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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-11-30 - Orange Coast Pilot--, ' . Police Unionizing . F;a~es Coast Test . . . _.; DJIDERJClt BalOEJO:Jll . • ..... ,"* .... Its Teanuttn·backed police of. ficen. .. ,l,lt\\ ..... , •• ,. employe1 -•aid the union welcomes the battle. tual recruitment of, pnllce ol· !leers u f111l·Oed1ed union mtm· bera. Tbe .,...., .. of !be Toan.ii.en ·ua.1 ... In orcaDl•lnc ........ . forcement • f er1onnel hrou,-hout ~lfornlil In part-wnt bln&e on the outcome or an upcoming tecal battle between the clt1 of San Qemente and sa.os~•ttt. Al-yrtor tbe llDlca will ap-pear In Oranae CO\lllly ~or Court Thursday aeethit a writ of mandate to squub a cit)t resotu. , tloo barriq pdllca officers INm ~or partldpallnc In any or- 1anbaUoa tbaf mi1bt affect their performance durln& a labor db- pute. ...... The re.aolutl91t, Qdainally adopt"!! by the <ity council In Oc- tober 1970, was reaffirmed Just yya flter wlice '~ an- nqu~ced they trad staned a . . : SUNDAY - repr11M:atloa coetiact ~ tbl lateraatloaal Brot:berhood of. Teamllttt. . Saa Clemente Jllllice o111 .... a.re amona Jaw enforcement penoaaol In 11 ~ c\tleo and eouatles t6~ baft llped repreaentaUou tontncta With !be Team~ten In !be put "ar. Under 1ucb coa1r-. iitfteers do not bolon& to. Iba union .... membora. Ratber, tlley emplO)"' the uni'!" to ··-them In • . 1alar1 ae1ollatlon1 with mena,.meat. In San Qernente, alllcen pay 111> r.;-t ol tboir monthly income ;J:tl; contract. Tbe Saa Clemente Qty Cowl· _ell'• c...U•••• ol tile ccatr..i .)ialds. matttbaD Paulnc Interest fD !be Tea1111ier1> -and dtlOI .ud, <,0uaUu. thtOl!llboul the --_,atcbard-Caatl•~ research dltMt6r f0t T•amllera Local 111 "-Ille dlvlalon foimed lw publlo U the Team1ten Union wlna the cue -and the dttlaion i• 1111lllned I• appeals -tbe union will hl•e won a m~ victory tn its overt effort to organize police ofllcera. A win for the. Teamsten means tbat dUes would be bard preaed to enforce resolutions like San aemente•a. ~ -- ()n(!e representation rontracts ar• permitted, It Ollly will be a matter ol Ume before the union moves into a 1econd phase -af'- ''There'• no que1Uoo about tt, .-. said CuUe when aaked If tho un- ion would Ilk• to orpnile police omc...1 u cud·carrJIDI niem· bon. CUtle pol~ted out tbat 11!9 un· Ion clalma lh'emea In 25 jUrildlo· tiono -lneludln1 the dt1 of Leguaa Bnch -•• members. The effort to orsanbe liremen beaan three years aco. <See POLICE, hp .Ul I VOL. 68, NO. 334, 8 SECTIONS, 90 PAGE~-OR'ANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA' ·' ~ SUNOAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1975 lill .... ;.;.;...,;,..;..;;.;,.;;,;;;,;..;~~;....;.;.;.;.;~i!iil!ll ...... ..;;.;.;~,;,;,;;,.;;,;~,;,.;.;,.;.;;;~-.;;.;,;~·,:;,; .. ""!~--.... ,.. .................. ;.. .................................. .,,, lWENTY·FIVE CENTS ,. 1 . ~ ~ ~ .. •-- Slihday ·Driving Out? SACRAMENTO <AP) - Emergency energy shortage measures th.at include a ban on Sunday driving will be con- sidered by the state Energy Com- mission in public hearings start- ing Monday. The commission's staff has drafted an Energy Shortage Con· tingency Plan that also includes · cutbacks in lighting for com- mercial advertising. Hearings on the proposal are scheduled Monday in Sacramen- to, Thursday in San Diego and Friday in Los Angeles. The commi·ssion is scheduled to adopt the plan at a Dec. 23 meeting in· Sacramento and pre· sent it to the gOvernor and legislature by Jan. 7. An emergency ban on Sunday driving would rec,\uce. gasoline use by 12 percent, acCording to ·the plan. The annual demand on electricity in California would be cut by 416.5 million kilowatt- bours if stores· and advertisers would turn off lights in show win- dows, billboards and electric signs. , "In these areas, compliance -will come from a sense of com- mon purpose and the pressure of peers. If they believe the emergency measures fair, Californians will accept them,·' the draft report said. ''Enforcement should be directed against flagrant violators.·· The proposal also states that electric utilities could reduce natural gas usage by 90 percent by switching to another fuel, such as residual oil. "Although switching fuel saves no energy, it does save fuel in short supply.'' , . . ~· ' '.,, ;--' t~· \ + •. ·1'""" ~ -• -• . ' UPI Te ....... CAMPING TRIP VICTIM.HE~D FAgM HELICOPTER Jon Garttoon,1111, A~lled to Ambidancle 111'11emet " -.. \." . Ford Che~ks Pipeline Alaska First Stop En Route io ·P~Tdng FAIRBANKS, Alaska !AP) - President Ford inspected icicle· laden portions of the trans- Alaskan pipeline Satw-day after telling ;\ flag-wavir'lg crowd the United States and China have found common ground in pledg- ing "peace in Asia is basic." Making the first stop of his 10-day journey to Peking and other Far East cities, Ford told about 5,000 persons, many wav- ing American flags, inside a SDOW·COVered hangar at Eielson Air Force Base: ''1bere are fundamental dif-. ferences between tbe American and Chinese societies. We mia,y not agree on some issues. But we have found an important area of common ground. ''OUr mutual pledge to peace in • A COUPLE Of! ' -Henry Kl1il-• Asia is basic. So is,our pledge of noninterference in the internal affairs of otbe"'rs. l will seek to stren,i.hen these-understandings and to further advance a rela· tionship based upon mutual respeet and mutual accoolmoda- tion." . Wearing overcoats, baid hats and knee-high Arctic boots, Ford, his daughter Susan, Secretary of State Henry A. Kiss- inger and Federal Energy Ad- ministrator Frank Zarb went by car to a pipeline pump station for ... a $)-minute tour. It was Ford's first visit to the pipeline, although be bas·been to Alaska twice belore. The temperature was about 10 degrees above zero. Ford and his party at times trekked through l'h feet ol snow to inspect tanks, buildings and elev.ated sect.ions of the $6-billlon!plos pipeline, scheduled for completion in 1977. Ford hopes the pipeline will provide 2 million. barrels of oil daily by 1980, saving the United states at least ~ milliqn daily, ·at today'• prices, in payments foi-foreignoil. .. , Security was tight. Ford was surrounded by Secret Service agents and Alaska state patrolmen and a helicopter hov- ered.overhead. Alter going on to Anchorage for an overnight stop, Focd, wife Betty, Sulan•and Kissin&er were to leave today for Peking via a briefrefuelingstopnearTokyo. · American officials have cau- tioned in adv11nce that no spec- tacular announcements should bo' expected from Ford's four. day visit to the Cliinese capital. There is no evidence of Jan early solutian to dif(erenc.es fbetween the two countries over the status ol Taiwan, a key to the establish- ment Of formal diplomatic ties. Moreover, recent awiese 'com- mentaries indicated -uqeainess In Peltjnf qver Ford's quist for d«ente with the Soviet ~niOn. Rescuers Airlift 9 Snowbound Youths llJ GARY GRANVILLE ••o.n,,.......,. Nine Orange County youths pluc·ked Crom a snowbound mountain meadow Saturday morning by a Marine rescue helicopter bad spent Frid•y night huddled toget.bh in a two- man tent in near-blizzard condi- tions north of Idyllwild. dergoing treatment tor frostbite and exposure at Hemet Valley Community Hospital. of the boys on snowshoes at d\ISk Frid•Y· ••wind a~d snow conditions were SO bad rthat it took U1 five hours to pack up a trail that can normally be covered in an hour,'' said rescue unit coordinator Walter Walker. Temperatures in ttie Tabquitz: Meadow area where the boys were 1tranded dipped to 10 degrees during their tong ordeal and winds up to 50 miles an hour whipped the freshly fallen snow into six-foot drifts. ''We knew we shouldn't fall uleep so we spent the night pnlinding each other, talkin( and praying,·• 1aid one of the aur- Tivor,i, -15-Year~old Michael Selepec. He and five of his camping mates were in their homes in Oranee Saturday night after un· Volcano Erupts But three ot their companions, Pat Norther:n, 15, Ronald Smith, 15, and Bryan Kemper, 16, re· mained in the hospital for further treatmer:it. Along with Selepec, those treated and released from the hospital were Tim Dalton, 15, Jess Seavey, 15, Robert Slack, 14, and Keith Kensig, 15. Most of the boys are students at Yorba Junior High School in Orange. All nine youths live in the city of Orange. 11 was the volunteer Riverside MouDtain Rescue Unit that spc>tted tbe nine boys buddied together under e tree Saturday mom.in& and radioed their loce· tion to two El Toro MaJine Corps Air Base helicopters sweeping the mountain area. · ~ Members of the mountain rescue unit had set out in search Exhausted after' reaching the 8,500-foot level of the San Jacinto Mountains, the 10-mi.n search party bedded down in the snow for the night, Walker said. "We are all experienced moun- taineers and we're well - equipped. We knew the boys were neither experienced or well·e·quipped and were in serious, very serioUI trouble,•• be added. After finding .the youths, Walker's group guided them to an open meadow where a Marine helicopter picked them up and_ earned tbem to tbellospttal. (See RESCUE, Page AZI One Man Killed . 2 Quakes Shake Hawaii IULO, Hawaii (AP) -The strongest earthquake in more than a century hit Hawaii's largest island Saturday, trigger- ing tjdal waves and brief volcanic eruptions that spewed molten lava 30 feel into the air. One man was killed, another was mjssing and 34 persons were taken to island hospitals with in- juries, officials said. There were two large quakes and aftershocks throughout the morning. The first tremor re- gistered 5.5 on the Richter Scale at 3:36 .a .m. and was followed 72 minutes later by a majOr quake of 7.2 that caused most of the destruction. Other islands were not af(ected by the quakes and the powerful waves that resulted from the earth shocks. Ranger Chris Cameron at Volcanoes National Park said the dead man was a doctor from Hilo who was camping at a seaside park that was inundated by waves. The missing man and many ot the injured were also at the campground 30 miles from here. Authorities said the dead man was Dr. James A. Nitchel. The miuing man was identified as Michael Cruz, 26, ot Mountain View, Hawaii. Cameron said the land sheU on whiCb the camy was located sud- denly dropped below sea level, cauiling the sea to rush over the area in a powerful wave. More than 30 persons were evacuated from the Camp. Nine boys o( a 10-member Scout troop were hurt, none seriously, as a result of the waves, hospital officials said. Residents of coastal areas were evacuated and police sealed off downtown Hilo to pre- vent looting in the biggest city on· the island of Hawaii, P'?pulation 26,000. Glass and Christmas de- SEE PHOTOS, PAGE01 corations were scattered in the streets. "I thought the world was com- ing to an end," said Mrs. Ken- neth Young, a storeowner in downtown Hilo . "I can't describe the' feeling ; I Celt like hiding un- der the bed.·· Windows were broken in busi- nesses and homes throughout the island and many small buildings collapsed . Highways were blocked in many areas by landslides, lava flows and deep cracks from the quake and tidal wave. Scientists said the damage was not as great as it could have been because the big island of Hawaii, 75 miles across at its widest and 100 miles long, is made of porous lava rock that can absorb the shock. Also, the island is not heavily populated. Officials said the most severe damage to property was caused .when 18-foot waves hit Punaluu Village at the southern tip of Hawaii Island, about 200 miles southeast of Honolulu . A restaurant and several homes were destroyed or heavily damaged. A number of boats were· destroyed or heavily damaged at harbors throughout the island. · The earthquake triggered an eruption in Kilauea volcano. Molten lava leaped 30-(eet in the air from a half mile crack in the crater floor during the 9().minute eruption. A second outbreak was reported on the rim of Halemaumau Firepit, a part of Kilauea volcano. Saturday's quake was tJie most powerful since one on March 28, 1868, estimated at 7.7 on the Richter scale. Why so sad? Obviously it's a traumatic day in the life of Bobby Hall as the 3V.-year-old Corona def Mar lad teams to face up to a crisis you can see by looking on Page A2. (t1' ·1·01·: INSllJI·: itE!'fl.U. RJ~RTS -Neltliqr. landlord nor renter fully un- defstands the give·and-tak:e oC ~ contract we call "Jhe lease." Dally Pilot St'alf Writer iackle .H~an tells the ~toey frum bOtb licW to lead off today's YOU Sec· Uon, Page Bl . ... OLD CAR NUTS '-;It's a real· life version of "The Great Rate" u autom..obll• freaks of two con-tine6ta ciank up .tbeir magnl&-' cent machtnes for the annual 58-mile run from London to Brifhton. Hu1b .A. Mulli1~n rideo along and tells about It, -. Pai~A4. " HORSE S.U.E -A horse sbnw that turns one o! the Oranae Coast area •s most exclusive arenas into a "used horse" lot is what has Tom McCarm "llol'sin". Around.·· He previews the Horses forSa1eShowon PageB2. HOUSE UNWANTED - Overla>o~ing th.e American River just outWi.de of Sacramento there is a nice mansion that its in~ tended occupant doesn"t want. ~ow,ver, there are reasons it s~d be lived in -$103,000 a year in upkeep, for instance - writes Bruce Keppel! on Page AV. DAii. r ~l I.OT llCT\°'4S TVW"k • ~\ ') ' AZ DAILY PILOT &lnday, November 30, 197$ 3 Arrested After I 7 -red Light Chase By JACKIE HYMAN O.•O.llyl'tllll ..... What began as a simple speed- ing ticket turned into a high. speed chase Saturday (or Hunt- ington Beach police and ended in the arrest of three people. Arrested was the alleged driver, Barry Grayson Ashby, 21, of 6200 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach; bis brother, James Raymond Ashby, 22, and Sharon Mary Quarn, 21 , both of tile above address . Police said a car allegedly drive n by Barry Ashby failed to stop when signaled by a police <.'ar. Instead, the car's lights were extinguished and It sped away. Pursuit beganatmidnight . The vehicle, followed at times by up to seven police cars, sped at more than 80 miles an hour down PaciCic Co ast Highway through Long Beach, at one point careening through flares mark- ing the scene of an accident, and on Westminster Boulevard back to Huntington Beach, through about 17 red li ghts. The car stopped at 6200 Ed- inger Ave. and the three suspects were arrested at an apartment there arter a struggle. Barry Ashby was charged with suspicion of r('ckless driving and CBS Fowukr Dies PHILADELPHIA CUP!) Isaac D. "Ike" Levy, one of the founders of what is now CBS Inc ., died Saturday at his home after a year-long illness. ~le was 83. as:sault on a police officer ; hi s brother with assault on a Police olficer and Miss Quarn with in- terfering with an ollicer. Douglas Says Foreign Pay 'Regretted' ST. LOUIS (AP)-McDonnell Douglas Corp. said Saturday that it bad paid more than $'2.S million in fees and commissions that might have gone to officials of roreign governments over the past five years in connection wlth sales of commercial aircraft. A spokesman for the firm said the information on the payments had been submitted to the Securities and Exchange Com- mission at the request or the com- mission. The firm is one of the nation's leading aircraft manufacturers. A study completed by its in- dependent legal counsel "con- cluded that approximately $2.500,000 of foreign fees, com - mis s ions and consultant payments ... were or might have been received by in· dividuals who might be legally considered oCficials of foreign govefnments. ''the company said Saturday. The firm said it regretted the payments, made between 1970 and 1975. Valley Cop Nabs Robbery Suspects A rookie police officer in Foun - tain Valley nabbed three armed robbery suspects Saturday just as they appeared ready to rob a convenience store. Officer Lairy Griswold, who bas been on the force three months, arrested Luis Linar, 21, Erasmo Garcia, 18, and Miguiel Arzade, 22, all of Fresno, in the parking lot of the 7-Eleven Food Store at 10545 Slater Ave. shortly before 6 a .m. Police said Griswold was on patrol when be spotted the sus- pects' car parked beside the store in shadows just out of sight of the cashier. Noticing the susp1c1ous loca - tion of the car, Griswold radioed for assistance. When another of- ficer arrived, he rePortedly talked to the suspects, none of whom could produce identifica· tion. Griswold then said he spatted a loaded .38 caliber automatic pistol on the front seat of the car. The three men were arrested on suspicion of armed robbery and carrying a concealed weapon . The car matched the descrip- tion. of one rePorted stolen in Fresno, police said. 1,200 Viets Relocated FT. CHAFFEE, Ark. (AP) - Nearly 1,200 Vietnamese re- fugees were processed out of the. Ft. Chaffee relocation center during the past week. ~ The refugee population at Chaffee on Saturday stood at 6,128, down Crom 7,305 a week ago. Indiantown Gap. Pa., had 1,271 refugees Saturday. Indian· town, which is expected to close soon, has processed 20,440 re- fugees since it opened. .Coast Watch •.• Top News Stories of the past week f r om Or ange Coast Communities LAGUNA BEACH--The city ordered a crackdown against zoning violations by .the Hare Krishna sect, which operates a .temple. in the Art Colony. Group ieaders responded that they will lower the · volu.me on their 4 a.m. chanting among other concession& to the temple 's resi- dential neighbors •.. COSTA MESA--A free turkey feed · planned for 2,000 senior citizens and orqanized by the second district of the Veteran• of Foreign Wars drew only 400 old-timers to the Orange County Fair- qrounds Thanksgiving Day. The attendance left organizers with enough food for another 1,600 dinners. They gave it to other needy groups ••• WEST ORANGE COUNTY--Several Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach residents have already announced that they will seek council seats in the March 2 city elections, but Huntington Beach Councilman Jerry Matney said he wouldn't run again "if they gave me city hall a~d the beaches and the oil fields .. • ..... SADDLEBACK VALLEY--Opposition is surf acing to plans for a second campus in the Saddlaback community Collage Di•trict. Opponents fear a second coll•9• might raise taxes and diminish the quality or education on the existing campus in Mission Viejo ••• IRVINE--Tha school board turned down a request by administrators and teachers to set aside smoking areas at high aohool campuaes, although a new state law allova school boards to do so. 'Th• board cited another state law ega!nat minors' buying ci9arettea and •aid aett!ng up smoking areas would be giving tacit approval to violations of the law. • Sad With S a itta ' • • IJl.el t ing Snow OpemJ Homeward Roads l Temperatures rising into the 40s are expected to melt away the last vestiges or snow today on ml»t Southern California moun· tain highways, clearing the way tor returning holiday motorists . Most state and federal hia:bways and freeways in the mountains were open by Satur· day o.lgbt and could ~ eros5ed without chains, according to the California Department of Transportation. But chains were still required on State Route 2 and Route 39 in San Gabriel Canyon Road, near • where the two roads intersect. : Cha.ins were a.lao required oear ' San Berqardlno mountain re· sorts, with 12 inches of snow re- oorud at Bia Bear Lake and six Inches at Lake Ar.rowheed. 1 A heavy two-root snowfall had, trapped hundreds or molOl'islS in:; the mountains Friday nlCht. ' ~·· Despite the b.ad weather. t.be California Highway Patrol re-· ported that the state's hollda~": traffic death toll so far was Ottl.~ 24, down 10 from the same Um~ during tho Thanksgiving bolidaf.j lut year. about a 30 percent .. ~ decrease in fatalities. ~ Firemen Reseed In Wake of Storm ~ From Wire Services winter's first storm Saturday quenched the last traces of two fierce fires that for nearly a week had burned foothill brushland north of Los Angeles and chased canyon residents from their homes. As U.S. Forest Service officials declared full control Saturday over the fires -meaning the names were completely out - the rush was already on to reseed the 66,000 acres blackened since last Sunday. ·'Some residents will be a.ske<P, to board up their windows. And in ~ some cases. where it 's inevitable:< that they will have mud in their:i homes, people will be asked to re-,, move their belongings or move-~ out. "We're also urging all the peo- ple in these areas to purchase flood insurance under a national program that makes the in- surance available to them." Well , it's easy to see that one of life's first visits with San- ta Claus can be pretty traumatic for a little guy who hasn't spent all that much time with the gentle giant of the North Pole. This scene occurred Saturday soon aftet Santa took his post a t Fashion Is land to meet Harbor Area Christmas-wishers. One of his first customers was Bobby Hall , J >;, son of Mr . and Mrs. Robert Hall of Corona del Mar. About !iO men were spreading a variety of grass seeds by hand. Aerial seeding was expected to begin next week. Although the fire destroyed or damaged about 40 homes, the af- termath could be worse if heavy storms wash the unprotected earth down slopes into inhabited canyons. However, officials hope the reseeding will provide a vegetative cover within a few weeks to bold the dirt in place. Next week fiood control oj. ficial s will a s k ·county supervisors to approve emergen- cy improvements cdsting $100,000 or more that could·pro- vide homeowners with a little more protection. F r om Page Al RESCUE ... The youngsters' near misad- venture began Wednesday when they left on what was to have been a four-day camping outing. B each Woman Hurt, Newport Man Jailed Flood control officers also circulated through residential sections Saturday, advising homeowners what to do now to minimize damage in the coming moot.ha. "We'll do the best wecan,"one OoOd control engineer who sur- veyed the fire scene said. Unexpected heavy snows and winds bit the area Thursday night, tearing the boys' light tents and erasing the trail they had followed into the meadow area. Friday afternoon the dis · tressed youngsters were spatted by two hikers who later described them to authorities as appearing worn out, confused and in no condition to move. A Huntington Beach woman apparently escaped serious in· juries Saturday night when she was struck by an automobile in Newport Beach, police said. Susan Fullenwider, 21, of 19341 Weymouth St., was taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital where p;>lice said she was treated for apparently minor cuts and bruises. The driver of the car, John L. Thompson, 54 , of 423 E . Bay Nomination Disappointing To NOW Head ALBANY, N .Y . (AP)-Karen ·DeCrow. president of the Na· tional Organization for Women. expressed disappointment Satur· day with President Ford's nomination of John Paul Stevens fortbe U.S. SUpremeCourt. "WP-1 re very saddened that it wasn't a woman," she said in a telephone interview from Miami Beach, Fla .. where she was visit- ing relatives. ''He is being touted as a big intellectual, which is tine, but there are many-intellec- tual women who are qualified." Stevens, 55, is a federal ap- peals court judge from Chicago, known as a scholarly jurist with an interest in antitrust cases. "Another thing that distresses me a great deal is that he has been against criminal deCen- dants' rights in a variety of cases. That worries me because I feel that the best judge that we could possibly have, from a feminist point of view, is a person with a strong civil liberties back· ground and orientation." SUNDAY DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed il'rnld9nt •"" Pvbll..,. Jack R. CurJtv Vlt.• PffflOIM -°"'* .. MiiM{lff Thomas Keevll £0110• Ave., Newport Beach, was ar· rested on a misdemeanor charge of drunken driving. The accident occurred about 8:55p.m. in the 1600 bl<><'kof West Balboa Boulevard, according to Officer Bruce Foster. He said neighbors bad already come lo the aid of the victim by the time he arrived, only minutes after the accident. The victim told officers she bad parked her car in a parking space at the street's center divider and was crossing the road. She rePortedly said she did not see the vehicle. The driver reportedly said however that she appeared sud· denly in his headlights. Police said there were no witnesses to the accident itself and that ·further investigation is unlikely. ''U the big storm comes, some areas will be completely un - protected, there probably won't be anything we can do. But if we get normal rainfall, then the work that we can do might do some good.'' The reseeders will continue next week, working down the lines from the peaks across the ridges and canyons scored by flames in Big Tujunga and Mount Baldy. The most critical areas, the spokesman said, are the canyons with older homes situated close to streams and foothill develop- ments where the fire burned away all trees and shrubs from the hills behind the homes. "We tell the residents where to place sandbags, bow to remove obstructions where we think mud will flow," he said. After having given the boys· their sleeping bags and a two· man tent, the two unidentified hikers marched out of the moun- tain area and reported the _ Orange youths' approximate location to the Riverside County SherifC's Office. 1 It was nearly nightfall before Walker's rescue unit and volun- teers from a similar San Diego County volunteer organization could begin their snowshoe trek into the mountains in search of the stranded youngsters. It wasn't until 10 o'clock Saturday morning that the exhausted boys were reunited with their parents· at a hospital in Hemet. J. HERBERT HA l ~ewelle rs Fin~ Jtwefler5 d Sil11er5miths Since 1898 And, more im portant, it's a Pul sare from J.HERBERt ff All It's hard to hide your pride v.tlen you show this new 'Pulsar to vour friends. Just a fhck of your wrist flashes the time in glowing red numerals. Push a button, and it sho ws the eJCact second. Push another, and Pulsar tells you the· month and date. And after the first thrlll of ownership is over, you'll discover how superbly trouble free and accvrate it is ye•r after year. StainllS$ steel with matching band. $295. 14 kt. gold·filled with matching band. $395. ll~li. N o movin91>1111 10 .... ., out. No '# •ouHn• fnlln 11n.1nc•. olllnt or c1Nnin9 ne1<1ed · t vt t. I ii. Pul\lf ii como11111v w•T•r •e1i1t.1nt to r dlOll'I 01 100 fffl, 11 lo n9 1.1 ui.a .1nd liml tcr"n rim.in lnl -<:1. I. Ev11y P\ils.1r is indi•'«ltl1Hy l•tt9d •I ... ,, 0"41 ""'"" 01101• i t it '•IMHICI. SOVTH COAST PLAZA / 549-1379 ·• WESTMINSTER .MALL/ 897.0327 Senta Ano Fashion Squrn • l'll<ntt HH/s & Fox Hiiis Molls , Prn4deno • Santa Anftq Fashion Porlt • Wood/find Hiiis Promanod' T. • • • > • Belting Off ·to Brighton ,, 'Old Cr ocks' of Two Conl.inents Make a Sentimental Auto Journey • • • • • By HUGH . A . MUUJ:GAN Assocl•ted ProssSpecl•I Correspondent EN ROUTE LONDON TO BRIGHTON -Out of tbe miaty autumn woods, the gho6b-- of Gottlieb Daimler, Ettore Bugatti, Louis Renault and HelU'Y Ford materialized. in a cloud of exhaust fumes. ''Pump her up a bit,··· commanded the driver, Baron Edward John Bar- o( Beaulieu , as our 1963 DeDietrich tonneau lurched past a wheezing 1899 Wolseley two- seater, gone a bit knock-kneed in its wooden spoke wheels, and slipped into the vapor stream of a turn-of-the-century Locomobile Steamer. . As the only instrument on the dashboard indicated, our ·oil pressure had dropped below a pc>und, and it was my job, as copilot, to pump away at whatre- sembed a bicycle pump. His Lordship was busy as the or- ganist in· Westminster Abbey manipu lating the array of clutches, levers and pedals that ·erratically delivered the ex- ·plosions or our 24-horsepower. four-cylinder engine to the chain- drive rear wheels. ••GET A HORSE," some fuf- fian shouted. Lord Montagu cut him dead with a honk of the bulbous born. • We were belting down to Brighton in the "Old Crocks" veteran car run, a 56-mile trail of punctured tires, busted axles and jettiso ned passengers com- memorating the 1896 law that raised the speed limit frotn 4to12 miles an hour and abolis'bed the requirement that ''self - propelled" vehicles be preceded by a footman at 20 paces. The day the law took effect.. 40 celebrators or the new Motorists Lib set out from London's Metropo1e Hotel to its namesake in Brighton, and 14 got there, in- cluding a scoundrel who cheated by putting his electric Brougham on the train after smearing it with mud. Now, 79 years later, in an an- nual act of renewal that lined the route with several million spec- tators, 284 painstakingly pre- served relics from around the world assembled in Hyde Park, near where the Metropole used to be, for the Brighton run. Alas, 28 fell by the wayside in a geyser or steam and a clatter or hardware, and, sadder still, 29 never got going at all, despite the crankings and curses or their owners. To keep the busy south coast road from becoming one vast hardened artery, the Royal Automobile's Club now restricts the nostalgia processiODI' to ge- nuine.antiques built before lWS. .. These old rars were built to go, not stop," our driver fretted at a traffic jam in suburban Croyden. "Modem paved roads are kinder to the tires and motor, Ff'Olll Page A I but today*i traffic throws them. They're not as maneuverable and don't have the braking power for quick stops." ALL ALO~G the way now, the roadside was littered with broken-down, boiled-over, lov- ingly lacquered remnants of an era when ecology meant not run- ning over a chicken or shying a horse. Among the fallen was an 1895 Benz Sociable, smuggled out of East Germany bit by bit and reassembled by owner Berthold Ruckwarth. Coming up on Gatwick airport, the trumpet-like brass valves on the dash began hemorrhaging oil onto the floorboards and the oc- cupants or the front seats. ''That's a good sign ... means she"s lubricating," said Lord Montagu, whose foot kept slip- ping off the well-doused pedals. Ahead of schedule, we pulled into a pit stop: a gasolinE} station, something unheard of when the DeDeilrich first hit the road and fuel was purchased at the local drugstore. Other antique car buffs had re- ached there ahead of us: William Harrah , the Nevada casino operator, in bis 1903 Napier: Thomas Lester of Cleveland,' Ohio, in a 1903 M.ercectes. Like specialists around a· death bed, th~y hovered over the raised bon- net of a 1901 Renault. Autograph hunters and camera bugs crowded around POLICE UNIONIZATION ... • Said Castle, ''We ha\'.e found that public safety employes over the years have not experienced effectlve representation that ex- ists in private industry. They need help. They have day-to-day problems. T)ley have to deal with management with a higher d egree of sophistication than they have." Like most palire agencies, San Clemente officers used to employ a ttorneys to represent them m salary negotiations. CUtle s~id the arrangement did not work to the employes' ad· vantage. ''The attorney must view the employe as a rlient. He does not become part of the rela- tions, like the union does. The Teamsters works day to day, week to week, month to month,·' Castle said. In addition to San Clemente, the union represents officers in San Diego, Vernon, Visalia, Oroville, E l Centro, LaVerne, Dinuba, Delano and deputy sheriffs in Lake and Plumas C!OU.nties. . c.atera,. I P"•lr .,.,.. •lf'""r -•IW -. t•r.ca1t f•r m••t •' S•vl"9'" ~......., ....... ~ ...... ~ .......... ....,.,.._.,....,.,._ .,_ •ltMI W••lf't9r Jlf"Yl(a -. Eight months ago the union negotiated a new contract for policemen in Vernon. It included a 16.S percent salary increase and a 7 percent boost in fringe benefits. Vernon officers were the first in California to sign a representation contract with the . Teamsters. Police officers in San Clemente are seeking a 13 percent in- crease. They cite salary surveys which show that, regardless of rank, they are among the lowest paid in the county. San Clemente officers recently turned down the city"s final offer for an 8.6 per- cent salary boost. Castle freely admitted that the push by the union for public safe- ty employes has caused a stir, particularly in conservative communities, such as San ·Clemente. "We're now going through an educational process," he said in a recent, separate interview with The Associated Press. One point he raised was that policemen do not understand that affiliation with the union through Local 911 does not create a conflict of interest. He said that police officers who held union memberships would not be required to honor picket lines while performing their duties. If the Teamsters loses its fight to represent S<!D Clemente of- ficers. Castle said the union would look at other alternatives to maintain ties with public safe- ty personnel. He said the union could lobby for new state laws all~wi~g such representation. As it stands today, state statutes on public employe· employer relations provide that a local agency may prohibit its members from joining certain labor organizations if it is found to be in the public interest to do so. It is on this provision of state law that the San Clemente coun· cil based its resolution. • ID Salt Lake J0.00 HlustOfl " .. ,. " 1 lrd"apolls 'l'eMperal•rn Albu' .. t " 1' ~ 16' -.. " ·~ 10 S4 ~rd. JI t 101ti1 " 1S -" " llM• .. :II °""'"'°"' "4 },l -". a""'"""'' " ,,. O.V.la'MI 49 " -.... Oft lllflMMI u 11 =:... ~ '; • t JKk1•vt11e KaMn Clty LMV•t Litt~ Rock LoulS¥111• _ .. ...... MllWMlll• Mcll .. M.P. -0.--v ... ""'-0"' PNlad'llhl• -· -P'tlalld#lll. ... __ -......... ........ ........ 5lofl ,.,.,. ----... ~ " " .... .. " n " .... n " " " " " " " " .. " " " .. ,. " ,. .. .... " .. " " .. ,. .. .. D " .. " " .. " n .. . " " ......,. -S-.0,.. If -llO..,. --~°'''"' Selut-..,."" ...... lkorolerrr. Qll MVw 10 ...,, ___ ..... ___ C~T.,.._. ..... Orwoilll (;owtft-...... ----wt I•• ............. , .. ... o.-R.C.W.-..... ... __ 0... ....... .-....... ~ ............... -- l Hugh Mulllg1n {back SH~ rlglrt) Is passenger in !ll03 IUfO ClflSUlg W..Stmlf rster Bridge "' begin London·· to-Brighton veteran car nm. au!d!x.~30.1978 with questions that drained the poetry from the past like the green slime oozing from a 1904 Ford. Hill, the Brighton run's last and sternest test . It's called "Heartbreak Hill" by drivers who can't hack it, wives who have to get out and push, and passengers left heh.ind to lighten ballast. Some even try it backwards, thinking reverse is the stronger gear or the fu el flows better that way. pocketa-pocketa-pocketa·· of Walter Mitty's dreams. · But every now and then a true acolyte genuflected at the shrine of bygone elegance. "She"s a beauty,.. said an old man with watery eyes, reverently touching the hood of a 1904 Franklin. "Courted my Molly in one just like her. Both gone, years and years ago:· As we ru m bled t owards Brighton's shingled beach, it was difficult to believe that when our faithful flatulent steed first came this way, Edward VJI was wait· iog at the Royal Pavilion, Teddy Roosevelt was in the White House and the Four Cohans were on Broadway. Time to move on again . Hell for leather and chattering like an Eskimo with National Health teeth, our DeDielrich bounded up mile-long Pyeeombe '1NOW YOU can smell the sea," said Lord Montagu, honk- ing the horn in exultation. He opened her up all the way for the home stretch over the downs, and the po u nding cylinders responded with the purring "ta- ''Biggest crowds ever,·· beamed the Lord Mayor . welcoming us to Brighton and the - roveted. medallion. "Had a nice run?·· As if in reply, the radiator boil ed over as the en_gine expired with a cough. They help you put your world in focus Viewpoints of columnists appearing regularly on the editorial pages of the Dally Pilot help you sharpen your perspective of the events.shaping your world. Here's the lineup of Dally Piiot columnists: JACK ANDERSON reveals. His talent for prying government secrets from bureaucrats drives Washington bigwigs to distraction . EVA"'-'S AND NOVAK 111 s Rowland Evans and Robert Novak ~ team to examine the political ~\ scene as It affects the nation. I'.~ f" NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN. pokes . .j at stuffed shirts everywhere - from Congress to the American Medical Association. SYDNEY HARRIS m i xe s h i s ph!losoltfiical dissertations with quizzes and thumbpall observa- tions to ke ep readers on their toes. EARL WATERS has spent 30 '"' on events at the • years rillportlng lltate capitol. S. I. HAYAKAWA lllumlnates..,,,.- modern society, social Issues and commun i cati on. '0_ CHARLES MC CABE places his p'f/ tongue flrmly in cheek fo r ~ humorous looks at everything from ~ sex to sandwiches. ~"' NORMAN COUSl .... Sexpands your community to Include the world. Find yqur favorite columrilst on the editorial pages of the DAILY PILOT 642·4321 I~ , • iA4 DAILY PILOT Sunday, November 30, 1975 Co-op s on 1l1l'·powered Cyc l e ~ Vicki Fitzsimmons tries out custom made Trike Master, ~ a three-wheel motorcycle on display at New J er~ey ~ Custom Motorcycle Show in Asbury Park. The trike 7 features a Volkswagen engine. : t Sinatra Cons~nts ! : To TV Interview ·~·· • t ; By IAY SllARBUTT ! ;, NEW YOaK (AP) -Frank Sinatra, who reacts to re· ' r Porters as the mongoose does the cobra, is interviewed about : as often as the sun rises in the West. But he recently sat for an hour-lone TV chat here. Alas, for Sinatra fans, it only was shown here. He ta~ the interview, which contains nothing startling, on Sept. 22 while iD town on a singing engagement. BUT WHAT MAKES THE TJUNG sort of interesting is , that instead of eoing the national TV talk show route, he chose 11 to lay his thoughts on a relatively obscure local lad who'd met him but twice before. ·i The lad is Bill Boggs, who hosts a midday talk show on i, WNEW. Boggs said he met the 59-year-old singer last Easter while visiting Las Vegas, Nev., and again in September during . a telethon here. ~ He said he'd never asked Old Blue Eyes to appear oh his ;J show, figuring that'd be presumptuous, but that Sinatra •P- L patently liked him and decided on bis own to tape a 60-mlnute U. interview with him. ~: HE SAID SINATRA SET NO BAN against discussing I things like his stormy marital life, or his acid from-the-stage comments about various gossip columnists or his fabled rows , with the press in general. : But Boggs said he didn't ask about such things ''because I ~ know he didn't want to talk about it •.. and l don't really see f ' myseli as a journalist interviewing Frank I. Sinatra. I sat down and had a conversation with him from the standpoint of somebody who really cares about him and somebody • I I . ' I l I I ~ who knows enough about him to know what not to ask. Hence, if you really want to be logical, that's probably why he came on the show in the first place." For Sinatraologists, here are a few things The Voice told Boggs : Al a yOuth, he'd planned to study civil engineerine. buy was trying his band at 51"~'11A. singing. His late father "got a litUe fed up with me because I just wasn't going out. looking for nonsinging work.'' WHE R EUPON THE ELDER SINATRA, apparently despairing bis boy ever would go to college, one morning said. '"Why don't you just get out of the house and go out on your own?' .•. " • On bow he felt after ending his ''retirement" of less than two years lA 1973: '' ... I was struggling. I was really fighting my way out of the doldrums, because when I quit, I let every- thing go." On the preference of his son. Frank Jr .1 for singing Cole Porter and Rod.eers and Hart songs in his own night club act : " ... I say fine, but there's also Bert Bachrach and Jimmy Webb and a whole bunch of other guys that are writing good things. 1iAND HE SAYS, NO, HE says, 'I want to do this stuff.' I said, 'Yeah, but they're not buying that now, not always buy· ing tt. You've got to mix it Ln some way.' But he's pretty hard- headed about lhal." Ou hi• own future: 111 guess I'll just keep working until I get just weary enough not to work anymore or the minute a vibrato (a reference to vocal shakiness) shows up in my sing· inf. 'That's the time to go home, when it begins to go like that. that's the time to go home." -COSTS ARE l.OWER because you buy in bulk and act as your own ffiiddle man. You can save from 30 to 50 percent on some items. -Items like produce and eggs often are fresher and taste bet- ter. -Wholesalers may offer a wlder variety or goods than an in · dividual store. -Working and planning food buying can bring you and your neighbors closer together, pav· ing the way for other community efforts. On the minus side: -CO-OP BVVING takes time. You must be prepared to put in several hours a week on a re· gular basis. Other people depend on you and you can't simply de· cide to skip the weekly shopping trip. -You may have to get up ear-. ly in the morning to visit wholesalers in areas that some people wouJd consider unsafe. The best merchandise is often goneby7a.m. -You will have to tailor your shopping list to the wishes of the group as a whole. Jt isn't prac- tical to buy artichokes or any other item for just one person. IF YOU HAYE DECIDED that the advantages outweigh the dis- advantages. you're ready to form a co-op. First contact friends and neighbors to get a suitable group together. The Office of Consumer Affairs recommends JO to 12 familles. Tony Vellela, author of "Food Co-ops for Small Groups, .. says you can manage with as few as five members. Still other authorities. noting that many produce items are sold in crates containing multiples of 12, sug· gest that groups of six or 12 families make division easier. YOU WANT A GROUP that is big enough lo permit buying in quantity, but small enough to manage. Remember: you have to transport the groceries from the wholesaler to the distribution point. The next step is figuring out what kind of co-op YoU 're in- terested in. Are members in· terested primarily in economy? Are they looking for luxury items not available in the standard supermarket? How about health foods? Do you want to buy meat as well as produce? Try to find people with the same tastes. The shopper who's looking for organically grown vegetables won't be happy in a ro-op that stresses standard pro· ducts at low prices. SET A BASIC membership charge for the co-op and collect it in advance. You need cash to work with. The fee should be large enough to cover the cost of the food plus gasoline and other supplies. Yule Dinner Slated in NB Reservations are still being ac- cepted for the annual Christmas luncheon SpQnsored by the Women's Division of the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce. It will be held Wednesday in. Newport Beach. Highlight of the luncheon will be entries of holiday tables dis- playing nautical themes. Women who have created the best table displays will receive prizes. A social hour and display of the entries will be held from 11 a.m. until noon, when tbe luncheon will be served. The affair will be in the Monte Carlo Room of the Newporter Inn. Cost is $8.50 and reservations may be m·ade by phoning · 67!>9500. i I Fleas Bugging Florida ' JAOCSO~VJLLE. Fla. (UPI) -Swarms o( t fteu are altaetlng North Florida pets and their f owners in tbe worst such outbreak in decades, ac· I ·cording to Duval County agrtcultnral agent Ed Al- len. Allen said be vi.sited homes In wblcb the neas "Were so numerou1 that wltbln minutes a person·a l•J would be covo~1'!f_lh a solid blanket of the "'1nllet1, par11lUc ~ . ms OFnfE rs AVERAGING ABOUT 25 calls Dr. C. Foster Wright, immediate past president o( the Jacksonville Veterinary Medical Society, said flea infestations have become ''real bad'' in the last month. PET SHOPS REPORTEDLY WERE DOING a brisk business, selling flea collars, dusts and •prays. All•n blamed the outbreak of neas, which he called "a flea epidemJc," on five straight mild win- ters plus an increase ln the number of animals and ' RealR a t~e UP'IT..._... 'No. 10' Not ltape Victim LOS ANGELES <.U'l -An elderly woman llllu.Ily believed to be the 10th victim ot the » called "Westside Rapist" died ot a heart attack, an autop17 dla.. closed Saturday. Muriel Blance Parker, 76, wu found dead In her Wilahlre dla- trict home Friday. Police bad said her home ap- peared to have been ransacked. and that she may have been killed by the phantom intruder, who i.s believed to bavo killed nine elderly women and raped another two do&en.. But the autopsy showed she had died of a coronary oceluslon. Officers said fUrther lnYellU,a- tion showed her home bad not been ransacked. The special police task force investigating the-series of rape- murders said the Parker case would be turned over to Wt.bbire Division investigators. Body Recovered Jennifer Withe rs cheers on her rat, Hava, during the tightrope walk of the San Francisco State University Rat Decathlon preliminary competition. The rats are trained by the students as part of experiments. Hava qualified as part of the team and will now attend the finals at Sacramento's American River College. SAN DIEGO (APl -Tbe body of a 23-year-old sailor has been recovered from surf off Sunset Cliffs. Police said Micbae! Leon West apparently drowned while swimming. The crinkly look in 1003 cotton. The smash hi! of the year in fabric- crlnkled cotton-done In your lavorite pantsuit look. Handsomely belled 'big top ' look lop over matching pants. ¥" sleeves, favorite colors. Junior sizes. Add a pretty po lyes tar print long sleeved 1hlrt to your wardrobe and you ju at can't mi1s. Added spice lor all ·your aol!d sep111ates. '12 Crinkly pants ••• the way you like them. And at a price that doesn't hurt The crinkly cotton shirt style dre~for all year ·round. Done in the colors you lovrf. Junior sizes. U• tour comtuft nl JCPenney cMrge cerd. at all. Favorite colors. AU stores open every Merry Christmas ;1,!~~"!:~:~ Avallable l"n Loa Angeles, Orange, Rlvenlde, Sen Bem1rdlno end Ventura c:oun11 ... • day fs;om people wantina' to know what they can L dll to oxfu"!"'•le the pesky verm.in, he sald. the fleas' remarkable ability to reproduce. \------';-----------------_. _______ .....;:;.....:......,...-.;... _ _J I ( ~· • I ' f ' Santa Ana'.il~ver Drama Divers in wet suits lift 1>ody of Antonio Garcia from rain-swollen current of the Santa Ana River near Prado Dam after the 25-year-old Chino man's car swerved off Highway 71 and plunged 300 feet into the river. Seriously injured in crash was SF Voter Fraud Showdown SAN FRANCISCO (AJ') -Mayor·Joseph A. Alioto appears h eaded for a showdown with the Board of Supervisors over a suggested aJloca- tion of $129,000 to in- vestigate voter fraud. The mayor said over the weekend that the pro- posed. inquiry would be .. an investigation to pro- ve that there are soldiers in the Presidio." The supervisors last week demanded the in- vestigation in the wake of allegations that many persons who r esided elsewhere were voting in San Francisco. Meanwhile. a tax- payer's suit filed Friday in Superior Court CALIFORNIA Prisoner Stabbed SAN' QUENTL'I (AP) -An inmate was stabbed Saturday during a brawl among 15 San Quentin prisoners in an exercise yard, prison of- ficials said. Blanca Casada . The 14-year-old girl was a passenger in the car. Fidel Alsasua, iden- tified as cousin of the dead man, is assist- ed by California Highway Patrol officer as he collapses (right photo)at scene of the body r ecovery. , Big Bear Air Search Halted LOS ANGELES CUP[) -An air and ground search for three persons m,issing in a light plane was suspended at dusk Saturday, but renewed efforts were to resume today over thous ands of square miles of moun- tain and desert lands near Big Bear. Missing since Friday in a si ngl e -engine Beechcraft Bonanza were pilot John Clute, 00, Pasadena, and Dr. Don Nebreker, and his wife, ~targe , of Arcadia, both in their 70s, who were heading for their cabin al Big Bear in the San ..Bernardino Mountains. six miles northeast of Bill Bear airport. The pilot repc>rted be was en· countering heavy downdrafts and turbulence and was re- turning to El Monte airport. Clute was reported to be an experienced pilot with some 11,000 flying hours • Newspaper Owner Dies -challenged the validity of the city's 1974 election on grounds that 5,000 non-residents voted il- legally. Officer Leo Shepherd said the fight involved Mexican-American and black inmates, but "we are not certain whether it was a r~cial thing or a direct assault on one in- mate." The Civil Air Patrol said the plane, which took off from El l'.Ionte Airport at 3:50 p .m . Fri- day, was last tracked by the Ontario airport on radar at 4 :16 p.m., about PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP) -Leo E . Owens, owner of lhE Whittier Daily News and whose newspaper hold· ~ngs once included ownerships in several California and Texa~ cities, died Saturday a1 his home here. He waf 86. t youca11 efore Dec.25 1 Oean house fur holiday guests. 2 Drive to L.A. 0 • •• 3 Drive to South Coast Plaza and shop ••• why fight LA. traffic when California's most important quality center is right in your own back yard! 152 stores to serve you -open 10 to 9, except SUnday, 11 to 6. -~- ' \ SUndly. _ .. , 30. 19T5 DAii. y PllOT .Af '\./ Brown Presses Pay Cu~ • WOODLAND (AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 1atd Sat1&rday bis request for some 1tate transPortatlon entlneen to lower their PIY IO other• can keep their jobs a few months longer is ••an idea that'• eventually &oiD&: to take bold in this country.'' The CaUfornJ1 State Employes Association re- portedly has rejected Brown's sug1estion to hive 1bout $1000 en1ineens in the fmancially troubled Department of Transportation ccaltrans) cut their pay 10 percent for several months. The en1ineera would also cut their work week from 40 to 36 hours under the proposal. The money and free hours would allow a delay of several months in scheduled layoffs of about 2,000 other Cal trans engineers for the same amount of time. Brown told reporters at a sboppipg center political rally that he had sURaested to CSEA of- !!dais that O.partmmt of Transportation employ .. wbo face layoff a vote oo the proposal. t 'The question is wbet.her those wbo have.th privilege of working are ready to 1bare the bu.r'de of those who next month are facl.ne the pro1pect of DO job,'' a aid the Democratic &0V8rDOI'. "Maybe those who do not reduce their bqura .may find tbemaelves in the aame posiUooaomeday. At least 2,800 Jobs In the Department o( Transportatfon are to be eliminated by July l be<ause of declines in highway eonstrucUon and gasoline tu. revenues. · CSEA considers the proposal inequitable because some employe clusificatiool factnc the layoffs, such as draftsmen, would escape the pay cut, the Sacramento Bee repxted Saturday. rint -s irts • or t e am1 .y. Unique photo and screen print T-shirts. Boys' screen print 100% polyester 'T-shirts. 3.50. ,. . ~·" ' . Photo print cotton/ nylon lerry T-shirts Junior sizes, $8. Polyester photo print !or Juniors, S7. Men's pho!o prinl 100~:. polyester T-shirts, 3.98. They're the rage ... nothing short of terrific! Photographic and screen prints that include exciting aclion and natu1e scenes. Merry Christmas from . . . Girls' photo print polyester T ·shirts sizes 7-14, 3.50. Sizes 4-6X, 3.25. • \ All stores open every night 'tJI Christmas.. Stores open Sund1y 10AMto6PM, nn • -Available In Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura counlilL • • ( DAILY PILOT EDlTORJAL PAGE ) Doctors' Exodus? Will you have a doctor after January 1? Don't bet on it. Don't bet on it especially if you are ja Medi-Cal or Medicare patient. 1 The Orange County Medical Association just 1com'pleted a s urvey of slightly more than I ,000 prac- ·ticing physicians, and the results of that poll make it ;clear that new malpractice insurance charges are go. •ing to have a staggering errect on medical care right !here in Orange County. In many cases, you will find ;yourself without the services of your present physi- ~cian and in other cases you can bet on increased :charge:; as physicians confront insur ance increases 'of as much as 486 percent. : Or the physicians who answered the OCMA poll '(about two-thirds of them answered most questions, 50 are just walking away from their medical practice . and 33 are moving out of California. About half (443) : will restructure their practice to reduce exposure to •malpractice claims -a euphemistic way of saying : they are going to be ultracautious in their procedures, ·at times no doubt reducing their eff ectiveness to care for and treat patients . Biggest effect on patients. howe ver, will be in the : treatment of the low-income patients receiving Medi· Cal and Medicare benefits. Of the physicians who responded to a question concerning continued treat- ment for Medi-Cal patients, 579 said they would cease treatment after Jan. i~and only 297 plan to continue taking patients on Medi-C:al roll s. Medicare patients of 452 doctors no longer can depend on their services after new ins11rance rates go into effect. A large number of doctors did not respond to all questions asked in the pol l, reflecting individual un- certainty as to what alternatives might be available between now and Jan. 1. As 1976 gets nearer, the chances of such an alternative appear slimmer and slimmer. And it appears more and more likely that a . still higher number or physicians no longer will be available, at least in the traditional roles they are now filling. A lot has been written. and a lot has been read, about the malpractice insurance controversy. After Jan. 1, it won't be just words -it will be an issue brought home to thousands and thousands of Orange County r esidents. Watch Those Motivations A majority of Orange County Supervisors are again permitting personal philosophies to get Jn the way of good judgment. Three board members. all of whom happen to be Roman Catholics, are balking al approval of addi· tiona l state and federal grant funds for the county's family planning program -essentially threatening doom for the program. One board member. Halph Clark, repeated argu- ments he has used in past years, saying he is against the entire program because government doesn't belong in the a rea off amily life or birth control. . The other two, Thomas Riley and Laurence Schmit say they won't vote for the funding when it comes 'back before the board unless all abortion counseling and re ferral services aredeleled. Schmit contends that his feelings a re based on personal philosophy, not religious belier -failing to provide a r easonable distinction between the two. Though abortion counseling is a very sma11 part of the total service, and could be eliminated without great detriment, s upervisors s hould carefully bal ance the motivations they have about a decision in an area this sens itive. • • a • • -- The captain bas decided be may help bail out your end of the ship, aft.er all!' Secrecy Mothered Assassination Plots When you ponder the Senate committee re port on the plots or the CIA to assassinate roreign 1eaders, the question th at in- evitably com es to mind is whether the price the American people have had to pay for these machinations is the retaliatory assassinations or President John F. Kennedy and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. Nothing is more naive than to I suppose that undercover agents I of the Uni ted States could at· : tempt to murder heads of other l governments without putting t their own leaders in mortal f jeopardy. We know very little J.about history if we think we can , carry out acts of violence without . bavingtbesamedonetous. ; The American people are at a I natural disadvantage in this gris- ~ ty business. An American Presi- 1 dent. being the head or an open : society, is highly vulnerable to ' • f;· r • j Subversives • I !Talked Of . iDoing It, l iBut the FBI • ~Did It I ~ • skilled assassination attempts. His visits to different cities are announced in advance. His ap· pearances at hotels or other public places are readily ascer- tained. The American politician sees a vote in every handshake. Recent events have demonstrated the re- 1 at iv e ease with whi ch handshakes can lead to as · sassination attempts. THE DEFENSE of the CIA. or course, is that we have no choice -other nations, especially the Soviet Union, are playing the un· dercover game, and we have to take part in it in our own self· lnlfrests. With America's Bicentennial year about to begin, it might be a good 1dea to ask ourselves what men like Washington, Jefferson, Adams, Madison and Hamilton would have thought of that argu- WASIUNGTON Hardy is a big chunk of a blond man. Th"e basic beach boy build. An4 to a woman his 37 years might gi've his face just enough wrinkJes to overcome the surfer's rec kless symmetry. Astu.ally Hardy is ' an ex- M~ne, a husband, a father or four and a general con· tractor in Camden, N.J ., and on this day be was t e lling Congressman Otis Pike and hi s Select Committee on In te 11 ig enc e or the lack or it about Hardy's brief, miserable career as a paid FBI snitch. These days you can·t walk in a door in th~ Capitol without com· ing Upon somebody recounting to a raised row or legislators some awful business of orricial ( NORMAN COUSINS ) ment . No g uE'ss work is nt'f.'essary . One or their prime purposes in breaking away from Great Britain and in creating a rrt>e nation was to disengage ourselves from the sordid and de· ceitrul world of European politics. They wanted to demonstrate that it was po ssible ror govern· ment to hold to a moral standard. They would have ridiculed th e argument that we have to engage in rouI play abroad because thi s is the way mo st go\'ernments behave. Judging rrom the records or the Philadelphia Constitutional Con- vention, they would have said that the only role ror the United States today that is consistent betrayal and ignominy. In the competition ror worst scandal of the day, Hardy didn't make the network air with his story about how the FBI paid him to lead a bunch or idealist d.ing-a- ling s on·a draft board raid : "I WAS NOT only encouraging the group to raid the Camden draft board, I was initiating all the plans to do so ... .I provided them with constant moral en· couragement. I provided them with the tools they needed, lad · ders, ropes, drills. bits, ham· mers. I provided them with rood to sustain them during the course or the preparation. All of this was paid ror by the FBI .... "J taught them how to open file cabinets without a key. I rented trucll.s for the m. l obtained a floor plan or the draft board building for them . I taught them how to climb ladders easily and walk on the edge or a roor without falling . ''My neighbors began to with its original purposes is to set a moral standard for the world, and then use all the skills and in- fluence at our command to rally the world 's peoples against criritinal s and murderers who use the national interest as justification ror their outrageous deeds. The Founding Fathers would have reminded us that no princi· pie stood higher with them than the right of people to self· government . They would have blazed with indignation that of. fi cials of thi s government would have used the exc use or national self-interest to subvert or over· throw other governments. INDEED, THEY would have declared. that nothing is Jess in the interests of the American people than to employ secret agents who deprive human be · ings or their basic rights and who ( VON HOFFMAN ) wonder wh.y J had this crowd of people climbing up the side of my house and parading along the edge of my roof every day. I began to feel like the Pied Piper." Elsewhere in the Capitol, Clarence Kelley. the head of the FBI, was telling a row of senators that the bombings are up almost as high as food prices this year. And what's the reason for it -more radicals ·or more FBI agents? The tales they tell in these hearing rooms 0£ government murders, burglaries and porno pix are incontestably icky, but we need those pictures of naked rabble-rousers making love to each other to justify this enormous WPA project for cops. Blue welfare, Head Start for gumshoes, why else the FBI's fascination with the Socialist recognize no legal or moraJ stan- dard in carrying out their aims. What would the Founding Fathers do about the CIA itself and about those American of- ficials who authorized the as- sassination plots ? 1bey would say, first of all, that the CIA is clearly unconstitutional. They would say that the United States has a primary obligation to ob- serve and enforce its own laws. They would prosecute each and every person involved in as- sassination or subversive efforts. Two women are now charged with attempts to kill President . Ford. There must be no double standard .. The American officials who were involved in the as- sassination plots against leaders of other governments must be tried under the laws. Nor is it an acceptable excuse for secret agents to say they were only acting under" orders. At Workers Party? THF. BUREAU has been spy. in.g on, harassing and infiltrating this minuscule sect for 30 years. OUring that time there bas not been one conviction of a party member. There hasn't even been an indict!Dent. Millions dropped on this booUess project. James B. Adams, Kelley's as- sistant, who does'a lot of the testi- fying (the chief couldn't possibly make all tbe hearings), told the Pike cotJ.mittee the purpose was to gaiD .. intelligence. But as the decades rolled by, shouldn't it have occurred to a few of those Oatreet that they were surveilling talkers, not doers? Put a tap and a tail on the Seventh Day Adventists. They 're in an open conspiracy with the ultifTJ(lte SUperpower to bring orf the End of the World. It is pitiable to watch the representatives of the spook agencies try to defend them· selves in the bearings. They Nuremberg. the United States helped to establish the principle that individuals. not nations. must suffer the consequences of their actions, even though they are ordered to carry out crimes. AT NURF.MBERG, too, American jurists helped to define a standard that could make the relationS of nations something less than a jungle. Some of the finest public ser- vants on the government payrolls are employed by the CIA. In terms or character, inte- grity, intelligence and com- petence, they compare favorably with any body or government • employes anywhere in the world. What has happened underlines the basic lesson the Founding Fathers tried to teach us -that even the best men cannot be trusted with secret po)Vers. plead that they did it because they had no guidelines and the poor dumb bunnies are righL WE EGGED ON the FBI and the NSA and the CIA and, the local Red Squad . We demanded that they do it, and many of us in Congress and in the media kJlew 1 what sort of abuses were taking place. We had to know because the victims repeatedly came to us and told us . We knew. we knew, ~ut now we're going to dump the scandal off on the cop. pers. Better that all of us who have known these things ror years and stood aside and kept silent, better that we at last stand up in public has Hardy did and make our apology as he did his : "I am not proud that I wa s an FBI inf or· mant. I am not proudofwhatbap. pened as a result of my being aQ informant. I only hope and pray that by coming here today, I can right some of the wrong that-was committed. ·· .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- • t Jimmy Carter's Chances: From None to Slim .. ORLANDO, Fla. -The pro. : spect of little Jimmy Carter, the t former governor of Georgia, be· ing transrormed into the giant· 1 killer who humiliates George Wallace in the Florida presiden- tial primary is preposterous - but not quite as preposterous as it was early this yeitr. Indeed, even though oo sane Democrat would bet a plugged -nickel on Carter's humiliation or Wallace in the March 9 : DemocraUo ·primary election : here, eventa set:in to be conspir- . ~ lng in suCb a :way as to deliver muimum political dividends for • Carter. I MOST IMPORTANT is lhe !act 1 that no other Democrat -with f the inconspicuous exception of Penns7lvania Gov. Milton Sbapp, an almool invbil>I• dark hone - bu shown tbe sligb~t Interest in a statewide race agalnst Gov . i Wallacelll Alabama here. • To the contrary# even Sen . Henry M. Joeltson o Washinglon -wbq Is erpected to run de· lef-ln oelected _,.-anal cliolrlcts, mainly Miami, with its large pro-Jackson Amerlcan- Jowllh community -Is not yet regarded as a aert~ factor ex- ~ln MI.mi'a DadeCounty. , -'( ( EVANS-NOV AK J Thus, almost by luck of th e· draw, Carter bas a favored track position that other Democratic presidential candidates in years past have often striven for but seldom achieved: a virtual two- man race against Wallace and his hard-core but quite inelastic force of supporters. In 1972 winner W aJlace got less than 42 percent of the vote in the presidential primary here, despite the highly emotional pull of a.a a.ntibusin1 provision on the ballot. Most Democrats and many Republican leaders her:e perceive Wallace at best as bold· tng onto just about that same stttngth next March, with no sure way to measure whether his paralysis will hurt or help him· politically. Another 42 ~rcent of that 1972 vote was distributed among thrtt: other candid.ates, each or them to tht: left of George Wallace : Hubert Humphrey, Jackson and Edmund Mll.'lkle. On the far left, the sb'Ongest showing was made by Sen . Geor1e McGovern, with a meager 6 percent of the total vote cast. Neutral Democrats doubt that Wallace will be able to pick up more than scattered votes from among th e 1972 non -Wallace voters. Ir true, and if these same non-Wallace voters of 1972 ac - tually go to the polls, they may well vote for the candidate who has campaigned tirelessly for thelr support -Jimmy Carter. THAT THEORY is by no means ironclad. Under fiorida 's &residential primary election aw, Secretary of Stale Bruce Smathers must place every pro- bable 19'16 presidential candidate on the ballot unless an affidavit ofnon<'andidaoy is filed. That means the huge bloc of non· Wallace voters couJd vote ror any of the 1976 candidates on the ballot, including Jackson , But since Jackson got only 13.5 per· cent of tht' vote in,J9'12 despite a major Campaign, it fs unlikely he would get many moce votes in March without a fuU-nedged er. fort. . That explains why earter·s re. lenUess campaign here (he hsJ been in the st.ate 22 separate times since last Jan. 20) may pay rlcb dividends and why he ran • JIMMY CARTER away with 70 percent of the straw vote taken last .. weekend at the first state convention 9f the long. decrepit Democratic P'artY in 7S years. , C8rter's other asaetll the prox- imity of his home stale, running some 200 m.llea along the north F1orida ~der. Postwar Georgia peanut farmer Carter talks the same language aa the con· servallve farmer• or 'Dortb Florido. · ... • No other Democrat in the swollen presidential field is so low-ke.y as Jimmy Carter, who wears a perpetual half-smile and predicts that the 1976 nominee will emerge rrom the primaries and not from any deadlock con- vention in New York City next summer. At a coffee·and-doughnut rally in Lakeland early one morning last week, ISO local Democrats heard Ca rter's soft-voiced political pilch, which defies pre· cise ideologi<'al definition. Carter combines a liberal idiom with some: hard·line positioos tbill are anathema to the left. Including denial ol the right to strike for public employe uniOM, and the death penally for certain capital crimes. HE IS CAMPAIGNING to win here -although he woo'tadmitto being an ••antl· Wallat-e" t:an · did.ate -in two-step ca.mp.aign he thinks will decide lhe Democratic nominee next sum· mer: r1n1t, beat Wall~ in this head·to·bead contest; second, win in an ~arty non-Southernltate ~ainst liberal opposition. lf Ca.rt.er 1ucceeds in step one In P1ili1d1's tlllJ:dil,,.tbs-11811orl prim.or). ~ lwo will-pc)Qi . :t I • ble, despite Carter's shadowy standing with the controlling liberal Democrats, who re4 member him as the man who nominated Jackson for President in 1972 and who courted Wallace inl970. OftANOR COAST DAILY PILOT Rol>eftN. Wttd.Pv"""'-' Thoma1l<ttuil, £ditor Tllomo.1 Polm~r .Sunder 1o .Editorial Pag~ EdiJor The tdlt0ri1I page· ot the Dally Pilot lttka to Inform ind 1timul1le ~Mitri tiy presenllftl on this page df"ent eommentary on topics or Interest by 1yndic1ti ed columllisls and ca'rtoonists. by provkJing " forum , 'for rtlden', _views . and by pre-s~llne lhl1 newspaper's oPlnions and kit:as on current topics. The edit.Ori.al opinions ot the Dally Pilot •PPtar only in the editorial t!olumn at the -top of the 1>11e. Opinions U• Pl'tUfd by (tie columnists ind cart.oontstt Ind letter writers are their own and n~ e:odonemmt of· •their vlewa by thi!i Daily Pl.lot should be Interred. SuDctaY, ~vemtM;r.~. ~s Castro's Detente B~Ue~ by Actions I .... WASIUNG'l'ON le~~·· lhe balmier Caribl;un blow· inC bohfffD CUba Ibo United States, MCC'e! Seoate t..otlmoll)r woms tbat ndel Qulro Is IUll lr1inC to spread bll l'9V<llutloo to U.S. territory, Tbe Yeteran lnveett1ator Allodlo '°arabocbla. tutlfylnc behind clOoed do«I ol Ibo Senate lntemaJ atcurlty -.ulx:ommlttff, cbarled that the CUban leader Is eollaboraUn1 with Ibo Soviet KGB to unaermlae 4Qlocracy l.o Puorto Rico. 11llore than 200 ' P\ato Rican activists have •Wied Cub1," Th1bocbla roPottea... "Many ' were trained ln teqoria111> ••• TbiJ number does not ln!:lucle Ibo 60 or 70 Puerto RJcane w"ho traveled to Cuba wilb Ven- ceremoa Brigade." . ' Thia brigade JJas been (1~CK ~DERSON) j IO&' C:~ and tho KGB, acconl-lnl Merel tatlmony, Is M••e91 PIMlto Lozada, former "dirtl' Iii~" thief ol the CUbon lntellla-. Hnlce. To lqlllmaU.. the campai1n for revolution, PIDelro Louda baa tried to brine In liberal leliden and hu, even lured some Amtrl<an Indjan aet!vlsu. So far, however, Ta.rabochia re- por!J that tbe Puorto lllean PfO- Ple are firm In their clellre to re- main with tbe United Slat..o. POUTE INVUTIGATOllS: tbeif d•ll1bt that II works oo virtually incurable sores. Dr1. Geoffrey F~rnle and James Doman built the machine with lilhb. a fan, and some twitches and fancy wiring. lt supposedly emitted ''elec- tromacnetic radiation . ., Nunes were ordered to reset the mac.hine every two houn, and, at the same time. check and treat their patients' sores. The phony gad&et was installed in a Torooto boepital. Astonishingly. five paUents with painful and stubborn bedsor6 were totally cured within 30 days. When we inquired, the doctors readily admitted their machine hid no therapeutic value. It "worked'' only because it forced nurses to treat the bedsores every two hours. DAii. V I'll.OT t! f • portrayed as fre1h.raced young Americana eager merely to help Cuban1 chop sugar cane. But Tarabochia testified that the Venceremo1 Bri1ade "is con• trollod by lhe KGB through tbe Cuban lntelligAnce Directorate." The DGI, as the directorate is better kqown, reported directly Out of pure politeness, the Senate Intelligence C·ommittee was compelled to investtaate a 'IPY mi.asion it had no intention of ln· vestigatlng. Theodore Orevers, a Grand Rapid.a, Micb., detective, wrote tbe committee about a Navy plane that crashed Into the Baltic Sea with an eight-man crew on Aprl18, 19SO. Blues Had Origins • ID Po.litics to Castro. Selected members of the brigade, accordinc to , Tarabochia, are hip deep in Puerto Rican revolul.,ioo. His tale of intrigue and subversion, in· cidentally, bas been confirmed to us by U .S, intelligence .aurces. ''Detente-and"the lifting 'or the blockade of Cuba" may be lhe tune Castro is whistling, said Tarabochia';' but below "the sur- face ... there are no indications that the Cubans have renounced their p0licy of subversion." Castro's main front for Puerto Rican revolution, said Tarabocbia, is the Puerto Rican Socialist Party. One of its leaders was caught with a cache of bombs sunk in 'a "fi'fe.foot-deep hole covered. by a concrete slab located under a cabinet" in Puerto Rico. Exotic acida and de- tonation devices were found with the bombs. In the United States, the re· volutionaries have enlisted Puerto Ricans in New Ycrk City, Chicago, Philadelphia, Albu- querque, Boston, Bridgeport and several other cities. Although -Castro's siren song of peace began early this year, one key Puerto Rican revoluUonary front was founded as late as March. Tarabochia, using elaborate charts, traced the Puerto Rican and Cuban activists to such citadels -of terrorist training as North Korea. He found a trail of 16 bombings traceable to Pue'rto Rican re· volutionaries in Newark, New York and Chicago. 'lbe bombers, using timers ranging from cheap Timexes to 17-jewel watches, hit police stations, an Exxon build- ing, Union Carbide and a bank. Directing the terror campaign In behalf of a relative of a crew member, Grevers asked the committee to investigate reports that the crewmen, later found to be on a spy mta1ion, were alive in the USSR. The detective received a routine reply, thanking him for the information and stating an in· quiry would be made. 'Ille letter was intended as a polite brush- off. But the elated detective took it literally and announced that the committee was investigating the whereabouts o( the missing men. The embarrassed committee, therefore, felt compelled to con· duct an investigation. It pro· duced no evidence that the men are alive. JDTLEK BOOTY: A former Army lieutenant colonel is free to keep tbo $33\000 be got from sell- in& a stolen 99-piece silver service .that once belonged to .Adolf HiUer. tbe Army bas de- cided. U be bad been caught earlier, be would have faced 10 yean in prison. M a field hospital commander during World War 11, lhe officer was looking for pots and pans for bis hospital when he stumbled on the cache of silver, embossed with Hitler's Initials. He put the 9tlver In the pots and later spirit· edit home. Failure to turn in such booty is a crime, the Army told us, but becau&e the statute of limitations expired 2S years ago, the officer can use it as planned to retire in Florida. HELPFUL HOAX: Two in- genious Toronto doctors who in· vented a Rul5e Goldberc machine as a medical hoax for curing bedsores, have discovered to The way Harry E. Godwin or Memphis, Tenn., tells it, ''In 1909 Ed Crump was running for mayor. The two other can· dldates' campaign ma nager s had hired two of the best bandg in Memphis to write and play cam· paign songs," leaving Professor W.C. Handy to come uP with a song for Crump. ''Memphis was wid e o p e n . a red.light town -and Crump bad Jaid he was going to clean it up. Handy wrote a kind or tongue·in · <'heek song called 'Crump Don •t 'Low,' all about what Crump was going to not allow if he became mayor.·· Hence, as the song says, ''Mr . Crump don't "low no easy riders here: Mr. Crump don 't 'low no easy riders here. We don't care what Mr. Crump don't 'low, we gonna barrelbouse anyhow. Mr . Cr-ump don't 'low it, ain't gonna 'low it here ... Mr. Godwin's ta pe tells in W.C. Handy's own voice what hap· pened when the song was in· troduced : "We played that song on the corner of Main a nd Madison. It stopped the traffi c. Stenographers danced with their bosses. Men ran up to the bank to know 'what's the name of that?' And we said 'Mr. Crump,· and we had to play it over and over .·· THREE YEARS later Hand y rewrote the song and publis hed it as "Beale Street Blues." It is believed to be the first blues published, although Godwin believes there was one earlier. But, Godwin continues, " .. .it was the first published blues to contain what the boys call a juz ( S. I. HAYAKAWA) break." Godwin has Handy ex· plain what happened during the revision. Says Handy, "One night after midnight I passed by Peewee's Sa loo n . Ne xt to it was a barbershop . The barbershop was open, say about 2 o'clock in the morning. I s aid, 'C'moo let's go home. Whatchya staying up so late for ?' He says, 'I haven't closed up because ain't nobody got killed yet.· "And I 1truck myself and said, 'Thal 's it!· "My brother Charlie said. 'What·ait?' .. And l :said. 'The Beale Street Blues,' and I went home and wrote the words .·· This moment was the inspira- tion, then, for the famous words of the song : "You'll see pretty browns /In beautiful gowns, I Tailor-mad es and hand-me- downs. /You 'll see honest men I and pickpockets skilled, I you'll find that business never closes till somebody gets killed.·· MR. GODWIN'S tape contains fa ntas tic jazz , such as Danny Barker's own performance of his composition, ''Save the Bones for Henry Jones 'Cause He Don't Eat No Meat ," and Butch Thompson's rendition of "Mr. Jelly Lord," in which Jelly Roll Morton dreams that be bas been knighted for his performance on the piano. Best of all, however, are tap· ings of Louis Armstrong. In a small group a white lady and jazz enthusiast asked him, "Young people or your race aren't in· terested in our kind of music ... Dixieland, the New Orleans jau ... They are off on this kick of Rock and Roll. It's so f. Life Issue Is Not fo'r Courts ' I I The New Jersey judge's de· cision that Karen Anne Quinlan must be kept alive by a mechanical life support system seems to.me the right one, but for the wrong reasons. Had the verdict gone the other way, the case might have been a watershed decision in the whole matter of humane life and death and euthanasia. It would certain· Jy have started a moral debate of immense consequence. As it-is, the case has degenerated into an empty debate among doctors and Jawyen. There was not a single doctor among those testifying who would acknowledge that he had a right to let a patient die of "judicious neglec't. ·• This was not because these ~ ' I ! I CHARLES McCABE doctors, or man)' others, bad any notable reverence for life. Doc- tors practice ''judicious neglect'• all the Ume, wllh and without coMent of the patient and/ortbepaUent'sfamlly. NO, WHAT heavily determined the judge's verdict, in my view, was the testimony of tJie doctors, which led him to the view that such matter.a as ''judicious neglect•• and tbe "rleht to die'' are more properly the concern of the medical than the legal pro- fession. What led the medical pro- Cession to its condemnation of humane dying as its moral duty in this case was less old· fashioned uprightness than the specter that dominates the medical profess ion at thi s minute: a paranoid fear o r malpractice suits. Joseph and Julia Quinlan, the adoptive parents of Karen, of· fered to sign a release exonerat- ing the hospital from all responsibility for the girl's de- ath. Friends of the Quinlan fami- ly believe that fear or a malprac- tice. suit moved the hospital authorities to keep Karen on the respirator. A IJTrLE·NOTED factor in the.case is that Karen's natural mother. who gave the child to the Quinlans at an early age, is still alive. Thi:s woman 's identity is apparently known to the .Quinlans. There is a fear she might just come forward and :sue. Joseph Quinlan <'laimed that the two doctors in charge of the case had earlier agreed to the "judicious neglect·· idea. The doctors disagreed, claiming they would not have pulled the plug even if the court had ordered them to. Yet jt is s ignificant that their lawyer, Ralph Porzio, is a specialist in malpractice suits. Porzio. through the course of the trial, kept warning Judge Robert Muir Jr. of the conse- quences of a decision in favor or the Quinlans. In' his opening re-- marks made refe rences to "Nazi atrocities .. a nd told the judge be would be "ordering an execu· tion.·· TllE MALPRACTICE lawyer said : "If this court approves of procedures which might tend to terminate or cause termination of her (Karen 's) life. it is in· ev itably givi ng sanction to euthanasia.·' The ca se. instead or settling anything, has n1 oved us all back a rew .steps on the impartant questions of how much control an individua l may legally have over his death. Now th at the law ye'rs are prac .. ticing medicine, every doctor in the country will be strongly motivated lo ta ke the safe course (the one free from threat of malpractice) by offering to the termina.lly a nd hopelessly ill pa · Uent all the tec hnology available. The Quinlan case is far from t'learcut. s ince no one knows the wishes or th e comatose Karen in the matter, but the matter should be appealed , sinee in the end it is the lawyer s who will have to give the doctors th eir ans~rs . These will probably be n('ithcr good nor ri~ht . monotonous. Somehow il doesn't · hove !he depth." Armstrong: '·I mean, just let them get tired of it and say there must be something more that all this derived from. Because the Rock and Roll came from the sanctified churches in New Orlean.1. I remember when I was a child where the sisters would shout and things that they are do· ing now. It is nothing but old soup wanned over. But we can't do nothing about it.·· was sung to the tune or "When the Saints Go Marching In.'' "WHEN I WAS only /fiveor90 I down Rampart Street I would go; I that's where I beard the great King Oliver I who was jan in New Or1eans .... ·· The song recalls the great mo- ments or bis life -the honky tonks or Prohibition days, bis work in Hollywood with "Bing and Mrs. Grace (Kelly)1" and be· ing named, because or his con- certs abroad, ''Jazz Am- bassador,·' The song end~: ''from New Orleans." On Jan. 29, 1971 , a new presi· dent was sworn in at the Preas Club, and Armstrong was persuaded by the club and permitted by his doctor to attend, 'With orden not to entertain more than four minutes, not to blow bis horn, not to clown around and get excited. He did all these things. He also sang his autobiography. which Mr. Godwin recorded. It "Alter this," writes Godwin, "Louis went back to the hospital, and I believe never left again. So I this was his final farewell ap-. pearance.'' I Thank you, Harry Godwin, musician, composer, jazz anti- quarian. for sharing these treasures with me. When Is a Mansion Not Also a Home? By BRUCE KEPPEi. The only person eligible to live in the $1 .3-tnillion mansion just completed in CaroUcbael will have nothing to do with what he calls "the Taj Mahal." After• all, what does a young bac~lor or ascetic taste need with 12,000 square feet or liv~g space. including a 50·bY·40·root bedroom suite? Now , someone who woWd like it is private citizen Nancy Reagan, whose dream it reaJizes. 11te wife of the former gov- ernor was first made nervous by the t'ombustible na ture of the inherited mansion -a century-old Victorian home surrounded. now by commercial structlU'ea. And she later felt that tb~ private home s he and Ronald Reagan later leased was "a bit rinlcy-dink" for the state of California, because a house guest -former Vice President Spiro T . Agnew -had had to use a guest room without its own private bath. SO THE REAGANS pushed through this mansion built on a bluff overlooking the American River in Carmichael, 11 miles rrom the Capitol. Had Republican Houston F1ournoy. a family man, won the camp-,ign to succeed Reagan, the house would be getting the full treatment now -the roomy interiors decorated, grounds landscaped, swimming pool and sauna installed, and plans ror a homewarming shaping up into a glittering social event. But Edmund G. Brown Jr., a somethina:-else Democrat, defeated Flournoy. Among the less boring thlng1 he said in do- ing so was that he would never live in tbe Reaaana' dream house. Brown subsequently found a sixth-floor apartment adja- cent to Capitol Park that met his housing need.I Just fine, belonged to the slate, and carried a rent of $250 a month, which fit nicely into the budget of a governor . But by then the mansion was already under construction in Carmichael and or· ders to abort would have brought with them both litigation and substantial costs to restore the site to its natural state. So the house recently was co mpleted. For tht> foreseeable future, that low·slung California rambler with the Spanish accent is likely to remain vacant. Tbe Brown administration's effort to put the building to some U&e as a site for state-run seminars and meetings, which now take.place in private hotels, was defeated in a Senate commit· tee last August after having cleared the Assembly. ANOTHER EFFORT to broaden the law will be made next year, but until that is successful the building can only be used to shelter a governor. j Even vacant, however, the mansion will be costly. To maintain the empty building and grounds and provide ade· - quate security will cost an estimated $105,000 a year. 1--' The complex technical sys te ms, from an elaborate .,. telephone installation to a solar heat collector that produces most of the hot water, will tend to deteriorate if they don't function regularly. And appliances that carry a one·year guarantee may go untested by normal use. During his campaign ror office, Governor Brown called the idea of building a mansion in times of economic hardship "absurd." Granting that view, now that tbe "absurb" has come to pass, doe.1 it becomes logical to leave il unused! THE PROBI.EM llERE, for Brown, is that the mansion bolds a symbolic value that runs counter to a basic strain of his ''new spirit" -a re-evaluation of materialism and what he bolds to be conspicuous consumption. The buildil1g's architecture itself exudes less a reflection of California's Spanish-Indian heritage than the exclusiveness of the state's affluent suburbs, in which few living represen· tatlves of that heritage can be found. (As former State Architect Joh.n Worsely once said, the building doesn't have "style" so much as "class.") So the question is which values the public feels more com· fort.able with today, the Reagans· or Brown's. Will Brown be pressured to inhobit the residence simply because it's there? Or will the lawmakers be prodded ins tead to let the building be put to some other use? For how, the taxpayers have a $1 .3 million white elephant on their hands, the house the Reagans built . Bruc:e Ktpptl 1.t mioogzno tditor of Clltift'/rnaa Jou rnal , from which thii article_7 taken ·~~~~~~~~~-,..-.~~~~ ' • • Sadness Haunts 2 l)aughters I J)~r>Q;\' !Ul"'I I -!land 1n helpexplainit:sgreatness. h.and they run through a wood in A \'i~ito r can st•e the OOl'·rwm their ankll··lt·n..:th gown~. twu lit mini t•ol!ect1un in 10 minutes or tie girls t•has1ng ;1 hullt•rfly llut it spt>nd hours on it . IA."vey ·~ sh m a<'rompany1ng pan1phlet exrlainl) \lo'hy an air of sactness <.'lings to lht•st> twn girls through ear h s uccessive portrait. is not a merry l'h:1:-.(>. ·rhl' gi rls art· The idea, which onginaled at grave ~nrl somt·how Siill . the :"l'ation:1l G allt.>ry, is one v.•ay G A INS 8 0 R 0 U G 11 had Later they st;•nd tall a nd proud torombat mus('u n1 fatigue -that something o( an obsesliion about in their rlo"•ing i:owns, gorgeous surfP1t of riches where the t'Yl' his daughter!!' ha ppint'ss. Lt>vy young ladies in the prime or life. glaz('sover, tht• mindswitchei;orr notc•s. I-le f('arsd his grown ·up Yet th(' rt• are still no smlll'li, and and thl' ft'<'l s tart to hurt. "fine ladit>s" m ight somehow again tht' mf1od is Yii ~tful . ''miss getting husbands.·· ~le These ~tr (· th t• daughters of TllF. G0.1\1. OF f'aeh "pnint must ha"e ha d secund sight . Thon1as Gai nsborough, the i;:rt•al ing in foC'us" show is to make it "Ro th girls W('re apparently 19th century paint ... ·r who is cur-easy for an ordinary mu.s e um wl)()('d by the talf'ntt>doboc player rentl y featured in a new kind of gm·r to study on£' paintin(: in Johann Christian Fischer," art show. depth, to really see it as a 1..rveyv.·rote. "Both set'mlo have Tht>re was reason for thei r sad· scholar sees it fallen in love with him ... nC'SS . ThC'V sharl'd a star-crosst•d ''It's !rut' that modern IO\'£' storY One dit'cl w1married museums can be somewhat in To ~targaret 's dismay, her and theotht•r mad. digestible,·· said Gallery DireC'tor t'lder sister ~t a r y won hln1. But Gainsbor o ugh 's doublt· ~Ii<'htiell..evC'y . "Weare trying tu the marriage q uiC'k ly failed. portraits of hi s d aught C'rs ar<' on p r esC'nt :1 subs tantial hor:. ~tary moved back to her parents' view at London 's National d'()('U\'re." ' home, and the two girls lived Galler Y as tht· 1<1 l<'Sl t·xa mplc uf a G :ii n s horou g h loved paint there the rest of their lives happy museum idt~a . in~ hi s daughters. Besides fiVl' ~1 ary slowly declined into mad - The notion is called "Jla1nt doublt• portraits he also paint('d ness. Spinster ~l a rgaret died in ing in l'~ocus ··It d1splaysjustun\' lht• girls separat<•ly . !'~our of lht· 1820. followed six years later by STERN FACES REVEAL SAD STORY ... m:1stt·r11i\'('t'. surrounci('<J by ob-double portraits a nd two single 78-year -old !'.tary. Tht>y were jC'l'ts or rt'lated p111nllngs whieh onesareintheC'urrentshow. buriedinthesamegrave. ... AS CHILDREN GROW TO BE LADIES It alia11.o; OhJ(•(•f Film Lust Blasted H0'.\11'-: ltaly·s prun11nent dire(' tors and C'rtti<'s ar\• (';.1mpaign1n):l for ·•the <>nd" to bust ancl lust films nr I lolly wood -on-the Ti lx:r Two of thC' no tablt•s, dirt'ttors Roberto Rosi;plJini and Franco Zef fir('lli, have turned to G<XI as the sub· jeC't of costly and ambitious produ<·· lions .. ~ fe\I.' fl'<>! that vi<>wers of erotic films. having seen e\'erything, will still take in mor(' of the i;am(' ~but art• also ready for nudity that <.1 PJ>C'<.1\s to re- ason as "-'l'll as thC' Ii bido. ROSSF.J.J .l~I . a foundi ng f<1lht•r 11f postwJr r('alis m and lht• tliret'tOr of "Ofl('n City," issul'd a public appt•al :lg.:linst pornography in a major as· sault on the t' rst w hilt• trend in I t;.dy. l·le said erotic filmi; wt·re di ssl~minating ·'aberration into<'Uff(•ntethics. ·· lloi;sellini, howevt•r, i;ays he ts not ad\'OCa tin):!'. rt~ligious views or even 1norals. ll is latest wo rk . "T he !\.1essiah. · · depiC'tli Ch1ist as a social r(•- deemer rather than God, stresses "Christ the peasant .. rather than the :\Jmighty <·reating miracles. I-IC' says, "The film has no m£'ssage and is a study of the power struC'ture of the time ... Zeffirelli, too, is an arch foe of porno· graphy, complaining that it has "fatal· iy lowered·· the c ultural level of Italy's vi tal fi lm industry, 'wl1hich employs :K>0,000 persons for its 2.50 films a year , highest in the world. Ht• is now direC't · ing a six-hour television documentarv on "Jesus of :\J az.a r£'th, · · at a cost of $1 ::; million. Rut currently the films in wide de· ~~.-+--.. mand a nd supply ar1.• n11tpll for lhl•1r thin plots and hl•a\'y nudity in a trend that b<>ga n ii de{·adl' ;1g11 and still prt•· vails. l.eg itim a l t•, by nudlt y ·alunt' films ha\'e bet·ome so rreval<'nl, hack on the S('reens after court battlt•s, that hard and underground porno h;1s ncv1.·r aroused signif il' ant i nler<'st in I l:tly. Rut despite a harsh campaign by in lluential direc tors and C'ritics, F:ro~ has taken a long l£'a se in movie houst·~ S uch films yield hefty returns . ProduC'ed on shoestrin.'t'. budgl'lS, mnny take a sli ght risk as thC'y stay off the scrt•ens for weeks during highly publicized censorship cases. llut Lh ... ·n they return to a rnass audience t·ur1ous about what was so immoral in the fi lm ITAl.IAN CRITICS have assaJl(•d their courts for \('ttin~ such films uff the hook in a few ~'t...'('k s or months v.•hile one major Italian-produced and direC'led film, "1,ast 1'ango In Paris." was kept away for yea rs for only one or two sequC'nCt'S C'unsidt•red in questionable tastr. .<\ctually, flops of any kind are rare in Italy, particularly f11r ('heaper films. Italians floC'k to moviei; for films assailed or praised, their tele\·i ~ion yet to make the inro;id it h:is in other parts 11f Europe or the Un itC"d States. For instance, Italian television of· f ers only t hre<' film s~ wet>k. com pared to O\'t'r 200 a "'\'t~k in ~ew ,·ork. The movie indus try a ttr at· ts in on1.• yl•ar 550 million viev.·l"rs , 10 times Italy's population. Pasadena " ' I • ' • ( ti I • Tt>e master of tfie bioqraphical nove~ author. of 'The Agony and the Ecstacy' (Michelangelo), ~wst;fqr Lifer (Van Gogh), ~nlf'Clarence Darrow for tht!{)efense', has now written ii new novel, 'The Greek Treasbre' a biog111phfcal novel of Henry and Sophia Schlil>'r;nn, the amateur archeologist and wife t~am wh<>- rediscoyerqd the city of Troy. •Ana Irving Stbne Will be here to au\ogreph his new book, tomorrow, Monday, Oecem~r 1, from 12 ~()().2:00 pm. You're invited! And if you can't make i1 , tall, we'll ask Mr. Stone to . ' a tograph the bJok, and we'll hold it for you I 'The Greek Treasure'. $10.95. Books, 24. I R obinsa~·s Newrort Special Shoµping Hours: Mon.