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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-01-21 - Orange Coast Pilot.. IRS to Reopen Civil Tax Fraud • . Probe of -Nixon? DAILY PILOT Doctors' Strike Contagion Hits .. 2nd DB Hospital' ' .. . I• ' , . ' , * * * 1oc * * * " ' \ ( r \j WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21 , 1976 ~ ... MO. lt, 4 SllCTIOMS. • .. AGH Lamp, Potty Foul Up Tot Tuesday just wasn't Wendy Westbofrs best day. Firemen received a call at about 9:30 a.m. from Wen· dy's mother who said the 2·year-0ld bad a lampshade stuck on her head. Sonya Westhoff told firemen that she had been cleaning her home at 1621 Baycliff Circle in Corona del Mar and little Wendy was "helping." SOMEHOW THE CIULD bumped the bottom of a wall Jamp and the half·round shade fell down onto her head where the wire spokes held it firmly ln place. Mrs. Westhoff said she tried for 20 minutes to get it off, with Wendy getting more and more unhappy. By the time firemen arrived to cut her out of the lampshade the little girl was "screaming bloody murder." her mother said. Once firemen cut the shade oft, everything seemed to be going just fine. UNTIL WENDY WENT to use the potty a few minutes later. "She got locked in the bathroom and it took m e a good five mjnutes to get her out," Mrs. Westhoff sai.d. Doctors' SloWdown Hits 2nd Hospital Dodor:s at a second Huntington Beach hospital have joined a medical slowdown by voting to ell min ate elective surJery. A spokesperson at Pacifica Hospital reported today that doc· tors voted Monday night not to book any further elective opera· tiom. The official said it is too early to feel the imp act of the slowdown yet. "The stalf bas not been cut yet,'' she said, "but it may have to be later this week." Doctors at Huntington ln- tacommunity Hospital were the fint in West Orange County to eliminate elective suriertes. An official said today that· about 55 stalf members bad been laid off. She also reported that the number of patients at Huntington Shell Oil . . Redireea Gaa HOUSTON <UPI) - Sbell Oil Co. today an- DOW\Ced a r:nny per iauoo decrease the price ol 1a10Une effective im· med.lately. The natlonwtde reduction applies to all claues of trade, resellers and consumers. Shell aald the reduction reflect• current martet ecmd!Uon.s. lntercommunity Hospital has risen from SS to 60, up slightly from Tuesday. Officials at both hospitals said that emergency operations are being carried out. Doctors at Huntington Intercommunity vot· ed to curtail their performances 'lbursday night. John Christianson, ad- ministrator of Fountain Valley SANJ)IEGO DOCTORS JOIN"tLOWDOWN, Page AS ·Community Hospital, said today doctors there are continuing their normal surgery schedules. "The patients need surgery · and our doctors are providing ·it," he said. He said there has been no slowdown and that 32 operations, both elective and emergency in nature, were performed Tues· day. He said that the patient census is hicb wttb up to 75 percent of the '214 beds occupied. Ute's Robbed LOS ANGELES <UPI> -A iunman boUDd two Jewelry store employe1· wltb tape Tuesday before-fiednl with 13> diamond rings valued at $80,000. Sheriff's deputies uld the man forced a Zale's Jewelry store clerk, J.B. wan. 23, to bind the handa and feet of clerk Ju am Macbarro, 25, wttbtape. u Delly ...... Stiff ..-.... FLAMES AT CAMP PENDLETON FIRE THREATENED BASE HOUSING PROJECT Realdents Were Evacuated, But Allowed to Return When Danger Passed IRS Probing 'Tax Fraud' By Nixon? From Wire Services WASHINGTON -The Internal Revenue Service has reopened a civil tax fraud investigatjon into Richard M. Nixon's 1900 tax re- turn, the Washington Post and the New York Times reported to- day. In a story by Bob Woodward, one of two reporters Who gained fame through reporting the Watergate case, the Post noted the IRS bad concluded in 1974 it did not have sufficient evidence to charge the former pres1dent with civil fraud. Now, the paper reported, in- formed sources said the agency "believes it can abow that the former president bad had knowledae of a back-dated deed claimin& an illegal deduction for his 1lft of papers tq the aovern· ment." IRS ofltciall would neither roll· firm nor deny the reports. U fraud is proved against Nlx· on, the Poat said, be would be (See NIXON, Pafe.U) • Flilre Sparks Fire At ·Camp Pendleton By FREDERICK SCJIOEMEllL ot•DeltyP'lle4 ..... A stubborn brush fire on the Camp Pendleton Marine base knocked out power to 22,000 homes in eight south Orange County communJties and forced evacuation of resldents from a base housing project early today. By midday, the blaze had con· Victim Slain In Bos Heist • MEXICO CITY (UPI) -Three armed banditt shot and killed a ~ pusenaer bttause he re- fUMd to band over a plastic bag he was canytng, police reported. tnalde the.,., were two botUH ol milk, two notebooks, a peocil and nQte from the victim's child. "Daddy: buy a 300 page notebook, one with 100 pages, and apencll, ''it read. sumed 400 acres at the north end of the base. Officials said the blaze was about 80 percent con· tained. Full containment was ex· peeled later today, they Aid. · Power to San Diego Gas and Electric Company customers - including former President Nix- on -in San Clemente, Capistrano Beach, San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point, Laguna Niguel, and portions or Mission Viejo, Laguna Hills and South Laguna went out of service at 4:16a.m . Service was restored at 6:23 a.m., according to the SD&E spokesman. The ftre broke out about 8: 12 p.m. and San Clemente Fire Olief Ron Coleman said the ap· parent cause was a traininc flare that came in contact with brush. The fire moved in a westerly dlrection and for a time threatened homes in the San Onofre Hou•inl Project at th• ex· treme north end of the base. (See FIRE. Pase .U) 0 'Major Turning Point'.? WASHINGTQN (UPI) President Ford today proposed a "major turning point for the American people" with a $394.2 billion budget which, he said, concedes the federal government cannot solve every problem in the land. Laced with cutbacks and sure to be controversial in an election year, the fiscal 1977 plan em- phasizes stro'nger national de· fense, the search for energy, higher tax cuts for wage earners, business and investors and mak· ing elderly sick and working poor pay more of their own way. Social Security taxes would go up to save the troubled fund which pays retirement benefits to most working Americans. If passed by Congress, it would mean a federal spending record. But Ford said its relative austeri· ty would strike a proper balance between the needs ofthe nation as a whole and Ameridans who are actually poverty stricken. "We will give more money to those below the poverty line and cut off those above," said the <See BUDGET, Page A?) Coast Weather Gusty northeast winds 25 to 3S mph seen for Orange County Thursday, making ·for sunny skies and fair night s. Not as warm Thursday with beach highs 68 rising to 78 inland. Lows tonight in the 50s. · INSIDE TODAY . Polutinian guerrillas crossed into Ltbcmon Jrom S11rlo ond have OVt'n"tm .a Chri1tion village .ond tight~ o lfege on the big. pelt town in the &kaa V°"'1/. St011/, map A4. •••ex DAILY P1LOT .... s · Wednetday. Janu!!y21, 1178 Prank Kills Girl OC Costs Higher H orn Spooks Tustin Teen 's Horse ------- Than U.S. Five days ago, horn-blasting motorist spooked Dana Sharp's hone-in ModJeska Canyon and ~e was thrown to the ground. The 14-yHr-o ld girl lingered in a coma until Tuesda y at Mjssion Community Hospital and then she died. Orange County She rifr's ~partment officials believe the driver who leaned on his horn lll5t Friday afte rnoon did it almp- ly to see iC he could scare the horses. "The girl and two companions weren't even on the roadway of Modjeska Canyon Road," a Sheriffs spokesman said today. One Dad to Go Women Made Mystery Pact HIALEAH, F1 a. CAP) -Police say Katherine Turbt'vdtc. 44. died in silence and complia nce as s he permitted hers elf to be strangled. Charged with second-degree murder m what police an· calling a death pact is Lorraine DiLello, 39, "'ho shared a quiet home in this Mi a mi suburb with Miss Turbeville Poli ce s ay Miss DiLello admitted the killing. "We understand that they'd decided that one of the m . for some reason, had to go," s aid homicide Lt. Cecil Seay a fte r police were summoned to the wome n 's home Tuesday by a call they later dis· rnver ed was m ade by Mi ss DiLello. "flow they dctl'rmined that Turbeville was the nnl' to go. I can 't s ay . . The whole thing is pretty weird." he s aid Seay s md M iss Turbeville w as dressed in her nightclothes a nd settled peacefully in bed. He s aid that the dead woman's throat bore no bruises -a sig~ of a gentle stra ngling with no resistance. • Fro• Pag~ A l F IRE ... Residents of fri ngl' ar~as of the project were evacuated about ~ :.> a m tod ay. but were al- lowed to return to their homes aoout t wo hours later when the danger passed No ::.tructur al damage was re ported by ba~e spokesmen. The blackout affected pohce :i nd fir<.' deparlm<.'nts in San Clement<' and all hos pitals m south Orange County, mcludin~ San Cleme nte General, South Coast Community and Mission Commumty Hospi tal. Officials said that emergency genera tors 1mmed1alely \\ent in- to service and that no problems resulted ·Rut \H ' "ere concerned ... said San Clem ente Police Lt. Clifford Gate~. noting that street lights and all traffic s ignaJs we re af- fected He noted that the outage set off burf!lar alarms at businesses and banks thro ugh out the city Orange County Sheriff's deputies reported a s 1m1lar problem Gatrs said add itional person- nel werC' called to duty in case the fire s h ifte d t o ward Sa n Clemente He said the police switchboard was flooded with calls for early morning risers who wanted to know why the power was out Thret> pt>rsons had lo man police telephont>s to ha ndle the calls. n r J e rom e Thorns ley, ~uperintendent of thr Capistrano l 'nified School D1slnct. said dis- trict administrators started to !ay contmgency pla ns at 5 a. m. to kt'ep schools open des pite the blackout 'At the last minute. the lights ca me back on," Thornsley said. He s aid some students over· :-lept because electric a larm clocks in their homes didn 't go of! Reagan o n Busing ROSTON <U Pl> RC'publican prC'sidential challenger Ronald Reagan m et secretly in New Ha mps hir e two weeks ago with a group of Ro ston antibusmg ac- l 1 v is t s ma ny o f the m Democrats lo dlscuss court- ordered school desegregation and otht>r issues, the Boston Globt' said today. ORANGE COAST lqjifl~l{t)i · ''• Ot,•l'll)r C, ••I 01 li1 f"t1IM •tit wt 1 ~ 1 I It, ... ,. lfV ,,. """'. , .... , I\ µubtl" .. ,. ty If• • ,. Ct, f l'vt>o,,,1,1c,, Ca~nv \.c:io1t.1f• • 'l•t .,,, ,,,. f,tvnh\f"I• l'I Al f\ft,..y tt"CAl'J~ f , 1d-1v t >I CO\tA 111+·\lll ~ .. ._~flrl A+Mh Hunf1t"-1ii;' f ~ ,,., r1111ntn1,, ""* , h v ~~. S wtctltbu ..- v , .... , ftno l •Qun.t k• ,, " ""°"'"' (o,n t A i1noh• •• q..:.""' 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O·•-(N <I ""QI ''"'"' ~ Pltft'f t«1 tw'fllil.\ \IOftt'\ 1llu\lt•t•1~\. •twWI m•ft•r CH .. ,,..,,flt •n•fth tw•PH\ t'f'Mf ff •t•••,.,v· •O • tt\•wt U>•C t41 D~tn htt.-i tf ,...,, .. ,.. .,....,..., .... ,., < f•n IO\l lt .. paid af (Mht Mir~, (,e41..,,1•c1 \utJwrl1)tlOC" c,.. (Mr~ 1 t.1 )\ '"'" _.,,.., ,.. ... , "'u.._,,., • ..,,.,,,.._...,.._ "''"°"''"'' .. f HB Student Sues Casino In Las Vegas A Huntington n each college student. who claims that casino employes grilled him all riight and much of the next morning a fter he won the SSOO jackpot prize in the Stardust Hotel gam- ing room . sued the Las Vegas hotel Tuesday for $1.1 million. Marcel R. J . Poetoehena 111 s tates in his Orange County Superior Court la wsuit that he won the jackpot on J an. 24, 1975, while visiting Las Vegas on a day trip advertised by t he Stardust in Orange County. He claims that he was prompt- ly accused of tampering with the gaming m achine and derued the balance of his $500 until the next d ay when he missed his return light to Or ange County. Poetoehena claims that three c asino employes interrogated him for several hours during which they ridiculed his accent and manneris ms. f'rom Pag~ A J NIXON ..• forced to pay $222,121, which would include $148,0fl> for a 1969 deficiency found by the IRS in 1974 plus a SO percent penalty Cor fraud of $74 ,040. Nixon could challenge a fraud assessment in court. Nixon had no legal obligation to pay the 1969 tax deficiency because the three-year statute of limitations had expired. But fraud has no statute of limita- tions and makes the basic tax de- ficiency also collectible at any time. In 1974. when the IRS ruled Nixon's vice Presidential papers were not a legal claim against his taxes, Nixon paid the amount due for the 1970-72 returns and said he also would pay the 1969 deficien· cy alth ough he was not required to do so. The Post said its sources re· ported be has not done so. Pres ident Ford's pardon of Nixon covers only criminal mat- ters and would not apply to civil tax fraud. Meanwhile . Sen. Barry Goldwater says he doesn't think Nixon "e ver told the truth about his connections with Watergate." Interviewed Tuesday on NBC's ''Tomorrow'' show. Goldwater was asked if he thought Nixon was honest. "No, I don't think so. and I think that was his trouble," he said. ls Lovelace Book Dirty? LONDON (AP> -A legal bat· tie has been Joined to see whether an autobiography of porno movie star Unda Lovelace is obscene . "It is not 1 book like those dangerous works or the late Agatha Christie which deal with poi.son and sudden death.·' said deferJJJe counsel John Mortimer. representlnf' Heinrich Hanau, pu~ber of the Brttilh edltion. The governmtnt. which cbar1ed the publisher wllb pubU.hlng an obscene article, aaJd 38,000 of 50,000 copies of the book published In Britain were sold an the summer of 1974. ttanau hu pleaded innocent . .. Tbey were •t least 25 or 30 feet troni the road.•· Tbe spokesman said Dana's two friends said the lone, male occupant of the big sedan. "didn't even look back as he sped off." Dana lived wi th her parents ln the north Tustin area and was a top student at Santiago Junior High. The s heriff's spokesman said family members told officers Dani was afflicted wttb a disease tt.at stunted her growth. ·'She was only about three and a hall f~t tall and her feet barely reached the s tirrups," the spokesman said. "We were toJd she had just s tarted learning how to ride ·· When the unknown driver blew his horn, Dana's friend s managed to control their animals but Dana was thrown head first onto a-pile or rocks. She was rushed to Mission Community Hospital where she was comatos e until Tuesday morning. A hospital spokesman s aid las t -ditch emerge ncy measures failed to save her life. Sheriff's investigators are working almost around the clock to track down the driver of the car but, ironically, they think no c riminal cha r ges could be brought against him. The spokes man said he might be cite d for using his horn without cause but noted that the m ain reason for finding him is to "tell him what he has done." E'ro. Page A J BUDGET .•• President while outlining the Ul'I Te.._..... Weight y Issue Soviet le ader Leonid Brezhnev takes the measure of Secreta r v o f StatC' Henry Kissinger 's girth prior t o their new round of s tragetic arms talks in Moscow where Ki ssinger told the Russians that failure to reach a new nuclear a rms accord "will leave us both losers ." HB Police Chief Hurt in Accid~nt LOS ANGELES (UPO -The cost or Uvlng In Los'Angeles and Orange counties rose raster than the national average last year, increasing 0 .7 percent in December alone, the U.S. Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics sald today. ~cember's price rise. In tbe Southern California area boosted the Conaum'r Price Index to a record 163.7, meaning that goods '75 COST OF LIVING 'ONLY' 7%, A4 · and services costing $10 in the base price year of 1967 were up to $16.37 at the end of the year. Prices gained seven percent nationwide during all of 1975 but in Los Angeles and Orange coun- ties moved up 9.1 percent, reflecting increased costs in all major areas of consumer spend- ing , according to Brue e Hanchett, the regional com missioner of labor statistics. The 1975 increase was less than the 11.9 percent rise in 1974 but higher than 1973's 7.8 percent. Housing, up 12.3 percent, and transportation. up 10.1 percent. made the biggest gains during 1975. Food costs rose 5.8 perc,nt, apparel and upkeep were up 1.9 percent and health and recrea- tion up 8.2 percent. During December, housing cos ts increas ed 1. 