ,. M..,...11 • , im -, t th t b b t. 40-33. MY ........ IC*Oll.. Coote -... •mr•no '"'" "°"""" WHtmlMl• • s Ut UJ Ttoy 1 UI "' 00 er a roug The Sailors took ·the P1111_...., .. ~"" 1.K--or• • • '*'l'•k--..r.. ' ... • Marina to wtthln 40-37 lead for~ In the first KM11ac1rr '"· 1'1w11911d IOI H••fl'-TV~,,._,,... H_l...,.8"cfl s..10t-u s.u..... , n• tot
Wttb 7 ,5 t • th P'-nl• IJD,Ml••lllll .. IU Fo .... telltv111.., •• -. .... , .. tt•r• Alllllelrft , 1 JU "' ; o o, e period w they ratUed .. 1..-..1•11a1f11 .. v11.., N•~"-''·Mer'"'" "'*• ... r'•lc-
Sallon played Uaht man off 10 stralgbt points, ~:;=1'~·.::"=,~~ ~~ui = c14'c=': Huf'll~~~~~.,,1,.,1.,. ~~~~;".'~:.::": bolilnl from an 8-5 de-NML lll•Mk• ctl c llOIJIChOft Edl-et*-tH1111or e_. .. _., __ ,, Pllttbur(llli,Mlnneaout 0. M l•I G ,., A_, fie it to a u-8 lead. T-to•. 0.-11 ..!... m G 1,, Lonqtaiio.: __ ¥_¥_1111_•_1 "-__ 111_11_v_._11_•~ _____ L_-_•_11_si_. M_'-'°' __ 1_•_11 ___ _
Tony Warren scored 14 c111u.QD'-•1
1en111 ,v -1110"""'' w111ec• 1. Bu'"'· '~ri~~ii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiift points for Marina, but L°'Anot11t1.w~1 H•lfllnw: Fv.2t.-1J. ~ &uketball Scores
"'"'._ ... , CIMWIMI ... S4. Jolwl'~ "'· .,, 12. G9oroirt-. oc ..
Mlr'tl-17. Vh"tlftle•7
-Ofll•Mt1.wlC..,.wch1t
NevJ ICM.JofN ..... 11101 s CMo11111t$."k~.., Wike l'_t .. , Ouk•ll1
W fllh"' & Mery u . Oe o. ........ Oii,.
8\ltler ... v .. pertltotll
(ltlQVD ~'1. w Ml(fl,_n ..i
O..rolt 11. 1 Mldlle9ft n fWIMllllle~ ~-p
Ket1Mttll, Olll...,,.. Sl M
•-ttl'Q,1-MSI "'•-n.CtMwM1'2 Otrl"-"..._Ml_I._, ........................ 0..111<., ... 1'111 .. ,, ...... _..... .. , ........ c ............ n, Mire c:.. .. •• 11191......,d w.tToft'_ .. ,
M«lllnQ110ttJ ....... v.~ ...
T tf'rllft<e ti, "'-111111 MMI• M
r
the demon -like Tars ----~cc~iCai-•iiiiiONii4~iiiwiMiii10iii.: •• :-----::~·:.:;.~: ~ 2~ lHE •T Sl!UI
khwlllle 4 I 1 t
O.r11111m1 t O 2 4
Oelty • 3 0 11 Tl"'"*'' 1 0 , " 8row11 O t 1 1
BrM-.. 0 t 0 t
T9'tll 10 1 11 '1
MlifoN I•• .. " ... l'llCll 1 0 I I
lto.toltr t o 1 4 , .. ,... 1 • t s
Ol11116 1 I 4 Wtr,... O s 14 Hel~ 11 10 ,..... 17 f ,! ,.
~ .. oaw.-
N-.wt If II 1' 1-4t
MM11'11 tO 11 14 •-If
·~ ~'SPici:L .....
"'• Patio Cover lMnbet
~ 20°/o OFF:·
' J
OOICe._,l)f,...
Ir VIM, c:.11"""'41
MAll.E0810$l
Thu~f!!wuart3. tm OAILY"1.0T
NOTICE
rlCTIT'°'-ll auttlljlll
MAMallAT•MaNT
TIW IGlllOwlllO __, II •11t 11181·
MU•\ ""o"e"T1as 'o" f'i.OflHSl~U. llGM A,_ O<I.,., o.rw"o-.u.....-MI<~ ...... 9111Mft, D DI., llt "_,IOt t. ....... ,_ C>e<Mm•. c;.A. mn
fflb lluM-Ii~ 1W •lf>-<llvldY ..
Ml<Mtt ..... Sillt'll" O<>'
Tiii• ",._t ••, lllM wltfl tlW C:OV.tY Clw11 Of Or•"Ot C-ty .,. JMUMy ,,, 1m
l'Jtl1S
f'u!MI,,_.., Or~ C..St O.lly P'li.t. an te.t1.w,...>. io.1'n , .. "
PUBLIC NOTICE
J11·77
PUBLIC NOTICI:
WemenG
The lJltimate
,...._AP._..dW :.t
Written oa the door to tbe Rhode Jalam ~·~ bathroom are the worda •1For llembera Only .. ':'
the facllJties wttbln have traditionally been the " maln of male lawmaten.
That was wbat Sen. GDlo I . C...Ua. UIUU&lll\. untU a Statebome auardkept blm from entertq1.
"I coulctn•t 10 to the ... bead.'' Canulla eof4%~< plaiJled. "Tbey'.e Cot a luard out there bec!aUil ...: sen. Giana Fleek'• uaing lt. Thia Equal 1tlab AmendmentatuJfll1olnftoofar." ~
Mn. Fleck. a f.teabman lawmaker, aatd ••
got a riJhl to uae tt just 1.lke anYoM else." •
Comedian lebu Canoa, saying that • ._,,. ~ ~
the enttttail1ment Industry honor ouraelva too~'
quentl1." told CBS bo woo'?\. e~rtlclpate in its "Peopt•• ~
ChOJeeAwarda"teleeut. ~ :
Tbe aiher-ba.ired star '4:
NBC•a ''Tonl&bt" show aald~~
he Informed producera ~w CBS procram, to be aired j': '·
10, he won't appear in It, •
cllpe ol bis show for it, or a ;.
any award. : :. Carson, atnce:r Job ~.
ca1tsotit and comedian Bob Rope, ~ ::
listed as nominees in the °F1vorite All·~
Male Entertainer" cateaory. _., ~; . ~
Pftslcleat Carter'• brother Bl.U1 ls now aa o6-: • ficial celebrity. • ~
"If Billy Carter's not a
celebrity, then there's not a
peanut in the state of Georgia,"
said TudJ Rice, president ~
Top Billing Inc., a Nashville
firm that represents celebrities.
Rice aaid Billy signed an
agreement wtth the firm that
will represent him .. in the area
of penonal appelrances and
with the media.'' ••U.YCAHll• ... * 0 Delaware Gov. Plelft 8. n P• a~ .. •
in his own right, may give up bis official state LiDcoG ..:
Continent.al for a van, • • t
Press secretary Fred Stem said that du hilt,
who inherited tbe oU1dllL,,
PEOPLE assumed office la• ( )
governor's car when
. . month, finds it too.·
---------crammed forworttng. •
Be's cons ideria,-,.t turning It in and leasln1 a motor van with e~~ space to bold staff meetings on bis frequent ~
between Dover and Wilmington, Stern aaid. ..
f'ICTITIOUJ au11M .. NAMa STATllMllMT n. lot IOWl!lt PfflOft la doit!9 lul· -M:
5"0RECIUEST ltEAl.TY, mnu
ADM LIO., ~II Vellt•, CA. ft10I
MelWI• Ortey Miiier. 1717S La
AOMl.tl .. Fou!ll•lnVat .. y,CAfVGI ™' boniness '' COllduc'9d i,. an a. dl ..... I.
AMM "O Mitter ™' Jlet-4"\t •• , flt.cl .... "" Q>u11ty Clerk Of ~enot C-.-, 0111
Je;luery '· "".
. . . .
Fi1MKY WINKIRIEAN
i '
f
TAKE nvrr 1cn3 1..056 m
MICHIGAN FOR E)(AMPlE ... ~/~Mft~s!.
WAS rT 50ME1MIN6
I SAID~ ..----.--rrr-i
TANK McNAMARA by Jeff Miiier & IHI Hittds
.rANCY by Emit BushmlUer
STEP UP, CHIL.l:>REN···
I HOPE YOU ALL
BROUG~T BACK YOUR
REPORT CARDS !ODAY
YOU DIDN'T
RETURN YOUR
CARD. NANCY
lllAY'S CIDISIGID PUIZLB PEANUTS
ONtltO FMtu,. Syndicate w...,..n "1aa aoi..s.
.AcAoss
lbpend
'CM ..... ly
&···-Petet:
S1intP1ttr
11 f,Wlttul old
woman
1•A$olaYet '·"'"' .... 1 ""ui-"'"9 f7~
8 feDtic 35 Impel
0 Oi.nt I• 31 bet Mu
"'°"'' 1 O Cuddled 31 Moc*•" '" 11 Oi¥ino ... cow ... to 38 WO!MA'I
120..·-~ Olll of '1 Ceitbr stion I
13 0..truellft •2 OffenM
wlndl • • • Malt llQllOt
DOWN 1 a f""'"' •s C..IPOOI ffOflt 1M 49 I IOI h<MI 41 •••• Carlo 1 Utility COfll• 23 Attention 48 Thread
2 r..'l~==· 25 l<lnd of win· 60 S.: Prefix 1tiy """ 6 l u111v. 1ut11.
3 Endlfto witf\ 2e Aldlale 53 Editor'•
you119 ot 27 HM&ened word
CllJi
----..
Q~ ''C
JUDGI PARK&
50 l 0M
HAVING IT
FRAMED
~ '"or CMOf
Ctl.Jf
-·-'""' ---.:H>'t •.••
old 28 Conlrowt&iel 54 tndi.n Of
• Wlncl llOrllll Cuatef •Ide .... 1co \ ' ...:;..;.;...~--,.._-~-......
5 Before 29 5tltl9Y 55 P1t1dla e Wqod•n 30 Col\ltndltd 51 Su.r prOd· lhot 3 t Colllpi.ttfr ucf
1 A1tM111t """'*' 59'00tlcal: 1111M 3S Solitary Mew.
DL SMOCK
NOW X K...,OW
'1.'M 'T'Hl!!I SKINNll!5"T" WOMAN t'OC"f'O~ ''°" 'T'MI! WO~L-P .'
GORDO
MOON MUWNS
by Charles M. Schub -------....
by Hwolcl Lt Doux
by GtOrCJt Ltm0nf
by Gus Arriola
by ~ JohnlOll ____ __,,,..
THE GIRLS
"The thlna ls. I'm oo the third d&)' oh new diet so I don't think l
could feel very aorry for the Republican Party."
DENNIS 'THE MENACE
'• I
PVBUCN011CE
I .,1cimoos1vs1w•u
NAllUSTATIM•NT
, 'tllelOllOolt"OOli'lonl1tlolng~MU •
~;
PAMPERED PLANTS, 1'1S !Ubb
St .~l•Mhl.~
JuOfoe •• ~--Y. ?'IS 8•t>b
1$1.,Cosl•-.CA
Tiiis butlMU 1$ ondilcted by •n In· ~vidU•I f Ju OM R ~CJW<•'I'
Tiiis sl•t•fnl'bt·-fllecr w1111 the
County c1 ... i. of Orol'fl Coun•w "" .i.nuuy 1. lt71 •
11'1 ... ,
• Publlslled OraftQt C:-1 O.llv Pll-' J•11. 'IO, 21. •nd Ftti l, 1t11 ltS.11
PUBLIC NOTICE
..
D
A .
I
L y
p·
1 ~
L
.0
t
6,950
orating' & dd
rick patio area'
c o m p i m e,.n l l h 1 s
sppcio"* 1 story town
home. U you are paying
w~ste~ rent money,
here's ;Qur chan(e to #(Cl
S0"1e'~•x deductions & a
savings accQt started
Sm dn pymnt possible
~mt.
Walkff & lee
Real :Rto te
SIDE
A MESA
ttOUNS-1 LOT
Su~t' rler invest·
ment. jaclous homes forthep eQ.fonelnfan.
taslic t Me aista
Mesa. ~ u can't do tx>t
ter th this. Much too
much tode11cribe. 110 give
us 11 ca4. S.6-7171. $91.950
full pn.e !
C)PfriH\h ll\r N, Jft'~ #'
l lRPJlll
MEsA del MAR
WMll maintained .
bl*ulilully upgraded, 5
tlodroom. 3 baU•. pool
hllme. Located on one of
tblta Mesa 'a best streels
•here the netihbors
fuave real pride in their
~mmunily FuJt pnce
$88,900. CALL 556·2'!00
' #'. • ' •
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
J4 I !\ny\od. ~)""" N t\ 675 6161
~
COATS& WALLACE
REAL ESTATE. INC.
MESA VERDE
41EDROOM +
FAMILY
Just l11t.eQ t New roor.
new paint oul!>ide and re
ady to move in Great
~~HERITAGE
•.• REALTORS
1ocat19n for ch1ldJ':n SPORTSMAM'S They can w<1Ul
elemell.la,r)' and Jr. ~'g · : . ~ DREAM
School Pr1C'ed ro ~J?UCED OVER baq~111.11 and quick.sale at , 000. Exception al
$70.500. Call Siit6 2313' ,: • tom home built by
Off"' 111 ·" s •lflol ru1tfN'('1 • Leirnke-1alh & plaster
THE REAL-]
ES_T_l!T~~~j
construction. N. Tustin
•location is perfect ror lt)e
,&pQJ"tsrnan -zoned for
'l,\qr~~s. with an ideal tvt
---for park1hg R .V 's 1• ZP.ff..trt... 1 .Qoats, ell'. BcautU~IJl
nuKK J :: 3BR, FR home lit rn
l'tTfa. Offer•d b~and-new condition
MetaV~rffi! .2'STORY ~.9SO
LuxtJrious • bedroom on qtdet cul·de-sac wllb
.fot~al 41nl.n& room.
\ar1e family room,
kitchen eating area.
Park·Uke oversized yard with flowerB, fruit trees, ~ketball ~ court, auto
sprinklera, coveu~
paUos, and yard UshUoe
system. Looks like a
D'IOdel home, .hurry won't
last. C.ll 540.llSl.
~~~·HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
Large 4 bedrm rumaly Wtlh many custom .u~:
hom1t close lo Mesa grades. Separate 12 x8
Verde Couatrv Club. workshop. ~as ROlent1al ---------
Grand p1a~ ~ize<J living for RP toning on over p ti $71 500 room . J11ritO.. ~eparale t,nrd. lier~ lot. NOW only .res1 ,
famrly room complete S88.900. Priced J • under com·
with we t b a r • b 1 g 'f)G.l'abte otnes. PopuJar bedroom~ ~d heavv CAU NOW 3 bedl'IIl .BBQ model a.ha'ke roof. Covered ~ 752 .7315 nestledlncenteroltract.
patio ond beautiful ?'/.. • p}etty as a baby's
grounds s urround An· Smij,e 1lJld avalla~ for thony rree·form pool. OONALD M. BIRD fdt PoSSession. J
Call 546-5880 .!for full de· Auocio•-s. lt.olto.s
tails. . ;·
~HERITAGE ·
• • REALTORS
The Blacest Mltkatplae•
on the Or••• Cout
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED
ADS
'(°" Con S"a II, Fmd II,
Trodt It With a Wont Ad
[842-5678)
One Coll SerlllCt
fO•J Cttcltl Ajlprovol
2ON1
LOT
Eastsidl!° tncome pro~r·
ty with a 3 bedrm home
+a l bedrm r e ntal.
Consist e nt income
$625/mo.
$87.500.
~~an
-ANYTIME
Classified ads sell big
items. small Items or
any item . .Just call
642·5678.
& FIND. BIHTISH COLUHBlA
Pool Home
. $.58 000 .
F.ao&.a.\Uc bJy gives you 3
bedrms, 18"18 ramtly
room, gorgeous pool de· signed Cor Olympic
stardom. Private yat'd,
step saver kitchen with
lots of cupboards and a
hobbyist's garage.
•
Roberts
Realty
1"41 hacll llYd,
IUlllll\OD lkath
OH THE WATER
I I C:SE.LE~ I
TPROPERTIES
0 IC PS l IC l T W t.J\G A I ANS DJ.,.
HAAHLUM~E~~pNASE0£~
T M I T T I V P, E E. ~ S V IC ~ 0 l E
FLB I t1,TALE.M.8Sl
AOHOHOC ITANSM£0 IlS
l AU 8 J V AN C 'f'I CC K. 8 N•tt·R K. N
R ~LS T f. TV t 0 Q, RE l•A A A E 'r
ti' { 0 0 f.,• 0 T U P 0\.£ V ~ )'~ C E M
( B C N K,A' t V N El. S A }(t ef T H T ~M O~J~ENA~ANi~MASS 'r u v B T ,R· A. .1 b c N F 0 F4S I G A E
KL 8 0 S ~ r ·A IR 0 TC I1V"'A AN W
£ 0 C R R R E S A R F L Y L S N N 0 W
~ C ~ T 0 F R A N A N A H 0 C A 0 M E
P 0 L M S T I K I N E R I T 1 N t S N
$125,000
F.antasltc view Crom lpls
2 Bdrm Condo wilt\ a
boat slip available. For
the execuUve who wants
a•refr'd li ving ~ith
quality this is ill You 'ti fa.U In love with t~ qwet
co-ordinated decorating
DltVETOWATER
$159,500 '
Ea.stcnt Style 2 Story~ Newport &ach, Loads r Most For ·Money ..
EASTSIDE, 11~ sq.n: .• J
bedrm , 2~. b'lll'U~
sepatate la~dry rm, lit 1
kil .. formal di11.lr,g. easy
upkeep yard,_1"1press1ve
courtyard e~. 'L1e re·
ar pallo. Ne~por,t
, Harbor Higt\. ·CJose, to coll caune, $82,500. 41!t1* RllJM ~-:r ... lnetructlons: Hidden \Nord• below •PCM•r forwwd, beck·
• 11prd. v1> • .i-bl' d\agooally. Find ucn 1nd bo11 it In. "
·~tr1beo · ~t. Robson Vancouver ~
Colulllbfa R. N1n11mo V1ctor11 ~
Fraser .R . Nelson Monashee ~ts. u
K1t1 mat Peace R. 5.keena R.
TomoTrOW : Movie Actors
qu&lity cmd room o tbam ln lt\11 •..1. Bdr
llome with benullrul pool
a~~· ~rounds .. It's as Im· ~~Ive lhside es It J~ owaltle.;
WATERfROl'ft HOMES ,
AEALE8TATE 631-1400
MESAVHDI
COUHTRY CLUI
Prime Countr)' Club area
of Mn• Verde. Quiet tree lined, cul·de·sac
leads to l ·story, spacio11s
3 bedroom home. Large
master iswte plus 2 twin·
sized bedrooms. Family
room hosts mauive
stone firepla-ce .
breakrast bar & over·
looks tropical garden
p¢1o. 'n!Jt price $100,too.
lcrt. Dowo. Call 962-1188
.• , P.€=~~iuA
COZY COTTAGE
in Newport H eights.
Imagine a rocker on the
big front porch of thiJ
cute 2 bedrm hornet
Large yard, extra large
garage with alley access
lor RVot'boat. $75,000.
PETE BARRETT
-REALTY-
DAILY PILOT
LOVIL y Daous
This very fopu.lar Bluffs c?a~kt)i• dorninlum ft0<>r pJan, known as the: .! •
Delores. is lov~ly -she is also tll!, ·:
lowest priced Delores on the market.·~· ~ . :
bedrooms• 2~ t>atbs, bea\l\U~J · .:
wallpapers, near new appliances, ~6:-, :
ligbtful patio garden and a greel\liel*' · ·:
expanse for the backyard. OUrreilU~. · ·
.there is no loan on the property; .the
price is $125,000
UNl~UI: ti()Ml:S ·h
REALTORS*'. 675·6000
2443 East Cont Highway, Corona del M• '!!
also in MHa Verde, at 546 · S990
..
..
I .,,
, : .....
.......... ,.... ....... ....... ....................... ...................... ....................... ................... .. ••·•·····•·····•·•·····
IOOJ C.W•Mw 1022 C._ .. .._. IOIZ c.t.w.M I 4 ,.....,_.._. 1040 ....................... ....................... ......•............. . ...................... . 100j~-. .......... .._ ... _., TAXU.Tll m1.oo,..~ asec~P••c. • ·
.W 11~1 a•--..... •br..._:__ / ... _ .. d tJCWa '-tOcc MB8*ale5'*1allat.e. J.
REALTOR
675-Hll
--~ --isf HOUSES
caooo IUY IM THI IACI •• Y:
2269 GOLDIM CIRCLI - l
1-.lroo•. 2 bet•. fa•lly roo• o•d
flta,hc:1, .... coftNd ,.... _. fNt ................................
..... fw S71.000. onM DAILY 1-1. ••••
MIW USICWO: OLDI COIOMA D& MAil
CHAIM. 2 •••w. I ..... • a.z lot. C•ual• ... , ....... nit bl• Id Cllt-
.... ._ wfltl flt~IDH, ... CJl"l'llf ,... ......
fw..... .... AU. .............. to ....
COU OP NEWPORT RIAi.TORS
2111 L C.-Hwy .. C... .. Mir
675-5511
1002
n1.n LI.JI... -·-• ·--w TOOft\,.._, ,__.. rd (or6bdrmsnodelaava1l. • o.w.c. 2nd TD. So. or on.Seeat10Ularsuerit. Blt ttws. bit ya • · .omew/PoOla _.ll tlnt'IDE HWy. On4t Z bdrm. wttb Saturdey Oh}J 14¥ call •red patio. 3·bdrm. 2 PennlQltOD ~rtlti• UNI~ bu&e matr. "bltM .. + 2 Property Boue.•.sso batba. natural brt a Bedroom. 1 bath home l·bdrm. unJu. t~ Blb. flreptece. Uvrade . THE LANDI.NG ~~~~1!.:J~.·~:tt:·:~ t.ooce&D.'1'9.soo. DUPUX $'ow~ 0·~.! ~1 400 on hue• cul-de·
recrea tion roo m . OltAM4tlCOAST ~~..-· ::,,.~w-. -°' ., ___. .... c__. 2 ~--e. r ....._ aac ....... Rm for~! '·
ll:.'!r:::!.~~.~ RW.ISTATI ;;;"~p:.-;Y::Va!:u~ =~".°"· 1'°" home even baa bullt·ln 644-4141 ceiltDtloc:aUon. • Pl..-kltcben apfllances. A ---------• S\15,000 · ~ WNER: 2·1ty, 38r. eooctvaluu $61.950. U'M'LllREDHQUSE .......... .., • .., 2~ba. lndry, hml din.
546-4141 2 Br 2 Ba, S. o1 Hw7. IOOlS.c.tHwy ,,...10 wooJA_·N,20 "'"°' FR, ttplc, nl~ 14. Ja<'. 1
~
COATS& WALLACE
RE AL ESTATE. INC
3 +HUGI
FAMILYIOOM
Jog to be'ach and walk to
beautiful Meadowlark
eoU course from tills IOV·
ely home. Gourmet
Kitchen with formal
dine. Large Llvifta Room
with crackling nreplace Jmt listed and prteed for
Quick sale at 165.000. Call
983-6767
Ol'fN Ill 9 •ti S I I.JN IOfll N!('f;
[111111
$98,000. Paul Yutln , -blkbcb. 179.11150.-0M2.
Real &late. 8"·.,._, AX& IASTSIDI Colte.... 1 1024 Rl1ht location! Rtabt IRAMD MIW •••••• .... • .. •"••••••• al..u! Rl&ht price! Brin&
e Atrlwn 4br. newly d~·
orated, up1raded.
• U&-4lOll7 Open S»I . 4 II+ DIM I u.sneo1--.. bnllba and tooll. Bil 4
the lde.i combination o1 SUrp I Br, 2 ba oa buae bedroom home, bu1e -+--------
a new home io an lot. 171,500 . .411 \enna. cabi&-11.te family room • eU•~Ushed neigh· 9'M3TJ.'Bkr. Lar S• used brl ck
borllood. foaturine all flreplace. Use your im·
the latest kitchen •P· aalnaUon, but hurry!
pointmenta. overatzed t•SA YERDI Call6'5-0303
garage, large rooms, 3 3 Bedrm .. fallllly room.
baths. step down wet· carpet. drat-•. fresh
bar. rniniocea.n view. All J)eint, peUo, tarie yard.
walkin1 diahnce to rruittreel! ••.ooo.
f[ivate beach. Only ~Mcc..le ~~'644-7211 ~=.:.fu':
l=OREST E
OLSON
••C.--' ....... ,. ....
l .. + FCBly ....
BY OWNER 4;e l level hme. 2 Ba
We have a lovely 3Br. fplc, dining rm, sbake
2i,..,ea co•do in the roof. dbl gar. lge treee • DUPLD French Quarters. Will yard. Cul de sac St.
':.:J.
''Jf '..I' .l~ll H~ :q 1 V
NI .1 · .. ·;
I 1002~ ... , .. 1002
•• •• •• • • • • • • ••• •• • ••• • • ••••••• ••• ..... ••• ••••• lalloa l.a..d 1006 baths, each unit. Large house in or near CM. qj \ Spacious 3 bdrm. & 2 sell or ttade for a 3Br ~
mstr. b<lrm ., beamed 556-887•or•~ N•ttOUH uu.Tv
QUINTARD REALTY Beat buY In Cont. Con·
do-3 bdrm. pool etc -
main. free-2 bath-
must be sold lh1s week -
new palnt~arpet etc.-
19765-Keawlcks-make
offer~13·8250. 2~ lo
selling realtor-1 % lo
us.-Total fee paid by
eellerN -••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
MISSION VIEJO'S BEST
Thia large 5 bdrm. home is probably
the bes1 buy for the size. with its large
f amil)' rm .• formal dining rm.. f rplc ..
3 cat •gara~e & view of night lights &
Mission Viejo hills. Absolutely im·
maculate ! Transferred owner offers
at $125,000 for quick sale!
WE'VE MOVED
To larger quarters in the Great
Western S&L Bldg., 450 Newport
Center Dr., ground floor.
450 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE 759-0811
Gwral IOOZG1wal 1002 ..............................................
W l<Sl.l:Y '.\
TAYLOR CO
ln:,\Ll<>l\S '->llll•· lH·ll
-CANYON TOwt•IOttlS Brand new! Countless amenities: Golf
course views, picturesque split levels
(& 1 level) with cedar shingle ex·
terior. Choose from 2 & 3 bdrm homes.
For sale from $130,000-$159,500
2111 S.JG11 t .......
-~WPORT•P"WW" cenB. M.I. 644-49 I 0
A HAPPIMIM& IH COltOMA Da MAR
4 B<lnns.. formal dining rm., brkfst.
rm .. study in child's bdrm .. wet bar.
family rm. 22x18, 2 frplcs. Approx.
3,065 sq. ft. Add beautiful garden.
custom built-ins. fabulous outdoor
lighting. exquisite condition; private
beaches. For the f arnily taking great
pride in their surroundings. Priced to
sell at $1 5.000.
ARCH ll!ACH HEIGHTS
3 B<lrms., 2th baths ; sweeping view
from Laguna coast to Palos Verdes.
Upgraded carpeting & drapes, wood
paneling, great eye appeal! $110,000
CC Orange Coast Q:
2600 E. Cast lwy .. Can.a del lar
IEll mATt 144· 4841 ...... I IOOZ G1msal 1002 ..............................................
AMon a GU.AT VllW! On the bluff in
The Bluffs; 3 bdrms., 2~ bath con,
dominium. A highly upgraded Dolores
model with wet bar, broad
wraparound deck & a view that won't
quit! $149,500. Bring your binoculars.
67J..4400
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1•••r .. .............................................. 1002 IOOZ Cit•r ..
1002
ALL TERMS!! Exclu.sive Morro Hills.
Fallbrook. We have a
... , .. ...................... .......................
ATTB4TIOM VA. FHA or auume ex· lovely 4br, ram.rm, sew·
Nn .... rt Beacl. INVESTORS iating VA loan with juat lng & laundry room. 2400 rm •r-11 l 4 UMITs-OCEAM $13,000. Sharp home wltb sq.ft. on 1.15 acre, almost
EXCLUSIVE $100,000 added family room for 1 acre pasture. Great for
3 blocks to beach ln only $53.500. Call im· horseor4·H project. Last
n 1 • established pride or mediately! chance before we list ~ ownership beach com· 5'1·~ w /broker. $120.000.
DETAC ED STUDIO munity. Hlgh incomewlll W ...... •lealtors Redll('ed to 1114.000. 531
BLDG . (400 sq .ft . show cash flow with lllt111Hetwork Georgine Rd. Fallbrook. wtwa~. Could convert minimum required down 1~~~~~~~~~ _<7_1_4_17_28_-6868 ____ _
to pool house or guest payment. Excellent in· I-TWO STORY
tao use > • H I F po o I , vestment opportunity for IA YCllST MEREDITH cuatom ltltcbeo, lte t.be bandy. Will show tm-
frieodly dining rm. open mediate appreciation POOL HOME GARDEM ESTATE
llvinl rm + famUy rm. 3 wtt.h a little sprucing up. Specious, btll, newly de· Formal entry into huge Lp bednna. Truly for HUJ'l')' for this unique conted home in select living room. Formal dln·
familJ liviA1. 2S40 Vista property. Call for more area. Move-In condition. Ing room, gourmet
Bara. cor of Tustin. Information on this pro-Priced riicbt for lmmed. kitchen with breakfast
0,-f's11Sat1Su11 l-4. perty. Also other oul· saJe-646-771 . area. Huge family room 4111Ln.etlNI au standing Investments. with cracklinl fireplace. ti. u -""'.= 963-7al. Walk·in closet ln master tD ...... ~·o·~· ___ ._._· ___ ·..;;.__ t;ii~~··~1d::!r. ~· I --------Ol'!Nl119•11Slll"''0111NICI' . =~=-. -~~ti:~:~~~· [1111111 Best Bay In Fenced yard. Tool abed. . om•-=-••••-wttb over 22IOO sq.ft. Ad· Fruit trees. Complete t:r• to Mlle Square M v de' witb •love Ir rerrlg. an, IOlf coune and 8$3 Ir Washer/dryer. patio
SPAt"ISH VILLA
$49,500 • IEACH
Winding walk way
•••••••••••••••••••••••
layfroat Duplex
Balboa uland. l&r. 2ba & 2br, lba. Sandy bcb, big
lot. $225,000. 83Hl554.
c ei I.. x Int r ent a ls! --... -15-... -r-c-11-0-1--1 ~ 11u0r-... c..u .....
S139,SOO ,.. If "'" \ 645•9161
PAUL MARTIN 3BR 2ba upgraded Bue· ' 2br. lba hie. redecorated.
REALESTATE 644-7383 cola hom(l in beaut. Builder's home! Xtras. Nice a~a. ss1.soo. By
nbrhood ne• golf coune Step dn liv rm, fplcs, ownr. 963>-7652.
OPEN ROUSE Sat/Sun
Coun•-F b 3 Id and pa~k . Lota o.f ~'. 4 br. dr. $80,000
••••••• .. • .. ••••••••••• heav;~':n~am~~~ak wrought-iron Ir britk. Chris. Bkr. 963·8377, ....._ 1044
BR d floors, 2 fplc's, bread OPEN HOU$'E SUN l ·S: ~6 •••••••••••••••••••••••
lc6oo r.-.....a I 001
2 .. enS129,500 1782 Kinglet Ct. AGT . ...:..:..;;..:,,:.~------i---------4 BR, den 1139,500 oven, 4 Br 2~ Ba, 40x238' 673-7601 Beat lnflation
Duplex llrlLidoS140.000 lot. W/Creek. treea, view. 3 8 2 Ba ON YOUR Mavins Sale
Manl}all Realty 675-4600 '250,000. Owner. Lie. OWHa MOVING inf. Only' S3S.950. For owner's haTee vacated
IAYFRONT Salesman.640-ma out or area , want. ac· additional info. Write to ProPertY and have asked
Old World Charm i·n th1's1--------llf lion! Big 4 BR .. 2 ba .. 2-E.C.O. Planning. P.O. for a qfA.ick sale! You
.... a.Ill! story. Near ~-John 'Mie Box 305, Buena Parlt, Ca. be fi lhi ll Jbr, Jba w /frplc. Only " ,_w DUPLEX Baptlat Chuttb & school. 90621 ne t on • se ers
$225,000. Open house Sat So.th of Hwy Only $68 000 ---------• transferi 3 Bednn + den
" Sun l ·S. 201 E . 38R&28R. ' &Toro IOU & dlnin& rm area & '-
Edgewater or c 8 11 Cont4!mporary Design. ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• patios. Just bad house
Property HOU$e 642·38SO 1Ats ol Wood & Gius. Op Open House By Ownr. •br. fully insulated <cheaper
beam ceilings. Pvt tam.rm, l~ ba, 23571 utilities 1 Ir painted. ~~~.!?.1.~ baJcony off master suite. --OPEM---1_ .... J .... t0-Al-L_Y __ , Duryea off Rocltfield. H~.Carpet Realton
IU1LD!ll"S HOME Frplc in both units. 3 Q u..sSun. $72.SOO. 833-S380 Patios. Footbridge to •1 Vauco ,.__._._ V...._. I
0
,.4._ ______ _
When a contractor builds beach. 1175,000. Ask for Mesadel Mar, CM .._._ --r •
bis own home he fre. Bruce 6 7 3 . 3 O 1 O or AGENT 54tr-4141 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RANCHO SAN JOAQUIN
quenUy puts ln many ex· 83$-0211, page445Y. Ai\. a-•-ID SIO,OOO 3 br, 2,,... ba, popalar S.n
tras. Right now we bave ~ $7200 OOWNI Luis Rey. Vu golf coune such a home to show: 4 Fantastic new deluxe • • & I a It e . s 114 , 500 .
Bdrms .. 2i,.., bath•. forAdAction home+2·2Br,2Baapta. ~sq.ll.famllydeli&ht 547-7044/83.1-3215 formal dining rm.: livlng 1169.SOO. ~Ai\. in the heart of Fountain --------
rm. & family rm. with Valley. Call fordetalla! WOODBRIDGE
frplcs.: over 2600 sq. ft.. Call a BOAT Ml'SSING S31·~ Luxury Condo, by on a large lot. Call for a WftthaYett Realtors Owner. Arbor Lake
'list or 56 amenJUes built Dai•ly Pilot Mesa Nortb vacant "Briarcliff'' 2 BR. 2 Ba ..
In by owner. Price hoqie, new parpel & 1~~·~·~,~R~E~Metw~~ortc~~~I Save SS over next phase .
$196,000 AO.VISOR pai.Qt, room ror boat ori. ~1833or49'-2108 'HJ 833-9781 Hester-Brown -~fAllOllS
For Dress Devotees
van. RED CARPET CAM-f QUAUFY7 RANCHO SAN JOAQUIN. 642 5678 '754-1* 3 BR Townhome, dble best location & vlew • fplc. far .• nu cpli, paint. priced for immediate
For Girls, Boys! ·
By ·ow11i..1ER Wax eas fir & ow. aate. Prine.only. 7~.'J8N
" Sll.500 +closing costs. =-=..,....,,...,..=--''=---
3 BR+fam Rm, 2ba. Assumes pymnls of $368. ------
COILEGE PARK. New· i ncld Assoc. dues . W:...lb "d ff ly redec:. '79,500. Must $47,000. Agent 979-7888. UUU nafe Dini
see. 557-6451 or t92·11.85 I lwalilogt• hoch 1040 C..... Sl;t TNCt
MESA VQ.DE Immac. 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PHASE II br 2b 'tam ln I t 0 E WIUOW MODEL . 4Br. neigh~~,IJlDel Pt~ ~~Rto ~:if:!!~I~~ 3Ba, 2 st)'. $88,500.
tile entr~~ Cust. shut· to be vacant 3 bedroom 640-6631 or eve M4-7Ul
tered & OJ'llped, flr. to home. Oodles of fruit - - - - - -•
ceil'f. wsed'1bTk. frpl:· 2 tr~. 3 covered patios. Woo'dbrldge Place .
cov d . patios. With Asking $56.000. Call Greenbriar Plan. 4 Br.
MUCH, Mll¢H more. U Tarbell, RLTRS,842·8854 ram rm, 2 ba. Call ~~~a:i~~1~:·900· Hntg Seacliff 4 ·Br. _640-_2!526 __ . -----
---"'--..;----• w1poot sw.ooo. 6882 Lit· -esio---ue Harbor Dr. 536-517 ,.." '°"1
... on a COR R LOT
with city app val to
ADD UNIT :~t hts beautifully up rAded
home shows off ots ol paneling, high 11tone
fireplace. huge ~mlb room and bas QU TY
COPPER PLUMB NG .
Will not lut-177,000!
1£1~ Prap•tln 752•1920 l400 OU4Ul St. Nl II
~ Br 3 Ba, pool, tennis,
Newport Riviera. AU for
,;6,000.
hcbrRealty
642-4751
FIXER UPPER
IN 980,000. NBRHOOO.
Owner / Agt Home. Feast your eyes
---------• on this beauty in the bills 4 Of' ol Turtle Rock, with H ·
5 a.*'°°"9s quislte landsuplne •
Versatile floor plan PoSb privacy. 3 Bdnu., 2
features a convertible lnlths, cozy family rm.
den, fireplace & big $109,500 .
bonus room, huge swim ~ pool. Trailer or boat 552-7000 parking, $81,900, Tarbell.
RLTRS, call 962-5566. THE _ . · ..•
Jlnt What VILLAGE. · ...
McNlt HHdecl! REALTORS Handsome family home.1---------
4 Bedrooms, 'lo/• balhl. AllOR LAICI
Pool table sized bonus Choice lakefront end un-
room. cozy fire place. It.By owner . ..U-05at or
dining uea. $83,950. Call st0-1219.
Tarbell, RLTRS, 842·8854 ---------
OWN ER MOVES: Im· Wooclwidp ..........
maculate 3 bedroom . Luxury 2Br, 2ba Condo
Brick fireplace, slate en· $99, 500 · Call U U)
try foyer, handy built· 641-647S all 9 PM. Prtn
Ins. Not far from ther-onl.y-'--.-------
beacb. Only $60,000, call
Tarbell, RLTRS, 962·5566
POOL
THIRAMCH
48R POOL bome that is
sharp and clean. FR with
ll Oreplac.. Cµt~ ... ac
street that e1td1 on
EucalyPtu.a lined creen·
belt. JR EXEC. HOME 184,900 ~club. New highly 4 Bedroom 2 batb0 and fW"D. Come see. you will
UHtaded carpets and family. Pri'vate Spanl.Sh ~it!!
drapes. Completely courtyard entrance. 11 painted tbrouahout. backyard. Great place
Seller needa smaller for cblldren. Neat •
boaae atMe Uieir famU1 clean! See it do today.
bu IJ'OWD·Up. You will Offered at a low a 900 loft the De1Jhborbood. • .
through Cutlllian eourt ..,.,_..,,,....,
yard leads to authentic
red tUe roof and Spanish
balcony I Seeluded entry
t.o Rancho Uvln.g room!
F\eala d1ning plu. Can·
tlna bar and gourmet
kitchen! i,..,'mllea to
pounding Pacific. Pool
plus tennis make this aarden home living at Its
(ineet! Try $4,9SO Tot. Ont For qulck appoint·
ment call 847-4!010.
Seller wllllng to do
approx. G.000. worth of
ofC .. ites. Asking '57,000.
AGT. 673-7601
IMMEDIATE POS·
StSSION on thls
beautiful 4 bedroom,
sln(le story. ranch style
home. Huge 11parkllnt
pool\ ,m•nicured yard,
plusb crptg, in quiet
neighborhood. Move In
toda)' -$79.950. Call
S45·•424 Associated
South Coast Brokers. ~.~::!!?.'!'~ [~Rsl -·-=A r~~ THE R£AI ..
~ ESTATERS
Sill idle ltema .......
..... to .....
549·1655 MZ·se'781 _______ _
10028111ral L 1002 ············-···-·······-······-·········
'E
110111 ILlllS aa.
OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE
Ll>O ISU
...,..,....c~
who will appreciate tbfj 3 Bedroom
Ooly Cottage. Walkini Dtatance to Clubh~. Beaches & Shope. Many
1111u1ual & intrilul.nl Features in
Wall Coverln• IS°])aneJlill. All Thia
• J.Jdo Isle Too. Sl.U,000.
Lachenmyer
• rlPaltc1r
·' '· J<1,,. f' '.";"·""
....... 1002 ..... . 1002 ..............................................
LUM IXCLUSIVIS CAMIC) llatt •teS -Unsurpassed
ocean views, private beach, 4
bedrms, ses>dinl.na. •189,900.
SPfe&.ASS -Tradewincls model.
Open beam ceillngM bedrm. fami-
ly rm. great nook. . ,500.
UnJque 5 Bdrm. sep. llv·
lari l1ngertrps stay toasty rm. dln·rm. lge ram-rm,
even ai r" hour5 ot p1a1r 2 ba. ~car gar. Schools &
9285
SIZfS a.20
"" 11T Mi-11T '-"'""'-
QUICK CROC11£T gil!s'...piac shop I near. $69,900.
tit&'. -sturdy a11raclrvet Keef. Owner. 49'J.1021
bays. gtrls warm 1n lhrilty ha .
and mrlten sets. Use iNChrnt Cotta Mete I 024 Cotta Meta I 024
wullable synrnet1c worsted ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••·•~•••••••••••••• P•t 7386 Sim S. M L incl.
Ir's so nice being 111 a drm
-rhe "all to&elher" lttl ol but
toned bocltce above a s.k11t that
S 1.25 lor each pattern Add
35t eacll pattern '°' l11st ct1u 111~11 and halldhn& Send to:
i-.mgs so11i., around your legs. Alte. Brooks
1ou owe 1110 J01115ell' Needlecraft Dept 105 Pnnted P1ttt1n 9285 Mrs.es· Daily P11ot
S1111 8. 10. 12. 14. 16. 18. 20 Bo11 1&3. Old Chelsea Sta.. Size 12 (bust 34) ttkn 2 314 New York. NY 1001 t Pnnt y1tds60111Chl1b1c Name. Adaress. Zip. Send $1 25 IOI tacit patter" Pattem Number
Add JSI fOf tlCh P1llt111 IOI MORE tllan over hfort: 2~
tirst·el.m a11ma1t handhna det,jfls 1>!11S 3 rrea printed '"'
hlMI ti: skit NEW 1978 NttDlECRArr
Merlan M1trtin Oi'TALOG' Ku tver,thin&. 7~c
Pattern Oept 442 C"clttt Wltlt S4ftres l"°O Dally Pilot Croelltt I Wudr•ll• 1.00
232 West 18th St New Nifty Fifty Q1111ts 1,00
Yo rte ... "' 1001 1 p nt Ripple C"tlltt S1.00
• ''' rt Sew -lllllt look $1JS NAME. ADDAess ZIP. Nt1dltpoh1t .... St.DO
SI l E II n d S Ty L ! Fltwtf C"clttt a.oil SI 00
NUMBER 111lrpl11 Croclttt .... s1:ot
h 1" k'llft Ill• te set 1 l111tant C...Utt ltlk lt.118 plttlt1I ,, .. , St.. ... .., ...... , Jllec•t ... , t .oo
tllf ... fall·Wlllltr ratttrt hlJtlAt ...., look 1,00
C.i•1t1-c:1111 ct•• IUldt fot ~Oflplttt '!'"k s1 .oo trn fllttrn tf re11r clltlct. Co111ptett A lllt 11' .S1.00 19" 75f 1owt 12 Mlt Af1 11a ,:U S01 Sow • 111111 I••• Sl..21 1 .. 11 of 1t tollta ti \Oe
l111t111t Me11ty Crttt:a iUIO M11sn111 Qllilt ltot JI ~01
l•atffl halllt11 ... t.oo 15 G.llllta for T••Y d IO•
ldc.111 ••-'-~ I.lo ... , llf tt Nrtt lie• Sic
• I Grand Opening
I TERESITA Vl~LAS
CONDOMINIUMS
16 Luxury To~1
Featuring Spacious 2 Bdrm &r 2
bath, with fireplaces. balconies and
private patios.
FROM ~8,500
znw.~c.-Mno
,._,41-Jttz
U1i11..-10.1..,I
\
IAMCHllALTY
151-2000
l week unli•t.ed bJ OW1lr. Beat fair offer b\&,11, Sbc, 2ba, 2Ytcar tar, com· pletely up1raded, Im·
mac, mustaee. SS1-3Z3S
2for1
Hie• 4 Bdrm + Oame
room for you, outa1de a ~· f0t the kids Abandootdl Paint & aave.
Ritt> CARPET 754. 120%
$56,000 e..n.w. ...
Super •tirt•r tn thts f"a& arq t lnlmaaulate, laltllully deeontect, ,..