-Wed. 10-9 :30 r:;;:;;;;:;;~H; .. ~l~IT;;'il~S~;;:;;;;;;;~--'~::;jjjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ·~ -n. ..... wc:fk• s...tt.11"' ww~ .... -... .... lh9'1M NEW 80011 Dy ~ J WoH.-1 MD N_..,•oo.url;lllO<l i.-11.".-t.IU .... ,.0. -JIJ1 ............... c-.tl'4t DISCOVER LE PETIT CAl'E & lfED'S SHOES DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 642-5678 5outh Coast ?taza Pre-holiday savings. Women's coat specials. Warm winier savings specially 101 misses Choose lrom !he latest looks wraparounds. mod1f1ed Hencli looks and liooded styles. In a vartely o! fabulous fabrics 1nclud1ng new Ultrave!le · Arnet · In acetates and woolll1nenfnylon blends No,ch collars. sh1r1 collars. even a plush lamb lur collar coat ru S.A country ol or191n) ..Wonderlul winier colors Street wrap. tie wa ist 8-1 If." 39.99 Single breasted l!e waist. 8-16. 39.99 S1n91e breasted w1lh hood, 8·16, 39.H Lamb tnmmed tie style. 8·18. 5!.!8 Use your JCPeriney charge card \ Al Slorn open •vm ntgttt untll Chnstm•a. Stor•• open Sund•y 10 A.M. 10 1 P.M. J_ Complete · coverage of counly governmenl and cour11. Every day In the DAILY PILOT \ \ " ,/ / I' ' \ ' I I \ \ \ ". t Available in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Venlura countlh. I • • Sunday.No11ember:IO, 1975 DAILYPILOT A 9 : The Perfect Soldi,er? State Counts Terrorist Bombings SACRAMENTO <UPI l -Eleven terrorist-t.)'ll'8 bombing:s w<-re amoog 91 bombing incidents re- ported by IO<'al law en- forcement officials In California during the period July through Sep- temMr. the State JWili~ Oepartmt>nt said last week. the third quartf'r 197$ bombin1s In tbe July tlgurt"S were down from throuah· September the 131 bombioi in<i· period, dent• reported in the Other bombing lncl- Aprll through June dents accounted for one period lhls year. A 131 death and one injury, total also was reporttd ln Eight or fhe 11 ter the J•ouary tbr ouah rorist-type bom'blDgs oc- ?.11lrchperiod thisyear. curred io Northern Robot C·limhs Stairs, Disarms Bombs, Fires Gun, Follows Orders The department said The aeency said nine California and t.br.e in injuries resulte-d from 11 Southern 'californii}.. it terrorist group-related: &aid. PUBLIC AUCTION ESTATE JEWELRY U.S. OFFICER CHECKS OUT WHEELBARROW WASl-IINGTON (UPI) robot through its paces -Terrorist bombs ha\'e at a recent invitation· become almost as much only demonstration at a part or daily li fe in Bri-the Bij.tisb embassy. ln- tain as afternoon tea. terest 111 the curious little The British army has a machine ran high among funny-looking little robot U.S. military pe.rsonnel, it thinks might be the the secret service, the aru:w{'r to the-bombings, . FBI, federal agencies and British indus try is and local Police and fire trying to sell it to tht> rest officials who attended. of the non-Communist A Morlax spokesman world . said Wbeelt:>arrows are The device is the in oper ation in the Wheelbarrow P.1ark Vi l. Irish Re publie, the Theo multi-functional '.'if'therlands, Canada, "-------------------./ gadget bas been used for Kuwait and Argentina. CALIFOlHIA'S LARGES1 LAW SCHOOL WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW OF ORANGE COUNTY FULLY ACCREDITED 8Y rHE ST!-Tf 8AR OF CAL/FORNI.A OFFERS A PROGRAM OF FULL -TIME LAW STUDY TO BEGIN IN JANUARY • tH EITHER zy1 or 1 YEARS of FUU.r/ME low ilvdf (15.16 clo1voom llour1 ctr •e!l): or e IN t rTHER l'h or 4 YEARS of fART·TIME dcry. e~~;ng, 0< wffl~ low 1lucif (J do1se1 per ""!tel J.~ hO<Jll ~r clan): • You ccn earn Yoll' JURIS DOCTOR (JD) deg1te or.d qvolily lo lob th• CAUFORHIA IAR EXAMINATION Willi 01 r-HOHE fOI U.TAlOGUI 1111 North Stile College Fullerton, CA 92631 17141993-7600 APPLY NOW FOR DAY, EVENING, 01 WEEKEND CLASSES BEGINNING JANUARY 19, 1976 SIMILAR PROGRAMS AVA/V.8L.E AT COORDINATE C"-MPUS IN SAN DIEGO STVDlNJS IUOllU fOl ffDPALlY IHSUaED STUDENT LOMU • AlrtOVID fOI VfTIRANS • two years in strife-tom and the firm has gotten Northern Ireland. and inquiries from dozens of metropolitan police rt>-other non-Communist cently acquired the robot countries. He said he to try to stem the rising believed the machine is a tide of tert orism in Lon-must for airports, don. harbors, oil refineries 1o1ade by ~1orfax, Ud., and chemical plants "as w major British derense part or a complete. total contractor, the e lectric-security system.·· powered robot can climb Col. Mike Newcombe, stairs, disarm bombs. representing the British tow vehicles. shoot its army. said the basic idea way into buildings, for Wheelbarr ow was break windows, opt>n car sketched on a restaurant trunks and piC"k suspect tablecloth in a dingy items up 1 n it s airport, "Because we mechanical arms for re-faced a bombing cam- moval to safe areas. paign the intensity and AJ,f, TJllS is done re· motely , with an ex · plosives expert operat- ing an eleC'tronic control box at a safe distance from the suspected bomb. Wheelbarrow is equipped with lights and a television camera. The remote operator can manipulate the robot by watching a small vidro monitor. The standard vehicle costs $11,200. minus ship- ping and duty. The de- luxe model. equipped with all conC'eivable ex· tras, runs $17,400. Morfax and the British government put the complex.ity of which we had not ever met before. "The mos t precious aspect of it to me is that I can sit 100 meters away from a bomb situation. and I can send my friend in there to do the dirty work for me ," Newcombe said. Physically, Wheelbar· row is a gangly device that looks like something out of Buck Rogers. It is built like a miniature tank, with tracks rather than wheels. Its most striking feature is a long arm extending in front that can r otate 360 degrees and move about 140 degrees up a nd down. Rockwell electronic calculators give you The Answer. 89.95 Rockwell 63R slide rule with scientific notBtion Performs complex calculatio ns such as factorial compulations. degree/radian conversion. parenthetical operations. Extra large display. Ideal for engineers, scientists. Batteries. charger. case included 16.99 Rockwell Model SR electronic calculator with percent key Adds, subtracts, multiplies, d ivi des. 8- d igit display. percent key with automatic add-on and discount. Floating decimal. Operates on 1 9-vott battery or optional AC adapter. 19.99 . 18R electronic calculator with percent and memory Ideal fCJr everyday use at home or in the office. Percent key solves add-on and d iscount problems. Algebraic logic: automatic constant and repeat. Floating decimal and negative indicator; dual clear entry/clear all key; 8 digit dis play. ~111·f Penney AH Slor•t:eo o .. ry nigh! unm Chrt1tm11. S1oro1 open Sunday 10 A.M. to 8 PM. ARCADIA-BANTA NITA CANOGA PARK CARSON DOWNEY FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH LAGUNA t&LS EWOOO MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTH HOLL YWOOO NORTHRIOGE OllAHOE 'THE CITY' PUEHTE Ill.LS RIVERSIOE SAN BERNARDINO TORRANCE VENTURA WEST The arm carries the television ·camera, a five-round shotgun and a mechanism that can lay an explosive charge ·to neutralize suspected bombs. Both the disrup· t ive charge a n d the shotgun can be activ3ted by remote control. .<\t the end of the arm are nail-sharp edges to break car windows or glass doors . The operator can maneuver Wheelbarrow using either direct sight or the tt;>levision system. If the robot must enter a building, guns can be fired remotely to nail doors open so it does oot get locked Inside. THE VEHICl.F. weighs 4JO pounds, is 27 inches wide, 48 inches long and 32 inches high-with boom arm folded . It can travel 100 feet per minute, and its· two lead- acid batteries can run slightly more than two hours without recharg- ing. "Wh eelbarrow can do nothing to prevent ter· rorists from planting bombs, .. a !'t1 orfax spokesman said. "But ii can do considerable to minimize the damage and the destruction.·· & FINE CONTEMPORARY JEWELRY Probably the most in'f>ortont estote jewelry sale of 75. OVER ONE MIWON DOLLAR INVENTORY , FREE ADMISSION WHEN: Fridoy Decemi,.r 5, 1975 8:00 P.M. IOLllS' P&t'lllt ,l&Tll _ LDlS ~ Sll!S 11 Sll1 lmlS N!Sltfl WHERE: Newport Galleries Ltd. 2542 Wast Coast Hwy. Newport Beach, Calif. !•uo" "om '°""' oi lht t111ts1 ••lettronl rts\'4.IWltl SI Southern C•llfomla) WHAT: Somet~ 10 wit ev.ryone'1 podietboo« c:sld tcru •. Oiomond Kllitoir91 from VJ carat to 20 corots ond up in fancy <olOf"I ond while'-f•pensive men's ond lodie1' wotch.s lnckdn9 Piogeh, Ome90, lcuM and Mercie!", lueche Girod. Palek Philip, VodwrON Constorine, elt.. most brc:sld ne•. lots of gold lt•"°Y· ~eds of !Mon c:sld cock1oil rirlgs Mt .nth n.ibie1, _,oAd\, ~"· diomoricb, etc. S-find jode c:sld CN""iefltal jewelry, loh of m. ontique re•""r with moriy !a"nCM holrnarll. f'k1tn.m c:sld diomond brocNt1, ~ ~" pen- donts, etc. GJ.A. APPRAISALS WITH All IMPORT ANT PIECESI IM,.rte11t Net~Any it'"' purmo..d cwid giv.n 01 o gilt "'°Y bt r•turn.d for utdit or eithanged !CN"" other mttchcn:IM by peoon recti'ring gilt. INSPECTION: s...ndoy. No11ember 30th Noon-S:OO P.M. & 7-00 f.M...S:OO P.M. Monday, O.Ce"'°" lo Noon-9:00 P.M. Tuelday, Dec*"** 2nd Noorl--S:OO P.M. fridoy (ScN Doy) lQOO A.M.·5:00 P.M. & 7.00 P.M.~ P.M. Phont: (714) 645-2200 for lnfonnatioft T erm1 of MM. 8cl'llr.anericord, Mmter OaQe, chedu, terml. Solurday & Suodoy, December 6lh c:sld 7th-FM crystds, porcelains, V...., broru:e1, arptitl, •le. •I be .old. Avct iMMr Art Lr<rl•• 16''x56'' . ~~~ deluxe decorator ~,·full length mirror " " iJ 6.99 carton of 36, covera 3 aq. ft GUnvnerar" by Hoyne, a great new way to decorate with mirrors. 2"x6" size in clear or gold tone. Use as mirror bricks. accents, borders. cover furniture or accessories. Create your own designs. Do it vourself ... just press and stick I 8.99 Add useful beauty to your home with distortion-free Great Lengths'" fashion Plate mirrors by Hoyne. Four 16x14" mirrors apply easily to doors, walls, other surfaces to make a 16x56" full length mirror. Foil decorator border design enhances any room. '" Gla1-Tlle1"· by Hoyne make any room seem larger. Do a whole wall, or add decorator accents. Silv~r or gold foil vein; green, gold or sitver swirl effects. 12"x 12" size. ARCADIA-SANTA ANITA CANOGA PARK CARSON DOWNEY FUUERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH LAGUNll HILLS LAKEWOOO MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTHRIDGE ORANGE 'THE CITY' PUENTE HILLS RIVERSIDE SAN BERNARDINO VENTURA WEST COVINA WHlTTWOOO · -,--COVlNA WHITTWOOO • ·~~~~~~~~~~_:;=-::~-""'"'-"'-=-==--~~~~~~~~~-'·-·' I \ ' -· I • AJe o.i.JLv PILOT Sunday, November 30, 1975 rozne A.it8rney . . Throws Hat in R ·ing a, 0. C llUSTINGS Ol .. oauw l'tlel:IUft An lrvine attorney who believes individual property rights are going down the drain plans to become the fourth can· didate for the Republican 14th Assembly District nomination in next June's primary. William Crpsby. 3700 Park view Lane. plans to announce his can- didary Thursday. Crosby, 30, describes hims<'lf as "basically C'on~ervative." "My main motivation for rWl- ning," he said, ''is that I have not heard the other candidates ad- dress the issues in a ·conservative vein." • Lobbyist ~ Okay ~~µght 1 would be 1imllar lo the operalloo maintained In Sacramento, wlll CMt $100,000 •year, lncludbw a salary of at lea1t $.10,000 for tho lobb)'ilt bimaelf. Even If tho Transit <el!dwtthtbelrplam. DUbic:t approve• • ""°" A bearlnl bu _,. 1harla1 a1reement for earl)"' Jnaary tn _,., tbe two cOUlll;y OOllllb' supeii« Courtm entlllelwlllhaYOtowal\ a bld by Madeline at 1 ... t unW after tbe BlaclrwoU of Newport lint ot the year to Ill'>-Buell to Ul the lob-. bylltplllll with·-· C •t t Seek ~ .. "!l~o.:'i,. mwat Z Y 0 re_1pond to a "1bow OC Fire Aid . 5:p~i:-= THE FrVNE SOCIE" Q ,• ....... (114) ~7431 , .,on •!l!r.., ..... .,.....,. ·-· Newport .. .-. Coll!.-............ "'" ...... to: ~ ................... . ADDRESS •••••••••••••••• Shop early for Now16.99 Noreko LedrbugTll delux•cord shiver. Dual·action, one--stroke shaving for close.·comfortable shaves for legs and underarms. Snap·ofl cfeaning. 110/220V for ORANGE COUNTY PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTI TIOU$ BUSINESS NAME STATl!MENT TeM lollowlf'\;I l)ffM>n 11 !IOI""' M l· ""'•s· TIGEFI Fl EAL TY & INVESlMENT CO., 1"31 !loll• 0.lt• Rd., Hunl:IA91on llorKl'I. CA. t2 .... 9 Curt!' L. WOOIW'f, !/Ill F•lklrk 1.n., Huntlnvton !ka.;11, CA. n...-i l"I' bullrw11 ll con(lu(ll'CI by~ ln- <11.,;ou11. Curll,L. WoolM!J Thb 1111 .. Y~nt WI• Ille(! <with ti. c-ily Cl••-ol OrlnO. Counly on Nov· ~ll,5'7S. -· ,_, Pl,1bU"'9CI Or•n~ Co.11 0.llr PllOI. Nov.1'.U ,JG.•l'Cl0.(.7.lt7S 'll1·1S · D-ath Nedees •c·~~~~~~~~~~~--j ' THOMAS ) HUDSON THOMAS, rtslelefot of C.SUI Msw, Ca. Piss.ad ew1y ,....,.. .,...,.,. 21, 1t7S111r. -ve of 7~. $uN!""'° ~ 1111 •If• MN T1'Dm11, -~. -JO'l'CI JOhMM; of Clt$11 MfM, Ca. <iii ,an, Ji "'" T"°"'1s of T1ulln, Ca. Fl,.. , trlnlkhllC11'9n, Ol1pel Mf¥1(1 -ln- lt rnment •J.'1<1t PM. TUI.Mer,• OH1mblt 2( 1t,J •I Wt1tml/lstet" #IMn!of"l•I 1"..-1 M1Wtu1ry I. CilfNWry. WtVlllllS .. , llt.odU:...., ctlf9ottorL . VOTaNDAHL, ' ANTON J. VOTINOAHL, retldtnl ot H~k9on S.ldl. ce. ,..,111d .... ., NO.,.mblf' 21, 197$ 11 IM 10t Ill 74. Sul"•l...O by hit .it., Miry vot...a.111 ,. Clf Hunt!ntll>l'l .. e<:ll, ca. AIM ~I""'° by -\Oii, J1m11 Vollnct111hl ol H~­ IP'!llon 8eec:r., Cl., 1M tour Cl-..ghlt.,,, e. ... r1, H1911 of Glrdton1, Cl .• Burley DNl'I Plltult.111 ol Yonk••s, New Yoo., llll'll\I ,,... Voi.nct1Pll of Htwtllol're, C.., MilrYIM Trlldt1u o1 Ean-..h, W~flllnoton. Aho 111vt1 -_,,.,., 8er1 vo1.-1 Of Awt>urn, c... He 11 Ibo wnol....cl by !WO 1lt11r1, Bert.11 Wik........, 01 o .... ,d. c. .. 1n0 Hlr-... ClrbJ of St. Plt.r1tlouro, Fl1. TWll,.. ..,.~.,._ 11 ... o••~. ••• -91'Ml-er1Nt_,, 011ri.1 E"""°" Ft.Id. Mr. V.'911l1Pll w.11 I 111-klrlO n'llmblf ol Tiii F1rm1r1 Union of North o.1<011. Slt"vk:11 "'111 tis T- dmy, 0.(ember 2, 1915 11 10am n..sn- ~Wll"I "'-* In Huntington 8'111:11, Cl. 1n1•rm111t 11 1n911wood "'••It Clmtt1ry Jn fl'!ill•wDOd, C.. Smit!> ~dlr1etor1. WMaeLl!lt, SALLIE.JUNE WHEELER, rftloen1 of Sin!• 41'11, C.. S11rvlvl'CI bJ Mr ~.John E. Wllnlet'. 5.111 -1 nwrnti.r of SI. J1me$ fplKO!M-1 O...-ch f1/f ~ &111;11, C• .. 1nCI esJCCiate INmtllr of Thi Orotr ol SI ........ o,,....,., Colo!'-. Mtmor111 MrYI<•'· I PM !5.Yndll', No.,..mber 10, 1t7S 11 St. Jlmtl (plSC:OPll Chur<ll, Newport , •tch, ea. Jn 1i.w ol !lowers, t1m11y Sll!KlleSb m1mor111 comrlbuUon~ lo SI. Jtl'l>ff Epl1cop1I Ch11t<ll, N-rt 8'Kh, C.. f'l(l!k View MllrtU.rl' dlreclor1. D•CIClill JEIU.LO E. DECKER, •119 1.1, of ~. ea. Dell of dNtl'! "°"" Mlbtr" !7, 1t7S. S...r\11....cl by his wt,.., ~A. 0e<-1r; dlt,1911t1r, L.,,.._ J . Grlffnta, Md G1ll9hl•r, P1tr1c11 L ,Met-; p1nC11on1, TDOCI A. Grltl11"1 e1>d Thom11 w. Mel•••; gr1nct-t c1itVOM1r, Tffl..OK•r•nMcltntr,..-.d J. .n11 Grtfflttu. ~·Mr vie• end IMtt"- """'Tllftdey 10:JQ AM, W1llmiMllr Momorl•I ~••It Mor11o11rr 1nct ~.,. Wntll'llMtor, c;.o. . 8Al TZ·BEROERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 873-9460 Costa Mesa 846--2.C24 Bl!ll BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 8-42·9150 McCORMICK MORTUARY l9guna Beach .C9'1--IM1 5 Sin Juan Capistrano 49~1778 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cametety Mortuary Chapel . ' ~ Pacific View Drive Newport Beact'I. C.lltornia 64+2700 PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL AIN!RAL HOM! 7801 BolN Ave. WMtmln11er 81134025 holiday savings! Closeout! Pointelle cardigan sweaters 8.88 There's holiday mqlc ~n this classic cerdlgan, updated wllh the lacy pointelle look. Soft ac7lic knit is lull fashioned tor ' i comforta;b1• flt. Chtlstli\aity: 1 • lcotors;include ice' blue, ice · •• _pink, ivbry, white br navy. ' Womenfi 36--42. • • Chatge it! 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AU stores ·open every 1 night 'UI Chrislmas. ~lqret( o~ Sunday 10.\M lo 6 PM. -·MORTUARY $27 M1ln St. Hunt~~ICh . ' .. . ~ Fa1hlon1 and c;hrl1tm11 rkord et JCPenney 11ore1 In Loi Angel••, Orange, Riverside, San Bem1rdlno end Ventura countln. Pmonel f::•l'9 p~· 1 tt 11t ARCADl~..sANT~ _ANITA BUENA PAPIK CANOGA PARie CARSON DOWNEY FULi.EATON HUNTINGTON IEAOH LAGUNA HILLS LAKEWOOD LONG ll!ACH S'ALTOS MONTCLAIR NEW NORTH HOLLYWOOD NORTHRIDOE ORANGE 'THE CITY' PUENTf..HILLS )UVERSIDE SAN BERNARDINO TORRANCE VENTURA 18TCftESTER WEST coV.NA ~~~~ I .. Yo11r Rental Rights ·As Landlord and· As Renter Recently Anne Jones (not her real name), a coast resident, re- ceived t.He following note from her landlady: "I was really dissapointed {sic) when I found you bad animals in ypur apartment. Vou do know tbt!'y are not allowed so 1 have to give you an· ultimatum. Either get rid of them or move. I will give you five ilays lo get them out or to move. Please let me know your intentions ... Ahne Jones bas a 30-day rental agreement in a no.pets apart. ment complex, but she had not believed heP landlady would ob- jeet to her pets because they were caged hatnsters. Uke ·many tenants, Anne bad never read her rental agreement carefully nor did shtr know much about her right s and responsibilities. Could h er landlady re'ally force her to move within five days? WHEN ANNE sat down and read her rental agreement, she found it contained this clause: "If lessee breaches any terms herein, lessor or its agents may at any time, with or without de· mand or notice, re·enter and take -JX)Ssessioo or said premises and . remove all persons and property therefrom and the lessor, as lessee's agent, may place lessee's property in storage al lessee's expense; but such re· entry shall not be deemed a termination thereof or liability thereunder.'' Is this clause enforceable? Could Anne's landlady, o n becoming aw are or the hamsters, have put au 'A:nne's,possessions in storage and repossessed the apartment without warning? Not without opening herself to possible criminal charges as well as <"ivil action, accord.in.i: to Nan. cy B. Kaufman, supervising at- torney (or the Legal Aid Society or Orange County. "The -only legal way to do it (evict someone ) is to get a court order," she said. Removing the tenant's possessions or locking out the te. nant without a court order is a violation of state penal code sec· tion 418, said Beverly Higley, ex- ecutive director of · the Orange County Fair Housing C.Ouncil. although she noted that not all police forces are responsive when tenants call for help. IS IT COMMON for rental agreements or leases to contain clauses Which, if e nforced, \nieht result in legal action? "All the leases and rental . agreements that I have seen have at least one or ·JJ>Of'e unen· forreable clauses, clauses that iJttribute a right or .. a· duty to either party that ddeS 'nOt exist in Jaw,'' Mrs. Higley 1aid. . But Anne's more Immediate question was whether or not her landlady could order her out in five days, even tboUgh abe bad a !JO.day agreement and had just paid the rent. In general, yes, under what is called a "three·day, pay-0r-quit notice,·· said C.H. •Fierce, ex- ecutive director of the Apart· m e nt Association of Orange County, an organization of rental property owners. When such written notice is given to a tenant who has broken the lease by nonpayment of rent or other violations, such as hav- ing pets in a no-pets apartment, the tenant must correct the situa· lion in three days or move. II he does not. all three persons queried agreed, the landlord's course of action should be to serve an "unlawful detainer" notice and obtain a court order. If Anne did not remove ber peU and if proper eviction procedures were · followed, she would pro- bably b1ve a week or two to move before she would be formally locked oist by the county marshll ~-.office . If the excess rent she had already paid were not refunded, she could sue for it in small claims court. THE LAW is complicated, ever-changing and full of twists and turns, and it is no wonder th a t m ost Orange Coa st landlords and tenants do not know all or its intricacies. However, many. like Anne, do not know such important (acts as that: -A landlord has the right to give 30 days eviction notice to a tenant with a 30 ·day rental agreement without giving any re· ason or complaint. . -It is a misdemeanor criminal act to Jock out or take the possessions of a tenant without a court order. -It is possible (or either a landlord or tenant to sue the other lor damages or money owed up to $SOO in small claims court without hiring a lawyer. -It is illegal to discriminate on the basis of sex. age, race, or occupation and, after Jan. I, it Nill be illegal to discriminate on the basis or marital status, in leaJing apartments. However, the landlord can refuse to rent to anyone be bas reason to believe can,·t pay the rent. He is' also within his rights to ban children aod pets o( any kind. -There is no such thing ·as a nonrefundable dePosit. The money can only be used to pay ba<"k rent or repair damage above and beyond normal wear a.ad tear. Otherwise. if it is not refunded within two weeks after the tenant moves out he can sue in small <"laims,court. He is entitled to a refund even if the lease ·specifies the money isn't refundable if the tenant moves within a certain period of time, such as a year. lfthetenant feels the landlord is knowingly trying to cheat him cl a refund, he can ask for $200 damages in small claims court. -A landlord may evict for no reason, but be can't evict a te- nant to retaliate because the le· nant has exercised bis legal rights by, for example, reporting the landlord for health or safety violations. The la ndlord may be subject to punitive damage.sit be evicts to retaliate. -A landlord who enters a te· nant's apartment without specific permission, even if be is permitted to do so by a clause in the lease, is opening himself to a ·myriad of possible civil and criminal charges. -A landlord can't knowingly overlook a violation of the lease and then evict a tenant on a three-day nojice for it. -A land.Jord bas the right to evict a person for nonpayment of rent or for no reason at all even if the person is sick or pregnant or has lost a job. He can also refuse to rent to a person on welfare. -Anything a tenant installs which is solidly affixed to a build· ing, such as a hot water beater, becomes the property or the landlord.' This does not include items merely screwed or nailed in which can be easily removed. -A 1974 court decision permits a tenant to withhold rent if the apartment is uninhabitable. Ir the apartment is partially un· inhabitable and repairs are not 'made within a reasonable time. the tenant can pay to have the re· pairs made and deduct the sum Crom his rent, as long as the amount does not exceed one month's rent. If the landlord evicts the tenant for doing so it might~ considered retaliation. -A landlord has a right to alter a rental agreement or to raise the rent on 30 days notice unles s the tenant has a longer lease. However, it's important to re· member that all these state- ments are general and that in- dividual exceptions and com- plications do exist. In all cases, it ia best to proCeed with caution and to avoid legal action by peaceful negotiation ilpassible. 1 \ • .. seems to me that tney're mostly water. Am 1 right? L. K., Costa Mesa You are. Sprout• .. 75 to to percent wai.r. It woufd t•k• quite a 1 ... quantity of •proutl to provklia a algnlficant amount of nutrients. Dr. Rofl•nd Mccready of tM USDA Western Aeglon•I AeNarch Laboratory analyzed the nutrttlonal value of aome common Med• and aprouta, including Mfalfa eprouts. When compared on a dry weight baala, tit• calcium, Wan and zfnc content Of sprout• remained about the Hnt• •• Heds. Prot .. n was allghtly higher and fat lower In eprouttl, Vitamin C and 9CNM' B vitamin• ware hlgher In sprouts than Mede, with thtl greatest lncreaM In vlt1mln C. Cooktng ot sprout• .........,. lowered the amounta of nutrtents. Nutrient level• of aprout1 c:otRpmred favorably with thOM of other fresh vaget.blea. Rd,...d Claeelc -r-t• Stdt Order llftof'd Cl•ft •f Aaeol.,• 8ellkrt1pt DEAR PAT : I ordered a pants suit from Greenland DEAR PAT: Back In July 197' I ordered• record llbum Fashions In Miami, Fla .. on Sept. 2. It was never delivered and from Record Club of America. To date, I still haven't received my letters aren't answered. I can't afford to make Greenland a 11. My letters and proof o1 payment have brought no re-nse. present of $13.93, so l'dappreclate your help. wlll you contact thlsclubon my behalf? G.S., Corona del Mar M 8 Downe GrHnland'• recowda lndlca• that ttta pant• ault had bffn de- Aec:ord Club of America declared bankruptcr o.c. a,;;174• ,.,..: llftf'lld, but to tit• wrong eddreu. When tM merch•ndlH •••not ac- record club ha• been the aubfec;t of many AYS complalnn, and he cepted at tttet eddrna, H ... returned to Greenland Faehfona. A,.._ operation haa bean the~ of attention from the ,..nnaytvarU •t· fund check ttHtn •••lawed to you -ag1ln at the wrong addr••• - totney .. neral *'nc• 1174. Nor toNlng for beftktuptcy, IM clUb heel and tt W•• returned. The ~alon Is atraJghtened out now and you bMnaubjecttoanagrMmantwtthtMateomer .. waltMt ..... M wllf ,.,.tve • rafulil check wtthln •raw daya. OtMr readen ex- h IO offer a ,.fund, crdt or choice of other MlecttoM tt perlenclnt problem• wtth Q-Nnland ehould addreaa tMtr complailnta not be t•lod In 30 da~. Tllo flmt'o _..._n Hid ai.t na !?!fl;----.'°IOI~·: · N•n Anulono, Grwnlancl Sl\ldloo, Box 232, Ope Locke, FL clellllO Oll•lnot tM --- -_,,..._to Judge QI bona, Boa IOI, HanlolJurg, PA 171Ge.•Qel'" "'""• e .. a lo-fll planation alto can be ,.... .... d. bf wrttlng 90 ... "9o0rd Club Ameftca, Box 22, Yortl, PA 1nu. . • AUelt• Spre..U Are 7~ lt'eter DEAR PAT: Ill> b!left.a90rs feel ti.y mli.t NI •111111 sprouts lrl o~cler t~ ..,..,.; ,. and maintain their ~ii'ith. I wondor If nutrltlonal claims '"' this food ltam are ex1ggieratod. It • .. CJrel•••ta Are •elng •--'-• DEl\R PA.T : -n can ..., l xpect the results 01 the re- evaluation S1udy_of cycl..,ales, 1nd has It yet been dete rmined It saccharine Is c1 rcl rogenlc? 1 E.E., Laguna Beach • Tiw Natlonal C.noer lndtutlt 11 •~)'Ing the ••hMnc. ret•tlftl to tM Cllnofl<eualnt potenht of cycfam•te• and• declalon la expect • -· :: -· ·, • YOU DAILY PILOT SECTION 8 l SU'"", • '°·11171 • The Pros and Com Of Discrimination Rental housing can be a touchy subject. It can lead to tenant-landlord fistfights, <"OUrt suit.a, PrOPUlY damaee and -morecommonly -anery wordis and hot'teinpers. On his side , the landlord has often paid a larJi!e sum ln ad· vance and has eood·size payments to make over-a 20 or 30-yur pe:rlod to ltture the proptrty. He is dependent on prompt nmtaJ payments and a high occupancy rate for a return on his invest· ment. On the other side, the tenant has lnveated what to him may • seem a <'OnstderabJe sum in moving expenses and service in· stallation char&es, plus a major inconvenience, 1ome psycbological upset at change and an emotional commitment in . placln1 all his possessiom in an apartment. WHAT LEADS to many of the disputes between tenants and landl~s who beUeve they are (air and reasonable people! • "Most people do not know their rights or they do not know . their obligations as landlords and tenants," said Beverly Higley, executive directoroftheOrange County Fait Housing Council. Her aeency has noted"a high rate of illegal discrimination against minorities and women. "We have bad many complaints Crom aingle women wbohave been denied housing,·· Mrs. Higley said. "Discrimination in th.ii counly is just really unreal. It's one of the worst problems that we have,·· she said. It ii difficult for a person to prove be or she bas been dis· eliminated a1ainst these dayg because some landlords, aware ot recent legislation, use "sophisti<"ated" methods to discriminate, Mn. Higley said . SUcb tactirs involve sbowioa: the prospective lenant the apartment in a friendly manner, giving him forms and informa- tion, "any number of things to indicate they are a (air person." However, the landlord then fmds some excuse not to rent to the person. TO CHECK OUT discrimination, the council will send three people to the apartment complex at different times. The first and third are not or the group subject to possible discrimination; the middle person is. If the first and third people are o((ered an apart- ment and the second, with identical credentials, is not, dis- crimination is chareed. The tenants' big1est problem is "people can't afford to have their righta any more" because o( the cost or lawyers, Mrs. Higley claimed. '"'- Some lapdlords also suffer from rent defaults and damage, ~said. "l find eenerally it's the Mom and Pop outfit (t.hat} gets npped orr ... They're not familiar with their ow n rights and obliga. tions," she said. (See DISCRIMINATION, Page 84) ed to be reached earty,neirt year, according lo the Food and Drug Ad- mlnlatratlon. The aacct.rtne question Is sttll up In the air 100. The Na· tlonal Acaffmy of.Sdencea N1tion•I R••••rch Council ha• compfel· eel e •tudy for the FDA on the "Safety of S•ccharlne and Sodium Saccharine In the HufMn Diel." The concluslon le that "the re1ults of toxlcfty studies thus far f'9POf1ed h•ve not ntabllshtd conclusively whether eaccharlne I•« fa not cerclnogenk: when admlnlslered oral- ly to teat anlmale." The committee recommend.ct addltlonal •ludlea to re90lve the queatlon of carclnogenk:lty and other safety 11aues. AU Their AppHa-N~ Rqlad11g DEAR PAT: After 20yearsof marriage, we need to replace all our appliances. can you get some expert advice on what we should keep In mind while shopping for these major purchases'? M.N., San Clemente The anawer to row ~don comes from Mra. Virginia Hebeeb, a ..._ Yorlc lfdltor and chr91nNn of the Major Appliance Conaumer Ac- don Panel. Sha cit•• theM guldellnea to avoid dl•Ntlefaetlon after purchaM: Be eure therw'• enough room to mo•• appHancee for pro. per cleaning, aentctng and ventllatlon; check adequacy of gaa or etectrlclty' connectlona, _.., aupply and dr11ln fac:Hltlaa; conllkler ap- pliance Mn In relation to tamlty .. ff, future neede and economy of operation; be aura yc,u·,. aatllfied with 11\e brand, atyle model and color of the appUencebafwe ti 11 lnetalled; consider neec1°for features that add to th• purchaM price; be aura the apptlanca la rugged enough to mfft ,our neecta; toofil:for quellly flnleh end trtm on wotklng and decorative componenta; check ••M of maintenance, esk tha ....., to demonatr1• the appNance; under1tand what the warranty Cloe• •nd doean't pro'lkta and consider the avaflablllty of competent ne1rt>y Mr¥1ce. MACAP alao •cMMa looking for Hale to verify that oeneln perlormance and Nfety requirement• have been met. The A• aoddon of Home Applance Manufacture,. (AHAM) vertfl•• claim• br ,...nufacturerl on the petformance of room air condltlonen, raftieitretor·freat.era, l'Mlmldfftwa and dehumidifiers. Underwriter• Llboratorte1' (UL) label• on elac'lr1cal 1ppll•ncee and American Ga1 A.11acfatton Llboratof1ae' (AGA) Mala on gaa appUa~a aeeure that oenaln aafaty etandardl.,. being met on all untt1 of that model end brand. • fl2 DAILY PILOT Sc.lnday, Novembftr JO, 1975 Santa, ~yone Horsin' Around wllh Tom Mee.an • The West Orange County Voluntary Ac- tion Center /Volunteer Bureau places volun- teers in non.profit assistance ag~ncles. For In· formation about th~ op('1u.n~s listed below or other openings, contact Judy l..ower at the Huntington Beach Outrt•ach Office (960-3312} or call the main orfic:e in Gard<'n Grove (531)-2370). Yes, Virginia, t here 1s a Santa Claus ... we hope. Every year volunteer:;; br- ing joy to handicapped chJldrcn and hospital patients by donning a fu rry red suit and white beard and playing Sant.a for an hour or so at parties. Th.is year our jolly volunteers seem to have fo rgotten how fast the calendar is mov- ing. Why not consider playing Santa yourself? You might have as good a time as the pa- tients! Horse Show ·Offers One-stop Shopping For 'Used' Mounts An exciting experience is watching youngsters in elementary school reach their full Potential. This is being achieved through a special program of positive reinforcement. A ·Westminster school is beginning this pro- gram, and volunteers will receive training and direction from the school psychologist. Although the program itself :,tarts after th e Christmas vacation, voluntt..'f'rs l$hould sign up immediately. BelpforYou Guard's Guard A man convicted of multiple counts of rape, armed robbery and assault with a dead- ly weapon was working as a security guard. So was a convicted murderer. "There are probably some people who shouldn't be given a badge, a unifrom, and a gun," said Dou glas Faigin, chiE>f of t he Bureau of Collections and Investigative Services, as be revoked their licenses. The bureau, a di vision or the Consu mer Affairs Department in Sacramento, is setting a record with its policy of aid to consumers. Faigin's job includes licensing and monitoring all security companies, private patrol operators. security guards, private in- vestigator s, collection agencies, and in - surance adjusters within the state. The dema nd for guards is growing rapidly as citizens become more security conscious and fearful of street crime. It takes six to eight weeks to process an application for a guard license and check out any arrest record. Some new policies by the Bureau of Collections and Investigative Services will ~~-~ ~~ consumer more hel p in protecting himself and against fraud and outright physical danger. in Faigin'sopinion. First, he has initiated a series of question- naires to debtors of collection agencies to ascertain whether t he agencies have used il- legal tactics in their methods. Faigin also intends to publish notices in et the newspapers listing names of al l agencies r whose licenses have been suspended or re- volted. I They're going to tum the Coto de Cau arena into a ''used horse'' lot oext weekend. Only quE>stion in my mind as I contemplate the plans of trainer Max Bonham Cor bis upcom- ing Horses for Sale Show is: Will it turn out to be for Cadillacs or clunkers? The price of quality horses keeps going up while lhe dollars you can get for a backyard pet or t"ommon "usi ng" horse keep decreasing, So 1t 's going to be very .interesting to see the proportion of fant"y hwiters and jumpers, with asking prices of $7 ,000 to $10,000or even $12,000. to the plain horses that you can buy forunder$J,OOO. IULDRED PENNEU.. the ahow secretary, call:> the event a' 'swapmeel .. ofborses. EARL PENNELL ABOARD ONE OF SHOW:S FOR.,SALE HUNTERS Il it 11 that-meaning that there will be borsn there ju1t about everyone can afford-it could turn out to be a highly successful venture. What it's all about. in case you hadn't heard, is that next Saturday and Sunday, the beautiful horse facilltlea at Coto de Caza (out near O'Neill Park in Trabuco Canyon~ map) have been booked by Max Bonham for two days of very specialized borae showing. Entries have been received from literally throughout California and even from out of state. Each horse entered in the show is up for sale. A catalog baa been put together listing the name, bei&bt. color, sex. age. breed, training ·- 0.ltypti.t ........... ,..0- New Race Season An outatandin1 group of freshman tprinten will converge on the S&- day Horsemen's Quarter Hone Racing Aasocia· ti.on meeting when the world's fastest horses ..,.. again begin action nest Saturday at Loa Alamitos. The season will feature day racing on a Tuelday through Sunday basis un- til auistmaa. Most of the clU1y 2- year ·olds. who will become sophomores oo the first of the year, will be aiming at January's $50,000 ·a dded El Primero Del Ano Derby. level, owner an~/or trainer and asking price of each horse. Saturday will see the horses go through a schooling show that will be open to the public, and then on Sunday the animals will again enter the arena and go through their paces just as it they were performing in a major show. There will be no ribbons, however-no awards for winners or this show. THE WHOLE event is designed to showcase horses doing what they are supposed to be able to do and proving to potential buyers that they are worth their asking price. There will be veterinarians on the grounds to check out the soundness of the animals for the buyers and to work with the sellers to assist in presenting the horses at their besL Sunday's schedule will get under way with a Hwiter Dlvi.Jion, scheduled to run from 10a.m. to 1:30p.m. There will be a $100 jackpot jump during the class at approximately J p.m. A Halter Class competition for all horses un- der 3 years old will start at 1:30 p.m. in the cov- ered arena. Western Di vision competition will be broken down into pleasure, trail and hackamore/atock events. Entry fees in the various events will pay for the whole venture. Bonham and his associates do not earn a com mission on the sales and there will be no admission charge to the public. IT SEEMS like it ought to be· a colorful cou- ple of days of horsin' around for families that en - joy that ltind of thing. . And it certainly beats traveling miles and miles to a bunch of stables to shop for horses U you're getting ready to buy. If you're in that category, haul your trailer on out there to the canyon just as if you meant business. Bonham and bis show entrants will be ready for you. Meal Planning Have you noticed nutrition labeling on eome of the items you've been buying lately? You can get a single copy of "Proteins, Carbohydrates, Fats and Fibers" free by writ- ing to Consumer Information Center, Dept, 72, Pueblo, Colorado 81009. Ford's Consumer Plan Immediately Attacked Your Diamonds Reset While You Watch I I i j ' ' Here are some of the highlights from this government publication tp help you when you plan your meals: -Your body needs protein mainly for maintaining and building body tissues. Pro. tein cornea from meat. fish and poultry, eggs and milk . And vegetable protein is currently beinc sold as meat extenders or meat sub· stitutea. The greatest amounts or protein are needed when the body is building new tissue rapidly, sucb as during inlancy, pregnancy, or when a mother is nursing a child. WASHINGTON <UPI ) -President Foret an- nounced pla n s f or federal agencies to help consumers by such means as assigning U.S. attorneys lo handle con- sumer fr aud complaints a nd creating social security om buds men to aid di sg runtled beneficiaries. Consumer groups im- mediately attacked the plans as a ''pathetic sham'' and •·window dressing.•· comment on these pro- posed plans.·· He bad the plans drawn up as Congress was debating Ieglslation to create a Consumer Protection Agency - something which bas been approved by lx>th the House and Senate. Backers of t1e legisla- tion said Ford's separate consumer plans w'ere de- signed to shield hi m frotri public anger when he vetoes the con· gressional bill, as he pro- mised to do. -The main job of carbohydrates is to pro. vide energy. Some carbohydrates provide vitamins and minerals as well. The best IOUl'cea for this kind of carbohydrate are· enriched and whole grain breads and cereals,, and fruits and vegetables. Other sources which add additional calories, while providing. very little in the way of nutrients, include sort drinks, cakes and other bakery products, can- dies, syrups, jams and je~ ' ,...._~~~~..;........~~~ Ford, who has ordered the plans implemented immediately, said they ''will prove responsive to consumer concerns. I en- courage all segments of the public to read and The nation's largest or ganized consumer group, the Consumer Federation of America, called Ford's plans "a ~a~etic sham·· and "a Diagnose Alcohol Intake LOS ANGELES (AP) -Physicians should routinely investigate their patients· drinking habits no matter what their ph ysical com- plaints, says Dr. William E. Pre1ton, a specialist in alcoholism rehabilita- tion. Preston, a co nsultant to Contra Costa County Mediacl Services, said that baU of all patients ln· county hospitals suffer from ailments in whiC'h aleobol abuse is a factor_ TbUJ, a routine chc<>k of pat ients f or .alcobolitm would insure lhat the patient r~ceives Jrtttment for more than just aurfare symptoms, with the underlying came going unnoticed. : "WeU over 7S percent ol all back dlsablllU .. are related to alcoholis m and this Is well known by the people who proceS5 dlablllty claims, .. said Preston. The alcoholic, he aclded, m ay suffer ge-- nuine back problems caUled by the wuUng ti· You're invited to the excitin9 ,...,,,11n11~ t~;i.4':1~~~ MICRDWAYt OYtN FREE MICROWAVE COOKIN& SCHOOL TUES., DEC. 2nd 7 P.M. to 9 P.M . RESERVATIONS REqUIRED 401 MAIN ST.~°" .-536-7561 FOR RESERVATIONS OVEN feet of alcohol on the 11urT11tllT01111A,., 536-7561 -.. of the back. '--------=---...i...--.;..;.;.;;..;.;.._::;:::;;:;=~.;;::;:~;.a I • devious attempt to un- dercut·' the Consumer Protection Agency. Ralph Nader said the plans were ••a transparent and phony attempt to mislead the public into thinking that the Ford administra- tion's consumer ac - tivities are anything more than a window dressing deception on the American people.·· The plans were sub- mitted by J7 cabinet de- partments and agencies. They involve a review of consumer programs, plus propos als to in· crease staff devoted to consumer problems and find ways to involve con- sumers more directly in decision makin.e:. ---Wm. Harold Jewelers -.t.SM!y ...,_.,. .... lODopO.., C'coltk Jew*y ....., ....... .... _ ,. ... ... 406J~ST. MIWPOU HACH PHOMl67MUI ALL FABRICS ' • • with Coupon !Except Sale ltemsl EqNtH M •Nr· Doc. I al 6 p.a Good Suiiday, MOY. 30 -I Z·S, M-. DK. C:-' Cou C, • !'111.t N..._ ..... ..,. thit.aitd . .._.u """'· Eal chlldre1 buds• imtiblti the fro< behind C.pltol, Democ llepubU tioned I ·the city TbE equatin enmeo Tbeirp -a rev ty and t IN was det the cit justice, of law i the cu various entire J eluding ment, 1 employ .crimiru An< aginatit souther streets ol crea Rome - ability tion nee Un. citizeru port th1 designt con.stn: one hiJ avenue houses islands dered mall." Fo periodi and c1 c1r ..... 1· into siJ ! was an were I Presid1 So ernmei higbpc tiom iJ ' the six -Suprer • meetiJr resign1 who fa ' life~~ partic1 ' origini ' the sta 1 " • TE ' repre: ' descer: ' fromt ' ideas ' turno• • f one-ha ' two ye w litUe I Many 30s. ' Tl centw sulate thanl electi• have: has se them1 for SE aver a aver a w Iengtl • • • I • Sund!)'. Novemb9f 30, 1115 DM.YPILOT 81 l are and Fee • g of the Bureaucracy lftmlne poaltlona of _.,., Sam Rayburn wu 511 when be became speaker, John McCormack 17, · C...I Albert ez .. In um, the leaders ot tbe Honae averaaed a yea.rs, tboee of the Senate• years. Jn U1Z a computer simulation predicted that a new eonareuman elected bl November would have to wait until the year 3>13 befcre comtns Into a post. tionolreal power. ...rt In Waablnston ii IO lltn>nf that volwilary re· llpatlon ll'om b!Jh natkinal posta now merib front· . pap atteaUon. Hence once professional poUUctaoa .-each Wuhlncton, they want to stay ror tbe rest of tbelr Uve1 . To leave the city la tantamount to Jeav·. inl politics; to co home ii to be exiled to Siberia. tJ/ -~ Stou" .]!f..DORIS~!ttw ·' ATTllll 8AME llmetbatpolitlciana have made Wa1hln(lon thelr political bome, the rules of politics have chanaed. makin& it substantially euitt DOW than it wu JOO yea.rs ago for a11 incum· bent cooireaaman or sen.at« to win re-ele<:tion . * * HARVEST OUR Early lhla year, I uked a clua of Boat.on sehool · hlldren to deacrlbe the lmatea that came Into their when they thoulhl about America '1 political titullons. "Tbe Wbl~ lfouae," veatu1"d a boy In ~"!·rro~nt row. •'The President," aussested the girl c; him .. And Ihm the c1au ooeoed y. ;!'be pltol, the Co-the UDooln llomorial, the mocrat1, tbe WubJnaton MonumeDt, tbe blicans, WUhlQCtorl. D.C. Not aoe cblld m- ApparenUy theae patw'ns are ebanclnl today -the lll'7• elections produeed a abate.up In tho leadorablp of the House cl Representatlvea -but the dominant tr•ncl In the 20th century remalna one In which the meml>en cl COopeaa are aervlnS loolcor and lone er. Molllle amateun -wWlna to co•• and 10 -bavfl become career pro· featlooallab anxloua llo atay In Wuhinlton u loq u-1ble. Howdldtbilablftcomeabout! * SAYINGS. ·~ the 1tatehou1e. the IO•eJDOI', tbe mayoc or city counell. Their entire focus waa "" natiODal lnatltutlona, ua11n& the whole ol American politico and ..,.. . DI with • f-bulldloea In Waablnct(ia. D.C. u-perceptiOG& rellectod -boweYer·impetfectly -a revolution•l'J' lhlftot power from tbe commwU· Y and the sta tea to the national JOVOl'DllleDt. It can be attrlbutoclln part t.othe cbanJea In the nation and the world alnee the 19th century. In the lut 100 years, our mtion h.u UDdersone aa. ln~ dustrtaJ revoluUon. become a worldwide Po•er, waaed six war• aod suffered several major 1 fJCOllOlllic depre11ion1. The 20th century bu aeen the natlGoaliutlon ot-ial and economic problem a and the crowth of larp natiODal oqanizallona to deal with them. The Jooaer a person stays in office, the more power be acquire.a in bis committee. tbe more -· be baa, the more umpalcn fundl be re-..i-. Md the more funds, the more likely bla 'ehancea of re-elect.loo. The cycle 1oe1 oa. Air/ analJ'Sb ol the present and tuture role ot the CGnll'H• muat toke t.ot.o conslderatloll lta com· -1tlon: the men and women Who make It up, their · habib ol mind, their financial dependencies, their altl-toward their jobs, their choices u to bow to aptlld lllelr time. Slloky •l•·INIS ti mt. - 11M1 lilt .. Ct1nby callee ,i.ia 11111 111l1U. $Mrt Jacklts. ............. .a ... '» 123• P11U ............. -.... 1fl 112" i11vsn ........ -...... '11 112" Wrts ....... -.. -·I ... '11 11219 Sn1ttr1 ........... 1 ... 111 112" lie s.... lo Cliadc Our Bargain en.-... IN THE l!!AaLY dayo "' the republic, power as decentralized. All the acllvltln that •Dl•ied e cltiUns' lntereat -the administration ol ·ustice, the scboolin& oltheyouna, tbe maintenance law and order, the buildlne and upkeep of roads, care of the sick -were carried out in the · 'l1teae developmentt have concentrated power in the central government away from the states and }()('alities. Jn 1801 the entire population of the na· tional government numbered 2,875. One hundred years later the number bad grown to 351,798 employes. in 1971 the national government bad S,637,000 employes, coostltuting almost 7 percent of the labor force. So Joaa u repraentatlvea -ra .. 1..uon and a pormanant base In WaabJnCton 11 their main soal, then la little hope fer bulc cbanJe. The system. ~ ilaelf by rewardlnJ fidelity to tbe atatua quo at every tum. Many representatives continue to preoccupy themselves with ron.stituentaervice nar- rowly defined -with baby books, birthday greet· ings, appolf\lmenls to West Point, case work and ·pork barrel projects. (One leading scholar Open Mon..sot. 1°"' estimates that constituent service occupies more 29129 !11)21 arious states, not at the federal leYel . In lM>i the tire population of the national government, in· than ball or the time d each congressional office.) s. M:Srnll PACIFIC COOT HWY. . !IOJI AllolllS Ail IOTlll:TOI IM:il 11 I~ 963-1221 luding both the civilian and military establlsh- ent, numbered fewer penons ttutn the <federal As the distribution al power bas shifted away from the states and localities, the attractiveness of ·local political careers has declined, and the pull of Nerf. we~k Prof .. Keorm cWrcu&set Arncricon .ot-SAii Pm'«) Al CALLI IMY• tilude• lolllard Ill< pr•lidellctl and lht growlh o/ prtrid<11· 547.3091 ~= employes now engaged in appre~~--federal criminals. ...._.... tioi ,,.._ 1n lht 20th ctllllnll.:_· --------'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""':! ' And, far from being the center of political im- agination, Wa1hingtoo. D.C., was' a backwater, southern town where pigs rooted ln the unpaved· streets. Though the capital'• planners bad dreamed ol creating a center ol national life -a Paris or Rome -their dreams had foundered upon their in· ability to attract the commerce. wealth and popula- tion needed to make the city pn>Sper. . Unable to raise the necessary funds from a citizenry too suspicious of centraliud power to sup. Port the creation of a national capital, the planners designed roads that were never built and started constructing buildings that were never finished. As one historian bas described it: "Where majestic avenues were to sweep, tree stumps stood, where houses Were to be, barren hillocks rose Ute desert islands. Cows grazed on future plazas, roads mean- dered into cow trails, bullfrogs chorused. on the mall." For 30 years the unfinished Capitol dome periodically spilled dirt on the beads of the senators and congressmen walking below. Diplomats dressed in their finest stepped from their carriages into six inches of mud. Even the Executive Mansiori was an object or ridicule; or the 30 rooms, only six were plastered and dozens of privies filled the President's lawn. So uncertain was the future of tbe national gov· emment that most men in public life considered high positions in Washington less preferable to posi- tions in their own villages and states. Only four of the six men George Washington chose to sit on the Supreme Court actually showed up for the Cll'St meeting. And the number or men who voluntarily resigned from the Congresa was greater than those wbo failed the uat of reelection. yet in a peculiar way, the very difficulties of lite in Washington served the cause of democracy - particularly in the Congress. The Congress was originally designed to represent the popular will in the states and localities. TJUNJt ROW useful it was to have a rotating: representation from the population at large descending on Washington each year. coming fresh from the people, bringing with them new demands, ideas and power. Each new election brought a turnover of 50 percent, which meant that more than one-half of the representatives to the bOU!ie every two years were freshmen. · SHOW OF HANDS IN CONGRESS DURING NIXON HEARINGS Author Today's ''lecture'' in the Courses by Newspaper series in the first of four articles by Doris H. Kearns (right), associate professor of government at Harvard University and former staff assistant to President Lyndon B. Johnson. She helped the former president in preparation of his memoirs. This year she has been co·host of the public television series, ''Assignment America." With new men continually filling the chamber, little premium was placed on age or experience. Many or the leaders of the Congress were in their ,----------,-------------------- :llS. The constantly changing Congress or the 19th century was a far different body from the more in- sulated institution we know today, where fewer. than IO percent or the members turn over in any one election, where more than one-half or the members have served more than five terms, and one in five has served more than 10 terms. The average age of the members today -50 foe representatives and 60 for senators -is 10 to 20 years older than the average age or the voting population. And the average age or the leaders is still older. :~:~:: everything you w•nt to know about your team In the With the rise of seniority in ~e 20th century, length of service in the institution bas come to de-DAILY PILOT sculptured wood & soft kid Slim all the way from a narrow carved polished woode n wedge to a slende r stra ppy in fine tan kidskin . A knockout oomblnation among ~Y newsies. An pleosantly priced al Chandlers. 19.99 Use yout BtnkAm1Hc1n:f Of H1slu Chtrtf SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA ' \ I Penn sale. Choose a new holiday look, and save. Sale 16.88. Helene Curtis 'Unipenn'. Reg. 22.50 plus cut. J ust the th ing for a younger, softer. more casual look. Giv es l"la ir bounce and body. Ha ircut and set included. Sale 14.88 Helen Curtis 'Phase T perm. Reg. 17.50 plu1 cut. Gives your hair a more definite, curl. Has special conditioners for strength and shine. Ha ircut and set included. Sale prices effective through Saturday. ARCADIA CARSON DOWNEY FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH UQUNA HILLS LAKEWOOD MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTHRIDQE ORANG£ 'THE CfTY' PUENTE HIUS RIVERSIDE SAN BERNARDINO VENTURA WEST COVINA WH!TIWOOO. UN )'OUt .ICP.nney ch•rge caJd. !fo appointment neceaaary. Charge It. ....... Ge nuine 1ade pendant s. suspended from delicate gold· filled.chains. Choose fr om a selection of beautifully carved styles, including the Buddha. Elephant, Turtle, Cross, and others. Each, 6.88 -· 4-section bracelet 24 .95 Heart drop-earnngs 19.95 Hoop drop-earrings 19.95 I i ' Start at 6.88. Stop at 34.95. Some of the best gifts in jadeareat JC Penney. Long li fe pendant on 24". chain 24'.95 Engraved plaque pendant 14.95 Dragon pendant on 24 " chain 24.95 Good Luck pendant 19.95 ARCADIA CANOGA PARK CARSON OOWNEY FUUERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH LAGUNA HILLS LAKEWOOO MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTHRIDGE ORANGE 'THE CITY' PUENTE HILLS RIVERSIDE SAN BERNARDINO VENTURA WEST COVINA WHITIWOOD. Uta your JCPenney ch1rg1 card . r I • llif DAILY PILOT Sonday, Ntwemt. 30, 1915 • • • at1on Pros and Con~ • • • Disc (From Pope 81 l In some cases, landlorm may open themselves to charges ol discrimination solely throltgh Ignorance. ''The civil code o( California says you can't turn down penons betause of a physical handicap or because they have a eu;ide dog or seeing eye dog," said C.H. Fierce, executive direc· tor of the Apartment Association of Orange County. He said a seeing eye dog is not a valid reaso n for refwalng to rent even in a no-pets apartment, although some excepllonJ could be madl' under unusually hazardous circumstances . }~IF.RCE SAID ttis orgaruzation once investigated some cases of alleged discrimination against the blind and found that the landlords we re simply unsure bow to bandle such cases. Wild 'Friends' Evicted KANSAS CITY (AP) - J an and Jack Armstrong v.·t>re evicted from their apartment whe n their landlady could no longer tolerate the wild com - pany the couple regularly entertained there. - She had put up with a h ye na, polar b e ar , rh i n o cero s . three j aguars and even a moun· tain lion. But when she ("aught the two modern day Noahs smuggling in a gorilla -she said "out!" The professional zo. o lo gi s t s and their "friends" found a haven in a house on the spacious grounds of Swope Park. Armstrong is head zookeeper and Mrs. Armstrong i:; curator of animal health at the Swope Park Zoo . And except for an OC· casional carton of worms in the mailbox and gorilla teeth marks on the dining , room furniture, things are as normal as they can be around such a lively household. THE TWO still care for baby animals when the mother can't or won't rais e them . Mr s. Armstrong is mothering two young polar bear cubs, which are extreme· • ly susceptible to disease. "It's a bold atte mpt," admits her husband. "There are only four polar bears in the United States who have lived beyond the age of one ;.. year after being 'hand reared' ... .·.~ ,...-....-:•/~ ~~~ ',_ ... "".,....., .. --.. -_...,....,.., .. . ,,_.,_~-;;:; : . ; ; ; : . ... ' : . ~,' .~ .. .' ::·· ., """'" ,~,~,,.-~, 20° Io OFF All Toddler Dresses I> " Getyourli'lgirl ~"{ picture perfect for "h"I the holidays and ""r"'' save money, too. '"1e reason for some Jaws which may seem unduly restrictive to land.lords is "to avoid a breach of the peace because In iltua- lion1 like that people are likely to lose their tempers,·· said Nancy B. Kaufman. &upervisin.g auarney for the Le1al Aid Society ol Or•nie County. Both she and Fierce a1reed that landlonb &bould use ex· treme caution before enterin& an aparlment withoul permi1slon. • "It's really dumb of the landlord (to enter lncautioualy)." Ms. Kaufman said. "A landlord can only ent.u the tenant'• apartment by written perm.isaion to do so ... He can enter only if he fee la there is an emergency that justifies doin,g: so," Fierce said. YOUR CHOICE 2.99 each Reg. 3.99 w-·· Seri• PrW Tops • He uld hi• l?OUP qg..ta th1t. Jn c1"' or emersoncy, the Jondlord brl"' 1 wltneu, knock oc ri•I loudly. open the doo< llow- ly and ell! out. un1 ... 111reor aome othe obvious catutropbeb occurr\q. WREN CASES come to court. JI.a. Kaufman aald, • .,. uonableneu" ls u1ually a •tronl factor ln determiDlnl the out· come, alone with wbatettrpolntof law pertains to the case. Many landlord-tenant cues can be settled in small clalm1 court, where no lawyer U permitted and fees are small. When a penon -landlord oc tenant -needs leg I! help and can 'l aflord a laW}'er. be can tum totbe Lecll Aid Society, which i• apolll<ll"ed by the bar a1sociation. S~ial Price on Junior Long Dresses 13.99 Our long dresses are party perfect for the holidays. Choose from halters, key~ho le backs. wraps. AU in pastel polyesters. Sizes 5-13. Better hurry 'cause now's the time to rtress up IQr less. Styles shOwn not •··•Jlable at all stOles. 5.44 Puff or short 1leeve tops, tnatchlng tong leg tootsie pants. Polyester/cotton. Machine wash. 0-3 mos. Short sleeve screen prtnt IOC>S are t 00% polyester, Asaorted 'prints. Sizes 3.C to 38. The polar bears moved into the Armstrong home when a baby sea lion left 'tbefriendlysurroundlngs of a lawn chair in the family kitchen and traded daily romps in the upstairs bathtub for splashes in the zoo pool. The Armstrongs hope to use the knowledge they've gained to belp raise polar bear cubs that belong to other z.oos . Choose from long or short dresses, puff or long sleeves in lots of cute styles. Like all r,roud parenta, the coup e have also shown an interest in the age·o ld tradition of matchmaking. "We sent a crane to Omaha and a capybara to Lincoln," says Armstrong. ''The Kansas City zoo has a hyena on loan from Jacksonville, Fla., and two wombats lrom San Francisco.·· BUT PERHAPS the most ambitious arranged "marriage" took place when the Armstrongs ac- companied their two heavily sedated female gorillas on a no-frills charter fJight from Kansas City to San Diego Wild Animal Park for a tryst with a male who was about to lose his female companion to the Phoenix l.oo. "Breeding loans," ex· plains Armstrong, "have become absolutely essen· tial to the survival of en- dangered species in the zoos because o f gov· ernmental bans on animal exports." I "FLAMBEAU" {PASTELS) ONE-MAN SHOW ~:c: dale fal]rney INtlAIO~ D.ESIGN A.S.l.D. ·.._..:..CO~A~ON:::.A~D~E~L-M_A_•~_, Lt 21•2 I . COAST HWY· -"40-8512 ' ' In polyester or polyester/cotton. Sizes 1-4. 5.44 Acrylic sweater in as~rted ski-style designs. Machine washable . Sizes S,M ,L. li'I Boys' 3.99 Sizes S,M,L. ~ "· Big Girls' Cardigan Sweaters 3.77 100% acrylic. Hand washable in assorted colors. Sizes 7·14. li'I Girls' 3.44 Sizes 4·6X. Sale pri<ed items effective Sunday thru Wednesday. Dec. 3, 1975. Infant Boys' Creepers One piece polyester/cotton kn it with embroidered design. Snap shoulde rs, crotch. o, 1/2, 1, 11;2. lnlant Girls' Diaper Sets Puff sleeve, shorty dress with matching pant ies trimmed in lace. Polyester /cotton. Colors. 1/2, 1, i 1;2• ! . ' ~ Crinkle cloth pant set 12.99 100ok machine wash cotton 1n natural, blue and rose. Sizes 7 to 14. Pretty Party Shoes 5.99 Patent vinyl uppers, adjust1ble stl'ap. Black and white in sizes Bl/2 to 3. GREAT BUY Women's Pantyhose ~ Nylon with 100% cotton crotch ;n fashion shades. Sizes S,A,L 1.11 Sizes QS, QT. ...,. PAmQ Disch at Or#"IQMhOl'PI • Open~ 9:30 to 8:30. Q.indeyl 1 Otoe. ~·City Or. 11 Gardin Gtow 8tvd. •Open Wffkda_ys 10 to 9. &ndeyl 10 to 8. SAMrA....., 3900 So. Btttto141o. of So. Coott Plua • Open Dolly 9:30 tot. SUndoys 1 o toe. 't . . : .·:.:., ·~- -- -.· ... SAVE25°/o Ml1111' Searl Blouse 5.99 Rtt. 7.99. Knot it, bow It the long, print scarf goes' great with our polyester/ cotton blouse. Lon g sleeve$, notched collar. In pastels. 32·38. ~, De U1 Mi • ~ Th F(] 0. ALJ. After work, Woblb to"'°: ret1rt 80081" The foot) erted ' Guan: far th SanD side I And ; about the Pi East< Wal trical Law1 Labo; with t TraDl! alWa) in po1 ing, s year1 drear own chart• IT threr Wahl' find wast pair, mess, "Al best said. Th• smal deck addec cabin _forth He a expa engiD heat, and powe navi@ devic H< vest horsE two engil Vikir Jeisw use • die11e Mr as di Oak; Hos becai ment earl) coulc their to 5' boat1 <han ing 11 Alas' "I size hanc' Wah "'m' timf hanc Fe Al at hilir "I wat1 saln stre: plun Bort won herr No and · at U Hori new "V now ville sbo~ 1 .. d DJ NI II Del !or Am !hr< the pub WO< c 'IDCENrsai._.uc 111 ....... •lllre 1'1111 ... - --of bloloa. • Jlofan Ille :Z0.1"ar pr'Qject i. 11 Sunc!!y.~301 1915 DAIL y PILOT II """'" lhl• year 1bllly!Qs the lbeep. Desert Put Under Man's Microscope PALM DESERT (UPI) -A lf,OOC).aere it.retch of dnert near here i. clOled pomwionUy to all but aelenUata stud:rlnf animal and plant life ID tho hanb, arid terrain. But rosuli. of much of tbe Im· portant work wUl not be avail.a· ble for another 18 yean. One ol Ibo major lll"O)oeta i. a 20-year study of the de1erl ecolOIY. beiun two years .,a. It i. made possible oal1 by IJe. lbll al>le lo control tbe doaert area ptflllanenUy, Dr. lnrin Ttna, dlNelor of Ibo Deep Ca· nyon Desert Resoardl Oenler, uld. Tiie r-.... ~by bllrbod wire atop a mlle-lanC ftaee 1tretcbed acro11 the Detp ea.._, ano!Pt-Fse, irldCh •aii11 from "8t to a mile wide. Ii. undlal>lrb..s doHrt terraln, aloP- blC -Ha 1•••1 to 8, "JOll.foot-blib TCll'o Peal!, i. a natural la6cratory for tbe 1lully ol a de- -i....,.tem. Oftl' In 1991, more clwlloa will have altered tbe face of Soulborn califomla, but Deep Canyon will r•maln Ibo ume. Ttna 1ald the 1bldy wwld help determine bow belt lo protect Ibo lrallle doHrt onvtroomont that reaehe1 1round tem- poratmff of 1110 de..-clurlni Ibo 1ummer and has 1 ... than throe Inches of rain a year. INQ.UDED In the °""'all pro- ject i. tbe 11\ldy of one of Ibo na- . tioa'1 few do1ert bl8 bom sheep herds. r.ulll already,•• Tina NSd.. ''We have lnt.erea1illc ftndlnp about reproduetloll and tbe r&1119 of tbelbeep. "We are Hpeclally looldbll at Ibo tnipact of dovelopmonll on tho r&nlf•. Tbore i. a dancer to tbe ~ hclt-n sheep -tboy are Jll"Olocted by law, of coune - that they could lo1e their habitat." The aclenU.11 share tho harsh condltlona wltb tb<ir subject> durinc the aummer. lie bll<t1 part of tht w17 DD llil tripe wltb a nve·fallonc:OnlaJJ>oi' of water strapped lo 1111 back. 'lbat'a 1111 dally consum.,tlon In tbe JJ5-lo 125-de,..eo boat. WATER IS a!IO a l)l"Oblom for the animals. He 1aJd the:1 mu1t replace nve percent of t.btlr body we1-ht dally wltb water to lunolve. tamb mortallQ' rum to t10 percent In the de....t. Dream Found On Ship ALAMEDA, (UPI) - After 10 years of hard work, Nils and Carrie' Wahlberg have fulfilled a lon&nme dream and are retired and traveling aboard their own ship. Their home is the 83- foot MV Viking, a conv- erted World War II Coast Guard patrol vessel. So far they have taken it to San Diego and up the in- side passage to Alaska. And now are thinking about a voyage through the Panama Canal to the East Coast. Wahlberg, 63, an elec- trical engineer at the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory and later with the Bay Area Rapid Transit District who has always been interested in power boats and sail· ing, said be and his 60- year-old wife began dreaming about their own s hip after they charted a cruiser in 1962. IT TOOK a n other three years before Wahlberg was able to find the Viking, which was badly in need of re- pair, but, oh, what a mess,''besaid. "And my wife was the best of partners, .. he said. The ship had only a small pilot house on deck. so Walhlberg added a spacious lounge cabin and another cabin _for the owner's quarters. He also remodeled and expanded the large engine room to provide heat, hot and cold water, and enough electrical power for a full range of navigational a nd safety devices. He replaced the vease l 's twin 600- horsepower engines for two 185 -horsepower engines that allow the Viking to cruise at a leisurely 9.5 knots, and use only JO gallons of diesel fuel an hour. Mrs. Wahlberg retired as director of nursing at Oakland's Seminary Hospital last year because of a heart ail- ment, and Wahlberg took early retirement so they could begin traveling on their ship. They cruised to San Diego to test the boat, then spent more than two months travel- ing n_ortt"! from Seattle to .Alaska. "Despite the Viking's size. my wife and I handled her ourselves," Wahlberg said. "We took some pretty rough seas at times, but the viking handled them well." For Mrs. Wahlberg, the Alaskan trip was ex- hilirating. ''It was delightful, watching bears catch salmon along isolated streams, seeing glaciers plunge into the sea at Bartlett Cove, meeting wonderful people, fis- hermenand cruisers.'' Now that they are back and the Viking is tied up at the Alameda Yacht Harbor, they are making new plans. "We've got a daughter now living in Jackson- ville, Fla. The charts show the Panama Canal leads in that direction." DEl'ENTE NOSTRIKE MOSCOW (AP) Detente bas dont; nothing- ror one heralded Soviet- American project. Only three or the 16 lanes at the Soviet Union's fU'St public bowling alley are working regularly .. UFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY W...Y•W.t ....... lfUH.-.lf•" c.... W...-141 .. llf SALE Part al the land wu deeded by Palm Sprln11' !Int mayor, PbWp Boyd. The rat i. leasOCl from the federal 10......_.1. '"lbel'e have been quite a few -l:C:l ..... ----~· -- ~ --~ VALUE Mr. CoffeeN Fiiters 99¢ Jack Turner. 31. an environ- mental pby1lolo1t1t from Unlvonlty of WyOJnlnc, spent bl.I seventh aummer on. the re- SclentiJta have come from •• far away as AU1tralla. lnclla and Israel lo study ID the clooed re--· Hamilton Beach VALUE corn ';ii' CAPEHART 1 ~. 99 Stereo Unit . Cannon velour towels Mr. Coffee•• Coffeemaker Sell·butterlng. 4 quart non· 99.99 .stick plastic cover. (500). Solid state AM /FM·FM stereo radio. Full size BSR automatic turntable. B·track player. Oust cover, 18" speakers. (8TPS). Polyeater/cotton In a wide assoriment of fashion color•. 1. 9 9 R911. 2.77. Bath size. 1.22 Atg. 1.11. Hanel ai:z:e. 77$ Reg. tit. Wash cloth. Original oil paintings 23.99 PEDAL POWER &'Si Fantastic lun for young kids. Built !Ike a lflcycle bul wilh motorcycle detailing. SAVE 20°/o Reg. 29.H . A big beautiful selection of Calllomla hand painted olls on canvas. Floral, blrdllte, tradltlonal, tea and landscapes. Big 37"~7'". UTILE AMERICANA Hot Cycle 9.99 Get the spirit of '76 wltn this Americana trimmed cycle. Pedals on 11 " fro~.1~~'!1, .2Zfm'f.lu_ maker brews faster for a better cup.of coffee. Olsp<>sabte filters. (MC1) Rl1C3:99 Slow cooks stew, soups, roasts, too. Full 311.z quart capacity. (3 100). The Treasury The. Treasury Make.up Mirror. styhng/dryer The Treasury ~~,:~~. ~~~!!. SL99 With varying brightness. (1230). Ou r own shaving buddy for Stirn line styling. (4200). warm lather. Uses standard Th T aerosol can. (3200), e roasury ~-'C -~ Mist Curling Iron ......-.....::_ .. ~:ql .. _. 10 99 Feat"'esa ready indicator ~lr) • light, thermostat control, non-stick coating. (1215). ~ -- SOUNDESIGN AM/FM Digital Clock Radio 29.99 Wake to am, fm. or buzzer alarm. Lighted, 24 hou r digital lea f clock. Slide switch operation. Switchable AFC. 31/2" speaker, earphone jack. (3486). BIG BUY SPECIAL , PANASON IC ~=~:~l~~~:rumenls 39R99 If purchased separately 119 50 Model 4005 takes up to • 30 calls. 13"" 50 Remote·rr.iatc111 turns any phone into •• an e1o::tens1on ol you r own . Please consult your local telephone company for installation procedures and inlormat1on re garding possible intallation and/or service charges. 13 • 99 Portable ca~lle recorder 8 digit readout performs 5 has pusn.button con trols. functrons 1nclud1ng percent. built·i n condensor mike. Pockel sized. (1200) (RQ309S). 4.99 AC adaptor. Limited quantities. Sale Priced Items . Effective Sunday thru Wednesday. Dec. 3. 1975. -.. , ..... llNch ot Ononoot-•()pen -daYI 11:30 IO 11:30. &I...,.. 10 10 8 . CIM.HSI: City Dr. It Garden Grove 81Yd. •Open weekdlyt 10 lo 8. Sundaya 10 10 e. IAMTA AMAi 3800 So. Brit~. of So. Cout Plua • Open Deity 9;30 lo 8. Sundeys 10 toe. ,. .... ' ' OAJLYPILOT Ceremonies Performed Smith-Scheuplein Lisa Marie &heuplein became •the bride of Tierney Winston 'Smith Jr. in a double ring ceremony in Calvary Chapel, Costa Mesa. Parents ot the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. Carl R . Scheuplein, Huntington Beach, Mrs. Craun • G.rady, Tigard, Ore., and Dr • • T.W.Smith, Grants Pass, Ore. ., ·The former Miss Scheuplein is a craduate of Cocoa Beach High School, Cocoa Beach, Fia., and -:will graduate from Orange Coast 'College in January. Her husband is a graduate of Grants Pass High School and the University of Pennsylvania with a ·ss in economics. They will make their home in Santa Ana. ... • Clark-Laun Kristine Laun and Scott ·Meredith Clark exchanged vows ·, 1in St. Andrew's Presbyterian ~Church, Newport Beach. They are the daughter of the John Leon . Launs of Newport Beach and the I' •. " ' . ~ . ' " .. . , . MRS. GARDNER MRS.,SMITH MRS. CLARK MRS. BARRIS son or the Junior Paul M. Clarks of Palos Verdes Estates. The bride is a graduate of Newport Harbor High Schoel and the University of California. Santa Barbara. She was a 1969 National Charity League de· butante and is affiliated with Alpha Chi Omega and the Spinster~ of Los Angel~. Clark is a graduate· of South Torrance High School, attended Mt. San Antonio College and now is a student at California State University, Northridge. I-le served for four years with the U.S. Army Security Agency. They will live in Glendale after a Hawaiian trip. Barris-Masson Robert Barris and his bride, the former Gayl Angela Masson will make their home in Newport Beach following their honey. moon touring Mexico in their plane. They were married in St. Augustine by.the-Sea Episcopal· Church. Their parents are Mr .. and Mrs. Robert Lee Barris of Cleveland and Dr . and Mrs. Jack Watson Masson of Santa Monica . The bride attended high school in Montreaux, Switzerland, and was graduated from the University of southern California with two masters degrees. She is completing her doctorate and holds the record as the youngest woman ever to have Oown solo coast-to-coast. Barris holds masters degrees from Kent State University and the George Washington Universi- ty. He is nbw Clinical Ad - ministrator for the Southern California College of Optometry. -", -", -", .. ..... ..... Statum-Schrickel ~t. John the Baptist Catholic Church, Costa Mesa, was the set· ting for the nuptials uniting Vickie Lynn Schrickel and Douglas Frank Statum. Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. Emil A. Schrickel and Mr. and Mrs. Glen W. Statum, all of Costa.Mesa. The bride was graduated from Costa Mesa High School and now attends Orange Coast College. Her husband is a graduate of Estancia Hi gh School. They will make their home in Santa Ana. Gardner-Fowler li niversity of Southern California graduates Emily Rob· bins Fowler and Jeffrey Nye Gardner were m anied in All - Saints Episcopal Church, Bever· ly Hills. They art> the daughter of Mr. .and Mrs. Philip Fouke Fowler of l..os Angeles and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Oliver Gardner of Laguna Beach. The bride was graduated from the Marlborough School, Pine Manor Junior CoJJege and af. Ciliated with Pi Beta Phi sorority at USC . She was a 1970 Las Madrinasdebutante. They will make their home in :Brentwood. following a honey- moon in the Hawaiian Islands. . ' . .. , Stop Reading Between Lines ,, ... DEAR ANN LANDERS : I work ~ satwdays for a friend of my "falber'1.Hel1knownaroundtown '!°pa very decent family man, hits • ..-•O"eat wife and four good.kids. ·:; lt seems that whenever I walk intotlail man's office he is reading ~~bruo1raph lc books or ·~--es. When he sees me :.,~ lie tries to dit.b the porn .-ru.lor worlr•hfft& or other office ~'but it's obvious what bo'a ... to. fllne<Tatb•r way he is 100 per. ..... ~A-OK. 1 have become so up. "'wl lllout this that It has me con- .. ~ about loll of other things. I -17. Thia man Is Q . Wm )'OU :ho!D-aort out my lhoucM•T -:: 1 ·ldlatsvu.u: ••• 8BOCI:: -...,,. ell ...,., e-..Me covaed ..... -.~.U)'la 1111 t 'wuwellulBlood. .... _ ... ""'91w ....... ...... .._ .... -.Iii ~u ._,.-•• , ., Clllponl &Ut'• ms problem. I see no reason to make it yours. DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband is suing me for divorce. HU grounds -cruel and.inhuman treatment. He says I am always picking on him. What do you think of a man who refuses to change hia un- derclothes for weeks at a time, won't brush his teeth, wU1 not make any decisions m his own and then criticizes me because I madethewrongone? He l'Wll to bis mother and tells · her everything that happens In our houst-, then 1he comes back to me and I have to discuss with her a lot of things that are nane of her business. My husband cheat.a, when we play gin rummy, hides candy and cigarettes all over the piece, hasn't given me a compli· ment in years and seldom has anythln.1 of interest to .aay. Ht1 doesn't Hit a lln1er around the ) house to help, yet complains if the place isn't spic and span. I've always had to do everything myself. And now HE is divorcing me. Pleasehelpmeunderstandtt. BAFFLED IN BAKERSFIELD DEAR BAFF: Never mind try. ing to nnderstand It. Just be glad yoo're oat of It. Yoar mant11e sounds like a nightmare. You.. -be happy to be flff al llult .adba11. Coant "* hl•d•P. Sweetie • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was invited to an en1agement party in June. I a ave the bride a $40coffee maker. She broke the encace- ment six months later. The en111ement gift waa not r•- tw'ned. This girl is now engaged again -to a different guy. I have been invited to the engagement pert•• . WUI 1 be expected to.give another (Ann Landers O=J present? What do you thirut? - TWICE TAPPED DEAR TWICE: Tbebride-lo-be tthould bave retamed al.I the gtfta wbf!ln tbe engagement w1s brollea. Yoa aeed ao& btla1 .-... Jae.ldentally, a Utfflfee maker II mGtt Uke a wtcl<llng -t than a allow er llft. Unl ... )W are in tbe •eddlng _party, I'd s17 7oa weatoverbo1rd. CONFIDENTIALTODIDYOU SAY IT: Ytsldid, and I will glad· ly say It again. ••AltohoUsm, ~ which often masquerades as 90Cial drinkine, ba.1 ruined more marriaces, careers, h~althy bodies and fine minds thAn any ,single element known to man." • Dehutantes Presented Highlighting the Thanksgivln(! weekend for 17 young women was their presentation to society dur- ing the 15th annual debutante ball, sponsored by Newport Chapter, National Charity League. Presentations were made last night in the South C<>aat Plaza Hotel. To merit the honor of being selected, the de· butantes must fulfill all philanthropic, social and cultural requirements throughout a six· year program as Ticktockers, a junior group whose mothers are league members. Introduced by presentor John Hallam Hiestand are (front row, left to right) the Misses Marcy !hone Rose Constance Elizabeth Wagner, Cathy Ellen Lar..;n, and Kimberly Alice Skilling. Others are (center row, left to right) the Misses Delia Elizabeth Richards, Marla Evelyn Johnson, Susan Wahlers Olander, Lisa Ann Hinshaw and Deborah Hearn Martyn. Also making their debut are (back row, left to right) the Misses Marianne Louise Nehrenberg, Nan· cy Jane Englert, GleMa Marie Anderson, Leslie Jean Smith, Anne Elizabeth Zillgitt and Nancy Ruth Munger. CALENDAR Y WOMEN : At a 9:30 a .m . meeting on Thursday, Dec. 4, in the Santa Ana YWCA, members wiJI learn about the Bicentennial when Gene Moriarity, chairman of the Santa Ana committee talks about the historic event. MANO CON AMOR: Prospective members are invited to a holiday punchbowl at 7:30 p.m . Thursday, Dec. 4, in the Turtle Rock homeo( Mrs. Jay Martin . There will be a discussion about Children's Home Society, a private child we If are agency, which the auxiliary supports . EBELL CLUB: Newport Beach members will g.!ither at the clubhouse at 1:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 4, for the annual Christmas Tea. Helen Brown, soprano and Wanda Crockett Brown, harpist, wiJI entertain. SOUTH COAST LITERACY COUNCIL The annual Christmas party will take place at San Juan Elementary School at 7 p.m. Friday, Dec. 5. An lntemaUonal theme will prevail in potluck dishes, songs and dances. REA.CH OUT: Screenirut of volunteer facilitators for the Orange Coast College program will lake place Saturday, Dec. 6. Those interested may make reservations by calling the Women·s Center at 556·5557. ORANGE COUNl'Y INDEPENDENT BLIND: The newly founded organization will meet for the second time at 6:30 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 7, in the home of John Zigler, Anaheim. Further in· formation is available by calling him at 635-9388. SMALL WORLD GUILD: Children's Hospital of Orange County will benefit from the Christmas brunch planned at 11 a.m. Sunday, Dec. 7, in the Tale of the Whale restaurant, Balboa. "Reservations may be made by calling Mrs. Paul Tonkovich, 5514734. SENIOR CITIZENS ART GROUP: The Costa Mesa artists will have an exhibit and sale from JO a .m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 6, on the lawn in front of the Boys Club, 2131 Tustin Ave., Costa Mesa. All proceeds will go to the club, which hosts seniors in its facilities on Mondays and Fridays. About JS senior citizens have been in the group since it was formed by George Burkhardt a year ago. Members range from beginners to professionals; DAY CARE CENTERS: Four new day care centers, ad- ministered by the Orange County Community Development Council, now are accepting applications. They are located in Santa Ana, Huntington Beach and Orange and will serve low·income families who are unable to seek or maintain employment or training for employment because they can't afford child care. Children must be ages 3 to 7 and toilet trained. The ceriters will be open 10 hours per day, Monday through Friday, and will serve four meals per day. All children will be given medical and dental examinations and follow-up treatment. Anyone wishing information on the centers may call the Orange County Development Council at979-256S . ANTIQUE SHOW: The Santa Ana YWCA will have its annual antique show at the Y&Jnday, Dec. 7, from 10 a.m. to6p.m . The followinj Friday, Dec. 12.i..~~ ... Y will host a Christmas program btglnniilg at 7:30 p.m. uorotnY Fuller of Tustin Will present a musical book review entitled The Sound of Music, and the Santa Ana High School Chamber Singers will perform under the direction of Mike Murphy . Tickets will be available at the door. Free child care will be provided. GROUCHO MARX TRIBUTE: South Coast Repertory Theater will honor the famed comedian during a special ceremony at 5 p.m. &Jnclay, Dec. 7, in the Villa D'Amicl of Promontory Point, Newport Beach. Included will be dinner, cocktails and a program of entertain· ment by Soutll.Coast Repertory. · The affair will be limite•f in attendance so that the "special character" of the evening can be preserved, according to SCR board president Stewart Woodward. Tickets are $50 each and the affair will launch the SCR an· aual support campaign. Anyone wishing ticket information may call the theater at &tfr3252. PllOBATB llBlllNAJI: Manattment al a probate estate will be the topic of a seminar Saturday, Dec. 8, to be sponsored by the OrangeCbu.nty Trial Lawyen Secretaries Association. Between 9 a.m. and 12:30 p.m., eight speakers wUI discuss the legal, banki.ng, newspaper ancl Internal Revenue upect1 o( probated estate handling. The program, at Saddleback Inn, is open to all fnte-re1ted legal secretaries, attorneys and law students. Re1ervatlon1 may be made by calling lhe association at 542·2357 • I I : I ' . I " r Irrepressible French Quarter Keevs Spirit Despite Many ' 'Clean It Up' Programs • Ladden and paint buckets decarat8 the Vieux cam, or Old Oullller. but · tmidents donf let r;Jew>.up ~s go lOo Ir. -is St Louia Cathedral, "" JacJr:san Square, at the -of the fllSlonltioo '""- NEW ORLEANS (AP) - They're trying to clean up the French Quarter again. For two centuries, hur- ricanes have washed lta nar- row alleys. fll'el have razed ita delicate buildings. croaad· ing district attorneys have chased away its sensuous lures. Now it's the paint buckets and pounding hammers of restoration, lured by the sweet smell of tourist dollars. that threaten to make the Vieux Cane, or Old Quarter. something new again. Through it all the Quarter has thrived as a great living museum -a patch of history in the shadow of the 20th cen- tury. ''It's the original New Orleans that b.as, through thick and thin, maintained ill architecture and atmosphere and senae of being apart lrom the rest of the country," nov- elist Hamett Kane says. '-i'llE QUARTER is an in- destructible part of this in· destructible city. It bas stood pretty firmly against every threat. Re1ident11 of the French Quarter's 78 blocks. are tbe first to &eose, and resent. changes to their neighborhood, like the pro- pooal in the '608 lo raise up an expressway along the river. "Wtienever there's been a danger, tbe people in the Quarter have rallied round," Kane said. ''When the ei.· presaway threatened, we got reaction from all over the United States .... There was the feeling that if the Quarter went, America, and maybe the world, would lose something." Back in the '30s, the Works Progress Administration put people to work rebuilding lbe French Market, and a great protest arose. This fall. new shop owners are moving into the market buildings - restored, even down to paint color, to their pre-WPA ap· pearance. And once again there is protest. GONE AS A result of the restoration are the f"tsh criers, buket weavers, most of the vegetable peddlers. 'Ibe great nap came when the C8fe du Monde's weathered green awning was yanked down. Lynda Friedmann is torn between the city administra- tion that hired her and pro. moted the market renovation end her job as directOT' of the Vieux Carre Commission, which regulates development in the Quarter. "A friend of mine said peo- ple in New Orleans aren't concerned about anything but their oak trees and artifacts,·· she said. ''The real gut issues that affect people are l~t. lt"s almost a shame to flap around over the awning.'' Mayor Moon Landrieu had 'Pf'Ol)Oled that Jackson Square be Used at night for Son et Lu.mi.ere, a sound and light show presenting the city's history to tourists through re- corded narration and spot lights. The idea induced public feuding between Landrleu and TV entertainer Dick Cavett and aroused such a storm that the project has "been placed on the back, back burner," M "ss Fried- mannsaid. THERE ARE other, less enraging change : Traffic is now blocked al c rtain hours from Bourbon nd Royal streets indow shop- pers { ee rein; a park is piano d beside Cafe du Mon e , rising up from Jack n Square over the flood wall at keeps the river out. Fro there a Moon Walk, na for the mayor, will d cend like a w barf to the ver's edge. Always, the new en · croaches. Modern hotels rise above the rooftops. Huge de- partment stores sit inert along Canal Street, one boun- dary of the Quarter. The Superdome has mushroomed within walking distance. "The Quarter has changed but not all for the bad," Kane said. "The advan'tage or the Quarter is that people live there. ''To some extent, it has become a tourist trap. But whatever they do the Quarter retains its spirit. It is the single, most authentically ·restored pJace in America. It"s the real thing." You Learn To Say 'Chee Chee' BySTANDELAPLANE CHICHICASTENANGO -It only takes a day in Guatemala to learn to say: "I'm go- ing up to Chichi." (Say it "chee chee" - equal accent on both.) We had a repor.ter in Guatemala last week. "Chichi unchanged. A highland Indian town with a market as colorful as you'll ever see. Maya Indians swin& pots of smoky copal Incense on the steps ol the ancient church. Inside ·the door, a lot of Maya In- dians watch over blazing candles. "Don't go up the front steps. You'd dis- turb· the wQl'sbipers. There's a side en- trance on the right through the garden.· They say the same Indians go to .the hills after church and burn copal to a stone Mayan god." "Chichi is on the tourist 2'oute. On market days the square is lively. Bustling with the Indians wlio only speak their own ·Maya-Quiche language. Two-thirds of Guatemala Is pure Indian. They don't speak Spanish and they look through you rather than at you. It's as Utough you didn't exist. "Evecy,body's in the tribal dress of his _ village. The walk-through market displays green coff<:e beans and tan s\Jal fiber rope. Brown sugar is sold in cannon ball sizes. You can blly red and green tomatoes, live chickens and hom&-made b.!eswax candles. "The sun is warm and the air is refreshing and cool at this beiehL" "Most Indian sellets shn.PlY spread a mat In front or them and display the, war~s they've c~ed all night to reach the market. But th¥re are Spanish-speaking sellers of woven, bright-colored cloth. "You should get a table cloth and napkins for around $10. Cost you $9 in Guatemala City. But the seller had to bring it up from the city to make his simple, barefoot appearance. "Might be worth a dollar more to say at home: 'I bought itin Chichi."' "Although it looks like a film set, the In- dians are not financed by the tourist bureau. Chichi is a natural. You stay at the Mayan Inn. It's an attractive colonial inn. An Indian boy lights a pitch pine fire in your room m orning and evening. "The occasional small earthquakes set the hanging baskets of flowers swinging. The country has been under a kind of martial law for several years, but it doesn't seem to affect tourists with their bullet pro· or vests of travelers' checks. "We are thinking of driving down to Guatemala and conttnueto Panama ..... Last time I went in by car, we went down to the low banana land and crossed at Tapachula. The coast route can be hot. I'd tum sharp left and go uphill to cool country at Quezaltenango. This is a pleasant and large town . High enough to be chilly in the evening. A Guatemalan told me his grandfather had an Indian servant climb into bed each night to warm the sheet. before he turned in. From Quezaltenango it's a paved blghlf!Jld road all the way to Guatemala City. ' • ~LVP1LOT IJ -----PtlBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUllUC NOllCll ~' . ---J1CTITIOt.+t •UtlM&U rtCTtTIOUt•UllN•» MOT1cao,. I~ llAMl ITAT&MIMT NON •ltl"Oflllt•tl..ITY MAM•fTA'flMINT 1 fll .,.. _..._,,. ,..,_ ............... Ml'lke It ,_,..., ,1 ... 11 I,._. .. -nm 1+11_. .. ,.,_, •r• • .... M:: • 9" ... wlU -.. '•9t'GRM .... __ .. , ' ..... J . TecN llM Atllltdtit., t9t "DIMY•tlt MIHIHG QO.",. • .......... 1'-lllllt\ ~,,.,.. ... .... '''"' ,,, .. ,, , ..... ..,... • ........,CMIW,~1 .... M·M4.~ ...,.... -.... myMlf, .......... """""' . ' ..... CA ...... ""''--· . THI MC HAU:~ --'*""' , ... ,.,, °""'St~ 0.twlfllt Hlfl\M'l'ef ,...~ lf1S. I~ 0.-WttrM ... (.81-H. a....otH He,._ Q)fl:fl!OAATIOH.•Call ........ ~· IL He•IO". 1)00 $o. c.-. """"' Aefff -WI -..,,......, ....... hl9ft0. C..I ntU. )*"'H""'-1.1¥11, 1. ttlcb•rtl McH•Wtllle11, MklMt ,,.. ... ''°' ""'' .. ~. •IWl'-,tl-11 ~., ... l....., ..... ,.. ....... ~.OM. CO.I• .... ~. CA t2'1 I ~---1\.CA. TJilft """'""' It C.Orl<fllCIH tly • "*!""" °' ..... C..11 o.lly "'lte. I , .. ,,,., M<HO~tbte11, ...... No1N..-.. ....... ,., .. -o., .•. lt1i et1•n SoKm.,.,, ,,.,., ,_,_... LMtL ....... ...-...iJ,T.-. ....... «f\CA. --nM1 iivllNu It c~i.. .-, o 11lh ....,_,.I ••t Ill .. ..elf! lfW Tit AV EL ONoilly Oetit ., °'"""' CHiiiy .... -P UBLIC NOTICE ........ -...._,..,.,i. THl"MCNAUOHT'ON -•1CTITIOUt. ·~SINISI C:Oll"°•ATIOfll ll'l*llMf Oraf\9* CM1I 0.11, ~\ot, ""'""""·~ .. Ion ' ..i=· STAT MaNT av: lllc.~Mc."•wtfll:Ol\o ,..,.n, •,ond OK. 1, t•. 1•1t 6U1-11 """ I'll,.,_ ........... ..UM; -· DA""IElt DAN MIN'~ HAlll .&,, Tlll• ~·--••• fllelll .. tl'I .. PUBLIC NOTICE OC.IOH.J 110'1 LI "•i RMd. Will ll ONMW o.A If°'°""' c-M'r• .... ~ .. ,..('.A.tMoJi .,....U,1'1L I.a ,..,,.., Clltto;: Llll!Wllt.. 1llG2 ]ewJ Hit .. 1n1T1ous•us1••11 "'-"*'-"--· ._1.,.. vi. CA. "VllllhMd Or .. c:.-t Dflllf ""' NAMI S'l'AT•MINT i..~~-ll c.-uc:IH by.,.~ No¥ ... OftdDK,,.14tl, tm T'lletol"""l'llJ111t-l1aol1111~ 011CE-.. -., "'"'•'I CU Hord ~llflloll Mexico; Cf'CDl!llELOJIOEMIENT CQ., 1'401 'nll1 " ...... ,., ••• I 1..i .!tl'I tN PUBUCN ,, . llolWCNUI flt•., H11lllll'll(ort a..:f\, CA. i=•o..11.e10r.,..c-..1w .. .,.. ..... 1). ,,,i ITATaM&N'J 0111 WITMDllA!lf!\. -Oolrtl• L. W-001 .. r. 0'11 Fallt.I"' P11ell1hM Or~ Coe" O.Uy '°"'°' ·-. Kill Trips u.n., """4.'"°9t"" a.ecti, CA . .,... ...... l .. J),•,•1'111 <.1,IOJS GW-11 JIOA .. Tlfl•INIP OPl:::t TM1 ~1 h ~Ofttluc:IH oy an I,,_ ~ Ult.Dalt JI ........ PUBLIC NOTICE fltCTITIOUlaUSINllM . " ClurU1L.WOolMy TIW f9'lowl{ll ...,_.. Mt .... ~ "-I• 1U.Mmenl ••• Ill"' Willi IPw ........ ,.1 .•• ,, .. :.~s MEXICO CITY CAP) c.o...!r Cle•• DI Orlo!IOI Co1111lr.., HO,,. f'IC'l'ITIOUI IUllNllS ,...-=:: °""•'"' .. -U,ltlS. -NA.Ml. STA'l'llMINT lttllM l'lftl-ofO• -Hotels and travt'I Thi I01klw11111 petllOll 11 doo"I eo.I• 1.QD "O" &. SI . ...,.,..... 111 .. agents have received "'*I"'"' °'""" C.." O.Uy Piiot, --c..1"9nM tttol. ~ Ho~. i..n. JO,•ni:I . °''· '· "'' -N 909"$ UNION OOClt. Q 5e. Br+' • TIW llttHIOlil t11111fMll ..... 30,000 cancellations !or f<nlllt, a.lbN lilitl'IOI. 0111.,.. .... ntU ..... ,_ .,. .. ~, ....... trips to Mexico by U.S. ~r1 J, .1 ..... itl't Ponola Dr •• Mlrtl'I ll. 1'1Slfl trlOc.o..nt"t-;_~ PUBLIC NOTICE Cfft. Mota, Olll01"11lo '1•7• ..ull NOrnt ..ci ._._.., h Jews protesting Mex-Tiiis MMl-1 II CClftdlKl..:I by .. I"' 'M.,....~ ... ; ico"s rect'nt vote in the oi ......... \11<19" ~dlo!OnMVe.,._I,..,_,. ,ICTIT10US •USIHllSI Roti.r1 J . lll!bee ....... ...... 0r-.. CMtt 0...., ":/!!:. Uni t ed Nations on NAMISTA'l'lllM•NT Tl'lil 11M•-I _, IHact wltfl ti. Zionism. TllOl!o1-... W-11-"1b"'11_.. eo..nt;.c1 ... 11 Of Or•• COut1lrM .....,_ Newmtiwt, 1 .. u. .. ,.,, .• _. ~ M :t ....,.,.,J, .,,s. .. ~texico was among the THE VILLA E FLOOR SMI TH, -PUBUC NOTICE ; tsS. H•mlUort. H11t1!1119lot1 a.~h. CA. fl'ullll"'-d Or•• CU•\ O.Uy Piiot. countries approving a ..... ND.,.mWrt. 1•. J), JO. lllS _,, U .N . rt':solution con-Jotk Dt•11 Smltll ... S L-nl. STATlllMllNTO,AaAN """llnvtOll IMMll. CA. '1-PUBLIC NOTICE 0"Ullll0" demntng Zionism as Ti'lh ~""'" CO...,llCllO Or.., In-fl!CTITIOUS IUSIN•Sllf racial discrimination . ........ TlM followlllO ... , ........... J.clt.O. .... Smitl'I ..ICTITIOVS •UllNllllS ..,,... I,_ -ef ttlf' tkUI'-' The president of the Tllh 11-'-111 ···~ !ti.cf .!Ill "" NAM• STATlllMINT _, c--.i, Cle•• of Or•not CoulltyGll ....... TlM followlr19 ""'°" ., 41111'8 """"' ~MANAOllMl!NT • Mexican Hotel Associa-.. "'*-' lf, 1tl). ,..,..H; HA OuPollt Drive, H•wpcwt lion, Rodolfo Casparius, -La lllSTltO, 2Jl'OO A-t El Tote Aoed. C..tllol'111 ....... P1,1llil!"-<I 0•P9'J (.a.oil o.ltf PllOll, El'l'on1.CAt»lO TN f'lctllleut lkllkwtl said that the 30,000 can-...,.., i.,ll,JO,•ftd O.t.1. 1•1) ...... R*"" futon, UUI \/lo Ettou-. Mil-i..m t• ,...,. .. , UMG "' wr• " cellations had been re-"°" 'll9"9. CA m1 J. c.o...MfORAU(IW1II,1•11. Tlli1 bY11_. b CDl'IOllCIHI Dr "" ir.. °""'' W. LOllO, tt01 Gal•C: ~ ceived. in only one week. PUBLIC NOTICE Cllwic...1. ~lk«fl,C.lllOl"1'11•'24il0 ltobert TlrtOR llf"lllltord H. MU .. r, SS l..w-dl ,. A spakesman for Mex· TPllt \IM•,,.,.111 w•• In"' ..;II'! IN ""'-tlkOCh.C.ll!w'lllOt!W •tc;TITIOUS •USINl.11 Counlr Cl•rll Of Or_,,0-Covnty Oii HO\!· Wlll•rCI S. \loll, 1101 Gr• ~ ico·s travel agencies, MAM•STATelfrlll•NT _._ti, 1t1S. a.ltlw, C.Olllonlt1t'2 .. I Tony Perez:, said last TN follOW •"Q Pl"llOll it lk>l"l buM· -NI llllllM$1 ... C~ ~ • M•M F'\.lbll1'1H °" ..... C..11 o.11? Pllvl., ...,.,o1,_1,..r1'1lp. week the tourist boycott NEWPORT VACUUM CENTER, ND•.U ,llO,•flCIO.c.r,1•,1•1s ~1l. OlllllER W. l..ONG is growing at an alarm· 1a~ Not•oort Ill••·· Cote. Meu. Tllil IC.kltMnt .. , lllH wlWt ...:l ingrate. c.•lfoml• mu PUBUC NOTICE c-, a .. 11 °'°'~ (;ounlly• 1.-..lr>Q \.Incl, 11Jl1111 No•oort 8h•CI., ernblf II, 1•1s. Mexican Cool• Meu, C•llt0<!\il '1•11 .. ICTITIOUS •UllNISS ..,_ newspapers Tllh blalrw11 l1 c-..CIH by •11 I"' NAM• STATIM•NT fl\IOll""" Ot_,. CH1t l)Mty PIJICll, reported Friday that · a' Cli•l-1. ,,,. lol~l'll ~·"°" 11001 ..... 111111-How. U,llO,•tlCIO.c. 7. ,,, 1•1J 4'si-7J • . former president of Mex-Jn1in91..1ne11 n · Tlli1 "••t~I ••1 fllH •IPI IN TME SECOND TIME AROUND PUBUC NOTICE j ico, Miguel Aleman, now c:.--it'I' 0.•11 (Ill Or•l'IQI! Counly on"HOw· SHOP. ltlt !.. Con1 HIOll-.•r, ~ head of Mexico's tourist -~ltJl.. a..:ri, CA. t:i6S1 t'ICTITIOUl •UllNIU ·-A-kl C. HOl11t. lo..I Santi ,.,.. HAMe ITATeJrilleNT council. was in N('W F'\.lblltl>HI 0r•"9"' Co•.i O•llr Piiot 'Sl .