7 per cent, health and recreation moved up 0.9 percent. But transportation dropped 0.3 percent and apparel and upkeep costs dipped 0.1 per. cent. budget. A two-car collision at a Santa Police said the second dnver "This represents what we hope Ana intersection Tuesd ay a fter-involved was Mrs. May Hamad, Higher mortgage interest rates along with increases in maln- tenance and repair cost.8 con· tributed to the housing increase costs in December. - will be a very major turrung noon briefl y hospitalized Hunt · 23, of 12612 Morningside Drive, point for the American people," ington Beach Police Chief Earle Garden Grove. he said in signing the 955-page Robitaille and caus ed major She and her son. Iman, 2, and document. "But it does not hold damage to both his city sedan daughter lmin, 1, sustained out any promise that the federal and the other ca r involved minor injuries in the broadside government can or will solve T he occupants of the serond collis ion, according topollce. every problem." vehicle were s ha ken up , sustain-Chief Robitaille was treated at Despite Ford's call for reduced ing bruises and a bras ions but Huntin gt on Inte rcommunit y Masseuse Charged With Soliciting welfare spending, more than half were not hospitalized according Hospital following the collision the budget would be spent on peo-to Santa Ana police . a nd released following x-rays A masseuse at the Physical pie. Defense spending would Chief Robitaille, 44. was off du-and patch ing-u p. a ccording to Therapy Massage Parlor, 2626 Jump to $101.l billion -better ty today nursing a bad leg brwse nurses. Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa , was than one-qua rter of the budget. as a result of the J 40 p m col A spo kes m an for the Hunt. arrested Tues day night on a Three of Ford's top economic lision in central Santa Ana ington Reach Poli ce Department charSi?e of soliciting acts of pro a ides Treas ury Secretary Investi gato rs said tu~ car wa~ said today that Robitaillt' was on stith .on. William Simon, Budget Director struck in the left front portwn at his way to a meeting with Orange The arrest of Shannon Sorrells. James Lynn and chief economic First and Fairveiw Streets by a Coun ty supe rvisor R a 1 p h 27 . of Los Angeles. was based up· adviser Alan Greenspan -car carrying a woman and her Diedrich when the accident oc-on a visit to the parlor by a vice praised the budget. two small children . curr ed. squad officer. "We have come to a point of de· ==========::::;.--------------------------------cision in this country," said Lynn, who warned that continu- ing to run up bigger deficits each year "is not where we want to go." Sen. Frank E. Moss <D-Utah), expressed what is likely to be a common Democratic concern - whether holding the budget lower than projection~ will place a drag on the economy which only now is emerging from a recession. The Pres ident proposed greater cuts in individual income taxes beginning in July. but also $101 BILLION FOR DEFENSE--A7 FORD SEES HIKE IN S.S. TAXES, 86 asked ror a maximum increase of $49.SO next year in the Social Security payroJl tax -the one that cuts deepest into low and moderate income workers. His proposed revenue sharing and other reforms would require recipients of some federal aid, such as Medicare, to contribute more toward their benefits. In his only new initiative, Ford proposed "a so-ca lied welfare czar" to coordinate federal welfare, housing and food pay. ments by s etting uniform ·na- tionwide standards for benefits. He offered no details, but said he would a s k Congres s (or authorization. At his briefing, the President stepped away from the podium and pointed to flow charts that depicted responsibilities at the Department of Health. Educa- tion and Welfare. "If you look at those mess chart.I, you'd have to beJjeve that any one with common sense would want to change it," he said. The President said defense and e nergy received the highest priorltiea in h is propo8al ror fis- cal 1977 being sent to Congreess today. "Thls is not a policy of the quick fix ; it does not hold out the hollow promise that we can wipe out inflation and unemployment overnight," Ford s aid. For the first time, a president's budget will be reviewed by the new Joint Congressional Budget Committee. It is likely to be frisky and independent both in dealing with Ford's proposab and suggesting its own. Hammer C.-e .Stall WASHING'l'ON <A P > - Special Prosecutor ~ JWff •ueed Tuaday to hold otf -• planned fe lony.~ladldm1~t aa•lnst m lllloii. (re lndult.i1 iall1t Md 1lobal patron ol tbi arU Armand Hammer. Start now! Get your kids starttd in tht Kellogg's ' Stick Up for Bre.klast Contest. ADVANCE REGISTRATION ICE SKATING LESSONS • • Enhance your child's poise and po slure. A planned prog ram ol lessons with the e.xclu s•ve Ice Capades' easy lea rning melhod gives you or your child heallhy e•erc1se •n pleasanl 5uperv1sed surround 1n gs. REGISTER NOW STONEWARE PLANTERS glazed with water proof, lead free glaze, one of a kind pots. HANDMADI ON OUI POm•s WHHl JANUARY SALE SAVE UP TO 60% AT OUR FACTORY $1 OFF llY S.00 PURCHASE Wlll lllS COll'OI • OFFER GOOD THRU JAN. 31 Buy direct from the potter High quality hi-f ired pots, handmade. and glazed, one of a kind stoneware pots. Dealers welcome HEAVY DUTY MACRAME 4 n. LONG $9.00 VALUE ON SALE FOR $3,50 OTHIR SIZH FROM 99' JUTE •1 .. BEADS ON SALE Wf ALSO CAHY DO-rT-YOUISILF MACIAMl I U,,LllS LAIGl 11 /•" WOODIN llADS HG. 1 Sc NOW ~ LA•Gl CllAMIC IW>S llG. 60' NOW 35c 1" & 8" Pot Ref. S9.00 Our s3so Price 6" Pot Rea. S7.00 Our $2SO Price 4" Pot Rer. S5.00 OUR PRICE s2oo SIZH HI A,,IOXJMAn UICU SIZES AU HWIU I .. ' l ... Wednesday. J1nu1ry 21 1976 . . ... , .... DAILY PILOT A 3 !7~~~ii o~!~tus Panel Seeks Budget OK ~ Corumlaslon on the Status of 'Ibe commisslon·s report and a other 12 t0mmisslon meblbers teated bylaws . the budget and comm1ss1on af least .ca hour~ mission 8 pokesman. · : Women baa apparently over-budget req~t of $17 900 were on bad no.t been told s~h a report commission actlviUes. before rnina with supervisors. Th * come iotern"l · di.ssent for the the supervisors' age°nda earlier was be~g prepared. · The minority. report urged The individual members of th" e d~pokt!sm-an said rt m>w ap time being b t t Ull i '" pears oubt!ul the mmority will ,l, u 1 us s posslb~e this month but were w1thdrawn The minority consists of SUsan superv.sors to reJect any ~u~get Board of Supervisors still have r.o'!lplain about commission ac- that conn ct may surface agam bycommi.ssionoffl~rs. Sassone, Doris Allen and Mary allocation for the comnuss1on, their . copies of the original t1v1hes to supervisorsnextweek. ne1 week. . Schmitt, who are vtewe4 as the noting it should run on volunteer minonty report, which has now T e comtnlsslon wall come The reuoo for that e.ctlon was conservative bloc of the com. help. been circulated among the other They were apparently satii;fied before the Board of Supervisors the fact that three commission mission. The report outr aged the re· commission members. in part by reductions in the prd- Tuesday seeking approval of a members hed· ~ent a "minority The thr k maining commission members. ~ed commission budget that $15.100 annual budg~t and accep.. tep)rt" to ~upe1"Y)50l"! critiquing meeting g~n ... 1:: ~Tis~ion who amended t.he commission's If any additional rninonty re· ehmmated such items as child tanceof a report on its first three the commissJon's actlvtties. The hours last we"ek hil than our bylaws to reqwre any minority ports ~re lo be filed, Friday is th~ care services for commission w e ey pro-report to be submitted lo the deadlme, according to a com members. ·Hinshaw as Assessor--a Pavlov? &~ \'?@(!:!][? ~®((WO©@ Tbe column appears dally euept Saturdays and Mondays. AU.•ecuon Beans DEAR PAT: What is the season fo r Mexican jumping beans, and where can they bf' purchased? W.F .V., Newport Beach The "season" ls more or less continuous, dependJng on tbe family planning of the "Laspeyresla Saltltan'' moths. Each jumping bean contains a full grown larva of this moth which lives inside the bean. Th~ caterpillar moves its house by grasping the silken wall of the bean with its legs aod vigorously snapplng Its body. As far as AYS could find out, Ttjuana is the nearest buying source. Kew Claaf11 DEAR PAT: I ordered a personalized key chain from StarCrest of Costa Mesa last Sep- tember. When I inquired about delivery in October, I was told that four to s ix weeks were re- quired for p r ocessing a personali zed order. r wrote again, but did not receive an answer. I'd like either the key chain or a refund. P. L ., San Juan Capistrano StarCrest is sending a refund to you. Its spokesman said the firm bad experienced slow delivery on this item from the supplier. 'Prayer Doll' DEAR PAT: I ordered a "Pat· ty Prayer Doll" from Niresk Co. in Chicago last Oct. Z'l. It was to have been a Christmas present, but the doll still hasn't arrived. I don't know Niresk 's address because the order form was an insert in the Sunday Daily._ Pilot. My check was cashed and 1 want to know how to get my $11.95 back. R.C., Balboa Nfresk could not locate your or· der, but. you wUI be issued a re· fund if you mail a copy of the front and back of yoa:r canceled check to Nlresk Co .• Attn: Georgian• Kubeck. %JO S. Des Plaines S&., Chicago, JL 60606. Dial ~ide County's Old Trees HangingOn Victim of Progress In Orange By WILi.JAM SCHREIBER The Inn came during the 1920s. The Orange County Transit Dis tric t 's Dial -a ·Ride bus service in the city of Orange will keep running pending an appeal of the Superior Court ruling that ordered its termination last fall. County Superior Court Judge Lester Van T a t e nhove ruled Tuesday that the pioneer door·tO· destination bus line can continue operations until the Court of Ap· peals in San Be rnardino can hear the case. That might not come !or six months to a year The distriet was ordered last fall by Judge Mark Soden to halt the Orange Dial·a· Ride operation within 120 d ays because of unfair competition with private taxicab companies. Directors of the di.strict de- cided to appeal the ruling and sought the stay of Soden·s injunc· lion to give the m a chance to ap- peal. 'Ibe cutoff of service would have been Feb. 11. Meanwhile, in Sacramento, Santa Ana Assemblyman Richard Robinson h as in · troduced a bill that would eli minate part of the transit dis · trict's governing legislation that requires remuneration to private entrepreneurs affected by the public transit service. 0t"'90.1trPf1otSUtt St. Ann's was a noted way sta· Rulldo~ers m ade way for a new tion for Los Angeles County chapter in Orange County . g~v-couples seeking "quickie'' mar-ern~e!1t Tu.esday._ ~ $8 m1lli<?n riages in Orange County, where admm1strahon b~lding .. But m the local marriage ordinances the ground breaking, a little of were at the time less severe. thepastwaslost. It w as also r ight across Three old trees came down Broadway from the county's old without fa nfare in the early red sandstone courthouse where morning hours -uprooted by most such marriage cere'monies heavy tractor blades. . occurred . The trees -a Himalayan Mrs. Weston Walker of the San· redar, a camptior and a rare ta Ana Historical Society said the Guadalupe fan palm -were the 1 three trees town out Tuesday last traces of the former occu-were part of the original St. pants of the lot at the comer of Ann's Jnn grounds, once con- Broad wa y and Santa Ana s idered the m os t beautiful Boulevard. landscaping in the area. In t ~eir place will rise the As the years went by, the coun- rounty s 110,000 square foot seat ty acquired the inn and used it for of government, an ultra·modern a courthouse annex until it was structure s haped like an inverted tom down in the last decade t~ pyramid. It is due for completion make way for the parking lot. m two ye ars. . Wh en the county paved the lot. Before the co~nt~ acqwred the the three most prominent trees land and paved 1t with asphalt for were retained to break the employe parking, it was the site monotony of unlovely paving. of two Santa Ana landmarks., Mem bers of the Morley Nearest the corner, rq~ht Construction Company crew who across th«: street from the Smith tore up the parking lot and trees and Tuthill Mo~uary, w~ .the Tuesday said it was "too bad .. Santa Ana First Christian the old trees couldn't have been Church. saved. And next ~r to the church But they said there was no way were the spacious landscaped to move them because of their grounds ofthe~ldSt:Ann's lnn. . size and no way to build around Count y His torian James them because of the building de-Sleeper said the church was built sign. Bribery Hearing Charge By TOM BARl.F.Y Of the D•llY PllotSUoff Co ngress man Andr ew Hins haw con d it ioned rom mercial interests in Orange County while he served as county assessor in much the s ame way as resea rchers cond ition laboratory animals, an Orange County Superior Court jury was told late Tuesday. ''He exposed business tax· payers to the old one room with two doors trick." pro:.ecutor Michael Capizzi told the panel during his final aqrnments dur ing the two-month bribery trial "You know the routine .. Go through one door and you'll get clubbed with a baseball bat or you'll receive an electric shock You soon learn to i.C)e tne other door." Capizzi said a classic example of what h e describe d a s Hinshaw's conditioning tactic~ occurred when officials of the Tandy Corporation learned in 1969 that an import tax exemp· lion previously a uthorized by the assessor's office had bee n nullified by Hinshaw Prosecution witness George Upton testified dunng the trial that he approved the import ex· emption while working for Hinshaw as auditor-appraiser He said Hinshaw cancelled that action after noting in Up- ton's presence that the Tandy group was not on his list of cam paign contributors. Upton has since served 87 day" of a six-month county jail term imposed after he pleaded guilty to bribery charges. · "T,ndy soon got the message and we have had two of their ex ecutives tell you from this wit . ness stand that thev decided to use the safe door." c·apizzi said He argued that the jury had been given abundant proof that Tandy got the import lax exemp tion they wanted after Hinshaw received $3,600 in campaign con tribulions over a three year PE'riod. ~ Capizzi estimated th<' total sav ings to Tandy as being "between $150,000 and 5190.000" Hinshaw has admittro from the witness stand that he accept ed a $1.000 c ampaign contnbu lion from Tandy Vice President J ames Buxton and that he wa~ the recipient of t"o sterl'O set<. provided without char~e by the Garden Grove electronics firm The allegations comprise two of the three felony count~ ron t ained in the grand jurv indict ment. The third count stems just after the turn of the century. from charges that he solicited a bribe from a lawyer quring an assessment appeals heannJ!. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~...:.....::....~~~---!.~-~- ORANGE COUNTY Juvenile 1 Aid Asked Of Cities Orange County cities should I share the cost of setting up and operating six proposed regional youth centers throughout the county, the Board of Super\liSOl"S decided Tuesday. Following a suggestAA<>n ~ Supervisor Ralph Clark, the board voled unammoU$fy to ~k the cities to put up hail lhe cash need ed to s upport juvenHe diversion programs rec.eoU..Y ap. proved by the CnmiD.al J~tice Council under its 197& plan.. "The feeling has, been fi!X· pressed that the coun~ sbouldbe responsible for fun~such pro- grams because they will save probation and couEt costs." said Clark "However.! !eel a~oopera\ive cost shanng arraogero.eDt Cor·Ute operation of divers&Ona.l'Y Pf'O· grams would be deiicable'" kw added. Clark suggest..ed. t.tiallhe cou_n, ty agree to pay half the local match reqmred to attr1J.Ct Law Enforcemen t Assistance Ad · ministration gr;ants th.at w.o~ld provide 90 uer~ent Qf I.be pro-- gram fund1ru?. He also snggested that the <'ounty agre6 to pa-, tts one-half share only tr the programs art- evaluated and all Juveniles re- ferr ed to ihe_ re!