-tO move lnto. Boat ~-Seperate fanu. 1 room, h••rly l~~ee. Deluxe b\lilt· I'll. -11 toda.y. 540-1 '20
n,_.S. ..... S. ........... ,. • .....,.,_.S* Otfllwl_,..... io............ Tb ,Febt 1m DM.Vl'tt.OT ....................... ....................... ...................... . .............................................. 1;;.;;;.................. t + fl ... .
••... ~-----.. , ..... .a.;. -·~ ., .. , ....... .~ , ..... , ............ , JOOO..._,,,,.,.,r 2000 .._.. .......... d Ha•nU.fw ·-~ "'-"Uw•--• • ~~ .,... .. wr=~ .._.... ~ .,. _ ••••••••••••• ..... ••••• ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ......................................................................................................................................................... ~IPAU ,.... •cAMYOH HAllOll v•w ~~ ....... ~~!.4 ~!'!~.?~!~ ~ ............ ?~~~
BY OWHP B•BtUO IAY ~llW • $2 tl,000 POITOFIMO fUW-.JOIS ~ WALK TO OCl:AN a it)' 3 t Br, 2 Ba. FR. C1M ctrpa, .. •.UfeUr decorated An artordabl•. )'et V\ew Newport Bay t.o 3 Br • .,_ + bonus rm ntw Ul'J"UlllUnlll I: Prutt•• 4 Brt 30H Br 3 Ba ram rm hi>ic prof lncbcpd. sau. s ~ .. • '.~rpnnl .. , 'u~!!•'dm1 beaat.trul and 1paclous O.tallnal IJ"Gft 1ate Pluih tnchcpn. 8 & URE Roanoke 1523 mo D/W i:m 714 ~O.: Morruncdaw. 5S.J-'TI~ • • ,.., " ~ ..... oa fami l y home whb try. Mamcnoth llvlo1 maininn!nl patio area. JeanJnt.7U.lDOotOeo $3l·eMSAtt.NoFee MW330
dlilnMt, eptl, no It.Net.I aomelhlq ror evaryboey room wlth VIEW! Mar· K A T " y T R A c y Two Super-ahe.rp ™--wkdys, ~e ----=------
:o.--d1 •pd'°". p/&fPOOJ0 0/at01'!}_· 11\cld ., werlubnp, bl• fireplace Paneled REALTOR. 1100 Quall~ Side bJ •Ide -aepe.rate Iota NEWPORT Hat•. am. 2 a.EAN 4 Br. 2 ea. rrp~. L£ASESAVAlLABLElll .. l»• la 1 , darkroom. t•meroom, ronnat dloina n>0m. Wet Nl\l Bch. 548.J927 or Low lllala'*'uce br tncd yd No' PETS cpt. drp1 • iseo mo. Walnut SQ C• Kom•
9UOO,-.mf l&IDJ*Ctl, tam din rm 4r blr. ~dOUI kitchen It ~-21111 ao.b for Sl.80 OOO • · · d -· 114-...... or Al·~ '!be Ranch Ul\lv. Pk b~aldtchen.ll'14,500 P•,try . .Extra larce · Inc_,,lbl ·,, · OH & wtr. P · -60· A(t.NoFee DeerftUI Cu.lverdale _______ .. DOLPHIMR.L mutor wU\J. Olaued MR.IXICUTIVI '"" rrs.ms Coll Pk TbtWUJow1
VIU.AGl It c.-494-1511 vlew patio. Lo•d• or Bt1 Can)'OO beaut)'! Ea Poctflc Shore • ..., MetaV_. a..EAN 3 Br. 2 Ba. cpt. Turtle~ TtMColooy -....a.9iftulTJI•• tt«aae. J Car 1araee. cluatve location 4 bd Old City Plaza 4 8t deft 2~ Ba fplc drpt, J car gu. ~mo. RacquetC1b Oreentr~ .._...., ·---------t Ca.U now ror per•on•I home on prime~ actt ill w. Avenida Pallz.ada MW cpta' red~ated :i '114·~ or Sll-i545, IAHCHUALTY
Wowl WaJt "~-.. ~-~~~~NH<I' 1.ot wrvlf!W or city nu.. San Clemente car aar.'2 paUoa. pror A&t.NoFee ls1..aooo ~ .. 1tUM.1.oa 3 "2'°' °"" FOi I COU coune otc Temflc 4t2-IJOO lndacpd. •vaJI March l. SLATE R . G OLDEN
.._.. lihrq\a41tte model Y..-=• I• 1~1;11·~1 patio ror Hf'C enterta10 -.,mo lae. Grdnr&wtr WEST Super' Br. 2 Ba. Walnut Square 2 br, ll, llomt ln Univerally Frt ~ . 12·5 . ----:-.. ·\·-ln1. Call ror deull1. pd.~ frplc, D/W, cpt. drp1. ba. comm. pool. AIC.
Park. Everytbln1 la •t70'-:' • tA•) , j 83MZ:ie. $42&. 714.963•4519 0, 1ar. Beam1. nu
CUit.om dc•c:,· e.t.rpet, .. • -• AcNa91foto .. IZOO t.dln....._ E..tde 3brl 1b6 brdwood 581-9MSAl\.NoFte ~1 r: ~b~-: c ~' f:~e~ec:, OcecM Vltta Dr' "!" PLAM •••••••••••••••••••••• • Gf'oftl 2700 ~· ~~~u· Newly T\lrtleroclt Glen, new, 3
w-1Ja>aper. ahullen &t SOlllh ~ Comp. redeeor.; on cul 5-ACRIS ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · 5 ~ma~lt ~ ~o ~· BR, 2 Ba. lam-rm & din
a>rofesa. landacaf1ln1. Lovely OCEA VlEW 3 de aac. tat Time oltued South ot Oran1e County. •VOCADO COUMrltY Sharp 3 Br 2 Ba lune. nr avad now ~ ' rm. swim pool. teanla.
F'ant.utlc location. •t a BR., 2 bath apt. Close to foraale.3 BR, 3 b• .. ram. Fantastic view. Full 3BR 2BA bome on a. achooh1. 1hopptn11 ll · 1ardener. S'ISO. mo
fan&uUcprtco! a1~ shopping&beacb. Seeto-rm. Flnlabed & Ptotled price $11 ,500 Xlnt. acru. FantHtlc view. part. 1057 Parkhill Dr . 3 BEDROOM. 2 bath, la 919-&472 day1, en-ens ~.~.~t c~i':°°u~~~ aaraae.1134,750 .... _ ._.,,.VI terms. Bkr. 714/522·2080 4-Acres mature treea. S450 mo. 675·7390: prestlee area of •Jt· EV1/Wknda
Wesley Dr .. rouowalgns. COltllM ASSOC. ....:W,_.. •. ew or6'16-S'117 Owner mu.st aelJ. Won't ~10. •fl5PM. e en 1 l v e home 1 . Woodb .d e &tatet 3 B R..tton 759·0226 Totally upgraded wttb 3 la al 1 o n 8 . Bk r . Spacious, private patto. " I • r. ----------1 patios for ocean and c .. -rclal n4/522·2080or676-5717 3 br, avalJ March 1. $350. community s wlmmln1 3 Ba. Cam-rm, den. frpl~ re d hill .164..
')~12-/500 ~~n>& canal view. + Tenola & Property 1600 mo. 1st & last. S36·3348 or pool, 2 car garaee. hufe dbl &llr. alr cond. ~ . ~t'rW PRIVATEISLAMD pool.JBR.2~baollux· •••••••••••••••••••••• UNDEITHEOLD 646-5386 mHter suite, built·n mo. '154·389' d•Y• W'--~r·I e , 499·2&00 ury Newport. $89 • .500. INVESTOR-user. Multi· OAK TREE 2 Br 1 Ba . encl gar, oven. S450 per. month. 551-068leves.
uvuu da 30' BOAT SLIP 645-3474 purpose bld1. Balboa 100 Yr. old at.one house. East.side. •dulta, nopeta. KEY RE ALT 0 R 8 Turtlerock Glen, new 581
2 BDRM. 2 BA.;~ unJt PRIVATE DRIVE NEWLY 4 Bdrm fmi ~nnery vtg area. Cor old noat•l•lc 2·story ·$2185 $40-0093 962·1788 38a Cam rm t.enD1a pooi "----1 rt •· 11111 I Joe. C/21Marten840-~7 . " · • _,.. .~ ... 18 • townhome. Luxuriously ""~' v fJW, g vacy ... f8COLLINS ISLAND 1 Iii barn, WU1dm11l. Iota of Men Verde 3 Br, FR. 2 CONDOS 2 Br, $250; 4 Br ownr _,., . ....,_ !5!!' .. nctedy a.pRproeaxd.yA~porir Joel·. C:!~pl~ce.Rd~:.~n2 Trade ~roooFinance • IRcCM9 Proplrty 2000 ~ut·bld~~i. mobllnlehlome fplc 'a, bltna or achl1. $335, lst. luUrdep. _U_Di_v-. Pk-.-,-Br--2-Ba-. -0-R.. ~-· -.. -· ___ ••••••••••••••••••••••• .or care ...... er or ·aw•. -rln 1 ,..._ 8»-4SM.S 979-7888 ...__ -nft .... 1.M • L • t u a s how y o u car garage. Sl29,500. m. mo 558-8723 huge trees. on 1 acres ol 8 '.... c · ...... .....m .. ~. new ..--
neighborhood amenities ~ DittnnProperty! all-usable land. Fan·• Br 2 Ba lge rncd yd 3bC'. lge ram.rm. l~ ba. drpa.S45()mo.w.au
flUOO _ _. Baycrest 3 br. 2 ba. BAYSHORES . BY lcanfindltror (iou. tasticvlew.S.ofOra:fe worblloi)NwptSchoola' frplc, SM<> mo. Mlle to Near new 4 Br 1 86 ram.rm, din.rm. Open OWN ER 3 Br 2 Ba. Beachareaspec allat. Co. Ownr anxiout & w lJ $400.MS-Ml7orS4&-3068 ' bch. Huntington Con· Colle1e P k ., tpll'.
9' ...... ·• .. 40 000 Ope H F 1 Probates. foreclosures, carry. Bkr. 714/m -tlnental Twnhma. New drpsthruout CbUdrn 1020So.C°"tHwy.4 .......... Sun 1 S, $150,000. 1806 • • · n ouae r Bankruptcies, Divorce. or676-5717 EASTSlDE $345. 3 Br 2 cpt'C "'paint thruout. peuOK.Ref.dep.._..•d.'.
Leeward Lil. 642·7889. B1 lhru Sun., 8·SPtd. 2662 Investment properties. .....___ 9!-.u....... Ba. dbl gar, kids. ~ Ca 11 Ago t . L arr Y sn5 mo. Evi. m-M ~MICJllll 1052 Ownr. Cr es l v 1 e w DJ" Belowmarkelprice. ..-.~ OK . 236 Camelia. 842·a3'71. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71 ......... 1-----------· ........,.. """' Ken JollntOft. lrolltt ••••••••••••••••••••••• M2-63158Joel UNIVERSITY PARlt ELNTGUELTerrace. Lg. UDO ISLE Call m4>67MMS lcAoal.a.d 3106 Nu 3 bdrm 2 ba + bonua RETERSTOWNHOME
2 br. 2.,.. ba. twob:;d. LUXURY NIWPORTHGHTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br 2 Ba hae. encl yard, rm. Twnbse, 1..., ml frm AlmostnewZBr den din
Lndscpd, wood panell. U you like that old ~~J1~r~~~b~~enb~~~ Balboa Island Waterfn>Gt walk t.o schools & shoP1. bell. S42Smo. References rm. brkf1l rm'. 2~8a. :.":!:';. ~J:o~~pe fashion country look with frplc. + many extras. 8 UMITS 2br. lba. sa:so. mo to No dogs, 2 kids OK. $340 842-t140. frplc, btfl cpta/drp1. ttSZ3 C.UitPUSDl:IRVl,.E House Sun. l·SPM Uled brick, stained glass, Some ocean /Ca tall n a Santa Ana. Five 2 bdrm. &-1.5-77. 831-0554 mo. 648-34.20 Exec 2 Sty 2500 sq ft 800 ceramic tile entry /patio,
OPENDAILY cei.linl rans and pegged views By builder. trades "3 l·bdnn. Pnme pro-CoroeacWMcr 1122 MESA VERDE 3 BR. 2 sq.ft. den.' Plush 4 Br. 3 pro(. l~rs~irn!t :~
SA M To PM Woodfioorscombinedto considered. $139,950. 225 perty. s125,000. 15 % ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ba!newcrpts,drpg.oew ba, all bltna. crpt ispmklra1 d · · · 6 · · ON 10th TEE. El Niguel produce a warm cozy liv· LaJolla Or. Open d111ly Down pamt in/out, dsbwshr. thruout, pool, nr shops, ar, e ec. gar r opnr. ---------1 Country Club, 3 BR. 1ng environment then till dusk. 646·7085 or llUGIUMDY Fu~. 2br. 2 car !arage, bltns, frplc, lge ram-rm. achls. bch. Malnt free. commuoll1 p ool & Ubrary, lge 3 car aar. you'll want to see this 2 646-7968 pauo, frplc. 1 b from $4.50 mo 540-6'157 ~S Nopets 642-3973 jacuui, aubmil child or MOTIVAT(OI Reduced this week for bdrm/dln·rm home. All REALTOR 675-6161 beach. S450/mo. 556-4414 · · · · · pet.1495mo.S51..sellll
Y ..... ~e b "ve to• .·~II fast sale. $159,000. 309 this luxury for only IAYFRONTCONDO days,675-45110eves. College Park 3 br, 2 ba, SUPER 3 br w/frplc. Lrg UNlVERSJTY PARK ... ~.. .. ·' w t o 64 $129 500 It you hurry Udo Peninsula top floor Costa Mfta 3124 encl. yard. bltm, pool, yd. Blke t.o bch. 2 car soon.aocometakealook es green r. 'c...ia 6,.4721 · d · ·For sale by owner Santa dblgar.~.548-4471 gar.$400mo.Owner/Agt VlLLAGEIU at this 4 Bedrm .. fam ily or 642·4088 OPEN SAT .., .. • I 2 Bdrms., en. 3 baths, 2 Ana 4·plex. Spendable. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-o E ........ 3 bedroom, 3 bath • SUN decks . bay & o~ean "'Sid """"'UW pd .,., .. _ U . 597 .......... ves ...... 3155 rool'n + bonus room • " $1()&,000. 642·1960 ...,.. e ... .,.,. . ru ..... OCCSpecial. $165. til pd. family room Townhouse.
Qimell model in College view! Boat docking ok. Fee Stv/refrg. Fee 3br. 2ba, 2 story twnbse 2 llreplaces. Gr eat Park.~ Dilferent rdruJ
2
t Mluioftva....a... 1067 avall Never lived in Newport Beach MainRentals.~S370 MalnRentw,S4().S370 w/pool. xlnt location. Greenbelt location
tre.e1 tn yard an ...__ S18S.OOO •-•--1t 3148 $340.842·1739 Includes use of all •••••••••••••••••••••• DOVER VILLAGE .......,.... ~ S2SO. 2 br. garage. Fncd f a c a Ii ties < p 001 s. ~!A super bargain! ON THE S .&ND S d b 'PLEX •• • •• f kl .. _ F BR 1 ded 833-3380 Agent Mi11lon va.i-II' 2· ty. con 0 w 1t 2 ... ••••••••••••• • ••• • or ..... ee • new y upgra . clubhouse, lenrus. etc.).
r"' bdrms .• 2 b1tlhs up, 1-'.I p R 1 0 E 0 F Beach hme avall thru mid Main Renl4Js. M()..5370 Close to beach. 1426/mo. $495 552.7ss2 WXURY Huge 4 bedroom 4 bath bath down. Frplc., blt·an . . June. 2br, 2ba, ram.rm. Ask for Keith. 988-1317 -On an EXTRA LARG home with g u est range & oven. dshwshr OWNERSHIP . near Crplc, TV. Curn. Patios, 2 Br. cpts. drps. kids ok. ATI'RACTIVE WALNUT
Logilltaleach t048 LOT w /beaullCull quarters or SUMMER Washer & dryer. Patio. J~oag Hospital. Spanish trees.$395.494·1930 Stove. No pets $225. Sharp3Bror2+den. Lge SQUARE. apaclous3BR.
••••••••••••••••••••••• landscaped yar d. thl RENTAL on the beach. dbl. garage, pool & tile roofs. Private 645-2978 rncd yd. Desirable loca· 2ba Townhae. Lra encl's
OceeVlewCoado shake-roofed hom Close to the pounding I bho balconies & patlos.3Br.2ba.a1r cond.w(w • Uon.$42:5/mo.642.0565or patio/yard-pool & rec.
2 Bdrm b th.a d w/fireplace Is In a surf. An unusual op· cu GullseW enclosed garages or cpts. dshwsr. rncd patio. MESA VERDE · Attrac· 892·338S r .liti On! $325/ ·• 2 a · en. 2 SUP R portunity, better hurry• ALICER course. All 2·bedroom 2 view pool dbl gar $W0 t1ve 3Br. 2Ba. w/w cpts. aci es. Y mo fireplaces&bonuahobby E B location CUU6'.5~3. REALTY 675-5200 bath. 2-swry umls. Will 768-sBza . . . drpa, d shwshr. frplc. 2Br. 2Ba Upgraded Con· Immed. occup. Bkr. room. Catalina sunset.a; CLOSE TO SHOPPING. consider exchange. By · gar,$l20mo.~3368 do, security, wsh.r/dryr,,_642_-0200 ______ _
waj.lttobeach. $94,500. IS2,500. appointment only.no Newport leach 3169 . lavish rec,536-6155 OMGOLFCOURSE MORINS REALTY SanCt.n.nte 1076 dnveby'splease. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pvt 2 br, nice yard . * 49..a •057. I& aaua~I ••••••••••••••••••••••• IP.IQ ·~ Ocnfnt 4 br 3 ba frpl etc +patio. $250. Fee. BEAUTIFUL&NEW Rancho San Joaquin. ~ M•11 ... ERS • ua ~mo Wntr'only' NO Beachcomber.631·2011 Never.been occupied! 2 San Mateo model. under ' Place •A~-~ ~ " Place PETS 673 7368 · br 1..., ba condo Cii>lc, CODllt. Avail. approx. 3/ l.
LAGUMA CHARMER Pl l... POINT p lll'ti99 · MF.SA VERDE 3Br. 2ba. tennis. pool w/Jacuszl Right on Hilb fairway.
E1ttra spacious one op;;t_1920 CUSTOM VIEW I DP752_1920 BY BEACH 2 br, 1..., ba. frmJ dm. outdoor BBQ, puWng green. etc, etc: night light. & 'N
1
ewport
bedroom home w/lrg MOOGUMnNI ""'" Harbor View 1•00 oua1ut.NIW ""'" Uv rm. din rm. $300 mo, $595 lncls garden er. etc. A super home for Center views . $4 95 fenced yard. room to HOME April/June. 67S.239S 546-3UI& Agt S3SO. mo. Month
-'d. Mint cood. Close In. Castille El Dali 3 br. fam (So t) MESA VERDE Gemini Realt 83M823 Owner/Agen\S48 l.2llO "1.~. May trade. nn. upcrades. view, War· merse Construction to begin Soalta LOIJllllCI 3186 Dana Point 3226 )' .
"Z"REALTOR494-8611 ranty conventional. 5 Bedroom with a great January •77 .. JlOOSq. fl. 4-PLEX -••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br2 Ba, fint time ren· Supervalue! ~Permo.
ownr. $71,500. 768-81M7 feeling ot old-fashioned 4 BRh 3 8'; ~temporary Last phase. All have 3 Arch Bay 2 Br WW 4 BR + ram. rm, 2 frplca, tal, new cpt.s & paint. 4 BR. 2 ba. Pool ck tennis. u...rl-Archlcry ~ace and comfort. ranc stye ome.1Many. F.P .. D.W .. F.A. Heat. cpta d rpa' f plc' pvt fenced. SSOO. Beautiful. Families or angh. The Colony. Paul Martin ZBD)(M ,den,2'hBA con· By O wn er 2 ne.w f\replaces\nfamilyand many xt~as. Pa!'& & 1600'3 Br.2baowner's beach ' · w' ~privat e & unlque. Magnolia & PCH, $4.50 R.E.644-7383
temporary. Wood·glass. Cordovas. upgrd d tivingrooms.largeeal·in speclficat1ona avail. In unit+ 31130' 2 br, 2 ba mo 544.:~:n vie • 496-5980agt. mo.963-S259or530-0655
V\inr view view • w/peUoa. A./C. 152.500 & kitchen and family sized office. $156.900. units Agt Sl75 ooo · WALNUT SQUARE 3 Br 2 **•;...,..,.D~• S&7 ,500 flex terms. formal din.Ing room. All ~-,.,~ · · ' · BToro 3232 2 Br. near park, W/W Ba,upgradedtwohle.No
GALLER-;'o"FHOMES CZlJMZl-4.582 Uliloaalal1(esunnylot ~ C"'...o1 Oa 642-3550eve~·l08t Houses1Jftfw'111shed ••••••••••••••••••··~·· cpts. drp1, no pet1. pets.S3SS.642·1'799 ---------• j1111t n ght for that future ct'; ti'! Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lake Forest new choice Clean. grdnr & wt.r pd , ---------
8.,\.!Mll le•lt 1069 pool. (and you own the ~ 4 UMITS ~ 3202 lakefronl 4br, 3ba, wet cpls only. $2:50. F°' appt. 3 Br. 2 .ba. frplc, country
CALL US land l. Duy it loday and Mew 0.. Mcrtwf ••••••••••••••••••••••• bar. A/C, $495. Lowered S36-7lMO . elec. kitchen. patlo, encl.
-•--· J · · s i c I N for quick re n tal back yd, dbl gar. $400 • . fOlr all the latest multi OH THE IEACH ...._._an une. Spacwu.s. solid construe· en or al zen1. ew . Near Heil & Be h b + 14761 Deerpark 549.4471 P'• U..Ungs available In SUHSIT • SURF 493-2143 lion, In mucb desired houseba • $275 mo. 2 bdrm. 2 <714>9'.N·l60l dayi boous room. ;:~, cpta ·
the Laguna Beach area! • 11 'Quail ~ Co.ta Mesa area. A1klng tb. Large 2 car garage .,.. MO FREE RENT drpe 1385 lit .l la1t .,.. MO. FRE!: RENT AJ.ao.we have 2 Lot.a Wlde at corner. . Spectacular Ylews. 3 '137.000. Owner deair• w/elect. opener, F'/A 2 it.ory, 4 br, 2 ba, cpta, -.7ite · · 3br. 2ba. family kltchH.
JUSTLISTID Lge walled patio & PICIC9 ' Bedroom home under short eacrow. Ail. cond. & heal. EHY care drpg rncd yard 1 yn fnc:dyard. Newly painted
I BR . 2ba. «>«•n view Jarden. Outdoor brick Prap...tltnl coru1truction. Wet bar in Ms.tt03 yard. Stove, carpell, old. Frplc. $375. mo Call Beaut. decorated 48r J inside. $335. mo. Call
('ODdo Cl h f'rplc •tlacbed. 3 8~· 2 7S2•tf'20 family room. $167.500. custom drapes 6 more. Ru.sty ~11162 be home. $400/mo. Vk Ruaty. 549-UMIZ ll beach.~ l~l~to~~~~~ Be. room for expansion. l400o.MIU1.N«~TllA04 DUPLEXC.M. N.ext w K·Mart fl·~· · Yorktown/Brookhurat. --------m 000 ltultiple zoning. J2'75.000. Sp I 11'11 v·u f J; AMCHOUGE Two 2 Br. $74.950. Prine ping. 435 Stetson Ill Super sharp 2 BR Coodo. Limb school. Im med OC· Turtlerock Broad moor • By owner Phone Mon· yg aH 1 1 age o onJy. Ownr1Agt. 671-4430 Hemet. Calif. Owner. Nr Lakeforeat. Avail. im· cup 963.4663 Plan Ill 4 Br 2.,... Ba: Fam
Fri. 6pm.10pm, wknds Harbor~iew.Sbr,2~<sba. tNVESTMEMTS .... E~ORTl£"'CH Costa Mesa. 646·4718, med.$295.mo.499-2109 . Rm,3cargar.Ava1l.lm· 4Wbt:f& 8am-1lam. (714 >675-6'968 formal d~n.rm & tam.rm C7 I 4) 496-7711 " nr-11:A 642-1659 •W.W leach HoMM med. RE Ail. 833-2699 ~111111'~ Pro res Ii Inds c Pd . DUPLEX Fountain Valley 3234 Gel ready for summer eves. __
4H·2800 ~:!:tti:1~~~ck~~ :;e~zpz~tlc!!r~!u~ru~ BEACH FIXER Walk to the beach. Pride BELMONT SHORES on ••••••••••••••••••••••• now! Walk to beach from •Brand new reoced 3 br . .!:::!!~~~::.:~~-I Unique 2BR home needs or ownersb.ip evident in water, Cape Cod. SUD· 3 BDRM. p~ Ba. Prestige here Walk to grade 2ba. cpt. frpcl. ram.rm.
OMA&RBS thu. Br ownr, pno only Pano ra m I c v a e w or help. Walk lo beacb. Lrg. I.his 2 BR + 3 BR. 2 story deck 3 Br FR. fplc. SM area. $400 mo. Agt. Aalc school & high school 4 ,,.,,..._ PM.673-1417 Irvine. Ai rport & sur· 2 car garage, R.V. park-duplex. New crpls, mo. (213) 691 ·5331; forKeith968-l3l7 · access to Jacuua & pool. P11 USTIN& roondtnlo! tulls . Wlk 'g dis· 1n°. New lasting, only ~bly painted & Uled. 3 llM-l82S dbrbi g3a~~~~ugmeo~un614d~.: $450. mo. 763-054'1, TilE BLUF'FS·S98.000' tance from tennis court " 2Sl'ORY 3 Br 3 Ba bonus ..,.,., INU• WOOOS COVF. 3 BR. 2~, ~. din. rm. & pool. S\96.000. Shown $59,500. Fire places, sundeck, Cor'OllGdel Mar 3222 1 r 1 • 0 W ~ St. 536·1718 S3 7 s. 3 b r. 2 b a 1 n
Whaln ll bummingbards Gn!enbelt. Agt 640-5560 by appt. 640-.\Ml. BERTHA HENRY patio & dbl en~I. garage. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:~:4~ c~r 1
53i.9645 Cul verda le. Commun.
ttom thu 2 8r, l bath REALTORS $129,500. s. or Hwy, newer. 3 br. 2 Agt. no Fee ~Oft pool & rec area. 17691
own-your-own condo. LIDO ISLE Early Bluffs "J" plan. 215De1 Mar.SanClcm. KATELLA.vRE~LTY ba. Crpl, lndry. no pets, __ Hart»Our 3242 Loyola Cr. 833·1103 or
llO' Wblt~water view + end unit. Canyon, Fash. 492·4121 837·9400ore es, 68·5500 rel .. gar .. $495. 675-6900 Fplc, 3 Br 2 Ba. bllns. un· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-2018
Ul!ltad l..afuna. lmmac OP~HOUSE Isl view 3BR. 2BA, dn '~ tr-t.-"'--1080 IO U .... ITS fin. bonus rm. fncd yd, 3 8 3 b .A h ---adultbWlding.Jw.tOO ti At t ,.-.. -" DELUXE3Br2~Ba .. ....iftr ....... Smo.cc71060 r, a ..... wnouse ltepl to 1«h1ded beacl\. I. 11·5 :;r:~k~a p~~I so~~~ ....................... Pride of owners hip in dplx. 615 ..... Marigold, """'' .... ~ Sparkling n~~ con.~. locJlnohoch 3241
Move in conditio n 104Vhlt4e..to. lll0.000 &44·7641 Pran $40,000-VA wesuideC.M. <6> lBR& S46Smo.6«·2A06 Modem 3 br. 2 ba. fplc . S470. Call Lila · ..................... ..
Owner wilt finance . Undoubtedly 1i1 aharp, only Dandy Stmi <4> 2BR units. Asking . OW. no wax firs. cpl, 84&-l3Tlor846-5456eves. 3 BR. 2YI BA, oceanvu.
available April 1s t elepnl2-stnrv r•Kience -For the newly:-"ds! $272.500. Agt 631-3900 & 3BR 2BA home. ~ice drps, $395/mo. 963-4569 Lux 2 Br Twnbae Pool move in now! $475. Call ·--•--.-..7 r t -:-t·r t 4 LIDO ISLE ~· ..... 741,. ocean view. Bulltins. 53l·""A"' Agt noree · · .. """' •IUU! 67 .. 3620 _._... .......... .,.. or en er aanmen · Charming J bedroom.,_,. .. r.......ic,dblgar.~95/mo. .......,, · · TeMis, frplc. No pets . ._.,.......,or ...
S7t.SOO :.;,~':1':;· ~1b'..!7:01:r ~i!.a~s~'m1::.,<>;.f:'d:t party al.zoo living ro6m1 8· UNITS. good Coat a p;.;'t.ige Homes 64S-M46 3 br. shaded yard. vacant. Child OK. 536·2Z'H. RENTAL
________ _. he ti I I enclosed and covereo Mesa area. Exchange up Only $259. Fee LAGUMA IEACH
ruVt HOMI s :S 11:~ C:. ~~~~ a111t e':: Seawtnd db 2 Br condo. 2 patio with BBQ area. possible. Agt . 645-4286 Newer spacious & airy Beachcomber. 631-2011 1_.__ 32.,.4 """"~ sty H\ ba fplc up· Calltoday,540-1720 3br,2bahme.So.ofHwy. ,.,.._ .. lstQual.ityextic.hom~.3 •U!l. -w lmmed. occu-acy. Sub-· ' ' H I ""'"'l I und I 11..&.-t~ •--h 3240 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BDRMS fam rm 2'--., .. ..-graded. encl paUo. els to 2 o u se a on a o l .~ • ., c, a .. ge game mn;;;r• __. .. . .. ....
Z Badrooma. l bath, m!tyourt.erma. S21S,OOO bell. 16.S.500. Pnnc only. -(Newport). 2·2Br. $81,450 rm. 2 car gar. $475. mo.••••••••••••••··~··•••• IRVINE baths. 2 Fireplaces. All
nraplace. excetlent PICASSO 1·998·8320. 64&-7668 Aat546-3166 Call675-0764eveeooJy. WA.UCTOIEACH 28R,l~Ba ......... $350 bit-In k itchen w/eler atr"l appeal. freshly ••""TOR .. 7 • .,.,46 en/wknda ,..__.._ 32 2 BR. 1 Ba .......... l3SO lron.lc equip. Outatand·
palnted outside: th la ~ • .,,... · '"#I 111 Ctillfornla" Loh for Sale 2200 --Meta 2 ' 1 br, encl. gar . 20S 15th 2 BR. 2 B• ....... $375/48!1 Ing ocean • C•tallne
"cotta1e" h•s growth •••••• .. •••••••••••,••• •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• St. ~or 538-1'118 3 BR. 2 Ba ....... S385·500 views. Home valued ovet
" potential. Owner will IUCHllTllAT UDOISLE Tlt9flft 1090 'hACRI MesaVerde48r.2~b•.t bdrm 2 ba drapes 3BR,2.,,.,ba ... $550-l,000 S\25,000. Rent for l82S
CalTJ Lat T.O .. pau aav· !i,!:u::. QLll~ko ~,~1~ Jr you're Jooklng tor ••••••••••••••••••••••• Le\ei, all uaable land. formal d1ning. huge fam patlo, 'rtp, w'ater aof'. 4 BR,2~ ba, furn .. SS95 Month. Refertnce1 rt
.... onto JOU. 116,750 .,... IOIMthiag ctMierful, coz1 BY OWNER LaurelwoOd Building site or bring rm. study, 11undeck. n lener. cpl.I, $385. 17401 4 BR, 2.,... Ba ... ISS0/800 quired. a for right bu)'er. Only 4s comfortable, then you Townhouae. 3 br, 2 ba. your mobilebome. all Mesa Verde CC. lnclude1l Waa.I Cr H B. 89'2·2SI02. 4 BR. 3 e. .......... aeoo MISSIOH RIAi.TY Pll"'."'lilll'!~ lll:UOO. ()pen Sat• Sun ~ aee tbia cute doll upgraded cpt. Dshwabr. animal• OK. Loaded water. gudener, ne · · BIG CANYON ,.._.494-0731
• 1 S.3Z3Qad~ Property brw on the isle's quiet drpa. 2 paUoe. C•ll for with trees. Terma. Rkr. c pts/drpa. '950/rno. 2 BR, Condo 1""' ba, frplc, 3BR,2~ Ba....... S700 --------
allloaarebS.yP ua l:louae,8'2-!'Mt end. 2 Bdnns. + appt.S51-G4Nor830-9883 714/m.2080or878·5717 546-lZU pooh. patio. S295 . a...--Mlgllll 3112
LqunaNlpel HARIOflt VllW den. beamed ce1I. living _..............a_. IO Dl Twnhs 2b 2b 532-4015or'1118-82J1!6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4'"'7222 131.013' ra. ra ised f rplc . .,...._e.r 91 Momtalw.Dettrt. x e. r, 8 • nu . 4 er. 2 b6 ••ffUll" a..
MOt!11'1GO ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rnort J400 C1't. dbl gar, pool, $31 4 BR, 4 yrs. new. Great Spet'l. vie w . $410. ----------1 Delllbtful 4BR It ram. $54,900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo.~.5Sf.<l848 netibborbood. Nr.~an. mo/IM.dt-OlD
room IOcat.ed ln moet de· TRY VA INDIAN WELLS CONDO, NEW . aBr, 2Ba. near So. a8!.1'~~1'15. Mr. Kabil, •••--•--1111 alrable P!lue II. ~ blk a bdrm, 2 bath. clean t /o, C24 Casa Dorado-a • 2, Cout Pina, "9S mo. •·· ..... ...,, Ml.UEL SHOIU ~':: ~ ~:cJ!e:~ btrt home. Best aru golf. tennit, poo!aJ:l bill· <213) '31-7383 or eve tmmac 4 bdrm, 2 be, cpt· 2br . den, 2ba, frplt.
w/auto apmkln & l(U. f\011lou1 556·7035 Or ~n:~ar~.ua~e.O:. (2U)5et-OU'7 5 .. ~~e: .. ·:ii COf· ~i::c::r.~l1vt~:
front/rear. Interior tn 9D-5e'1l. furn; u.nf. (71') 346-az83; MesaVerddbr,aba. .,._.__..,. · 1uuded comauaaity ~11~.,l~.o~~ !Me-98S7 3100~.... Landmark J Br. 1 .. e.. OPEND"lLY $.mo.840-0719
IJSC/drpt. Warm Iv'-rm HEW CONDO CM of~ s.oo. .._. ram Rm. 4 )'n old. '400 n ~... "" lncld• roahl\'e rouib New England atylo Coo· ..... rty 2150 3BR, !'AM. RK. epta mo. 4!M-5448; 88&-4456 IA.M. Toe P.M. • ....... , ............ ..
.. wn ~·r hook.cue. A do with 2 &R, 2 BA, ....................... •• tile. Bl. C!OV. patlo, SNS. 2 br. aar. kJda. peta, \11ew1. Turtlerock TUT. 3 Avail Now. 2J80014 ft. M W
10lld bara•ln In todl.)''1 btamed celllna1. u lOACRBSES(;ONDIDO fncd. M15. 2311 Rut&en aactaok. Fee Br & Fam Rm, beaut. 5 Br. '3 Ba, k.&da, '*'·
mrkt. 1188,500 O~ celleittvl~w. $118,000. 0..,...,...,. Ett.t.e area, vlew. owner Dr. m-f7SO rum R.entels, S40-53'70 llOOmo. '152.ctl7 park· pool. EZ tnma.
Hou9tSat. 1·5 1823 CalllomlaOoa.at •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• broker. 714-222..()331 cusrou ..... 2ba r I o-. "--ed •• WMJIM ('11') Carlow. 844-578'7 PropcrUcd40·8U4 ....._..... "'" o.uc, • rpc . 4 BR, 3 Ba upgraded new .... es ~ur comm.1---------,_.S. UOO OltofSW. p001 w11pabtnu pnt~ seso . mo. w/1rdnr . Newd cnr. lot. 2 br. 2 ba, ... lViaSutaLuda HAI.IOI VllW ....................... ,..,, .. ., 2600 & .. ~-"f ti'° ,at 11, MM808M2.'74111~. cpt, rp, elec. tar. dr. a bl', 2 ~1.AJC btautJ CAAMIL •••••••••••••••••··~··• CuW'Cu .,,. a op I · $475 opcuer. StePI to pvt. tenn Bltoi, pauo, PH/mo . • 8 8 t 1 •• 1 llSTILUFfS Mobile,Modu}ar Horn.e6 RESlDENTIA' BLDG l'QO. incl pool servlce.Veryelean3Bll,2Ba,nr court. Pool It iacunt __.,or681-llOO
" r. 2 a, •in rmd ... ol Earl)' •tt•. Redecorated DuUdln1 Dellve'i; Set.. PROORAll t:catt<t fo QiflMSOJ Wettrnlntt.er MaJl. '37&. IQ>. 5S2·53'11 wknds or --------&:st~t~rlty c:P•,· ,:d~~~ 3bdrm., "ba)'f'ront"wlth up, • Servt1:1t. $.'$10 NoEotSanD1eioCoUA• .,. __ ..,,_11111 Bi ....... mo. 9Q..21ll evn. or aft.t:JOPM.wkdys mGVlaSAntUlarta
MA water vlew. '132.500 Or for rr..•t. or info. •u Sm tn,,.unent •d re --.,.. 8~ 4 • "'-~ llU31'1 da,... S br, 2 f)a, b&"91. e~ Sl3'7.-By appt. only. "7Smoatb ..,. Cont.ad , _ • ~Ull · mo. g a, SQ.,_ '1'\lrtlet'OCk Gltn, Plan drpl fl"J)lc paU.O lncd
M+S571 l\Ceftt ~ 1"t.ller •1*9 for lxJO' tum. _.n ;. orm-«111 tBRCondo,lmmae. coo· U,4BtFRTtnnA:NC. yanLP1$,;.,, ~Ot
Broadmoort Vllla1• of • Adu~~·+~ .. ~.;:· cto =c:. ~~= P'NiDcb QU'1er. br, I ''went lo everyth1n1. ~·· Avl. 2/t . '800 lll·UOO •
SeHtew, J 8r 3 Ba peta Co, lnc. -4030 BJ~h Sl, ,ba;-t dble ucl, ,.r. SZ315.rno 1JU 5'7~ mans 18r 2ti.A.blloVUl Co.
Ramptoo, bt1t lo' ' J BR, 2 BA, rr.h paint ln CoaY •• lrtr ln Newport Sult• t ta. Newport Sl.Cwt/Nh1C Pool• ttic s Bi, 1,,.. tMI &irfslde Coa 1\uUlroclt Oleo Plan 4 do ' •lnlla 11 ..... • Atc'
ri..,_, IM. 11100 mo. Sell 4out Vrry private yard. 9n.t'h park. J<Jd II '8 Beach, C.. 12eGO (Ut ) temer. fl'5, Aak for do. Frtilc.r pool, P•llo. Sbr. I cu tar. pool teo: criia cll'pl v1;r'it llQOI'
tndf 144.cJOln Welton6Co.816·#00 dk.ll.500 5'8·25156 '1$M2U. Jan. lod64-14tt tm·Ol'Dor518182'1 nts.Si'96 mo 641).lof,.. NoPt1.s.uO.~
.I
BLUFFS CONDOS
Leases starting at
Month Agent 644 1133
• ' l
MFG.ALARMS
Well estabhshed. ~·
yr net S50.000. yr
l\andles including 1oven·
tory. Potential hert!'w111-
amaze you. PleasW\iall
immediately. • • • '
Ult 751...J.if t
RESTAURAMl .•
Ultimate an f1xt~~'t &
mottf. Busy beach :8'-ea
loc. Only S39.ooo:--run
price. Mak1o g money.
Look. you'll buy now
Ull 75 t-3741
MfCJ. r,,rw1ture
Sl50.000. p/yr and grow·
ing Owner wlll stay .:is
national n1a r k e tin~
manager $35.000. w;ll
handle . C¥11 • .tPr
specifics. ~,
Ult 751:".1741
RAMIC 'tile. N(W or
remodel. Fr •• aml Joba
VERYNBATPAroH wt1comuae~aft5.
JOBSflTDTURfJ Expr'd llltMtttlf"ds . Free!lt. m.t• ~wort tlfl)t. l
PA'ICH PLASTERJNO JQl>OK. ~9. ••AU.TYPES•• ,.,....,~~-!!:..--~*-~~~Ceramic Tile: Tubt & -showers, kite-hens.
1---------r·~-·AddiUoas. R•tuo· floon, peUoe. MS-2129
ate Uc, ln.1ured. low co over bllc waUe. Free Tree s.r.&ce
prlce1 too. Exterior eat.towra\el-.am ..................... ..
---------•---------• speclalla\. Tr7 me-Calico Removals. trl mm hlg. ReUa~e aptcl JaP'Jlese -~ •-•••••• .... •••••••••• pruntni, tree eel. Llc'd
lady wUI tl~an Your l'wClauiftedA(l PETERSPAINTlNG LUMBER-Repair. re. l'U.UylnaUftd.642·211M
y.., c.. w "· find ...
T ... • With • WClllt Ad
(842-1878 )
o..c..s.w.
.... Cndt ....
baule.8Q.G74aAlpm ACTION Expr'd. Reas Rates. pipe, hutallatlon w·-~·"=: Calla Free Elt. Call Gtne service. s . G. Gldte1. ™'!'~~n1.1.tol>P•n1i.rte--·~ Dally Pilot ""''UM.'"" "2-9315 sno ...... c""'anup. w .. er HO Call am AD-VISOR ~ · rat.ea. Llc/lnard. Tony
Girt. FJeeesta,141-5~ IGM71 WantAda CaUM2-54S78 WantAdResulta &U-Ml9 &IS-5Ut
LoetltJOmd 130 '-tat* 1350 tWpWtlittd 7100 HllpW..tecl 7100 HltpW..eH 7100 MIAaW..tM 7100 MlfpW..W 7100 Wcmtecl 7100 5020 ................................................................................................................... -~.-................................................................ .
;;:::·;~·;::•t;;; .. ;; ll'=~·y:::!w':~:.1Si!b ''THEEXP!;RIENCE'' Aec:ouMTIM6CLIC ~~~ Enth°:1:1u~-d~~ 0 . Ho TEL p BX LOAMSlaVICI
Conaumer Product. collar. Irvine Ave. CM. Adult motet. Closed ..a.M. OMCI COUNTER HELP alltoeeded ror very buay OPERATOR Alrporttr P'or mort1a1e loan • ~ady for production. 59-30IT circuit TV. For Reaena· Muat have exp. ln ac· P'P specially pract.lce. Inn Hotel, Irv. Coatac:t broker firm near Fuh
l'rilductproven. Prlnon· -FO-UN-0--... ll-h_t_f_,_Uom __ ._~------couata payable & re· DAY SHIFT. FULL Ir P~MI Goodopporforricbtalrl. Mr.Hannan.881-ITJO lon hi. Some exper re-
.538-U'79 sma w em *11 •RE .... 'S * ceivable. Good typllt & " 11 ..._ ,_1• o.ey exper need apply. q 'd , C•ll for appt. ~ lonJ.halred cal. 2~ ~ ,... p I ea s ant p bon e 1'1 ~u •~ Noaamoker.644.o595 Ho.use/Apt cleantn1. Pl·~ . ..._,tol.omt 5025 moliths. Vlc No. Laguna. OUTCA,LLMASSAGE peraonality. Full-time time/fulJ.Ume, $3.00 br--------~·1'••0•• .. • .. •••••••• 41H-87 6PM·2All aas-1780 perm. position. Salary 14---.. .. •--Dental Aaat. exper. to rm start173-123$ LUMCHCOUMTER 11f ._... & 3rd T D •1 ,..-. l"P"J r ... -chair aide position In u...-ai. U .•M 2 Seb 1t-.-..a 9r1wClllM ..• ·-• • FOUND fem ere.,., Col· v ...... ;;_,. ,.,1 .. )•.I• •Chi bua 4 d k l ._....eeper ve .. , .._ .... , r-WANSAVAILABLE or*1 kitten wr..in., col· AIORTIOM YIU" , _.wv, Y •Y w l.ract ce. 19 bldrn Bc:b hie. aal Exper'd person wlQted ,.._..,t not Important ""• • Counaelltur •· Rer-al ror appt between Xlnt benefits saJary a c .. · •· ..._ _ _... to work at lunch counter
'. ·:·~m.-aeroker ~~Uwty~S::~dwarda. Pree. tdt-a:all . .;k~ 8:30Alt1U:OOPM DEL JACO await tbe right in· ~:.,"knn • ""'"""· preoarinl sandwiches & -:", 7,.--------1-=='L:.:.=.::=:.:.__--J ' 24 Hr Helpline 547.9495 eon.• Lite Corp dMdual. Send resume lo salads. Some arm work
2 d TD FOUND small fem gray niW.l'Jth~t 2525JL..Pm14......... Ad. No.an, Dally Pilot. Houlek•per lnclud'd . Uniform n Poodle wearing plftlt •SPIRl111ALREADER BklCF·U Cotta Mesa P.O. Box l 560. Costa LtodH0911b1par hamlshed. Med & hosp.