• u., .... a..:ti.CA.'2•~1 '""tollowll'IQ penllnl '"' dllklll ....... York trying to settle the NOwmo.r•. 16, tl. XI, 1011 •J::U·IJ Tlll't bu1lnH$ II COlldll(•eG by"" I"' l'ln•••; problem . Cllwkllllat. 8ASA8E ANO ASSOCIATES.1115 Aona!CI C. Hollb W1U.:t, Cnt• -w. CA. t'JU7 Aleman's office con-PUBLIC NOTICE n.i., •U.t-flt W•I llt..i wllPI !flt Vivian ll-bl.11li W•llec•, ~ firmed that he in County o ..... ol 0r.....-'°""''""' ,._. New. CA. '1611 was .....,..1s,1•1s. Jot a-111t, 11u W•lleca, C.aY New York where the .. ICTITIOUS •USINISS ...... -~.CA. '2'21 Mexican tourist council NAMf. STATt:MlNT F'\.lbll1'1H Or ..... Ca.Ml D•llY PllOI, W. lt•lcl ~Ruby A....._, Jt«D T"' ktl-ll'IQ IM<Wn b dolftU bull· HOv. lD,•nd 0.t. 7, 1•, 11, lt1S tin-JS A011111 O.U Tff•OC•, Dlomotlll eer, has an office. NI.Slit" '-'-Casparius said that he DELPl41 AU'l'O DE51G~5. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE Phlllp G•l•t, 1)111 S.llllf,., Ullll,. c-rt. N•wparl e..n, CA. lfVIN, CA. ' received a letter from a -Tlll1 buM~t 11 (Olld1H;ted tr!' • Jewish organization in ftk"9td L. WJ1111. 1 L•lllllCll Cdurt. •ICT'ITIOUS•USINISS 91"""el 1Nr'IMnlllp, ""1IOr1 e..:PI, CA. '1"3 HAM••TATl:M•HT \llwl .......... New York, which said 7Plll ~INtl ii tORCluCll'CI by .... !"' T'lle fol IOwl"Q t)er10ll It. 00l11Qtut.l11t11 TNI 1l•lefntnl W•I l llH ..... , h Mexico i• visitt'd by dlwk!MI. ••: c-ityO.,tDIOr~ '""1WOll ...... more Jews than any of Rk .... nl L. WUlh KING OPTICAi.. COMPANY, -.....,.,u.1t1s. ' Tllil 11•19...,.1 w•1 llleCI with ti. HOrlhMlin SI'"'· Or lol\OI, CA. '269 ..... the other countries ap-c.-.i, Clerk .. Ot--.. c-ity .......... Johll DO'llf Olo'Mw•r, ... '*"1tl Tiii-i '*"-"""' ••• fllod wltfl ""' proving the anti-Zionism ~11,1•1s. 0.k Slreet, 0r0flg9, CA. '2M7 c.ow.oty a.,... .. er-.. Covn11 °" ._ ·-Thil 111111""1 11 COfldll<t.O by., ~ "'*"'1S,1'1S. resolution. PllOl!1'1H Or• .... COOl4 Diiiy PUot • dlrlduoll. PUtl01'1H Oro .... CMt.I 0.Uy ... !el H• said th at an Now Jl.lD.•nCIO.c.l,!4,ltJS ..00.J ' Jofln D. CorM•I• -.aa •• 11e10.c..1,1•.1•,1m .,.._n TPlh il•~t ••t IHll<I ,,.,,,. IN t'stimated 70 percent of c-, ci.rt o1 0r .... eo11mw °" ...,,,. the tourists visiting fro m embtr IJ, !'JS , PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE -the United States each F'\.lbll111M1 o.anoe Co.111 O•U• Pliot, SU~l'ftlO"'-COU•TO .. 114 are Jews. Mexico PICT'ITIOUI IUSINl!SI HOw. i., U ,JO.•llCI O.t.1. It IS ''""' year MAMI STATIMENT STA TE OF CALI FORHIAR'.Jlll earns more than $2 '"" fol low! ... '"' _.. •• e doOflQ IM.l1l-PUBLIC NOTICE .. .... 1111• billion a year from rwuH; OROE"'-TO SNOW CAUle flO .. ... A 51ST£1t ACT. 11.t SoulPI CH ANOE 0 .. HAMI' tourism . .. ICTITIOUI •USIHl'SS In 1"9 ,,,,.11,, ol ,,,. tfJ1k:M1-I f1f Co.111 Hltf!W•'I'. \..1911"• BIKPI, CA NAMl$TATt:Mt:H'I' JOHNANOREWS8ANK °'"""'- '''" TN lol IOwl""' per10n l1 Clol1t11 tll$rws1 ... _ Mlr'llM Lit S<oll. ?Olli Sun\lllltf Trw lll>PllC•llOll of JOHN ANOftl(WS PUBUCNOTICE Df' .• U1J1.iN llo-C:PI, U. t1•il M 8"'Nlt5 Jor (n•"OI OI n•""'• ..... ._ ....... F, Scott, 70J11 Sun V•llty LJoWRENCE HYOl'tOSEEDING btOft Ille<! II\ Court. •11CI II ~~ f'ICTITIOUS •USIMHI Df'., UIJl,iN lloKPI, C ... '1•~1 CO .• 2"'11 WPl!11., Drive, £1 Toro. CA. from WJCI l~h<•llOll lfl•t J N MAMIE STATIMeNT . ~"" OAlWS SANKS Pl•1 lllld •11 •ppti.:., Tllll bulitlKS II <Ondl>C. .. CI Dy .f limit C.rl 8<..i1'1•• l..l••t"<o.1-"11111• 11011 propo\I"~ IPl•t 1111 11-llo ""' ktllowlr19 ""'-ii doi1"19 bull-eel _t,..•lfllP \lie""°· Ml••IOll \ll•IO. CA. "2•11 C~lioJOH AN0AEW5HAG.AN. ""'": Martl'MIL•oSc.o!I Now, Cl'lere4ore, II II lllrdrf .,..,..., WAYNE WAREHOUSE SALES, TPllt MMe ..... ,.t ••1 11111<1 wl!PI 1fll TPlll DlltlnliS ii <Olldu<lld Dr ... Ill--Cll,..;led, 11••1 •II ""''°"' I...._.. 2l0\1 '""°"II°" P•rt-y 1..1(1,... 1-11111, c-ly Clerll DI Clt'l"OI CounlY on HO,,. Cli¥~1. ed Ill WICI tn•lltr Clo i""·' blfri 11111 C..r1 8<•Cl•PI•• l..lw,On<t Cbur1 In ~l>o'•lrntnl on 1111 2WO.y '-'-'"'' emt11r11,1t/S. OI Dtc1tn11er, 1911, •I 10:00 O't.-.Clt. w • .,.,. V. Foy, 1!1J1 P•wdeN SI., ·-Tiiis 1t•lernH1I ••• lllld with ii. •rn.. Ill WiCI Clay 10 lhO• C-.::.: T111!111.U.'2MIO PllOll1'tld 0r•"9' C.0•1• 0.tl f Pllol Qounty Clertt DI Or MQt Coulll'I' Oii ND,,. wt" •POll<•llon '"' c,..1199 (Ill ll'lt Titlt. busl ... 111 II tondlKtH bv an 111-No•.1l,:ll.•rd0.c.l,14,1,IS ... ~.S-1 i ~12. ,,,,_ VO.+d NII IM 9r.t11•H. 111...wi...1 ....,, 11 Is tu'1""• orCleroCI IPl•I • c:r:..: W•YM II. Foy PUBLIC NOTICE P\;Olhl>tCI O••noe COfl11 0111, Pllol, tPll1 Orck!r To SllO• C1uH bl~ 1,, uw 0•11¥ Pilot • ,,..~, ot TP111 11•1•tnHll ••I IUed willl IN ND•. 16, 1J, JO, •n<I O.c. 1, 101S '31>1-J' vener•I ci rc 111•Uon, print ;,, t.Md Coo.Jiiiy Clerk ol Ol'MQt Counlv on Nov· FICTl'1'10U$ IU$1NESS county,•• le••• on<• 1•cP1 ..... '°' touo- tl'l'Ur 11, 1t7J. PUBLIC NOTICE 1...:cH1I ... W1"elt.1 or lor to Ult .,.w Of . ...., NAMESTA7E~l.NT w lCli.•rl!\Q . l'ubll!Md Or1t10t C:O.U D•llY Piiot,, TN lol IOwl1"19 JM!f10fl 1$ Clolr>g busiN11 U.-'""Git~ M NO....,mlMPr S, lt1S. Nn. 11,JO.el'ICI Dt<. 7. 1•. tt1S ..... .. n . .. ICTIT!OUI •USIN£55 SAMU LDAE11£N CH ECO 'S C •MllAS NAMES.7ATEMEHT J ... olS.ICI SPECI ALTIES, 1611 Pl.ceno1. Co1U T"' follow! "Q jM!r10l'li ••• CIOU'9 ""'I 5-rlorCOlll"I PUBLIC NOTICE Vl•TUE AJlllD K"llCr., INC. Mev,CA.'7611 ,..,,n . D•~C-""'D,we A•11l A. Ay•lo I. Ere11ul•l A, Ar•I•, ll•lley Sl9n Sllop, 16"0? H1t•rC1 Hltw .. ..:Pl.C•Hl.,tU•tHM ,ICT'ITIOUSIUSIH•IS 1100 .,,_le•IOll Pl., 54 0 , Co\!• Mew.GA. A ...... MICl••r CU¥, CA 9J6!S . A""111r1 Jor AW!k•llt NAME STATl:MllNT -~ EClwl•d F . H11q11e1. IOJ6• L• Pub!ltlleG Ora"!'i Co•1t O•llY Piiot. TIIOl lol10Wl119 pef"Mll It. llOll'll busil'M'lfl Tri11 b1111,,e11 h cone111c•ea by • Dt"119nw. Founl•ln V•ller, CA 'l'll'OI. Nowmbet t. 16, 1 , JO. 1t1S •2'0-1Jo M ' gene••l -1ne•\hio. J•rne1 11. Liiiy, IS~ wtiltell'll'I, ,.fltODUCTS UNLIMITED, non En11\>lelAy1t1 fo\.111•111 V•tler. CA"'°' PUBLIC NOTICE Gr~ Lii., HunU011IOfl 8No:ll, CA. A•11IA ,Ayal1 Ge•1ICI F. Huqhe'. lllCI? til l•fll -T"'' 1.u11m1,.1 ••• f!leCI wilPI 1rw Aw .• MIClwey (1\y, CA '1&55 I" rant fMrll11, 2 1042 G-r99fltloro \.11., (Dunlf Cler-"' 0r1 .. oe (OU,,IYOll HO•· 'l'Pllt bu11ne11 h cond11ct!'<I by 1 SUl"llttO• COURT 0" THI! H\lntlflO\on a.ecri,c.r.. ""' ...,.,., 11. lt1J. ~ ... •1l 1»rlntr\hiP S'l'A7e DPCALl .. OltMIA FOii TPllt D111l .. 1111 conOllCIHI"' ....... ·-EClw•rCI F. HUQ~l TM• COUNlY 0 .. LOS ANOl!LIES 41¥1-1. Pullli~ Or•11oe Co•\! O••IY Piiot, TPlh "•Tement .,,, liled "'""' ll'le NO.,. Stt•U F,MkMllrlln "'°w. ?J, JO, Ind 0.c.1, I•, 1915 4'1ll-1S c.ounty Clerk ol Or•~ Coun11 on NO•· loKITICE 0" IHTINTIOH lO YL.L Tllll ~•lemt!\I ••1 1111d wl!PI ll'le en-be< II, 191!. •IAL ... OPl"'-TY AT PfltlYATE c-!f 0.rk ol Or•noe C.011nlyan ND•· PUBLIC NOTICE ·-'"' P\lt>llUw<t 0r•"'le Co••I O•olr P\IOI, E1t1le ol DA\11 D J . LIPKIN, Hl"blr ll, ltli. Ho¥. Jl, lD.•ncl Dec. I, I•, lt 1S ..... °"••W<I . ,_, ,ICTITIOUS •USINESS NOTICE IS HEAl!llY 01\IEH thllt, Pub!IY'rotd Oriti._ CO•sl O.llr Pllol, NAME S'l'ATEMENT "'°"· 1•, 2l,lD.•nd O.c. 1, 107S """ TPlt tollowlr>Q ~rwn h C10tf'IO bull· PUBLIC NOTICE -IKI tu tonllrm•llon by llW •l:Dft-. l'lllilleel S-•kw Courl, on c.comti.r • • "'"~·1 1t1s .i t :OO •.m . or u. .... ...,. ""'Ill" PUBLIC NOTICE H LEE'S TREE SEAl,llCE " !Pie l lm• •ll0•1CI by •••, !Pie ...,._ LEE'SGARDENIMG. 1',CTITIOU' •uStN ESS .. ...M9l'eel, •1 t•t<VIOI' of "'9 OSI* of l'ICTITIOUS tUSIHESS Jl LEE'S OW,,RF GE ll•NIUMS. NAME STATEMl!NT 0.•ICI J. Llp1<on, OK••VCI, wlll Mll •t ,.AMI! STATEMENT •n PwloY St ., Coron• doe! Mii•, CA. T..,.1onow1119 ""r10n1 ••• CIOo"9 fllnl-Ofiw•I• S.Olt lo,..,. t1i.P1e1t Md !»It ..t TN 100-1,,... per10n1 •r• doillO tM.!· •m l'ltl1 •• Dl«ler Oii tM lerm1 trld (-H~ Lt' Simmon•. •ll Poppf, Ctlron• GOLDEN PA,,G, 11011> Mll"l'\e lwr•aftfl' menu ..... 111111"9 rl9ftl, Otte. ""5•1: Clel ,...,, CA. 02•1s ......... B•tbcMo 1111nc1 . C•llto•~11 '1'1"61 THE PL.ANT AAIUM. 21031 l.t Pat. Mlro1lav 811h-. 111', Mafi M -lnM••SI of 0.•ICI J. Llf*ll\ Ot- SlllM ?H. MIU Ion Vl,Jo, C.llforr>ta "2blS Th!1 D111llW\I h conCluc,ed bJ ill\ I"' cffiOCI, •t 1rie n ...... o1 ri11 cM•tPI '"° •O O.vo®•I ,.,,. , Balb<>• Island, (1 U•o•nl~ 911161 •IOM. tllle, M<l 1"11'1'11 .... l tr. IMllO 1.H Slmrnon• II••• B•rllll. nJ•» M.1"1'11! A~ .• l)omillk. JoM FlllO.fl•, 1!0'1'1 U Tlll1 11•11,,...nt ••• llltCI wilPI ltlt &.lboa l1l•nd, C•lolo'"'e 9]b61 1111 KQulred lnl<klllion lo IPlalOI~ Sutn. u.,...,. Hons, c.n1orn11 "21>SJ eo..r!r O•rt of 0••"111 County on No• . 'fl\11 ~ .... s 11 condll(!HI bv an ln-dlnl •I U. !)""'of 11110.•IPI, 1,, IN rHI Wlf'\tloO Pe11!-........ U0"2 LI .....,.,?S, 19/S. Cl!WoOJll ••ooerly toc•ltCI I,. 1,.. Co11111, of s.-, L.-g...,. Hlllt., C..tllor11l•"2f>SJ "'' M Mlrost•w 81'1/k Or.,., SU.t• of Olllorni1, Clncrlbell nil• b11\lnt11 Is conC111tled 01 1 P\10111,,... Or•nqe Co•sl 0•11• Pllof • TPll' si.1-n1 ••• !llf'<I with trie •• loliewS: oen-••l Pt•lfll•1lllp. ND¥.Xl.•1'1110.< 1,,4,Jl.ltJJ ·~-1 s '°"""'Cl••-ol 0r•"lltl Co11n,r.., Now-L...ot 11 Of TtKI No. 111•, •I per mmp Dominic Jolll'I F!CIOM ernblf),, 191). !""1'wf l'KorClld 111 llOdll 40. ~ 3 <11 TI\11 t.l•lt,,.,....I ••s IH.0 "'"th IN! ·-Mlsclll~ llVPI. reco•Cll o1 -• Count'/' Clerk f1I Or•• County on NDv· PUBLIC NOTICE P\IOl lY>fd Or•'* COi" 0 •11'1' Piiot, 0r.,.c-tT- .,.._. s. ttJl. No ... mbe•• .... :u , JO.,,,, •mis Tiit """""1fY Is coro1mo111y ,..._,,... ·-.. ICTITIOUS •USINISS W OS ••l"l Llpll.111 Ori ... , Wo•lmlM..,., fl'ublbhld Or•tlOI Cont 0.lly Polo!, NAMIESTATEMENT c.llfo"'lo. ~mtiit·•· ,., 13. 30. 101) '11J.IS n..1011-1111;1 ptflOf\1 ••e Cloi119 bln.I· PUBLIC NOTICE TIM UI• h IUbltCI lo c11••tnl I.I""" 1'1111•1" co..,...,...u, <Olldlllolll , •••Irle!""","'" PUBLIC NOTICE VILLAGE CIEo~TER TR,,VE1. ..ICTl710US •USINESS Mrwl lloM, rlOPllt, rl9htl of ••¥, •nCI U.Mar9W'11e P-••. Mlss1onV1110: NAME$TO.'l'EM£NT ..,,.,...,.,,of <1<..,CI. T,,_ procoerfy It lo CA..,,,, Tha fol!Owi..., JN•Wn Is doi ..... OUM-bl 10kl or\ •n ... , 11 .. bo1K. ••t;otpl •• f'IC'TITIOUS •US I NESS Don•ld T. 8eCIClo•. JSl Vhl• .. "., 111 ... NAMI! ST•TEMENT . Grlrldol, New wt 8eKPI. CA. '1WO £L JAY CERAMICS, 111"1 C:,,nver ~.., °"9" •re Jnvlttd tor tPI~- TN tol IOwil'll Olf"10!\S ••• doo119 bits>-Jore• Ao•• 8e•e1a.. ~s1 Vh!• ~. l!I Toro. CA. '2Ull ....,.,lftlt....,JIMl11wrhl,,...aow;1 I~ rwu11: Pl Grlrldol,N-POl1~KPl,CA.'1WO HI•.-., A L..C:•I•, 111'2 Girqr rwc:llllOll llt tlw otllt t ol IC:•tr, HoortOllCI TN C.llllld Compul••. JUI Sovt Florence 0 . Fr•n•P101111. J1l1 LIM. El T ... o. CA.'26JO 6111 • .ttiornry for 1•ld e•1<11IOI', •I »so Pt•u DI'., S9m• Anl, C•HI. t21CM. \11l1Kllo, We11mi,.ster, CA. TPll\ 111111.,..;1 !1 coM11cteCI by .., !n-WH~lr• aovtow••CI, S11ll1 1no. LOS Wlltl•m L. Olld Llndol L. M.1'11n, 'I06 Robert II . Fr•n•P101r1•. SJJI Cllw!Clulll. """111, C.Hletnl•, O• fl'lll'I' Dlt 11..., a.1111 St., N-llO"'I s.acn, c.111 '266tl I· Vllloclto, W.S1mo .. 1le•, CA "•"'¥II. L•K1!• ... , .. ""tle•ll ol Wkl SuPl!r!"' (Mn II n.11bolWNtJ11 (0 .. CllKleCI by. n.,.,. TPll1 1l•ternen• ••• !lltd -1!1' ,,.. •nr 11,,,. lfltt Pl"I pubtkc•llO" ot tfl!1 ed ,.,..,....11110. TPll\ bu1IM11 11 (onCl1H;!HI lly o C-r Cit•-o1 Or•"V' Co11ftly Oii NOw· not!« -...., ........ 11..,,. ........... ........ , .. rtlltt~"'-LlnM L. M.trtl11 DoNMI T. Beddoe emlle• '· ,,,, TP!e o<OO.rt'I' Wiii bl IOld M h Tbll 1l•t.ml!\t ••J IUtd wltPI !fie ·-1911-•r>Q terrn1· c•1PI, 1111 .. '""'' Gouflly Cl.,k of 0r.,.. county on HO Y• P\lbll-Clt'11>9' (o.111 0•11¥ Plltlt Pvttlltl>HI 0.1r>Q1 (O•tl Ollly PllOI, (10". I ot tfle •"'°""' bid lo~' tmblt' 11. '"'· Hov.Xl.•nc1Dec,1.u ,11,1t1s i.no-1 ' No•. IO, oftel O.C. 1, 14, 11, 1t1s UJ>.JS tlwolW bvc•rtlllld CPIKk. lflolt>.ir• ·--··· ., bl Pmhl Oft cOllfl• m•l loll of wle ltf ll'oe Publl1htcl Or•• Co.111 D•Uy Piiot, PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ~ .... Court-'•••1 ..... 1~. OPel'OllllQ NOY.ll, JCl.•n<I 0.c. 7, U, lt1S 6'0!-JJ .... -lflt-llC• e•-111 •• ,,. ,,,... ...._ .... !n ... ••llCI •<.ol•tlle I'll"" .. ICTITIOUl•UllNllU PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS •USIN EIS ,,...-o:Mwr llYoll 0. ,....,.,_., n et !I'll N•M•STATEMt:NT NAMl:STAT•MENT cMt. ol f"k ... Cll ... II CIWIW'lftft<ll'. IJ n.. fellowlllO Pl1'IOll1 ••e .,... ... 0!$. n.. fellowl1t9 ""''°"' ••• dloi"9llut;I-lf'rOIMlloft .. Ill .. , rKWIN"I el - .. ICTITIOUS •USIN•IS rau•: N1111 ' ... ,...c •. ''""'!et llll•t, llld ..., tt111 N"ME ITATEM•MT LAOUNA MAINTENANCE, 121• 1 ClllOWELLI ANQEASON, Svll• 1..,..,,.~ llOllCW sf\011 M •I llll•llif*'"" n. lollowl"9 O'frlOI) It 1'111111 11\151 • \111l•CltC..toU ... ,S.L•9u,,.,CA m'1 !01. •7" Mat ArlPlvr Rl~CI., ........,,.,,, (Ill tlw 1"111 ... NS1•1: Joflll How•tCI ""''''°'· J1161 V11U a..:ri.o nt .•)"'° Tlw-M9Mdr• ... •w1t,.r..t..1e COMMEMORATIVE OOINS. 110 £. rltC.t.llM .S.lAIUM.CA '2•n Allf'I Hun Cto-11. nos Surftftll rwfwH lo l<<OO'I My DICI\, 1,.,, SI., ( ... 0 . M• UI C..t. Nlltw. CA O'•l9 A.1Ef"k ll,J11Dl ....... S~ ' 0.1¥1, lot-8eKPI. C•"I "l'tSI 0.19" HowmlMPr to, •t15 ""'· ~.U.9MJ1 K•"" Ancfoer)Oft, Jl, W So C....-. SAM~.Ll~ll(IN , ltellltt1 f:. HerM-, sq T111tlfl Aw .. l(ur1 :llluu, Ho. I lotu!PI EM-Dr • L01Anq.elt1,C.IH.to0lll "P' 11.M l*KlllO<ol' O'MI ~h«Pl,CA'1 .. J. S. \..IQUM,CA. '1111 TPll\ bu\ltMIS I• COrtd11CIH ~'I' •1 llfl.•le ::f"•ldJ. l. ....... TPll1 blnl11tt1 II tonduet.cl i.., Ml ; .,. '"I' 1tu1I""' Ii corld11tled by • ...,.,.1 _,,..""r11. ..... ~ .. !(ll,Mll. llill'Nf'•INrfntrtl'llO, A1111H!JtlC,.,....11 KA~YT11Me•\.\. R.E H•rbllOll J HOworCIPtar'°I K•• ... Ancfoer \61'1 -...... -... ,,. Thh 1uterne11t ••• lllte With "" Tlllt 1t.tt.rn ... 1 ••I tllt'd will! lfWI Tfll1 st.,~ wa• ltt..S .,.;111 0• ,_. 1111 '• Goutll'I' c .... ol Or•noe Covnty ........ (_, C••·-"' Clt' ... OI c~, an NOW C-Cr C*•·-ol'Orlf!Yll Co11"l•t"'No•·· La-...., C.H...,!Ol1•1• ' ene.r1•.1•1J M'btrlJ 1tl) ..,...,ll ,lt1S. T ........ (1111 *-1* ·--.. ._. .....,_,., ..... •K'lrtw I I "'*"'thM Or...,.. Co•ol l);llly ""'°'· ..wlo\lltel Or•"~ C:0.1• 0.Uy PllO'I ,....._ D.Jll.•nd OK ... 11, 1'7J ~fl.• ,_w ••.1J, '°· •nll o.c. t. 1tJt 4'2-7 · fl'ublllflld 0r.,... Co1nt Dolly l"llol J "-*'....,.. Or•r\09 Coli't O.Uy S NDw.JJ,JO,•llCIO.c.J.14 .,.,._,s ,....,,,.,JO,oN10.<.5,1tlJ I \ I U DAIL V PILOT Sl.Jnday. Ncwembw30, 1175 Hit Disc Surprises 'Old Pro' Janis Ian Salesmen Playing Tag By M.,RV ('A~1 PRELL A~ H••ll••lwfH Wrt• "1 know some performer:, who can't go on vae<ttion rnor(' than two weeks, .. says singer·sona· writer J anis Ia1t. ··I ran cheerful· ly go away two or thrt>l' years and never notiC'e it " In rart J11n1s IJn dh l co away for Sl""Ver11t )'t•ars. Now she 's back, with a s 111glt• rt•cord, "At Sevfnteen," :i hit this fall and the album it's rron1, "lk>twel'n the Unes," going gold. Sht' and hc·r band are on tour until J)(>c . l·I, then take four weeks off, then tour :1gain on lht.• West Coast, windin~ up in lla v.'aii in Marc h. A new alhum. "Arter.tones," thl' third filr Columbia, comes out in January. "I dtcln't think 'Al Seventeen' would ht.• i.IS big a hit as it has been," ~1 iss Ian says. "I thought J -A'~S going to be lucky ir it wenl top 40 . It kept going up. It is real· 1Y. strang('. You see something y0u swe;it('d ovt~r; you have rour weeks of panic, thinking it is no good. E vrrybody says it is good; ii.'. is like you'v(' b('en vindicated when you wt:•rt• all rt•ady to be d1.» rensive about it. "IT '1AOF. OOl:'lil<~ a third ~tbum -the one I just finisht.-d - ('tsier. You hav(' some kind of s(!lf·confidenc('." She th.inks it is lbe bt'st·crafted and therefore best or her albums. Miss Ian says that "At Seven· teen" isn't h('r favorite song from "Between the J.ines:· "It's a good song. It does what a good song should do, whirh is strike a ntrve -communirate to any age group, cross class and cultural boundaries. That's what a really good song does.·· 'Her fa vorite song from the album i s ''Watercolors," tJtcause it is less structured than ttie other songs . ''J usuaJly decide op craft. What it says in the lyric J ,.1ready know. J really get picky a,_bout rhyme schemes and things like that. • AFTER S HF. writes a song, Miss Jan says, "I try and sit on it Cdr awhile till I get fa miliar with it. You get paranoid. You're ~rvous you 're going to write a whole batch of songs that nobody is going to like any or and ypu'll think they are wonderful.'' Singer-songwriter Janis Ian, who cur her first hit song ar rhe age of 15, has made a successful comeback now ar 24 !\ti ss Jan grew up in New J ers ey, her rather a mus ic tearher and the fa mily mo\·ing often to towns with hi~ger schools. They movt'd lo New York when she was 14 . She had started piano lessons at 3 and started on guitar al 12. "The i;uitar was for folk sin gers. I was going to be Joan Raez ; I was go- ing to be great ." ._ At that time she signed with Elektra Rerords. which didn't rt>lea se anything. Atlantic cut her song, "Society's Child," about interracial dating, but didn't release it. Verve, Ulen sign- ing folk acts, bought it from ;\tlantic and the song became a hit . Miss Ian dropped out o( school at the beginning of the 1 Ith gr;cide and went on tour. "I hated tour· ing. I didn't have anyone my o....,, age, no band. Jn those days tlle folk sing('rs sang songs of pro- test. It started dawning on me I was singing all these songs to change the world to people who felt the :same way I did. ".o\.'1 D IT'S HA RD to sing to people older than you are. Rut I got more backlash from folkit>s than anyone else. They'd say I hadn't paid my dues because I was that young.·· But she has no ad vice to ease the path for beginning performers. "If you listen to ad· vice, you don't believe it and i! you believe it, you don't care." A couple of years after she stoppE-d perform ing thE" first time, !\l i:-;s Ian moved to Los Angeles. whert• s he ll vt"<l two and a hair y('ars. "I det·ided it is not a cultural havt>n . I got bored. I was teaching n1yst·!f to sC'Ore at the time ; I was sitting with tht~st• notes on the paper that only I could hear . "Writing songs is mainly what 1 did. I read a lot of poetry and poetry criticis m . I did on(' album for Capitol, thE-n they paid me to leave so J Ii ved on thut for ~· year . "I came back to New York and stayed with my mother. It is weird being 21 and going back to live with your pare nts that you ha· ven't lived with since you were 16 . She was pretty cool about it. I was really broke so my poor mother fed me for a couple of months and bought me cigarettes whe n I was still smoking ... The first album she made £or C'.olumbia, "Stars ... out in 1974, gave her enough of an advance to move into her own New York apartment and start working again. She wants not to marry. "I nlmost did get married but I barked out. It is a longth.ing; it is like promising to be in love with somebody forever. I couldn't make that promi se. I don't want to become a statistic in getting a divorce. Then again, my kid brother wants to get married. To eacbhhsown." TODAY'S CBDSSIDRD PUZZLB MESA 1884 Newport Godo Mtto S4t.1 SS Z ACROSS 83 Atrlcan rlvM 118 Morlndlndye 67 Elude 119 Ambusher 1 Enamel 68 Veull curve 121 Stale 6 Corpulent 69 Employed 122 Ohlocny 11 Assigns 70 Anne•ed 124 Wild; """' 71 Between : uncultivaled 1& Masts prelhc 127 · B1istle ,21 Command 72 Negative Jon 128 Moth Z2 CUrus fruit 73 Legal 129 Chinese 23 Scalllon 74 Looked pagoda ')4 Celeallal pleased 130 During ...,, 75 Constelta-131 Approve 1S Masculine Hon 132 Irish title 76 Trade-marX ancestor 2e Nero's Mslx" 77 Promenades 133 Calclum 27 Spanish 78 Bondage symbol • article 79 Watchful 134 Plural ending 28 Neuter 80 Oulek 135 Music note pronoun 1empered 1 36 Shoe plate 29 Japanese 81 Pursue 138 Present drama 82 Allows publlcly 30 Nlckel 85 Liquid luels 140 Postolllce symbol 86 Toothy stamp 31 Bone: Latin smiles 142 Phltlpplne 32 Chinese river 87 Vagrant isl1nd 33 Toll road 90 Vain 144 Chars 36 Soup string 91 Glisten: 145 Facllltatad 37 01 Scot. 146 Abrasive government 92 Gong sound material 39 Admit: 2 93 Mexican coin 147 Aiverducks wds. 94 Magician DOWN 41 Too much 95 Crazy : slang 1 Automatic 43 Continent: 96 Flare ••" abbr. 97 Taxi timer 2 Show up 44 European 98 Verve 3 Small tlsh river 99 Wiid animal 4 At no time 46 Teasing 100 Flat 5 Three: 48 Chess pieces 101 Harangue comb. form 49 Tagalog river 102 Tendencies 6 E.fead spread 51 Commence 104 Window 1 Be part ot 52 Granular screen 8 Prln!er's snow 105 Bandleader measure 53 Curwtd letter Lawrence 9 Dirty 54 Shakes-106 Peelle verb 10 Amuse peare's river 109 Concludes 11 Peace 55 Miid 110 Argot 12 Anele 58 Military 111 Beside: 13 Spanish tor review prell• , .. 58 Dried grape 112 Suitable 1.-Songstress 81 Clan pattern 115 Sunshade Arden 82 Rouse 117 Endure 15 Tillered 11 16 UpbraldeCI 17 Sat 18 Verb lorm 19 Pine llqulds 20 Smarts 34 Knowledge 35 Glossy labrlc 36 Elecled prosecutor 38 Odin's brolher 40 Bind 42 Ashen 45 Applause 47 Rusal1n ruler 50 Forward 51 Asaassl~ ated 52 Nude 54 The Orient 55 Kind ol llnes 56 "Seine" city 57 Biennial herb 58 Hindu hero 59 Agree 60 Jot 61 Publlsh 62 Biii's other name 6' MoUonless 65 EvH glance 66 Whlrlpool 68 Growls 69 Stops 70 Accumulate 72 Rocky place 73 Flower· holders 74 Argol 76 Rapture 71 Untldy 78 Sparl\le 79 Sum 80 Sut1y 81 Fad 82 Appl&-llke lr\J lt 83 And others: Latin 84 Latvian capital " " 85 Shine 86 Body organ 87 Greek rener 88 Stcond·hand 89 AddlHonal 91 Prods 92 Gong sound 93 J1unty 95 World-war It assls!ance 96 SlghHess aspect 97 ltaUan city 99 Liquor palm 100 Scheme 101 Succl~t 103 Assigns places again 104 Deluted utterly 105 Burmese language 106 Vision science 107 Prisoner's "dream" 108 Sllkwonn 110 Comedian's 1011 111 Gold mine 112 Mimic 113 British gasoline 114 lnslructs 116 Essence 117 Hol y man : abbr. 118 Thorough- fare : abbr. 120 Emerge 123 Luzon native 125 Syrian coun1ry 126 Indiana city 134 Knead 137 Babylonian •"" 139 While 141 "·-deum" 143 Tarunr s B-llat " M HOUDAT SHOW TO Sii MS \'Lt.I.I A trur account of onr of thr mo•t incrediblr journry1 in A mrrican hitrory. a DOTT·ll.ITTll '*"8 """ .......... "" CO.I.I MOUM1'AM" MA T1MllS DAIL T 141-lllZ Call 642-5678. \ Put a few words to work lor you. lly IERMA BOlllllECX It could be one of the bel:lt-kept secret.II in the r~tailin1 busines.s, but 1 my suspicions have fin•lly been confirmed. There is a class in which a group of handpicked personnel is trained how to hide price tag:1 from the customer. The course l•sts Cor six weeks and runs the gamut from '"lllegibili· ty : The Salesman's Friend ·· to ··Booby· Trapping a Blou1e Sleeve Wt th Open Pins." Retailers realized 1ear1 •&o that hid.in& price tap 1.s not a Job ror amateurs. There is too much at stake. It eoutd mean the difference between a customer not buying or making a purchase to avoid humiliation ("Advanced Uttering: How to Make Fullerton Has Dance, Show Fullerton College will offer a modern dance concert and a feminist show this week. "!\tyth America -flow Far i-fa ve You Real· ly Come?··, a feminist show written a nd directed by a F\lllerton College alumnus, Rosalie Gresser Abrams, will be staged at 7:30 p.m . Tuesday in I.he Campus Theater, 321 E. Chapman Ave., F\Jllerton. Tickets at $2 .50 are available by calling 871 ·8884 or 828·1134 . The Moving Compa.ly, a modern dance tour· ing company, will be in residence at the college for two days this week and will offer a public con· cert at 8 p.m . Thursday in the Campus Theater. TicketlJ at $2 .50 will be available at the time. Additional information ilJ available from Flor· ence English at 87 l ·8000, Ext. 78. The Pasadena· based group is headed by Pat Finot, associate professor of dance at Cal State l.os Angeles and Cal State Long Beach. MWS -sc1aa -...... 1-1 lmlRISS r.11111t!RWI &MT-ull'f MT!lf ·A z.w.a.••tt'lllll l'lm.ITOI llllllall• Pl.19 IOOUI' •tlll liOTTlU ._.,., ... P{UR l!Dl.fl • ... .OIWllll#S h* • SIP/OI SPfl.IEIO • ,.... lrACH.Wl 0 WW. "' °"'° llQ'.lWll • I ""9:111. JICl'tlt • llQlllCU· 'Wl'ISOI' EDWARDS' IRlSTOl CIHEMA ~·'-­_,._. __ e.t.U M.Oltll . --........ --~ ~-CIA%Y MAMA ,.. ·an ow at Post hted by con tinuous silv ~~strations by P r eston 1 nowned Hopi Indi _, I thing o ngye, one of the a ftsmen SEE CLASSIFI ED SECTION FOR ANSWl!RS I ,) , >'t>i\~·ard-wlnnlngje""·elry, pottery, baskets. beaded bottl~s and rugs from th" l 97 5 Gallup Inter· Tribal •nd New J\1exico State Fa.irs- wlth thclr rtb1)()n8 still attacbcd-a,·ailablc ,.. for purchase , t>C>For Christmas ~I Ying. choose from our VA8l 8l'lcction of old and new ... plc~s, priced from 85 to 815.000 " t>C>EYcry piece Is guaranteed to be authentic. backed by O\'Cr 32 ,,·rars l~:::::.;"\ of cJtperfenoo In buyinp; and seUlnft American ladla.n ha.11dcrafa. t>C>Prc11loo will autograph purchased coplel!I of Art and Indian lpdi\·Jduallst-. • new book cont&lnlog • chapter on him and hie work. Al 8315, a band10me gift ' for a collector. " Thursday through Sunday 1 1 December 4,5,6,and 7 l OA.M. ' to 6 P. M. No admission charge tAPlm.ANOTRADING ml' .\('f'0911t rro'" W•litr'k' M.IMfo• s .. J ... C.pl•tff41o 3 174 t C..'"1noC.pl11 11110..S&.J• .. C.pl.um-.. c..f1ronit.9tR7&(714)493-90" l -. AT WIT'S EN D a Nine Look Like a Dollar Sign"). A friend of mine sneaked me Jnto • seminar one day laJt week wttile a lecture was in progress. ''Do you see what Dorothy has just done? .. asked the instructor. "'She has made 011e of the classic boo-boos in ticketing a dress. Does anyone see it?·· A hand waved. "She put the ticket in the exact same spot as she put the tickets on the other dresses." '1EXACTLY,'' sald the instn.lctor. "Let me re- peat. Never put the price tag in the same place of any garment twice. Now, you've hidden the tag well . You see, a woman would have to set down her packages and ex- amine every single open· ing In the dress. This is great, Dorothy. The hem would ~ the last SPol she'd look for a price tag. Can't you just see her on lier knees becom· lJll paranoid? I love It! Doet anyone have any more sugceatioos a.s t.o boW she can confuse UM! customer!'' A. HA.ND raise, "You can keep mark.lna: ovu a pri«t like it bat bet:n marked down and tach Ume smear it." ''I'm a lining man myself.·· said the in· structor, "but that's a cood one. Once that little beb1 is sewed ID the lln· tng, the)' ".'ever find it •.. even with glasses. "Moving right along, I've got some visuals here that might interest you. Get tbe lights, Buf- ford. Here are some new pritt tags that put a hole in tbe material to get them out. Don't you love it! And here are some new tags for jewelry that you have to submerge in water to get a reading. However, if your depart· ment doesn 't carry them, just remember, the prict fac es downward. AL WA VS. "Now, who has a new place to put a price tag on an automatic washer? Next to the serial number on the bottom or the machine? I LOVE IT!" "H.UHVILU" till '"TOMMY" Cl'GI ~MA.IT & ClilT W.IT"' "'YAMISHIHCl POINr" INt -.o• IN 60 SICOM)S• ""IY& IMIYEL'" INI ,...COYIH._,.tll "Y ..... - lA MllllAOA WAlK·llri IAlllGAllri 111111(, I I se MOlriOA • lll•u SATUROAY{(1ctt1I Holtd.,1111J0.500 11 ..... ·--.... ....... __ I IMmMUY~LUIY" VANISlll .. l'OINI"' - 11 ...... ....... _ .... lo·-I ............ ...... I ·-~ -· -.... -~"11·1 _,. -~-"'"" ,,. _ .. ··--·-..... i:::::· ,_ .. ··--·---·-..... ... , ...... _.. .... , 1 1~ ~-. .,, ... LIT1 DO IT AOAIN"' -·· DOC IAVAOI• -· ' ·~·--.... -... lml<AllACllS.., ---., ... -.. i Nn Of 1M1 CONDOI • "'-·-·· lllONllMIDOOI• -•...i •u•••- 1oosn1 COOIUIN .. ·-PAIT n, wALDll IAU"' --··· Oii llACVIA"' ... , __ "' ..... _ 10N1•t0•cn••• --... ... .• - Am.14--.... __ ... llPICAI Wm"' -··---·-._ ' LlnDOIT-"' --1111-& ...... ~ • I " • Newley in Diekens Fihn Ul'il• ....... NEWLEY STARS AS QUILP Disenchanted With Stage BJ GLBNNZ CllUJB \lfl'tUWMJAl'9--m:w YORK -Aetor Aa1boey Nowley, wbooe lateet lllm, "Nr. Qullp," liu llad a sat1Y laWe press, baa a lot In commoo with bis most ,.moua role, that d Ut· ~':t"~ J:t (;il~P the World, I Both are somewhat baf!led IJld dlJenchanted with the world u 1he1 find it. and are unsure where the1 are gotn1. Engll1b-born N'ewle7 enjoys life. He makes a/ood llvin&, bas a btautlful tbir wife, Darell>, three children and a lovely hotne in Beverly Hills where the deer oome out of the hills to eat their peaches and al1dioli. He says he ha.1 become dis- enchanted with the leJitimate theater. never reads criticism. prefers worlrinl In nightclubs and feels tbe main thrust ol entertain- ment in the future will be toward moviemuslcals. AT THE SAME TIME, bis de- votion to the theater is apparent in conver1ation. and one senses that he is saddened and frUJtrat- ed by his indifferent reputation ooscreen. "1 never read the reviews;· Newley aaid ln an interview dur- ing a publicity tour for "Mr. Quilp. • a m.us1ca1 version of Dickena· ••;rbe Old Curiosity Shop." ''I used. to when I was young (be now iS «> but now I never do. 1 just cannot believe that they have anything to tell me. I get paid very well to do a job and that's it as far as I'm concerned. "I've been out of love with the theater for some lime. I fmd ap- pearing before audiences un- satisfying and exhausting. The thing about (Las) Vegas is that the money b so 1ood. l linly have to WQl')t 1is w ks a year.·· Nowley makes up to mooo a 'Wffk with his D11btctub art, DIOltly •i"linl hl• own...,,.. He 11111 wrl\ .. ·-· with lons·tlme partner LesUe Brlcusse, 1UU m.a.tea fllma. and last year starred In London in "Tiie Good Old, Bad Old Days." 'DESPITE hls diunchantmeftt with the stage, bis voice brlabtcned when he wu u~ed bow much bis work was in· fiuen<ed by the late J-Cranko, the South Africa-born choreo- crapher who directed Newley·'s first stage hit, the 1955 London re- vue "Cranks.'' Crartko, director of the Stuttgart Ballet at the time, died in a plane crash June 211.um. "I was innuenced totally by him," Newley said. ''One or my greatest joys was meeting Crank• Just before be died. I worshiped him. Everyone who worked with him worshiped him. Because of him I was fe.scinaled by mime.·• That fascination hJ.S stayed with Tony Newley for 20 years, though be bas never studied mime. lt was directly responsl· ble for the two big stage shows he starred in and co-authored and co-composed with ••Bricks'' Brtcusse: "Stop the World "" and ''The Roar of the Greasepaint, the Smell of the Crowd." At the moment bis career is in limbo. He has talent, intelligence and a deep involvement in show business. With the right roles and a firm paternal hand, he might become a major character actor either in films or on the stage, while continuing his night club· bling. Capricorn Ends Project MONDAY, DECEMBER! By SYDNEYOMARR ARJES (!\larch 21-April 19 ): Involvement in- to a kind of mystery is indicated. You 're called up- on to be discreet. TAURUS (;\pril20-May20): Accentonpublic relations, r esponses, partnerships, legal formalities -and marriage. Highlight originali· ty, creativity. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Go slow. Li&ten and learn. One who aided or taught you in past may make reappearance. CANCER (June 21-JuJy 22): Creativity, emo- bargains, reviews and appraisals could command spatlight. Fix things at home, including safety hazards . SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov . 21): Lunar cycle is high; take initiative. Emphasize personality, dynamic approach. Be a self-s tarter. SAGl1TARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Check behind the scenes. Examine doubts, fears. Your position is stronger than might be imagined. . CA PRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Accent on friendships, romantic concerns, rewards due from professional endeavors. You will successful - ly conclude project. ~ tional respo nse, dealings with young persons are . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You climb a rung or two -you make room for yourself at more elevated position. Fresh concepts are favored . t . ·highlighted. Social activity accelerates. ! · LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22): Accent on specifics, I basics, details, homework, You may feel as if you are painted into corner. That condition is tem- porary. VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22): Emphasis on ideas, relatives, messages and visits. Highlight versatility. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Money, costs, Nobody could dream him up. His incredible bank robbery is all the more bizarre ... because it's true. "AN ENGROSSING,. SUSPEN S E·LADEN DRAMA. The catting la remarkable." -Judith Crist, Satur.S.y Review /IJ P1clno'1 work criH · out for 1n Academy Award nomln1tlon." --Norma Mclain Stoop, After Dirk FASHllllf lSL/IJID * flEWPOWT"CEllTP • • .... . .. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): See beyond the immediate. Develop philosophy. Create program which adds to knowledge, increases chances for suecess. "Conduct Unbecoming' .. mlllllltlng t9llllln aid "'illlld PlrfOIMMCll / 1111111 tar fuclutlng · v ntertalnllllltl" -•. r. umu MATINEES THURS.,SAT. -""'-SUNDAY 1t1atA!L llliX BICHARll Al'mll>IOOGll. llE'llll IWAID SW:V WCI CIWSrol'llEl PLllllllll -YOU . · PLUS PART2 WALKING TALL edwards BRISTOL CINEMA The ldeai Family Xmas Gift \ . PERFORMANCES: j,;t!. MITES: /I \ T11ur1 .. o.c.1s-1.,-. ·· . . Pit., Dea. K -I ,.._ • ~ 0.0..11-I.,.-, .. l'llCES: BARGAIN! luri..hc.H-1,..-. ·Sl.50-1S.50-Sl.50 MOft.0.C.H -1...... Frl..DM.21 -2p,,.. F•..,•!y Sl'low T-.,O.C.M-1,_... Spec:t1l ll ort 1o~n l•~'~!s MATINEES: Fri., O.C. H -2 lt-M. 1a..o.c.1i-2,.""' --.o.c.n-2,. .... 1'WL. Dee.. :Ml -I P·"'· Slit~ DK. 21 -1 P·"'· & all Su<1 ·!~,,.. TUlllL 1t>a ... 1Itl•KO""t1o "1<110<5 uno.r 1~ Piii 5'!nl0< C1!11""~ -· ct..tt -~It"' •. ~ ... r--·•• c-.--......,....,.,,-...... • .... i.,.. ... ~ ... , ... . ·-.... c ............ c ........ Sff 11IE llRCUT, UllCBSOR£D OltGlllll 35 II Plll!S! •--·PLUS THE SECOlll> MOST FAllOUSi·. -ADtR. T F1M OF OUR TIME •. The DevJI in Miss Jones ONLY ORANGE COUNTY SHOWING! ' PUSIVCIT • 878-40.8 709 E. Ballloa ll.vd. Ntwport 8Uch ot'EN DAIL~ AT 12 llOOll 100 "'•" ~ ... ~~. °""' T ............ c. •15':11 ••••YI.MAIL TlllS CeV•t• ll1A¥1 ,_ . -., --I I ... -.... ' --.. I -·-.. -"' --I ncrns 1-,.-·•-"' --1 HOW ON IAll , __ ,,_,.__ ' -c- c-.. -• U.-0,. I :::;-I .,.._ ...... - I -· I c:... s.-r..._ ____. .... I -"'" ,.._ I °"""" v.. --~--:-----... ...... Wr . , ........ !•·~, ..... ..... ·-~ ~. f/o <•"!'''I"'!-"'°' 'ft.1 r! r&~ CONVENTION ~ IC'• /'ft CENTER IDD W111 tt:11t ll1 At111t11 .\n1h1l111 , C lifo1n i1 9 10 I DAil Y PILOT Bl Oakie Writing Menwir. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -When a Hollywood •utinl dlttelor In the nrly days of the t&lltia needed someone to oa17 a jolly and rather dlm- w!lted second liddle to the stars, the name that uuall1 came up was tbatd Jaek Oakle. 01.kl& WAI • comic ol vast ·epergy and wild talent. who always -med to be top banana u_..~ when he teamed with a OAKIE IN OLD DAYS kindred zany soul named Starred With Chapll. n Skeets Gallagher. They --------'--wer-e a famed film com· Auditions Set The: Fullerton Civic Light Opera Company will bold audiUooa for "llello, Dolly" beginning Saturday, Dec. 6. The audition schedule is: Dec. 6: 1 to 3 p.m .4:horus, 3 to 5 p.m.-principals, singing and rt"adinJ. Dec . 7: 1 to3 p.m. -dancers; 3 to 5 p.m . -pnncipals, ain.ging and readinl; 5 to 6 p.m. -chorus. Dec. 8: call backs at director's request. · All auditions are held at the FCLOC buildinf, 218 W. Commonwealth Ave., Fullerton (two blocks west of Hp.rbor Boulevard). An accompanist will be provided, as well as music from "Hello, Dolly." Any other music must be provided by the auditioner in the proper key. WMATAMOLIDAYSMOWI DAVID MIYalol ''OLD DRACULA" Ut'•N-1 --·-Mtl •r .... t Sma•ll ''YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" PETER SELLERS "UNDERCOVERS HERO'.' (R) Ptu• Gig Young ... chael Brandon "LOVERS AND OTHER .STRANGERS" edy duo or tbe.ir ti me. Oakie eventually played In so many mo- tiol'I pictures that even be •ave up rountinc. He wu a cost•r with Alice Fat• and Betty Grable In 'Tin Pan Ailey." He wa1 f eatured with Shirley Temple tn ''Y'oung People.·· HE WAS in the cast when Bing C?osby made his tint picture, and he also helped break in such "newcomers·• -new to Hollywood -as Geor1e Bums and Gracie Allen, Maurice Chevalier and Lily Pons. His real name was Lewis Delaney Offield. As a child be lived in Oklahoma, and the name Oakie was tagged on him by friends when he en· tered show business. Oakie began his career on the Broadway stage in -·-SUPll STAI• C•I -M.OMI" ,,, ·~~=-'" "SEVEN ALONE" ..,.._. .. c_.._. 1925 and was active tn movies until 1961. He considered bit char~ terlaatlon of BenltO' Mussolini in Charlle Chaplin's "The Great Dictator" a1 tbo blih point of his profe11tonal !Ue. HIS LAMPOON of the Italian dictator included the jutting jaw, t.he im· perious flxed atare, tht• ultra-stiff posture or Mussolini. all c!,one with an inlecUow buffoonery. He plAyed opposite Ch1pUn'1Hilier. Now nearing 72. Oaki{" ls a familiar figure on the Hollywood scene. Jn the last rew yea.rs he bas been writing anec- dotes about his years in the movies. Encouraged, by their succe1sful publication in magazines, be 11 now writing a book. >&101 .. 111s1 ~111111Klr.,.C: '1 IAYS Of lM[ COMOOI" ,.,....,..., .... " .. Ttl!IUJIAT,._ I-MINIM-. .,_. SO. COAST PLAZA CINEMALANO Ill' St.~ ... N*-ll' f'°I uuo•u• 'SPll:£ ODYSSET: 21111" . ""°"'~ ...... •• TNllll1,,.,..1'~ 11.)1.4 ....... t-t.it CINEMALANO , .......... DAYmMIYB4 ... "OLD DRACUU.N IPGI ALSO Th~ t~rrllvl1111 motion piclttn from the terrif11ino No. I but~ ·~ I 41l•NI 'THELAHD THAT TIME FOllliOT"' J::ll-1:....,..JO INI ALM>- "Sl'EEll MaCHAMTS" ...... , ... F~!~~"!. Y~\;LEV UQ{>O ....... ,_ .. _,. .,. ·- Walt Oisorr's '111.ASUIE ISUllD' "Ill. STll" 1:00 4:05 7:10 J:JO l :JO 9:JO Ill hlM .. 1 a.1• --;~iii--- ( aws 'THE OTHER SIDE OFTI!E MOUNTAIN' "'Wmd 1::~mn r ~ ...... ~.RM!,.f~J~ ...... ) liiiiiiiiiiio;;;;;iliiiii~ ... Ill .... ~ "'Conduct Unbecoming' .. . mounUng t1nslan and polllllld PlrfomtlllCIS m1k1 for f1scln1tlng ent1rt1lnmentl" <•a> !GllA'I \IOU Uli.Wl .\M."lldOl.QI ro.C'I (f.M;M ~ PU.'lollftJI PUJI flnut HO'i>J.11 "PART 2 edW31fs PISTDl CUI CM A u.>..~s.1.11 HJb WAUUNG "'"~q'. ~~·..,._ TALl .. CO.MIT Al CINIMAWf_l'fOl'fl.T WOOO'I' Alli"' "TAKE THE MONEY ANO RUN" CINEMA wErr--... ,,,w_,.,. ., • .,._.,.,, •U""" ""'-.!!!_'" "~' I BAS!LSYDNEY MAnlollU """"'·· ,,. ...... ,......,... I f ' ! • I ' ' I I ! ) Teetota/,er Behind Bar "'Crlpes, John. you told me to come in and spook )'our bartender and instead, be spooked me:• That was the word the owner of a certain bar got one night from a 5teady customer. I still don't know bow 1 spooked the· 1uy but I guess spook· ing customers pre- tty much sums up my wee.k as a ./ bartender. Turn· ing loose a teetotaler and a man who knows nothing whatsoever about be· ing a bartender behind the mahogany is enough tospookanyune, I guess. This was a beer-only bar. I was glad it didn't serve mixed drinks because I had enough problems. Trying to mix a drink would have been "mission impossible" for me. I don't know the difference between a martini and a whiskey sour and am not the slightest bit interested in finding out. J enjoyed my week but I think service beyond that point would have become very boring. 1 suppose that's because I think the world's biggest bore is a drunk. My job was at a "family" bar. It's not a joint but it's really not ''uptown.'' It's well run and has a good clientele. A glass or mug of. beer is supposed to have about 20 percent foam. That's what I was told and I tried to follow the instructions. t· BUT SUNDAY, my fl.l'St day, I was like a pan of oatmeal after it fell on the kitchen floor -one big mess. I'd give one drinker 80 per. cent foam and the next one no foam. I just couldn't regulate the tap and the more the customers showed their fangs, the spookier I got. But I learned to roll with the punches. As one man told the boss on my flftb day, ''Sun· day we couldn't get him to talk. Now we can't• get him to shut up.·· I ' t I . A bartender, as I've always believed, has to be a long-on-patience listener. He.probably Hears as many "confessions" as the parish priest. ' ~ I ~ Blue collar workers, I learned, have two or three favorite bars and usually limit themselves to them. ~;. Teetotaler though I may be, I often go into bars and lounges. I never go alone but with a group or someone l"m with-and I have as much fun as anyone. J'd feel silly going alone into a bar and ordering a soft drink I think bartenders probably put a lone male (a stranger) ordering a soft drink in one of five categories: f R .. The man is an alcoholic testing himself, he's a guy on the prowl fOl' a woman, he is a bUBband looking for a partying wife, be is the law or he's a very gay individual. I don't qualify on any of the five counts. Frankly, 1 think bartenders, bars, lounges, night clubs, supper clubs, etc., are all highly over-rated. Hearing a guy say, "Only J.J. down at the Silver Saddle knows bow to mix my drinks·· is a bunch of bull. Booze is booze. Hard liquor isn't glamorous. VNDERST AND, I'm not a prude and ~ maybe I shouldn't take such a negative at· . ~.t~ titude but I'm not :s«ry I have it. When I re-~ alize there are 10 million known alcoholics in ' :,; this country, that there are probably another ., 10 million ''unknowns" and that perhaps .,. 1 another 30 million men, women and children are directly and adversely affected by ·~ .; alcoholics, it's pretty difficult for me to get ... :,, turnedonbytheindUBtry. : • When I think of the blown and wasted :.:,.,·\' lives, of the billions al dollars that go down the ' drain annualcy because of alcohol, my bead swims. Ma1be I saw too many ol the problems ~.: that booze causes in 20 yean ol newspapering. I probably rode In the backs of too many am- bulances with dead and dying drunks. I took too many pictures of them in their wrecked vehicles. I helped scoop up too many of them from the roadways. Power Plants Ordered SCHENECTADY (UPI) -General Elec- tric Co. announced it has received the biggest single order in its his- tory, $150 million, from Southern California Edison Co. for combined cycle power systems. Tbe units are to be in· stalled in the Mojave de- sert 120 miles east of Los Angeles at a 1,300- megawatt plant to be known as the Lucerne Valley Station. Combined cycle generating units couple a ateam turbine and a gas turbine to achieve very high operating effi- produces about 6S per- Come get lively curls, real. savings du ri ng our perm special. cent of the unit's overall of the unit's overall potential. They exhaust the gas into beat re· covery units that generate steam from water for additional power. No extra fuel is used to produce the steam. The 15 gas turbines to fill the Southern California Edison order will be manufactured at Greenville, S.C. The beat recovery systems and steam turbines will be made at Lynn, Mass. The Edison plant will go into operation sometime after June, 1980. La Maur 'Organicore' perm l O 6 Reg. 15.00, now only . . . . • • • 6 La Maur 'Textra' perm Reg. 20.00, now only ...... 14.66 AU PM""" lnc1udt lh&mpoo, tK •nd hair trim &1ltd halftu&l .ura. T1nt.d,. bJMthld or kliDf" b.ir •llthtly hlchtr. T~~~~~y BEAUTY SALON .............. not !In _,._ .... , ~ r-~=:·g:..a11. l ~ lo. :: I CQITA MEIA HUNTING ON BEACH ' 545-4d31 8112-8611 1 \ v • I The Job Hopper Taming the Big Killer o.1111 H1•11111 One of the bardeat thing• 1 ever bad to do in my life w a1 accompany a aberiff one morn- inJ at 3 o'clock to a woman•s house, wake up thiA grandmother and break the news ber high school-age granddaughter was dying in a local hospital because the girl's boyfriend had been driving while drunk. In my years as a newspaperman, I can't recall ever using the term "DWI" (Driving •While Intoxicated) in a story. I was always more basic . If the driver was legally determined to be drunk. I said it. I wrote it. Jt used to bum me up (still does) when a judge would fine a driver $200 to $300, perhaps lift his license for :l> days but suspend a five-day or longer jail term. I always believed anyone could come Up with the fine. ADJ.One could catch a ride with someone to and from work. But no one could buy time. I have zero sympathy for the drunken driver. J THINK a bartender who knowingly con· tinue~ selling drinks to a man or woman who is drunR'" is a sad and sorry individual. If the place needs money that much. he should stick a gun in the drinker's ribs and get it over with Cast. SEA TTL!!; (U Pll - Athero1clero1l1 -bardonlnC of the arteries -la the llAcl• lllOlt Im- portant ca-of death In the United Statea today. Tb.ll diaeue la IO com- mon that nearly every American will have ac>- meone close to them af. fected by it. It alfecta the Coroaat)' arteries, cau1ln1 ob- struction of blood flow to the heart mU>Cle. ONE OF ITS major manifestations ia the ''heart attack '' or myocardial infa;ction, which, In fact, la the de- ath of a portion of the heart muscle because of insuffklent blood supply. Dr. Hernan Alvarez, an auiatant profeuor of medicine at the University of Washing- ton. aays it ba1 been ob- served that many pa- Uenbl llllfferlng heart at- tacks auch as these died beca\Lle of severe dis-- IUSCllated, hoapltaliied and cllsebarced home. The Jarceat croup of tbae patlabl -191 - were oulferlnl cardiac arnit at the time the llledlc lcu artlved. WANTED OIAllONOS•GlM STONlS•GOlO a PlATIIUll JIWELRY c..-·-... ~ ~ .. -"' .., ,, .. ...,... -.mdulls 1N ertattL hl*t .... _.. IOd ......... lry G...iat• G ......... Ctll ~­lflll inti for Mr. Foltz. at mervyn~s today .... Levi'se first quality jeans, our big special pur· permanent preu, polyester/cotton blend that washes and dries dilse for men! All fHtu,.. 4-pocket, classic styllng with that beautifully; comfortable, 1~ cotton. Get the greatest name world-famous look and fit. MQl;t have 21'' or 24" flared bot· in~Jt•m now at our special low~ tow pric:et 8 99 1 toms. And they're in tong wearing, easy-care fabtlca • • • Available inwalstlius 29 to 36.$14-$16 Valun • • 2 NEW STORES IN sbuTHERN CALIFORNIA -fULLERTONi C.wOldtC.•. 3ZD4 _.,.LiNll-911 llOO •.• HUNTINGTON BEACH: 1811 MIMl.Aw-ta.1731 I S.ncl!y,--... 1175 DAILYPILOT Cl fB • r111ns No Match for Hoosiers, 84-64 Irvine 'Dealt 9-8 Polo Loss JIJllOlf.UDL.BANDY .............. LONG BEACH-J''"' Snndsen acond • .-i witls aeven aecood1 remalnlq to clv• lbe Unl-.117 of Clllfornla tBerte19J)aNVlc- • tel')' over UC IN!ae in Ille l1nals ol Ibo aevenlb anauol NCAA water polo champlomblJIS at Bel· -l'lua Ol7mpk pxil here SaturdaJ'nicht. . Svendsen. the tournament•s most ••luable player, maneuvered himself LDto the dear in front of the UC! aooJ for Ibo wlnniDI shot and put the ball Jlllt under the outa~hands of dl1'1DcUCI goalleGlly Antley. The Joas ended a •atlant comback try for coach Ed Newlana·s UCI Anteaters_ Wilb 21 aeconds remalnlna tn Ibo first bait, UCI trailed by aS.2 margin. Gary Figueroa, oneoffourUCI Players named \o tbe all- tournament squad Ibid the lead- ing scorer in the event with 13, scored a goal with nine seconds remaining in lbe hall and the An- teaters came back to tie the count at six after three periods. Figueroa scored the tying marker on a perfect pass Crom Boyd PhilPot wilb 35 seconds to play and the two teams battled on even terms throughout the final seven-minute stanza. The two combatants traded goals with the other a man short unW the fatal (for UC)) shot by Svendsen with seven seconds re· maining. The victory gave Berkeley its third stratigbt champion.ship and left UCI as the bridesmaid for the fourth time in seven years. They won the tourney Jn 1970 and have fmisbed second each ol the last four years. ''They just got a side release at the end and the guy scored the .goal," was all a bitterly disap· pointed Newland could say for a few moments after the game. ''There was a lot of good play out there tonight," he finally ad- mitted. "I thought we played pretty good defense but we had a coupleoflapses. "We also missed some scoring opportunities that would have :helped . ., In addition to Figueroa, UC! placed goalie AnUey, Philpot and Tim Quinn on the seven-man all· tourney team. Svendsen was an eighth man with two Berkeley teammates, Tom Bellanti and Walter Bricker along with UCLA's Robert Webb complet· ing the team. Nick Baba or UCI was name<\, to the second team. AnUey had six saves during the game with Philpiot and Keith Wall blocking shots foe the An- teaters. In other games Saturday.night, UCLA defeated Stanford for third place, 6·5; Cal State (Long .Beach) defeated Arit.ona, 13-6, for fifth place; and UC Davis pummelled Army. 20-3, for seventh. CMAMPIOtrlSHl P GAME ....... _ UC 1""'-t t * t-1 UC ..,._,,,.,. . l J 1 ,_. UC lrv!M ICOfh!f-4"lfllllnlll 4. ,-,..,,.._ Pl'lllpot.. W.11,Q\llM. Safford Leads Trojans Past Loyola, 94-77 LOS ANGELES <APJ - Southern California, led by lbe shooting of guard Marv SaHord and forward Greg White, rolled past Loyola 94.77 Saturday night as bolb 'teams opened the col- legiate basketball"seasoo. Safford hit on 11 al 13 shots from the noor, most c4 them jum-' pers, and finished with a career- higb 22 Points in his lint start as aTrojan. . Former Corona del Mar High standout Jeff Wharklnsccnd 10 points for Loyola, a s did freshman Dave Rhode, an ex· Fountain Valley High star. Another former CdM cager. Casey Jones, had two points for lbe Trojans. White, a 6-foot-9.junlcr, sccnd all~ tour ot hls 19.pointa in lbe first bolt as use hit~ porcent al itl tries in the OP.eniog 20 minutes to lead 4 7-37 at balftime. Luther Philyaw of Loyola acored 18 Polnts for the looers. He got support from Eric Qaus w!lb 13pointaandeightrebou00s. The Trojans finished the game bl!Ung ~ percent of their field •oal tries, holding Loyola to 46 p!ttent from lbe n-. Southern Cal won the batue of the boards gettin1 ~ rebouncb to 28forlbeLlona. \OYOLA ml a.. ti, ......... , .. _.... " ..... ,.,.. 1t. ........ ...., .. Hwlllw"t. ..... .. tOUftllaM CAL .. , .....,1t,T1w•Wplf. ..... '4...,....2l. .... ,, .... a.""""''· . twft"'91......,,.c.I''· ~*1. T ........ !~t .. ,.._,.a.,._ ~filllt•; Nty-.A;""- I . ST. LOUIS (AP> -All· American Seott MAJ pumped tn 31 points and top.ra1*.ed Indiana rolled to an 84·64 trlUIXIJlll ovw UCLA's defoodfn& <hamplon Bruins, in their nattonall7 telo•l•ed colloce basketball -Satur~n14bl-Tbe 6-7 11., flNd 15 of hls team·l••dins total In 111e openins 20 mtn11te1 a1 ll>dlana surged to a 36-28 halftime lead .,... Ille No. 2 Bnitns. In the ftna1 half, llayeombioed with 6·3 1enlor &uard Quinn _.._ durina a 1~ Hooo1er1 SJ>W't lbat broke o-Ille contest desplte Rieb W a1bln1ton '• brilliant lboolin& for UCLA. 'Ibo Ion wa1 UCLA'• tlrat in a seuoo opener since 1964 and marred the· debut of Gene .Bartow' the IUCCetlOI" to the fahHd John Wooden IS coaeb of the Bruins. Sparked b7 toweriJl8 <enter Kent Benson. lndlano opened a 13·8 lead wlth less than six minutes 1one tn the aame and, acept tor a brief UCLA IJuny, FORMER LOYOLA UNIVERSITY STAR JACK DWYER. DB's .Jack Dwyer Medical Student Became Grid Star Editor'• note : The modtTTI: era aporll vilta ii providing ent.er- tainment, quality, and occcaional· ly controversy on.a acole. never attained before in the world of athletics. Yet .tp0Tt1 of day1 gone bu.al30 had great momtnts.and 8Urr performers. Today our look at these day• Joeu1e1 on Jack Dwyer. . ByHOWARDL.HANDY Of .. o.u,,.1 ... -... In high school he was a Jourth string halfback as a senior ·but finally earned a letter when two teammates in front of him were drafted into the service during World War II. As a member of a 58-man B team at Hamilton High as a sophomore, there were three players left over after five Going Back IN SPORTS strings of players were as- sembled. . ••I was the second of the· three players left over," Jack Dwyer says in recalling his )'OUlb. In high school be had thoughts of becoming a pro- fessional boxer or baseball player but during a stint in the Army, he went out for the football team as a halfback. He was accepted in medical school and was in the top 10 percent of his class when he turned to football at age 19. ''They bad a kid playing in front of me J will never forget because be paid me ooe of the finest compliments I ever re- ceived. "I was playing fer Brook Army Medical Center of Tex- as and ran a play for 7S yards and a touchdown but it was called back oo a penolty. "They called lbe same play m the very nel<I down and I went 80 yards for a touchdown. The fellow in front of me came over and said. 'there goes my job.• "Do yo11 know who that fellow was? It was Doak Walker and there is no way l was going to take his job." After his stint in the service, Dwyer attended Los Angeles City College, "I was on the mile relay team that won the national championship and set an NJCAA record. We beat Compton six times that year by a total of six incbes-cne inch each race," he says. His final two years in col- lege were spent at Loyola University with such names as ·Don Klosterman, ·Gene Brito, Don Berberet and several others who went into pro ball. "! played my greatest col- lege game against College or the Pacific. I made six UD· assisted tackles, intercepted two passes, recovered a fum- ble and blocked a conversion and bad ao 80-yard kickoff re- turn. I also scored a touch· down,·· be recalls. ••But Klosterman· picked that same day to play bis greatest game. He was so beautiful in passing the foot. ball lbatday, wbo cared what anybody else did?" Klosterman, the current vice president and general manager of the Los Angeles Rams, set several NCAA passing records as a quarterback for Loyola, re- cords that stood for a number of years. Dwyer bas lived in the Orange Coast area for a number of years and still owns a home in Costa Mesa although he currently resides in Huntington Beach. . ·He is doing free lance car .. toooing lbese days alter a career in the restaurant busi- ness with former Rams team- mate Tom Fears in a spot called Fa~Jacks. When be played football in college, he weighed l.q. at 165 pounds but moved up above the 200 mark when he quit lbe pro game. (Next week Dwyertellsofbi.s experiences in professional football.) C<llllrolled the tempo lllnluth lbe npen•aa ball. A pair of Benaon tree !brows produced a 15-8 Hoooler adYan· ta&e, and-then lbe .Ucl1a.-ng WaabinCtOD and teammate Mar· que1 .Johnson scored on fasl breab to help UCLA clOle to a 19-18 dellcit. 'lbe Bnllna were dOle again at 23-20 2~ mtn11tea later but fell -U olt lbe pace as Bue-and May connected to help Indiana to ltabalttlme bul&•· Buckner scored the tlrst four points in the second half as lo· dlana hit Its firat six sbob, and the lloooi•ra apurted to a 50-32 lead. With May connecting on nine of his 11 field goal tri .. during tile flaal 20 minutes, Indiana widened Its lead to 58-38 wllll • 12:52 to ao and later enjoyed a 12-46 advantaa:e with less than aeven minutes left. Only lbe shooting ol the 6-10~ Washiniton., who accounted for 28 polnts, kept UCLA from abeorblnt an. even worse defeat. Harrused by a tight lndlaoa • defense, lbe Bruins committed 21 noor errors and mllUllled to bit only 28 ot 82 field aoat tries for 45 ' percent. * * * UCLA Ml W.IJ\lft4toft ti, JolUIMft It. or.111 .... r t • llllW.. &. MCC.Aff 4, ,.......,.. t. y,_ 2, Gica n•••t. Racing Star lli11 ' Dies in Plane Crash LONDON (AP) -British race car driver Graham Hill, tbe 19811 winner of lb• Indianapolis 500 and a two-time world cbam· pion on lbe European Gt and Prix cimJ!t, was killed Saturday night in the crash of a small airplane near here. Police said all six persons aboard the plane were ltilled. lllll was U.ted as being on the pl~, and his driver's license and one of his credit cards were found in the burnt-out wreekage. Later, police said the autoraclng great waa among the dead. His badJy.ebarred body was Iden· tified by usinc denture chart.s. Police ofllcials said Hill, 48, a top driver for a decade in Formula I cars. owned the twin- enctne Piper Aztec which was making an instrument approach to a tmall airfield near London. They said the plane was on a !light acroaa lbe English Channel from Marteill~s . It broke through heavy fog above a goU course near Barnet, north of Lon· don and about 10 miles from its intended destination. Police said the plane smashed into the ground near the first tee of the golf course, burstingintoflames. The plane bit two sets ctl trees .before crashing, piolice saido ad· ding Ibey believed it was beaded tor a landing field at Elstree, not far from the crash site. Just before the crash, the plane waa beard coming in low over the golf club. Mrs. Jean Dickens, wife of the club steward, said, ··we heard this noise which teemed to be on the roof. It sounded as ·if somebody with boots was walking on the roof.'' The American-registered plane was ''just a burnt-out wreck:,•• police said, adding that all the bodies were believed to be those of men. Hill was a frequent passenger * * * Gurney Saddened ByEDBVRGART Ol .. o.i., ......... A 16-year-old friendship between Graham Hill and Dan Gurney bas come to a sad end . Hill-two-time world cham· ]rion on the European Grand Prix circuit-died in a plane crash Saturday, only one year after he retired from racing. "'It's ironic that be retired from something very hautrdous only to be killed in something lbat is statistically pretty safe,·· says Gurney, a retired racing great who resides in Newport Beach. Gurney met Hill in 1959 and the two bad been close friends since. ''Words are always a bit use· less at a time like this," says Gurney. ''He bad a great sense or humor and a sharp wit that en· cleared him to people all over the world. He was also a great fami- ly man and was a formidable competitor.·• Gurney· was also a formidable competitor and the two were teammates in 1960, less than one year after they unceremoniously met in the 1959. Grand Prix in France. "He was clrl1'ing for lbe Lotus team in the Grand Prix race and I was on the Ferrari team,'' re· calls Gurney. ''We both dropped out of the race with punctured See G•mey, Page C 2 on filgbta making short hops across the English Channel, and, associates said he often piloted his planes. Hill retired as a driver in 1974 and bad been working as team manager with Embassy. Hill Cars. a company that waa work· ing on development or a new Formula l car for the 1976 season. Hill, a dapper Engllsbman who· was quick with a quip, burst onto the auto racing scene 13 years ago when he won the world driv4 ing championship, nailing down the UUe by capturing lbe Italian Grand Prix. A year later, be won the Ain· tree 200 at Aiotree, England and followed that with victories in the Monaco Grand · Prix and the Grand Prix of the United States at Watkins Glen, N.Y. GRAHAM HILL '66 Tilt Reealled Bowl Rematch Parallel Seen At first reflection after Friday night's USC-UCLA football deba· cle, I thought to myself lbat if Woody Hayes were watching the game he'd cancel the rest of Ohio State's practices between now andJan. l . His Buckeyes play UCLA in the Rose Bowl. They've already lam· basted UCLA 41·20 during re- gular season, running up a 38-7 lead before relaXing. And in that one UCLA clid not fumble. It fumbled 11 times against use and lost eight or the wmTE WASH 1 ~ bobbles. If it can repeat that performance against Ohio State, Hayes may have to punt on first down to keep the score under 100. At least that's how it would seem. . There is, however. an interest· ing parallel in this upcoming Rose Bowl encounter and UCLA's last one, a decade ago. In the '66 Rose Bowl duel Michigan State was heavily favored. It was unbeaten and had beaten UCLA 13·3 in the season opener. Michigan State had one com- mon oppanent with UCLA-Penn State. OSU beat Penn State 23-0 while UCLA eked out a 24--22 vic· tory. UCLA struggled to a tie with Missouri, a loss to Ten4 nessee and barely beat Wasbington, USC, Syracuse and Air Force to take a 7-2·1 record against Michigan State's 10·0 mark. Yet when they met in the Rose Bowl a strange thing happened. UCLA won, 14-12. And it was no Duke. To think lbat UCLA might pull off a similar upset against Ohio State a month hence is not com- plete insanity, although it woold be if UCLA were to fumble 11 times. A passing team can beat Ohio State. UCLA does not pass often oc well. A team with strong line play might beat Ohio State. UCLA bas fine offensive and de· tensive lines. A team that makes mistakes will not beat Ohio State. And therein lies the story for UCLA's chances New Year's Day. PS-U I were the SC people, I might have thought about shed· ding a few fewer tears over John McKay's resignation in light of ·usc·s dismal showing in its last four games Call losses). •••• Sources iD Ann Arbor say that University of Michigan footbaJl toach Bo Schembecbler took bis . team's 21 ·14 loss to Ohio State so hard Illa! when he finally left UofM stadium Nov. 22begotinto his car and drove around until J0:30beforefinally goingbome. He admitted that be was aware that a house full or guests were awaiting his arrival and that he simply wasn't up to being socia· ble. i'd feel the same way if I had given the game away as Bo did with his order to pass in the clos- ing minutes of a tie game. Two or the aerials were intercepted - one setting up OSU's winning TD. the other ending Michigan's fmal bid to gel a drive going. And what a Surprise to return from Michigan to find out that Saddleback football coach George Hartman bad disdained, going for a victory via Ute two- point conversion instead of tht!i tie be settled for in the game With Citrus. A bowl bid and an out· right conference crown were Jost lo Saddle back, tbanks to lbe tie. It was no shock, however, to learn that Golden West College's football forces had once again lost the big one that determined its circuit crown. Sports on1V 9:ao a.m. (4) - GRANDSTAND -A preview of the 1975·76 basketball season with highlights of lbe UCLA-Indiana game. Tide Ruins Jordan's Finale, 28·0 io·a.m. (2) :...,NFL FOOT· llAU -The San Francisco 49ers meet the Eagles in Philadelphia. (4) -The Cin•' cinnati Bengals meet the. Houston Oilers. l p.m. (2) -NFL FOOT· BALL -The Minnesota Vik· ings meet the Washington Redskins. BIRMINGHAM, Ala. <AP) - Richard Todd ran for two touchdowna and lbrew passes for two more Saturday as fourth· 'ranked Alabama smashed Auburn 28-0 Saturday, spoiling the coaching finaJe ol. Ralph "Shug'' Jordan. Todd brought his team's letharg!• attack to life in the second hall with three long scor- i.,. clrlv .. as the SUgar Bowl- bound Oimson Tide won eaally all« a PoOr start. Todd scored on runs of 33 and· i• yards in the third quarter, !ired a 17·yard touchdown pass to Jerry Bro .. .., in the lint quarter and dosed lbe scoring wllb a 2'-7,ard t.oas to Ozzie Newsome in the final quarter .. The victory in lbe nationally· televised game was the loth atraliht for Alabama slnce an apenin1 20-7 loss to Missouri. It save lbe Tlde an unpreeedented fifth atraisht Sout.beutern Con- ference t!Ue and tied a record ol 20 stral&ht conference victories set by Tennessee 35 years aao. -I l Jordan, who announced before the season started lllal bis 25111 year would be his last, ended with one of the poorest seasons of his career, 34 6-2. The Tigers playql inspired d•- fenslve ball during the first ball when lbe1 held Alabama to a 7-0 1esd, but slmply did not have lbe strength to stay wltll lbe four. touchdown favorites for 80 •mtnutea. Alabama bad a second quarter seorlnll opportunity killed by a clll!P'DI penalty after the Tide had reach~ the Auburn 10. Auburn's deepest penetration in the game was to the Alabama 23 early in the fourth quarter where Neil O'Donogbue had a 44-yard field goal try (all short. Sophomore fullback Johnny Davis was the workhorse for Alabama in the game which started ln windy, 70 ·degree weather and ended in a chilly night air. Davia was the game's lead- ing TU!lher with 98yardson18 cu- ries. · (5) -COLLEGE BMKET· BALL -Tbe UCLA Bruins and Indiana in a game taped Saturday. 3 p.m . (5) -COILEGE ' FOOTBALL -The USC Tro- jans and UCLA Bruins in a gametaped Friday night. 4 p.m . (7) -COILEGE FOOTBALL -Hlgblighta of selected games played tbla . weekend. . ,. . __J ,_ I -• r. • (2 DAILYP!LOT Sund!)'. Howmbef 30. 1175 ... Edison, University, ·Hulst Win Crowns ... By F.D BURGART Of""' O.Ut PJlolil: ""'"' WALNUT -For Edison':; Olargers and University's Tro- jam, the 1975 CIF cross country champio n s h ip s rese mbled nothing more than a dual meet. All year long the Chargers were far superior to their oppo- nents and on Saturday at Mt. San Antonia.Collea:e they won the ClF 4-A title by 28 points over defend- ' ing c hampion Palos Verdes . Costa l\1esa finished a puzzling sixth. I And the Troj ans won the 2-A ti- tle by the same close n1argin that they did in most dual meet.s, edg- ing Bassett 83-89. San Clemente was third with 92 points. It was also an afternoon when Laguna Beach High's Eric Hulst won his second individual 2-A ti- Ue and when Mater Dei's Bill St. John ran one or his besl races ever. St. John, who ran 10:28 during the preliminaries over the hilly two-mile, 100-yard course, turned in a s uperlative performance Saturday, narrowly losing to Crescenta Valley's Don Moses in the4-A race. Running stride-for-stride with Mose-s for a large portion of the second mile, St. John finished a close second, clocking 10 :05.6. Moses was timed in 10:03.2 wb11e Edison's Colin McCoimell was thirdinl0:07 . McConnell wasn't Edison's on- ly star. Getting great balance all year, the Chargers finished 1·10-14·15-16 in team scoring and their time of 52:35 was almost one minute faster than they re· corded in the prelims. Most of the Chargers runners College Football Sun Devils Win, ; Gain Bowl Berth TEMPE, Ariz. -Eighth· marched80yardstotietheseore. ranked Arizona State, with· Adams' game-winning boot quarterback Dennis Sproul pass· came after safety Ed Oaks in- ing for two touchdowns and run-tercepted a pass by Tennessee Ding for another, won a berth in quarterback Randy Wallace and the Fiesta Bowl opposite returnedit26yardstothesix. Nebraska Saturday night with a B-•lor Rolls 24-21 victory over archrival and -17 12th-ranked Arizona. Undefeated Arizona State trailed 21-17 early in the fourth quarter .wh e n Sproul, a sophomore, ca pped an 80-yard drive by plunging over from one yard out for the decisive score. Florida Rallies MIAMI -Henry Davis raced 63 yards with a runt in the fmal four minutes o play Saturday night to give 13th-ranked Gator Bowl -bound Florida a come- from-behind 15·11 victory over Miami. Bobby Ball then saved the vic- tory, intercepting a pass by Miami's Kary Baker in the end zone with 1:21 Jeft. The steal • killed a Hurricanes drive that had reached the F1orida 16. l The Gators, outplayed most ol the night by Miami's eight-time , losers, trailed 11·8 wh~ Davis received the punt, slipped past two potential tacklers and ran in· • toopenfield. I \.Vols Vpset : KNOXVILLE, Tenn. -An in· tercepted pass that was returned to the Tennessee six*yard line. mid way in the fourth quarter Saturday set up an IS.yard field &oal by Mark Adams and 1ave VIDderbilt a 17-14 victory over Tenn6see, Vandy's fint victory over its arch-rival since 1964. Vanderbilt entered the fourth quarter trailing 14·7 and HOUSTON, -Baylor's Bubba Hicks kicked four field goals, in- cluding a record·tytng 8)..yarder, and freshman Steve Howell gained more than 100 yards Saturday to help the defending Southwest Conference champion Bears salvage a disappointing season with a 25 -7 victory over Rice. BYI/ Loses JACKSON , Mi ss . - Quarterback J eff Bower and an effective running game enabled Southern Mississippi to trounce Brigham Young 42-14 Saturday in the season finale for both teams. Bower ra11 three yards for one fourth-quarter touchdown and passed 29 to Greg Pieper for another to pu~ the came out of re- ach alter Brigham Young had narrowed an early USM lead to 20-14. fltaRs Tri-ph Halfback Roe McCl endon didn't cover as much ground as his Cal State <Fullerton) team- mate, fullback Steve Walters, but more of the dirt he ate up was paydlrt, as the Titans whipped Cal State Nortbridge, 14-0, Satur- day night at Santa Ana Bowl. Both Fullerton scores came in the rint half and were credited to McClendon on runs of seven and 17 yards. He ran for 66 yards on 14 carries compared with Walters' 116 in 25 tries. Kings Romp, 8-3; Aussies Advance INGLEWOOD -Veteran Bob Nevin scored his 300th and JOlsl National Hockey League career goals to help the Los Angeles Klnp defeat the Buffalo Sabres, S.3, Saturday night and snap a five-game losing streak. The 37-year-old Kings right winger became the 22nd player in NHL history to reach the 300- goal mark as he capped a three- goal outburst in the second period that put Los Angeles into a .5-1 lead. Marcel Dionne rined in his 14th goal of the season and added two assists as the Kings ran up thelr highest point total of the season in beating the leaders of the .Adams Division. J\'etee-be Wins TOKYO -Defending cham- pion John Newcombe and veteran Ken Rosewall will play an all-Australian men's singles final today in a $100,000 interna- tional tennis tournament. Newcombe, the defending champion, advanced with a 3-6, M, 6-2 semifinal triumph over Australian Tony Roche on Satur- day while Rosewall beat Stan Smith 6-3, 7-S on Friday. Francoise Durr of France moved into today's women's singles final against defending t!Wst Chris Evert of the United States, beating Martina Navratilova of Czechoslovakia 6-7, 6-0, 6-2 Saturday. Miss Evert ousted Olga Morozova of the Sov- iet Union6-l, 6-1 Friday. Gree•Lea.& MIYAZAKI, Japan -Hubert Green and Larry Ziegler each shot five· under-par 67s Saturday, giving Americans the top two places after three rounds of the $200,000 Phoenix golf tourna· ment. stayed in the middle ol the pack dwing the race's .early .stages • and all fini s he d s tronaly, · partJcularly McConnell who took 1 narrow lead coming down the fuial bill. "Our str ategy was to maintain position during the tint pa.rt of the race," said Chargers coach Gordon Fitzel, who once aeain saw Charlie Christensen (loth), John Hogan (14th). Charlie Walczak (15th) and Joo Golds- tein (18th) turn in strong performances. They ran 10 :29, 10:38, 10:40 and 10 :41 . Like Edison, University got good balance. The Trojans run- ners finished 4-7-19-23-30 and were timed in 54 :44 wtllch was 56 seconds faster than their time in theprelims. The Trojans' top harrier , Woody Glass, ran 10 :38 whil e Mike Fero was timed in 10:46. Their other scoring runners. - Jose Galvan, Carl Ehlert and Neil Graham-ran 11 :02, ll:Os and 11 : 13. Hulst was an easy indlvidual winner in University's race, clocking the day's fastest time (9:57). Il there was a disappointment, it was Costa Mesa's sixth place fmisb in the 4·A race. Rated No. 2 in the CJF 4-A poll, the Mustangs only compiled 131 poinU and their 54 :26 time was eight seconds· slower than their prelim mark. The Mustangs started off quickly but fell back. * * * Cll'ClltOSS COUNTlltY l'lf'AU ATMT.U.( •• llllll'lldlHll-1. Mown ICrn<..-.t• V•llWI 10;CIQ.1 1. St. JofWI IMO) IO:H .61. McC--11 (Ed)10:07•. J. l!"rier IBl1/\°" AtJO•tl tO:C:. S. 5'1ll1bu,,,. CFoelltlllll tO:ot 6. •ur1tl" tlktrtlMlll 10:10 1. F. EelMt CIA) 10: fl •. sn ... C8u"**J IO:l•t.Jury I Pelo. V.rdl1I10:2• 10. Wyrn«i (PY) 10:tt.. " TfMl'I Scorl119-EOI-M, .... OS V.nln ... Fool!NU 111, Burtlotftk 11•, 81$1'1Gp Amit 12", ~ -.a1s1 •• llldl~l-1. fl:IKMll CNotA ~) 10:1.t.I 2. ...,..!Wi ~tot• F•l 10:11.61. C.-IH-'hwMI IO :lt '· Godlro•1 IS•lellfftl 10:U J . 0.•n c,-1111w1er1I 10:11. '''"' ktr1r11-s.1 .. 1an Sot, up1.-IO, u -·· •·• ltodl...w..i.1 -1. Huitt tl.."11,,.. lludll t :fJ 1. ~ ta.Mttl 10:21.•,, ~mii fl!. ....... 1 10:21._ Frk1t91' CHenwtl lO:!IJ, Jlodriflutl C~I IO:•LMKln ( .. lltwlft Per11 110:11 f. Fr-CU C...O.J tO:M L Gl•ss (Uflll lO:• t. I'~ ~ O••I 10:1' 10.. ~ (LAI ~I l0:6'. ,_ SC'orl"'l-Unl.,..nlty G, a...ttl fl, S.. "'"""""-•·• llldlvlei.t•l-1. ••t:tr CC.."'-111 10:1•.• J, ~ (0.Mr1110:1tJ. $ml!ll """'9tltl) 10:1', T.-n KOl'lftl -SMmwin llwti.ti Ji, llltMp JU. ...._., .. Middies Deal Cadets Ninth Straight Loss PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Special team players Jeff Hoobler and Bob DeStafney set ·up first half touchdowns Satur- day that fired Navy to its third straight victory over Army, a 30-6 thumping before 81,578, the smallest crowd ever to see the service classic at 100,000-seat" John F . Kennedy Stadium. Navy's seventh biumph of the seuon, the most for the Middies since the 1963 Cotton Bowl team won nine 1ames, never was in doubt after senior Larry Muczynski's 27-yard field goal gave them a 3-0 lead mid way through the first period. Coach George Welah's future Naval officers got 17 points: in the second quarter on the first of Bob Jackson's two short touchdown runs, DeStaloey's 4.2-yard run wltb a blocked punt and Muczynsti•s 31-yard field goal. Jobn!on finished with 140 yanls on26carries. Welsh went to his bench early in the second half in an apparent "effort not to embarass the out- classed. Cadets, who lost their ninth straight game ol the season after winning the first two. Army's lead in the 76-game series melted to 36-34, with six Ues. Even with the second and third unit players on the field much of ·the final two periods, Navy · added to its total on 1 28-yard field goal by Muc1yn1kt, and Jackson's two-yard touchdown. I I .. • CIF CHAMPIONS -Coach Gordon Fitzel's Edison High Chargers rolled through sunset League cross country competition to claim the league crown -then cap- tured the CIF 4-A title Saturday. Kneeling (from lefl ) Craig Kelsey, Hudy Arciniega, Jon Goldstein, J otm Hoga~. Standing -Colin McConnell, Charlie Walczak, Ch arlie Christensen, Fitzel. Saddleback Rolls; Boes, GWC Fall Saddleback Coll ege rolled to its third straieht win while Golden West and Orange Coast were dealt defeats in J C basketball play Saturday night. Coach Bill Mulligan's Sad· dleback Gauchos topped Gross- mont, 73-64 , at MiraCosta College behind a 21 -point effort by Mike Bokosky. occ·s Pirates, a 74-68 loser to Golden West Friday, fell to host LA Trade Tech, 88-87, in the last seven seconds. And visiting Golden West dropped an 82· 77 de· cision to Cerritos. Saddleback held only a 35-34 lead al the intermission, but went ahead by as much as 15 in the second half and controlled the game the rest of the way. OCC went ahead of Trade Tech, 87-86, with 13 seconds left on a bucket by Skip Jeranko. The latter, who did not play against Golden West the night before, scored 20 Saturday night. At Cerritos, Golden West led 77-76 with 30 aecond.s to go when Ken Scott stole lbe ball and scored a layup, sending Cerritos ahead to stay, 78-77. Down by three at halftime, the Rustlers scored the first eight points of the second half when they switched to a fullcourt zone press. Jack Fletcher hit 9. ol 14 field goal attempts in the second half and wound up Golden West's leading scorer with 23 points. Golden West returns to play Tuesday, hosting Barstow College w bile Saddleback is in action Wednesday in OCC's Miles Eaton tourney against El Camino College (9. p.m.). OCC plays Tbursdi;.y night at 9.against Phoenix. or-..c.nicv> .. ft ..... 8otdtft • l 1 13 Dtm.n """''-2 1 , J W.1111 6 1 0 IJ ,.,.._ O t ! 6 J l I 1 0 J 0 J Ml,1711 ...... "*O • • ' :tO ....... UOy •• J 12 :lllnNI T•ylCll' J 2 4 I TOUols Kmtftl'"9: LA Tr .. TKfl,.u.-«I. ..._.,. 1n1 CMTtt1a ia> JDJN'°"' I O 2 16 k:Dtt J 2 O I Flet<l'w 11 1 1 " lM9 • 0 • 12 kNltld J I 5 I ....,_,.. IS $ 4 JS Wit_.. J 4 210 'IMl'tlllltnil1 0 J 2 C "'1l 4051 O.nwn SJl 1J ,._,...,. J I I I W.,.,. J J l 11 Hlncll .. r I OJ2 0..0.l 0111 .Hoo:.11"'" 1 o o I Tololl1 M t JO n T.talt J:J 16 It la' H•lltl-: C.rrllot, ..._.,_ , ...... lllfft) '--'K• __ , ....... °'' "'~ .... K.,. DoM J 1 •• 1 1 1' 11 J 1 ) IJ j 0 ' 10 l 1 I 1 . ' ' . 2 I 2 j . ....-.. ( .. , ICllfOI' 1 O 1 14 Sutlon .s 2 ' 11 R•Y •OJt Joli.ft 2 J s • lloW J1!1 SOrl"t I 0 0 4 .. Xlw tOOJ H~tty40.SI ,....It 0010 HDttmafl 0 0 1 0 Tot.I• 11 '' 10 1J TOl•I• 21 I 2• M H•lftl1'1'4! s.odloHclll. Jw.t. C~ge Outlook UCI Experienced, , But Lacks Height By CRAIG SHEFF Of .. 0.11,,.11 ...... UC Irvine's basketball team shot a sizzling 52 percent from the field last season -the sixth best mark in the nation amona: Divi!ion II schools. And with a defUlite lack of height this sea&an, coach Tim Tift says his club will have to match that mark in order to be as successful as it was a year ago. The Anteaters open the season Wednesday night, bostini Hum- boldt State. Tift bas a lot of experience and some good shooters back from bis 17-10 team last season, but be figures to be hurting on the boards. Dave Baker (6-8) and Jerry Maras (6-6) have graduated and thus have left a big gap in the re- bounding: department. The two averaged 17 rebounds a game between them. The rebounding will depend on the play of 6-4 Steve Oeveland, ·6-s Jeff Buller, 6-S Dan Hair and M Scott J enkina. Cleveland was a starter last year, Jenkins played in all but two of the UCJ games, Hair saw little time and Butler did not play. BuUer is returning after sitting out last year with a broken foot. * * * UCI ~ffldlWlllt Wiid .• Diie:. 3-u"'riotdt si.i. ltmmll. S.t., Otc:.6~hlrft Col COllt9f nwttrltl. s.t., Otc:. 13-Pac:ltlc: Olr111i. ~I. T111s.,D11<, l&-.IN•vMI {~~I. Ttiun., Otc:. 11-·1 NOttll o.lcau St4t.. Sflt., Diie:.. 20-1 Unl.,."ltyfll Mortt1 OKata. ~.OK. n-t Ul•ll Uni""'"'"· Main., OK. ft-I-• C..ntr•I """"-). Tlll"L, Otc:. »-Sprll"fll Arta' <:ollt'Of, Mkll. "'*'-'· \ S•l.,JMl.3-C.ISt.to ~I ll!DrNI. Tua..,J-......... U•ftY,Ottl._ ttton.J, SM..JMI. 10.-.tGtllftd C....'l'Ol'lortli.g.. Wlid..Jal\. 1•-1 U.OI' $Mt OlofD. s.t,.J..-. 17-C.I Poly (SLO) ~}. SM.,.JM.,,._,.,,,., ... MOOr <hoftlll, T-.,JM.17-UC Ill"'"'°' °"'"'9) • W.. JM. 31-UC O.vli Olorntl. Fri., Feb. ~.of S.. 0...,. o.ri...1. 5'1,. F.o.1-fai.f• 1""""'1- s.t., I'&''-' LA l•Plld. T-., '"--11-' Amtles ...... S.t.,F .... 21~e11 (,_..I. Mon., Foti.. t1--Gll St•l• (Ooo1 A1qw1 HlttLJ ...... Wild.,""-1~1tlndS1"' """'-). s.t., Foti. 21....,.,lr l"orco Ci.omtl. Orr Sidelined BOSTON -The superstar career of Boston Bruins de· fenseman Bobby Orr was inter~ rupted for a filth Ume by knee surgery Saturday. It was the second time this seuon Orr had been put through surgery on his left knee, and It ls expected to idle him for et least seven or tight weeks. He saw considerable playing time two seasons ago . John McNeil, a sophomore, has had knee surgery, but is still not ready to play. He looked very promising in the Anteaters' fll'st nine games last season before the injury sidelined him. Other players who Tift says will see a lot of act.ion are JC transfers Mark Bonvechio (6-5 ), from San Jose, and Bill Beckford (6-4), from Palomar. And Mike Fitzmorris, a 6-7. sophomore up from the frosh squad, could help. Fitzmorris has been nursing a sprained ankle. At guard, the Anteaten have three very good ones in Kevin Davis (5-11), Tim Tivenan (5-11) and Nate Jones (6-3). Davis, a starter the past two seasons, averaged 11.4 points per game last season. He and Jones are very good outside shooters while Tivenan is a fine playmaker. They will be backed up by Rich Younge(6-3), a transfer from West LA. UCI bad a quick team last season, but Tift says they'll be even quicker this year. "Our •booting and our quick- ness will be our strengths. We'll have a better defensive team, because of our quickness, but of course we won't be as skilled in- side as we were last year. ''But this is a great group to coach. They're eager , e n-thu.sia~tic and they play hard," says Tift. GURNEY... i Continued From P1ge C 1 radiators from flying stones and it's possible his car could have run into mine-or mine into bis.·· Because o( the crash, Gurney and Hill developed a lasting friendship. "I maintained a close rela- tionship that became a bit closer once he retired,'' says Gurney, "Alter bis retirement, people were looking forward to his com· raderie and a chance to look back and reminisce.·· Gurney saw Hill as recently as two months ago in New York and bas only fond memories of the late racing star. "He was very determined and came back after some severe In· juries,•• says Gurney. "He also enjoyed life very much and liked meeting all sorts of people." . BARONS TO HOST j . SI'. PA.UL FWDA.¥ De.fending champion Johnny Miller of the United States, meanwhile, wes out of conten- tion, IS strokes off the pace, go- ing into today's final round on the 7,0lZ·yard, par-72 Course. · 8-llB-•red Winless Chargers.Battle Denver Fountain Valley IDgh's Barons """' the nip of the coin Saturday morn1nJ: and will be the bost 1cboof for their CIF .C·A quarterfinals football game Fri· da7 aa:ainst undefeated and top- ranlted St. Paul. I Th~ site has not been con· fumld with officials, but the l Barona were 1eeld.na Orance Coast Coll•&• . I Newport Harbor lBch's un- i beai.n waw polo tum (22-0) 1 1 .. tlbecolnfilpforllsaemlllnals aanie with San Marcoe <»-OJ &lid l will play the latter at UC SaDta Barbara Tlleoday at3:15. CINCINNATI -Cincinnati catcher Johnny Bench has bffn named the recipient of the 197$ Lou Gehrig Memorial Award, an honor given to the baseball player who best exemplifies the ability and character ol the late New York Yankees' first baseman. B..,_,.wDlft LAS VEGAS -Roy Holloway, 23, Los An&eleo, died at Valley Hoopital Friday nltht of !Jllurl .. suffe~ In a 10th round lcnocl<out Joos to Mllce Mayon of San Dle10 In a Junior welterwellbt flfhl Wednesday nl1bt. DENVER (AP) -The Denver Broncos, who bad hoped to be In the tbtct of the playoff ba!Ue at this 1t1ge of the season, instead find themselves hoping merely to avoid total embarrassment as their once-promisine season self· d .. trucls . Saddled with 1 4-6 record. the Broncos hope to salv1.1e some rnpectabtltty today when they entertain the wlnl~ss San Diego Qiarpra In a NallQD&l Football Leaeueaame. "Wtnnlnc 18 atW our first priority,'' eays co1cb Jobn Ral1ton, lncftcatlnc that ••' : : . I perimentin& with l>Ol'100Del is of been necessitated by injuries. lesser importance. Calvin Jones, out much of the In accordance with that princi· season with a knee injury, re- ple, Ralston intends to continue turn5 to claim his startinc spot 1t to start Steve Ramsey at right rornerb1ct. Joe Rizzo quarterback. Ramsey, al!boogb replac .. the tnjuttd Ray May at completing 57 percent of hla strongside linebacker . Carl panes for the season, hit on only -Scbaul<owttch wW open at left three of 12 throw,. and was in-guard in place of Tommy Lyons tercepted twice in last week's who broke his le1 ln Atlanta. • SS.21 lou to Atlanta. Injuries .have plagued Denver John Hufnagel will be the all ~•son1 and the most crucial backup, and Charley Johnson lw been tne h•llllllrln& pull suf. probably will aee actloo only as a· fered by running back Otis holder on field goal and extra Arms!Nnc. Without Armstron; point ticks because of a cracked. . · Denver's ctound ca'°" bu been collarbone 1uffered last week. anemic. Fullback Jon Ke1W01'th The only lineup changes have leads the team with a paltry 3.17 • ' ;tardson 103carrles. San Diego's problems have been of a different nature. The Oiargers played good defense fOl' several game1 earller in the seuon, but were shut out three times. The Chargers offense, In !!'ct, ranks last ID the American unuerent'e, whDe the defense is no better than 10th. But coach Tommy Prothro is confident his leam's 0-10 record Is about to be Im pro.eel. "I tbtnk we will win In ~nver," Prothro l1Y3. Denver won tne tint meellni between the two teams. 27-17. • • g e c ), d 7. b ·s d e 'n 1) r s rs e h 0 .. y g r e k • • n •• is d • Sunday. NO¥tomc.t 30. ,975 DAH. .. YPfLOT C:'J Prep Cage Outlook for Coast Area Tbe 1117:1-78 .... p llNl:elball MUOD iei. unc!A!r w~ Monday with the We1tminater-Narin1 tournament toppln1 the .eboclule. And roe Oranie Coat .,..,a fens it lhould be a b--)'elll' with 4-A powen llarina and FWa1a1n va11.,. loomlns big In the - iaiue. HunUllgton !leach -1111 llDOlher Empire Leal\ie llUo and San Clemente and llissloo Y!fdo lootl"I toua:h In Q1e South Ooat.Leatuerace. Amons the Wonted llldivldllals b Mlrina Hl&h wbl& Rieb Bran· nine. a ~\lo 1uard wllo .ir.aciy bu been named to the All-CW teams aa a sophomore and · junior. New faces in the coachi.nc ranka are Edison Hllh'• Lionel Purcell. La&una Bu.cb"s Ed Burlin&h•m. Newport Harbor'• Ken Ammann. Marina's Steve Popovich and Dana RllJs• Art Jenkins. Here'• a capsule loot at each or tbeare1'115teams: C'ore•a dd Jflar Paul Anderson and Chris Baker have graduated, but led by Ibo return of 6·6 junloc center Alex Black, the Corona de! Mar High Sea Kings should have a formidable basketball team once again. The Sea Kings compiled a 17-8 record last year and their coach, Tandy Gillis, says, "we'll be stronger than last year. We are a little bigger than we have been and we have three guards return- ing who have played varsity ball." Gillis· top returnee, though, is Black who averaged 15.5 points last year. A muscular center, Black (6·6. 225) is an excellent shooter from 15 feet. The losses of Anderson and Baker-they combined to score 638 points-are big but Rich Nebb (5-10. 155), Gary Guisness (6-0, 180) and Jeff Ruzicka (6-1. 175) saw varsity action last year as guards. They will ~ aided by~nior Steve Scholoemer (5-11, 1 who was on the junior varsit team last year. The Sea Kings will be inex· perienced up front but appear to have two good forward prospects in seniors Chip Stassel (6-4, 170 ) and Doug Garn (6·4,175). Others who will help are juniors Jack Tuz (6-1, 175} and Paul Akin (6·2, 155) and senior Pat Ahern (6-2, 170). C'o•ta life.a They·re not going to scare op· ponents with their height, but the Costa Mesa High Mustangs figure to have one of the quickest basketball teams in the Orange Coast area. "We enjoy running and we're scrappy," says Mustangs basket- ball coach Larry Sunderman. That statement probably best describes a Mustangs team that returns three starters from a 13·11 squad in Sunderman's first year as head coach. Those returning starters are forwards Dan Byers (6-llfa, 185) and Stan Miller (6-31/z, 185) and guard Gary Spink (5-10 1.h, 150). Byers averaged 11 .2 points; Spink 9.5; Mlller 8.4. Byers and Miller are among the Mustangs' tallest players. Gary Wills (6-3, 165) is Costa Mesa's best shooting big man, says Sunderman, and figures to help out on the front line. Two players up from the junior varsi· ty, Steve Kiley (6-11.h, 170) and Doug Dysart (6·0, 165) are other forward contenders. The MU.stangs have depth in the backcourt. Along with Spink, Sunderman has four other guard candidates, including Marty Feducia, a 5-6. 125-pounder who· started for Newport Harbor last year. Mark Oman (6·2. 170). Tim Young (6-0, 160) and Rick Can· nariato {5·3, 130) are the others. Oman was a varsity reserve last year while Young played on the junior varsity. Cannariato is a transfer from Milwaukee and Sunderman says. "he is like a jet.·· DaraaHIU. Famous for only having seven players last year. the Dana Hills High Dolphins take on a com- pletely different appearance this sea:\()n. They have a new coach in Art Jenkins and feature a 12-mao rooter, led bJ tbne rewmlnc start.rs fl'Om a aquad that wu JO.IS. Tho1e three forwards are .Reary Jliklewlcs (6-a. 175) and Jeff Paulaon (IJ.3, 175) and iuud AndJ Hoffman (S.l, U5). Paulson ll<Ored at a 10.8 clip wblle Jliklewica a...-aced 10.l andHonmana.o. Altbou1b Paulson and Mlklewiez are returnl'na --It will be Paul-. Stll Helo <s.z, 110> and Carloo ~· rano (S.I. 110) Wbo will atart U forwarda In Dana lll,lls' O!>Onlnc came aca1nat c,_ Tuaday nlilrt. M,llrlewica and Halrman-4>olb on Ibo football team-have yet to practice. 09enln1 in the backcourt will be Bob Slupln (:loll, l~) and Chrb Baur (:loll , ISO). Other guards are Don An- deraon (6-0. lt!O), Steve CraPo (:1-10, lSO) and Kevin Culberuoo (:1-8. 140). Competing for forward berlba .... Hector Aguilar (II-I, 110) and David Reeve (11-1, lSO). Jenkins says hls Dolphin! will run a three-forward offense and play mao·to-ma.n defense. Ed,,._• A new dimension to the Sunset League is added al Edison High where former Seattle University roach Lionel Purcell is preparing his Chargers for the 75-76 cam- paign . Among the changes at Edison are man-to-man pressure de· fense, a pressure offense pre- dicated on wearing out the op· position and West Torrance transfer Bob Vogelsang. Vogelsang, a S-10 senior guard, and 6-3 junior Bob Herson form the nucleus of experience at Edison-a commodity that is similar to the lack of size at Edison. Seniors Mike Timmerman 16-2). Kelly Gallagher (6·1 f.g). Mike Samuelian (5-8 g), Ron Den Heyer {6·4 c) and Vie Rakhshani (6-2) are joined by junior can· d.idates Ray Gomez (6-1 f), Jim Williams (5-10 f), 0-aig Fidone CS-11 jr.), Jack Dashwood (6-4 jr. ), Ed Bell (6·2) and sophomore Mike McCork (5-11). El Toro El Toro High coach Wendell Witt has no returning players from last year's 16·10 team which advanced to the CIF 2·A quarter finals, but he seems very optimistic nevertheless. "We are small and inexperien· ced,but we are talented and we could surprise some people.," he says. Witt will have seniors Jim White (5-10). Todd Fraser (:1-10). Dave Ric~er (S-10) and junior Mark Hill battling for the forward positions. Senior Marty lleim (6-2) ap- pears to have the inside track on the center spot, with 6-3 senior Tom Greenwood backing him up. Senior Tracy Singh (6-0) and 6-0 junior Mike Hill (Mark's twin) seem to be leading the competition for the guard spots, but S.9 senior Tom Bius and sophomore Bob Charles (5-10) are not far behind. According to Witt, all of bis players shoot well and are ag- gressive on defense. "Our goal is to put a lot of pre· ssureon the teams we play with a man·to·man defense and dif· ferent types of presses.'' he says. E•tarada They return a legitimate All- CIF candidate in 6·6 center Jim McCloskey and figure to be a contender for the Century League title. But Estancia's Eagles may be without junior guard Ray Orgill, a key player on their fast break. Largely responsible for the Eagles' 14-9 record last year, Orgill-a second team all-league pick-is sidelined indefinitely with a back injury. Even without Orgill, though, the Eagles will be troublesome. McCloskey is an outstanding out- side shooter and averaged 17.9 points last year. McCloskey is the only return- ing starter although 5-10 guard Kyle Bischoff averaged 7.3 points in a substitute role last year. Bischoff and 5-10 senior Gary Confer will open in the backcourt. Mccloskey will be at center and senior Stu Van Horn JIM Mc CLOSKEY Guides Estancia (6·4, 170) and junior Pete Newman (8-4, 19S) will be the starting forwards. The Eacles have plenty of depth and all t,be newcomers played on championship junior varsity, sophomore and fresh· men teams. Other forward candidates are seniors Larry Hall (6-2, 190), Mike Hobbs 16·2. 185) and Dan Collins (6-4, 200) and sophomore Jim Price (6-2, 190). Battling for backcourt berths are seniors Jeff Krobnfeldt (5-11, 19J) , Casey Gleason (5-7 , 135) and Kevin La Rue (5-10, 170). F _,.taira l'alfev The defending champion Barons of coach Dave Brown will be quicker-but smaller-flS they gird for Marina and the rest of their Sunset League adversaries. There are no returning ~tarters from last year's varsity, liut the nucleus that powered Fountain Valley's junior varsity, sophomore and freshman teams to records of 23·1, 22-2 and 23-0 make the Barons a force to be reckoned with. Returning from the varsity are forward Rich Valbuena (6·2 sr.) and the Barons' third guard- Mike Zumbo, a 6·1 senior. Up from the junior varsity are guards George Barrios (5-11 jr.), Scott Ford (6-2 jr.) and senior Jeff Yarrington. At center are Scott Tingey (6· 7 jr.) and Todd Southwick (6-8 sr.). Brown has some talent at forward, too, with Jon Holland (6-3, sr>, Bill Carroll (6-4jr.) and football star Bo Boxold (6-2) in the picture. Carroll was the most valuable on the sophomore team last season . "We have some quickness," concedes Brown, "but it may be a while before we begin playing welt.·· Huratitagt-Befl4'11 With four of the top seven back from a championship team last season, coach Elmer Combs is hopeful that the possible los.s of Phil Dunkleberger won't be too much to overcome as his team girds for the 75-76 basketball campaign. Dunkleberger is suffering from tendionitis in both knees and Combs says he's possibly lost for the season if he doesn't respond to treatment. Back, however, are 5-9 guard Kevin Karkut and 6-1 wing Perry Harbin in the Oilers· double post attack. Guard Paul Finchamp {5-10) and 6-3 junior post Clark Sims re- turn to the Oilers attack, with the balance of the squad coming from the junior varsity of 74-75. Jim Spowart (6·3 sr.) is billed for duty at the post and aquatics star Scott Weir {6·3) is another candidate at the post. Also in Combs' plans are Rick Thornton (6-0) and Dean Owens (6-1). Combs, who begins hi s 17th year as varsity coach for the Oilers, says his team will employ their customary fast break of. fense and zone defense. Harbin is a returning all· league player and Combs has more experience than at this time last year. ' LaflllJta Be84'11 Laguna Beach won the junior varsity title last year and those College Football Gayner Retires Pro Sco res ~ ..... I .. lht .. 