\lf}Oal rouJh service cenl~rs' ar~ acCel)te<1 into their progl.'ams. Clark's prop<>i4l drew quick approval from his four feUow supervisors. Flu Hits Vegas LAS VEGAS. Nev. tAPJ -Las Vegas is beiog,besleged by a flu epidemic. Clark County health officia!4 say, and it ·~ experted 10 contin~ fon at least two more weeks.. Medic Tax Plan Delayed Bal,l,ot Measure ReaJi.ed for November · ~ Gem Talk Orange County supervisors will wait until November to ask the people if they want to pay for param edics through creation of a countywide service area with its own taxing power. Though no formal vote was taken on the matter at Tuesday's board meeting, s upervisors agreed that rus hing to get a ballot measure ready for the June primary could jeopardize the entire par a medic program. The board did order their ad· ministrative staff to immediate· ly begin the task of setting up llnes of communications witb the 26 cities in Orange County to de· tennine what they'd like to see in a county paramedic service ells· trict. Though not all the cities mu6t p8rticipate, County Ad· mlnistratlve Officer Robert Thomas said it would be tricky to operate an al1 ·county raramedic prognm without fol coopera· tion. The service a rea concept was first tiroached last summer Ln response to growing concerns by city and county officials over the mountln1 coat of p1tramedic service. • The county's cost alonef01"pro- vtdJ.oi service to u~rated areu and rontnct cities hLIJ In -, creased from $400,000 lo $1.7 million in two years. 'Thomas• analysts weighed alternative methods of paying for paramedics, including fees for calls, s pecial district !inane· ing and the service area. He told supervisors in a report earlier this month that the service area represented the least difficult means of funding since it required no special ac· lion by the state legislature. Thomas told supervisors Tues· day that a service area could be created by an action or the board without an election. But he sald no true rate could be set unlesa the people vote on tt. The procedure outlined by Thomas involved bearings before the ~al Agency Form•· t io n Commis si on and :supervisors, durtns wblch pro tests would be beard. ti 50 percent of the landowners in.the proposed service area med written protest or the ownen of half the land vJlue protested, the idea would be scu~Ued. But once that occurs, Thomas said state revenue and taxation coda prohibit any future use or general !und budget money to p-.y for paramedics. Ttis>ugh no general fund monev ByJ C. IJL'MP1llm:.'i is currently use4 in the county's , paramedic program, which is funded under the fire tax rate, supporters or the program have urged that s upplemental money be budgeted to offset rising costs. r,.._,.._.-..~ The same result would occur if GEM MYSTERY the entire issue of a service area SOLVED BY PAINTING and tax rate is put to the voters A few years ago, a little girl and is defeated, Thomas noted. went to Cincinnati's Taft The new Se rvice Area 23 Thomas envisions would have a Museum to see paintings and an first year budget in 1977·78 of exhibition of the Hope Diamond. about $6.7 million to pay for 30 Cl'he Hope, once part of the par a medic units around the ~re n c b crown j e w e I s . county. ·dis a pp e are d du r i n g the The initial maximum tax rate Revolution and didn't surface for would be about JO cents per $100 38 years. of assessed value but that would . . .. , increase to about 12 or 13 cents in . The girl said: That s the same auccessive years, Thomas noted. blue stone the lady in the picture • Supervisors told Thomas there is wearing.'' Experts agreed with are "too many unanswered ques· her. tlons and details'· tbat must be worked out with the citie-; to pro- ceed with a June bMlot ts.sue. They said joint committees of clty and county officials would have to be established to de· ttrmine bow the service area would be operated and who would control the purse strinJls. Thomas is expected to come back to the board within a week with prellminary plans for liaison wllb the citi~. The picture was Gova •s "Queen Marie Louisa," painted in 1799 seven years after the Hope disappeared and 21 years before its sale in London. Th6i queen ruled Spa.in from 1788 to • 1808. How s h e obtained the diamond and how she disposed of it arc still other mysteries in the history of the Hope. Today the Hope diamond can be seen at the Smithsonian Institution. • ... 3. 75 car~ts of u good quality diarnoocls one ring only $2400 ,1 • .. 4 DAil. Y PILOT Jut • witla Tom 11.rphine .... RICKY TICKV POUTIX: On· ly YHterday up m Sacramento, the A::.sembly 's Elections and Reapportionment Committee C'leart'd a bill that would create a one -house legislature in our Golden State This will no doubt be greett-d by false huzzahs The author or this momentous measure 1s one Tom Bane. a Dem()('ratic as~emblyman from up in Van Nuys. Bane noted that this 1s the first time that the s10gle-house notion has ever C'leared a leg1slat1ve committee Anyway, if Bane's measure should som<'hO\\ get passed by the legislators 'ott'd m by the people. California would then have abandoned a separate As- sembly and Senate and simply have a unicameral legislature \' 0 l I D 0 l l R T I. F. S S n•memtier that w11nderfu l \\or ct t1n1<' n m t' r a I from ) our grade school days It went m a sentence you memorized hke this · "'.'iebraska 1.., the only state in the l 'n1on "'1th a unicameral legislature ... This • .., true ~ebrasko passt'd the single house notion m 1934 and 1t cranked up into operation 1n 1937 Thus Nebra:.ka has a ~1ngle house \\1th onlv 43 Jay,makers elected by dtstnct ~ Thev are voted in on a non- partisan basis. 1f you can 1m ..igml' a thing ltke that In '.'lebras ka, there 1s no ltmtt to lel?1slative sessions except that after the first 20 days of any re· cular meeting , no new bill can be introduced unless requested by the governor or a committee. 80 YOU CAN SEE where Wrong Thinkers will start cheer- ing the si n~le house plan that As- ~~mblyman Bane has propost'd for California. Fn"Sl, they will figure it means a ~ut'back m the number of lawmakl'rs we have up in Sacramento who are always thinking up new laws and trying to get th~m passed. While Nebraska has only 43 lawmak~rs. we have 40 in the Senate and another ~ in the As· sembly for a g'r a 11d total of 120 Nebraska ·s non-partisan no- twn "'ill no doubt ra1se false ·hopes amon g the Wrong Thinkers who would calculate we could do the sam e thing and thus reduce 1he vOlume of pre-heated dir blown forth from Sacramento dorlng &ch legutative debate. All of this, of course, is just ~tse hope. Rane'& measure, ih the first pla~. ~sn't reduce the number af lawmakers. In his new single- house plan, he would have 120 people gath.end in what he would call the Senate. That's the same iwmbe.r we now have in both housei. ONLY DJJ'FER ENCE would be tht'y -..·ould an be iathered on one floo r of the unicameral legislature. The li<lt rur would s pew forth in a concentrated blast. There would be more political inf1J?htmg because there would be more lawmakers m one place to flgbt wlth. ~ 4ull days, the snorin~ wouH:l sel'\rt louder. Well, you mi,ht give A S· semblyman Rane an E for Ef- fort. But &Ven if the people get a chance to vote for it. and 1f un- H am er al 1 s m l'omes to California. don't f iiure ~ hap· pllleSs ls l)uttlni a1LJ)C)ll.t1cians u1'dcr one roof. Inflation 'Only' 7% For Year WASIDNGTON <UPI> -The cost of living in December rose 0.5 percent and g·ained 7 percent during all of 1975, the Labor Department said today. ·.The December.to.December increase in the Consumer Price lndex, the m ost commonly used method of measuring the infla tion level. was well below the 12.2 percent Jump dunng 1974 and supported optimistic predictions hv administration economists that inflation is moderating. SERVICE C'OST increases were the major factor behind tn· nation during December and the full year, said the department's final report of 1975. December's 0.5 percent in· crease was an improvement after jumps of 0. 7 percent in each of the two previous months. The .>ear's highest monthly increase was 1.2 percent in J uly and the lowest was 0.2 percent in August The Consumer Price Index stood at 166.3 in December, meaning that the goods and services that cost SlOO in 1967, now cost Sl66.30. Increased taxi, railroad and airplane fares and property tax· es combined with higher prices for new cars, auto insurance. auto repairs. medical services. fuel and some foods lo dnve con- sumer prices up 0 5 percent m December. THE A VERA GE worker's weekly earnings and hours rose slightly faster than consumer prices during 1975, the depart- ment said. But with help of the ft'deral tax cut, the average wage l"arner's real spendable earrungs were up 3.8 percent. During all of 1975, service costs rose 8.1 percent, food pnces 6.5 percent and other commodities 6.2 percent -all of them less than the 1974 levels. New car prices ro.se 2.1 per- cent in Dece!Jlber, reflecting the continued introduction or new 1976 domestic models and the first shipments of imported 1976 models. There were also large in- creases for fuel oil, newspapers and magazines and tobacco pro· ducts. But prices for used cars fell sharply and gasoline and motor oil prices also fell . Miss Martin Found Guilty In Colombia BARRANQUILLA, Colombia (UPI> -A military judge has found Kelly Ann Martin, 23-year · old daughter of New York Yankees baseball..inanager Billy Martin, guilty of attempting to smuggle about a pound of co- caine out of the country. She was sentenced to three years in prison later in the day. A military spokesman for the Second Colombian Army Brigade said Tuesday Miss Martin, daughter of the Yankee manager by his first wife, had re· ceived a preliminary pronounce- ment of guilt from the judge1.ry- ing the case, equivalent to a con· viction under American law. Miss Martin, held without bail at the nun-run Barranquilla women's jail since her arrest Nov. 16, was tried by sum· mary military court-martial un- der Colombia's state of siege legislation. - --....._.., .... ----- IS RA EL , f 0 • • 0 ' ' -'f-• ; . ·' , .. % ' .... , • '0 • -, . 0 ••• ~ ' . • ! ! . . ... 0 30 M l. U"1 ...__. PLA, MOSLEM FORCES QRAB LEBANON COUNTRYSIDE Atrocities Cited at Chrlatlen Town of Damour . PLA Guerri1Jas .OveITun Village 1 Fntm Wire ~ces BEIRUT Lebanon -An estimated 3.500 to 4,000 PalesUniao guer- rillas crossed into Lebanon Crom Syria during the night, overran a Christian village ln eastern Lebanon and tightened a siege on Zahl ah, tbe biggest town in the Bekaa Valley, a spokesman for the Lebanese army reported today. An air force recoona.Luance plane brought back pbotol sbow·: ing scores of army and polict!S poets n the Bekaa region abUze,1 the spokesman said. Tbe attack coincided with a new Syrian m ediation bid sup- ported by King Hussein or Jordan. who arrived in Damascus in bis private jet just as a Syrian delegation arrived in Beirut. The Syrian state radio said Hussein went into im· mediate consultations with President Haf ez Assad. THE ARMY spoke!man re- ported the invading guerrillas captured Chtour a, a strategic town of 5,000 C hristians on the Blirut-Damascus highway wb1ch also controls the access to Zahlab. But Lebaneae arm y troops still held the hills between Chtoura and Zablah and were pounding the guerrillas with heavy artillery, the spokesman said. The army 9aid the guerrillas included troops of the Palestine Liberation Army -PLA -the regular military arm of Yasir Arafat's P alestiDe Liberation Organization which is based in Syria. WAFA. the Palestioenews agency and the official voice. of the guerrilla movement. denied the PLA was involved. Spinster Found Dead Jt was the second major move- ment of Palestinians from Syria into Lebanon reported this week. American. Lebanese. Syrian and Israeli government and military sources reported Tuesday that an estimated 1 .500 PLA troops crossed the border Monday to fight in the civil war on lhe side of the Moslem leftists. Subfreezing Temperatures Killed Woman PIITSBURGH <U PI) -Two weeks after her gas was turned ore for nonpayment, Sophia Easer -a spinster with a reputa- tion for defiance -was found frozen to death on the living room floor or her large frame home. Miss E aser, her body covered with rags and the living room carpet she curled up in to escape subfreezing temperatures. was found Monday. Police entered the home when their telephone calls and repeated knocking went unanswered. .' "ONCE WE got inside," said Munhall P olice Chief John ,Dorko, "we found the cold bad burst wate r pipes in the ceiling, and water was streaming through the house, onto the living room and kitchen floors." Police said they found sheets of 4 Relatives Held In Florida Heists BARTOW, Fla. (UPI) ·-Lawmen· siftin~ through a "mountain of items" found in the homes of four suspects said today they believed they had recovered property taken in almost a ll of the 16 central F1orida cases linked to a roving band or ski-masked terrorists. Three of the four suspects, arrested Tuesday on charges of buying, receiving and concealing stolen were thrown ore bridges but were property, w e re held under rescued $250,000 bond and faced hearings · befor e County Judge Ed "WE BELIEVE this is. ~he Threadgill today amid tight group that h as been terronzmg sel'urity precautions. the p eople the past several The fourth suspect, Cody months ," ~aid Hillsborough Martin, 16, was ordered held in County ShenfC Malcolm Beard. ice a half ·inch thick coaling parts of the ldtcbeo floor. An Equitable Gas Co. spokesman said Tuesday the company turned off gas service Jan. 5 because Miss Easer had not paid her bill for five months. POUCE SAID Miss Easer ap- parently h ad enough income to maintain her four-bed.room home •and they were unable to explain why she did not pay her gas bill. Both police and the owner of a · food market next door said Miss Easer was a defiant loner who had once thrown beer bottles at a mailman attempting to deliver mail. Charles Burke, owner of the Black and White Market, said Miss Easer stopped shopping at his market in 1958 when he raised the cost of ground meat by five cents. The coroner's office could not estimate the time of death, but police said Miss Easer was last seen Jan. IO. THE T E MPE R ATURE J an. 10. according to the National Weather Service, was minus one degree. IN ISRAEL, Is raeli Defense Minister Shimon P eres has again warned Syria to stay out or the Lebanese civil war and the armed forces chief says he's sure Damascus ~ol the m essage. Talking -to newsmen while touring the Lebanese frontier Tuesday, Peres issued his second warning to Syria in three days, s aying Israel would take un- specified "defensive measures" if Syrian troops invade d Lebanon. He said, however , Israel had no cause to intervene in the pre- sent pattern of fighting there. . Armed forces Chief or Staff Lt. Gen. Mordechai Gur, speaking in Jerusalem, said, "Syria knows quite well that if she takes such a step, she might (cause us to) change our policy, and if our policy is changed , then nobody can dictate to us what type of ac- tion to take and where or when to take it.·· Gur said Israel was strong enough to prevent Syria from "tak ing any steps against Lebanon, which would m ean steps against Israel.·' c u sto,dy Tuesday during a ---------------------------------------..__-, juvenile court hearing. THE ADULT suspects were Daniel Morris Thomas, Zl, his wife, Lattie Mae Thomas, 25, and Lee Otis Martin, 19. All of the suspects were related, officials said. Dan Taylor, media relations officer for the Polk County Sheriff's Department, said the search of the two cinderblock homes where the suspects lived took longer than anticipated and that officers probably would spend a ll day "going through this mountain of items to determine which or it is stolen and from where it was stolen. "Items have been found from almost all of the 16 cases that have been attributed to this group," Taylor said. THE 16 VIOLENT assaults at- tributed lo a group of ski-masked terrorists cover ed the period from Oct. 8 to Jan. 15 and in- cluded two murders, several rapes, and robberies in all but one instance. One woman had li - quid drain cleaner poured in her mouth and eyes and two women Courses by Newspaper ........ . ........... . .............. ............... . . •.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·. .· .... ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ·:·:·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:· SEE AMERICA Without Le•vfng Home Registration Form These weekly perspectives are drawn by well-known scholar-writers In a sertea of article• for Amerlc•n Issues Forum, the speci•I bicentennial program of Courses by N e wspa1>4tr . The topics are those on the minds of every concerned American -topics like government, land UH and human rights. So relax In your easy chai r and j oin u s In exploring our -country's heritage and horizons, Its problems and potential. sessions are scheduled for from 10 a.m . to noon, Saturdays April 3 and June 5. . The course text-reader ($4.95) and optional study guide ($2 .95) are stocked by the Orange Coast College Bookstore. Campus coordinator for • Courses by Newspaper ts Tom Wert, a member of the Orange Coast College social· science staff since 1985. He will conduct the two on-campus dlscussJo'n and e xam sessions and arrange voluntary seminar· ; ........ ll Sparks Crashes All you have to do Is open your mind -and your n ew s pape r . W e 'll put America at your fingertips every Sunday In the Dally Piiot. In our pages, you'll find thought-provoking views of America at tta bicentennial. If you wlah , you may enroll for two free c0urse credit• at Orange Coast College. Class enrollment dosesfeb.13. Midterm and final examlnatlon·dlecuaalon • sessions. He may be contacted by phone, 558-5759, or, during his campus office hours, room 102A, Art Center Building. "'' ..... , .... 1(>10( ·~1 «> IS -.no •• , . 01 S.Cr-"'o ., • 01 St Lo..11 )1 ,. s.ltUlt•Cll; ,. ,, s-irr•M•5'0 .. " ')& • )) " ,, ,, 1t IB••tN I: .·1)$NOW ...._ .... aL23\l40'flttf' ~ t f()W Civic c.111tr r••<ll•d 14, tllrH °""'' .-.,,. T "'"4SIY't -"'-$.lrono Mftllfftl to "" _.,. «· <•'*'-l'f fll'llfle W M mllH .. llOl,r """"'"" UlrO\IOll tltl IMllnt.UI r-1 ., ....... ,, ._. .. ,, ••• 11 .. wllll lllGMly .,..,_,. ~llUl'fl INm Ol iltoU. ""'°''' ctoud't tlllet coowrtld IN••· • .._ llllthe,,. ,...,., c:lllWfWI•. llllft -• lolr Nortll 11 .......,.. wlllCI\ Is 16 ts ml In en Mllr llklllif • 41rt -Miid Ill 1119 ._, *-' ... , u-_...,, llllM ,.,... '""".a to 11 wflllo , ........ , ...,, ,... w1t .....,.lied ~rotw .. fltll'., 11.s.s .... ,,, EJltMCIM out1• ,., nw ......,. IMl•u falr WH INr wlllt t.m· WM.,._ MeW --·· HftN Wiii ,.,... ~ 1' et Ille W.t<Mt • 1S.nd It lfl._., Lowt Ill CHtlel .,.... 4' .. "· .,... .. aeft edVIMf'lff ..... C.. ~-te WW MHICMI w• for ~ wlf'dt of ts I• U llrML ... .....-.. -». s...,lff....,Ttda W8DMUOA'f' """"'"' 11:to1.m. 0 s.c.M• 6:1•11.m. O.J n.uaso•Y F1~1111"' n·s ... "'. 1.0 l'lnt... 11l0•.lft. u IK«ldlltefl 1:0111olft· u ~llw 1:~11.M. IA lurtrtM'l•'fJ•.m .. ..cu. ttp m. _,.,,, .. ,,o J1pm .... u•.40•m. --------------------------------------------------- .. COURSES BY NEWSPAPER is offered by the Daily Pilot as a public service. Class credit may be earned by enrolling at Orange Coast College. COURSES BY NEWSPAPER REGISTRATION FORM THE MOLDING OF AMERICAN VAWES I with to Nive my cr«ttt' recorded at ((M<.kont) ,,...,.. Ulll ,.,, .. Dlllll ... ~-----•::.-:... ""' ~--··au 0., ftllr ......... c.,. H you plan to regllt• for OOUf"8el ot"'-than eour.. by N....,.., ~ dtaregard thla torm and register for all cl..... at the QOl!ege. °" --' -----Cllr .. -' '-0 M •I• t . 0 '••••• a _,..,..._....,.. • .._., 1 0 'fe1 2 0 No • ''-Y .. flf Nilfl ..... .,_ Ma •• ._. ,_...,......_. ...... • 2' lkr 9llMal. • t0.-. .. ~,,.... .... ClllllMrMe....,.t ~ o. v .. __ _ 11 ~..._«:--.? t ()Y• I ()No ............... _____ _ "·-~-----tl.OS S I • .._ .................. .,. -~ "------- . -- DAILY PILOT •. -· 1 f ldentft~ Late Police Eree FBI Fugitive SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Police had one of the FBl's 10 !"ost wanted fugitives, an alleged radical bomber, in jail for three days last month, but re· leased him be Core finding out his true identity. Dwight Armstrong, 2A, a suspect in the deadly bomblDI of a University of Wisconsin building in 1970, was arrested Dec. 12, after be was grabbed by a market owner who accused him of trying to steal cheese. He gave his name as ( Stale 1 Douglas James Hardy. "He. had quite a bit ot ----------' identification in that name," said an FBI spokesman. "He was placed in jail, convicted on the cha~ge an.d sentenced to 30 days. He was gone by the llme his true identification was established through a fingerprint check." Wedne9dey January 21. 1978 DAILY PILOT AS S an Diego .Joins Doctors' Sl SACRAMENTO (AP) -The physicians' malpractice slowdown appears to be progressing in Southern California but Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. re· posed "Medical Peace Corps" &ad been transferred to a dllferent level of negotiations. HAWTHORNE (AP> ports no pro&reas in talks with doctors and . -The t.oymaker that legislators. gave you instant puberty The medical staffs of two San Diego area Brown said tbe doctors should spend 20 daya a year treatlne the poor without pay 1n return for state taxpaye~ help with malpractice iruuranct CO&ls. u ... , ........ T o ll•n A9al 11 State Se'l. Randolph Collier, 73 , first elected to the Senate the year Gpv. Ed- mund G. Brown Jr. was born. said Tues- day he will seek re- election to another four-y$?ar term. in a teen·age 1lrl doll hospitals bave voted to join the slowdown by Loi now has an "anatomical· Angeles doctors to protest the high cost of malprac• ly correct baby boy ticeinsurance. doll." Some 60 doctors on tbe medical staffs of Bay Mattel, Inc. said the General and Community hospitals in Chula Vista new comer is c ailed decided Tuesday olghtto join the doctors strike as "Baby Brother" and it did 50 ophthalmologists and ear, nose and th;oat has all the equipment specialists at San Diego's University Hospital. * * * * * * Malpractice Suit Returns $675,000 necessary to show its ANOTHER 200 San Diego doctors at four gender. h · 1 d ByWlreServkes Victor Morhaim. White RAY WAGNER. presi-ospita s vote Monday night to stage a two·day LOS ANGELES -A Memorial Hospital was dent of the company, work slowdown, handling emergency cases onJy. • b . Ji . 'th abs o 1 v e d o t an Y After meeting for two hours Tuesday, Brown woman w o is vmg Wl said in a statement Tues-told reporters he was optimistic that a solution to a broken needle in her responsibility day: "In this age of re-the problem could be found. spine has been awarded Mrs . Smith won the alism we feel it's ap-The physicians blame the slowdown on sudden· $675,000 in a malpractice malpractice judgment propriate to offer ly increased costs of medical malpractice in-suit -the l&rgest local against Dr. Morhaim youngsters a baby boy surance. The spokesman for one doctors' group malpractice award since because the wayward doll that is a boy not only blamed state government Tuesday for any "serious a doctors' slowdown needle interf~res with in costume but right ed. 1 .. · h began in Southern her sex life, ruining her down to the last detail." m ica consequences it may ave. Cal . k BROWN SAID the talks centered on whether ifornia on Jan. 1. marnage . ..,-.in -' Tri-• B f Qu A company spo esman t . t al . f d Id '--She sued the doctor, PllC"9 er-• ... eg n• -.. ake Rocks said packaging will have pay men s m o a slate m practice un shou uc The award by a charging that during a LOS ANGELES (AP) -The lewd conduct triaf to be extremely clear mandatory, and who should pay claims if the state Superior Court jury biopsy on Nov. 1, 1971• he of D M be t .1 fund ran out of money. came during the doctors' · rt d eputy ayor Maurice Weiner has begun in ffnrnh ldt Ar cause re a1 ers want to B . h' f 'd . th tt D inse e a needle "some Municipal Court, with the prosecution saying it in-0 ea mak.e sure. parents rown s c ie ai e m e ma er , eputy slowdown protesting ris-distance away" from the tends to offer 8 all . f . t p 0 aren t surprlsed when Health and Welfare Secretary . Robert Gnaizda, ing medical malpractice correct location and it nover viewo v1ceen orcementin ETR LIA (UPI) -called the mandatory payments issue a new snag: insurance premiums. L<>s Angeles. · A moderate earthquake they get the do.ll home. The doctors want them to be voluntary. One of the doctors· prime broke. w i , t registering 4 s on the BUT ADS will be a pro-A piece of the needle is e ner s a torney, Douglas Dalton, waived ~is Richter Seal~ rumbled bl e m be ca use, "TV GNAIZDA TOLD reporters that doctors in the 0 b j e c ti v es in the still lodged against her opening statement Tuesday until the prosecution through Humboldt Coun-codes won't even let us low-risk fields wanted to stay out of any state slowdown is a revision of spine and cannot be re- wraps up its case. ty Tuesday. sbow a dolrs bare bot-malpracti.ce insurance plan. But the Brown ad-the tort -or adversary moved, her lawyer said. There were no reports tom, much less. this," the ministration's proposal includes mandatory pay· -system under which During sexua l i n -e t · t a f d c h' h 1 t' 1 · malpractice cases are h of injuries or damages. spokesman said. m n s m o un rom w 1c ma prac ice c aims tercourse. t e movement The seismographic sla· T~e same toymaker would be paid. . I tried. of the needle near her SACRAMENTO (AP) -A proposal to raise the ta.'< on cigarettes by one cent a pack is before the California Legis lature. tion at the Univers ity of earlier: released a female Specialists in high.risk fields such as The jury decided Tues· spine causes her great California in Berkeley doll name~ "Skipper" neurosurgery have had the sharpest increase in in-day that the $657,000 pain, her lawyer argued. said the epicenter of the wh?se bu~thne grew '!1'd surance costs -nearly five·fold to $30,000 a year in should be paid lo Mrs. and she and her husband early morning tremor ~a1st whittled by twist· some cases. they report. Velma Bailey Smith, 40, have separated because It was introduced Tues day by Sen. Arlen Grt:gori~, <D·Sa~ Mateo), who last year sponsored leg1slation to increase the tax on alcoholic beverages. The alcohol bill was vetoed by Gov Ed- was 40 miles wes t of .-.1:-"'n..._g.-.:h.;..:e..:..r...:ar:...:_:.m.;_. _______ A_l_rP_a_d_y_. _th_e_d_o_ct_o_rs_· o.-.:p..:.po_si_ti_o_n_to_B_ro_w_n_'_s.:..p_ro_·_b_y_h_e_r_ph_y_s_i_c_ia_n_._D_r._.:.of:...;th=:..e.!:p.:.ro::.:b:.:l.:.e=m:.:. ____ . Petrolia under the 1 · mund Brown Jr. Gregorio said the increas~ on cigarettes would bring in $30 million a year. B...,, Blast• R est R.0.. REDWOOD CITY <AP) -A bomb has blown up the men's rest room alongside the fairway of the 13th hole of the Stanford University golf course, San Mateo Count~ deputies reported. They said a pipe bomb apparently about six in~ ches l~ng was ~etonated about 10:30 a.m. Monday, wrecking a toilet bowl, other plumbing and fix- tures. Deot• Plot Man Gtdlt11 LOS ANGELES <UPI) -Gary Desure, 32, a former Montana mental ~atient, and Michael Mayo, 24, of Warren, Pa., will be sentenced Feb. 9 for threatening to kill President Ford. Desure pleaded guilty ui U.S. District Court Tuesday. Mayo pleaded guilty Dec. 16. The Secret Service accused them of plotting to kill the president in Sacramento on Sept. 5 -the same day Manson follower. "Squeaky" Fromme leveled a loaded pistol at Ford in an unrelated as- sassination attempt. Pacific Ocean shelf. Stick up! Su th1t Kellogg's• Stick Up for Breakfast coupon ad in this paper. Jc\C~O'S SPORTSWEAR wt~ra1FF lltAlA 'BAL BOA ISl ANO ~Beodl 116MorineAve 548-"21 675 1904 -----.J .--~ ·---- BEEFEATER'S BEEF Best dam beef you'll ever put a fork to-that's Ivey Ranch Beefl It's com-fed, aged to perfection, no hormones or harmful chemicals, neither. Whether it's stew or steak, Ivey Ranch Beef makes a meal to remember. It's beefeater's beef ... We guarantee it! --=--=----.. --··-·--·-- CHUCKWAGON PAK Tendei; juicy, com-fed, aged beef 11.75 POUNDS ONLY$20.2S c 18 Different Assortments from $5.95 ·Sides, Hind and Forequarters The Produce Mart Placentia at Victoria c.osta Mesa Available at: Ivey Beef Company 133 E.Alton Santa Ana 645-1365 546--9330 BankAmericard Mmcr Charge Vermeulen Ranch · 323'82 Del Obispo San Juan Capistrano 496-0431 Food Stamps -===-=.=-"~n 7 Days a w_ce;.;.,;,.;,..k ___ _ Save.30% with UnitedS ''Freedom Fare:' ltSthebest reason to vacation now instead of later. You can take a vacation now and save :m·x.-or go this summer and save less. ~ That's why we say "Now·s the time:· Adults save 30% off round-trip Coach fare. and children under 12 you take along <;ave 50%. There arc no mileage restrictions. no holiday or weekend restrictions. Freedom Fare docs not apply to tran:I within same state or to Canada. Different discounts DtsUnatlon City Akron/Canton Allentown/ BethJehem/ Easton Baltimore Birmingham Boise Boston Buffalo/ Niagara Falls Cedar Rapids/ Iowa City Charleston, W. Va. Charlotte. N.C. Chattanooga Chlcago Cleveland Columbus Dayton,O. Denver Des Moines Detroit Eugene, Ore. Flint Fort Wayne Grand Junction Grand Rapids ,,.. Rou11d tr1p Your freedom fare Sa•ln11 S225.00 S 97.00 256.00 251.00 202.00 102.00 274.00 239.00 178.00 224.00 230.00 210.00 199.00 22S.00 217.00 2 11.00 I 13.00 168.00 218.00 105.00 218.00 211.00 95.00 209.00 a 11 0.00 107.00 86.00 44.00 11 8.00 103.00 76.00 96.00 98.00 90.00 85.00 97.00 93.00 lll.00 49.00 72.00 94.00 45.00 94.00 91.00 41.00 89.00 Dat111alloa City Greensboro/ High Point/ Winston-Salem Hartford/ Springfield Huntsville Kansas City Knoxville Lansing Las Vegas Lincoln Medford . Memphis Milwaukee Moline/ Rock Island/ Davenport Muskegon Newport News/ Hampton/ Williamsburg New York/ Newark ·Norfolk/ Portsmouth/ Virginia Beach Omaha ' available to Hawaii. Your Travel Agent has information about specific cities and flights. Or call Unih:J at 537-7521. Just pay for )Our round-trip ticket within 10 days of when you maJ..e the rc~rvation -and no later than 14 days before departure. Stay 7 to JO <la~s. There arc a specific numlxr of Freedom Fare seats on each flight. so make rcscrrntions early. Round lrlp Your Dtlllnallon City Round tnp Your f'Nledom rare Savlnr~ Fr~dom Fare S.vlncs S235.00 :ilOl.00 267.00 202.00 16 1 .00 213.00 214.00 48.00 153.00 94.00 183.00 199.00 182.00 206.00 256.00 263.00 I 15.00 M .00 69.00 9 1.00 92.00. 20.00 65.00 40.00 79.00 85.00 78.00 88.00 110 .00 113.00 Pendleton Philadelphia Pinsburgh Portland Providence Raleigh/ Durham Reno Richmond Rochester Saginaw/ Midland/ BayCi1y Salem.Ore. Sall Lake City Seattle/ Tacoma South Bend Spokane Toledo Washington, D.C. Youngstown/ Warren/ Sharon .s 120.00 258.00 234.00 I 13.00 273.00 241 .00 69.00 249.00 245.00 218.00 109.00 102.00 123.00 204.00 123.00 217.00 251.00 231.00 S52.00 110 .00 100.00 49.00 J 17.00 103.00 29.00 107.00 105.00 94.00 47.00 44.00 53.00 88.00 53.00 93.00 107.00 99.00 256.00 J 10.00 157.00 ~67.00 Fares subject 10 change. Security charges not included. Beginning June 1st, the summer discount begins: its still 50% off for children. / but 20% for adults. So now's the time. The frien4ly skies of your; laOd. .4• . DAIL PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Council Action Unfair The Huntington Beach City Council has taken the unprecedented action or placing City Administrator Dave Rowlands on sax months' probation. • may probe and recommend until doomsday. but his powers to shake things up are llm.ite<t by the city's personnel system and by the council's own prerogatives. WE CANNOT TOLERATE SOVIET INTERFERENCE WITH ANGOLA! ANOIASSUAEYOUFARMERS THAT I WILL NOT ALLOW ANGOLA TO INTERFERE WITH OUR GRAIN SALES! And, apparently intent on dispensing disfavors equally. the council also voted to publicly reprimand Councilman Jerry Matney for the manner in which he brought the charges agamst Rowlands. Rowlands may indeed deserve some form of d is· c1plinary art ion based on the findings or an ad hoc com·rruttee studying his performance. But to place him on probation with the broad hint that he is res ponsible for certain undesirable condi· tions in city go' ernment is unjustified and clearlv un. fair. · Coun ctl members the m sel\'es must s hare the blame for the conditions that they attribute to Rowlands. A counctl s tatement disclosing Rowlands' proba· llon term said c ity government h as been "increasing. ly crisis oriented" and that the "orderly operation of the city has been consistenU y frustrated by internal chssension, public dissidence and economic factors d.Ild management difficulties." Mer ely to obscn·e the council in action provides evidence enough that it plays a part in the aforemen· lloned problems. In point of fact. the executive session against Rowlands and Matney was in itself an act that points out a lack of effectiveness. The m eeting may have been in violation of the Brown Act because Rowlands presumably was not in· formed of the action to be taken and wasn't given his choice of a public or secret session. Secondly, the reprimand of Matney should h ave been made only at an open public meeting. Council members also directed Rowlands to cor· reel problems in the finance, city attorney, personnel and public relations departments ·and conduct a re - v1ewof administrative personnel. But \\hat can this really accomplish? Rowlands Rowlands can recommend dismissal of employes but they have a right to appeal before a personnel board that h as been sympathetic in the past. Rowlands appears to be between a rock and a hard place. He is blamed for performances that be cannot control and for conditions that are aided and abetted by the city council. Whatever his s hortcomings, he shouldn't be thrown to the wolve~ as Political bait in an election year. Practical Requirement Jake Abbott. superintendent or the Huntington Beach l.Jnion Hig h School District, believes students should not graduate from high school until they can ::.how proficiency in basic skills. He is implementing a four-year program aimed al requiring graduating seniors to prove they have acquired skills before they receive their diplomas. The school board last week extended Abbott's contract to 1980 to give him time to complete the pro. gram. It only m a kes sense that a high school graduate should have learned something in s chool. rather than as Abbott puts it "fill seat space for four years." Some type of graduation testing seems in or· der. Abbott calls his program "competency-based c urriculum." a name most parents won't understand without a translation. But the idea is a good one, one of many Abbott has brought to West Orange County since he was hired about a year ago. H /F ff £Ar<! HEAi<-' ,, , c~~v.' ctAPI ~ \ \ B0111esteaders Are tlae Intruders Placebos Can Be Dear GI001ny Gns The CoyOtes Were There First Powerful ( VON HOFFMAN ) WASHINGTON If Listerine C'an't prevent colds can it cure warts? The Federal Trade Com- mission. which knows 101 ways to waste its insuff1c1ent staff's time on the tn v 1 al. 1s in full chase after WarnE'r La mbert, the com· pany that makes Listerine. The FTC wants millions of dollars worth of future Listenne ads to contain a st at ement saying : "Contrary to pnor advertising, Listerine will not help prevent colds or sore throats or lessen their severity.