. • • bow. Vlc l'Jlh le TusUn, ... ~~lycl.Jcensedl R I ~~~ Mesa, Ca. 8IX26 PM shift. 3·11 :30PM. benefiU. Apply Lindberg £0W BANK RATES C.M. 842-6309 --.. El 1 am no ea Accurate typist w /some DINT AL ASSIST. General PM acute holp. Nut r I t 1 o o • bet w n
. • LOMG TDM San Cleaneote. For appt. sh. pleasant surround· ..... W..tM I 7 I 00 Help W..e.d 7100 CHAI RSlD E N B .. """"". req 'd. Sal com· Carousel & Bullocks, So . .' RMAMCIMG FOUND small bllt & ta 492.9034 (92·7298 inpNp.Bch~c.35hrwk, ....................... ....................... • · · ex· ;eRiurate w iexper +Coast Plaaa Shopping
MECHANICS m a l e d o a • P a r M·F, 8:3CM.30. Startint / per'd. 5 Day week, 8:30 to bendlla. San Clemente Ctr. Costa Mesa, .Uk for
NATIONAL BANK Chihuahua. Anaheim,/ MASSACiE ~. Send resume PO Babysitter, eveniJ111 for 2 IUS DllVBS S:30. Pd vac & med in· Gen'I H<11pltaJ. 498-ll.22. Dave. •for Pat Groce CypressS29-1867eves, RGUll MODB.S Box 22118. Newport Bcb, amall children. Irvine OceuVlew~boolDlat. 1uruce.548-5e02.
d,., IJJ.1Zf2 92613AUn: K. Wheatley. area. Week ntght1. SU3 Per Hour. ~•L .a. •• 1-a LYM J.11 ---------ifi}?e~pbn: .~!~.:rmmaltx. e? PVlc. ESCORTS AP··~~HOUSE ~or7~ Substitute Drivers W5"1,,_ ~· Housekeeper. varlou1 Full & P /tlme. Team • .._. Trwt "" ~ _... OU1CAU.ONLY An1.m.,.,u needed WWtnln Posal Cbalr~ld e /Expr 'd duties. Mature woman. Leader. Mesa Verde ;;e;;Jr 5035 ~~~~ & Adams. 6)l•3ll I MAINTENANCE Babysitter " ll1bt bleFttimetnfutun AP. Newport Bc:b. Send re-7-3Shift to au.t home. Conv . Hospital. 661
,..,...................... --·d c?ct~LE ed full ~~:''a:i!dy~r2 ply. Personnel Com· sume to Ad 17911, Dally C.M.844Mr7111. CenterSt.CM.~$585
I FOUND: Cat. Blk/Org. RELAXING MASSAGE .......... m ••I . Hood m.m ' . mission Ofc, 7m Warner PUot. Box !MO. Costa .·,'.'·LOANS'*% rr---··-h ll 8 time. Newport Beach, ' Ave, Hunt. Bch. Af. Mesa,CA'2fl28 HOUSBHPER MachinlatGenerat unu .. •c s e ), toes on BobJamea-Llc. Masseur 6'4-26U A I t 2 w·u front paws. 8411-297 OatcaUa•9,'9W111 Bade ore glr1 for busy ln· firm 1t1 v e Aetlon -Mela Verde Conv. Hoep, l eas yr exper 1 · ""AhoMTD &.o.s 846-24(17 _.;..;;;.;.;_:_,;::_..:...:...;~.:.._-l--------·1 lemiata olc. 141nimum 2 Employer. DRIV-s 6tl1Cent.uCM$48-S585 Ing to learn dle malting.
• • ~t Terms since 1949 E R EXOTIC &IRLS yrs exper. Must do EKG. cero.e1•1l1 r• Sant.a Ana. 557-8485
! ~Salttar Mtg. Co. R WA D Massage" Modeling ASSEMBLERS Venipuncture, light lab, No special lie. ~·d HOUSHEIPIRS D full or part time ~2171 54S.061 I L«e blk Lab type dog Oulcall542-3188/5'3..a250 2nd Shift. Must like de-C.M.area.146-9200 BmyG.P. Practice needs MacGregorYachteorp F/time. Bayview Coav. ColtaMesaarea. ' "Zar" wear'g gold scarf, --......-------• tall work & be able to1_________ exp back ore medical as· um Placentia, C.M. Hospital. 642·~. 64S-91S7
"NIYATIPAltTY choke chain, U.C. Davis FOR EVERY MAN WHO workw/fiber1lass. 8a.ok :ity:~~PP~~~~P EL E c T R o LU X Housewives or Colle1e ald part Ume lo work
I WW pay more for your tags.645-8995 WANTS A GIRL. Ph c.-... v Authorized sales " Students for sandwich A morn's a lnol wknds.
_Zbd __ T_.D_._64_2_·35_7_3 ___ ,Lost Golden Retriever, 1..sas.s383 Mm~ ~184C!D CARE FOR CHRISTINA service. M /F . Full· salad assembly. IHOAM, Casa Laguna Motel. Call
, 1 Arb.,_ h H ___..THE~RLD 7601Claystree£ FU•• 'TIME Lady lo stay wn yr old P/Ume542-4153 Mon-Fri. Must be neat & Ulllan 494·2996 • s==rs/ ~=~.4~ac ts. ""oF'HvrMos1S So~~C:~f!8i:~n~.> COM-CIAL ~.~~all\\~T :30, Electronic englnee~. R" ~=e:.~~5H~~ ~DSWANT£D
Loet&'°"'4 Lost: Sml black pouch Free Consultation EqualOppor.Employer TEUIR Dtech.Small~rowm~ln· S.A. (al comer of Car· Topwagespald!Tbelnn
--..•••••••••••••••••• conta1¢ngwallet&other aessioq! (71t>556-e014 Cashier , f ountain , strument mg r~ s 8 rtage,btwnMac.Arthur& at Lasuoa. 211 N. Coast ha 1m11•• 5100 items. Vic: Alley 1600 blk UMITID busboys. No mlnon need creative design engineer Segeratrom> Hwy., Laa. Beh .
....................... Coriander Dr. CM. c:&.EARAMCESALI ASSEMBLY. Appllca· CAUFOIMIAIAMIC apply. Daya " Eves. w/manaftemeat poten-lllriill Newspapers Hunt· ·Reward.545--2130 CustomBru. 631-1127 Uonsnowbelngaccept.ed 230\So.Maln wkenda. Swensen's Ice Ual. Postlon also avail Insurance MAIDSWANTED
lagton Beac h High . . --------•I Cor full time assembly SantaAna Cream.49t-9:Mt for R le D tech. Laser OwwYowOwa DonQuixoteMotel pa Pe r Dr 1 v e sat . ~UND: Pants 10 bag, woners. Muat be able to Preda1on Corp. 54M464 ._...c. AIRCY 2100 Newport BJ., C. M.
,.b.5lh. 8am-12pm . Vic. Harbor Blvd & HAPPY 29TH won wtth b.and.a. Speed C714)55a.1117 COOK Exptr Farm Mechanic No exp ~d. earn while Maintenance person. Parkins Lot. tlfHam~~~:..CM. To Iden· TO :ia1l]~~cl ber~'Apup~ly. Back-up & or breakfast needed by a row Ina )'OU learn. eep your pre-P/Fllme. Energetic. y....,.,,....., An~ual cook needed lmmed. Ap. farmer-pecker. Muat be sentjobwblletralnlng. C1eancut. 548.7948
Happy d lk L b d Pro • Inc. l~F. ~·-' ply In person to 1801 expert In welding. trac· ,__nlwece Foun : B a ra or. '1Ur nHf'K" SbPuk Blvd., Irvine. or V)')'YO~uwt:)' mploYer Bayslde Dr Celli. Wed· tor -n.atr & pac king ~ MATURE W 0 MAN Vic: Magnolia/Slater, ~ ca11540-70U &m .... ,,_
Birtllday HB.CaUlol.D.&47.7838 ·--------i · macblnery. Xlnt oppor l!cU.Cllll 52·1 i47 p/tlme to welcome ---------• ASSEMBLY electr ic 1•au•1"' ,,,_ -·1ble motival· newcomers & contact Found, gray Persian Cat. Pltlme d -:;. ctJ COOK-Breakfast. Lunch ;f p.;-''9M2oo lllAr. •-P merchant.a. Fiexible hrs. Linda Vic. Goldenwest " Ed· parta(:n~=~&No exp. Tb L ays, a a ve. &ly~~er· Exbetpe~.9Aapmp-. Comm·~, L'la.,....es Ua Need car, Ute typing. nee. .... -· . e 01 Inn. 17925 ....._ • .... • Fut Food Servlre ls ac· · 547.3095.
""• inger. H.B. 847·5087 AUTOMOTIVE MacAr1.Ul' Bl, Irv. Call 11am & 3pm-5pm, 111 cepttna applicaUons ror derwriter. Min. 5 yrs ex·1---------
DITAIL MAM 541MN48. FublooCenter . Newport d1y1, nlahts & arave ~· Fred S. James 4 Mature saleslady for
We are looklna for a BARMAIDS: Day• Night Beach. yards. Apply at Nauglea, .. Lag. Bch. Cootact bakery. Call
--------• qualified & u..!.&enced & Relief Sblfta. Call for 21401 BrOOkllurst. Hunt· Mrs. Bradley, 54t-3058, 494.9240
detail man ror'~~r de· appointment. 548·'7'781, ~ Bch. 49ol-Ul87. E.O.E. Mahn Lady.P /Thne
alersblp. Immediate utrorJameaHarper. COOKS FJCIOOtCIC9IR Janltoral ~ork . N.B. We need M pleasant non·
ooenlng. Contact Sales BEAUTICIAN needed ror Experience Preferred, <In Newttort Cente r ) Need exper d cpl. Ap· smoking lady to type &
ltltlf., Newport Datsun. bu:sy Costa Mesa shop. But NotNeceasary ThrtJ T. Bat. & Financial prox 4 bra evea. Steady· file. Some phone answer ·
888 Dove St.. New~rt 846-2818 Day & Night Shifts Stmts. ElJJ)er'd only need S500 mo. 213/927.0W Ing also. Hrs: 10 to 3
Beach. SSS.1.IOO. Available apply, 8'0-4630, Ask ror hen Helper-Mon tbru <Fiexible>. 'fhia is a tern·
"'UTOLOTIOY Beauty operator. Hair ApplylnPeraon Jan. Fri Bam·lZpm. Call porary ass1gbment for ,.. dreuer w/followln& for SnadcSholtMo.9 11111111111 ____ .-Richard 634•1471 or approx 30 days. Please
With 1ood drlvtna re· ucltlng new NpBch 3448£.CftH"wy,OdM .,. .._p'7.. W4T s:i&-0780after 3. call Michelle 752·2656, 3 cord. Benefits. Roser Saloa.642-4ll64 Equal()pporEmployer reel aw/A.laoFeeJoba to5 pm.
MWer Chevrolet. 900 S. ~/Construe. S900+ KJtchen & Din. room help. -~------Coast Hwy, Lasuna BEAUTY OPR An is· Typist/Mag Card toSTIIO Mature women. 7-3 Shift MICHAMICS
Beach. l&nt.I, full time. Richard COOK. exp. fry. Als SecrtUr)' loS825 ln 1ueat home, C.M. Recent expe r. Apply Ouellette Salon, 200 Oiabwasher. Appl)' al, Ci.O./Acc:ounUng to S750 64&-6718. Shell Stilton, 17th & Automotive NewpartCeaterDr.N.B. 562W.19tbSt.C.M. lrvlnePen10MelAgency1---------f •--' N t B h New Detail Sbop needs 1 --.....-uY1ne. wp . c .
belP. KB 19 FASHIONS Cook full time. breakru 488 E l'JUI Coeta Mesa ._.,... SICllT ARY
Top ••lea paid. Enaine Offer. oppor. to tum & lunch. Coffee Shop SUlteZM 642·1470 Needed for N.B. Law of.
Bc.eamen, ens painters. spare Ume Into proflla· Deli. 842·1'26 nee. Call M0-5t05 Aak for
Wters Is poliAben, up-ble p/UQte buainesa. Ex· FILE CLERK 1-St&lan. _______ _
bolstery 1b1mpooen. dtlna sample program. Co•tlf Http Must have car. 3-5 dally, egal Sec 't1·Recept.
check out.=k·up • d• Phone for appt. 963-7470 P .T. uper. Captain Sdaywk. ~-5S71AIUor ComP«ent••P· for busy Uveey. A y at or $31)...5683. Mikes 815 W. 19th St. Ann. trtal lawyer-varted prac· ---------1 2111&8 &rborBl,CM -C.M. lice. Mr . Stewart. BeA Profanl ~lo.10 Bleycle repalr & counter General ofc person 6'4-M:IO
CocktallWaltrta aales.2yrsuper.Quall· Counter Olrl. P/Tlm needed by farmlng1---------f *Sff.00• AUTOIALISMAM t)' workman. Ase 20 or Fut service uadwlcb operation. Musl bave LEGAL TRAINEE·
MEDICAL
TRANSCRIBERS
Loo.I & short term
&Altnments.
VOLT ExciUng"Prolltablt Chlvrolet ~· P"!f'd . over.962•73851HI shop. CaU btwn •2PM, PNV1oua ore exp ln typ. Brl&ht. xtnt t,yplna skllla
Gl.alowws Profeaaloa or1Vllltralnrlabtperson. _,._,f.. 833-8919 Ina. bookkeeping 6 torcareeroppor. on Maa ..... c:Dr
•IAt.r'Q la 40 hra from Rocer Miiier Che\trolet, •CJI CUSTOOl"'M ~U.496-6200 II typewriter In N.B. --Laauna Beacl'a. 41M·UJ1 thr u trla balance. "' e1tal' plannlna cor-&4M 41 pro{snl'• the flJ1e art ol SalelMsr. ' Knowledge <:I construe· Nlsht.s 11:30PM·7:30AM . •B4'LFACTORY Por•telawpractlce. lt1as (Acroe ll'rom
,,, ......... , .... ,. •.,f llv ........
waitress technkn1es. tlon. Vlc: Fairview' & A,pply only tr quallfied Girl needed ror shop. n uper. pref'd but wUI Or Co. Al rt 1
•---------• •Freeplacemen\Sva 1·--------1 MacArthur. Salary open. w/6 mo's general acute a .as br w/1tlnt co. bene. train.Call (714>m9913. .,_.!~8eporE:/°ployer
•Dayoreventna ... lona VON Send resume Ad t789. hosp.+ carpet & noor M.'MMOafordetalla. r1:•~~uiMili' 1l·~""'f~--~Op~~~~~ ·CALL (714) 7'1-91M A Dally Pilot. P.O. Box tJcp, Adult pref'd. Sal LEGAL TIAtM•
For a free c:onswt In OM 1560, Costa Meu, CA commensurate w /ex OLODAOFSWEDEN Recflqcood typlna akllla ollhem05t~proteu WA .. lnall 92611111 +bene. San Clemente <NaturalCosmetlca) Ir ~ lo lean. MEDICALASSISTANT
So.Calli lltftla,Jnc. W,.111•~... BO"T COMPANY ___._ Oen11:1oepttal,498-1122. b11 openlnga tor dis· Will teach you ever· HuntiqtonBeachPbysl· 1791Z2styPartc81.8teC < .,.,.,, " n~ tr1butor1 In this area. =l d l R I I lfied d Irvine, Calif., mt• \ UpY_. GEL-COAT Touch Up DELI Clerk. Salary +ln· Exclusive American °f..!~." ...... w~ant.e1 }0
1 ~n. 0eP11>' CPlUll p b ...... Ml Penoo. Must tuave e.x· cenUve1. App1y 11·3, rtpts. Used ln Europe's ......., :-m--~a~ -1 a >' ot, · · ::'~~Pt :W ~ !;: ~a.1~~;J:ro~:~: :i':: X,~e1t~E~ ~=in;~'f.:i~t-;o_'._l40..o?00._._-_·· __ ..,_-_,_~_~ ... _ueo __ ._eo. __ u_M_e_ .. _·
bulllneu. Control your 1763PlacenifaAve.C.M. C.M. &t. • HlfltW..tM 7'00HllltW..e.d 1100 own bowl, own iDcolne. IOOIKll!Fa; Del,lvery ol Dally Pilot. A eanrorappobrtment ................................... , .... ,., .. .
-:-~-~=---:---i--=:..;:;.;:.::..:=::..=:...:::::;...;:.l•----------1 tor larle route ln Newport Beach •~table tor a h1lh MWll:il 548-S251
ldtoolorcoUeauWdtot. GRJOORIA Earnlnp approa.lmately
t I
"91pW...... 7100 ••a MeteaW.IOJI ...... IOI tit.c••H• 1010 t._.. ...... ........ ..... •••••••••••••••••• ....... ~•-•••••••••••• ·~·•••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wssa• IOIJ ... ,_ ... tt.laW~ llO KO .. Tnlln eel· chlldren·1 •••-••-•••••••••••••• •"•-••••••••••••••••• •••T• .. ••n•-•••...... UT018t .... ~·=-~':ct-:; clod.,"'* ·n.m1.a1 WANTED Conn JIJn.O•Matlc eloe IMtl.tblataR•~/
1-... R8TAIL<?Lft....., w1-.a-.ot~-Ml ~Ave.R.8 la-0388, TOP CASH DOLLAR orpo excellent cocdl· lwWc• fqZO .... AHDWOMIM llC•lfOflST SIC .. ,AIY Wantedv. Opportuna~&Ult~ ·w=::b.!~er = ..... S. 1011 PAID POR YOUR Uoo.lioo.P.P.532.1259 .................. ..._ ..
wanted to work for Dev. co.. Ui tNtae aMb U> Gltl Ole Need Cood ~~_!IJ(tln~ _ 11 tub enctoaurea ... ~·-·--·•••••••••• J~~TCIIE&. = xl t d AMERICAN SOUJtCK :laalee'I R•HedY AIMI penoa poc1 oa ~ th •twins. Gen'l ott "'l""'........ ~ 111Ma. • 0 04•-c1 ART 08JrN•o• OOU>. . · ux. n coo Marinu l!lqu prncnt at ib.Mleclunlq Servi w/fl"Olllofcap~.Ne t duties.for tmall elec· Anllbelm.GJl'dtnGrovt &eUN U'llt-·,.. oee0ttton SILVER SBRVIC£ enc:h w/c11e. Muat ~t!i&S-78>
startlq p., •:t0 hr lJ1llni .1s uper. ln real troaic we. ToP pa.y for &Wt!IJtminatcr. C • Pluta " ,,.tft items. FtNE J'URN. fl AN: tell. Davld498-1'101 -lh: Tu'4t thru Fri e ee\ .. ·no .. elnr or con· ri&ht strl. S45-Tl08. 6U.7701 @!19NI 30 urm P«otnac Ln. H.B. TIQUES MS-2200 loah. Power 9040 IPll Rellebl ...... wan etructioa Call Iv It ...... 10 Fri.Silt. . FENDER 0 AND ...................... . .t t7u.Js. e •--v have •bo.o ::-:urfc~ SICUTAIY Waltresa Food/Cocktlltb. •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• · 1.UeGAM TA•S MASTER AM PlJFl£R 21•Tro an. Ex Crulser
.. _,_, meeb•Dt~ ~ ect1&&1 to~· Weat Coaat reglon111 ApplyafUpm..i.1Sid'lBlue N~yt D~~t~:,• ut s~..i;:m~~· ~~~(.~~· ~yourbuli.-. card. na. Ql.795$ Twin~.f'l,n8.,0Q der ~ •/••P In ou per, hles ofc. for thla world Beet, 1072.iata-.N.ll. this b~r alo •l 121. HB. Mile:. ltcma, ~me Send Cll:le card for each lilS500 AY
a.-&.. ,,_ l.0'• tterin.nen 1.1. ll-'--wldel mt, gr. bu an or>en· WAITRESS &other duties ~22'79afte.r spm ... 1 lll pl1.11 ooo •PMC· We Fender Fretle1s 8.an. 21' Eldorado d•" "wser -• ~ _. n i or • •ale a Orialn I Pi N t return permanently Natural nn•1h . Xlnt .,, • full time poaltlon i l'lflDlll'lft'ft sec~etaty/c~rdlnator. i:tt.. SUO~r +':rp.,. c.'11 CGih 1035 1'tfto matebtna oak chi SAled atttadlvc ta1 " oond.S'TM'739 Olds ~:tBewrr::t~·
Hewtll W/~:f,ll~. muMIUtll.IM Po&iUon req fl accur•te 8'1S.l4.5l ••••••••••• .. •••• .. •••• eablneta rounded Ila 1trap. mfftll'll alrUnt ~usttC Pk.is l.o :.S.42.$l · pow·· dlr. w n -..... M tYPJn1 • id ·~lephone Htrna.1•1•.o klttena. CFA. suo pr. Wt II ae' I l.O. requlrementa. Prt· a r5 a . cand (11')55'1·8'6t. .,.,,,,_., nn O. communJcat,loo ssma. Waltra..Cook M&F. blue saoo up eepa:rattly <cash>. 208 s . voot. Jou" theft! For • ottlc:!r.lllt•• &1085 16. RS¥son cran o .a \~
........ ...__ .......-• .,,_ Expef. pl'el d, but we So • -1 P/Ume •· """" '"'ll WilaooSt. C.M. ~llied lag enclOM Et i...... JIP uc-w/custont'ttlr
•.-.• ••-. ,,....._. ic.11 .._ ~· f!!'.I will train the ri&ht · M8 una. "" .......... u f b l •• .. ••••••••••••••••••' "' ·~· { IJ 75·1200 w•. Fu lit nu .. pmon. Gd sat & bene. V /time. CQlfee shop ex~. CUDDLY t.oVE FOR l of a kind Alley sale. Rat· ':"!&./~~:.~ · ~:.: ~ ~! lJKE NEW . 4 u.sed 8• Of· Like nu. S3.000. 1\4 >
BrulhSaJes,554-785l. Ha\19 beell th klni 1bOle mteteat.ed please ~~ &:~;::iM~~te s YOUR VALENTINE! tan It y,>lclrer. 8at. Fe wUI back fl trim your nee desks wtwood grain ..,_1661 '.
MODEL fNSTl\UCTOR. ol lncn:asing YoW' pr• appl)'at: AMF.Inc. Po&· • Klmalayan kittens sth, lo-5. 217 Main St. tap. Or try two cards tops le matchina swivel 1971 20' Sktpjack In 1o00
must be ablfo! to take full tenl!nto~! J\apldJtiea:· ter & 8 rum rte ~d Yard Maintenance Ii CFA/ACPA rrs. M0-6.i19 SeaJBeacb. back to back. chra. xtnt buy.199ea. ror cond .. S6.000. (jal I
ehrJe or proJnm pa.ndlng mulli·m llon Division, 38Ull Aveni a weeding in Dana Point. eve Movbll aale Some rum & PRICES: desks S20 ea. ror chn. 675·83S9 a rt 8PM or
plush new ac.hool ' dollln• arf,0~1"'t'panve1aisndseeka1: Aeropuerto Sao Juan 55&-0186aft.4, WANT""D t b ' ..... odds• ends 901 B E fleaor3/$5 640-2400 wknds.
studio. Boactt area. .. " Ive Capistraoo. "" <> uy ..... re &a&a~lb -.ecl, ' · 4JStapSUOea. ---------Salary necoUable. Send iraavecareeroriented F.qualOpporEmployer tat carrier. lrg enoujh .• ~ ... ; G/9t.apSUOea. IBM Eicee. Typewri\er loah.WI 9060
reawne f& composite hi persons for potltions in Merc~•llM for 2. Reasonable. Call Mo Mutt art! Anti· lOormore$1.40ea. 16". MdlC. gd cood.$225 ..... h ............. , .. .
ccafidencetoAd.No.ato. Its new Huntington SEC~ITARY ••••••••••••••••••••••• C.M.'714/~ ques. lW"U , Olano. Too SaleaTaxlncluded SST·6066 home, 833-5440 Jtobiel6.trlr.new\r•M& Daily Pilot, P.O. Box Beach/Westmlnster Fash Isl ~anclal Serv. AnHqilts 1005 D6CJI 8040 manr ttema to ll"1. Fob NOCARD? wwk more. Sl.425. G46--or
1560, Coeta Meaa, Ca. Jpca:=a~/1~1f n'i:~ firm. Typing 70 ~m, sh ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• $-6. 9932 Baybreeze Dr Draw your own or send EXEC DESK 4' CHAJR _58_1_·1_505_. _____ _ 9311218 ~whlcbparaowa ~1:a3:1t!"~ tguel Wonderland Golden Retriever Pup-HB<So.ofHamilton.ori ~e.addreu.phone&r Wood,gdcond.$185 ERICSON 29', trutl
MOTORROun your succes1 aod lo · ' · · Of Afttl 1 plea. Male, Fem .• 6 Broolrhunu. ::i"A:r:,:hcard per 642~ crse/race. 121.000 ofr.
Daily Pilot route lo come. Opportunity uci· SECY /LEGAL . ~ ~S. ~· 64.a·lc..5 Garage Sale Sat/Sun, SeOct check or mooey or· reh 1087 67&-1830ev & wkndt
Newport Beach, after· lhblted!Pleuecall~y Phone493-5351. HUGE w~rehouseChamplon AKC lM.mlsc items.477E. derto: ••••••••••••••••••••••• l8'SOLCAT.lyrol(t,all noons. Monday througb or Ed for snore details.,._ . St ti Att . crammed with over~ Doberma .. P~. Great ~ay.CostaMeaa PILiOTPRJMTtNG extras. -Frtd l S turd at... .;>Crvice a • on en music boxes, nlckelo· ... PET FAIRE t and ~ ~us a 1 •Y 898-7855 dant. exper d .. Day & deon pianos. circus or· t.empeement. quali· 2 Refrig. (apt. & dbl dr>. P.O. Box 1560 RANGE COUNTY 549-100 $300per°m:th;~~ Eves.Full&p/time.Ap-gans wall clocks ty.'1S1-2928or642-6S37 ~.Dresser. Hdbrd.s, Caet.aMeisa,Ca.926216 OFAIRGROUNDS SantaCrui27. Enuftada
cub deposit required. ply, Shell Station, 17th & grandfather clocks: Rareall blk AKC German OM;stOI Dwr. din·rmset. Beer drafter bolds 14 Keg FEB.U, Fri &Sat lOAM· race winner. ~ete
Call 642 4321 sk r Irvine, NB. fascinaUngantiques. Sbeph~rd pups. Won-TVs. Movie & 35mm of bee ' d S200 lOPM; Sun 10AM-6PM. w/trlr. 7 sails. rating clreul U • ' a or Service Sta. Attendant, OverSl.000.000Worth derful ramily dogs. Cameras, Projectors. ~ g:u:ft':iAM · Forinfo.CaU642.s551. gearS18.S00.&44-548a a on ex....,..'d. Full or p/time. American tntemaUonal 494•3117 ans. GAR AGE SALE . · ·
MURSESAIDE ,.._. Galleries· 1802·T Ketter· Sat/Sun, 252 16th Pl. CUSTOM DBL. Yell. Head Parl'Ot. Hobie 16. blue & wbile Apply Areo Station, l7th Ing St . .' Irvine. Tel. ~BOXERpuppies.5-wks, C.M.ND,642-8860 W/cage & stand. $350. w/troller. good c.ond .. l::;1t:C.~~n"~.t~:.; We'rw...,..toliMtlp! &lrvine.C.M. 75'-1777. Open Wed tbru tail$ cut. Adorable. SlO Horws 8060 WOVEN WOODS 846-<Mr70 $1400 or orr 83S•CMi96.
661Ceoter'St,C.M. I.I.SALIS Sharp Gal 20-45 w/car. Sat.9AMto4PM.Visit! ea.979-1624 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WA.T080%0FF •,.__·---&-Onpl---8-0-9-0-1 _Ki_'_m ______ _
OFC. MGR/REOPT. 2 W.ehave.twoopeoings in ~o~=~~~ ~G~i;r·~rn~=~~ RUTH'SAMTlc;>UES Adorable Australian For Sale Reg. 2 year old Over40ln..tqckl:tterns ••••••••••••••••••••••• 26' SHOCK Ende,vor
Poe. open w/mgmt. co. our Fashion Island office S i t b Annual Feb Clearance Shepherd Pdps. 8 weeks. Arab stud roll '500. Call AlsoMlNl·B ds Wurllt.zer piano. newish. Sloop fully equip'd'. sips
OFC. MGR. w/litetyping for licensees interested r:~~ ro~. ~er~5jo~ if Sale. 10 to 20% off on all $35. S36-8Z79 892-0365. ~ 833-9770 Upright, pecan finish. 4, dbl life line, en&. S
& heavy payroll & gen. in Investment Real you're neat, personable merchandise. 504'1'.r So. AKCSilkyTenierPuCpy, 8yearMare.Gentle&xln BGIEJBALL? Just tuned. $650. Pvt sails, like new. have~llp. ledger exp., $750 mo. Estate. Pleasant condi· •-u· 97n -47 rt Bayfront Balboa Island d rldi hors w party 751-5004 Must sell! S5250 ,or best w /benefits; REC PT. tions. solid train.inf.· xlnt ~oaenmefrgoreapc;.. ""'' a . . , Bwkol fem, champ ine, ng e. estero • offer. 548-0742; 556-1818
Conta BilG " .-<NexttotheFerry)Open cbampsired64S.6734 F.quitation.554·2999 We have a basketball Thomas Org"'n, nearly or" ........ ~1 ·• personable, to handle comm. ct er-Wed Through Sunday goal 1 h c .. ......-'""'
heavy typing, phones & rie, TKE GERRIE CO. 12·5. Ph 675-0433 Purebred qua I German Reg '4 Arab fjlly yearling ~e enoug or a oew. cost $500. sell $195
r I 1 i n g . s s 0 0 m 0 ~ SKIPPER ~ ~uE Shepherd pups. 6 Wks. bay ribbon winner. will ~~r:.~~ canw ~ o~ke~ or trade. 968-8906.
w/benefits.645-4411 RETAIL SALES For 83' triple screw A"1I.,.. Ready to go. S50 . betall.9634278. apartin2pes,butyou'll SewiRgMacldnn 8093
Hobie 16, xlnt cond: $1750.
Kept In garag~. ,
846-8749 • Par-legal or Probate Full & part Ume. Apply diesel yacht, for u.se in SHOW & SALE 96(),SOSL Jewelry 8070 need a truck. S200 or of. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Secretary. Recent exper. in person to: San Francisco Bay area. Anaheim Convention PoodJes-Lge toy males. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rer. 534-'7533eves/wknds. Dressmaker Deluxe Sew· 19' Llgbterung Clau c,tay
Call Mrs. Winslow THE TOBACCONIST ~~~~ 1~fj~~!~·to~ Center Blk. 4 mos. l yr. le lChoc WA....,.ED Furn, hsehold items, Ing Machine Portable, ~a1~:kin~~~~!,,':,lc,~ull
837·1060 INC PO Bo 3325 Sa Fr 800WESTKATELLA lyr~142 ""' t~wrtr.addmach, runs good just limed. D 8477783 HwiUngtonCtr H B · · x ' n an· AcrossfromDisneyland r--·t y TOP CASH DOLLAR 1 bn r . camsSS0.898-1029. ave. · · PART·TIME ·Fishing ' . . cisco94119 FEB.3-4-S.6 ~ o OU 8045 PAID FOR YOUR aeca t,reng. '-G--~ 8094 Dinkillen No. 5. 84t' tack!~ company needs Retired man P (f garden· Thurs/Fri/Sat 1 to lOPM ••••••••••••••••••••••• JEWELRY. WATCHES, Call 67S·7203. Sport;;~ ~ .._
rt ti employee over s.rOpportunfty ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/hand trlr. fbfltlas null pa · me f h' ing & weeding. Trans. Set your own hrs to dis· SUNDAY 12lo6 PM Full grown Golden Lab. ART OBJECTS. GOLD. Mlsalaneous p AC 1 F 1 C GULL "mast. Perf ror l:O:.¥ln&
55 U> work in our is tng provided.548-8119eves pl the lastest Beeline CALL (213>42'7·4848 btfl, xlnt w/chldrn, good SILV ER SERVICE, Wmhd 8081 Id h · or sailing. Bestofrialles. reel dept, must be BY . SEKULICH watch dog. playful. FINE FURN & AN-••••••••••••••••••••••• orange/go /w l. 640-6224 640-1893 mechanically inclined, ROBBJE'SRAGn'MOP Fashions. No exper. N PRODUCTIONS needs rnore room. Free TJQUES.64S-2200 SSSC.A.SHFOR bag/harness/helmet. ___ o_r ____ _
call642·1163for appt. Mature women needed deliv. No invest~e~t. to good home493·7620 "' ssoo. 642-8362 PRINDLE 16, fa~ de·
PEOPLE PERSON for . housedeaning Newwardrobe&unli~1t-LOVESEAT Dbl. wing ~ Carat, xlnt quality Goodusedfurn/refrigs mo. witrailer. A race
eeds i service. ede~tngs.opJ>:Orturuty. tufted.61e$s.CouchBlk. KITTY Needs home, diamond wedding ring frzrs&stoves546-0768 WetSutts,surfing,diving gear. Pattison alls. Exec n p /trne as· 548-0757 FunmfashlonfLeld.Call horsehair. walnut Blk/Org.<Tortoiseshell) set. White gold. orange &waterskiing.very re-642·5675 ~·a~~~~~~~f.1im1:'1· SALF.S ·D~ESSSHOP, foralppt.963-
7470
'. *-8894 . ~~~ws.spayed. ~~~mc~en10!rt5~~e J: o':=!~:3Js. ::=~:~:1sevs~au NAPLES sabot. 6'rand ' Mature girl, 25·35 for Supp ement your mcome. Country Pine Draw Table. ,..,..1925 p . "t" •
11 womens dress shop. Ex· Exec. ods part time As· $245. Four Rush seal Female Siamese/Manx '""' · NEED-USED ersaan BARGAIN. Almost new ~!·. 892m~:.!!g, mu .... ~e
Sal 645"1182 · J •'---tock 8075 & Chinese Rugs & Parker Hale. 30.06 _,., '""'' per. nee. 30 Hrs p/wk. 50. . open chairs, $100. English cat,shols, box trnd, wil .. ,,.., Tapestries from Pvt mauser action, Bushnell PHONE SALES
Phone Sales people,
male or female, 16 to 65
years of age. Guaranteed
wages or commissions.
250 East 17th Street,
Suite O. Costa Mesa,
between 5:00 & 8:30 p.m.
963-7171H.B. Telephone Ans Serv, ex-Walnut Hall tree, S13S. spay644·0139.S46·7308 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Partieaonly.64().7014 . 3x9 scope. qlty case. UDO 14 . m10 UOman
Full Mahogany Wash sland, • . Reg. Morgan mare. broke sails, new cover. trailer. SALES pe~'dorwill~rain. w/marble top. $75. Oak Collie Shep mix, fe~ .. all t~ ride & drive blk t4Mlkal cleaning kit, S250. $1375.551·2978
Expr'dcommissionsales ~:US:~ shifts. 558·3711 Gate leg dining table, shots. xlnt d;spos1t1on. parade Morgan geidlng, lmt1a•Rh 8013 974-0959aft 7PM/wknds i
withmanagementpoten· $195.640"8169 5364319 &536-5iu Eng, Western <714) ••••••••••••••••••••••• Store.R•staurant, ~~ ps/ 9070 tial. Charis matic TelephoneSolicitors CAT ADIMONTE CHINA MI x e d German 3311-1011 Yamaha Flute. perfect ... 8095 •••••••••••••••••••••••
personality. Able to re· GOOD VOICE 3 Pc set, hand painled In Shepherds. ~': gr~wn & Mochineriy 8078 con~. I yr new. Paid, o••••••••••••••••••••• Pvt dock for power"boal to ~~:~:!t;.r~tp~'t;i~~ GeMralElectric Italy. Assessed $300 by grown. Loves ch11llren. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $325, sell S175. 848·9219, Piano bar. ssoo. <seats 41. S2.2S per ft. 673-6336
-646-4223. Equal Opportunity
E01ployer
person. TANNERY BuHdenCentH' local gallery. Sacrifice 646--0642 EISLER 3KW. spot aft5PM 12>. Kimball g•ano. $350. or642·9666.
WEST. Soulb Coast AIRCONDlTJONING $99.640·7730. Longhair, s pa yed. welder, used 2 hrs, cosl Beginners Electr•crm Hostesstablesst~~c·h!!"· • .Pea'" -------.---Sc T H I W I k .. •• •• Pnvate dock for rent. Plaza.549-2243 ott •op oury age UNIQUE ANTIQUE declawed,calico cat nds $400 frst $200 ta es. Guitar.SSO.w/amp.dnt deticase. · DoverShon!s.NB.Upto
Salesladies,Hull-time&l :~f:~~~onditions CHURCH PEW. PVT loveofadults 540-7325 642·7344 ~~ever used Vmce THEQUARTERDECK 55', max h gl. 1s·.
---------p/tlme. AnUq & Gift EveryoM Knows Us PTY 847-4861 Samoyed male. 2.,, yrs Rockwell 9" tablesaw, 4" 2530 Pacific Cst Hwy Prevailing rate. 821-6230
Silk 8~~~EpRrinter, ~~o.!!;....~A. 540-2705 or We'reThelest Appliancff 8010 old. Has shots & tags. ~terrombo.3 mo.old.Clarinet, Alto Sax& 548·1177 <714>;(213>924...,.91
Mylar. fabric & 1 man .._ (7l4)835.3323 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 842·3892or847·Sll6 M . 675-0292 Sousaphone. Drums TV, Radio. Boats. Storage 9090 squeegee, exper nee. SALF.s.!'.'Jational !irm now REFRIGERATORS l"'.! yr male Lab/Dobie. Mfscelcmton 8080 g~~~:~~inZ~cPt!i;:; MFi, Steno 8098 ................... ~ .. .
642·2241 aft2PM has f/tune operungs. Hr· WASH.~RS·DRYERS Gd w1children. Needs •••••••••••••••••••••~· Piano & stool. &42·693S ••••••••••••••••••••••• BOAT STORAGE S30 mo.
ly or comm. No exper TELLER Recond1t1ons-Repros & room to grow. Aft 6. CIUNA Spode Billlngsley pp Three month old J>Of'l#lble free launch. Sall/Pwr. ProdtlctioRCOllfrol nee. Will train. Call ror FrgtD:amage.Guar/Del. 962.5159 Rose Din plates serv Sooy TV. l2in. Make of· NewportDunes.644·0510
Ty.Jst intervw963-5919. 29YrsmOrangeCo. r.-.u..-8050 pcs Nocu ..... 979-8466 . 5 Channel Quilter PA rer 842-~.847-4962 '" 1 A permanent part·l.tm DUNLAP'S ,._......_.. · ,.... Head, xlnt cond. $350. • Transportation ~~~~!. ;! ~::C~ SA1.IS position is currently 18lSNewport Bl. CM ••••••••••••••••••••••• . POTIERY Call8'1S·Z5l5. Repo. Com~erc. record g
ood t 1 New local women's san· available in our Laguna CALL548-7780 **I BUY** studio eqwp. Ideal ro ror person w lg YP ng dal mfg. is seeking sales Hills Office for a Teller Wholesale warehouse. SS WANTED: Used Selmer h m e u s e b y t h e
skills. ability to work u..orwomentocallon withpreviousretallsales Non working appliances Good used Furniture & Less than swap meets. MarkVltenorsax. soph1sticaled . PM .
••••••••••••••••••••••• C~,Sak/
Reid 9120 w/figures, pleasant apparel&boUUque shops and/or financial ex· wanted. Also REPAJRS Appliances-QR I will Ceramic & Stoneware. 642-3555 673-1417. •••••••••••••••••••••••
phone personality, some in all areas. Full or perience involving con-&SALES646-5848 sellorSELLforYou. SO< Pots. 1523 E. First Sl. -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiil Camper Shell w/dbl bed & customer contact i p /tlme. Xlnt com· siderable public contact. MASTHSAUCTIOM Santa Ana. II tbl for compact truck. 5hip'g&recv'gofc. Muat Typing and OexibiUty in Kenm.ore Washe r $85, $3.5().CallaftS,645·5647
be able to work flexib ~t:i~~~l~~~ne. working hours are re· Westmghse Gas dryer 646-8686 & 833-9625 EARTHWORM SALE
hrs. 645-4800 quired. Saturday hours $85, Kenmore gas dryer Hand carved darkwood FOR GARDENS. Let the
Pit Sales, $40-SlO wk up SALESPERSON will be mandatory. We SllS.Guar/del.546-8672 waterbed iwitb ead· wonnhelpyoucultlvate.
Men , ladies. studenls. Full lime or p /time for ~fer a progressive start-Gaffers & Sattler gas board. nightstand, ever-1000 for $4. 3000-SlO. Also
Eves/Sat. SS4 ·7851, jewelry atore. Refs re-tng salary and company stove, Hood & fan incl. ything needed incl. worm castings. B'S
113$-16116. q'd.S48-3270or64>5911 benefits program. Good shape, reasonable. velvet bedspread. Must Worm Farm. 17362 9113-41~ sell. 642. 7~ Gothard. HB. 847 ·5141
PVT. Duty Nurses Aide, Saleswoman, exper, PleaseCall For Appl. Mechanic's chest locking
S5hr .• Mon.,Wecl.,12hr. P /time, for better PeggyBoyd Remodeled· KenmoreBeautyRestbeds.~.& 6.drawer Walerloo in·
shift. 768-700 womens c Io the s . (714) 759-4911 bltn dishwasher. works twin, $40. Maple chest chiding 4 .. roller plat· Newport Bch area. Call good S2S 979-8466 S3S 548"8213 h c;>.C.SUPllVISOR t0:31MPM.S48-1007 . . · form . 1.<;" rate et.
8 " BS.· Ph i ---------• GREATWESTHN Kenmore Washe r & Must sell redwood lawn sockets, open and box ·"· or · "' .Y8 cs, a_._._ .. Del S .A.VINGS dryer. Gd working cond, furn. L·shape bar. Grand end, etc. No Junk. Sl75. Eng. or lndust. exp. Min. --•try "' Call ft 2 p 631 2067 2 yrs lnsptttion. Good Fem. student. morns 24100 El Toro Rd S150 both. 968·7028 aft Bahama waterbed, 1 yr a er .m. -
iJbUity to work witbou 9;30-oooa. Xlot p/time. Laguna Hilla. Calif. 5pm. old. All gd cond. See at Sears airless spray gun dirfct •• .... rvtsioo Mu.at Wo~14UO-S 940 Congress, CM . d o · I II ~-..-· · Kenmore elect. range, 646-2209 use once. rig na y have good aupervlsory SEAMSTRESSES Equal opportunity Upper & lower ovens, $320, now $175. CaJI eves.
skills. StarUn1 salary FULL TIME affirmative Avocado. Xlnt coad. 2Custom Teak Ship Beds, 840-3694 Sl.000. mo. Please call for ~ action employer M /F 1---------1
a . 83$-3422 P$275i d.14~3204 I i I ~~t~~w:a ~~~:J~· ::~ ~ e:c~~~~e i~:.kc~~j •--Aa..i•ST TYPts• CLERK r g ia re m Per a 675-<rlSO • . ~--"""' Secretaries/l'ypi&ts •· . refrig, cross top fnr, 833-5244M·F10.S
Attractive, over 18, for
HEALnl SPA. We will
trato rlaht person fo
easy fun JOb-Mr Oee,
(24hra > 7SZ.te61.