11 A,..,. 0-9....i 12•,SN11'1.1DI o.troh 111, Naw VOf'k 110 """"""'"· Phl~lpl'll•" Ml'-1* .... 0llc:efCllS Go~st.-112. "'*"''• 100 "'-tiellll 1)0, &vffelo 11.s IA.ST BodOfl Calleot ''·Holy Crot.J 10 ........... """"'' litu'IQIM'' 21, S'l'l'KllM 10 T...,,. ''·YIU-"• I VMI 11, c--ctk \l'I I C.W. """'· Hlt$lr• • IOUTM ~"' A.,&W'l'I 0 Flwldmll.Mleml (flle.)11 SO.Mlttltt!Pfl •t, 9YU 1• Vlll'lllwllllt 17. Ten,..•-1• Ak-11, J.c•-St.• Or-a!l119JI, Sout .... rfl If AW.llen\lo St. Sf. TutlleQH ti S., C.rotlM St. JJ, w.f1 Ol'CI' SOUTMW•IT .. ylorJS, ltk• 1 •• , •••• s •• 1 .. W, Ttu,SL ·~ ......._.Q,. TlllMJO lltOC'IClll Ari:-~Jt, t\rl-21 MCI.A ,_LAYO,fll OM-.110-rtt,....., W.tWfl Ktftl1'Cllf 14, ~ -Q --..,,""',.. u. 1.Ml9ht1 Na.Mldl~lof, ....... Jt l.Mflet."'", Al._ ,., Norttl O.MM '' Newport Beach·, Kyle Gayner bas announced her retirement from competitive gymnastics due to a back injury which bas not 1ulficienUy ,responded to treatment. Gayner was injured three years ago and was recently training with Olympics gymnastics coach Muriel Grosfield in Connecticut before an- nouncing her decl.slon . She now plans to pursue a career in theatre aod dance .. The former Olympics bopefUl was known for her ••per1l1e on the balance beam and she ·woolbe 1975U .S. national t!Ue. She competed in meets in Russia. Ct.ecboslovakia. Rumania, Japan, Germany, South Africa, Holland and France. ...._,., "-••Y Leet .. ~lil'!I. NY M•"9'1't J O.trvil I. lterses Cl ty J NV ISl'....,..fl, St.'-"'' 1 Nllwllf'MI .. ve~"'' • a..tol\4,0ll<-..• ""'' T"'°'" 1, ~ledtl"""I' I ltlof I *-t.11.S, Wnhlft910flJ 1929 PHAKrOM II IOW IOYCI UMOUS19 0::.-llo!JY 0.-•40.000 ~ WI 3 "'"' ~ £..-cloM ir., "'°"' Aowo. "' LGftdOn. ~ l llOdy-11 ~ Wl0.... .. el ott.r, C.r ... -Ally Ol'I tllWlllY Ill .___ ~ ~. ~"""'"" IQMINt OONOITIOH. .._...O-IJIJl71f.U41 ~-12111 -1 Attention: Kruee Auction Patrone VJllll for tho \bl.rd 11\lUd •Pot are S-1 Gary Kanter, S.11 Ron Hawkin! and 11-1 Carl Dederick . Pat Patrick (8-0. 1:50) ••er•1ed 3.3 pointl u 1 substitute forward last year and Ammann l&Y>. '"ho i.our best defender.'" Too1 Warren ( .. S jr.). 't'Nnt Senkb<ll (11-2 or.), Gary Bonner UH ar.) and Dave Gibb< (l>!i jr.) round out the rosler. Battllna for other focward poal. tlons are aenlor BID Wilkinson · (11-2, 180) ODd junior Rob Galey RICH BRANNING M•rfna Standout players will be coming up to the vanity thil1 season. And it that isn't enough good ne-ws, Ben Bacon. a 6-5 junior, will be returning this year. .. Ben should be one of the best centers in the league," says coach Ed Burlingham. "He was last year.·· SerUor Brian Smith, also 6-S, could challenge Bacoo for the center spot once be is well again. Smith is out for a bout a month with torn Ligaments in his ankle. On the front line. the Artists have an abundance of talent to choosetrom. Seniors Jim Evans {6-5 ), 6·2 Dusty Dvorak and 6-2 John Lil · jestrom all have a chance to start says Burlingham, along with sophomore Randy Smith (6-2). Seniors Bob White (6-3) and 6-2 Eric Akins should give Laguna good depth on the bench at the forward position. Burlingham will be going with 5-10 seniors Kevin Pike and Jeff Taylor as his guards. According to Burlingham, Pike will work the point guard spot, setting up the offense. Laguna should have a good strong defense says Burlingham with good rebounding strength. The Artists will use a zone and man-to-man combination. /lfari•a Four returning starters, in · eluding Orange County player of the year Rieb Branriing, make the Vikings of new coach Steve· Popovich a solid threat to the Sunset League title and CI F honors. And the Vikes will be present· ing a slightly different offense with the emphasis on a faster tempo. "We plan on getting the ball up the floor a little faster," says Popovich, who succeeds Jim Stephens as varsity coach. "We're farther along than I thought we'd be at this stage," says Popovich, wbo also has re· turning starters Tom Ugland (6-0 sr. g), Dan Boldt (6-3, sr f) and Matt Cook (6-5 sr f-c) in the fold. Also big in Marina's game will be Mike Buhler, a 6-5 forward · center who was most valuable on .the 23-2 junior varsity team last season. M•terD ef Coach Jerry Tardie's Maler Del Monarchs have returning euards Jim SchullS (:1-101' jr.) and Jim El••• (6-0 sr.) to work their fest break around u they seek their filth CIF playoff• berth ln •even years under Tardie. ··we11 be runnl ng a fast break offense again," says Tardie, "but we're not nearly as quick thisyearoverall. Wehavealotof inexperience up front, however. and I have eight playera vying for the three spots.'' Returnlne starter Pat Hill <&-•) and returning: varsity members Jude Kaufman (a better jumper than his 11-2 helsht Indicates) and John Stemmer (6·3, 195 PoW>ds> • are in a fia:ht with five others. Up from the junior varsity are Bill Gainey (6-0), Gene Uekbus (6·2) and Mike Kamaka (6-3). Also in the picture are G·3 Paul Mosbrucker and 6-4v.t Brue*! Hayes . Jflbdort t'~o Coach Pat RobetU bas seven of 10 back from last season'a varsi- ty, including three starters to bolster Mission Viejo Higb's shot at South Coast League champion San Clemente. All -round 6·• star Steve Sawyer, steady Mitch Adam:s and Kelly Cox, a S-10 guard with good outside shooting, lead the attack, which also include& a vastly improved David 1.ogg in the front line. Zogg, 6·2, i:s joined by guard John Hattrup (5·6). Also big In Roberts' plans are Tim Kennedy (6·1), Tom McDonald (5 -10), Greg Gensichen (6·1 >. Mark Booth (6-1), sophomores Mike Boster (6·2) and Tracy Alexander, a 6·2 Texas transfer. Rick Erickson (6-1> and Joe Blum (5-9) round out the squad. Roberts, who has bad only one non-winning team in nine pre· vious years at Mission Viejo. says, ''This is the first bona fide shot for us at a league title. We 've got more heiabt, ex · perience and leadership and we have some surprises out of our zone.·· ~f!teflort BarfJor lt's hard to evaluate tht" chances of Newport Harbor's Sailors. They have a new coach in Ken Ammann and only return one starter and two lettermen from a 13·11 team. Also, they Jack height -their tallest starter is&-2. "I'm not sure how good we'll be," says Ammann, an assistant basketball coach at Orange Coast College for the past two seasons . "We"re little but we 're quick.'" Leading the Sailors is senior guard Kim Cooke (6-0, 155), a sharp shooter who averaged 11 .2 points as a starter last season. ($.2, 150). ' Joe DlSt1nl1lao. • 6-2, 180r Pound aenlor, flluree to be th<i 1tartln1 center. Senior Rick PedilO (IJ.J.110) is alaoinC<lll\U· Uon. Senion Mark Ka19 (8-0. UO ) and Joo McCarthy (:1-10, l.S) and juniors Ron Crail (5-11, 140) and Rolf Schwalbe (11-1, ISO) are bat· UinJ rot backcourt berths. s a .. a--t .. Sao Clemente coach Stan DeMaggio bu two new trarusfer:s which ba•e his coacb.i.nl rol- l~es in the league buDin& walh curiosity. They are 8·5 senior John Wither~! from Pomona and 6-3 jwtlor Mark Sherry from Iowa. "John has outstandlng jump- ing cap.abilities. says De:Maggio. "and ls a fine shooter. Mark Ja a very strong rebounder and a good shooter, and they shoulf help us a good deal. .. In addition. junior Tim Dunham (6·2) and~ senior Ran- dy Hallmark will be return.inc from the team that won thp league tiUe la3t year~ . 1 Dunham bas moved fro~ forward to guard. Senior Jim Hutcbinis (11-51' MVP on the JV, 6-2 senior M Oliver, 6-6'Ai junior Bill Neely, will all be work.inc for a start.in& slot on the front line. Juniors Mike Horvath (6-0), the leading scorer on lut year's JV team, S.10 John McDonald and 11-1 Johnston Mltchell will be seeing action &t the guard posi· lions. DeMaggio expects this year's squad to rebound better than last year's, but not be as good dP- fensively. U•ieenit" They 've got height on the University High team, and coach John Driscoll couldn't be hag- pier. "J consider height the single most important ingredient in basketball, and for the first time in our history we have some of it here," says Driscoll. "We also have some people who can really play the game, more than we've ever bad." Some of that talent and size can be found in 6·6 senior Steve Wood, a transfer from Virginia, 6-S sophomore Roger Poirier. wbo averaged about 16 points per game for the JV last year, and the only returning letterman, 5-8 MikeMcClymonds. Junior Mark Green CG-4) and 6-4 senior David Pareell will also be pushing for playing time in the front line. Fighting it out for startinl spots at guard are seniors Keith Johnson (5-1! ), Brian Howitt (5-11) and Mark Calub (S-9), and 6-0 juniors Bill Halford and Mark Eykbolt. According to Driscoll, those competing for the guard spots are all pretty even in talent and all have the capability of start- ing. College Va nguards Deal t Baske tball 6 7-61 Cag~ Loss Scores UCI Qualifies LOS ANGELES- Despite losing to UC Riverside in the regional finals, UC Irvine's An· teaters have qualifed for the women's s mall col lege national volleyball tournament in Pocatello, Idaho, Dec. 11 -13 . UK .. ,LOyOle l / lfldl-... UCLA 6-1 Slenlord "· NtY•d• 1R1no f 10 USF to, UC O.vl' 10 """"'ell"' .. , Hf\llnqS 11 t.St)U,Cl1 61 C.I Poly tSLOI ll. S.1> Fr-ch.co SI .... O>koSI. 7•. Wl'llUl1r 11 'Ntstmonl 13, A'"bon.Odot 61 UCS.... Oit906S,Aruw Pe< Ilk Q M;tr!I-St."· P\1911 Sotl"d 6t Olr.lei'>oft\11 61,0l<lehomo Clly U Ntveela CL V ) ... Or19ot1 S!, 1$ ..... ,,...llCO 11. Co!OfOdO '' V-rtilll IOS, towo St llO Prov!CIH><1 11. Br_,. SI w.,.,..,1nv 100, w,,,,,,. s1. s1 ~ue ll.X•"'-'"' Wltc~I" IOS, O.Peuw w Mlen'll (011', Otllo Norl""•n6J NO!re C.""" !IO, Klnl SI. 61 Syrec:uwl3, H&,..1rd 70 OllCl!WlolU 91, c1 .... 1 ... a St •S Mari.hell 70, B&ld\O'ln·W1llec1 !oil Meryl end 111, IE'. C.rolln• 1-4 Vlrqlflle Tech"· S.wenM 61 Nor'tll c.rou ... SI, lOJ, Clledot! IS OU.1 lOl, John H09kln' n T 11he 1$, Oltle"°'"" SI . St Ver""""1 n, Noo1heo11ern s.. FlorM!e •1, Fur'"en •~ T--11. tlltcoyno 6l 8vtl1r 70,Qfilo SI. 61 Prl11C1ton61, 0••••' ... T1wsTec:11'6,lteftw,s1.,. Oeyt011U,A,111ena 6S MlU.OU•l •f. Felrl~Vhl Okkl_,, Iowa 111, AUQUtl1nel1 Loull.,lllt 1', Mlmpllls SI I• D&rlmoutll .. , S1, P.t,r'' NJ 6/ tlolM SI. 1', Co-61 Tul -17, SOI.Ill• De t ote ti NtOre'lk• ''·Horii!_,,,,,. .. Pe11Amlrk _, I~. TCU t• N0o11t C.ron111111.s. '4<1w•nl 1~ T11111• llEI P1sol IS,M ICl_'1_Sol 'Ntber 51. "· S.n.JOM St. n Ml•t.litlppl IO, Ml~taud _1..,11160 AJr Fwc1 61, 1(1"9 Pl. S6 Wike Fort \! t4, RlcFlmond to M""'"°'1 "· Sloll.11 0.kote SI. U 72 PANTERA from $8995 SAN DIEGO-Unable to hold onto a 37·28 halftime l e ad , the Southern Cal i fornia College Van g uards dropped a 67·61 non- conference bas ketball g am e to Pt . Loma College Saturday night. Pt. Loma, utilizing a ti ght zone defense, tied the Vanguards with nine minutes to play but only held a 62·61 lead with 19 seconds to go. But the visitor s turned the ba ll o ver and Pt. JC Football lllrl,..~•Bewl •• , ..... ,tlel<I) LA Y•rt1y )I, Frt$llO CC t ,....._"' C.l Ol•~lo111lllp Corotrec-tele, CNIDOll O Loma immediately con- verted the miscue into a field goal . The Vanguards were sparked by freshman guard Freddie Glaster. who scored 15 points. Randy Ad a m s, a 6-10 freshman ct"nter, tallied 11 points a nd sophomore guard Da vid Haron had 10. The Va nguards, 0-2, meet host UC Jrv1 ne at 8 Saturday ni ght. s.Glll C.ll9'1e !61. \ -lstHCI """ -~ Wetll.J,.. S..rrOfl Grett.,. ,..,. l• ti fJI I p , ' . ' . • ' ' • 0 ' " ' . ' " . " ' . To'll" 1$ 11 11 ., Halttlmt. SCC,31-11 NEW 25,675-SQ.-FT. INDUSTRIAL BUILDING WITH DOUBLE DOOR TRUCK WELL, EXPANSION LAND, PROTECTED ENVIRONMENT, EASY FREEWAY ACCESS AND MORE. For 1nlo1m;if!un on tn1o; 01 0H11·1 \1111tc11no .i1rern.1lrVi call y11ur hrnkr>r or Cr:11q ly •!l M .. na111 f nl S 11• :ind LC:Js1nQ "' 17131 fi:JR .l ,'(1jj ~/\,I \ H3.1 10 1ll ' !RVINE INDUSTRIA COMPLE X UC A:+"'°'ld&MI UCI, 1S.t ,l-1S, I~ UCI Clet ~·Pol, Porno.,., IS. I, IS... OWN YOUR OWN. 10% ~&~M~ ON INDUSTRIAL CONDOMINIUMS. Now you <:<in buy onf' of oiir 4,000· f3.000 ~qu:.ir,. !not 1ndustr1nl bu1ld111ci': ror only 10' 1, (fnw1 i. Eleven inc!ivirlu;1I units IPll 1n Ph.1~· • IH, 1n thr> tu•;ir! ol H11• nation's 1.11gest rr1r:istcr pri1nnr d . industrial ;;irc.J. 1n (Jr clngc County Nr.:u airport and th•! 1nlersechon of s.1n Diego and Newpoil lreeways. Sec u111 rnOOels or c:all (/14) 979·9205 0' ((13) 680 'l41!°l fl')1 1nform;::it1on KOU/IRVINE CENTER -~1 90 A A111:>0tl LOOP (Jr, CostJ Mcso. (:a q:;i57n IRVINE INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX i I I I ' t I I I f • ! I r I .. Cf DAil Y PILOT • Sund1y. NoY9n'ltMr 30. 1975 The Week's Market Highlights NY, AMEX, OTC Gainers and Loser s ~-NASD Quotations on Mutual Funds f Ntw Yo•' -fol· '°""'fll n. • "" ., w -''"" Pt•· tK Of< M"'wal '""°' •• ""°'•" bt I"' H ... ~(> Int. .... Gw l• ... "°"' ll'lt J ,. . • ·=~M ~t' (j\" AllM Ft "'' 711 .,,..,.. '" 111•1Jw • ..,,....,.. 1n1.i L. '°t "' • 11 '·n ,Ajtllat. • )t II.II Al .... ,, t.•1 11.L- •MI ll"ft 11 Jl H.2• ....... (qi, ll (J). ,...,. 'UMD1. 01111': -1411 I.ti 1.M -"" .,. 4.tt .t.m Inc 1,tt I.If ""' -I.Oii Lit 11 S..CI S.M 0.11 INI f'A 14 ti II.,. (Ml".~ I.II t.Jt Glli ......, J.M 4.ll Iott -ll.1$ 1'-11 In• Nol 11 U U.JI -P1'1 It 1' 11,IJ Sil FtA .. 15 I.JI """' ... " 1111.tll Anl Dr1'I 'J't •.IO ·~'"" ',~ ... I" 4 1t '·M " I.It H.l . ~Dr I.II (I) '~~ et'" l!IO~I.­• » '·" l'ltOfft .,, .... ........ "Ji 11.14 s.t<tr •JI• ... ,. ... lnw 1.•t I.II , W. N•ll t.11 10 ... -~ l"•i .• 1.H I ... llOUOlilTON: '"""" t lt•H l"....i I •• M I.IS Sttoc:• I.I? 003 \.( G4ll (I f C1l '"" t.n H.l . 111¥ t.U N.l . «II HI 1.1• NI.. t,11 lol.L. 11110111 l llOUI' : 1• '""' t.»Nl. 101 ""' J.)'11 lol.L. ""' 111 !•) '·'° •. ,. t , ..... ,. 1.95 1., 1.00 YI• '1UllDI : lwll ff II.ti IJ ti (4" ,. 1.11 •. 11 OlwSl'or 1'!0 Jll NllWO 1.t0 'n NV Ven \.II tll Cl f..... t.tl t II () lf'llf Ill I.ti ... , ..... Ml lol,I. !IM •• 1t 10,10 111¥ II I ti~ AlllllllO MOS:; ' . "'"' A Gii"" ..... ... " ,...,. """ -'" -.. """ .. CMAll llO!iTOlll: 1 ...... ·-" 51\lr II ·-· J11 •n J,11 1.ll I.ti I tt 1.11 • ro , .... J,J1 J.lll • °' •• 101111.11 I.JI ,,., '" ··~ ..~ . " "' S.11 0... FC 1 ... I.fl OU. ..... PO$: ~ ,_ ... ,, J,t l J" tc~ "' I.ti ..... (Dl..Ofi!1.t.L ...... , ·c;....., •. li ... JWIJ ~I <ti -'·" ''° ~ t ,t) l ,OI 1-C-l ,ot I.ts ~ l1J !1J ~ G 11. H "l.L. t="WLTM .. .. • .11 '1 C 111 IM "' ,. M JM 11• Ft I 1J 1 II C-r.i l .MH L C.. 1-t.ao •.IO o.lllt• 1UNl. c...MI Ill t It N L. c...r. c !1 ) ,,, °"""" IHNL Mt.AWAll ~,., OK.it t 11 10 u Dt101 , • JO ••• 0.lw F ti:! tll 0.li.T Ill•!? ......... ttON L l)fK( C., 113 < 1'll DMtC;t 14.11 N L Dr ...,_ 1.16 H L. IMllTPUS Glr Ei Ft 10.U I\ l• "' •~•ll l• IJM •>'IO Oryf Ui 10,0! "' l . S.,111C"'•t0H l ... c..f!I 10.tl I I tt l!&I! ¥u J,.,H l , l!IOQl9 Cf 7 lO I ti 11..llOM & MOWAllllO: a.in I'd I,~ I'' ,..,..,.. ... Gwtlo f I.JI t II , ... _ , .. I 'IO SopKlll'SJ11 U !lt<l l't I.II t M l!Dll! S. 1'.IJ H l (fll'•I l't t,,.10U I!""" Trt ll f !11 '-1'1 1111"' l ''""d ,., ... '"' Bu,. '·'°Ht. ,.O•ll•TID Gii ; .. t.->IOI I JO ( ..... J!l,lt _.... t: ... •IS.l4 ll'IDILltY CWIOUll': W-I.ti 1 11 Caflt•I I OCI t 11 Conltt 10 11 II l OIJ lllC 10011 l c..1 in . l CNllJ I 11.ll N l t:H•U r.u ,..,. .. ,Ill •• ll'Vrll.. ,_,, 10 01 ~f SM lll T""" It. I) JO '1 ,lll&lfCIAl ~11.U.U: "" C>Ytl l IJ ,. l Fifi I"" d .M H l fl" lllC I.ti H L 1'1ft Y• 10,11 II II "'"' tMVllfOlll: DllC l't • U I II Ori!! ft I 00 I M lf'ICO"' I.II ltl ~~ f I .I I Ill 1\1 Mull! 1.20 H L M W•ll 10 ... H l "°"Gt-lM •CIO l'OUMOlllS OltOUll': """" OM- • '1 I OS 10 1111 ft FINANCE Profits ;Remain Up Despite Stock Fee Decontrol NEW YORK (AP) -As a drama of stormy upheaval, this first half-year of unrestricted fee competition among the nation's :stockbrokers is a dud so far. True there has been a highly publicized price war among brokers competing for the busi- n('SS of large investors . But Wall Street has not broken out 1n the mt>rgers and liquidations some had predicted once the'old fixed commissions on most stock transactions ended May 1. Before that date, brokers charged according to a com- plicated rixed fee schE'dule rang- ing roughly from half a percent ~ to two percent of the transaction. After that date customers were ; rre-e to shop around for the lowest t fee they could fi nd. I As a m1.1lter or fact, however, the industry's post-Mayday pro- fits have held up very nieely so far. The Individual investor has • seen little or the big rommission discounts going to banks, in- 1 surance companies and other in- ' stitutions and he might be hard- 1 pressed to detect any rurfercnce at all in bis dealings with his broker. I Lewis A. Engman, chairman of the Federal Trade Commission, recently d escribed the effects of Mayday as "very salutary" for the industry that so vigorously rtslsted It. I SOME OBSERVERS contend that the tmpact or the new com - tltlon baa been P<>flP<>Ded by a tron1 and acU•e year In the stock m arket. But host Wall Streett,. •freed that ,....,.. of chaJ1$e are In moUon. '11 think some tundamental 1 ~ , ....._, Ill .• •.01 ,."'!!"',,,•. ......, "" '·" °""' 11 .. ''·" °"""' ,.. UI This Week ,.._Ywtl IU"tl -l,,_ I0,_"9'°" ,,.._ ...... ,.,...~.--,--­Mw.11• "'(Ht .. ~ Oii ! ......... ,._ ,..._ Y.,a tUPll -'"" ......... lo•I -I .. ••1 IMI ll•W ...... "'°"" __ , .. _..NWf .. illr'<""'°' f~I! ,. ltl • ll'••kllUN C... I),, t ,n NL.· o.-.111 ... 11.• ~-'·" 1.0 ~ C M.UM.• .,._,, ......... '' u•• "'"' •• .,...._.. ~ .,. IM A-rkM s..ti --~-- Hr' W _....., < ....... aoT IN ~•t:•< ....... . ... ...,,. ... ~~ cti. ...... ,, ...... "'' ..OUI": -I 11 ft 1o1 l lllC-I.II 1.11 ......... _,,, __ _ ...... ..-......... ......,..,.m1 ~.,._"'-'-•'•<~ffl(t..W W.-l'ICIMlflill"'1{t. ·--· _._ ...... _ ... l*"'ll "'" .... lflit -··· '"""" ,,,_ Off?( S II I• U>llO •11· Goolft S• '·~ .. " .t.tlll.i • 11 'u Ttefll!I &.12 &.If •-11 J.l!I ,_,. ,-, lf'lt"' 1,11 tn l>#PI kt IM ).11 USG•\ t4JIOJJ· .... _ ••1on '"''' , t. 11 10..02 .... ,.. ...an.t• JI•-I, N,L- w.., " ... •. " l .. 0 l.Jt t.1 .. ,.,,.. lw 1.rN.l. l• .. c... 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S!«k 1 .. n 11 11 -ft I 11 H l. Soflt(I •I loO t II Nt .... Ofl 10 .. II '6 VI' Pty •I 10 I 6l ....... Wit !0 4111,Jt ·~~ ll~•ft I II ) JI Hl<ftlt• 11 )I II l Ill: ""°'11.ttlll!H l ~~ I ll • 1' C>'l-.OI ' II • to !""""' JM)" ~ Wlll 1'.ll H l 1'11 Ut JOI DH'lllMM '0: '"1!.flll)ll))I "'"''d l ll•f/1 hWI f ... l'<l.t.I /1 ,H QI F!'OI ! " I '4 """"'" ·~1111 1• ''"""" U " 11 JI l .... tl •01 11! ~ Ot ... l)tJNl. SIOMA fUllDS: C.0 \flt I • I 0 1 ... \1' tH101• '"' !oil I Clio In Vonlur I" •HI ~tft I t0111L. '' II.Gr t 10 N l . !ill c;..nF 104110,tl Soooll In~ 111 Ill S... '"• G l1J !rl '°"' lft• IOU11Ml ~I•• Ill lol.l . l'tAl l 1110 0 111": Cotn ft I tt •.>l 01-...l11 ••I t 11o p,09,. J.•1 l ff SI Fr Gr •ltN.1.. \tF•l,..111NL Sit!• ~,, •31 JI It 11 SflAOM.A• JOii ""'ll'ld f.JtH L- #1\.o.FO .tillHL Jn-t 1 01 H L. Ott.., l!tNL. YALU• ll•I 'DI: lltl lM llO JM Vtl I"" I 11 4 Iii le• GI~ I 11 I .. ..... \pc; l" 1 " YAMC( UlllDllll; 1" .. 11 1,11 ltll VS (orft 1.11 I HI """'' I If I II Vftel•OI G l Ill 11,l . -0.1 I 1.11 NL 'l'ANOu••o D•I' ~ foplor 1' 111 11 II • .... , 111 ltS -r 1011,,0, ''"' '" t11 ...... ,,,, 10" 11.u , 'M!ltr'I '" ''° .,,,..,...,, '"ti! Wl""i.t I 11 I 11 11 ... 1to1 1 J 1l J .. Wllllol.9' IM IOI Wtl"f._. '"'N L.I '#t>I l!'OI 1.U J.Uj '#l!lt Gt-•• I""' U:mf.i IDfi: Weekly Sales .. ,llift, •• ~ = ::: J!!'~·.· .:i:m:I· ::1 · ,_"""' 'r.<h . .!!! •. ' ~ Mto:•• ,I ,liii J, Yea rl y Comparison ... .-...... .... ~ '"' ..... 1 "" ..... . ''" -... nn "'15:· .• [ ...... "" •. . 'I" • 1 '' HY'I ............ MYDK UM•· 1) 41 Utt 11, "9 '" " Sl llM I .. II tit I 111 1'I II all 1• t• .... ,. NI•" ...... ""' Doc: UMio ,. ,, '"' 'iii "' IJ .. UI .. I Ill 11'1 m LOS:lllll ........ " °" ... 1·11-l·M Oii •t 1·11-1-11 °" ., S.U ... 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(.,..! 1:1111111 Piii'•"' 11 111111 OTC 10 ~lost Acti\·e (IA1 I() It.I 10 UIUI !"N L Cu>! SI 11-ltn ........ 111 111 C ... I S2 I" t11 PllO Fii llO 1!'4 HEW VDllll tUPI) -t1w \0 -II Kii .. •ID<•• I•~ "' ltw OTC "*'"-' Fr!Otr t\ "'"1'" ~ HA~O c .... 1 ~ 111 111 ,..,.~1 tllNI.. Cu" S.. J" l .lt Pl()ftllll •D Apollll J.I/ • \J P!... Fd II lt 11 ).I llKI 'I••-lit ..... Olt, Gio., E"'Plt 1n1 n . .oe 11'4 11:w.-"' """"' J.111 lll Pliol• II tlllO!I UIOfN"l I .. IOI Pl-t 1'1110 W ....... .,...,.., o/MtO ,, .. ao.,. '- ,._, Lite • ,100 '"" 0>+)-1• LO Etlt 11ti1l IS Pl.I GJIO (I f h ) c-.oi-11>1 H,• 10!.~ """• o., Ul(t~I 100 101 P\.I T"' ll f II) "''"' Olwll M.100 10... 100.• .., lilt OllOUP: ll'tllCI llOWI' ~11'1 ~liFR Jl,tOO 11;. 1\'I-.... CJll'llo.. Oii Jl,000 \... '"' C,. lt<ff U 03 11 olO Gr'"1ft 10 IJ N l . Grwi~ 1.0I I "4 1...:0"' t Q H L--., lw>tft )1,100 l~ ,...., , • , IMO"' 10.m 10.till t+fo" lrt t tt N L . ... , H s,.,. )4,)00 14 ... JS .... ' .... ll<ti.tt ft U.lt U •1 Hw i<lof I W H L. .,,_ M"'' 11 • .00 • '"" . lMt lfli• llJ I ll '"1 Fd l>INL UMCOLN lol•TI.: Pro"" G1 !tl 111 I.In< Cp 112 I U Prl<OI \IP b ) bl !.it Am l ,)t N l l"VTNAM !.It Oii 1.00 H l ,UllM; 'iiflt !.pl 1J l0 N L. (Ml,., t .... 10.llo changes arE' taking place, in an evolutionary way ... said an ex- ecutiv(' who supervises trading at a major institution . In particular, he pointE'd to signs of inC'reased dominance of the large, broadly based investment houses. But the main s urpns('s to date have come in "\lo'hat hasn't hap· pen~d. rather than in what has . New York Stock Exchange figures show lhe number of member firms actually up since last spring: -from 505 at the end of the first quarter to 513 at the third quarter end. If brokC'rs' profits hav(' b('en squC"ezed, it hasn't shown up in firms that make earnings pub~i('. FOR THE T•llRD quarter of this yenr-the first full fi scal period or competitivl' rates-the national firms that deal ex· tensive\y with the public all did well. in some cases spectacular- ly so. Obs('rvers generally agree the rebound in stock price!§ and trad- ing volume this year has al least C'Ush.ioned the impact of the new competition. So has cost.cutting. Said one Wall Str('eter: "We're seeing a lot of cost-cutting and people just doing a better job," One nondevelopment puzzling many has been the a~ncc or so· called "unbundling·· Of such services as research. Under the old fixed -rate setup, the idea was that commissions also covered cost o( research and other extras, whether or not the customer used them . With th(' arriv:il of !\1ayday, brokt>rs were free to unbundle - to begin cha.rging separately !or taeh ser\'k;t'. Out rcw hnve ,,,,,., ),4tl,10ll chosen to do so yet. "I'd just be speculating," said one banker. "but it may be the difficulty in putting a price on each individual piece. '.'l'obody has had any ex peri('TIC'C' with doing that.'' Much more in line with prt· !\layday expectations has been the pressure on firms that have a single s pecialty rather than on the divC'rsified. full -line con cerns . The spo tlight fell parliC'u!arly on "research bouti- qu('s ·· -smaller firms, roncen- trating on institutional business. whose prinC'ipal assE't is a stable or "star" securities analysts, ench commanding annual pay of $600,000 and more. Before Mayday. institutions re- warded th('se firms for their analysts' work by steering trad- ing business through them. When the restrictions came off, the re asoning went, institutions would tee! legal pressure as managers or other pe-ople's money to seek the biggest discounts they could find, regardless of what research they received. Ther(' has been some strain on the research firm since May t - yet the C<-lSUalties so tar have been relatively few . OSF. SUCH firm , Auerbuch, Pollack & Richardson, has closed its doors, blaming the "trend go- ing away from speC'ialized firms like ours toward the broader- based firms." The other side or that coin i:s vh~lblc at. Merr-llJ Lynch, active In all ph11e1 ot the bu.sined but tradilJonaJly known for Its publlc client~le. R@cently the firm has bfo('n promoLJne the develo~m""-~ of its rt.'searC'h department. ' .:,~ ,kr.;. 1~• ~ I ,fol JI q :d t:i-1."' .. 41 II.ti 11.t !•IM 91 l• "·" "1'•1.11 ...,. "" ..,, ..... 1• -...... a on nw ....., ven 'i.c:• £""""'9t -i h _le..,, \19Cl E•c ...... -~ ... M ...... lhll"fl ... Md --- "'...ti Mtv -Uk O.....llfli...-•ac. :ilit I ... -k :..!tr..:~.~ -1 k •ISUMIO 01\llOl#C& ~r(M -k ••DUc,o DIVIDlttm ()OW Pwtllflll. .~ --,,_ Uc ' All MI; MIOtt a & H9:::=• MNI S1. ft ·-~ ~~.,,°j;;" t,. ;: t·11 ·~"-f..r-" 1:ti :; :~ ~It' ... tlffft . .., .Mt ·--,,.., •. •• .ti. 1.0Wla t MO JITMS ft ll H ~..: er: '-.1' ~ 2. .... .. ~.'llow Mlftf• 0. •• .... .Hi ft .ti . ' "°9Mk 1.11 " 2 .... COl'TlllOJIT 1t71 ., U.ltM ""' .... ---... 1•'' ' ' 'r < I I -,. -.,,.;J,h( /• I' Slurry Slugf est Rages :'<l'EW YORK (UPI) -A bitter struggle has developed between the railroads and slurry pipeline advocates over a potential $1 . 7·billion-a- year new coJl hauling business. The C'onflict is being waged i n intermittE'nt hearin~s bt.'fore the House CommitteE' on Interior and Insular .i\ffairs and a Senate interior sub- committee. The pipeline advocates are seE'king a ft~der:il right of eminent domain to buy rights of .,1,,ay. Rut there is vastly more at stake. Only one coal slurry pipeline pre5ently is operating in the UnitE'd StatE's, moving coal from the R!ack Mesa mine in Arizona to a power plant in '.'levadJ. Curiously, this pipeline is owned by lht.' Southern Pacific Railway's parent company, which says it was built because a new rail line would have been impraC'ticaJ in the area. THF. FIRST COAi. slurry pipeline, running from Consolidation ('..oal Co/s Cadiz, Ohio, mine to a Clevt.'!and pow('r plant, was shut down after several years beC'ause it no lqnger could compete \\'ith railway unit coal trains. This pipeline is used now to haul garbage from Clev('land le re- n1ote disposal sites. The t\\'O projects seeking federal eminent do- main rights now would extend from the Gillette minE' in 'Ytryoming to \\'hit(' Bluff. Ark., and from C'oal deposits in northwest Colorado to a Houston power plant 7he first coal slurry pipeline ... is used now to haul garbage from Cleveland to remote disposal sites.· Eminent domain is the right to condemn and buy land whether or not the O"\lo'nC'r wishes to sell. In the past, the power to grant eminent domain has beE'n reserved to the states, C'xcept when it involves natural gas and electric pawer lines. This is true ('Ven o{ highways partly financ('d by the f('dE'ral government. Ad,·oC'ates of coal slurry pipelines claim coal is analogous to gas or electricity. The railroads S3y that is nonsense because gas and electricity can only be hauled by pipeline and cable line, whil£' coal, like oil, £'an be moved by rail, truck or barge. The pipt>line advocates say state eminent do· main will not be sufficient because the railroads "'ill refuse to allow coal slurry pipelines to cross their rights of way and state legislatures cannot l'lt' d£'pended on to force them to do so. TlfE SENAT E P ASSF.O a bill last year to give federal eminent domain rights to coal slurry piPC'lines and such bills are pending in both housE's now, but th(' railroads have mounted a ~trong campaign to defeat th('m. Also a near-srandal broke out in the Senate committee when it was brought out that Bechtel C'...orp. of San Francisco, which is seE'king to build a S750·million coal slurry pipeline to be financed th.rough I..ehman Bros., the New York invest- ment banking hous(', had been paid $418,000 by the Federal Energy Research and Development administrsition for an unsolicited study of the question that plumped mightly fOf' the pipelines. About the same time, conclusions or a study by researchers at the University or Jllinois under auspices or the National Science Foundation were emphatically against slurry pipelines on both economic and ecological grounds and favored hauling steam coal to pawer plants by rail or barge. The coal sluN'y advocates base their case partly _on the view lhst. with production of coal expected to double by 1984, the railroads tre not liktly to be able to handle that much traffic. Considerine the present. weak nnancial condi- tion Of the rail carriers. they say neither freight cars nor locomotives will be available in suffl- rient numbers. They al9o say conl sltlfry pipelines can be built more cheaply than new rail lines, a fact the ' ·1 J I railroads conct.'de. And they contend that finely ground coal in liquid form, flowing continuously from the mine, is essential to the rapid con- version or the nation's power industry from oil to C'Oal . The ra ilroads deny all t he pipeline claims exeept that new pipelines would be cheaper to build than new rail lines. But they say • nearly all coal could be hauled on existing rail lines. Order Yours NOW ••• •EASY TO USE •ORDER FOR YOURSELF OR A FRIEND SH A"f AND SIZE OF LABEL ""''· Jol'ln Doe 123 Mein Slr••I Anytown, Any1te t• l 1J'$ r ------------,--------fill in thl1 C-OWP91', clip •nd m•ll wlth 11.SOt•: Pilot Printing LAbel Div .• Pott Office Box 1 ~60 Cott• Mu., C.lifornlo 92626 •• • .,., ....... Y"" are c.t. "''·''l;§hjjp ------------- Housing Recovery Said 'Slow, Painful Journey' BOCA RATON , t'la. - "Without a vigorous housing r e- covery I do not believe we will soon see real prosperity in America," Nathaniel H. Rogg Executive Vice President of th~ National Association of Home Rllilders told the Home Builders Association or South florida here recently. The housing industry is on the road to recovery but It is a slow painful journey and ol a patteni 'A'ilh the recovery or lbe general economy which, Rogg saJd, is ··uneasy. uneven and wtcertain. ·· ''Mistaken governmental policy in dealing with the twin is- sues of inflation and recovery from the recession" U primarily to blame for the nation's current l'C'onomic plight, he said. "I FEEL THAT the Federal lteserve Board, in its approach to monetary policy, is still mis· reading the forces of inflation which it is fighting. They are targeting at the notion that the economy is too loose and too speculative, and therefore, it is necessary to follow a moderately tight policy when they should be following expan sive monetary policy. "When inOation is proceeding at a 7 to 8 percent rate, an in- crease in tbe money supply of on- ly 7 percent provides absolutely no room for recovery, makes for a flat or declining economy, and results in interest rate increases which are detrimental. particularly to housing_'' Rogg said the Administration has been ''overly optimistic" about the outlook for housin& "perha-pe to prevent them rroni having lo come to grips with re- ality."' HE PREDICTED that •tarts for 1975 probably would be al about a 1.1 million level or less than haU the production level of 1972-73. The prospects for in - creased production in multifami· ly units are glum, he said, and "no real recovery in housing is possible until we can gel multifam ily housing started again." Rogg expressed concem about the continuing upward trend or interest rates despite record in- flow of funds to thrift institutions. "It is as though the law of supply and demand has been repealed with respect to the price of money." he said. "When money is tight, interest rates go up ; ~hen money is readily available, mterest rates go up." Rogg said it is "imperative to find our way out of the ~nomic jungle, which is dominated by the concept that tight money and high interest rates are a way to control inflation, when it is qi.tile clear that high interest rates in- crease prices, divert funds Crom long-term investment to short.- term consumption-oriented ex- penditures and encourage spttulative rather than produc- tive loans." ROGG SAID THE Adminislr&· tion had made "an excellent move" in reinstituting tbe Sec· tion 23S home ownership pro- gram. e\•en ln Its revised form . Properly administered, "it can be a good tool for housing people just below the median income level." he said. But he expressed concern about the program's mortgate limits which are some SZS,000 in most areas and 128,000 in high C'OSt areas. He also ex- pressed C'oncern about the in· come limits but said that talks are under way with HUD M<'retary Carla Hills about mak· ing adjustments. For the future he foresaw "more government involvement in our business'' and a closer rel a tionship between the overall economy and the housing scene than we witnessed in the first post-war generation. The "in· geniO\lS and flexible builder" of moderate size will be able to ad- just to the changes more rapidly than the larger builder organiza- tions , he said. HE ALSO FORESAW "contin- uing attacks on our sources of money supply .. and greater con- cern about housing's problems as a growing housing shortage be!'omes a major national pro- blem. Koll Center Draws ) Two More Tenants-/ Population trends toward single family households, elderly retired people and of newly mar- ried couples, suggesting a hous- ing market which is looking for smaller and possibly less costly housing accommodations, he said. As to housing starts, "we are seeking to develop a consensus around the need for at least a 1.8 million level, 700,000 above this year"s . This is a level which we think is not only viable but is absolutely necessary," Rogg said. A manufacturer of race car engine parts and a collector of antique cars h ave purchased condominium units in Koll/Irvine Center, Southern California's first industrial con- dominium project , according to John Alstrom, Koll/Irvine sales manager. Troutman-Barnes, a manufac- turer of race car parts, engines and automotive prototypes, has relocated from its Culver City facilities to a 4,800-square-foot _ unit at 3198-L Airport Loop Drive. The sale pricewa.s $96,900. I.eland R . House Jr. of Hunt- ington Beach purchased a Coast Man Retains Board Post 6,400-square-foot condominium unit for the restoring of antique cars at 3198-J Airport Loop Drive. The sale price was $126,500. Koll/Irvine Center has com- pleted construction of its third phase of development with 23 or the 33 units, many with pre- finished office s pace, already sold or leased. A fourth and final phase of the 101 -unit project is scheduled to begin construction early next year, Alstrom said. Koll /Irvine Center is located at the intersection of the San Diego and Newport Freeways, adja- cent to Orange County Airport at Red Hill Avenue. 11. Another problem facing home builders is the increasing gov- Prnmental regulation at the na- tional, state and local levels af- fecting land use and the environ- ment, Rogg said. NAHB's answer to the proponents of no-- growth is "Sensible Growth," he said. and NAHB is backing legal efforts to overturn a Boca Raton regulation r estricting the city to 40.000 dwelling units a nd a Broward County, F1orida impact tax. George H. Cofrin III, regional r epresentative of Investors Mortgage Insurance Company in Newport Beach, was re· elected to serve a three· year term on the Board of Governors of the American Society or Real Estate Counselors during its recent annual meeting. The society's 1976 of· ficers. elected in May, are president, Neil J . King, Skokie, Illinois; f irst vice presid1ent, Francis H . Andrews. Portland. Oregon ; and second vice president, George f'-l . Lovejoy, Boston, Massachusetts. NEAR FALLBROOK-UN PLANTED ACREAGE ALSO r. ----- - - - - - - - -, OR CALL I ~~filRNIAREALTY : JACL~ BUCK I ~~~:CALIFORNIA. CA 92390 I co ECT I I I NAME I (714) 676-5688 I I The society, a pro· fessional affiliate of the National Association of Realtors, \11as formed in 1953 to meet the public need for competent, dis- interested and indeoen- dent real estate advice. I ADDRESS I A DEVELOPMENT OF I I KAISERfftiuP.i I CITY STATE --l !f-' I I I COU11TESY TO I LICENSED LlELE~~:_No _J BHCJl'\ERS BROKER • l\l,,11:11111·t l 7'illas Adult Condominium Home• in the Preali6iotu Jf'e1tcli// Area of Ne-~port &o,ch • l)t·rorulor ~·a ll-lo·\\u ll car11cti11 g • F.11(·lo!<<'tl (ltilif) t•r llnl<"011Y • llrcakfasl l>:1r • Co 111i11u o11~..c··Jca11i11E' o"·en l!.'42,000 to i,44,000 2 IJedroon1!I • 2 Baths S••1•arate Dining Area 'I / l -7' ' .... • lt·e-111 :tk t•r rrfriilfcralor i'..... f 11•11 • Ah11111ln111 do .. ·t •pace ~ 'f!ll1101" I fl ... .. '• • llrnJ',f'rief' • Log-l1nr11i11g firc1,1u,·c • l\lirroretl closcl tloors • 3 l1cnlf•tl &wi111nti1ig pool.s /IR<1 .J256 Hu1l~1r1d Roatl l\'Pll'I'"'"' l l1•11t'l1 . ,;nfif. 926f1Q .<;111"~ U f/ir•• 1•11d11 ••: ( 71 •I ) fl ·l ,'i ·HJ 7 :I . r OPEN BEAM CEILING IN OEANE MODEL HOME More Than 80 Percent of Serles Sold Most Deane Homes In Uni Park Sold Less than ont'·fifth of the homes to be built by Deane Homes in the I rvine village of University Park remain to be sold, ac<'ording to Cary Garland, director of marketing for the na- tionally honored homebuilding firm. Four of the five plans offerC'<l by Deoanc at Univ<'rsity Park have been accorded "C'.old '.\'ug - geot" awards , in competition with homes from throughout tbe 14 we-stern states. The fifth plan. made available for the first time Ju.st over a m onth ago, is expect- ed to be entered in the 1975 com- peotition . The 47-acre neighborhood in- cludes a total of 230 residential units and a five acre private park with pool and tennis courts for the exclusive use of its residents. DF.ANE HOM F.S in University Park are located jus t off University Drive. about a mile and a half east of Culver Drive, across from a 345-acre regional park and just a few miles from the campus of the University of California, Irvine. Deane plans at University Park range in size from 1,430 to 2,440 square feet . v.dth prices starting at $70,500. !\1ost compact or tht> plans is the sin~le story t\110-lx>droom, t "'o-bath ''Walden." A wall length planter next to tht> rre<'- standing, glass-enclosed s ho"·er in the ma s ter bath is one dramatic ft>aturC' of the home, as i:> the ltigh vaulted ceiling of the living room. ~od el home s at Beane University Park are open daily from 10 a.m. until dusk, and may be reached by taking the Culver Drive offr amp from either the Santa Ana or the San Diego freeways and traveling toward the beach. Turn left on Universi- ty Drive and travel about a mile and a half to the entrance of the development. ------- IN HUNTINGTON BEACH , DAILY PILOT (;S Beachwalk iJ I Townhomes ~ Move Fast ' Octan-area hom~ken: ar\· buying new townhomes at the rate of almost four per week in the ~achwallt community in lluntington Beach, report:i lhc builder, A.J . Hall Corporation. Buyer enthusiasm is a ttributed tv thl' availability of the remain 1ng homes in Unit 4 for im- mt."'diate occupancy. Abo bnng- ing response is the complete select ion of bome8 just in- troduced In a choice center sec uon of the development. BEACllWALK IS located within 1.500 yards of the ocean In the exclusive Huntington Seacllff are-a, across from the 18-hole golf <'OUrse of Jluntington Seacliff Country Club and a $300,000 pnvate tennis club. Private recreation is provided -y,·ithin Beachwalk's extensive. landscaped greenbelt areas for the exclusive use o( re!ldents. There are t"'O deluxe clubhouses. a junior-size Olympic swimmlng pool, cabana buildina: with s aunas, outdoor therapy pool and volleyball court. \Vben complete. the community will have sevt!n pools. Prices or the one and two story luxury to"·nhomes range from $52,000 to $70,000 and a choice of five distinctive floor plans is of· fered. The homes have two, three or four bedrooms with two, 2~~ and thr~ baths. THE BF.ACHWALK re · sidences feature s uch custom- q u al it y appointme nts as dramatic living rooms with vaulted ceilings and fireplace::i "'ith ceramic tile hearths, large family rooms and optional wet bars in some plans, and ceramic tile entries. Furnished model homes ar~ open daily from 10 a.m . at Beach"·a\k, with representatives of Donald Bird Realty, exclusive sales agent, on the premises. A select number of the townhomes qualify for the $2,000 federal in- <'Ome tax credit, the sales agent noted. Beacbwalk may be reached by taking the San Diego Freeway to the Beach Boulevard exit, then drive south on Beach five miles to Pacific Coast Highway. Tum right on Pacific Coast High"·a:y to Golden West Street, then rig~t on Golden West for one-quartty mile to Beachwalk in HLD1tingtl1 Beach. : LUXURY LIVING LESS THAN 1 MILE FROM THE BEAC EVERYTHING'$ INCLUDED IN THE PRICE: •Shag carpeting • Custom fireplaces •Deluxe "Ultra-bright" country kitchens •Wet bars •Shake roofs •Concrete drives • 3-car garages • 3 baths • Front lawns with a tree and sprinklers • Rear and side yard fencing • 2200 square feet of living area MOVE IN NOW $61,900 to $68,900 ' [_,o.1 11cl 1na1·k N 110 •• 11 ... 1'1 • ~ Oa•11fl a11 • ' !Ill~ avt ;::- ! (714) 842·7497 ' ~ • ASK ABOUT OUR "HOUSE-OF-THE-WEEK" SPECIALS I Landmark Romes • • I • DAILVPILOT Sunday. November 30, 1975 I I Choice Sites Re.ailJ Real, Estate •I I , ·''Questions/Comment Landmark Going O Laguna Village Marks Events I A few months agowewerecbargedovertz,000 as • prepa)'mf'ot penalty by the savlqg1t& loan that held Ille morta1e against our property. Tbat burt. I beard wbtcould becood aews, is it true. . Jstbf're now a new law reculaUog lbecosta lbata lndeTcan <"barce you wbenyou pay off your loan? If -, wlaat are the costs and bow are they fl&ures and appied! Thanks, T.M.NewportBe1cb Under a new law NO -µre -payment penalties eould be C'harged against a loan on an owner· 1 occupied single family dwelling after the loan was ft.Ye years old . California homt..'owners may s ave thousands o! dollars wht'n they sell their home, under a bill signed last month by Governor Brown. Theintentorthecon- surner oriented bill, authored and successfully moved through thf' Legislature by Sen. Dennis Carpt>nter <R-Newport Beach), i~ to provide a more realistiC' markt·tabilityof property by curtailing pre- payment pen a I li<"s on home loans. The bill will affe<>l home loans on owner· OCC'upied sirtgle family residences made after J anuary 1. 1976. "In todays mobile society the average Californian moves every five or six years,·· explaine~ Carpenter. "In selling their homes they often fare pre-paymentpenaJLies ranging from three to 10 per<'e nt of the loan ·s unpaid bal ance, creating a tremendous burden on the homeowner.·· Moreover , during the firs t five years or such a Joan the ownt>r could prepay up to one-fifth of the original principle in any one year WI THOUT pt>nalty. Prepayment penaJties could be charged on any amount in excess of 20 percent of the original loan wh.ich was paid in one 12-month period. This penalty would be limited to not more than six months' in- terest on the amount prepaid which is in excess of 20 percent of the original loan. EDITOR 'S NOTE Randall R. f1.1cCardle 1s an mvestment analyst, college lecturer. and author•of "Real Estate in California." Send your comments .and questions to Randall R. Mccardle , clo the Daily PiWt . P .O. Box 1560, Costa Me sa. Dana Light Homes Have Tax Credit In addition lo their special '"12 Months BEi"fore the Payments Plan.·· Dana Llght ocean view con- dominiums also qualify for the $2,000 tax credit. According to Rod Gilliland, director of sales, "Those who buy before Dec. 31, 1975, will have an opportunity to recapture their down payment in the form of the $2,000 tax credit on their 1975 tax re· turn.'' The special "12 A-1onths Before the Payments Plan" is being offered (or a limited time and con- _-ists of the buyer making the normal 10 percent down payment. Dana Light then will make the en- tire monthly principal and interest payments for up to one year. For that period of time, the only pay· menu required are taxes and the homeowners' o: rees. Priced Crom a low of $38,950, Dana Light two and three bedroom, two bath condominiums are 1ocated in Dana Point with a six-mile ocean view. A heated pool with jacuzzi. saunas for men and , women and lighted tennis courts are a few or the amenities included. All the homes are located 1 within a private security guard-gated community .with garden-lit sidewalks, private streets and cob· ,blestone entrance roads. Located minutes from the Dana Point Marina ,on the Street of the Blue Lantern, just above Pacific Coast Highway, the furnished models are open dai- ly. Phone 496-4552 . BOAT HOUS E! 621 Lido Park Drive. 011 the water in Newpart Beach. For people \\'ho love the sea and th~ thin g~ of it . Thirty·~ix: of the tnost desirable \vaterfront i.:o ndominium homes ever available. (A slip for every l1ome!) A rare opportunity to ~ras1> life by the hand and live rt the Ylf\)' you've always dreamed it should he .. Jo youij, free Hnd close to the sea. Do it no\v! You've waited long enough. Two bedroom. two bed room and den condominiums from $140,000 Excellent financini:-81.'.""o interest (8~lk A.P.rt) ---------, I 621 Lldo RrkDrive 1 I Newport Beach: . ~ 1 Calif. 92660 ~ I <11•> a1s.1010 =-= I ~1140 You're right! J have waited too Jong. I J'd like to receive n1ore informntion I on 62l l.ido Park Orivt>. I I .N1me Phone Wh1Je a few choice selections re. main, vlsiton are adviaed to view the 1..andmark home Bolsa community as 3000 u possible accordlng to sales manager Bill Walker. According to Walker, the Landmark Ho.mes, Bol sa Chica homesite is the area's mo1t complete new home package. FEATURES INCLUDED in the purchase price are shae carpeting ln the living room, master bedroom suite, haJl and stairway; fatted air gas beating units; step-down living and family rooms; rear and side yard fencing with gate; concrete driveways; shake rools ; and deluxe- equipped kitchens with continuous cleanin& double ovens. Also included is a new porcelain lined deluxe dis- hwasher, formica countertops, garbage disposal, and luminous ceil- ings. All plans feature roomy pan- tries. Fireplaces are natural wood burn· ing with ga' outie~-The bathrooms are equipp;ed with showers over all tubs. while some have separate s hower stalls with full helghtb ceramic tile walls . They also feature culturN marble pu.ltmans, custom ,hardware and tubs of long lasting pressed steel. THE TWO·STORY homes are locat· ed in Huntington Beach on the southwest corner or Talbert and Edwards Street, between Warner Avenue and Garfield Street. They ere priced Crom $64 ,900 to $68,900 with conventional financing available. The choice or exteriors gives the project a near custom home appearance and avoids the monotony which afflicts some new home de- velopments. The homes are designed by R.J . Marvick & Associates. FUrnished models were decorated by Brownie Rowe Interiors of Beverly Hills. For information phone 842-7497 REAL ESTATE New O ffice In Newport Construction h al!I begun on a new 3,000 square foot office build- in& at 206 Riverside in Newport Beach, accord· i ng to owner-builder Tom Grogg. The one -story Mariner's Cove building, complete with tower, will house six suites. LQwla VW•a•. a $45 m.llllon townbom• oon· domlnlum oommwllq,celebnted tbneevenla lhla put weekend : I. The tlllrd pbue a(l5 townhomes pl OD Hie. 2. The flrlt re1ldenls bqln morin& In. 3 •. The NOl),000 recreation axnplex o~. llundreda of .,... bomeoeeker• •U...ima weebod •ctiriUeo at themodelolldrecre•tlm-. The 914·1lOlt development, which off en YleWI of the Slddleb•ck V.Uey, bu .U two-story townbome coadomlnlum1 In the third pbue, pri~ from $43,llOO to "8,800. Two end three bedrooms end two balhl ore offered, The ftoor plans nry In me from approxlmately l ,~ to 1,665 1q11are feet of llvinll ....a. LAGUNA VILLAGE, LOCATED weal on Canada Road off tbe Sin Diego l'reewoy, baa con· dominiums grouped in dusters ol tbfff to five UD· its. nve decorated models are open from 10 a.m. daily and there is a 3,000 square foot decorator ttnltt at the sales complex. Building Push Urged The recreation center features a 5,500 1quue fool ch1bbouse and three pools, includlu tbeupy pool. The clubhouse has a spacious maln lounge with wet bar and large fireplace. card room, kitchen and activity rooms, billiard room and men's and women's saunas. There is a children's play area, two reauJation·sl1ed double tennis courts,· lawn bowling field and a sand.lot volleyball rou.rt. Clubhouse areas can be partitioned oft as well . J . S. Norman, Jr., pre-theeconomy, sident or the 74,000- member National As- socia t ion o( Home Builders <NA HB ), has urged President Ford to set a minimum housing production target of 1.8 million units over the next 12 months to stimulate production and employment throughout In an hour-long meet· ing with President Ford at the White House last week which Norman described as "cordial and constructive." the NAHB leader said this goal could be achieved through implementation of a number of federal programs, including re· lease of SS billion in Cranston-Brooke funds -a program which pro- vides 7 '1': pt>rcent mortgage money for middle income families. The construction of 700,000 additional units -the differ e nce between actual produc· tion expected this year of l .l million units and the 1.8 million-unit target- would create one million man-years of work and reduce government out- lays for unemployment compensation, Norman said. In addition, this new construction would help moderate housing prit'es. relieve pressures for rent increases and generate $5.S million in federal taxes. AT LAGUNA VIUAGE, parking is a major ronsideration. Two can can be accommodated in the garaee facility oC each tawn.home, and an addi· tional parking space per residence is available on the street in special areas. Homeowners pay a $50 mon(bly fee to cover all mailltenance of townbome exteriors, greenbelts, personal water bill, recreation amenities, fire in· surance on each residence and a master TV anten· nasy1tem. Conventional financing is available with 10 per· rent down. · Expires Dec. 31, 1975. On March 29 the President signed into law the Tax Reduction Act of 1975. In simple terms it means that on homes that qualify; you can receive up to a $2,000.00 credit on your 1975 in come tax if you purchase a qualified new home prior to December ~1st, 1975. The trick is finding a new home you'd consider buying that qua lifies. At Village Walk and Newport Terrace our homes do! And not just a couple of obscure models either, but all of them. So there's plenty of selection. Both commu nities are established prestigious villages in the heart of the thriving South Coast area. Village Walk features sexy. chalet·like, trHevel floorplans just moments from Soulh Coast Plaza. newport le1·race $40,995 With exciting touches like soaring wood beamed cei lings, skylit lofts and rooftop gardens. Plus a sophisticated social life for the successful young at heart. Newport Terrace is near the sea in Newport Beach. Here you'll discover luxurious 2 and 3 bedroom town homes with fireplaces. beamed ceilings and dual master sui tes. And just for the fun of it there·s a private 15·acre meadow, pools. sauna. jacuzzi , volleyball and a list of other adult playthings you won·t believe. If there has ever been a time to buy this is it because when these rebate qualified homes are gone there won 't be any more. And besides. how many times have you seen Uncle Sam this generous? lake lhe San Diego Freeway 10 the Fairriuwexrt Northc.iem1le.Orphone t71 'J 556-1161 $37,995 I Street City,Stt'lte,Zip _) G:r Under the direction of Ring Brothfin mi....---. hftl..1111 --I : 0...loprn•nl Corp. -a--..... ,.tt.'!.=.-:;·~· nc. IB!l,,,,. ........ ----~ .............................. ~!~ .......................................................... ~ .... ::::"""'::;. ' ' ' ' ... ~ ~·- •• ttAUAI ...... DAILYPILOT ... , Hawaiian Islands OAHU ,<§ NllllAU Ho~ MOLOKAI m:~AUI HAWAII 40 • "'I . \ ~ KAtlOOLAWI LANAI HAWAII Pacific Ocean .. • ~ :• ....._ ___________________ .. ,,. -""' ~· .• . l . ._' . . . . ·Earthquake! • i ... ~: .. • Two strong earthquakes Jolted Iha town ol Hilo and Ila aunoundlng area In Kiiauea on Iha lalarid ol Hawaii Saturday<-mep) and cauHd wldaapraed c1a,,,... and near panic as .ahocka spread tlvough the "Big Island." Molten lave spewed from a nearby volcano, moat active In the world • . Sl:enea ranged from the puzzlement ol a dlaplacad cat (left) to the Industrious sweeping up ol broken glaaa by a ll1o merchant (below left), atepa that lead to nowhere alter being knocked askew on Hiio home (bel-) and fishermen uprighting a boat while earth moving equipment dears sway a qua-uaad mudslide (bottom photos). One man waa known kllled and several -re Injured (story on Page A1 ). Photo• by llnlfed Pre•• lnfernaflonal I ' ' . I ' •82 OAILYPILOT For the Record Db•olutlon1 01 /lfarrfage l"li.<110<•-•H Clr•YMI, R1t1Wo•U I> '"" AnQelll'Wo C ~l•v•I, (ll•n ...... u••tn •ncl A-f1 ..... l'ttr,....r, RowM .,,,. O•nl•I C. ~. Emm• LOU•l'lll ll>O""''A, !opurtln , f'•lm•r O•Cll1ott •n<I ... _., ....... Ml:Gf•t", Ooro•"• £ . .,,e1w1111...,H SnwM•inon, ""4•¥ "'°"'"' •M a.11y .... Kf•mer. Tnr11.,. o .,,ef'reo11(• ~ tl:tioe.•, ll<t1l1 J•l'lt •ncl J•m•~ £. \lrfn,ll•,,.;•( -Jt~l4 McM!lt1•n, J<1\11.,.une \.. . .nct Ken .. , .. ... Go ... 1. 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Allen. Lloytl C. Incl !.Mr1n M. 5-k'Yln:•. f.l111bllll Land Fr ... kA.. McGcl'IMrl, °"""•'J. lftd Terr•nu P. ~, INrlMl'l.t M. 1nd J1mes B. ,..the<.""" (H1nl'l.tl'll ..,., Alec. • c:ro1-H, Henr' A. Ind 0.borlh -· • NDtl. Johfl M. """ Glwl1 J . --f'tlim, Urry W•yne Ind Kittle ·-. • Smllll, Betty L•I •nd How1rd • Nortnll'I. : 09 La«!, LlllCll Jl1qutl 11'1111 Jn1 ..... Mlr11 .. J,HeN'yJ.•nd £1¥1. : Mkk.t"f', Jl"lt Glrnl1r 1nd Gsy'N!!t- • IMO. • ~S~NDlll111dWl!ldllle. • 5'wlk. RICflotl'Cll Ch•'11r Incl (M1Nft : IN-I•. JllMIOn,. Mlrfln Llrvy •lld ~·· .... • ¥•••rtl1l11, F1y M••ln• •nd • NoltMnlel £. • Y11,Mn1nd~. • 1'1110l, Be.irk• at1d Ff en It S. : F1-,C.rolN1111nd TModoreW. Vl1rr1, Wllll1m A. 1nd Lll'ldl s.a ...... Roff, ...,,.,_ ...o J1me1 w. -..w.11. Sulln M. at1d Alchll'd 8. R1mlr11, Donn• K•Y 1nd Dewld "''°'· er-, ~I Plolrlclt 1nd JDMne ..... Forel.J.tmn £. ll!d Jllll' L """"" ROl'l.tld Ind n... A. WIUl.rnl, Dlboreh M. ll!d s.m.-4 W. JIG}R. GlrclellMICI J11 .. ntl110. ltlmblll, Sherron A.. lftd Jot>n C-ln. "· HUOC-hl. Br•nl Ev•n •nd ~ INrll. Atlmlrwl. Elvlrl A~l Ind Jolin. !'111110, Mlf"ltllrll Mlrll Ind Aolll<1 ........ ,.. WiHL ,.,MMA.. Ind O.wld A. llekl'lboerlll, Judi y . 9ftd ,,.,,.,_ Y,1rr11t. Diion11ct •nd s,1 .. 11. C\'P'I-, E1ltltf' lfld E\IOlfll Sit-. !MlldOltt, Eric Al"" lnod Neclll. Cllrw, hal1A.lndW1ll•rH. F, Urson, P•trlcl1 Bv•r 11'\d GleM ....... Soldlfl, £1tt>er -.l1Uc...,11 L. Hor1n. P•11' Su1 11111 Robl•t -WtU1". WIUl1m Tftotnsl •nd Plul• .JDHplllne. ~,ClrolUIMld Altll•rd~•. Huddle, E.dl111 Mne Incl Toby Ja.. Flll'lll,.effrl'l .... H . Mic 0-0... O..rll\ A. Jr. Ind Miry ·• L 1(1114, Dwl,f'll L•ul1e •lld L'l'f'I ....... Sml01, l!rm• Llf'ICll ll'ld De•ld ._..,,, -, V1Mk,C....i.Mt11ndAll111J"'* ' "'"""° ... "*'11 Dwprll, Br.nt W.t>b ~ "-!t'k.11 -5"1111\ Debblotll'MI Ol•l\t A.. HIWll'f, $UtMI A. IM Br!M N. ~. WllKlm Alltfl llll\t N!WltYNn .-• ....,...II, l'tlrkl• Allf'I •nd Vlrlmn'I I-t s.1u...,Jolllllllue1nd Joflnf'lle~ -· .,..~lfl, .. tlce M, l'nd Wllll•m H. ~,Jvwllel'.lftdT~tH. Ii ...,....,, .llflft MOrrft Ind....,,~ ' • ,,..1\, "°""' ... Cllftrf!ll fir..,_., GfM l'I' •1'1111 01-LM• ·-• """""'llltl'I I . lfld~1"J. ~ C1itt. C..-LR 11\d •-14 L. '~lit1CfltlMlftdlll<"'nlJatwo ' .. ..,_ 11fw,LyllLMIMl1191 .. .. Quleo!M,. ~ 0. lfld C1¥9rl .. _ .. "" S1t1111, Gtrol A. IM 'f"""8• ~ ~ Rvfl'tl.lfld •-1• • MCQirdW',,._rt_ll'ld~ .. tt. • l•rlll,, M•r' AH<• •"'d .,.ler :-tcllllt, Al19'1O.lllN01""' ....,_.. '°OU<Ot4, I~• I . ..0 &,_.,.. H. ~ .............. ~ Y-.nt.~1.tnflllkM1111 ~Allllrt IAllll..W ... tric. ,...,. • •, Sunda , November JO. 197~ ~.':':.~ ........ 1~.':':'. ~ ....... . D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 ro-ol IOOZ-nl ,toOZ ... , .................................... ~·~··· The Bluett Marbll>loo• on '!» 0.-. Cout ~.=·=:. . ,....,.,. DAILY PILOT CLA.SSIFIED ADS .... --......... ..... -.-. -·--.. """"··-· ,_.. )000~ __ .. ,..,. __ ""' ' ...... \0)0,,.., "°"'~" & ._ ...... ~ You Con Sell It, Find It, [ 642 567&] T rode It With a Wont Ad • Hou1H For SaM ••••••••••••••••••••••• Goe-ftft"al I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEWPORT HEIGHTS $49,500 Th~s lovelv 11-HH, 2-ba ho1nl' 1s nl·stlcd on '' <1u1 l·I t·ul 111~-~ur, on a ..:1ant lot ~·ith 111111.: kl11tl:t of fr111t lri,:i'!t, ~rnp1•s and herrll'!i, 11nd a l ;~r,.:e gardt..'n ilrl'" \Valk to shopplni:! and schools too. Plenty of room for OI pool. J\Js8umitblc Jo'JI,\ loan. HOLIDAY ROAD ,\ very s peri;ll cu:ttom hu1ll :-hake roor1·tl bt'au- l ), 2 Us c1I b ric k rireplarcs, 3 t)('dro11n1.'>, 2 baths, sep11 ratc garage . Only sru.~IOO Ruth Laurie,A.9ent 646-4380 $1 0,000 Under Market Beautiful 4·BH , 21h h;i , two.story ho 1n c ~·1th pool. den, and Sl'parall• din1n.i:: roorn. Hom01nllc arched, beamed enter· tainment area surround- ing pool. Extrava gantly spacious and located near Bal acr1c School. Owner be1n~ relocut1..-d . Priced at $79,500. One like it sold ror $89,500. W ESLEY N TAYLOR CO . RE1\LTOHS >Ille•· l!H H HOUDA Y SPECIAL! OHL Y $14,500 Let 's make this a special gift for the yr. to that special fa mily or yo urs! Really sh":Q' ! s. 6 or 7 Bdnns ! Lge yd . '\ 'HDA ISLE -SUPlll ELIGAHT Ex~i si t e NE WS BR Fre nch Traditional w/beautiful water view. Pier /slip for lge boat. Fam rm , lgc play rm, formal DR, pool & SI> bas. 76 LINDA ISLE DR . DAILY 1-5 U9UISITE IS ntE WORD fo'or this unusua l offering w/3 BR & maids rm. T erraced gardens o'look buy & f~ashion Island . Imported fountains , marble & beaul. appts. LIHDA ISLE-MAIM IAY VIEW J-landsome Mexican contemporary for easy living! 5 BR. 51h bas. Delightful bayside t errace. Teakwood, abundant tile, high ceili ngs. Dock 3 boats. J6LINDA ISL E DR. SAT/SUN 1-5 H.Y. HILLS IUUTT! $115.000 Meticulous ly m aintained ' 3 BR Sausalito model by Lusk . Love & care makes this the sharpest! Land incl. CASUAL AHD COMFOITAILE In Newport Beach -yet hidden away on beaut. tree· lined cul de sac st. Spac. 4 BR. FR home. Lge yard. view. Recently upgraded and only $89,500 2319HEATHER LNE. SAT/SUN1·5 21 I I s.., J....,.. His Raed HEWPORT CEHTEll. N.L 644-49 I 0 Chestnuts Roastinq , Hy the opt·n f1rl' uf this Gmeral 1002 Ci.._rot 1002 lov('ly 4 llr home 1n N. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa r.l(•sa. F:111uly 11111, Dining Hm. and funtastil· back yurd for Santa 's re· indeer. ()nly $1800 down & yo u 'll h1· 111 by (;hris tn1as. Foll price $48,700. Call Dover Really 645-9070 or 646-1514 FIX E ll UPPER $19,950. For immed. sale-estatl' property-as is condition LarJlC w('ll l'Onstructcd house -lar..:e lot , frui t trees. rorner . Dni.·e by FOREVER VIEW Cd M duplex on R-2 lot located on Bi g Corona Beach. A few steps to crashing waves. Superlative 180 degree vie w of main channel, Catalina, and beaches. Private road access and guest parking, architettural plans and permit for additional unit. Open 1·5 Sat /Sun . 3030 Brealer1! Drive. Asking Sl72.500 . ROGER "S REALTY . 675·2311. One Call Service Fast Credit Approval ....-........... -·-' ; -·· H.- OPEN HOUSES SUH. I ·5 115T lllT 11 Greenbrier Ln., Big Canyon Beautiful 4·bedroom. highly upgraded home with H /F pool, jacuzzi. fire· ring and waterfaU. $177,500. FANTASTIC 865 Sandcastle. Harbor Vi ew Hills 4-Bedroom. professlooally decorated lhruout, 21>·baths. ~car gar plus huge swimming pool. $124.950. MOVE IH 4800 Cortland. Cameo llighlands 4·Bedroom. 21>·balh. huge living rm, log burning fireplace. Home surrounds patio. Owner will carry financing. $89,950. 640-6600 35' SAHMIGUB.Dll HEWl'OllT llEACH BAY AN D BEACH G75-3000 •' '' '' loo ',-, • I<••"'•• .,.,.,, ~Yl<rw Luxuriously built for builder1! own home. Everything just like new. 2 huge bedrooms & 2 baths PLUS separate suite & bath on upper floor . s11s.ooo. Opea Sat. & sun. l ·S. 225 Santa Ana Av e. Newport Beach. A .. 1.-far i..- 2 Br Front home with fireplace-Close to ocean in choiee Corona del Mar area. $375 mo. 3 Br 2 Ba & Fireplace, just above Big Corooa Beach. $525 mo. Open Sun. 1-5. 206 Fernleaf. BAY & BEACH REALTY Owl6111T- 1oozro ....... 1 I 00% I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! IOoM.... IOOZ I0101nol 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• LIDO ISLE Lido Nord. 4BR, family rm., 3 ba. Pier & float. $249,500 Like new! Lido Sood 4 BR, 4 ba. I-Owner. Custom bayfronl. Lawn, patio. jacuui; pier & float. $325,000 Waterfront, Lido Nord. 6 BR . or 4 BR. & 2 BR. apt. On sandy beach. $285,000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bny\1d1· Dr•vt· NB 67S 6161 • 1002GtMral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 4511 CAMDEH. CAMEO SHORES Dramatic Ivan We)l.5 ! Dance under the STARS in the hu ge t e rrazzo entertainment area with SLIDING ROOF & VIEW the sunset over Catalina fr<?m this 4 bdrm., formal dining. family rm. home nestled in this -exclusive PRIVATE BEACH comm. Priced to sell!! ! ! IY Al'l'OINTM&fr CALL THE RESIDENT SPECIALISTS 673-7040 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• OUT$TAHDIHIO-FIEI STANDING Bluffs Condo; 3 spacious bdrms., 21> baths -move in condition -many decorative extras. Bright . wrap-around patio. $76,000 C.F. COLESWORTHY 640.0020 USTILUff:. CENTIR · GioMNI 1002 li101nol 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• GREEHIROOK RANCHO 5 .~~~oL SAN JOAQUIN sl~~~~E 2 IR-Den-2BA AIAHDONED $69.500 H •RRY 1 •aam Formal entry. Sunken ... "" living rooln with floor to RHltor .. 644-1559 ceiling fi?eplace & 18" 1~~~~~~~~~~1vaulted ceilings. Open gallery & library. Enter· LOW, LOW tainers delight wet bar. Huge family party room DOWN adjoins terrace thru wall 124 E. Edinger. then call 642·9601or67S·Ol44 Agt. G...eral 1002 -.... 1002 GIMMll I 002 Gr1tcral 1002 Comesee thisluxurious J of g las s. Formal bedroom 2 bath shake separ ate dining room. • roof home with large Large garden view yard a nd boat gate. kitchen with eating area. Owner's so anxious Two separate master they'll even take a car, suites. 4 Baths. Sweeping boat, camper. house. stairs lo massive bonus ASSUME 7% LOAM ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... BARHARIOR $228PERfl'<40. Prestige approach. Co1.y pa rlor . Stone hearth fireplace . Go urmet:i kitchen. F ornl:ll dine room rami1 y area. FA51" POSSE SS I ON POSSIBL E . O wn er bought another & very an.JtiOWi · lake over his loan · no new loan costs. Hurry for this .. cream. puff". Call 546·2313. Ol'fN Ill 0 ·ti S ,UN !QM N'(f• [~ll~~lttl Newport Beach lmmtd. PossesJ. Opeo Dally 1-5 1633 Highland Dr. Near Westcliff Pl aza & all schools. Newly de· cor .. in mo\•e-in condi- tion! Ideal home for the young executive with the g rowing family . 5 Bdrms, 3 baths, ramily rm. with frplc., all bit-in kitc h en with scJr . cleaning oven; encl. landscaped patio en- trance. Pool-size rear yard. Priced at only $94,SOO. Owner \lo'ill finance. Rancho Calif. Located in the Sandia Ranchos or the Santa Rosa Mountains. 22+ Acres. 16 Acres planted in Hass, Fuerte, Bacon & Zutano Avorados for year around fruit. Care & management avail. ror absent<'e owner. Ex · cellent terms avail. at a sal e pri ce o f only $145,430. Also avail. various parcels. vacant or planted. Phone now for further informaUon. "C" THOMAS REALTOR 234W.CoastHwy. N'pl Beach 548-5S27 EVF.S : 545·5643 •VIEW* Best in lrvine Terrace 3800 Sq. ft . on front row. 4·Bdrm, 4 'h·ba. pool. Xlnl investment al $200,000. 675-6060 HAYE CAKE Rave you r cake & eat il too as the saying goes. It a1Uld happen to you i! }IO\J buy a unique duplex ia Corona dcl !lo1 ar . Live la one, get income from th e other . We ha ve several. Ask about the one on Narcissus a t 1124.950. LAST CHAHCE FOR TAX SHELTER We have a few income PIDPE!rties whe re the of· ftr can be constructed to ilklude prepaid interest & poina. Up to 50% or Ytur down payment can .:========='-1 be50% or more soft (de· d!X'table) Hurry . We ha·1e to clO!le this year . Cal us for details SUPERIVIEW MESA VERDE Fairwa ys, g r een s, water , palms-spread oul before you in panoramic splendor. 4,300 Sq. rt. of superior COMPANY desigr. & custom quality REALTOHS cons truction . Thls 5 bdrm, J frplc, home is SINCE 194•1 one or a kind. Full size 1 ~~~6~7"'3~-4~4~0~0~~~ handball court. huge pool 1. with jacuui plus over 'h 1 $]2 900 ae<e. Shown by appt. , • 545·9'i91, 3·Bldroom home on R-2 - lot ,,Ith room for addi· tiom.I unit or boat & trailtr storage. Fai.·ora· , · bl<' rm ancing available, 1------====--I andfrith a price thi s lo~· you better a ct now. Tustin 2 Br, 1 'h Ba. up· CAU. S56·2660 ~raded, S29.99s 10'70 dn ~ELECT 997 ·6227 ask f o r Sohradcr. ROPE RT I ES IAMI ~ QAY I. IQ.AM ------ 0 '""'f'll"IV" .... 6 ,... .. mt.led -orcn bllow 1o ..... ~. 6 tlmple ..... dL Ptlnl leller1 of ·eoc:h ll'I l!O '"" of "lUOttL I 1 DUCLEG I I I I I I BROW DY I I I' I I· S U N I FE I' I I I I I S ITSIN I I I I I' I ROHR I R I' I' I' I I I· NE HALE I" 111 I I I ' -• .... - e times: I live high ctlrM . You "" y apartment tenenti sing Syne" when 11•11 SCRJ.M-4,m A•••.,. Ill Cioni coll"" 5100 I ···········~··········· B.DUMPO HORSES-BEACH Jt's low down and dirty! Looks like a home where the buffalo roamed ! A handy man's paradise Paint and prorit ! A long. winding country lane, shaded beneath a n um. brella or towering trees leads to thi s rustic ••••••••••••••••••••••• CALIFORNIA HOMES Super sharp 3 bdrm, 2 ba. with beautiful patio,. Can't b eat this f o r $46.950. See it berore it is gone~ Can be purchased subject to existing G I Joan . 646·7711. Open Eves. hidea way. Big wooden 3 -bdrm rancher PLUS a separate 2 bdrm guest cottage on lh: ac re! Walk , to beach! 3 Corrals & tack room ! Shovel "em •-'--~=====~- out. paint 'em up. and TRI-LEVEL you've got yourself an ASSUME $17 .200 estate! Priced dirt JBdrm, plus large bonus cheap-which seems only room, cathedral ceiling tight! Call 847·6010 for in living room, spacious moredetails. kitc hen overlook ing O<'tN r.19 ·"1fu,i10111 "'"'' therapeutic s pa set in Great Tm Sh.rter Corona del Mar. Buy 1. or buy 4 in a row. Prired from $80,000. to $83,500. A-1 Condition. 640-6600 pri va t e sc clu.ded backyard, extra large king sii:e master suite with sunken Roman tub . Hurry! 963-6767 . U'fN 111 0 ••I 5 fUN 106( /'J'(f' [ ~1 lfl$iH:fl RUSTIC GIANT +POOL i Buy now & save! Get this err e ~iant poo) estate at R · WINTEI\ DISCOUNT'! ~;;;;;;;;;;;;CD.iiiji;~·~··~·~·-~;;;;;;~-1 o~'ner boul{ht another ..: home & pri ced this one lo BEACH DUPLEX ONLY $61 ,500 Bachelor hide·away & In· come. Sharp r ustic charm & cont"mporary. Priced for quick sale. 1 Block to beach. 5'5·9491. -Walker & lee He al !stai n sell fast ! formal dininj?. Se<'luded den, childre n's wing & hidden m as ter over looks park-like grounds & sparkling pool . llurry -save thousands. Call 64S·OJOJ Ii CCIUIWlll U.O CM'AIY UDO ISLE INYESTMEHT Vear end tax advantag .. Bay view. 3 bedrooms, 3 by buying this 4 Br home baths, dining room, den, in Laguna Beach. Owner heate:l pool. so· comer is licensed contractor & Jot. Owner leaving state. will rent t.his home ror Gii W AUC:EI his own use unUl June. RULTT 675-5%00 C•ll For Details msVloLldo.N.B. MAYOCK FANTASTIC-c.:;:i~:-.•. rin ancin g. pool ,1 _________ _ Jacuul , deror eling and landscaping, location. FORCH> MOVE! One ot lhe best homes For Sale ly Owtttr a nd locations in all or $41,900 will buy 3 yr old Bay Creal. Private upgraded , ne•l 28? • financ:ln.: available. Let Family lfom e with u.\ !lhow it to you today, fireplace on quiet cul-d· $139,500. sac. Sme.11 fmt yard & condo lot or TD as the room & more bedroom down ' payment or will suites. 3700 Sq. ft . of lux - exchange. ' ury. Hurry! Easy terms! ..... ., i Call003·7B81. .., .~:::~·~I ~":"; .......... ~u ~ .. ~~;-!!!t ...... 1[1~111~&·1111 ,.......... 100% cw...... 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• REALTORS . 644·7270 OPEN HOUSES llG CAMTOM .,6,, 5 Bedrooms, 3 baths, pool & U jacuzzi. $194 ,500. 25 Lac ....... &..., IU. °""',.. 1-5 C .. lo•I• M-644-8259 DOYB SHORES i.6.t submit exchange or 10% down. U $120.000 Equity in this beautiful Colonial home. 1 Bedrooms, 6 baths, family room. play room and large billiard room with wet bar area. Master suite has large His & Her bath with steam bath, gym, study and view balcony, much more! For the large entertaining family, a must see! Call now fl Hsqslllu Ct.Ill S11d., 1-4 LOVELY UDO ISLE i.6.t charming 2 story U contemporary designed home. Spacious 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, beamed celling, fireplace, gourmet kitchen. Large master suite with fireplace and sundeck on a comer lot. Close to clubhouse, tennis and beach. Great for entertaining. $169.000. 711 Tia Udo Mani, .. s •• ., , .... VIEW VllW! i.6.t immaculate Lusk 4 bedroom, .lt"JI family room, dining room home. New off.white carpets, mirrored wall in dining room - entertain around your beautiful pool & jacuzzi. You must see to appreciate. $119,900. ...~-.CllM LE R•ISOR , .. ,e re•r ••rd with " panaromic vlcw or mountains & orange 2n1 If. Coo't Htg , Corona det Mor REALTY groves. Open hou•• lr--;;;--~'~~~~~~~;...~l'I 4523Cimpus Dr., Irvine Sat/Sun. •~·0987. San Campus V1Uey Shop Ctr . ..:J::•::•::n..:Ca=pl::•::tr..:•;;;n.oo;._. --~ CALL 133-8600 Want Ads Ca ll 642-567 &•••al IOOZ.Gwral iooiG-ioot -.Fors• J-·""-Sund!X.N ... mbe•:J0.1975 DAILYrtLor D:J ~·-•11>•••••••••••••••~•••••••••.••••••,••••••• ••••••••••••••·•••.•••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••··~·· ~Fors-. ..._.., fo.r S. 1-For -\......_For S. Gwr• IOOJG4Mr.. 1 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••·••·•·••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ***OPEN HOUSES*** +4ARIOR HIGHU..HDS -$64,500 Can 'I last long! 3 bedrooms. 2 balhs, many upgrades. quietstreet. Better hurry! Ol'IH 1-5. UIZ'IUISITA ILUFFS VICTORIAN CHARM Move your antiques & Boston fern into this darling Lbree bedroom home. Lush new carpeting & beautiful paper give that "I'm home" reeling. $63,000. OPIH 1·5. 410YISYA llOMA HEAD FOR HARIOR VIEW Wake up to the sunrise every day, a \•iew of the mountains. The best part is a Newport Beach address plus 5 bedrooms, 3 baths. All ror $119,500 rec. Ol'IH 1·'-ZZZO l'OllT AllEllDHH PRESTIGIOUS CHAHHEL ROAD Discover the advantages of living on Peninsula Point. ');bis exceptionally clean 4 bedroom, 4 bath home with spacious master suite is 112 block rrom ocean & bay beaches. $169,500. Ol'EH HOUSE -2219 CHAHMEL llD. HEW LISTING -LIDO HORD Fabulous 6 bedroom Lido Bayfronl w 12 bedroom guest a..partment. 45 feet on the water w /onshore mooring & beach. Well constructed newer home w /elegant form•! plan. $375,000. OPEH 1·5. 306 VIA UDO HORD. **BY APPOINTMENT** EJ.STILUFF-CUL [I~ SAC STREET 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, din. rm .. pool. Ideal home for large or growing family. Oversized lot for play areas plus beautiful Anthony pool. Newly decorated. $11Y7,500. FRENCH ARCHITECTURE OH THE BAY Terrazzo floors -master bedroom suite with marble bath, sitting room, fireplace & night cap bar - formal dining -10' ceilings -Pier & Slip on fee for $295,000 IAYFROHT FOR SI 10,000 2 bedroom, 2 bath condominium w /action view of bay & jetty. Best buY in channel reef w /more square footage than other units on the market. CUSTOM IAYFROHT-95' 5Lll' Find old world charm on Linda Isle in this 5 bedroom family home. Tree-lin ed bayside terrace on 90· fronta ge w /garden atmosphere. $400 ,000. ENGLISH CHARMER Used brick, fine paneling, high beamed ceilings throughout 3 bedroom, dining room hom e. Lovely yards, many fruit trees, only $71,500. IAYCREST ••• CUSTOM BUILT $129,500. Ivan Wells q bedroom. Roll ·back roof over massive inside atrium. 2 fireplaces. Dining room. 3 baths. Spacious. ()pen. Yard plumbed for pool. PRIME SHORE CLIFFS ESTA TE Lovely custom home on large two-Jot site. 3 bedrooms, 4 baths, den, large guest suite. 40 ' pool, lush tropical gardens. Fee. $229,500. · BA Y5HORE DRIVE HOME Exciting 2 story home. 3 bedrooms & fam. & din . rooms surround large sunny patio. Short walk to private beaches &marina. $150.000. FEE LA.HD-BLUFFS Compare this lo others at this price on lease land & appreciate the value. 3 bedrooms. large master suite, conversation area in living room. $77 ,500. IT'S THE LlmE THIHGS Thal make Corona del Mar. These twin duplexes, if bought smart today, are tomorrow's opportunity. Hurry for one or both. $86,000. OCEAN VIEW FROM BIG CANYON Customized air conditioned beautifully decorated Deane Deauville. 3 bedrooms, large family room . Lots of marble & Stauss crystal. Gorgeous gardens for outdoor living. $199,500. llG CAHYOH IUILDIHG Gorgeous view lot and perfect for spacious elegant home in Newport's exciting new community on ' championship golf course. $85,000. INDIVIDUALITY WITH Ft.AIR Best describes this contemporary 4 bedroom, 4 bath home in Newport's private & elegant Big Canyon. Super showplace. Bright & airy, dramatic & highly customized. Priced coosiderably below replacement costtoday at $265,000. · SUNRISE -SUNSET Lido condo with fantastic views of ocean & bay. Highly customized for discriminating buyer looking ahead to the future. $115,000. CONDOMINIUM AT THE OCEAN On a private Laguna Beach. 2 pools, tennis. beautiful gate g uarded grounds. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, walk, swim, ftSh, relax. It's spotless. $79,500. PLEASE CALL FOii A FllEE PICTUllE IROCHUU Of USTIHGS A COUWIU IAHlfH CO. 644-1766 -.. ·- •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ' I al IOOZ 4 •al 1002 ---------------•IQ•••• I002!&1•rol IOOJ •• .r •..................... -;i........................ . ..................... ·••·····••••··••••····· * * * * *'* Heritage Collection DIVORCE FORCES SALE HIU IN YOUll CHAHCl-to get a ouper house -one of a kind, 2 story, - Y-home. Featuring 4 bedrooms, 2~ baths, oep 20x26 family rm. with open beam cathedral ceilings. Freest.anding fireplace and 8' bltn bar. Don't wait on this one -owner anxious. Hurry. c• 54MllO. TOWNHOUSE HO DOWN YA. Super Huntington Beach end unit Townhouse at only $39.500. 3 Big bedrooms, 2 baths • .._ Wk••• and dining area and no common wall. Only steps to pool and recreation. Assumable 7¥..3 Joan with payments only $212 per month incldg laxes. First time offered. Call 546-5110. $55,900 LOYI&. Y 3 year old Mesa Verde Home. 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths w/calhedral ceilings, patio kitchen and corner lot. Low maintenance yard with large patio a nd fr•lt trH1. Call us for complete details. 546-SHO. POPULAR 4 BEDROOM CA MB.OT MODEL -single story, like new. Owner transferred. Sacrifice. Close to schools. Beautifully upgraded. o,... -. Sat/Sun 1·5 989 Dahlia, Costa Mesa. CALL54G-l 151 REDUCED a.41 STOllY -large 3 bedroom, 2 bath Townhouse. All extras. Beautiful floor plan. Patio, pool and clubhouse. Good starter home in excellent condition. Cut to $38,500. Col 54(1.1151 JUST LISTED FIRSY TIME OH MARKET -large 2 story 5 bedroom, 3 full baths, 3 e<r IJOl'"9"• quiet cul-de·sac, near schools and shopping center. Hurry on this one only IBJ,500., Col54G-1151 ERITAGE 1002 ..............•............... , .............•. Pete/Jarreltf'<eaft'! prejenlj TRUE CALIFORNIA 5PAIU5H STYLE 4 IEDllOOM formal dining room, large ramily room, master suite and study all in U·sbaped home. Built around a brick patio. Plant lovers dream! True move·in condition. Call 642·5200 for details on this new listing. PERPETUAL VIEW l'AHOllAMA Of OCEAH AMII IA Y from this beauti!ul 4 bedroom Hilltop home in Broadmoor. 2 Marble fireplaces -one in the master bedroom. 3 Car garage. $150,000. 2501 u.-tw11e. CcM s..day 1 .. 5 BACK BAY BEAUTY SPIC AHD Sl'AH -4 bedroom home on quiet cul-de-sac. Super kitchen with island cook top. Large private yard with pool. Creal value at $68,500. 342 Viste layo, off s.te......, A••· 0,... S'•llar 1·5 VERY SPECIAL VIEW YlllT SPECIAL l'U.CE on the hill overlooking the Bay. 3 Bedroom home with wide open spaces. Sunny inside and out. 2 Closed garages & 2 covered carports. $129,500. 320111Mplld.CHffllon .... HI S..1-5 642-5200 .. 675-4060 1002 • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• *ESTATE SALE* 52 feet of Big Bayfront. Pier and slip. Quality + in this large 4 bedroom 4 bath home. Bank says $265,000! (Less than land value!) Call 675·7060 for appointment to see. Balboa Bay Properties Realtors * 675-71160 * ARTIST'S CHALET 2 ST ORT .POOL G......i 1002 GeMnl 1002 BA YFROMT •••••••••······•••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• S32,9SO Luxury is provided in this brand new, custom built exec. mans ion. Superb decor & des ign. Terrific view or Ba y, boa t activities & s pa rkl- ing lights at night. Jus t li s ted . 646-7711 Open Dttorated in plush new carpeting throughout. Sw eep i n g s tair s to master swte, used bric k fireplace in living room. Bike to beaeh . Call 963-6767. Eves. [ij''""""'~'":.···~1 - General I 002 GOMrOI I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• EllPAHSIYE HOME OH THE WATllt Terrific day and night VIEWS from this 4 bedrm home . A bath for each bedrm, plus powder room. Family room and formal dining room. Atrium with fountain and greenery. Balconies on both levels overlooking the water. An ideal home for indoor /outdoor living. BOAT SLIP. Open Sat/Sun 1·5 PM 631·1400 $220,000 OWH TOUll OWH HOME AHD IOAT DCCII Live in a quiet private community with no parking problems. Pitched beam ceilings thruout this 3 bedrm home. Large ti ving room with patio overlooking water&OOats. Open House Sat/Sun 1·5 PM. Sll9,500 IU.CH HOME with FORMALITT Owners bought another and are ready to move. Lots of room in this 3 bedrm, den, dining rm. home. Atrium with greenery and sunning roof. ()pen Sun 1·5 631·1400 566,500 COHDO on the WATER for CAREFREE UYJHG Good size rooms for your furn iture and gracious living. Spacious 2 bed.rm with view of BAY. Leave the maintenance to the experts a nd enjoy life on the WATER. $17,500 YOU'LL LOVE THE FOREYEll OCE4H VIEW from this large 2 bednn Condo, high on a hill, surrounded by greenery and 2 patios. OHL Y $48,750 Tltll'LEX OH THE MT Three years old with 3S' & 50' BOAT DOCK. Two 3 bedrm units Plus one 2 bedrm unit. OUTSTANDING VIEW, $295,000 631-1400 e spcciahze 1n ... on 1h1: u.•a ter ... nl!.ar the water •. K!W of waler ho1nes We show by boat and ca WATERFRONT HOMES 2633 W. CoaSI Highwov Newport Ek.ch 17141631·1400 • SPAMISH GIAHT Sain Beginnft'S + POOL No real estate license 2 Story • 4 hedroom -3 necessary-Call Le Roy baths . Dining r oom. Opfer or Jim T o m , Sunken den. Fireplace. Pt:RFOHft1ANC E REAL rugged beams. Oaken ESTATE, 847-358 4 or bannis t e r s tairc a se. 846-3377 Romeo balcony decor. -'---------! Tile roof. Few blocks to REDUCED S6000 golf course. mear the Spanish mansion, 8 ' beach. Ready for this? walled estate, lusl'j Only $43,500. Call land scapin g , exotic 842-2535. patios, private master °""'"i9 •11 sru~1ost 1;rc1·-suite, childrens s ui te, G:tn1ral !lpaclous living rm & c athedfa l ceilin gs. Owner anxious. 962-7788 KEY REALTOllS 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• BOAT STORAGE? Why not have your own pier and float and separate pad for boat storage? 40' of water parking space with a 3 bedroom family room home. The land alone is worth the asking price of $129,500. Call 5464141 . SPECIAL SALE! This stalely 4 bedroom, 2 story home is listed for $57 ,900, but right NOW can be bought on conventional loan terms for only $53,900! ! It's only 3112 years old and features are an especially large master bedroom, 2112 baths, big family room and separate laundry room. Fast escrow too!! Call now, call 546-4141 HIGH ATOP SPYGLASS Beautiful 3 bedroom Spyglass Hill home. This popular Ports mouth mode l features many decorator upg rades. A MAGNIFICENT OCEAN VIEW. You own the land. $159,500. Call 640·6161. BIG CANYON Highly customized 4 bedroom BROADMOOR home. 3,000 square feet of living space includes expanded fa mily room, living room, and master bedroom. Professionally landscaped. Air conditioned. See to appreciate. $171,900. 640.6161 $41,500 Buys this 3 bedroom and den cutie oo great lot. With lanai, BBQ, and waterfa ll too! Existing VA loan can be assumed. Call now for all details. 962-4454 YOU'LL LOVE LIFE In this Villa Pacific 2 bedroom, 2 bath single story townhome. Palos Verde stone fireplace, wet bar too. A MUsrSEE AT ONLY $43 ,900. CALL NOW. 962-4454. Office' locott-d In Costa MMa Hwmnqton Beach -Nt-wpcwi Btiach I YOU OWM1"1~ 263 W-Howporl Shortt Large lot. 3 Br home + patios. Spacious s in gle story. Reduced to $75,500. Open Sun 1·5. HILL TOI' COHDO 411 Rogsloip NHe.,w01pono«t leoc~ Park Lido townhouse. Close to beach. Spacious 3 Br + dining room. You own the land. Private patio opens to heated pool. Priced right at$47.950. MOYE lllGHT IH 315 ihd St Howporl Shont lmmac. 3 Br dollhouse. Perfect for s mall family. Steps to community pool & tennis eris. Close to beach. Open Sun 1·5. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~II. macnab /lrvlne 1"' realty FIHEll HOMES fllOM $39,750 TO $745,000 OPEH SUH. 1-5 P.M.: 409 HIGH DRIVE. LAGUNA BEACH. Marvelous 5 bedroom Cape Cod home w /extra Jg . 2nd story family room. Formal dining -expa nsive brick patios - beautifully r emodeled w /the finest appointments. $265,000. (H38) "SY AllTB HOME" Great c h arm in this older 2 bedroom + dining room home. Great potential w/zoning AP. 80xl40 lot. Close to 17lh St. shopping. $39,750. Harriet Perry 642·8235. (HJ9 l UHDA ISi.i Contemporary residence offered for sale, lease or lease/option. Paneled family room w/fireplace down + tiled floor family room w /wet bar upstairs. Dramatic 2·story dining room. 5 bedroom, 4 fireplaces, secluded patio. Good lagoon location. $3(XX)/mo. on lease. Appl. only. C. Schweickert642·8235. (H40) TllEMEHDOUS VIEW Superb Bay & Ocean VIEW! $23,000 in extr as are h ere in thjs professionally decora t ed & landscape d 3 bedroom, family room, formal dining room home w /sheltered pool. $169.000 fee. Appl. only. Dona Chichester 642·8235. (H41) llG CAHTOH POOL HOME W /GOLF COUllSE YlEW . Brand n e w 5 bedroom contemporary home professionally decorated in stunning earth tones . Lg. family room opens onto private courtyard featuring oversized custom pool & jacuzzi + covered patio for outdoor Calif. entertaining. $289,000 fee. Paula Bailey 642·8235. (H42) "'SHIHG IS IBJEYIHG!" Sweeping view of sea & Newport Center lights from luscious living room , dinin g room or paneled family room w /bar -plus 3 sunny bedrooms & custom pool·n-jacuzzi. $174,500. Jack Custer 642·8235. (H43J A GIFT AIOYE ALL OTMEllS Love ly Lusk home in Eastbluff. J bedrooms w /game room or 4th bedroom & family room. Big 20x40 pool TOO, plus firepit. $98,500. Jeanne Newman 642·8235. (H44) VIEW! VALUE! LOCATION! Superb Dover Shores Day & Night VIEW. Remodeled kitchen w /island cooking. 4 bedrooms, 31h baths, formal dining room & lg. family room. Professionally decorated. $175,000. Larey Dyer 642·8235. (H45) XMAS IM llG CANTOH Newly listed 2 bedroom & d en DOVER model. Beautifully decorated w /the finest in carpets , drapes & wallpapers. Loads or extra stora ge . $129,500. Jeanne Barnett644·6200. Oi46l IAl.IOA 151.AHD IHYESTMEHT 2112 year new 4 b<!droom & 3 bedroom duplex -I 'h block to North or South Bayfront. Great income! Betty Kerr 644~. (H47) THE GU1o40ROUS YEllSAILLE with VIEW! A very exciting Big Canyon home w /dramatic 2-slory entry, curved staircase & quiet c ul-de-sac location. $235,000. Tom Queen 644·6200. (H48) A YOUCH OF OlD MEXICO 6 bedroom, 2·story Spanish. All tiles & fixtures imported. Hand.carved doors l eading into charming courtyard w /jacuzzi.' Extensive use of stained glass. $289,500. Lynne Rothell 644-6200. <H49) u2.a2Js '44-0oo 901 0-on.. ..... ll&KNU'u ,.....,,_., lud'I, Cehkw,,,. t1MJ I ' -- DA!LYPILOT Sund• . NcwtmW 30, 117& ~.~:~.':.~.~~.· ........ 1 ~~!~:.~.~ ....... ~:.~~ ....... J ~!:>:..~ ........ ~~~:!.~.~---··'~-~.s:.. ___ TARBELL 1926-1976 "Golden Anniversary" ,,...,._ Meso Y~ MocW! Sleek ranch IOCJ !.tllounded by yads o f velvet geen! rhe best 1n P'"'de al ship! AU foams ae versized fo r comforl. ~,, ... -e's o 3 Wroom ....;ng with the master '!.uite Iii , secluded from the child-en's. ..-. q.aters. 20x2 I foot li...ing room boos t ~ 11"s own ,. I 11 rwopkx:e. Candlelight dnnq 1oom, mom-/01,1in' kitchen. I sepaote family game 1oom. S62.m . A$k fa I Sa<ly ShotJen_ ~ 1720 ' I I 0WMr AnxlMs -Gic:wtt Ec.OftamY Sitt'! Bur~ling with pride of ownership! Freshly pointed thruout, 1hick capets & teAtu,ed drapery. Spacious floor pion features 4 bec*oom suites, hand~ stone fireplace 1n the separate family room. 0..et!.lzed liv1nq quaters., large moslet Sl.ile. Deluxe li1chen wirh hrndy bU lt-ins. 1'$kinq $42,!:00. 540-I 71!J I ' " ' ,_ '" I Ca a th f Getaway! Fontcnt1c home. Me\O Ver~ c:reo! Fully SP'1nklered IO"Nns, neotly m'.Jnict1ed for beauty. Lage covered patio rrckes on ideal game room, eleqont cathedral ceilings. Formal d ining qucr161'\, plu~h carpels in the fami ly room. 1 bed-ooms, 3 full borhs. Sunny breakfast area ~erved by a hamerroker 's kitchen. $69,GOO. 540-1720 Newport leach-Tri~Le•el! EAceUenl oeo ot the beach, oricjnol m:::idel with custom decor. View balcony, comm. swim pool & rec facilities 01,1oiloble. Catheaal ceiling~ in kiichen, ,living room & d ining room aeo. T osteful appointments thr uout. 3 beaooms, entry foyei-. Topped by mis!>ion tiled roof. $60,SCXl Call ~1720 JecM1Yi & Pool -Drosffc Reducll00t! 1~ Owner_s ae exlrerooly a111ious ta sell this executive va!a! Balcony overlooks a shimmering pool. lots of concrete docking. muscle relallinq iocuzzi. Huge inside with CNef 2800 iqUO"e feet. ~fet dining room that sears 12 guests, librcry a study off the kitchen. 3 lage bed-ooms, 3 baths. 0.-et~zed living room 20t2b foot ban.is ~oom. Coll 54().17"10, for a P'ilo'Ole showing. ' . ' ., •t ' ' -. " .~I • SJl,500 -4 I~ Hin! A tremendous home buy! Bring point & sa.re US! Wide entry foyer leods to on over1.ired • living room. i bedroom Wies, private rrostet retreat with it's ONn both. Trailer <7 boot parking outside surrounded by lush k:wdscoping. Private potio veranda. Check out the pice! Asl: for Joan Hefm:::1n. Coll~1720 SeraM Tne-URed Sh'eet! Ono qUet safe W-Oe.soc! There's o COtfel"ed patio thot runs the lengrh of the homo that's pa-feet la< gare tables! 2CX)) squae feet inside feQh.res 4 YS"SQt~e bedrooms (h.m one into a den), conc:feltghr dining room aeo S8ved by a gourmet kitchen. Separate family room, blazing fl'eploce, Oodles of b.ishes & trees! $4'1,500. 540-1720 -•d bf Ow .... -$41,995! A trerrendous home buy! ~ hos left, ready to move into. Private patio vercn::b, room for ycu boot Of trailer. Brord spanking new capets & point, new -.aiities in the gaden baths. 3 bedroom stitM. entertciner's living room oeo. Private master retreat. AD this fa l.0-.de. $42,0CO! Unbel;<Mtble! 540-1720 -VIII• - T .... s, Pool Heart.rt Worderlul c .. o of Nev.port Becxh! The ;deol hcwne for the entertainer's.. conv•sotion pit, 2-story in de~gn. 3 bedrooms., 3 baths. lntirrote .; -OAng "'°"'plus o '"'Y b-eoHo<t bot. Pa<quet '"1 fb::rs plus or*le-deep capets & coordnoted '.1~, dopery. Deluxe kitchen wirh handy W'Ol"k areas. " . A lot of '°""' I°' 1he nnneyl $77,lm. Coll •' 540-1720 . ,, ·' s,-1 .. Haclet1del E•lt S.! Excellent '·1' oeo of Costa Mesa! Jop:lnese cp'doo in bock itj )Qd. bid: covered patio with loth house: Soloi1111 floors in •itchen. new bull-ins fa time-10ving holiday dinnets! 3 bedroom~ entertainer's living room with hol\dsome -><>bwinci r.eploce. $>4,950, roll ~1720. .. , ,, .. ' ' ' ' '. 540-1720 2955 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa Maauilcr RELO Serving 7000 Cities Thruout The United States ·1 All'"BW108S' ' 2 "-rl ... 1 i..,nt .-...... c • ..,.,. . ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• IOOZ ••••••••••••••••••••••• S..,..rbH- Ofth•Week MESA VEllDE PACESLl'TER for only W,900 t.:xtrcmely up · i.:raded 4 ht'drm + 2 full baths I!IOO Sq ft . + l ~x30 adtll<d i::amc room. t.:n· hrl· home rt.<decorated. l\love·ln fresh. Owner transferred. PRICE REDUCED to $63.950 Choice ?.fesa Verde area on c ul -de·sae street. 3 Bedrni, (am rm , lge Jl v. in11: room. t•onipletely re- dti<'orit('(I. II & F pool. Don 't•:miss this lovely home .YoUr clloice of len· ders. Quick possession. G-al 1002G_,al IOOZ 8111111 ,IMZ 8•Hal , 100 -ION INZ ....................... ........................ .............. -....... .......... ...__.... . HOMES OPIH 1-5 lllh Alltr- Ut41Cj)UI IH MESA VBDI! -3 bdrm Republic, beautiful neighborhood , beaul. cl>nd ., $69.000. See Glen Statum at Z731 Gannet Dr. UNIQUE IH THE llUfFS -4 bdrm townhome, beaut. carpets, patio, n.r pool, $61,500. See Sharon Smith at 2416 Vista Hogar. of n11wA_rt_ · .. : I REALTORS 67J.551 I ------OPEM HOUSH 1606 AHTIQUA -DOVH SHOllS: Three crackling fireplaces proclaim It's CHRISTMAS! Move in for the Holidays. Classic columns, formal entry, living & dining rooms. Paneled family room . wet bar, four big bedrooms, 31; bath5. Owner moving East. OPEN SUN I IDS. 4714 COITLAHD: Choice Cameo Highlands four bedroom home -or three & den. For the fun-loving family ; in beautiful oonditioo & ready for quick move·in -plan your Christmas NOW. OPENSAT&SUNltoS. • • NEWPORT 8£JCH UCIO'fl( JUST ~BUii s.BR, 3-ba, 3-car garage, 'Rllrbor View Hom.,. Somerset model, onll( l )'T· old. You can be Jn by OtriStma$. $99,500. ree. . NEWPORT WCH HAPPY HOLIDAYS Enjoy Christmas in this J.BR, 2-ba bome with fireplace, spa, boat yard and N.B. address. Only $67,900. fee. OPEN SUN. l·S, 2908 Silver. WOOOSTllAM 3-BR, 21;-ba. 1800 + Jt_ o( luxury/ condominium living. Owner just'o completed professional decorating thru-0ut. Priced ID sell al $.51.900. l JUST LISTED lluntingt o n Bt>a c h Pacifi c Sands. trllevel pool home. By Deane Brothers. Tills lovely a bedrrn. 3 balh home of- fers enrnfort in living. 1''ormal dining roo m . Large family rm w/wet har O\'l'rlooks pool nnd terraced yard . Compl landsrpd front and rear. Workshop and s torage eab1ncl.!!1 1n oversi~ed 2 f':tr i.:aral:C. llloc lc: to ix.·can f)ffered al $73,SOO. UHICjlUE IH ORIGINAi. HAUOll VIEW RU.S -Privacy; pool home, canyon and ocean vie ws. $122 ,500. See Barbara Hutchings al llOOSandpiper, Corona del Mar. 701 IOCICFOID RD~ Cameo IIlghlands canyon & ocean view. This too is rour bedrooms or three &: den. L-a-r-g-e covered patio on canyon side, room for pool at lhe front. Private beach. In fine condition. OPEN SAT & SUN 1 to S. l20 SI.AW.AID ID: SHORECLIFFS address and "best buy". Custom quality, inte-resting split-level home; beamed ceillngs, paneling; separate (away from it all) family room&: cozy Swedish fireplace. Spacious Jawns, fruit trees, private beaches. OPEN I l THE BLUFFS IMEIGBICY SITU.A TIOH NEAR NEW llunt1ngt o n Beach fourptex, 4 blocks from beach. Always rented. l'ril'ed at $140,000. ~~~~· lMI Campus N 8 54t·NSS SACRIFICE Owner Mo•lnq Gather round fhe fireplace in this warm and comfortable home. Wood s butters and pane lin g a nd old fast1ioned h a rdwood floors add to the comforl. With 3 bdrms and I "~ baths. there's spare ror a ll. Owner 's asking $43,500. and needs a quil'ksale. ~·~::.~~~ Prap.rti•• 7Sl•1920 ••oo OUAI~ st. NlWll'OIT tlM'.H UNIQUE IN CORONA DB. MAR -3 bedroom plus de n, cute. wilh beams and brick. See 1-larland Jloak at 433 Heliotrope, south of highway, UHl9UE IH MESA VERDE -4 bdrm, pool, large cul de sac lot. $73,500. See Link Myers at 2955 Mindanao Dr. UNIQUE IH llG CAHYOH -Unique decor and ldscping, pool and sep jacuzzi, 4 bdrms, only $174,500. See Vergilene Hull al ~9 Torrey Pines Lane. UHICj)UE IN HARIOll VIEW HOMES - Sparkling Portorino, excellent street. 3 bdrms plus loft, r ec. rm .. at $97,000. See Fran Scott at 1958 Port Trinity. UHl9UE OVEll IUCIC GULl.Y -3 bdrm, fabulous deck, cedar, glass and brick home. See N alalie Fogarty at 716 Poppy, CdM . UNl()Uf: ti()Mf:S REALTORS"' THE NICEST PEOPLE SELLING THE NEA rE$T HOMES CORONA DEL MAR, 975«M>O MESA VERDE, 546-5990 • CALL US SAT&SUNlloS. - l 16_ CATAL,_IHA : Newport Heights O!mce Area. Cozy Cape Cod : Stone exterior, dormer windows, IOUr nice bedrooms, 3 baths. Motivated owner moving South. OPEN SUN I to5. 315 CiOUllMIOD: Olde Corona del Mar cottage by the sea. Stained glass antiques; paddle tennis court, brick patio. Walk to beach, three bedrooms &study. OPEN SAT&SUN l tos. THE IWFfS: A delightful condominium in beautiful conditioo ; three bedroom & family room on the lower level (for the teenagers ), unusually large storage areas & closet facilities. By appointment -just give us a call. HOISIS! HOISES! In the City or Orange, for the family who loves to .. hit the trail". An unusual home with "'country kitchen'', four spacious bedrooms -master-suite has its own Single Story GHeral 1002 GtHrol 1002 conversation pit with fireplace. Cool ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• patios with wagonwheel waterfall · CONDO 2 8cdroon1 RR1\DFORD Pl.ACE .,.,,itt1 upgraded carpets, panelin~. and decorative wa llpape r. Double car gar age. Onl y llYk Down. $31.000. ~~ -ANYTIM~ LAGUNA. SUNSET built in inter-com, air conditioning, & WATCHER MESA HORTH stereo. Can readily be shown -just Enjoy the view of th ..