·· It 's the commission 's conten· lion that this best known o( mouth washes can do none of those thinJ?s, but that de· cade upon de· cade of ad· vertising has convinced million upon nti!Hon of our fellow citizens that Li sterine does in fact prevent colds or lessen them Tsk. tsk, the com· mission may in its zeal be about to giv.e Amen can an extra case of the snitnes. The findings against Listerine are doubtless scientifically im· peccable. but if people believe that bad·tasting stuff is good for their colds, it could be. This is the placebo effect. Doctors long ago discovered that you give sick pe-ople sugar capsules, but if you tell them it 's strong medicine. and they believe it, there is a ~·ery good chance they'll get well. THE PLACEBO, for instance, is the drug of choice in curing warts, according to al least one doctor. Better than any drug with active ingredients, better than surgery. He reports complete re· covery from warts by the use of lead pencils, five dollar bills and I can't think of what else. The operative therapeutic agency here is faith, a nd so effective is the placebo when people believe in it that it has 'to be considered the single most powerful drug known to modern medicine. Faith in a placebo may be only as strong as the faith of the pa· tient in fhe person who gives It to him. It can be engendered by the kindly, old family physician. Slnce he's about as common a !'ig.ht 38 the cop on the beat or the milkman wlth the hone-drawn dtiiry waaron. the fundlon ol the Dr. Welby /Robert Youns charnct t'rs on TV may be to rein· foree this fadin.i lt'gend and kee-p tt vivid enouth for us to project onto the medical mechanlcal mea whose valuable tlme we ~up at the cllnlc. TRE PAJTB lnspired by the doetor'1 bed1lde mUlN!I' lJ ehaney. Some doc· tan don'l ban Aobert Youn.g'a bedside manner; and e-ven if they an dlcl, a pby1lc1an ...... up- ward ol 120 pattens.• day doan 1. bve the Ub>e to cuJUvate bls c:mtom.,.. • c01tOdence in h1I unl· ~ thaapeutle akilJs. Advice to a budding en· trepreneur: Corner the market on thr ee·cent stamps and peddle them at three for a dime. K.M.R. It's more convenient and effi- cient to encourage the belief that the doctor is the custodian or magical powers which operate for your good regardless of his personality. In much the same way the validity of the Catholic Mass is n 't imperiled by that state of grace or lack of it of the celebrant. 'Tm not even sure how many patients I have in the hospital right now. I don't have as much time to devote to patients as Marcus Welby," says Dr. Peter Sullivan of Houston·s Hermann Hospital. "Good doctors don't have time to take a personal tn· terest in their patients these days." As quoted Crom Roger Rappoport 's "The Superdoc- tors, ·· Playboy Press, 1975.) DISTA~CE can create awe. The unknowable doctor whom you never see but who knows you. ..Doctors are accused of playing god sometimes, but in this rela· tionship they are most certainly acting as god surrogates. Dr. Sullivan's description of his rela· tions with his patients isn't all that different from Moses' with the Lord in the burning bush. God must be omniscient. Dr. Harold Scheie of the University of Pennsylvania's Scheie Eye Institute has a fisheye telescopic lens in his office that allows him to inspect the work of his recep· tionists. Rappoport writes that Dr. Scheie also has a "desktop control panel -equipped with 53 buttons -designed to let him tune his office TV sets to an over- all view of his operation room (and) a close-up of each or the five operating tables. . When he sees or hears something he doesn 'l like, Scheie can pick up the phone and bawl out tbe sur- geon through an operating room speaker.·· Dr. Kurt Wagner of Beverly -Hills wears a gold whistle around his neck which he blows when he wants his nurses to come to al· tentioo. God is all·powerfuJ, and one of the signs of p<>wer in our society is money. "Last y('ar I made a million dollars." Dr. Wagner ways. IF MOST people's faith in medicine is stronger than their faith in the Divinity. you have some inkling why. The optimal conditions have been created for the pltcebo to work. No African witch doctor can have more cooperative and credulous pa-uem.. The drawback, of courae, ls a hod7 of la1 people with such ltJ'onl medic aJ dependency they abdicate respon.4'ibUity for their own bodle1 l.nd th@lr 09ln "8.Jtb. There are no atheiltl, nf'ither ln the ro•holn nor the walUng roo1111. Li1tmne, nUJ"M! Soak ~our warta 1n ll four UIMS a d4)'. To the Editor· Something should be done about the coyotes around San Clemente. For starters, they ought to be protected. I certainly can sympathize with those unfortunate people in the Shorecliffs area who have lost pets to coyotes. The loss of a loved pet is a personal tragedy and a heartbreaking experience, whether the pet dies in the jaws of a coyote or under the wheels of a car. But if we are to assume our proper responsibility in such matters, we have to admit the coyote is no more to blame for our pet's death than is the driver of a car in most cases. U we took reasonable precautions and kept our pets from roaming about freely, especially after dark, they could not be dragged away by coyotes or run over by cars. AS FOR coyotes being ''blood· thirsty," a coyote eating a cat can hardly be considered more bloodthirsty than the same cat eating a mouse. Such things are always relative. I think the residents of Shorecliffs ought to keep in mind, too, that it is they who are the in· lruders. not the coyotes. That area has been coyote country for thousands or years. As far as the coyotes are concerned. suburban homesteaders are upstarts and nuisances. The Navajo people called the coyote "God's Dog," and held him in high esteem because of his intelligence. Since the coming of the white man, the coyote has been the sub- Je<'t of the longest and most in· tensive eradication campaign man has ever launched against any of his fellow animals. Des pite mountains of accumulat· ed evidence that coyotes are im· portant and beneficial in the ecology of most areas they in· habit. the federal government is spending $8 million of our money in an ongoing eradication pro- ~ram I can only describe as "bloodthirsty." I CAN think of several more useful things the government might use S8 million for. The pro- gram doesn't work anyway, because the coyote is a beck of a lot smarter than the federal gov· emment. As for the present coyote pro- blem in the Shorecliffs area, if the people there can be patient and keep their pets corralled after dark, the problem will solve itself. Coyotes don't abandon their old hunting grounds easily; but if pickings get really slim, the pack will move on to new ter· rlt-0ry where food is more readily available. MEREDITHGORMAN P1n1~h ( MAILBOX ) Letters from readeu are ~lcome. The nght to condense Letters to fit 1paCe or eliminate libel i.s reserved. Letters of 300 words or less wiU be given preference. ALI Letters m1.1$1 in· elude Jignature and mailing address but names mai1 ~ withheld on re· quest 1/ !tll/tetent rea..wn i.s appmmt. Poetry will not be published. '•~Not To the Editor: An answer to the many good <'omments concerning many animal owners (Mailbox, Jan. 18). Ralph Rollins is a new neighbor, but fast became a good neighbor. His small pet had a large fenced-in backyard. But Ralph happened to see a strange small dog squeeze through the iron gate and his pet follow . Ralph immediately went and bought mesh and put it on the gate. Now the mystery is, how did his pet get out? A dog following a dog's instincts? Judge not your neighbor! If you should be so unfortunate as to hit a dog, take what action you can to find the owner or to see that it receives care. LOUIS and RUTH MELLO Wronglfl AeftUftl T'othe Editor: In rebuttal to the various let- ters and to the headline in your Jan. 18 newspaper. I feel that I must answer the accusations con<'erning my mis· treated, unwanted dog who was struck by a car in the cold, cold night. AS IT was for my three pre· vious dogs and another I current· ly have, my terrier was never aJ. lowed to run free in violation of city leash laws. He was allowed, however, (as is my other dog) to sleep on the chair, bed. near the heater, or in any other part of the house he desires. In oth,er words, he was well taken care of and well loved. How did he get out in the cold, cold night? I do not have any answers for when I returned home s hortly after midnight the gate was tightly secured. It seems that the general con· sensus indirectly blames me for the dog's death (as well as so- meone·s friend). I •1>0logize, but feel I am wrongly accused. Only I know the truth or the care and protection I gave my dog ; . ·. . ' therMore these accusations are irrerevant to me. My conscience does not bother me. RALPH ROLLINS ln"ol"ftf Citizen To the Editor I wish to correct some im· pression left by your Jan. 2 arti· cle titled, "Paramedics Bring Back Man." Thank God our par· ty was s itting at the table next to the Frank W. King family on N~ Year's Eve. When Miss King stated that her father had turned blue and my husband im· mediately went to his aid. He at· templed to give mouth to mouth · but could tell there was a blockage in the throat. Two to three minutes passed when the Costa Mesa Fire Department was called. My husband co11~ ~ tinued to give mouth to mouth after dislodging the food in Mr. Kings throat until the paramedics arrived on the scene two or three minutes later with their equipment. My husband continued to work with the paramedics until Mr. King was taken to the hospital. The management of Reuben's, Catherine King and Sgt. Tom Lazar of the Costa Mesa Police Department expressed their gratitude. Here was one citizen who got involved and was well trained enough to save the life of a fellow man. MRS. THELL E . GLASCOCK Parca..edlc• To the Editor: I want to shout from the housetop praises for the Newport Beach Fire Department and the paramedics; and I don't know any better way lo do it than through your newspaper! We had an emergency recently and the Fire Department and the paramedics were here within a few minutes after our call. They took over and saw that my husband had emergency treat· ment and then took him to the hospital, where his doctor was waiting. Only someone who has gone through this can know what a blessin~ it is to be able to call a number and have help there. I notice there is some question regarding the financing (or the paramedics -they are worth everything it costs and I hope our supervisors realize that. MRS. J. LEONARD SMITH C..t l•tflled Totbe'Editor: We feel that the Const Com· munity College Dl.Atrict should respond to the Daily Pilot's Jan. 14 editorial whlch qu~tlons the expenditure for the District '8 new annual report. "Accomplish· ments." The Coast Community Collc1eo District l$ a $50 mllUon.per-year "co rporation .. whose stockholders are lha tupay~r• resid1n1 in our 7&-equarc mJlc district C1ettled by more than balt·a·mlllion per1ona). By law we mutt publl1h and make available lnrormaUon per. talnfn1 to bud1~t. tncome, f?'Owth and other ptttlnent data. We fHI that the new relldabl formal wUl beUer m.ablA ut to share with the clUm\rY Uuit In· formation alotia ~th our pro. II' ... Naturally Jt wouJd be Ullo . i feasible to publish a fme quality annual report for every tax· payer. Therefore, we have chosen to distribute a couple of thousand reports to citizen ad- \'isory groups, libraries. cham- bers of commerce and civic dignitaries plus other outlets where the reports can be easily obtained by interested citizens. YOUR WRITER labeled the annual report as ''sellaggrand.iz· ing." The District and its two campuses, Orange Coast College and Golden West College, and KOCE·TV, Channel 50, are de· dkated. energetic and creative institutions, the faculty and staff o ( which are proud and en· thusiastic of their efforts on behalf of their students. They rightly listed their Accomplish· ments. In reference to the report's ,"poor contents," this new.styled report is a first for us, and the contributors of the content were exploring. However, important· ly, the chancellor's office re. ceived many letters from college presidents and district. ad· ministrators and politicians praising our institution on the ex- cellence of the publication and on the District's accomplishments. This annual report admittedly has enhanced the Coast Com· munity College Dis trict's already e~cellent national re- putation. And why is a national reputa- tion important? Our district either produces or collaborates on the production of television <'Ourses for college credit as well as designs the academic support material for these telecou.rse$. This annual report ·-"Ac· complishments" -was sent to the chief administrators of every community college district in the country along with a letter from Chancellor Watson focusing on our available TV courses for credit. The resultant orders have paid for the cost of the annual re- port, thereby relieving the t:ix· payers from purchasing this publication. Six thousand dollars out of an annual budget of $50 million truly is a modest amount to pay for tbe returns enjoyed by our colle(~ district. RICHARDV.SIMON DirectorofCommunityRelatiooa Coast Comm~ Collefe Dlstrl• DAILY PILOT R~rf N. WHd, Pul>Hlhn Thomoa KtflJU, Editor Barbara Krdblch, &dUonal Pagt Editor The.' c.'dltorial PUC ot the Dalt.r Pilot uth to lnlorm and' stimulate readers by presenUn1, on this P•ie dlver1e commentaf'1 on topics ol inlt'real by 1)'11Cllcal• ed columnists and cartoomsu, ht provtdina a rorum for ....acs.r,• views and by pre•aotlDt Utll new•papcr·~ oplftiou and Ideal on rurrcnt toptcs. The ecU'°'1ill Ofllnlona ol tht Dally PUot IPPMI' onl1 tn the edllot11l column at~ top ot lhe P•i-· Opinions U· pretMCI by th• eohunnlsts ud urtoonhta aDd r.taar •"riltn .. their own and no tndonemmt of lhelr vlew.a b.f the I>llb PSloc. lhould be ln(trteel. WedDelda)t, J,a. 21; 1i78 'Ford Asks Boost for Defense WASIUNOTON CUPI) -President Ford today asked Congress to increase defense spendlni to $101.1 bllllon declaring "We dare not do less." It wu an fndieatlon his efforts 10 limit growth in the federal budget end at the Pentagon door. He said the requested lncrease of $8.3 billion includes a reduction in pe1'Sonnel and that more mlebt be needed 11 the SALT talks falter and the nuclear arms race expands. There would be a total of ' $S billion in foreign aid and tor