UFI IS Full tialme ~illon, 1 yr. whit. $125. 675-1358 Chrome & Tinted glass Vied cpt Gold 47 yds gener office exp. req. , ·Coffee tbl w /match end · · MIVllt OULL Must type 55 WPM net. Gas Dryer $45, Wash tbls $100/bst 646-078S Shag 34 yds. wool pile $2. With Office Overload 493-7913 or 493-8004 for Mach $45. Both work · · per yd. 830·5092 eves
Enjoy the variety of testing appt. & in· good. 2528 Nwpt Bl Drexel: full pecan d/r & Plttne)' Bowes No. 4150
choosing some ot our tervtew. Bring up to date 64M.183 master b/r sets + 2 girls Po&ta&e Mach Flnt 1125 ---------1 wide selections of tem· resume. $600 /mo. •--£r-SOii b/r seu & 3 pecan wall takea 642•7344 llC9"f /GEM OFC (.lOr&r)' ofc Jobi. Call to-MinoriUea encouraged to -nun cabs. Wash & dryer. pie· ---· ------1
SewraJ toS110 daJ,atarttomorrow. apply. EOE ••••••••••••••••••••••• tures. bencbs. m1rrors. 3 way mirror, full aize,
'l'ype60Accurately t8~ office • •PUIUC• Xlntcond, Dover Shores. ideal for men's o r
Employen Pay All Fna TYPIST RNITUU 64.5-6270 women's store. 70 yds dlx
UsReindenAgency . overload lfyoucanlype50wpml *RI * Bdrm Sets. Ruaa, Sect'l cpt'g,muatsell.642·7288 4020BirchSt.Stel<M will pay you to learn •.A.UCTIOM• • ~Beach 83MIJO 517.0061 computerised photo y-.u. 7 JOrM• Divan, Lamps, 3 This. CAAPETNEW Call for appt/£8\ab '65 3723 Blttb St. NB typesetting Art Griffin * -• : Chrs. Cheap. 642·4262, 167 Vela Hvy Rust Nylon -;;;;;;:P1u;~;1~~~~~~~~1 The Comp0sing Room' •R.-MaloM• mBroadway.C.M. p I u. h . I 0 6 yd II R.clcepUon1at, P /Ume. """"~· • •Coml,..Rh• Otocolate, SH, Muat sell ply tD J>•raon. Re1 SECRETARY "''......nA· •• .._ ..... ,._....._.. l Vear old queen u 67s.•
Beaut)' S&loo. So. Cout PartUmtOK.'3.00hr.to TYPIST·Accurate tor --..-waterbed, liner • --------1 Ptua. Mg. Fatar. atar\. Koo·Ftl. Gen. ore. rnottgage bankln« firm hal9r1 W~ redwood frame 546-018'1 For sale 9 piece patio
aeee,t/Girl Friday duUee. Must be tralna· lo 'Newport Financial SSS SAVE SSS aft 8. . furniture, xlnt cond $150.
Fbr' ~apliy atudlo. ble. Call Prestige Homes Ctr, Exper'd on IBM ex· Food available on the Brand new. never used Call <n•>ll63-941J.
•mus( have front offtct letwa9:10amfltl:30am ee. typewriter. Send re-premJaea. Items subject 01'811{1e7'aofa&match'g SpealalartJessooa&i:olor
ezper. Satet a. market· UD.oGly.645.e848 ~utecs8!1:Zo.':;~~ to presale. We l\ono loveseat.$:500.963-3171 theory for advanced
'• l ab l ll t Y n ec · SECRETARY·P/tlme 9-t Dally. Pilot, PO Box U60 ~;':1cc:~h~:~~ Uvtng room & dinette aet artlawandprot 675-5162
K.oowledae of photo· MoQ.f'ri.. Gen olc, Ute bk· Costa Meta, C• 9:1626. a.eclla le CASH! 1 _ NO le tbls. Call after a. Reeeo trlr hitch, bara "5. LfJ,! b 1 be l Pf u t • ll11Gt. accur typing & PERSONAL CHECKS MN310 Nutone (Tl!~Dl comm.
c.n..:':t;;_,etoa\art. ::. req'd. $4.35 hr. PLEASE!! T SAVEi FEB SALE. New waxerSl.35.615-5218 ~~D~ MASTBSAUCTIOM fl uud furn. appl'•· ss Oal. Salt water .~1t.'~t~!~ a-•-•ay •Ex c ELL g NT 20751/zMwptlt.d ~lte. Wllsoo'• Bargain aquarium. duel tlltel'1.
Pbo1ws .._.._," WORKING COSTAMISA N'ook.21tores-M&ldll4 fhh, much mort
neat, d~J..h~e?l!::i Hutlt. lkh Branch CONDmONS 83J.t6Z5 , 6464616 W 19th CM W -7930 le 11~/btat 151·0116 aft beaded "r':';t.b..._1 .. uc. •FUll·Tlme •FBJNOES 5f8.&262. Xtra discount 6PM •OoodTn>iat Musthavt()wntoola on every lte~ U you br-.1--------• Call BettJ 567.eeeo •Sboc1h.ud Aak for: ing to t.HiJ ad al Ume ol Bulloclts bcl•e eyelet dbJ ·--AM•-•B&Ncoapprcf'd -r-a..a....... pw'th.... COO'fOrttr, dust curne, -••vs.•• A )1ln ...... ,-OffOITUHITY aha ms, UO . Cctn\ • Fmlal. Jl'ioandalS."'. l'PP4'lD~OfrJ,.e 89ACI CHAIRS m.tvM. nr.. • ......,. J§ec;y fron PenoMel Offic4 knock• often wbeO 1ou ~' · 1--------1 ~ die*. ~ Reft • • G01.D8tSTATI uso rault;Sctll~ Dally A....-lO C.,.... ftefrlg, lw1n beadboarda.
• lYPI to wpm. • ..,. Pilot Classlllod Ad.1 to Bfll¥oUNI. Uke new, lawn rnow~r. ed1er, ~&.;·~.'] : Mlluti Dr, N.8. ~ ~ UR'tOS. f)ar.a>owat 81 reach the Orange Coa1\ MUI IOlt lc bacl1, 4 col· •arbaa.i diapout, 1a1
IOO. Downet~aao:u1 market. or11. Sul)er ror club, etc. ruae top. girl's btkt.
-'.<,213)¥"Q.ae&l Pbone642·~ SlOta or olr. See to •P· motorcycle rack' t man
f'Alull Opp Empl.yr m/f prelate. ure rail. vlbil.y, freeie.r.
~ H,. l" • , ,.. ' ., p I ' [)
• 1 • • ! •• ! It ii II ~ "' I ...
- ! ' .• ,, ' ~. , . '1.J ... l C•ll962 aeot mlle64&mt •55t ,!._
. ··~
T
Weatts of CLo-ve
This Valentine·s Day send 'f04X k"""8
a greeting all the world can ltW'9
with a Daily Pilot Heart of LOY&.
It's easy, comPose your personalized
greeting & we'll set your message in
type to fit the border of your choice
or your own handwritten thOughts
may appear in the bof'der you select.
Borders come in 3 sizes: $15, $8, & a
special child's size fbr $2. (You must
be under 12 to Qualify for this one). If
you wish to create your own
greeting. use a black pen & write
your message in the heart below or
. draw your own Valentine of this size.
For help with your ad, tust call
642·5678 & a friendly Valentine
80-Yiser will be happy to assist you.
And. If you like. you can charge Ybur
Valentine ad or use vour Master
Charge or Bank Amencard.
DAILY PILOT
842-5878
Mall to Dally P11ot C1asslf1ed
Oopartf'fltnt. Boie 1500, Costa
Mesa92626
Motorired Bikes H 40
······················-' Moped Batavus Deluxe.
347 mi. D1recuonal lights
& battery pack. $375.
546-1018 aft 5pm
9150 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'65 Honda 150. 5000 oni;i
mi, x!J\t cond $150. and
·74 Honda Trail 70. Str
legal, 790 mi. like new.
$300. Ph 548·301 1
KAWA Zl, 75. 6M F'ainnte
rack, shocks. goodies.
$2.000. 64().9393 ; 752-9478
'73 HONDA 500. mint
cond, xtra seat & helmet
$1.000. 963-5124
'75 YAMAHA RD 350, xtra
clean. very low mileage,
A real bargain! 557-19'9
aft5PM
CHERRY250C·Z M·X
$350.
495-5442
''14 SuzukJ 380. Xlnt cond.
$'700 or best ofter.
960-4613
,3 Yamaha MXiOO; Rid·
den _very l!Ule. Sacnftce.
546-3208 bet 8 & Spm.
Moc.orcycle trlr. 3 rails.
front bx & me.g wbls,
$250. Call 548-7286.
''7'2 Yamaha 100. Lo ml.
rWl8 like new $250 /oft.
64.2-2726 aft noon.
"18 Yamaha VZ~. J'Mf
Eqpt, lool( lrvl kits.
1625/~t otr. "2-035i&
~~ . ...................... ..
25'0PBN ROAD
Fully aelf·eont.
Winter rates. 644~
T.....,...Tran•' tl70 •••••••••••••••••••••••
hhr;. Uffltty •........•....•.... , ...
H.eaYy ctut1 rn w haul~ ~ '900den & wfll trlr.
encl top, ne~ runalo1
iear.Call898-TCDO.
...
( ~ • ~-..... ... ·~jl
V-tl70 ....... 1111.W .......... ,, t14 Mtee.t 11rW .............. Thund!y.F!btu!z3.1971 DAILYP!l.OTfJJ
... •••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••-·-· ._ •••••• ._..._ ... •••••••••••••-•••" ••••••••••••••••• ...... .-...... UM4 Ai1191. UN4 ~ U-4
""Dod1•11,.... W1Dd. IMW t11z,...... t7H ,..,. t110 v•~ t110 ................................................................. ..
BaoO. Haa •••ryllln1 ................ ••••••• ••••••••••••• •••••••• .. ·-•••••••••••••••••••• •"•••••-••••••••••••• 1u1c111 tt I Fard tf 40
,,_ ~va m .1523 • '7uooaAJr ruf '"' caaa ........... .J' ..,..ISCHI ••4•, -ir.s•.A.sOM ...................... eo. .... ..,.. t9JO ...................... . • • I ' • .-.....,. .._ FR.P' _,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... 1974 Font Van nnllihed °'· ext warr. mmac 1mmtdlate Delivery '70 Riviera. 1uper sbarp. 77 LTD WAGO"
lat. Xlnt co~d Ooly &40413&.Htl»08U • • Great~! SALE Xlnt cood Full pwr. lt71MARklV lOPUMGl•r.autarnatic,
11.000ml.844·:56&1 '74 BMW zoaa. 41pd. •nr'f. llU.Y.A.TIS OM vw loaded. Pvt Ply. 6'2-1884 Aqua edlUon. F\lll power &lT, PIS. PJB. AM·~
bl/bl l t AM/FM u u o1110.1111t1190lllt "MO•t11U A • • ,_ 1 1 l12cllldln1 vlnJl lop. ce11etw, tape, apht troM • FORD '74 Econo Van wt u 0 ii 111 '" •u,_., YW.ftOllCHI CAMPBS r18aicllSk)'la s>ee• · lHtber htl•rlor, tilt to1l,CT\llncoalfol root --~:-.-:~~--....... ...---"i P'·D . VI, auLo, PS/PB. "7~~~7892~ 0 SAVE ON FINAL FEW SanJuanCiplstrano AMDIUSU ~~7 .:;:,s. f150. wbfft, crulH cootror. rack.Uc.man.'
cstm wu1dows. top vent, NEW '7UAGS ·ORDER l37·4100 4tl·45 II 1 _.... I I of both • ID All/Plhl«NO. alr tclftd. W~AWAY CLOSED trlr IUtcb. oew btaket. 1971 BMW 3.0 CS. 4 aod. YOUR '71 NOW! Lower ...... ae ect on 73 <:ent z dr hardtop <•R.XlU. f!NDLEA8£
-••••••••••••• .. •• arr~.pti&1M06'7 new•Mtcheltn1. alr. pmnt..on'7tJ1a1.Buyll '°9tSC .. '70tllT newltuaedcnodei.. new ,.'!;lala new t.tana' $1316. $140.Umo +tu to.-a ~·~~~·l~Tra':lAilllolW-'Md tltO AM/FM. t1~. •llvtr a dltferent wa1 wltb Sportamatlc PP llLLYATIS iuto P/S 'P /8 A1c' mo'• on approul of
&NmC'OOler 'redlalt.~rl· ....................... ::Ji::!~c .. lmrnac. =i:-ymeots. Call AM/FM. maaa. yelluw. VW~RICHE •lot: 1 ownr. 'u350: cr«lltC.AUFC>aMIA
lildlup1t1i•tr1r,11P.1, CAIHPOACAISt · xlnt cond. l owpr. S.J11&DC1pt.strano Trllde!M4-75'72
lft090mat1c tohn, Hll'I Tops Dollars aid for C:., 9711....._ t7J2 __,Stan. Mon·S.t. 1374004tMSI I C...aic 9tlS AUTOLIA~
llUlltch. SC.~ dean uaed cara fr~k• Ii ·-••• .. ••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• ••••• S.S. •.500 . •••••••••••••••••• • • ••• 11100 W. lJ.acoln,
4 -.....on.," tllO e.on.tta. Ask. ror Puul 74 Capri, V-6. low mt. li'74 Jeaten H atey. low 'fllPoncbe9tU spd Konl ~~w 18~l ~nu. AAahcn6aJl•O
....................... O'NeilJ. CUil. int, AlltFM itereo. rr&lee. xl.nt cond. "200. whls new Ures FMMM t • m • 673 ... 3~: (!!) 74 MAllUV
HOW.ARD CM•rolet air, •In\ cond. '3150. or best offer. Call alter 1 ater9o caaa. xlnt cond. ~rec. · · :ti Full power lncludlna tm Ford, SIJl5, va. PIS.
LIASIAMIW?7 DovU,QuaUSts. e6l.(JM5 Pll6SIM>OSZ UIOO/b'at orr. Call AM /Fii 1lereo, tll\ AIC.•d.r
•MC JIMMY NEWPORT BEACH 'Tl Capri 1600. 4 Cyl Sl200. ~ • f 131 983-UIM. MIW * USID wbfft, cruise eonlrol. 791-ae
4 W.-. DllVI WE PAY TOP DOLLAR Xlnt 1u mUeaae. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'a Porsrbe. Xlnl mtr 6 vw•s vl111J top. leather la·
VI. aulomaUc , pwr. 1'0RTOPUSEDCARS 8'4·23M. trans. new tires Lert A... 125 ~:m:-x>•lr cond. <Uc.
ateerl•I + braket, FOREIGN,OOM~TIC ·n CAPRI. new eng. front crashed. S1400. .., ... er Nabe •.&.4l6.
tlllltom Interior. •ux. orCLASSICS clutch. etc. Runs Xlnt. 54M802aft5. IN STOCK rs ~
t.lt, alrtd plat.ea, locltJna lf your car ls exlra clean Sl4Q5. Mu.st sell! 875·3622 "JO Tar1a. blk w /hle brn Herd to find Cadillac GUSTAFSON ~rrlsl~)~ ED ! .. i:Ua IUICK alts.:.> int. fac. alloys, AM /FM. modtla
AMty $145 ff 2925 Harbor Blvd it CBpri, dnt cond air. 5spd. f1500. 673--0816
LINCOU' MERCURY
16800 Beach Blvd
H un11ngton Beach
Ford Country Wagon.
A/C. P/B, P/S. d ean.
l2300. Xlnl cond. S'TS-5218 Quality and Price
Guaranteed Plu t .. /mo . ca P Uret.975-8546 14 Maw RX3 Coupe. 4 7!'MrF°Mss~~:'eo~~1~c~i~: .. ,,..,...
..,,.._ • Cost.aMesa 9792500 lt.ick. AM /FM tape. new cJ!!..._.. ...
c 0 • l . • 7 2 a 5 . ; WE BUY __ .. _ . // J LcJ~•nii ~pcciJli\h •ntdual·MOOO ; total Dahm 9720 spd. w ....... wmty. very side &out. S4400 830-1929 'LIUt'1j"'·J••r Preferred R,11cs
eeall to Urt ... '439.64 in-C&.IAH CARS ••••••••••••••••••••••• dean 83'1·3202 ·75 Porsche 914 . Konla, 7900 Wntmln11er Blvd.
842-8844 MM'c.., 9950 ====.;;..;....----1 ••••••••••••••· •.•.•••. '76 MARK IV ·ee Wagon $600. pnvat~
d . lat mo. J>ayment. &TRUCKS DRIYEA '74 Muda Waaon RX4. stereo 8 trk, AM /FM. Wfftmln919f 193-7551 L~p~N~~S&lr~~J" ~ •1ee. deC>oslt. beslolfer. mags. xlnt cond. orrer. '72 Beetle. Xlnt cond. Nu CJdillJ<.\ In
..... •MC T....eka CONNELL LITI"LE... ~7280 675-eeM .... •-M FM 0 c
Fully loaded Including party. call 531-62.39 after
tilt wheel . cruisconlrol.1_&-'p"-._m_. _____ _
AM/P'M stereo, air con· MllstCllMJ 9952
d1Uoolng. <O!MNKW l ••••••••••••••••••••••• &.D. P'rwy·Avery e~t ...-akes °' l1res. A I rJn~r 1x.m1y
LAGUNA NIGUEL SA VE A LOT Merc.dn lea 9740 9142.01974 Low m1. radio. 831Vi446 ____ 1 Opi:n SundJy $9216.
CALL 131-0800 CHEVROLET SHOP &COMPARE ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• &ood oond. S4800 '72 Camper folly equip'd. Cc1dillac
21128KarborBl,d. IAIW1CKDATSUH Lease (714)846-3775 new valves Top cond Master Dealer GUSTAFSON
LINCOLN MFACURY
16800 Beach Ulvd
Hun11119ton B<"ach
ale/trade ·~s Cobr•
powered. Many extras
Sl400/b6t ofr. 645-8438
"fl" .Ford Bronco. super COSTA MESA San Juan Capistrano .... _ Used Rois Roye• 9756 $2850673-0087. B d
clean. 546·1200 831·1175493·3175 ....,..w. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----2600 H.irhor Iv ·
_48M423 ______ 494 __ ·Z7_12-t ________ --------M:~~:;s #J DEALER IN U.S.A. ·~M1W~~u~B .su~1:ro' C.O\ld Mt:~ S40.9100 1973 Okb o;ega. Sl99S
Oldlmoblle 9955 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 842-8844
'11 Bronco, loaded. 14,000 TOP OOl_.LAR ROY .-1rig ...,_ 645-6557 Nabers Sale or Trade ·10 Con· vs. A/C,7~ ..:~A~r.
mi. se.ooo or best or " -CARVER Unental Cpe. Xlnt cond.1------~ IMMEDIATELY SPECIALS Lt-..~-of I rt '74 VW Super Beetle Cadi•Uac , Days 546-8833, eves & 9957
f ,.. PAID 0 .... DIS, • .a.y ~ IW -· ...,..........,
FOR ALL .......... nl~ 1 ROLLS·ROYCC 14,000 ml Showroom 8210 4 Door. 4 speed. AUTHORJZ O wknds 646 2226 ••••••• •• ••• •• • •• • • •• • • '63 Scout 4x4 FOREIGN CARS ra .. 'o. <-PKE> IMOJ•mbor•• new. must sell S2S90.
w ""'' MERCEDES DEALER '71 Pinto Low mileage, 1115'. 644·0669 CALL Ok COME IN ~ a..w1 552-0247 '75 Mark IV. foll power. perfect cond SlOOO
TO SEE US MOW $2895 6862 Manchester. d Cadillac. 75 Coupe de au~o. air. P/S, P/8 , P/W. Ph992.1616 Col()J11do 4x4's: 1) 1975 M£WPORTIMPORT5 88800VESTREl-:T Buena Park CLOSEDSUNOAYS '72 Van. No s1 ~ windo~ Ville. Fire Mist Cense. split Pwrtseals, Landau __ _
P-2:r04x4; 2) 1971 Jeep 3100W.CstHwy,N8 NearMacArtbur 52].7250 --panel .. Runs g!cal,C'pld w 1wh1lc t'a l> lop & top, leather. tilt whl.1975Runabout.18.000m1.
CJ.5 customized & ex· 642-9405 &JamboreeRoads Onthe SantaAnal"wy Saab 9760 loler1or. C.ill Van leather All options cruise l'Ontrol. Only Priced for quick sale. traa.; 3) 1954 military _________ , llJ.130'0 ...... ••••••••••••••••• 752·7355.nalei.S51·4076 Mint.$7,000 551•5316 art 19.000m1.gold·tan&tan Call@2-8229.
power wagon; 4l 1947 WE BUY •74 · 450 SE. 17·800 mi, LIASEORIUY 5 30 lld k d <0021.WD l $8,495. Lease ------Cl-2A. All sound & very •USEDCARS& T°'IUYER silver, blk It.hr. cruise TRADE '67 VW Bug. hne evs.a ay w n s. or buy on approved '72 Pinto Wagon. 4 spd,
dean. SCS-31518am..flpm TRUCKS• See us first. & last' Top control. SUD roof. 5 new YOUR SAAi AT cond. worth Sl IOO fo~ VW Illness forces sale. '73 El credit. air. top shape SIS7S. ·73
~ SUverado. 4x4 shrt bet
canadr trd for van. Dys -.ma. eva 493-7SM.
Trwcka 9560
Come In or Call doUarpaldforimPorts. Michellns, $14,750. PP. IEACH IMPORTS Sqbck <w /o fuel inJ> of Dorado w/Ca bnolcl lop. California Pinto Sqwre Wagon. 4
PREEApproiaal COSTA MESA 548-3028 Sun. 549·2042 FROM~lS5 equal value54o7377. All pwr. Make oHer . Auto Leasing spd, top shape. $1975 t
Groth Chevrolet DATSUN wkdys. 141DOVEST. '68 VW Bug, runs xlnt _4_96-7_635 ______ 1 l600WUncoln.Anahe1m o'Wner 642-8327
18211 Beach Blvd 2845 Harbor Blvd 15 450 SL. Lo m1. Maple HEWPottT IEACH $1300 or brc;t oH er '76Sev1llc 1714> 771>-2860 77 STATION WGH
Huntington Beach ,.._ cir. S.15.900 or take over CALL 752·0900 962-4?08 aft 3pm SI 0 ,000 each -----4 Spd, al.I'. Pf$, ste<'I bell· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 847 "'087 ... 549.3-.-.1 ....... ta Mesa MO·MlO I . t b no m 1· n a I SHOWROOM FRESH -v .. "'"' ae wi vw B ood d '7ff F'leetwoodBrougham , ed radials, roof-rack. lt77GMC 1975 Dalaun 280Z 2+2· cbar1es.Call837·7660. Toyota 9765 71 bl ug, It h cdon •Beautiful low mi cars. ~Mark Ill load~. lo radio.Llc.176RYQ
•111uu• .... 4X4 TOP .... u ----'--------•·•••••••••••••••••••••• re t eng, new e:i eri.. m ew radials pnde of -"" Loaded! netal c brown '71 280 SE. 58.000 mi, $14.SO. Dys 673·32'13: Evs. Cully loaded SV #3717. 1· n · WALK AWAY CLOSED t ~aer model. 400 DOLLAR exterior with Siddle m· '6700 Ph 4gg.5759 days, 17 968-72S2 1-itwd IJ~73. Dir. 543.2963 PoSs es:uon $3795 PP. END LEASE C.1.1>. Vs, automatic, aar tenor Uke NEW! Ask· 49M858rughts or7S2·0687 751-8113 1111.79 mo + lu for 36
eond .. pwr. steering + PAID ing sesoo. Prl ply. vo1.,o 9772 l""A Co tine tal oood mo's on approval of brliea. locldng di!( .. oil FOR CLEAN 581-7991. MBZ 230 SL Roadslr, '66. .. '7SCdV. lmmaccond. """' n n • " ed. ~· ~" g I ta-t. tilt Tc s s "'00 H t d TOYOTAs .•••••••••••...•••••••• Loaded. 33.000ml, body & motor. $600. er ·ct •LtFOR .... IA ~b ~r' -la · ua, I IMPOR AR '74 Da"-un 610 • dr 11uto 7·" · eau · co n .. S7600. 673 .... "'" r1rm! 557 1101 "' " w ee , cruse contro . .A.LL MODas '"' · · · Camel wtdark bwn top. ,77 ~ AUTO LEASING CTXR267FSOS176). "" ..., 8 trk, air, new tires . dark bwn inl. 6 cyl fuel HERE NOW
usr ... Sl0,Ml.S6 orSharpbsto. rrM. ~ ~:!!.·. $2495. iaj .. perf running order Che'YJ"Olet 9920 ,._........._ 99~2 Anahle6001mW Lincoln.
DLSCOUNT$1636.56 _,,_.,, 640-Q24 or64().1893 •HEW COLORS VOLVO ••••••••••••••••••••••• =.::;:~••••••••••••"'-• 77(>.2860 MOW $9225 1973240Z '67 250SL. New Michehns. '7l MALIBU 75 Vetlc. T·top. whale taru------
AleRGMC: TnlCks Gdcond. Mags both tops. new paint, •HEW MODB.S HERE .._.OW Extra ~lean. Blue. blue leather mt. loaded. $7900. '72 Runabout. Lo m1,
S.D.Frwy.-Averyexlt S3200 494-5272 clean 673·3434or675-3302 HugeSavingsonALLre· n ml. Air Cond. Stereo TI4~~aft6 :30 R&H, Gd tires. 4apd
LAGUNANIGUEL maining n e w 7&s & Cassette optional. 96.00C SL300 ~or838-3446 C .A.111~1 " 0 '75 Datsun B210. mags '70 230SL. apectacular Demos ~EWCOLORS freeway 111lles. $1600 '75 Corvette, 15,000 mi,•---·----,... • -v80 "'/new a tee I be lte d machine. Flawless cond. The ·Better Bargain *" 551·3855 after 6 pm or Showroom clean. all ex· ·71 Pinto 2 dr sed. Air.
Autos. hnported r 8 di a 18 • AM I F M · Sl0.900. 499-2109 MAR"'UIS TOYOTA •NEW MODELS 640-37S4days. lras. $7795/bsl. 838-5071 auto trans, radio. Runa REA del Van 5 xtr tires. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 831·9038 ---------I ..,. oreat By owner ..,.. ..
Roomy. Needs some wk. .65 Mercedes 230SL, xlnt MISSION VIEJO Huge savings on 7a611 r~ '00 Nova xlnt cond. P/S. Cougar 9933 S48.r.00Gattflpm. · -· ~4113 9am-Spm w/d '73 PU. AM /FM 8 lrk cond, $6500. Pvl Ply. l31·288049S.1210 maaning new s P/8,Auto Trans. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------
tl!OO. stereo, mags. cmpr, .u .. -.6 1---------1 Demos in stock. Sl.500. 963-1~ 1W70 Cougar XR7, xlnt Pinto Wgn '72 w/raek.
'71 Datsun PU. $2800/ofr.
Shell. &d Urea. xtras.
Xl;t cond. 831·1832.
'74 Courier. Xlnl cond.
$1125. 752.0547
"72Datsun PU, xlnl
cond. $1900.
~
'Tl Pill.on Eng Muda PU
w /ahell & AM /FM
cUHtte. xlnt cond.
G.8115. &'2·9919 eves or
871-0228 wkdys.
'M El Camino. 283 VS.
8ll&o.. RllH. good cood.
... STM705
•SALES
•SERVICE
•LEASING
O•eneas
Dd••ry Service & p.irb now 111><.'n
536-2926 or 968-2181 art _.,.._·--·~-----1Toyota Corona '69. S800. MARQUIS VOLVO
5PM Sell or lease '76 450 S M> Victoria Coe ta Mesa MSSION VlEJO i3 Monte Carlo Landau oond, 36.000 orig mi, A/C, Gl.d, 4-apd, A/C. nimote
•nDATSUM ~~(t,e~~z. Xlnt _548-4096 ________ 831·2810495·1210 ~c~~gf~~v~~~ ~.~~7Jsape deck . ~:==~~;O
WAGOM ·ee Toyota Corona. New ORAHGE COUMTY 77 ........ _ ... u...11L... '72 Cougar. Shwnn cln. 4 speed, air coodit1oning.
4 speed. a.ircond.IUoning, Mll '74 450 sa clutch & brakes. S700. VO c":::':1 c ,..._.,,. new: pol. auto trans. air. radio. heater. <12681$) radio, beater. (~HGD> lmmac cond. Slate aray, Dys 54s-5713154s·&3l2 VOL -c ~ brk, slrtr. lo ml. must SI 699
$2599 sunroof, 45.000 mi,1_e_va_. _______ EXCLUSIVELYVOLVO 3SOV-8,Hydratrans.alr. seetoapprec.645-7191
C ompl s erv . rec s . '70TOYOT• LargestVolvo Oealer P /S. P /B. tilt whl , $12,500 (714 1 894 -0636 " inOrangeCounly' radlaJs, Rally whls. Lie Dodge 9?35
d1:1ys <7l4 l493-6773 eves. H1 LUX PICKUP BUY or LEASE 93SRTP. •••••••u•••••••••••••• r:~lll•"
on Sal's 8 lo ·I fo r )Our ..._Mo-~~ cooveruencc
4 speed. radio. h<'alcr. DIRECT WALKAWAYCLOSED ·75 Dart Swtnger Coupe. --~~~Im 1974 MBZ 240 D. Xlot (753WJ') ENDLEASE small V-8. auto. P /S, .. 4c!~;,1,F1~~~~,._. 11o4 aded. $1599 ~·,·~· ~.~~-f'J!~.·~ $112.10 mo. + tax for 36 vinyl top. pretty & lots of a--...;;;;;_.;.;.;.;.. __ .. ................... c .........
~ ,..,tltl trl40.t4'7
..,..,..., ...,...,. 'f mo's on approval of e conomy . (395NDP>
Mercedes Be nz 197 credit. S2995.Canrinanceon a p·
280SEL 4.5, new slver 2025 S Manchester CALIFORNIA provedcredit. I!!~::=:==:=~=~
acrylic paint. bkl gen int. .._...,.~lft Anaheim 750-2011 AUTO LEASING Calfontia Plymouth 9960
'76 l9>Z. auto. air. i.tereo sU bell tires, mint mech .. 1600 W. Lincoln, Auto l.eating •••••••••••••••••••••• •
8·trk, mags. IC1ac1ed. cond. One owner. always 1,., ..... ...,. Vol. '73. 1800 es. O~lg Anaheim 1600W. Uncoln.
'74 Dauun PU. Great S6llOO 6447255or 540·706l svc strictly accord'g t c .... ....._ own.r. Personal car.mint 771>-2160 Anaheim
end. Many xtru.11MHarborCM.S.6-9303 Fiat 9725 manual.$8000flrm.Lic ~'4 .. tJOJorl40.t•n cond days. 838·5155 17141771>-2860 ATLAS
SZ100/batolrCallMS 53:27 Alldl 9707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 145GHR. Pvt pty <714) ~=======~~~ Eves.551·5051 '67Chevy Mal.ibu283. 557-1713. 197 T C II 1600 ----Good cond. $800. ChrysSw JPtymouta.
'73 Rancbero 500. PB/PS. •••••••••••••••••••••••New I S Xl9 Fiat. Xlnt 4 oyota oro a . · '64 Volvo 122 S slalion 962-63511
All. new radials. $3100. Audi '7~ JOOLS. • drive. cond. dark brn. convert. MB 71, 280SL, orig pvt Xlnt cond. 48,000 mt. wa&. Clean. $1150/offer .
'74 DODGE COLT
GT
Open !>ally & Sun. 'hi 10
PM Pfl,._.114 4door, l6,000m1. tmmac 84().4182 o wnr. 2 tops. A I C . S2450 645-0927aft6pm. 845-2928
1-Ford Pkup; Clualc It.TSO &44-6999 iS 131 4dr, Sspd. silver ~· xlnt. Sll.900. Tri...... 9767 ...:'6S_:;:_V;;.;ol_v;;.;o_P_l_800-_S_.-lo_w_m_l.
Model. coat $1500 to AM/FM. Low m1. Sac ••••••••••••••••:•••••• air, xlnl cond $2700.
ret&oH. Hll for 1975 .,., IDOLS. t d r sedan. Pvt. Pty Eves. 642·33&4 ~ 9742 a· .J 536-8294 ext 306 eaa~·6'2.f1327 auto AM /FM ,tereo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' • , · '69 Fiat. good running a ..J • • • Autos. Used "7! CHEVY LUV. m1ny fee. alr. new tires. im c<>nd. S650 or best offer •••••••••••••••••••••••
atna.lncld'1 Cobra CB. mac .• low m i. oriit 00-1436aft6PM • uuOVTHB"£A 80U\cvAA0 •1111e• Ge•ral 9901
lilultMllt S:ll00.4111-01128 owner Musl sell lh1s ---------• l•4.'9'llll900 •1l_.396, ••••••••••••••••••••••• -.,-0-r_o_r_d-~-. _T_o_n_P_U-. wbd.. 846'2881 FIAT 50\J '76 TR7 with AC. Londod,
•number rack. 11200. Reduced ror rast sale '"" 1.'.'::0°~ • 11.J.':e':.~:,· 0"l'" Cassette. Luggage Rack,
'73-3978 IMW 9712 F\at 128 SLC '73 New an· . 7 7 MG B . s Free maas. Sens ible pay.
----------••••••••••••••••••••• terior & carpel. AM /FM . Syr/50,000 mi exl. warr. menls 0372VC >Cap
Pwalture Truck. 1968-1 Ferran Mags Flared with 77 MGB purchase. 16144.SO. CapRed SSOO toa. lotemaUonaJ. 85,000 wbla Rear m o lde d Chooae one or our 27 Rea $3122.26 36 moa
nil l Own. $2500 (ii'\» apotler . vinyl top Spot Buy/Purchase Plans. pymnlllofonly$122.28
CallMl-5518 less! New paint! 645-7588 AM L1 DSGO ENT SE W0 NML Gy '76 -TR7. red. black Int,
Y.. tl7 Sat. & Sun AM/FM, air. 4,000 ml as· ---------1 S74/mo. SerNo80617. cap sume lse S129.SO or AMC 9905
'998SOSPYDER $4318. red. $398. Rea purch $5665. 833·2575 ••••••••••••••• .. ••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••
SADDLEBACK
BMW
'64 Impala convt. llebll
eng. gd ltre/baU. P tS.
radLO. $300 548 07%7.
4 speed, radio. heater.
<424LPZ >
$2099
2929Harbor Bhd .
Costa Mesa
546-1934
'89 Plymouth 4 dr V8. rull
pwr, alr. runs perr 1575
Ph 64.5-8614
73 Pty. Cust. Wagn C~u1.
1--1-,.-,-H-._.;.. __ ..... -.--e $1900/offer. Call Ev1 ---------962-l523 '76 Nova. l.lOOM. Forced C: .... Mne ------
to sell due lo health. ~ "'-646-tJOJ w 140.t4n '69 Road Runnet-
~~M Apt 1. Bet. Ford 9940 PleaseCall963·5327
---------••••••••• ••••••• •• • • • • • Pontfac 99 65
74 VEGA '73 Gran Torino. 2 dr. •••••••••••••••••••••••
4 speed, radio, beater radlala, electronic igni· '74 AREllRD
(813KJL) lion, PS, PB . S2100. fullyloaded 645-7155
S 1499 558-Wl ·75 AJ-t-re. Xlnl cond . lo
lnlCHIYYVAM va. aatom1tlc. pwr.
1t .. rin1. radio & Iona
wb"l baH. Extellen
eaDdkloft·rudy for Im·
mtdhte dell very .
<91117%).
IUJORLEASI M1awbls.AM tFM. S2352.4048moa0EL ...:..-_;....• -----
YOUR 1977 Mow 844·~33 . ·m TR. New clutch, reblt 67 Ram.bier Waaon. auto, r.~11111•• 8S Midget. Xlnt cond, trans new tires new A/C, 1 ownr. 61,000 ac· __ 1972 Flat 124 SPort Cpe, wire whla. new top, ton-brks · Xlnt run'g 'cond tual mi'a. New tires .... M'""t~ftl
'71 Gnlaxie soo. Orla m.1. ad mpg. Oya 496-227J
ownr. PS, PB, Radials. orevs 493-7584.
tinted gla111, AC. immac.
9974 S18SO/bstofr. '168·1131 YfCJG
OMLY$4495 ,
lt74DOOGIVAM
VI, automatic, pwr.
ateerlna. radio II lo•
mlleqe. ReldT for Im·
nttdlate dolJv•ry .
<&1WX).
OMLYSJ7tl
SADDLEBACIC good cond., sunroof. S neau cover. Sl,OOOtlrade si.00 /bstofr S3&-7?l7 · 0200. 1184 Sonora Rd
VAU.IY IMl'ORTS spd. w t radials Call for Van. 751-4278 CM. ~307l evs, dys;
anytime 494-3012, Sl200 VolksWGCJlll 9770 ~4 111·2040 49M94t Orm. MG'50 TD, right hnd ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...:..:.;:....:.:..:.:.. _____ _
CRE VIER
d r l v •. co 1n PI • te t 1 '8& VW p I y '7.S AMC ~Fi1t850Spydcreporty realored. MOOO. P .P . ane an, new
converUblt. AM/FM. Gd < 2 u > 441 . u u 0 r eq, look.I great. Sl900. GllMUM
cond. m.8703 C2JJ>199-1207. 1_980-3348 ________ 1 e cyt.1 aulO. trans .. aar
.., VWSu U Lo cond Uonlng . power &'St a lll<>ADWAT '73 Fiat 850 Spyder Conv. n.-i 9746 4 per Bee e. w 1t.eerino radio. heater. -• d AM FM I -r-ml, air, qew tlre1. • SAMfA AMA iunl coo • I . 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AM /FM, clean. $2800/bsl <•78PC'U)
835-3171 m.l.SlllGO 844..uoll 72 Opel 1900, super buy, ofr IJ30..C600or827-8810 $2499
TNUUltlAT11DllMHQllllCHIN« '74 nat 124 Sport Coupe, air, best offer. An 7PM, ---------· •USID IMW'1* AC. s 1pd. lo m i. $3100. ~ 'Tl Super 8. lo
1
w miles.
"1SmA <HKWT> PP.IU-751tt?ftl. ?4 ,_.. ...... ~.... S1450. Hurry. Chuck r:••• ~Bavaria StR 908LVV VY'-.~•" 7$1-41050. a.ftert75HIUS is~updS/R334PCW '75 Xl9 Flat. lmmac. Auto. tran1., cHHtt•
•tl00411pd ZXX816 Loaded. ~or bat ofr. player. he au t . '68VW. Clean cObd.
"10.0CSASIR7.SLWB 833-6aUdys,836-U60ev <823RHJ') ~\~'-. ..,.'"!9-~pd41~~~fm '70 124 Spider. only $2599
-· 30,000ml by ort1 ownr. CleMdO.. Sundays Out.tnd'1 conc1 $2250.
OltAMGECOUMTY"S ~S46-~2$6C>......;_·~~~~-1
OLOIST .._. ............. ....................... 11--~-~------.. '70 VW Ca1:0per Vea
Westphalia mdl, l'f'bll
q, new Urea, xlnt coed. smo. 493..-oa.
'ts v;N. Or.at cond. '8'75.
'11 VW, 1575 Pvt ply ...............
•••••••••••••••••••••••
'72 Grand Torino Sqwre '71 Veta AM /FM. Tape It~& Sta. Wgn. All extrH. 4spd. clean, Id radials.
.... '4~tJOJ .,..1...,461 Xlnt cond. '2000. 640-0383 S900/ofr. 497·3851
. --Alltot. M•w 9100 A.to .. Mew 9100
63 Chevy Caprice P /S, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••• P/B, air. radlals, needa
ef\I. $375. 897-8625.
Chrysa.-9925 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'75 Chryaler Cordoba,
while w /buraursdy Int.
loaded w /all xlru. quick
sale. &40-5172
"ftCordoba, 8.000 ml, lux·
UJ')' Int, loaded. teeoo.
ll0-9151
9910 .......................
MOM THI SPOlnS CA1t CIM1'B
$.400
BACK
I I .11 T
1245"119
MIW 1977
PINTO ,
'-2·Dt. SIDAM ~ 4 spd., front dlaca, vinyl bucket eeats.
• elec. rear wind. defroster. stl. bH.
;. • . radials. tnt. glass, whl. cvrs. STK237 ~ ..... (101722). ., . Q ~ s3372
.. 3 -· ....
~ ..,.
"" ~r :. ~ Ir '~"" .•
;.' !t
~. ;! ...:··
Plus Tax and License
•
MEW 1977
MUSTANGS
2 DR. HARDTOPS
2+2 FASTIACKS
Over 25 new 1977 Mustangs in
stock. We have a SUPER
SELECTION of standards and Ghlas.
SEE US
BEFORE YOU IUY!
•
MEW 1977
PICKUP'S
·~ · "READY TO ROLL u -.. '"' • CHECK OUR a :.. VOLUME SAVINGS h
"' From light pickups to custom eavy ~ ; duty models, we can serve you best.
.,
•
HURRY FOR FINAL
CLEARANCE
DISCOUNTS
ON ALL
REMAINING 7611!
SUPER
RESALE V~LUIS
74 MUST AN6 II
V8 engln,. 4 8PHd tranamlulon,
radio. heater. 3&,987 m llel',
Immaculate! (825LFK).
$2699 • '74 MOMTE CARLO
Auto .. AIH. power eteerlhg •
brakes. factory air, vlnyl roO,,
(948HZM). ""
s3499 •• 17S CHIVY ~4 TOM
SUIUUAM
Automatic. R&H. power ateertng,
factory air condR1onlng. (7' OL Vl).
7a s.v111e ••... , •..... ~. saJe Priced
• f: (0452927) ... .
78 Eldorado •.. : ..... ~· ..... $9495
C536NIM)
, '·
75 Fl98tWood Brghm ...••• 1 ... S9295
C173MCFJ ·
75Eldorado Coupe.· .. ~ ....... MM95
. (725KYS) •
75 Coupe deVllle ............. $7995 (135MO~
1 75 COuPedeVille ..... .,_, .... $7595
C986MXT)
75 Sedan deVltle ..•...••••• ,17495
(0102.034)
'74 Eldorado ................ S69QS
(816LPC)
'74 Eldorado ................ S8495
(079KGE)
••••••
'73 Olds 98 Sedan .....•...... S3295
(354GOT)
75 Mercury Monarch ....... S3Q95
(L540479)
.·'76 Ford Granada .......•.... S4795
(F126178l
'74 Dodge Surfer Van ........ S5995
With mag wheels. steceo tape &
sunroof -LIKE NEW! ( 183334)
77 Chevy Monte cilrlo •..... S6595
(897RSC)
I. N;
Y '
E
N
T
0
R y
R
E
D u c
T
I.
0
N
B
u y
.N
0
w
A
N
D
IRA•D .. -·-·-··'__....
•EW
1977 .. ·
* Great Selection
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY ·
BUY
f.ROM .
IKE
7ZPINTO
Auto. trant. (322FYB). •
5 1599
'71AMC .......
Automatic. pawer eteerlng. air cond. · 11 .. than 15,000 mll• (478PaJ).
52419
73JtATSuM'
61tWA90M
' •Pffd, air conditioning, radio,
._ter. Super nice cart (6eOHGO>
,.
BUICK'S
SMAtLCAR
NEW•EL
LOW LOW COST
HIGH·GAS MILEAGE -Calif. EPA Ratings:
22 MPG CITY
32 MPG Hl6HWAY
ALLATGREAnY
REDUCED
PRICES
*48 months at $71.71: cash price
$2888 (plus tax & license): deferred
payment price $3891.36; APR 12.67:
down payment $1 99 plus tax &
license (cash or trade). On approved
credit.
All o f our cars have a 5 year-50.000
mile service contract available.
Yz Mile So. of the San Diego F~.
Between Adams & Baker
I Wherever you llve In
Orange County, buying a
Uaed Car In Costa Mesa
'trom Johnson & Son
! "Just Makes Sensel" I
I •
'75 UMCOLM MAltK IY 1 .V-8, automatic, ractory air, power
steering & power brakes, power i windo'1s. power door locks, cruise
· ,control. (691LPY).
'8895
75 OLDS WA.oN YISTA CIUISm
9 Passenger v.s, automatic, PoWer
steering, brakes, windows & seats.
(389NBV>
'4895
'71 UMC°"4 CoUPt
. VS, automatic, factory alr
conditioning, whitewall Ures, run power, heater, stereo radio, vinyl
roof, tinted glass " wheel covers.
(2S2CCY).
'2695
• "7J Mlillir1titr1Gora • v.s, automatic, ractory air, power
steering, power brake1, power
: windows, racUo, heater. (202.JEO).
s2595
'7J OLDS CU'R.ASI
2 Dr. Coupe. va, a~Uc, factory ,
air cond1Uonln1, pwr. steerlnl, pwr.
brakes, stereo radio, beat«, tinted II.as': vinyl roor. whitewall tires & wnea coven. (537HTY).
s3495
'7J CHal AC SBAM Dl¥IUI Va, automatic, ractory alr
coodltlonlal, full power, stereo ndlo, heater, whitewall tlrel, vinyl
root. ui;::.n:··~~ covers • bron c w /dettp tab
Jntedol'. (11311SS).
. '4495
.
MIRAaE " MAZDAS
11ASKTOSEE
TME·FACTORY
INVOICE" SALE
5 YR.. 75,000 MILE "
WARRANTY
•
76 COSMO DEMO
SAVE s2000
W4S $6015 HOW s4095 8«. tC02tc7021M
•
74MmlS214l SAVE s537 . -.r. ts}C3e:noe ... •
• '76 IX4 DIMO sln4
SA VE • 1 soo-· .
Ser, ILA hSt4191t
•
••Young looe i.t a flame ; vny prfll,
ty, often W1J1 hat. and fierce, but .till
only UghJ and Jl;ckning The~ of
the older. and~ Marl is oa
coal!. deqrbumllt,g tlltqWnC~.,..