-I OPEN HOUSE call. Laguna , • .,,_ E>ocllon1 Fri ~at J5un 1.4 COLE OF NEWl'ORT REALTORS location within walk dis 783 Hudson, CM 2515 E. Coast Hwy .. CormMI .. M .. lance of everylhing im 4 Bedroom, 2 baths, fplc, 675-5511 p o r t a n l . T h i s t w o c 0 m p J e t e c a r p e t i n g 11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! bedroom plus dt'n home lhruout. Drapes. Bltn11 .1-may be the view home Dbl C ed r I -you've been looking for. ': itar over pa 1~· l'if.M.rol · IOOZ 'Geweral 1002 Call us ror additional ,-.. All in very good cond1 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• t1on. Reduced lo $46,000. formation. Call 673·8S50. Roy McC~I• OflfN l•i 9 • II S fr.JN ro Ill N<I' __.... .,. .. R•dllor BEST IN BLUFFS ; 1810 Newpot"t Gfttffal 1002 . Co8taMesa548·7729 •••·••···••·••••••••••• "==== OPEN 11·5 2921 QUB>ADA IV. del Orol BUILDER'S FURN. MODELS. Panoramic bay views, custom 2 & 3 bdrm. with fam. rms. wet bars, 2 frplc's_ 2500 Sq_ fl. $136,000 & $141 ,000 Incl. land. • ~II. mecnab /lrvlne ~ realty FOi THE llST IH CAMEO SHOllS & llGHLANDS PIOl'llmES UCl!LUHT SllSIGH & QUALITY W /VIEW Make this home perfect for a lg_ family . Separate suite for teenagers or in-laws. Immediate occupancy w /short escrow. 4 bedrooms, 4 baths, study & family room. Privacy in pool & patio areas. $215,000. Belle Chase Lee 644-6200. (HSO) COllOHA DB. MAii VIEW HOME Marvelous jetty & ocean VIEW from this MAGNIFICENT 5 bedroom Cameo Shores home featuring den, game room, family room, lg. formal dining room & a quiet retreat off the master bedroom . $310,000. Tom Queen 644-6200. (HSI) NATURE CAHYOH VIEW HOME In Corona dei Mar w /free-form pool, private patios & lots of cozy charm. 3 bedrooms, formal dining room & super open kitchen off family room. Reduced to $86,500. Belle Chase Lee 644-6200. (1152) Spanish Hocifltda 'NORTH TUSTIN 4--6 Bedrms. Fam. rm .. dini.ng rm. bonus rm. 3250 sq rt . of Elegant charm & Quality. Amenities galore, inch.xi · ing cntrl air, s team cablnct.s, fruit trees, etcJ I yr old . $109,500. Call Villa Associates (714) 832·9211. MINIRAHCH OHLV $]9.500 This charming 3 bdrm. 2 ba home has new cpt, bll- ln kii. l1 e cov patio. You v.·o n't believe this enormous lot. S4S·9491. -Sell things fast wilt\ Dai ly OPEN l·S 2761 VISTA UMllOSA NEARLY NEW TENNIS VILLA. Cusl. end unit, 3 bdrms., form. din., fam. rm., bar, 21; ba. 1850 Sq_ fl. Near pool. A buy at $86,750 Incl. land. FREE-STANDING; 2500 sq. ft., 4 txirms., fam. rm. plus huge bonus rm. 2 Yr. old, wide greenbelt, nr. pool & courts. $99,500 HELEN B. DOWD UALTOI, IHC. MLS 644-0134 1973TopLI•ler&TopSale- 1974._erUp Hewport-M ... -of IHlton Pilot Wa nt Ads. 1----------------- Geoor.. IOOZ GIMral _ 1002 G........a 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ELKINS "()y.,. SO YeesofS...lce" e IY APPOINTMENT EllGANT LIDO TOWNHOUSE First Offering! New 2 Story Custom Buill. Flexible Plan 2-4 Bedrooms. 31; Ba. Lge Family Rm. Lovely Open Atrium Up. Ali Electric Kitchen $155,000 IATRONT WITH PIB MISAVEIDE s-~· For years Unique has .. farmed" Mesa Verde. SlOOO's will tontinue to be invested. Sales people are needed to manage "fa rms" in the golf course, original P1cest- ter and Republic Homes area s. New or ex · perienced licensees are invited lo share our 10 years of suecess ln the ft.l esa Verde market. Please contact Jim Wood al 546-5990 . SPANISH VII.I.A OHTHEIAY Priced below market. Absolutely the best value in The Bluffs -This very private end unit wilh wrap-around patio has 3 oversized bedrooms. 21; baths, family room and for elegant entertaining, a beautiful formal, dining room and plush living room. This highly upgraded home can be yours for only $68,000. 53ZCAHCHA.N.I. OPEN DAILY 1-SPM l'HOHE 6411-1119 FOR DIRECTIOHS IRVlNE CUL VERD.ALE Hlghly upgraded 4-BR, 3-ba, FR. home, located near community pool and park. Lowest price for this plan-. $59,000. fee. Ol'84 THIS WICBID. l752 CLAUMOHT BUILDER'S C~OSEOUT SALE llBI ·GIEBCTIH HOMES 2-BR,2-BA &den&3-BRhomes. Open Sal. & Sun. 1-5-Greentree model complex, corner of Walnut& Culver in Irvine. R.E. SALES In a rut? If you are tired of small COf!1~ission splits and big company politics, contact us for an appointment to see a fresh, new approach to real estate sales. Call Cliff Landry for an interview. 67~7601 Anytime Ii-1ooz 'G1 .. ,... 1002 .............................................. VALLEY REALTY Pll!SEHTS LIDO LIFE CONDOS Waterfront living on Newport's Main O!annei. Spacious 2 &3 bdrms plus den &: wet bar. Finest construction available . Subterranean parking. From $179,SO!l.'Open Sat/Sun. 1-5 320 Via Lido Nord. HARIOR· VIEW CARMEL 3 bdr, ·FR formal DR in Harbor View Homes. Superior condition inside and out. $79,500. Open Sat/Sun. 1-5 1963 Port Weybridge. OLD C.D.M. New appliances -new copper'1 plumbing in this 3 bdrm. charmer on R-2 lot in Old C.D.M. $68,000. Ope n Sat/Sun.1-5 700 Marguerite. NEWPORT HEIGHTS Cul de sac loc.ation -spacious 3 bdrm. bonus room custom home -lots o( trees for that ·country feeling. $75 ,000. Open Sat/Sun: 1·5 3000 Beacon. IA YSIDE B.EGANCE Imported Italian tile entry -4 bdrms. FR on waterfront -Room for pier & slip_ Elegantly appointed. $285 ,000. Open Sat /Sun. 1-5 645 Bayside. LAGUMA CONDOS 2 & 3 bdrm. condos with whitewater view in No. -'Laguna. From $54 900 Open daily 1·5420 Cypress. ' · 0.. year w•1..tr i1icW CALL 675-7325 CALL US FOR A FPEE ESTIMATE OF YAlUf \'}\LLEY R~~.L\.I .. T\. A BERG ENTERPRISES CO. " " SPECIAL OH ltOXIURT Spacious & rambling 4 bedroom, 3 bath home w /family & dining rooms. Surrounds a children's playyard & boasts a superb view Asking $152,500. Martba Macnab 642-8235. (HS3) A .. Best Buy" On Linda Isle Spacious 2 Story Family Home w /4 Bedrooms or More . Gourmet Kitchen. View of Channel & Bay. $285,000 $3',900 Winding walkway to •••••.!!._•·~··~··~··~··~··...::•••••••••••••• elegant bayside living at ~ .._. -~., -..._.. ------~- I ' CHAllMIHG 3 bedroom home in Cameo Shores -beaut.Hui courtyard entry w /Sparkling l'ool. Magnificent ocean view! Formal dining room family room w /fireplace + paneled study w /huilt·in bookcases $215,000. Barbara Aune 642-8235. (H.54) ' HIGHU.HDS 4 IBllOOM 'Spacious "U" shaped family home in excellent locaUon w /private beach access. Quick occupancy possible. $85 ,950. Martha Macnab 642-8235. CHSS) ' •o.aus 6444200 t01 o...w om. tM4 M.tc"'111ut ~hlctl,~H9" ..:WPOIT HEIGHTS! Spacious 3 Bedrooms Lge Family Style Kitchen. Built-in Charm Galore . Palio . Barbeque. Only $511,750 RllHISHID LI.ASE Harbor View Romes, 2 Lovely : • Bedrooms, Den. Plush New· Carpeting. Bui ii-in Kitchen. ' $S95 Month. HI.Al WA Tll w ,.WO.AT sur 2 Story Condo. Coves Area. 3 B~, All Ele~tric Kitchen. Patio. Like New $93,500 GIOIGE 11.lllNS CO.. UAL TOIS Ill DOVEi DllYI 6ll·llOO ) a fraction or norm al OCEA"" VIEW cost! Adjocent to docks " and mariti m e living! •An. immaculate 3-BR, din rm home. ~r~~hil~~;:te~0:;:.~ Patio lllus 2-decks, used brick fireplc., dine! <',ourmet •unshine w~ bar and a Queen's kitchen, are k i t c h en f 0 r t h e some of the mat\;y extras. Ope.n Sun. 1-S epicurean! Walls or 1201 Cliff. DllYE. MIWPOIT IEACH gla"' Sw<,.plng mast., ALL .FOR $9," 500. bdrm retreat!1 Winding ~ stain:a1e to sun terrace! Red lile root Ir: Spanllh alcovm ! Try $3990 tot.al down or take over exist· ing loan al S249 per month. It's uniq ue and won't last ! llurry, eaU 847.fiOlO. O#fN I~ t •It S f\J,J TO Ill" f'wl(f • ' ' '8 w .. ': Don 't five up the ship! ''Ust' it in classifit'd. Ship to shore results! ..,_ ,_ •Tlft.D• • ..•.•••.••••••••• StS.000. ..., ............ bet:clt Th,ree furni~h.e~ units -Heart of Bal~a Penins?la,, near shopping, sch00ts and t~nms courts . Large decks over garages. . JACOBS REALTY , "675-6670 2919 Newport lllYcL i:omer lOtti I • DI RECTO.RY ..... =······ ... ,.... -c.. .. ..... a ......... ... waif ........ .., .. ,uttta•=~lt ....... M&YNOTWIMfAM. ....... .......................... ..-............ 7 .... ..._ .... I ....,_. -.. HOUSES FOR SALE 2 llDROOM Zl!Ml! Tqrtuga , San Juan Capistrano 49fl.0987 $41 ,900 Sat/Suo ICM 2521 Crest view. Newport Beach 673-8550 $67,500 Sat/Sun 1·5 • 2 U a FAM IM w DB4 2037 Port Bristol (HVHomes) NB 642-8235 $73,950 Sat/Sun 1·5 787 Nyes Pl., Lag una Beach 644 -6200 Sun. 1·5 J llDllOOM 405 Lugonia, Ne wport Shores, N.B, 548-1290 $54,500 Sunday l ·S •17897 Maggie La. Htgn. Bch. 962·4495 $39,500 Sat /Sun 1·5 263 Walnut, Nwpt Shn, NB 54:;.7575 $75,500 Sun l·S 31562nd St CNpt Shores> N.B. 645.7575 $65,500 Sun 1·5 8 Rue Chateau Royal, Big Cyn. NB 640-6161 $125,000 Sat/Sun 1·5 1896 Del Mar, Laguna Beach 644-4910 $69,900 Sat/Sun 1·5 137 Via Waziers , Lido Is l., NB. 752-7315 $159,900 Sat/Sun 12·4 ••Sl238th St, Newport Island, NB 61:;.1oso $139,000 Sat/Sun 1·5 315 Goldenrod, Old Corona del Mar 61:;.5511 Sat/Sun 1·5 320 Seaward Rd, Shorecliffs 67:;.5511 Sat/Sun 1·5 ••No. 5 Balboa Coves, Nwpt. Beach 631 ·1400 $139,500 Sat/Sun 1·5 209Joann, Lido Sands, Nwpt Bch 67:;.6670 $62,!i()O Sun 1·5 320 Kings Road, CiiffHaven, NB 642·5200 $129,500 Sunday 1·5 1455 Morningside Dr. Laguna Bch 494-8057 $145,000 Sun l ·S 118Topaz, Balboa Island 675· 7144 $89,500 Open Sundays J IR I. FAM IM or DB4 306 A venido Carlos, Newport Bcb 752.0347 Sat/Sun 1·5 20911 Beachwood, Huntington Beach 962.4454 $62,900 Sat/Sun l ·S 17792 Cypress Tree Ln., Irvine 646-7414 $79,900 Sat/Sun 1·5. 4441 W. Coast Hwy, NB 646<!255 $96,950 Sat/Sun 1·5 1030 West Bay Ave. Newport Beach 6734781 / (213 ) 449-6175 Sat & Sun 2145Seville (Balboa Penin) NB 57:;.9111 Open Sat/Sun 1·5 Madison PL up Bluebird Cyn. L.B. 499·4551 $149,500 Sat/Sun 12-4;30 4101 Glenwood SL (Irvine) 551·2100 $53,000 Sat/Sun 10.5 24265 Cedarbrook Circle, El Toro 586·5013 Sat & Sun 1-5 1715Tradewinds CBaycrest) NB 642·8235 $92.500 Sat/Sun 12·5 •4601 Camden (Cameo Shores) CdM 642·8235 $215;000 Sat/Sun l ·S ••121 Harbor Island Rd., NB 644 -6200 Sat/Sun 1·5 343.5 Quiet Cove (HVHills ) CdM 644·6200 Sal/Sun 1·5 16.57 Bluebird Canyoo Dr. Lag. Bch 494·2146 $138,000 Sat/Sun 2·5 3140 Country Club Dr Mesa Verde 979·3'188 Sat/Sun 2·5 ••3806 Channel Pl, Npt. Isle, NB 546-4141 $129,500 · Sat/Sun 1·5 ·222 Lugonia, Newport Beach 631·1400 $66 ,500 Sunday 1·5 •2319Tustin, Newport Beach 546-2313 $85.000 Sun 1·5 Z753 Gannet, Mesa Verde, CM 546-5990 $69,900 Sunday 1·5 1201 Cliff Drive , Newport Beach 675·6670 $92,500 Sun 1·5 26592 Fresno Dr. (Seville) MV 581;.7322 $53,500 Sun. Only 10·5 •3075 Platte, Costa Mesa 64$-0303 Sunday 1·5 •8391 Allanta, Huntington Beach 549-8655 $73,500 Sunday 1·5 •3006 Ceylon, M~ll'Venle, CM 549·8655 $68,950 Sunday 1·5 716 Poppy, old CdM, CdM 675·6000 $129,000 Sunday 1·5 •llOOSandpiper, HVH, CdM 675·6000 $122,500 Sunday 1·5 ·433 Heliotrope, olltCdM, CdM 675-6000 $89,000 Sunday 1·5 4 IED.ooM • •706 K·Thanga (Irvine Terr.) CdM 675·5930 · Sat/Sun 1-5 783 Hudson, Mesa North, Costa Mesa 548-7729 $46,000 Sat/Sun l-4 2l!JOSerang Pl (Mesa Verde) CM 557·1849 $62,500 Sat/Sun 12-4 711 Via Lido Nord, Newport Beach 644·1Z10 $169 ,000 Sunday 1·4 212 Via Palermo, Newport Beach 645·2425 $115,000 Sat & Sun 701 Rockford Rd, Cameo Highlands 675·5511 Sal/Sun 1·5 316 Catalina, Newport Heigbls 67:;.ssu &In 1.s •2416 Vista Hogar, Bluffs, NB 67:;.6000 $61,sOO Sunday 1·5 . ' •342Vis ta Bl\Ya, B Bay off S.A. Av. 642-5200 $68,500 Sunday 1·5 4 U a FAM IM w DIM •2864 lnroz Dr, Costa Mesa 7~1920 $79,500 Sat/Sun l ·S 1003Coocord, Cosla Mesa MS-90'10 $48 ,100 Sun. Only 14 1723E.Ocean Blvd Balboa Pen, NB &M>-32SS $12S,OOO Sat/Sun 14 1841 Pt. Taggart PL HVu Hms NB · ~1261 $89,900 Sat/Sun 1·5 2319HeatberLn (Back Bay) NB 644-4910 $89,500 Sat/Sunl-5 360'7Surfvlew (HVHillsl CdM 644.QOO $119 ,500 Sat/Sun 1-5 •908 Aleppo CEaslbluff) NB 642-823S $98,500 Sat/Sun l·S •1368Galaxy <Dover Shores) NB 642·8235 Sat /Sun l ·5 •2218 Wmdward (Baycrest) NU 642-8235 $149,500 Sat/Sun 1·5 •8118 Sandcaslle, Corooa del Mar 644·1Z70 $.119,900 Sat/Sun 1·5 4610Dorchester (Cam. H'lnds) CdM 642·8235 Sal/Sun 1·5 •2837 Ellesme re, Mesa Venle, CM 54&4141 $83,950 Sunday 1·5 •1512 Dolphin Terr. Irvine Terr. 673-1148 $129,900 Sat/Sun 124 163S Bluebird Canyon Dr. Lag. Bch 494-2146 $138,500 Sat/Sun 2·5 •1023 Dolphin Terr .. Irvine Terr. ~7211 $199,500 Sat/Sun 12-5 1606 Antigua. Dover Shores 57:;.5511 Sun l ·5 4714 Cortland, Cameo Highlands 67:;.5511 Sat/Sun 1·5 9785 El Durango, Fntn. Valley 557·7016 $73 ,500 Sat/Sun all da y • •333 Morningstar, Newport Bch. 631-1400 $220,000 Sat/Sun 1·5 •19141 Beckwith Terrace, Irvine 673·8550 $117,000 Sun 1·5 2501 Lighthouse, Broadmoor, CdM 642-5200 $150,000 Sunday 1·5 •#9 Torrey Pines La. Big Canyon 67:;.6000 $174,500 Sunday l·S * 1958 Port Trinity, HarVuHms, NB 675.600() $97,000 Sunday 1·5 1812 Port Wheeler (HVHomes) NB 642-8235 $92,000 Sun. 1·5 •2955 Mindanao, Mesa Venle, CM 546-5990 $73,500 Sunday 1·5 871 Sandcaslle, Corona del Mar 640-1047 Sunday 1·5 17Cypress Point La. Big Canyon NB 64().6161 $179,900 Sunday 1-5 19 Hermitage La. Big Canyon. NB 640-6161 $169,500 Sunday 1·5 3010 Washington, Mesa Verde, CM 546-2313 $47,900 Sun 1·5 1209 Santiago, Dover Shores, NB 546-2313 $129 ,000 Sun l ·5 51R&FAMIMorDB4 •••6.57 Via Lido Soud, Lido Is. NB 673-7300 $299,750 Sat/Sun 1·4 25 Locbmoor La, Newport Beach 644·7Z70 $194,500 Sunday 1·5 •••76 Linda Isle Dr (Linda I, NB 6444910 $395,000 Sat/Sun l ·S· 36 Linda Isle Dr Linda Isle NB 6444910 $395,000 Sat/Sun 1·5 • •618 Hbr Isl Dr (off Bayside Dr) 642·8235 $325,000 DAILY1·5 17 Lochmoor Ln. (Big Canyon) NB 644"6200 Sat /Sun l ·S 1572 Pegasus, Santa Ana Heights 64$-0303 Sat/Sun 1·5 409 High Dr., L aguna Beach 642-8235 $26.5 ,000 Sun. 1·5 2421Sierra Vista, Newport Beach 646·4380 $89,500 Sunday 12·4 7 II I. FAM 1M er DEH #3 Hampshire Ct. Dover Shores, NB 644·7Z70 $295 ,000 Sunday 1·5 HOME +GUEST 2 .. 31381 South Coast, Laguna Beach 494· 7551 $275,000 Sunday 12·4 HOME & INCOME 2 ••• 2 .. 516 Femleaf. Corona de! Mar 675·9111 $92,500 Sat /Sun 1·5 CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE 2 IEDllOOM •#4 Westcliff at Dover, NB 642·1733 /645·2848 Sa l /Sun l ·S l IEDROOM 41l Flagship Rd. Newport Beach 64$-7575 $47,950 Satl·5 4 llDROOM #10 Goodwill Ct .. Newport Beach 64:;.0303 $62,500 Sat/Sun l ·S DUPLEXES FOR SALE 2 IR I. I IR 3030 Breakers Drive, CdM 875"2311 $172,SOOOpen Sal/Su n l ·S 61136tb St, Newport Beach 640-5660 Open Sat /Su n l ·S • Pool * • Waterfront *** Waterfront&Pool ..... - --... • • ' t-....:S. I SU!ldrt·-"""'· 'm IWLY~lDT • le•r.t IOOZ •••••••••••••••••,•••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••\••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... -...Fors.M -...... --.. ..... -l= .... -. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Coroaa def Mw I OU ConMMI clef Mw I OJZ Mwtl 'I• 1tocfi I 040 • ..... I 0 IXlCUTIVE IEACH UTIEAT 41R·2 STOllY $52,500 Secluded entrY to tnler· tainers delicht Uvi.nc, room with C'rackllng fireplace & cocumandinlj ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• HALF A DUPLEX -$50,000 • THE OTHER HALF -$40,000 SEE 457 SEAWARD ROAD SUNDAY UNIVERSITY REALTY 3001 EAST COAST HIGHWAY 673-6510 ACT Ill I Curtain rises on this dra matic 3 !: bedroom and study, 2 bath home with f. ~ cathedra l ceilings In Iaree form al ,: dining room. Sunllte atrium opens to 1: living room, dining room and family j: room with cozy brick fireplace. 2 .: Large m asler suites, one up, on down. Boat or tr ailer storage area. 2 Car garage. AUowanee for luxuriou ' n ew carpe ting included in p rice,. $62,900. vlew ol coYered pavlUoo & grounds. Baaiquet COf'OftOdfl Mar I OZZ osta Mna I 024 o,.w,..,_ 1.s2ot11 _._H1 ,,2..44$4 aired dining room is con· ••••••••••••••• • • ••••• • •••••••• •••••••• ••••••• ~COATS & WA LLACE 'CJ:J-7 REAL ESTATE . IN C. vrniently served rrom URE ~t~a Verde . Dy Owner huge gourmet kltrhtn. 4 IR DUPLEX Tri·level ~ br, htd /pool, Sepa r a t e v.•lnJC for SO OFIAYSIDE Ueopt.$79,SOO.Prtn .on· m.a.i;ter & guest 5uill'll . . ' BR 2 BA l-'IYo:·..:"':.':..-061=.:.'':..'=".:.'.:.'""'=--I Sweeping stiilrs to with al , rent ... &. second story suitt'&. Only 1 ~ year~ old . PRIMEEASTSIDE A LOCAllV OWNIO COM PANr SIK~ING I Hl SOUi COASI RlA SI HCI 1% I Hurry I Owner houi;:ht Featwing beam ceiling&, AT $45,000 ano<her. Mu5t sacnrice! n1111u.ral wood nnd bnl'k C.all963·7881 . textures and perfect Averyshortwalktol7th U..-6:~ •-h 10•0 In'--1~44 location. (;all 644-7211. Street, a neat 3 bedroom ._..,....,Oft -oc ,. ...-v :;:.'f..i r,, 'ii · 11 s lt1t• r., ~' 11~ '1 home surrounded by bol • •••••••• ••• •••• •• •••• • ••••••• ••• • •• •••••• •••• [® l1~!il1tl ~ ~;;~:~~·E~,~~~2 j:,' • BeMm55,3.;!~0nome ln ';\',~;;~~~~~ •. ~·~~!~ . =-·-•m111E1 ~ Ol'f,.,'\rt 'il ·1rs•uN•o~1 .. <1• nice a rea. Fircplilcc, PrinSl25,()00.m.t'T19 1 [a 1Tu!1·1:1'1JI bllns. urpe1'. d"I"''· 4 IEDROOMS . Ouatity Bli It Eastern Charm! LAK t-: VIEW. New1>0rt Beath. lf.!l' 5 bedrm, country kitchen 'i- library . Lg pool. l~e yard. Perict·t for gro"'" ing fa m ily . See to believe' Open 1'~ri tSat /Sun /t.ton l ·S. 2327Tust.ln,N B UGLY C..t.Rl'ET LOVELY HOME This ~ sq. ft . home ranch style ha s 4 bdrms, lge F R. formal l>H & can be purchased !'ubj<'t·t to 6 ,..~ VA Joan . C lo ~c enough to bike to beach. $62,SOO. s.&.S-9491. -' . . Retirement Dream on Balboa,lsland Let us show you a money making property' New 2300 sq.ft. 2 story, n .2 zone or use as 4 bedroom, lar~e family type home v.·ith 2 fi replaces. Quali· ty . 209 Pearl. Open Fri /Sat/Sun 1··1 STOP!! A REAL VALU1':~ Charming Mesa Verde. among newer homes. Al· t ractive-landscaping. Lots of sto n e and sec luded patios. You ~et 4 bcdrms. fam rm , 2 ba in spacious arrangement for enlertaininJ:. Owne-r has reduced pri ce to $58,900 to move to new home. You'll be glad we as ked you to call, 54(}.9922 for appt. OWNERSAY5 Sell·l~use option lease- A once in a lifetime op portunily to move "up" lo Irvine Terrace 4 bedrooms, l haths. pool & t"f.E land . Opt•n Sat /Sun 1·5. 706 K· Thang a. ~.~t;1{i1 i~ ~~~~. ~~~1~stebnu~1 °tu~~ THE RAMCH . --••=•=-mil your tt.>nn11 <.:1111 to $54,950 TWO HOUSES • .... .,....... Ill T:'~,~~~·l;:"h'.::·~~.~'. I Jil Swec111n,;-rement d ri\>e ~:::~P~ moenc El~~.l s~~; ~+£-:~1:~~C:,, h~~·c~!::~ ooe-rent the other. Both in g w h IL e b r I ck 1n tip top move·in condi· fireplace! Gorgeous COMEIY&IUY tion. J\t ai n hou~e ls a FalS~ial pallokltchcn.•Kingsb.c 11p•rlouslBR.Clean asa r--bed r ooms l n c l u d t11 SHORECLIFFESTA.TE whistle! 1-,a ntastic Think of this G~ ... , secluded mastc.r auft e. t':lei;:ant quality home In starter investment op-mortgage, available to· tlcavy cov~red p at\o. choiceCdl\1.Jbedrooms, porl unlt y. Call now day on this 3·BR pool JUST LISTED·HUR~! :i baths, for mal dininG 645-0303. home. This house: has the Ca\lnow 752.1700. room. stu1Uo & family appointments for a fam i· Mr. 111 q."\1ur• row NtCI.• room Call ror appt. ly such as 2·ba, dlx. kit rh [ I ;;~~··~r.:·:,·,.,.~··~:;~ ~· l~liH;ll l~,Lil'eY .. tl center entrance. $43.50011,,,. 'O'~;;,J!-!!'-~-~-""" U! .~J -lfJll! .I!!'! ~ CALL JlERfOR MANCF.I...: • 6 7 5.59 l 0 • i;:;:;•~Cll~MU~~·~Yl~El:-::;:~m~~l;;;R;;F.;;A;L;;ES;" ;;T;;A;T;;E;·;;"';;';·;3584~ UPGRADED Terr a~e 36.17 E c .. l Jtv.·,. (..'r1 ,\f Cambridge Townhome. For Sale By Owner·Me:oia 38r, 2ba. laund rm, f'r •DELUXE DUPLEX• Verde 4 Br .. 2 ba . Pnme J•ark /Pool. la ndsc~. 11rea . Under priced al paneling, shutters, pifr· $f'4,500. 979·7320. quet entry. Gar openir. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 162.500. Owne-r. SU.80!5 ·• 552-7500 red hill reelt y ' Lowest Price! Harbor View Hill~ Reautiful eustomized LUSK, 48r, 2Ha . Fam. rm , D R . Open Sun I 5P~1 . 877 Sandcastle. 640-1047 OPEN ilOUSE . By owner 1·5 prof done in & oul. ml1Sl see spac. 3·4 Br, 3 Ba . A/C, l yrs old. 24265 Ct"da rbrook Cir. 586·5013 Fowttain V alfry 1034 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUSTBE50LD WALK TO BEACJI SCliOOLS AND Sl-I OP· PING. Only l yr young. BiJ!: 4 br. 2 ha. Wet bar . 1tficro.wa\'e oven. Quick r-~~~~~~~~~ possess. No qua lify. UHIVERSmPAR" Owner will he-Ip fine. Cuslom Parkside Scott Really 536-7533. The Julliard ! A-1 arvelt:J.ii. l~~~~~~~~;;;;;I f Io o r p I a n ! 3 l.'r g 2400 sq. fl .. 48r, 3ba, up.11 bed roo ms +huge boftu11 graded. Fnm. rm . Bonus room! On a quiet str~t. rm. Dining rm. 3car gar. PRETTIEST $63.000. (Hl1). T<1 m 573,500. Call 557-70 16. h Qu 644 6200 c;>UAINT DUPLEX Prin. only. Ont e een, . · Soutll of Hwy. HuntHICJI.., koch 1040 BLOCK The kind of property ••••••••••••••••••••••• and iti; a very nice block buyers search our town !---------·' too! J..ocated in mo~t pre· for. Quaint. cute. charm· SHARPEST stiJ:ious a rea' J ll uJ!:e inR. unique (oops!). and !! bedrooms, 2 bath. formal adorahlc . With beam l·eilings. knotty pine S&Sintown.Customde· dine. + private atrium walls, wood burnin)l ~oration and landscap· off master suite. Walk to frplc and a sunny pr1tio, 1ng. Over 3000 sq.fl: Sta_rt beach, lennis and hand nght around t he corner t.he NewYear out n ght1n ball c11urt . Compl up· from Carnation Park. th1s lovely home. g r adf'd for most d is · l' criminating buyer. Steal $86,000 Call644·7211 this rast. 1t v.·on't last ? ~ 962·44n U:::)S46·8103 Call 962_7~7~7 S1 ~I Macnab-Irvine HEALTY CO~\ PANY THE BIGGEST : AND BEST : IM UMIV. I' ARI( This is a frre standln~ ' bdrm. family room hdmc "''llh formal dining arµ2 2 massive fireplaces. Jt's many fE"alure s include.: -Open beam cathedral ceihn~s -imported Itali an entry tile ~ S&S BB O \li'NE R anxious . ca.lo~ ~O~ HM:luced below market. --FC't.· Land. :woo. sq ft. 4 Graciou!I Santa Bar bara !\"lodel with pool & adja. -Spanish tile roof V.'alk to tennis, pool school , & library AttentiOft Buildrrs hr Rkr 673·1148 2 prime ocean hay ,·1ev.· I lots in CdM . l hlk from beach. $128,500. 979·0631 or 64•1·4510 o .. ·ncr I 006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ol'EM HOUSE I 023 Dolphin Terracf! lrYinf! Terrace 4 BR, Pool. spectacular view. S199.500. fee. Open Sal /Sun 12·5 1301 No. Bay Front, 2 UR House & 2 BH Garage M.lm Apt. $140.0110. By owner. ~ Byappt.673-5100 __ ~ 3 Br Fixer Upper on F'u\I -Jot. gar , patios, $69,000 Costa Mrsa I 024 firm . 675·2975 • ••••• • • •• • •• • •• • •• • • • • WOODSY 3 Br. lg yanl. 200' to Bay Beach $89.500 hy owner Open Sundays f;15 -7l•l<I 118Topaz. 1\1 Verde Pacesetter. 4 Rr, 2 lla.1,.-:e lol. 2RIOSeranj! Pl 557·11«9 o"'ner S62.soo cent to the park. I year l•--------•I NEW and all lhe work is AND Pnt·e has just been re doccd $5.000 to $81,900 in cluflini;: the land! tlone. Walk to Golden \\lesl Colle~c . Don't wait you'll miss it? R.3'9·1710 REX f,. JI Ol>GES REALTY BIG-VACANT 2 Story New pai nt 1n and nut. Forn1al family rm & chn · in.I? rm BBl) &· covered THE VILLAGE, REALTORS 559·5055 patio area Vl'ry low Tov.·nhouse. New nan~ho priced at only S5H,.'l00. San J oaquin on the Golr REDUCED 20671 Tiller Circle. Won 't Course 2 hd, den, 2 ba. last!! \\'orld He:.r l F.s tate For sale or lc:i sc W/Op· To $46,000 for this lovely 556.7777 lion to buy. 833·2581 or 4 year old home with a 1...,~~~~~~~~~ H.1:1·3952. secluded br('akfast patio, I· ------- also has a no qualify in~ S53.000 ~ 3 Br &. FamRm . V,\ assun1ablc loan. SEACOASTCHARM lnrlry, upgraded. By Don'twa1tyou'llmi.l;sil! FAMILY HOME + O"'·ner4101 Glenwood St. 839·1110 5."11·2100 REXL.llODGES INCOME ------ HEALTY l br in cus ton1 :1rea LA SALLE SE..t.CLIFF w/seasHle churm ' Cop MODEL per kl'ttlc k1tc·hl•n , 2 \'an1 I $99,500. olleJ!e Park, 3 HR . 2 R;1, Your choice or 5 models. E1tceptlonnlly attractive IJ?"e fam-rm. ncwl)' de· On or orr the r.OLF upper l ·Bdrm unit ~atcd .545·51·11$51 ,500. COURSE. Bkr. 8"7 ·2525, on n13jor Greenbelt ty haths. candl<" lite din<'. come see this beautifu l •I hardwood f/(1 ors ~ hC'ctroom 2 •2 bath carpets. Plus a I hr ren· IO'i''nhou:sl! with lot.'!. of tal to help you make the w/beamed ce1hn~ and ""1ESA VF:HOE. 3 bdrm, 1."c....7 ... ·97_,o ... 2 _____ _ pe~ & grOO\'P<I hardwood 21 -.i ha., 2 fplcs . lgc fa mi · payml'nl~ short 011 cash? mirrors. wood panclini.:. Submit a 2nfl 1·.o ! a ~ and "'':ill pap('r. Close h1 sumable 7,..., v A. loa n ! pool and paddle tcnn1?:> bkr 962·5Sl l court . Locations grent . floors ... J_..arJ?;e I· Bdrm ly rm, IJ?;C' master bed rm, TRANSFERRED lower unit. OPEN SUN . bi~ yard. inodcrn. upcn. 12·5pm : 212 12 12 1~ Onyx. l"llT)' home this is your ch<ince In $129,000. 2140CounlryC\uhDr NERVOUS quit bein~ a taxi for the children. Fireplr1ce, hiii:h t~amed Ownr/Realtor979·:'n88 SELLYOl!T{ llOUS1': ceiling, 2"Bdrm, 2-ba Fantastic I yr old "llunl· &S.<\VE LE RAISOR home plus •Partmenl. $36,000 lnj!tonV;ew."Lo•d•ol• JO, BK!t trg. p:itio. Call for appt. tras incl cust. cr1b1nets. 968-Ml82 REALTY lora Vance VAJFHA solorium Ide. ''op;eot WANTE D c Pvt pacty FULL PRICE landscape. hu~e lot, shk need!I 3 br home in 4523CampusDr ,lrvi111· r£alfor roof .. 3 spac. bdrm~. 2 downtown II B. Prin. on· Campus Valley Shop Ctr. CN·ncr trans ferred. mu.<;t ba, fam-rm. Beau11ful, ly 675 0026 CALL 833-8600 673 ·4062 sell lar~e 3-BR ranch that 's all! Hurry .l"""·= ... ·='------1-----------""""""------I house. Assume 6% Fifi\ 963·5611. ••••••••••••••••••••••• loan. psymt11 only $142. -1---------•IL~a hach I 048 per mo. Lo\\.' do-.·n pay-BEAUTIFUL ••••••••••••••••••••••• •FRESil • menl . low n1onth ly , , ' JELUXE ~f 08 1L f: S'ANISHCOnAGE paymts. Cull nov." 28rHousr 110~1E at ocean, bin Many, many improve· 54().3666 endofcul-de·soc-VIC"'". 3br. 2b:1, lrg llv. menl! ma.kc it like new Spe<'Hll amenities. Hui.;!! and ready to move into. Jljj1....'J•• i::~ J $46.SOO 581.2306 o~nt"r dcek . BBQ. landscaped ~~m3p~~:~io"nuet~~e ~~·~~l~ ._ir=t/i#J4J:I All TERMS! ~~~~~~~~~1~·~~ACJI . 3 <'harming Only $79,000. JT OLLTS •••••••• Good family home. 4 l"IM 1044 unit s . F:inla ~t1c vic)N . WOOD,Healtor .675·M676 We'reheretoh~lp bl'drooms. 1 ~~ balhs . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2·1br. 1·2br, 2ba. frf'· P I T WW~.", 'c•o'11'e"g""e."c"1~,o!d"1"0 •OP,ORTUNITY• patio. O"'·ner finan e . PEH 0 f'f S790 dn. P3!>'S all cost . l.n "°" " , s11~.ooo 4 bedroom 2 bath plws of. of $21 ,8(1(1. Prin only 1 Br both llunlin~on Reach New I is tin,:: -~nt)!eou:i OC r. ANS In E H W)' flee. SteJ).!! 10 boat l~unch Condo. 998·7894 11nd Wnlm1nster ~1all1'. 3·BR , on land you 0 ,.•n Choice 3br. 2\.'J ba, dtn. .nd Pn.voote ba• •··ac•. t-:xcel\ent neighborhood. ~I any xtn. $79.000. 1 h 2 ' 1 1 "Ut: 11 OPENSAT /SUN s we 11.r. rp, vew. Owner 11 moving to On ly$47,000. ~ · ·1· pm 0..'Rt'r flnan e. $149,$@. Ore ion . 2145 Seville. The fasll'Sl dr;lw In .the \Jfl l§T:tli~;l"F.1;;' Michelson to Elm to WHI lea!u~ opUon. ()penSnt/Sunl·S west .. ·" I>:1lly Pilot --~!; ... -·--~-~ l'7792Cypre5sTrec l.n. PEGALLEN JEFt' BRIE RY Classified Ad . Phone 962·4471(r.U 546·8103 UNITED IROKERS Rt-:AJ~TOR 494.lS7S l\EA~TOR ' 67~·9111 642·5678. JoMC.-.y 646-7414 1095N.Co•st.J~.na:uDa I I I I l l , -.. DAil Y PILOT Sunda , November 30, 1975 ~~!!!!.~~.~~ ........ l ~c:4!!:!.~~~~••••••• ~:!!.F.~~•~••••••• Condo mlnlum1 ToWA• ~Couaty .._...Uat.M1t1d hou:sn fors.de 1100 Prop1rty · 2soo••••••••••••••••••••••• ············•JI'••······· ........................ ... w.. lll1 ~~!.~~~ ........ l~~!.~~~ ....... . I 1 i 1 •ocll I 048 leg•1a ltoch I 048 LOCJlllla leoch I 04' ...... $ ... ...................... Newpori leach I 06' Hewport .. och I OH leDCh I 06' .......................................................................... GARDEN'OONDO SpaciOUI 1rou.nd floor, quali ty con1lructlo1t, frplc, wet bl;r, dbl elec 1ar O)Jmptc lliu pool, Adults. Own the land, walk t o s hopplna . Reduced to•4'11. •OHIAcaE• UMOH HBGHTS" PACIP. RANCH ••••••••••••••••••••••• Br, % Ba, frpk, p'f'l. pa\lo, 2 bib to bcb, DO petLfm.ITWl87 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• llUFHIPLAM Front row view, 3 Br, dm, eornpleh'ly remdkl. open Me Sat/Sun 1-5. 308 AvenidoCarlo6. SOLAIHEAT AHDLAGUHA ~~~ LIDO BA YFRONT ESTATE A private place for the thouahUully unorthodox. Bountiful view, 11moked &IUI, hardwood Ooon, be~med ~IUngs, s t:iined &hua wlndow!I, ad In - finitum unusual• p lu., 4 Bdrm1., den /library , $1915,000. BAYFRONT EXECUTIVE HOMES All 1lumpstoae COOlllnk·ir.c~ -J224 Uon, s.BR, 6-ba, dea.r" ••••••••••••••••••••• Muter .Wtt: bu hia 6 DUPLEX WITH PIER & SLIP OPEN TODAY 1-5 DRIVE OVER OR SAIL OVER TO 611 36th ST. •Lido Nord . Prime location. 50 Ft. lot. L&e. pier & sLip. 4 lldrJl\'\., ramily rm. $400,000 * Lido Nord. Lge. 1>ier & slip. S Bdrms., spacious & inviting. $325,000 * Lido Soud . f.>icr & .slip. 5 Bdrms. & d e n. 2 F'amily home w /loads o f paneling. $299.750 110:1 1• .. ~· 0<• ... t.. ... 1~ ,..._._, ..._h 1JJ·OJ.I' 642-1733 JlKR 64.5-2848, 1100 •-b .~ All -· oll Br. fntd yard, •anre, rtaS BUD. ......... · t pie o IJ N .h.llrt . Diesi l PIC•bo '11 •••• ~::t:dr:"°" pet:. Sz10~ a way. • ar S48-82Sl orf?l..1111 pecaa kit.ch., cumoon1..:o=====;:_-- builtim inc. leemaker, $270. 2 Hr, yard. c plal, r~frl c . lretit:er, colt -drps. tliO "D" Monte Yb· maker. ~o wtwet bar le ta 846 8883; S.U-7128 Wate rfront living, ycl walk lo shopping -no s ummer trarric snarl! SPACIOUSHESS Presently enjoyed as ,, ~ hedroom. Son ClelMflt• 1076 ........................ . ...................... . beer ta pper. all ne w v l nyl floor•. crpta, MESA VERDE NEW DUPLEX~ DANA POINT f'amlly hon1e w /a room 2740 sq ft home: howcv'-!r , owne rs will for everyone . 4 Udrms.. return it to a ·• l>ctlroonl u nd I larre fan1Uy room, luun-4;. * Lido Soud. 50 Ft. lot , lgc. pier & s lip for 60 ft. bo•t. S ildrms . An xlnt Ooor plID. Leasehold. $225.000 TWO FIXt..:R u1·s Lar.i:e ,.Jew lot. Good 1r1· come potentiul. A-1 ake of. rer. 2 Bt /1 Br M!l,950 3 l{r /Z Br 1'10,900 3Brl2 Br $75.'™> Only 3 left al t.he•t· pricca. 12000. tux credit. Jlome & income. Wtstbay Income •lome.s 341.21 Cst Hwy, 49&-3431 wollpuper, s hutlcr5 & 3 Br z IMI., J(rdner locJ'd dfl.18 . thruout. ~aut'ly $375mo.545·1867 Jd~cpd w /walit rfalls &l..:::==C.O."-'"'-'--- K<M ponds. Room for tm·I---... -~-... ~ nis court & swimmin& 3 BR. 2 BA. Bltrui. Good pool, !iO a\'OClildO & 15 crpts. drps. Like a model fruit tre<.~. $?24.500. home. Dble gar. H&F' clr1 &-1tor:il!c roon1 , v1ew bedroom duplex if you desire. C ALL 673-7300 FOR PRIVATE TOUR ANCHORAGE IHVESTMEHTS 1714) 4f6-77 I I al)!!• '""1 tor tho k;d. HASTINGS & CO. d ........... LIDO REALTY D<»!HA MOHDOR. Realtors 3377 Via Lido, H.I. 6 73-7300 pool. Own•r pays pooi &t"rv . It ga r d•ner . &66-3928 or eves. 549-1532 ~~€!?.~~y. 111"9 640-5560 Day or ETtni~ .. ..: .. 9,4-0lfO~ll-'. ~~~~.~~ ••• !?.~~~~~~~.~~ ... !?.~! OPl<:NT~l~~UN . l ·S TAX SHELTER ~ CALL NOW FOU R·PLEXES near ~/. 752 ·7315 lhe ocean. SlZS ,000. and •""•.!:~'-!..!:'!.!:~ up DONALD M . 8110 I ~"" A -, llurry on thi!I 1m - 0Cean \•icw 2 btl rm . own Laquna leach I 048 Loguna leach I 0 48 m:iculatc 2-BK hCMC h lachenmyer YoUt 0 ..., n ar1t. Close to •••••••••••••••·••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• ••• Mew Fabulous Catalina Vi tow homt' in ~aut nbrhood abopptnJi & l hlk . walk tu TRADE SE DRAMATIC HOME 1921 Kings Rd-Opl'ft Daity 1 1.4 Oct"~n \'l('W, r1ref1l>tt'C, Re,11to1 --- beach , in the heart ur • LL With f,!u•·St apartml'nl. and anxious owner . Only OutofCounty VAIL DEC lST. ~tESA LMgu nn ik'al·h 111 xlnt Excltin.i:: executive homf' Spac iou> s hinJiles 4 _....J ~ ...... '"" "'3,000. Property 2550 DEL MAR. 3 BD, 2 BA. n~ighborhood. A ...,-hulc ur ""'Ith punoranlic views-hed room , 3 Ii a 1 h on , ~ ..J • '1 1 p AMORAMIC ••••••••••••••••••••••• FP, 0 /1. Chiktren OK. ubuy at ~2.500 for boat, land or homr secluded C'ul-dc·!HIC with .... "'"";"""-i-~,-OCE.4.MYIEW REALT Y INC. 2 Bedroom house and 1 Near all schools, $37.S. mA .......,.fl,....n:.c.T"t within 6 miles.of Oran~e wide and exc1tlnl{ ocean " fj ' 7 14/846· 1371 bedroom house on R2 lot, mo.545-6740or642-8181 . u u LA.::u . .i.·~ Co unt y a 1 r port . \'ie...,·s. lligh beamed cell· ,,(-If_ ·~-:::~ .. _.~--~ U 111 111 " r h n 5 Ju 5 11 ----------$23.950. ~.000 down, $175 m@IDilGW ZAG HOD7.KY Re:tltor. in gs & patio . Guest z.: . REU UC.:!-:f) the ii rite Income Property 2000 nlo. Ownt.•r will carry Isl 1 STORY 2 br, 1 ba, stv & •99·'2800 494·Mill ~i purtmenlhas fireplace. ~ ,.-_.... S6.7oo on tins luxunous ••••••••••••••••••••••• T .D. 4139 Te mescut. refrig .. encl. gar. Adll.s, ----w lk 1 •· h I ·,-'a --~ ~</_ ,-.. _. new 2Hlt . 2ba Villu Triplex,E.CostaMesa Hume G ··rdens nopcl'l.$215.548-6920 •OCEANFHONT* :.J 0 vl'at fll\( • -P•• ralr•c•· •·ondomin1um . • 11 $139 m .. .. $75,000. Xlnt lax s hell(>r <C ) Tta re at $225,000 . By REDUCED FOR \'I a~c ' ' · ~:-----· -.. 1 Will help finance to close Agent . 832-26921 -'~o~r~o~n~•.:c:.· ------Br l o/4 Ba , $.150 full up· owner. 752·1171/499·438<1 . EMERALD BAY H out. Xlnt iuve1>tmcnt ::1t R M5 Farm g raded, cpt11, drpt> IMMEOIATESALE Li\·e with the v.·orld at ypen b e ams, 4-BDRM , 3-llAT • only$<19,800. C9tc ' s, 2:700 549-2066 Chnrmin.i:: & cozy 2 your fc('t. This n1a~nifi-formal din, family room . 3 Ca r gar. CAl .• 1~492-4121 $6,000 .• ~~:!~ ............... 1..:.::.c='--------LAGUHA BEACH IS A Bdrm. home on the end cicnt fan1ily home is hid-AnotherOc. Vu. hme . by Keith 1 'os ri·e ld . BEHTllA HENRY REDUCTI0111rr..1 HOMEFIMDERS or quiet, private drive den on !1 quiet cul -de :-.ac -i ll i':ALTORS 1""'11 ·I 5 AC R I:: S : pink 642 9900 overlooking \\'oods Cove. 0 v e r I 0 0 k i 11 f.: th e A.HODA MAGIL, Rttr. C7 I 4J 642·3600 --------! 6 Unil'I Easlside Costa G r a P er r u it • 4 0 O O * * • * * WAY OF LIFE ( Yi'llAT A WAY 1'0 LlVE!!) o .... ·ner leaving area. dramatic panorama or S..Juan .J,.fesa.Owner saysmove per/acre. 922 ·7398 2brtriplexw/yd&gar $71,500. L aAu na "s ru gged I Capistrano 1078 now, he's got another Tradesinvited. -chg · coas t Ii n e . Sp 1 r a I ILoguno Miguel I 052 Mewporf Beach I 069 ••••••••••••••••••••••• escrow to close. Thesel...CC.:::=:'-'".'...'.:=::'----I 2br, gar, k.ids lpels ok ur IN TJIE WOODS ; of Bluebird Canyon. Strik- ing conte mporary, 3 HDR!.1 . & DEN home, wtt.b all wood exterior. Franciacan tile floors , fi'reptace, open bea m c:el lings. Sprawlin g beneath tall shade trees. Newly constructed & oc- cupied by builder. A RARE FIND f 'OR $80.>00 PAYS FOR s t aircase leads to 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l Br 2 b3 fnm rm units even have a s pen-WHOOPEEE! ITSELF bedrooms, family room • 4 Uedroom. 2-boiths,1 flre Place, 2 yr ii: old'. dable.They look sharp RanchoSanGeronomo $l96.2 brduplexw tyard 4 units, inc 1 ud in g &. i;!Y~n:asiu1n . Gou rme~ . step-~own li vi ng room, OPEM SAT /SUM I ·5 landscaped, pntio cover, now but if you 've got the Selling for $40,000. dO""TI ~SIDE Ice house 3 separate and private k1t .c hen has. 2 d umb-f amily roo m ._ large 512 38thSTREET by o wner . $49,000. beurg•d·o'°ne~el'i;~xyingco~i~~~ (and tax dcduc lable ). Br,2Ba,crpt.s,dblgar, owners living area. out-""'a1ters, 2 d1shwa!lhers enclue.ed lot , l)pnnklers. .00-1468 .. Ocean side 26 + acres. $360. 1923 Fullerton, Z o!-areaownerneeds im-and cenlrallsla ndforlhc Ideal family h ome MEWPORTISLAMD Sc:MtaAna. 1080 exchange. Stocked lake, stream, blks E. of NB Blvd. mediate cash. Close in ultimate in entertaining $59.900. Watt>rfront hnme -pi er house + guest, barns, 556-1017 · J t c 1ouD RE •LTY & n 1 • 3 ••••••••• •• •• ••• • • •• ... .. • ----------with ni ce o..:ea n vie""' convenience. us r · * .... A * oa, s pic n span -1£ IQ .1 corrals. Boarding horses•- rrom all living quarter>. duced to $299.000. 831 941 1 bedroom, 2 bath, warm & 1/• ACRE UGI ~ pay ex~n scs. Asuume La.rge 4Br ho.use. NIDIS TURMER ASSOC • comfortabl e h o rn e . HORSERAMCH Plac• 67o fina~~ing. dist., frplc, din rm., new $.129,000· 1105 N. Cst llwy, Laguna Mission Vieja I 067 KilchE'n 3 GOU R!\1 ET'S S2 3,500 Pi ap..-i:I•• · 640..6600 paint. $375. 673-0626 OPEU HOUSE 494.1111 ., ......................... dcliAht! rireplace a nd 752 .. 1920 " · 1· s II It 's a do<. but u fev.· 3 Bd 1 ba Slo"e Lg EXECUTIVES -... spacious p3 LO. e er 1•00 OUAllST. NIW,-()tiT •t&eM • • ~ • ffiGll ON A HILL; "'ith a, panMamic \IU Of the ocean & Ca talin :1 Island. 4 BDR M. & DEN +din. rm., built on 3 levels. Liv. rm . with beamed telling & rireplace. A SAT.&SUN.lto5P!\t ~ may help finance. bus hels of nai ls & 9 ~ fencedyrd.Boalaccess. 1455 Mornings ide Dr. OCEANF.RQHT OMLY $139,000. gallons o r paint can Grnpe Ranch, producing Kids & pets ok. Close to ~;;i~.~~:pointments Pri. beach. 5 Br., 5 Ba .. ?"c uf !\tission ~iejo"s Balboa Boy Prop ~:r~~~~~ntt:i ~ ~~~~~! =l!~~t~~:._.~~~c . errie schools.$.150.546-79<15. . r I • lg. LR + fam. rm .. frpl., inest ne i!!hb_or oods, R•alton ' Posfihilitles oalore! I f CJJ. --·••-4 Bd, & Fam.rm., newly GREAT F' A l\1 1 LY -;;~;;;;;;~~~~I lfOPttEAT$78,950 • Y. 0 U G ET T 11 E 3 BR Oceanfront private community w /tennis SKAKE.S: when you buy ct s ., private bea ch . t.bls rustic 3 BDRM. & Touches or N:ew England PA!\t . RM . hom e . h · I l Oetailed exterior or AL c arm in new y cons . CEDAR SHAKES, Liv . home w fbay windows, rm . w I b Jack Ir 0 n windo""' seal. S109,000. fireplace, open beams & 3 BR Lri-level . sweeping far out ocean view. Pacificpanorama,frpl, PRICED TO SELL, FOR wet bar. Over 2,100 sq ft . ,ONMLIYSSlllllO,>OOH R••LTY of contemp. qua!. S69,900. _ 1896 Del Mar Sat/Sun 1-5. beams,4decks +studio neur lhe :O.t ission Viejo ., " HELPHAVESlOOOOO _.. -- apl. New rurn'.1ure ,.,,,1. Country Club. This is an •675·7060• you have a strong right · . • remodeled, no pets, kids , t · g· Need units 1n C.M. now! ok. Refs a must. ...... 5. In· Cou l d b<• 3 u n ,·i ,, elt'.::<1nllydecoratcd.two arm Ql s rong 1ma 1na-~ h b th tion th. may be for }'OU No listing nee. Exchng Real Estate el water & gardener. Reduced to $299,000. story; J ~e a rooms, . is . . 800 3COTTAGES Jus t r edu ced from $115,000. Beaut. Ck . Vu . Across from beach & 1 Blk. to town. 7...oned C·l. Contract of sale poss. Great potential ~ $89,000. LAGUN1\ charm 1 Br. house + studio Apt. Across from be:ic h & cl05e lo !own. Great Ck. Vu . $72,000. din in " room, 2 'h baths, Oceanfront 546-00Zl. ok. Steiner Investments Exchange 2 548.3337• ,., 6(2.9666 .................... ······1----------an set an1ong tov.•erin~ B be ed ·1 F 1 trees and privacy. The Largest & best duplex in i $100,000 ~~quity in San 2 r am ce1 .. P , price is so rig ht )'OU town . Sp c c t :a cu I a r Cov nqlOft 4.Plex Gabriel Valley income Laun. ~m. Nu paint, lge won't believe 11 ! coastline views ; 2 bdrm. . MEW OH MARKET property £or beach or yd. Patio, 2 bl.ks to shops PRESTIGE & 3 bdrm., with family Original owner buying Orange County income & parks, $270 inc waler&: rm., 5 baths ; <I £rplr~ .• 5 up-must sell. Xlnt llunt. property. (213)444-4025 lrash.646-!Klll AHO ELEGAMCE t'll<'L ~arages ; a ll bll-lns BRADFORD PL Bch location. Call quick· or f213)962-0038. Brokers Pool home 3 br, 2 bi, Leisure liv in~ for active + ['arp. i''incst in ever· CO.,DO can'llast! $1 20,000 protected. frplc, bltns, dbl gar. adults in beautiful ~as ta· ything ~ $.150,000 " S~obl• of lle_l-Sol. ~et for ull1m~t e c LL #!!\. ,,,_2 ,1 .. VACANT -3 Br, reduced Rral &tote College Park Area. $395. pnvacy m softly rolling " 9!\!!, ~ to $32,900. Home is very $850 Per Year Wanted HOO 548-4471 or540-3666 hills with your o...,·n golf Mf4'411fC. clean and ready to move Principals Only! ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br. 2 Ba. plus bonus course, two eleg~nt club ; ~:A t. TV into. Vl'ry close to Che 549·0812 or Private Party v.·ants 2 or 3 room. Gd. cond. close to houses· recreation cen-s,., Nr•por• Pol l orr1cr pool. Owner very anx-646-6710 Agent BR home. Prine only. all schs. $375 540-1542 or le r s . 3 spa c i o u s ious :.ind will consider South Coa!!l lnv~tm ent 552-7778 aft. 6 pm 546-9460 bedrooms ~·ith 2 baths. 3 BR + DFME any terms. ....":~~:"'!".:.'~~~~i::'==::,:::c~::.:...c-::--:1-~':':~------ Spanish tile-roof. Ca ll for NEWPORT 839-1710 3 TO 11 UMITS Private Party wa!'ls 2 or 3 3-BR + ram rm. Me&a - un appointment to see Jt EXL.HODGES New&: near new l ax B r home. Pr1n only Verde. $37 5/mo. Call 985 S. Cst Hwy, Laguna Wnll')' M. T oylor Co ""-494-0731 RHl!on 644-4910 VICTORIA BEACH· !iiiilii!\iiiiiiiiii•l '~~~~~~~~~~1 Level lot. XLNT Oc:. Vu. " Underground util. Poss. theWtbelievableview. $74,500! REALTY sheltered property in ap-S5.2-msarll"6Pltt 645-5045Agt. Shlncjlecl Channer EMERALOBAY T e r ri f ic v ie w . 2 ()c:ean side. charming bedroom, 2 . bath, open ,iWderhome.Hardwd Ora. bea m s. f 1rep l ac.e, J,.ovely grnds. $155,000. h ar~wood fl oors, brick Agent 675.WOO. patios, large t erraced -=---------1lot, trees. $96,500 TRADE Open Sunday 12·4 Equity in Laguna Beach Be~ch f ront . Private C·J land with income. Al l stai rs to tbe beach. orpart.call fordelails Lease or purchase this MOM & POP secluded home on YJ C-1 Comer near Victor a.ere. 40' living r~m, iJtugo's. Funky s h op. firepl ace, panelt.n ~, ~e & garages. 75 1''t. gues~ house, & artists oo' No. Coast Hwy. Ask-studio. $275,000. 31381 inc $135,000 South Cool, by Laguna OLD SPAHISH Royal. ft.Ower Temple Hi lls *494·7551 * 'jjea. Day &: night views lo( Laguna & coa1lline. •'ftOmantic arches, foun- 1 • .11,!')' (<r.)ac5 t'.6L.f'cir tain & patios; modem 1==========1 'k'ftchen. Call to see. . ESCAPE 'Country p1a<'e, just 5 tTtin. from town. Room for kids le horses & being a.II together. Priced al $115,000 , FIXEll UPPER . Slashed to S72,SOOI Liv- ing & guest q uarters, room to expand. Woodsy, "v,rtvacy, a "m\l5lsee", f~ .. I ' ' S53 N. Co.tt. Lapne '4*4,~791• 798-64150 TrodlllOftal Holl day> Chestnuts hy the Fire and a large kitchen ena- ble you to enjoy your own home by Christmas. 4 Br, 3 Ba ,2 Palos Verdes Rock fireplaces, pool ta- ble In the ramlly room, pingpong table on the sundeck. Priced for you at $133,000. Spaciout U•in<J A Bath in every bedroom studio guest &Gile wilb private outside entrance. Family Rm, wi th wet bar & modem kitchen. lncl'd glass lop r a nge, self clean oven, mlrcrowave '0:t.anview3br,2ba cust. oven& beaut i r u I built home. Reduced to cabinets. Lots or e"Xtra $111,900.499-1188499-1112 cl05el space & storage areas. 3 car garage, By owner, 3 hr. country street to street lot ror feeling, brick fireplace, .... $138 ·~ Ope be n pn vacy. ,...,.,. n .;open ams. peg oora, Haase Fri. Sat & Sun. din rm. sunny kitchen, 2.s, l635 Bluebird Canyon ·ew, walk lo beach. 500.4!M-1318 Dr. Hatwol Cedar Jt.* EME RALD BAY · New c ustom cr art ed er fortress, 8·8 R, home in Ra ncho Laguna . A, r&Jnily rm. home-Dramatic entrance way lrg. lot, open spaces , leads to step-down living prlvate area, tennis , room. dining rm , family pools, parks. T here's rm, & den. Pella glass nothln& Uke thill in all of windows compliment the Ot)r.nge County. $250,000. wood &: glass decor. 3 car .... *LINGO* gar age, underground L • ltUL ESTATE utilities & beautiful ca- ' Y6'.81)11 499-tSSl nyon view. $138,000. ~ Ope.n House Fri. Sat. & _ GRACE r. SPACE Sun. 2·0. 16'7 Blueb;rd Canyon Dr. ,.,.r-aoi1cv1ew1 MAYOCK 1 .Perfect family living & n tertaln menl In de· Corporati·on Dcblfut now 3000 I Q I\, '8-Br, 3-ba, tam rm, Logunaleac.h •HSDUELHSEGHl~HECE It ARB 0 R VIEW SouthLoguno 1086 preciatin~ area. Some OWN P r operty in 2-.-B_E_D_R~0-0-.-,-.-2 -1-8 6 A ~ l-IOMES ! Lowest priced ••••••••••••••••••••••• can close 75. Inglewood, Hawthorne Placentia. $21S/mo. Call Only $79,900 fo r a r.lonacointract ! Double LIOHSESTATES orSo.Bay Area? G4.>-5045 Agt. magnificent two story door entry . Massive MAGNFFICENT 536-2579or 592-so10 WILLPAYCASH! ---~----- esta te-t y p<' hom e on c ra c kli n A firep lace. OCEAN VIEW Ph. T 1 and Oma Point 3226 huge lot with cur''"d Spacious formal dining 8 .d , h OW.,'ERS om D Al•ss ro ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... w er s-custom ome. .., TD PROPERTIES driv e wa y . 3 hu ge room. Vaulted ceilings . Close to beach & priced • • New2BrCondo,Ocean& s ubordination. $39,500. 497-1711 bedrooms. 2 ih balhs, Garden view kitchen. below re placement cost 4.PLEX (213)674·mo'7 anytime Sunset View, t en nis, L091MaMlg..el 1052 pr~essionally decor~ted ~e~iu~~Jad~~bl~odoo~f. $81.750. Sharp, imma c ul ate or{714)846·5221aft.6. pool. $320. 714 ·833-466.<J ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Pl15 your uwn cus om master s uite . Large managers building. Very Rentals days; 7 14-496 -8 174 SPECIALIZING lN RESALES IN THE PRIVATE GUARDED OCEAN COPTtMUNITY THE SHORES AND SEA TERRACE jacuzzi. No community · d · wknds association dues. bedrooms. Redwood cov-pnvate groun s, patio, •••••••••••••••••••••••i----·------- Mlsslo"' YIE 'O ered patio . See t o bigtrees,waterfall &lot.s HousesFumish.d FoultainValll'y 3234 " ~ believe-callnow752·1700. -~~~~~~~~~cl of .green! Offered at low •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• REALTY pn ce or $87,000. Agent, a.o.1s1mtc1 3106 3 bd 21A b . d 581•1000 837•9500 [® Mobllt>Homes 549-0812or646-6710. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • d a, air con 1.f. For Sale 1100 wt Ls Fu B garage oor opener, &e ••••••••••••••••••••••• $45,000, Small traile r Bante~yfe, t hrn . 3 S37r 2> clean oven, crpts, drps, ASSUME7°/o LOAM . Park,DesertHolSprings .' ron . o~e, 1800 sqft. $350. m o. No credit qualifying no DBL Wid e apprx. 16<XJ sq. 10 spaces + 3 lrailers, + Wt l hou t Pl c r • $425 531-5001or831-0282. new loan costs. If this ft . Super oeean ~1ew. 2 swimming poo l s w /pier, 675-1217 or·1---------- sounds good . call us, we MEWPORT SHORES North Laguna, pnvale +owner's apartment. 675·2898675-4000, 673-moo 3 Br. 2 ba, frplc, bltns, dbl can make it happen 3 Bd rm . & den. fixer-beach. 494-5037 Submit d n . 0 w n er Lu Cott . garage, encl. yard. $380. 58 1_2100 upper. Choice location! 6422657 xury age.ant.iques, S48-447lor540-3666 Walk to beach, pools, HUNTINGTON BEACH -sunken heated wal~rbed,1 ----------WILLIAMS tennis .Only$50,900 ~' just across the street BUYFORLFSSNOW! 2Br.$365yrly .673·781l8 Hunflnqtonhach 3240 CENTURY 21REALTY CAYWOOD REALTY fr o m the b e ach . 2 Fast rising prop. "aluc : 1-ine 3144 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bedrooms. 2 baths in 4 ' ' F Le 3 B 21.h Ba *548·1290 • St pk th 1 dE.C.~1 .• nrpk,thewlr.2 ......................... or ase _ r • 3 Br. home view lot. Coun· i----'---'-'"-''----1 ar ar wi J>OO an 2 Br houses on lot . F R Fu U 1 p.. Formal Din. Rm, Fam. try kitchen. Assum. 7% Harbor View •tomes. clubhouse, call Coals & privacy, lg bk yd. 2 1or . enTwt ~-3n8v. 2!"..: Rm . with frplc, cust. loan, $44,900, 830-8465 Carmel model. Family, W a 11 ace Re a Ito rs . patios. $58,SOO prin only. :;1n~5 n'""j 3r, "' crpts & df'J)5, elec bltns. Owner. 3br 2ba owner-644 ·0357. 962-4454. 529·7248 ' . mo. or mos. water softener. Lgc heat· FOR TIIOSE OF YOU ' ' Avai l. Dec. 20. Call ed pool, wtmaint. inc. WllO JUST ?lot UST J r. E s tate, lge fenced Jlarbor Vi ew l lomes 4 Commerc.ial 8 UNITS w /pool nr So. 552-7883or552-0328 Walking dista nce to MAKE A "MOVE" THIS grounds, 3 B~, i''am. R!Il • BR, 2 BA , Fee land. ini· Property 1600 Coast Plaza by owner. L-a leach 3148 schools, beach, parks & HOLlDAY SEASON -superlndscp ng&patios mac.Agent640·1267 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 17 .7M gross 120M ~· 1· hed l ' L~K~··~~.'>:!'.."~~·~"6~7~~~-f;;:::::;-"';:C:;:':':'=;::;=::;:;-[Mod 1·1 1 1140 000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1g t enn1s ct. $450. WE OFFER SOME.....,..,,.,.,., yownr ...... · crnspi -eve • 642-lOOO e ves. Avail lmmed.968-8068. MI G HT y G o o o Beaut. 2 story colonial 8200 Sq. £t. clear s panl-'-=-='-'--""-----JVlew, 3 br, 2 ba, avail. "BUYS." SHOWN BY Mewpcwt Beach I 069 home w /view from every tilt-up on 25,000 sq. n . 6 Plex, 5 Plex, 5 Plex 12117-1 /16, childrentpets Uke new 3 Br + Fam . A p p o I NT ri.t E N T ••••••••••••••••••••••• room. 3 hr, 21h ba. fem land. $235,000 Contiguous bid gs in C!\1 OK. $400 mo. $100 wk. Rm, frplc, nr. Adams & "ANYTIJ\I E." CA LL DOVER SHORES rm,sunroom,overslzed2 l30x l50,$58 ,SOO AU2BR.Agent675-0000 497-1851 Beach Blvd. $375 mo. us• • car gar., sep. laundry Sh opping Ce nt e r, .._._ le 3 9 Call968-9331 . GalaxyDrive,byOwner. area, F I A heal. e ncl. $179,000 Lotsforsole 220 twwporf och 16 Contemporary Redwood patio. bE'aut. landscaped •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Br 2 Ba Fam Rm ~:~~Sil~ f c 1!i~h~1a ~ ll&lliG~l~a~ss~V~i~e~w~H~o1mJe~.['j J&~r~re~s~h~ly~~P~,;~n~t~ed~,~s~e~a-I P~~r~:a·~,~~·~~~-1~-~~ • • SAN CL EM ENTE' 20peBr. wi8·nter 5rental. $235 Bu.shard Adams.· $400. B/R,5JOOsqrt underroof. w a ll . 673 .4 78 t or b X • exelu s i· e S l'ORE n ouse at&SUn at lst /lst/-dep 9687202 landsbecopedLeRorner.3BR, Xlnt value $259,000. (213 )449_6175 0 ;.·r-COLONY~ Mag~irieenl 1 :00 1 26 33rd S l . -.vu · -.. , open am ... $74,500 Appt .6'6-0000orS44'468<1 . view of ocean, surf 8 (1)871-6089 2,3&4 hr Condos. Teruus, F'or Sale by owner Dover Condominiums ff own-channel islands just 1 pools, sauna, jacuu:l. Nr. Shores. Baycrest 5 Br, housesfors ale 1700 yds.tobeautiful,"T-ST ,, LEASE J an.J.uly3 bt;·2'd: beach. 988-2297 o r 21h Ba, beaut pool & ••••••••••••••••••••••• beach. One of a kind ~l ha, all appliances, lam 968-4405 ENJOY Chris tmas here. Owner movin g n ow. Very upgraded 3 BR, lush landscaping & tile courtyard e ntry • .......•..••.•••. $74,500 jacuzzi,$99,500548-0120 NORTH LAGUNA only $55,000 _ CAL rm. Dover Dr. No pets.l--------- co.,DOS 492 .. 121 1470. mo. 631-3591 HOMEFIMDEllS ,.. BERTHA HENRY ••642-,900•• \\'h;tewater Views-2 & 3 u----•~-1-L-~ REALTOR ~"""'"'-lbr,util pd.'A m ibch TRIPLEX bdrm. units rrom $54,000. -------'---'---'--.c:J •••••••••••••••••••*••• . chg . A REAL BARGAIN. This N 420 Cypress, orth 12UMITLOT lcAoalslmtd 3206 2brcondo,child/petok mosl popular lg. 4 BR. La~un 9 garden home is wel l Costa Meaa R·4 with 2-••••••••••••••••••••••• located to all community Call 675·7225 bedroom house. Street Lovely 3 Br l lh Ba,+ Sep. Hurry! Jbr dplx, fncd yd actlvities ....... $'75,000 a~ h lley. access. Owne Guest ~m & Ba. Rltn kit. 3 Br 2 Ba nr beach & shoP· wtll e p finance. $49,950. 2 frplc s. J;a r, wshr/dryr. ping, $325 mo. Lse. lat & JUST REDUCED-Owner $550 mo. 675-2975 lsl + Dep. Vacant, avail. can 't use 2 homes. I I IQ ii ~ · ed 9688198 Spacious & c harming 3 U"I Corono cHI Mar 3222 tmm · · BR, (am rm w/fp, formal Plclt• ~ •••••••••••••••-•••••Condo. 2 BR, OW, d l')'r di.ni.ng ................. $83,500 BLUFFS, Twnhse 4 Br,1---;;-~;;;;;;;:;;;---\!~~~~~i_il!'~~!!j Prapmrti.. . •• 2·BR, frplc, 2-~ar gar and washr, refrig.,stove. Canyon Vu, Schls, Pool. RAYSl10RFS 7S2•tt20 & workshop. Avail. Dee. Clubhouse/pool faciL &ifoytt.eGooclLif. 2Va B&, $69,500 Ownr Newlistlng2sty,3Br,3 T.4.XSHELTER ••OOOUAILl't HlWJOt N &c:M 10.$450 /mo. $225./m o. 963 -45 67 494-3973 Ba, Fam. Rm. s hort OCEANASOUTH •• 2-BR, frplc, block to 962·2116 493~2513 499·4514 1---------wa lk lo pvt heh & IN Arch Beach Heights, 2 beach. Avail Dec. 27.1---------La N' ,. HARBOR VIEW HOMES marin a . F ee land, OCEANSIDE view l<!l5. $25,000 each. $350 /mo. 3 BR, I~ ba, big family guna 1gue: Portoftn 1 o.edlmbomac,4Br,3 $120,000.548-9SJ.1 CO!\tPLETELY £ur· l°'9BaJa.494-o6S5. HALPIMCHJN rm. Nr, Ad ama & thechoiotcommunity Ba, fin s h nus rm& nl sh~d. prof•sslonally Momltaift,Des...t, REALTORS Brookh u r a l . $SBS. loft. $91.500 for quick sale d, ecoroted model! ($4,000 Res~ 2400 2127 E. Cont Hwy, 6'$-3147; M>4289 OP!H HOUSE 12·5 prinonly.640-6.141 BIG CAMYOM t l 2RR t '""'B -· 30832, .. to ' '",',,',"1 c0ry,to ry ·,·0 n"do'. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-4392.. 3 Br 2 Ba+ Bonus Rm. Palermo, up g rad C'd, 5 Bedroom,Jbath,pror. RIVER ts&td ,,,,en Isl& hi Htqvel •I arbor View Home•., d..cor & IRndscpd & pool Encln"ed garage. Patio 3 ~CE HOMES crp "ll'· ..,_,,, d l a · SI U< soo ·1h ht r • PROPEllTT "1 last.lil68·1141 CUltom home-cul de sac 494-2146 l oca t ion, d ramatltl----------·1 .. 4!(!ftn, mt &r. ollil'.hl llaht Ylews, lastt, quality, l Bas thruout. • •• OPEH SAT. r. SUH. ·-· 29 .. 30 12-4:30 -t•M a d laon Place u p ••lu eblrd Ca n yon . ()ut1t1,ndl ng buy at 110,600. 1°1 •UHGO• :,::.. •. UAl.ISTATE --........ 49U812 ' -· •• ' AO/an REAL ESTATE ')QQ (".l o <l•H'Y" ~t 404 '"'' \10 11J•I> RARE!! Ellate located on\.\ acre Ut Woods Cove. Parklike 1e1Un1 1urround1 cJa1sic home w/6 bdrm1, 4 ba. Sfe t'o believe. $189,500. •• Gotr course view-1601 Port Abby Pl . :in cuz&I. · · wi wrouJ!: ence °' lblocklob1 '"beach,2br,1~-~"--'-'-'-----8rnnd new Calirornia 642.0322 Open Sunday 1-5. 25 gale. Adull Cove r 40) 5 Arres on Colorado r '6 3B 2BaMod lh N •·BR. ranch home on Lochmoorl,a .NH.C.8 11 c o mn111ni ly. pool , river Suitable for de rplc,patio,view,dec k, r c ome, 0 , · , -dbl gara.fCe. $COO/mo. yd wk, ldelll for pro{'s, 10th fairwa y of El Nhrucl Bevis Meti lrr 6ol4-11259. j acuttl, c luhhou~e. Nr. \elopmenl. Wiii finance ••• * ** • • • ** • * •• * • sn•la or cp)J, cust. wood. Gulf Cour~C!. Superbly DlGCANVONLOT Aus tin Smith Corman E:I Can1ino Plaza shop· by princ1pal.Princ,only. 2 br 2ba Cape Cod 2 mirron & wallpoper!i. c us tom de1 I g n e d t o Dest locat ion on Go1£~~R~e~•~ll~o~"~~~~~~~ ping center. ~alk to bus .557-8450 all :Spm, rirepiaceS patio garag' e Lge frp1c, dbl garp;•r Please the mosl d is· Course. "'0 7,500. Owner line, 30 min. to San · ' ' ' Be h Bl d •· ~ O ~ D le•o •v•l l now 1.ARGElottnSan Moritz 1ne.gard.$t00/mo. ac v •~"'Y· . crimlnatinJl.$16&,SOO. 58t-026<1orS42-6735. LJDOISLE · " •• · · <C II '*****••••••***** 982-0458 Lll,llunn Niguel l\ealty $32 500 CO!\IPLETE BY rest ne area). All 1----------830-5050 496•4040 OPEN llOUSE oWNElt. 548.3036 · utilities in & paid, walk-Snu~ 1 bedroom, choc LEASE 2 br, 1~ ba 9dult \ ,, Don't 1tlve up the ship ! 212 Via Palermo.J-'-'-''-"-===:.:...---1 Ing dlslaoce to J~ake brown e1rpeUn1, p1tJo, coodo ~ mo Cptd '"U!lt'' it in t~lassllled. $115,000. 4br, 2b<t + lrM: ri.tcsa Ve rch.~ condo . 2 6<1. 1 Gre.:ory . Very nice! garage. f>P":!'er. $2'7S /mo. drpd ,' wai h er idr1er', Ship to 1hore re!'l ulls! lot. Bryant Wiest 1\lty, 8:1 ., ;ttl.ached garage, ~or 540·6410, a11r Unl•enityl•ofty refrig/rna. 968-ZZ90 OT' 642 -5678. 645-2425. paUo.$34,900M5-fB86 forDwaln. l E .c.tlfw1 C11"510 ....,1 . I }. . --. • Hl•n Uw .. B1ti1d H1•n U.tu 't 1d ow ...... ••••!••••••••••••••••• ''''!••••••••• ... •••••• ....:....... JSJ:S ...... twatl u.tw.. lAf a twww11t1 Ui;fwa ... lm•h ~ ;SundaY,,,,,"1:.!· -"""'-'"'bo<,,_,,:10,. . ..:1::c07c:&,__ ___ .,.----'ONL=::.Y;...f'l:.=lO::.T'--'D=iJ"4,I\ -··•·•••••••••••••••••-(•••··•••••••-•••••••••• ••·••••••••••••••••••••• !Offlu • ...., 4400 - 11 i "_ ...... \JJ40....... 3244 ·······•··············· ......... , ................... ., ................ . c..1ew... Jl14C:O...MeM Jl24 11wcrr ,.. .... _. sa4o •••••••••••• ~.~::.... wU.•••=~o ••·•••••••••••••••••• • ••• ,,,,,J;.1,-,, .................................. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... ,.... leeclil ll6t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• \flll1ge Real Elllale ~ J br z ba ow MIW No,A&ull F"'I, bllU, ~ -'beoui 18£.At.rr. ct..ASS A tlOJ FJR!IPROOF OF " , F.din1tt/Sprla1dale landt<' PIC, sss'o /mo. tOW)OtOUSE 38R,28A ... $13S ~91Z·Zlll Reot.ab.Zbedrm-$2U. Mediterranean Village OCUHROMT RES 0 RT Horbor .~lff:.ms. C.M. •MaanotiatP.din«er -15 Mlnute:a to Beaeh. a :t 8R, I 8A. •• 1310 L-.•• leec:9' 1241 Min. to Irvine lodusl.rlal. R EAl.TYfNC~ tBR,lba,winlerPJO Air cond, elect, cpl.I, 17141.4'1311 3BR.28a.$300Wlnter drp1, music, ele• .. ' •Doi.&/Brookb...,..t •••••••••••••••••••••• Quiet cul-deofac. Private 3 BR. 2 BA ... 1.12$ Puoram1e oeean view, back lawn area wll.h -Carpets & Drapes •Wet Bars r STBtS TO IE.A.CH JinU.or, ample prkc. All ~· • 8olu/Bus.b1rd br, zy, ~. din rm, trpk or•Dl• treu. Adult.a aod 3 BR, 2 BA ... $345 bltna, full tength decU ovtt II yrs OK. Louted CWldt .. W•OllW 2 BR , 1 ba. winter S!!5 Incl. 31 ml.n. S .D. &i. 5 mla. · LOVELY I. 2. & 3-BR'I , 4BR,2ba,yeorly$4.. LIVING Rlv/N.B. f'Tw)'ll, 7 mil>I· Some. •tudlo1, frp1ct, 3 BR, Z Ba . S!Z5 Wlnt~r altl)Ort. M. R. Stever, oGl"llSScloth •Fireplaces •Dishwashers •Pools •Garfleki/Broakhunt ~ rao. Call~ In Tuatln bet •fk en l BR, 2 BA ... S:S:.U. 558-.5458. 494._-. Newport & Redhill (o(I •Gym & Saunas -Tennis Courts bltn l, tri. patios . 38R.Zb1POOWntr. Mar .SS1.0lllor648..s391 •Atlanta/Newland San Ju-an St.). No t"ee. J DR . 2 BA ... $315 OM View. 2 bd, drn. 1 \.\-546-4_\4_1. •Beamed Ceilings •Wood Paneling •Security Systems •Fair Housing I ed ( 01es ALL Bachelor apt fu.rn $1~ enc 06 ar . Yl'ly 60' PB ~ FT areas of H.B. ~ •&ttPadden/ b., $400. 714.f:21-tll!S o"----------•ALSO• SEA WIMD Oa kwood offers tht t611WESTCLIFF-NB LARGE 3. &c 4·BR bomet Condo, z BR .. 2 ba., den. tiomt in rCJort Uvlnc al 3 AGT. 5'l·Mm I & 2 BEDROOMS Brookhunr 714·990--0899. 4 BR, 2 BA ... l»O 2-Bdrm--'-"-"b----4 ~H u.mn. 3600 near aood schools ln de· Uni. Yr).)'. $ni. price you c:un al,ord olO 9 •., •Adan,1/MaJnolla • I •. remodeled ••••••••••••••••••••••• BR RA $320 aU wood, walk to beach. aired oel1hborhood1. · Jo\lmlshcd C'9o an .. V<t $300&up. There's 11 mllhon In C08ta Mes• Pl11a SIS uo ir:.e.e rec reation fa l'illtles. mo ~3900 ' l BEDROOM & DEN 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE -~~cFad~entMewland 497·1&13orC117·l~ 2 ~:~ :~u~t:,15 :0~ >IBR .2BA ... '380 l 1gm1otlls J 2:5 644..QIOO <Suslel A special section for t hose with small pets. " ~ NIGtrr LIGllTEO TEN·I.:::::;· ==.:----- NISCOURTS. A full time Nt;WPORT. full aervlt11 •&tc Fadd~n/Bu:sha.ni ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adults Only Bd. patio & pri. )'pd 2 M.ct1vities director who garden olflC'e suite.:. 1 ~bl~k=-be~•~c~h~, !-~~· _A_•_•_u_. ~~~~~~~~~~~! plans parties. BBQ 'a, vari?USaiict, from '3t in· 3 BR, 2 8A. •. S37$ • ~lc Fadden /Sprincdale 4 BR. 2 8A ... S3A~ Newer home in Lag. ID lb. Apow IMC ah F.misMcl Sale/lie or rent. 3Br ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2ba, bltnl. $290 mo. Av11l 1 .... 1.a.d )70 6 De(' l . (213) 3»9752. • •••••••••••••••••••••• I-Dec. 4th.,~. triJ)ll & 1nore! f'rec Sun· cl uUI A janitorial llt'"'- 3 BR, 2 BA. large apt in S AS day brunch. nr airport m-6668. 4-plex. PaUo, bllns. Near LA IRIS Plus Wwutlfu\ !UnKles, • UOlAa /Spri.ngdale 3 BR, 2 BA .•. $335 •F.din1er/Sprinrdale LC11J19H1Nkjlltt 3252 LITTLE ISLAND • nr 4 BR . 2 BA ... SSSS •••••••••••••••••••••• new, 2 Br. !iun deck, S325 Office Open Daily 9:00 to 6:00 014) 557-8020 2400 Harbor Blvd., Coota Mesa, Calir. Ellla (Beach . $3.SO .' ForDiacriminaUng 1&2 bt.•droo m apt~. Lg. exec. ~fllce •~•II. ~ Agt. Adult.a fumlshed & unfum1~hed. w /'!i1ecdr<ld1na0t aer1•010"~~ Watcllthe._. t d Mode ls ope n 10 to 1. inc u e . ver ~ ••2 BR, near new. $185. o •tf' the oc•• Sorry no peta or children. Oranft:e Co. Airport. Con· •Magnolla/F.dlDl:er 3Br,2ba,yard.$325. m o . adults no peta 3 en. 2 BA ... $315 GOLD REALTY -"";i""'394i;;;'.~;;i;;;;;i;]'1Q'71 Bltna , carport. Nr . R o ommat e s ervi c e tact Kathie for de:t.allt 963-4567 or962·2U6 495-4W or &3l·Z700 lel>oaPe•Ma 37 07 Coroeo del Mw 3122 CMta Mesa 3124 lrYine 1244 ~ hoch J26• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·-······················ freeway & major 5hop-hachwlthhl ihpl a va ila bl e. Mo nth tn 1 _:;1'2=.;·084::.;~7------~ ping. No pets. MS-0760. l BEDROOJ\1 month occupanry. m •Heated pool $140 up atore-o ces epla ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEANFRONT 3 br. 2 ba, ...,·Inter rental $3SS . util. New,large2brstudioapt. •Sundeck drp!I air bath. 17301 _,. Nr. major shopping. 7931 •Private balcony Beach Bl, H.B. 842-ZSSC B t~AUT . S;1n JoaquinSl95.3Br,2ba,ulgeyd. Incl . Avail . 12 120 . ·rwnhme Large 2 Br, 21h room for camper & boiit. 6l3-f724 ua. 2 sty. View or 8oU 2826 Irvine. 646-8883 or1 -----------1 I ~v i..::"::°':::'·c:"'c.7:..:·0::1_:;78'----l "Adequatc park1ng O a kwood FREE REMT 11. l ~r'('S EX Igo 2 br, 2 ba, di• •Elevator G d -·...,'"' '--h •Security M en OfCiceS !IS )OW as 3Y PtC course & lake. $550 . 545--11128 HOMEAMDERS >$7·1044 1---------·I poolaide ap\ nr 11\,'. • Adl\, Furniture available A ~ ft. Ml1eion Viejo " COR6NA DEL ?at AR no pets. $195. 536-8362 Lse req'd·Sorry, no pets part m ent s Laguna Ni"ueL 200 6\~ ~-------llNEW 3 Br. 2~ Ba, ••642~9900 • * 2 Br ·rownhouse, frplc. 2 BR, 2 BA, children ok, SS15 River Avenue tWwport ... ch 2000sq ft. 831 -1400 REHTALS 2 BR, 2 ba home for only $375. Clean. highly up- Twnh me! on 15 acre park, view, pool. jac11Zll, sauna, lse $375. 646·2700 Bach w/aundeck $13S Pool, tennis, continental PIMECREE.K cpta/dl'J'll5 , bltn.s, $175. No (at Seashore & SSth) 1rv1no al 161" lrfine Low Office -chg-brcaklast. Some ocean & LIVES UP pet.I. 960-1991. For appt. call 642-2.566 64 !>-0~::io Near OC ;\irport, S.D.' )love n~· ! 2 br, furn. Catalina \'iews. Close to TO ITS u •ME HARBOR VIEW "''"' L-•-och 31.e• PARK ._.EWPORT freeway. View Office \n OR... 4 B 4 Ba $600 -"'-"/g~ar=·~W~•~l~k_to'-b-'h"----I sho1Jping & fine beach. o,·c-r 500 t :lll trc•·~ and ~----,.. 1 d ll 3 BR. 2 ba home for $395. r. 644 ~"' .... m_o. 6+1·2611 1 o s t r t· 11 n1 ~ w 1th ••••••••••••••••••••••• APAITMEMTS -------"'·ell appo nte I U el WILL CONS I DER:l----:..:..:~~==----1 2 Br. lrplc, bar, bltns, 1 ~~~~~~~~~~ ~a l e rf ;all ~ l"r ca ll" 11 Drop a pebble into the Bachelorlor2 ll 4000 Rec ept!on, ceXntra ,.:raded STUDE•-EW l •-d . hoU:ie from Ocean Ftont f. I 1 I Cke an rrom your Apt. Bedroom• and ooms phone. library, erox. i-.1.;o wnn ... e,en unit on ~mo.Wlnter .673-tiOSS C t M 3824 rt' ax1n.: stt in ~ or •••••••••••••••••••••••ample tree parking OR... 15 acre park. New 3br 2 1 _ OI'"'" OS~ H O your s pacious new l·or Lease. Luxury, security, T,~nhouses LIV". 81 N-port "··ach., =!33~·'622:.::=-------3 BR. 2 ba +formal din-ba, bllns. frplc. upgrd:d , or . ...,,... <>J ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2· bt.-tlroom apurlment. l\lature adults. 317~Cst. ., S239 SO ir. .,... ·~ 1• 1n~ room. Good location. pool . $360. 644 · 1480/ Costa Mna 3724 Off leaten Poth rrom 1220. Furniture-Hwy . 499-2835. Ope~ 9-6 Daily Weekly winter rates. $35. Larae sin'"le ornce In LaW' ••10 2 •· 3 B Ad I S II l Spa-Pool•·Tennts single room. 6302 W · Cst. · ~ • ~ IJ0.5050ext22 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I. "'"' r. u lS no avallable. ma pe s 8 lk 1 1 11 p; v-'I I Suite Xlnt NB loc OR... pct.s,dshwhrs,sbagcpts. OK. Adults onl y. Officr 2 r. wa 0 own Across rrom Fas hion wy. neiuiOtl10le. Ubrary· Xerox · Rece...'.. . BR 2 .. b ~-rt! k ONTHEBAY $37.SOWEEt<&UP 1 d r 1 beach. Adults without 1,i--• al Jamboree on C714)673--0440 • • .,-J . r.: a; J u eroc . Stud" &l BRA,. c ose garage . rp c. 11pf'n 9:00 lo 6:00. 231)) b 497 Z884'9'1-3l09 anu J ___ :.:_::c::::::.:.:::._ __ J tionist./Secretary area., Sf75f'urn. Beaut Apt, 4 Br, 2 Ba, • 10 . P BBQ. Gas &: .... ·ater pd. F airvie w Rd .• Costa 12"':::~·-=~·=:::..:::..:..=::._-1 SanJoaquinHillaRood. Rooms $25 wk up . 644·9'.50 LE RAISOR beamed cell. frplc , •TV&MaidServAvall Pool ?aleset. Phonc~5·2JOO. Oceanvlew 1 Bd. N. end. C7141644·1900 w/kitchen. Apts $37.so l-'------.---- dshwshr$SS0.673·5719. •PhoneServ.Htdpool UMAHCHAAnS 1----------1 new cpl & drpo, elec.1--c...;...:.:.:._.:_:....:_;,_c.:,. __ lwk up. ••B -915~ or? Spaces Avail: (1) Ap-•Children Section 1• • uo 600 fl 1~ REALTY wpt Hts 3 br, 2 ba, den, •Low monthly rates. 778Scott Place, CM Adult 2 huge bedrooms. frplc , garage. l\'S blks -" ~3967 . pnro1•1213 •q. 1•11 --.!!t open beams, 2 fps, bltns. 642----5073 $170 no pets. Inquire apt Sch., $275. 673·3'131 or SPAMklHG HEW . room o ce, ......... 4S23Campus Dr .. Irvine $425. 6"2·9G66 -~~~week's rent 1---....::=-...:::=---I C,568W. Wilson. 548·5804. 3 Br. with Swedish E-SJDE C. M. l br, bath, mo. In large ofricei bldf Campus Valley Shop Ctr. i..:.=:.o_:::.:;:;;:_ ___ -1 ZJ'76 Ne"·port Blvd. CP.t ?a~ Eo~Ae a~!!.~!;.e a2r la:i1---M-E_S_•_V_ER_D_E __ Whitewater view, nearly fireplace. Small. children .,•v: ...... entr., ,,~;~rt1s'1· $105. aAtn ~I~ CN~I r~i:~ ~annn CAU IJJ..1600 llG CAMYOH S48 ·97S.Sor 645 ·3967 ~ welcome. 2635 Santa Ana 1..::c:'..:..::::.:0r:_-=~..=::._ __ , --------'---13 Br 3 Ba Twnhse & 2 Br a 1------.,.-----1~·~·~d~l~·~·~p~ts~·~M6"'°·~l~034:-:.__... --1 NEW 2 Br, 2 Ba, adult r4!!!ei:: ~ b5300a ". 3:~~ ba Ave. (East Costa l\1e!ia Newport Beach. Sleeping c:5511=.-8029="--· ------ Lge New Twnhse, 2 Br. BaTwnhse. fM.7395 •EIMGcrdeM'* CASA VICTORIA apLs . Lge beautiful in· .......,.. behind Santa Ana Co~n · Room near Shops & Bch. In Koll Business Cntr. Off den. 2 Ba. frplc . 3 . 1BrF\Jm.$185mo.l\tove l .2&3br.Delux.eUnrur. teriorsopentolushwettcr beach. 494 ·3333 0 l.r)'ClubJ . .675-3399fortn· Pvt.enlr&bath$120mo. l\1cArthur & Campu11: balconies. dbl gar. Nr. Beautiful Harbor View in fot $265. Adults, no or Furn. ~as/wtr pd. landscaping. f~very con-494·1339 formation. 673·0343 NB. 314 sq. It. at 50' aq. ft. Sho~ & UC I, "''·"""'" Home J.4 Br, 3 Ba .• Bonus E d S ceivable extra. l\1u st see cc=~'-"--'-'--'--~"-'-='--lroom, great pal>O. $600 pets. 177 . 22n \. Adults-NopetsSec.gate to appreciate. $355 5465. Luxury 1 bedroom. View. UTILITIES"•ID ,_1133-_30'1_1_. _____ _ -00-3645 Pool,recrm,elevators !ES VERDEVIL ~.,. near beach, f r enc b ,...,.., F'1m.Rm,pvlbalh,cov'd1-Ideallocation,beaut.dlx3 mo. Call 714·894.-2245 or Po A • Li..::>. b BLOCKTOOCEAN "ar. Pool, lllS mo. •Share Newport Beach ~Victoria,642-89'10 '"'"'" M v rd 0 · doors, open ea rn s, "' br, 2 ba, dbl garage, no1_..552=·~•44=1 _______ , California Atmosphere io,l _....:::::_:..::::::::::c:::::.:::.:::_1 ~ esa e e nve fl: a r age, I a u n dry , Deluxe Private 2Br, 2ba .1.:N=ew'.::.!port::.:~64:..::6~"'4:..::60:,oe~ve~•~·-I nr. Airport 2 Rm ole. pets. Lse. 919.0493 nrly new complex offers East. (714)S40-8871 . J ust utili t ies. $325/month. Lge walk·in closet a , Furn. $100 mo. Calf -"='-='-'--'-''--"='---12 Br & Den, 2 Ba. patio, to serve bu!ly people. H-i'--'a D• MHa W. of Mesa Verde Ctr. orr bltns, garage, cable TV, 1-'rederick 540-2210 * R~•LS * pool & tennis priv 'gs, ~. h --llarbo• Blvd adj. lo c . •1 .4 ·::"'~·.:1M::.:1:..· ------1 Vocoffon Rentals 4250 · g""l I'"' rum bac start ut 1160. 160 W Wll C.M I'I -Adults/no pels. $300 mo. UNIV. PARK w a Ile to be h. $380. Also 1 bdrms. 631 -2276 • IOft. • 1 _G_o_ll_&_cC_ou_n_1ry~C_l_u_b_. __ 1 Woodsy Separate Bach. till June 15. $17$ mo. on ••••••••••••••••••••••• 800 Sqrt New Medical Of. :ll;!R,2ba.bonus .... $475 645-MJG CloHdGcr09es THEV~DOME Apt. Util pd, $140 mo. yearly lease. Available CAllM fice !or lease '-"block 48R,21h ba ......... $450 Southloguno 1286 1 Br mobile home $155. BEAUT.GROUNDS U"'I .l:::m:::m::.::ed::·~°'::.:':..·•.::91:.:_;·1:::03S::_--1 Dec. 10. Call for appl •••llG-IEAR•** rro _m Hoag llo•~· 2 BR. 2 ba . . . . . . . . . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• +utll. Mature adult only, ADULTS-NO PETS 3 lge bdrms w /2 baths. -551~ after 6 p~f . 3 large bedrooms S1ee""' Cabinets, etc, f ree I THETERRACE 1991 Newport Blvd, IOminutestoocean. Lge. frplc , patio&pool. Quiet Oceanfront bach. Avail. · ,..., le ase assumed Cal 3BR,2Ba ........... $42S2 Bd, South Laguna 646-8373 1 Br, $185. Gas & water adlt units across from now. $200. util incl. Lrg, 2br, 2ba. wlk to bch. 12: Separate Rame room 548·3451 lil De.c . Jl o Rancho Sari Joaquin Ch,a_rmer. Frplc, beamed incl. Dr aperies. carpets. Costa li1esa Park. $275. 536-0321 pool & tennis. $31S/mo. Wlth color TV and pool thereafter• 675-1189 Of 2 BR .den,2 ba .. $4SSl500 cvel~n.!!~c:g_4•94"032••·1 _ocean Partially furn. 2 br. 2 ba. gas heat. gas st.ove, air 64.5-3381 or 837·9517 . 1845 ..::::.:=:.....------I 63t-1622/642·30t8. table. Huge sundttk. Dy mail repli;s to Ad . No. 28R 2Ba ... ""' .,_ ......., No children or peta. $185. conditioning, s...,·imming Anaheim Oceanfront 2 br, lb.~· yr week or week-end . 572, Daily Pilot. P.O. Bo;. · · · · · · · · · · · · _,,,, Mature adults. 642·S848 pool h ly. MOO. UUI Incl. Kids & Steps to Sand, 2 Br 2 Ba. 494-8611, Laguna Beach 1 .. , Costa l\1eaa Ca TURTLE ROCK Beautiful Spanish home •rec. room, was ers FOURSEASONSAPTS ok "''"'-0321 . r l ....., -'UV, ' ' 3 BR. 2 Ba ....... $425/450 by 1he beach 1·n e•clu·•·ve HO EFIHDERS &: dryers pets ·...,.., bltns. patio, rp c, -"5 R...+als to s hare 4300 92626 " M · Spacious 2 br studio, 11'.i mo 6429666 CULVERDALE of So L g 4 b Oc e•n •·u dup .. 126'. . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1· f S n to area . a una. r. ••642.9900•• •2Br,lba,MesaVerde. ba, p vt p a tio . pool. ., . Of1ces rom ~SOsq..,... 3 BR. 2 Ba .·········· $375 4 ba, lge~ rm, library, Avail now mobile home Adults. no pets. s.zoo . Adults. no pets. $195. 735 F'1rplc , gar. etc. Sgl pro· Hew Luxury Condo Professional l\fale wants JOO sq rt . PrimeC.ttt . IOC . WALNUT SQUARE r a 0).. t1ft, t: en tr a 1 $65 Refrig Avail. 833_8974 JoannSt.645-03J2 ressional adult only . /Lease now & choose female.to share 2Br apt. l\.!anufa cturl ng ar••·· · 3BR,2ba,AIC ...... $335 cour<yard,2eargarage. h 494·8171 your own carpet&: lnTusUn.838·0662 6464296or551·4289 28R,2Ba ........... $325 Avail. Jan.1. $700. mo. ·C g -OAKRIOGEVILLA 2Bd.FAMILYOnly. drapery colors.2Br,2Ba 3DR ,2 Ba ....... $315/335 (714)499-4108 o r (714 ) A bargain~ 1 brSISS 3 Br, 2 ba, bltns. children New Carpets, pool. New duplex, ocean view. w /pool in presti~ious t'l!ale to share Beaut Cd~I delx 2 rm suite A/ TIIECOLONY 833-6413 2brunrum,bltns tli0 ~·elcom e . $225. 8S8 W. $190. 645·1204 . frplc, beam&, 2 br, 2 ba Westcliff area. Walk to JJE:ac~ home. $130. All util, pkg, $160. m 2BR,den,2bafurn $600 Center.645.1197 . blocktobeach&$395. h & k Ad It uUls inc. no drugs. So. 675.rooo DEERFIELD Weshniftsttr 3298 STUDIO ts II uttl pd 714-49'7·U23 213·941·7455 15 ops par · u s on-Laguna 499-4329. -.:::..==------Studio apt $1:>0. Good I~. ap ·a · ly. $400 mo. &U-8373 orl ..:~::::::;..;:.:..:=::.:.---1- Sep. unit on property. Front duplex, 1 Br, adults $160. mo. 859 W. 19th St. Mission Yi•jo 3167 64S-8616 Female ,20-35 wanted to OLealuw"otrfu,.1,lye , cFqu•l•phploedn 673·1616oreves 642 -5056 over 30 yrs. No dogs or 642-3452 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DR B -;~-;:;::-;;;;:-:;::;:;--;;-;;;l1 c'~a~1S~.~548~~·Z1~20~-----1 'd Nr Hoag Hosp. 2 • 2 ~har~ n~ce 2 ~~· 2 3 upt Island. secretarial help 1 Br, rurn. No pets. Call . HEW EAST SIDE 2br condo. $260/mo. Ki s BA. bltns, OW , gar. in A1_1sa1on VteJO, w i g~ avail.$500644-7600 after5P?it. I Br loft, bltns . dis-2 Br & Den, cpls, drps, & ~t OK. 837-6050, Ei:-Adults, no pets. S2lO /mo. look1n~ young res pons1·1..::.:.:c::.=cccc..:..:.:.:..c.-- JBR.2ba .......... $425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• COLLEGE PARK Fireplace. 3 BR. 2 BA. 38R,2ba .......... $400 cpts. d rps, bltns, DW, lovely fenced backyard. $350 /mo . 963 ·4569 962·2118 552-7500 red hill 548_4206 h...,·a s her. cpts , drps . bltn!I & dshwshr. $275 l ~tens:=~'..:°"c.-:'~16~-c64c>~·~3485....._:·-::::J~S42~-~'387~:.._ ______ 1 ble m;ile. will . rurnish Pima ~=-;::;:~---;;;:;-;:'l-$2~20~.~64~2~-624~3'.,-____ J_,;S42~-S~2'~3_______ r e f i f desired • ca 11 h.cutive Suites Deluxe 3 Bd. Jba Condo. Dmt0Point 3726 Lge 2 Br. bltns. crp.ts, Mewportleoch 3169 Nr Hoag 1-losp. Large 3 768·0265 -----1 Cus tom-decorated fuiI Pool. Jacuzzi, security ••••••••••••••••••••••• drps, close to bus. shops H...tift91onhoch 3840 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BR , 2 BA, fpl c. b\tns. Car rer woman seeks s ite view or r lcel . raale v gate,wasberldryer. Will BIG 2 br, 2 ba. $250. Util &schls.S110,6Jl·30l4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WATERFRONT DW, patio. encld gar. s;imc tn sharedcluxe 3br Services of Certified consider 2-3 women.No Incl . Near beach . VIEWSIN Adults.nopels.$290.mo a pl s150 + 1':! ot il . Proressional Secretary, children under 14, no 496-019Sor960·1142 Lge 3 Br 2 Ba . ?il esa del ON BEACH 642·0596 Ml:J·i200 reception&: t>quipment:'l pets. S375. Owner/Bkr. '' sz~ I"' B NEWPORT. hlk A. rt I ~ Ht·~ •-h 37 40 . ar a~ea. ,;,u. U"tV 3 B 2 b' bl,.,.k lo beach irpo er nn. '"""" ----------IBef 6, 893-1351 or aft 6, ----wm.-..,...on-oc Valencia.540-7823 srrtlrlngck'SIQn andan r, a, "'" · Howdoes one findtha t ?a1 ichelson Dr, Irvine . 1-~ANTASTIC view of UCI, 893-4716 ask !or Jerri ••••••••••••••••••••••• SI 00 IOHUS etegant, @xclting way to Near new. !391). ltlGHT ROO;\I ~!ATE ? Call f~ve ?a1oore. 752-0234 park & hill!. Rancho San Kukuk. BEAUTIFUL 1 br rurn LARGE 3 br. lower. s hag Efficiencyrrom S220 live cnoose lofts. Day 548-4063 By re~isLerin~ v.·ith Joaquin Twnhse, huge 21-'---"='---------l apts $170 & $180. Spanish crpts. encl. p atio. Nr. 2 Br· 1&2 Ba from SZ95 wulC!ows. s1ryllgt1t5. fire-L J-lousemates Unlimiled Business Rental 4450 br&den. 2 ba, 1507 sq. ft! lm~ac 3 br, lrg liv nn. style bldg. p\1 encl gar , CX::C. S235. mo. 552-4576 3 Br,2 Ba. from $17 5 g~~~~~vg~l~~nf:~v NEWPORT VIL A 832-4134 ttl on-Fri I2·6pm ••••••••••••••••••••••• High ceil 'gs, frplc , 3 patio, l'rpt, drps, xlnt pool, sauna. lndn-'. ad Its, m1111on-dollar rec center. Super Deluxe DELUXE office, comm:1 balconies, pool & rec. area . $375 . Eves or 17301 Keelson Ln . 1 blk BR. 1 Ba., Pool. 2 Adults •Summer &\\'inter al Tennis court~. too. 1 &2 BR Mor F share 4 BO, 2 frpls. & indus trial spaces. Ahlo area.lblktogolrcoune. °"'knds.962-0678. W.oflleach ofrSlater. ~tax . $255 ttto. 16328 beachis beautiful ..,,.... d 1 Poo l. 595 plus util. mini ware hou1>es in $400 R d 1 Iowa.549-4338 . •\'iews of ocean. · . ......,, Beaut. ,\pts. A u ts. 8922345 J . . mo. ea Y now . Oftdominiurns ---~8'~2~-~7R48~----1c"':':'::.:.=--:=.:__-:_-:_I " • ..-,~ Bllns. crpt..s, drapes. dis-· · im. Laguna !';iji!uel & P.1ission "''°~ ·~-'••-d '425 -P A Cata lina & Palos •7rom,,,.,ory'Pni nl t v e1·0 area• lla•clo lo .............., vnTilnlf ne ~ lrfine 3744 2025 omona new pa rts. Verdes t' VJ't F v h\li'asher, r ec. rm. poo , Christian Science lady 1 "· " • TURTLEROCK. never •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Only I left . I Br. crpts •Large privat.e decks ~-~'.I saunas , BBQ. Security wishes l o s h a re apt San Die,i::o t"wy. 200 l.o lived in. 2 Br 2 Ba +den Beaeh Condo,_ 1, br, PCH $70 k $300 "n dr11s & bltns. Call for •Heated Pools-Sauna!\ bldg. w /malure lad y• Lag. 2000 sc:-ft 3 As low as a&· & Din. Rm .. Nr. pools & Harbor Pac1f1c, Hunt. t•lud~s ~~id ser\·k~: ~-. Appl. 645·0527 • A.~i;igned covered ~~S~~g~~~t;enta!sfrom IS.19 PL1\CENTIA AVE. Heh. 494·6104 per !IQ t . S: 1 ·1400 parks, lovely lndscp'ng Harbour. Bea.ch access. sauna, jaCU'lti, pool &: 2 Br upper. encl gar' ad Its parkinJ: 100 Promontory or. west. , __ 1_7_1_4_1_6_4_2_·2_3_5_7 __ 1Gc:wnnes for Rent 4 3 50 ~ Sq Fl c. 2 s ~ore rron,t S450 mo. incl grdnr. Pool. jacuzzi. Vacant. phone l7)7 E. Dyer Rd , only, no p ets. $185. •Additionalfreeparking Just nortn ot Jamoor ee •••• :?••••••••••••••••• "'tth 6 dr1vc-·1n bay . 833·2252. $2 55 mo .847·330 5 Irvine.>$0-1515 545·0'160 •Maid serviceava 1l onPaclf1cCoa!>tHIQneoooway. WATERFRONT. quiet, Ideal for auto or boat ...::::c==-------1 2131'377·&585. -----.,.---,cc-eel-'-"-=.:__------•Furniture avail Te1eonone 17141 67S- . Jri; patio. 2 Rr lots l2x21 ' Gara~e. $27 mo. h St _ owned andmanageoov t .~5 · ,1 1-1 1 Pl A C •1 !lcrvice. 585 W. J9t • ~a Beach 37 48 1 BR . cpts, drps. O/W, Tne 1rvlne comoany. s or age. ->.>a mo in u 1 · 21 6 accnlla \'e, ·'' · CM. Days ~0-5710, eve!-o •-I a-e..-1.11.___. .. ~~---I-11.~..1 o •· 30 5 ---------~I Dock ava i l 6 73-7381 t>'nrea•) ""'41 20 ~ -n••n1• ,.,........_ ....,.-.......... ,,.......~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• stv. refril!. no pets. S150. (X'n t'll ·r 9· ···JO 1-c::.==c.· "c'~:.:.-· '-"''---I 646,0681 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• KITCHEN apts at Cresc· 7 20 '· C ' · Sh a Ii mar Sat 10·5, Sun 12-5 •DELUXE• 675-6670 .::..::..:==-------. 1----------1$5(_>-Double 9ar <1ge, xtra Industrial Rental 4500 s..to Ana 1710 s..t-Ano 3780 ent Bay. 1435 N. Cst Hw y 646-2613 Eastbluff 3 br, 2 ba. lse. New 2 Br Westcliff Apt. 2 hi gh door 12-1 W. J ames ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 ..:R"'="='~· ~"~t"""=-· '="..:'..:·2'08=::__ 1-'-"B...::c.:__1 ___ 1 ___ , HuntinCJtOn Incl. spac master suite, full ba's, frplc, all new St., CM. 673·7787. 1. & r . a rg. ap · carp.. din rm & dbl garage. apphc., 673 -3593 days l:.:=...::c__.-..:_c_ __ -12000 Sq Ft or i c e 3769 patio. xtras. ceramic kit, Pacific Auto door opener avail. 83.J..9338 SINGl,t:GARA GE \.\"arehou!le space direct· l-"Sl~85c..:64c5~-c4266=------l Pool & r ttreation area .1~---------1 $J0.001r-.t ONTfl ly ac ross from' O t: $40 WK UP 1&2 Bdr & & 7110ceanA\'e Adultsonly.nopets. ONTllEBAV 5.'>7-1694 A1rport549·1480 Bach. Color TV, maid 1 StC?ry, I br, s tove f714 )~·1487 3Br2Ba.rrplc.dshwshr, serv. pool. Tllt: f\tESA. refn g. Adlts. no pets. •FROMS332• bltn s . patio, 5395. Office Rental 4400 415 N. Newport Ill , NB $165.S.'8·1il20 f\lanagedby 865Amigos Wa y,NB 673_5719. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' :.646::..:·'68::::1:_ ______ pTU N NIN G 2 Br 2 Ba 1--W'-"B'°Li'°a m"'--W'-"a l..:t•cc•..:•_C:.;oc.. -I 644 --8064 or 536· 1487 1· r.tanaged by Ocean Vu, yrly. 2 br, 1 ba 3BR. 2 bath. Ideal beach garden apt , Pool. rec 3 BR 2 Ba f4-plex). Nr 5 William Walters Co. duplex. $300 per mo. lol'ation. Yrly lease. room$205 .710W.18thSl. Points. Frplc, dbl gar. 644·6780,642-3639 150 I WostcHff Dr. Newport F1nan(•ial Ctr LecnincJ Offic~ Space Call on Site ~l a n a)?er Lease t ,000 sqrt w /olfice 11 0-220 V , heat , ho l water. new building, gd local. 645·22-,4. 5375/mo. J ones Rea lty . 1 lb 1 C ts S320. No pets. 540·4484 Bayfronl 2 Bd. 2 Ba, Pvt lnc,873·6210. et sn~ rap · p · Bch &: pier. $550. yrly. SCMtaAna ENJOY 1 1 .cc==~=-----l drps, kitchen, patio. 242 1&2 BO. Bch, pool apts. 979.1935&644-4510 ••••••••••••••••••~~ ... ~ Bf.ACll·LSE-ADULTS 1',lo~·er (rear). $175. up. Adults, no pets. l..::.:....::::::~::::...:::::__ __ I HOMEFIHDERS .. •642-9900• .. $llS.lbr,utilpaid ·Chi!· (714 )64ztiill 1 t ('XI 246 AIRPORT 3200 square feet 191z•per sq.rt . 2 air conditioned office~. ample parking. 'A RESIDENTIAL MOTEL S125 studio 675-1865 after Efficiency, quiet. sober. 536-7031 •LA PARISIEN ME• T HE AMBASSADOR WAY 5:30. t031\1cFadden over40, $140. incl util. 261 VACANT Jge 2 br, 2 ba, 2 Br. unfurn. S2l5. All WESTCLIFF BLDG . NEWPORT BEACH ';====~~~;~~~;;~;~;~=•li::~j~~F~~~i;; 2 c lcctri e. Fire place. l Bd furn -pool-b i t to ft.1esa0r.&16·734 s~udio, R I<?. OW, frpl, Heated pool. Adu\Ls , no Occ an ·Sn~I Adll ·Yrly 5 · 2 b i e big sun p1:1t10, pvt closed ""ls. $160.675 -6428/646-2696 r~~IOU !\ f r Dnh n•hW gar.,$300.mo.AJlutiJpd . .,... l br, renced yd , gara~c Co:n•< .... !<Ml Do--,,..,_ ••• ,/"" C-'""'"' ;,/ c..,..i.t• •""''"''• ./Mu"" COMPANY Rt-:Al.T()flS SI NC to: 1944 673-4400 • KITCHEN FACILITIES AVAIL .• JACUZZI A HEATI:OPOOl np ex, nr wy. !\ \.\ r. 426 22nd St. Agt. No fee. 979·1~, S I B' 'urn W/•.•ra•c. Sic...., garage. S230. 675·18-t9 o.,,1311 or8'S·<•lll Across rrom gou course 2br, util paid. $155. • WASHER & DAYER AVAIL • ALL UTILIT1E PAID n" n .-~ .....,. 20-132 Santa Ana Ave ./u ... .... ./F ... l •,....111- ./Xtr<o• --· ./IKJ-""'• ... e11 ./ ........ ,....~"" •AECAEATIONROOM •WKLYMAIO SEAVICE lo bea c h . $200. mo. BcautlfullRr alladultn 2Br stove.dshwshr.~arb. ET •'A AEFA OEAATOAS TV /DIRECT DIAL PHONES Winter rental. :>44-6899 or 1S Bit b I 3 Br 2 Ba. xtras, $259 mo. h •W "'1 1 • 67 •. ,~no pe apt. ns , a cony, Encl'd gar&:patio. 3Br 28a.frplc,newlyre· disp. air cond. a a R C1tll Mr Howard 64 5·6101 R .. tab Wonled 4600 . ...................... . • \NDIV10UAL TEMP ERA.TUA; CONTROL ll -'-~·c..:.~0"--------1 crpts, drps, gar, storage, 842-0389 decor. l 'Y'i Blk to Dch. l'rpts, d~. t'ncl pallo, SanCletM1do 3776 walktol'veryt.hing. Ideal 673-9202or645-7575 nire residential area . The beaullful and untque Ambasaadot Inns are f "ddle aged couple Cl l h t I f d ••••••••••••••••••••••• or mi · 2 BR, 2 ba, dlx studio. ose o s ops, ma urc 1·2·Ilr. L'le. w /gar .• nc • 1otallysurrounded by lush gardens wiltl comfort· Studio Apt, util pd. Sl70646-6887 cpts, drps, bltns. D/W. 3 IR, 2 IA adlts only. No pets . In· ----------1 yd . in C. Pot _ Ma tu re ing we\erlalls,gentle atream1.and bubbling $lOOmo. 1 Br. por c h , s t o ve . gar., pvt patio. Wtr pd. Frple, V:i blkloocn. qui.re 415 S. Orange Apt INGLE to 6 rm suites wkna . man 2 mellow brooks 4!)2.88(Mavailimmed. dsh..,,•hr. s1 4s. mo. 703 Nr. Goldenwcst College . 673·6612 _C~----------I Av ail. in plush ofri ce dogs.$200.64.5·70!M. "-I Shalimar. 962-8936 Sm. pet ok. $240/mo. Bd Bd 1h South L-o 3886 bldg nr. OC Airport.. t"\Jll 2 or 3 Bd on Peninsula Furnished Single Apt/Motel Units Low Weekly Rates COSTA •••A122n Karbor Blwd. Tel:n4/M S-4'40ffom S36 FULLUTON/2100 W. Common¥te alth, Tel: n4/87g..6901 fro"' $33 SANTA AJIA/939 E. 17lh Sir.id Toi: 714/151·9231 I""" $37: S.. col.IT PLAZA1210t S. 8 •ls 1ol Awo. Tol:n4t'40·2300-$80 ~liiNR I 675-6551 2 rm & I rm bo -"2-· strvice in cl : Recep-UnfunMshed LLERTON large & modem . Center••••••••••••••••••••••• Com pl e te ly furn . I ••••••••••••••••••••••• wi~~v~2 ) cl ean. cute. 1 BR apt,. 1 blk from pool. Near bch. Garages. Bach. Ap3rl. S . La ~una ~:1~~~· ;~;~~~~:J t;';,: mon th Dec IS-Jan. 1~ hl>oa Island 1106 1 br units !or adult or be3~h. Patio or balcony $195 & $240. 646-5210 $130 mo. call a(tcr61 M. ing, etc. Call 8l3·3S40 Ca\1 675 -6496. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,_,,pie no pc" Owne avail. Ref & !ltovc Incl. 499·3$3'1 • .a .. .no • • Cpt.s ,drps.$175.960·3840 2 Br Bayfront., lg . deck. • lusinfls,.n•e st/ Super lwtu.tY super lg 4 LbereSunday. ref, alove, <'rpts, drps. Apcal1ntntsFum1shed PRIMEOFCSPACE: Finance Br. 2 Ba, 1732MI -fl. frpk, Easts l d c . z bdrm , HOMERHDERS slip avail. 673-9335 or Uftfuntfs lMd 3900 • Udo VUloqe & ••••••••••••••••••••••• sWlkcn lub. dsh°""r, gar, ed d 1 642 9900* ••••••••••••••••••••••• Shop Areo •.-1Mss $400mo.613-M.54. enclOl!I garage. a u ts , •* · * Close to 8ch. Lr~ 4Br. -0p,......-·,1y -'-"'-'-"'-------I OO·SOOO, owner/a~cnt. 2hrw/balcony & gar age 2ba, decks, encl gar, $475 THE EXCITING 3416 Via Lido, Ml ..-· ·-· Corottoct.I Mar 3 822 -chg -mo.&42-3S6l PALM MESA APTS. 1 suite approx . 600 stt l't . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br. bltns. ne w cpts, :Jblks bch .2brduplex 1---'-'-'-"'-----I &1JNUTF..S TONIYf View racing Via Luto. Nei"hborhood Boer Dor. s Br 1475 mo blln• & rtrps.NrW.t9thSt.Shop W.Oceanrront2Brupper, BCll. In". Ownt'r . nrcv.e r CostaMcs~loc t1t lin1e • ' · • pin!( centers. Prvt. patio. " l dshwahr. 2 sun porl'hes, 1972 Wallace, Apt I), C~t . 3 br4·Plex. lncd yd.1ttir sundeck, gar, stove &: Bach , 1&2 BR . CC'.'mpany. 17t4 )675 -7002 offeir{'(I. 979-1268. Leavt crpt.t RT:t-3231 1538 3836 ref rig, wsbr/dryr. Ad Its. from Sl*J. name & 1. . ' . $100 mo. sorry no pets. WALK TO IEACH $300 yrly. tn3·1412 Adults, No r eL"' • t MO t"'REF: RENT• Dix 2 Br Garden Apt. 642·8181 days. 644 -133~ 1 & 2 Jlr, cpl!!, dprs. J561Mf'111aDr. 1 2·3 llm. ofrlccs; rrom Fabric ShopinbusyShop. frplc. nu erpL'i, paint. Igel c•~·~ .. ~-:..· --------1 bltna, ~ar. 221 16th. 205 YRLY 3 Br. 2. ba, frplc, !!i lllks F.a!lll of Newport. $1 3.!t p e r m o . N ear Ctr. P artner spUl. mu!'l patlo.!l adlta, no pets. l 5th St . 8 4 7 . 3 9 5 '1 ; bltns, garage, by 381h St. ll l\'d.) Airport. No lf'a!'lc req. sell. Gd. businCMi. Call S29$. •1.s.-0632 CJasaiOed Ads 6'2·5678 532·2064 ; 536·3058 Park. $400.S48"4063eve. S46·9860 IJ33·3223 9T1l noon Holland Rlt)',&U-4110. SOOS I I • .... _ . -· .. -·-. _____ .. ..._.. --·-... ----- DAILY PILOT Sunday. November 30. 1975 ----··~ •• Add it .•. Build it... Diaper it •.. Hammer it. .. Carpet SERVICE DI RECTORY .-lumb 1t. .. Patc h 1t ••• .-1pe it .•. 1<ei:noa5ei "··· lt Cem t 1 w e t Hoe ·1 Clean •t M e Roof lt ... Landscape lt ••• Tite lt ... Trlm It ... ewlt ••• · •t ... p en 1 · · · "t 1 · · · . 1 .. · . 1 · · · ov Haut it ••• Add It ... Plant It... Alter It... Learn It. .. . 1 ... ress it ... P a 1nt i ... Nail 1t ... P1aste r 1t ... Fix it ... ~lttlo.j Ccrpot Senlu Docldt>g 6155 G-.W"'I )Hodl"CJ i.-bcopl"CJ ' , ...... ~ .. tri09 "'•hr ...... ~ ......................................................................... ·······················1······················· ...................................................................... ·······-············-· )' homr. ll~·h;,ihlc, de Shampoo & stra m l"lean· lakonln fWaAways Comp I a.,rllc n 5~r v1 C'e . JIAUl.ING & CLt-:ANU I• Compl svs.·Oes1,1tn5 , PETERS PAINTING 'G IPtumbu. Repair, lut.JJ able, fn<' ~ )'d. lov 1n11, Color bni:ht('ncrs: oecor;itlve w .. terproor t.1 ~1n.t-4"lt!11nufll!.·Olll l)'~1 neu~;1bl"1r11te~.ea11 Sod, 5 prklra. m;,i~onry , ln\IEllt·ReuRates PATCHJ:WJ'ls~ suvic•U•uet., reJMpe. 0 . are. Refs &12 !J?CJIJ "":ht C'rpl.$ 10 min bll':n·h coi.lln.1ts over prun1n1t ~7 ·91HO fJAVl () __ 646·••tU.'l waterfalls. f'ord Lo:sC'p Call Gene al 5.52-0458 rr.: ~t 540-l8ZS Gldley. "2·931.S. "a....1~.......___ Clean llv rm. din rm&: Uvangureas GtnH'alSf'rt'ic•s $12 a Load 962·7817· llOUSEPAl-..lNO J>RAlNQ.EANED•..50 ...--n hall $1.5 . A\·~ rrn S1 !JO. J Y ,. I , · · ''"' ri ••••• ••• •• • •• • • • • • • • • • • . ·h SIO h· · ~ G rs ., .u~rilntL'e •••••• •••• • •• • ••••• • •• • (.ct nd or u11s1 ~ht\y Masonry lns1de-/Out. lfl-qual /low , Eves. wknda s.ame p c:e BUILDERS . I ,.111 s,.·:1p '.~•Ul t ' ~air C · uu.r APPLl f.OSYST~MS I DO IT ALL• 'l'HASIT &Ot:RH IS ••••••••••••••••••••••• rates. Bruce 64$-$319 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Guar s.s&-'1• fantMlic lot in Ui g IK-ar t im. pe or . ri>t re· li c 283642 IZ 13 l72G·lti51 · Coll Sludcnl :'14H 6428 ,....'--,._ alti arrn:-: foi a hnin i: 11u1r . 15 yrs 1•xp. Oo work --Elertr1cal . Plurnh1ni:. ~--· · t'irl'pluccll•l'lan1rn *PAl..,Tl..,G * ...., •-"-1oys1·lf. ll1•fs 531 ·0101 Bectrical etc. Kca.~r ates fAz .. 19:,7 t-'a st l)cltvery , h;iuhni;:, Uri ('k·Concrete Patio n " S~ial1h -•-ii litnprov c 1u1•n 1 JH h --·•••••••••••••••••••••• -----~ Hltlt.'kWalls HD<lPits 11<-/lns 979 ·1335 Try ua r--d ••••••••••••••••••••••• O.·~afh:•r 7 1':'11 Hcp:11r flr ln:>lall your .t-:L•·.crrtic i ·N·S 1 . b HANDY MA N·llornCll & niov in ~&(•lnups .$'1u1> ners t.:S t (itlt:o464 W•t e r heatera, II· Jt'EPAiftS.AL.LTYP~ ' "•""'t , .• ,,. •"t" ,.0 ,.... " m JO l'i . ~pl c le•t 0 . l''rl't'l'Sl K42 4rl97 • p--• p · r , E ---•I•. dr•lns. faucets, 0... , .,... . .', ":' , ... maint /rcp;urs. 22 yrs '' :\. o n s r " 1 u:; ------rvo , 111nttir. nt. • xt. ~r repipea. Day & Reas,freeests,llc . .., ....... ~!~ ............. ;1111t·1'<ilahor 645·3214 ('11;p#2JJI08~·520J Crurt111na11 MS·6S!W!I _ Hovsecltonlnq WILLIArt1S&SONS Qual work & rell!I . Fr~ night aervice. We take Wa lt ~anyli.me C /C H · . c·11RIST~1AS ••••••••••••••••••••••• l\t asonry, Hnt•k /Ul~k tsl. i51·0684/548·2759. G1ALIT'i' Hl ·11.J>IN(; & e-mfflt OftCrt"te ELECTRICA i WORK av1n1<: .1 • • &Stone , ··ill 581·7829 ft.1.!itrChllrQe . LiC' 300948. f,_. Sw"Ylc• ,,t)-CA H l '~·:-.,r·rH Y S\'S ••••••••••••••••••••••• l\J ·' • ~ . l'AltTY·• 5 to Ii prs. Wt •1101..'.SF.Cl,f:ANIN(;• .. · -PAPER /PAINT. 20 yrs JUSTP'LUMllMG ••••••••••••••••••••••• ; CAL i·.5'19 •11 ~9 · llnt·k~h!uck i.C:~~~~~~~~~Joo.1No Job play \ht• old oneJli & llu By rch:1hle~~·cH~!111•• ~ood Mo•ln<J ex 1>r.Ne~work.S•veS$ •CALL&l2·4111 • Rcmnva.l.s, limbing, top. ~ llr111•w:i):-. SHlt·i~;;dk~ nC'W C:dl Ht'd G4fi·341 2 rf'ft>rent·es,,..\8·1jt7 I ••••••••••••••••••••••• no w111t . SOl l l•f actlon I Addlt!on .... ll1•111"dl·h11 ~~. 1·ur h & ~:u l ll·r l'oul GcrdenlrMJ C t . 1 t 1 , ·rtioroul'.:hl y clean )O ur ~lu\111i::1 llltuhn~ Stuclt•nt .:uar f'ree est645·~1 P.tARV 'SPLUMBING ~lR~O<for r.,: c:J,: Pat 1ns . l'.in1·l 1 11 1-:, 1ll·fks \\';i11H.' 1;.1'>.~1;73 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ri rpt>n r ), pa n ir .: h SI k w 1 l11 r~e truc k ltt··1:s -----•64&980'1 * d I 1· /b d · Cablr1f•t.,,t'll' 1•12 :.1;;r.1nr · w -n11no r r e pairs Fr1·t 0'.11cur ;ipl 4 1~··~~-li;irr'y 5'8 !t723 1K:t9577!1 •House-,oiRfl""l* NOJOBTOOSMALL e' IC' on /In s . • , .. &4fiO J ;11·kor J11hn ContToc:tor F.xpr llmw tuiunGarden1•r t-st1n1;.ili'~ !t45 \1Wl I.i t 11 \22(1 llf'f, 641 l'~• E•I . & Int -Work Guo• 6(2.2fi:M . -Yd. C.:J('.;i.nups & ll11ul1n r. -'-'---------~to . b ~t k & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Trim&prun('f>4fi ·4fi7!i HauliMI Expcr Japunc!!oc la1ly dt· ~1 0V l 11'(;~ 2 "xp m en by h e 'd /bonded prof DR.A.INS CLEARED Ornamental Prunln1, re· _,. ~l ;.1 1n.l'l . ·1 1,nA \Hn Jlolula)·~l)('r free ------••••• ~·?·••••••••••••••• :-.ir c:s hou$i•clt•an in l( n1uv~ you . ltcasonablef palnter. 499·4131 & Atl-"i:11ture$5 moY•l•,refs furn.lnsrd. l"lnl.o;h ·<'·11r17!1 l;~:;uro .... all. l'Ctl '.I! 1n !l ulatl•Expert Jap a nc !I " •l·IAULJN C • /l(•\1 :1bl e Nit ic rtl:i..675·157l .5S2·ts"8l . 675·5284. 1'tl &i 2"11nesS12.50 f"o rd L and 1ca pln g ~ntr.111 1"' :,.i w l'll add on IA5 :~13'J Gardl'ncr (_'o n1pll•t1· t_ransportut1nn &12 4:\119 -----3 &4''mainlinesll5 962·7Bl7. MJNOll 11< 1:-.1 t: 11 1·:1•1\I H yard servi<'cs, <'lcanu1)S YAltO CL F:i\Ntl P ~1 ." v 1 11 ~ / 11 a u 1' 11 A · Plosfft' JW.-pair Yard sewer lines $15 hr l-'----------For' l'la:-.s1fi<·tl A1\ Fre('t•sl as1.2210 ••556 03•17 "" H I • f<.C'onom1<'<1 I & d1:penda· •••••••••••••••••••••••' Statclo··•30I........ Tuttwi-Pl urnb1ni-: l".1rpt·11tr) <\t.'l'I()", OUSf'C f'OftlftCJ h t 1• !t l u d "-' n I !I " "-' --·.,. ,. 1 1 'llt 'Sl:tl ... --Vf.'.HY NF.AT PATCll Call540 1687 ....................... . • "er .un11· It' .... I. 'II R h' y I" It 11·uLINt• & ~.3·3447 ~7!j !.IOJU &MJ..1 74~/644 2.'.tfb • -· t ;1 ,, 1r s art .~t>rVt<'e. l'I( " • m•1\1nJ: 1 _JOBS &: RF.STUCCO Piano lessons Beginners Carpt•n!r' f 1111:-.h. Il e I Ua1ly l'ilol ftl;iint /Sod/Cleanup,o; &: cleanup From $1 0 Pt-' llf)USE WOHK SELL idlt• 1t1•1ns 14•1th a f.)'tt est K93 ·143!J II h' l 11 .,. and Adults. College m1Xll·I ~· llc11a 1r H1•;J, Al>·VISCJH haulini::. 673 ·0775 Free lo ;id f)i•pi·n it ;ihl1· 1tesident1al C'l\I ar1'.1011 (l;ull l'd11t Clas~i f1 \·1l 1\d C~ve ~, ... mctdmdg ,1° 11~1 · piano m ajor . 546·2098 , ratt·' C:il l ~7!IO:r.9 i~\2.5fi78 f'St ~-286K Jy r1t·a.<.l.'<'all&157•l.117 &12'~78 WantadresulL~ 642·5678 ,,a.ssi 1 a 5 01 we · C.M. I IMlpW-.1 7IOOHelpW-.I 7100 l~np•possrtunity SOOS Money to Loon 5025 ~?:!.~.~~~••••••~~.~~ ~~~.~~·:.~ ...... !!.~~ ~~~t!.~ ••••• ~!.~~ ~~!.~!~t~.~ ••••• !!~~ ~~lr.~.-.~t•e•~•••••!!.~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •'--Process-• ·······················1 ~ V'O Liquor License (lr;in j!l· l'o lh1 ~alt• i.;1•111 "('tX'K'r AJLS" Sl2,875 rR1vATE PARTY ';'.'.~·r,~:~:;,::~,,~;;',',,~;: AVON BOYS AND GIRLS JUNIOR SALESMAN x1n1 0 • .=~;ry '°'" will make 2nd Vic 13th & Walr1111 ll H 12 tO l5 . pc.r'd individual lookinJ: tn.stdeeds,credit 1J '25,91i0227:J/f1:Mi·~J577 MEEOEXTRA for that ··special '' C:.i.11 J\1r \.\.'1n~ton 1•nll l'l'I 121:\ I 272 421!1 not important! F'OUN d I SS TO MAKE I thange. Make your Ne""' IJ !l n10 ol 1na e Earn Chris tmas money work in~ a few 0 T 1 0 Ye a r h a p Pen l n Call Broker (;crn1:in sht·phl'nl. v11· of CHRISTMAS ho urs a flcr school and Suturdays. lf 1 0 5 Years Id J>ecember, Call Control •530°4781 • Santa i\na i\Vl'. C ~I MERRIER ? Car eer Employ m enl BEAUTY SHOP l·--------1 5-18<U.i!J duy11, 54.it ~7'.1/i you arc hu11 c st . ambitious. and not Agency,5S6..s.505. Nel!I SIS,26ti·s<'lr 1,pcr~ll t•vt•s. 1-:arn ttu•rn a~ :ul ,\\'ON afraid to talk to people , phone Mr. Earn $20·$40 per week working after u1i: FP thl.!>IMJ I.OST Grl'y min i;itur" Hf:l'Rt:s f>:NTi\Tl\'t: Wolfe at 645·2873. E.qual Opportunity s chool & Saturdays. Huntington •LYN $650• Orange County lab seeks qualifil'd person wit h l 'alif. nursing license Fantastic C'O mpan y bene f its . Lots or diversification. Call Cotl lrol Career Employment AgenC'y. 556.SSOS . l"alll!t•.1lt11r Glendaleln•estment SC llNA UZJ.:n 11111, .. 1 mo Set i be autiful J!i ft ~. Employer Beach & Fountain Valley areas only. Paul Co;.tl :w;;t 1;112 Corporation old fem, v1<' of 11unt llrhr J e 14'l' Ir y. l'O S 1n t·t 1 e ~ Leave name, address & phone number · -CO "F·•·.,'.Slltll' PriYatefundsfor 2nd 011 1·hank:-.~1 v 1n 1: t•1·1•, morl' I'll sho14· 1 t)11 ho"· ""\ape recorder Call "o •-r -Trust DtedLoons. ltE\\'1\HIJ.H-IO 177G C.:ii ll 540·7!~\I or Z1•n1th ..... . J"lO"o,JOi:I''-· t:xccll l'nl lu <'t1t 1on 111 • HEWA!l l) I.OST rt"1n ........., ~ 100 P an e t Refurhishcd. :-.('.1t.' :.!.'! R•oionobl• l••m•. -7·1J59 1...1....1-w-•-• 7 H.i W t d 7100 Costa )ft'Sa ldt";tl r.1111111 1711 "B" Wtstcliff si lv<'r lni: h;dred tal)hy, •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 1)pe r ;1t1 on ,\,k in g 631-2233 \'iC of Cam ino ltr;d li;1bys1t1t•r111."t'tll·d for 3)r Help Wanted 7100 HelpWool.d 7100 ........................ ······················· I tt9,0UU -492·8793 aft 6 nltl , Cd 1\T a1rl1ne t·oupl(' 111\lllltlli Mone-yWonted 5030 -.