sales of U.S. military equipment. United States con fulfill its objectives or mutual s~urlly. international stability and peace," said Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld. ··At the same time, the budget renects a serious effort to achieve restraint." That may not be enough to satisfy critics who say the United States ls fall- ing behind a Soviet Union that is spend- ing more and more on its military -a growth of 3 to 4 percent per year. THE ADMINISTRATION hopes to change this by closing b~es. ending sub· s1l11es for military comml.ssary stores, reducine the cost and disruptlon of many milihary moves cutting civilian person· net levels and reduc:lng certain r e - enlistment bonuses. Wednesday January 21 1918 NO MORE MANPOWER WASHINGTON (UPI> -In an apparent bow to feminist objections, the fiscal yt>ar 1977 budget avoids the word "man- power" in describing federal job training and employment projects. "This word change has no effect on the composi- tion Of the function (Of such programs)." the budget explained. • DAIL y PILOT A 7 RfHUter Sen Barry Goldwater will be among those on the dais when Dean Martin is roasted on his own NBC·TV s how Feb. 25. FORD TOLD CONGRESS it would have to pass leeislalioo permitting him JAMES R. SCHLESINGER. who sour('es say lost his jot as Defense s~retary when he refused to accept a $97 billion defense budget for 1977, has said only $110 to $114 billion would over· come inflation a nd provide a real in- crease in spendine. Development requests lnclude more work on the Bl bomber, the Ugh\ Fl6 fighter, the Trident mlS$ile-flrlng sub- marine, a new \nteroontinental ballistic missile, a new Army tank and the nuclear·~wered cruise missile -an item which has complicated the SALT talks. A" ,Ml• The Pentagon increasingly is turning ------------------------------to loreign military sales rather than · to cut about $2.8 billion from the defense · direct foreign aid. It is asking a sales • bU<f.et -or spend that much more if they did not agree. "I am 1ecommend.ing a significant in- crease in defense spending for 1977," Ford said. "If in good conscience I could propose less, I would. Great good can be accomplished with other uses of these dollars. "My request is based on a careful as· sessment of the ipternational situation and the contingencies which we must be prepared to meet. The amounts I seek will provide the national defense it now appears we need. We dare not do less. And ii our efforts to secure international arms limitation falter, we will need to do more." The budget is trying to increase spend- ing by about $.11 billion for weapons, re- search and maintenance, although the $51.8 billion sought for personnel costs is still about half -reflecting retirement pay and high salaries paid to the troops which officials say the all·volunteer force requires . program or $2.1 billion, and the budget I request said "a substantial portion of whkh will be for Israel.·· THE ADMINISTRATION wants an additional $1.8 billion in security support assistance -money to help nations, mostly in the ~iddle East, arrange their budgets so they can purchase those atms. When the draft was at its height in 1968, personnel absorbed 41.8 percent of the budget; last year the percentage was 54.2 and this budget hopes to reduce that to 51.8 percent. The budget revealed that the cost of supporting the 200 American technicians to keep the cease-fire lines in the Sinai Desert will be $35 million. FORD SAID TIDS BUDGET would provide $1.4 billion in new spending over and above inflation. He said these real increases should continue to $149. 7 billion in 1981 -$121.9 billion in 1977 dollars. ' . "This budget provides for the essential real growth which will ensure that ttie * * * * * U.S. Budget At a Glance * WASHINGTON (AP) -Here are highlights of President Ford's budget for the fiscal year begin· ning Oct.1 : TOTAL AND DEFICIT -The federal govern· lnent would spend $394 billion, an increase of $21 billion from the current budget year. The deficit would total $43 billion -but that would be a drop of nearly half from the estimated deficit of $76 billion in the current year. P HILOSOPHY -The lax and spending changes Ford proposes would, he believes, lead to a balanced budget within three years while improv- ing chances for the economy to get onto a sustained growth path. But "this is not a policy of the quick fix; it does not hold out the hollow promise that we can wipe out inflation and unemployment over· night." The growth rate ln federal spending·would be cut to less than half the average annual growth rate of the past decade. TAXES -Personal income tax cuts which are enacted on a temporary basis for 1975 and part of 1976 would be enlarged and made permanent, re· ducing payments to the government by $28 billion. One key provision would increase the personal tax exemption from $750 to $1,000 a year. Corporate tax- es would also be trimmed, but Social Security tax- es, paid by both empl9yes and employers, would be increased. (Related story. B6). DEFENSE -Spending would increase from $92.7 billion to $101.1. billion based on what Ford called "a careful assessment of the international situation and the contingencies we inust be pre· pared to meet." More than half the increase is for procurement of hardware, and research and de- velopment. Personnel would be slightly reduced. , INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS -Foreign aid would drop from $6.6 billion to $S billion, prin~ipally due to a large reduction in emergency secunty as· sistance of Israel and the end of aid to Vietnam. However a foreign military credit sales pro~ram totaling $2.1 blllion would be substantially earmarked for Israel. SOCIAL P ROGRAMS -Block grants in four areas would· replace 59 separate grant programs covering assistance for health, t;cf ucation, fe~ng or needy children and community social service programs for the needy. Temporary unemployment assistance would be continued through calendar 1976 then phased out during the first nine months of J9771"as the economy cootlnue3 to improve." IQl(;l~JIMI SU PER SALE 'SALE ENOS SATURDAY, JANUARY 24TH .. l f! f/Ja, ~'1 ..... . HURRY, SOME QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED! $ • Warp knits ... the ll, lustrous new look . ' . 1n mens suits. 4 88 REGULARLY $85 Deftly shaped 2·butt-On style in a new luxury· look lus trous wa rp knit polyester. Shrugs ofT wrinkles to keep you neat and confident, too Chooee from an rirray or nch tones. Regulars 38·46, lonKl! 40·46. Hurry in, save. Save $3 to $}0. Men's tailored leisure tops with trim-fit flares. 29ss7ss REG. $40 LEISURE TOPS REC. $11 PATTERN SLACKS Revved.up leisure tope enlivened with stitch trim and pocket details. Of comfortable double- knit polyester. Rich hues. Regulars 38-46; longs 40-46. A big buy for men, at Wards now. COJNCTOTHE THEATER? SEE US No need to run al I over town for Ucketa. Juat go to your nearest Warda boa office for th8ter and local evt"nt llch i.. Pick up a '!Chedule ror quick m ereoce. SEYll.1.E ••• •he spirH: of 76 obtain the best price and the lowest lease rates / Nabers Cadillac 2600 Harbor Bl11d., Co~ta Mesd 540-9100 Save 22-26%. '• '• BOYS GET IT TOGETHER IN DENIM DUOS 2fOR $7 3-88EA. JEA.NS REC.4.49 5 ss EACH JACKET REC. 7.99 We&lem-look in rug- ged blue polyuter/ cotton denim. Con- trut :ititching. No iron.Jeans slim, reg. S. 18. Rider jacket 8-20. S.29. husky jeans, 4-88 uch or 2/S9. 4.99 Chambray shin or tott.on, 1¥>ly~t.er , . 3..88 Men's shirt clearance. OUT THEY GO. FASHION DRESS SHIRTS AT A STOCK-UP PRICE! 2ss Hurry in for best se!C'ct1on of our Jseortmt!nl. Nol everv style m every &ire ur coior. Lots of easy<are fabncs. Save $4. RUGGED LOOKING MEN'S WESTERN CHAMBRAY SHIRT / 3ss REGULARLY 7.99 A itreat look Blue cot- ton machine washes. Yok~. long point col· lar. long tail!. Contrast stitC'hing. Oap button pocki:t4. S.M.L,XL. ENERGY -An Energy Independence As· sistlpllce Authority would be established to provide loans, guarantees and other he!p _for private ~ect<?r t"nergy projects. About $650 m11li.01? m _spending .•s planned for fiscal 1977, but $83 billion 1S sought m L-==========---.--------------,r'l!!!!!!------------t~:------:--=-:-=::-~--1 spendingauthorityforsubsequentyears. SAVE '6 SAVE •3 * * * Space Plan Advan£ed In Budge( WASlUNGTON (UPI) -President Ford today propose4 spending $1.4 billion this coming fiscal year to keep the new s pace shuttle rocket plane on schedule for the nation's next manned space rught in 1979. Ford's $3.7 billion Save 2.11. MEN'S TWILL DUO FOR GREAT LOOKS, WEAR 5ss gss Jr.AN JACKET REC. 7.99 REC. 11.99 Ru11ed combo with t.oday'11tyle. In hardy no-Iron polyOt!ter/oot,.. ton twill. Hit colort. Jteket S. M. L. XL; jeAJll Ul 811.a 30-<W. SAVE 1.30 MEN'S, BOYS' CUSHIONED SKIPS Cotton,rmyduck;nibber 469 compoundakickwli.lt. tol• In colors. Great valual MEN"S LEATHER MOC OXFORD ~l.•n m.1dto >0lr. S1 7 r n t t" r hf t' 1 ,.. .l fir,.,.,. M•1k 117 II ll.11 REC.$23 SAVE 36o/o WOMEN'S DUlY OXFORD SHOE 2-~elet. rbl1t 1099 ROie mode For weer w1t.h a uni- form Hurry! Special. BOYS' FLARE JEAN VALUES 2 roR$5 Wanted style. in llOI· idA. !fizzling J)9ttema. Wuhablecottona, pol- yeatert cott.ol\11. Shrn. rt'g .• h1111ky 8 18. Hu•k>• .•••••••• 2111 apace agency spending 1 _J..:iL_~ _________ _L ____________ __JL_1=::U.-~L--------.J.....:~====:::::=:::::::::::::::~~ plan for 1977 is 4 percent 1- hlsber than the 1976 bucket, but NASA Ad· Men'116~·1l, 12; boya' 11·6. REG. 5." ENJOY WHAT YOU NEE.D NOW, WITHOUT DELAY-USE WARDS CHARC-ALL PUN "",.... mln11trator James C. •••ttd.sed Fletcher ntd it does not keep pace wltb inflation. House Speaker Carl "The 19'17 bude~t is not Albert bas entered an that ln normal times ihe Bethesda Naval it ouiht to be, but it doeS H o s P 1 t a I f o r provlde for measured t r e a t m e n t o t p~~ toward the na· bronc b It is. H 1 s tlon s objectives in space FOndition is not and aeronaullca," t>elieved serious. Jl1etcher said. .. Pocket savings with us. •~ • MOl'l'f'CLAl1' 11tOnlclalr plau, 'l'l~ :lO.~ • M1'I Bf:lllNAlllOUCU mitnl (l\y ll\lllt, Tl~ • C •N.w. .. P"' •• •-··• plo~ 8M IOOO • PU&.Llft'l'ON MrW ll on~ T14~j'9 • ......., ...,. -11 • •• .-. ANA lino•-' •I .,.Vl'fl'->' .. 71A.64l.e94\ ,. ,,..,. """" _,......, -_. ........ h. TJ• • ..,. -· • NORWAUt t"1pM"•al at ..,,....1~ Nwd ,_.,..., """ ,,. '"" ..., • coet'A MaA bri.t.GI "', at .. ,, dt'll) fwy . 7H M9 tfOC\ • JlUNTtNOTOH~H _, .... ~ 11 .,.... .. nu _,, • MNOK.UIA CITY i.obiu al _, 1194-112.11 •TORRA NCI •1 ._ IMhlOfl -.-. 642-•11 • OOYfJilA bo1"aftc:8 at Mn h.rMrdu~ fw). tfi6.74U • l.AJ(IM)OO le blVlt II ctndlwnod, M:l-7800 • H08f:MUI> 34i()() ,_-i bl..J, 6iJ.3JJO • QWI' 1,()8 ANOIU:S la e*wca 111 ~ M.. P."2i • &AOlA ROCK oolcw.oii u hrwdway. ~~ 111111 • t,VlfW()()n 1...,.n.t ..t . el 1tai., 6.'17 8000 .,. SHOP MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY ~30 AM TO 9:30 PM ... SUNDAY 10:00 AM TO 6:00 PM .•. JUST SAY ••cKARGE IT!" ... I I .. ' A• DAILY PILOT Wedn..s.y. Jenuag 21, Urte . I DMV Fees 'Ripoff' Claimed by -Coun-y Solon· ""--- -- t ; Assemblyman Paul Carpenter l D·Garden Grove) H>S motor vttucle hce~e fees are ··a $S0 nuJlion npoff" or Cahforrua motorists. So he and State 5c'n Alan Robbins (D·Van Nuy! > introduc~ nurly identical bills this week aimed at forcing the Department of Motor Vehiclt$ to give ~tate residents a 10 percerit rebate on their bcense fees CAJlPENTER SAJDt.he "ripoff' is the result of the con\•ersion to the year.round registration of motor vehicles. The issue dates back to 1973 when Gov. Ronald Reagan signed a measure authorizing conversion or OMV vehirle registration from a system of 16 million renewals every Jan 1 to a year-round system with one-tweJlth of the state's vehicles up for renewal each month Part of that plan was a discretionary 10 percent reducllon 10 the changeover year lo make up for what amounted to overcharges built into the con· * * * * * * One for Month You'll Need Two Stickers on Car The California Highway Patrol is r eminding motons ts to attach the license plate sticker mdicat- mg the month r egistr ation is due when replacing re· g1stration stickers on their vehieles. Two stickers have been provided this year as the state is convert. mg lo a year-round registration program . One sticker is for t he year, indicating that the vehicle's license fee has ~en paid and the new one indicates the month that registration is due for that car. PATROLM EN SAY the month sticker must be placed on the left-hand side of the r ear license plate, a nd the year sticker attached to the right s ide. Highway Patrol Commissioner Glen Craig said no citations are being issued as yet. but cautioned that "enforcement ·w11l begin shortly to assure that both stickers are displayed." ORIVF.RS RF.ING stopped for other violations currently are being reminded that both s tickers must be on the rear plate. Craig said . ...... Deaths Elsewhere WAS HJ NG TON CUPI) -Gladys Hinckley Werlick, 85 , a Washin gton socialite whose parties were among the highlights or ::.ocial life in the nation's capital for year s , is dead from injuries s he re- ceived from a mugger outs ide her home last week. Mrs Werlick, who went mto a coma because 1 of a fractured skull she received in the mugging, died Monday. ESCONDIDO <AP> - Rryan A. Sweet, 78, a member of the San Diego County R oa rd of Supervisors from 1935 lo 1938, was fatally injured Jan. 11 in a collison in- volving his car and a police cruiser. LONDON CAP) -Si r Ronald Edwards, 62, chairman s mce last ()c. .... ,, .. SAN CLEMENTE GEHlllAL HOS .. ITAL JM11N1ry I, "1• Mr •nd M" Gr•oory R•M•u. Upi\tr-Beech, boy Mr •nd M rs M•r k W•tts, S•" c1-m•.boY J•ftlNl"I t, 1tH Mr •l>d M n ECICly M<lrlol\, S." 0-nlt,Qlrl Mr •"" Mrs J~~" Smolll, Lotgurw Nlgyel, 91•1 U.varv "· 1t1' Mr. 8110 """· Mu ll ROH, S•ll 0.-M•,boy Mt.•"" Mn ti.,010 Coptttome, Jr . S...C'-1•,boY Mr •ndMrs E119tM ECohev•rrl•. Sari 0 ...... , •• 0 .. 1 JMl-Y 11, "" Mt. •...S Mrs George Es~r. 5-tl c1e .... 11tt,boy J.,. ... ,., 12. lt7• ltN •"" Mri Urry Port••, LA1JU"41 NIQUel,bOY IN. •1111 Mrs. Wellu 8rsttoff, Jr , M<s- slort Vlelo, olri J e111N1ry n , "1• Mr •1111 Mo L•on•r<I ~. Soll\ ;.,..., CAplstr-. boy BAL TZ-8EAGEAON FUNERAL HOME Corona det M ar 6 73-9450 c.o.ta Mesa 8-46-2424 BELL llAOADWAY MORTUARY t 10 Broadway Costa Mesa 8-42-9150 McCORMICK MORTUARY Laguna Be11eh 494-9415 Sen Juan Capistrano 496-1779 PACWtC YtEW -.OfUAL PAAK C....tetY Mortu81"f Chao.I 3600 P9dftC View 0tWo Hiewpor1 Beech. C:.tomaa ~2700 ~, .... , -.0.MWllA&. ..,.. 1I01 ._. AV9, ........... ~ tober of the restructured British Leyland car and truck manufacturing company and president of the Bee c ham pharmaceutical group, died M o nday al a hospital. Df!fltlt Notl~es GILMOllE IOA EVELYN GILMORE. rttldtnt ol H11"11ngton &..:11. c.. 0.1• ol dNtn J ...... ,., lt, 197'. s.u .... 1 .... 0 try,_-· J•mn G<lmo,... 01 Hunli"91on Beech Mtd .Jofttl L. Gilmore of CMdlfl, C. , 10.,, or•l\d<llildr•" •nd ,_ tr•M.· gr-lltlClrM. Vl\lt•tlOI\ W~ 2 oo to •·oo & 1 oo 10 9.00 PM Se<vi<f'\ Thur\,day It ·oo AM, both •I 0110.y eroc ... rs Mort11••r """ Chapel lnler· menl w111 De ~1 .. 11e 0 11.U.y 8rOCl'ler\ Morl11•ry, 11911 !Mac " Bo111ev•rd. Huntington Bt•cll, C• Clortclon M 2-m1 ltEVEltE M A ll MOHD CLAYTON REVERE cte ARMOND, .teJ< '3, long tom. res1<1~nl of Oraf>99 County, P"SWd away J•n.,.ry IS, 1t7• Sur .. iveo Dy "" wilt, El11a11e1n ol ~ !Mech, <A • Wt>, RICIWlt<I o1 Ne w Orl••M. Loolsl•"•; CS.ugMer, Mrs. Wllll•m F. Gorm•n (Marilyn); i-1Jf'<ltld<lli1e1re" of LAil""" Beech; slsltt, Miieir.ci O'Connor of LotVef'IW, C.. Memorl•I w r .. lces -·• held •I MolrlM rs O>urcll of Newport &rec11. C.. on Sunclay. J""""'' 11, 197• wiU. Rev. Wllll•m Acton olf1c1•tlng Ar· r-.menls Dy Tiie Ntptun. Society ... 1t1Duro•l •l 1oe<1. TODD DAVI 0 OGLE TODD, res.Oenl 01 Huntington Beech. C• • P"Sse<S ._., Jat1u.,., It, 1976 at lhe •9t' ol 16 !>u'V1.,.., Dy llis wife. Jess.e Todd at liuntll\Qlon &ecn. Mr Todd _, • memoer of The Hul\l•noton !Mech Mo110nic LOdcJe 2St. 111 lteu of '-"· Ille 1.,.,1ly ~ts OOl'l•loons I» mede to it.. cn ... uv of your cttooce ~Ykei w!ll t» Mid •I tO·OO AM on T ... Uf"\d<ly •I Smit,.,s' Mortu.,y Chapel lnter,...nt, Wrstmlnster Memo•l•I P•r~. Smiths' Mo-y<11rtelon. McOllAW SALLY JANE MCGRAW, resldMl ol Co\i. Mew. C.. O•te of ,,._th J-ry 20, 1'76 Survived DY Mr ll<nblll\d, l.eo G McG<•w of Cos141 Mes.e, ,_ tom, ~''" W Hooper of Los A"91!1eS •nd ~,., F McG••w of Hunlln9'on 8tac11, mottter. Mrs. Jel\l1le l<.uencer ol Lono &eac:ll, t-l>rotlwrs. Wiiiiam Kuenclf' ol H•w•ll alld W•ller K~cer, Jr. of Long &each. FUMr•I servlCH ~II ~ 11•10 WtOll••Cl•Y 11.00 AM, Bell e.