Hnary Ward BeecMY-
By CREaYL aOMO
_.. ___ _
such as; phosphates, sodas,
sarsaparilla, malts and ice..cream
cones. The candy counter displays a
myriad of temptations for the sweet-tooth. .
As Mrs. Pinkley prepared Lo lce-
cream soda with two straws, she
winked at her husband and said,
''What flavor would yo• like father?"
1 I
I --Glv(~ •card« •sqJJ &Ut \o your aw~theart la• tradi~aI way Ut f/!%•
preu your leellnpon February.f•.
II any of Oran1e Couot.y'a
' merchants carry "Jittle tbings" that '
touch the heart and aomo of QetD
are: .
110 for Gthi, 911• Adam$ Avenue
in Huntington Beach, wbJch carries
• compltte Une of Hallmark vaJen. thaes expressing evert,1 sentiment
frotn romantic to humorous. Igo also
baa boxed valentines, party goods
and gllta.
Via Lido l>nap, 3445 Via Lido ill N6wport Beach, carries catds,
boxed eandy, cosmetics. and fra-
«r•nces. Store manager-Gorl®n
Elwood uys Via Lido blS a "wbOle
section dev~ecf to Jove and devctlon and bard-~. classical poetry." •
Irvine's tark View Center, 6311
UntveraJty Dr. in the El Rancbp
Ce~er, ~ carries boxed cm cards and frainnces. Owner
BorNno "'1' the store cat · to those 1iesi?:tg gffts under '15. !
also has an .. ex~Uent" JewetrJ'~ partment~with prices ranging (~~ S2 to $100. ark View also offers ~
sdectlon .tmall books et poetr)i.
•
-
' \ \ '
~ \
(
\
I
j
(
1 '
l
0:.
..
..
There•a notbln1 more pleuant
than a flDe m..i ta a ftDe r..,...aal anLQr...._ Co.id flAd•to_....
forlilnate fO have a 1u1mber ~ U · cellent dinfna Spot.I to choose
'lo belp 7C1G' uc1 JOG.I' v~
fiqd Jut {be Niil mood~ 7f1Gr rm·
denOU1, we bave complied a selee·
tion of IOllle of the area•s fine ratautanta:
Aaeln' Marta,..,-·ltlT W. ~
.Bwy., NtwjWt llMclL ..... 1. ·
Located oa Newport Bay. the
naatlcal~ta provide a col· orful. cosy. ;;nd comfortable at· .mos~ QUaliq •~•· Aged eutern top llrlom <cut frelb dafJt)
alone or 1D eomblnatkm with JoMter or aluimp. terlyakl top alrloiD.
111ordllab; 1almoa and fi11a
uneroles fonn a cllat1Dctive menu. Entertalament nillrt)y. Open for
lunch. dinner and ~-Open aeven days a Week. Limited reserva·
ti om.
Bea 8rewa"•• JUN Cout B,,y.,
s.tla .,.,... ...... u. Allo~·
aJ•) •.
A very unus'fal aetUnc. Ben Brown•a is locaTed Olll a hillside,
overlootiQI tbe Aliao Creek Golf
Course. with a view ol the ocean and
sheltered by the towuiq di1fa ol
Aliso Canyon. It ls h1Jh)y recom·
meD!ied 1or -&ou.mielJoc)(I ol(er· Dia• which lnclude boullabalsse
maraellalu. •campt, 1callpps mouaadiN, troll ... .,.._, veal
1caHopntandn.lm .. o--. ... mtertabunmt 'het-a.,, ......... ......., iD tbebmge.
Opm'1 Lm. to2a.m. dally.
Lo.e Is like a living. growing tree that bears fruit. Why not give her a
symbol ol your majestic love in the
form of a fruittree?
Citrus and other fnait trees are
priced from $9.95 at Sapen Decer,
ble., UIZZ Warner Ave. in Fountain
Valley. ACCOl'dinl to the folb at
Superb. 'tbe citrus trees are "loaded
wlthfruit."
Another idea for a living gift ls a
pOtted. indoor plant. Tbe sis-inch
plants ~Jn red pots and are priced
from $l.95. Other suggestions in-
clude outdoor shrubs. Dowers,
planta apd colorful ground covers to
beaatitt J04F surroundings -and inte~ity your love.
BLAZIER'S $28 0 '30
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a.1erY.-Ga.._ bu be# the
Ant phase of a florist service wt.kb
wW ofter• fine selection fo fftsb-eut
ftOwen ~I to Jett D'l:lllc:u.
. 1eneral manacer.
ne-opea.ln1 of the ·~ service 8t Bocer's N~rt Beach
loeaUoa Ml been kqed~to ~alen·
tiU'1 Day and Will fW.. ~
teL Onten aucb as orchids, dl.f· loclibt, tulips, indoor auleu and
ma117man. .
Powers wW be dbP8194 oa lav'ia unower carts .. placed eonveoientlj
throuthout tbe nunery complq.
.. la lt8 tradition .of Uftlque'ness,
Roter's will provide tbe •o1t1 San
Francisco flower cart on the c:canMr-'
style of flower bu)dog." N1'
D'Ells~ .t • nowen _,be ~chaH4 bJ JM
bunch.or cUltom Hlected la tM mix and m11tc:b faslllon:'Frenc:h bouquets
will abt> be available.
l'D additiialtt a~ ol floral desip expens ,.su oe oo band to arrance
special trier bouquea and unique
corsages.
u An outstandinf flower selectioo
Will be available-for ~at 1pecl.t
day.• Visit Ropr'a and say it with
flowers," said D'Ellscu.
The aeven·acre nuraery and
botanical aarden ~plex is located
at 2301 San Joaquin HUis Road ln
Corona del Mar.
Now II a beautllul tlmef or flowers.
Sprinf lsJast about tQ burst into bloom an h&arts are full of
. l'OOl•nce. Oran1e County flQrists are
unanlmpus tp their feelings about
nower ~ -especially the red rose.
.. Sometimes one s lncte r01e
mean1 man than a whole dolea,"
said J;>ee WembJfcu. usiatut
muaa1er of Newp0rt Florilt .i .,.
N"port Blvd. lo Newpor".t Beacta. ·
A 1lqle, lona..._laed l'OM·ll
pric~uat $2 apct a 4IOMD l'OMI are from $1J dep8nclbil oa
....... Odilel' 11111.elDe ... are mlfilature ...-at ~ .... OJ' ..... arranp. utr.$12.IO. . •
lbefer~aadoww ol ... lW Broadway ~~=:c-=~·tbe time · -~pa.._···11aa11eo1.
on; ~ ..... -reel. Cina· Uom..,. .eccim-to rmtel and molt of our rrencellMDb are done with
be.artsUclcupWI. Tbb ls • .., pre-
U.y U.e of ta.. year for ftorilta, ••.-id
111. Shafer.
la ..id1Uoa to traditional floral ar·
ra•1•m.a.M .. Vtrie,.....at
,, 2951 a.-~ in Cotta Meea. ls Otfe wbl~ dried ar·
ran:?:lents a b~tet. ~ are cfetcdbed by owner Gay Sweetland
as ••m:cn pei'fect because ti,ey will
lastfor,ver ~"
El Plorllta, 26881 Trabuco Road ln
Mission Viejo, offe~ l~ven Wicker
PNLYptLOI I
basket.I wttb red pea !'OHS u4 bucl
vuea with carnatlons or l'Oles.
Tbe firm allo offers the F1'D 1'Love Bundle" which ls an arrange-
ment of red and white nowers with_,
lace heart. It ls ericed at '12.50. El
Floriata a1lo bu a Valentine Du
Disb Garden with live plants an4 nowen priced from $8.
Maeres, 490 So. 'Co11t Highway in
L11una, features arranged roees
from t1a and boxed roses from $15.
Mixed arranaements are prlceclfroln.
$10. -Time in a Bottle ls a unique Valen·
tine lift, aecordln1 to owner Jack
Kutchera, because It ls composed ol
preserved roees which are made into
a miniature 1ardn and encased lD
1lasa abd wood. The bottles are de-
licately scented and are priced from
$10.50.
Allen Beck, manager of Flowers •1 Mont at 448 E. 17th Street In
Colta Mesa, aays the "red rou ii the
tradJUonal flower of love" and is
priced from $17.50 a dozen .
Morri'a will also feature tbe red.
beart·shaped antburl\un and special
orchid arran1ements or loose flowers.
Flewen·bJ·tlte·Se• proprietor
Ron Francescool wants to remJAcl
those away from their sweethearts
that nowers may be sent anywhere
in the world throu1b local FTD
fioristl.
Francesconi's sh9P ls located at
998 South Coast Hipway in Lacuna
Beach.
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A eift of jewelry is a very lasting or cupids and hearts are other sug· from $20 to $151 t. JOUl" aift Ci~. 't n1 of sayiQg bow much ,.a care: a gestiaas. Simply Us also w crystal r ....
ring with a beart-slaaped sibteUe « Austria md Laser-craft accessoriei ~ -I ~ a Rtltimental charm or nen a pu1-81•;17 Us at 3416 No. 1 Via for Jew' perusal. ,.
fed·heart pendant enuaved with Oporto, Lido· Village, in Newport The callery also specializes ia I
your words. Beach, is a distinctive art gallery. creating QPique pieces ef ~lrY
C'llarles R. Ban Jewde.-a. 1048 The custom jewelry store bas atid deslcn specialists craft Ucl
Irvine Avenue, Westcliff Plaza.. in many one-of-a-kind items from local create a range ot Oliainals borD
Newport Beach has a wealth or tiny free-fc>rm to tif!aDy styles.
treasures. to dame your Valentine. Jewelry ~ created include "The nice thin.& about jewelry is belt b~kJ~ rings, pendants,
that lta permanent,'' said Mrs. Mary bracelets md earrtnas. Barr, owner. Pnfeldeal .tewders, Inc. oCiers "The puffed·heart pendants may a new conceJJ& in gem purchasing. also be set with diamonds or semi· Tile firm is. bne of the largest precious stones. We also have a gemological laboratories in the Uail· dainty bracelet with hearts strung ed States. through ordan«llnc.. '' Located in Huntineton Beach, the Barr also has beaft-shaped ear· firf has ~ ~ display areas rings and and a wide selection el an a«ording to president Orin charms representing many oC tbe Terry ii dedicat~ to educating lhe tho&lght.s and feelinp lovers often baY\ng publie as to the necessity oC share. studards, based on cut, color, clari·
Bob Raciti of KadU hwelrJ, 1838 t' and carat weight when purcbas· I Newport Blvd. in Costa Mesa. bas inggems. ~ something special to SQUest for The firm also doe$ custom desi&n· I your favorite Valentine. #i of jewelry qd doeS appraisals. 1 "We have beart·sllaped, natund T rry pel'SOllally makes several
trips a year to Bram to buy lar~ c diamonds and heart-shaped rings
ud iDtematiolta1 artkt,s. as Well as lots or diamonds and colored stoaes I for ladies, and I rean, tllink cold and sells them oo a first come, first l ch&im are the best giftl for mm.•• be otberltemSfrom &. soarcea. served basis. said. Owner Floyd' E says be
Tbe chains come in auorted shes "bolds a delicate interest m ~
lng quality. uM)ueness and elepnce and desiens and are priced from $25. from the artworld. '' CaJI 642-5'7a.
HeaJt.shaped earrlop, bracelets Fantasy se.a creatures ol blown· p.,f a fe)lf words
to work tor ou. and charms in the romantic sh.apes &}ass ·are available and are priced =-
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Big-screen Romance
Can BrigHte~J)llJ ·
The world ol v1deo.hQ ~the
world ol roma.ce -"4*,b la Mlllc-
ti ve bome acreentnei of.,..,
favorite tucks net vldeo lotl'od\lC·
tiom to new faces.
• Bolt Mc Caasland ol \'Yeo )'Im. Jae. ort.n the couple an opPoitiaGity
to view television on a sl1·fo9t,
diagonal screen with rtlllote control.
"Tbe \ID.it Is $2.05 lmtalled in the
home attd with a Sony Betamu re·
corder you can record your ravorlte
programs or films," he said.
Video Plus la located at 2816 E.
Coast Hitflway in~ del Mar.
DATE SERVI<%
Randy Mc Coy of Video ~ti•• located at Sl'1 Sall Mlcolas
Drive, Suite 109, N4rNPQrt Beach,
llJS hit firm is a vkleo dating
service where individuals aetually
pick t.beir cla&a on telev1aioo prior to
-aetualli meettna them. "~ aew member is allqwed to
look tbrolrO a membership book
containin( a brief prollle and picture
of o&ller members. After aelectinc
one or more pciuible dates, the ln·
d.fv.idual wat.chel a five to seven
minute •mterview' with the~ "
be said. '
"From that you &et a &ood idea ol
what someone iS like."
After viewing the color tape, the
member may request to meet the
other party. At that time, the other
member is notified and allowed to
see the other member's own
television tape and then makes the
final decision u to whether the two
shall meet.
The cost for a three-month mem-
bership is $150, and fl$ for addi·
tional three-month memberships.
Gifts With ~tyle Earn
Valentiile Doy Response
' Give a ttmembrance wtlb 1t71e· -
ad you'll be pleaaed with U.e
response frol!l that apeclal SC>'DeCJM.
At l!ue managel' Steve .PMebllar sua•tta a Bllrt PaleJ booded nede Ja•Nkia aweatablrt tor nrt
maM'8llne men. It is availMlle &lbe
Fashion Island store for Just $1U.
Zor to~ ladies, F~nl WDb a
pair of white, sprfhg lounitna pants
coupled with a red tee-shirt top
would be a amashlna valentine Idea.
Tbeset lsabout$80.
'or the kid at heart. be suggests the "Poocb." It la a atuffed
"pillow pal" which ls hndm.S. and
bandpainted la "lveteen. The
''Pooch" 66 ~ fJ'om England
and is •,., at M li'fi,w, Fashion
Island. -.
HawaU, Acapulco. KuaUu,.
Greece, Puerto Vallarta ••• places
that brine to mind images ol IClft
breezes, warm eveninp-and love.
You ea11 take 1our loTe cm a dreamW.~to...,. of ~pk
tureMt• )oQlel with tM Mfp of Snea Seaa Tra..-1. 3"8 B Via-
Oporto, Lido Villace, Newport
!)each.
Owner Mimi Wagner says the cur·
reatr•tarualr-eeaPKhPU.
to Ba,.,. ts S'l"1T per person. The
tour badrflel mealatn Ulp, ~ ~
commodlll~ 1114 a oee •81' IM>tll eniMadretara~
A ''luclpaekafe0 toBawalllsj1sst
~..=.i ud lndudee airfare,
For additional Information, con-
tact Seven Seas at675-7777.
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Lighting artantemenia, seating
pieces arranged aoftfy-ana dinlnJ
seta can help to reflect a romantic
mood in yOiir home.
Gerber Fanltare, 18183 Euclid
Street in Fountain Valley, proudly
di.splays the latest trend setting de-
signs -glistening chrome, rich solid
woods, glass, mirrors and rich
furniture fabrics.
The firm carries the lines of Thayer Coggin.-Selig, Gre1
Copeland, Kovacs Lighting, Deslen
Institute of America and some
brands carried exclushtely by
Gerber.
Ow•er EIUott Gerber bas a
lifetime of experience in th~
furniture business and for many
years was the head furniture buyer
for Bull~k 's department stores. His
expertise ls available free·of·charge
to customers, includin« ()ridante in
coordinating furniture, lighting and accessories.
( THtl !llOOIUI.\~ )
REVIEWS
Cuatomera also benefit from free
delivery and tel up, lffi>mf>l servfce,
a profeulaftal sales It.all and terms .
su.lted to rrt moet budgets according
to a company spokesman.
Free coffee or wine ts available to
customers as they browse.
A ·Valenti·ne
' Tb·at~i:asts
Want to a.void Valentine's Day
clicheit?
Why not buy a gilt you'll bath en·
joy and that will last for many
years? Nordtc· Ltne, 217 E . 17th
Street in ea.ta Mesa, offers you an
alternaUve. ,.
According to manager Mary Jane
.Johna, Nordic has the largest selec·
ti<M of Scandinavian dining room
fundture In the United Sfates. Tbe
dln1n1 sets ~ available in eithtt teak or r°"wood and are pd ced
from $300 to $2,000.
Tbe firm also c:..-rtes wall systems
and leather chairs for the fireside
from Norway.
Nordic Une Js open every day ex·
cept Moncta.y and Tu~sday. •
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PILOT ·ADVERTISER Wednesd!y1 FebruNY 2, 1977
W eateliff Plaza ln Newpott BUch
bu everytlling for. the romantic Valentioe abQpper.
Wttb llaft~ -...et on ooe end
and .... Dnlp 00 the-other, the
center ii a uniqne blend ol high
, ...... a.diets, gourmet-looclsbopl
Mel CUl ideas. -'°'· lactiet {asblon, there's La· Galleria, .1ea11 Dalal. Dkk v~
and •••• laUJaate Apparel. For !-!!:~'just a few steps to Bill
_"7 • ., 11te ~eeper or Dar· .reU'• Ta' 8Mp for that special
Valeatinedance.
Barr l~r'a carries a wide as-
Poe~ is the language of Jove.
Give your love a treasur:e you both c• ~hare. but it you're in doubt a&uhrhat kiQd of words are roman-tic perhaps the following list com· · DiJed with tbe,help ot personnel from
B"'1Stano•s and B. Dalton Pickwick
stores in South Coast Plaza, Costa
Mesa will help:
"Tile Prep•e&" by Kahlil Gibran.
soft-cover and delUie editions.·
''I.ewe., by Leo Buscaglia, Hard·
CO'fer.
"Leaves of Gold" by Clyde Fran·
cis LyUe. Hard-cover. ·-s~ of Lon" by Walter-
Rincfer, Soft-eover.
"lA•e la u Mdtade0 by Walter
Rinder. Solt-cover.
.. Do Y.ou Love Me?" by R.D. La·
sort.ment ol romantic jewetry, ar for
the lltUe "sweetheart" in your fami· ly, atop ln at B•mpt1 Duapty a.lldrn'•a... •loll Batnare la a lat more than
just a hardware store nd.features a
Jar,ge agcwtmeot ~ dl .ldeu.._For_. before dinner bon d'oeuvns, trr.
Hie~ l' .... olOJalo.-: .
U ye>U want your "Cl'C>WDblg alory"
to be glorious on Valentine's Da,, ·~~ ~,!l Pla1'o7 ._, 8&1'1111 or We1t1C11D Bair ........
Carda -.d .nwpplng1 are availa-
ble at botla P8pet-U.U.lted dd . s .....
ing, Hard-cover. _ . ..v e.., •arrieicl~' ti7: Lois Wyse,
Hard-cover. • .
''Wet PUI& ud O&laer Sips ti
Lon" by Lois Wyse, Hard~. \'
"Desldera&a" -Asn.,mou,
Hard-cover. + ..
"Treasare a.a&" -Colledlon ol inspirational writinp,liard-Cover. ·
"Wlap of SOyft"J by Jo PeU11
Hard-cover.
.. Appia ol Geld0 by .J.o Petty.
Hard-<:over.
Of counre, there are many, many
more books of romantic and
humorou:S poetry and prose aT~
ble for Just the two. of you in
libraries, card shops, drugstores,
supermarkets and ~s\ores all
along the ~e Coast . ,.,., ...
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AA '1 'a...we You0 c:Qe from Prtscllla'a C.ke tlox In the Meea Verde. cen•,eoeta-....
Bakery Gan ~even ~ove
Romance and Valmtine's Day co
hand·tn·band. It's a .time whea ane·
shows their affeeQ<lll'ln ~fmall
waya tbat!llean.c> inuca.
The baten-at Ptisdlla'l'Cate BOit -at the Mesa Verde Center·tn eosta
Mesa are really roll\aatics at heart.
A true taste of romance from
Pk'isciU•'• mat~ an 8-iaeb, bead·
shaped cate, baked freahlj each day
from scratch and-~ i:ao pre-mixes.
The 11tngle-la1ered, heart cake bas
white lclq ana red trim with the.
customers choice of eitber "I Love
......._. . .
You" or "Be My Valentine',. as the
JM>lid•J ereelhfg. . . "
S~lal Slngerbread Cookies . also flav~ been Alesigned with the roman··
Ue ifeetfnp. · ' Store.m..,_ Pat Reynolds, Upon:
custome.t req*8t. adds the desired
greeting Mid the name of the person·
to r.eeeive tbe cake if desired for ad··
ditlon to the decorated 2-layer
Valentine c~e.
PriJcl1la's ,Cate Box bakers was
founded 23 years ago and prides 1
·itself on still mixing .their cakes
· &esb eadi day from acratCb.
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•• OAJL y P!LOT
Nuts for Nuta?
Does your sweetheart love
sweets?
Spoll him· or her with some
homemade, band-dipped chocolates
from the bind Sweet Slloppe, 440 E.
17th Street in C"osta Mesa.
Owner Mary Costello invites the
public to stop by and watch store
personnel make chocolate boxes
with a C\lpid design on top -and
then fill the boxes with chocolate
candies.
The carved boxes are priced at
just $8.SO and hold more than .a
pound of chocolates. They are
available in either dark OT ivory-
·' ..
white chocolate.
Delea Grace Caaclles of
Westminster Mall andJ.aeuna.Jlllls
Mall invite you to try an unusual
choice of dietetic candies in exotic
fi•vor1 like Swiss Mint and Pecan
Crown. They contain no sugar or salt
and are priced at $3.25 for an eight·
ounce box. Both stores also feature
traditional, heart-s haped boxes
priced from $1.25 to $25.".
U your sweetheart relishes nuts,
try Morrow's Nut House in the
Laguna Hills Mall. Special order,
boxed nuts range in price from $3.25
to sa.so' poUnd.
Old-fashioned fun Sets 9Fone
Would you like to spend this Valen·
tine's eveninl having some good old·
fashioned fun?
llesa Verde Center a t use comer
of Harbor Blvd. and Adams ~ib
Costa Mesa adds jµst a toucb of
nostalgia to our busy world.
For instancf, you can skate
together at the Ice Capadu Cbalet,
co bow ling at Koaa Lanes, co to the
movies at the Cinema Center or play
records at the Music Mart.
Then afterwards, how about a
shake or a .malted 'at Swenson'• lee
Cream Parlor? Or it's just a few
steps to Hambur•e r H•mlet or Coe•'•· Perbap& )'ou'd like to capture the
evenina wit.II a picture of the two ol
yo\l on a. tee:-sbirt .trom Pboto
Fadilb.._, •
(cH;\~L£S M.-CABE)
DELIGHTS
In the DAILY PILOT
A 9ulet dinner llt home Is easy with the hetp of Ralph's Market In
CostaMHa. From Jeft: Sid Beaty, manager and Marta O'Oette, new
Appetite Shop manager
-~~desgns
Imports ot the finest quality. ditect from Innovating
design centers world wide ae n<:NI on display at
Orange COunty's newest. most exciting modem
hOme 1lmlshlng$ slofe Of COUfSe,-usuol reducftons
• prevail.~ l0% to~ below monufoc· 'Ne". ~ 1etaP prices. Reason enough to
stoptl tQdav;
~crd. Mo$terCholge. Revolving Charge.
Plotesslone>l lnfellof dellg~ S8f\llce.• Free dellverY
ond..rup.
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A (luiet evenl':lg at home, soft
mustc. candleUeht and a romantic, sensual dinoer could make .!hi• Valentine's Day a treasured~·
brance !or you and your ~weetheert.
To aul(le tbe man who wants to im· ·
press his lady. despite limited
kitcb~n expertise, we went to
Ralpla'1 Greeery, 2300 Harbor Blvd.
in Costa Mesa, and elicited sugges-
tions for a slmple. economlcal din·
ner tor lwo.' · . ,
A.romantic ~ble setting seemed a
gOQd w~ to set-the mood fot lbe
evening, ~"s carries flaruills-r~. wovettplacemats by Styletraft
at S .79 each which.:Jnay be coupled.
witll Kleenex. White <llnner napkins
. at$ .S2 ~package. ...
Another thoug'ht Jnilht be a
plastic-backed, tiss'"' t••leclotb
with dinner napkins set by Special
Occasion at $1.49. Or, olcltash1nned~
paper lace•doilies by Boylcraft at
$.98apackage. • Your centerpi~ oould be a bou--
quet of Fed and while mtxed Dowers
at $1 .39 a bunclt. potted. red azaleas
at $5.99, or potted chrysanthemums
at$3.19.
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take a lew moments to sbarnome oJ
your favortte-poea.1. Or perhaps, If
you didn't have Ume earlier1 to pre· ,..e ! ~le, tosseitgreen salad.
The avocado b often called \he
"love fruit'' and tl is fitting that it be
mcluded ta your evening of love.
You may purcbase an av~ado,
cherry tomatoes, lettuce and alf'1ra
sprouts at tbe produce 'department
for aboutfl.OC),
Your salad may be topped with
an.ti tOC>k'4 ahrimp from the J'is·
ber,nan'1 Q>ve for abQUt $UM a half
pound. Most 1a&ed dressings are
ptteed at-less than fl.00,...... or it Ro-
• .«J.ue1iu:tlf y~ast.ate -J.rY Bob's
:&oquefort f>'renina tn· the de·
'111tatessen fo)' $. ~9. - . . . Frob mushrooms, simmered to
butter, will be a sen~\Jal addition to
YO\lr meal whetber you decide on
~ meat' or ·fisb ae a-~ain entree.
Choic:e mushroc;>ms are priced at
abc:rut.t -~a half~ a.nd Ralphs'
Grade !\A Butter 1$'Just.$ .SB • half
))<)Wld.
Ttie personnel at.the meat depart-
ment cited ~teak as the traditional,
"..n.um beT ·one" selecUon for
twosomes. Porterhouse, T·l>ooe, beef loin strip add New York stew
range in price from $2.19 to $3.19 a
pound.
Johri Munier, as~istant manager
of Ralph's Fisherman's Cove, sug-
gests whole-cooked lobster which
can be split in two and broiled or
barbequed and basted With butter. It
is priced 1lt about $4 .99 a pound~
Raw lobster tails, which must be
boiled prior to broiling or barbeque·
ing, are priced from $9.49 a poubd.
King Crab Legs may also be broiled
and are $.1.99 a pound.
After dinner, a~ candlelig .. ts nicker and ~o\Jg)lts are shared,
Earle s"Uggests chunks of imported
cheese and fruit.
·-·nufSd!Y.febN!Ot3. 1tn .. QAll Y. PILQT ,,
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ATTENTION:
DOCTORS, DENTISTS,
ATTORNEYS, EXECUTIVES
Are you working too hard? Why not fully enjoy
~IJr leisure hours? Don 't deoy ~ourself the greatest
form of entertainment offered today ...
ADVOIT UFE·SIZE COLOR TREVISION
CHAN8£S TY INTO THEATER
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BEN BROWN ·s (ALISO CREEK INN) in. South
Laguna is ideal for weekends ... holidays ... vacations .
. . only minutes from any point in Orange County. . .
Restful. rustic beauty all the way in lovely,
woodsy Aliso Canyon where the mountains meet the
sea (just 267 yards to bathing beach and fishing P.ler).
Relax in ·a charming garden apartment with living
room, bedroom, kitchen, color TV-private
patio-sw1mming pool · '
Dine in a casually luxurious restaurant
.. , overlooking our challenging 9-hole golf course .
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NO SMOG-NO TRAFFIC NOISE
AAA
She'• your .,sweetheart and ,ui
love her. Now ibe-two of you are an-
ticlpatiac a beautilal event -Ule
birth of your child.
Duiilla Uaese •aitlnc JDODtbs )our
V alentJne can look u JovelY and
feminine as she desires with the help
of P~Je Boy Maternlt)' Faablom.
The sbcp, locfted bl South Coast
Plaza In Costa Mesa. is to tbe baJI·
.·The
ultimate in
materitity
tOLD .... ~ ls the 1pf1ng ~recast • shown her• ln 1h8'4t
atrtk fng ••Ptrete• fO< the , hidy--ln·wa1tlno, ertont ,, .. n t: tolyuter .............. Oft the
' ~dly tb'IQ«hel~ tllnle. I
, Pants-szi. · • '" • ~ < Top-$®.
ness of making expectant mothers
glamorous.
II~ Jin. Candi Campbell ol
Newport B.ch & seen, wearing a
pol7Hter and ~top.priced al$21
and polyester gabardin~ pants al
$22. The pants are available in red,
green, yellow, coral, while and
black.
Once again, w. woold like to explain our '
method of operation al'ld why we aft COO·
· . th'tUally slfessinc atal'lderds. W. Niie been
......_. , ... .J· trvtn« to JM)lnt out th• dltt~ lo tM --.,.. ·• '· qti'ltties of pmstones and dlarnoncfs ,.
Orin T ~ GG )IOU would twiw soma Idea of ~t to fool\
Cll.>dwlt ~l(~alltlslrlu~ol AITNflC.f) ~w:::et .~:!:~~ aaJI when )'OU er~•
I ti.Jlt•ft any •tort 11llln1 • partlcut" commodity stioold oot only stand behind thtlr mtrc~. bUt be expert enc>4.11h to
do ttleit own appraislna of that particular jewelry, or any other jtwtlfy you may air•* haYe.
Theft la an awful lot to the business of diamonds and pmstones that you should not
be •pected to understand. as there Is In any other business . . • so tM next t!fM ~
art Pl& to buy jewefry, come down and ditcuss It with us. You .nit sa .... rnoney; and at the same time, ~Ye an inter.stin& taltl about jewelfy.
I• ac.in st.,-t spe~i"I to different groups on the mlnine, cuttlnc. and IYllultion of stones. H YoU art 1 membef of some group. you mlcllt COf't8Ct your t1>m~ c:Mirman Ind have him ,..,_. me 1 calf.
~mber. If you are ~ buylna bV the standard, you lft probltlly paylnc too much!
~
20902 Brookhurst Street. Suite 201 . (Near Atlanta Avenue)-
, Huntington 8each. California 92646
(714) 963·5625
.. -
Udo Village
3411Mo. 1 Via Oporto
· Newport Beach
(714)875-3123
.-M •
"Why not start your love affair
with lift of mther? It's Hit. ...
ble, MDSUAl and it smells &ood. All
our furniture ii' sent to yw ~ IOve
from Brazil," said Arthur Tonyee. Toynee is the. manager of Btadl
Cootempo in the Bristol Town and
Country Center at 3654 So. Bristol
Streetlnec.tallesa. ~ r
He t~ a Jeatbe~_ couc.h ls tM
0 perfect•1biq fol' aiteltallalne at
bome aD4 •• ...._ -creat." ~
ranaefrom$C25to$1,275.
The store ls located between
Sunflower and Mac Arthur Blvd.
The loW · aflair betweea Orange
County and XOCE-TV. Channel 50
bas blossomed.
Orange County's only local
tele-rision station ls eetering its fifth
year and Is pre:se11tinc four weekly
evening programs SJ)fftlita.lly about
this area:
The station is also a PBS (Public
Broadcasting Service) affiliate br·
inging nationally produced pro-
grams to the air.
• , • cl .. , ,..~.
I
.;.: • •I ·,
•Dilner+
Reservations 64Cb5 J23
• • • • ~ i\ , . ., .. ,,,._.,, ~
THIS VALENTINE'S DAY se1td your love a greeting all the
world can share ._Ith a D•Uy Piiot Hurt of Love. It's
easy, com pose your ~rsonallud greeting and we'll set
your m essage In lY1>e .
BORDERS COME IN tt\e 3 sftes as shown below :
$1S, $8, and• specie! child's size for $2 (you Must be under
t2 to qualJfy for.t9'e littfe-st gr ... tlng).
IF YOU WISH TO ~AEATE your own d•.'OTet•cl ,greeting, use
a bfack pen & dra'it your design to flt Qn• of tf\e dotted fine
"hearts" sho"wn. ~or help with youf ad, just e,afl 'ut-5678 &-.-. frtttuUr Velentt11• 11d·VlKr wm *'• h•P•Y a.a assist
• you . And, If y.ou 111te, you can charge your He~rt of Love
or use Y•q,r ~ster Chafge or Ba•kAn:urlc~~d ,
-
. . ..
\
--:a.·
A
Top off your Dinner
witn the best Cappuccino or,
Irish Coffee In The World
Soft, plush "Carpetinc helps to create a romantic enviroiullmt ln yourbeme, ...
"TIMt J ... llloelel' Cal'M$ co; Is u-
nounclna the opeaiaf otlta Mti Joe•·
tion ln Costa Mesa. TM store ii
located on Briatol street Just sOuthot Baker Street on the ~ of ~
dolpb Street.
Tbe famUJ~ floor ~vertoi chain spedalbes ID all types ot floor
coverinp, includlnl carpetinl, tile1
sheet vinyl and oak parq\Mt. 1be
ttoref also c.arry draperies •
woven woods. -. The company •u founded kl 1171
and llu remainid a famib'-owned
buslneas atnce that time.
--.. ·~
Give your J..tY tbe ja of~ for V alenttne•s Day,
Kilo's Wo.,ea's Health Club, 208
Walnut Street Ill Newport Beach. is .
tho ..iv eunnmdm1h1 .a, lor._wQmen In the area accotGlag to-~ llDb
spokesman. .
"There are ao contracts or initia-tion fea'for membership, the price Is a nat $25 permcdb, .. he saJd. The club bu,....,.,._ f« 1"t&ht
training, racquet ball, "jactlnl, aauna ~off en CJ;OUJ> ,qerclM and ~~~~ nes1 oriented ad geared to iDcftM.
ing stamina and toning muscles:
. . Dr. E. B. Praatel. _, amembet
ol tbe Amerlcaa lleidleal ~ .,. ~J eonduc:ts ave medleal ~
In Ute Loi .u.•. Oraace Comft
San J>ielOacl Las Vecu area . ·:.i The centers deal with the Jaus
methods of hair transplant and tie
newest techniques In eosmetic a\11-
gery. ~~~· A graduate of USC medical scauqr,
Dr. Frankel bas been practi~
dermatology since 1964 and b#
performed hair transplantations • thouaands'ol patients. r
For more In.formation and._.a brochme, .... emtact br. Fra:nkel !f
8101 Newman Street, Suite C,
IJuntlngton Beach. Phone: (7lt)
M06*15.
~ .
. •IMVESTMEMTS
· ~ntUnlt8
80llness Opportunities
lndultrial Bldgs. & Parks
Mobile Home S&tea &ftlrka
Shopping Centers ·
Office & Medical Bldgs.
Bulldable Land . .
•HOMES
.. Waterfront Starter
lsJand Veew Fixef-1.1pper
Family & Kids . Condominiums
•LOCATION
Centrany Located in the
Orange County, Newport·
Irvine ln<tustrial and
i Office Complex.
,
. '
•PROPERTY .
MANAGEMENT
A full staff to do
·resident and off.oSlte
management of
· houses, apartments
and commercial
property.
, 1-400 QUAIL STREET• NEWPORT BEACH, CALI F<>ftNIA 926'0
, TELEPHONE <714) 752-1920
' DERMATOLO&Y. llON-DtSEASE$MD~ NoRIASls NEW Pt!Qto.J1iERAP.Y TATTOO REMOVAL
ft.ASTIC SURGERY
II All •FACE" EYEUDS • NOiSE •QM· ~•SCARS ~WAINtClES'• ASDOMeN
-
-
--\....
I 'I--
SIESI~-. .
' ~ f I
The world's famous leather chair for comfort and
design by WESTNOF.A OF NORWAY. Comes in high {
& tow back and ottoman, Rosewood cir Teak finish. /
Several colors to choose frOrri ...
A beautiful tite dining
tab I.e. buff
1
et ~ n d
m a t c h I n g c h 'a 4 r s
:available fo te@k·.,.·no rosewood . ,
.l
BJIDCllA~L PASDVlal • Of lilt Dllty .........
Althouah many city, 1cbool
d bUsiness olficiall in Orqe
County are orderlna •mploya to
wer thermostate to 6$ desrees.
tbera ere still conaiderlng
hetber to comply with ap .. Of·
er•• from tbe state Public
tilltles Commission (PUC).
Thermostats in county olflces
emJ).n aet. at 68 degrees because
* •* *
~EXJCO CITY, Mexico (AP)
Mexico will help the United
tates fight the energy crisis by·
l(eUJng 40 million cubic reet of cas
da)" to Its northern neighbor at
current interstate prices,
American Embassy sources said
ay. It also offered to sell more
oil.
Mexico will start the gaa flow·
g to the United States Mooday
r Tuesday and will also provide
f00,000 barrels or crude oil daily,
the sources said.
President Carter said Wednes·
. day night that Mexican Prest·
dent Jose Lopez PortUlo offered
to help the Unit>ed States in the
crisis caused by the extreme cold
winter, which has caused shut·
downs in iudustry because or ruel
iihortages.
The rates Mexico will charge
for natural gas will vary from
$1.90 to $US per British Thermal
Unit (BTU), the embassy
•ources said.
They said there was no fixed
price for the crude oil but said it
would probably be the same
rice paid for the limited.exports
exlco makee to Uae U~
ates. That price ls $1!.IS per
barrel landed In Gulf ol MUko
»Orts.
Mexico also offered ~ sell to
the United States an tddltional
two million barrels of crude a
day if American ships can be
found to transport the oil. The
planned 600,000 barrels daily will
be transported in Mexican ships
r ships rented by the MexJcan
iovemment, the sources said.
Mexico has been sellin& about
00,000 barrels or oil a day to the
United States since important
ne~ oilfields began producinf in
the Chiapas and Tampico areas
monlhsaeo.
The natural gas would be •up·
lied from the Nuevo Laredo and
eynob fields on tbe Meucu
de ol the Te.xN border.
If Huntingtoa Beach Police
pt. Mike BurkenfJeld bad beea a blact·and·'fthile patrol car
ednesday, he would have had a
e exti.nauisher bandy.
·Unfortunately, he wun 't wben
became aware or a car ftre on
olden West Street near Mansion
venue and quickly pulled over.
Still more unrortunately for
apt. Burkenfleld, the bluln&
ar wu hia and he was drivina lt.
The blue 1&utted the enPie
mpartment, then burned lllelf
eut before Patrolman Dan
~Kerran ant..a.
The rest of the fire engine nd
uatana WU l~ed. ,
no ellanaes eao be fn1tlated u10GG•p0ealbl(t,offfelals1ald.
wlt.bGut anro•al bom the Cowl· .... are '°'*1n1 at it todu.
ty BOia"d ~ ~. aa.ld ••1a1ct BOb Daftln,.uslstant city Stan il>avldloa, QD..uaty main· maiaacw IA :Cotta Mesa. "We
teoa.nceeonttolOttker. want to make IUl'e we don't trig-
Davjdson said IUP«Yilorl wUl 1er tbe beatln• Q•tem," be aald, not be able to tile any action UD· reffll'l'iD& to potential equipment
til1M'J¢Tueeday. problems tbe cooldowtt ,eould
Moat municipal offices cau.se.
throtllboat the county already Tuesday PUC President
have been cooled to 6S delfea. Robert BaUnovtcb ordered all
Tbose that havm't plan to do so thenDCJStata be set at as degrees
durlnl the 'day, SS at nl1ht and
tumed orr when buildings are not
in use.
However, PUC orftclals admit
the order fa unenforceable and
said it ls a voluntary eesture
aimed at lowerini consumption
to aid Midwest and East Coast
realdeots who are surferlng
through this winter's deep
freeze.
Ir followed, the restrlcUona
would mean Californian. may
llve ''below ttie comfort Jevel,"
sald PUC President Batinovtcb,
but the hardahipe wW be milM>r
compared to other areas of the
country.
A random survey of South
county l'elldenta today revealed
most homeowners are complying
with the PUC's ~uest.
Bud Hopp, plant operations
director at Burrough"a Corpor•
Conrad Won't
•
tJon 1n sadcneback Valley, aalcf
the electronic componen~s. ~anufacturinelirm bas low~· ther.mOltata to 6S deareee. He
said all cu-related equipment is.
shut down at nteht and t.bat ~
comea."1 bas been on an energy
conaervatJon pro1rani for th&
past two years.
School di.strict officials seem
holltan' about lowerin~
(fJeeVOOLEll. , ••• .U) •
'Falk . .
To .. ·oc Gi-and J11ry •.
Dell•~ ..... P'Ml•
SILENT BEFORE JURY Ponce Informer Conrad
'Live Saver?'
--l'l'BVE IO'IUU:W
• OlllllDlllW ........ ~ Ol eleetrte lbock treat·
meat Ind rafted nstralDt d re-
tarded petieata at Fairview Statd
Hospital have prom~ a review
or the hospital's aversion therapy
program.
But Fairview's administrator,
Dr. Michael Levine, said the
avenion procram, in which e.Jec· tric sMck ii used as a 4eterrent,
is a Ufe aavet. .
State Health Director Jerome
Lackner iospected »aciftc State
Hospital In Pomona Tuesday.
and the health departmtnt has
i nd lcahd it will review
Palrvtew's procram ln the near
future. Jl'airview and Pacific are
the oal.v two la In the
state's ll·f.aeW ta1 opera·
tlon wlddl use a therapy.
Repona of the use of cattle
prods on patients came following
a Joint state-county health team
visit tot.he Pomona facility.
Levine said the Costa Mesa
hospital's aversive condWoninC
proeram is limited to a very
amall IJ'OUP, and called the~
ANCHOIUGE HTI'
BY llB.4T W..4J'E
ANCllORAGE (AP) -While
much of the nation l.s hard·hit by
record cold, tbe National
Weather Service says that fM the
!int Ume in iw 80-year Natory
here, temper•tures In tlie
Ancborate area dtd nO\ drop
below aero durtna Janupry.
In fat.t; while tl:le city's
'aouary temperaturu uu.,ity
averqe 12 dearees, the service
said, tempenit&INI d1d Mt even
drop bdow 14.
The recwde4 "lb thi8 fear
was '9on Jan. 2'.
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of* Delly ~llelS1flf
Gene Conrad, a police in·
former-turned political tycoon,
was on hand to testify before the
Oranee County Grand Jury to·
day.
But testify he won't.
Before goint Into the jury room
in answer to a subpoena, Conrad
said he will cite his first, filth,
sixth, ninth and fourteenth
amendment rights and refuse to
testify.
ject a tophjsticated operation.
"lt la a well controlled project
restricted to between eight and 12
ktda here," he said in an in·
terview today.
Levine said the treatments are
done only with the consent of the
patient'• parents and with the ap.
proval of a Human Rights Com·
mittee.
"The project is a life saver,''
Levine said. "There \re, from
time to time, residents with very
self-abusive behavior <s uch as
striking thejr beads on walls).
Their whole life becomes
their self-abuse,'' be explained.
.. And, what usually happens is reatraJnts and drugs because 'Oi
after a short period or time it no
longer becomes n€cessary to ad·
minister the treatment,•• he said.
Levine said the shock treat·
ment dlsruptl the destructive
behavior long enough for other
behaviors to be taq1ht.
Levine also denied that the
aversion conditioning involves
<See SHOCKS, Pace AZ>
Clutched in the burly 42-year·
old rags to riches police in·
former's hand was a written
statement be planned to read to
the jury.
It said, in errect, that as long
as Assistant District Attorney
Michael Capizzi is Involved in the
jury's probe into political cam·
paign financing, Gene Conrad
will not cooperate.
Conrad is a central figure in
the investigation into financing
of political campaigns in Orange
County last fall.
One way or another, he is
responsible for pouring roughly
$48,000 into various political can·
didates' campaigns, including a
$.10,000 loan to county Sttpervisor
Philip Anthony.
We~ay at least five people
involved in Conrad's political
machinations testified before the
jury. .
Two witnesses are associated
with Conrad in his loan
brokerage firm, Pension Funds
'Chat' 'Change
FDR'B Son Recalla Origiinal.
Pretident Jimmy Carter's revival or th~ fire5ide chat
WedneJday night was not completely in keepinl with the
tradltloa beaun durjn1 the Deprenloa b1 frealdeol
Franklin Rooeevelt. <Related stoty ~aae A4'. r .
l'DR's eldest son, James, a Newport Beach resident,
said today he noticed one significant change during Carter's·
"chat" with ~ nation Wednesday nltbt -the fire ih the
fireplace waa Ut. . .
Roosevelt, a local businessman and
lecturer at UC Irvine, said hls father
never had the fireplace lit du.ring his ad·
dresses to the nation.
AND, HE SA 'l'S, FDR heartily dis·
liked the term "fireside chat."
"I don't think he thought of those ad·
dresses as fireside chats. and I know he
used to try and find out who st.arted call· •
"oouv1LT Ina them that,'' Roosevelt explained.
"I can remember him saying that the pi:ess would pro·
bably call them fireside chats even if we were in the midst
of a July heat wave.'' ·
ROOSEVEl.T SAID HE WATCHED most of Carter's
speech and picked up what he missed on news broadcasts
later in the evening. •·
"It was comparable In that they boll\ were tryin1 to re·
ach out and communicate with the Ptos>le, 1' he observed.