-. -.. rl'I!. hrs ""'<'t·kC'nd ~ & INVl·:STi\lt:r•r r1·c) ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rt.WAI{(), LUSr \'It' uver111 J.:ht1'40 5\4:1 , _ n73 .. 1.100 ' ..._ _________ 1 f>:stancia Iii St !, blk L11b I" ,.•/Doberman m;irk1nJ,!s B1\NK . Slllc of two dt•sk ern ploy · EA.RM onfa<'e& le.:s. GEMERAL CLERK n1t•1\l A gene ~· "' ll'.:rt·:1t .from I 0°/o to 17 .40°/o 540·0093 or fi4G·Rfi27 \llunt . Bl'h Branch t potenti a l in. Nc"·port IMTERESTon •Bankt:xperienl't' Centt>r . low 11 \'l'rht•arl I..os t : 3 DoJ.;.<.. Irish seller •Accuratc'r ypt':)l Reason;lhlc tc r1n s :•r hi9hly se-cure 2nd "Dut ht>ss .. Hlk Cocker •Shorthand lll·lpful range:<! '1~·9532' aft ~·r 7 trust dteds. Call Spaniel ''Spark y'', Sml Apply In Pl·rson •PJ\1 Broker530·4781 Cocka poo ''Snoopy'' Pcrsonncll>ffil·~· --Vi e : J\les1:1 de\ l\.l ar. Lost Hard1\•:trl' Storl' bc;u·h 11 ·28. Jl1'~WA!ll). Please Goldenstate Bonk area F I' s.12,000 l'all Mort909es, Trust call 545·3945 or 546-9202. 10230 Paramount RI J. lollnnd Hlt y 1"15·'1170 Dffds 5035 -5350 J>o14·ney. 213/t!'l.3·94GI -•••••••••••••••••••••••Personal' Equal Oppor EmployC'r SANDWICH SHOP INDUSTH IAI. LOCATION ••••••••••••••••••••••• UAUTICIAHS W /foll . New N H. salon 644·0661 or540-RS82 DRAFTSMAN/DESIGNER MECHANICAL Minimum 2 years recent draft ing experie n ce in manufacturing field of val ves, pumps or c losely r eJated equi pmeht . Mus t be familiar with ANSI STD & MIL-STD-8. Knowledge of hydraulics he lpful. Equal Opportunity with nationally kno¥.'ll val vc compa ny. SetM:I re-wme & salcry requiretnl'nts to: ! l"O lox 2322, ll•wpori leach, Calf. 9266] General Office lm mrd Opt>n inf:. f:x - penence r{'(1uir~. Ca ll for interview on 1)1'.'c. I &: 2. 58fi·l97J ask fur B.J . 1 n· tet\'il',.'S J)cc 4 & 5th on· ly . Santa J\l arga r ita Water Dist. GJRl.S·GI R l..S·G I Kl-'; Easy run job. day or ni ,ght. No exp. nee .. we train yuu. You must like people & he at leas t 18 Apply any aft. or eve. 2112 Harbor. Costa Mesa . HANDYMAN Jleavily exper generalist Open onl)' 2.'i hrs a "-'(·ck 2nd TD LoOfts k nets 014·nl'r S250 per fairest Terms si nce 1949 week o .. ·ner ill & mu!>l PREGNA NT ~ lEJ\UTIC I ANS ·Opr needed for r eside n · Carin i;! <·onfid~n\ial ""'/follo14'ini::. \\'111 pay lial/commerical repairs Drinking problem? Call Alcohol llelplinc 24 hrs a day 835·3830 counselinJ: & rert•rr;il high comm or booth on a free lance basis. Abortion. Oldoption & spnce rental &1·1·2138. Help Wl:lftted 71 00 Help Wanted 7100 !\;l etieulous perfectionist keeping. !BE U--OP -L--. -1 ·•••••••••••••••• •••••• ••••••••••••• ••••• ••••• caliber prererred. !\;lust APCAHf.~S47 ·2.'>63 A TY R. ead.1n~ l----------ilJOl\'UT Shop. :ill nii::ht have truck transport a· sell. Ideal for t.lom & Sattler MfCJ-Co. Pop . Tcrm.s i\f,!ent . ~2·2171 545·0611 &17·4200 2nd TD Loans Wanted Inspection MECHANICAL RECEIVING INSPECTOR A1ACH INIST TRAINEE Opportunity to associate wfmaster machinists in a small shop environ· ment. Re1:1·s hi ~hsC'hool industrial ilrts course or \Viii be r<'spon sih le for equivalent work exper. mcch:inical inspection o utilizing lathes, drill pre· commerC'ial fabricated ss & mill. Minority apph parts from chassis ti cants encouraged. t·abinets and electronic print•"· Ab;my to <ead DUNCAN me<hon;co1 blueprints. ELECTRO ... ICS use mic rometers and " Vernier Cali bers re-2865FairviewRd quired. r.tu st be able lo Cost a flo1esa lift 4-0 lbs , also some test· Equal Oppor. Employer ing required. l\.1inimum 21 .... ~~~~~~~~~ ;vearswexi:ierien<'c Apply ~tanagemenl tn person , 1'~'1, Ex~c~Ol~~:gE~o~~art STANDARD ~ime business assoc!ate Only $9,000 F\Jll Price Loans on 2nd T . o . ·s MASSAGE 644 ·7321 . Eves. 552·0943. Woman il"C 25.45. Apply tools. Contact Mr. Sam N Lo 2 d T D . /\pply in Person ,.. r...adehe 6 9 PM 673 8300 MEMORIES INC r Lot·at('d on th<' writer cw ans~ .. s FIGURE MODELS 3T05Pt.1·lt1on thru F'ri in person, ftlr . Donut. 135 M.o. Cont~acting . . AN APPL.JED • r ' GIFT SHOP Huy T.O.'sfor cush. -~-'--'"-'----'C'-'---I N .B.Salon. Ask rorJ1m, CocktoilWaitre-ss s hift . No exp nee . tion and all necessary 1n wholesale supphe.s. Bu si n t!ss full y capitali zed . lntervie14• 673.2223 .amidst 3000 yachL<; in ex · $3000.. .000. B & G. I The Ancient Moriner r:. 17th. C.J\1 t j citin g ma rina . Nl'Cl!S t:<1uity Tnvsmt. Div. ESCORTS oys Ir s ---H . I A . d & t..1AGNt.llCSC0RP work ing owner with BARNETT MTG .CO. Outtall·Appt.only t0 to l4 yearsofage.Dai· 2607 W.Coastllwy,NB Earn $200 mo. p /lime. o0JPtila : aedes 2'l21South AnneSt · 1\tANAGF.R : t:xp. super nautienl flai r A~c nl. 2Q Yrs3in0rg~ty. Home-Office·Stud io ly Pilot delivery routes ~'ul~er11R1rus~Sales .local i~l:~r. ~·r~rr::'ees 0':~: .SantaAna,Ci192704 op p . Jr . & f\1isses 837-4200 645·21 4 anyl!me 6J l .. 3B I I may be available in your Collegl' Student pr('fered arc.!.:..._1 I. 96M·8378. &42·0400. Spor t wear Factory I ---Amounctmenh/ ---------area. Earn profit for de· IO PJ\1 ·4Afi1 Winchl'll 's Fa hr 1 c a t 0 ',-,-~&~1-~~~'--------1 1\n Equal Opportunity Outlet Store , Costa Personals / u ·,a • ._ • ,..... Don uts , z.53 :. 17t ~t War<'hnt1fi('mt·n wanted HOSTESS .._," r ,.,,.,,a. op qu : I Mew Beauty Salon FOXEY Gll<L·s O tC II l•···cn'•s & e.·os·h.1·•-. o• I h E mploi····-"1 1""' ·~=· Nccd t a lt'ly If you like il. name your L 1 & FoUnd !\;I assage . U-C:lll, We· merchandis e for S('l\ing c 1 M l ... ~~~~;...~~~~J person. Resume. Box 600 pri te. Best offer l ake.<.. OS co m e . Sp ec ialize new !lubscriptions. f.~or ~ l'S:t -for LiJ.:hlin.[! 1-~ixlu re Co. Apply Jn Person j: Daily Pilot 1, Localed in husv parkin' ••••••••••••••••••••••• p I · 0 12 31-,··ro,mato·on 11lca!ic •all Compano·on driver & lite Exper helpful but nol I Cl ~ S50od --~-------. •-----m 11 51 00 a rap eg1cs.,,. -''" " ~ ne<.·e.<.sar.v . Contact \\'ood Daily Betwn 3 &5pm nsur. e..-~ MA~ICURIST ! . urea oo 17th St .. C .~1 . .....-e en ---'--~------' 642·43Z I . From San cooking for man OO·fl.'>. Li•htln" Fixture Co. 2031 TiteAnclmt Morin.r Busy progressive dental ... '•1oderateclientcle.Prin···••••••••••••••••••••• SPIRITU1\LRt--;AoER Clem en te-San Juan ref.~·o.t20;979·42S6 "' rr· · · ed ed Readytowork Applyin I ·I I .-...... \?¥It 1''1 -SouthJ.-;.J\lainSt.lrvine, 2607 W.Coast Hwy,NH o 1ce 1s 1nimm .ne · : ~~a.;:.,con Y. ~·9447 or SCRAM·LETS v~n 10 , · O Capis trano area, call 546·2''.X>l or person "A·ith 1 year re· person. Tues thru Fri. 3 I '1"fU""'""" Advice on all matters. 495-0630 and l\.l ission Vic· Cooks Assistant _ , lated insurance exper. to 4 PM at 76.1 W. Baker, Bter Bar, Costa l'tl esa ANSWERS 312N.EICaminoReal, 158·0-,;~110T_ oro area, call r-.1aleorfemale.I9 yrs & Fibt"f"IJlassMolders fl ouse ke epe r ·~ld ~r T)'pinl?nccess.CallCon· CM , Restauranls ·Newport San Clemente. For appt. ..,., over . Ev es . 2 1 5 Wanted. 12 131437 .2949 \ w?man wanted to llve-1n, troJ Career Employ mentl--M--•S_S_•_G_E_T_E_C_H_._ , Beach ftt otel 50.u. Indio CUDGEL -BYWORD 1 -'~"~·t.903~4;1;;;;1).;;:-:'~9~2-~9~13~•1 .. ~E~q~u~al~O~p~po~r~·~E~m~p~lo~y~c~r,1jl~<i~v~c~"~i=d~e .~N~B~548·7418 & ~ -----with Newport BeaC'h Afi!ency, 556·8505. ...., ...., i Furn. Store. Santa i\na INFUSE -INSIST Le-cnirMJ Dec. 4th 646-8251. FOREMAM ramily. Salary+ room&: TRAINEE ~ r-.1obile Park. s . c a1,·r. ...... ~llRROR -ENA.MEL T lo-LL /R 1 C , F f'·ll h Fiberglass ,·aeht mold -I board. Ca ll 640-8044 · Lady who ne~s $500 mo& Young lady (18·28) for ,, CINER•TOR On Russian our ~e-e-per ecep . I A irm: ·u C' ar.[!l' , . . up .Salesonented. Phone I ·t· t r II t. · to 120 u Hunlin1:lon IN ·~ r r bookkcCJl l'r y,•1th Ill~. r-.t.ust be quahhed. flous•kc•per w1'th ""'· •fan'lyn .968·8-.8 eg11mae u 1mepoSI· ""' .. ..,., .._ 1 n ° 1 es. Ch I d m1··1·mum or 5 '· ,,. ex-( 1 J j·Z!f.l!:f __ p,•_ room & bath. TV , 1 "· p. n c. n e I ' o~o•h ,C··-.'ta •l···sa. s ·g r the l'm . 1 lo've (Aerofloat). Anyone do· Front o c o bu sy 2 3,4.,,, .. .. ..,. " .,, t'o• Noc• e "' · lied h' h ·me ;ngsame,pleasl't'Onl:icl . iropr a<'tor mme . " -. c d to s•h I Ba y &BeaehHea\ty tnaso.ca ig en ' CPA Off LEGAL SECRETARY s n '"oo' earn neighborhood. You can .Liz Reinders. 833·8190 . po.o;ition. llr.o; 9·1 & J.fl pc~ence. . ll't' ex:· Fr y t: o o k , ,, x p e r . ~d. salary· 673·6628 · white you learn. Apply in t Commercial Dept 124 HrAns Serviccl Dr. Ca ry 1 .. t:outure, pen ence dcs1rahle Call bre:ikfa tor dinner · run mature 3 yrs. exper. I._ _ 675-3000 ~~lidi~~. ~~ t:::~:~\~~ 2043 Wl'slcliff l)r. Suite art . 6PM 675·3'151 ~r send or p a r~ lime. B~b 's H?USEWIV ES. wante~ to busy general practite in ~~;:'~. ~~~~~~;~ ' Beauty Salon Booth Spucc "Auld Lang Syne" when NANCYS OUTCALL 107. NR645·5300. res~mc t_o Arl. No . 468 1'~i1m1lv llt>i;tauranl 1409 .,.. o ~.k for c ~e a n 111 g Santa Ana . Salary $700+ NB Rental, llighclass Shop. you .-:o down the hall to fi1assui:;e.Ca11 -l)ally Pilot P.O Box, !So r1·c·1mino ltl.'al San scr\_iee. Part time. Ca ll 547.9773 · · 644·2138. the INC INERATOR. 12131421·0574 Bookke-epertfarttime 151,i.O. Costa fi1l·~11 l.:;1 . Cl~m,t•nl~49Z-13.;>J ' Ja,~1ce's Raggedy Anns. . '~l aturebachelors wish t() -'--""-'-"---------l-'-='-"'--'---"-'----1 -Approx 2 days a 14•eek. ~126 ---67. 6.553 Lf.':T S lttAKE _A DEAL . t mploy married women BOUTIQUESSprofits ror Lost&Found 5300 Solid Citizen, lifcrcr'.o;, & ftlust be cxp<'rieneed. -. -•GEM'LOFC $542 ____ ~ _ Youanswerth1sadandt for household manage· Chri stmas . Best N.B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• class, set>ks larl y 19·42, Call 962·8910 bctw 8 & De\ivervman, nver 21· LA Fantasti t opportunity .,.___... ~ will send you details on t · L Be h Times.route. Co~ta J\lcsn wo'th t•h·,., N" ,.,,mp··•y Ind Engineer SISK an opportunity for hi gh cm•• •. m k'1"1'll!'3 t"'t <1rea. 675·09301640·6823. $100 REWARD. l~ost nr not over 140lbs. no l'hild, 9AM wkdys . ----1 area N ·ollect !\;I st . "· ..... . S les1•1 . SISK . 1• L U , h oo inJ? s I s impor an , Talbert & Ward. t~Vly. 640·S47fi · 0 l · u. "V;iricty" Filled. Don't a '' anne in com e S c a s S4 OOperhr 497 ·2360 ASSOCIATE ·I~etme show 11 11 3 Yr old male -•BranchMqr $575 + have ci1'pcnd . t•ar dclav-This one won 't r.tfgpayrtgcnaccl bonuses and frin ge · · . ou how to earn in,top ~,.:, Ccr~an Shep. Blk & tan . Employrnen! & This finanC'iul co. is s<'ek· 546·6'127 . _ \a s t·~ ! c a 11 Cont ro I P_tt f'hone Wrk $.1.10 hr ~n~fits . ~·e need an in · Medical Tronscribe-r inc. _S200 1nv . f?r 1n· Ans .to"Rider."96S·9103 Pre-poration ini: ind.i vid~als w/ thl'ir DEN'fALRECEPT J\1inZ C:iree r J.:nip loy men t lrv1nePersonnl'I ARcncy d1v1dual ·~ lh~ beach Fast Expert & exper 'd terv1ew. J\1r. O Toole ••••••••••••••••••••••• future 1n m_ind . ftl u s~ be yrs exiler . J\\usl t ype. A~t·ney.5!!6·8505 ~E .17Lh.Costaf\1c.<.a area NOW. Wnlc C.F. only. Busv surgical ore 6'14·5391 LOST late Aug . Gold JobsWantl'd, 7075 a g gre ss ive_ & .'-'.n · knowallphascs offront -So1te224 642·1470 P ate. Pres ., Texas Newport.SendresumetO lnvHhMnt --Pearl 3 charcm• Bract>let. ••••••••••••••••••••••• t hus1as l 1C'. f.T1n or1t1e s dt'sk. Salarv & benefit s 'li'ou don't need a gun to 'f!cfinery Corp .. Box 71 1. Classified ad no. 569 C'/o Newpo r t 1•1 a r ea M. I Id,., 5 ""'e\come. Call Control · .,~., ··d , r . ·· •h . Fort Worth Texas 76101 o ·1 p·1 •POBo •= Opportunity 5015 · · · · ae nurse ""'OU 1 (' C E 1 , 1 open.640-0.'lOOor..,,.,·081!1. ral4 ast 'A en you Havesomethingyou 'A·ant · · a1y 10.., x t ......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Reward. 493·0899. dys. ony s hift. <.:ahf cert. a reer ~mP 0~ men place an :id in the Daily to sell '! Classified ads do Costa f.tesa. Ca 92626. CO-VENTURE Lost· Blue Amazon Par· 08424 . Loe· a l r e fs . r\J?cncy,5S6·SS05. _ ••DENTAL•• Pilut\\'antAds!Cnll now it "''ell -Call NO W, LOAN f\IOOELS ·MASSEUSES I' Extlusi\'c "ranchette" rot. Nr . Brookhurst &: 638·73.1.1. ---CASHIER FrontOfc: $800 -6"'2·5678· 642·5678. PROCESSORS Figure A1ode ls, Escorts. mob'.le home ,ubdo·,.,·,,·on Adams . HB . Reward HftpWoot·• 7100 Full · I 2 i)ental of<· needs ('n· --n--S '' --•ed T ~ llm<'on y. I.+ thus ia~tic '"'rson 14.11.x. HelpWonte-d 7100 HftpWanted 7100 uuwney avings&Loan asseuses nct."\.I . op bein' c•p•nded. Will co· 968·5280. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 Locations .... has lmm...tiale nn.>nings money New s tudio · · per in t omplelt· officl' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ! -.. ~ · ' ventu_re 2nd unit. v.cry FOUND : flot ix Shep, blark METRO CAR WASH in Orange Cou~ for 631·3811 pr~f1ta.blr s 1 t~a.t1~1 n WJtan markinj.?s ... ·hton ACCOUNTING 2950HarborRl.C'l\.1 !l(·l'.'tups. C all ("o ntrol •BOBBY McGEE'S• conventional loan .pro-NURSING h h II t d d _ 'aree r Emplo y m e nt cesso•s. "lust hove ex· w 1c . w1 s an ni.?1 in· chest, tg mle,557-6020 CLERK .. ~~,. 0 505 " vestigation . $25.000 . C.ishiC'rs 14·anted.21 yrs or ~·J.!ency,;)Jf}.,. _ per. in processing from L.V.N. minimum investment. F 0 u n d : Dr ind le floi:·nufactun~J.? cxper. in older to work at the OC DENTAL ASS ISTANT CONG LO MERA TION documentsthrou~h fund· 3-llshin.rttime. I Owner644·4670. grayhound female. Cdm 0 .ice routines of re· Fair S14·ap f\1 eet . In -· NURSES •IDES ce1vables, payables &: terviel4'S 10 am Sat. & Chairsldt>. 3 days-wk . in~. .,. ,, • NEW PRODUCT 6 F. 7 .1 3 e_m 6100 School playground. payroll . Type 50 wpm . Sun. back door of Sna('k F u l I nl o u t h r c . Contact Personnel Dept All shifts. Xlnl bene I 1.::c::..:c=------I Apply In Person Bar ('OnstrUC'tion prac. t-:xpcr Restaurant • Supper Club 549·0902 Park Lido Conv. Cente1 t)C.TREMELY lllGH CA.MIRO . req.645·<1070 EqualOppor .Employer 466 Fl ag s hip , N P p O T E N T I A L Losl Found '. Blk Lnb. -OPENING SOON -642·8044 . A'lITOAlATICCONTROL Female Vi c OCC. Choke Manufaclurin9Co. ..,hcf .. mu~t b,c ~~per. r~ll Dental Offi ce. ('Xper. OF llEADLIGllTS. chai n /fl cn l'llllar . 7601ClayAve lluntllr h or p~rt·l•mc.C,illforin· necess.Lab&1ten'lfront H.4pWClfttecf ·· 7100HelpWeted 7100 j TA I L L 1 G 11 T ~. 540·1193 We.<.tof Beach Blvd ~14·· 673"9393· ofc. Non smoker. Rcrs . at 353 E. Coast ......._wnv ••••••••••••••••••••••· ••••••••••••••••••••••• • PATlKlNGLIGHTSA ND . SouthofGarfi eh.l fleplytoClnssifiedadno. ,..,,., -, ' E M E R G E N c.: y l\.1ale long huircd Sheep Equal Oppor . Employer 568. c /o Daily Pilot, l'. O. Mewpor+ leach i WARN.ING FLAS~IER dog mix abt 25 lbs salt .&1""~~ ..... ~~""'""'""I Clerk . Tyn1·st Box 1560, Costa tt1esa , Cn t f S pepper found 11·24 VIC[· ~ , LJGl T : 2·Palenls . Brookhursl Yorktown AfP.ec.. Cle-rk needed for the Laguna,_92626 ________ _ 1 Out.,tand ing coverai:e. JIB 962-4034 Beach office of the Dai\yl ~ntal •sso·st. p/to'm•• 1-.,. 1 Ip s t a 1. I o n a n y 1..0.~·:::.;· =_::::;c_ ______ I to Key, lite typing. '""" ,, " ~ 4 ut omot1v(' vehicle. Lost: German Shorthair Gt1tt1'al0ffice Pi lot. Must be depend~-panded duty dental as· f ~otorcycle, m?torhoat. Pointer. rem Liver & WillinR to learn insur t hie. able to type eleetnc sist & plaque control in · • 40,000provcnmile,.Part wht. 6S lbs . Vit. Vons Cutslent ils.L1teofc. , 45 WP11-1 , handle phones structor. Chairside ex· Ii known as AUTOt.1ATI C Center' Beach & Atlanta, NIGUEL and front counter . Prefer per. Xray li e rcq·d . Xlnl • C 0 NT R 0 L 0 1'" HB.Reward .536.:KM6. PersonnclAgency resident or Laguna oppor.Sal open .R42·1i631. I • f1EADLI G J-ITS AND 27001 fi'or~s Rd ,Ste49 BeaC'h. Excellent com· _,_.~-=======1 PARKJNG LICIITS. ex· LO s T Sm a l I b I a e k l3 Flags Center) pany lx'nctlts. Apply in DIETARY SPVSR : o'tcted lo OUt!lell com· Cockapoo 14'('1'.'hite chin Bll-1477 persontothe rrr ror 144 Bed SNF I ' binedunll . .SOas,,embled. whhi;kers 492 fl l4R or Or~Coost Previous dietary expr. Low cos t . Customer 41992~·!154~3~-------/---;:L~•;;•::•n:•;;;N;;;g~u~•:;''---1 Daily Pl Jot necc. flo1 ust have com· d l d di I --TT 330 W n St pleted or be enrolled In , pera e spay. a s· LOST D k Bl b A ENTIONI • ay • sembled. Cannot forget nr . ack Tab Y · CMta Me!la approved course . Gd. I and leave tight.I on or off. KI t. ten In 8 a I h 0 a 3.4 Mo't won Equal Opportunity wages & be.nefiL,. Apply ope r 1 le !I Au To . Petunsula area. 675·1276. t I & O•er Employer in person. SJRJ Newman MAT t CALL V 0 R LOST Springer Spaniel. 1 -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;~~A~v~c~. l~l~R=. 84~2~·~~55~'=· :;;::;;::;I MANUALLY by flip ol female, "Mia". Children We will train you In our r a.,ritch. Exclusive rlahts. heart·broken. Liver & bWJlness . No 11trike11 or llo0,000. Act I Ye JJ&l!s white. 642•8399• layofl11, plenty ol work. If lpArtner~ SJS()OO for :JS% you 'r e a mb itious & c#. net. ~1ide:r 1u1ran· LOST: L&e Daisy Dolf, would like a PQA:ition out teed royally ba1ll. Write pculbly let out by the of lhe ordinary . Call to: Wa lter R . Ste. ir.na, F..dl&M meter man. Vic. after9am 22t4·A P 1clfle ,li.'!f• •• Sa:nUaco Rd , CM (Me:!ia CollolllH&,Col.llam de1Ma.154&·185a 53'·1 II] ' ' " To place your mes1a1te before the read.I n& public, phone Dally Piiot Clas1lfied, 842·.5618 1-"'ur Clas:sificd Ad ACTION C•ll• Dally Pilot AD· VISOR 642·5678 I ,, lohrriewilog wll be -ot •nt-..i Dtc.....-11twas1t: 6.tr-t t &&teS ............................. KITCHEN PERSONNEL WAITERS WAITER'S AIDES COCKTAIL WAITRESSES BARTENDERS -BAR BACKS HOSTS -HOSTESSES We seek dJ.amJc people of vision to perpetuate our tradition. An Equal Oppotf\#llly E....,._ -------- MANAGERS & ASSISTANT MANAGERS Hamburger Hamlets Due to our present rapid extensi"1:: program, we are seeking ene~getle:· people who wish to progress quickly. If you prove to be stable & dedicated " & possess the ability to lead & motivate people. )>Our future ls with us . Management experience is desirable, but not necessary. Excellent salary. Company paid bencfib. Apply Mon thru "'°l 9AM·Noon GEHEIAL DFFICES 322 Ho. Footltll lld. •ffrty H11s ..... Oppo:l_lfy' 1layer ,{)., ~~~ ..... !!.~!~~~ ...... ~.~ ..... !~,,.,,?!~I~~~ .... ,?~ .•• !~~~:: ........... ~!:: .......... !!!.~! Sundax.~301 1975 . DAILYPtLOT £9, ""i"i'' AJd•, .a,lc•t • N 1tt.11&1l .... s.._ "'"•'' aoos •SP48clt....i.. . ,_ .. 1 .. _ G__,.s• 1os1 ..... 101 Kt41•••• 1 o p l me ua)'. nalelab ewportl rvine 1ru. ·.TAILORESS ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,nn sir .. ""-• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••--••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~• HPISH• ...... .,07. The "••II•••• but ---•ucTI~ U••new•.c.u .... 1o;co PUIUCAUC110M PUtUC•UCTIOM 1 • nelahborly" winning r_._ ~ -, MANY ttEMS OF FINE MANY ITEMS OF l'INS MOVlllG TO HAW• ' Nurslnl ~lteoC!ant ex-team with ht.th tommJ W b ltl r MANY ITEMS OF nNE Sears 10 apeed man s &$TATE JEWELRY ESTATE JEWELRY eomplete baby fllnl. pc!r'd. BQ'view Conv. q>Ht. traln1-• fl'OCta:m. e_ ave a pos on open or an e~· JEWELRY, ART racer •" whffll, xlnl. ART OBJECTS AN' ART OBJECTS AN' related llem1, dr . 1 Jla.pltal, 2051 Tburia nalionwlderflfurallaoci penenced lailoress to work ~m~ OBJECTS, ANTI~£S., tand.SSO.&t&-laO TIQUD F'INE "1RN. TIQUES PlNE r\JRN . patio table, 4 t haln..-" AG..CMIDDllli. more . Cent arr 2 t . alOllgSJde the greatest master tailor to ~~~F~Rt"i:kroTC.; ETC. PHONE roR m: F.TC. Pi'IONE FOR 1N: Pmclleton Jacket ~~ """""·""ll•p/tRN'1• ::."'Ar,l'W"•li;.anlRdin be!oundanywherelntheGREATEST BROCHURE.ou.2200 llOCJI 1040 FO. "BROCHURE. FO. & BROCHURE. ~~:r:·R·vt .~:.i+il LVN'•· 1mmed. open-e 0 ra•c houae. Sl'ORE to be found anywhere. Our ••••••••••••••••••••••• 84.S-ZZOO ~2200 food Gd ri /bal \:Jft- --· -· st«e Is located in Newport Beach & NTIQ ES UWlAAPSOAKC m.a . • ,.. . . I ••-tau h A U l<&Wb.ctt.mp.Unn S•t & Sun 1·4. 2024 1 WAMTED OfcMocW... $100 IEALUTATI u"' ors opisonthe2ndfioororlhe Sll.O. Call"4-Nottrolt Lo, HB. Rup, TOP CASH DOLLAR lldnn'tawi111 1el. ~.-·•~,NB_ , .. L -store in a larce air conditioned room THE MAavnPLACE drpa,to)'1,clothe1. 221• •Id•• •ve. c ,..,......m ·-~ OHOllT\IMITY with aJI ul CONNEcnON O U Samoyed & • PA I D F 0 R Y 0 U R ~ 0 ' t al•• oriented puson Well localed RE office neweq pment. Wealsobave IO">offwlththls ad ~~"~5) &etl $1.0 'e:~ 4 Yamib' G ara&e Sale, JEWELRY. WATCHES, r.tes.aS.-5143 w/min 1 year Nlattltl e•· d 2 11 the best sates staff, selling to the .z..s . . Nov. 29 &: 30. t :ao to5PM ART OBJEc:rs. GOLD 2 B!WTV• ZI" &: 21" !bl\ ' perienee. Po1tllve at-:.~~~le. 8~~e~ nicestcustomers&lf you wou.ldliketo lTOOSo.GrandAv•. S.Sl • Home Made qullta, S ILVER SERVI C~. • abed ·h-; 1 ttlode a muat! elill Con· Crtoall l Your own dctk have the opportunity to join our Santa Ma $U-4&8l Ad«ab1e Wlre Hair T t-r-furniture, e xerci1er1, Ji'I NE F U RN " AN . !e!1°s'ft = "6.cz9c le I Ln:JI Caree? Employment and phone. Call for in· team ... Please send a brief resume to: CIW'it.__ Sllop at: rler AKC, 8 moi old. t'lothes, C'Ol.>lcware &: dis· TIQUES.&U-2200 • · • • ' ."-:ency,~. trrview. --ft-&.. ,~, p, 0. loa IS'A, C-' ReaaonableM6·1900. ho&. Iota of Mlle. 21881 ll Old Nlt'I Cash r.g1stoul'. W E La be ·--,---Kiowa Ln . HD to rewood Org . Euc. $78 s110 lO'J'ernsrttn lklf• PAMC0.Ll1) i9e0...,__c nmeyer,Rlt.r MIN. Ce. '2626. ClmsfftM .. -. 601. Btiltany Spa niel, Pol ., 1 Bermuda,offMaanOtla c!>rd. del. Oak . Coust xlnt' qnl. $.100. Rcit\,or I c reator• of Savage & rwwportBl'td.CM -d I--' --1-1 _._ mu. AKC, P1~ra, ~ F lrewood Supply, noor heater $80 Oallun tarthenwear needs head 648 'RZl,nn:61s-4571 "• ca lwct ,_, ..._-• =• www. &U-1889 Garage sale: Chriatmu :!181 ·1122. r n hi·PWT''d $40 St1·r l cosmetic compounder. &hop here! Good Item•. a " ••CA AU' k '"' Top pa>'. f' h 0 ft e YoRln AKC No junk. Sat Ir sun 10.s. AnwoodJStock Up t.-q u..p. s;so._. and!>. ' ~141............. HtfpW..ted 7IOI HttpWeeted 7100 714-178·1246. 21192 Windaon1.H.8 . t7Scorddel,&U·2624 675·ll7S , "·cc.-~--'-''-"'-----I Real Fatale Salts ••••••••••••••-••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• GREAT~ -GALAXY tEALw n..i..-Fr' S t S M Len Chin 01 · S.bot mold, new, nn•r, Parf.TiMehH ·• • SICalTAtY SUPERVlSOR· SWAP M££TI ~rm•n P1nscher pup-1., a ., un.. any nox a ( )'mp1a used iacriflco ''" ,._ $2QQW--L A new ofnce ID a pre· A tlnaDCial oraanl&alion EVENING • pies, putt bred. r~. 5 baby things, Helld Stln· Gold ) 12 place aet.linas $48-3JOoanytime 1 .._.,.. .... stigious loc:aUoa. Strong in Pa.sh Ion l1land offers Nl1,ht time " •·ieek.end wks SSO. 64G·7GOJ dard 5':1.s, w tatep In bln· never used $400, 644-MSl • . f'ttl Tlnw 1 a ales support " high 1 mm l' d 0 p p o r . f 0 r schedule at prtv. re-crea Sun. Nov. 30, llam·~m I dings, boot.I, polla, & car . 22' Lincoln cba11s.i• for ·-commlss1ons. 901 Dover mature resp. orglfllnlzed Uon club. Rdired maJ o.twfoSpaactway FrfftoYOll 045 ra!'k. MU!.c. MUSant.&na Garfers & Saltier d11 -11.lotor Home eons.ttw-' -Mm and Women. New Dr. Suite 130 Newport people oriented woman preferred. SSOO mo. l Ontario, CaliC. •••••••••••••••••••··~· Ci~le H.B. M2·4605. hwasher, 1 yr. oid, white. lion G50. 1958 5 ton lntt. ! olrice otNatlonalCo.No 8':h •ho Uk.es telephones & start.Call586-0860 Forlnfo.2lll990·79'Z7 AKC Female Mini · Paid $300. Wan\ $1.25. $650 '6S Butranr '&• t:xper. needed. Full 64S.llll has &ood followup & .Schnauzer,I Pl'IYed-Also Sat-Sun . Furniture, M0--1982 mot.o~$7Sup. t~aini n & prog r am . follow thru Re quire · Tax Retum Pttparer Must sell 108 pl e!'e gp:;.y ed female C at . freezer,retris,miar-.SeeSoh . 1 548_1038 MB-$274 • llana,-emenl and bJgb Ty · Asso!'ialed Duti es . Theodore Haviland Em· 642-0973. lo apprer-lale -2663~ mer piano, !'Onso e , incomepolenlial. •ltcep+ JSecy SSSO ments: plna 60 wpm., Pttimt. Small P.A. Of pre:s1 ebin•. Dy •PPl. . Oeseo, Mission Viejo blonde, 23 yrs old. Xlnl. Combination Motore~k-('114) S.Sl ·l689 E t I c x p e r w I I B .At rice. Older CPA or p 640-1663 Pure ~red P.1ale Spnngt-r . cond. $600. W1ddlcomb utiltrlr,3mol01TYCletor 1 call M 0 nd a y op ly r::.i~{ wa~:~!.,. p~t~oe'!.: trans!'ribcr, 3 yrs busl-preCe rred. 417 Ca nyon s~el. 2 yn old. LoYes For Sale·Austrtan 1lr.1 contemporary arm!'hr util ii::irdenlng ttlr '•Int • between ~i for appoint· Year,getyourfootlnthe rnessg ::p~J~~~-g~~t·. Ac re s Dr L•guns Bra11 bed w /canopy, !' ildren.644-5615. boots sz 7~1 $10 pr. Skia lj.ld lwte<I , xlnt cond. wod 548.7828 ment. Beach 497 2303 custom shear• & spread Sl0-G2 ea. Much More. 1100.640-567~ · m door now. Typil'l.f fc sh Phone&44·4360ext 293. · • $650. complete. 644·l164 . Toy Australian Shephard . t 91 Flower St, C.M . Refrig S2S power ed(tr P•XAn1weria9 SerT. c' ... ,w.·· ..... ECmapllloCooy-'•'2,• Sec:-rctary for salesman. Teac.h.,...P.-enh Small. lovable. superb 548-7866 . Japanese cocreeh. labble S3S 100 g~llon ruel talllls L I . F 1 · ... ..._ . Oak Vict.ori~n Secretary wal!'h dog. IWS.0022. game toillle w 1.a c rs. lk ' · 1 t c i· 14 . oca 10.ns .. ul or Agency 5:;6-8505 An s wer p h 0 n e & Unu5u11I oppor. fo.r 1n· S22S Sal & sun Antlquet,tut na uJ.?.. couch_ Bsl.. offer. S2S ea. in ant aeal 1, -! • p /t1 me s hifts include ' · schedule •ales leads . tl'resting ed uc.a.t1 o~u l 644.1154 . Furniture 8050 glu ! & gift ilems. 968 9fi0..4125 baae•ntennall0,AC10C. wknds. Exper. pref'd. RECEPT-TYPlST Crom Educated,1ales orienled s•1h .. 'S work. P0&tt1on 1n---••••••••••••••••••••••• Springfi eklCM540-3178 converte.r .ss . Whole 1-:0E. 543·7'181. now lhru April for beach lady---1)ersonality + a Yolves eont•ct w/parents 6' Antique Buffet 1930. 1-~0, S ale, Kg Sz Bed , For Sale · Irvine Country w~eat gr111n in 5 gal con· P _.•_. area a!'!'ounting of!'. Call must. $.100. minimum + of pre-achool & 1cbool Mual sell, too much furn. Dinette, Couch & Lov· Garage SaJc, everything Club Golf Family mem-lainen, $15 per I00 1tbfi . C'f'T '"' 646·-#Mforinro. commission . s da ys , 3Re !'hildre~x.:.r-ep -Pri Pty,67s.4238. eseat. Call bef. sPa-1 . must io .. 21871 Kiowa benhlp.SM@.S75-0llT. 642·5339 Wont.... R 7am-3pm. C.11556.:1'718. t1onal lncome r . Call •--a 493-4038or493-S229 Lane, H.B. 21h blka So. of Tube lrame wheel -h•lr .. ..., ecepl/St'eretary vi r g In i a I . s. -..r"".CH eo I 0 Edison H.S. Sat. & Sun. . OASIS ... Hoan P art·timelolease bldl!. SECRETARY.sh /type. 673·1166,:>40-15 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Llghlbluevelvel Poollable,Pln&·Pona:ta-S2S M a n u al Model ,.2:3~"' or •~tpm llntg Bch. Base salary + Ven1tile. Good detail. 05hwshr. wshn & dyrs. sol a, $75, ble, Golf Clubs. womens WATERIEDS Hospilal Bed. gd cowl. Bonus. 832·4161 PartJJ'ime . 645-2666 TOW TRUCK DRIVER. recond. guu s.u. M6·~18 64-i ·5708 clothing & a hoes, like 2 free SlS.Oorolfer. 631-2063 f:S.rn $4 r putting your exper'd. G &: W Towing. 839 7620 Sk' M yt • ...., 1-•-~ personality 10 work. All Sec ret ary /Girl Friday IOOOlrvine,N.B.642-1252 · __ 8' Sor b new. 18 • new a ag '",.. .. s _. Com_plete set. or ca n--k done f•om our ••ow l M be tll a, Loveseat, lu Dryer, Carpe\.s, '65 Mus-W/every eompi•te uno'\ •·•'s handtnols in la ·-• R • at usl versa e. some . Apt. size Mayta~ MI NI n or a l & cofCee table t g6 I 1 ti '" K;• 0 Irvine ore. You must esp1r Ory sellin g . Bookkeeping, T y p1s t /Rece pt1onis t WASH E R & DRY E R $100.C..11548-6271. • an cy,auoma c. Nowtill Christmas aluminum ches t 01\ posses• a pleasant clear neceuary. Atrport Area Xln 't r;pelUng " gram· CO~t BO. X In L cond. Creative Play Things Ta-1775 Newport Blvd CM wheels. 2SOCliff Dr., A'pt .l voice & a confidenl man-Therapist Call for appt. Mickey mar. SS.S0-$600 mo d e-645-89ll Bar. portabl e w f4 at.ools bl e & Chaira, Blocks, 645-2732 17, Laguna Beach. ~r. Perfecl Cor sluden~ ••·n 2 ,1 1 Novak. 714 ·54S-4014 p e nding on exp e r . -----padded bla!'k vinyl. SZ25. Trut"ks, Ca ri, etc. Hot J4C puckag·• BIC di•· E x e r c I 5 e e e n • h • . & housewo·v ..... No actual :nt yrs expe. r. '~us """"'~...,, F b b I ... u•• ~ > .. h bi od ,,..,__,. ar e rware r o1 e r-.....,. ...... pla.te, Cloor scrubber ...... able lighters & dis· -tweo'ghl5. Good c-~•·) !lelling involved. For a ve e x per. in ° SKretary flte<ept l . · I t ....-.. "'""' more info. 83l-8098 betwr. 1 gast:s. ICU & gcaeral Per·m. r /lime poslti~n . ~r~~!~~~~ li;e ~u~ ~: f!ench Proven Desk le~lh ~1151he:j ~~~~ 1~i~!~~I:: ~la,y rack& $1 lS.833·2094 ~~~lee broom 111.0. I ··93'1!1.5pm rC8 piralory care. Salary rrues thru Sat, 9·5:36) *UTOTEM* 644 ·1910 inlay & glass top. like albums , boob, i·e-elry. Girl's bike, set 1 Golf I · commensurate w trrain-1 -.1 --new,S\50.644 ·1164 . .. & C l •1 o r a respon s 111 C'. EMPLOYME-GE B'Se"d, 1 Wh t 9131,iz E. Balboa Blvd. club s./c a .11e, Hll MOLD SET UP MAN Hamilton, Costa Mesa persona l e, well OPPORTUNITIES 6 d' c-ond . Buyer. mus t Ne~ U sh~ped sectlonal. Balboa.Sat/SUn.9-4. rot\s&en efbro1ler, 7·dr. Mi.cellaneou1 j PLASTICS. INJECT ION 1ng exper. on act" r. b re• u e1ros 1 e SOP.1E EXPER REQ: r.1e morlal Ho"Spital , groom ed individual transport $100 545·0214 wh1t1e. On a:. cost $1400. HonH 8060 desk. 2·t1er lamp tbl, Wanted 8081 GOODPAY FORGOOD OO·Z1l4.EOE. W/good !l e cre taria\ f\illorPart·Tlme · · Sell$600.6il·Wl7 Mognu11chordorgan.All ••••••••••••••••••••• ,.1 1~~~~~~~~~~~1 skills If you a re effi No Exper. Necessary ••••••••••••••••••••••• reas 642·5967 J\lAN.549-195S. . b · . A 2l65Ell 'bl Uprighlfreezer ,S12S .Call Ooubl bed e<1 Reg Pi to 8 /W be t . SSCASH$$FOI l.'ient. right & able . cc · g1 e tos · operat' e , never us , . n au . RETAIL SALES please write for an appt. Go To The Nearesl ee in 546.~n . sa!'ririte for $50. 613-9015 marked mare. Ex!'el. CHRISTMAS GIFT Good used Cur11 /reCri1s " PLUMBER POSITIONS & include your resume & TIC TOC P.1ARKET or642-20'12 . trai I. exper 'd rider. Adult &Childrens candid Fri.rs/stoves. 546-0761. Heavily exper. plumber "' d salary requirement. PO ForApplications &1nfo Whirlpool Brand New . 640-7661 Portraits inNaluralSet-W t d . 5 1 '1 needed ror resid e n · ant goo !'Om · Box 2328, Newpo rt OR CALt.(714)642-7702 Stove Cornln5t Top Will Kin~ sz mattress W/box-· tings. Living Photos By 3 n e · ma l tial/commerical repairs mbuni!'a~rs&wl.hok are en· &>ach,Ca92663. TI!'TocSystems,lnc . aacriiiee 5425_ 968-.tli . sprin ~&framt"S12.5.1714 Reg. lh. Arab Kelding. Steve.Call640-817l PRlayhousbei. A01nodso, Dond~k. oo ·a free lance basis. t usiasllc 1 e people. PM Skylark Ln. NB. 548 ·0479 . Xlnl child's horse. Grey. . easona e. t I• !\lu s t hav e tru c k Specialty rood sales.Ser vice Station Atten· . . . . will mature lS .2 H .3l1P gasoline air com· llon.545-1953 •1 traasportalion and all Pa rt I Fu 11 -T1 me op -dant, exper 'd_ Day & Wa1~re5s , ex per. f /lime. ffot·point Gas Dryer $50. Formal d1n1ng (~lanley ) 968-1828 . pr~sor with loot box ; Musical ~ necessary tool s . ClG portunities. Linkletter's Eves. FUii & p /time. Ap-Sid s Blue Beet, 107 21st Whirlpool Gas dryer ss:s Tabl e/4 chrs, China Cab. both on a good small • ;•Hc'eosee prererred. Con· 1-· 1 re brand Foods , ply, Shell Station, 17th & Pl, NB after4pm G&S bltin di'.~hwashc; "nt1q ue Cin1sh. !'ane back Palamino Quarterhorse. trailer. $225. 494..m83 IMfrumetrtl 8013 • 1 act Mr. Sam Osadche &W-8712 Irvine, NB. S75 Guar/De1546.ss72 t"hrs. pecan tbl t op. All $250.00 or best offer . ••••••••••••••••••••••• p I ~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l~~~~~ESMJ\N\\;;;I W AITRE.SSES · Cor $4 50. Re!'l iners. ( 1 552.9044 arter6PM. lioover Dial-A-Matic up· Guild D·~ acoustic glllta~ ~!wr!in~73.s300 M.0 .11 SftOE S1\LESAt AN Wt: Exper'd.f\illor pll Auction 1015 Gldvelvel&lbllcnaug.HOUHhoklGood 8065 right vac uum $40. w /case. Perfect cond' RN have an opening for ex· Good hrs. Neat appear. ••••••••••••••••••••••• wit.h wood arms) S3S e a. 5 Rerng. smgle door, $50. tioo. l\lu.staell, Sac, $250 per shoe salesperson in Over2I Span. Tile triple dresser,••••••••••••••••••••••• 400.3318 7514660 l Emet-gency bette r grade ram l \y Su rf&Sirloin **'BUY** headbrd, 2 drwr !'Om-PERFECT CllRISTMA.5 . . -t POLICE DFACER P /time, l -ll:30 & llPJol. shoes. Full or part-lime 5930W .Coas\Hwy,NB Good Used Furniturt! & mode {nol exact match) GIFT Nippon 3 piece ~ea set. Electri c Guitar, Les.;; 1 :JOAa.t,Aint working Call in person & ask Cor No Phone Calls Applian!'es---OR I wil l i\ll ror $100. ,\IJ ite ms Save $50, 15 pc Gourmet Ha v 1 land -L 1 m og e Paul Copy $75. : ~:'o. Mr. Cannon , lt emphill --Sell for You . mus t be sold this y,·knd. non-sti<'k !'ookware sel, dessert plates. 545·7880 642·21S!J 1 c-: .. E.Contact D. Shoes 54 Fashion Island WHO WANTS TO WORK? M'STEJIS •UCTION "'~"'-"""''. $lZ3,S57·6763 N i C I k ' CITY OF . NEWPORT BEACH · Sl 178 to $1432 Per r.10 Testing Dec. 16, 17, & 18. Applications a ccepted beg\nnin" Dec. tst. App- ly in pers on to the petsonncl department, 3300 Newport Blvd, N.B. Roache, R.N. Costa • DRIVEACAB' '"' '"' .,....,.,,v., atura eruean min 5Pc.P.1e~urydrum1ri 4 Mo,j.;e s a Pote mo r ,i a 1 N.B.644-4223 CHOOSE your ho. urs , 6464:616 & 133·9625 stole valued $1400. &t. Cymball'I + xtra!I, Xln~ H I 27"~ Ram.boo Dt annin ~ lhabble & Jewelry 8070 ol 6311971 nd ;~~·t~·~·;""'~~~~·;;;;;rS1i:t~te~r~t H~•i•~•~P~•~·~'~·~·~~·'.1 work ror yourself. be Aft6-Call842 .. 1542 !'hair se s h1 g ark r. · co .$175.968·'1202. h . ,· d$1······················· woman for 1. 8 yr . old your own boss. Men or 1 . I 8020 <' airs. x nt con .. 00. ' 2:15-5:30 M-F, 846-8458 Women. Can be sli ght ly 1cyc es orbstorr. 646·3425. WANTED handi!'appe d. Neat·••••••••••••••••••••••• RN'S SKIPPER Cle an Appearance . Used 1 Bikes&: Parts. Buy, Yel11owtdhh.l canopy dbed&. i~~DcA:~RD~L0L~n tFull-Timel For80' Yacht Boal. Will Vets., relired. Age 25 lo s c I & trad e. 2488 w ma c 1ng sprea JEWELRY, WATCHES, cnii.se in. Seattle & San 70. Supplement your in · New p ort 81 . • C M . !'anopy. $30, 646-6525 ART OBJECTS, GOLD. Med Surg, 11-7:30 shirt. Francisco bay ar e as. come. Drive a cab 6 hrs 1 c6'2c=c·~79~1~0c. _______ 1 Exper . acute car e Nev<'rusedOinRm.Set& S ILV ER SERV ICE. •-· . 1 Referencer; & •alary re-or more a day. Apply in Boys Nisiki Semi-pro 10 ltulch . cost $1800 sell F I NE FURN & AN · REAL ESTATE SALES '""'inlal on y. Excellent quirement ~ must be person. Yellow Ca b Co.. pd d $1200 644 5035 T QU benefits. Contact Mrs. fum;shed wllh Jst letter 11251 Slater Ave, Foun· s xlnt con . $200 or . -I ES.645-2200 ATTENTION Jensen , 642-2734, Costa best orfer . 642-2159 LICENSED, ,_1 es 8 M em 0 r i 8 1 in order for appli!'ation tain Valley. Din set 10 pc. Sher aton SY· Miscellaneous 8080 UNLICENSED, ll .1 1 301 y · 1 . to be considered. Wrile Bicycle , Red Beac h tie, beaut. cond. !'Os t ••••••••••••••••••••••• GETTl1E RED ospi a · l!' oria Ad No. 580. Dally Pilot Classified ads sell big Cruiser, clean. $100. Call $3000, make ofraBl -0264 TREAT1"1ENT! Mesa,Ca.92626. item.JU&tcall&Q.5678. Brown 8 Herc ulon soCa , machines . n e w neve r · CAA1PAINIA 'Sport' 10 white c onle mporary used A unique gift idea .11_,,,..,., (,~ ... ~ CARPET ~C~.~M~.~E~O~E~. ~~~~~1 :P~O::B:o~s~J~5~6~0~,~C~o~s~t~a~l~it.eu~~~~.~s~mal~l~it~ems~~or~an~y~I M2-l64S . , Po s la~ e v e nd Ing We train you lo sell RH's & LVM 's 75 lh I speed great for Xmas. bunt'h1ng tbls. ba r stools , SJS. 1·6340 homes wi an ac!'e e~at · p /time openings on all Xlnl cond. Tom·S45<t580 3 shelf un it 968-0f.87 9l]~;;;L,~~~~ ed course \hat starts am -shifts. Calif. lie req'd. ----------1----------152000 met'hani!'s tools/roll p mediate!)'.. If you. are i!'-Ple ase apply Pa rk A1ens 10 spd bike. ~d Trundle Bed. all wood ca b.$900. 1.ady Shick lerested 1n earning big Superior Healthcare , c ond .. make offe r rrames, xlnt cond. Sl OO, h a 1rsetter , $~. xlnl. money from the start, 1445 Superior Ave NB 8.13-7754 &W·2Z39 548-5960. get individualized Cree 642-3410. E.O.E. ' trainingonthejobinone ACONV(N1ENTSHOWINGANO Sofa be d , s t e reo / TV Nu calculator, musl sell o(riiany top o[fiees locat· SA.LES COUNSELORS SlWINGGIJIOEfOlllTHE johwithalow·c-ostOa1ly ca bin e t , p l at[o rm c-o mpl Wi ll scie ntifi!' ed thruout Oran~e Coun-For Newspaper Promo· CAL ON THE CO. Pilot Class ified Ad . rocker. All very gd cond. fu nc ti o ns SSS /firm ty, call for further de-tion. l\1ust enjoy working Phone 642-567 8. ! 751-4fi7•1 833-7754 lails . Arlene, l714) with young people 10 to p f ed 1 c•~ .. ~·~1·~2;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ ~:i?n~~rt~0a;,e·r~~~~~ ersona iz Designer Pattern ~~::!!'! ........... ~??.~ ~~:!!!'! .......... ~??.~ ~~::!!?: .......... ~??.~ • Excellent part-time posi-~ Real Estate Sales tion. High pay for 2-3 ' UHIQUE HOMES hours ea!'h evenini. half-;i . -.~ tO Years of success in d ay Saturday. Call Mesa Verde. Beautirul 642·8102 for 1nlerview tJ; otfjce. Strong sales sup-before 6:00 t ... l1 r:ki~ ~~~~~onlact S_A_L...c.E_S_P_E_O_P--LE-· I '< 546-SttO BROKER, 90 % Comm. •~~~~~~~-~~~from start. Pay $190 /mo. ore sharing. Gene at PILOT REAL ESTATE, REAL ESTATE SALES Join :jj: 1 Tori>el~ lealton •Free 15 day training 540.0555 SECRCTARY course . If you can take Gregg •Cadillac-carprogram shorthand at 100·120 •llawaii,A!'apu\co lrips y,•pm, type betwec.n 55.75 •I sl pla!'e -sales i n wp:nt&are lookin g fora OrangeCounty l'h111lengc. then send us •lit place· listings taken your resume. in Orange Cowtty Classified Ad no. 567 •ts\ place-listings sold in c to Daily Pilot Orange County PO Box 1560 r •Isl place·advertising in ~~C~oo~ta~M~e~·~·~· C~a~926"'~~~1 , r• c411fornla •1st pla!'e-adverti1lng in 'lh•U.S.A. •Secretary $725• ··!sl place winner R!XO Don'( wait lo ril'lg ln the ~Home Buyer's Contest Hew y ear. This co. needs 'lf unlicensed, let us as-JOU oow! Strong sh & 1sistyou in obtainingyour typing ski lls are :,Real EatatelJ~nse. Call oettpary. CaU Control • lilAory Career Employment j, 142·66tl N:ency, 556-8505. · TnRBEl l..:.... 1926-1976 ,,,.. ' Uing anything with a Daily Pilol Classified Ad is a simple matter .•. Just t all 642-5678. 71985 Spad•a &a,,.1 iq1,1e Spadea Mini Cata I OJ 7100 lHftpW.i.cl 11oolttotpW.t.d ........................ is••···················· • • • • nm Spadea Boutique dl!llitD buttons to the side wUb ooo torD back lapel. A ~ Ue sub circles tbe walstllne over the long or knee lenith narrow Permanentpar1-tlmlopet1lngs lOfP'l)fessiol'lal ~ P•brtca; toft c~. sheer wool or n eeee, • PUBLIC AUCTION ESTATE JEWELRY & FINE CONTEMPORARY JEWELRY Probcibty the moil important eito1e jewelry ~ of '7 5. OVER ONE MILLION DOLLAR INVENTORY FREE ADMISSION WHEN: Frida Dec.mbtt $, 1975 a,oo P.M. IUlllS I l'ln'ATI ,MTll5 W'(IJM: tOTs 111 sm:s rs un llGOUS m:sm WHERE: Newport GoUeries Ltd. 2542 We•t Coast Hwy. Mew port Beoch, Colif. r .. n»• 1rtom -o• '"' ,..,.,, "'"'"°"' AlliN""""' b!""" ,..,,..,,,., WHAT: !>or-"'"'9 IO ....... .,, ........ f>O<•••boo~ O'.d ,,, .... Oi.......,...d ,,,.. .... , •• 1.,,.,., 'I> (Of<>•'" :10 u woh cond "'° In fDt><t col0<0 ""d •h•••• l•~•"''"• "'•''' ot><I lad•••' w111<h•> l"<l"dl"g l'k>9-to, o.n...o. &.........e ond ,.,._,<•e<. a...ct.. GOtod. ,.,,..._Philip. VocM..,... (,,.,0100-. ere. "'°'' b<and ,...., l,.,,. ol gold few elry. ~•d• ol fMhi.,,. ond c0<\1Dll rW>g1 ,., ...-ith ...i.. ... _,aid,,·~·~ •. ••< S..-fond jof:le ond .... ~.,, ;.welry. tot. of ,..._ Cl'l!lq.os l"'welry ,,.,,., ........ t....._ ..,...,_,, """""" ond ......_,.. Dr°""""'" .......... ~. -............. G.LA. APPRAISALS WITH AU IMPORT ANT PtECESI ,.,..,.,.. • .,, Net-Afoy \••"' J'"'<io.o•ed ..,./ II"'.,. '" o gih _., b9 ••h,,Md to-uedot °"' •·~ for o,.,.. ..,..tlocorO,. b~ .,.,...,. ,..,.,"""' IJ!ft INSPECTIOlt ~.,...,_....._JO". Mooro·.MlO P.M. & 7.00 P.M.-1-00 PM Mordof, o..._...-,. h t Noor>-9.00 P.M. , ......... o.c-.i-~ ,...,_~ ,,,..., 10.00 ......... .S,00 I' M & 7.00 I' Joi ...00 •.Mo, rhotw: (714) MS-2200 for informatMM. ,_of ..... , .....__!( .... d. Moo•e-0-Qe. ct-i<• ·-- $of.,rdo)r & 5-do,. o.c.....-&ft> ond 111>-f..,. vy.•(11\. pan: ......... ....... --·· .. <"'"'"'" etc. ..... be told A•cti-.... Art l••I•• saltsdtrkStowoRlnOtl'ihOPS31the Yt!loUr for louna:ewear. 719115 is cut only In Misaea OlsMytandHolel.A!)plleantsmustbas-per-ienced itt Sizes fo.~. Size 12 requires 4 1/11 yds. of 4S" Cabri!' !----------------------------"! set lint ladles' lashlons ilnd be1vallabl1 to work varied for the long length or 3:V1 yds . for \he i;hort length . l • • • ; • • • • t sttlttslncludll'IQ some!Venil'IQS andwetkends. To order: send pattern numbcr.•size. na me. ad· '\ drtss and ilp, Prl ~c $2.50 plus ZS• posla ~e . M'Pl.YIMKJISOM d Spadea Mint Calaloe with 91 pages or recent styles, . . n·sne lun lnclud.ln.1 over 30 all new dealana. $2.00 poetpald. · l g Make check payable lo Spadea. Send orders to this _. : • .....,..,..,..,•I• Spade1,2 Bridle St., Milford, N.J • { OllMI. Depl. CP·l5. Got ten lords a leaping you want to move by Christmas? Move them under our tree. Buy a one or two-inch box under our tree on December 4, 11 or 18. Fill your box with items you no longer want or need. Convert your clutter to cash. Your old skis, sports equipment, luggage, toys, appliances or furniture might be the Christmas bargain someone else is pining for. Putting a box under our tree is easy and Inexpensive. Rate s are $4 for the one-inch box and $6 .50 for the two-inch package. To place yours just call 642·5678. Your credit is good with us. We'll bill you. Or, you cBn chBrge your ad to your Master Charge or BankAmericard. DAIJ_Y PILOT 1 I • OMl)Wd ,...._ 0111C1 . 1m ~!Mi ,~ CA !m03 ..L . _.~;.~===~·-~""-'~::-~·=·-~:::· ====~~·~·~•:--~~·~·!-:~·~·=-~~~·~-=~·~·=-~~·~·~·=-~~1111~L--..,,------------------~==============ol I • I • I .. •• ).n• VP s noc;kl 9560Awlo1W..,lod 95'0 ...... 01 Im_.... ""'°""",..lwd ,blot,.,.po•lwd ""'°'·"",..t.d • ,"" wnlL. IL.OT unday, November 30. 1975 ' r-· •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••·••••--•• •••••••••••••••••••••• ~--••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • t7 IS Mm:da t731 t.4erc_.. letm 9740 ~ ~ loah,l'owor •040Mol""'yclu 9150 75 CHEVY WEPAYTOPOO!.LAR -4 9701 c.,.rt . . • ••••••••••••••••••• ,...""-tttt1 8013 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Scootef'S FOR TOP US~CARS •••••••••••••••••••"•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••·•• ••• •"•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l/2 TO"" SWB >'OREJGN,DOMESTIC l"70Toyot•2DoorSOOan, '73 Capri 2000. • Spd. U....TileAIH.w 73 MERCEDES YAMAHACh1rinet 1nXl:it '11 Model Clastron J4 ' Rotre Skl panu. Org le n orCLASSICS new paint, run• good. am/fm t.epe, new atee! Cond. Must sell SlSS. n.t.11uboutw /40JiP P.1 en:, yell,341ona.coal~.sell PICKUP lfyourcariae.atr•cleao 1,le. 712BHN. 1795 1961 radials. new Kon• LJ11.1o..-a.~'c7'osMO 450 SLC sct.SS41. allelec ·Juslovrrhauled, $30.G4Z!l87l ~usfirst. P.tercedei, 4 door, In· shock.a, new ~~U.. Just ,..._...,.,.., · Office "-ndtu.rt' & !::t:l~~r,s~i~· W/COVfr 1973 Yan111ha 7~ Xlnt ~~Yen:7· ~~8l~h~n:l i IAUEI IUICK lcrlor &ood condltloP, tuned. Lo mi a. Show we .. Of1'1M ,..... ::~~·~ii~lbell:teeri!~~ ~ptMnt 8085 --1..'0lld. J\tui1t Sell. $7~. tra ns m i11&io n, radio 292$ llarbor Blvd. ~ runnln& "f:tdltiU°, cond. S32()0. 673 • 9178 $139.89 automatic t.r1n1mi.Mk>o\, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Du~st>ITrawlers fA6·~"W heater. powt-r steerina Costat.teaa m-2500 1 some pa • t. '73Capri,:itlnlcond. power a:teerln&. factorY': •-1 Jo -Y,.40 .5-0 .77 d · 1 7301:L~llM.Dealer. -v ... m ... tsell! ~mo+T"·' a1r--"•U-1'n1,•M1~ .,..y chrB S8 1up. ex<.· sv . , . ' air con it1on1ng , Pu TOPDOL' •R EICa.minoAutoSales """" F"' ....... ......,....,. ..... " '""" ch rs Sl~/JS_, .s~y. d • .s k_ll ~~~~-frorn $25,000 tu XH. 75 llonda many more extras. Se ~ l2L2S. El Camino Rl!al Bst olr. m.-0989 •7028%1 st~reo r adio, heal("r, $. Electypewnttrs l'nrl e . A'fL1\N1'ICl'A''lfo'I'"' JerfWu;J3:~uJS:rtrick thisone! (~72'1') PAID Sa.nC1emenLe498·1400 Y Uo A' Rcrt'ARV C23SHSY> 867Wl9th CM&l>7<11 ' ' ---$4895 IMM~"l•TELY llll•Capriys. e w,F'1' PERFORMANCE+ $15800 ~;;;;;;·~~·~;;_;-;;_;;.;;;;;;;;! l\!Altlil~lr:C<). , . IAl'A conditioning, AM I l\ ?IM,GHIWAYE.P.A 1 • t;.u;.5491 &IH-6-\2'7 74 ~ 1~75 K 1 c<.· Com . FOi ALL MERCEDES radio. Dual ex#usl. &1aii: JG moo. O.E.L. Cap. ~~s -----mod1r1cd. S395. firm whttls, Conni Shock•. & ........ 30' Diesel Trawlt•r 247532A K.1:1·*142 FOREIGM CARS TRADE J\lichelln Rudial tires. Max. Term obligation In water $!~1,!)00 ---linu llarllC.lr .C.~1 . CALL OR COME IH Under 12,000 m1lea . Thill f3.1L5.320AC. •IU' Oics1.•l 'frawlt"r '70 Triurnph ·rn1;c ~c 63I·1276 TO SEE US car 11 In perfect co11dl · IQJmediate Delivery SLEMONS MERCEDES J 97ll'W:.rbor, c.~t. 631·1276 1 t s:n 500 N<1t toi.:eth,·r. Custon1 INS 636 3YrorSO,OOOmi n wa er ' " L'h ' . t I "ffi ... IV\ Uon. $1 ,000, 675·1 . or F'act•rv Warr•ntY A'fl.ANTIC P/\Clf-'I C . op ..... ~ s c Irv c ._..,., 1974 PORSCllE '73911T. Mint Eves844·1630. diri~~ .. ~~~~~ 'S8Mcreedes300 0 ~lAlll TIM £ C(). flrrn 83.1·311'16 IMTER"' •TIO"' •L <'oodition' t100683l I .. -; .. •z•• $3200. f..tG·S-191 __ fAG f.427 Go CART. 4hp. Urii.:i,:s ""' ""' PORscii E •74 · 914 734 dr. sedan VS auto/at ..,.. -... 67s.S495. STARTING S I 55 .. 1 1 Jf4 TONf'ICkUP Sil E II t •. run pwr. mui;t .se ll P .P . 17SltlOCl&YI. 1----='-'-'=---Newnnrt Rast.'(l lloat Cluh tra on en.•.. s ce ver. xce e n con . _....... r ••• -mt.-•MUM ~ f II I V 8 4 •P" .. d r ·•<l•O Pn··~n·•bl.(00""12), .,.vvv,o r . .....,.,.""" Members hip f(1r s:dc. rame. new 1rt's: -. ... ... · .. . .. cu ~ MG 9742 S.vc SIOUO ,.,.,11 "Ir . Xlnt t·ond. 575. 96SS-0Mi heater. low rnlle:-.. Lie JENSEN INTERCEP· Colt ,717 Exp•"re•l2-07·7> ' " f 6 ~' N 66678W . ~-11 '---==-"::.::..:::...:.;_c:__I ••••••••••••••••••••••• F\.lltunti75!!S66. at :....,. o · JlOOW.CustttwyHA TOR ii. I.ow m1 . ru Y •••••••••••••••••••••••r· A HEW BUSINESS 7 . '69MGCGT Ptofe!ls1ona l los.:n de· 1'1otor S:uler, ('lai<~n·, [)I) '74 YAJ\1AllA 125CC ":l'Z, $3195 642·9405 "'lulpped. Pri<<d tor im· 71 COLT mcd1ateaale! (lJ35S2). I CHEVY MONZ.\ 2+2 4 S~ed, lo, o miles aipf'r has thl· answer for yrs old. Llkf' new. $750 t'Xl. fra me, mech xlnl a.tins. 1etterheat1s. 1Jus1· Also izv "'nu·ti. s1s. ga,:,o-~·~"~0-'-'-1023=-----Santa Ana OrmtgeCounty'1 oesscnrds<"lt· R:n .2m11 ~~2H'.~_. .70 llONOA $1. IOO street HighHtSlvyer 'M -22· Trnjan 1nh0ard. or dirt, only 1600 Ul'IUitl Lincoln Mercury on Imports Secrt"ta;ial de~k ~"' t•hu!r V-8 fo1yhrid )!t'. Cuilf!) mile!'!, ex cell~nt cond1 Biii Maxey Toyota Sl75. E:c.1·c 1l1•sk & c-ha1r cab in ·ht·;id hi 1n 1 tiip lion $.150. 830-8630 130 I N. Tustin Call Roger or lt1ll Cpe. Under 12,000 mi .. 8Jl0t1J. •·•pd. Week-end •pedal $1799 Priced for quick sale. """'"' 1. Bill MOJl~Y Toyota HOUSE OP 18881 hach llHI 847-8555 IRAHD HEW 1974 MAZDA S2831 4 Speed. radio, wlr.e ,.,•heels, .showroom (rrsh. Oneownr.r. 11121. SAVE Harbour V .W. I'. t • : • $185. 4 Cla:-. .. rnl l <11Jlc5 Ne ..,,·lv rcf~nishcd . $3!)0(). ·• · --1 __ ~5~4~7~·~0~5".._'.l~l'_ __ l -::::-::::-="'=7::::-8555:='":..'-:~-I 36:ic7 2", S:lO t.'a •• 8 fi7J.~ Suzuki . TM 125,75 JU St elassroorn l'hrs $10 t.•a . ---------rcblt. ~1ke nu $4~ <i r lake ·70 Dats un I). U. good FREE APPRAISAL ~7118aft5pm . '64 26 ' l\.•ntur~ ll:iven. ~rpaymntslW2·9M5 l <'ond . $ll00548·1786aftc We buy used cars & 8087 ~·111 sere""'• wide bcu1n , Iii Tri. Chopper. 73 Yum. 61'/\1 trucks. Call GltOTll 213/921 ·8588 IMPORTS 9720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• tncludt..-s ~•let Prep Equipped with Rotary en~ine & many more ex- tras. Ser. JJ213001. 3 Yr. or 50,000 mi. t'"•ctory "1~',..=-~"'"-h_. ---"'-'~·"".,,-,.., Warra v MGI 9744 (urldy t'<1b1n, hc<1rl , 1·:1 n· "'" ~·I X be"."l offc•'· 853 ----------Cfll-:VROLET for i.1 free ____ 7~1~4~/5~Zlc....·7_ZSO~ _ _, ••••••••••••••••••••••• I I <5 ~,. "' ~,•_s ...... ,5.'P• e t. ,.1 IJ IJ. l:ovt•rnor<.:ft.1. JUST appraisal. .... .....11 9707 ·r11 lkini,: p;irrot.ye llow u• ....,,.u GHOTll Cll EVROl,F:T ""_. naPl'<l Amazon, vry lamer--------X H 1s llonda Spcl'ial. 18211 Bca<'h Hlvcl . ••••••••••••••••••••••• rumcs wi. !'ages $250. f\111 race. clean & f<.isl. ARRIVED l~unlLngton BeuC'h * BEAT * WILi. BUY YOUlt DATSUN, TOY OT A, OR VOLKSWAGEN PAlD FOR OR NOT. OLDS .' TA.a ••••••••••••••••••••••• lll.DS/ ._ ,. MCB. 10.000 mi, pen 17111 IUCi.•... cond, 5 yr~.000 mi warr. MT.llAICI• 112... orange. S«SO. 499-3686 Expires 12-07-75 Ponche 9750 Uasenje. tn·colorcd AKC Boats, R~nt / ~·1 t '"I .,.,A., .,7.•-7 549 . .lJ..11 rel!. shots & obudience Chartl!r 90SO · 1 ' us see,.,., . .,,,..,,_ '76 <P.ln THE '76 tnunl! S75 doghouse Sl5/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 14 Varna fl,1X·360, ridden SELLIMG YOUR CAR? PRICE INCREASE TOP DOLJ.,i\R CALI~ SAL BERNADENE S40-044Z Met-c•des Benz 9740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• *BEAT* THE76 PRICE INCREASE S42·7887 Jlolida\' Cruises twice, bouj!ht new. J\h1~t T t T k TOP PRICES PAID "' s & 0 ans 8090 Christmas -ParlH.'S, FIS· s~ll this wk end. $1150. oyo a rue s For lm1:iorts ano rq h1ni.: P.1rt1cs w11_h . .;kip !.162·3119 •5 Spoodt l'a•"d for or N•t .•.........•••••••.•.•. ., J"IELD 'S Ware h ouse ~~~·r~~N;1~ ::~;.~J~~'~ '73 Triumph ti50 B?n •4SfM~S De-onLt'wi1 lmporls .'Sale. 400 pianos ~or· skipper Call li40.5955 or ne,·11le Xlnt shape. hk1.• •.4.'1tomatic5 196G llarhor,C.~t . gans, new/used. Spinets, f,-15.&!66 new. $!150. 646·8118 D l • &Vi·9J03 Grands. Players. Go1niz K k. ,. d •11.a Ann l oul ror business. Hent 1974 awasa • .n ur~1 @J""' WJIO TOP w/opt to buy_ Kawai. Boats. Sail 9060 175. $475. can r1nancc 2 ~ St':inway. Baldwin ,••••••••••••••••••••••• yrs.<'reampuff:-i.Hl·l428 ~ TOYOTA ( Chickerin g. Yan1aha, RANGER 2G. Loadl·d. 4 MotorHo~s -f Krmball . Wrl~z r . Sail s. S890U 1213) Sale/Ret1t' 9160 19MHo•bo• CM i,Jt.<,iJ(l1 Pai'd 1975 AUDI IOOLS 1CllOICEOF13) 1975 AUDI FOX (Cl1 01CEOF4) SAYE WHILE THEY LAST!!! Ccwnper Shell 69Dat...,PU Ex<'ellent condition ! ZCU224 $1488 tl14 l638 -2770. 12012 S96-IY7W ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. , DOHIURHS Brookhurst .GG , ,, , ti6 El. CAl\llNO. 4 spd. ----------IL1do 14. xlnt cnnd. litany Hent 73 ?\•erland ZlJ · maJ!S. $1 IUO or bsl offer. FOB. PORSCHE/AUDI 197 4 DATSUN ~ PianoTunerllas 1 xtras & tr11i ler. Pvt 11ty. Loaded .. 1-rt>c mllt•s. 1° Call after 5 or all day Used YW'S 13631 HARIOR Piano for s alt• 714 /l>-12·8489. r:ites . Pn ply. 5~·0547 · Sat /Sun. 645·08&! GARD•u GROVE 260Z ••960-1155 • • f'aidfororMot U"" Coronado 15 w ltrlr xlnt 25' 1975 Open Hoa<t fully ·12 Cou rier PU . u1r . l----------l 4specd, factory <iir con· Kimball Console Piano con d . Fur Ii n g 'J j b . S.C .. sips ti·f! ""'inlt'r r:1lcs maJi:s. c<.irpcling &1Z·9S07 197 2 AUDI ditionin_i!. ,.\hi /Ffl,1 r~dio. De:1uliful · Xlnt l'Ond 5.'i2·07 15 cves. &1•1·8385 after 2 P!\l heater. !\la.; whet'ls. Lie. Sll00645-4"45 P .I'. I 00 LS 4 DOOR Z13KBO. -'-""'--"''-"'--'--~--IBEfl~IUDA 3U Kctrh hv O<A·nt /5or a~101.or llon11i. ·10 Ford pi ckup & 1 Auto. tran~., air condi· <s;:595 Hccond. Upright l'1ano. Cht•oy Lee, f.~. hull. full;• Private .1:roup . (iber tt.l a ss fold ·a "''ll Y tioning, A llf1 /fo"h1 radio. .1'J ivory keys. tuned. rt." ('q ui p .. S23,90(l , (714 ) fl7:1-42.l8 . ('amp trailer . 2186 :ll~w>l::::-~ll<'.".'h~. ---""~'~-·~·="=-1 heatcr.Lic.04lF\"C. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Leose Hew.Used OVER 100 MERCEDES OH DISPLAY Hous~ of Imports AUTIIORIZED P.1 ERCEDES DEALER 6862 Manchester , Buena Park 523-7250 On lhe Santa Ana Fwy. '60 M..rcrde~ Ben 300 SL Rdslr A classic. l'fint condition. Priced to sell ! 634NBW. SALE Jim Marin~ MOTORCARS 1975911 s COUPES CONLY 2 LEFT) 1. Owner's Demo-Silver w/ sunroof. Loaded with extras . Approx. 4.200 miles . ,\really beautiful car. (200988). 2. Bra'.nd new red f=OUpe with air, stereo, alloys. etc. (202293). These two cars must be sold on a fi rs l ·com c basis. No phone orders accepted. DOH BURNS PORSCHE /AUDI 13631 Horbor GARDEN GROVE g ula tcd, x lnl ('Ullli. 551·6734 ~-R • lla_lcii,:h,bl\\'llV1ctoria&Autos,lmport..i Santa Ana 49'-6B61. -----------1973 HOA Ill.INF. 28. WI <2995 1200W.Coastllwy. ISVENTUHECi\'r ,llccf· loa~~rl 12.000 ml . I SOn ••••••••••••••••••••••• ., 645-1102 "729140range, app~rp. Se-wing Machineos 8093 ing jib trlr S800 Pvt Sacnflce. C:in he sct•n al 72 Dodt)e-1/1 Ton f'U s A L1'ncoln Mercury AM /t,M , mags, rad1<1ls, ••••••••••••••••••••••• pl)'. G73:Zlil2.. ' 1972 lla rbor Blvd, C.1\1 . 318 v.s. stick shirt. ll.D. anta na '65 !\tercedes·_Benz 190C, 4 $4200. 615·9020 I yr old Brothers SC\\'Lng -. 642-8286 package. excellent cond 1301 M. Tustin dr. good m1 /cond $17501~--------- rnachine. Consol. szoo or Cal 20 +Slip. 5 sa1ls. No. L' I M 547 05 I I 673·192567S·O!I09eves Porsche 71, 914-4, 1.7. 5 bestoffer673·2416 22. OB. \'Pry good cond. '74 Tioga GT. IK'~· /\lini #93625. 1nco n 8fCUry 1 __ _:i'.'!_<'_'.·~~-'---l::::-:::=;:;;:;;:_:-::-;;::~=-I spd. AM /F~d . Bes t offer. Sl000-~~·54'19 motor home. Lo 1nl 's. $2288 t970280SECpe.One&on· 751·7210 SpOrting Goods 80'4 Call 495·5666. 130 I N. Tustin 74 Datsun 260Z. 2 + 2. air, ly classic, concourse col· I-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ••••••••••••••••••••••• L1\Sf:R i:17667. Harken USED CARS 547-0511 mags. tape, xlnt cond. lectors item. to.lust see tol• ~i~J~~!~~{ ~~~,~~rl~ ratchet, ~4280 Slp~~~~~2!;1~~~ 1:1·@'D1" '70 FORD --:.,:::2:::-A-:U-::D:::l;-:-I O:::O:::L:-5:::--11,-"'";"~D~·.'>s;~,':'-~':'u~••:_n_8_2_1_0_. ~~~·4~~·t Pty 675·7482 ~;o~c~~g~~~.Pf'p.1 i·~ Su:Per ~lagnum 71 .• $20. Newport ketch. Top cond. Trallrrs, Utility '180 llw1'.1. ~lh. ac :.z.4435 WIMDOW VAN ~Door . . hatchback, auto, lo . mi .l-.7=1:...:.>~IB~Z~.~280.c..._S_E_L_. _S_il_v_e_rl condition. Li e. 036FFH 642-9877 Owner says sell. Make •••••••••••••••••••••••1-'-----·-----I VS, 3 speed. mags, 8 Aulomall~ trans!"yss.1on. AP.1 /fM 8 trk, radials. metallic. A·l cond. J\tust Dealer. ilart/Hustler Skis, 2{)()(.'m, offer. Call Diek at Avery 5~1 0' Utility Lraill'r. 1\lso '64 Ford 1-;. T PU. Reblt track stereo. Includes factory tnr c~nd1t1on1ng, $3200. Pvt. Pty. 644 ·810'7 s· c Bst ofr . 1,-~ El Camino Auto Sales &CCo.675·8991>962·4180 t-.lotorcycle traile r. 4.5 cng. nu clutch & tires. extralongwheelhase. A~l /F~I radio. heater. a · :.\ 12125.EICaminoReal "wtLook Nevada bind · cycles. like ll('W. 24 53 $200 heavy duty rack. 73CITROENSM Superni<'ecar!246FYD. Fiat 9725 Mercedes 450SL me, SanClemente498·1400 =-a~l~edof~~:e~e~~s~.-Fgfn~al~.itf~~'ii~~f.s ~: SantaAnaAve,C.~1 Clean. $1095 ·u9 3 :. T . LE.\SEORBUY!!! 53577 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 39.000 mi. Like New.I"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" 673-90l5 &642·2<l72 CaUG40·0564. Gft.1C. Cle<.in. needs ne..,,· 5 speed. air cond ., ?I,,lp.o0o1o. 646·7965 btwn .74 9 11 Coupe . S s pd, -=:--c::--:----~--ll~~.'.'.:'.'.::'.::'.:'.:_ ____ 1 Gardeners utihty trailer bd $l0'35 leather, metallic paint & D l • F ·~::::c.::::_ _______ I · Store, Reslaurant, Laser Yellow w/new sail. Xlnt. cond . ATLAN°fTC PACIFIC Aft.1 /FJ\1 radio. <11111.e lttn-t l -P.plags, atr, stereo ~atped, lar 8095 Xlnlcond. $750. ---~548=-~""""'----I MARITlft.1ECO. '73 BMW Bavaria t-\11\ UUW MERCEDES ower antenna, tine ....•• 91 646.6427 ~,J.:. glass, Carre ra steering ••,•••••••••••••••••••• 675-6866 DUNE BUGGY or ltaC'e "'' 4 speed, air cond. & ~:~~: TOYOTA Whl ,$9.900.581 ·7862. 22' Shuffleboard. must be Car Trlr. HamJlS & tie· stereo. A beuuty! RESALES mov ed, make o ffer. 2 Z • Po I y n cs i an down s . Li c'd . $250. '75Chevy 1/1Ton '73 BMW 2002tii Renault 9755 9'$.1268; 645-3199 ~atamaran , unrinished, 540_7023, P\ll. Pty. S3700 842·1039 191>6 Horbor · { M 646 YJ03 MBZ •75 450 Sl-:L. Exec. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1nclplans.Also3burn.& . • XLNT CON D I T I ON ~ offt'rexpircs 12-1·75 L Sed to.let finish -Rodlo 54 ' rd PU (61 R bit St .. reo, & air conrl . ()nl' ux . · · . · i3Renault1S·2 OR, 4SP, 1 "• • oven propane boat stove. Ford Courier Trlr. Xlnt 0 · e ... M Elect. roof. Old pnce. A!\-1 /FM Jow miles good HIR, Stereo 1098 Offer. 499·1977 cond. $250 or best offer. trans & valves. Bod y owner. B W Big week· end reduct.. buy at 10w Bl Bk. '$2750. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 524 3853 very good. $750. 497·2196. '72 BMW 3.0 CS ••••••••••••••••••••••• (040890). . 557.3522. Magnavox /$200 o r &gen loafs, Slips/ . S . • & 1972 Chev :i~T PU, VS 400 4 speed, air con<i . & .1)a.J. MBZ '75 450 SL. 5,000 m1.1---------S1SO stereo. Argos/Quad Docks '070 Auto en1ce stereo. 1'1inleonctition' Lease or buy. (024737). Rolli Royce 9756 3 >peakers . turntable ••••••••••••••••••••••• Partt '400 eng. auto trans, Pwr '67 & '68 MILLER MBZ '72 350 SL. Cpe. ••••••••••••••••••••••• "-9176 BOAT SLIPS ••••••••••••••••••••••• stener & brk. gd cond. I 250 s· MOTORS F 11 • . A ..,..,.. Somelive-aboanJs U.S.ma~s forChe,·yI.uv. $2.:::00 or best offer. One ~Bs p ee d ~one ~:assl:.or ~u: :nq~: ,~"=l=D=EA=l~E;R:;-.l;;N_U_._S_._-~ RCAcolorTVConsole25" 645·8616 Exl418J 14x7, l4xfi wfhubs &"_67_3-_208_7_______ t•rm•.(039'1YF). ROY ,. automatlc.1t1ustsee! ~omfi ,. ~ b(aut picture, •lnl cond. chrome luscs. $70 or best. Vans 9570 ,71 TOYOTA '76 BMW's ' ?>1BZ '72 Z80 SE. 6 Cyl., CARVER s1'9.S48..fi271 26N' Boal Sli8P-h$75Cm0 11· 645-7455 •••••••••••••,••••••••• fuel injection. Hard lo ROllS·ROYCE ewporl c . a MorkllC-od I A ·1 f Afl.mira l Solid State 673-641 3 aft 6pm & Anti~/ •73 Ford i\utomalic. air-~~d . & Order ..,OW FACTORY find m e · vai · or 2:Mf.111tis1. -·-reo, •m t rm radio. w'nd•. Cl .. 1•'•1 9520 ..... AUTHORIZED lease or purch. (091983). COSTA MESA "'_, .. " ''Surfer'' Van Landau . Low miles. MBZ '71280 SE. Tobacco ";:===~>«:!!.-~"'!!!"'!......; sdlid walnut cab. Very ••••••••••••••••••••••• '66 CORVETIE --~efttrwy. Sain• Service brown. Looks & drives ' liOO<I cond. $150. 962-7475 42 x 16 ' Slip + Side Tie ro .38 Chrv. Ho>· al. V ·8, auto. trans .. A fi.1 -ut...1.e. • Ct011D SUNDAYS sailboatto27'.Seeat611 4door.G"c:oo<'·ondition. radio, ma g wheels CLASSIC ... _,... Parts•Leas1n9 likenew .Unusualvalue!I ---------~ Magnavox radio. stereo Lido Park Or. N.B. or 845_52~1 Jipecial paint. A real buy Two top~. Im · 111..,...•415 ••t ; t2()W. WarneratP.iain (1£1675). Saab 9760 i:"M.Beaut.cond.W11.lnut callS48·1608aft.5pm. ut maculate ... MJNT CON· U..A.,..,'91trweylld' SantaAna 557·213 l\fBZ '71250. Priced for ••••••••••••••••••••••• oa,b. Xtra speaker. $50. 4 Whe~I Drives '550 53277 DITION! Opeft9'1ncMy• quick sale. {002172). '72 Saab. auto, AM /FM. 8 Cassette t;ipc deck to Boats, Spee--d & ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 EL CAMINO '74 Fiat 128 Waqon M UZ '74 240 Di.esel. track option. AIC. 30,000 cp·atch. $2:0. S48·7408 Ski 9080 l Automatic & air condl· OR.ANGE COUMTY'S 4 Speed, AM /FM radio, Economy +. Lease or mi. 675·1992 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• SAVE ft,,... 1t11h1 · · Lo ·1 OLDEST 12.700 miles. Showroom buy. (022642). 1'V console w /remote Fish or Ski NOW ~ '72 & '73 Scouts cyl., economy. Excellent ••••••••••••••••••••••• New Zenith Avanli color &""'" UIJLO tioning. w mt es. & ready. 520MCC, MBZ '72 220. 4 Door, 4 Stub 9761 OOntrol.S595.673·0017 15 n. glass runabout in :t~,: TOYOTA Both are ha rdtops . $2788 cond Lease or purch EXCLUSIVE excellent condition with ' Equipment Includes rool · · · · Stereo copo /spkrs/ re· trailer and el...!ctric start LAST OF rack, automatic, air con Sall"S·Serviee·Leasing ~-~~~0!J9 230 Sed. Good FOi . ~~~=erb. $1000 mk 50hp Men:ury. l't1ust sec '75 Landcruisers 1966 Hcnho• c M b46 9303 ditionin1o: & power steer Roy Carver, Inc. ljt:Ii 1~1e'll family auto. Shows ex· Orange County ___ to appreciate. Wil t ·6 To choose From 1 _ _:0f~''='~c~x~p~;'~'='~'~'·~l~-7~5_-_1 inJ. XLNT inside & out Rollslloyce BMW m'\1 n:;iu~h'lJ~. cellent care. Priced ror ~ Sltny 17 .. Color T .V sacrificeror$1000asis. Example: .71 Dod ge Van. $l.SOO. Willtrade, 234E.17thSt. llWlt.lk'b. 842·4435 qui<'k s ail'. co21139 ). . ~ 'f/Stand. bought 1971. J?;d .. 1_C_a_ll_64_6_·_4965 __ e_vo_n_i_n~''-·-'75 Landcruiser Good condition. 3spd. ._ .. "'""t•"trwr· Costa Mesa 546·4444 Honda 9727 P.1BZ '67 200. 4 Door. New OOnd. $175. 646·6S25 645-8059, Stuart. ..,-:=,':•,.~, ••••••••••••••••••••••• engine. Excellent cond . .. ~ ... --&-M-ori------ITransportation 4-Speed, air s ho<'k s .. CHEVY V 1 1976 BMWS 3 HondaCivichat<'hback P.tust see! Be early ~ MOTOl · ne ••••••••••••••••••••••• Warn hubs, mud &. s now. 64 . an w mags. U..Avetrr hrtr..y !Jdl slick shirt.radio. low mi. (15902'1 >. CAI :tq.ipment Airer-oft 9110 062ND~f ll • J!: h b ck sea t s . O,.ttS..ndeya GREAT979.:!273 HOUSE •UTHotlUD ~;;;··········;()jQ ~~~:;;;;;;:~~;,:,:~·;;:~ $4777 1-=.~=·~":c~=~'-'·-·_· _ss_50 _""'_'_ 0 '_'·1 ____ H_O_T_l_C_E___ ARE HERE ansrerred. must sell '72 OF Wn • Senrk• ·~••••••••••••••••••••• 65 hrs total time. Top J) l .65 Dod~e Van l'amper. how Daily Pilot Class· Hond a GT Co upe • DAVE ROSS l~YA-?i0¥~:ics :d~!:~l -'cq=w~p_m_c~n_t_._55_2_ .... _1_s_. __ 9n11.e 1111,;& Bed. ice box. tbl. sink. iried ads display their !!,1;,1~~g . Best ofr. IMPORTS POMTIAC·STUTZ tUes.callS46_4m Cam-rs, Sale/ ~ ""'' UllW $1700/ofr.54S·6819 messages 'l''ilh legibility ~ 2131921-8588 2480 Hcrbor ll•d. ~ RT-· 9120 ··tt and impact? Our ads. we J '730., ___ .:_71~4c;l5=Zl::...:·7=250;:.,,~-I ---------• e-nt :··~'.:. TOYOTA '71 Chevy van. sink, bed are proud lo say, really aguar-1· Sell/Rent 22' Chri!I Craft.••••••••••••••••••••••• cah•"nct<. c l·~an .-249 1 Ph $'st• atOADWAY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....w--•/ , ... ...c,...5/ [.U<e new SG hr ur st'll ., ... "' get r esu t s . one ".!.~ ""'".,.-· si495. f..15 v;i9~ 11.flNI · Campers $895·up . 1966 Ho•bor, c M 61!> 9JOJ -•~96~-02=18:______ 642:5678. SAM TA AMA 73 J09ucr 2 + 2 Classics 9520 Clas1ics 9520 --:--_ _ Shell~ S179.50·up . r.la · 835·3171 "Sunroof" ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••. i 5 KIYf\t\ Jnr .... ·ay. 858 W 18th, CM '67CJ5.Jcep.Su spcnsion. il ITCh('vy .. J.'lOV8eni,:, T-....IO-• l...:U1..T1MAT10111v1NGMACHIN£ Stereo. c hro111t• ""'ire """tCon". Sl'•O. 642 R-171 front 1·nd & trans l·om-auto trans, PB, stereo •-•-h 1 -1 ·1 .IU,ll " ,, • ----ll Xt S2900 ft-w ee !l, IR,. •IR m1 el". ... Call&12.11:\.11 pletelv r ebll. $2600. l':tsse e. • ras. •·• ·m1,~BhfW2002. 6291-ICB. Deis. Morine :lqMlpmeot IOft .cah·o,·cr. 552.02f.i. _67'-5-_n_t_6_.______ ffllAlllI'_. $2895 slt.'CJ>S4,Xlnll'ond -t ~ 8J109't'l ALSO $995 .548·!)886 '76JeepCJ-'7 'OOG.J\lC lh.tonya~.Jspd, • . . '73J &f XKE 9030 •• •••••••••••••••••••• Trailer for l.lt1o l·I $100 673·0633. --'-"-''-'-'-='---Loaded wilh cqui pment ~ C) 1• com pl. s~tock. Ask· :t SELL idle items ""'ith a ''So"'lfl·lorop" Newcamper~hl.'11 including automatiC' inJtSIOS0.492 -0567 for 1r bed r /U . .11 1 ~7~-~;;-~r=;:;:=:::~-t:D:=a~ily;:P:H~o;:t;C~la~'s'~";''"~A~dl. 6.578 Mile~. c hrome ""'irf· .. ..,,..., nr,,g_4743 lransm1ss1on, ""'t 1 ow ·oo Econolinc. gQOd en~ .. ........., ''" ran~c Qucdor trac. /\lalf ncwtran~ttircs. $l200 /of ~ ""'hel'ls. Both cars Sable MatMCycl~s / "''heel!, lnpe, roll bar & frr962-0184aft3 ~. STAR G A'ZER ~'-.,J ~~K~an intt•rior . 7t..;H.P. ~tERCUR'' out· Scoofe-rs 9150 mori'. Less th;1 n 2,000 11. 11 \YR rt111 ti.: "°ard. Run1" gr efll &•••••••••••••••••••••••milt's. VKY225 . .AutoLeostng 9580 1:J.. 1_.a.,,1,..tc1 .... ,G-J. ;;. "'!L~~'; ... (•At ! ~1 r. n y ext r II S •74 HONDA CJ\. I"" •lrcct. Ser 1tOCIOOG8. ••• • ••••••• ••• • • •• • •• •• .... 0 .. 1.~p '" 1~. S•o•• «• nwl'@' ~ ~ 9 Tu d~·~•c-p "'•••091 lo• Tut\da~·. ._ 1_~ __ rxcl!ill'nl condllion S.150 $5188 Brand New I 76 ~""""•can-~"Q,o....-1.'oe" ~H\i. ~. ,OWtt 9040 R.10·86:-IO M ·zD.. o+,..,.. .. Zodoac.birllil•Q"I. KO.M .'<! "' "' I \lo.. Jl ~-~,,' ! .lo• O<O. "~'·• -····················· lnt. ~~"' ~ , .J.. '70 Jlonda IOI). Low m1 Sh~crest LeaseforOnly i .. ~ "" , " ~:i• 11 '"'°~ Crulaealong Cab in Sl:SO l'n\:-ile t):"lrt AMC /J •• _,.., .. ,,..... .~ ........ , ..... 111tX1ll · •er. inboard. Jlull 1n etp $84.59 ,C> ,. "' ....... ·~··-· ~·•3'1-•1 $-10·79"2 1675 1 l"'a<'h Dlvt1 ..... Y'0".. Mi.~ .. •""°"" --• eond., Cnf:! 11et.'(IJ1 re ' '• i · ·•· "" ~1 De-• '4GI,,..__""' -n-r· · I II lluntin~onUcri<'h rmo+T&L ,,._ ~····-.. ""' • .,._ ~ "(-,• 1'. _,.,. ~ 1n1tc Y !IC · 1974 ATC !!O ltond:t, Aood 6 pc t•.,.. n r.. •••· ·""• -~1 iL , .... 169 lhan It 'll __ _.. · • .,.,,, ,...11 r 848406 JS~1PG lllW1\Y E.r .A 1c~ • t.-10 ........ ~tc 1' .. -, ..... c..,.K1lt1C1n...._ ... ,,...,..1 <tlt'r 1,,,,.. ,,,., 110.. .. , J.t.1~<o ~. ~.873-3074 _ 5P~1 1i75U27 36 mo!I. O.E t .. C11 p. ''°"""'"'-,,,_ ,,,._ "'°" ·· •------.l <'rpChtrok<"e ....,·'17. J\l ll11t . term oblii a· 11r-•J-11 "... '""''•l(OllN ' \" k--' ~ /01'..• •• M..... J•-"if"' •28' Mont•rey• llond a Tr:iil 90 Lo n1ll~·:s \ r1·c .. "''· part.i; tion. Sl232.8fl . (.J A C. 1, ,,., '' ~" , • .,. ··• ,,,,, '' ,( "--·e-o( thl' ht•ll l J\lu~t Xlnt . S200 or offer ~>'!P.5.'l92e\'l'Q1n ~s __ Scr#154ft92 !!~-16 ':~~ .. -· .,~: • ..:.; J~~ ,.ti t,1JI ·~· ., '' 1 ... 6 41 - Sul IW6..JK48. f...15 :)7!t'i -----1 it I.:in1h·ruiscr. Gd . cond. Immediate DeliTery ::~~ ·: ;/:.; ... '" ·1 •. ,. '3-S1--9 ' ulhC"•strun•b<•ut, '15\'amaho400T-;ndro I.Al New 11.rc':l. ~1nny x trll~ f:xtcndcd \Vo1rranty ~;;:-..:,:~1 :,,~':'.'~ ; !.... •ou.•••u1 "' . Avftil. !'" 1:o;.. ..... '"' •~~ .... ._ J•~ ~'".:l lrttk(!, 6 cyl. Or1y. ml lL'tl. S:ZOO t:1ke over $Z"OO.h73·6264 . Jr, ~· .,, ,u,.,.,. ,11 ,, .,.....~ contl.$3000.675·312:1 p~mLl.&U·74M . TNCks 9560 =•UM ~~~~·· ~:':.~" f~t~ .. !,t,;·nl " 1"'"""'--1 :e ,_..,,... •~ 1~ M ... _ "'"""'s-t-er.n, twin v--. Whit a Chri.!ltmas GiR! ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11111 a• '""'° n11o•~.... i/\,... ,,...,_,, tucn ..., "'"~ rv p k ...,. 11 ~ ·• ,....,.......i "', ... ,...., Semlautop1to&.Xt.rufor 1973 Yamaha lOOMX·.'68 Ford~ Ton ir up. 91' .... •la•I ~°"' ~·~-. :;;:::,. ""'•Ina & Uva ab6ant. xtraa . t"aa l , c lean. Air, Z l1nt1 . tt9S. XI '·-@-.) '"'' E 12 07 7. ' l'.,'G· ,,_ r.itulhl '37,800. Ml-ZOOS. $41-116'. .,....1.ST1-673--0833. icp res · · ···~ • \ I • • ' I SAVE ) NOW . NEWPlJl\T IMPllR TS 3100 W.C..slHwy ltl 642·9405 :\11\TlK X .l.1)1 S~'<hln '6.1 1\utu tr:1B'\ Very Jtd co nd . lk !"l ofl"l·r &t2 1272 Mnda 97J8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,l t.t:1~df1 616 m 145 1929 PHAMTOM 11 ROUS IOYCE UMOUSIHE PhotORraph by Jack M. Wald.rad, Jr. Cooper body . Over $40 000 involved in 3 yrs. restor ation. '&;g1ne done by Rolls Royce in London, coach & body wnr-k dc;ie i!l Geneva. Best orrcr. C11r pre:;entl}' on display at Motornma rn llollywood, A1"olulely restored lo MINT CONDITION. ........ -12131 719-5345 It_., Ad-• 12131 9to-16'2 Allen lion : Kruse Auction Patrons "' -' ..,..., e•a;W Aillel.' •••W ... .....__I ~ .,.,,...,1 -._._ ·~-~ "--~ Bil ··············-·-···· ...................... -.. •••nw r••• ----.-Sw?da)'.Novembel30, 1175 o.tJLYPILOT • T..,... ~ t76 rl 0 t t167 ;:•••••••••••-• 9 •• 7 • 7 •,• ·-••••••••••••••••9•• 7 •,•• :::•·•.• .. ,•••-••••,••,•2•0• :::_;••••••••·-··,·~-.. • ....._ UMd UMCI UIM • • ! ,_. .. •••••••-¥•••• ••• .. ..,••••••••••••••I 111£ LEl•I .....-. •-••••"9• ... • • •••••••••••••••••-' T"YOTA "'141 ••• _ .......................................... -·····················.......................,,SS ;.;:-······--;·;; ~ " t t I '· • ~ ·~ '··-b •• 7J ..... I • 71 ,.... CONNRL Tb Sf'tUe latai."71 l'ord ....................................................... . ._.,..,,., . a.-,..... ... :I.. ~ P fl<-lom 4C,.'4~All 4-164 ·CouDllY ulre.10 ,.o. .. o,laperled 1974Pl,....0 72P--~~ .... .-.rwu..inou.111ao. rodl,... ....... ""'°""tlctnasmluke, &ta ••c-_..._ i--. • ae u ... ...,. """ G.•s.r.IW-'.', GlllLltQ o, cbnotno wb .... , r~-elr COGCll"-'·•, CHEVROLET wbale blue bk. SllTS •-•IUPll • • •IH*I. radio, hesUr, r~ ..,_..._.. • MWtirea.l.WV. ~ steemi.'T.d.. A*in&S1101.11M$51. wheel coven . Laodeu ~ ~\::,, =~ MllR.,O fD $3111 t't.. bulor. u,ooo miles SAL!S•Sr:RVICE "DoCl-So0ttm0.Xlnt top. vln1I Interior. sle«itol. pown d ii -flL ' OlODDW. 2121-... d. 72 ..... Ctm~y -.o1r.-allpwr. HOLXP. Uador 1000 -·· -r-, OT tJ'Ml5 COSTAll!SA !l'!nw..-sa.-ai-ws. """"-power •••••· radlO\ -M R B · -54~ 1200 ~} -=--'= UASI S'2795 he ler, wflltew•ll "'-" A....,Plnry~-....__ -- 1 .llMw.i•o 1---=::....:.::.....:..::=.::....-1steertoc. power ldlscl lt76C',.. • S Unt<d JI .... •'-'_,, ... , --........ M0 .. 01c•1s c .. ·-·· wind ...... s Santa Ana ers. rack . Uo d• .... SSIOM ¥11.10 .. Tri a Wldo ""4Wa • ,. •n .,.,., w ..... power """· -S-To le • wboleaale blue boo an..., .,.mo w/Wtrewhll,Ofttdri•e, -:_vw ... :a.cb .t.:·~~ew tD»W.eoutawy a...yS•-'• C::~~ :t:!:.:.11•tt~: .., ... ,a 1 ~~--i-;"~·OllQ.;::511=·~llll8=;;· ::"'"".'.:::-~.!!!!~-:!!!:r!!!:.' ~~=-::..:.·::::« 64.1102 Fnmt • rear aJt, 1uto. tin'~ ..... w•··· COY· I :-.Jn Men:ury $1177 1.., Tri balotr.s• 1111. ,... """'" _., 1leerln1. er';': ~ •• It . "U:.der $133.19 LllMll TOY :A"S p1e1o1y~...:!.s_"1;.::· • vw •1· "'bit,.,., 74 VOLVO \:r~~ 63.000 m1in . .-...ie-.el.IHHY. per mo. +T&L 1 ~~17~~·1 ;'" ej•ll 11,..:a .: AllUVIMG DAILY siaoo.cau ... -.. •. --~--Clean. 142 2 Door H'D9 $1877 . s.r111M10 ~;;;;;;i~-trnl WI• Luuw tl997 ;. .... .,.. 9770 -. ... toato11w.m -t011 -w (fj l ...... o .E.L.Cap.l>S2'1 '°' 9960 ~ • 71-FUB.IMJECTIOH Y LI 1·~ ::~.OteArCm obllaatlon VOLVO 1 Pl .. •·· ~ ll• will deliver -••••••••••••••••••••• ,,. " l&Mi 1 r m -arranb' •• A.Mt •••••••••••••• ••• ••••• -· 745 .. -.... t Speed, radio. Rl•tera Automatic tr1.n1mls&ion OnAllUfedcm ""'° UUIO . new Corolla 2 door t .... .,... fGCJQ power 1teertn1. air coo .. M T t ~ I •• 0 ••..,., ATLAS 1966 Hotbot CM. M6 •301 ;00• 100% Fln•ncln: Sunrool, chnome wheel• Ottft. $ · dltlonlna.leutbanll, lllllonyle-!llyoHol ~ TOYOTA En"""ed'farr .. ty ollereQOlttsl2·1-lS available on approved &stereo. 1888 mUet. radio, heater, etc. -· •ij!itt~W·P~ I c~ ... ~ ~·rc1 9970 credit. f« 36, '2 or • 71 VWCAMPH 12151.Pll). 147.aSSS 1,.. "°'"''· c ...... ,_3 .. nuu:Oetvti ••· I rn ....., -Al ()pen ally 4r. n. 'tll 10 ••••••••••·••••••••••••• 11\00uia. mmaculatc lntlde " $5295 offttexplresl2·1·75 -----•1• PM f ti (QI\ emu 7lS111pH'lfftte ljm:i•:.!l,•Ja'A'/ Small8, auto, pis. ctc·an. 'ilO Ford Custom, R fH, ... IUCa•lll~lll cO::ai:eJav ' iUr ~=~:..:~""arr d l • out!lncludcsakiracb. @£ -•. '158 Chev. • dr Malibu. .._... ___ ' 2929 H ho DI d '7J. Xlnt cond, u pv.6/ S~cial mag11, custom \i9l[ LaChlMf. . $850. &«-s?H, Bhdfs. AC. very lo mi , xlnt care, Expires 12.m .1s 546-1934 top. & btds TOYOTA paintjob&stereo.MUST Hunt.Sch. 142..+U.5 19'70llarbor.C.M. _ N 6 1 3 pd very rell1ble. best ofr --=::'.!==c=,:,.:.:.-f---------1--"6P::.:m=-w-""=·----'-' SEE, will trade. 631·1276 •• nva, cy .. 1 .. over MOO. 042-7199 Sat · LEFTOVER 1972PLYMOUTH ·75 THUNDE RBI RD, S4DDl.!IACll 6''fWCooovmlble Econo. 2 dr .. EOOO. or SUnAM -TuePM, lllt4HDHEW75 WIELEC MOON RF- 1"6Horllcw.CM "'·'JOJ VAUEYIMPOITS 4Speed,radlo.complete· VOLVO orr.581-674latt6pm. '13 LTD z dr. hardtop, OldsStarflre CllCkET4DOOR LEATH . INTER .! •lllMu~Sn• 131·2040 4tMt49 ly reco nditi o ned . iS ,.lonteCarlo,allpwr, vinyl roof, A /C. P\lt'r . Y·6 '~asM1'1«" 4 !lptsOO, radio. heater. WI-IT /WI-IT . FULL 03SKLE. air. blue wtwhitC! land1u, S2495/offer. 640-0l87 v HSS227 PWR .• DIVORCE SALE.. ROLL 'EM YW BUSES SAVE WAGONS likenu$4850S>Z-0<.91 ~•Ltd Brougham.• d Closeout Price $1195 ~~a s,Et't'E~A~~ . "70 Nova. auto •. air, PS, hrdtp. 400 V-8. Ajr, P /S, $3995 HJ::ASONOf'R .«73-9911~. 16 READY TO • CAMPERS 71-145 Sliver w/blk vonyl dean P /B, window•. ...... Santa Ana IUY'7STOYOTAS •& 4 srceed , air, atere $999.496-0218 locks . vinyl roo r . SToChoosc 1974 }'-Bird, Sunroo~,. Example: As low aa 74 lus 434LP5 ljli,• 'il:l''e'l't'Jli rid o, luggage rack .• 67 El Camino 396 Shell AM I F ,.1 s tereo Ser#~~5~~~01 2tl296 Ll.RCOIR Mercury ~~.'.5J~':.·.':.~!:b ,_. $3199 '7PU!lenger ,lomilea. if lie ~ •5932. Xln Brougham luxury group - 7 4 •-·· ll4KY ac v · mag!I , stereo.tape. t Tilt whl, ginger g)o Extended Warrant y 1HA Hunt. Och. 842·4.:U $3199 Cond $1400646 8681 Avail. 1301 M. T111tln flt T·Bird, xlnt cond. 2 dr, p . -painL 16,500 mi's. Orig. 547 0511 landau top, ate. full P"!!' CNo.3267) 7 assenger, plenty of '67VW8ug.Goodcond., •69.145 'M Corvalr tttonza, prt owner .$.1100.f\t r.Thr • . room. $1100. Private Party. ...t.v Sat&Su 548 •119 640-8306 al$/IAZDA nu tire!!,&: lo ml. $1125' • SR5 with stereo Huge Selection of 1976'1 Wewantto!lell You want to buy Let'• get together 4 Dll Corollo $3295 (98257) See the nice guys tlool don1 fonJel ol 70lul 219Hll 9&3-2006eves. 4 Speed, radio. heater . .,...,. n. .., · · . 11111 ... &VI. reas.olfcr.6462511 • ., gp I 12634. '65 Chevy 2-dr, 283 hard '5 1 t"'ord halfT. p/u mt.IEACll•la... IFYOU , •, assenger, c ean. 69 VW Sedan, Porsche C'1Q77 top SS. Gd Transport.a· gd. cond. have a service toorrer or 61' 71 11111 205JSI rims, radl1ls. xlnl cond. f1L tion. $300. 64&-?&36. S200 536 Expires 12.07.75 , goods to sell, place an ad The fast.es\ dr1w In the, 7Passenger,sharp! 548-4503 '63 122 · in th e Da lly Pilot Weal. · .a Dilly PU~ 73 11111 666GHM ·m Sqbc:k Sta. Was. Orte. 4speed A?.i radio extra Chrysler 99ZI Ford 74' Pinto, Wig. Auto. Toronado 1973, xlnt cond., Clas.sified Section ... Classified Ad. Pho~~." 1 Passenger, dual tanks. o-er. Reblt en•. New exlra sharp' FTNise · ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 1 r · R I H TR · R K · many xlras, lo mi ., $299.5. Phone &G·s.678. 642-5678. " ' 70 Pop Top r;;Jio1s. •uruf. su'So. eau . . 1970 CHRYSLER >Owner. but dean s:nso. ......... ......, Hew ,_......,Hew ,_~ 1131 963-4711 .Pvtpty $1599 HEWYOIKH 133-2'196. '73 Omega, PS, auto, c •••••••••••••••••••••-•••••••••••••••••••••• d l • 4 DOOi '12 Ford Ranch w1goa, new tires. Good cood. Clean.run camper ·s.seug,Needsbodywork. Bit A11t1l xlnl cond, all t>xlr1a. $2100 830-lJOl 70 lus 93515 $400. 1¥11. UUMJ V_-8, auto: ~l~!I ., factory Beat· orr over $1950J-'=~·-=="'----Call846-3414 . att cond1t1on1n1. power 4N-«768 Pinto 9P1Ssen1er.Runsgood! VOLVO steering, power (disc) ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 711111 532C '63Bus,must sell brakes, radio. heater. ~wy ttSO 7 Passenger, extra clean. $5'7Sorbestoffer 191>6 HC1rbor ( M 646 930J, whitewall tires, vlnyl ••••••••••••••••••••••• •75 PINTO V -6 711us 01411 9&2-l489 orferexplresl2·1·7S roof",tint001las!1,Whet!l•72 &l o nlego MX cover!. Lie. 471AVA. Brougham. 2·door. Im · 7 Passenger, air cond. 1968 VW Squareback $650. Less than 54 ,000 miles . mac cond. Lo ml. Stereo, SNARE A HARE ... Stationwa9on ~· 71 Bus 048FUM orbestorrec Aut .. ,u...i $l 295 foe air. cust •tras, P.P. 9 Pusenger. Like new 675·0587 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bstofr. 833·9171. ••••••••••••••••••••••• . Se vo1.o 9112 ~~!'! .......... !!~.~ Santa Ana ~· eougar x•1. 1mm•c. OL 1970 Plymouth Duster, lo nu. e to appreciate. lll&lleochllvd. V VO ni ce ca r . Go<!d • M Pvt. ply . ti.1ust sell. Huntington leach hchati•e-Dealer transportation , $795. Ltc. Lincoln ercury l-'-91-"9--"24_3_1_. -----1 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 847-8555 GARDEN WEST VW Automati c transmission, factory air conditioning, radio, heater. less than 15,000 miles! (238P.1 IE). $4295 SLEMONS MERCEOES '76 @rabbit 53676 ••• ' 1q.,,), \\ Mo. I In Parts & SG4lfh Coast Area i~F~\~stang, lite Brown 1301 M. Tustin '68 Marqll;is . manyext~as. i 91603tt•1 :1z·~,.M . Sft""f'ice wfROO interior. Sharp! 547-0511 63,000 mi, xlnt cond, 1m·1---'="-='-='--; o' j lo o I I ~ , •' ' \~ • '11 "" "• • I I , ·I \\,>[IHI '•1 ~1\,,,1 ---------IVW '74 Bus new tire!!, lvyorleoseot $1895.Llc.:JZM;LD. , . mac. SlOOO . 837 ·1527 197 T '72ToyotaCelica mags, Z·bed , am /r l) 1968 Chrysler Newport fi1 Newport Z dr cpe, v1n.1 .c.830-~l_36_l ______ 1 I PIN 0 42,000mi,allxtras radio.S51·S728. Mft.R i IS Very _clean car . Near top, Xlnt ti~~·· radio, '68 Cougar XR 1 . New Auto. trans., radio, 827 -2140 l -'-'--'-'-",'-69=~-'----l new t!res. Runs good. p/s, p/b, lo m1 s. Pvt pty. pilnt, nf!!w vinyl top, heater, vinyl roor, Uc. ----""-''----I ,. " M QT R S SOOS. Uc. WSJ65'1 . Dealer $565.&14·9217 IC!ather interior, xlnt 378C'l'I. 1974 Celica GT, 5 ;ru!t Con•itrtible . ~. El CamlooAu~Sales Cowtiw..+at 99JO cood. Runs great. $1700. $1495 22.,000 mi., brown. 4 Speed, radio, heater AveryPkwy·SDFrwy 1212S.ElCarrunoReal ••••••••••••••••••••••• 55i8-e42. cond. 640-0758 wire wheels, walnut MISSIOM VIEJO SanClemente498·1400 1-=:.:..=C..-----·I dash, cmtom pin strip 831·2880' 49>-1210 CpricesgoodfoclOdaya) 1974 MARK IV Mllslang 9952 Santa Ana on. g etc #1598 A t r t . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' · · AMC 9905 u o. trans, ac ory air . CELICA'S ~95 OllAHGECOUHTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• conditioning, full power. Brome ~3M.ch I, ••r. Lincoln Mercury VOLVO Al\l /FM radio, he aler, power, tape. $2900. 75 ,,, ....... $4377 ~ cri110 EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO ·~;:;Hew whitewall tires, vinyl 551·3377 1101 M. Tuttln Model 110.1. Inc. tu a 1076-76 lie. Cash price 13980.58. S500 down Pl)'n'ent: APR 14.34%; 48 p1yment1: OAC.11783037312). s9512 Only ....... . . . at DON BURNS VOLKSWAGEN 11731 HARBOR HLYD. GARD El< GROVE SH-4 100 i " 4 Speed, stereo, air con-MOTOR CARS Larsest Volvo Dealer OCH" roof, tinted glass, wheel '8S MUSfANG 2B9 vs. lo 547-0511 ditioning. Still looks 1200W.CoastHwy inOrangeCounty! F\lllyfactoryequipped& covers.Uc.837KJD. ml. CLE1\N Gd cond. 1 11 73!.~l~~~~~ .. $2997 1 ___ 6_4_5_·_1_1 _0_2 __ ; B~~~i~ASE ~:r~~r~!Jm~~~=:~ $6095 :!:.~~ Orig. Equip,~.~~••••••!~~ ~-~~••••••!~.~ ~-~~••••••!~ • • ~~ t.~I [,~~o.n~~ ~ai~~~~'.~:::~~~\: .. ~.r.·:·-1·~~:·:~:,~:j::':L,~:~::~;.~S: livery.$3588 Santa Ana 72 .......... u111 . oQ ··-----· ----LincolnMercury •Speed. stc,co & lope lomolea.2'!4G · 2025 S Manchester Shorecresl deck, air conditioning. .~ t"l288 Anaheim 750.-2011 A.MC /Je~ 1101 M.Tustln 2.llFNC. ~ 16751 Beach Blvd. 547-0511 1\81111 lA,.,: • '7 5 Volvos Huntington Beoch ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sale!! and Ser vi ce OLDSMOllLE GMCTRUCKS HOHD4C4RS U.lvenlty Olds 2850 l~arbor Blvd . Costa rt1 esa 540-9640 • wn Ull\O 148-8066 72Marlt1Y . ~'.·, .· TOYOTA Buy or Lease 1--..:..:.::..::.:..:_:_ __ I Prime cond. •ir. P IS. luiclt ttlO P /B, till wheel, Al\1 /FM .II·.::'"""-· "'="c.· ---'-"='-'·4435=-1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• stereo. cruise contrl. elec Codilloc 9915 -Volvo Dir. since 'S6 ·-·-"lid .. 70 .,... "'-!back 73 Wagon 4dr. 35. am/fm u WlA , pwr !le• .... sure ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1966 Harbor. ( M 646 9JOJ •" rva track, -d<l-k•. load air. nu tire!!, clean, r-· ...... _.:or::r.::er:..e:::•,,P:.:i:.:'°::'.:'.::'·.ol.:·7.::5_14 Cyl., 4 speed, stic mags. $3,200 557_1694 levelers. $197.S. 546-6170 shift,radio,lomiles,nic -~-~-----1 or 644·1805 ask ror '74 Celica GT. immac car168AKN. '64 Skylark. nds head Charles. cond. Am /fm. 17 ,000 mi. $1488 itaskct only. otherwiselC_.:::::::..:ell::::: ____ 9_9_3_2·1 Wht,blkint.Ofr640-7963. OK . $1 95, 418 ·8 art e Hamilton, Cl\1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11 Toyota Mk II , 2 OR, 4 •TOP CAS}I ~ SP. AM /Fl\I, nice buy at 9915 For Corvettes and other 51375.557·3522. ••••••••••••••••••••••• used cars & trucks ! Triumph 9767 lltrll. Bch. 842·"43.\ ALL '73 Coupe de Ville. Single HOWARD Chev rolet, ••••••••••••••••••••••••1.::===---'-"-'=-1 o°"·ne r, Xlnl cond . Dove & Quail Sls. Near 75 VOLVO'S Looded. $4990. 644·2<09. Jomboree, Bris tol. & 71 Triumph TR-6 ROadster 65 VW Squ..-.back 4 Speed, radio, rebuil engine & transmi!l!lion. Sharp! DRR689. MacArthur, New po rt "CADILLAC" Beach B33-o.sss MUST GO "'' Corv. 42'1 -• spd . •Int To M'*• R-ForTh• Quality l Price cond. 54200/fi,m 57s ABS $3795 76'$ Over 70 1c536-=..:09:::30c:....---- lo Choose froon COU'Jar 9911 Jim Merino SH Th.m Sfartin9 F'or the best prices, th ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1288 4 Speed, radio, heater. Immacula t e ins ide & oul!440DUP. MOTOR C:ARS Dec. 1st lowest le"e ntcs, & de-'68. Auto, PS /PB, AC . 1200W. Coast Hwy , ::H"'=·.:"'="c.· ---=""=·::c""=-I pend able service, -see New tires, new battery. 6-'5·1I02 " "68 VW lus ~~engines. new colo'5. NABERS CADILLAC $1250. Ph ; 64 5-0991. -,-,-T-R_·:.G.:, .:mc.in.:t.:ccco:cn:.d_ .. _n_e_v.1 4 Speed, stick &hift, ' 1\~llOl lll•n: 1 2600Harbor Blvd ~••••••••••••!!.~~ _646-__ 6602 __ . -------WLA50.'1. ~ 1--0::.P:...::E:.:N.:S::U::N.::D=A.:Y_-l xlnt cond, runs great, $1988 ~ VOLVO '68Codilloc Sedan OeVill $400.631 ·3014. llalbers Cadillac Qgality & Price 1'71 ILDOUDOS 3 fo u-.i T ll<t 'l'O"' tf'>OI(•. 1(1 •11"!i(l!JOfrilEZJ SAU PRICED 1974 COUH DIYIWS 1 to ~ T llt.:t 'fOUll tl\ooc•. to ••&ee5(111'117l SAU PRICED lt7J SIDAM DI ¥II.US l to~T--'l'O"'t-•.IO •~(19TGl\tl SAl.E PRICED tires. low ml., best offer . radio, very clean bus. -~\, UULO COSTA MESA 54£>.91 '64 Polara, Vinyl top, pwr, IF YOU 4 door, ruu power . $500. ~-1.. 9940 have a service toorrer or llll!!ll"'1"mll'lrll 1966 HorbOf c M ti•b 9303 496-3318 ruru 2600 Hsbor llvcl. r~~t; s~l~ r:~ce :~1 ~~ I: 1• ~w1u• l.-,.,-'-V:.:o:.l.:v:.o:::l4=2S..o.. ",'-" 4Spd:::..:, ::cF::.:M~.1·.,.~~E~ld~o~r.-d-o_C_o_n_v_e_rt_._A_i~~;;~~~-;;;;~.-~~~;~:~~~ Costa Mesa C1ass1f1ed Section . ' lleac~. · gd. sU radials. Nds work. cond ., leather seats. must sell. (714} 998-2022. 540·5630 Pbone642·5678. flirt. . 842·4435 Sl.000/bst.631 -2197 . stereo. loaded. $4900 . Privateparty. '----------" 9725 Roi .:;~~~~2~~3~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~;;~1 Call \\'eekends 675-9710 Fiat weekdays, 833·2580. _c=~=~----1 • • •• • • • I • • • • • • • • • • ~ • • • • • •• • I • • t I • • t • • • t • • • • • • o 'tiBELDORADO Loaded-$1350 /best 642·0462 " :· .. .. } " • • • ~ g • I \ 9917 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Must Sell 1968 Ca maro, Sl 100. Call 496·2260 or 494·3262 '7J "LT'" cpe A.T . Air ~ond. Emerald green w twhlte vinyl top. SU per clea.n, Xlnt tires. tnst 1aU1es, rallye wheell. CTR console, tilt whl. etc. etc. 1-owntr 2SM miles. W -3301 . $3995. '68 327, Auto, new (mags), trlr hitch. $1.250. 557-9'729 or 82:8-5202 . Must .sell 1974 Camaro AM /FM 8 track stereo A/C, mag whls. xlnt cond . 982-8470 Cllo•rol,t/." 992 . •••••••••••••••••••••• '60 Corvalr 2 d.r coupe 3 1pd, clean, needs some t(x.ln $250 /or btst ofr. 646-7016 U.ST WEEK SPECIAL NEW 1975 128 52899. 11033904 + T a L Dir. prep. orrer good tl'W --30th. 1175 . Dick Miller Motors RAT FACTORY AUTHORIZED S.t.t. Sertke, L-"'t. 0...tfMOI DMl¥ff)' 120 W. Wamoral So. Main, Sonia Ana • 557-2132. -------I ALLEN'S RESALE SPECIALS YOU'RE COVERED UNDER OUR DOME '69 MERCEDES 280 SE '74 DATSUN 2601 Aulon"ehc .... oondillon•"O • -(Wy l!IOOO ....... I looks """"'($11KK8J '71 JAGU:AR XJ 6 Autoon.llC ••• tO,.,,tllOn""O. ......... ..nrooi (111,.L.I $AVE $AVE s6795 '75 CADILL:AC COUPE Fwll oo•••. !1ctory 11• con<1ol10"•"0 tllt ·~••I I 11•rto Only 2201> ''"'•' !&illilMPGl '74 VOLVO 164 E l\utolnlt.c. .., concllllon"'Q ' -..--&ril..,, ~-···-•ft•" ••1!~1• Y1•1 tltlnt {~JI '74 FORD _. ... D Full oo•••. l1c1orr t i• -llOtllnQ • ""'YI <00!. Only 11.000 ........ (3231..~) s7795 $AVE s5900 '73 CADILLAC '75 MG MIDGET CONVERTIBLE Only 7800 ,..,,.,, 4 •P••d. I M/Fl,I •1"""° 1-& m0<1 UO.•-l864NCNI '72 ALFA '75 OLDS CUTLASS SALOM .A uto,.,111c . t•c !O•• •" OC>ndlllOl'IOl'O, ••II•• "'"""'' I wlnyl l op I • 000 mil•' (1191.PHl '72 MERCEDES '74 FORD V• TOM PICKUP SUPEI' CA8t Aw•Ol"lht llOW., .... .,ng, pow•• O•o •"• I t.ctorY .., eoncJ•l•Qtlll>Q Only irx;o -I 7Je.oel) $AVE $AVE s4995 '74 FORD IROMCO '75 CHEVY MOMIA2+2 Auto"''''' r 1 ctnr~ •" -"°"'"O & only 8000 "'"" l182MFW) '74 vw BEETLE Sfl(I(, i.;tory ... tOl'Odlhonlnt • ""'"Mr-it2GJl'IPJ s4795 $AVE s3295 Ol'EH FRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUMDAY I . . • • . . • . ~ ' . . I 976's HOW HERE AND I 975's MUST GO! BIG SELECTION HEW '75's READY TO ROLL ATTHE GREATEST CLEAH·UP DISCOUNTS OF OUR 54 YEAR HISTORY M1Wlt75 . PIMTO MPG •52999 +Tax& Lio rnct 2300 cc 2v 4-cyUnder .. ng., Calil. emissions -uipment, select-shift, se-o-matic, front & rear umper guards. {Ser. '.5R10Y157803 , S tk. 520) BIG SEl..ECTION PINTOS TO CLEAR HEW 1975 MAVERICK 2 DR. GRABBER 3485 +Tax &LI~ . 250 CID 6 cyl. engine, tf. emis, equlpt., power steering, select shifts, crulse-o-matlc, white skleWall tires, dl&e brakes, front •. (l'l'llnual) & front & ,_. bumper guards. (Stk. t1030, Ser. f5K91L148569~ BIG SE LECTION MAVERICKS TO CLEAR HEW 1975 MUSTANG II HARDTOP ,3999+Tax&Llc. 21/2 ACRES OF FINE TRADEINS REDUCED TO CLEAR! ,, ASK AIOUT OUR 12 MONTH, 12,000 MILE USED CAR llT84DED • SU.VICI POU CY • SPECIAL LUXURY BARGAIN 1974 OLDS CUTLASS SOLON Auto . tran s., air conditioning, stereo radio , vinyl roof . reclining seats. rallye wheels. (192876) s3377 • 10 USED HON DAS .. STOCI: "'s.per Gas s .. .,... ... ,, s,.c...- 1974 HONDA CIVIC Aa:iio and heater (131656) $2677 • '68 OIEVY CAMARO Radk>, heater (313281) s977 • 70 TOYOTA COROLLA 4 speed, racllo. heater, vinyl top. (089AWOJ s1077 • 70 OIEVY MALIBU . Auto., PoWer steering, air oond., radio, heater, vinyl top. (965BZT) s1477 • 72 PLYMOUTH DUS"TBI Auto .. power steeri ng, AM/FM with 8 track tape. (293.JPI) s1477 • 72 OIEVY VEGA 4 speed, radio, heater. cn5FVAJ s1577 • 72 DODGE CHARGBI Auto .• P.S .. AIR CONO., RADIO, HEATER, VINYL TOP. EJCcellent condition. (1112KKG) s1977 ' SELECT Best 1976 USED Domestic New CARS Car AT Buy On FANTASTIC Harbor SAVINGS Boulevard! BRAND HEW '73 BUICK 1976 UTAnWA&ON c Factory air conditioning, full power, roof rack. only 22,000 miles. (305HFR) WAS $3595 NOW$3222 h '74 BUICK e APOLLO 2 door cou pe Air conditioning , power steering, power brakes, viny1 roof. raltye wheels, y low 23,000 miles. (#5789} WAS $3595 NOW$3222 e t '71 BUICK SIOITWA&OH Air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, ra::Uo, heater. (15928) t SALErtlCED s1999 '74 PLYMOUTH e 'CUDA Air conditioning, power steering, power brakes. AM/FM stereo w /tape, 52888 rregs, custom aide pipes (008MIL) WASS4395 NOWs3999 + Tax & License IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '73 JAGUAR (362) (1J0816Y134325) XJ.IJL Auto . trans .. air conditioning, power OVER windows, AM/FM stereo w/tape, leather interior, ctvome wheels. (401 MFD) WAS $10,995 NOW 100 $10,333 IN STOCK '63 CORVETIE READY W,......Y.UUHAaDTOP 4 speed, radto, heater, rreg FOR wheats. (CNV867} SALErtlCED DELIVERY $3666 TODAY! I DATSUN DATS1IJI 280·1. runmo.. mL mnlt:TIOI. • Computeriz.cd fuel injeclion • 2800cc overhead com englno • Powcr·ossisl rront disc brakes •Fully independent suspension •AM/FM radio with power an lenna • 2 models: 2-and 4-suotcr '76 Datsun 280-Z. Gel into one! IMMEDIATE DELIVERY NEW CAR TRADE-INS '73 DATSUN PICllUP Auto. trans .. radio, heater, exoellenH (2613-A) '72 DATSUN 110 4-0001 Auto. trans .. radio. heater, vinyl root. (2743) '73 DATSUN 240..% 4 speed, radto. heater, vinyl roof, low miles. {2757) '72 DATSUN 110 4 DOOi 4 speed, air, radio. heater, extra ciean. (2758) '74 DATSUN 2 .... z Auto. trans .• AM /FM radio. heater. less than 7,000 miles. (2764) '73 VEGA GT 4 speed. radio. heater. (2766) '73 COMET Economical 6 cvllnder, auto. trans.. 1 owner & extra dean! (2779) '69YW PASTIACll 4 speed. radio. heater. exoellent condition. (2770) '72 PINTO WAGON 4 speed, radio, heater, see to appreciate. (2771 l '72DATSUH llOWASOH 4 speed, radio. heater, root rack. mags. real nice! c2n•1 23 Firebirds NOW IN STOCK Trans Am Formula Esprits l.Art)e1t Selec:tlOll In OrOllge CoMy! iRAND NEW 1976 . FIREBIRD $4689 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY (258706N515826) • HUGE NEW ASTRE SELECTION BRAND NEW 1976 Air CaadilfOHCI ASTRE s3739 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY (ZC77BSUS'7441) ' TU\ BE PLACE sl~ lt75 IROUGHAM ~LIL) Loaded. .SALEPRtCE 1972 CHRYSLER HIW TOUR 4 DOOa Len of Uwy!! foct. oil-c:ord.. WM control, power ~ ~ .,.,.,. ...... n«Jl'fy -?"...,...,., ti-9', a..lom gold n.M:ir ......, ~ ~ matching tltlsicl-. lt75 {125FXX) B. DOllAllOS 52495 3 10 choose. Take your choice . (750MEZ) Lo as $7995. SALE PRICE. 1973 PONTIAC MAHYllU4llOOll Qly 25,CJX> odl.d m1es • • • en llUAdy r.. lumy car • • • hta fad. <J'i, p:!W9" wind., 6°""°'f powel" teart. o5Ye 9"Mn with while ""'¥ 1973COUPE top. Priced at Wholesale 8tue DEYIWS fled!! 1914f\eV} 4 to choose. Take YQUr 52475 Clloice. ( 40801 M) Low as 14495. SALE PRICE 1974 CAl'lll Rae fwd! ~ medoical condtion. ...... ...,.. appeoi19 · . • hta 4 speed economy inn.. redo & heater ••• need1 a new ~J lt72 ELDORADO (16l1Cl.EJ COHYllTllLE 52995 (351 KSR) Loaded. $4395. SAl.E PRICE. 1974 CHEY. HOYA HATCHIACI. Oiven orly 27 ,CXX) oaual ~! 1-b caito. tr(IM., or c:ond.. po.ow 1974 COUPE st~ good fanWy car'":~. DEVILLES 53175 7 to Choose. Take your Choice. (Ser • 1797) Low as $4695 SALE PRICE 1974 DODGE IAMCHA&•H .l.IST t.COC!! ••• ho5 V-8 er9ne vftth a.lo. Irons., .. wheel doive cn:l CN.Y 10,CXX> actual miM-Yc:.J ~ ., rm ... .,. "*3 ca. (-447""'-'I 1974 SIDAH 55375 DEVILLE {222NJW) Loaded. $5895. SALE PRICE 1973 MA YEllCK 2 llOOll hrtomatic "on1mi1Jion, radio, heater, loc:ol l owner cor! P66000! 52275 1973SEDAH DE VILLES 3 to choose. Teke your choice. (291GIV) 1974COUGAR Low as S3995. SALE D7 PRICE. 0:n GtgiW Metolic fini5h "¥iltl beo.di~ two-tone leather interio-, Nlt/f-M stereo wiltl lope decl Priced fur f~ SCJ!e. 1372KBJ 53995 1972 COUPE DEVIWS 1974UHCOLH 2 to choose. Take your chQ;ce. (123ABC) • DOOll Low as $3695. SALE Jel bled ..in 999 Jlell nm PRICE leoeh.. Fuly ~ with d ltw ellfQ$ ei;cept wn 1oof. 'llJIJJ ...., ll411<l51 55695 1972 ELDORADO 1974UHCOLH COUPE ........ (8200JU) Loaded. Only 24,000 actual miles, \t!i $4395. SALE PRICE. paws, faoorv air tordilioninQ. ond 10 many more luxutie1! 151 ""'l s74·75 I • • . -·--· COSTA MESA SADDLEBACK LAGUNA BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH FotJNTAIN . VALLEY JRVINE SAN CLEMENTE WEEK OF NOVEMBER 30 • DECEMBER 6 AMERICAN MOTORS Ward S. Lee. Inc. 1234 S. Main St., Santo Ano 547-5826 Crevier Motors 208 W. I st St., Santo An<;:i . 835-3171 ' CADILLAC Nabers Cadillac 2bCJJ Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 5'40-9100 CHEVROLET Connell Chevrolet 28~8 Harbor Blvd:, Costa Mesa · 546-1200 . DATSUN Dot Datsun 18835 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach 842-7781 • i#•1il•I Theodore Robins Ford 2060 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa 642-~IO Sunset Ford 5440 Gorden Grove Blvd. Westminster .636AO I 0 D!Gi. University Oldsmobile 2850 Horbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa 540-9640 LINCOLN-MERCURY Gustafson Lincoln-Mercury 16800 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach 842-8844 _ Johnson & Son Li ncol n-M ercury 2626 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 540-5630 Santa Ana Lincoln-Mercury 130 I No. Tustin, Santa Ano 547-0511 OAJL Y PiLOT. TV WEEK. NOVEM8£A 30. 1975 OLDSMOBILE · University Oldsmobile 2850 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa . ' 540-9640 PONTIAC Dave Ross Pontiac · 2480 Harbor Blvd, Costa Mesa 546-8017 PORSCHE-AUDI Don Burns Porsche/ Audi '13631 Harbor Blvd , Gordert Grove 636-2333 Chick Iverson , Inc. 445 E. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach 673-0900 TOYOTA Bill Maxey Toyota 1sse1 Beach Bl vd .. 'Huntington Beach 847-8555 VOLKSWAGEN Don Burns Volkswagen 13731 Harbor Blvd., Caden Grov~ 534-4100 SUN D AY HOVEMB!R 30 . . . . . I • 1 , t, <*> IMllca• • Miettlu 1-.t. 1:00 m Bible Answm/Chri.tDpllera 5:JO • ,., ... Soup 7:00 U.S. of Ardlll Detlnls the Meuce People's fonim Hotar of '°""' What Do You Uped1 (6) Tiiis la the Uft Wamtt Roberts • S,.nbll Movie 7:15 With Thia Rlq 7:30 Hartt• Clobetrottera Jl•1111 Swawrt Sllow Tlae Chrll_,.,.ra Moritton Tabtrude Choir TlmlllJ I lassie Yoar Doctor Auftn Tennessee Tuxedo Ele111ent1ry News 00 Rex Humblnl 7:45 (I) S.Oecl Hurt 1:00 Lemp Unto My Fttt 3 HJth•raJ to Huwn • This Is tht Uft Rex Humblnl 6 Onil Roberts I TY I Loob at Leamln1 . On~· Coli.th ~ 9 Jeny falwtil WO! lf11N : Mister Ro1ers' Nel1hbortlood ( Cl)) o., of Dbc:overy 1:30 look Up l Uvt Cl) Da1 of Discovery • Cflall1n1e My Senno11 JillUllJ Snuart Show It Is Writtttl • MMtifti Time at C.IYary 9 Ci) lllthfJll Kuhlman : Seta111e Street ( Ci)) Fabulous Kem CountJ 00 ai Ru Hu•blnl · m Meet Ult hen 0., of Discovery ca Cl» Witlltt a> &ta & .. Yid.I • TiltltNI ~ 10:30 I (9 (I)) CJ) m Dewtle QC Relilleos SC*Jal C.twary c-.pe1 Pamua o.111ca1 11 :00 I Ra H11•i.tnl Hollo IUJtf's Ctildt (mJ Cl)) (]) &l Thae AN tlM ,. 0 r.i;c~, ®J Mother GooM P•· racle From I Cajon, Cat. Will Greer is Grand M1rsh1I. m Movie: "'lord Jeff"' (mys) '38- Mickey Rooney. I Cflurdt In ttle Homo Flrst llptist Cllurdt 11 :30 <9 ())) CV m Mike A Wlsb CIOfia c,.,-1 Pet Haven .'\ f T f P ·~ 0 0 N 12:00 (]) This la Your Blblt 0 Movie: '11ortlnnst Tniil" (wes) '46 -John Litel, Bob Steele. Cl) Movie: "T1lt fillJ Who came a.er• (dr1) '51 -Paul Doualu, Joan Bennett. M &l Directions Movie: (C) "SlsbtdMw11t'° v) '54 -Alan Ladd, Shel1ey Win ters, Hu1h O'Brian. I America: The Yo11n1 Eaperience W11M1ert11st American/Israeli TY Hour Mldeut AIUl!ysia 1 I IJl(lA I Cocbpefl Goes to 11 Plimotti Plaatatioa for Thlnbalvlnc (~()))Anhui World ! 