-.., Chapel with lnltrrtWnt al Peclflc View Memorl•I Puk, Ntwpor1 8eac:ll, C.. Bell Bro<ldw•y Mortu.,.y ell rt< ton. KHOEHLE ROBERT L . l<.HOENLE, rttldrnt oi S...t.e AN, C.. Dele Of dutll J-rv It, 197• In HuntlnqlOfl Be•c"'. C. 8onl Decemh.r 7, ltl4 1,. Alo.rOI\, 01110 Survlwo Dy "" wot• Mergarei; son, Ttdof HUl\llnQIOI\ 8eKll, ""°'.....,·Mn . !Yt"9 K,_..le of "-l•ln ll'•lley, l'tltO DrOtfters, W•lt~ l<.l\oe<lle encl Edw«d IC-I•. ~II Of Ot\io, stst,.,. El- Mcl<.l\son of 01110, I-O••ndcl'>lldrefl, CH-• -Nicole M r K'-ile wn • member of Tl•• Font a.rk11.,, ~" of Huntlnqton Beech ~ten ..+ti De held -1 2 JO PM <WI Tllur'id<ly, ,,... ... ,\' 22, •I The First Chrl\llan a-di 111 Huntlft910fl Beec"' n.om.s W. Ovtr10I\, officiant. Interment, "-<Ilk View M.tmorl•I Perlt, Ne-#port 8e11<h, C• T ... e l•mlly lUIJOUh ,,..mor1"' contrllMltloM De madt 10 n.e FlrsC OW'lsCl•n Olurcll of HunllllQlon lllNGll, C... In llle NI,,_ Of Mr. l<.'-llt SmltM' MortlMlf y <llrectors. ltOTH HELEN ROTH, rul<1•11t Of I"° MID<wo¥1•, Cost. Mtu, Ca. O.le ol O.· .. ,, J~ 10, 1'16 S.rvlc.s -Ptllll· lne. Pe<lflc View Mtmorl•I Perto: Morluery, Newport 8HCll, C... LIPPEN MARY LIPPEH, resldelll of~ Hlllt., C.. Oet• of dfflll J_., 20, ,.,._"""'"'"by lier ~bM<I.-'­~ ""''"' •• Mn<li"O. "-c•fk Vlt w ,,_.m•rlel P•r ll Mortu.,.,, Nt.,,,,.n 8HC II. OOLOaa•o RUTH OOLO&ERG, rnlWt!t Of Le9'IM Hflh, C•. O•ta of dfflh '-f '6, 1'7'. Survlwd b\' '-' ......,, Wiii,.,.. G9~. Servl<.ft .,. ...-._ Peclflc View ~ llWt!Mwwery, ~ ....... , Neptune Society ~ll.IMTIOM BURIAL AT SEA 646-7431 .,_ ..... "'-"' ......... .... --~-'*­c... ............... ....... C.-./Bllr. version. Tb~ renewal notices went oot ltst month, but the JO percent dLScount was opt included. It was canceled last swnmeT by Gov Edmund Brown. Jr. to raise more state funds lbat will at tract more federal h.ighway rund.$. ACCORDING TO ROBBI NS. the elimination of that 10 percent discount is a "bidden tu" that will cost tbe motoring public at least $S0 million. AccoJldlng to Brown's administration about $26 million will go to state highway funds and the re- mainder will be returned to counties and cities for road projects. The Robbins and Carpenter bills would re- instate that JO percent cut in the form of relunds which the ir bill would require the OMV to mai1'ut latt>r this year, after the fees currently assessed against motorists are collected. ••t R EALIZE THAT the state needs all the money it can get. But I hope things aren't so desperate that we need to cheat the people," Rob- bins said . "We're trying to mandate what the legislature intended in the first place," Carpenter added. "This is really a hidden tax. and we should bold the gov- ernor to his word of no new taxes.'' But even Carpenter conceded that chances or enacting his m eas ure are slim . "If we don't have the same kind or public hue SUPER SALE and cry that O(curred with NOx (the mandatory smoe device) progtam which Brown ultimately aueecl to eliminate,~ aren't going to get this bill passed.•• Carpenter said. lo separate interviews, both Brown and McCarthy. lbe most powerlu1 legisla tor in the lower house, indicated some dislike for the Carpenter- Robbina plan But neither expressed outright op· position. ''THAT BILL WIU. have to compete with pro- grams to put people back to work. to provide educ a· lion funds and homeowners property lax relief, meet medical and service co.sts for the elderly and disabled in this state and similar programs which are underfunded. It will be considered only in that light,'· s aid McCarthy. And if either of the measures -which require two-thirds majorities in both the Senate and As· sembly -get to 6 rown's desk, chances are not good that they would escape Brown's veto. He said he would take a look at them, but the criteria he listed seemed to stack the jwdgf\lent against a signature . .. , MADE AN I NmALjudgement that it would be good to get the federal money and provide the jobs for completion of freeway projects. The vehicle license fee pay m ents are a n attempt to capture availa ble federal funds." Brown said. "If the legislature would like to further curtaill , SALE ENDS SATURDAY. JANUARY Ufll .. HURR Y. SOME QUANTITIES ARE LlMITED/ the building of freeways lh.IJ year. that's certainl y somethJnR I would want to examine. J wouldn't want to preJudge that," he saJd. But Brown's top u 1st.ant 1n charce of both h1ghwt'Y• and the OMV, Transportation Secretary Donald Burns. m ade his position quite clear. .. MY F IRST REAcrlON is quite neaatlve, and I'm sure the le1islative rt!action wtll be lhe same," Burn said. "I don't accept the notion there's a ripoff. There's an opportunity to obtain federal funds that a lot or people want very badly, both for the jobs and (Dr these projects." REWARD WE WANT DIAMONDS GEM-STONE S AND FINE JEWELRY Highest pric.s paid for jtwtfry from privatl individu1ls 111d 1stat1s. F r11 extrnlftation and appraisal by Grad· uate Gemologist Ple11• call 536-7548 for appoint· ment. Ask for Mr. Terry. u UNIV ERSAL DIAMOND INDUSTR S 412 Olive, Suite 203 Huntington Beach, Calif. 92641 714/S36· 7548 (lSavings! sw.;-1 Woll -Dul Lode· ~ 64 "· JI II •ew 6t tt. '4 M ..et· 1' "· 7&.as SAVE '30 WARDS BESTG.ARACEDOOROPENER •.· tooled -.cr ew dri,•e '•·HP. ln11tant ea f~ty rever11e Control extra Come home to aafety. $}}9 REGULARLY M9.9S MOTORIZED BENCH SAW OUTFIT Outfit includes 9• Hw, 16988 2 utens1ons and atand . Creot for your workahop. REC. ZJS.97 SEP . $9 to $30 off. Elegant chandeliers. ~ BronH chand. 8 lt.e. Spaniah broru.e, 84 c:ryet.al prl11m•. 005-lltht flxtun. Black f1ni11h, ~11111" ahadee. Re1. 87 .99 ~Modem ch&nM- tieT. 6 •ho.de., wood column JWic. 33.99 (!>J& .. 111ht flsture. Ant;qued oopper. wood limefiee 1te1. 37.99 69~8 24aa 2483 "·" .fencing. WE STILL MAKE HOUSE CALLS ... CALL TODAY FOR FREE HOME ESTIMATE. OUR BIG 7-HP LAWN TRACTOR Save$30. Power-packed 20" rotary: 31/2-HP for toughest jobs. Versatile rotary is just what you need for a well-groomed lawn. Its hard-working Briggs & Stratton en· gine has dependable pull-and -go starter. 20· deck cuts and bags ef· fic1ently AdJut;t.able cutting height.A c:rau ratcher, r"ll'· low pric~ ..•• 17..119 Other mowers as low as .......•. I V.&I $2()() off. $23 off. 8-HP lawn tractor. Transnx le tractor haM dependable BrtJ:ICM und Stratton engine with conve nient elec tric Ml.art. 31> mower incl REG. $799 20" rear-bag rotary. ko·:1r-1•nd l'11lchPr ltnd ) n.,..,1~c" tnmmmg prob- lt·m~ 3°:-HP Briggs & St ralton eni::me Ad· JU:.ta bll' cut ting hl11. 14988 ltEC.172.tt Briggs & Stratton engine. :l-sp. lran11m111111on: full d11Teren1.Jal dr , J2" mow. 49988 NO MONTHLY PAYMENT TILL JUNE '76. FINANCE CHARGES APPLICABLE DURING DEFERRED PERIOD REGULARLY $549 Values. Kitchen sinks. Strons.'n.id, wbite lleel ainlc. Sparkling porc:elo1n 2288 ensmel finish N!81t.ts lil8ms, cleans eas ily. Rrr 27 9,,. Fauc.t all•. ~. · 0 Ruaced ~hite c••t iron 1ink. ~tam resist.ant linieh. 59ss C oppertone, avoc:ado, barveet 11old lllnk, 64..88 Feucel e11tr•. REG. 69.9S Sturdy 1tainJe11 •leel eink. Cl~smin11 lin111h can't, 3488 chip or Blom E11&y· cleon, 11elf-rimming. faucet extra. REC. 44.95 Ward• bett 1talnln1 ateel aink. Glewrung nickel chrome 6988 eteel. Big 8-jn. dee p bowl11 E1111y lo c:leen. F•ucet extra. Sinsle Iner top mount faucet. Fits all of the above 1988 11inu No-drip valve 33..16 •pray Caueet, M.118 REG. 27.95 10" radial arm saw. Demand the best, the 2-HP Powr-Kraw aaw . When you wanL tu g~t pro(OMion11I retultl llt hotM, you $ 2 49 t'an ~ly on OUI' powerful 2-HP rodinl arm aaw ~uipped with thn.'t! 1pindlc11 plue O umvel'tlal motor th11t produces ' 3460. RPt.1 (or c:uttinJC •nd p indm1t. anrl 20.000 RPM for nay routing and •hapinR. Up front conlrol~ ll:'t you m11kt> quick 11Ciju11trnent.1. Gnugff ure l'8llY to Tf'lld won't 11low • you down No t1pec1ill w1r1ng nN>dl'd UL he~. Sa\'t now RECULIJU.Y '31t BUY IT HOW-"° OOW.. PAYMENT UQUUt.ED Wtf!H YOU ADO IT TO YOUlt WARDS CHARC ALL ACCOUNT On a budget? We'll help. • CANOGA PAlllC topenr• plalA. M'l 1000 • (~A •QA 1w1.w • , •• .. n ,...., r.,.,. 11• M& o.oo • CO\llNA herrant'e ot oan boornordlM M , ~ 7411 • t:AO&A "()('IC roolon.do e1""*'"''>'·134 '2tl • nru.&ltTON h~ •• or•,....horJe, ?t• m ~ • H"'"1111Cl'"r'ON lllACH .don ... , at ... _. ... 714 11'12 11611 • l,AICIWOOO lellewood bl>d •1 ulldl~,.O"d. 63.l 7600 • t..YNWOOO hnpn-ial hl•d , •I IN..,., ~'t? f.000 • MOKT<'i.Alk monttloor plu.. 71•·•~ •NORWALK tmP"'••I ... MnO<AI>. ~-... OIU • l'ANORAMA l'ITY iohlu et~ .. AiW • Ro:iEM~AO ;l$JO ~ 111 .... , •1 '1111 SHOP MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 9:30 AM TO 9:30 PM ... SUNDAY 10:00 AM TO •oo PM •.. JUSTSAY .. CHA.ROB ITI" ly 't h y d .. a • l l v ~ ' r " ' . ' . 9 I! Wedn...:l!Y. January 2t. 197& OAILYPILOT A: . ·shuttle 'Stalled' OCTD Passengers on .Rise OC EmpWye Parking Bid Okayed SAN.TA AN A - Ridership on Orange County Transit District buses continued its steady climb during December when more than 948,600 passengers Supervisors l ate last year agreed to resurrect studies of Ontario a.s a possible "relief valve" for overcrowded Orange County Airport. tario. ty work together to prf Loritz said it is best vent u n n e c t> s b i, r : that OCTD and the coun-duplication of effort. SANTA ANA - Orange County Supervisors said Tues- day they are satisfied the county General Services Agency <GSA> is doing the best possible job or relocating em ploye parking spaces lost to construction of the new administration building. ORANGE COUNTY Over the long term, Morris said, the county and the city of Santa Ana should intenslfy parking planning. Morris suggested that the county study the possibility of building a double or triple -deck parking garage in the general area south of Santa Ana Boulevard in · the vicinity of the Ross Street intersection. were carried. · The figure represented a 58 percent increase over the same month a year ago. according to District General Manager Edward Loritz. LORITZ noted that durlng 1975, the district served more than 5.65 million passengers com- llE ALSO said that Bead• Group r:f;14_to just 3·5 million while the county should Supervisor Thomas Riley of Newport Beach has suggested that special transit terminaJs could be opened in Orange County where passengers destined for Ontario could board high-speed freeway ex- press buses. IN HIS report. Loritz said OCTD would be the most likely entity to pro· vide such bus links to On· =I 3424 Via U~o Lido Shops Newport Beach O,.EN SUNDAYS-1 1-4 They showed little sympathy when Orange County Employe As- sociation Executive Director .John Sawyer again protested the fact that many empk>yes now must walk more than a half-mile to their offices. maintain its current FayO.RoundJr .h~ In his generatf~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ on the parking lot site at parking policies for the be e n e 1 e c t e d manager's report at the corner of Santa Ana time being, new parking p r esiden t of the Monday's OCTD board SAWYER SAID some employ es h ave con- tended a spoils system was used in assigning new parking spaces. Avenue and Broadway, policies should be con-board of the Family of directors meeting, """--+c * lf-.k OH DISPLAY one of the mos t cen-sidered. Service Association Loritz also noted that the 8..,.... trally-located parking Among other things, of Orange County, a district's planners are * . * Dodge ASPEN & Plymouth VOLARE lots in the area. Morris said. employes non-profit United "evaluating dis trict -fc ......_ PRIZES!! JAM. 22-25 R.I. "Cuba" Morris. director of the GSA, told supervisors his office has relocated employes on the basis of seniority and rank and is trying to arrange the most conve· nient p arki n g for employes who carpool. Morris noted that should have to pay de-Way Association participation" in county ...- things will improve in posits for parking passes ff · efforts to increase use of w. ?t o enng counseling to o t · 1 ~ ¥ s h c f two years when the $8 and pay for new passes if n ario nternational out oas a•a million building is com-the old ones are lost. families with marital Airport. '"ht9"•1·~~, , "•R·. ,. pleted bee a use it will ,-----------p_r_o_b_Ie_m_s_. _______ T_h_e_c_o_u_n_ty_B_o_ar_d_or1_~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~-- He conceded that most of the 361 employes whose parking permits were revoked due to the new construction have been r eassigned to a county lot on the ex- treme northern end of the Civic Center. BUT HE said ample warning was given and several discussions took p lace with e mploye representatives before the action was taken. The administration building will be located * * * ( Pilot Logbook J have 200 basement park- ing stalls. Morris' report on the parking situation sug- gested that supervisors resurrect a proposal to start special shuttle bus service around the Civic Center so employes who park long distances from work can ride in com- fort. BUT SUPER VISORS delayed for three weeks Morri s' reques t for $16,000 to start such a service. Supervisor R alph Clark said shuttle runs might be in the domain of the county transit dis- trict. * * * Big Issue: OC Parking By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of.._ Deity ..... St.tt "ConM.der the inanimate mote of du.st 01ld its tmerring .obilit11 to bring low even the mo.st pro- digiou.a of machinery." -Author Anonymous, 19th Century. There's a lot of truth to that obscure old quotation, especially when it's applied to the "prodigious machinery" of Orange County government. It doesn't take a whole lot to gum up the works. Take the latest molehill-turned-mountain, for example. The life and death issue is park- ing spaces -about 300 of them, to be exact. THEY WERE LOCATED ON the choicest employe parking Jot in the Santa Ana Civic Wf Center, right in the middle • of everything. But the County Board of Supervisors decided they wanted the parking lot site to build t heir new, $8 million administration building. The employes would have to make do until the building is completed in 18montbsorso. SCHH1H1t The impassioned howl that arose from displaced employes made it seem as though supervisors had begun lopping off heads for sport. The employes charged that a "spoils system" was being used to relocate the people who lost their previous spaces on the basis of rank and importance in the county hierarchy. THEY SAID THOSE who couldn't be housed in the county's "prestigious" Civic Center parking garage were forced to park in a lot nearly a half-mile from their offices. To hear the wail of protest, one might think the lot was in Siberia. Apparently, the press was considered worthy of "upper crust " parking in the garage, though the treatment was less than satisfactory. Most spaces were gone by 8:15 a.m. and those of us who arrived on time were told "your credentials entitle you to a space on the roof -if you can fmd one. A MAJORITY OF THE press corps is parking on the street or in nearby priv..ate lots for 50 cents a day. The significance of the issue of 300 park- ing stalls is questionable at best, since it was obvious for months that something would have to give. In this case, the new building was a lit- tle less flexible than the parking spaces. There is and ·aJways has been a shortage of nearby parking in the Civic Center and for 300 of the 11,500 county employes to cry about it now is so much wasted water . SUPERVJSOllS COULD MAKE things a . little easier by providing such things as tram service but there is no realistic way of making a major improvement in Civic Center parking over the short term. Enough county Ume and money has been wasted on thif less-th311:-major issue. · Charles 'trenta , Mrs . B etty Ellaa, secretary to the [)\strict chairman otthe Advisory COuncll of Carpenters in Comm ittee, "is a small Orange County, has re-tribute for Trenta 's four ceived an award for out-years of outstanding standin& service from the s~rvlce to the Arthritis Orange County Branch of Found al on • and the Arthritis Foundation. particularly for his help · with the ann ua l "The award," aald telethon." "'-··~'~JN SUPER SALE I SALE ENDS SATURDAY. JANUARY 24TH l fi f/f. ., ~-1 •.....I __________ __J HURRY, SOM!:: QUANTITIES ARE LIMITEU' .;? -ft ·1 R<>gµlnrl\'·Prtl't'CI d1·<01.1tnr t11hl1·~ many wtth protN"lll<· top' •fl·" ll•U.~ bet11nd·door Hlorajlt• 10%-35% off bedding. . Regularly pnn.•cl t\('ln And full bt.-d ding Extra-finn t4"upro>mt"firm 111 • 1nnt.