Another major difference was the fact that Carter ap.
peared on nationwide television. FDR's presid'en~y spanned
the years prior to commercial television and bis addresses
were broadcuton radio.
·Winter -Woes Spr.eaditig
&JS Supplie• Frowing . But New St.arm Seen
By Tiie Auoclated Preas
New supplies of natural gas
are already ftowln1 east, but the
elf ecta ot the bitter winter of 1977
are1preadln1 even faster.
L•yotJ1, for example, have
b••un reacbln1 into New
En1tand .-an area 1pared until
now because lt uaes llLUe natural aaa.
In Ohio and western New York
state, two of tbe hardest-bit
areast calm weather and •U&htly
IU1n1 temperatures Wednesday
1ave aomethln1 of • raplte to
clean·up crews and river pllotl
trying to deliver fuel. (Related
photo,A4>
But a new snowstorm, moving
throuah the West', promised
STRJPPER8 GO ON OE8PtT£ COU>-A3
I
more trouble as It headed for the
Great Lakes. (Related 1tory, A4)
And with an estimated 75 dead
and two milllon already tem·
pora~y out of work nationwide offlciatt 'in Pennaylvanla and
New York expressed yet another
worry: they fear m9jor fioods
this sprin• lf a quick tbaw sud·
denly melts the huge amounts of
snow on the ground.
Armed Thugs
In Maslt8 Rob
17 at Eactoey;
ol America or Irvine.
Both Harold Morr and Donald
Ectbart are shown a.s $2,500 con·
trlbu~to Anthony's campaien.
Also locked behind closed
doors with the 1rand jury was Robert LanFranco, owner of
Amco Builders Supply CompaQ"
of Costa Mesa. Amco is shown on Anthony's
campaign disclosure•atatement as a $10,000 'donor. However, it
was revealed two ween ago that
(See CONBAD, Page AZ)
BB Wreck ~
Kills One~
HurtsYpu~h
A Burbank man was killed and
a Huntington Beach yo~
seriously injured Wednesday
nl&ht when their vehicle
slammed beadon into each other
on Pacillc Coast Highway in
Huotlqton Beach.
The accident in front of the
Southern Callloroia Edison Com·
pany plant claimed the life of
Ch11rlesL. Piper, 78, police said.
He died shortly after being ex·
tricated Crom the. tangled
wreckage of his 1961 sedan and
taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital
in Newport Beach.
AnthoQy J, D'Agostin<>. 20, ot
202 11th St., Huntington Beach.
was listed in stable condition t,o..
day at Pacifica Hospital with a
fractured. leg and multpiple
lacerations.
Patrolplan Jim Dowlintt sal4
D'A(ostlno was drtvtng west lJll
the highway tow!-rd his
downtown home at 6 p.m •• wbe11
the fatal accident occurred.
Police Trame Accident 1114
vestlaatfon orftcer Orva = said today that Mr. Piper's e
bound car apparently cro,,$
over the centerline, causing pie
collision with tbe van.
Mr. Piper's remains were
taken to Pacillc View Memorial
Park in Newport Beach, where
funeral urancements were
pending today.
Coroner's deputies said Mr.
Piper leaves his wife, Julia.
Integration Vowed
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Of·
flclals of the National Assocla•
tlon tor the Advancement of
COlort\d People have vowed to"to
all the **>' to the Supreme Cqurt
if neceawary to Insure Loa
An1etea school• adopt an ln~
srtUon .plan the NAACP con·
alden 84equate. .
. l
I
l
ByMl~PAREVICll • °'*.,_..,..,.....,. Altbouth many city, acbool
d business officlala in Oranae
CoQty are orderin& employes to
er thermostata to es decrees.
tbers are still considering
bethel' to comply with IQl .. OI'·
er" from tbe state Public
tilitles Commission (PUC).
Thermostats in county offices
main set. at 68 degrees because
* •* *
?,IEXICO CITY, Mexico {AP)
Mexico will help the United
tates fight tbe energy crisis by
ll'illJng 40 million cubic feet of gas
a day to its northern neighbor at
current interstate prices,
American Embassy sources said
ay. It also offered to sell more
oil.
Mexico will start the gas flow-
g to the United States Monday
r Tuesday and will also provide
600,000 barrels or crude oil daily,
e sources said.
President Carter said Wednes-
. day night that Mexican Presi-
ent Jose Lopez Portillo offered
help the Unibed States in the
crisis caused by the extreme cold
winter, which has caused shut-
downs in industry because of fuel
shortages.
The rates Mexico will charge
for natural gas wm vary from
$1.90 to ~.15 per British Thermal
Unit (BTU), the embassy
sources said.
'They said there was no fixed
price for the crude oil but said it
would probably be the same
rice paid for the limi .exports
exico maket to Ute u.n.d
tes. That price ls llJ-85 pitr
arrel landed in Gulf ot Mako
ports.
Muico also offered to ilell to
the United States an tdditlOnal
two million barrels of cnade a
day if American ships can be
found to transport the ·Oil. 1be
planned 600,000 barrels daily will
be transported in Mexican ships
r ships rented by the Mexican
iovemment, the sources said.
Mexico bas been selling about
00,000 barrels or oil a day to the
United States since important
new_ oilfields began prodocinl in
tbe Chiapas and Tampico areas
8 months ago.
The natural gas would be sup-. ed from the Nuevo Laredo and
eynob fields on the· Mex.lcm
de ol the Teua border.
olice Captain
Inds a Hot
Car-Hu ONn
no ehanfes can be illltlated a Mm• poalble, officlaloaid.
wit.llclut 8J).Pl'Oval from the Coun· .. We are JootinJ at it today. ~ Bosd fA SUpervllors. said ••said BOb Duaan. assistant city
Stu Davldloo, (»UO'Y main· mapqer i,ll Costa Kesa. "We
tenaneecoaqoloffieer. want to make nre we don't trig·
D.vtdam said superriaors will aer the heatinr system," be said. not be able to take any action UD· refenlng to potentJal equipment
tilnext'l'uesday. problems the cooldowa .could Mo~i municipal offices cause.
throqbout the county already Tuesday PUC President
have been cooled to 6S degrees. Robert Batlnovicb ordered all
Tbose that bavell't plan to do so tbermostata be set at '5 degrees
durtni the 'day, 55 at nlaht and
turned off when bulldinas are not
inu.ae. How~er. PUC offtctal$ adinit
the order is unenforceable and
said it is a voluntary aesture
aimed at lowering ~onsumptloo
to aid Midwest and East Coast
residents who are suffering
through this winter's deep
freeze.
If followed, the restrictions
would inean Callfort\jarw may
live .. below the comfort level, ..
said PUC President Batinovlch,
but the hardships will be mlllor
compared to other areas of the
country.
A random survey of South
County TeSidents toda)' revealed
most bomeownen are complying
with the PUC's retuest.
Bud Hopp, plant operations
director at Burroulh 's Corpora-
\
Conrad Won't
lion in SaddleJ>ack Valley. aalcl:
the electronic components.:
manufacturing)irm has lowei:ed'
thermostata ti> 6S dearees. He
said all cu-related equipment is:
shut down at night and tbat tlle;
companJ bas been on an enagy
conservation program for th& past twoyears.
School district officials seem
heaitanl about lowerin~
(See<*>LER, ,•le .Ul ..
'Falk
To · OC Gi-and· J11ry
Dally .. , ... ,taff ~
SILENT BEFORE JURY
Pollce Informer Conred
'Live Saver?'
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of ... Delly l'llet SI.ti
Gene Conrad, a police in-
former-turned political tycoon,
was on hand to testify before the
Oranee County Grand Jury to-
day.
But testify he won't.
Before going into the jury room
in answer to a subpoena, Conrad
said he will cite his first, fifth,
sixth, ninth and fourteenth
amendment rights and refuse to
testify.
Fairview Slwcks
l!olit;Y. Reviewed
-ftBVEJOl'CilELL Clf•o.lry ..... a..
a.peitl ol eleetrlc lbOck treat-
ment ilDd fareed restratnt ~ re-
tarded patients at Fairview Stat4f
Hospital have prompted a review
of the hospital's aversion therapy
program.
But Fairview's administrator.
Dr. Mithael Levine, said the
averQOil program, in whicb elec·
tric sboct is used as a cteterrent.
is a life saver. .
state Health Dirtctor Jerome
Lackner inspected Paciflc State
Hospital in Pomona Tuesday,
and the health department has
indicated it will review
Fairview's procram in the near
future:Fali-view and Pacific are
the only ~wo tala in the state'• 11 al opera·
tioG wbleb use therapy.
Reports of the use or cattle
prods on patients came following
a joint state-county health team
visit to the Pomona facility.
ject a IQPhislicated operation.
"lt is' well controlled project
restricted to between eight and 12
kids here," he said in an in·
terview today.
Levine said the treatments are
done only with the consent or the
patient'I parents and with the ap.
proval or a Human Rights Com-
mittee.
"The project is a life saver,"
Levine said. "There Me, from
time to time, residents with very
self-abusive behavior (such as
striking their heads on walls).
Their whole life becomes
their self-abuse," he explained.
.. And, what usually happens is1 restraints and drugs because 01
after a short period of time it no
longer becomes n~cessary to ad·
m lnlster the treatment.'• be said.
Levine said the shock treat·
ment disrupts the destructive
behavior long enough for other
behaviors to be taqght.
Levine also denied that the
aversion conditioning involve!!
(SeeSHOCKS,PageAZ) .
Clutched in the burly 42-year-
old rags to riches police in·
former's hand was a written
statement he planned lo read to
the jury.
It said, in effect. that as long
as Assistant District Attorney
Michael Capizzi is involved in the
jury's probe into political cam-
paign financing, Gene Conrad
will not cooperate.
Conrad is a central figure 1n
the investigation into financing
or political campaigns in Orange
County last fall.
One way or another, he is
responsible for pouring roughly
$(8,000 into various political can·
didates• campaigns, including a
$30,000 loan to county Supervisor
Philip Anthony.
Wednesday at least five people
involved in Conrad's political
machinations testified before the
jury.· .
Two witnesses are associated
with Conrad in his loan
brokerage firm, Pension Funds
'Chat' 'Change
FDR's Son Recalls Origiiaal
Pr-.ident Jimmy Carter's revival of the fireside chat
Wednesday night was not completely in keeping with the
tradition beaun durln1 the l>epression, by fresldellt Franklih Roo8evell. <Related story Page A4. f .
J'Dll'a eldest son, James, a Newport Beach retident.
sald today he noticed one significant cblmge during Carter's·
"chat" with th6 nation Wednesday niJbt -the fire lb the
fireplace wu lit. . .
Roosevelt, a local businessman and
lecturer at UC Irvine, said his father
never had the fireplace lit during bis ad-
dresses to the nation.
AND, HE SAYS, FDR heartily dJ.s.
liked the term "fireside chat."
"l don't think be thought of those ad-
dresses as fireside chats, and I know he
used to try and find out wbo started call· •
.-oosava1.T tn1 them that," Roosevelt explained.
''I can remember hlm saying that the pi;ess would pro·
bably call them fireside chats even if.we were in the midst
of a July beat wave." ·
ROOSEVELT SA.ID HE WATCHED mbst of Carter's
speech and picked up what he missed on news broadcasts
laterinthee•ening. -"It wu comparable In that they both were trying to re-
ach out and communicate with the people," be ob&erved.
Another major difference was the fact that Carter ap-
peared on nationwide television. FDR's presid'ency spanned
the years prior to commercial television and his· addresses
were broadcast on radio. Levine said the Costa Mesa
hospital's aversive conditiooinC
proeram is limited to a very
small croup, and called the ~
ANCHOR4GE HTI'
BY llE4T WAJ'E
·Winter · Woes Spreading
ANCHORAGE CAP) -While
much ol the nation is bard·bit by
record cold, the N lltlonal W~Service says that for the
lint time in it. 60-year .history
here. temperatures in {he
Anchorage area did not drop
belO'W sel'O durinl J &nUfll')'.
In fact; wb1le Ufe city's 'anuary temperatures aaua,Uy
average 12 dearees, the service
said, te~ did not even
drop below 14.
Tbe rec«ded bip this tear
wast9ooJan.. 2'. • ·
Gas Suppl~• Fl,owing . But New Storm Seen
By Tile Anoclated Press
New supplies or natural gas
are already nowlnc eaat, but the
effect. ol the bitter winter of 1977
are apreadlng even faster.
Layoffs, tor example, have
beeun reaching Into New
En1land -an area spared until
now because It uses little natural , ...
Jn Ohio and western New York
state, two of tbe hardest-bit
areas, calm weather and sll&htly
rtstn1 temperatures Wednesday
aave sometbina of a respite to
clean•up crews and river pilots
trying to deliver fuel. <Related
photo,A4>
But a new snowstorm, movina
throuab the Wes~. promised
STRIPPERS QO ON
DESPITE COLD-A3
J
mor& trouble as 1t headed for the
Great Lakes. (Related atory, A4)
And with an estiMated 75 4ead
and two million already tem-
porarib out or work natloowide,
officials •tn Pennsylvania and
New York expressed yet another
worry: they fear major floods
this spring if a gulck thaw sud·
denly melts the huge amounts or
snow on the ground.
Armed Thugs
lli Masks Rob
17 at Factory
of A merlea of Irvine.
Both Harold Morr and Donald
Eckhart are shown as $2,500 ~
tributon'to Anthony's campaign.
Also locked behind closed
doors with the grand jury was
Robert. LanFranco~ owner of
Amco Builders Supply Compa.QY
of Costa Mesa. Amco is shown on Anthony's
campaign disclosure•statement
as a $10,000 donor. However. it
was revealed two weeks ago that <See CONRAD, Page AZ)
BB Wreck
Kills One~
Hurts Youth • •
A Burt>ank man was killed and
a Huntington Beach yo~
seriously injured Wednesday
nlcht when their vehicle
slammed beadon into each other
on Pacific Coast Highway in
Huntington Beach.
The accident in front of the
Southern California Edison Com-
pany plant claimed the life of
Charles L. Piper, 78, police said.
He Clied shortly after being ex·
tricated from the. tangled
wreckage of his 1961 sedan and
taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital
in Newport Beach.
Anthony J. D'AgosUno, 20, of
202 11th St.. Huntington Beach.
was listed in stable condition to.
day at Pacifica Hospital with a
fractured leg and multpiple
lacerations.
Patrolsnan Jim Dowling sat4
D'Agostlno was driving west Oii
the highway tow~rd bis
downtown home at 6 p .m., whe11
the fatal aceident occurred.
Police Traffic Accident In-
vestigation Officer Orva Akin
said today that Mr. Piper's e4$t.
bound car apparently crosSeil
over the centerline, causing Ule
collision with the van.
Mr. Piper's remains were
taken to Pacific View Memorie}
Park 1n Newport Beach, where
funeral uTangements were
pending today.
Coroner's deputies said Mr.
Piper leaves his wife, Julia.
Integration Vowe~
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Of'·
(lclals of the National Associa•
tton lor' the Advancemept ot
C<>lon!d People have vowed to JO
all the way to the Supreme O)urt
if necesaary to insure Loa
AnJelea schools adopt an tnt.,_
gratloo plan the NAACP cop·
sidera adequate.
···Wale~· U~. : . .
, :Cid, Qidered
OAKLANl> (AP) -
'Dlrectori al u.e EUt Bay'•
water aupply have
declared a .. state ol
emer&ency'' aod VO~ to
tak• •tepl to reduce water
UH byone-fowtb. The East Bay Municipal
Utility Dbtrict, which
serves most of Alameda County and part of Co.ntra Cotta, actect Wednesday
'nlcht alter a 3~·.bour
public hearing.
The board agreed to
meet Tuesday nieht to de-
cide bow to Implement the
2S peTeent cut ln water con-
sumptim.
Wall Street analyst Bowen
)lcCoy admitted Wednesday tn
Orange County Superior Cowt
tbat Jm valuation of the Irvtne
Company might be understated
by as mu.ch as $S0 million.
Closely questiooed by attorney
Howard Friedman, wbo
represents Irvine heiress Joan
Irvine Smith. the consultant to
the .James Irvine Foundation . .
€1Uef Reserve Board
Vows Aid to Carter
WASHINGTON (AP) -•
Chairman Arthur F. Burns oftbe
Federal Reserve Board said to-
day Prestdent Carter's $31 billlon
econoQlic proeram is an "ineffi-
cient way to stimulate the
economy," but the board will
<'ooperate to create jobs and
speed economic growth in im.
Burns, a 72-year-old holdover
appointee of the Nixon ad-
ministration, mixed both praise
and criticism or the Carter pro-
gram before the House Banking
Committee, saying he thinks
Carter came up with a "prudent"
program c~nsidering the advice
be was getting.
.. AU in all ... I think he has
done qulte admirably," Burns
told the committee.
But he also said he didn't think
such a program 'is needed,
,especially the $50 rebates on 1976
taxes which the Carter ad·
ministration hopes to dispense this spring.
•'The Treasury doesn't have
this money. The Treasury bas to
Tax Help Set
For Seniors
Free sessions to asslst senior
citizens in filling out their income
tax forms are scheduled in Hunt-
ington Beach.
Personnel will be available on
Thursdays from 1·4 p.m. at the
Human Resource Office, 520
Pecan SL from Feb. 3 through Aprill4.
The same service wlll be of.
fered Mondays from 1;~ p.m.
at the Seniors Recreation Center,
1706 Orange Ave. from Feb. 7
through April 11.
The tax helpers have been
trained by the Internal Revenue
Service in cooperation with the
American Association of Retired
Persons.
Bolsa Chica
Talk Tonight
Assemblyman Dennis
Mangers will discuss his pro.
posed legislation for the state
purchase of the Bolsa Chica
tonight at a meelinf of the
Amigos de Bolsa Chica.
The meetJng will be held at 8
p.m. at the home or Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Houseal. 16952 Baruna
Lane. Huntington Harbour.
Other speakers will Include
Jim Slawson of the National
Marine Fish Service and James
McKevitt. field supervisor for
the Department of the Interior
Fish and Wildlife Division.
'Dead End' Slated
the Huntington Beach Jijlh
School drama class will present
"Dead End" tonight, Friday and
Saturday niehta.
A 1935 melodrama, the play
will be •ti.led at the Huntineton
Beach H18h School Auditorium at s p .m. all three niahts.
DAILY PILOT
go out and borrow it," Burns
said. "It's not a good habit ...
for our country to get Into."
Nevert!)eless, Bums said the
money-managin1 Federal
Reserve Board is maintaining its
target for basic growth in the
money supply for 1977 at the level
the Carter administration thinks
is necessary to support its pro-
grams.
Burns' statement to the com-
mi\tee was his finl public reac-
tion to the Carter economic pro-
gram being debated by
Congress. While Burns doesn't
need to approve Carter's plan for
it to become effective, the
board's money growth policies
will be a major key toward the
program's success, if Congress
enactsiL
Burns said tbe economy is
showing good growth on its own
and "itis not clear to me that any
stimulus is required," he said. "l
would have preferred to wait a
little ... "
Fro..PageAJ
CONRAD ••.
the donation was actually made
through a cashier's check drawn
by Conrad.
Today, Conrad said he has
amended for the second time his
major political donor's state-
ment to show the Amco contribu·
lion as coming from him.
The other two witnesses known
to testily Wednesday were John
Bathen and Martin Kirschner,
both of them $2,500 contributors to Anthony.
The newly elected county
supervisor amended his own dis·
closure statement this week to
show the Conrad political invest-
ment as well as loans received
from Fullerton attorney Michael Remington.
Remington is on call today for .
an appearance before the jury as
is Conrad aide Loran Norton.
Conrad said he was employed
by the Orange County District
Attorney's office from 1972
through 1974 as an undercover
agent. However, officials in the
office classify him as a paid in-former.
In 1975 he was convicted of a
felony crime and senteaced to
three years probation.
In the past year bis story bas
been one of rags to riches, from a
threatened foreclosure on his
home in Anaheim to heavy cash
contribottons to political cam-paigns.
He claims hia sudden fortune is
the resulL of enriching real est.ate
loans brokered through Pension
Funds of America.
The company's activities are
under investigation by a federal
erand jury as well as the subject
9f various civil suits filed in
Oran1e County.
At Conrad's slde as he waited
to enter the grand jury room was
his attorney, Richard Donald.
On Conrad's behalf, Donald
Jast month filed a $170 million
lawsuit against the district at·
torney's oflice that claimed
Conrad'• civil rights bad been
violated through a series of al·
leged wtre upping incldents.
tetWMd that bla UlfllllQeot WU
coa:ppiJed be!Ol'e the company put
Its current five.year develop.
meat plan lnto effect.
And he aerecid with Friedman
that Irvine Compmmy sbarea ..m
be worth much more than th~
present estimated $33.50 each if
the completed five.year plan that
expires in 1981 l.s as successful as
predicted.
McCoy praised the Irvine Com-
pany holdings now being soupt
by two financial Interests as a
"top-night ottering that is a.moag
the best in the United States to-
day."
McCoy said the current contest
between two bidders -Mobil Oil
Company and a consortium
beaded by Wall Street financier
Charles Allen and Detroit de-
veloper Alfred Taubman -is
drawing international attention,
particularly in financial circles.
The !uture owner of the Irvine
Company will not be decided Wl·
til Judge James F. Judge rules
on the merits of the lawsuit filed
two years ago by Mrs. Smith.
Mrs. Smith took legal action to
halt the sale of the foundation's
interests to Mobil for a figure
that was then determined at $200
million.
Mrs. Smith supports the bid or
the Allen-Taubman group, which
hiked its offer to $282. 7 million
last week.
Fro..P~AI
COOLER •••
classroom temperatures. While
thermostats have been lowered
in the Capistrano Unified and
Laguna Beach Unified Districts,
officials for the Newport-Mesa
district said thermostats would
remain at 70 degrees inside
buildings and between 76 and 82
in swimming pools unless the dis-
trict is forced to comply with
PUC requests.
The PUC has requested that all
"luxury" uses of natural gas be
halted.
A spokesman for Laguna
Beach schools said the district
will maintain present swimming
pool temperatures until the coun-
ty Health Department provides
information on what. effects
lowered temperatures could
have on swimmers.
In Huntington Beach school of-
ficials said teachers are being
"encouraged" but not forced to
reduce temperatures.
A spokesman at UC Irvine said
campus buildings switched from
natural gas to oil heating as of
Dec. 1, 1976 due to cutbacks in
gas supplies.
Orville Reinhardt, physical
plant administrator at the col·
lege said supplies were cut off
(8,000 cubic feet per day) and gas
company officials predict no re·
sumption of supplies until 1980.
Reinhardt said oil heat is twice
as expensive, but campus energy
conservation programs have cut
consumption by one·third.
Campus dormitories and re-
sidences are still using gas for
heat, but school officials have
directed s tudents to set
thermostats at a maximum 65
degrees.
F,....PageAJ
SHOCKS •••
the use of caWe prods, saying the
devices are fesB crude than those
used on animals.
•'It's kin,d oC a receiver at·
tached to the arm and operated
through remote control," Levine-
said. "So the kids are not touched
with a cattle prod."
He said the hospital is !aced
with recent court rulings saying
that if a patient cannot be treat·
ed, he must be released.
"If we have a self-abusive
client, ahd other progrJms do not
work on him, and we get the
authority to use aversive condi·
Uonlnt to COl'rect hta problem,
then maybe we can help.••
Mangers Repayment
Attempt Rejected
But tbe attorney aay1 It was a personal loan be made to
Man1en 1111 OcL Zl and bu
copiq of a not• al1ned by
Mablfln 11 well u a check~··
ble to him penonallr to ba~ bla
arcument.
Nqw, Re11Un1ton wanta hla SS,000 and Man1er1 has bor·
rowed '5,000 trom Auemblyman
Howard Berman <D·Btnrly
Hil1I) to repay the lo.an.
Remln,ton sent Manprw a let·
wr todq UkinC blm lt •-repay
the loan In the aame mann. it waaObtalntd."
TOGl\le In cbeek, he a1tO cau-
U on ed the frHhDHD ••· ... ~ ... ~ .,..,.1\DI • penoaill debt wlt.k umPalP fundi;· .
I '
:
s•ported
... wi .......
Indian Prime Minister In·
dira Gaildhi speak s to
thousands of s upporters who
came to her New Delhi re·
s ideoce to demonstrate
their loyalty after leaders of
her Congress party broke
with her.
Fl'OlllPageAI
VAN •••
but still with only what police
termed moderate damage, was
rescued by crane.
A Huntington Beach. lifeguard
with a wetsuit and scuba diving
gear was dispatched to ac-
complish the underwater hoist hookup.
/ -; . ,....., . ,.
,,-,,. ,. Ii
; -r ,..rl ..-.:(" v \-'\ l , .. •
r,:,.:-1 . . . , ....
I
, '
,. ,.
''
now
, '-.....,
A Lacuna Beach savines and loap tnysteriously closed and
locked ill doors at mid-day Wed-
nesdaY1 p~ptlne police to try
and ctt irulide In a full·scale rob-
bery alert.
Only after bursting into the
World Savings and Loan wilh
IUDS drawn did autboriUes and
branch Manager Patty
Dombauser -who had been at-
tending a business meeting away
from the bank -learn a medical
emer1ency caused the abrupt closing.
Police were called by a ciUien
who reported the branch office
was closed when it ordinarily
would be open.
Police found a note on the door
Valley Police
lice ming
Bicycles Now
Fountain Valley police are re-
minding residents to license their
bicycles.
Bicycles may be licensed
evuy Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. at the Fountain Valley
Police Department, 10200 Slater
Ave. The fire. department no
longer issues the licenses.
The$! license fee is required
for au new and old bicycles,
license transfer and replacement of lost or damaged stickers.
police officials said.
All old Fountain Valley bicycle
stickers, gold in color, expired
Dec. 31, 1976. All new licenses will
expire Dec. 31, 1978.
Police will inspect all bicycles
licensed. Stale law requires
bicycles to be equipped with a
h eadlight and reflector~ on
wheels, pedals, handlebars/ and
at the back of the seat, police
said.
..
saying the bank bad closed ''due
to an emergency."
Mrs. Dornhauaer was sum-
rqoned from her business meet.
tn1 and u flve officers stood with
drawn guns, she wilocked the door.
OCCicers charged In and found
. . • an empty bullding but no
bound and sagged empJoyes, and
no rified caah drawers or other
signs of a robbery.
As dozens ol curious onlookers
gawked out.side the buildlng at Forefl. Avenue and South COast
Highway and pressed their noses
against the glaas windows, of.
ficers waited again as the
manager opened the vault in
case employes bad been locked
inside it by a bandit.
Theybadll't been.
Arter checking that everything
was in its place and deciding no
robbery had occurred. police Lt.
John Zelko withdrew his men.
leaving it to the bank manager to
find out why her emplQyes had
left.
Mrs. Domhauser would lllake
no comment this morning. Other
bank e1J1ployes, however, we.re
telllnc customers that an
employe was hospitalized with
an emer~ency medical problem.
The condition of tbe employe
was not known.
The bank reopened at about
3:30 p.m., after belng closed for
more than two hours.
Traffic Tickets ·
Stolen in BB
Kevin B. Maddox told Hunt-
ington Beach police Wednesday
he hopes whoever stole his wallet
bearing the winged emblem of
the Harley Davidson motorcycle
takes care of the contents.
All they got besides the $20
billfold when they rifled bis
pickup truck at his north city
apartment was the two traffic
tickets it contained.
I :
• I .
6~~~~he netwOrksJ
watch your favorite show while you record that program
you hate to miss ... sony betamaxS. does it all I
What happens when your watching eo you can see It 19" dlaoonal Trlnltron acreeo. favorite TV show ts on at the again as often as you like. So. ·with lh-e eame 1h1rp. crl•P
same time a1 your w1te·1 or suppose you're watching a color whether you're watching
your kids' favorite TV ahow? great program and the phone the actual 1~ or a tape. You
Or when the networt<s put two ring• or company comer or the can't tell the difference!
great programs on at the aame sink oyetflowt . . • Ju1t press
time? Sotnehow. you always the .. record" button. But what
miss something. No more. If nobody's home ..• ? Sonv·s revolut ion ary
n-ew TV recording
system-Setamax._recorda
program• off one channel while you're watching another
channel. So whenever you
want. Just press a button and s•• the ahow you
f'9C<>rded-4he on• you alWayt
mland befot9I
I. "!'·· c-:"\ I . .._ , ..
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. .
'
17
EARBORN Mich. CAP)
ter two mUc•niaces lo 11
ara of marriage, a Detroit-
ea husband Jnd wlf e have de·
ed to pay someorte to have the
by they can never have
tether.
Over the past week, advertise--
ents ln several Mtcbigan col·
ge riewspapers have sou&ht a
donor" lo carry and deliver, for
fee, the artificially inseminated
•
' child of•• Al and Betty, .. who wish Ann Arbor has a1~ed to perform
to remain anonymou15. They aaid thf l~emlniatlcm. and several
they used the colle1e pre11 •.prospective donors have already
becau"'e several ,large dally inquired, asking tees rangin& up
papen refused to carry their ad. to SS.000. lncludln1 ~ses, ac·
An only chlld, Betty says not cordlna to the couple's attorney,
having children has ~en tb'e Noel Keane of Dearborn.
"biggest disappointment of my K~ane aaid the action seems to
life. When you are in love with lack leaal precedent in Michigan.
someone, it's important to giv~ It may be the first time in the
that person a child." state that a couple have made a
A University Hospital doctor in pubUc plea for a woman to sign a •
contraet to bear their child, he
said.
• 11T.he l~&al questions we are
cerned about is payin' a fee to
compensate 11omeone for dolnc
this as well as,. assuring the donor'
follows through on giving the
child u.p af\enbirth,'' Keane said.
Keane said be assumes Al and
Betty would formally adopt the
child after its birth. But be said a
"legal vacuum" exists in the
area. . • ed Ke~ last Septem.,., .rter Micbi~an Atty. Geo.I.Frank several yean of efforts to at·
Kelley baa refused to clve an opl· ranfe an adoption failed and Al
nion on the matter. stlll bad a desire to "have my
"At fll'8t_. it seemed bizarre and own cblld."
far·out, although we imagined it "He (Al) feela strongly about it J
had been done quieUy before," beinl hls baby and at least this l
said Betty. "But all our friends way it will be bis," Betty said. •
and family reacted nicely and The onty restriction on a donor
wished us well." h that she be Caucasian.
Al and Betty. l middle·clus although there are health and
couple in tbeir mld-305, contact· <See BABY, Pace AZ)
C·onrad 'Won't Talk'. to
'
,o Sell
U.s .. ·Gas
MEXICO CITY, Mexico CAP>
Mexico will help the United
tates fight the energy crisis by
elling 40 million cubic feet of eas
day lo ils northern neighbor at
urrent interstate prices,
merican Embassy sources said
. ay. It also off~red to seU more
Mexico will start the gas flow·
g lo the United States Monday
r Tuesday and will also provide
,000 barrels of crude oil dally,
e sources said.
President Carter said Wednes-
ay night that Mexican Presi-
ent. JQSe, (,,opez .,ortillo off,ered
help the United States in the
rlsis caused by the extreme cold
inter, which has caused shut·
owns in industry because or fuel
rtages.
he rates Mexico will charge
r natural gas will vary from
90 to $2.lS per British Thermal
nit <BTU), the embassy
urcessaid.
They said there was no fixed
rice for the crude oil but said ll
ould probably be the same
rice paid for the limited eltport.s
exico makes to the United
les. That price is $12.~ per
arrel landed in Gulf of Mexico
rts.
Mexico also offered to sell to
United States an additional
o -million barrels of crude a
y if American ships can be
d to transport the oil. The
anned 600,000 barrels daily will
tramported' tn Mexh!11tl"lhips
ships rented by the Me.xiean
overnment, th8'0Urces said.
Mexico has been sellln1 about
,000 barrels •r Oil a day to the
nited States since important
ew oWields began produdna tn
e Cb.iapas and T.amplco areas
monthsa,o.
Tbe natural 1as would be sup-
ed from the Nuevo Larecio and
(See MEXICO, Pase A2'
enado School
Venado Intermediate School
nd Deerfield Elementary
bool are the two campuses
'.cbeduled to be vilited Frid~ in
the series of school tours
pooSOl'edbythelrvineUnified
School Dtstrict.
The public la Invited to
participate lo the half-day bus
tour, wbicb will bealn at district
!Madquarten, 29t1 Alton Ave .• at
8:20 a.m. For more Information,
Phone Fran 'Morton or Nancy
Jtowland at &56-4900.
Ceast
•
D.tlly l"lltlt Si.ff l'Ml9
SANDBAGS STACKED ON CULVER DRIVE PROTECT CULVERDALE FROM 'MONSTER FLOOD'
City Ordera Sendb•gglng WhU. Irvine Comp11ny ReaJJgn• S•f' Dle90 Ct'M~
·-.. Irvine Sandbagging Turt"le Rock
Park Naming
Wntest O~'d For Flood Threat·
By IDLARY KA YE
OfUwOaity .. , .. ,s~
If a 100.year flood should hit
Irvine during tbe next few
months, CUlverdale residents will
bemorethmrready:
• S.radbags piled high on Culver
Drive near Culverdale look as if
the village la preparing for war.
But the sandbags actually are
piled on the street to protect resi-
dents in the event of a monster
fiood. .
A flood of that magnitude has
never occurred in t.be youn1 city
and, the entire region Is currently
experiencing a near-drougbt. ...;
But city officials told the Irvfne
Company that the sandba1ging
must be done ~bile the company
ia realigning the San Diego Creek.
a project that has resulted in
fioodina at,intersections when lt
raina.
The Irvine Company, as part of
lts total Woodbridge develop-
ment, is realigning the San Diego
creek f.ol' a two-mlle stretch,
between CUiver Drive and a ape>t
about 3,000 feet east of Jeffrey
Road.
Armed Thugs
In Maski Rob
The new creek will be placed
between old Barranca and New
Barranca Roads in the middle of
Woodbridge.
But in the meantime, the com·
pany-·has· dammed the existing
creek and diverted the water to·
the ·nearby San Joaquin Channel.
The water finally 'flows back irlto··
the San Diego Creek at the point
the creek crosses under the San
Diego Freeway.
TbeeoUre project (s expected to
be completed by November, ac·
cording to Irvine Company pro·
ject manager Robert Santos.
But in the meantime, ever·
yiime it rains, the intersection of
• Culver Drive and Main Street and
the intersection of Jeffrey Road
and old Batl'anca fill with water.
Sandbags on Culver Drive are
there to protect Culverdale resi·
dents. But aandbaes on Jeffrey
Roacj are there for a different re-
ason, according to Santos.
(See SANDBAG, Pace AZ)
Irvine Community Services
commissioners agreed Wednes-
day to allow a contest for Turtle
Rock residents to name the new
park in that community.
However, commissioners held
off allowing the contest sponsor,
the Irvine Company, lo have
final s ay oH which name is
picked.
Commissioners said the con·
test can proceed as long as they
have final authority on the new
park name.
Residents will be asked to
come up with a name for the-five-
acre park adjacent to the new
Bonita Canyon elementary
school being built in Turtle Rock.
The winning entry will receive $100, with $75 given for the
second place entry and $50 for the
tbird·besl name.
The Irvine Company will an·
nounce details of the contest in
the coming weeks. Dead.line for
entries wtll·be March 25.
'Cllat' ·Chan·ge
FDR'• Son Recalh Original •
President Jimmy Carter's revival of the fireside chat
Wednesday night was not completely in keeping with the
tradltlon be•wi clurlng the Depression by President
.,,, Franklin Rooeevelt. (Related Story Pap A4.)
FDR1a eldest son, .Tames, a Newport Beach resident,
sat• today be noUced one stplficant chana• durine Carter's·
"chat" with tbe nation Wednesday night -the fire in the
flre~w•llL
ROOlevelt, a local businessman J.11d
lecturer at UC lrvtne, said hit father
never bid the fireplace lit during bi.a ad·
draaes to tb• nation.
He Cites
Rights of
Silence
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of ... o.lly '"''-' l\Mf Gene Conrad. a poll de in·
former·turned political tycoon,
was on hand to testify before the
Orange County Grand Jury to-
day.
But testify he won't.
Before going into the jury room
in answer to a subpoena. Conrad
said be will cite his first, "'1if\.b,
sixth. ninth and fourteenth
amendment rights and refuse to
testify.
Clutched in the burly 42·year·
old rags to riches police in·
former's hand was a written
statement he planned to read to
tbeJufl4. It said, in effect, that as long
as Assistant District Attorney
M ictrael Capizzi is involved in the
jury's probe into political cam·
paign financing, Gene Conrad
will not cooperate.
Conrad is a central figure in
the iav~taat)On lnto fi.baneing
of'POlitlcal catn)'algns in Orange
County last fall.
One way or another, be is
responsible for pouring roughly
$48,000 into various political can·
didates' campaigns, including a
$30,000 loan to county Supervisor
Philip Anthony.
Wednesday at least five people
involved in C<mrad 's politic¥.
machinations testified before the
jury.
Two witnesses are associated
with Conrad in his loan
brokerage-firm, Pension Funds
of America of Irvine.
Both Harol~ Morr and Donald
Eckhart are shown as $2,500 conr
tributorsto Anthony's campaign.
Also locked behind closed
doors with the grand jury was
Robert LanF~nco, owner of·
Amco Builders Supply Company
of Costa Mesa.
Amco ls shown on Anthony's
campaign disclosure statement
as a $10,000 dOOOJ:. However, it
was revealed two weeks ago that
the donation was actually made
through a cashier's check. drawn
by Conrad.
Today, Conrad said be has
amended for the second tlme his
major political donor's state·
ment to show the Am co contrlbu·
<See CONRAD, Page Al)
·council Gets
Qtoice for
City .~lerk
Olllty PMtC ..... ,......_
SILENT BEFORE JURY
Ponce Informer Conrad
Schoo kt'
#
Merger
I
Assailed
By IDIAllY KA YE
Of .. OMty Pn.t St8ft
-:
-: '• '· . . ....
UC{ Vice Chancellor James
McGautb recommended today
that the proposed merger of the
engineering school and -the
physical sciences school be
scrapped.
McGaugh made his· recom·
mendaUon at a session of the
Academic Senate.
The vice chancellor comment·
ea Uifi"mOfhDlg-fliallfelft:cr fteJi
"no strong support" for. the sug-
gested merger from any or the
campus committees that studied
the plan. .
.McGaugb announced last Oe·
tober that he was considerint
maklnt the professional 8Chool of
engineering a division within the
school of physical sciences.
At that time, McGaugh said be
beUeved It would be the best way
to preserve the small school and
integrate it with the other related
sciences on campus.
However, he receiv~ inlttal
protest from both engineering
faculty and students. Some oft.he
faculty saJd they would look for
jobs elsewhere if the professional
school lost it& status and was re·
duced to a dlvlalon of another
school.
McGaugb said the plan bas
been studied by the E(tuc.Uonal
Policy, the Graduate Council a®
the BUdget Commltues of the
academic senate. •
Each ot those committees Mat'
(Sft MERGER, Pa•e .\2) •
Romantic
~·· Featured
T~~•'Dalli Pilot bltap.JW
up to date oo Romance Onaae •
Count)' wltb a Nview of Valen--
tt.11'1 llft, •uu-tlom· Youttl ftnCt 1u1&esUona ranslQI
from waya to dine out -or ID -
DAILY PILOT
By lllaL\EL P.UKEVJCH •
Of, .. Datly ~I ... M<tff
Althoueh many clty, school
and bualnesa officiala ln Oran1e
County are orderlnt employee to
lower the.nnostatl to es depeet,
others are still conslderin1
whether to comply with an "or·
der" lrom the state Public
Utilities Commission (PUC).
Thermostats in county offices
rem•in set at 68 d~grees because
no chanees can be inltlated
without approval lrom the Coun·
ty Board ol Supervisors, said
Stan Davidson, county maln·
tenance control officer.
Davidson said supervisors will
not be able to take any action un-
til next Tuesday.
Most municipal offices
throughout the county already
have been cooled to 65 degrees.
Those that haven 'l plan to do so
as soon as possible, officials said.
"We are looking at it today,
said Bob Duggan, assistant city
manager in Costa Meaa. "We
want to make sure we don't trig·
ger the beating syste m ," he said,
referring to potential equipment
prQblems the cooldown could
cause.
Tuesday PUC President
Robert Batlnovich ordered all
therrnostats be set at 65 degrees
during the day, SS at night and
turned off when buildings are not
in use.
* * * . E',....PageAJ
MEXICO •••
Reynosa fields on the Mexican
side ol the Texas border. The
sources said the gas would be de·
livered to McAllen, Tex .. for db·
tribution by the Texas Eastern
Transmission Company.
f',....PageAJ
.MERGER ••.
McGaugh a report stating thev
were not in favor of the merger,
he said.
The plan was also reviewed by
the execut; •e com::litlee of the
a cademic senate. the committee
of industrial associates and both
the graduate and undergraduate
councils I None of those groups favored
, the pian either, he said.
Although McGaugh is suggest·
ing th<tt the merger be scrapped.
he said he will recommend a few
changes.
First he said he would rccom
mend that an advisor y board on
engineenng be formed and that 1t
report to him Such a group
would consist of faculty mem-
bers from several related schools
a nd also some external mem·
hers, mcludan~ al least one from
tne tndlL.c;tnal community.
McGaugh satd he would also
ask the engmeenng dean to work
C\n an academic plan for the
:.ichool which would lake into ac·
<ount that at will always be a
~mall school. with no prospects
Sor great expansi9'1.
However . McGaugh said he
v.illl allow the school lo fill the
two full lime teaching positions
that have bct'n frozen and might
be a ble to add more positions in
the future
According to McGaugh, the
<urrenl system of ench school re
)>ortang lo hlm will also be
<hanged. All of the professional
i!>choob wlll report to one person.
)>robably a dean, who wall then
7eport to ham.
•tcGaugh said those 11chools
<will Include the encaneerlng
:ichool. the grad\late school of ad·
:rninhstration. the department of
computer sciences, and lbe office
e>f teacher education. He said It
~lght Include the social ecology
«iepartment, loo.
I McGaugh explained that he Is
'ettemptlne to retain the pro·
:f esslonal statU.9 of the engineer·
:Sng school. yet relate It to the
e>ther sciences on campus.
o.-ANQI Co.\11'
DAILY PILOT
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,,
Planners
Extend OK
For Condos
The much-delayed hillside con·
dominium project in Turtle Rock
is all set to go again with a one·
year extension granted by the
Irvine Planning Commission.
Commissioners aereed Tues·
day to grant the extension for the
construction of 165 units on a
hillside location between the new
Chris t College and Mason
Regional Park. The land is
owned by the Irvine Comapany.
Planning on the project •.•1as
begun three years ago by the A.J.
Hall Company. However, that de·
velope!" has turned the project
ove r to Broadmoor Homes.
which ¥1111 continue the work.
Part of lht! delav resulted from
the city's reluctance to block the
view ol the hillside rock forma·
lion known as Turtle Rock.
City officials said they feared
residents below in the University
Park area would not be able to
see the formation if the new con·
dominiums were built.
However, few residents pro·
tested the view blockage and the
city council finally decided late
last year that the project should
be allowed.
Broadmoor Homes now has a
) ear to begin construction on the
new units.
From Pase A J
CONRAD. • •
t1on as coming from him .
The other two witnesses known
lo testify Wednesday were John
Bathcn and Martin Kirschner,
both of them S2.500 contnbutors
to 1\nlhony
T he newly elected county
supervisor amended his own dis·
closure statement this week to
~hov. the Conrad political invest ·
ment as well as loans ret'e1ved
from Fullerton attorney Michael
Remington.
Remington is on call today for
an appearance before the jury as
1s Conrad aade Loran Norton.
Conrad said he was employed
hy the Orange County District
Atto rney's orrice from 1972
through 1974 as an undercover
agent. However , officials in the
office classify him as a paid in·
former.
In 1975 he was convicted of a
felony crime and sentenced to
three years probation.
In the put year his story has
been one of rags to riches, from a
threatened foreclosure on his
home in Anaheim to heavy cas h
contributions to political cam-
paicns.
He claims his sudden fortune Is
the result of enriching real estate
loans brokered throu1h Pension
Funds of America.
The company's activities are
under investigation by a federal
grand jury as well as the subject
of vartous civil suita filed ln
Orange County.
At Conrad'• side as he waited'
to enter the 1rand Jury rQOm wu
his attorney. Richard Donald.
8y'IOK BA&UY Of t99 Oell't HIM t .. ft
Wall Street analyst Bowen
Nc:Coy admitted Wedneadl)' in
Oranae County Superior Cow't
tll•t hlJ valuaUon of the lrvtne
Company mleht be understated
b)I as much u $50 million.
Closely questioned by attorney
Howard Friedman , wbo
repre&entl Irvine heiress Jou
Irvine Smith, the consultant to
teautled th•t hls a11essment wu
compiled before the company put
lts current five-year develop·
ment/lan lnto effect.