12:30 CV Real Estate Re,ort 0 &l Issues l Answtn Qj) Pro Football Su Die10 •t Den· ver. m Movie: "Tho C.lltemlle Ghost .. (adv) '44 -Robert Youn1. Charles llau~i,: ::;::et O'Brien. farWt R rt lndiln Sunuur (R) Ids of Mart u I Service 9:00 I eo ...... lbMnt C...pus Profile -Yiewpolnt on Nutrition "The Air & Nutrition" 1:00 R @ CV Cl) Pro Football Dou· hlehuder 2nd aame-At11nta vs. 01kl1nd. i (ei!) (j)) Directions On C.mpus l~ttl(I) ~~·;::.rb Come Alive This Is Your Bible (]) C.meni Three I Ci)) Town Hall Meetln1 9:JO l~(j) NFL Pre-8ame m Cranclsbnd ( ) JlmlllJ Swawrt Sh CrMVit Goolles A•azln1 Prophecies Spedrvm Jeny Falwell : Electric Company • Mustc:. J Pallbras 10:00 R (ill (I) Cl) Prt football Dou bleheader ht aame-San Franci vs. Philadelphia. rn Accion de .. Comunldld D ID Ci) m Pro Football Pitts- burah vs. New York. Hour of Power 6 Real Estate Open House Speed Buw • Her11d of Trutll Meet the Pms SundaJ Celebration : Classic Theatre (R) UCLA llsketb1ll Trojans vs. In- diana. Head On Pilot Prorram "Lewin's Deli" 00 m lnsiJht Jim Thom11 Outdoon : The Trlbll Eye (R) • Ch1mpionshlp Bowlin& · lnsl1ht 1:30 w (~ (j)) Issues l Answers Wrestlln1 From the OtJmplc Movie: "The ThlrtJ·Foot Bride of C.ndJ Rock" (com) '59-Dorothy Provine, Lou Costello, Gale Storm. fJ Mtvie: (C) ""Son of All Babl" (adv) '52-Tony Curtis, Piper Laurie. i The Yir1lnlan (1) NBC ReHfious Sp1d1I The Hum1nlst Hum1nist Altem1tive 2:00 (V Movie: "The Bullfl1httrs" (com) '45 -Laurel & Hardy. 0 a;, NBC Reli1iou1 Special "A Conversation With Or. Alfred Gotts- chalk" On the occasion of Hanuk- kah, Or. Gottschalk, President of the Hebrew Union Collere in Cincin- DAIL V PILOT, TV WEEK. NOVEMBER 30, 1975 (fa;t tfiern tog6ther rzoW. .. Now is family portrait tinJe. Someday you .II look bode on today. You'll remember the family oll together. 1'nd you'll be glad you toolc the time tcx:Joy to get the family toqether f Of a portrait. Do it now and sove ching <XX Clvistmos special limited offer. CHRISTMAS Special Limited Off er 4x5 Living Color Minature Reg. $31.00 Now Only $17.95 P.aee 3 "Destination America," a major documentary series from Thames Television which portrays the making of the Ameri- can nat ion through successive gene rations of European im· migrants, in eight one-hour programs, will debut on KH J, Channel 9, Sunday at 5PM. Two centuries ago, the newly·born American nat ion was a near wilderness of under four million people. Nearly fifty million Americans celebrated the New World's centenary; over two hundred million are now !;haring the bicentenary of the world's most powerful country. One factor dominates America's dramatic growth into the twentieth century; im· migrat ion. Of today's Americans, over half are directly descended from European immigrants. "Destination Amer- ica" is t he epic story of their pioneering forefathers who, in the greatest of all human migrations, opened an unknown continent and made the American Dream a possibility, and for many, a reality. No town or village of Europe was un· touched by this massive movement, which sent 35 million people on a one·way transatlantic journey in search of liberty and opportunity. And no place in America is without the im· migrant trademark. To fully capture thts experience Thames cameras filmed in seventeen American states and seven Eu - ropean countries. The story is told through the memories and experiences of t he ordinary American people. Over two thousand Americans were ilPProached in the search for interviews. Two hundred were filmed and the series finally includes about half that number. Each story is different, but together they form a mosaic of the roots of the American nation and cult ure-a culture identified by its diversity while still loyal to its origins. DAIL y PILOT, TV WEEK. NOVEMBER 30, 1975 A SEAL BY ANY OTHER NAME As everybody knows, ''a rose is a. rose is a ~·" Or so the story goes. But a seal is not a seal . •s .not a seal ." not a ~al. WeU if a seal is not a seal, what 1s 1t? A seal ts a sea-hon. And a bear. And sometimes named Sammy. One p.trticular seal or sea-lion or bear, stars in "Sammy, the Way-Out Seal," a sPecial two-hour comedy presentation airing Sunday at 7PM, on The Wonderful World of Disney, (NBC). Actually, the show is mistitled because Sammy is not a seal. He is a California sea-lion of the type normally seen per- forming in circuses. These sea-lions are considered to have powers of understanding that far exceed even those of dogs. Centuries ago, Sammy's descendants were land dwellers and related to the bear family. At one time they were even called sea-bears. They earned the name sea-lion from sailors who thought the bulls, whose shoulder hair stands up like a mane when dry, looked like lions. And their speed is deceptive. Most people think of sea-lions as fat creatures lumbering around on short, stubby flippers. In truth, sea-lion5--given the proper terrain--can cover grQund as fast as a running man. And they often climb steep, rugged cliffs to great heights. Underwater they are as graceful as ballet dancers and love to play. Few California scuba divers have missed the experience of having one cavort around him .. But they flee in a panic whenever their mortal enemy, the killer whale, shows up. Once, a pack of the whales appeared off the coast of La Jolla, a famo'us Southern California resort, and the sea-lions in their frenzy to escape dashed out of the water, across the beach and ended up dodging traffic in the main street as they continued their frantic flight to freedom. But usually they lead less hectic lives. And one thing can be said about them, whether they are on land, in water, in circuses or on television-they are fun. S~ore manag~r O.lan Soule and a slightly amated customer, Renie R1ano, gaze in disbelief when a sea·llon comes crashing through the neighborhood supermarket. natl ind Los Ml•l•t. is Interviewed ctltle Mutln Boo~n. a. .... ratettai. .... ""' (j) NIC Rel.,_ S.-. hid! for T _.., · : Fltlfta u.. ( I ())) Wedd tf S8rytAi Willf• .... • i:>0 am N1e ·~ __.. . UA O.t1rminln1 Fon:." A one.hour film coneemin1 the role ind st1bl$ of women In European socJtty dur1n1 the Middle Ales ind the Renais- sance. with specl1I r1tertnee to the : church -SPECIAL- @ Mo.II; "Triple Trouble" (com) IJ THE GAS COMPANY ·so -The Bowery Boys. *PRESENTS .. AMERICA" m Movie: "The T1'Ne MusbtMn" (1dv) '35 -Willer · Abel, Paul IMlricl "Tht Huddled Mmes': Luku, Maraot Gr1h1me. S.lrtl .. "*-f•n1111 Q) Ci) Movie: '11le lobo" (com)-·l'M TI• ..... . Peter Sellers, Britt Ekl1nd. Mme: (C) (fflr) ..,.... Dtlplll I Pentecostll T1111pte ruu" (adv) '72 -Joanna Ptttet, ())) NFt GIMt ol tht W1t• uurence Lucklnblll, C.lestt Hofm, lni(aht 0 Jtny Ylslb • . . "Geor1t f(tn Roller lames ntdy" • 3:00 I use football use vs. ucu. ~ Nattoul Oeocroptilc Wllcl Wild West W1t1r Wor1cl s.11 Dill• ""'•ber • Movie: (C) ~ha•&• of Habit" m utie on Se•'"'me St. .. 11) '69 -Elvis Pruley, M•~ - T ler Moore, Bubara McN1ir. *with THE MUPPETS S4nlsttr Cln1111.1 and PERRY COMO Italia 75 m [IPlpA\J Jiiiie •• s.a .. Jl•111J S..111rt Show fifffi Miss Andrews Is joined a., : -•U Street W•t Perry Como and the Muppets,. plus ( ())) This It Ult NFt tht ch1recters wtio live on Sesame J:JO .'. ~~ Jeffenoo" ls"liJ:t::~7:_.. c.l.t)rlty Tennb ~ '111 Valley hlillou1 Town Hall ""cJlLIWltJ Met (R) Lit : Wuhlnst-n WHll In Review Grant is hostess for this •PtClal on · Tlle11t Cfftat unc:tr with 10 women wflo rt11t1 • This lrtflt lift t,~elr,.....l!!_rso) .~~M!!encesr . 4:00 ff T1ku Al1 IUl'ds llJ -.... , 1111 · 5'.indlJ T1m1 TMltlt . T........._ Clui. (til (I)) (1) Gf) c.ttect F•· C..... .... a..11 if . · .s:JO i a a Cil w.. 11q•• I Mewet1ct liiMii W'"'..W ".Th• Uninvited" IMSlde . ..._._ = "f0f1llddtn l>ts· .................. --.... 1t ~ (com) _ __, -......... ....... tit of the 1n1kll" David Niven -Jun Hutew, John and Lionel narrates. Bu~:· Marie Oretler. I""" ~ lltct CMt:ert .... .... :..':!'.... ~ U.. llecb W..Whna ,_...., .. ~,.. • ...., MltlMt ltellef ..... 4:30 ..,.. ..... 1:00 n (fl) (]) nne tM t11e .... Cl) .... dill ,.,_ When Pett Is •it1llltd tfttt I nit flMbtMes fill frocn 1 horse, Endy becomes : "-f..twt friatitened 1nd Is convlnctd tie's bl· ~ in1 lied. to about his f1ther's condl· 5:00 .... ~r:; U.. Nttioll tlon. He sets out on 1 dln11rous a.u1c Tales "The Blick Arrow" ind eventful trek to Pete's,bldsldt. J9fln Mc-., ... J1n1 Adman, Harold Gould 1nd Tom Wheattey Luest. 1 trmAIJ Deltlutitlt A.mtrica D SEAL STAR STEALS e Journe(' A docurnentlry 011 the maklna of America. Toni1ht's * FUNNY DISNEY MOVIE epbodt tells the story of t"• Ital· n u Cl) a m w..w •f .,..., ians who mi1r1ttd to America. ·~mmy the WIJ·Out S.11" (2hr) (Ya) ....,. Th• rescue of an injured sH llon OJ Movie: -Wl'N No An1elt'' turns the quiet little town of Gales· (com) '55 -Humphrey 8o11rt, ville into hll1rlous p1ndemonlum Peter Ustinov, Aldo Ray, Joan Ben· when "Sammy" deddes to invest!· nett. 1at1 the lay .J>f th• land. Robert Koreu DrtrN • Culp, Jack Carson, P1trici1 Bury, CJ) Word1-A·hppl111 Mich1tt" McGreevy ·ind Billy Mumy Add11111 family star. · : The Opea Mltld e <9 ())) [f) aJ s.ria Ft•llJ ( ())) l.ouf'J P1ul l1t.111 obhMa "TheCapt1in" Th• Robin· · EMuelltro son f1mlly is end1n1ertd by a sea CelHrtty Tt1111b captain whose remorse over losln1 ltwfotll ., AtHfica his ship and crew has d1r1natd his 5:)0 0 Cl) @) @ Cl) m ..... lllind. Andrew Duu1n auests. 0.AJL Y PILOT, TV WEEK, NOVEMBER 30, 1f'5 IJ n.t'1 lllJ u.1 ....... n. 00leaDllp1000 lC... Alhit m .. Santa Ct•ua l.llne 1\t Olle W11 * hrade" BILL WELSH & fl' . OTORIOUS WOMAN .. 808 MC AlllSTElf * Life of Georp S•nd m CJfRll[J...., a.a lMt Masterpiece Thutre ~'""and Bob McAi· • Mobil Oil Corpor•tion . list" host t"9 annual Hollywood fllUI.....,._. TfMttn: ,., .. ,._ CMstmu Ptrldl ..-.... "Coftflict" Geor11 Sand , .. ti n1 • Ctfvts notoriety with the publlct· ... ...... ... ..... • ticHI of ,.., ~ "Liii•". --{C)~ ....... ,.. ......... 0.n Delley, Robert Wiper. W...W: Dee.m., Nhe (dre) '52 -Jamea CICMJ, ... ,. 11111 b c..a.s . I=::~:.' c.., • ., =:;-..:: 7:30 I a..tce 10:00 (ft) CJ) ()) .,.. Bronk Is sud· lu Dlelt ..._ CMleneee nij emTrolfid In his most difficult .... : ~ ~ ~ tf cast when ttle 0ttn who cl1lms to Wt"' (dr1) 69 -EMs Pml'1. have been ~b.. lor the Mary Tyttt Moora, 8a"8re ~•Ir. bonlbln1 datfl of Bronk's wife and I Cl)wkllen the crlPJ)lln1 of his d1u1ht1r two ....._ c-.., y11r1 11rtler surfeces and Is klllld. ..,_ Preen• In • lhool·ovt before he can r•· l.'CIO 8@ Cl)(I) a-Cher ulults vttl •ho, fllred him to do the job comedy end rocll music witfl l\lestl on 8ronk 1 family. Jeny Ltwla 1nd l'OCk tlnaer/com· ' ~tf =' (la (I)) CD OJ Ill Miia.. $ JtnJ flhNI • i :iavCi'ms CnlsMe :.: tw ,_.., -.y,olVidtd l.oJ•ltY' Sttvt's ..... pl1~ to ~nr a acitntist tnd fib =ff :W a..tecl .._._ J0Un1 '°" out of luult 1r1 tilndtred when tht boy doesn't • LM..,.. .._ want to ltlvt 1nd. tMlr mpe lO:JO n • ., ~ a. route Is blodled. Mlchlel Mc:Gulre, TedlJ It Ape c.u..te Radarnei P1t1 end Ned Romero ~ ... ~,:::. 5=.s 11.-00 r..~u.w Netn lat. 700 a.• osa...•~.... 100a• W..Wtf~ t:OO B@ CJ)()) ..... A small Nev•· <6 ()))News Ta town controlltd by mobsters Mme: (C) '1'"9 ll•ny ...,_ pr0vts to bl • vt~ unsafa pl1ce 11111 Story" (mus) ·55 _ Steve Al• tor New. York dl1ectrves Koj1k ind len, Donn• Rt1d. . Crocker, who 10 there to 1et a Q) MIAJH· tmpoulMe witness needed for 1 New York City CD KATHRY.N KUHLMAN trill. oa @~mNic Sud•J ·* (IN COLOR) MJstiry -likCiy "Double· like" Kltllryn Kuhlman McCoy has a tempomy selb1ck Ci) N11111 of tll• la111t wh1n ht loses bi1 In 1 diet 11me, : iip'a Show but f1te brines 1 fit score when 1n Owtnua Rettri.u1 CrutlClo 1ttorney asks him to recover $100,· • Jl111111J Sna1rt Sllft 000 lost to 1 t11m ot ardsharps. 11:15 (1) Sa111111J l eo.,.., Roscoe Lh Browne, H1rry Gu1rdino, 11:30 Pre f..tblll ... t/MM: JC) Fiona Lewis, J1cltit Coo11n, Vil ild 111d Wondttfvr (com) ' - Avery, Nit• Tllbot, P1ul Picerni, Tony Curtis, Christine Klufmann, W1yn1 Tlylor ind J.S. Johnson Larry Storch. est. B S.111my ' eom,.., Guests In· Onl hberll . elude Carroll O'Connor, Weylon Jtn· 9 (1)) CJ) tJ) A1C S..S., ninp , Vickie L1wrence. t"Mftlt: <"Cl <Ziir) '11te uu1i.. ~ llledlx lq P.Ca .. 11" ('ra) '73 -Walter Mme: (C) .... "9lcl A P• M1tth1u, Bruce Dtrn, Lou Gossett, orw" (dr1) '64 -Gr11ory Ptdl, Albert P1ulsen, Anthony Zerbe. Vil Anthony Quinn, Omar Sh1rif. Avery, Cathy Let Crosby, Jl11rlo Gil· Cl) Ttlopulsa lo. When nine "people on 1 cross· ®)Movie: (C) "C,,.,.. (mus) '63- town San Fr1nclsco bus ue slain N1t1lie Wood, Rosalind Russell, Kart ind one of them turns out to bl a Milden. police detective, his former p1rtner IT~ & Scaslft Alamo · · 1nd a youn1 1sslst1nt look Into the ( ) Spa1lsll M"lt b1cqrounds of the victims. Their 12:00 U ..,, Ttlllple Churdl search l11ds them into the st1my Mn: '11te Solid htcl c.csa. u11dersid• of San Fr1nclsco ind into ltc" (com) '56 -Judy Hollldey, 1 blza,rre situ1tion In which thll de· P1ul Doualas. t~• can trust only himself ind OJ M0¥1e: "lltUe at AplcM P111" must defy his superiors to n1il the (wes) '52 -Jeff Ch1ndltr, John murderer. . Lund. m I am.at I Miss c.odttl ' Ult I W1m11 Rtlltrll Md CW.i1i11U1t ·A N1tion1I Geo· 1:00 S,UU.1 frMIJ . 1r1phle Society Specl1l docum1nttn1 1:55 MM: (C) '"Six lladl Hwla" the work of .i.ne Goocl1ll who spent wes) '62 -Audio Murphy, Din yms In Africa studyln1 th• habits Duryea. of cftlmps. Z:OO B Chtlleqt MJ S.nHfl Page 5 Bll-IPECIBl DlllHI ' NBC follows the above Special with 1 90-minute 1dven- t .. llr.11, naalling it an All-Speci1I night. 11 Ron Leibman st.n ill "Ro1111n Grey: The Art of Crime," on NBC from 9:30 to 11 PM. llib•an portrays 1 Gypsy antique d11ltr m sophisticated New York City r11ident-proud of his Gypsy heritage Md yet completely It 1111 with the city's 1lit1. Ht turw1 to cri111inology and ltttmptl to solve 1 mur- der we... hi• fri•ll is accHtd ot slaying 1 young woman. Clil 01....,, Jose Ferrer, DIVid Hediaon. Di1ne Klgan. E ..... Reche aM Jitl Clayburgll co-1t1r. "Valley Forge," the Hallmark Hall of Fan11 dran11 b111d on the play by Maxwell Anderson , 1in 11 1 90-minute Bicent1nni1I Special on NBC, WtMll- dey from 8 to 9:30PM. The dram• t1~1 af Geurll George W11hington'1 efforts to continue tht ltnlftlt for freedom from Gr11t Britain 1g1in1t 11ounm1 Hd1 in the bitter winter af 177 7 -• 7 8. Ricnr4 B11•1rt atan 11 Gentrtl Wubington: Herry Andrews 1p- pe111 11 his British foe, General William Howe; 11M1 Simon Ward is cast 11 Howe's aide, Major John Andre. ~:E{:E{:E{:E{:E{;E{l MAYO AND COMPANY -Whitman Mayo Is surrounded by his new tehtvlslon family; Carol Cole (lower left), his dau1hter, Joe Morton (lower rilht), his son·ln·law: Rosanne Katon, his 1rand· dau&hter. and Haywood Nelson, his 1randson. They make their debut In "Be It Ever So Humble," an episode of Grady, Thurs· day, at 8PM on NBC. DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK. NOVEMBER 30, 1975 DOUBLE SURPRtSE -Charies Dumlns (left) and Tierre Turner .,. both surprised when custody of the street·tou&h orphan and his dOI Is awarded to the mfddle-•1ed bachelor cop In the premiere of NBC's The Cop and the Kid, a new WMkly comedy Mries, on Thursdays at 8:30PM. 'KING & QUEEN OF GAME SHOWS'~_./____,__,_,_,_ Comedy team, Mitzi McCall and Charlie Bri ll, who specialize in improvisations and zany rep- artee, have recently become k nown as the King and Queen of game shows, consequently giving them more air time than any other couple on television today. Mitzi and Charlie are cur· rently appearing on such game show favorites as Rhyme and Reason, You Don't Say, and Celebrity Sweepstakes. In addi· tion to their appearances on game shows, they have appeared on virtually every top TV variety and taJ k show, and plans are now being formulated by Ralph Andrews and ABC-TV to star Mitzi and Charlie in a television series. T heir resounding success and insane antics have enter- tained people in many of the foremost nightclubs throughout the nation including the famed Cocanut G rove, the Sahara Ta- hoe, the Upstairs at the Down- stairs in New York, the Purple Onion and the H ungry I, and the "Follies Bcrgcre" in las Vegas. For the "Follies", their original contract called for a fo Jr-week engagement. Their success was so outstanding thal they were signed to remain on for an unprecedenled full year. Certainly, much of their suc- cess lies in the hilarious ex- change of their patter; there is no doubt that Mitzi and Charlie think funny. But they ar..e also actors. This rare combination of ac1or-comedian makes it pos· sible for them to personalize their act to each audience. Charlie first laughed at M 1tzi in 1959 at the Jerry Lewis Comedy Workshop at Para- mount StJdios whale Mitzi was in a skit. Charlie told her she was greal. A short time later, Mitzi saw Charlie working. She thought he was terrific. too. They decided it would be won- derful to tell each other that every day, and subsequently they were married. Mitzi and Charlie spend most of their wak· in~ hours working with each other. reluing with each oth- er and enjoying their 7 year old daughter, Jennifer. Even though their lives arc built aro:.md each other, their mate- rial, timing and personalized message humorously appeal to everyone. What makes them unique. bcsidcc; having more air time than any other couple. is that they are consi<;tentl y fresh and always human. Pa1e 7 . DAILY· PILOT. TV WEEK. NOVEMB~ 30. 1975 AEGULAA DAYTIME PROGRAMS r .1 u h: r. 1 r~ ' , .:00 I m Sunrlat S.IMSUr . iftowttd11 · S..rdl; Ttlescopt Tues., Thurs. tD Ecluutlo111I features 1:30 Ecluutlonal futures • Not for Women Only Earttl Lab Michffl JIWoft Show a (fQ) ..Educational Futures NtW Zoo Revue Qtlict Draw Mdlrtw 7~11~~~~=J Show I Cartoons i !~:~~th m Good Mom- , • .-, fll1 Speed Recer Stoel Martret Openlna Mlltt1 Ro1ers' N1l1hbortlood 7 = 30 I~==-Tu11tdo 9u11 & His Buddies Thrff Stoo111 : Seaamt Street 1:00 Cl) Captain llln11roo Sunup Ro,.ptr Aoom Tht FllntsW111s The Mu111tera m Tha P.T.L Club iift Yol'll Stodl Elthan11 Little Raacals 1:30 I Retl1lou1 Proin1111 • JKll Llllnnt Yo1I l Friends MiahtY Herwtes New loo Rmm : Villa AJttr•: C."alCOltndas Tues., Thuri. 9:00 = i Price la Rl&M . Setame Stfffl . m®J mc111br1ty Sweepstaiis The Qallery Lia.-It to Beaver AM Los An1t1e1 • 9Ft1turn llovt Lucy Senti• a.n : Sulm• Strttt ( (I)) Mlllt Douflu a. .. 9:l0 0 @ (l)@) a;, WhMI of For• tune i MoYll: Set Daytime Movies. Tim~' Lluit lD Q§Futum Cfetn Ac:m . GaJlopi111 Gourmll 10:00 i ~ ~ ~;::~ R~lers S!i.: Set Daytime Movies. Ho1an's Herou : Educational Proera11t1 lO:JO R aJ fE ~ Lowe of Life ~1!~~;,;;:4 M Truth CK Consequancn ·~· N "THI IMALL CAil IXPllTS'~· FACTOlY AUTHORIZED SALES -SERVICE -·PARTS. PDSONAUDD LEASING -All MAKES & MOORS A 11111 SILEC110N Of USED CMS 842-7781 540-0442 S~rving _A// Beacl. Ci!i e~ 5 MINUTES SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY. 11135 IEICH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BUCH a 100 an 11:00 8 '-i(J) Y .... l Rtdtu • 98'M a1 1lfl· 'cut 1' Mldriet I ~ (j)> Cl> m Slitw.ofb "'""' ' ... ProfaMf Dtdtlc Company; 1"' Open lid Tues. U:SO II (iJ) CV CJ) Stardl lot Tt•Of• row a @ Cil ®l m """ '°' tt1t L<h oo> oo m •hJ11• ' Rt1· .. II I Llt'a Rap Biil Cosby feablm A f I f f·' '~ l J ( i r ~ 12:00 I Noo11t1.. I . To Tell ttlt T rlrttl I l.owt Lgcy (9 Cl)) (]) GE) P1£MIER£ I• Of Nilfit (90 min., Mon. on(y) Monday's eplsode will present the enllre cast. in an expanded proaram which will allow viewers an oppor· tunity to become familiar with the ctruacters; backaround ind theme of the suspense drama. I Movie: See Daytime Movies. I Dru11 of Jtanllie ~ Noon Attalr /Joe a.ratta Somef'Mt Jetsoa' Not for Woinen Only 12:30 tJ ·@ CI>()) As the Wortd Tums (lhr) 5?~ CIJ dj @D 0.11 af Our !Did Vn Dyle (t,il (j)) CI) 5) All My ctlll· m ucept Mon. fl =:u..lp of &tdle'a Father §1uttw111~ 1:00 I "'°"le: See Daytime Movies. 6 M~"J RFU (fB! (I)) (1) 6) Rylft'a Hope Except Mon. I Joumey to Advellura •lerAaa1 ae.rtet aos111 Mow~: See Daytime Movies. . Ecluutlonal ProtJlftls l :JO I @ (1) (I) The Culdln1 Upt . QJ (]) ®l m Tile Dedon 6 Nani . (Q!j Cl)) CI) Q) Llt'a Mike A Dul (lhr) GI Movie! See Daytime Movl11. !:OOIJr CV DEBUT All 11 Hie Fa11 I Ci) @) @D AllotlMlr Wortd Pllll Duahue 5"" Mat.di 5am• """ 2:30 I@ (]) Matdl "'" .. ""' (9 Cl)) (f).G!) OM Life .. ; lii MJ Clildren Mon. i All la die Fa•IJ· a.1 H••llr lnterritws/feablrn 8et S..rt • Ftatum La Cata 3:001J @CI> Tame•tes l te~=. Cartoou (9 ~)CJ) 5) .... ,., Hos. I; lftai I Hope Mon. Low Aaericln StJlt Movlt: Set Davtimt MOlliH. ltbons/UdJViltt ThJM Stoo1n CJ) lrona1" Dar• Shadows : ftatum l:JOE'"'h' Movlt: See Daytime M~lts. Proflilt Wed. I m Mike Doqtu Sllow Ouie l Hanltt Morie~ See Daytime Movies; Domln10 Wed. Maverick • Tht Lucy Show MicbJ Meuse Club The Mu1sters CI) New Zoo Revue YOll & Huct : Educ.ttlonal Pro1ram1 ( (j)) ComedJ Claula Drama 4:00 l]attler lftows Best • Mict'l_Mouse Dub (9 (JJ) rn m ABC AftU· trSped•J "The Skatina Rink" (R) Wed. • Beverly Hlllblllltl Yoel l Friends Gllli11n's lsllnd CV Tel'f'J & His Friends CtnascolendH Cil Mam-12 The M11nsters : Mister Roaers' Ntilhborllood ( (j)) The Flintstones Except Wed. ii) Sube P1l1ro &l MlssJon: hnposslb&e Except Wed. &) Rody & His Frilllds 4:30 Diet Vin o,ke Show Cllll1an'1 lsllnd Ster. Tre• • Datil Shadows Ad1m·12 Bv1i & Hit luddlls a.wan Cl) Price la Rlaht Rilall Boy Show Ci) Merv Griffin Show Brtdy Bulldl : Sesame Strfft ( (j)) MltklJ Mouse Cfub Jact Benny Mon. Uld1rdo1 5:00 0 D ®l QJ <9 Cl)> Ntw1 FHtures; Ntwa Mon. Titt lit Valley 6 @ I love Lucy ··~rick Tile Flintstones Speed~, Room 222 Drama Met.a famllJ 5:30 u Ci)@ Cil (tij (j)) ..... Slla1p Hit Stan; News Mon. Ho1111'1 Htroa The MonllHJ §) Three Stoo1es fncty Griffittl : The Ekctrtc Comp1ny • Town Tall! Jldt leMJ satow; Nen Mon. M O ND AY . DECEMBO l fof momlns and •btnocM u.tJnp, pie ...... DAYTIME 'ROGRAMS. Below, fw your convenience, .,. the day1 movlel. DAYTIME MOVIES ':lO 0 "TN ,,..,..._. MW' (mys) '52 -Dtnnot Walsh. "T'he Dffll llut SM" (dra) '55 -Vlv~n laiah. 10;00 (i) ..,..... Rim'° (mus) '39 - Al Jolson, Don Amecht. JZ:OO m "'Te111pt 6 fmy Njpt'" (COfl"I) '45 -Rlt1 Hayworth, lM Bowman 1:00 U .. Advttrbl,. la Dil•ftltl" (mys) · •o -Geor11 Brent. 9 "'The Mitadf of Mer111t'1 Cfffl" (com) '44 -Betty Hutton, Eddie Bracken, Dl1n1 Lynn. l:JO p "'TM Actress" (dra) '53-JHn Simmons, Sptncer Tracy, Teresa Wr11ht. l :OO @) (C) °'TM Fo,..U.n Mt11,. (dra) '71 -Dennis Weaver, Anne Fran- cis, Lois Nettleton. l :JO (J) "Sirts en die lMM'" (mys) '58 =Martt Richmond, Mari Corday. D (C) "T'he 0..rt Softt' (rom) ~ -Gordon M1cR11, Kathryn Grayson, Steve Cothran. I • ! : • I : • I • 1:00 I ~t&!. ~ == ( Cl)) (]) ti!) Nft Mo'*' ht NtiNIH New Enaland Pa· triots vs. Miami Dolphins. • frollSide P1rtr1c11e flmltJ Adnt·IZ Soltdld Stu Trel : lup's Shew Uttft Ra1e1ls &:JO I=.:.:" SMw Cl) Hoc1n'1 HlfOH • NUtwlDt 1:00 0 9CiJmNew• lewli111 for Dollars Mod Squad Tt Tell the Truth Conantntlon I Love Lucy Tiit Fii (])Guasmolt LI lobl Love American style : Ctassic Tbt1tr. Prtvitw . hlo.11 Add1a11 Faalty 7:l0 I $25.000 ..,r ... ld , m WJld littfdom Leve Al9tricln strf• I Trusurt Hunt 0 Mmio. l Movlt: (2hr) .. Destry Ilda Ai•in,. (wes) '39 -James Stewart, M1flene Dietrich. I Hip Rollers Brady Bundi (I) Wild Wortd of Aailtl1ls 11 Pelformanc:e at Wttf Trap lonne Warwick•" m My Little Ml'lie 1:00 1J (HJ (]) Cl) Rttoda Rhoda is de· termined to prove to her friellds that women can have fun without ftlfl'I, 11thou1h she bt<COIMs d11blous of htr own theory when she has 1 n &tit out with the 1ir1s. a o (I) ~ nie ,....,. Iii• ,_,In Money" WMn Dan Wes tin 1t1rn1 that Walter Ctrtton's Aunt Maraartt (Helen !Ottb) h11 tm· bezzled thousands of doll1r1 at htr bank Job to finance her poker play. 1111. bt devises 1 plan to return the money before the loss i.s dbccwered. D Mftlt; (C) (Zltr) .. °'{· Tt"fr'S tlff1e er Hemtl'" (hot) 65-Ptttr Cush Ina. (i) Wiid Wllid Wat m "THE CROSS-WITS" *with JACK CLARK Mon. 15t~8pm on 11 • r.6 .,,.la L .. ~ ~ to llcl (4hr) 'Ctltb· rifles entertain to help raise funds for Melodyland Christian Center's Outreach pro1rams. Guests include Pat Boone. Alt linklttttr, Graham Kerr & Katherina Kuhlman. l ~f,..M.UC. ,.,. .... 111111 A(t'lldedio IE ..... UAfUlle Procr1•1 &:JO I) Q?) Cl) Ptlytlb Phyllis has 1 very larae "small" problem to fact when her dauahter 1nnounc.t$ her intentions to marry the son of a midcet couple. i Do11 Adlint' Scrte11 Tut lkrv Grtflln Sllow l~fl<IA t Tlult Uitetftlln Pera. dirt I This documentary focus· es on Micronesia in the South Pa. cifie and how the sprud of modern civilization has affected the tra· ditional culture of the isl1nds. El) Los Pofiwoces t:OO f)@ (})Cl) All hi U-. f11111tr Thinas 10 from bad to wor1e for Archie when he Is mu11ed and it is him-not the muuer-who ends ~on trial. CV Mom: (2hr) "What.wr H1p- Ptnecl to Biby Jane" (mys) '62 - Bette Davis, Joan Crawford. n ta CIJ m MM111 "leht .... Vie: (t) (2hij (R) "lllttlrflln Ate free" (com) '73 -Goldie Hawn, Edward Albert, Eiieen Heckart. Mich11l Glaser, Mike W1rren Youn1. aspirin& actress Jill Tinner befriends Don Baker who Is 2f) yurs old and blind. The fellow's sense of humor impresses Jill and their rapport arows when he br11ks away from his domineerin1 mother. Problems arise. however, when Mr1. Baker inv1des Don's first month of indeptodence ind insists th1t he re· turn home. 00 Tho Uwtouchlblu 0 UIC StMdll "Ten Feet in the Air'' A look 1t the "eity a•me" of baillttblll and how it provides 1 WIY out Of tht Chetto for )'Oun1 blldi men. @) Mftie: (C) (Zhr) .. Do Not Dis· turtl" (c:or.1) '65 -Doris Day, Rod Tlylor. 9 Movie: (C) (2hr) "To Tr1p A Sjit1 (adv) '66 -Robert Vauahn, tuci1n1 P1luui. tTl) The Tribal [Jt The yieldin& and resistance of tribal cultures to the forces of the civilized wor1d is ex- plored in the final pro1ram of the series. (Qi Ci)) Q) Mobii. 0111 9:30 I) @ (])Cl) M1ud1 How fu CAIL Y PILOT, TV WEEK. NOVEMBER 30. 1975 • • • 1000 Beautiful Stick-on labels tr • PERSONALIZED •sTYUSH •EASY TO USE •ORDER FOR YOURSELF OR A FRIEND SHAPE AHO SIZE OF LABEL Mra John Doe 12J M1ln Street Anytown , Any1t•I• UJ-45 Lebel• Do Not Heve A Printed Bord•• . Stylish Vogue type on fine qu•l1ty white gummed p•per • r---------------------, I Fill in this coupon. clip •nd mail with 11.50 .... Piiot Printing L•bel Div., Poat Off ice Box 1560 Costa MeN, California 9'262cS •• Sure to uw your Zip Co4• : ---14''·''411'111----: L---------------------J DAIL y PILOT. TV WEEK. NOVEMBER 30, 1975 'A DRY BEAT' l loyd Bridges doe)n't mind at a bll when fans and friend' greet him w11h 1okes lili.c, "Hi. Lloyd. Nice to see you dr)." Hi.-. 4-)car 'ilamng role 1n the old Sea Hunt series nol only made him a house- hold word-it made ham wealthy for the lir'it tame in h1i. hf e. The money itself doesn't mean that much 10 the caw-going vctcr:rn actor. but he " en1oying the freedom 11 g1vec; him "I haven't had 10 lake a llingle role 1ha1 l didn't believe an ever \ince I pulled off rhat wet-suit," says Bridge\. who 1i. om:e again :.t.trnng on weekly telcv1s1on, Lhii. time as foe Forrec;ter on NBC !Tuesdays, 10-11 PM). ··for the first time in my life 1 can reject bad roles without worrying about feeding my family." And that family i~ the most important thing in Lloyd's life. He and his wife Dottie, who met while sludenh at UCLA. have been together ever si nce. and if you spend any time wi1h them they'll ..ic;ually wand up ralking about !heir three children. son-; Beau and JclT. who have followed their father into acting career., and a • dnugh1er. Cindy. a c0llege student. ~ A natural athlele, Lloyd <;tilt weigh" exactly what he weighed HF.LPING HAND 8ridaH whb ltobblt Rl1t 5<'fM from tartltt eplsock. Lloyd upon graduation from college-dci.pile a <;wcel toolh 1hat <,ee<; him In • gobble cakes and ice cream as often as he likes. When he isn't Eddie Epa, fUMCI Ntw York City aattodn dttttdve hu hlmtd to an actlna cartt1' foltowlna bb ~ tiftmfnf from tbt f<>f'tt. Ht'• lttD wttkJJ u Ssf. lkmlt Vln<'ent on J~ Fonuter. shooting Joe Forrester he's uc;ually found on "a tenn1~ court. Bmlges own<; a lavic;h Beverly Hills home and an equally beautiful home at the beach in Malibu He also has the luxury of packing and choosing from the many oilers of movie and television role<>-hut 1t wasn't alwa) s M> easy. Born and ra1.,ed in Northern California. he came to 1he Un1ver~ll} C)f California at I O'I Angeles 10 ~tudy law-but he soon hecame a Greek. "I was ~tud} mg law mainl} to pica~ m}' father." says 1 loyd. "But I was at .. o mtere5tcd in acting, and eventually I wound up a' one of The Greek~. which meant we did the great Greek dramas. A New York producer ~potted Bridgei. in one of 1he dramas and offered him a role on the stage 1f he ever came to New York. He humed to New York. and as a rco;ult of hi<; theatre work there was 'POiied hy a Holl}'\\ Ol1d producer. who <,1gncd ham Hi a contract and returned him 10 California. "I was wilh Columhia for t hree years," he recalls. "I must have appeared m a hundred or more movies hcfore they lei me go. I was working for seven!) five dollars a week when I matlc those first film,." Starting in "Lone Wolf Take' a Chance," he moved through 'Two l..atinc; From Manhattan" and many more, learning from !.uch fellow actors a." Paul Muni, Cary Grant, Ronald C'nlman and Humphrey Bogart. · The Bogart film "Sahara" wa<; 1.loyd''i firM maior film. and he ha<> ~ince ~tarrctl an such h1t'i a\ "Master Race," "Home of 1he Brave." "White Tower." "Sound of Fury." "Plymoulh Adventure." "The Rainmaker," ant.I "A Walk in the Sun." He won an O\car nomination for h1 \ role in "The Goddec;.s " One of the nation's first major television i.tar,, he appeared on such programs as "Playhou<;e 90." "The U.S Steel Hour," "Clima,." General Electric Thcalrc" and "The Philco Pia) house" "I w~ the first man to ever cuss nn nallon·widc telcv1.,ion." savs Lloyd as he recalls a "PlayhOu'\C 90" drama 1hat wa' being broad- cast live. "I got so wrapped up in the role thn1 I added a few wordc; to the script wi1hnu1 even knowing it. ln\lcad of calling 1he villain a 'stinking bigot' I called ham a 'slinking blankely-blank higot' and those two forhidden \.\Ord' caused a furor all aero"' the counrry. I got calls in the middle of the night from reporter'\ "'anting to know what 1 had said and why. I really thought my career might have been ended by that slip of the tongue." In addition to his movie and television roles, he has starred on Broadway in "Cactus Flower," "Man of LaMancha," "Oh, Men. Oh, Women" and "The Dead Pigeon." Jn 1957 he signed for Sea Hunt and starred in 156 segments aver the next four years. He followed that with two series. The Lloyd Bridges Show and San Francisco lnternfltional Airport. He Patricia CrowltJ ponnys .loe'• .won critical acclaim for his starring role in 1he NBC World Pre- aJrl, Gf<>rsf• Cameron, a rm.u-miere film ''Silen1 Night, Lonely Night,'' and recently teamed with nint bos:tHL son Beau as each porlrayed Benjamin Franklin m "The Whirlwind." should the Flndlays ao to Mii Wal· te(s appUance 5tore7 Maude Is ep- P1lled to find that Walter has supplied a d1te for a rich lnvtStOf who's comln1 to dinner. Despite Maude's 1rauments to the con trary, W1lter Insists that prO'lldlna the min with 1 "dinner pertne(' Is perfectly ethlcal. I =' Flltunt 10:00 a @ (3) CJ) Medical Cnter Or. Bycroft (lfalph Bellamy) la one of the world's 1rut suraeons. but his pride hlS blinded him to erosive factors of his edvanc.d aae. When he insists upon performin1 an H · tremely critical operation on hb own 1randdau1htlf, Gennon haa to 10 to any lenrths to SIVe the 1lr1'1 life, even if It means destroyln1 a areat docto(s career. o use lasbtbell use vs. st. Miry. Ci) Perry Mason O Moblle Ont '1he Boxe(' Pete Campbell is assaulted by hood· lums after he refuses to stop his ti'fb~;~: ':"·~~. ff. ow catcher A film bio· 1raphy of photoarapher·anthropol· 01ist.filmm1ker Curtis (1896·1930) who worked with American Indians for over 34 years of his life and struuled to preserve a record of their traditions. (Qi) Ci)) Hte Haw &) MlSsi .. : l111poulbte 10:30 · Co111111untty Fetdbad 11:00 . ii~~~.., 6 Scl BU .. • The lucJ Show Movie: "0.tota" (wes) ·•s - John Wayne, Vera Ralston. (]) Survival Combat (j)) Love American Styt. 11:15 ~Cinema M 11:30 tm (3) CIS uta Movie: (C) heNiiftt Dluer" (mys) '71 - Patricia Neal, Pamela Brown. rn Comer Pyte 0 Q} (I) ®) m Johnny ca ... Roy Clark is guest host. Norm Crosby guests. Ci) Movie: .. Bloodhounds er lrNd· we'(' (mus) '52 -Mitzi Gaynor. 0 Mptery Theatre! (C) '"&cape" (dra) '70 -Christopher Georae. Martyn Mason, Willi1m Windom. ~The FBI Movie: (C) "All Ult lrottlen re Vali.nr (dra) '53-Robert Taylor, Ann Blyth, Stewart Granier. ffi Silent Movie: '"Tiit lie Par.cit" (dra) (1925) John Gilbert stars. r Cl)) Trvtll or Consequences 12:00 Twlltaht Zone Movie: Mfhe LA>111 Walt" (dr1) '5' -Anthony Quinn. Charles Co· burn. 12:30 0 Mayti.ny RFD ({) Movie: (C) Mfhe Jayhawken" (wes) '59 -Jeff Chandler. I Man From UNCLI 1:00 ~ iD Tomorrow Cfne Autry 1:30 (])Movie: (C) "'Town Tmer" es) '65 -Dani Andrews. 1:•5 ft Movlt: (C) "'The Man Who Never Wal" (susp) '56 -Clifton Webb, Stephen Boyd. 3:30 I) Movie: .. Flfhtln1 WHdeab" {adv) '57 -Keefe Bruselle. ( c d c tf T B c ti ti c 8 c a t F f " I CHOOSING UP -Donna Miiis, Christine Belford end Mendlth B.xter Birney (from left) choose up sides to determine which of them wfU rtde their community bicycle to work In "U. Mllnst the Wortd,'' the first of 1 two-pert episode to be colofast ftturs· day, Dec. 4 1nd Dec. 11 at lOPM on NBC's Medlul Story. They star In the dr1me H thl"ff Interns 1truatln1 to make their m.,u In medlcJne. CYSTIC FIBROSIS TV AUCTION Charlie Tuna, popular KllS radio personality, will host the second Cystic Fibrosis TV Auction ·on KHJ, Channel 9, 'live' beginning Satur· day night, at 11:30PM. continuing until 5:30AM; Sunday, (Det. 7). Charlie will be joined by noted tv and radio personalities in this mare· thon event Including KHJ's Machine Gun Kelly, KTTV's Ben Hunter, TV personality, Stephanie Edwards, ·actress/writer /producer, Sally Baker and KHJ!TV's Tommy Hawkins and Suzanne Childs. All pro· ceeds from the TV Auction, where viewers bid on Items by phone in the comfort of thefr own home, will go to the Cystic Fibrosis Founda· tiOn to help children with serious and terminal lung diseases. Items to be auctioned off include such things as a seven·plece CaAOell & Chaffin dining room set, surfboards, a ranch mink hat1 grocery gift certificates, trips to Las Vegas and Lake Tahoe, lugga1e, camera supplies, suede ,iind lamb coat, a Bc;>lex 160 movie camera and case car shocks from Midas Muffler, night car racer designed beds for children custom-made jewelry, a Fun Machine from Baldwin Piano, tires, a custom hand rubbed paint job, a grandfather clock, for the golfers -a set of irons, wood~. putter and a putting green, I [ .m··· ce•·-;1.ms. DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK. NOVEMBER 30, 1915 'VALLEY FORGE' "I've been reading about George Washington since I was a child in school but that hasn't helped me portray him. As a . human being, Washington is one of the least-defined figures in Amer· ican history," said Richard Basehart, who stars as Gen· eral Washington in 'Valley Forge,· the Hallmark Hall of Fame Sicentennial drama on NBC Wednesday, at SPM. Basehart said: "Washing· ton is the central character in a play which covers a cru· cial time in his life aRd in the life of a struggling new nation. My job is to make him as understandable as possible. From what is known. he could be violent although he was reserved. He was a man, according to some. who had a tremendous sense of his own importance. "But you must remember that in 'Valley Forge' you are seeing Maxwell Anderson's conception of General Wash· ington. This is a dramatic presentation, not a history text. To that extent. my por: trayal does not require a minute dissection of the man's personality." The· play focuses on Gen- eral Washington as he trie$ to hold together the ill· equipped Continenbll Army in the bitter winter of 1777 · 78. It is the· second Ander· son play for Basehart. . _,,,_ Lucllfe Ball 1nd Jackie Gleason combine their comedic talents for tt-first tJme when they star totrether In A Lucille Biii Specie!'. Starrin1 lucflle Ball 1nd Jackie Gleason, 1 one-hour trtloo of comedy dr11mu, to be broadcl1t Wednesday, et lOPM on "CBS . .•••• ,, ••• ,, tttt •••• Pase 11 TUESDAY DECEMBER 2 For momlnc end efternoon llstlnp, 1)6eeM ... DAmME PROGRAMS. a.tow, for your conV"tnlence, ere the day's movlff. DAYTIME MOVIES 9:JOU"l'll WI Mr Ufe" (myi) '41 - Michael Whalen. "I W11t.d Wlnp" (dra) '41 -Ray Miiiand. 10!00 Ci) "Clpt.111 fr .. 1 ea.tilt" (adv) •l] -Tyrone Power, Jun Peters. 12:00 m "Good SHI" (com) '48-Gary Cooper. Ann Sheridan. 1:00 U "A F11htln1 ChlMe" (myi) '55 -Rod Cameron, Julie London. 9 "'Operation ldlor' (com) '65 - G.Orae Wiison, Uao To1n1ulo. l:JO 0 "Any N11111btr Can P11y" (dra) '49 -Cl•rtl Gable, AIHiS Smith. 3:00 tlQ) (C) "Rmn11" (dr•) '71 - Bradford Dillman, Shelley Winters. D "Time Lost & Tl•• Rem .. •· 1Mrt4" (dre) '66 -Sarah Miles, Cyril Cusack, Julian Glover. ':00 ~ 8 ~ J1 I~ !r. .... W Llkers ~u Llktrs V1 Wesllincton. (I}leuw M lrtaidt Partrldtt h•IJ ..... 12 I~,.. Our Stoty CJ)) Tnrttl er c....q.,.... Utlt Ratals Hou 6:30 I::::.:· .. (J}Hep•'•Hef'MS : Sitllldstll11 "At1o's G1n1" folk· i er At1o Guthrie rums. (j)) L,..,. AMricall Style A.trb• Outdeen••• lallepht1 CounHt. 1:00 oo @(J)mm ..... lrot111de .... Squ.cl To Teti the Tnrttl C.ncntrltJt• I Levt Lucy Tht fll (])QulMIOU a.. lobl Lowe Ainerica• StJI• ( CJ)) s.w.u . . Palo .. Addl1111 F•llJ 7:30 IJ New TNIMlrt Hunt O@CI H1Qlm HellJ•••d Sg_wires o 1-1-e-c .. 14-1 El rt II ci uh Dr. Georae flSChbeck hosts this look •t the awesome ind frl1htenin1 netu· ,., phenomenon of 1n earthqu1lle: whit it can do; how we can protect ourselves; can we predict them7 (I) ,..,.Is The voice of 8ur1 Ives Is heerd H Sam the Snowman, who slnp end tells the story of "Rudolph the Red·Nosed Reindeer," anl· meted musical spec:lal to be rebn>adcast Wednesday at 8PM on CBS. Pa1e 12 DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK. NOVEMBER 30, 1975 almost didn't tJke plect baute D MMllM $ ~ (C) (21tr) Atchlt ind Mike's undt Clamlr COii· '1flllillt Caeut' (dre) '69 -stantlJ dluaned on plans. (F11'1t of I ltMJ ..... I two part ~ lfOtY) Ltt'a ...... AD911 0 ..... Dr. n.: n.. ,..,... .. the .. I!) n. ,....,. i 10:00 II@()) Cl>._... While tryina A.riul W..W to lnvutll•tt Hit bacqround or Mr UClle Martie • youn1 Nn who's SUPPQStd to 1:00 8 OJ) (]) Cl) Qetd TI.a Every· m1rry the dau1hler of I WUlthy ililn1 INtnS To bt comin1 up ros.s busi'*3m•n. Pete end Mtc dis- for tht Ev1n5tS: JJ. has 1n 1ssi1n· • cover that tht poflc.t, the FBI, end mint to paint 1 mural 1t 1 bank. the syndicate ire trylnt to stop and Thtl011 wins 1 university their invest11atlon ... •nd they're scholarship -but 111 the aood h0t>in1 to live lon.1 enouafl to find plans run Into sntp. out why. Don hrter ind JoAnna O 9 Ci) fr:'......, 0. "Loni Clmeron~tsl Wey to Trowhere" Sonny 1nd Will, D 9 !Iii 8' ... Ftnatar 1tt1mptin1 to mike money on '"% Troba 11-C.use" Forrester Is 1 Iona haul to Cln1d1, hire 1n extra frustr1t1d when Ult courts release truck end two drivers, then di~er a dru1 pusher (Paul Stevens) ind 1 one of them Is dependent on pllls. very stubborn drunk (Richard Bn•· l iir~ -°"' zh•rtb, m ..... t~JI« & Youq Pt~ ll110t1 wt Vt OS mues" (QI CJ)) Cl) aJ Mateus W.a., m "THE CROSS-WITS" M.D. "Th• One face In the Wortd" * Challenging New Game Dr. Welby runs Into 1 touchy situ•· tlon when 1 womtn doctor d1fln Mon. 15th-8pm on 11 the unwritten medical lew of not 0..ltf'a CMicl 1dminlsterin1 to 1 rel1tlvt when her Jello lllMur stMlw father becomes • victim of lukemla. fl .., dt Iris CllacN Julie Roa•rs. Blair Brown end How· Ct!...... ud Duff 1uest. = n. 11n11 ., She"4d t1e111tS m '" s..rt • bltits m ....., flytliM's FlJtll Clrc:us ~ M(f)tvit 10-.JO I CNt•ulltJ ftedllilcl l :JO tJ (I! IJIJ .... Sea ...., &I Mevte: (C) (90) ""Hounds tf tilt : lllbfutieul Mlllltiet ftstlvll ~ (mys) '59 -Peter E Sllew dt Wlltef Mt~ Cush!!!(. Christopher LH. 11:00 (]) U gm News u <~(I)> (I) m w .... l8fi · rn a 9 · ... Kotter "Cllifoml1 Drumln' " Kotter lat of I feces the problem of 1 new stu· Set llllla dent from C11ifoml1 -blonde ind • n.. Lucy 511ew pretty B•r:nbi Foster who his e liloYtt: '"fie.. tf the lltbaly crush on him. st" (1dv) '45 -John Wayne. I The loblly Ylllto1 Show Med Squad Merv Qrfffln Show Cf) 11ttte11 .. Wlldllft Adventure combat CJ) Joe & Solas : Wou1 Allwl ~Sllew dt Ed1lta Naurit ( CJ)) Lowt AIHrtan Style 9:00 (H} Cl) CJ) M_•A•S-~ A colonel 11:15 . CIMIN S4 who his been senously injured In • 11 ·30 I~ CIS Lltl Movtt· (C) t~nk ~iden! ch~ks Into the hos· • r drel_ '71 -Robert Blake. p1t1I wrth hrs pnze possession, I Q ®) m JtMIJ Clrstl me old Colt .45 with chrome barrel Lucille Bill & Johnny Mathis auest. ind bone 1rip, which Is stored for ~The .....,_...rs S1fekeepin1 in the supply. ~ 1un Mevit: "-•bier frt• Nit· bin. When th• run Is mm1n1, R•· • Ja.M •54 _ o.i. Robtfbtl. du, who is In cherae of the aun D <ta (I)) CI> Wide Wttld 111,... bin, is the prime suspect. te o ~m®i mhla ..... ~n. F11 •'f>on t Feed the Piaeons" Sits. fj Movit: (C) .. trs A Iii C.U•· C~ow1ey ind Anderson ire de!er· try" (adv) '52 _ Gery Cooper, Janel m1n1d to 1p~rehend the con·1r11sts Leiah. van Johnson. who hive b1llled a number of old lZ·OO 0 Twlllc1rt z... WO!"'n of their life UVinp, Ind . Cl) Movie: ..... • Pl "-t1le led slim one of the victims. OI the Fa,." (com) •54 _ Marjorie u =~'°"ttl'BusHED lZ:30 Mai~% ::ride. * BY TERRORISTS Q Mowit: "'Tiit a.tonur & tti• fJ (9 CJ)) CJ) 9) TM R..U.S ~· (com) '50 -D~k Powell, ''Death 1t Mldniahr' While Terry June Allyson, David Wayne. ind Chris search I d1rti1ned de· m Mevit: "'last of u.. lucca· p1rtment store for bural1rs, their Mtfl (1dv) '50 -Paul Htnreid. patrol car ls stolen and they are 1:00 I (iO) m TtlMR .. trapped by 1 trio of heavily armed ient Autly killers. l:JO (]) Movie: "'Tiit TI• Stl,.. (wes) - The Bold 0Ms '57 -Henry Fonda, Betsy Palmer, CoSI Juipcla Neville Brand, Anthony Perkins. Movie: (C) (Zllr) "lsllld of 1:45 R MtVit: (C) '1lllcflburt 111 tit• Lowe" (com) '63 -Tony Randall , Sun" {dra) '63 -John Derek, Robert Preston, Willer Matthau. Ursula Andress, Aldo R1y. I AJctat of Man Z:lO m Ail-atlht Sltew: 1'ht lrH Ma· 9:30 (j7J (}) (I) All la the F1•11J ..,., '"They WH't lelltwt Mt" the Stlvic$' second anniversary, 3:30 IJ Movie: '"Fout la A Jeep" (dra) the family rtctlls how the weddin1 '51 -Relph MHker. mn..._ .. ,,.. ... &)MJUtll ...... DAILY PIL.OT. TV WEEK. NOVEMBER 30. 1975 CHEKHOV'S 'THE THREE SISTERS' WE D NE S D 1\ Y ISEcEMBDt 3 1:00 R Im Cl) (I) 'l!S!' ........ til ,......... (R) Butt For momt,. and afblmoon llltlnp. ==:.rm~~ tt.. •r'• mcMK. DAmME MOVIES t :lO R .... TrW' (mys) '50 -Huitt Sfndalr. "'llue Dtttill" (dra) '59- Brandon 0.Wllde, Carol ~ynlty. 10:00 Cl) \JM lla•Hllt" (dr1) '41 - Walter Pld1eon, G10J1e Sandm. lZ:OO m "Dtltta...r• (dra) '47 -Ruth Winick, Walter Brennan, Oun Ja1· ltr, Charlott• GrMnwood. 1:00 D "'TIM Mad Deeter" <mys> '41- Basil Rathbont, Ulen Drew. 9 (C) ""SllMt IM4. Leader ••• I 0..'t Ut14entalld" (com) '66-Mar· cello Mastroianni , Raquel Weldl. 1:30 0 """ la4 alllll Ult ... utif111" (cfre) '52-K.ltk 00\lflat, Lana Tur· ner, Dick Powell, Bany Sulllnn. J;OO~(C) '11M.....,. (dra) '71- Darren McGavln, Cameron Mitchell. t • t '' I ", I I 1:.00 I ~ i ~ .. u fl!.""" LaUn Lallers vs. Detroit. .... ID ........ Partrld1e Fa-., Adaa·lZ s.llCW Star Trtll 1 ~lrotfltr; Nationl Edition ( ) Trvth •r CMHqueltCal • Raab Hour 5:30 lhrv CrtHl11 Show lewttdMd (I) Hotan'1 Herott : Rulldadts ( (IJ) L.wt Aln1rtca11 ""' • Pep Coa tM Coultry Calltplq Couratt 1:00 009oo mm ..... 1'9nlilt Mod Squad To Teti tM Trvtlt Coacntratloll I loft Latcy Tiit Fii (I}C11 ...... 1 LI Ubl ltvt AIMrtun styte : Wt11t1n Alm ( Cl)) lonaua . , ..... Adda1111 Ftmlly 7:30 I @ Cl) Lut or tilt WUd . Ci) m ...... That ru .. urs Mall• A Deal • Miiiion $ Movie: (C) (Zhr) "Silk Stockl1111" (mus) '59-Fred Ast1ire, i Charisse, Janis P1i11. Price Is Rl"'t luldl : I'"' 01, You're GI{ . . t About tilt Wot1d1 Discussio11 1bout moral an1uish in America today 1nd the wide· spread trend in findln1 solutions throu1h psydlolo1icat means. Iva Mrntts this tniuttd musical adventure about the dly rtlndttf. D Hallmark Hall of Fame .• VALLEY FORGE Richard S...hart Harry Andrews a~ (i) 11C1m1 mt'I""" llarl kllf" .,...-, ... "V1t Oflt" (90) Ridl11d Basehart NIS 11 Gea. Washlniton 1nd Hmy AndrtWS co-stars n hb Btit1$11 military td· vetiary, In this 1d1ptatlon of Mu· well Anderson'• play. TI\t ptar focuses on tti. events in tti. bitttr winter of 1777·71 which t11d Gtn. Washiniton to hold a bttlul mtll· in1 with Gen. Howe, who demands the Continent1t Army to lay down Its arms. e Wiid Mel Wtlt • ca CIJ> rn m..... N11o "' Rettttt "Lance for Hirt" Tht Sheriff en1a1ts a mereen1ry bow· st1nre1. tht 81.U Knlfht. to combat • wounded Robin Hood. m "THE CROSS.WITS" * Star Studded Game Mon. 15th-8pm on 11 li.:.!£,Sa......., 1llE TIOlU SISTE.RS of CJw~-t'a P'-1 an Pottn1t4 bJ (1. to r.) fi...-.lt MJdMle Docrtc~, Eleft Aditm _. lllDd SeDLU. a.........,wratti.1 J.,.,... LlllPllt Pfetnm Anton Chekhov's .. The Three Sisters" is frequently staged .. the . . wrong way .. -too drab and ponderous. says Cedric Messina. 1:30 ~Movie. (90) -S. Wiit" ~dre) That's why he .. lightened the first two acts" when he directed the 57-Rich1rd Burton, Joan Collins. d b · ti PBS' "Cl · Th h H D <9 (I)) Cl) a> Tht'a llJ ra~~ to. c seen ~at1ona y on ass1c cat re -.' e .u-11a .. trs stormina-lnside 1nd out man1t1es an Drama on Thursday. at 9PM on Channel 28. "They re -as Clifton and Earl feud durin1 1 not shrouded in gloom as they often arc, .. Messina explains ... There's snowbound nletit in a motel with a good deal of comedy in them.·· five miser1blt companions.. Though his characteristic themes arc darkened by apprehcn-m Merv lrlfflll Show sion and loneliness. Chekhov himself described his dramas as G) Wiidiife Advelltu11 "comedies." Cedric Messina, producer of over I 00 BBC plays, nine 9·00 of which arc included io the "Classic Theatre'' series. has recognized · the Russian playwright's droll humor and tried to strike a proper I) A Holiday Tradition balance between happiness and despair. To be sure. interpreting * Bing Crosb~f amity Chekhov is a delicate affair -his craft is as subtle and low-keyed Host Fred . ire In as the everyday existence of ordinary people. "Everything on stage Tonite's Top fare should be as complex o r simple as it is in real life.'· the dramatist once reftcctcd. "People are having dinner. they are simply having II @Cf) (I) _I IH<IA 11 I • .1 dinner. and while they do, happiness and Jives are broken.·· CrnbJ SiieW 81n1 Crosby and his '1"he Three Sisters·· stars Eileen Atkin, Michele Dorice and euest, Frtd Ast.air~. 1ppe1r lot'!h· Janet Suzman -each a star of the London stage in her own right ~r for the ~rst time .on ltlevls~ -as the sisters. Joss Ackland Sarah B·adel Michael Bryant Ronald an 1 musal speaal, markln1 H . H k" R. · · y · Crosby's 40th consecutive Christ· incs. Anthony op ans. 1cbard Pearson and Marda anne com- mas show Cr0$by will be joined on pletc the cast. • the show ·by his wile l<.lthryn 1nd Wheo seen in Britain, "The Three Sisters" won high praise their three children, Harry, N1than· typified by one reviewer's judgment that "It bore the haUmark. of UlltMdM!bles ftavor to the full." Messina says that directing .. The Three Sisters" ·~·et and Mary Frances. Cedric Messina in its brilljant production and captured the writer's <9 Ci)) Cil a> lamtl "The was "like a two months' holiday'' -one month honing the in- Glory G1me" (R) Barett• is fr1mtd tcrpretation. the second rcnearsing and filming. Messina's approach for the murder ol a suspected 1un was so fresh "it was almost as though he wasn't dealing with an peddler and forced lo become • bl. h I · " fueitive in order 10 cle1r his nan:3. esta 1s ed c ass!c, rec~lls Ms: Su~an, whose performance as m The lolcl OMI Masha won special acclaim for its passion and "elegant arrogance." 9111.vte: (C) (Zllr) .. Juat ,., Yoti" Completed in 1900, the play Is often regarded as C hekhov's (dre) '52 -Bin1 Crosby, J1ne Wy· masterpiece. Its vision of three sensitive young women seeking man, N1tali• Wood. meaningful lives in a provincial backwater powerfully conveys the fil) Creat PtfforlUllCel "Brahm's social stagnation of pre-Revolutionary Russia as well as a time- $Ymphony No. 4" less metaphysical dtlemma. The close is a famous tableau: confront- 9:30 0 9 Ci)®) m I lflc!ALJ ... ing ~n uncertain f~ture .. t_he sisters are strangely .exhil~rated by the ... Crey ''The Art of Crim•" (90) music of a departing military band. The mood 1s resigned yet de· Ron Leibm1n stirs Is Rom1n Grey, fiant. poignant yet not tragic. the messagc-.. a"> simple or complex (Continued) as real life .. --something ca.ch viewer mu~t discover for himself. Page 13 WEDNESDAY (Continued) THURSDAY DECEMIWt 4 1 sophlstiClled Hew Yor" City in· tlqut dtaltr with a Gypsy lltrlt11 who Is drewn Into 1 homlddt caM •hen 1nothtr Gypsy Is tcCVMd of the crime. I """' For mornliw end aft9rnoon httnp. Club""" plNM ... DAmME ftftOGMMS. Fllm F11turt ... ow, fot your conwenl.nc:e, are the day'a mcwtes. 10:001J @(J) ())' lflc!ALI hclll • a.11 alt4 J.ait 1 ..... Miu Ball DAYTIME MOVIES 1nd Glu son ''' sttn 11 thrH dlf· ferent couplts In a ont ·hour Vtloo t:JO U .. lllttlUdoul Settlmelll" (dra) or comt~dr1mas. '38 -CIOfte Senders, Jofln CINI· ~ m ..... dint. .... ,... Ott'" (drt) '48 - '"" IJCMI Vert R1lston, John Clm>ll. (~{)))(I) m S ! a r I k J & 10:00 (I) ~Jltt•llll ~ ........ (rom) '46 Kutdl Slv•c• Sunday' Otttctlves -Jttnnt Crain Comal Wildt. St1rikr ' Hutch sptnd I frtnzltd 12:00 m '1\t tta"7 Tl•t'" (rom) '52 Sunday 1fternoon In Ptrsult of _ Cherla Boyer, Marsha Hunt. two robberi who don't know their 1:00 U "lruk 11 UN Clrde" (1dv) stolen tar cont1ins • limt bOmb •57 _ Forrest Tucker, Ev• B1rtok. set to explode later th1t d1y. 9 ""Quu o1 Dtfbtu'' (dra) '62 GJ lltt Smart -D1vid Niven Lesllt Clron. @) Tht Flm Churchllla l:JO fJ (C) ...... Bnt••tlr (edv) 'S4 lO:JO I Gtu Bartow Sltft -Stewart Gr1n1er. EJlubtth !•rtor. • iaf'lltf ltd Aratttrffl l:OOOj '"Stnlt J~ (drt) 6" -,.,.. Join Crawford, D11nt Biker. Mtlodl11 dt Sft"'prt . 3~30 (])"lac*, et UN lrtsll" (com) '43 -Tyrl>nt Power, Anne Btxter. 10:45 fm Ull11, Yori & Yoo 0 (C) '1M DudlJ Hullt" (dra) '71 =ltm Hutton, Peter Llwford. u:ool ffi RI~~,.... The 'f.1t1•1ten111 Set. lllllt • Tht Lucy Sllow Movie: "The Anett & Ult W · m•_.. (wu) '47 -John Weyne, Gi ll Russell. ~Mod Squad CI) St.I rvlvll Combat (j)) Love Amlfltu stJ1t 11:15 fii) Nudtlr p.,.., Hurt1p €!) Clnt"'I 34 hrtrida-F11111fJ Ada•·12 Soledad Star Trtt : 11 Perloru11et 1t Woff Tnp "Olonnt Wuwicke." ll:JO U @ m CIS Litt Movie: (C) "Pajama -fa .... (mus) ·57 -Dons 6:30 ( (I)) Trvtll Of CottMqittftClll Uttlt 1'Qcll1 Hoar Merv Grttftti Show 8ftttdled i . John Raitt, Eddie Foy Jr. ' @ (I) Im m JohHJ Cll"IOll • 8ttt tf ,,.. Movie: .. HIH A111t1" (com) '51 -Lorette You_!!I. Joseph Cotten. 0 <9 ())) (l) Wide WINW Mfttt: (C) ~llllf-Tlle Price tf Yilltftee" Michael Jlyiton s1ars. , (i) The Fii D Mowlt: .,.,.IMllh" (wes) ·so - Robert Teylor, John Hodi1k, Atltnt Dehl. lZ:OO 0 Twlfftflt lone m Mowlt: "fr1nc:a Cowen tht ... Ton'" (com) '55-Donild O'Connor. 12:10 0 MaJbtnJ RR> (j) -...: .,.,, l111*fu"'" (mus) '52-Llne Turner, Dtbblt Reynolds, Ezlo Pinn. m Mewlt: "Slld Chit H 101" (dr1) "S5 -LH Mervin, fr1nk Lovejoy, Teny Moore, Keen1n Wynn. 1:001111 m '"""'" ""' AutJJ 1:30 ~ CJ) Movt.: 1Jtulliub" (com) '51 -R1y Mlll1nd. Jan St1rlln1, June l oclthlrt. 1:45 fJ MnSt: CC) Mhf l.M tf ......,.. (com) '63 -Kirt Oouatas. Mitzi Geynor, Thtlma Rltttr. J:OO m AIMfftflt SMw: ......... West" "TM st.ii ltdtr" S:JO 1J Mewte: "'lao• SeMce'" (com) '33-Ulelllt Bill, tht Mart Brothtrs. (]) Ho&H't Htnet I (j)) love Anttrla1 stJtt Weter WOfllt Qallopiq C.urMt 1:00 oo@@mm,.... lrotmdt lowt1111 tor Dollan Mod Squad Te T efl tht T rvt11 eo....tratlH I Loft l.ltcy Tiit flt (])GwlSMOb La l.oM l.ovt Anttdc.111 ~ Em ASNEM NARRATES * "HANNUKAH" SPECIAL · : 'Mit2 H111ll'llbh (R) ( ) m • P1I011t1 Addams F1111lfJ 7:30 lobbJ YhltOI $how a;, Prtc. II Rllht love Amertc11 stJ't HltfrRolten Calldid c. •• ,. MHllOll $ Movie: (2.hr) "Pit & lb" (com) '52 -. Spencer Tracy, Kltharine Htpbum, Aldo Ray. Ibid C.111 Indy hid (I) Hoflrwood Squam let's Make A Del! • The Aaast ,, ..... Mtdll My Uttlt lbrale DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK, NOVEMBER 30, 1975 1;00 fD Qnalc n.tn "1lle Thtw Sh· II MARRIAGE IN PERIL; ttra" Antot1 ~11J .._ the dr11iy and u J ll1tttncit * SEE WAL TONS TONfTE wrtd i.y tm• slltetl eld 11ow IJ @ CJ) ()) T1't Walbu John they 1tt1mpt to tludt · r111lty Boy and lOltn Wilton try to rt· unite throua11 pipe d,..,,.. of rom.ntlc Wadt end Ytrl Walton, 1 couple fulfillment. J1net Suzm1n. Eiieen At· of relatlves of whom thty •rt fond kJns, Mldltlt Dotrtct ind AnttM>ny and whose m1rri11• 111ms to lleve Hopkins attr. 1ont on the rocb since thtr movtd Gl LI Cril4I -~ D~ ~ 9l m PmllEI ltMJ t'.JO fJ ,._. "8• tt' We, So Humblt''. Whitm1n 1;' NEW NITEJ I BARNABY M1y0 stirs as Gr1dy Wilson, w , moves In with his dau(hter's family * JONES BEST CAPER! when thtJ come btek to Santi 1J @ Cl) Cl) ....., '-A cal· Monb trom Chlcal(>. Gredy Is 10 cul1tini ,ouna 1111 who hn lnfll· tnr to t1k1 ttrt of the children tr1ted 1 socl•I "tioney .. t" to Mt whllt both ptrtl)ls wort. Redd fou up bur1taria for htt '°1 friend Cs In this first episode. decides aht w1nts to m•k• tht ovlt: (C) (Zlu') "Of Lftt •llld arran11ment perm1nent, lttdlni to " (dr1) '63 -Mer1e Oberon. murder. ~ Wiid WUd Wnt D 9 (I) t1Gl fD Mtdkll 1'ef7 (tJj Cl)) Cl) Ci» .. ,_, MAier ''Us ~1ln1t Ult World" Pert I of 1 sh" FISh btclns to feel 1nxioui two Plrt story st1rrln1 Donni Miiis, when he's put on res1ricttd duty Meredith B1xter ind Chrtstlnt Btl· and a youna detective is brouaht In 1ord u 1 trio of ,.,uni lnt•mi 1tru1· for him lo train. 1lln1 to m1k1 • pltc:t for them· m .. THE CROSS-WITS" selves tn the wor1d of mtdldnt . *with JACK CLARK ~JD~ Mon. 15th·8pm on 11 1J <SCIJH1HD Hany o "u· I Dultt'a Cltolce ercise in f1t1lTtY'' H1ny Is pltttd Joh11 ltlf)our Show 111lrm a ptlr of assauJns In a Nldt. Care race to find 1 pr11n1nt youn1 WO· =-min-the only witness to 1 murder J1p11n1 Llnp11• PYo1rH11 for ~~ fethtr wes fremtd. 1:30 0 @ (I) t10l m NDllEIE T h t 10:30 Didi YtrMtl .... eo, I tlM lli Ch1r1es Dumlna ind • 111,.. Paaptfb t. Mvnturt Tlerrt Tumer ster in this new mid· Ntws season seri es •bout I veteren p0llct LI T,...... Ctftl otticer who find' his pmiousty un· 11:00 (]) D ' mm ...., complicated b1chelor lift disrupted Ci) (1j Cl) .r ... when he's 1werdtd custody o1 • lat of r'IUCM slreet·wise orph1n. Sit. lftt o <a ())> m m 0a th• ... Tfl• LA1CJ s.... "The Grut £.supe" While r1tum· M , " I , : "'TllrM ~rs" Ina from 1 civill1n hospltll where wts) '49 -John Wayne. he wu sent for medical tests, Mod Scruff Fuentes tries to mllte 1 break for (]) BtttStllH freedom In tht destrt. Co•Mt I Mm Crtffl11 Show , (I)) Lowe bttrlcu sa,te WlldUft Advtfttare 11:15 • ciiilu 34 Clank Thutn Pmltw U :lO @(J) CU Lite Meivlr. (C) Musial Co!MCIJ ... Evtr (drt) '71 -Ml• t:OO 11 lHJ rn Cl) HawaU f1...o Mc· Ferrow. G1rrett's Avt·O tum is lnvutl11t· B 9 Cl) (fj tE! JellPJ C.net1 Inc· th• ctltleal stabblna ot 1 eollec• Philippe COustuu iuests. footb1ll shlr who wn brou1ht into ~ Tht ~ 1 hosplt1I by two other memben 6 Mtvit: .. l.ovt TUt lnrlw'' (com) of tht team. Tiit thinp aet 1 little ' -Jean Peters, Paul Dou&IH. sticky when flvt·O learns that the O <a ())) (J) Wide W..W ,,.. son of 1 will known U.S. Stn1tor is ttllts "M1nnh1" & "LonptrHt" Involved in whit looks likt I cold· CI) The nl blooded, well-oilt<f coverup of 1 D Movie: (C) '1\t Ila Haqtft(' 11n1 rape. (dra) ·so -Vin Johnson. o a oo dj m oleff Quetll m s., lnlther. ......... EctltiOll "The Bl.ck f1lcon" Ellery 1nd his 12:00 dad drop Into a New Yorti niaht· U Melissa Manchester on tiub to tttth Simon Brimmer's * Kirshner Rock Concert redio show Just IS one of the CO· 0 Doll llnbWI Red Ctecat1 owner$ of the dub Is found pois· GJ Ill 0 " I 1 : "Datl..U.. Satltl'll" OAed. (scl·fi) '39 -Buster Crabbe. 0 (J)KThtE Fu:L"Ls1~N LOVE l2:30 (I) lltvlt: "Tht llVltaUol" (dtl) Ml . ·~ -Dorothy McGuire. * ON STS OF SAN FRAN m Movie: "Oa oaa,...... Aroulld" O <a (I)) (J) till S1n.ta ef S.t1 (dra) '51 -Id• Lupino. frincbco "The Clt's Pew" Lt. Mlkt 1:00 0 ~ 8' Tt111ecr .. Stone hn serious doubts 1fter pro· l :lO CHI CJ} ihvtt: "'That Kl .. et Wo- posinr marrl11e lo beeutiful In· man (dr•) '59 -Sophia Loren. spector Irene M1rtin, who h11 bttn 1:451) Movie: "Dart Cltt' (dra) '50 uslaned to wort! with him on 1 -Chtrtton Heston, Uzabeth Scott. homicide ~SI. 2:10 m All ... tpt Sllft: '"YM Cal't Ru1 I Th lolcl o... AwaJ Fre• It," "'nit c.... Peo- Fattval lmnaUoal pit'' • Mtvtt: (C) (Zllr) ...,...._."' J;lO R MO.: "Wt stat'1 DtqllW° ,,.. (adv) '59 -Clint Wilker. <Wta) '48 -Ruth Roman. F RIDAY OECEMIDI 5 for "*"""' •nd •ftetneon lilelnp. = ._ DATI'IM£ NOGRAMS. , for '°"" ~Nence. .,. the .,, • rnowtea. DAYTIME MOVIES t :JO IJ..,... .............. (dta) '33- Ron.td Colman. "'lew ua.n'" (dra) '45 -Jtnnlttr Jonts. JoMpti Cotten. 10:00 Cl).....,....,. ..,.. (drl) '47- Tyron• Power, Joan Blondell. 12:00 m "footsltfS la tile Foe'" (d r1) ''SS -Sttwart Granier. Jun Sim· mons, Belinda LH, Biii Travers. 1:00 U "A Modll tor .. ..,.. (com) '45 -Arturo de Cordova. 9 (C) "'T1'1 W..i1t1 tf Madia" (fan) '61 -Donald O'Connor, No.lie Adam, Vittorio O.Sb. l:JO fJ (C) .. ...._., JullCtioa'" (dra) '56-Stewart Granier, Ava Gardner, Bill Travers. J:OO 0 (C) "'QurutlMd" (dra) '70- -Gary Collins, Sharon Farrell, John O.hner, Wally Coi1 J;)O CJ) (C) ....... bpna" (adv) '68 -Geno Bany, John Saxon. fJ (C) "'T1te RNcl a.cl" (dra) '72 -Lassie, Jed Allen. llil Lu, Jock OeMIVI. l • f ~ • ' • • I · '=00 R lffil~::: ~ .... Im l.....Wt P1rtrtd1t fl•lly Ada111·1Z Solld'4 Stir TRk : Aviatlotl Wuttlor ( 1 Cf)) Truttl Of Consequncu Lliiie Ritt.lb 6:30 MlfY lirtffla Sbow lowttdMd (l)Ho1al'1 Hel'MI : iiick Perspocim on tllt Newl ( CJ)) ....... A.trica• StJlo • Friffda of .... Alllopia1 C.W.tt 1:00 a o 9 Cil mm "-"' lrollSldt lowtlq for Dollars 6 Mod Squa4 To T tfl ttle T rutll C.MdtnUH I Loft Lucy Tiie f81 (Dhrumole Lt Lobl love A11ttrk.111 Style : WomH • ( Ci)) lona1121 Piro ma Th• Adda1111 ramlly 7:so I ;am ulo11,.ooc1 Scauam love Ametla• StJlo Wild WOftd of Advlnblrt World of tllt S.. • MUlloa $ Mtvll: (C) (2hr) OJIJI to tilt lottt111 of the Su" (adv) '61 -Walter Pid1eon, Joan Fontaine. m Tllo ''"' lulldl DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK. NOVEMBER 30. 1975 I f...~';.':. ~•1:;_'*" 2.i! ea!~'·~:! c:= w..v .. ~ 11 nt• r....,. ~· ... Utlt ............ (j) ~ wn.. , ................ _, --10:00 0 9 Ci) m Pellet Sterr (mys) •37 -Peter Lorre. Sidney L-0011 @ (I) Cl) uHil\l I Friar "Vice: 24 Hours" Ont Vice . Squad Bi.ckmt1. lllewlt: (C) (llw) ..,..,., Tera! officer flpts to kMP his wrfe arid fJ (Qi Cl))(]) WW. WetN .... T.,.I"' (dr1) '70-0arryt Z.nuc:k's cflildren from bllftl the objects of c]i "Monty Halt's Showcate" retiHlna of ttie Ja1>1new atttek on an underworld hrt man. wtlilt an You.na end PfOmisinl "'1«mtr1 it Puri Hartlot st1rrin1 .luotl Ro· ottler officer l>OSI' 11 an assassin fou.r Los All&etts am n ptdubs blldJ, Martin' &.\um, JO$l9h Cot· and "arms" to tllmlnate • CNil· 1,.. flltutld. Ma~ll. fllmtd from two points of man, Han Rhodu, Marty Cn11ls. .......... w• i. ..,._ 1111 James Whitmore and £ G i1n'1 writ. Paul 8ur\e, Ron Leib· i TM Fii wlew by JtP1ftlS4I and Amtrbn Shelly Novack and Janis P111 1ue.sl ._. Traill Cftw1 Ind actors. the story unfolds e UClA ......... UCLA 'fS. San on the hl1hat d lmax In 1 S91Ct•t· Jose State. U:OO R .._.: '"Cata. bt,.,... (•e.s) ular rest1&in1 of the dt¥1statln1 , ,.,,, aw. ·st-Joel lllk:C<ea, Cloria T-'bol attack. p1M>toer1phtd on actual to. fl> .._. Q) .._.: ..._. & ,,.._-. (adv) e1tion In Hawaii. W s..tt '62 -Guy Wllllams. Don Burnett. a ~ Ci) am SMt•• , s.. ~ n.tre: ....-. a •eel CWlft "The Olympics" Fred IOU out lor ••• ''Conflict" (R) fJl) ..... Sllw the Senior Olympics to compete lO:JO I twp s.. .... T..., 1%:JO ()) Mewle: "'Tiie fM & U-. leetfd.. fM O.nna's affection when she's ..._ r.r (dra) '52-Kln Oou1l11, Lina courted by the senior olympic dlamp · tt.pr O.la HecJt Tum11. Dick Powell. Lou Hunter (Percy Aodri1uu). 11 :00 I (])fl cm m m ..... m lhvil: ..,,." Ml"9f" (dra) '4' U USC ~II The V1nd1rt>llt Cl) @ Cl) ..... -OIMa de Htvllland, Lew Ayres, Invitational Tournament. Sit. u Thomu Mitchell. ~ WlW WlW Wat • llewte: (C) ....... Wttt.t A ~ .o;;i ftlll (f1t(J))(])Ql I lfiC!!lr.I Yet, c._.. (dra) ·55 -Jamn 0.an, l:OO Cl 9 101J"" 1111P1Pt IP•· lrtln'-. Then Is A S.lltl Claus (R) Natillt Wood Sal Mineo. dll No In orm1tlon available •I our This animated special, narnted . by m lhwll: "iJe Gn..... (wu) '50 press tlmt. Jim Backus. tells tht ch1rm1n1 -John Wayne MiurHn O'Hara. l :JO (H) Cl) Mefte: (C) "TIM ...._.._,. story of 8·yur-old Vir1inla O'Han· lllled S41aa4 (dra) 'S6-llalh1rin1 Htpburn, Butt Ion whose unsw1Nln1 belief in San (J) S.Mnl unusttr, Lloyd Bridats. Wtndtfl • ta Claus Pf'O'"pted • movln1 and ll'«ta11 sm.i Corey, Ear1 Holliman. eloquent letter from editor Ftt~k 8" TI•• WrntUq 1:451J Mewil: "1\t Jtttt lt Wll" Church of the Ntw Yortt Sun in : Wal Strwt w• (dra) '57 -frenk Sinatra. Jeanne 1897. ( ())) Leve utrica11 StJM Crain, Eddie Albert. m "THE CROSS-WITS" 11:15 fl) c1 .... )4 %:00 m All-MPt sa.r: "TIM SU. * Challenginc New Game ll:JO R @ (]) cas 1.at1 MeN: (C) CMnm. .. "TIM ll•u PeepM'" Mon. 15th-8pm on 11 ~ Hennl .... (•dv) '71 -Omar J:JO D ....w. "'l••tltll S..a..r" 10.ltf's Chob Sharif, Lelah Taylor·Youn1. Jack (dra) '43 -Henry fonda, M1u'"'1 Joflll lartMMlr DtoW P1l1net. O'H1ra. Y1enMS Tutro liulUl.U fE LA NEWS REVIEW * WITH CLETE ROBERTS TOP NEWS IN DEPTH I w Anaetes ...., 1tevttw Lt Yid• C.n Aurellt JtP1MS1 Lanau•1• Procra1111 l:JOB@ CI>~mc111co & th MH "Th• Strike" When Chico Joins the 11r111 mechanics union, the union or11nizer forces him to 10 out on strike !l_•inst Ed. o <ta())> w m ... 11 .. •-1c-11-, ... , • Very Merry c.tcket (R) Chester C. Crickltt returns from his Connecti cut home to help revive the l1uin1 Christmas spirit of New Yorters by usin1 his musical ullls to cfleer • J1ded New Yort scene. I Mm liritf111 Sbow WlkllH• Adwlrtlt,. 0 .,._ de Rosita Pm 9:00 B tD (I) Q:i m T'ho Rlckfoul f'lln "The Reincarnation of An1ie" Elayne Heilveil 1uests as An1ie. a bookkeeper who hires Rockford to find her miuin1 brother-• stock broker who is also bein1 souaht i Federal 11ents. Tiie Untouchables <a Cl)> mm uc rrld•, tvil: (C) (2hr) "Jenny" (dra) '70 -Marlo Thomas, Alan Alda, Vincent Gardenia. A youn1 filmmaker mar· ries 1 pre1n1nt 1lri in order to avoid the draft, then really falls 10 love with the youn1 woman I The Bold On11 Mtvil: (C) (211r) "'Ttnd« 11 the (ht" (dra) '62 -Jennifer Jonu, Jason Robards. Joan Fontaine. fil) W1shl1rton Wtek In Rm .. .... ,.15 SATURDAY DECEMBER 6 '. ~ ( ' , : "' I , ~ I ' Qu1rda" (1dv) 'SS-R1ymond Mas· '.!!· Robert Stephens .. m Movie: ''Tiit llact l11l1ht" (adv) 'S4 -Alan udd, P1tncia Medina. Ptter Cushin&. ell) Mister Rorel"I' ~allboftlood 9:00 D QJ 00 ®J m Laid ot th• Lost O Movie: (C) "Apadlt Womait" (wes) 'SS -Joan Taylor, Lloyd 5:00 Sllnrbt Stmtsfff Bndaes. !~""'" 6:30 I SunriM Semuttf (Qt; ) (}) Adventurei ol Qn. TV I Ql11100M I can 'roperty Ma1t11emtllt I Country Muak Lat's hp C.mi1a>ltnd11 7:00 II New ApproKhtl to Hlcll Sdlool 9:30 rm CV (j) ScoobJ Doo IMmlq @Cl)@?;) Run, Jot, R1111 CJ.@?;) £mct1tflCJ + 4 lain It to Buvtr (]) Slnt. Claus Lint ,,. (~ Ci)) (}) a> Groovle Qool· radt (21!!} les 1<9CIJ)(])Hona Kona Pllootr I Words·A·Poppirt' Withlt : Seume Street Stslmt Street 10:00 @CV Ci) Shuam/lala Hour 7:30 @CD Buas 8un111/Road-• @ 00 ®J m Planet or lh• runner ~· :.~ CIJ ®) m Josie & the Pu5-fS ~m~~ d)'tD NCAA footti.ll U <9 (j)) (I) Tom & Jar r r I Doubleheader 1st 1amt-Divis1on1I Gr1pe Apt Show Bowl 11me. Teams to be announoed. Youth & the Issues I!) NCAA 8alketbll1 Notre Dame \'S. Etmtntl_!l Nnn Texas Tech. @ 00 ~ m Waldo KJtty I Spanlsh Movie ''"wtt'" 10:30 ID oo QQ1 m wtttwtnd Couraceo11a C.t Movie: "Blatt of Noon'' (edv) Unit four • 47 -William Holden, Anne BHter. Tnit Adventurt Wilham Bendix, Sonny Tufts : Dtctric CompeftJ film feature Voice of Tokyo i The Rifleman U Cl) Shott lusters Movie: "One Toudl of Venus" el) ~ m 11n~ '•nthtr Crom) '48 -Ava Gardner. Robert f 1 of Man Walker, Dick Haymes. Eve Arden. (tlj Cl))(]) Lost Slut.er Movie M o v Tl : (C) "'The Quffn's : EJectric Compeny °"""l tc.ye •tlll"I rn "Dinny Kaye a LA>ok·ln tt the Metro- poOtan o.,_ra," to be rebtvad· cast on The CBS festival of Lively Arts for Youna People sertes Saturday (Dec. 6) at 5PM on CBS. In the "Look·ln" Kaye lntroduc.. audiences to the myrtad elements employed In an operatic production. Page 16 11:00 ~(I)~ far Out Spac.e N&rts ' (i) m The JeboAS 1u1n1: 11dow to ttlt South • Thia Is the NR : So1111dat11• "The Book of Chip· in" 11 :30 f) (ft) Cil CJ) fat Albert 0 @ Cl)®) @?;)SOI USA "Go Away Kid, You Bother Mt" The director of an orphan1ae entrusts 1 tr1velin1 medicine pitchman with the t1Sk of takln1 a youn1 orphan to his new foster parents. (j) Movie: "'The une Ttu11" (wes) 'S9 -Grant Willi1ms. A I I I /,' •• (I (I • J 12:00 e cm mm cas s,orts $pldK· Ulir "Love Doubles" A 2-hour Prt· senlalion futurin1 Chris Evert 1nd Jimmy Connors vs. Billy Jean Kina ind Marty Raissen in a doubles tennis match. Pat S11mmer11I and Tony Trtbert are the commentators. live, from Caeu(s Palece in Lis Vacas. 8 1rep Sports World Movie: (C) "ladlash" (wes) '56 -Richard Widmark. Donna Reed. I Combo Auction Ad Ub !!J llue M1rtltt (.i) Movte: (C) "81'1 tn tM un" (drt) -Erin O'Brien, Efrem Zimb1llst. I Chlllet M•thtff Rulidadn Rolle.r G.lmn Saturday Matlnff 12:30 Mr. Clllps Movie: (C) "It C.rnt FrGm a. neaUI the Sea" (sci fi) ·55 -faith Domerl\le, Ian Keith. DAILY PILOT, 1V WEEK. NOVEMBER 30, 1976 6)Threea.tc• ., 8'ltl ,~ .. Utt News 1:00 e Mowtt: ..,.,., °""' (mus) '31 -Eddie Cantor. Gtof&t Rift. Cl) Mt¥tt: '"PrlllCesa tf ttM Niie" (dra) 'S4 -Debra P1ret, Jafftty Hunter. 0 (Qi CJ)) CJ) a) NCAA footitilU Dotl~r 2nd 11me -Teus IA& .. ec· Natltul Edltlotl Sal , '19dttrta l:JO MoYtt: (C) "'Tiit Marudm" (•es) ·ss -Dan Duryea, Jeff Rich· erds. KMn1n Wynn. I fim's:..1ptur1 In tilt Opet 2:00 Chltdttft's f'll• fet- al Ho infonn1tion w11 1v1il1ble from 1he networtl 11 our press time. t10) Thia Wt•• In lt1t NFL a Soul Trat111 (i) Conetnt \ l•ICIAC , TM Hlcfl Cost of ti: Ill (R) l u.s. Nav, 2:30 Aarlcalture USA '1ha Rodeo" MovM: ..,,._ Crab!,. Wiiks AMoea Us" (hor) 'S6-Jeff Morrow. (])Comblt l ~!:,~wttt Aarlcaltu,. USA 3:00 Litt .. Ult Molllc:li.s Nfl ea ... of Ute WMll Taru11 Tllutte 0 Mmt: (C) "Muthty at fttt Slierp" (wes) '65-Broderick Crtw· ford. Movie: (C) "This Savlp Liner' (adv) '68-Barry Sullivan, Georce C. Scott, Glen Cor'bett, K.thryn Ha . Outtr Umlts lilJll Chapemil Cl) Vo~ of A(tladtura Country P'lace : Nudt•t '""' He1rtnc1 • C1ttucolend11 • Saturday M1tinff 3:30 Dudy'1 Trtthouse · · Saturday Movie: .. lttdy l.oMn'' (com) 'SO -The Bowery Boys. @ (6) Movk: (C) "'Cuna of Daft· nus" (dre) -David Niven, Leslie Caron. m fanf1nta r11coe 4:00 II Mtdb "lupus-The Wolf in Dis· aulse" A profile of Toni !<.ye -a dancer on the Carol Burnett Show. and Mrs. Edward G. Robinson-wife of the late actor ind artist. who both have 1 battllnr dise•u called "lupus." Fifty thousand Americans hive bean dllanosed IS h1vina the dread disene end medical nperts btlitvt IS m1ny IS a quarter of 1 million others in this country may also have it. CJ) Sports Wltfl 8trtU 0 Movie: "That Thrtt" (dra) '36 -Joel McCrea, Merle Oberon, Wal· ter Brenn1n. I Rims football AdJ01t Mlssltt1: lmposslbtt It lites A Thief Huaft ao, Sflow Portw W11oaer Show Boot But "All the Stranae Hours," by Loren Eisley. I CJJ> m Speed ha1 fu1btt ~r VoJc. tf Acrkuttun 4:30 News .. •ktn 5'ttd a.ca lhvtricl 1 ........... .... CalHM1llil ... ,.. £~M.tWCR,lt 5:0011 ~CJ) Cl)~ D11ay i..,e .t UM °"'9 Th• WOl1d·famou1 com.dian Intro duccs children to the mJtlld tech· nieal and artistic ti.menta called upon to produce an opera. Guttt stamnc Oft the specl11 ate Btverly Siiis and Robert Merrill, Judith 81t-I'"· Adrl•n• Mallpontt, Cf\artes An· thony and many others from the 1Mtty:1g;; ~~pit Uttlt btcaJa (Qj (j)) ti!) Ulldt Cree's llcd Wild Wild Wttt News Movie: (2hr) "'The flrtttJa& St .. bea" (dra) '44 -John W•yne, Susan HayWard. Dennis O'Knfe. I Ntrftt GllltfJ ,.,. Corun ,., ~ th• Cou1try ~lent Movie "The Unhol~ Thr1t'' 25) Lon Chaney stars. 5:30 News I Ad4'11U ~·"' ~~ A•trlc111 &:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 laniatancl 9 Nuhwth Musk m lJtttt Raab Hour . I , • ~ • ' I • I ' Hil1Jl~ ..... · mm""" 111 latttn Llltof tM Wiid • Maverld lronaidt Star Trek Lltln Muabls Cil NatJonll Oto1r1phlc Hff Hlw I (I)) Amtriall Ufestyte Willy's Wtrbhop mu <a CIJ> m " ... MIC News C.nftrttce S.11my l CompallJ Jot l Soas CI) '•P Goa tflt Ceufttty : The OpH Miid BudeMuiQJ . fhl f'Mture MJ Uttte Maralt C.adld C.8Mra .....,.. Oat · I 16c!A i M1111a A four-charac· ter play depictinr tht lift of Bltek American woman from slavery to the praent day, and starrinr Paul· Ina Myers in all four n>lts. ~§lct.{f~n Joha117 Mtthll la tM 111 R '-s M1this Is hem for this hour-lone musical trip throuah the Can1dl1n Rockies, and his spe· cl11 cuests are Karen V•l•ntine, The Co111reaation slncinr rroup, and N1tional Rodeo Ch1mplon Lany Ma· han. i The Com1.,nclen . Spece· 1919 ~~~ Lawr111ce Welk Show Ad1111·1Z rn aa..nca News : flrlnc Une Htt Haw Dt. J1aen lav•aJofl Hour Wild World of Aalmala On Mala' Sate• Test I t..w MericH-... m c... .. .... m lO:GO 8@ CD CJJ c.ttt .. ,.. a.. n.,. ..... n..,. idle tonne auuts. a.-oo II Ii! CJ) (() n.. """'--No NYPO stOf)lint was nailablt from the (Qj Ci)) Cl) El) II a t t H e I • networt at ou~ tirnt. "Think Murder'' Matt Helm's OW11 a a Cl) m EMratllCJ! "On lift is ht dan1tr Whtn h• invml· Clmtr1" S(iuad 51 is chosen ts the 11tes the "ski accident" death of subject of a ·TV docvipentary, and 1 youn1 resurch Kltntlst. Cart th• cameraman Is not too impressed Betz. Diana Ewina. Joanna 81rnu, with th• 1ssl1nment until ht be&lns Whit Blswl ind Jontthan Lippe to film the paramedics as they cope auesl with 1 number of difficult emeraen· O MM: "'" Ca•'t Clleat aa cies. Paula Huahes and Peter Palm· RHest Mn" (com) '39 -W.C. er auest. fields. Edaar e.raen and Ch1t11t ~ u.n a•• McCarthy lJ~~(I)El)Sat1rd1J 1::s~ud """' ""1i ""'"' Cntfl ....... CMlat fJ Millea $ Mftlo: (C) (Ztw) ... ._ Tiie Umudl1Mu la I the Sewn Hoedl" (com) '64 leftu• fil• "All These Wo· -Frenk Sinatra, Dean Mutin, Stm· men" i Davls Jr. m Lou C.nto• Shew Co•bo Auctlen (90) 10:30 Ci) T..., 1t Aqua C.lltatt m NWAY'S WITTY ON fl) Studio 22/Qulz n .. *All NEW HE£ HAW 11:00 II m D 0 Cl) m ..... m HM Haw Conway Twitty sinas 9 IK\A lai&W Utl.A vs. Soulh· ·Tollin' in My Sweet B1by's Arms," em Illinois. and "Toudl tft• Hand." Susan Raye I ~lilu slnp "Desper.do," ud Buck Owens ( (()) (]) NtwS and the Buckaroos sina ''Weekend : "TM f1chti11 Su...,,. Daddy," and "lrs BHn A Lona ( fl) '44 -John Wayne, Sus.an Hay. Tlme." ward, Dennis O'Kttft. m I 1Pi¢f.1Hutl111 tu '8r) l'llbter CJ .. N fllrlstlllaa aredt (90) ~The P.T.L Club fl) SP1nlaJI Movtt Oo11 Ada•.-Smft Tat m 8rut Performances ''Br ah ms Club Symphony Number 4" (R) • C111ema 34 I Super Show • Mov\t aassla J.!plnese llt11u111 Proarams · Roel C.ftCtrt 1:30 ().l) (I) Cl) Doc Medical PrlC· 11:15 Movte: ..... " lellt for Luthe(' tice becomes a perfect joy for Doc (wes) '60 -Audit Murphy. Boaert when his son, Chuck, hanas i°".,tk lwe sterlo.s out his shinale with his lather. ( Ci)) Sdtia flct*9 Theatre Pop hes tlle Coulltry ll:Ml Fnulous SZ! (C) ....._.,.. .... 9:00 @(I) Cl) Mary T,S.r Mtott (wes) '65 -J1mes Stew11t, Glen Trapped, hooked end reeled Corbett, Rosemuy Forsyth, Dou& in, Lou realizes he's been "HAD" McClure, Pat Wayne. when Sue Ann finally maneuvers Q fit Ci) W•ktld him to her apartment for a romantic Cl) lirtvlt: "Invasion USA" (dra) dinner. '53 -Gerald Mohr. Peaie Castla. 0 fl} Ci) m NBC Saturday Mov· 0 Movie: (C) "Home fro.1 the It: (t) (2ilr) "Sllowdowlt" (R) (wes) Hiit" (dra) '60 -Robert Mitchum, '72 -Rock Hudson, Dean Mutin, Geor1e Peppud, EJeanor Parker. Susan Clark, Donald Moffat, John 6 Fii Mcllam, Jeckson Kane. In New Mex· • I IHclAL I Cystic f'UHosis TV lco durinf the late 1880s. 1 treln Continues to 5:30AM. Host robber clouble·crosses his partners is Char11e Tuna of KllS radio, 1nd after a job. kills two of them and he's joined by KHJ's Machine Gun escapes 'llrilh the money from the Kelly, KTTV's Ben Hunter, Stephanie holdup. When the sheriff takes his Edwerds, Sally "Hobo Kelly" Baker, posse in pursuit of the 1an1, he KHJ's Tommy Hawkins and Suunne learns his childhood friend is the Childs. All proceeds will 10 to the outlaw beina hunted by both the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation to help l!_nf members and the posse. children with lunf dlseasei. U USC 119'etbllt The Vanderbilt I Ironside Invitational Tournament. : Evet1l111 at S,111,M"' 0 (QI (])) (]) 'I) S. W. A. T. 1Z:30 Movie: .. Amss die Pldflc" "Murder by Fire" Hondo and his (dra) '42 -Humphrey Bo11rt, Mary team 10 1fter a 1an1 of arsonist Astor, Sydney Greenstreet. killers who pose as firemen, I C.111bo Auctioft evacuate posh homes, open fire on Waters Fa•ifJ police and firemen, and escape 1:00 • At 0.. W'ltll ••• "Howard Fut" with • fortune in jewels. paintin&s Roel Cottcitrt and antiques. Peter Breck ruests. All-Nlftrt Show: "Tobof tM I Cil loxl111 From the Ofplpk rut. ,food Arrow," "'Tiit .... Ewnlnf 1t SympltoltJ ster Mah(' Premier Alm Q) Movie: "Riden of Ye111u.ce" 9:30 ()1J 00 Cl) Bob Ntwh1rt Show (wes) '53 -Richard Conte. Huah Bob and his medical cohorts aet the O'Brian. "tell it like It is'" treatment from (j7} (3) Movie: "Des.Ire Uttder tlle his sister, lnquirinf news reporter trllll" (dra) '58 -Sophia Loren, EJlen Hartley, when she's elven the Anthony Pertins, Burt Ives. 1ssi1nment to ~e what mikes a 2:30 II Movie: (C) "Twra llJ [very. bundl of doctors tick. tlllat' (mus) '49 -Din Dailey, (tc;) Movie: (C) (90) "O.liwr Ua Anne Baxter. mm EvU" (dra) '73 -Geor1e Ken 4:20 II llevit: "lll(lltlnart" (mp) nedy. -Edwud G. Robinson. DAIL V PILOT. TV WEEK. NOVEMBER 30, t975 DA YID HARTMAN: 'MORNING HOST . When David Hartman, host of ABC's n.-lntorm.tlona,_,,rog,.m, Good Mom1n1. America, araduated from Duke University as an honor student in economics, his parents didn't know If they had raised • bu.Inns executive, • professional baseball player, an Afr Force officer, or a musician. Why7 Because Hartman had already demonstrated his capacity for success In all of these fields. As a ntsult of his Impressive ac.dtmlc record, Hartman was onered po11tions with 32 meJor U.S. firms. Hartman, who maintains an athletic 6'5". 200-pound flaure, turned down professional baseball contracts following his ar•duation from Ml Hermon Prepa,.tory School, where he had "rntd seven letters for sport&. Ht keeps in trim by, among other things, wortdna out each sptlnc with the S.n Francisco Grants. At Duke Universlty, Hartman not only exc.iled in the academic arena, he also distin- guished himself In the University's AFROTC progrem as the cadet commander, which lad to a commission as a 2nd Lieutenant in the Air Force where he served 1n the computer program. A career as a musician also beckoned to young Hartman, since he had already mastered the vlolin, uxophone and clarinet. He was also active as • student conductor of Duke's choral groups. However, it was the lure of the stage that captured the attention of the multi· talented Hartmen. following his discharae from the Air Force. he enrolled In the American Academy of Dramatic Arb In New York, and his now well·known career as an actor was launched. followln11 a serin of roles In off-Broadway musicals, summer stock and as a Broadway staae manager, Hartman toured with the Harry Btlafonte Singers. He then joined the national company of "My Fair lady," before beinll signed tor the role of Rudolph In the onainal Broadway cast of "Hello, Oollyt" He had an extended run with that hit musical. In additlon, he appeared In numerous other productions, both 1n New York and on the road. Harttn.n became known to television audiences through his regular appearances on the long·running western, ''The Vlr&lnlan." later, he starred In two dram•tlc series, "The Bold Onff," In which he played a doctor, and "Lucas Tanner," in which he portrayed a warm, sensitive teacher. He also st.erred in a Bing Crosby Christmu show. Amona his motion pictures credits ;)fe two films seen on the ABC Television Network: "The Feminist and the Fuzz," a comedy, and "You'll Never See Mt Again," e suspense thriller. He demonstrated hrs verntllity and wide range of Interests In March, 1974, when he W8s host. narrator and executive producer of "David Hartman: Birth and Babies." This acclaimed documentary, in which he personalized the experience of the expectant parents and reduced to easily under$tood terms the complicated medi~al procedure, presented the first network television view of an actual birth. Hartman lives in Los Angeles with hrs wife, the former Maureen Downey, and their four-month-old son, Sean. Page 17 Robert Young takes it one day at a time. 'Tm not one to drag things out of the past. Today it's Dr. Welby. That's demanding enough and I give it my 100 percent," said America's foremost television doctor when asked to com · ment on the success his se· ries is enjoying in its seventh year. ("Marcus Welby. M.D." is seen Tuesdays, at 1 OPM on ABC.) "It could be," he cont in· ued, "that people may be get· t ing tired and bored of a neg· ative. downbeat look at life. We've been accused of not stressing realism in our sto- ries. I prefer to call them up· lifting stories. To do a story for shock value alone-that's easy. I'd prefer to be associ· ated with something that en· deavors to encourage rat her than discourage. People still kid me about 'Father Knows Best ' 'Too idealistic.' they say, 'no family could ever be like that.' I simply say: 'Of course not, but wouldn't it be nice if such a family ex- isted.' " Young paused for a moment, "I'm not out to cure the ills of the world nor am I on a crusade to upgrade soci- ety," he said. ''But I believe people respond to encourage· ment." Young confides that he has a gread deal of fun just living day-to-day in his chosen profession since he left his job as a bank teller 48 years ago. "Of course," he says, "there are plans we will try to work on during our hiatus. Contractually, there are some television movie projects on the drawing board in association with my Bobetty Productions (named after Bob and his wife, Bet· ty). I would like that name one day to be associated with a certain type of production. Call them 'inspiration' sto- ries--even though it sounds saccharine-but the fact that they will be taken from true life will refute such labels. There are great human dra- mas to be told. Walt Disney did a pretty fairJ"ob of telling such stories. I' like to pro- duce stories that I enjoy and hopefully that other people P•ce 18 will enjoy as well." • • • Actor Albert Paulsen. who plays the hospital adminis- strator on NBC's ''Doctors Hospital" (Wednesdays, 9 PM), has something that few doctors admit exist - a cure for the common cold. Paul- sen says he once had a cold for seven days and couldn't rid himself of 1t. ''I took vita- min C, drank liquids, got a lot of bed rest. all the things that he lp combat colds, but nothing worked. "Then a friend of mine gave me a re- ligious pamphlet all about cures for illnesses. I'm not a religious man and neither is my friend. But I read the pamphlet and it made sense." Paulsen doesn't remember who wrote the pamphlet, only that the writer was a physi- cian and a clergyman. How- DAIL V PILOT. TV WEEK, NOVEMBER 30, 1975 TV 1J~r Evening Movies ... • ""t 6;(11) 7:JO t;OO 7:30 a:oo V;OO 1:30 8:30 7:30 1:00 7:30 a.-oo V;OO SUNDAY, HDV£MIUt JO 5 CC> "TIM O.~ lur .. u'' (•dv) ·72 -uurence Lucktnblll, Joanna F'ettet, Celeste Holm. 9 (C) "Chanp of Habit" (dra) '69 -Elvis PrHley, Mary T)ller Moore. Barba,. McNalr. 1 (29 I) l CC) "The uucfllnc .-.,,Iceman'" (dra) "73 -Welter Mat tha u, Bruce Dem, Lou Gouett, Al~tt P'aulHn, Anthony Zerbe. MONDAY, DECEMICR l t •o..tty Rid .. A&aln"' (was) '39 -Jamu Slewart. Marlene Oletrtch 5 fC} "Or. Terrof's House of HoN"Ors" Chor') '65 -P.ter Cushln1. 3 1-Yfhet [var Happened to lab)' Jane .. (susp) '62 -Batte Oavls, Joa" Crawford. 4 Zl 6 (C) "luttarfllH Are fr••" (com) (R) '73 -Goldl• Hawn, Ed· ward Alben. Eiieen Heck.en, MIChHI GIHer. 10 (C) "Do Not Olstu~" (com) '65 -Doris 01y, Roc:I Taylor. TUESDAY, DCC[M8ER 2 I (C) "Jullus CHur'' (dra) '69 -Charlton Hnton, Juon Robard•, John Glel1ud. 5 CC> "Hound of the 8asken1lll••" (mys) '59 -Peter Cu•hln&. Chris-topher Lee WEDNESDAY, DECEM•ER l 9 (C) "Siik Stocltlnc-" (mus) '59 -Fred A~alra. Cyd Charin•, Jania Pal1a. 5 .. , .. Wife" (dra) •57 -Joan Collln1. Richard Burton. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4 t "~at t. Mike" (com) '52 -Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn. Aldo Ray. 5 (C) .. Of Love t. O..lre" (dre) '63 -Merta Oberon. Steve Cochran. Curt Juraens. f'RIOAY, DECEMBER 5 9 (C) "Voyap lo the lottom of th• Se•" (sci.fl) '61 -Walter Pid1ao". Joan Fontaine. Z 11 3 (C) "Toral Tora! Tora!" (dra) '70 -Jason Robards, J1mn Whit· more, Jo1eph Cotton, Martin Balsam. I (29 I) l (C) "Jenny" Crom) '70 -Marlo Thomn, Al1n Alda. ever, the information that SATURDAY. DECDHER, Caught his eye Was "colds 9:00 4 2S 6 (C) "Showdown" (R) (wes) '72 -Rock Hudson, Dun M.,tln. t d b d ft Susan Clark, Donald Moffat. are no cause Y ra S Or 9:30 10 (C) "0.llver Us from £vii" (dra) '73 -Gaorp Kennady. p 0 0 r diets 0 r inc I em en t 10:00 t "You Can't en.at an Honest Man" (com) '39 -w. c. F1elds, Edaar weather, but by worry. To 1 _____ B_•_r1_•n_&_c_h_•_r1_1•_M_cc_•_rt_h_Y·------------- cure a cold, one must usually complete some unfinished work or business.'• Paulsen thought about the possibility and sure enough there was a task he had been putting off. He compfeted it, went to bed, and the next morning. the cold was gone. * * * Theresa Merritt, who stars as Mama, and Helen Martin who plays her best friend in the ABC Television Network's "That's My Mama,'' are even closer friends off-screen. "The first time we worked to- gether was when we toured Europe in James Baldwin's 'Amen Corner,' and had such a good time. Then we per- formed together in the tele- vision production, 'J.T.,' so this is a most happy reu- nion," said Miss Merritt. Seen as laura in the series, Miss Martin, discovered by Orson Welles, made her Broadway debut in "Native Son" with Canada Lee. "That's My Mama," starring Clifton Davis, M iss Merritt and Theodore Wilson, airs on Wednesdays at 8PM. * * * TV !PORT! H!tJ!ltltJ/IT! SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 30 lO:OOAM U QtJ (]) (j) Pro Football San Francisco vs. PhiladeJphia. 0@ (j) Pro Football Pittsburgh vs. New York. 12:00 NFL G•me of the Week 12:30 Pro Football San Diego at Denver. 1:00 (i7} (])Cl) Pro Football Atlanta vs. Oakland. 1:00 UCLA Basketball Trojans vs. Indiana . 3:00 USC Football use vs. UCLA. 3:30 Celebrity Tennis 4.-00 (9 (i)) (3) College Football '75 5:00 JOJln Mc~y Show • MONDAY, DECEMBER 1 6:00 0 (Qt ())) (1) Monday Night football New England Patriots vs Miami Dolphins. 9:00 O KABC Speci•I "Ten Feet in the Air" A look at the "city game" of basketball and how it provides a way out of the ghetto for ~ung blacks. 10:00 U USC BHketball USC vs. St. Mary. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2 6:00 0 L•kers Basketball Lakers vs. Washington. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3 &:00 O Lakel'1 Basketball Lakers vs. Detroit. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5 8:00 0 USC Basketball The Vanderbilt Invitational Tournament. 10:00 0 UCLA Basketball UCLA vs. San Jose State. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6 lO:OOAM 0 (~Cl)) Ci) NCAA Football A Divisional Bowl game. Teams to be announced 12:00 (flJ (I) Ci) CBS Sports Spectacular 'fep _Sports Worid 1:00 3:00 4:00 9:00 11:00 (~(I)) (])NCAA Footb•ll Texas A&M vs. Arkansas. NFL Game of the Week Rems Football Action USC BHketball The Vanderbilt Invitational Tournament UCLA Basketball UCLA vs. Southern llhnols. KOCE-TV ORANGE COUNTY TELEVISION THIS WEEK ON CHANNEL 50 SATURDAY: fltOmllD M (P.M.) J:OOQM ................ ... •:JO lwdt: Thi Quest for P1non1I Munln1 ':OOC•••-~ 7:00 WrlUl'I Ftr A .... 1:00 (_.. M .,......, (60 min) ('8$) !t:OO ......... ,.....,. Thi Nofori. ous Wom1n: "Success" (60 min) CP8S) 10:00 Tiit ,,... be UAcl'OSS the Fron· tiert" (60 min) (PBS) SUNDAY: NOVDdO IOlll (PJL) J:OO a... """' ,.... '1rt· lawny of the 'Wells' " (PBS) no a.. n.tn ''Trtlawny of th• 'Willa' .. (2hr) 5:JO c.nt.nlll rr: ........ (60 min) (KVI ':JO.......... .. . , .... -.t Hullt 7:00 Tiit Alattt tf Ma• ''World With· In World" (60 min) (PBS) 1:00 ~IJ CIJHtrail IDHI (KOC() l:JO lteaalltk ...... (PBS) "Turner 11" • 9:00 SM..t_. (&0 min) (PBS) ''Htrtlle and Clllck" 10:00 flrtq U.. (60 min) (PBS) lllOflMY: DUOllO lit (P JI.) 10:00 l....sdlMI Pfttmull• (90 min) 11 :JO E1edltc ea.,.., 12:00 s.u .. SttMt 1:001..scMel Prerre••lll Z:OO n. A.-tf Mu (60 min) (PBS) J:OO.... .... "lift Goes to t)e Movies'' by David Scherman J:JOMW. ..... ~ 4:00 s.u .. Sb'ltt 5:00 Eecb1c .,.., 5:JO Yllt Allot (PBS) 6:00 QM lrtWtll H4 .,.., ...... l :JO Wrtlllla f« A a .... 7:00 Sardi: Tht Quest for P1non1I Mt1nin1 7:il Fec:n: On• C...tJ (KOCE) 1:00 Wtftd '1111 (PBS) l :JO w .... AIMt (PBS) 9:00 Celtnlpenry Cllhrlll lasua (KOC() !t:JO Tiie DftW Salll..t ~ (2 hrs) TUESDAY: D(Cf.Ml(I %M (P.M.) 10:0011-ScMel Prerrt••ltts ll:JO OedrlC c..,.., 1Z.1IO .......... . 1:001 ....... ,...,...... 2:00 ..... Clwllullli 2:lOW ........ Wttt 19 lmew (PBS) . l:OO , ....... ,...... (KOC() J:JOM..._ ..... ~ 4:00 s..a .. .... 5:00 Oedric .,.., 5:30 Canaec11;::._<PBS) 1:00 ...... ':JOc..-~ 7:00 Claalc n-trt ,,.... ''Th• ThtM Sisters" (P8S) 7:JO PttHe F1n1•: Mtdicllly Speek· inr (KOC() l :JO llltlrutieMI AMlutlN Fatfftl (PBS) !t:OO Tiit --...... "Knowfed11 °' c.rtflntf' (60 min) (PBS) 10:00 lftlt ,...._1tt1 (80 min) (PBS) WOMJOAY: DECOllO W (P .Ill.) IHI,......,,,.,. • ..., (90 min) ll:JO Date c.., • ., l2:00S..•Sb..t 1:00 l...sdeel Pncra••lu !.1IO lt-.ulk l1hll1i ''f 11mtt II" (P.1$) 2:JO......., ....... (PBS) "Dttr Oanct end Dytlnt' J;oow .... (PBS>. J:JOll .............. .... 4:00S..•serttt S.1IO Dedrtc c.., • .., 5:JOYlla Mtcrt (PBS) 1:00 QM Cf9d ... .,..,...,.... l:JO Wrftlac fw A ..... ' 7:00 s..tdl: The Quut Fot Ptl'10flll Munlnr 7:JO S.ucac (KOCE) 1:00 ......,.,_. ThNtrt Tht Notori· ous Woman: "Conftict" (60 min) (PBS) !t:OO la Ptrferaaac:e At Wiit r,.., "Dionne Wanridtt" (60 min) (PBS) 10:00 Tiit Oru••r (PBS) THURSDAY: D(CEllllO 4111 (P.M.) 10:00 ........ Precra-llr U:JO Oedltc ea.,.., 12:00Stsa ....... 1:00 l•·ScMel Pncra••MI 2:00 [Miiie At ,,.,._, (60 min) (PBS) J:OO Fecn: Or.111• C..aty (KOCE) J:JOllllW ........... ~ 4:CJIS.U• ..... 5:00 Otdrit ea.,..., 5:30 Cana1ultlldas (PBS) 5:00 CallfenUI Mruf (PBS) 5:10 C..S.INf &,Irina 7:00 ea.ta•l**IJ CaHfentll llSMS "Pov1rty-P1rt I" (KOCE) 7:JO Tiit On911 ........ (KOC() 1:00 leM hit /'All th• Stranr• Hours'' by Loren Elsetey (PBS) l :JO C1auic Tllettrt Prmew "The ThrM Sisters" (PBS) 9:00 a.ale Theatre '1he Thm1 Sis· • ters" (2 'h hrs.) (PBS) FRIDAY: DftbllER Set. (P.11.) 10:00 l.sdleel ,,.. ........ ll:JO Eledrtc ea.,.., 12:00 Sesl• SbMt (60 min) • 1:00 l...sdeel Precra••las (60 min) 2:00 Callte•Pl'llJ CalN.,..11 Ima (KOCE) · ?:JO a.ISie llrllbt PmilW (PBS) J:OOllclhleM1,.._ • J:JO Mi,ter .... ,. Ntta11'*'*4 4:00 s.u.. Slrtet 5:00 Oedric ea...., 5:JO VIII Allot (PBS) 1:00 QM crwa aM Dtu•p•ttlt ':JO••-• (PBS) • 7:00 S..rdl: The Quest for Personal Munlnr · 7:JO ¥....., ,... ... (KOC[) 1:00 WalltqtH W..t 19 R.._ (PBS) l :JO Wal SbMt .... (PBS) 9:00 ..,., ~ (PBS) 10:00 ANtlelt Wtettw (PBS) 10:JO AIWIWI (KOCE) SATURDAY: DECDllER Mii (P .111.) J:OO Qlld Crwtll •-' Dtuel.,..llt •:JO S..rdt: The Quest for Ptrson•I Mtanln1 ':OOC..S...~ 7:00 WrttMc fw A..._ . 'l:IO~·M .,....., (60 Min) • (PIS)" . t:Go....,,... Tlltltrl Tht Notort· ous Wom1t1: "Conflict" (60 min) (PBS) 10:001• ....... OAIL Y P1LOT, TV WEEK. NOVEMBER-30, 1975 STEVE BEU.: 'GOOD MORNING AMERICA' A9C '"""9,...... How <A¥•t=. s.e ..... wll ~ ......... C.-...,. • "'Goo4 M.._ " Ae ........,., llM _......... ... wtJ _, .. propw, MOtldaJI .. 7A~ •AM:. ABC News White House Correspondent Steve Bell and ABC Nt"Ws Correspondent Margaret Osmer will co-anchor the "BC News _segments for Good Morning America. the new informative and entertaining program Monday-Friday. at 7AM on ABC. The new Bell/Osmer anchor team will report daily from Washington, D .C., immediately following the hour aod'tbe half-hour points in the two- hour live telecast. . Bell, a seasoned correspondent. has handled a variety of assign- ments for ABC News since joining the neework as a Radio News Correspondent in New York in 1967. He began filing reports tor radio and television in J 970, as a combat correspondent with· the ABC News Saigon Bureau, frequently finding himself in lhe thick of the action throughout Southeast Asia. In April, 1970, following an ~ncounter with the Viet Cong. Bell and his crew were captured and held prisoner in Cambodia tor nearly an hour at gunpoint. Despite the danger, Bell turned on his tape recorder and 1aj)Cd a report or the incident. Bc!ll also spent seven weeks in China in 1973, where he produced a documentary, "The People of People's China," with ABC News Diplo·matic Correspondent Ted Koppel, and their reports fr6m China on the "ABC Even.ing News" were nominated for an Emmy Award. In ~974. Bell was named White House Cor· respondent, and in that capacity he reported extensively on the Watergate aft'air and the" development of the Ford ll'dministration. He has also reparted on various political campaigns and politicians. P~or to joining ABC News, Bell bad worked for WNEW Radio in New York City as a reeorter and newscaster .. He received his B.A. degree at Central College in Pella, Iowa. and holds an M .S. in journalism from Northwestern University where he won the Har- rington Award as the outstanding graduate student in broadcast · journalism in 1963. A native of Oskaloosa, Iowa. Bell served as an announcer and news reporter at KBOE Radio in his hometown and worked as a newscaster for WOI Rlldio and TV in Ames. Iowa. Jn 1961 , he joined WGN 1tadio and TV in Chicago u a news writer and re-porter. From 1962 to 1965, Bell was the chief news- caster of WOW Radio and TV in Omaha, Nd>raska, where be wrote, produced ancJ narrated· the documentary· series, ''The Out- siders," which was the regional winner and national finalist for lhe Emmy Awards in 1964. Bell is a member of the Washington Radio and Television Correspolfdents Association. the White House Cor- respondents Association. and the Hong Kong Foreign Correspon- dents Associa,tion. ,.,. 19 • • • SAVE : $4.26 « .. Five Top Women Of the Press Look At ''The Ford Style" I DAILY PILOT NOVEMBER 30, 1975 Test Yourself: How Well-Adjusted Is Your Personality? OltANQI COUNTY, CAUF'OMUA Johnny Mathis Talks About His Victory Over Fear and Drugs Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarene Smoong Is Dangerous to Your Heahh. ONWf-K"rlgs, 16 mt.-..· 1 .2 mg. nicotiMI: longs. f7 mg, ·11r," 1 .2 mt. nicotile, w. ps Ciglrldi FTC Ripon Afr. 76 • Them YOurself POil MMULYN McCOO of The Ftfth ~ Who are your dosest show-business friends?-K.B., Lynchburg, Va. • & a group. and also as individuals, we haven't got many. Our traveling leaves us very little time to make friends. And FOR MELANIE CRIFFITH Both you and your mother, Tippi H~ are lldr'esleS. Bow well do you pt along together?-N.H., Meclf~ Ore. • We're definitely good friends. And I t:hinJc it's becanse of the way I was raised. My mother never tried to nm my life ... she~s never interfered. We've always bad a great relationship. I suppose it's scmdhing not f!llerJ mother and daughter have ... but oun sure is nioel FOR FRANICIE VALLI I know you're &ieodly with Frank Sinatra. How does be n.te with yoaP-M.S.., Van Nuys, Calif. e As far as rm coocemed. for what Fn.n.kie's given the World, he can't do wroDj: When he walks out on that stage, rm in .. seventh heaven. I wish I knew why so IDMlY people want to put him down. Frank's helped so many peop1e. always without publicity. How could such a great performer have reached the point where the public delights in hearing negative things about him? It must be jealousy. FOR ANN-JIABCRET, daT of .. Tomtru/· Do you have any advice for pis who want to ride a motor· cycle but feel too dlicbo?