An be agreed with Fried.man
that Irvine Company shares will
be worth much more than the
present estimated $33.50 each if
the completed five-year plan that
expires in 1981 is as successful as
predicted.
McCoy praised the Irvine Com·
pany holdings now being sought
by two financial Interests as a
"top·fl1eht orterine that is among
the best in the United Stales to· day.··
McCoy said the current contest
between two bidders -Mobil Oil
Company and a consortium
Irvine Share
Of State Park
Fumb Weighed
Laguna Beach may team up
with the city of Irvine to stretch
its share of state park and
recreation funds .
Wednesday the Laguna Beach
clty council ordered staff to de·
termine whether Irvine officials
would be Lnteresled in combining
apportionments due rrom the
1976 steate Coastal and Park
Bond Act.
Allocations are based on city
population. a me thod both
Laguna Beach and San Clemente
-with small populations -have
oppOS(.-'d,
Councilman Jack McDowell
suggested that Laguna might
combine its $47 .000 allotment
wlth Irvine's SlOl.000 and buv a
bigger piece of the Sycamore
Hills ar~u within Laguna but
near Irvine -for development
a~ a recreation project
The area l!> al the intl'rSl'lltun
of El Toro Road and Laguna Ca
n~ on roa1!s. Both c1t1e:.. a:. "ell
as the county , ha\e cxprcs!>ed a
desm~ to develop at lc;.i4't part of
1t a:. a park
In a related actwn. the council
voted lo seek other :.t<t te ru nds
available through the Roberti
Z'Berg Urban Ope n-Space and
Hecr cat1on Program . for de·
vc•lopment of parks ut Crescent
B a y Point a nd Moult o n
Meadows.
Orange County will be getting
a block grant or $713.000 from the
program.
Funds would be on a matching
grant basts, with the appllcanl
providing 25 percent of project
costs.
Irvine Seeks
RecTeacMrs
People interested in teaching
specialty recreation classes in
Irvine are asked to submit a re-
sume lo the city's recreation de·
partment.
Each year the city offers
specialty classes. The recreation
staff ls creating a "specialist ac·
tlvlty Cale," where the names of
ln1tructora are listed , along with
cla11et they are able to teJch.
Anyone Interested In being list-
ed In the file may i:e nd a resume,
containing hls name. talent. pa11t
experience and time availability,
to the Reereatlon Department,
17200 Jamboree Blvd.. Irvine,
92713. For more information.
phone 75"·36.19.
Early Aetlon Urged
Pot Bill Backing
Sought of Carter
WASHINGTON CAP) -'l'bffe
mema.(1 of Con1r•11 uked
-President Carter today to IU:P·
port the decrlmlnallullon of
marijuana pos1es1ion and 't•
nonproftt tranaltr ln 1snall quan·
tiUea.
Sena. Jacob K. Javita <R·N.Y.>
and Alan Cranaton <D·CalU.),
and Rep. Edward I. Koch CD·
N. Y. ', wrote Carter 1u11estln1
early action on the ref O"J\ ol
federal marijuana lawa and the
development of a comprebenalve
policy on drul 1bU1•.
They ~ed conctcn for a
''fundatbtntal ufalrntH'' W·
dtrlJIJlt •lll1tln1 mar1Ju1.na la,,., ;rhily alao Hid lbe eillCWH-
llHtal of U.. left l'eq\llrti A
dlv....-ot lffl'H 11" IDfore. ment resource..
The congnssmen said mari·
juana policy should be primarily
J f unctlon ot 1tat.e eovemment,
but that lt la dllOcult for atat.es to
chan1• UMJr pollclea unleu the
federal law l1 chan.1ed.
Carter bu 1aJd he supports
decrimlnali:&ation fe>r po11eulon
of marljuana ln 1mall amounts.
Tbt con1ru1man aald they
woulc,t introduce Jegialatlon In the Hou•• a.nd Senate t.o set a max-
im um etvll fine of flOO for
po11e11lon and not·for.profll
transfer of ont ounce or less ot
marijuana.
Tht current penalty r--marl· Juana po&HHlon It I · • n·
mJ11t foe Up to OPt t'tft r ~:ne
of up ta •• ooo. Thl41 • tnl
penalty «Nld be SUpCT$tf' • by
u1, men atrtncent state laM.
htaded b1. Wall Street financier
Charlee Allen and Detrolt de-
veloper Allred Taubman -ii
drawlnl internaUdD•I attention,
particularb' la Cl*ancial circlt1.
Tb• Mure owner of th• Irvin•
Company will not be decided un·
ill Judie James F. Judge rules
on tbe merits of the lawsull filed
two years ago by Mrs. Smltb.
Mrs. SmJth took le1al action to
bait the sale of the foundation's
lnteresta to Mobil for a nsure
that wu then determlned at $200
million.
Mrs. Smith supports the bid of
the Allen-Taubman 1roup, which
biked ita· offer to fi28a. 7 ml Won
last week. Mobll, favored by the
foundation and the Irvine Com·
pany. has offered $281.11 million.
The Federal Tax Reform Act
of 1969 compels the foundation to
dispose of its 54.S percent con·
trolling interest in the Irvine
Company by 1983.
McCoy's responset to Fried·
man's intensf ve questioning In·
dicated Wednesday that Mobil Is
a firm favorite in the race to take
over operations of the Irvine
Company.
-He contirmed for Mrs. Smith's
lawyer that the current thinking
on Wall Street and in financial
circles across the nation ls that
''the sale of the Irvine Company
is Mobil's deal."
f',..,..PageAJ
SANDBAG •.
An inspector with the
Metropolitan Water District lives
in a small house on old Barranca
Road and his only access is
blocked when Barranca becomes
flooded.
"There's no hazard to re·
sidences since there aren 'l any
others near there. But it's a
nuisance for the inspector and his
family so we've sandbagged that
area, too," Santos explained .
now
CBEter's
Progi!am
'PruH.ent' • WASHINGTON CAP) -
Chairman Arthur F. Buma ot the
Federal Reatrve Board aald to-
day Prelldent Cmer's $31 biWon
economic prosram II an °tneffl·
cleat way to stlmulate the
economy,'' but the board will
cooperate to create jobs and
speed economic growth in 1977.
Burnt, a 72·year-oJd holdover
appointee of the Nixon ad·
mlniltration, mixed both pralae
and criticism ot the Carter pro-
gram before the House Banldn1
Committee, sayin1 he tblnka
Carter came up with a "prudent"
pro1ram conaidering the advice
he was setting.
"All in all . . . I think he bas
done quite admirably,·· Burns
told the committee.
But he also said he didn't think
such a program is needed,
especially the $50 rebates on 1976
taxes which the Carter ad·
ministration hopes t.o dispense
this sprin&.
"The Treasury doesn't have
this money. The Treasury has to
go out and borrow it,'' Burns
said. ''It's not a good habit ...
for our country to get into."
Nevertheless, Burns said the
mone1·managing Federal
Reserw Board is maintaining Its
target for basic growth In the
money supply for 1977 at the level
the Carter administration thinks
is necessary to support its pro-
grams.
Bums' statement to the com·
mittee was his first public reac·
tlon to the Carter economic pro-
gram beine debated by
Congresa. While Burns doesn't
need to approve Carter's plan for
it to become effective, the
board's money growth policies
will be a major k~y toward the
program's succeaa, lf Congress
enacts t(.
Bums said the economy is
showing good growth on its own
and "it ls not clear to me that any
stimulus is required." he said. "I
would have prefert'ed to wait a
little ... "
... ., .........
GRUDGING COOPERATION
Fedef•I RHerve's Burn•
f',....Pa~AJ
BABY •••
other factors, Keane said.
A final selection has not yet
been made, he said, but a mar·
ried woman with children is un·
der consideration. Betty satd she
prefers a donor who is already a
mother, so "natural maternal in·
stlnct won't be a problem wheh it
comes time to give the baby to
us."
The couple say they will tell the
child, when it is older , that Betty
is not its real mother.
Agreement Fails
NEW YORK CAP> -A last·
ditch meeting Wednesday failed
to produce agreement on a plan
lo redeem almost $1 billion in
outstanding caty notes that the
state's highest court ordered
paid. Mayor Abraham D. Beame
said the Court of Appeals would
be asked Thursday to send the
case back to a lower court for de·
velopment of a redemption plan.
you can _
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What happen• when your
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your kldt' favorite TV thow?
Or when the .networka put two great programs on at the same
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Sony's revolutlonary
new TV re c ording
1y1tem-Betamax"-(ecord1
program• off one channel wtule you're watching another
channel. So whenever you
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;; i' ;,\ I
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'·t< ~ -~ ITS IAST TO IUILD A YIDIO TAN UIU.llY
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HOMI With Bettmexlf Y9U no Qotckly tee Betamu• 11 11
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BecauH Betama11~ has an call use the blank cassettes
automatic timer you aet juat over and over-we've got
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t1plng whenever you want. department But ao me
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UCOD~TTOU• off When yov get home. your Progrtm• li ke the moon
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Of courM, aetarnax• can also backl 8nt of all. you Ht Bowl And whO knowt What rt cord the 1how you 're tvtiythlng on Sonv·a bflllltnt will be on N 1,, ~MIO oomel
'91'1~9" ... ,... ....... 19!!IWll""'~""'""'
J
I I
I
l
By JACK drAPP£LL
Of ... Mtot~•St.tft
Departinr Sao ,Clemente
Finance Director Kenneth Carr iot a fiowery resolution of
tbanu, a pl-.que and a dose of Jlf ayor B. Patrick Lane'• acerbic
wit Wednesday as the council
marked Carr's terminaUon of a
lone tenure with the city.
Formerly city manager, Carr
stepped down April-1976 after 12
yeen as the city's chief ad· leaderablp., tbe city bad Ira·
mlJaistrator to a.ssumo the j)06t or creased ln population from ia,ooo finan~ director., He leaves San to 22,100. Lane quipped, ''I'm not
Clemenie to become city • sure what be had to do with
rpana1erof Alhambra. • that."
Mayor Lane was'in rare form As Carr atepped forward to re-
as he int~rjected extem· ceive his cltalfon, Lane told the
poraneous commenta while read· finance director, •1Empty your
ing the glowine resolution com· pocket.I before you leave the
IQemorating Carr's service with city." •
the city. And, ·in presenting the city's
Reading that during Carr's tile, a plaque bearing a decorat·
ed ceramic plece, the may• re·
callloi Carr's trilg&l adminlit.ra·
Uon, noted "We onl)' 1lve tMle out to a few worthy recipients. It's because o( bim. He doean•t
like to pay the S2.50 ...
Kinder ._thou&hts were eon·'
veyed by th• other four councU
members.
Councilman Tony DiGiovaont
recalled that Carr bad "taken Me
under his wing" wheq the COUil·
C.Onrad 'Won't
MEXICO CITY, Mexico <AP>
Mexico will heir> the United
· States fight the energy crisis by
selling 40 million cubic feet of gas a day to its northern oei1bbor al
l
currenl interstate prices,
American Embassy sources said
today. It also offered to sell more oil. ·
Mexico will start the gas flow·
ing to the United States Monday
or 'ruesday and will also provide
t600,000 barrels of crude oiJ daily,
the sources said.
President Carter said Wednes·
'day night that Mexican Presi·
'dent Jose Lopez Portillo offered
to help the United States in the
crisis caused by the extreme cold
winter, which has caused shut·
downs in industry because of fuel
ahortages.
The rates Mexico will. cbarae
or natural gas will vary rrom
11 .90 to $2.15 per British Thermal llJnit (BTU >. the etnbauy
sources said.
They said there was no filed
price for the crude oil but said it
would probably be the same
rice paid for the limited exports
exico makes to the United
ates. That price is $12.65 per
arrel landed in GuH of Mexico
rts.
Mexico also offered to sell to
he United States an additional
WO million barrels of cnade a
ay • if American ships can be
ound to transport the oil. The
lanned 600,000 barrels dally will
transported in Mexican ships
sbfps rented by the Mexican
ovemment, the sources said.
Mexico bas been sellinc about
00,00&ban'els of oil a clay to the
nited States since Important
(See MEXICO. Pace AZ>
oman Sues
NeighbOrs
A Lal\U\8 Beach woman who
laims her nel1hbo1'S uprooted a
plum tree. ~rew her boun·
ary lines with string and
breatened to destroy other
bnabs sued them Wednesday for
6,800in damages.
Nora HW1ter. JS30TempleHills
rive. names William and Utta
arriaon u defendants in her
range County Superior Court
awt.
' Sbe seeks an injunction that 111 prevent tbe Hanisons from
y further cballeqe of her pro-
., lines and any repeUUon of
bat she clitims are acts of estrucUon.
Coast
Nina JObnston, 62, of Laguna Beach ls
given medical aid by Laguna Beach Fire
Capt. Harold Johnson and Fireman Jim
Dempsey after she was hit by a car Wed·
nesday in front of the Laguna Beach
Library on Glenneyre Street. The woman
was admitted to South Coast Community
Hospital and today was reported in stable
condition. The auto was driven by a 16·
year·old Laguna Beach girl, police said.
An investigation is under way into the
cause of the mishap.
COuple Seek
'Baby Maker'.
Through Ads
Over the past week, advertise-
ments in several Michigan col·
lege newspapers have sought Jt
"donor" to carry and deliver, fol'
a fee. the artificiallY inseminated
child of "Al and Betty," who wish
to remain anonymous. They said
they used the college press
because s.everal large dally
papen refused to carry their ad.
An only child, Betty says not
having children baa been the
"biggest disappointment or my
life. When you are in love with so-
. meone, lt's1mportant to glv,e that
<See BABY, Pas• AZ)
Armed Tliugs
In Mask• Rob •
17 at Factory
False 'Alarm·'
·Laguna Police Storm-S&L
)\ Laguna Beach savings and
loan mysterious ly closed and
locked its doors at mid-day Wed·
nesday prompting police to try
and gel inside in a full .scale rob-
bery alert.
Only after bursting into the
World Savings and Loan with
guns drawn did authorities and
branch M anager Patty
Dornbauser -who had been at·
tending a business ?heettng away
from the bank -learn a medical
emergency caused the abrupt
• c.losina.
Police 'fere called by a citizen
who reported the branch orfice
was closed when it ordinarily
would be open
Police round a note on the door
sayin1 th~ bank bad closed "due
to an emer1ency. ''
Mrs. Dornbauser was sum·
moned from her buslne11 meet·
inc and u five officers stood with
drawn l',IM, ahe unlocked the door. .
Ottlcen charted in and found
. • • Jn empty buildlna but no
bound and ga11ed employes, and
no rined cash drawers or other
signs of a robbery.
(\s dozens of curious onlookers
gawked outsic,le the buildine .at
Forest Avenue and.. South Coast
Highway and pressed their noses
against the glass windows, of·
ri cers waited again as the
manager opened the vault in
case employes had been locked
inside it by a bandit.
They hadn't been.
After checking that everything
was jn its place and decldlna no
robbery bad occurred, police Lt.
John Zelko withdrew his men,
leaving it to the bank manager to
find out why her employes had
left.
Mrs. Domhauser would make
no comment this momlng. other
bank employes, however, were
telling customers that an
employe was hoapitallied with
an emergency medloal problem.
The ~oodiUon of the ernploye
was not known.
The bank reopened at about
3:30 p.m., after being closed for
more than two hours .
.
cllmab was fl.rat elected.
Car took tOMiderable \ime to
show Dedlllng eouncll peOple lbe
intricacies of city 1ovemment
and acq~ lMJia) with ibe nan·
nln& of tbe munlclpality.
DiGlov~ U\d councllmembers
Donna WilldJlson and William
Walker ta.id.
. Councilman Tom O'Keefe not·
eel that be had JIMJt come on the
planning co1nmi.Sllon ln 1964, J.be
Mt raooa
N.Y. Stoeks
same time Carr was hired as cl
manaier.
Once it was b1$ tum to speak,
Carr said "hen be first came to
San Clemente, 'he was told &he
town was "a place1or the. newly
wed and nearly dead.
It was also described as "quiet
village by t.buea ...
"We've made San Clemente a
place where everybody can enjoy
(See CARR, Page AZ>
to 1 J~:ry :
He Cites
'
Rights of
Silence
By GARY GRANVILLE
Ol "'9 D.lllJ l'llol Stall
Gene Conrad, a police in·
former-turned political tycoon,
was on hand lo testify before the
Orange County Grand Jury to-
day.
But testify he won't.
Before going into the jury room
in answer to a subpoena, Conrad
said he will cite his first. fifth,
sixth, ninth and fourteenth
amendment rights and refuse to
testify.
Clutched in the burly (2-year·
old rags to riches police in·
former's. hand was a written
statement he planned to read to
the jury. lt satd, in effect, that as long
as Assiatant District Attorney
Michael Capizzi is involved i.r) the
jur~'s. prot;>e into ~llUcal cam· PC\! Q f~~. Gen' Ccwu-•d wn not coof>erate.
Conrad is a central figure in
the investigation into financing
o( political campafgns in Orange
County last !all.
One way or another, he is resJ>On.sib_l~for pouring roughly
$48.00Q in10 \'arious ,PC?lltlcal can·
didates' campaigns. lncluditig a
$30,000 loan to cbunty Supervisor
Philip Anthony.
Wednesday at least five people
involved in Conrad's political
machinations testified before~
jury.
Two witnesses are associated
with Conrad in his loan
brokerage firm, Pension Funds
of America orirvlne.
Both Herold Morr and Donald
<SeeCONRAD, Page A%)
Court-martial .
·Trials Slated
For .2 Marines
Oallf "''-'Slaff,,_.
SILENT BEFORE JURY
Police Informer Conrad
LagUna Asks • Crescent Bay,...
Status Report
The Laguna Be~ch City toun·
ell asked Wednesday for a status
report on a preliminary
arcbeological study or Crescent
Bay Point before it decides
whether to require strict de·
velopment standards to protect
potential finds.
A public bearing on the matt~r
was held over until Feb. 16 after
several residents wanted to know
what, if anything. has been round
or arcbeological significance.
One person, scoffing at the id~a. s.aid, •Tve got better shells
in my collection ."
Other residents were, con•
cerned that if com pleLe
archeology analyses are re ..
quired before any building is
done. they might be restricted in
rebuildiruf their own homes in
caseof ca£aatrophe.
The archeology study,
meanwhile, was reported 80 per-
cent complete. Results are to be
reported at the Feb.16 meeting.
Romantic
Pinkleys
Featured
..
Tway'a Daily Pilot brings you
up to date on Romance Orange Cou~ty with a review of Valen· tine's~ suggestions.
You ll find suggestions ran&ing
from ways to dine out -or 1n -
in grand atyle to where·to-llnd·tt
hints· for Unlque lifts or tradi-
tional Vale~tine offerings ot
cards, candy, flowers and
poetr)'.
And, featured on the cover ot
the 16-paae apeclal maauine are
famed Costr .Mesa romantics.
Alvin and Lucy Pinkley. Their
soda fountain has been the
backdrop for real·llfe love stories
alncel933.
For their atory • and help with
your own love llfe, turn to
Romance Orange County Jn
today'• Dally PUot.
A z DAil. y PILOT L/SC
Water lfae
Cw ordered
OAKLAND (AP> -
Dir'9don it UM a.at Bay'•
water supply bav
declared a •'state of
emergency" and voted to
take st~ to reduce waler
• use by one-fourth.
The East Bar Municipal
Utility District. which
aerves most of Alameda
County and part. of Contra
Costa, acted Wednesday
night after a 3\-!a ·hour-
pubUc beartn1.
The board agreed to
meet Tuesday nteht to de·
cide how to implement the
25 percent cut in water con·
sumption.
Sclwols'
Merger
Assailed
BylULARYKAYE °' .. O.tly lttlot ,..,,
UCI Vice Chancellor James
McGaugh recommended today
that the proposed merger of the
engineerin• school and tbe
phystcal sciences school be
scrapped.
• McGau1h made his recom·
mendatlon at a session of the
Aeademic Senate.
The vice chancellor comment·
ed this morning that he had seen
"no strong support" for the sug.
gested mer1er from any of the
campus committees that studied
the plan.
McGau1h announced last Oc·
tober that he was considering
making the professional school of
engineering a division withln the
1chool of physical sciences.
At that time, McGaugb said he
believed it would be the best way
to preserve the small school and
inteerate it with the other related
sciences on campus.
However, he received initial
protest from both engineering
faculty and student.a. Some of the
faculty said they would look for
jobs elsewhere if the professlonal
school lost Its status and was re-
duced to a division of another
school.
McGaugh said the plan has
been studied by the Educational
Policy, the Graduate Council and
the Budget Committees of the
academic senate.
Each of those committees sent
McGaugh a report stating they
were not in favor o( the merger ,
he said.
·a,. lllCIQEL P ASKEVICll
Of nit Olllty ............
Althoush many city, school
and buaine1t olflcials In Oranee
County are orderins emplo;es to
lower tbennMat.a to &5 dqJ"eet,
others are sUU conaldertni
whether to comply with an ••or-
der" from the state Public
UUUtiesCommiulon (PUC).
Thermostats In count)". offices
remain set at ea decrees bffauae
no changes can be Initiated wi~out approval from the Coun.
ty Board of Superviaqrs, said
Stan Davidson, county maiJt·
tenance control officer.
Davidson said supervisors will ·
not be able.to take any action UO· lit next Tuesday.
Most municlt>al offices
throughout the county already
have been cooled to 65 degrees.
Those that haven't plan to do so
as soon as possible, officials said.
"We are looking at it today,
said Bob Duggan, assistant clty
manager in Costa Mesa. "We
want to make sure we don't trig-
ger the heating system,·· he said.
referring to potential equipment
problems the cooldown could
cause.
Tuesday PUC President
Robert Batinovich ordered all
thermostats be set at 65 degrees
during the day. 55 at night and
turned off when buildings are not
in use. . However, PUC officials admit
the oroer is unenforceable and
said it is a voluntary gesture
aime<t at lowering consumption
to aid Midwest and East Coast
residents who are s uffering
through this winter's deep freeze.
If followed, the restrictions
would mean Californians may
live "below the comfort level."
said PUC President Batinovich,
but the hardships will be minor
compared to other areai. of the
country.
A random survey of South
County residents today revealed
most homeowners are complying
with the PUC's request.
Bud Hopp, plant operations
director at Burrough 's Corpora·
tlon in Saddleback Valley, said
the electronic components
manufacturing firm has lowered
thermostats to 65 degrees. He
said all gas-related equipment is
shut down at night anct that the
company has been on an energy
conservation program for the past two years
Change
FDR's Son Recalu Original
President Jimmy Carter's revival of the fireside chat
Wednesday night waa not completely in keeping with the
tradition begun durin1 the Depression by President
Franklin Roosevelt. (Related Story Page A4.)
FDR's eldest son, James, a Newport Beach resident,
said today he noticed one significant change during Carter's·
"chat" with the nation WedneAday night -the fire in the
fireplace was lit.
:i.-· .·'I,_,~" '. ·~ ~ •. ~·· ·. -. c ·.
ROOlevell. a local businessman and
lecturer at UC Irvine, said his father
never had the fireplace UL du.ring his ad·
dre11es to the nation.
AND, HE SAYS, FDR heartily dis·
liked the term "flreslde that"
"I don't lbink he thought of those ad·
dresses as fireside chats, and I know he
\lied to try and find out wbO started call·
•00Hv&1.T ing them that," Roosevelt explained.
"l can remember him saying that the press would pro-
bably call them fireside chats even ti we were In the midst
of a July heat wave."
ROOSEVELT SAID HE WATCHED most of Carter's
speech and picked up what be mialed on news broadcast.a
later in the eveblne.
"It waa comparable in that they both were trying to re-
ach out and commwtlcate with tbe people," he observed.
Another major difference wu the fact that Carter ap.
pearedon nationwide television. FDR's presidency spanned
the yean prior to commereial teJevtaion and Ilia addresses
were broadcast Oft l'Mlo.
Ptdrlot-' a..t.e
Emmy-award winning ac-
tress Kay Lenz will be an
easy act to follow down the
route of Laguna Beach's
11th annual Patriots' Day
Parade Feb. 19. She's been
named grand marshal.
FroaaPageAJ
CONRAD. • •
Eckhart are shown as $2,500 con·
tributors to Anthony's campaign.
Also locked behind closed
doors with the grand jury was
Robert LanFranco. owner of
Amco Builders Supply Company
of Costa Mesa.
Amco is shown on Anthony's
campaign disclosure statement
as a $10,000 donor. However, it
was revealed two weeks ago that
the donation was actually made
through a cashier's check drawn
by Conrad.
Today, Conrad said he has
amended for the second time his
major political donor's state-
ment to show the Amco contribu·
tion as coming from him.
The other two witnesses known
to testify Wednesday were John
Bathen and Martin Kirschner,
both of them $2,500 contributors
to Anthony.
The newly elected county
supervisor amended his own dis-
closure statement this week to
show the Conrad political invest·
ment as well as loans received
from Fullerton attorney Michael
Remington.
Remington as on call today for
an appearance before the jury as
is Conrad aide Loran Norton.
Conrad said he was employed
by the Orange County District
Attorney's orrice from 1972
through 1974 as an undercover
agent. However, officials m the
office classify him as a paid m·
former.
In 1975 he was convicted or a
felony crime and sentenced to
three years probation.
In the past year his story has
been one of rags to riches. from a
threatened foreclosure on hi s
home in Anaheim to heavy cash
contributions lo political cam·
paigns.
He claims his sudden fortune is
the result of enriching real estate
loans brokered through Pension
Funds of America.
The company's activities are
under lnvestlgatlon by a fedetal
grand jury as well as the subject
of various civil suits filed in
Orange County.
At Conrad's side as he waited
to enter the grand jury room was
his attorney. Richard Donald.
F,.._ Page AJ
MEXICO .••
new oilfields began producing in
the Chiapas and Tampi<'o areas
18 months aeo.
The natural gas would be sup·
plied from the Nuevo Laredo and
Reynosa fields on the Mexican
aide or the Texas border. The
sources aald the gas would be de-
U vered to McAllen, Tex., tot dis-
tribution by the Texas Eastern
Transmission Company.
~NGICOMT
DAILY PILOT Will San Juan Get
Use of the Hall?
San Juan Caplltrano cltf coun·
cllmen have Ht in motion an
entinfier's study wblcb may re-
nlt tn mU1tc rhWn1 out Ollff
more frOm the oldest recreation build.lu lD 80Ut.b Orange County.
Tb• ~ Juan Hot Sprt~s
dance hall was built ln the 1880 f
at the onee-fublonable health re-
IOl't on Ortea• W.bway, eut of
the mbalOfti elty. When tbe coun-
ty health department eloeed th,
H10rt tn 1'38. the daneo hall was
movfd Into town. ·
Until laat !>Member, tho old
1>.UdlQi wu rented out u duplex
boulftl. On n.c.11, the cit)' btld
the dance ball moved boom Ml
Camino Capl1trano locaUon aerou trOm tlM mLMIOG to a
.......... blldnd elt;y omc..
W9da11d.,,1 UM Qty c..DdJ .................. ~
tM aallDllM Ol .,._.aUOe Hldlcl to him tlM dlpaUdaUid bat ....._
torically significant wood-frame
structure into a city recreaUoo
headquarten.
The renovatf!d dance hall could
be used for meetint• of com·
muntty aroups, tlty-aponsored recreaUon classes and for cJty
recreation offices, 11ld Tom
Baku, recreltloo director.
The city will 1ubmtt the re-novatJOll project to the state in
March.
Baker said the city anUcipatea
recelvln1 about $39,000 under a
State 8oQd Act durina Ute 19'7'1-'71 flacal year •htch would bo used
to re.IC>cate and renovate t.be
dance ball, ptO«Uq raul\1 ol the
tn•lnMr'l llUcty.
lf the proifft requlrea moN
than •.ooo '° complete, •ooo bu belli ~atld in th• clt;y recreaUoft buqet for a ttm•
poraey nacnaUOn f8cWtJ, Bat..il'
•Aid.
ByTOllliaLEY
Of ... CMl~ ...... t\tft
Wall Street analy t Bowen
¥cCoy admitted Wed11tld17 in Oraoi• 6>unty Superior c.ourt
that h1a valuaUon of the lrvlne
Company mitht be understated
by as much aa *50 million.
Clotely questioned by attorney
Howard Friedll)an, who
repreaentl Irvine heiress Joan
Irvine Smith, the consultant to
testified that bis assesament wu
compiled before the company put
its CWTent five-year develop·
ment plan Into effect.
And be aereed with Friedman
that Irvine Company shares will
be worth much more than the
present estimated $.13.50 each lf
the completed five-year plan that
expires in 1981 is as successful as
predicted.
McCoy praised the Irvine Com·
pany holdings now being souebt
by two fin~al interests U a
"top-rught offering that la among
· the best ln the United States to-
day."
McCoy said the current contest
between two bidde'rs -Mobil Oil
Company and a consortium
headed by Wall Street financier
Charles Allen and Detroit de-
veloper Alfred Taubman -is
drawing int.emational attention,
particularly in financial circles.
The future owner of the Irvine
Company will not be decided t.ln·
til Judge James F . Judge rules
on the merits of the lawsuit filed
two years ago by Mrs. Smith.
Mrs. Smith took legal action to
halt the sale of the foundation's
interests to Mobil for-a figure
that was then determined al $200
million.
Mrs. Smith supports the bid of
the Allen-Taubman group, which
hiked its offer to S282. 7 million
last week. Mobil. favored by the
foundation and the Irvine Com·
pany. has offered $281.9 mllUon.
, The Federal Tax Reform Act
or 1969 compels the foundation to
dispose of its 54.S percent con·
trolling interest In the Irvine
-"~ ~ ....
now
Company by 1913.
McCoy's responses to Fried·
man's intensive questioning in-
dicated Wednesday that Mobil la
a flrm favorite In the race to take
over operatlobs of the Irvine
Company.,.
He confirmed for Mrs. Smith's
lawyer that the current thinking
on Wall Street and in financial
circles across the nation ts that
"the sale of the Irvine Company
is Mobil's deal."
l'..._P.,,eAJ
BABY •••
person a child.•·
A University Hospital doetor in
Ann Arbor has agreed to perform
the Insemination, and several
prospective donors have already
inquired, asking fees raneing up
to $5,000, including expenses, ac-
cording to the couple's attorney,
Noel Keane of Dearborn.
Keane said the action seems to
lack legal precedent in Michigan.
U may be the first time in the
state that a couple have made a
public plea for a woman to sign a
contract to• bear their child, he
said.
"The legal questions we are
cerned about is paying a fee to
compensate someone for doing
this as well as assuring the donor
follows through on giving the
child up after birth," Keane said.
Keane said he assumes A1 and
Betty would formally adopt the
child after its birth. But he said a
"legal vacuum" exists in the
area.
Michigan Atty. Gen. Frank
Kelley has refused to give an opi·
nion on the matter.
"At first, it seemed bizarre and
far-out, although we imagined il
had been done quietly before."
said Betty. "But all our friends
and family reacted nicely and
wished us well."
O.llr PIMt St.Ill ~· TOASTED, ROASTED
Ex-city Aide C•rr
Frda Page AI
CARR ...
their own particular lifestyle,''
Carr said, explaining things bad
mdeed chaneed.
O'Kee!e bailed Carr as a sin·
cere and conscientious ad·
ministrator.
"It has been a privilege to have
known him. His entire family can
be justifiably proud of him as can
the entire city," O'Ke~fe said.
IAGUNA GRIPES
SET FOR MEET
Questions, suggestions. gripes
and constructive comments will
be the order of the day during a
town meeting at 8 p.m. Feb. 10 at
the Neighborhood Congrega-
tional Church lo Laguna Beach.
The meeting is sponsored by
the Friends of the Laguna Beach
Library and will feature Mayor
Phyllis Sweeney, Dr. Robert
Sanchls, superlntendent of the
Laguna Beach school District,
Police Chief Jon Sparks, Fire
Chief Charley Kuhn, Dan
Armstrong, director of com·
munily information at Sad·
dleback College and members of
the city planning commission.
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• 8y TOM BADEY'
Of tN INll\' Pl ... l*Mt
Wall Street analyst Bowen
cCoy admitted Wednesday in
range County Superior Court
bat bis valuation of the Irvine
Company miaht be undentated as much u $50 million.
Closely questioned by attorney
Jloward Friedman, who
represents Irvine heiress Joan
rvine Smith, the consultant to •
tesiified that his assessment was
co.piled before the company put.•
ita current flve-~ear develop·
meat plan i.ft1.o effect.
And be agreed with Friedman
that Irvine Company shares will
be worth much more than the
. present estimated $33.50 each ii
the completed five-year plan that
expires in 1981 is as successful as
predlcted.
McCoy praised the Irvine Com-
pany holdings now being sought
by two financial tnteres~ as a
''toJ)·flilhtottedni that is among
the best lo Ute UoUed States to-
day." '
McCoy aaid the current contest
between two bidders -Mobil Oil
Company and a consortium
beaded by wall Street rmancler
Charles Allen and Detroit de-
veloper Alfred Taubman -ts
drawing international attention,
• particularly ln flnancial circles.
The future owner of the Irvine
Company will not be 'c:iecided un-
til Judge James F. Judae rut~
· on the merllf of the lawsuit filed
two years ago by Mrs. Smltb.
Mrs. Smith took legal action to
halt the sale or the foundation's
interests to Mobil for a figure
that was then determined at $200
million.
Mrs. Smith supports the bid or
.
the Allen· Taubman grout . wbich
hiked I~ offer to $282. 7 million
last week. Mobil, favored by the
foundatioo and the lrvine Com·
pany, bas ottered $281.9 milllon.
The Federal Tax Reform Act
of 1969 compels the foundation to
dispose ol its 54.5 percent con-
trolling interes~ in \he Irvine
Company by 1983.
McCoy's responses to Fried·
man's intensive questioning in· ~
dlcated Wednesday t.bat Mobil is
a firm favorite in the race to take
over operatldns or the Irvine
Company. . ,
lte confirmed for Mrs. Smith's
lawyer that the current thlnklnj
on Wall Street and in fin~al
circles acrou tbe nation is that
"the sale ot the Irvine Compaa.J
is Mobil's deal." :
Mrs. Smith is on record q
(See HEIRESS, Page A%)
ConrOd 'Won't Talk' to
Mexico
To Sell
I I
U.S. Gas . .
. MEXJCO CITY, Mexico <AP >
Mexico will help the United
States fight the energy crisis by
selling 40 million cubic feel of gas
a day to its northern neighbor at
current inter state prices,
American Embassy sources said
today. It also offered lo sell more
oil.
Mexico will start the gas flow·
ing to the United States Mond,ay
or Tuesday and will also provide
600,000 barrels of crude oil daily,
the sources said.
President Carter said Wednes-
day night that Mexican Presi· 17 dent Jose Lopez Portillo offered
to help the United States in the
crisis caused by the extreme cold
winter, w~ bM u~ •tMat-
.... 4.4owns ln industry benuae ot Cud
·• .. •rtages. •
· The rates Mexico wW e!larae
for natural gas will vaty ftiOal
Sl.90 to $2.15 per British Tllermal
U n it <BTU>. the e mbassy
sources said.
They said there was no rued
price for the crude oil but said it
would probably be the same
price paid for the limited exports
Mexico makes to the United
States. That price is $12.65 per
barrel landed in Gulf of Mexico
ports.
f4exico also orrered to sell to
the United States an additional
two million barrels of crude a
day if American ships can be
ou~_d_ to tr~r\ the Qil. 'l'be
planned 600,000 barrels daily will
be transported.in Mmcan 1blps
sbi.Ps rented by the Mexican
overfunent. the sourtes said.
Mexico has been aelllq about
00,000 barTels or oil a day to the
United States since lmportent
new oilfields began producinf in
the Chiapas and Tampico areas
11 months ago.
ANCHOIUCE HIT
BY HEAT WAYE
ANCHORAGE CAP) -While
much ol the nation la bard-hit by
record cold, the National
W eat.her Service aaya that for the
• firat Ume In its 60-year history
I b ere. tem peratures rn the
Aneboraae area did not drop
'btlow urodurina January.
I In fact, while tbe city's
'.January temperatures usually
a verage 12 depees1 the service
Hid, temperatures did not even
l!dfop below 14. 1 The reconted hlab this year
•149 on Jan • .24. .
Ceast
The first of 12 1iant liquefie<t natural gas
tankers floats out under its own power at
General Dynamics Shipyard in Quincy,
Mass. The ship will be tested before five
850-ton atummum spheres are put in place
to hold 125,000 cubic meters of gas. In the
f oregrmmd is the barge used to bring the
spheres from South Carolina.
County Weighs ·Order
Thermostats Stay at 68 PendirW Board Okay ,
By lllCB4EL PASKEVICH . °' .. CMITy PlltflQtf Althollca. many city, school
and buainetB officials jn Orange
County are ordering,employes to
lower t.ber$osta~ to 6S degrees,
others are still considering
whether to comply with an "or-
der" from the state Public
UtilitiesCommission <PUC).
Thennostab in county offices
remain set at 68 degrees because
no changes can be initia~~
without approval rrom the Couri·
ty Board of Supervisors, said
Stan Davidson, col.Inly main-
tenance control officer.
Davidson said supervisors will
not be able to take any action un-
W nest Tuesday.
Moat municipal offices
throughout the county already
have been cooled to 6S deerees.
Those that haven't plan to do so
as soon asJ>ossible, officials said.
"We 81'9 lookin& at it today,
said Bob l>uHan, assistant city
manaaer ,in Costa Mesa. "We
want to nuke sure we don't trig-
, ger the beating system," be said,
referring to potential equipment
pro blems ihe cooldown could
cause.
-1.uesday .euc President
Robert Ballnovich ordered all
thermosta~ be set at 6S degree5
during the day, 55 at night and
turned off when buildings are not
in use.
However, PUC officials admit
the order is unenforceable and
said it is a voluntary gesture
aimed at lowering consumption
to aid Midwest and East Coast
residents who are suffering .
through this winter's deep
• freeze.
If followed, the restrictions
would mean Californians may
live "below tbe comfort level,"
said PUC President Batlnovich,
bu~the--banbhips-will be"lDinor
compared lo other areas of the
country. • ·
A random survey of South
County Tesidents today revealed
most homeowners are complying
with the PUC's request.
Bud Hopp, plant operations
director at Burrough's Corpora-
tion in Saddleback Valley, said
the electronic components
(See COOLER, Page AU
Reseroe Board Chief
Vows Aid to Carter ·
WASHINGTON ·(A P> -
Cb airman Arthur F. Bum s of the
Federal Reserve Board said to-
More P"'1nea
'fhaii People
In Neu7J."!rt
He Cites
Rights of
Silence
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of ltle Delly "11•1 Staff
Gene Conrad, a police in·
former-turned political tycoon,
was on hand to testify before the
Orange County Grand Jury to-
day.
But testify he won't.
Before going ;nto the jury room
in answer to a subpoena, Conrad
said he wlll cite his first, fifth.
sixth. ninth and fourteenth
amendment rights and reflise to
testify.
Clutched in the burly 42-year-old rags to riches police in·
former's hand was a written
statement be planned to read to
the jUtf. ' It S8ld, in effect, that as long
It A.ulfltn~ Dlstrict Attorney
Jrf1thael Capiui is invo1 ved tn l.he
jury's probe into political cam·
paign financing, Gene Conrad
will not eooperate.
Conrad is a central figure in
the investigation into financing
of political campaigns in Orange
County last fall.
One way or another, be is
respoosible for pouring roughly
$48,000 Into various political can·
didates' campaigns, including a
$30,000 loan to county Supervisor.
Philip-Anthony. . . ~
Wednesday at least five people
involved in Conrad's political
machinations testified before the
jury.
Two wi1nesses are associated
with Conrad in bis loan
brokerage firm, Pension Funds
of America of Irvine.
Both Harold Morr and Donald
Eckhart are shown as $2,500 con-
tributors to Anthony's campaign.
Also locke~ behind closed
doors with the grand jury was
Robert LanFranco, ow.ner or·
Amco Builders Supply Company
of Costa Mesa.
Amco is shown on· Anthony's
campaign disclosure statement
as a $10,000 donor. However, it
was revealed two weeks ago that
the donation waa.actually made
through a cashier's check drawn
by Conrad. '
Today, Conrad said he has
amended for the second time bis
major political donor's state·
(See CONRAD, p'ge A.2>
DallY Pl!« Staff PMt9
SILENT BEFORE JURY
Potlce Informer Conrad
SclwolS'
Merger
Assailed
By IDL.\RY KA YE
Of tlle o.tlly Pllet SUH
UCf Vice Chancellor James
McGaugh recommended today
that the proposed merger of th~
engin eering school and t het
physical sciences school be
scrapped.
McGaugb made his recom ..
mendation at a session of the
Academic Senate.
Ttfe -nee-clnlnt?ettcfr-<!UrtUnent.
ed thi$ morning that he bad seen
.. no strong support" for the sug ..
gested merger from any of the
campus committees tb~t studied
the plan.
McG•ugb announced last 0c ..
tober that he was considering
making the professional school of
engineering a division within the..
school ot physical sciences. _
At that time, McGaugb said be.:
believed It would be the best w~
to preserve the small school and·
integrate It with the ()ther related:
sclences on campus. .:
However, he received initial;
protest from both engineerinc •
faculty and students. Someottbe:
faculty said they would look for·
<See MERGER, Page A%) •
'€hilt' ~hange .
FDR's Son Recalt. Original
Ol\ll Y PILOT N
ay Tiie Aaoelated Preu Jl'~w s~lles of natural 1u are Mlre flowing eut, but the
effttta of e bitter winter ol im
are 1preadln1 even faster.
Layoff•. for example, have
be1uo reaching into New
En1land -an area •pared u.nW
now because it uses Utile natural
IH• I
Jn Ohio and western New York
state, two of the hardest-hit
areas, calm weather and slightly
ristna temperatures Wedne.sday
1ave somethint of a respite to
* * * f',...PflfleAJ
COOLER •..
manufacturing firm has lowered
thermo.tats to 65 degrees. He
said all gu-related equipment is
shut down at night and that the
~ompany has been on an energy
~onservation program for the
past two yean.
School dist.rict officials seem
hesitant about lowering
classroom temperatures. While
thermostats have been lowered
in the Capistrano Unified and
Laguna Beach Unified Districts,
officials for the Newport-Men
district said thermostats would
remain at 70 degrees inside
buildlnp and between 76 and 82
in awlmmlng pools unless the dis·
triet b forced to comply with
PUC requests.
The PUC has requested that all 1 ··1uxury'1 uses of natural gas be
,halted. ·
A spokesman for Laguna
BHch schools said the district
will maintain present swimming
pool temperatures until the coun-
ty Hy.1th Department provides
information on what effects
lowered temperatures could
have on swimmers.
In Huntington Beach school of·
ncial& said teachers are being
"encouraaed" but not forced to
reduce temperatures.
A spokesman at UC Irvine said
<ampua buildings switched from
Jlatural gas lo oil heating as or
Dec. 1, 1976 due t-0 cµtbacks in
1ias supplies.
Orville Reinhardt, physical
)>lant administrator at the col-
l)ege said supplies were cut off
(8,000 cubic feet per day ) and gas
~ompany officials predict no re·
umption of supplies until 1980.
Reinhardt said oil heat is twice
s expensive, but campus energy
nservation programs have cut
onsumption by one-third.
Campus dormitories and r~
idences are still using gas for
eat, but school officials have
irected s tudents to set
lherm05tats at a maximum 65 ~egrees
' Newport Cops
Hunt Attacker I
~Woman
A man who hid in a Corona del
Mar businesswoman's car and
attacked her as she lefl work
Wednesday night is being sought
today by the Newport Beach
police.
Investigators said the car was
parked 1n a lot behind the 3100
block ot East Coast Highway.
The woman told officers she
left work at about 9:4S p.m. and
· didn't notice anything unusual
when she sot Into her car.
But when she reached for her
seat belt, she said the man re-
.ached around from the back seal
and grabbed her by the throat.
I She lotd police she frantically
llonked her car horn while strua· I ~line with her assailant, who she
said wu armed with a six-lnch
lmlfe.
The man suddenly broke olf his
attack and Jumped from the car. e woman told police.
Otricers said the suspect was
escribed u a Ne1ro. flve feet 10
nchea tall. wel1btn1 US5·1'75
nds and between the agea of
and.S.
DAILY PILOT
._, .. ,..., llfttl4llM• ...__
..... cw..y 'lliell,.,.,....,,1_ 0.--.. ...._
'"-;:,:,-wt
TllMMA.---..........
~ ...... ~ ... ... AUi ............. ....
STRIPPERS GO ON
DESPITE COLD-AS
President Carter si1ned
emergency leeislation approved
by Congf-ess Wednesday &ivlng
l:im the power to declare na·
tional or regional natural gas
emergencies and to order gas
moved from slate to state to keep
homes and bospitaJs warm -but
not to reopen shutdown plants.
The legislation also allows in·
terstate pipelines to temporarily
buy gas in some cases at higher
prices prevailing in intrastate
markets.
Even before the signing, one of
the biggest interstate natural gas
pipelines, Transcontinental Gas
Pipe Line Corp., reported it com·
pleted arrangements to obtain
about 130 million cubic feet or gas
a day from the Pacific
Northwest. Some of the gas was
already moving toward Texas,
where Transcontinental ls based,
by Wednesday night.
But gas moves at only lS miles
an hour in pipelines, so the pro-
spect of quick relief for curtaJled
fi',..,..PageAJ
CONRAD .••
ment to show the Amco contribu-
tion as coming from him.
The other two witnesses known
to testify Wednesday were John
Bathen and Martin Kirschner,
both of them $2,SOO contributors
lo Anthony.
The newly e lected county
supervisor amended his own dis·
closure statement this week to
show the Conrad political Invest·
ment as well as loans received
from Fullerton attorney Michael
Remington.
Remington is on call today for
an appearance before the jury as
is Conrad aide Loran Norton.
Conrad said he was e mployed
by the Orange County District
Attorney's office from 1972
through 1974 as an undercover
agent. However, officials In the
omce classify him as a paid in-
former.
In 1975 he was convicted of a
felony crime and sentenced to
three years probation.
In the past year his story has
been one of rags to riches, from a
threatened foreclosure on his
home in Anaheim to heavy cash
contributions to political cam·
paigns.
He claims his sudden fortune is
the result of enriching real estate
loans brokered through Pension
Funds of America.
The company's activities are
under investigation by a federal
grand jury as well as the subject
of various civil sulls filed in
Orange County.
At Conrad's side as he waited
to enter the grand jury room was
his attorney, Richard Donald.
On Conrad's behalf, Donald
last month filed a $170 million
lawsuit against the district at·
torney's office that claimed
Conrad's civil rights had been
violated through a series of al·
leged wire tapping incidents.
p,.._p~AJ
HEIRESS •••
favoring the Allen-Taubman of-
fer because tbe syndicate would
allow her to retain ber az percent
interest in the company founded
by ber grandfather.
U the Mobil offer II approved
by Judge Judge, she and other
mlnoqty stockholders will be
compelled to give up their abares
of stock.
College Choir
To Perform in·HB
The Azusa Pacific Colleee Con·
cert Cboir, under the dJrection of
Prof esaor Earle Anderson. will
perform at the HunUnitoa Valley
Cbrisilln Hllh ~bool at m West
Fifteenth St. in Newport Beach,
tonltbt llDd Sab.11'\ky at 7:80 p. m .
· Tbe perfonnance ts open to
tbe pubtie and tree ticket.a can be
obtalnedat ~boolottlce.
Hanaway Caught
POINT DUME (AP) -A 15-
year-old nmaw~ from Tanana
led tbe ldabwat patrol on a chue
that at tlmel reacb-4 110 miles
per boUt unUl h1I automobile
Wellt oat ~ COntrol ind col.Udecl
wt~ twootbercanOD tM P~c eo.lt lbbWU. Tbe 10uth wbo
WH Mt;, ld•attfJed, and tbe
drl• .. OI the two otMr can IUf· ,
f ered 1Dlilal' lit,luiUI.
...... ~ ...
Gu companies served by the
Columbia 011 Tran1ml11lon
Corp. m Ohio were told to extend
maintenance leveJ curtailments
to industrial and commerclal customers for at leut another
week.
Federal Power Commluloner
· John H. Holloman JU said many
of the plant cloeings could last
until spring -and could be
followed by other cloelnga this
summer.
Jn Buffalo, N . Y., where
soldiers and National
Guardsmen are hetplng lbe city
dlg out from a aeries of hanh
· storms, the widenlna effects or
the crisis were illustrated by a
jamup ol railroad boxcars una·
bletomove.
The backlog in Bu!falo spread
misery as far as Framin&ham,
Mass., where General Motors
closed an assembly plant for two
days, idling 3,200 persons.
Feed grain dealers in
Massachusetts also complained
of criUcal abortages. and one of·
ficial suggested rationing feed to
livestock -which in turn could
cut the state's egg production.
Digging In
Workers from Plaza Landscape, Inc. dig
trenches for water and drainage pipes
beneath what will become the tennis courts
in West Newport Park. The $274,000 con-
struction project includes the first phase of
the park on Seashore Drive from SSth to 59th
~ streets and improvements along Seashore
to Summit street. Park is expected to be re·
adybyJuly.
'Baby .Haker Wanted'
DEARBORN, Mich. CAP) -
After two miscarriages in 11
years of marriage, a Detroit·
area husband and wife have de-
cided to pay someone to have the
baby they can never have
together.
Over the past week, advertise·
ments in several Michigan col-
lege newspapers have sought a
''donor" to carry and deliver, for
a tee, the artificially inseminated
child of "Al and Betty," who wish
to remain anonymous. They said
they used the college press
because several large daily
papers refused to carry their ad.
An onl)' child, Betty s ays not
having children has been the
"biggest disappointment or my
life. When you are in love with
someone, it's Important lo give
that person a child."
A University Hospital doctor in
Ann Arbor has agreed to perform
the insemination, and several
pros~tive donors have already
F,.._PageAJ
MERGER •••
jobs elsewhere if the professional
school lost its status and was re·
duced lo a division of another school.
McGaugh said the plan has
been studied by the Educational
Policy, the Graduate Council and
the Budget Committees of the
academic senate.
Each of those com mittees sent
McGaugh a report stating they
were not in favor of the merger. he said.
The plan was also reviewed by
the executive committee of the
academic senate, the committee
of industrial associates and both
the graduate and undergraduate
councils.
None of those groups favored
the plan either, he said.
Although McGaugh ls s uggest-
ing that the merger be scrapped,
he said he will recommend a few
changes.
First, he said he would recom-
mend that an advisory board on
engineering be formed and thatit
report to him. Such a group
would consist of faculty mem-
bers from several related schools
and aJao some external mem·
bers, including at leut one from
the lnduatrlal community.
McGaugb said he would also
ask the engineering dean to work
on an academic plan for the
school which would take Into ac·
count that it wUI always be.a
small school. with no prospects
for 1reat expansion.
However, McGau1h said he
will allow the school to fill the
two full time teaching positions
that have been frozen and mlaht
be able to add more positions in
the f\ltw"e.
According to McGaugb, the
current system of eacb school re-
portinc to blm wlll also be
cbanaed. AU of the professional
schools will report to one person.
probably a dean, who will then
report to him. ,
McGau,eh said those schools
wlll include the en1lneerlng
school, the graduate school bf ad-
mlnlstratlon, the department or
~omputer teience1, and the office ot teacher tducatloo ... He said it m.labt Include the social ecoloay
department. too.
McOaUlh expJa.Lnecl that be Is
attemptln1 to retain the pro-
fetaJonal 1tatua of the en1tneer-
ln1 tebool, yet relate lt to the
othel' ac:lenc., on cam put.
Priaon Water Cot
SAN QUENTIN (AP) -Coci·
. victa wbo uHd to 1et c:lean llnen evel')' WMk Wiil be aleepbla on
tbe HIM Aieti for two 'Wjeb ••me~ water couervatlon m
tlie 88ft QMiatlla. PrtlOn l•uncll'1 iD
dnucllt!,.rcbed 11 a111i CoUn.tJ. .
inquired, asking fees ranging up
lo $5,000, including expenses, ac·
cording to the couple's attorney,
Noel Keane of Dearborn.
Keane said the action seems to
lack legaJ precedent in Michigan.
It may be the first time in the
slate that a couple have made a
public plea for a woman to sig~1 a
contract to bear their child, ne
said.
''The legal questions we are
cerned about is paying a fee to
compensate someone for doing
this as well as assuring the donor
follows through on giving the
child up after birth," Keane said.
Keane said he assumes Al and
Betty would formally adopt the
-" -
..... . .
.·
. .
,..._
' j
. ., .
now
child after its birth. But he said a
"legal vacuum" exists ln the
area.-
Michigan Atty. Gen. Frank
Kelley has refused to glve an opl·
nion on the matter.
"At first, it seemed bizarre and
far-out1 although we imagined It
had been done quieUy before,"
said Betty. "But all our friends
and family reacted nicely and
wished us well."
Al and Betty. a middle-class
couple in their mld·30a, contact·
ed Keane last September, after
several years of efforts to ar·
range an adoption failed and Al
still had a desire to "have my
own child."
''He CAI ) feels strongly about it
being his baby and at least th.is
way it will be his," Betty said.
The only restriction on a donor
is that s he be Caucasian,
although there are health and
other factors, Ke ane said.
A final selection has not yet
been made, he said, but a mar-
ried woman with children is un-
der consideration. Betty said she
prefers a donor who is already a
mother, so "natural maternal in·
stinct won't be a problem when it
comes time to give the baby to
us."
The couple say they will tell the
child, when it is older, that Betty
is not its real mother.
'.
you can · _
outwit the networks!
watch your favorite show while you record that program
you hate to miss ... sony betamax!t does it all!
What happens when your
favorite TV show Is on et the same time as your wile's or
your kids' faV<>rite TV show?
Or when the networl<s put two
great programs on at the aame
time? Somehow, you always
ml11 something. No more.
So ny's re vo lutionary
new TV record i ng
aystern-6etamax-..ecords
programs off one channel
while vou re watctung another
chant'lel. So whenever you
want. Just press a button and
see the s how you
reoord~he one y0u always
mlaMCI before!
I • t ,•: 9 ~ ~ l-
watching so you can see it
again as oftel'I as y0u ~ke. So.
suppoae you're watching a
great program and the phone
rings or company comer or the
sink overflows • • • Just PrtH
the "record" button. B"t what
II nobody·a home .•• ?
1 ~ .. diagonal Trinltron acreen.
with the same sharp. crlep
color whether y0u'r• watching
the actual show or a t~. You
can't tell the ~lffertncel ------·--=="' ~ ..... --~ -.
ttf•i1M ws:: .....
A VIDIO TAN UUAaT
llCOH WHIM HOIOD1"S Sound hard? It's not! You'lf
HOMI With Betamaice vou no Quickly see Bel1tnaX• le as
longer heve to choose e11y to operate as 1n audio
between your child's achool cassette reootder. And Just
play and a 9')eelll Proeram. like a cassen. recorder. you Because Betamax• hae an can use the blink cassettes
automatic timer y0u set Just over and over-we've got
like an alarm clock. It'll 11art extras right here In our TV
teping wheMver you want, deparnnent. But 1ome
...... .___ ....... ......,~~1 record up to an hoor and ahut ca .. ettea you'll want to kHp,
HCO•WMATTOUlll off. When )IOI.I get home, vour Progr•"1• Ilk• 0\1 moon
• ~ fi .,\ '
... WMAT YOU DOWT Ill t"*9 pn>gram It reactv. to p1ey 11nctlng or th• fl rat Sup«
Of course. e.tlml>t9 can also back! B"1 of all, you '" Bowl. And who knowt wt>at rnord the 1how you 're ewrythlng on Sony'i brilli.nt Will be on TV In ~to~
.,, ..... ~,..llMIJ!MllrD'9'1.,,,~l!R!MM'
I
17
o~ty.
I •
~ By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Of,,..,..,, 1"'"4 "-"
Although many city, school
and business officials in Orange
County are ordering employes lo .
ower thermostats to 6S degrees,
others are still considerJn1
whether to comply with an "or·
er" from the state Public
Utilities Commission <PUC>.
Thermostats ln county omces
remain set at 88 degrees.because
* •* *
no changes can be ~~tiated as soon u possible, officials said.
without approval from \he Coun-'•We are looldng at It today,
ty Board of supervisors, said • • said Bob Dunan, assistant city
Stan Davidson, 1~ounty main-manqer in Costa Mesa. ••we
tenanteconlfOl ofricer. want to make sure we don't trig·
Davidson said superviltOJ"S will 1er thebeatlnl system," hesald,
not be able to take any action un· referring to potential equipment
ti1 next Tuesday. problems the cooldown could
Most municipal offices cause. '
throughout the county already Tuesday PUC President
have been cooled to 6S degrees. Robert Batinovicb ordered all
Those that haven't plan to do so thermostats be set. at 6S degre~
durint lhe day, ~ at nlcht and
turned off when buildinc• are not in use.
However, PUC olficlala admit
the order is unenforceable and.
said it. ii a• voluntary 1esture
aimed at lowering consumption
to aJd Midwest. and Eut Coast.
residents who are 1ufferln1
through this winter's deep
freeie.
If followed, the restrictions
• would mean Calif4>1'1li.qa may
live "below the comfort level, ..
said PUC f'Nsidtnt Batinovlcb,
but the banta\ips wOl be ml.nor
com~ 1o Ot.b~ areas of the
country.
A randOm IUl'vey of South
County residents today revealed
most hotneowners are complying
with the tuc·s request.
Bud Hopp, plant opetaUons
director a1 Burrougb's Corpora·
Mexico
'
To Sell Co nrad \
Won't
tlon In Saddleback Valley, aald
the electronic components
manutaeturiD'1lrm bas lowend
tbermoetata to 65 de1reea. He
said all au-related equipment la
shut ~ at nl1bt and that tlle ·
company bu been on an enera
conservation. pro1ram for t.Iie
past two years. ~' School dlatrict ofrtclals seem
hesitant about lowering
<SeeoOoLER, Pa1e AZ>
Talk
·u.s. Gas
MEXICO GITY, Mexico <AP)
Mexico will help the United
tates fight the energy crisis by
selling 40 million cubic feel of ga&
a day to its northern neighbor at
urrent interstate prices,
To · OC Gra~d J ury
merican Emtia.s1y sources said
oday. It also offered to sell more
il.
Mexico will start the gas flow·
g to the United States Monday
r Tuesday and will also provide
,000 barrels of crude oil daily.
e sources said.
President Carter said Wednes·
ay night that Mexican Presi·
ent Jose Lopez Portillo offered
o.ilf ~li.t St.ff""'•
SILENT BEFORE JURY
Police lnfon:n•r Conrad
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of .. 0.llJ l"ltet Staff
Gene Conrad, a police in-
former·tumed political tycoon,
was on hand to testify before the
Orange County Grand Jury to-
day.
But testify he won't.
Before going into the jury room
in answer to a subpoena, <;onrad
said he will cite his first, fifth,
sixth, ninth and fourteenth
amendment rights and refuse to
testify.
Clutched in the burly 42-year·
old rags to riches police in-
former's hand was a wMllen
statement he planned to read to
the Jury. It said, in effect, that as long
as Assistant Pistrict Attorney
Michael Capizzi 1s involved in the
jury's probe into political cam·
paign financing, Gene Conrad
will not cooperate.
Conrad is a central figure in
the investigation into financing
of political campaigns in Orange
County last fall.
One way or another, he is
r:esponsible for pouring roughly
$48,000 into various political can·
didates' campaigns, including a
$30,000 loan to county Supervisor
Philip Anthony.
Wednesday at least rive people
involved in Conrad's political
machinations testified before the
jury.
Two witnesses are associated
with Conrad in his loan
brokerage firm, Pension Funds o help the United States In the
crisis caused by the extreme cold
winter, which has caused shut·
owns In industry because of fuel
hortages. Saddlehack 1' alley Water Use
Cut Ordered
SAL Closed
The rates Mexico will charge
or natural gas will vary from
l.90 lo $2.15 per British Thermal
Unit <BTU ), the e mbassy
sources said.
They said there was no fixed
rice for the crude oil but said it
'
would probably be the $•me
price paid fP!' the llrnlled exports
Mexico ~ke• to lb• Ualted g~ates. That price ii $12.65 per
rrel landed in Gulf Of :Mexico
rts.
Mexico also offered to lell to
e United States an additional
wo million barrels of cnlde a
day it Am•rican ships can be
ound to transport the oil. The
tanned 600,000 barrels daily will
transported in Mexican ships
r ships rented by the Mc!Xlcan
overnment. the sources said.
Mexico has been selling about
00,000 barrels of oil a day to the
nited States.
By iA'liUR KASPBR . ._.. .........
.. A ~l8dMlllte for the Saddleback
Valley l1oif.ted. Seil'61 Distrtct
Board of Education llas charged
that a publication 1ent to resi·
dents by current trustees was "a
political propaganda sheet paid
for at taxpayers' expense."
Juneann DeCasas, Obe or the 14
people seeking two available
trustee seats in the March elec-
tion, objected to the publication
and distribution of Spotlight, a
ne~letter sent to all district re·
sidents last month. She ma~e the
charges during the trustees' te·
• • gular meetine Wednesday. rvine Finn' II Tbt C~date asked the cost
-• --fOr prinWlg.,••~r. postage
ud Cliitribulion of the Dews.let· alue Eatirnale t.er she Said sbe: understood the
· newdeUer was malled to resi·
r _ _i _ • -•-J? dents of San Juan Capistrano and 1«..&el11~, Lacuna Niguel, which are not
By TOM BAKLEY Of ttll Dalty ...... Matf
Wall Street analyst Dowen
cCoy admitted Wednescaay in
Orange County Superior Court
at hi.I valuation of the Irvine
Company might be understated
by as much as $50 million.
Closely questioned by attorney
Howard Friedm a n , who
represents Irvine heiress Joan
Irvine Smith, the consultant to
Wied that his assessment was
mpUed before the company put.
lit• current ll.e-year develop-
iment Dian Into effect.
Ancf be agreed with l'rtedman
at Irvine company shares will
be worth much more tban the
present estimated as.so eacb it
the comf.leted ftft.year plu that
expires n 1981 is as aucceaatul as
predicted.
McCoy pralRd the Irvine Com-
<See .IOAN, PaaeAJ)
with.in tlle dlstrict, and asked
who made this mistake.
Mrs. DeCaus also asked why
. collective bargaining informa-
tion was included in the newsl~
ter when the same in!ormaf.lo"!
was included in newspaper ad·
VertiaeDU!IJts bought by the dis· trlct.
Loa Young. board president,
refused ~ take time from the
buain.. meeting to resPond to
the charges. She aaid, however,
the llaue would be "•sen~''
and the answers 1lven dw:tna the
trust.ea• next reawar m~Unt. But one resident. ElUa Henaoo,
def ended the newsletter. Con-
' lett~ ~re is "a lot of mis·
reportlnl ln newspapers," he
said tbe publicaUon was the only
way he eould 1et the facts. He en·
couraged trustees to continue
with the newsletter.
The newsletter was fi rst pro-
posed by Mrs. Young last spring.
Although other editions bad been
drafted, the newsletter wasn't.
approved by trustees until
around Christmas Um~. Trustees
(See PROTEST, Page AZ>
OAKLAND <AP) -
Directors of the East Bay's
water su pply have
declared a "state of tn.t,er.c~" ! v t9 Uh StePr • uce use by ohe·fou .
The East Bay Munlclpal
Utility District, which
serves most ot Alableda
County and part of Contra
Costa, acted Wednesday night after a 3 ~·bour
public hearine.
The board agreed to
meet Tuesday night to de·
cide how to implement the
25 percent cut in water con·
sumption.
A Laguna Beach savin1s and
loan mysteriously clo1~ and
locked its doors at mid-day Wed-
nesday prompting police to try
and get inside in a full.gcale rob-
bery alert.
Only after bursting into the
World Savings and Loan with
guns draWll did authorities and
b ra n 'ch Manager Patty
Dornhauser -who had been al·
tending a business meeting away
from the firm-learn a medk~
For Childless ~ouple •
·-··'B-aby . Ma~er.~ SoUght
DEARBORN, Mich. CAP> -
After two mis~arrjages in 11
years of marriage, a Detroit·
area husband and wife have de·
clded to pay someone to have the
baby they can never have
together.
Over the past week, advertise·
· ments in several Michigan col· l~ge newspapers have sought a
"doDcr" to carry and deliver, for
a fee, the artificially inseminated
child or" Al and Betty." who wish
1» rt!main abonYb'lous. They said
they uaed the college press
because •~veral l•ree daily
papera refused to carry their ad.
An only child, Betty aays not
bavJn1 children llu been the
•4btiiest cliaappolntment of my
life. ~ y~ are lo love with
someone. it's important to give
thai penon a cblkl."
A Unlv'ralty Hospital doctor in
Ann ArbOr ha •1reed to perform
the lnaemlnttlon. and several
proapeq:tve donors have already
inquinicl, •kine tea ranging up
to *5,000, lDcludinl expenaa, ac·
cordin.I to tbe eouple'a attorney,
Noel KeaneOI I>Mrborn.
Keane said the action seems to
lack lecal precedent. In Michigan,
It may w tile finl time in the
state U.. a ~le have made a
publicJlft fw •woman to lip a
contract to bear tbiir child. be ·
aatd. flf,J'. !W
"The legal questions we are
cerned about Is paying a fee to
compensate someone for doing
this as well as assuring the donor
follows throueh on giving the
child up alter birth,•' Keane said.
Keane said he usumea Al and
Betty would formally adopt the
child after its birth. But. be said a
"legal vacuum" exist.a in the
area.
Michigan Atty. Gen. Frank
Kelley bas refused lo give an opi-
nion on the matter .
''At first, itseemed bizarre and
far·out, aiµiougb we imaained it
had been done quieUy before,"
said Betty. "But all our friends
and family reacted nicely and
wished us well."
Al and Betty, a middle·class .
couple iD their mid·30i, .contact-
ed Keane last September, after
several years or ellorts to ar·
range an adoption failed and Al
still had a deslre to "have my·
ownchitd;"
"He (Al> feelJ strongly about It
being h.ia baby and at least this
way it wHl be his," Betty sald.
The only restriction on a donor <See BABY, Pa&e AZ)
'fZ hBt' C.•ange
FDR'• &Jn ~Recalh ~
Prealaertt Jimmy Carter's revival of the nre.tcte cbat
Wednesday lilgbt •u not completely ii teeplnt With tbe
tr adltlon befun du ting t~e Depression l>Y Prell dent
Fraflklin Roolevelt. (Related Story Pit• A4.)
FDR'• elaest son, James, a Newport Bu~ relldent,
aatd tMat he noticed one alpiflcant ~ange during C.ner'a•
"chat" witlttbe nation Wednesday night -the fire lA the fltflt>laoe WU lit. '
of Apierica of Irvine.
Both Harold Morr and Donald
Eckhart are shown as $2,500 con-
tributors to Anthony's camp~.
Also locked behind closed
doors with the grand jury was
Robert LanFranco, owner of·
Amco Builders Supply Company
of Cost.a Mesa.
Amco is shown on Anthony's
campaign disclosure ~statement
as a $10,000 donor. However, it
was revealdd two weeks aro that
(See CONRAD, Pase A!) .
emergency caused the aballlf..:
closing .
Police were called by a cit!zen
who reported the branch omce
was clcxsed wtien it. ordinarily would be open. '
Police found a note on the door
saying the bank had closed "due'.
to an emergency.I'
Mrs. Dornhauser was sum-
moned from her business m~t·
ing and as five officers stood with
drawn guns, she unlocked the
door .
Officers charg~ in and found
. . . an empty building but •no
bound and g!!_iged ~IJ\P.19.ns, JJ'd no ril1eC1 cub drawers or otlier
signs Qf a robbery. •
As dozens of curious onlookers
gawked outside th~ building at
Forest Avenue and Sowth Coast
Highway and pressed their noses
against the glass windows, ol-
fic era waited a1ain as the manager opened the vault in
case employes bad been Jocked
inside it. by a bandit.
They hadn't been.
After checking that everythiq
was In ita place and decidina .~
robbery ~ad occurred, police U.
John Zelko withdrew his men,
leaving it to the bank manager.to
rind out why her employea haft
left.
Mrs. Domhauaer would make
no comment. this morninlJ'.'Otbtt
employes, however, Wel'e
telling customers that an
employe was hospitalized wt~ an emergency medical pl'Oblettt.
The condition of the emplbie
wun~known. ..
The bank reopened at al>ool
3:30 p.m., after being closed.for '
more than two houn.
Romantic
lfb.ildeys
Featured
til DAILYPILOT SB
Ganer,'s
& Pro~am
'Pruaent·
# •
WASHINGTON <AP> -
Chairman.Artbur F, Burm ot the
Federal Reserve Board said to-
d ay President Carter's '31 billion
economJc pro~ram la an "lneffl· { dent w ay to stimulate tbe
economy:· but the board wllJ
eooperale to create Jobi and
speed economic growth in lf117.
Burns, a 72-year-0ld holdover
a ppointee of the Nixon ad·
ministrat.loo, mixed both praise ·
and cpUclsm of the Carter pro-
gram before the Houae Banklna
Co~mlUee, sayinc he thinks
Carter came up with a "prudent"
pro1ram coMldering the advice he waa gett,i.ng.
"All in all ... I think be ha.s
done quite admirJbly," Burns
told the committee.
But he a!so said he didn't think
such a program is needed,
especially the $50 rebates on 1976
taxes which the Carter ad-
ministration hopes to dispense
this Spring.
''The Treasury doesn't have
this money. The Treasury has to
go out and borrow it," Burns
said. "It's not a good habit ...
for our country to get into.··
Nevertheless, Burns said the
money-managing Federal
Reserve Board is malntalninc Its
target for basic growtn in the
money supply for 1977 at the level
the Carter administration thinks
is necessary to support its pro-
grams.
Bums' statement to the com-
mittee was his first public reac·
tion to the Carter economic pro-
gra m being de b ated by
Congress. While Burns doesn't
need to approve Carter's plan for
it to become eCfective, the
board's money growth policies
will be a major key toward the
program's success, if Congress
enacts tt.
E'rowaPageAJ
CONRAD. • •
the donation was actually made
through a cashier's check drawn
by Conrad.
Today, Conrad said he has
amended for the second time hi s
major political donor's state-
ment lo show.the Amco contribu·
ti on a. coming from him.
The other two witnesses known
to testify Wednesday were John
Batben and Martin Kirschner.
both of them $2,500 contributors
to Anthony.
The newly elected county
supervisor amended his own dis-
closure statement this week to
show the Conrad political invest-
ment as well as loans received
from Fullerton attorney Michael
Remington.
Remington is on call today for
an appearance before the JUry as
is Conrad aide Loran Norton.
Conrad said he was employed
by the Orange County Distnct
Attorney's offi ce from 1972
through 1974 as an undercover
agent. However, officials in the
oflice classify him as a paid in -
former.
In 1975 he was convicted of a
felony cnmc and sentenced to
three yean probation.
In the past year his story has
heen one of rags to riches, from a
threatened foreclosure on his
home In Anaheim to heavy cash
contributions to political cam-
paign11.
He claims his sudden fortune i~
the result of enriching real estate
loans brokered lhrouab Pension
Funds ol America.
The company's activities are
under Investigation by a federal
i;!rand jury as weU as the subject
of vanous civil suils filed in
Orange County.
At Conrad's side as he wailed
lo enter t.be grand jW')' room was
his attorney, Ric bard DoaaJd.
On Conrad's behalf. Donald
last month filed a $170 miWon
lawsuit against t.be district at-
torney's office tb•t claimed
Conrad's civil ri&bts bad been
violated through a Hries of al-
Je1ed wire tapplDI incidents.
DAILY PILOT
~
A" WI"""'"°
GRUDGING COOPERATION
Fedefal Reurve'a Burns
School$'
Merger
Assailed
By IULARY KAYE
0t t11e o.i1, ,.i.t si.tt
UCI Vice Chancellor James
McGaugh recommended today
that the propc>sed merger or the
engineering school and the
physical sciences school be
scrapped.
McGaugb made his recom-
mendation at a session of the
Academic Senate.
The vice chancellor comment-
ed (his morning that be bad seen
.. no strong support" for the sug~
gested merger from any j>f 1.he1 campus committees thatt.Studied'
the plan. )
McGaugh announced last Oc·
tober that he was considenng
making the professional school of
engineering a division within the .
school of physical sciences.
Al that time, McGaugh said he
believed it would be the best way
to preserve the s mall school and
integrate it with the other related
sciences on campus.
However, he received initial
protest from both engineering
faculty and students. Some of the
faculty said they would look for
jobs elsewhere if the professional
school lost its status and was re-
duced to a division of another
school.
Police Jail Teen
ID Shoplifting
Orange County sheriff's of.
ficers jailed a Laguna Hills man
on burglary charges after he al·
legedly look stereo cassette tapes
from a local store without paymg
for them.
Deputies identified the suspect
as John Kelly Martin, 18. of 25212
Stockport Drive. He was arrest-
t>d as he left the J .C. Penney
store in the Laguna Hills Mall
with tapes valued at $117.80.
Viejo Home Looted
Of Stereo, Jewelry
Stereo equipment, jewelrv.
television sets and a camera
comprised the haul or buralars
who broke into a Mission Viejo
home while the occupants were
visiting a nearby house.
Oran1e County sheriff's of-
ficers said the break-in was re-
ported by Anthony Gerrard
Pizzuco, 24. of 23851 Lindley St.
Burglars who entered bis home
vta a rear slldlni door carried off
property valued at $1,007.
By fte AaoelaMd PrM
New supplies ot natural 1u
are already fiowlne east, but the
effects ol lbe bitter winter Of t.m
are tpttadln1 •ven faster.
Layoffs, for exampl .. have
b•aun reachinf into New
En&land -an area spared unW
now because it uses little natural
'"· In Ohio and western New York
state, two of the hardeat-bJt
areu, calm weather and sllchUy
ri1ln1 temperatures Wednesday
gave somethlne of a respite to
clean-up crews and river pilots
trying to deliver fuel. (Related
photo, A4)
But a new snowstorm, moving
through the West, promised
STRIPPERS GO ON DESPITE COLD-A3
more trouble as it headed for the
Great Lakes. (Related story, AO
And with an estimated 75 dead
and two million already tem·
porarUy out of work nationwide,
officials in Pennsylvania and
New York expressed yet another
worry: they fear maJor floods
this spring if a quick thaw sud·
denly melts the huge amounts of
snow on the ground.
President Carter signed
emergency legislation approved
by Congress Wednesday giving
him the power to declare na-
tional or regional natural gas
emergencies and to order gas
moved from state to slate lo keep
homes and hospitals warm -but
not to reopen shutdown plants.
The legislation also a llows in -
terstate pipelines to temporarily
buy gas in some cases at higher
prices prevailing in intrastate
markets.
Even before the signing, one or
the biggest interstate natural gas
pipelines, Transcontinental Gas
Pipe Line Corp., reported it com-
pleted arrangements to obtain
about 130 million cubic feet of gas
a day fr om the Pacific
Northwest. Some of the gas was
already moving toward Texas,
where Transcontinental 1s based,
by Wednesday night.
But gas moves at only 15 miles
an hour in pipelines. so the pro-
spect of quick relief for curtailed
areas was slight.
Gas companies served by the
Columbia Gas Transm ission
Corp. in Ohio were told to extend
maintenance level curtailments
to industrial and commercial
Fro91P~AJ
BABY •.•
1s that she be Caucas ian.
although there are health and
other factors. Keane said.
A final selection has not yet
been made, he s aid, but a mar·
ried woman wit h children is un-
der consideration. Betty said she
prefers a donor who is already a
mother, so ··natural maternal in·
slinct won 't be a problem when it
comes time to give the baby to
us."
The couple say they will tell the
child, when it is older, that Betty
1s not its real mother.
Costly Vase Stolen
An Oriental vase valued by the
victim at ~ has been stolen
from an El Toro hom e by a
burglar who forced the front door
to gain entry. Orange County
sheriff's officers said the theft
was reported by private in·
vestlgator Douglas Mcintosh, 45,
or 22572 Lake Forest Drive. He
was asleep at the time of the
break·tn.
Van Takes Plunge
l!o Avert HB Wreck
mander observed late Wednes· day after the mopup.
·•And the people just moved out
here from Alabama and bought
the place two weeks ••o-'• He aaid the. new owners, who
were not ldenUfied, mentioned
s omething about crazy
CalJfomla dJvera aa they numbly
surv•yed their once-beautiful
back yard patio and pool area.
But police 1tre11ed today,
..however, that Witt wu not to
blame, but only took evallve ac-
tion to avoid another certain col·
llston before le»lnl control of hl•
vehicle.
Wtti 1ustained minor hlJurle.
lntheaUocte.
lnvetU1atan aald another
motorist and ac:ctctent wlt.neu,
John R. Brock 21, of 19322 Even-
lnc Rlll DMve. Runtlncton
Beach, Q\llckl.Y stopped his car
and dori lD'° &he pool to aid Witt.
Tbt van, it.a troat t.nd buW ln
but ltl.D wtth onlY wbat police termed modetate dama1e. wu nacued bf crane.
co1.tomen for at leut another
week.
Federal Pcrwer Commwioner
Jobn H. Holloman DI .. id many
Of the pleat cJosin.11 eou.ld lut
unUl 1pnn1 -and could be
followed by other cloltn11 this
summer.
In BufTalo, N. Y ., where
1 oldlers and National
Guardsmen are help1n1 the clt.y
dig out from a serlea of banh
atorma, the widening eff ecta of
the criaia were illustrated by a
Jamup ol railroad boxcars una·
ble to move.
•The backloc in Buffalo spread
m isery as far as Framlneham,
Mass., where General Motors
closed an assembly pl•nt for two
days, idling 3,200 persons.
Feed grain dealers in
Massachusetts also complained
of critical shortages, and one of·
ficial suggested rationing feed to
livestock -which lo tum could
cut the state's e1g production.
E',....PageAJ
PROTEST. •
decided to hold off mailing the
n ewsletter until after the
holidays.
Donald Ames. assistant
superintendent, said today that
the total cost of Spotlight was
$1 ,343, or about five cents Cor
each or the 27,000'copies mailed.
Distribution of the newsletter
was done by the Pennysaver.
Because the firm's malling ls
done by geographical sections,
he said, some were sent lo
Laguna Niguel r esidents. He said
the distributors "tell us that will
never happen again."
Ames also noted that Sad-
dleback is not the only school dis-
trict sending out a newsletter.
The Tustin Unified School Dis-
trict sent out a similar newsletter
at the same time, he said.
District officials plan to dis·
tribute a newsletter quarterly.
-. ~--,. -....
/;--,.,,. ..
.. ,,
-.r
/ .·
.·
' ..
' . . ./ . .,. .... ' :
now
Banker Gone
VISTA (AP) -Officials of Vlata N onal Bank •
say lt.1 $1.25 million ln ca.pita! is intact, althoqh bank
president Charles Wenz is missing.
"We have no word indicatin& anythlnl like kid·
naplng, nor any other information on where he went
after be left the bank about 8:30 Monday," said C.
Robert Allen, board chairman of the bank formed six
monthsaao.
Allen said an audit showed no shortages or ir-
regularities.
Sheriff's officers a nd the wife and daughter of
Wenz, 44, said they have no idea where he may be.
-.,flltl!el'l~>eculated getting the new bank started
placed Wenz er heavy business stress.
JOAN •••
pany holdlngs now being sought
by two financial lnterests as a
"top-fiJght offering that is among
the best in the United States to-day."
McCoy said the current contest
between two bidders -Mobil OU
Company and a consortium
beaded by Wall Street financier
Charles Allen and Detroit de·
veloper Alfred Taubman -la
drawing international attention,
particularly in financial circles.
The ruture owner of the Irvine
Company will not be decided un-
til Jud•e James F. Judge rules
on the merits of the lawsuit filed
two years aao by Mrs. Smith.
Mn. Smith took le1al action to
halt the sale of the foundation's
interests to Mobil for a figure
that was then determined at $200
million.
Mrs. Smith supports the bid of
the Allen-Taubman group, which
biked Its off er to $282. 7 million
laat week. Mobil, favored by the
foundation and the Irvine Com·
pany, baa offered $281.9 million.
The Federal Tax Reform Act
of 1969 compels the foundation to
dispose of its 54.S percent con·
trolling interest in the Irvine
Company by 1983.
McCoy's responses to Fried·
man's intensive questioning in-
dicated Wednesday that Mobil is
a fi rm favorite in the race to take
over operations of the Irvine
Company.
E',....PageAI
COOLER •••
classroom temperatures. While
thermostats have been lowered
in the Caplitrano Unified and
Laguna Beach Unlfled Districts,
officials for the Newport-Mesa
district said thermostats would
remain at 70 degrees inside
buildings and between 76 and 82
in swimming pools unless the dis-
trict is forced to comply with
PUC requests.
The PUC hu requested that all
"luxury" uses of natural gas be
halted.
A spokes man for Laguna
Beach schools said the district
will maintain present swimming
pool temperatures until the coun-
ty Health Department provides
information on what e lfetts
lowered temperatures could
have on swimmers.
In Huntington Beach school of·
ficials said teachers are being
"encouraged" but not forced to
reduce temperatures.
A spok~man at UC Irvine said
campus buildings switched from
natural gas lo oil heating as of
Dec. 1, 1976 due to culback.s in gas supplies.
Orville Reinhardt, physical
plant adminislrator at the col-
lege said supplies were cut off
(8,000 cubic feet per day) and 1as
company officiab predict no re-
sumption or supplies until 1980.
you can _
outwit the networks!
watch your favorite show while you record that program .
you hate to miss .•. sony betamax:E does it allt
What hapoena when your
favorite 'TV lhOW la on at the
same tlrnt u your wife'a or
yo11r lddt' hNOrfte TV show?
Or when the netwof'M pot two
great ~on at the same
time? Somehow. you alwava mill M>methlng. N9 more.
Sonv '• revoiutlonarv
new TV r ecording
1y1ttm-8etamax.,._records
programs off one ch1nnel
while you•,. wetct\lno another
channel. So whenever you
want. tuet Ol*I a button and
••• tt\e a how you
recordtd-4he one ~ always mllHd before! --
" I . ; . t•· \ '
~--· ~---
19-dllOQNI Trfnltron tCNtn.
with the same sharp. crisp
color ~ether you're watching
the actual show °' a •:r· You can't tell the difference
•
TRANSACTIONS
Thuf'!d!y. F!!!N!ry s, 1m $ OAILY.._OT
II NlaOe Flt• ...
Domestic Jobs~~ .. ,. ..
J,inked to Cost~~ f'"Y•.
By MIL TON llOSBOWITZ ~':".
Which would you rather have -lowe?' prices or m.-...
manutactw1.ndobeCorA.mptcanworkers! ~.
It bu come dOWD to that lD 1 number of fields u lm~
have soared, cauatot U.S. plant.a to abut down OT red~
empl~t. .~ ........
A CASE IN POINT IS 1118 SBOE lndustry, wh . :
employment bu declined from 240,000 to 1968 to 1'10,000 to:-
day. Nearly 400 mlWon pairs of aboes marched into the U~'
ed States last year, up one·third overt.be lmports ol 1915. 'fhe-.
biggest shipments came from Taiwan. Italy. Spam, BrelU •
and South Korea. ~
Resl>ondinltopJeuolprotecUonfromthedomesticabar
loduatry. the U.S. lnternatkmal Trade Commission bas
recomftMIOdec1 that import d\ltles be raised. U President
Carter accepts that recommendation. you will be conftoawt\
wllb blghershoeprices. :,~.~
Products made •"
abroad have achieved ~ .. ~'·
some slgnilicant market ••"" rv7 .....
penetrations. In shoes, Tree the fOl'eign cut ls ap.
proaching SO percent. In
sweaters. it is SO per·
cent. In typewriters. It's 30 percent. In radios. It's abov~
percent. In automobiles. it's IS percent.
EXCLUDING PETROLEUM IMPOllTS, which ba_ve
soared out of sight because of the lethal price hikee.
American purchases of imported products have 1one (tq~"
$23 billion in 1966 to $8$ billion in l.976. To be aure. our own-.
ports also have skyrocketed over that same period, but.:'-.
significant ohunk of OU?' sales tootber countries la represeD
ecf by farm products -and anlncreaae lo tbat aectordoes npt producemanynew jobs.
The te1evialoo set, a fixture in vlrtually every American
home. baa become tbe focal polot ol a raging controversy in
the foreign trade area. ·
Black·and-wblte TV receivers made abroad, prlodpally
lo Taiwan. have captured more than 10 percent of tbe U.S.
market. U.S. manufacturers were ready to concede the -
black·and-wbite market to the imports but they were not pre-
pared to give up tbe much more prtfttable color segment.-
and that 'a what ls begloninttohappen. ,_, ..
IN ms. 001.A)R SETS MADE ABBOAD compri~~~
about IS percent of the U.S. market. Last year their markt!L..
share shot up to 40 percent. About 90 ~nt of the lm~~
are coming from Japan.
Zenith, the leadlog U.S. producer of color sets, bas~
cused the Japanese of .. predatory" prlctna, me.mo, thaL
theypricetheirsetsbeloworclosetocostinordertotakeover
tbla market. Zenith estimates that over the put slx yean':
100,000 American Jobs have been lost lo the manufacturing of.-'
TV andstereosets. ~ .. :-~
Coming Glass, a leading maker of television tubes, ber· ..
jolned Zenith in this protest. Tbe company ha.a asked ~~
quotas on color TV imports. Otberwiae, warns Cornlog, tlk: ,
U .s. television lndustry la doomed. · '"
THE JAPANESE DON-r QUITE SEE it that way. Sow
is one of the leading Japanese ma.ken of TV sets, doing mot'\
than half of its business outside lta home country. Sony~~.
chairman, Akio Morita, baa defended the company's expoa....:
as follows: ;--:
"We spend a lot of Ume and money to develop the bel-'.
products for the American market. We work bard to find au-
the designs and features the customer wants. We don't tak-...
three-hour lunch breaks here.•·
~esGo(Jp
Grocery Costs /
Aid to· Chills ...
··~
BJ Tlae Aaodated Preu .
Bigger grocery bills are sendint shivers up and dos
the spines of consumers. An Associated Press mark• "
basket survey shows supermarket prices went up tu. .
month. with most of the boosts aff ectina food products. ..
The AP drew up a random llst of IS commonl
purchased food and nonfood items, checked the price at oil -
supermarket in each of 13 cities oo Karch 1, 1973, and ha
rechecked oo or about tbe.startof each succeeding month.
Among the latest flod.ings:
-mE MA8KETBASK.ET BILL inC'reased d~
J anuary at cbeckllst at.ores in 10 survey citJes. The averaa
riae was 4 percent. The bill decreased at checklist stJrJO,J·
two cities, down an average aeven·tentbs of a pe~~ ,.
wu uncbanled an oil·~
city. A 13-city aver a@ " ( J of the marketbasll:"t" "~~f1'HE'D bill• at the cbecklir ~l lf~ JU£1R 1tore1 ahowed an 1.1
-----------.. crease of a percent lib-· month. ·
-Marketbaakf bills at checkli!t stores In 12 cltles were higher this Feb.
than a year ago. The average increase was 9.4 percent. 11
only exception was Chicago, where coffee, respon.slble ft
much of the price boost elsewhere, was unavailable at U
chec klisl store in the requested size and brand and thereto:
could not be included ln the total.
-Almost allot the increases occurred at food counten
-111E ITEMS MOST FllEQUENTLY ~Gin pric
were pork chops, orange juice. coffee and eua. Coffee wr
more than $3 a pound ln two cities.
Pork pricea had been declinioi sharply recent!·
renectint increqed supplies ot bogs at the market. 11
Agriculture Department reported recently, however. lb
prices paid to farmers for their hogs increased from Dee. . ·
to Jan. IS.
Beef supplies are sWJ adequaf.et beJplna bold do•
prices. But industry and aovemment ottlciala warn tbat cr
tJemen have been gradually cutllnJ back their herds, mea.
lng lesa beef in the comin1 months and IUiher pJ1ces.
mE AMEmCAN MEAT INS'ITl'UTE 8BPO&Ta ~
that a survey of 23 m~r cauJo-ftedina states showed Ur"'
the number or anlmab on feed, betn1 fattened for mar)(( .
was 3 percent lower Jan. l than ft wu a year a10. Rancbe ~
are expected to senct-4 pttcent fewer caUle to market in tl ••
first quarter of this year \han they did a year aco. ~.~
-There ls m~ bad news ~ad. Tbe abno.rmallY ca..!.
weather is expecttd to add bW1ons to footl bllla. Flori •
citrus growers are 1Ull t.rylDC to total the damaae from frit ·, and t.b8 latest AP aurve.y sbOwed prieee for frozen orur.,,.
JUice CODC«!tr.U. alreaCIY have 1Wtec:t rtslq at cbec~
1tortU11 •Ix dUe.. • No attempt .. ., made to ~O the AP il.lr"\'eY · acco~ify to popuJatloo dens">' OI' ln la'mJ of what percc .
of a f '• ectuaJ srocery outl«Y eadl l~m repreMGta. -
n'£l(8 ON THE CBEaoJST UB CtiOPPed cbue"'!
center cut port cti0p9, froaen oranie Jwce COQOeQlrate. fee , ~ towe!a, butt~r. Grade-A rMdhrm Wblte tQ..;
crumy peanut butter. laundij cletSJent.. fabric ~
tom• uuce, ehocolat. cbip c.'Oc*MI, milk. lriDktmt&
and O'UIU1a1ed •.uiar. Cidee _cbeict~ ant Loi Aaleltl' Al~UI N •••
Atta.ma. Oa.· BoNn· Cblcqo; ~~-·~; Mlam•
New Yorki NllCl;;r;hia ; ~; ~t LU• atJ.,.
Se•Ulo.