-Cloria Ward, Mankato, Minn. • The only way to do something is to go ahead and do it. Most first-times are scary.~ plane trips. ski jumps ... but the second time around is great. 'The excitement 0£ that first bike ride will overcome your £ear of it. It's a terrific wal to travel ( l should mow. I have ten motorcycles) ; it s exh.ilaratiDg and worb oH tension. And it's a marvelous attentioo-getter. FOR ROl' SCHEIDER, nar of "/(IW6 .. You always seem to be in action &lms. Do you prefer them? -N.S~ Albany, N.Y. e Yes. fve bad good training for them. I grew up in a tough Mighborbood in Onmgeb!i{;· and found that box- ing was a good outlet for my · "ties. I made my stage debut in "Romeo and Juliet .. in 1961, and 111 tell you some- thing. Action thrillers are easy compared to Sbabspeare. rd much rather give a punch (or get one) than memortze a long speech from .. Hamlet.• FOR THE •ASK THEM YOUHSEU-EDITOR Why don't you ever write about Robert Redford? Alts al~ he won your popularity survey this yearl-B.P., Savannah, Ga. • Redford doesn't enjoy tallcing about himM"..lf. He feels bis movies should stand oo their own merit. Jim Spada is wri:-1 bis biography and told him that everyone be spoke to nothing but J>raise for Redford. Replied Redford: -rhat's because they re afraid some day someone will write a book about them, and the author will come to me for a quote ..... He can't understand why anyone should devote two yean to him as a book subiect, and be doubts the end result will be worth it He's self-deprecating and humble. An all-round athlete, he likes to sJci and play tennis and basketball. His wife. Lola, beads a group called Coo.sumer Action Now, and he' a involved in that, too. when we do have some houn to spare, we lae to spend it with those who are good buddies. They're the best. Since we became fa.mo~. we've found that new friend.ships tend to be superficial Quite often they result from your positiorr: U you're successfuJ, everyone wants to be your friend. lf yuu're not, they don't. FOR JEANE DIXON Do you believe in astroloey?-Dr. Finley, WyckotJ, N.J. e Of course Idol And I am thankful to the Lord of ill1 tht" stan for the guidance 1 have found in them. But the stars are only one factor in determining the course of our lives. Each of us has a free wi1L and so we use astrology best when we learn from it how to shape our own destiny under Divine Cu.idance. FOR SENATOR WILLIAM PROXMIRE (D.-Wii.) Does the stock market indicate the rul condition of busi- ness in this oountry?-A. Kravitz, New York, N.Y. • The stodc market is too erratic to depend on. It is one of the worst indicators of economic conditions. Forget it. Instead. look at these really indicative figures : Gross Na- tional Product, emplo~ent and unemployment, industrial productioo, prices (both wholesale and retail) and farm income. FOR BISHOP FULTON /. SHEEN Is todays permissive society responsible foe low religious int.erest and empty churches?-P.H., Asbury Park, N.J . e Let me answer this way: Do you think a bank robber would want to have the ftasblight of a policeman on his face as he was trying to break into a safe? Anyone who is guilty of adultery, imlnorality. dishonesty, graft and pride does not like to have the white glare of Divinity shining upon him and revealing his defects. FOR BARBARA CARRE~ actreu I just saw you in "'The Master Cun6ght.er." Where have you been all my life? -W .L, Austin, Texas e Well, J used to be a model. Would you believe how I got the role? Delores Taylor (the movie's executive pro- ducer and wife of Tom Laughlin, my co-star) was leafing throujth a magazine. She saw my picture, and that was it. They located me in Cannes, and J Bew baclc to Hollywood for a screen test. Before that, my onJy acting experience was as a Chiquita banana in a TV commercial. ~ber 30, tt75 liiawl(vJtttda(v The New1e>aper Magu.lne A ••Haftiee .. Dew CW~ lite. "9"'*"9 K. llMon, Cltall'lft•n ol the Soard ~ E4-'d ..... ,,,..,.,., llORTC>tt FMJtt(. Pi••'( at Md~ LEONAAD L DAVIDOW, Cbeltl99tt ltOllE.R'T D. CAANEY, Enc. V.P.-Auoc. P11bllaher 'ATRICIC II. UQKEY, V.P.·Ad Director MOAT PERSKY, V.P.·Edltor-in-Chlef Qen6d a. Wroe, Eutem Mgr.; fUch8rd D. c.rroff, "eynokk Dod8on, Managing Editor Aaaoc. Eui.rn Mgr.; Joe fraz9r, Jr.. IUc:Nrd V.adeti, Art Dlraclor Chl~o Mgr.; La•re-. M. f1nn, Detroit Mgr. Routyn Abrftaya, S.nlor Editor Peftdn-. ...,MM, won def La.a. and tuJw11rd, Marilyn HanMn, Food Editor Calif.; lteM D'A .... rndro, Maritetlng Mgr. Associate Editors: g.,i McGantty, ,,.,._ llwpfly, Promotion Director. Hat Landon and RCllM A. Thnlah Caryt Et., Merchandising. "'8USHER Ul.ATIO ... : ~ EWS, V.P.·Dlreclor; E.ltene Walpln, Art Ant; G~ &Mr, Picturea. Robert H. llantotl, Mgr. PU8USHU IUVICU: Contributing Editors: l.81TJ lk>f'U._.n, Robeft J. etvt.len, Mgr.;,.,,.. o. Baher, AoMtt Currwt, P.., J . Oppantlalrur, Busl""9 Manager,~..._., Promotion; W.. I rr. Headquarters 641 Lexington Ave .. N.Y., N.Y. 10022 "'ODUCTION: Rkhard MllJen, Dir.; e 1975 FAMILY WEEKLY, INC. All rlghla reserved. Roberta ColffM, Makeup. CompUetlby ,~ •.. -.... · , . . FralleM Spaaz Lelg•-.-., FAMILY WtDllY Contributing Editor . ' . ·\' . Five Leading \\Bshlngtoo New~"WDmen Take a Look at The Ford Style of Doing Things W hat as the atmosphere at Ford's White House? Have things changed au that much since the Nixoos? The Kco- ncdys? How are the parties? ls the White House really that open to n:portcn now? FAMILY WEEKLY went lo five top women writers, who have been White House watchers through mADy adminis- lrations, for their view ol the First fam- ily. What arc the most importaot or colorful changes you've seen? we asked. This is what they said : YMELDA DIXON Columnlst, Washington Star. Not long ago, I wu al Betty Ford's White House on the occasion of a state runner for Walter Scheel, the visiting president of West Germany. Mrs. Ford and her florist had pulled out all the stops. The big planters in the Great Hall were jammed with cauli- ftowen and grape- fruit and Boston lettuce, which wilted by 10 P.M. In the East Room, the mantels sprouted delphinium and aspar- agus arrangements tied with what looked like a tom pale blue sheet. Said one re- porter, "Jt would be aJI right in South- ampton or Jamaica or Grand Rapids-- but in the. White Houser' And a Con- gressional wife was overheard to say, "Let's face it, the only one with class was Jackie." I took exception to this. I said that was true only if your criterion for "class" was dc<:orating lhe White House for ele- gant entertainment. l pointed out that Lady Bird Johnson might not embody this type of "class" either, but abe will be remembered as long u the flowered parks she created around the country continue to beautify our land. I think probably the greatest change 4 • FAMILY WEEKLY. N-ber 30, tt75 I've seen under the Fords hu bec:o the party-time decorations. Their very first Christmas, the Forda retired the tndi- tionaJ Christmas decorations in favor of lots of trees and plants decorated with pb..id ribbons and ornaments with a patchwork quilt design. The Noel party for the preas featured two frce-ftowina bars and lavish bulf ets, and it weol on till all hours. It may not have been a .. Kennedy-type .. party, bot a lot of us appreciated it. VERA GLASER Columnist, Knight-Ridder Newspapers. The greatest change that 1 see around the White House is in political style. Jerry Ford's old-shoe politic.a) style is refreshing for a re- porter bruised by Nixon's hobnail boot. Or put an- other way, Ford's White House iJ like your friet>dly neigh- borhood drive-in. Not as efficient as Nixon's hostile for- tress, maybe, but it sure makes points with me. Shortly after Ford became President, I ask.cd him about 1976. Nixon would have played that one ''close to the vest" until the last minute, but Ford &aid can- didly he wu in the nee. Access to Ford's recently opened campaign office is easy, unlike 1972, when Nixon's receptionist uked for my l.D. Ford's relaxed political style includes bis outspoken, independent family. That means he's living dangerously. Take Jack Ford, who criticiz.cd Nixon when it could have hurt Jack's father, then Vice PrcsidcoL When Susan Ford reportedly said she dislikes reading, it caused a flap among the intclligcnts.ia. MOit recently. members.of the Ford family have com- mented frankly on abortion. premarital 5a. and the use of marijuana, and each ~mmcnt has triggered a national explo- sion. Compare that with Tricia's main- . President 8ftd lln. ford Mt the mood: Openne. on her part. ..... ~ -...ia·· on hie.. taining to the end that Nixon was hang- ing on to the Watergate tapes to "protect.. the office of the Presidency! Ford appcan more secretive than Nixon in only one area-religion. For the past seven yea.rs, Ford has b.eld weekly prayer sessions with three old friends from Congress. Now they meet in the Oval Offioc, usually oo Wednes- days. So private arc these mcetinga that "Ford'• White House •• Ilk• ycMM' frtendly neighborhood driYe-ln. Not a effident as Nixon's hos- tile tortresa, maybe, but It sure makes points with me." -Vera Gluer, Columnist they sever appear oo Ford's calendar. They were carefully kept out of print until I recently managed to pry the story loose. Nixon. by contrast, l\ckl splashy East Room services, featuring high~pow­ ercd clergy and musical talent, complete with media coverage. Another thing. Nixon was protected from personaJ coot.acts and daily chores by a "gaggle" of aides. Ford is a guy who picks up the phone and calls his tailor when be needs shirts. Old college friends and skiing bud<lies say Ford is acccuible, usually returning their calls within 48 hours. Ford bas been criticiud by members of both parties for oot "ig- niting.. the country as John Kennedy did, but I think: an easy-does-it attitude ......... to ...... ....,I_ s.... Ford ......... .omd .... White HOUM In blue June and • ..,.., pullover •••• At lat .. hfte White HcM.-chlldren who llCI -ff .... White .... la home~ .. -Helen Thom-. U.P.1. Buruu Chief may be what Watergate-weary Ameri- cans prefer for a while. HELEN THOMAS The fi~t woman manager of U.P.1.'s White House bureau. She ia cum1ntty writ- ing hM memoirs based on h« life es White House CC>fl9ap0ndent from the Kenn.ty era to the Ford Admtnlatratfoo. The Ford Administration is livelier and more open than its predecessor- but oot all that opco! It is lnle that Ford ' is more accessible f than . Nix on was (Ford has been av- eraging about two oeW5 conferences a month, plus per- , sonal interviews), but he stunned me recently when he laid down a new law excluding re- porters from covering social events, with the except.ion of state dinncn. Tradition- ally, these have been viewed as news- worthy happcninga. The President gives parties every week--Ui fact, several a week-He min- gles with hundreds of guests. I feel that when be gives a reception like the one he gave for 120 mayors or the party be gave for the American Society of News- paper Editors, we reportcn should be there. Anything could happen, and we should be there as witnesses. The Presi- dent has told me he doesn't lite .. the inhibiting presence of notebooks and microphones," but fd bate to sec us go back to the Kennedy era when Jackie once had us hiding behind potted plants. Other than on this point. the Presi- dent and Mrs. Ford arc more gracious in their hospitality than the Nix.om. The relaxed attitude is even reftccted in the attitude of the Secret Service and other White House assistants. But nowhere is it more obvious than among the Ford children. I have to smile·a.s I ace Susan Ford, 18, running around the White House in blue jeans and a jersey pull- ConJinued The tni inh team tojoin~no second string. When you're a Marine, you're a starter. And it's not because we're small. It's because we've got a rule: every man as good as the next. It's all Varsity, doing things right the fi rst time. !t's an attitude every Marine shows in his training, his job, his skills, his appearance and the pride he takes in wearing the uniform. Officer and.enlisted alike.That's how we work. The same goes for the way we play. It means competition. Tough competi - tion in sports like basketball, volleyball, bowling, tennis, golf, sottball, wrestling, boxing, judo, track and field, football and fencing. The Marine Corps sports program provides· for competition in varsity, interser- vice. national and international meets like the Pan-American games and the Olympics. And the program helps develop champions like Lieutenant Lloyd Keaser, the 1973 World Wrestling Champion at 149.5 pounds and the 1975 National Greco-Roman Champion. Re- member this: we're looking for a few good men. So if you've got what it takes to make our team, we guarantee you won't be a benchwarmer. Talk to your local recruiter, or call 800-423- 2600, toll free. In CaJifornia, 800-252-0241 . The Marines ----------------~---------------------- \\Bsldngton NeWS\\Omen ConJin~d over, taking piccureso with the rca.c of the White House photognpheB. Tricia and Julie Nix.on would never have let tbc press ace them dressed like that. Ac lut we have White House children who act as if the While House is home. BETTY BEALE Columnist for the Wethington Star and Field Newspaper Syndicate. ($oclaJlte Betty Beale caused a tizzy among her neighborl recentty when the P,..ldent and S.tty Ford ~ In for dlnM'-wlth Secret Service men, walkie talkies, ambu· lanc&-rescue trucks. uniformed policemen at the doors, the worka.) History is being made at the White House and Betty Ford is making it as the First Lady who dared to be hcnelf. For the first time in memory, we have a First Lady who doe.t not bow to po- 1 itical ex.pediency, presidential advis- ers aod people who write leuen to the editor. I recall when Betty Ford first showed her unwual independence by go- ing to Los Angeles to lobby for the Equal Rights Amendment for women. At that time she deplored being automatically linked with "women bra burners." Even so, I never really thought 1 would hear a First Lady t.alk io public ao frankly about family life in the White House. The truth ia, Betty Ford ii ad- dicted to telling the truth, and she will tell it whatever the consequences. To be this bod of woman requires a special kind of husband, and the President is just that--a man who lets each member of his family be an iodjvidual. Jerry Ford is also the kind of hua- . .. bud who COJO)'t Sood natural banter with hia wife, and evco belna playfully put dowo by her in public. Not long qo, when be got up to aped at a party for about 300 people at •'private club, Betty Jumped ahead o! him and grabbed the microphone u if abe were eoi.og to speak. >.. be watched. opc:o-«DOUthcd, she said. "Excuse me. did.n•t you know I wu &OlJll to make the~?" Then &he IAaugbed and aat down. Ford, reoover\aa quickly, grinned sheepishly and Wd, '1be way she's beco going lately, I really wu starting to take her seriously.'' >.. one who bu covered the White House through several administrations, the Finl Lady's frank and cllcrvesccnt penooality is like a fresh breeze. The fact that ahe answers frankly on any sub- ject and does oot run away from a ques- tion u put Finl Ladies did, makes her an exciting penoo to be around. There may not acem to be much sim- ilarity between a Betty Ford and a Jackie Kennedy, but I can think of one way they're similar. Jt took a Fi.est Lady with Jacqueline Kennedy'• confideocc to coo- "Betty Ford Is making It aa the Flf9t Udy who dared to be henelt."-Betty Beale, ColumtUt vert the stiff, white-tie atlain ol previous administrations into exhilarating gather- ings of relaxed people having a good time. Jackie replaced white tie and tails with tfiact tic and dinner jacket; she tossed out the huge formal U-sbapcd table, and instead placed guests at com- fonable round tables. President Nixon restored white tie garb and the big cumbersome U-sbapcd dinner table with the President and Pint Lady stiffly facing the bulk of the guests from their high.barked chairs. But DOW, J'm happy to say, the round tabb are back. TI"C Fords have come full circle, back to the relaxed style ol the K.c:noedy era. And Betty bas played a ma pa.rt io that cbaDp. CLARE CRAWFORD WUhington at.alt correspondent of PtK>pte rn.gazine and TV talk-show host Tbe moat tdrcshin~g.J.. <:a.a say about the White HjdK these days IS th.at lwdly any , except the Fords.. ~-the Ql~,....,.. alJ the ford chil- dten. lo days gone by, people w ere mon familiar with John-John, Caro- line, Lynda., Luci, Tricia and Julie than anyone wanted to be. Per- • haps the Ford White House reflects the country's atti- tude toward its Prcs.ident, an attitude of friendly restraint. Another area in which 1 have seen great change over the yean is in the at- titude toward the press. And the attitude of the press. Let me explain .... The media covers two White Houses. There's the West Side where the Presi- dent's Press Secretary deals with na- tiooal and international issues, and there's the East Side· where the First Lady's staff keeps the 1 press informed a.bout the social side of the First Family. As I see it. the Konnedys were great llt exploiting the social power. of the White House. So were the Johnsons. In fact., rve often thought that the Johnsom were the most suc.ccssful .. prof essjonal pcuanta" io memory. They scf\led cb.ili- ooo-queso under the Lincoln portrait and frogged to rock music until 3 A.M. The Nixooa weren't as elegant as the Kennedys or as friendly and folksy as the Johmons. But they were efficient. Tbey used Wh1te HOUie invitaliooa to pay off political debts and man.aaed to act more people in and out of the White House as gucsta than a1J tbe previous ad- miuistrations combi.aed.. The Ford Adminiltration bas 00& yet developed a distinctive entertainmau style. Mn.. Ford's ca.ocer opcntion grounded her for a time. but now she and the Pn:aideol stay on aod d.antt and mingle with their guests-quite the op- posite of the Nixom. While all this has been happening on lbe East Side of the White House. the pacic or foreign and domestic events bu bcicome more intense on the We.st Side. We've had the Bay of Pip, t.be Vietnam War. the Great Society, the Cambodian Bombing, Watergate, the Nixon Pardon. This has caused reporters. to become more intense. In the Kennedy years, the press was just another political weapon to be manipulated. In tbc Job.oson era, reporters were also manipulated, but they were also either loved or reviled . Uoder Nixoo, the media was ignored and scorned like the wolf Jt the door, until it blew down his house of sticks. Now, under Ford, reporters are regarded as a great force you have to be nice to, but which is probably going to misin- terpret what's happening. The Ford White House seems to think it's better to try to influence the press than to fol- low Nixon's policy of giving thcra as little information as possible. .. Might as well give them all the stuff we can" pretty much sums up the Ford attitude. Covering the President and hi.a f am- ily has gone from being almost a per- sonalized job when I fint went to the White House in the '60•s, to group jour- nalism and news-by-handout today. Per- sonalized journalism meant reporters were covering supposed f rieods. Group interviews and handouts mean no one really knows what's going on. It's an im- perfect media covering an imperfect · President for an imperf cct and fiNI frequcnUy disinterested electorate! "1JI S=:=·~ ~-~,"~ Try These Fresh Apple Pastry Squares! Food Editor Marilyn Hansen says, "These Apple Squares can be made the day before a party. And they freeze!" • • FAMILY WEEKL.Y. NooirsM*'IG. lt1& FRESH APPLE PASTRY SQUARES 2~ cupe ....m.d •11-plrpoee flour 1 tHapoon Nit 1 cup pe.. 2 lllbleepooM butter ' or ....,..nne , egg yolk Ma 1 cup CNlhed com n-... • c:upe (2 qCa.) peeled. ccnd. lllced wt ...,... •. ~cup ... ~ 11 11p0 Oft 9round glnget ~ t1Mp004' gtOUnd cl......on 1 ........ attfltJ beaten 1 cup ...... coulec"onena' ......,. ~ tlll.CIOft pure ..... Pinet t-ltdlt pnM....., 1. Preheat oven to 400°F . 2. lo large bowl, stir ftour. and salt to- gc~cc. Cut in butter with pastry blender until crumbly. 3. Beat egg yolk lightly with fork in measuring cup. Add enough milk to egg yolk to make ~ cup. 4. Stir milt into ftour mixture~ mix with fork to blend, atirring until mixture holds together and cleans aide of bowl. 5. Divide dough i.ato two parts. Roll half of dough to line a lS~ x 10~ x 1-incb pan. Place doup in pan, prc:umg down lightly. to form bottom crust. I. Sprinkle bottom crust with com ftakcs. 7. In large bowl combine apples, sugar, ginger aod cinnamoo; stir to mix. Spread apple mixture over bottom crust. 8. Roll out remaining half of dough and place on top. Pinch edges of dough to- gether to seal. Brush stimy beaten egg white over top crusL 9. Bake 50 to 60 minutes or until golden brown. Combine confcctionen' sugar, vanilla and water smoothly to make frosting. Let pastry cool slightly, then frost while crust is still warm. Cut into squares. Makes 16 s~rvings •The best applet for our Pre&h Apple Pastry Squares would be Cortland, Rhode Island Greening, Baldwin or Nor1hem Spy. SENSATIONAL PURCHASE! A. The Homestead in Wimer Copenhagen ~BlueQ. Decorative Porcelain Plates ·with Currier & Ives Winter Scenes I $ 00 ony ------MAIL NO.IUSX. COUPON TODAY -----' • AMERICAN CONSUMER. Dept. UH-n Caroline lloed, Pbibdelphia. PA 19176 Plcuc rush me the followinl( Currier and lvn Copen. ha/(C'n Blue Pl11es 11 $H>O each: -(UHA) Scene A -(UHB) Scene B _(UHC) ScmeC _(UHO) ScCMD _( UHE) Complete set ol 4 onfy $9.98 Pl~ 1dd '°' ~r plate to partially cover postage: and handling or $1 if or~ng complete set. If after receiv· ing my ordn I'm not delighteod, f may rrtum it within 10 days and,.you will ttfund the full pu~ price ' ( e:1cq>e postage: and handling) . SA VE! Order 2 KU for only $18.98 plus $2.00 postage:. Total amount mdoKd $ (add saln tu whttc appli· cable). Chcclt or monq-order, no CODs pleast. B. The Fanna's Home -Winter C. The Old Homestead in Winter D. A Home in the Wilderness On orden over $6 you may CHAJlGE 111 Exp. Oar.__ ___ _ Collectors love the distinctive color of Copenhagen Blue plates! And other collectors hunt through antique stores in hopes of djscovering and buyir.g a real Currier and Ives lithogr~ph depicting America's aJl-but-van- ishcd way of life in the last century! Now we proudly offer a rarilJ -genuine Currier & Iv~ winter scenes, faithfully reproduced together with the original titJc of the scene on genuine decorative porcelain plates, in Copenhagen Blue. Each plate meas- ures 8~H in diameter and comes with a special loop ready for hanging. Think how they'll brighten your kitchen or djning room wall. Imagine how charming they'll look on a display shelf or hutch! The distinctive Co~agcn Blue, accented with white, goes beauti- fully with any decor. so order otras for gifts, too. Limited edition -order quickly! ~predict our stock of these lovely plates will go fast at this low price! Mail coupon now to avoid disappoint- ment. Money back if not delighted -so why not order and enjoy the complete set of 4 -only $9.98 complete! © 197) ACI (ch«k one) O Bank.Amuicard O Amencan Express O Mas1~r Ourgc: 0 0 0 0 BANK NUMBE'R Cttdi1 Card#------------- N1me Addrns Apt.# I --------------~ : City t I I I • I I I I Stm Zip for Canadi1n Customcn: Pl~ Knd ordcn to T. P. Producu, Dqic. UH, Box 1600 Statioo A Toronto, Oncario MSWIYl (Ontario Residents Add Sala Tu) ---------------------------------------------- Can \Ou Gauge Your People Quii PersonaUty Adjustment•? J'SmfMfHlll/, j I True or Falle? People with a high l.Q. tend to be better adjusted. (See number 1 .) TRUE OR FALSE? 1. People with a high l.Q. tend to be better adjusted. 2. U you have a well-adjusted personality. you're seldom likely to fed lonely. S. There is a physical difference betweeo a normal penon and a neurotic person. 4. Tbe frequency with which you recall your dreams provides an index to how well-adjusted you are. 5. How a penon'a eyes behave when he sees someone he lites or dmitea provides a clue to his pemooality adjuatmenL ANSWERS 1. True. Many psychological studiea ahow that intelligence and a well-adjusted personality teod to go band in band. British studies of a random aelcc::t.ion of meo and women over 6S yean old &how that people with above-average mental ability are the least likdy to aufter neurosis or deterioration of intellectual powen in old age. 2. True. Studies show that the well..adjusted in- dividual experiences loneliness leu f iequentJy. He can feel alone without feeliag lo~ly. Peo- ple with neurotif tendencies. however, fre- quently feel lonely, even in a crowd. According to a study in West Germany. neurotic sub- jects sutler more severely from loneliness and feel lonelier than those who are well-adjusted. This difference is highly significant since. by assessing the looelincss factor in each subject.. it was possible to diagnose neurosis with an accuracy rate of 78 perccnL The study also revealed that neurotics are less communica- tive and less willing to attempt to make new contacts. 3. TTMe. Paychological studies show that the neurotic person typically su11en from cJaronic physical tension, while a normal person cioes not. 4. True. Studies at Britain's University of Keele., which evaluated the findings of leading investigations, showed that one who recalls dreams often is likely to be more at peace with himself and more sensitive to bis own inner FAMILYWEEJU.Y, ~ber30, 1875 •I f edinp.. On the other hand. it was found thal lack ol cbam recall at.roagJy augesas "'that the individual is experieocina al least • mod- erate amount of penonality conftkt. .. 5. Tru~. It's called "pupillary raponsc." The a.tent to which a pe.non's pupils enlarge when be sees someooc he lites. and grow smaJJer when he sees aomcone he dislikes. tells a great deal about bu personality. High pupillary ac- tivity ("Boy. did his eyes get big when he saw that blonde!") is an indication of good per- sonality adjustment. According to atudies. pupillary reactions are much less • pronounced in neurotic people. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• lei--::"~~::, • • More Chris tmas for Yo ur Money OUR BIGGEST EVER FREE GIFT-Wini-PURCHASE Here's a smart way to do some Christmas shopping for somebody special. With this coupon and a $20 purchase of Merle Norman cosmetics, this beautiful purse-a Merle Norman exdusive-is yours FREE. Its charming mock tortoise shell and crystal look makes it a versatile fashion accessory for da~me dress or ~egant evenings. And Inside. a Holiday Coll~on cl six beeuty enhancers to hetp you create a speriding holjday glow. It's an yours, free. with this coupon and any $20 purchase of Merle Norman cos~ A lovely gift for somebody special. Like you. Free Gift offer Includes: Intense Body Moistur- izer, Candescent Face Makeup, Taupe Creemy Powder Eye Shadow and a trio Compact with Satin Sienna lipstick, Tawny Cheek Color Creme and a Russett Moist Up Gloss. All in an exdustve QUfSC, and only at your Merle Norman Cosmetic Studio! ffiERLE noRmAn cosmETICS -offer good through December 25, 1975 Of wt'jle supplies last, at pertfcipeting studios. Redeemabfe only at time of pun:hase ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Gout and 8unitl1: The "Cryatal Dl•aw" Bursitis and gout have one thing In common: crystala. In BURSITIS, usuaJly Over 94 years ago we introduced a great, rich coffee ... caused by trauma or Infection, the crys- tal accumulation is calcium. The most common form of bursitJs ls in the shoulder. The paJn ls caused by crystals collecting at a joint or In a bursa. There are more than 100 bursas In the body. A luu la .. neture'• fftlle oll cen," a little UC contalninO fluid that .... friction.,. ..... mowing parta. SOIL Nov.1 we're introducing a great, rich decaffeinated• instant coffee. Try it tomorrow. The pain Is often Intense and usually lasts only a few days or weeks. TM r....clr la ,.... ..... -COftlralld motion to nold alfffu• (frozen ehoulder), Md an ....,. 9"1c IUCh u upk1n. For more eevere pain, Butazolldin (Phenylbutazone) or cortieone may be prescribed. In GOUT there is also cryetal formation-uric acid or uratee. Gout Is a metabolic or systemic disease that appears mostly in men. Other condi- tions such as rheumatoic;t arthritis or kidney disease are often associated with ll The classical picture of gout Is unbearable pain in the big toe, ~ut It can occur anywhere. Ovet'Mtlng Of Oftf'drt'*lng .. the UIU8I cw of gout, but often ff la genetic. Gout is usually treated by a drug called Colchi- cine. But now there le • newer drug, Zytoprtm (Allopurtnol), ~ lr'Hbltl the formation of uric llCld. Benemld (Pr~ benecld) is simllar1y used. Mptrln la not ueuan, NCOfftlnended. Gout, like bursitis, responds to Butazolidin, which has side effects and is generally used only for a short time, perhaps a week. -8y Erwin otey.n, Ph.D. <9fhe Diet \\ldtfl Beware the Whoopee Complex! Some dieters have a "Whoopee Complex" that is responsible for making them get off their diet. The 0 Whoopee Complex," .. one CalHomla diet ..,.ctau.t defL-.a It, • .. • dieter'• Plltlem of paying .crupuloue attention to hla Of her diet-followed abruptly by pertode of what tM penon lhlnb of .. ~ed dinlp8tion. Typical Is the "T.G.1.F. (Thank God, It's Friday!) Whoopee!" attitude: Vac,tlons and partJes produce the same "I'm off the leash" feeling. The problem Is, as the specialist describes it, "the dieter'• ~ of • partial lack of penonal control" In fact, we often accept our lack of control with a sneaky pleasure because we're unconsciously looking for justiflca- tk>ns to gorge on our favorite foods. Excuses of "What a swell party!" or "Wow, what a buffet the Johnsons had!'' are Whoopee justifications. Unfortunately, our body chemistry pays no attention to our justifications, and we fatten up again. How cen we conquer the Whoopee Compktx? Start by recognizing what you're up to and adopt an attitude of I'm in cf:large here! -8yH..n.tua..re 11 • FAMILY WE~KLY, November 30, 1175 A D .. Women -Figure Finner gins rou a allmmer,r.::;;Sl!W;;:::;,;;;"~;;;;::;;;::=:;;;;:; 90-0AY Zi_ ~~~~W~ ~·=·~:~:more beautiful bodrl MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE! • Lose at least 2 inches off your waistline Use your Figure Firmer for as little In 14 days. • Flatten your tummy as 5 minutes a day for 90 days, grad- • Slim thighs and thin hips ually quickening your exercise pace. • Shape and beautify bustllne You must be absolutely thrilled and • Firm and smooth arms and shoulders delighted with the way it helps you Men -Figure Finner gtvea rou •trimmer, look lovelier ... feel livelier-or re- 1tronger, more masculine build! turn for prompt refund! Helps you: • Slim waistline and shrink stomach paunch ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ F~ FlnMr ,...,.,_look loftH•r ••• ,.., ,.. • ..._ • Build up shoulders, biceps, thighs and .. , ln,... •lftutes • ctar! s11m .. firm• Md.,..,,.. calves 1our ...,. ••• tones up your ""'.c'" .ct 1nv1s-• Develop and strengthen chest or•tff i'OUf bodJI • Firm your total physique This is the revolutionary exerciser that lets Particular exercises are geared toward specific you lie down to lose weight quickly ... easily . . . parts of your body to give you sltmming action scientifically! Medically-approved Figure Firmer exactly where YO\I want It! Concentrate on your helps you look lovelier ... feel livelier in as little waist ... hips ... thighs -wherever you need as 5 minutes a day! the most help. You'll be amazed how enjoyable it is to shape Figure Firmer is so compact -you can tuck it up and slim down with Figure Firmer. No ex-away in the smallest drawer: so lightweight (just hausting calisthenics ... no starvation 'diets. 10 oz.) -you can take it with you anywhere. Figure Firmer helps you achieve and maintain Attach it In seconds to any convenient doorknob the results you want by utilizing isometrics -a -and your portable "gym" is ready to go! scientific way of putting one set of muscles to So why struggle to lose weight when you can work against another set so that both tone up get into beautiful shape this easy ... speedy at once! Figure Firmer way! Order now and take ad- Figure Firmer comes with complete direc-vantage of our low. low sale price -only $5.99. tions and a program of recommended exercises. Do it today! (.Mrl.'!1/;/;tz;-,cORP. ~.::.r:.: ~:S21Dept. L~SM Ser.Ing Satisfied Customers lor oyer 25 Y ••rs -------------~-----1 Jay Norris Corp., 25 W. Merrick Ad .• Dept L·SM, Freeport. N.Y. 11521 Please rush me one Figure Firmer r;, the $5.99 sale price plus $1.25 shipping& handling. [J SAVE! Order TWO for only $9.99 plus $1 .75 shipping & handling. Enclosed is O check or O money order for _ $ -· Sorry, no C.0 .0 .'s- (N.Y. residents add sales tax.) NAME--- AODRESS- CITY Please Print: STATE--__ ZIP· ·-L----·© Jay Norris Corp., 1975 _____ J MODERN SCIENCE PROVES ASTROLOGY WORKS BY PHILIP SYDNEY ~ ... ~ ..... Sena L.ONDON-Reoert&J.y in FhlM» a famou acift'lt.t ~ Mw:hel GagqQdin dec:iilMd to prove \hat ~ and haPDi- ne. in tir~ h.ad noWn1 to do with ~· ~ fact. tllat ~ .... • r.u. So .he at&ac:bd ·~ ~~y! Jn • Fnnce -the time of birth aa on eorery binh c:atifieata. eo he .waa at* to hire AMroio..~ Lo Cal& the ~ of !i76 Camoaa teecbenl ol meilicine.. He wu Mltoaiebed .to diK.over \hat mo.t ol than bit Man and Satvn ~~ · n · &heir chanderl n-. an the ~ &hat ...... ~n na~t f« healinS. But he refaaed Lo believe biaol' own evidence, · ao be Marted cbedrinc the bormcopee (amou.a lawyen, aoldien., potitic:iana aDd uti.Ma. He fOllDd lhat in *'.IXry •inglr ilutantt tbe pecJIJle that wen nc r ! (al, were "dOin• what COIDe9 ~ u ~ OD their a~ chan.a. UnCort.anat.t!,Y Lbe oppcs~ ~ ~ lRe. 1""e people who rail at the.r ~ and lb &heir u~ are tM onea who do the wrons tbinp.. 11My are .ci~ P'!«'I in round holea! 1lwy are plumben who ~ be doct.ora batchen who ahouJd be R'lfeooa. rnecbanic8 who ahould~~ M09t people have beard about the ridl, Camoaa and AC- ceufol l)e()l)le who u. utroloCY prac:t.ica()y fWl time" bat they. Btill think that Mtn>loO ia the '"foriuoe cookie horoecos» they read in their daily paper, or the Natal horoac:ope that they can bu_y for • rew ~ here in "'£ngland or a f"' dollan ID America. 'Tbere'a nothiq wron1 with thoee Natal boroec:opea. 1lwy analyw you character and ~ve you a grMrol ~-That'a lib IOmeOne de.c:ribi_ni a country to yoa io a ~ral -.ay. h would be helpful, )'et yoo would still probebb pt lo9t.. Sut Nalal A.tro&od ia not what Prince-Mainftt and Lord Snowden pey for. Or what led Prince. Grace and Prinoe Ranier to happioea Or what Winatoa Chmchill bought (?Om Loia De Wahl throqhout the war. No. Thoee people and othma like them are •eUin1 the othv aatrolo0. Not a N<'nnal Natal ho~ but a •~i/ic, atep by~atep ct.y-by-day p.ide. Natal utro&oc:Y '-Uke rMdinc • boOlt about big game huntin1 &nd then eoin,e to est Africa on your own. The oc.Mr utrolocJ i.a lib havins a !OP profewionaJ hunt.n lo help suide you Uuoqh the JUnp. Th&a other utrok>o ia called Tran.it utroJoc:y ~ the horoecopes are catJed 'l'l-anacopee. A Tran.cope • aa di.treftftt from a Natal~ a :ce ".*'! map -~.=-.·~~ can!U~~...!:e and tella yoa · the pod days and the bed daya ror all a.aped.a ol livinc. h pt'flni.cally ,.. )l'Otl by clt~ hand and ahowa you the ~ time and the wrma time (« aoecific thinp. After that 1t'1 up Lo you Lo take advant.ap o? the aood and lo awid the blld! Tran.a>pe Aatro)oo l. s-ctiaillY ~ Lo all bQt e_rofeaeional utrolopn and their nch client&. Why? Becawre it hu Lo c:heck the planetary pocitiona for .every 1ingle day and t.heftfore it a>9ta mon than 1D09t people coukt afford! Bal, not any moft! THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN NATAL AND TRANSIT HOR0800PE8 Where the aun. moon and DlaJMta ba~ Lo ~ al Lbe ~ of yOGJ' btrth i.a what makee up yoar Nata.I (birtbdat.e) Horoecos» and ddemime. you binh~ a· (Leo, Tau_ru, Cancer, eic..) Bat, the aun moon and Mia keep riabt on muuinlJ. 11>ey are in T,.;ruit. And after day tliey be.,> romuns Mw 4flllln with yow birth chart. And ~ 'J'ranaita crea&e a MW llol'O«'O~ that ahOWI 8"il'f/!ry .. ncle important period of .r:!! life! We call Lbeee Tra!Wt bofo. lKlOpel ''TranacoDee"". The)' are what Sir Francia Bacon cut fol'~ Eliaabeth 1mthe16th Century (lhe became Englancl'a _.-eat.st monarch of all timm) risht throqh to EvanaliDe A.da.m. who did the Mme fat J . PierpOD.t McqaD T" -the ~ C.tuy (He became the ridMet and mo.t DOWaful fuanc:ift of all timee). The Ford Mmtaq wu lhe ln09l nc.ce.ful car Ford ner pert oat. An ut'°"°""' picked the dat.t Lo lao.ncb it.! Tbat•a what the Ford Ea.er needed bat didn't have! Vivian Lone and the Put"""i who are famoGll utrolopn. advi.ae C011Dtlma bic ~ 00 all Upeda of ffoance inch:adi~ open· -lnp contnda, investment. and me11·e..-.. ln•eMlnent comP-niee and potiticiana me the ~-WleJ'8 of Tran· aoope utrolcJcy. (Why did. Rooald . ~ refuae Lo !.>e awom in u savemor until 10 peat au t . Trauita can be read for a day._ a month 01' even hun of yean , into the fo\Ure or bacsward inLo the pea. aa long u the stars ...Wn in the ab. John Huelria' in 1908 aid th8t tlVery :a> ~ when the 'l'ranllita al Satam and Jopit.n ue CIOllJU.Dd (come ~) the Pre.ident who took omce that ru would die in of&.. Lincoln. ~ Mc:Kin~. Hardina. Frank- lin Rooeevelt and I<enedy did euct.1i that! It'• euy to cloee your mind and MY "boD.8en8e • Bat 1iair" the cno.t ~ mn8cal of all timee bad a tulJ time utro&oser. He ~ them on every ain81e step. He told them when and where Lo open. Re got Lop credit ript .ion, with the wriLen and the diJoedor! Carol Richter i.a utrolopr t.o Hollywood. Rundl"ed. John F. Kennedy ... to&d by A•rolocen thait No.,.mbn ol 1963 wu a p.riod ol 1ravt danaer. On Nowmbtr 21, Tr•n•it Mel"C'Vry wu oppoalt. his Sun ill dw hou• ol death, and he •·as warned not to travel. The followl.nc traak day Transit M.,.. and Transil v .. nu• WTl"l' opposiw hi• p~-.d Mara. planrt ol Viownce: and opposite Venu! in eckil''s ch•rt. indicetiq de~ to her husbend. Transit Pluto was conjunct to her Mere.• hl'evy aspec:t of• denproue situ•' uon in publi< ll"OUP8. 'the -Aml!rlc-Bib6.. in MMthl'w 2. t~ thl' arrh ·al or tlw thlft •·i• menu.. -,ft.., hi• birth A.at....._.,.. lrom Lhl' Eest arnvl'd •l Jl'ruaaleai N yiq . ·wtw~ i• the rhild who was born K iftg ol thl' J•w•'!' .. John Hav!ric in 1908 s-cikUd Franklin 0 . R-,·•tt'• doth in ollia. Tiw dl'•rh o1 Stalin. Lhl' 1929 stodl man...t crash. •nd tlw .crttt riot.a oC 1964 and 1966 _,.. aJJ pnidic:wd. Kart E. Kraft pn- dic\l'd Hil)era ri• and fall t.o • dey. In encil'nt day • Noctn- damu. pndtcud lhl' rise o1 Oti"Tr Crom-II and Nepolpon and the nact det.n ol Wond W• II. Wm. Lilly l)ft'dictl'd t.hl' flrw or London with •udl ettu~y tbet he ... ecc:u8l'd ol atarting it. Tlie di•-of coi~ or .-......ti eapllll1t· 1 .. e,,... • 8-.da _,. ~....-~'-WW.­ Loo•. or the Wnoaa have uaed hi.a Transit &lltrc>lioo. ~ lik.e Marime INtrich, Gloria Swan.on, Rooala-Cotman, Tyrone Power. Danny Kue. Carol Richter became an amo&ocer becaue Ev!"~eline A.dama. who wu UlroJ.. CIC'" Lo Kinp, Queell.I 6.riancien told him it .... hie IJOC'Otion ac:cording Lo the nan. Hitler wu conquerinc Europe u kMla u be followed hi.a Tran9COpe1 .. ~ bY Karl E. 'Xraft. But when Kraf\'1 cbait told lUtleT it wu DOt the time to tum Ea.st to Ruaia, Hitler find him. That wu the ~Din• of the end rw Hitler. (See Wm. Shiren ~ BiM ud Fall of the Third Reich"). Countleea brilliant ecienti.ata, writer• and ~eniaaes thl"OCl2h the ace. ban believed in A*oloo. GT.t men lik.e Si n.oaWi Aq1linu, Sir Ropr Bacon (rather of mod· em erience), Shak.eepeare. Sir luac Newton, Carl J~. Einatein and J. P. Morpn have all openly 11P'e1Ci that utroloa worb! To make a Nata.I (bi.rthda&e) hoc~ an utroloc• calcula&ee the pomtion.a of the ...,. ~ time of JOar biJ1h and rn.n tl>em .. the interpntatiom that mab your Natal ~· But that'• ootY the ~llinni"6 !« a 'T'ranait ~ boroecope. The utroloftr then baa lo tab all or thoiie pc19itiona and caJcalat.e tLe coo.stantly chancins poeitioM of thoee atan ~wry •inlfk tl.oy in ,.. lation to their pocition• at the tUne of your birth. There are lit.erally miUioru of pouible Transita. No wonder only Kinp. Queen•. Millionaine and Movie SCan could afford Tranait ..uolocY! But the computer can make nUUioru of caJculatiou iD •ttOnd•. So, after many yean of won and a taw•wodooe cub inveatmen~ the ln.atitute for Applied Altroloo now hu thoee Transite in t.beirsiant COIDIJ'llWr. AD the c:alca- lationa pha.a 32 mill.ion ~ c:ombinatiou ol t.da! And IO, for the ~· ~ are available to everybody! Yoar U. ~ cWfaoent from that or any otheT ~ in ...tel, ~ >"'* an UM no olh~r fWTSOn in tit* world! YOQl' chart U. drawn from lh• 32 million pouible c:ombi.natiooa of flld;e tb.u an stored in the aiant computer ol the Jo.t.itat.e of Applied Aatrology and are thein exclusively! Why do we give you 'Th e S 1000.00 Horoscope FREE? ------ __ ,__,_..,.. . ..., _... ___ _, . .., _._ ..... -----. ..,._. -.-&"' ~-------~----------~---~ ,, ' PRINT CAREFULLY FOR COMPUTER -' Plftee ...ct me my -11.000.00 H~-•b•oh.itefy FRt:E I and my umpl.e 'lnil~ few which I am mcioetna S3.00 I P'Ull Mr pc19t..p and handlin• •• • depo.lt only! J nHd only I ~om it withia two w-. a.nd you wUI .net b.ck my orisinaJ c.httk cw_,. ordtt uecaatwd! I N .. ._ _______________ _ I I A6cb-a'----------------- ' Cil.J------stat-._ ____ Zi.P---- 1 BIRTlt INFORMATION I Blrthi>i-: I I I I Oily StM• ~nlly ___ _ ~: . D A .M w-u./ "'-¥/ v.-/ Ha.a/ MlmltA/ ·DP M. 1 Pleue make the same olfeT available to one othn : membet-of my family. I am encloeiq bUtbd•te and birthplace IAfonruttioa OD a a.perate ~ al paper.. : ...................... Fiii I f I FILL OUT AND MAlL THIS COUPON TO I INSlTIUrE FOR APPLIED ASTROLOGY : M1 ................. -. Clll. l0210 l!.~~-~?!!'-~'21~~0fj!--':.1~J SrarCfUit Johnny Mathis: Winning Out Over Drugs, Anxiety and "Fear of the Unknown" "I found I couldn't function ••• I talked c:orwtMtly, bebblng •bout nothing et .n. I didn't 9W9n make ............... home, rd "8ft con- vu181ons-peop1e thought I Md epf- lepay, but, of coune, It ·-,..., drug wfttadr...a." Johnny Mathis'a voice has been one of 1>0pular music's golden instruments for nearly two decades. But Mathis bad lo learn that the pra~ it takes lo smooth out a life can be more tortuous than the exerci5es needed to de- velop a smooth vocal style. Here be shares some reflections on this process, on the fear aod amphetamines that almost killed him, and bis sources of strength. FAMILY WEEKl.Y: You cer- tainly are looking relaxed and fiL llAlltlS: Yes, well, I've been singing and playing golf, so all's right with the world. FW: You're about to record your 48th album for Columbia, and you have "also been play- ing to scU-oot audiences in large thcatcn. Do you ever worry about running out of worlds to conquer? llAlltlS: Those things take care of themsdves. About five yean ago-when I was getting off amphetamines-I stopped right in the middle of a thought ... I was so startled by the real- ization that I really didn't have any goals. And it was 0 .K. It's still OX. I don"t want to do a Broadway show. I don't par- ticularly want to do movies, or anything like thaL I decided what l really wanted to do was what I have been doing, and to keep trying to do it better. By the time rm 45, when my voice will have reached its full maturity, I may know c:x.actly what's going on up there on stage. FW: b stage fright ever a problem for you? llAlltlS: fm the sort who has anxieties, but rve been doing it so long, I don't worry about it any more. I t.bi.nk the main thing now is that 1 know what I can do and what I con't do. rve got thi-s framework to op- erate in. and rvc learned how much leeway there is in it. That's a valuable thing to learn. FW: Your bout with ampheta.- miocs a few years ago was ac- tually a struggle with fear, wasn't it? MATHIS: Yes. I was so shy, 'So afraid of the audience. The am- phciAmi~ toot me away from reality. That was back about the mid.-60'1 when riot much was generally known about their harmful side effects. I had to do four shows a day at the Copacabana., aod I bad acute laryngitis. I weat to a well known show-business dod.or- very reputable at the time-and be gave me massive doses of .. vitamins." (Johnny waso"t aware at the time that he was Continu'd FAMILY WE£KLY, Nov-ber $0, 1975 • 11 TIY THIS IEW PIPE 3J 8A~s ! .. .. For dpr smoke,. and cigarette ..-noken allk• a "C.rey Pipe" can .. ve hundreds of doll•,. a year. .. H JOU are a pipe smoker, a ucarey Pipe" can end for· ..., your constant eearch for the most en)OJable 8m0ke of your IHe. So different that Ir• ~tented by the UNITED STATES GOVEMllENT ,...,.. 7 ••• ,1211M1 • • ~/ACW .- « YCMI MQ be a ptpe unc*er wttla a rack full of p1,_ and .till MWchl119 fwtt.. ideal .-noke, CK,.......,. you would Uk• to ewltch to a pipe to cut down on c~ or expensive clean. ne C..y Pipe may look Ilk• any ordln.ry pipe, but It'• a lot dtffere .. u In fact. th.,.'• nothing Ilk• tt In the whafe ..W. The C;8Ny Pipe la made of the finest acied Medtteman .. n .,,.__ bvt, Its big MCftt II•• In the exduslve patented "MAGIC INCH," deverty conc.ealed In a bite proof nylon .tem. It'• Not a Fitter The "Maolc Inch" la not a fitter that O•b aoooy and loaded wftta foul amelllng goo. A 9099y, foul amelling fitter tranamlts lta atale foul odor Into each 9Ucc ... lve puff of smoke, creating mON problem• than It eolvff. H's Not a Trap The .. llaolc Inch'' I• not a trap col- lecting moisture that OUFVIH Wfth every draw. It I• not a t,.., that muat be cleaned after every smoke. ff'• Almoat Magic Not my magic but NATURE'S OWN •AGIC. Wann winds pick up moisture by evapot'ation from th• oc..,.a, lak .... riven, and streams. llft H hieh Into the atmoephere _,..,. th• cooler upper air aquffzea It Into ckoP9 of water that faH back to earth fn lta most petfect state of purity. Just u the cokler upper air of th• at- m099h.,. cau ... rain, the cool air .................. c 1.c11·· ca.a.. ... tlwotlgh tt.e apeclal louven of the patenW C..y stem, ca. ... lm- nMCllat. COftdenMtJon of the mois- ture In th• •mok• where tt droP9 to the bottom of the chambef, la ab- ~ by the naturat ffbef alHv• of the "Magic Inch," and In tum, la ev~ Into th• out.Ide aJr. No accumulation ever remain• to tonn 9'ude• or 9'ug• of bfftw tasting goo. The "llaolc Inch" alao mixes purify- ing oxygen wtth the amok• from th• _ tobacco, In perfectly controlled pro- portJon8t coolfng th• smoke, ellmf- nating all tongue bite, and creating MELLOWNESS, MILDNESS, and SWEETNESS that wu never before enjoyed In pipe smoking. Today, over one hundred and fifty thouMnd pipe amoken smoke C..y Pipes almost exclu9'vefy. They all got started by acc..,ttng my most unusual offer to test a C..y Pipe for • daya, wtthout any rfak on their palt what.oev•. They were all granted th• ume option which Is you,. aleo. After • daya, If you agree that the Carey Pipe Is Ute best smoke of your ltfe, you may kffp lti If you don't agree, whack It wtth a hammer and retum the broken plecn to me. The trial hu coat you nothlngl How many buslneHH are that auN of their product? Ma~• Your Own 30 Day Test Cllp out th• coupon below. Fiii In· your name and addre .. and Hnd It to me TODAY. I'll Hnd you a full color brochure, absolutely free, ao you un Mlect your favorite atyle and ahape for your• day trial. r-----------.... -------... -------._ I E. A. c..r. Dept. 285 ii: 3112 N. IOlpMrtct Aw... CNeego, IL tol41 I I OU, •· ~. a..... ""Y"' tun col. ~"" .. I can ... ect a pipe I to .....tw t. • •~ • a .... trial beaia. I :..... ~ I· L~----------~~----7t. ___ J Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. Johnny Mathis Conti""ed receivans amphetamines-and neither were bis doctor's other famous patients, including ooe preaide.nt.] He taught me how to give myself (n. )ectioos, and he gave me all sorts of different col- ored pilb to ta.kc between injections. FW: How long did thu go on? MATHIS: For five or six ycan, although I didn't tile them when I wasn't working. I found I couldn't function when I was oo them. I talked constantly, babbling about nothing at all. I didn't even make ~· When I was at home and not takins them, I'd have convulsions-people thought I bad epilepsy, but. of course, it was really drug withdrawal. FW: Was it really the aodicnce you feared, or were you afraid you wouldn't be on top of tbe soap, wouldn't be sharp? MATHIS: I had terrible anxieties that everything wouldn't go just IO, that fd be Up there and it would all fall apart ... f car of the unknown I . . • .,.,,.,_ .. ,. 90 man, directions I thought dl ... ter might come from •... I Md to ta.Ye every detail planned." guess. There were so mktly directions I thought disaster might come from. I'd have to get advice on what to wear, bow to stand. J had to have every mjnute detail planned out beforehand. Eventually, someone said, "Why don't you just wear what you're wearing now? It looks all righL" I just hadn't been listening to myself .... But mostly, I guess J took those injections because J felt I oecded energy and WM constantly afraid of being sick. · FW: Nowadays you seem to have a more realistic picture of what your voice can do, which must help you feel more secure. MATHIS: Some nights now, you know, it's as sm<>()th as whipped cream. Other nights, there's a little edge that doesn't smooth out. The thing is not to panic .... It's like ooe day you're playing golf and hitting straight and the next day you're hooking, so you play the hook. On pills, I sounded terrible, but I was in this euphoric state. People would tell me what to do and fd do it. but I couldn't really listen too closely. You have to listen, of course, if you're going to sing. I used to get so involved in the sound I was making at that instanf that I didn't think ahead. I had to bear the next note in my head before I could make it l just couldn't think ahead. FW: Are you more experimental as a singer now? MATHIS:.rvc worked two years on a song before doing it in public. I thought thar might be a dis- gracefully Jong time, but someone said Lena Horne. my idol, took four years or so oo one pa.rticular song. The mechanical part of music can be a drag for me, but once I learn it. I remem- ber it I know every nuance of every song I ever recorded, when the strings are going to come in with a littJe figure. every bend in the bass f'Jlll line. every single thing my voice does. W.111 fAMILY WEEKLY, No¥9m1Ml' 30. 1975 • ti The First Norman Rockwell Bell • • .from the Danbury Mint ''Doctor and Doll'' A Limited Edition *The first in a series of beautiful porcelain bells, to be issued by the Danbury Mint, honoring the. finest works of America's most beloved artist, Norma.a RodcweJI. * Each issue in this series will illuscrate a different Roclcwell American classic. The first bell is based on Mr. Rock- well's famous painting, "Doctor and Doll". *Limited edition, available at original issue price only until December 31, 1975 and only from the Danbury Mint. Not available in stores. * Each bell will be hallmarked and regis- tered by the Danbury MinL • Bells are band decorated and uimmed with 22 kt gold. * ~ perf ea collectible for yourself or as a gift. Priced at only $27.50. NORMAN ROCKWELL stands alone as the ar- tist whose works best illustrate life in ev.cryday America. His warm picture stories lovingly cap- ture typical people m typical settin~ with amazing accuracy. He is Americas most beloved artist. Now, for the first time, the bes< of Norman Roc kwell's paintings will be presented on a series of limited edition collector bells from the Danbury Mint. The first bell, based on the famous Rockwell painting, "Doctor and Doll", is typical of the richness of Rockwell's creativity. This Jimited edition wiJJ be available at ori~nal issue prices only until December 31, 1975. The bell is made of highest quality por- celain which produces a clear, delight- ful ring. Each bell will be carefully hand decorated in vivid colors and trimmed with bands of precious 22kt gold. Only those who acquire this first Nor- man Rock well bell can ever hope to have a complete set of the bells in this important collection. Accordingly. we urge you to order your bell now, while it Js still availabk at original issue prices. R~u Shown Actual Siu r-------~-----~-----~-----, l A63-i I nco..ia.ryMi• tk ~ /'/!,;..._)., Allordn-1 I I 0 Ckrldinnmg Pb« must ~ postmarked Wntpon. Conn. 06880 by Dttnabtt SI, 1975 Please enter my order for "Norman Rockwell Doctor and Doll Bdl( s) ". My cbeclc or money order is enclosed at the rate of $27.50 (plus $1 .25 postage and handling-total $28.75) per bell.• ... NAM1:..-------------------~ ADDRESS·~------------------ CITY __________ _.. ATF ___ z._.1p ___ _ •Connecticut rcsidcnh remit SJ0.76 per bell 10 include 7% Sales Tu Make cheGk Of mooey order ~yable 10: D...t.ry Mild 0 C hel k he rt• rf be ll is to be givrn :.ts a gif1 and prin1 r<-tip- ieni'" name: bclo\\ !><l hell can be n:gistrrt·d m 1hJt llJIO(" Al~'"' 'l 10 3 "'<'l'ks lordehver-1 . llECIPIENT'S NAM ..._ ______________ _ L--~----~-----_.....----~-~-~-J TIM' .lbnbury Mint 1t oot alhliattd with l~ U.S. Mme or any other U.S. Co~cm~nt Agt"oc )' Miracle Hybrid Discovery ' I • ' in your own home starting just weeks from today! Amazing 'Year-Round Tomato' Gives You basket after basketful of meaty, mouthwatering, flavor- packed tomatoes . . . not just Fall and Winter -but ALL 52 WEEKS OF THE YEAR! At last it's here -the miracle breakthrough that's taken the garden world by storm. One of the most spectacular horticultural developments of our time. PIW, scientist's year 'round Wonder Tomatoes that simply refuse to stop producing cluster after cluster of big, juicy tomatoes ALL 12 MONTHS OF THE YEAR -yes, even ln wlntefl EACH ONE SO BIG YOU GET A WHOLE PLATEFUL OF SLICES FROM EACH SINGLE TOMATO Just picture this thrilling, yet incredible scene: It's the dead of winter. Outside, even the last blade of grass is buried under a sheer blanket of snow. Your taste buds have long forgotten the mouthwatering goodllills of fresh-off-the-vine summer tomatoes. Yet, inside your home, grows the lushest, "mid-July" tomato garden you've ever seen! So prolific -from a single sunny windowsill you get a year 'round tomato garden. SO eROLIFIC -FROM A SINGLE WINDOWSILL YOU GET A YEAR 'ROUND TOMATO GARDEN No doubt about it - it's one of the most remarkable hybridizing achievements of the 20th century. When In your life have you ever seen, heard, or dreamed of a YEAR 'ROUND TOMATO PLANT ... one that offe-"'you all of these miracle features: • Produce•, produces, •nd produces all yeu long •• new waves of tom•toea appeu CONTINUOUSL YI • Profealonelty bred to be auper-vigoroua. Mean- ing they requn no special care, no speclat ....,.., no apecW teedlng. All you do ta wat9r IMtn Md pick them -for the moat fuactoua, t-'1 tomatoee JOUW ever sunk • tooth into. • So much "'"'1 goodne• from eo little space. .. Just • alngle ... ..._..., In your home rewards you with baebta of dellctoua tomatoea • . . •II ,.., 'round eterttng tNa M1J F•ll or Winter! It's a living "Tomato Factory" all year 'round. Produces by the basketful all 12 months of the year -and NOT teeny-weeny cherry tomatoes, but juicy, meat-packed beauties so large you can barely squeeze 6 in a pint basket NEW BUMPER CROPS ALL YEAR 'ROUND Yes, be the first in your neighborfloo<t: to grow this wondrous living "Tomato Factory" ... a TRIUMPH of plant scientists In their search for a true all-year, everbearlng tomato. Imagine the thrill of picking fresh saJads almost dally as wave after wave of these solid meaty tomatoes pour forth Fall, Winter, Spring, and Summer tool And even more amazing, tomatoes so desperate to produce that for every cluster you pick. a fresh new cluster of meat-packed tomatoes rushes forth to take Its pf ace. And remember rich, thick foliag~ and prof.use golden flowers also make them a wonderful home decoration. So, you get a continuous parade of beauty . . . plus mouthwatering tast&-treats by the platterful, when you grow these spectacular all-year, everbearlng hybrid Winter-Wonder Tomatoes. NOW PICK SUMMER-FRESH SALADS IN THE DEAD OF WINTER! Yes, fresh-off-the-plant salads and sauces week in, week out, all ,.., long. Think of it The same meat- packed beauties you've seen setting in fancy food stores for up to 75¢ a pound ... now yours EVEN IN WINTER for mere pennies apfece. And remember - you p4ck 'em all 52 weeks of the year at the ridiculous cost of about a nickel a basketful of 6 luscious tomatoes! ,-------------------------------------------------, f YEAR 'ROUND TOMATO, Dept. JBA-45 : Carolne Ad., PhHMlelphla, PA 19178 I : Please rush me the number of everbettrmg toma- : toes I have checked below. I understand that each • one comes in its own growing pot, aJI ready for me to grow either indoors or outdoors. CHECK OFFER DESIRED O 1 Everl>earlng tomato S 2.00 (plus 25' shpg. & hndlg.) O 3 Everbearlng lom-'c>ea S 5.00 (plua '°' ahpg. & hndlg.) O e Everbeulng tomatoes S 7.50 (plus 15f ahpg. & hndlg.) 0 12 Everb4tarlng tomatoes S10.00 (plus S1 ahpg. a. hndlg.) .. Name Address City State Zip • 1975 lmematlon81 Marl<etlng, Ud. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR MONEY REFUNDED IMMEDIATELY! --------------------------------------------------l "l'n 11 ... ... ~· Ukl It ... " ' _.,,,.,,_ ......... ....... ,.. ............ _ ............... ._ .... .......................... Qif ............ Ml ... "',., CllJ ......... ------........... -......... .......................... ........................... ........................ YWNl&anm~ll ........... ,... 1'111' .,,.,. ..... ~---....... -......... . ...... Te: .... Al. "-. CA 11111 --------__ "l'"IMll ..... ---., I..--....__ I :--:,...-:-_ ,~~.: I ooa• -I ·----._,__ I '--' --·-=----·-• -I ---·-I I ~ ~· L SlUI "'--•I ________ .. Fast, •••Y to u••· Works enry time, QUIK·fll8 OT your mone)' balCJr ................ At aU dn.ae COUAten. BASEMENT TOILET ii flvslltt ., to nittiftc ...., tr uptic lM' 'Y ,........, llff. &~14?.~ 11111111 11lt.o pmtr ....... ~ ••111 Dt'i'fltt ~-Writ• fw fnt litsfatwt. Da~ ., illf!luiea ""'~· IMIUI, o.,t.J->1 Bo• mm. Hoema. Tl 77D. WHEN YOU ORDER BY MAIL FROM FAMILY WEEKLY ••• Ptease allow up to four weeks for delivef'y on ftet"9 ordered from companies that ~ in Family Weekly. Sometimes unintentional delays occur. If they do. just write: Lynn Headley, Family Weekly, 641 Lexington Ave., New York, NY 10022. I ~ Gt'lllddll .... Cl9 .............. .. their .. ,,.. •ltll Ul•H HClllSIH l ·•lllrt deslps.. Tll-.y celtlnt• tM S,.:lal ..,.,. ... hteeft ctilklf"• a ,,... .... l:rudllM & er•~ fll.c>llY f'OC'1lll .-,, decont• tM ff"Ollt of tflae 9'11111. Cmldme sklptl ....a. "If ··"" .. , ........ , ,,. •••••• ~ Cl"ladpe, .. ,, ....... ,.... ., ..... OROlal lJY ll'IJJitBlla: o...,._ T-atn Of'Uldpa T-&.lrt Dlle-flla I ._._ 1 ........ 4 11111 .... 4 aon-a. I llS'IS -I ~· ~· ..._..._,. .., ............. ........_U a.II 891U oou-e.i.. 14 arrt-eea t4 GOD-&89 II llS'lt-el9e II Mill checll Of "'·0. fof $1.99 llf•s 155e post & lllndl. for Mell T·Slllrt toi ~lend Stu· dlos. 10905 C:reeitl111d 8ld1.1.Ml1ml, Fie. 33059. (JU. & Fie. ralcffnts aao ula tar.) \lOOkend a&AUT'D"lJL Biceoteooial Medallion I.a a bandlOmC piece of jewelry aod an elepnt "heir- loom" to wear in honor of our Bicentennial. Clauic aeal ia surrounded by • circle of simulated diamooda llCt in a lonly filiCTee medallion. With 24 • chain. Gold or aHvcr finish. $7 .9S plus 7~t bdlg. Loretta McKay, Dept. FW-11, 149-12 ll2nd SUcet. Howard Be.c.h. N.Y. 11414. llENNllJNIPS are neat Jiu.le foldina .a..n that QJr'DC iD milbtY bandy aay time you need to .., t.b.rQd, trim eycbroft, or nen ad out a paper doll! Folded. they meatUR jmt 3•. They ...., apart in a jiffy when you oecd their lharp aervic:e! StainJea steel. S 1.99 each plus .SO, pAb. 12 for SI 9.99 plus $1. Haulil:er'a, FW, 779 Bulb St., Box 758", San Francixo, C A 94120. wr AUUNG 900"8" with your child playiq the hero! Set comes with ecrip( and LP record -contAins comple&e cast of profesaional act.on. sound dfecta •l\d music sound tncb. Your child ~ tbe pen of the hero or buoioc! Wizard of Oz. or Treasure bland. $.S .3 .S eadl. Eby Producciona, Dept. FW. Woodway Road. South Salem. NY 10590. ._ ... fir 1 wery limited time only ••• SP£CW.. SAVllGS on the "sleeper" gift 1f Ille se1se1 .•• MORE SlZESt MORE COLORS! AND THE ONLY MEN'S BUNDLER -ANYWHERE! ........... ltlMistita.: 0..-t l&P to 5·2· s 5·2· to 5·4· w: 5•4• to 5'6" L o.a-5'6• XL '11t! BlJ!ldler ..• our l•mous co1t1 .... u. tashJon few lltdies! How udusiYely ows In men's styJeS. 1'00: Ya. from lhl.iqut Producu. subtlanc.ial ...... 00 tbr orin..J -die """ -Bunditt1'V :-it·1 CIUS faJDU4d ~ 1'Cl1ioo ol tM d.-ic bvonle f« dliildfta. The mualy t..hion dui1 will make -.,,.. tid" • tic-ti· ful ~by all over apinl Ddic:iomly IQy 00 ~,. aod -in oar area.a. _.... ( aod ~) mcn's .a'lioo-fllllllildty aood-lootioa oo llim. Bundlen an IOft and com- fOl'tllble a~ Wooderfulty wa.rm. And uolike the li&hl. flimsy .. imltaUons.. may have seen a.round, our ~dlcn an tailored in fuzzy, blanMt· -1"'1 1009' Acrilaa9 .aylic (same aood f1bric u the weU-bown children's model) ... Wear-Date<fe by Monsaol.o for c:oostructioo. detaili~ aod durability _ 1be BundkrTM by Unique 11 made for lounain-. for aleepioa. for daydream.ins. for 1lmos1 anythioa in the way ol just plain luxury. Ladici' 8undkr features a full- tono o~'km zipper that matc:bet the cokw al the prmmt; Men's BuodJer bas a fuJkorlO nylon zipper with l!y froat. TbcR'1 1 rope .-aislband snd ankk rope.ties (for atn warmth) on It.us; a sturdy Id.I.fabric belt oo ltis. Both Bundlcn have Rrcleh-bit wrislku and ankku, plus detachable ilippcrs. In nun, evcrythina to keep a couple corier than they've been since w~. For ~ c:one9t donm. winier YaCat.iooen, low tber· mc>ICall aod warm bealu ... '°' aqy smart lady or pdl:lnu )'OU may know (inctudi.aa you!) .•. and f« MY~ o/ q to fl>~ ..... Ill-. *"'"",,.,,~ ... order The 8Wldk:c today. rrltts 11 IN&Pt ja 0.-. wU/ I" llP ..,..... fl/Ur tJW .Je. Mad\ioc wubab&e aod .-------.: ,...--...,· dryable T and quality-eade in the U.S.A., ol c:ourw. up to 5'6• S ''6• to ''9" M L XL -. KARA ANO CUB New breed of cat? Kara the Uon ... I• • mother tn • million. S~'s just given birth to a cub with deep black markings on its chest nod right leg ... Black-maned lions are rare, but one with these markings i.s unique," said Richard O'Grady. direo- tor ol the Calderparlc 1.oo in Britain, where the lion was born. "With proper breeding. the cub could become the father of the world~s first all-black lion. I regard it as a breakthrough in the breeding of wild animals in captivity." LAWNBOWUNG Lawn bowling I've been thinking of. It lt a lpori 1 dearly love. - I do not play, the game I'd botch. But menly like to sit and watch. Yet 1 di.covered, just today, Lawn bowli.og in another way. I mean, whea unobserved some dawn, I1J 1t9p outaide and bowl my lawn. That ~ 111 roll my lawn until I t makes a bell, then down our bill I'll bowl the lawn I loeg bad tended, _.. ud Deb,~ ay labors eod.ecl. 11 • AAMILY WEEKLY, ~bet 30, 1175 in the World! \k I I f I .... Allee: Alice ROORYelt Longworth. dMt 90-year~~ Washing- ton grtntM dlmw and daughter of Teddy Roosevelt, was neveT inter· ested in romance. •As a young girl. I never bothered with men my own age. One had to go to d ances, and wbm one had to go. ooe did. but I was much more fasci· nated with Father's friends. Sort of Rough Riders, you know. Military heroes. I probably had an Oedipus complex. I suppose it would be fair to say that I was never terribly in Jove. 1 was totally without sentimentality of any sort. When Jt came time for me to get married, I got married. Nothing very mating about it. My expectation of marriage was nothing-just to weather it as long as I wanted to. Just more politics, that's all. I was interested in politics, so I thought manying a politician would be much better than marrying someone else. And I preferred sooiebody who was not from the East, not Boston, Philadelphia or New York. That would have been frightfully boring.· From "The First Tune ... by Karl and Anne Taylor F1em- ing (Simon and Schuster, f7.95). BROUN AS GAa.£ And Gable -0... How to be GMle: When Universal Pic- tures announced that it '1tOUld p-o- duce the story of Carole Lombard and Clark Cable, all the top Hollywood male acton from Robert Bedfocd to James Caan were considered for the Gable role. but James Brolin of ·Mar- cus Welby" fame landed the part. "'Everyone thought it was a big jolce," Brolin told F.um.Y W&EXLY. l1le studio was bombarded with letters ask- ing why Ali MacCraw and Steve Mc- Queen weren't chosen. One letter said the idea of my playing Cable was 'as ridiculous as James Cagney doing pantyhose commercials.' .. But Brolin may surprise the hecklers; he prepared weU for the role. He screened every Gable movie and read everything in print about the late star. He even went Quips & Quotes A hog fanner with a mouse problem has invented a poison that will kill mioe but oot affect bogs. His slog-an : .. lt melts in your mouse, not in your ham." -DorotM.a Kem A man staggered home at 4 A.M., to be met at the door by his outraged wife. •What excuse have you for com- ing home at this hour?" she demanded. •Breakf astJ .. the hu.sband responded. -Lane Olinghouse 1 t used to "6 that a fool and hia money were ioon parted. Now it hap- pena to eoerybodg. -Conrod Fk>rello After giving what he considered a most stimng. patriotic, fact-&lJed cam- paign speech. the candidate stepped toward his audience and with an air of con6denoe asked. .. Are there any questions?" •yes, .. came a voice from the rear. '"Who else is running?'" ' -Tom Gallaglutr Ameriam mocon.u who blow hom. "' brealc up tnffftc #amt lcof/ at natiou who beat dnmu to drioe og Boil ipfrlb. -GnwY ...... THROUGH A CHILD'S EYES Kids lff life differentty. Send cdltribl.t- tlona to "Child," Family Weekly, 841 Lexington Ave., N.Y., N.Y. 10022. StO If uted-none return9d. Our daughter was eut riding ooe day with her two rmaJJ chil- dren ,.beo they saw a plane spraying crops. The children were fasc:iuted as the plane went up fOt" a tum, then swooped low over the Seid. Shocbd, 8v~year­ old jouna tumecl to bu brother and said, '"Ob, Troy, I think that plane i5 just learning to &yt• -Mn. ]oltta W. Doak Eadota.,Moine Doctor to invisible man: -Your in- visible wife just bad a seveo-pound boy." Invisible man: "'How is he?" Doctor: -W~ll. he's oot much to look at... -Sontud /. Stonnerd so far as to write " 100-page history ol eabie·s chUdhoocl. then studied it in- tensely for weeks just to get a full p.ic- ture oE Cable's screen and o6-scree11 imagr. From o physical standpoitit, Brolin shares many of Gable's features ~ he is 6-foot_., handsome. rough aod bas that same tousled. dark..brown hair. Also, like Cable, he's an avid JUneher. ANNIVERSARY: The A.F.L. and C.l.O. merged 20 years ago FtiUy. BumtOAYS (all Sagittarius): Saln- der-Efmn Zimbelist. Jr. 52; Didc Clark 46; Shirley Chisholm 51 . Moft.. d9y-Woody Allen 40; Lee Trevino 36; Mary Martin 61; Bette Midler 30. Tu11ct.,-Julie Harris 50; A.leqndeJ' ffajg 51. Wedn1tdlrJ-Andy Williams 45. TIMndllJ-Deanna Durbin SS. Fft.. clmf-()tto ~ger 69. ......,_ Dave Brubed 55. BIRTHDAY PEOPLE: Woottr Allen end SNrtq Clli9holm. ByFt'8nk ~ LITTLE EMILY 0 • " 0 • " • 0 II 0 • •• • II .. • • • • 0 # • .. .. .. 0 • 0 0 0 0 • " • • 0 • • 0 ,, 0 0 • • 0 0 0 0 Oo • • 0 0 • 0 ........ ,._._ ..... ~ .. ............... ..., .... .. .. .,._ • ........ ..._,.. ,.,, ,.., rr 1 Waming: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigntte Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. ,,. , . -· SALE MON£Y BACK QUMtAN'l'O: If for any rMSOO you are not completety satis· fled, return in ori&in•I lhlPP4ne carton within thirty days for prompt refund ... no questions, no excuMS. • e ' I ' I I I I ' I --------·----------------------------------------, 1 1 ORDEI NOW ••• DllECT WITH THIS FORM • OFF£1 EXPIRES DECEMIER 31. 1975 I I CLOCKS, KITS, MOVEMENTS SHIPPED PROMPTl V • SHIPPING CHARGES COLLECT I I EMPEROR CLOCK COMPANY, Dlpt..28-F Please ctMICll: New Customer 0 I I I I I I I I I I I : ; I We accept personal checks I I I ENCLOSED $ ( ) CHECK ( ) MONEY ORDER TOTAL $ I_ CHARGE TO MY ( ) MASTER CHARGE ) BANKAMERICARD f I ACCOUNT NUM•£tt Alabama residents only, I : 11 I 11::\-1-:J I LlJJ 1 1 .. 1 I -G~::: : ! : -·---· •1·~$. 1 r I I EXCLUSIVE ORIGINALS! YoarChilcftlN•meaaPartof Beautiful Art Prima Paintinp Reprodtaced in Living Pall Cdm- Famous Sor and Girl Poems Contain YOJ!r Child'• Name We'll penoNilln these beautiful prints with a chllcf"a first name In al .. ant .cnpt ..• c:t.lld'a name will ecwally be part of the famous USl'llps and Snails" or -...... and Spice'' ~ that ao .--HJ ltttte bop and aJt1sl Each pr_ln.t la '" full color ... wfth Iota of llf1SN blue for the bop, and soft P'nk for the ah1a. The prints -r• a fua 16lr2fY. Fnmea also available. ,._.ect for atfts. hollda,., apedal oc:caaklna. aranddllldren, nieces end ~ tool ,,.., ............................ $2M ,,., ....................... $2M m•• ftw .................. $1•• HOMEMADE ICE CREAM INST AllTl.Y llalla _th...,atertna Ice c,..m •nd oct.' Iced treeta In a matter of min-.,._ wlltl .._..~Instant lea ~ .......... lea c:.--m. cDetatk lea mffll. le.a and aller'bab .,.. a.lmpte to 11U111la. TIM secret 11 .. In the a~lal .,....,. _...,Inside the atirrina tub. 1t ....,.,.,.tw the ,..... ror crushed a and rocll salt ... that untll now made maldftC Ice CNam ,_.y and tim.con- aumlfl&, Follow the afmple Instructions ••• pour In the recipe (there era 19 In the endo!Md rKtpe bootf), end tum the ....,_, In just 5 mlnut"' )'OU'll have • fuU quart of deHcloua lea c:raeml 110U-...... lcie c-..... $14..f9 TIE "OVDtAUr l.OCM "' A TOR: •Aca. CHA,._ rUltK AND eoslirnc CAR. Baby pin-whale corduroy wlth ,_.,.. •ltlchlnc 1a b~ wtth bendana prtnta and meul buclllH. Hlp-hun•r bas I• llned. ~ doMd Mid ti.. 2 outside pockets and adjust· •bte .trap (7a10"). COlllMltic case has aoldan •"•P·•hut ,,_ ~ mlnoor tn Ud (5• wide). The 4• wWa 11.qclleln chanc• purse holds ~ & keys. 1702ll c-try T• .~~c-;~....., .~.:.;n.;;·,,..-: .It: 11029 ........... AllJ$7.91 A B Grandma & Grandpa T-Sltirts j ---Oranddllldren can I.how who's numbef' o,,. In U..lr lives with tfteM udustve T-.Nrt deslps. TMy celebrate the SSMClel tow between chrldren & .,..ndparents. Gnndmll & srandpa, happily l"OCld"S away, dec::orfte the front of thne shlrtL Grandma sio.en reeds. "'If ....._.. .. ,.. no ••• ea Gnndmll"; Gnndpe.. ~ ...... fala.. nil Granclpe.• Isn't it the truth how their ... e adYtce always carries the day! Gr••• T-Sllitt er_.. T·INrt 621D9--2 Each T-Shirt 62091-Sbie i a..-... 4 62IDIO-Slze' U017--. $199 62019-Stu. -----• '207S-Uu. Glllll-.. 10 UlTT7-SRe 10 UOM-SRe 12 • 62076-S!ze 12 620SJ--u Only '2075-Slze" aoet_... la G.07'-SRe 1a SUM CYCU ••• UST.ocJES.n' E *''CISEJt Rm 1.DaS. Htf'S. TUllMY. Hwe's a,_ iazy way to tone up ... amazln• slim eyelet R•n while you ... rcisel Ra.ct or watch TV as you pedal away. Tone up lees. tummy, hips In Just mlnut" e day, without t.ktns time away from otti.-thmp on your 9Ched- ule. T..,._r atee1 tr.me; att.ched vtn,yf floor mat-folch =-·~--~ ~~ .~~~~· .. ~. ~~ .~. ~~m= • TllEall•a A f.JtCHI '" lllY ••0•1 What fun-wh•• ..... ._, .... ,.... free rntlna o,, bottom or ll••lr "Innocent" wttlJ• .,.mk m~. He'a bkldeft _.I bew,_JI Is ~ -then sodl.oll-oL Rec. $1.49 llJ.ll-f'r .. ~ .... SLU DECORATIVE INDOOR/OUTDOOR Plant Showcases FOR OUR CRUHT CAltO CUSTOMERS (Mastw Chetp Oii BanllAmericard) FREE 24-HR. SHOPPERS' PHONE-IN SERVICE FOR OUR CR£DfT CAltD CUSTOMERS (Mester Cherp Oii Ban~rd) ~OH CHAllGE ORD£ltS ~00 Oft MORE. JUST DIAL I00-327· 8351. fl.A. CUSTOMERS OIAl ·7521. (Oo not use UMM numbers -=9Pt to Olds ~lse.) SHOP AHYTIME. 24 HRS. A DAY, 1 DAYS A WUX.. P'UASE Fll.L OUT COUP'OH 8D'OR£ CAU.JNCL 9-<>RDER BY MAIL-SATISFACTION GUARANTEED----, I ~Stucioslnc. i.-•1 .,... ••• ,....,n.w.ncm ...... ....S ,_ ...,,_ Milted below. I undentand If I'm not ~ Mtt.fJed wtth any "-". r call retu'" • wftNfl 10 da1S for • full end eo;1..,.... rwfund. How ft em Name of Item Price Many Number MINIMUM ORDER $3..00 Each TOTAL ' l&J7S DllMION LAMf" ntlE WITH AHY ORODI 14Me DANCIMQ SANTA OINLY Sl.99 W1Tff ANY a.tOIR lt£&$6.9t i..-DAMCIMQ CLOWN OM.Y Sl-99 W1Tlf AHY ~ lllll.$6.99 uue ROR POLYOf"llC OM.Y tzM wrTH lllfY ~ L.A..-REIL P• YALUI: Nlllm ...... cmlT Total f« To ftpre: tllClll onls, and -c:"9ft.. Include c:cirr9c:t :::: ... . .. to &¥aid dmlily. This la• ..... pett al ttte c:oR.. We pey 11.Y • ..ifl&.lta rwt. Scrry no stamcia or C.0.0. Add Stllt.e ~ Ta ....... E .. Ea ··· ~ "*"fr .. ,,2.11 ··ii: =•Md .,.... .. .. ... ·f, "*" 2..11 .. 11• . . 1t ""' ....... ..., • . .. 1.11 .,.... ........... YNl"SClm~ ,.._ tw a=-PMne i.ttate It• _, ca,y 11eta1s. Sd lptioll an' STA1" D1'---- "9 MAT CllAllll llT1 0 MAS1tll CMAllS(• 0 IMKMIElllCMO <°" OllllUS OF $5.00 Olt MOit£) ACCT. e UPIAATIC* DATT _____ _ •u ...-. llntlf Clllrl• '"° 111dlc:8t1 tM fOUJ Ml'lben lllbowe'"' w ti'"'--------L-....-------I ------------_.J c D PATRKJnC SALT & ....... IETI P9rtl ~ JO'" t.bM wtth colorful 1l•r•d ceramic •hakars •heped Ilka the famed Liberty Ball. On•'• bfuonad with U.S. fies; the othw bears a Re¥Olutio1Mry War drum. Ea. Jl,4•. 1~~ l&I" . fut RD 901'l1..f; fl.ASHUGHT MM£S UHtQUE COMVDtSA- 11<* "'EC£ nii. c.lavetty. dHl&ned fluhllcht maaqli«· adn as ''11\e Beer that ~d• MllwaukM f'•mous"-« i. It the other wwy around? Thia neat novelty lite la aura lo make a amfftl hit ~ your Manda. Looks ao rNI they'll try lo pour ltf 10" hl&h .,.._ bottle takea two "O .. alza battwlaa {not Included). 17034---r llottte Flaahltstit . . . . . .. $3..99 8AIUN" SODA HOLDEll KEE~S llEf'RtOERATOllS OOOR FREE Mini rapllca of first alectrlc refrl••rator hotds baklns soda to absorb odors, k••P flavors from mhdn•. Holda 2 to 3 cups. f'Qly; 2'A-2%.S·. 15511-a.llJnl .... ................... $1.AI CHECK •LOOO PM:SSUlft AT HOM[. K••P a close watch on health of IO¥ad -by taklnc blood ..,... IUl'W NMlnp at the doc:tot's request. Medkalty eccurna. preclalon-m•ck sP't,,.,.... ~-.. ~ .. prof .. slonall)' dftlSnM for doctors and students. It ~all__,._ ~·-·····r---831 ............... 4..91 NETTY HEN POTHOLDDt perks up your kitchen with -ntTy brtpt color. Thldt protective ~ddln1 means nothln.-'1 "too hot to han- dle." Pretty and practlcal addition to 7our kitchen. Han& loop. 6 . 16512-Hen Hot4af ... $1.49 Colonial Scale Model Furniture ,.........., o.&llllM ....... ect'-" C~ad from actual fumlturw prodUC*S In America ~ t 7SO ., t 7971 Mlnlaturn~ly ac:.lad & chtalledl Lons buffet tabla with turned wood t.c1; t71pla dr...., with slld-lnc ....,,,.,..; 2'4r-sliver c:ablftet: hla:hbcw wltlt louvered doon. lhelvn .. drawal"I; lowboy hutch with louvered doors; and • bellutJful open hut7;h with 3 sHdlnc d,.._,.. ., 12 mln- 1.tvrw ~ts abow. bch richly snlned wood piece i. bellutlfully finished In • warm walnut with Solden h.rO- warw on doors & dni-ra. •• ,.........., ... ~ $UI 1a11 "• • =~~ ta.,._.,,_ .,..., Cl-.S¥11 tlMI La kg tD11-lfftlrClllllllltCld1$1• ta. *&UiJW{J $4..W 1912-Allb,_.. .... $11 .. Dynasty Table Each nble Is handpelnt.d with tr.d~I oriental -In brilliant colon. Mistie: rNS- tar.orb passed down from pnentlon to pneration. Each table Is fl.-t quality hard-wood.~ first wltft a coat of~ black i.cquw. Eadl addltioo\al coat 11 allowed b> dry before the nelCI la •ppllad ... the mutt Is • lons-leatln1 ftnlth with the appeanmc:ia of fine patent leather. The hand-painted acanas slw the prb- lns appeal of iillnc Dynasty ort1ln•l1. The accent table can fraast.nd or be placed •••Inst • wall. Each table Is 30" ull with 2-18'" 1helws and 2-9'h• shelves. 137'°-Ac:cent T•Me .. $19.99 LUFFA rAOS-NATUM'a OWlll WASHC.lont. Used In the ~ .,.. tor centurlas.. the luffa p.t tc"'b' •••.II' •round-In dirt, bullt-41p dried akin •nd •iws 10" en lnvlaonitlnt ,,,.. ..... um and .. ,.., hotda io.cts of suds, don not ab-'> dirt bf odorw, rimes cf•n. dries In mlrt-utea. Set of 3 luff• pads with hantlnc loops. each •pprox. 7"4'. "4~ ......... $Lit MASIERWORKS llEHtND ~ In~ ant.lq ued metal,,...,__ Galnsborooct<s "Blue SOY" end S!r n-Nlt uwrenc:e'• "fllnkJ•" -b .. utlful full color prints NprOduced In Italy. ~ ate &Meed behind stau In exqul• haly omata met.et ,,...,.. to ..,.. play with pttde. Velvet-Ilka bedl-t,._ Set of 2. 5Y.t•8~· .-ch. lS465-MasterpMc9 ~ ............... tt.M REAL DIEKl. HOltN MAKES EVEllY CAii .. IUNO CW TffS •OADI.. Ellan tin)' CO!Qpacb ~haw the rou of super tntctor- ttaa&ar. wt.I tMr w ., • b&ut from this ...,,,.. afec:tnc: dMMI hom. Commands atllautlon .•• aMtolY can't be i.noncll Get )OW felr share of th• ..,_.)' "° mattw ~ stn car you're drlvfnsl Mountln• brecJlet•. 8'arctwet.. Nl1.t~follow IMt.li.- tion IMtluc:tlons lndd. 12 YOft. Hoa-m...c ...,.. .... s11.99 A booll41Hd tfWrw Instantly ,,_ 'Into e ~ M1orw r'IM" very ~ Contained ln • poucb -.Jly ~ In • •ltl:ue. .... poctwt °" '-Mfbec. IMtent U..... t«: www • Wa1S•..t114t• aultCeH. tt'• c.onatruct9d of • tie~ndsorne and durable wwt9r- pnl0f pCa6d faoric. Brtns It •tone .._.. you peen to M COllllfts '** wttti ,,_.. miff ttten rou atef'11ed out wtttt. Wotb the ~ -1 too .._.. rou•,. comlns bec:ll wtttt ..... It co41epua Into lb own conwnletrt f::h. 1ra the henctletlt thine since IMtant c:offM l t:t-•ttatent Lllaq9 .. .. . . . . . . . .. . . .. . . ,, ....... ... -. ...... ... .. ... .... .. . . .. ... . . . . . 2/17.99 j • ~YI ...... , .. -YOU ==-. ....... ANtWIZAL- AHYTIMD It'• finally herel The f•moua wrist l"lldlo --• runt. . . . •nd at • .,..... low prtcel Just r aaoes, tt p1cu up •II AM stations ... dej'-'a rldl c:t.af' sound. Wide leather· look band. ,._nllte batt. not Incl. 1656'-AM Wriat R .......... $14.519 POOi ON A 80LDOt TRIM PLATE HOMOllS 81tANO. lllOJHU. Oold•n·f'lmm•d poc.eUID p&et8 Is d-=onlted with hendpeinUd fla..n • -. heert·warmlnc poem . .... a°" ...... t~--=·· ................... $1..11 SMOO'nt-AWAY CALLUSES ... IECOMOS. G« becti "' ~lus R-eats rid of -.. ..t1 Kin In .-,da. Tums lt to an~­ smooth •klnl Safe H •n etectric ahewf'. Sturdy plas .. tic: case end 6 ft. -...anc cord. ReflO pacb of 7 waf9r Mads _Ile.,.._ UD17-C...Raa ... 1918 ..... (7 ...... ) $1.19 TAUUNG ANIMAL aOOI( SOUNDS ALIVE! SquHJ• eectl colorlul pace & hear dcls . baril. cat meow, horM neWl. pip punt. Squeeze whol• book at once & l:':c~• down on the term. . Uon•I funl Wipes clean. 401l-Anlnlet .... . . $1.29 £ •• f INSTANT Cookie Maker Grows & Blooms Anywhere-A .. rl•t "LIFE AIR PlANT'' Now dellaiht famlly, friends wltft llcht crisp, rntilt-ln-your-mouth confections just lllw In Slftllrt Ewope.n aifwal Fast. usy, f'lm. Set lnctudn SWedlsh ROMtta Iron plus 3 cest alumltlom forms In dln-t deslcns. ROMtte Iron ha1 double and IO you make two cootd" at onc:e. Juat dip forms In better, then In hat oll and fry for puffy. Soklen bf'Own d•llsfa. WhU. warm sprlnkl• with conlectloners' 1upr. Free recipe Included. 1'801 ............. c..u. ... _ ./ . •• \ ,, . . . _; ' . . ~~~'· ' ;,-r I: i \ .. ·I . .'., I "' ' • j ' -- ~SIM &DldlllMulllc ............ of a 400 0., ~ Clld "9Jos ""£ ......... -,_ "'T1'e s..... .,, Maald"' This marvelous musJcal replica of • 400 day anniverqry dock is a tie.• ttful music box It pla~ the enchaftt· Inc ''Edelw.,ss" from "'TlM Sound el llusk: " As 1t plays. the four .,...., counterbalances revolw exactl1 1111ia the ones In the actual dock unds • Cf)l'SQI CIHr plastic esom.. It'& an U • qulslte replica of one of the WOl"lcr& most falTIOU$ tlmepMces turned Into a m1111lc box. An el._.nt piece for .wt', table or mantel 4%• x 8" hiah. l8Dl7-Anntwn.ry Clods Mu9lc ... 17.W .... _., ... am .... ._~._ .......... ,r fHtll•'1, J•ll•• caa1ry 111ercllu IHI~• :;s::. .. ••· ... 11....... .. ,,.. ... ftewen. .... die ~=~wttt,..~ ' 1"'6tt.m,Wlle'U .................... .. ....,...,...~w. 1•11 r s 111111 ••• $1• .,.... nAm .. W'ttGl.S1"DY -?RS'tAllnX. ---.. Y. ~ .....,,,--. llpl?t-ln Mltlo m· COl-tlble ... end wt , ... ...,...,, ~ •P oowen. klllP9a-w.utlwww,..oof, tr'lll p rmt. wrthmlndtl ~u.rws tD 400'". Ull9fhdlld bJ wetitr, =-r--· ---tor JI 2'" wide rciA; cut ... JOU um&-11 I • T .......................... S1.9t ...._ ................................ l/PA9 , , f ,,,\\\~' ) ONE DROP MOLDS ATON wmtDEa ADt4Dfft -~ DltOP HOUJS A 1°" °' flttESSllRE MaM lmposslbio repairs from• alncfo tube .tu-.t mWns or ~,._ Bond virtually ony brMlll In pon:etalft, cenmks. rubber, penttc, ata•s.. or wood. Wonder itdtMstw moU. an lnvlalblo bond that dries In --* ond ta FOREVER! ll2 •PP'ic:ations. 13057-~ ................. SZM ; ~ WHflDI DtKOI a.ED TILE GaOUT PAST with this .. ,Y4' white tile llnw. Ono oppCicotlon does It! Fool· proof appicat.or flows In precfM llnea. No mlatakes, no ...._ no mGf'9 tedious I~ Krubblnc with • toothbrvsh and bfeoeht Non-1ellCJlilrins. 4 ou.-bottle =a~W:.'W.~~-..... , ............ $3.99 -ftllmcum-• rm •r-no. ......... tNlll Ill.., ..... wmtdt ......... dim ""' .. ,.. ,... ..... ltMtf.,.., '" .. .,.,..... Allon "'"' tll ... ... llP.t, .U.lltlllc ..... •n aroWUi for atrfftlf lffftltr, llNIU.ltr pta•taf tr llL WIN & plMtlc. 11111-1"111 .•...•• , ... f'tMTNU_.__.. IAlllTI A•YWllll AT --llabMSJ• ....... ................. ... ,.. ...,.. Wftll 111111· ... ,.......,....._ .... Ill·,., ...... alltsl fltl ~lllqa •P to IW lllafl, ..... lllta mi. ST tit IT. Hts ) IWfwt lf9IL . ~ ........ .... MA8Nll'IC~NTWIND CMI... POa OOC.WAY, P'CMCH, "ATIOI Choose pnltdfW~« -nnc...-... lnttie ....-~tt.ey.wlns, _.y Md ~ to IM ... Unlns Munth of mualc. H-chime t.eturw IS bronzed .. ,,ioM ~ ... '""" 1-• horMMecl •nd ..__~-Ind dtlmo flH • po-rful, •,...ad· •• ,,. ... -.to up toe> wftti • ~ "' ......... , bints _,..,_ below ..• oa 1n rtct. ~wtor·flnlsh•d ton••· 14172_...,_ .... c.... i~·w.;.;.·Jl-: nn .............. ..... GIANT lllMIMWl!JI .._. dlewortt soes so much foster wlttl ttll• omaz~ ,_ ma1nlf!M thet you II be ••toni.hed with )'Ol.lr own speed. tt'• 1 s~ wldo end honca froln your __..__,,. .... , neck by • &O'don cord ... lie~ too, lu.t focu ounceal It'• Made from the aamo material ... ~a.n...ton- 1uro oeitbl clarity. You'll UM It fol readlnc and any otfler ftno -* too. 17209-QlaM ..................... ""' ...... ,,...... fJlftMoo.d Meld In ....... C*'lbal.,...... "' ......... ......, ............ fJll tJred -I:• ....... .... .,..,... No ..................... Of'Y outlet. A&ltonwtlc sfM.Gft: ~ the vtn1' floor MM. -......... ......•......... tJ.ZM G H Engagement Ring-Wedding Band Combination Set Exqu~ almulated diamonds In hM"Y .a.ctn> plated white aold rll\p speell your kwel Two-tier weddlnc band Is studded with 18 tiny slmul~ diamonds.. Sofitlllre ~ rinC hH a ctn.ale four Pr"OnC"ed Tiffany .ettr,,.. Wom Mparataly, .-ch ts a spect.Kular dlaplay of beautyt Slip tha soltt.lre ~ dM twin banded weddlna rlnc to creata • !~,,::_~~~a~.~~~~ ... ~.~. ~1':M J 7231-Stze 5 17234-Sln 8 J 7232-Sl.H 6 l 723~8Ue 9 J 7233-Slze 7 UAYHl·LHI Nill TWHI llTI A HIP· ......... 9'BU ... / canJ ,,_.,. .. I .... .... ..,.. .... c....._ It loobl~ Hua ''"' lutller ll11tfte1. ""'--"--m.. ...... .. l2YJdr .... wttii fMr cuter........_ "o•-fnt roll U10H ....., ...... ...,. .. . .. Cir .......... ... ~ ....... ... ;::· ....... , ............. OVEt-11tE·OOOlt 90C*.!llACK MMU Alf'r DOCM A """°'" llACll U91lMY. Sturdy metal ~ .. ldeel for aton,,. .,..,.. becA books fK IMtadl ..,_ wh«e spece 19 limited. ttanp Neurely -tM top of any door; won't Interfere with etc. Inc. C.n also be hunc fluUI on any ft.t wrhlce. e,.s. fin. Wied metal !>fends with any decor. An Mtdltional '1ICk can be fastened to dM lnltJal unit If more itpece •• neecMd. 21 •x 2l"d" ct.ep. 17151 P11P Kil . . .. 19.tt TOOL RACK HOlDS UP TO 34 HAND TOOLS Rec:ti tN1s 34 holes, ell different s1zas and shepes, to hold ell your toots. Kwp ~I .. orpntz.t In worbhop; find the tool you need without seerchln&. Heavy 16-pup Industrial steel; rust· remtant baUd enamel finish. 24 • loric; .u.ches with 2 9ClftL 16446-Tool Reda ..•.. ····~······· .iz.,t GENUIM ~Ma a..oo.5 a.EAT ... ~ CA"-' ,.ATCtfWOl8U Western s-nta stytlns toola """tion.r In colorful S41ede ~ petchesl They're joined topther Into an alepnt, IOft ..... butter shoulder b ... Plenty of ,_ IMkM I. b ovwffow, ~ ouwr pockets. "Sett •loops" ~ tct> ;rl~r. With • mat.chine suede p;td. visor C41P-' you really pt It tocethw"'I Bae llx7x2 ~ "; hlrt ftts all. 14251-htd\ Suede ................... $6.99 14252-... tdt ... Hat ................ ..... TO ORDER: USE HANDY-COUPON ON P. 3 OF THIS SECTION I THOU6HT THl5 WA~ 5Uf'POSE O TO ae A SCARt/ ·5H.OW... ll NANCY THIS INFLATION rs· AWFUL n'' FOR A ? • ' tOCAL. WANT ADS • ' SUNDAY, NOVIMID 30, 1975 t'LL NEVER GO SWtMMlN6 IN THE OCEAN A6AIN ! WHAT 's ·so IEf<f{lF'<'lNG A60VTTHIS SHOW? 1/-30 - • W~EN 00 WE GET TO , THE SCAf<L{ PART ? I OON1T 5EE ANL{THIN6 . VER'/ E;(CITlNG, ElTHE~! B Ernie Bushmilf .. EVERYT~ll NG IS GCING UP I JUST SAW A SIGN THAT SA ID IN PRICE ---ESPC.CIALLY FOOD THAT SAYS ''BANDANAS '' NOT BANAN AS Y OU.RE RIG HT f;f .II; I / // ;// JI , 11 BANANAS THREE DOLLARS EACH II f/; 8 ANDA N A5 j f; $3 EACH . I . I //1({1 /! / /1~ ... ,..._._ I . I I I ·' ' " I I I NOY. 30 y,,, o_.0 us. c4i1 c• -• , , .. , .. ·~ •"'•o tf!,1'l1\t1l'l"'t•1'-~•;. 1"'1 .. ~ • ..,. JJ ·h TJ..117 MO~N ING ! KICKED A ~TONE TWICE. YE4STeR'DA~ I WATCHED A WET PIECE OF PAPE~ CLA~L I.AP. TH rg rs A NeEDLE ,,,ooyou WANTTO )'EU..~W? C> t> [> MEANWHILE JUST A WEEK OR SO! HAVE YOU AT THAT TIME HE WAS KNOWN HITCH HIKING AND I WALLY PICKED HIM UP A COUPLE VERY HUNDRED MILES FROM LONG ? HERE ,,,THEN I SAW HIM DAY! .. L.AST NIGH~ I wrTN E~7E:O MY • FATHe~ EfL../NK J..4 t'3 eve? A FEW TIM E-$. -·. -.... ' ALL PIGHT. .. NOW HOLD YOUR ~~AIH. WHAT'~ NEW WITH YOU, AICTHLA~? THS: OTHE~ DAY, I ~NAPPeO A Ollreo IWIG ~/GHT IN HALF. •.;, 1-0i~!! TOOAY I O~NK TWO Gt-A~e~ o~ WATE~. F~IOAY L.A~i l 8flU~H&O A PleCf o~ LINI OFF OF MY ,I.All. • · ON iLAE~OAY, ~TOO~ A ~PL.INiE~ o&Ar or: . MY f=l~!1'. YOU ~eAw...Y UVE AN E.><CITING '-'~e, A~THV1~. ~· By Hank Ketcham OGE PARKER <J <1 <J HE'S BEEN MISSING OYER TEN HOURS AND NOT A WORD FROM HIM ! WE'VE CHECKED THE HOSPITALS AND THE JAILS ,,, BUT NO BART SILVAN! HE WAS HITCHHIKI NG AGAIN! I PICKED HIM UP,,, BUT I DIDN 'T RECOGNIZE HIM BECAUSE HE'D SHAVED HIS BEARD! WHAT ARE IF HE DOESN 'T --. YOU GOING SHOW BY MORNING, TO DO? 1'LL HAVE TO CALL THE POLICE LIEUTENANT AND TELL HIM WHAT HAPPENED! CAN 'T YOU WAIT-A WHILE LONGER? I JUST KNOW BART WILL 17------~ SUDDENLY APPEAR! .. I . WIGHT WAS DIFFEREMT FROM OTHER BIRDS BECAUSE HE SlEPT UNDER A '62 VOL:K5WA6-EN AND AS A RESUlT HE WAS pFTEN COVERED WITH Oil f ONE DAY lliE BIRDS WERE lOOKIN6 FOR WORM5 IN 1HE 4ARD BUT 1HE WORMS WERE mo FAST I . MULLINS ... PITY You DIDN 1T l<NOW ME IN HIGH SCHOOL., EMMA--I WAS A SMA~HING CH,AP C.VE.N IHEN ... DOCTOR SMOCK WSL-L-,. -rHeRe ARe !HOS~ PAll~NIS WHO C'ON ,_,. Vv'ANI -ro ee: Fe!? ~ BY us... -..: ...... I WAS UNDOU BTEDLY IHE Mosr POPLll-AR L,AD IN MY CLASS ... .. BUT SINC.E HE WAS COVERED WllH Oil, GWIGHT WAS ABLE TO .SLIDE DOWN THE HOLES AND CATCH 111EM I . LIKED BY ALL ... THE CENTER OF /J-H: 111N" CROWD... · 1l1US HE WAS 1HE 0Nl4 ONE WHO HAD LUNCH 1HAT DA()/ A R~,AL. DoN ..JUAN, -roo ..... . . WHICH ONLQ GOES 10 PRO\J E, THE Olk,4 BIRD GETG 1HE WORM! UPTO Now, l BET you IHOUGHT Goot> OLD WALT ~ F.tN1:S~ANl>~-~"i By George Lemont AND SOAAe GIRL-S HUR-J IHe.AAseL..ves C~RRYING IN SUPPL..-IE:S ... • I • ~ ~ c ••<><>LE~'..$ I 1-30 ~/ c . \ ·Lo ~ ~ . . -... • • ; . . I r: "" .. . • .. . . • • -" I f I / CAN YOU TRUST YOutl EYES? Thtrt are at ltut she dlfftr· enca in dr-wln1 dttalls between top and boUom panels. How quickly can J<HI faod them? Check answers wUh ·th<* ~low. I 'llUHJllP ll Ire• .udlcf ·~ •IUf!.lJJIP •1 .11110::> ·9 ·u 11oqs •1 pn iq JO JIO'l ... "1uJSJtW 11 •:11•0 ·c ·1u1u1w IT 1p1•\\ ·c; "loJAIW ll 'llHJ,'I\ ·1 :u ;iu..i.lJJ!a BOOMER. I WA;· SLJPPOS~D . fO se WITH . LYLf. 10"1 IGHT I 6Uf 1H6R~ IJJA6 A · 0Qe,A K 00(.()N IN COMMUNICATION \ Ha/<K.ilulma/J ~ e \\JI,\ T 'rllt: OI Ct\f ~S! $omt>one 1ooft<I nn th 141M Y.Ord of •ach of thc."C bool\ t1tl b)• Chari l>lcktn\: t. i\ Chml m Canot. :?. Our Mutual hend. 3. ~Llrlln P•c"h'\\ll. c.in ) Oll conttl them'! ., •11,i, .. 1111111) ·i; ·pu,.1q ·c: ·1c•n.) ., e Qukkly, add t'tKhl. l'l"hl\'·l'li,:ht y .rnd r111ht rights • fur :\da', ''f'ii:ht. \\hu·h 1 \\hat'1 • \l'I' 11111· ,, .. 111un11 .lUU SllllNDER! scoitit 0 pofnb ,. u1ln1 all th• -------4--~~~ letten ln the word below to Corm __ .;..._.;.;....;+..----~ two complete word1: 8 E V 1-: R A G t; ore 2 points each for all _ __...:._-=+-~~~ let.ten ot more __ _.__:....;.;+ ........ ...._~""'"'!::• he letters. at leut 50 point.a.----+~~. By Brown and Casson G{PGY, YOV K'NOW 90Me1H ING? 8~ .. TH£ f~OU8 L~ WITH P€0Ple 1<JOAY 15 1H&Y OON'f £V£~ SA'( WHAT r~e'{ MeAN Af'J'f Mo~E ' 11-30 ''A ~~€A~OOWN IN COMMUNtCAltON '; Now WHY OoN1 i yo u l€LL M~ Hf. WAS SU PPOS60 Io CALL ME:- AN D MY PHONB 'S BeeN OUT O~ OTZD~~ ALL. DAY. . GASOLINE ALLEY ·Skeezix hasn·t bouqht another 1V,. Nina? I . WHAT llEAL.l-:l H-.AP.Pef'Je-~~ .. · . ·~ .. . . Best -thinq that ever happened to him! t ~e's in the den readinq, . . 1mprovlnq his mind! rm so ashamed!' But with all -the bi.q qam~s com1nq up ... by Dick Moores You could join 1VA ~ Tele- ·) Viewers Anon~mou;, ! ~ ~ ~ ~ 'J:''t:TJ:Mt::SLE~::E::::E:::CS by Tom K. Ryan .5CRIB6LE '5CR\e>6LE · 5CR\06LE. ® c I •<><>LE~',.$ 11-30 ~I c CAN YOU 1RUST YOUR EYES? Thtrt are at leut six dlCCtr· ences In dr~winc details between top and bottom panela. How quickly can fCN fmd them? Cheek anawer1 with those below. ·11unJ11P 'l lfO&.wdfd '9 •1u~UJJIP •I nno::> ·~ ·u11011s s1 p11~1q 10 1•0, .,. °IUJUJW" "I'::> ·c 'IUf"IW •11p11·.\\ ·~ 'IUJSIJW fl \llHJ.\\ ·1 :suu~UJJ'O BOOMER . . TOPPE .. ! "~o", thi~ _! \\ouhl lllJ~c ,111 1n1c.:r6f111~ l)rna• ----BULLETIN 80ARD.--- e\\ll\ r Jll~. l>lt "' \"\! ~llllt'Olll' aoortd on the la"L "ord or t•.it:h or thl"C hook till~ by Ch>4rl Dickrns I. ..\ C'hri'6.mtt.'i farrnt. :.!. Our ~lutual Fiend. a. ~Lulln P1ckl1•\\ it. C.1n ~ ou rom•ct tht-m'! e Qui<'kl~·· acid t'1J!ht. 1•li.:ht~ ·••1j.!llly .inrl l'lllht t'lghts (Or A®!> \\t'll:hl. \\hi( h I\ \\hUl°! \I\"' f>U" l'•lllHllllj 1111) , e SAFETY as an Important word during the hohctays, Of' uy time. Can )OU find al lea!lt (he more \\Ords amonf lt.s letter)'! Ill\ Ill IM lhl' tnr ol 3 ChmtffiJ) e1·w~\~"! Sa~ fthl: Sally ~1wad :.llllll·d ~dllla·i; trt·,· • ,,11d thl' 111.11h pro!() or. shOt'\. Sick i.hN•p 'houlcl 'll·l'P 111 a ,h,•ct . .. ,,.: hJ\l' .1 ~h"h'r ,,1 1.., llrdn, h\C ~lf1; CS to a fl!\\. I iJ\ oi ch oukr llrdc:\ nf in' J nunil'a lrum I 0 thrnu~h 17. ··Quc .. 11un How c.rn the d1~1h onl' 10 nme he plactd in the blJnk cl rde so thJt thl! COIJI ot t he n·ntcr Jlld nlld· Jlc numben. in Jll J1· rcctioni. -:(\\i<tl) the ... mount ol ch lllunbcr in place fn ihc outer-· mclcs?" ii Clue: Key to aMwcr ~.L~~~~=~~~;;ii~=:::ii._LJ - 1\ center number. FACE TllE MUSIC! Th,re arc d1thl rftore races than meet wt14t IMO.If ll •11•1 pu• muu UI • ·~· ... ,be rye IO the carolinif SCl'llC ilb0\1!. Can you find them? 111.Rr, II~ Rh! Apply color' lnr J 'urprt'-4' p11 tur1· I It• i!. :?-1 t hlUl'. :j-,t>llO\\. 1-l 1 hrti\\11. ·,-1 h'h ft-l.l :,:11111 j IH. hmwn. 8-Dk. blu1• • IH" i:n-1·11. 111-( .r.I\ I I -I.I. purl'I• SPtili81NOER! scoag l 0 pofntt ,. uaina all the leltenln the word below to form two complete word•: K E V f: 1l A G ~. ,. ' - By Brown and Casson WMAl'5 1H~ MA11e2, l WAC:J· SLJ PPOS~D . fO se WITH. LYLE: ION IGHT, 6Uf IH£12.~ WAS A · B~e.A K DOWN GYP6Y, YOU k'NOW GOMt1H JNG ? TH£ -rrzouBL~ WlfH Pi30Ple IOOAY 15 1He'1' oot-J·r everz SAY WHAi IH6Y MEAN ANY MOk'G 1 · GY.PSv'1 IN COMMUNICAllON e~ . • . GASOLINE ALLEY Skeezix hasn't bouqht another 1V. Nina? ( . Hi, Skeezi'JC! Nina sa~ .. ' \ \'A g1(€Al(OOWN IN COMMLJNICA/tON '; Now WHY 00N'1 You 1€LL M6" WHAT REAL(..~ ·WAP.Pef'Je-D1.? No TV at all? I can't believe ·t I I . You've become a closet viewer! Best thinq that ever happened to him! t. ~e's in the den readinq, . . 1mprov,nq his mind! Ht; WAS SU PPOS60 lo CALL. Ml ·• ANO MY PJ..lONt 'S f3£E-N OUT OF-0120612 ALL, DAY . rm so ashamed!' You could join 1VA ~ Tele· Viewer s Anonymou:,~ But with al I -the bi_q qames cominq up ... DICK TRACY C&\A!)~ THE HALL DOOR TO THE F=tAT WMERE VERA ALLDf D 15 BEING MELD CAPTIVE. . . .... ... IRACY NEWLY INSERTED SCREWS PIERCE DOOR FROM THE INSIDE. FIGURES i>-4E DOOR IS BOOBY TRAPPED ! ·29-... >- ". COVER 'EM , SAM\ WH ILE I LOO~ FOR VERA. WATCH OUT FOR T~AT BOOBY TRAP! GORDO I.' 'l 1. . .. »f~:\'il~,~~) ( .....,.._.......,. __ f ,~ l I . i I I I I I ) I { ,, SAM AND TRACY WENT TO THE REAR • Ii~ Clliester Gould --------------~..-.... WE'RE .WARNING ~ou, we HAVE SMIELDS. 1s "1TTOO L..ATE FOJ:< LUNCH? . By Gus Arriola .... . ·. IP ·. Tf//S PO We~ /,.!NE . EVER ENP6 UP V~OpR.­ ~UAIOt I W!l-J,.;,i ~~}At) iOOf ~ .... • ! .! i \ i \ ! : . i • J ! 4 ! ! . • ' • r j --'