-n.prinjl nr •Jr{'th11ne foam. 15% off all sofas. H<·~ul.1rl1 ·PllC•'ll qul'en ,ind 11111 · ... 11t1 "IP• fH r .... "'a \\',d(' "t•ft•t'IHH' nt' f.1hr11 -. coli11 •'.Ind ~t) 1,.,. 10% off dining & bedrooms.* All muster bedroom~ in great de- si11ns and ric-h finishes. Now r<' duced IO'i below rel(ular prices. 15% off rockers & recliners . rl All lengths; some sectionals in I\ fncludinl{ La-Z-Boy•. heat/v1bra. l great array of styles and fabrics. lion l't'(:ltner!I. Many style!I; care--Jlll-..__s_h_op_e_a_r1_y_.1_s'_,._01T_regu_1_ar_p_ri_ce_8_. _.___rree_~_a_br_1c.1_._1_s_%_o_rr_reg_._P_ncei;. Save $}00 to $150 on 50 sq. yds. installed carpet. Sundance. Nylon multi-level loop carpeting. 7~! F.xciting "Sundonoe" with ju~ h11cking comes in six deliRhtful decorator shades to brip:hll-n any room in the house Suv11' l;OW TO ,, 111t.-.sut1 r~ •OU• WINDOWS 1 _,, Chateau. Nylon pile foam backed shag. 7~! VerMttle "Villa" carpeting can i:o casui1I or elegant -it's up to you' Easy rnstatlation and easy care, too. 4 colorations. Villa. Durable fiber short nylon shag. 7!! Sort. plush "Chateau" i11 no-fuss. resihent nylon pile. Comet' in your choice of handsome colors. A durable buy for the honw. Made-to-measure draperies. All groups, styles, fabrics. 25%off. !Inn,.; 111 \11111 windmv mi'aiiuremf>nts. \hool'f' fmm tn•l"' t h.m :IOtJ rnlnr end fnbr1c cnmhinnt 10ns. Dra· µi.•1·11'~ arl' fun tol<frcl to h11ng 1n un1l111 m rh•:u .... and 1:iil111NI '' 11h •l ·1 nch W<'tghtl•d hotturu IH'mi,i. Luwd, 1111l11wd (Ir t•xlr;• full. tfdei.irc·d Cornt' 111 to· rl:1y 11nd ,..,.. our 1•).IC"t1:-11 t' drnpery ~mplc wall. VALANCES ~- USE WARDS CHA.RC-ALL CREDIT PLAN-IT'S TKE CONVENIENT WAY TO PAY FOR HOME FURNISHINGS Redecorating? We'll help. • CANOOA l'ARK t.op11na• rlaa11, 1\11., l\IQI~ • C'OllTA M 8KA bt'IJ\01 ft. at .an d1f'f(<> r..,y, 714.Mll-ll.400 • COVrNA """•"'* •' .. n b.mardlr>o fW,v. 1166 7411 • t;AGLt: KOCK tllliltildu •I bruadwny. :164-llltll • fllt,~lt'T'ON ~'""' M nrana~th<>'l"' 71Hllll 1'°'1 • Hl1N11NOTON 1n:AC'tl <'dtn.,-t •l IJC'ofh. 714 ll•n 111111 • L"l<KWOOU lftb"ood M'd ., torwll~""'"'· M.l·~ll4MI • LYNWOOD 1m1l4'rtal hlvd , nl •llll• r.-11 8000 • M()l\IT('.1..'llt rnon1cl•tr p1 .. ,. 7l4-1121~lo~• •NORWALK 1mpet1nl 111 ""''""'~ "1¥•1 . !1611.11911 • l'ANOMAMA C"M''' h>hi•• •' n'"""· 111u IO!lll • ROlilF.MF!AO !lfl(JO n> .... fh,..d hhd. '•'1:l.:1w -. • qAN RfUlNAllUtNC) ""'t~t <'itv mall. 714-llli. 'lll1l • !IANTA ~A bmt.al at on.,nt.,..nt.h, 111 .\•~ iiMI., • 1 OllltAN(l: ct.I •rnn flO'lhlM oquu,., 114? 9!l71 ·WI-:~ LOH ANOELElil la """"I• 111 llOh •1. llJ6.7'9.U SHOP MONDAY THROUGH 8AT\JRDAY 9-.30 AM TO 9:30 VM ... SUNDAY 10:00 AM TO 6:00 PM ... JUST SAY "CHARGE lTr' .. Al• DAILY PILOT Wedneeday, Janu!I)' 21, 191'8 dult Classes Thrive on Coast ByHILABYKA¥E Ofttlto.lly .......... dult education In UM! Newport-Mesa ed &bool District used to ref er to a fq cou.raa lD. .. sunhal ~b" and a adlatteriq of ••pa.rent education" offer~ ~~ay, 35 different a~t education ~ a.re offered in areas such as -lis~ history, fine .,u, crafts, mon~y ~ement and home lJ)lprovement. CLASSES ARE PREE for rcsi- of Newport Beach and Costa )>l"te with ~urses offered by other local agencies and institutions, including Orange Coast College and the Newport Beach aod Costa Mesa recreatioo de· partments. Some overlapping occurs, such as with courses like cer a mies, that are offered by the college, the scboo~trict and tbe two cities. However, Mrs. ·Harbison points out that adult education classes are different from others ~cause of their emphasis on •'educational objectives.'• Ace<>rding to Mrs. Harbison, atten· dance in the program bas increased greatly since its beginning in 1974. During the 1974-7.5 school year, about 500 persons were enrolled in adult ed\!Cl· tion courses. ALREADY, THE FIRST semester of 1975-76 drew l ,400 adults and even more are anticipated for the e<>ming semester that begins next week. Mrs1 Harbison says the program will continue to expand if residents indicate they want more, or different, course$. For the (Record . Db•oltd ... • Ot Jl•rrfllP f'li.d Otc...,._ JO Sullenlll•, Palsy and AdOlpl\ Johll Hey, ANIA M. and Ectgar R. Mc.._Jfffy, Ern.stliwO.andJotwllll\. ... t.JMIOJ.anclO.or991!. C(wl,..11, J-1 ,.IOHllC• and "9UI AltblK Bu ... O\atlH LAITY and Jana 0.. lllatl<Mrd, Oorotlly LOUIM-"" Mint Raymond Oovb, C.L Mom011 and Kat• llMntlaoll, Paul R. and J•nnlfer L .lollnto11, Phlllp CHry and Hnart "''-Ortli,.JOflllit, •tc:. and Raquel Scllmll1, Mer9er•I end Tlleodon Alt.rt Wallft, 1.AWf9flC• IC. aM Kat11ryn e. WAiton. Lori$, end f'r•nll R. eutltr, l!lltn l!tlulletll a nd La-.nc:e RvlW!l 511't'Wttlor'n. RICl\el'O J, and LO<IM Allyne, Ullde l! . ..idCltar .. • O. M9rtlndllt, .... rid. c. •ncl Noo'l'llAft R. llnltl, DonM Miln. and AnthonV H, N"I'\ T ... rlll W. •nd K<t,..ft L &rvwn, $11trry Meuretn end Dltnnl1 Mk:lletl Arnold, Rodn•rc>. end f'ranc.s I • Strehle, Shlrlt'I' Mlt Ind Elrl Edwlll'd . Br~ Ali/I Oloffr•'I' end Sandra Ly"" VotkH, M1r91ret Mary acid Joflrt l"1ul CIOtntr*'I, 'f rTV 0. Md SlllPMnle L Hiiie, Q\erlts A and 0.bllle Lym Ttl\t'tinl, Alie• IHOOU) eM MMWa ~ M0/'9flO, Victor I• v. Md L11lt A. TrlpOll, Ptmtl• R. lftd Antlleny V. Tldlo<k, .. .,..fly J. Md OoMkt &.. ZAlpotcllky. Mlchatl Jr. lllw! J.-.tte L Pllllllps, WlllSIOll W. tn4 Nomwlll F. WllCox,Arll• Merli end Bruce OM KHtlr19, ThOmatJ.•nd Bev.r1yJ. ,,_ruc;oco, Olen• LI• and Avellt11• .Jos4l)ll and are funded wilb local district money and a small state1ubsidy. ADULTS ENROU.ED IN any of the adult education offerings may earn credit towards a high school diploma. However, those who already possess a diploma m ay enroll in the classes, too. , Oocll,.y, Rvby D. encl Rlc;l\erdC. Cordero, Lolll' Edmono ind JoslphlM Vlnce11t, MlchHI P. end Verllt u. llrMclh19, O.l>r• A.nn end 1(111"1~ Olen Potmbt1110n, J•mts G. Ind Mil_, M. .. Nearly every school district in the • state offers some adult education classes. The scope of the programs. however, depends on individual school district policies. Newport-Mesa trustees are advocates of adult education, and the district's of- ferings have increased steadily since the program began in February, 1974. Courses offered are the result of com- munity requests, accordmg to Fay Harbison, adult education director. 1 ''WE ONLY OF,FER THOSE classes J>!Ople ask us for·.·• Mrs. Harbison ex· 'Plains. Adult education classes actually com· Funding for the program comes main- ly from local district money collected from taxpayers. A small portion is paid by the state. The breakdown this year is $1,247 per year paid by the district for each ADA (average daily attendance). The cor· responding figure from the state is $125. ADA, figured on a formula involving class hours attended, was 30 during 1974 -75. That meant the district spent $37 ,410 and the state contributed $3,750. TIUS YEAR, A TOTAL ADA of about 67 is estimated. .. Dana Citizens Set Meeting Dana Point Citizens for Action will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday at R. H. Dana Elementary School, 24242 La Cresta Drive, to discuss pending developments in the community. A chief topic of discussion· will be plans for a blufftop restaurant on Street of the Green Lantern near Cove Road, proposed by Ralph Marsden. Ambrollnl, Norma and D.rlo M. ~ Grau ~rgar•t encl Rocert Jay f'Owls, .Joyce l<eteft end JoM TllolNs Draper, Ca roll At C. and MaurlG• E. o..-.. R•be Gal I and Robert EiqM Tlnw!', w.1t.,c. end Lind• c. ~n, DIMll Land Roe e. Cronwell, Thomes R. and CathyL De LI Aou, Mickey Sur.anne and Tommy 8i111op, Arthur E. encl Beverly J. O.vtcwl. ~rt»ra Ann and Richard Roartv • .lunt Merl• anCI T11omn MlcllMI DevlM>n, Loul~ Rodman aftd Wllllarn _,_ McMlnus, Jolln Rot.rt and C.tllryn ..... 'Thotnas, Erika A. and lewis J . Van11t11le, Rotemary an<I i<enn.th LM O.llevo, Wllllem O.oroe and Virginie Ross, Elnore and Harold E1.19Wne .Ward, Sl'PNA Oo1191es and Mire.la lff BartNu. Lina Anna and Rlcl\llrd Al· ten -. IC•retl H. Md Berry A. Clephu, Alie• B•tll end John BonlflCe 111 Sutton, Emlld• Leon• end David AoQustine • Vooel, Wllll1m Oofteld end Esther JICel Scll0f99r, Gell R. and 0.r•ld P. G<fffl, Kenneth D•le Ind &r.nca. Ke.,. Foster. Bruce O•vlo 1ne1 T•nv Ellret .. Glllertn, <ieof'vlN"" R. lttd J- G. Watlllns. Ce<ll For•sl •nd Vlr9lnl1 B. Squyru, 81rbare L. end R 1moftd L Sl~rnann, Wllllem G. and Pen· nelopeJ. ~lledJ11t11ery t Horowlh, 0.vld L. Ind M4ry A. Elf.,, Gell Ellan aftd Cherin Rotitrt Morgen, o.t'•k W. and (Cine M. Dunft, Carot Atln end Roberl Martin c;...nla<IO, Sylvie Dympl• ane!Jlmm'( Mlrsllell Cooper, O.ntvl••• ROM •nd TllomH Troy Doaon, Otvld G •nd J.CQU.l'fll Min• Giberson, Dien~ Endres •ncl JoM Tlloml5Sr. Lltttu, NICkle Lynn •nd Landis l.tt &~. c11u<1l1 sue and R•lldlll F. Schnt<W. EOW1rd J . •ncl Conni• M. Stovall, Sandra J . .ond J•mes J. C.te, Pegvy """and Garv Lym Purillllsttr, O.ry •no Lise A. L.ollw, Yvonne Edna and K•r1·Htlnz H. Talro, Vickie Lynn •ncl Lel•ndJ•Y Scnlcktf', Ch•rles A. •nd Palrlcla A. Hamrick, sandra R. and Clyde F. Montgomery, Willl•m Let Ind Karla Jun Loper,Artllllr G. •nd Ju1n1 C. Nwo/I, Jou L. •ftCI Debllerlne A. * * * Rost e r of Adult SUPER SALE SALE ENDS SATURDAY. JANUARY ~4Tll •. HUHRY, SOMJ:: QUANTITIES AIU: LlMITED1 Oasses Outlined Adults living in the Newport-Mesa Unified ~hool District are eligible to attend any of the 35 different classes offered, free of charge, in the adult education program. Signups will be taken at the first class. Many of the offerings begin next week, with some scheduled later this winter. For exact days, times and loca- tions, phone the adult ed office, 556-3302. COURSES OFFERED INCLUDE Communica· • tions Workshop, World Since the Bomb, Writing with a Purpos e. Genealogy, Vietnamese Jn. 1erchange, J apancse Interchange, Multicultural Workshop. Also, English as a Seeond Language for (1) Vietnames e, (2 > Japanese and (3) Spanish- speakmg people, How to Prepare your Income Tax and Income Tax and Tax Shelters. OTHERS INCLUDE AMERICAN ANTIQUES and Collectibles. Beginning Piano, Ceramics, Hob· by Ceramics, Lapidary and Rock Hunting, Oil ~ting, Porcelanics. Budget Decorating, Build· ing and Fixing in Wood and Metal, Furniture Refinishing, Woodshqp, Navigation, Oceanography and Sailing. And. Needlecrafts and Off-loom Weaving, Quilting a nd Patchwork, Tailoring, Baseball Leadership and Coaching Clinic, Physical Fitness, Women's Self-defense, Stop Smoking Now and otorcycle Safety. Cleared; ture Not Hot BALDWIN PARK CU PI> -A crowded movie ater was evacuated by firemen here because of a r ·ng $130,000 fire next door in a furniture store. ~ More than 200 movie-goers were hurried out of tht:heater Tuesday night as 10 Los Angeles County fi e units battled the blaze at the Model Home f 'ture building. There were no injuries. Catch $100-$150 off. ' save$100. Our advanced color system 19" diagonal TV. Save$150. 4 -channel component system with stand. brc.atlnaking 4·chan_nel with this Warda component system It 1i-$0 very versat.Jle, 1t lets you enjoy AM/FM, FM stereo, the full Slotted nia~k tulle"' 1th m-l1m· i.:1m ·'''""'" hrdl1ant color nm! ''l<'11r, 'n.irp 1111:n""· Pushbutton Auto <;olur Ulll\ .111•, p1 c·-.c·I ton- trols for color, t1nl, contra-t ;111d hrri.;hl11t.>:<~. AFC captures ~troni:e'l ,1i.:n.d lor l••··l r•• ----------------------ception. Ea!ly t.:HF "clicl<" 1u11111i; 1\1111•1111.1 ~E FAMILY CIRCUS By Bil Keane includod for VHF and utti-·. l'la~t1~ c;ili111..t. 349 ~~ "19.95 Expcr1enc:ethegoodhfeinv1hrant11tereoor 2 49 88 sired 4·speed t.urnLable or 8-track Ulpes. <4 "' balanced speakers. Dark walnut-like cabi· REGULARLY oets. Stand and 4-cha.nnel headpl'lone. incl. ;J99.95 __ ...,., __ __ ''Mommy, if the McCouleys bring permission slips, con they go skiing with us?" WHITE'S SHOWCASE ~ff THl LA•GUT ~HlCTION IN SO ORANC l COUN TY • • ~ •· -t I f', , '· · · •.. JNCLUDES EVERY ·Z.IOY CHAIR 1M OUI SHOWROOM .AMD WAIEHOUSI 6-CYCLE, JS-LB. AUTOMATIC WASHER 4-CYCLE LARGE-CAPACITYWASHER Pamper,; all ~our: Wl.IJ!lh-21888 Handles regular, delicate 19888 ables.ewn k niL-i l~lb cap , fabrics. lk-~P motor for 5 temp combo~. :1 l!J)e«JR big, bulky ttemll. 3 temp. W11ter'saver 'control, too' R£CULARLY249.9S combos,spec1aleoakcycle. 2.{ .... dt?.ft', 118 88 it.1.1399$ Cu dtyet, $30 _.e. J.CYCLE A UTOMATIC WASHER Choose normal, short or 16888 pre-.wa!!h cycle. Pre-set variable water temps. Heavy~uty. ~-HP motor. REGULARLY 199.95 SAVE $21 OUR MICROWAVE OVEN WITH AUTO.DEFROSTER ~5::. Tuktot.i~ 2 7888 fn>A thaws fro. un foods. Over REGULARLY 299•95 1<11. fl. cap. HIADONLY ~ control to •rata. utn. SPECIAL STRETCH·STITCH ZIG·~ SEWING $88 SAVE •31 ROOMY 20-CU. FT. CHF..ST FREEZER Like havin(! a super· 24888 market ot. homel Chip· rc·11U!l8nl interior, nex-seal lid,roldcont.rol 88.ve now! REGULARLY 279.95 VER 130 CHAIRS OM DISPLAY .SAVE •Jt FIJll-«ir.e eewi ng hl'Od. Jn.line, 7.1g-1.ag 11tretch 11t1tche11 for knit11. Pushhulton re\ or11e. H111tonholt•r, SAVE •Jt Slalk1 •trfir• 5 169 &.y L.A-Z-BOY ha• LIFETIME wwranty on .. .,. of the patented rdnlno rn9d\atM9m. ·- w. s.ntce WW Wes.9 , ..... ... ,. •• ....... lnt.. ""-· .,.,. ' OW-.. T_... "" ............... _, ... 'llOfll.-.t,,...,.. • .... IM la IM .. 2Mt7 c.,..,.,_ SPACIOUS 15.2 CU. FT. REFRICERA TOR UIJ fro8t..lree, IO thttt'a nn 2 8888 defroeting. Stock up bnr· gain• in 4 7~ f\. frttlA'r. Twin cnapeni & etill rack. REGULARLY 319.95 JS A NEW APPLIANCE A NECESSITY? USE WARDS CONVENIENT CHARG-ALL CREDIT PLAN -NO MONEY DOWN Who'll service it? We will •CAl'fOOA PARK~ pl..,. . ._.,.t(l()(I • C'Ol'TA MPA t..1.W ot, •l .. n d~ fwy , 714-649· .. 00 • C<JYflilA hiimo.nca al .. n hf-;nal'd•N> l•v llM-741l • 8 A0Ul flOCI( roltWtldt> a1 ~ .... , l54 !>Ziii • FUU.l.:RTON hart-or al cw•n• .-th<l.,,.. "'-"''I 2'.00 • HUNTl~<:TON OKAC'll ""'"•"'•''•"th. iH Mil r.1111 • t.AKt:WOOll ltlbwmd hl•d al •ndt..w,,,.(I, Ul.1MO • l .YN'WOOO tmJl"rll•I t•l•d . al •l•I•. '\.1, ll(MIO •MONTCLAIR mont.clalr plH1. '714..f21 .I054 •NORWALK 1mpeto1I •I "''""olk btwl W.OllU • PANOllAMA CITY ll>bo&a 11 "*"' llH •Ill • f\OSIMP,AO :"100 .-mead bl...t. G13 3ll0 13-CU. FT. UPRIGHT FRU.ZER """a 11he1v~ ~u•l&ble 22888 t'Old control Only 2~ wide, "° it fit.II inltl email spaces. A~u1t. cold oontrol. REGULAR.LY 259,91 SHOP MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 9::10 AM TO 9:30 PM ••. SUNDAY 10:00 AM TO 6:00 PM ••• JUST SAY °CHA~OE IT!" • W!dn!!d!y. Janu!f)' 21, 1878 DAILY PILOT A J J JFK's Dad 'Snagged' Graee's Wedding? LONDON (UPI) -Grace Kel- ly mi1ht have married another man before sbe became Princess Grace of Monaco but the suitor wu double-crossed by Joseph· Kennedy, fat her of the late Presi- dent John F. Kennedy. The sto,ry is related in a bio- graphy "Princess Grace" (W. H. Allen) by veteran JJritish joua'nalist Gwen Robyns who s pent nearly two years re- searching her s ubject and talk- ing to dozens of friends of the beautiful onetime film star. . THE MAN IN TllE case was your choice Oleg Cassini, bJandsome designer who was Mias Kelly's constant companion for months rn 1954 and 19M. At one point, Miss Kelly asked Cassini directly what were bis plans for bis future and for her. He mentioned marriage but there was the problem of recon- ciling his two divorces with the fact she and her family were . Roman Catholic. Mrs. John Kelly, mother of th&. princess, then flatly told Cassini: "Look here, Oleg, you're a charming escort but in my opi- nion you're a very poor risk for marriage." THE SITUATION between the couple deteriorated, Miss Robyns said, and in an effort to retrieve it, Oleg asked Joseph Kennedy, a devout Catholic, if he would support him. Kennedy sug- gested that Cassini bring Grace to lunch and he would talk to her. "We all went to a little French restaurant'•, she quoted Cassini as saying, '•and no sooner bad we sa,t down then Kennedy started in on Grace. I sat spellbound as I liJtened. '"Now listen Grace,' Kennedy said, 'You are a good Catholic girl. You r epresent a good Send your kids to bed or out to play with all their Sesame Street* friends ... Big Bird, Ernie, Bert and Cookie Monster.** Save 503 and more on these fun clothes for little guys and gals during our clearance sale! Mak• bedtime • happy time with Sesame Street• sleepwear, only at JCPenney. Toi.Jsty warm two· piece sleepers or long gowns feature your kids' favorite Sesame Street' characters. Bright colors In ensy-care, flame resistant•·· Celanese• Fortrel· polyester. • .,, ... , .... 5.,,. ...... '''"•'"··· ""1,,., ...... ""'"of C,.1IOftf'l I ft.,,,, "I I.,,.°'., .1tt ··••UPPE:f c."•'•CI•• .. Coe" ...... t'l\lt, 8? o,, ()tut &.ft ''"'• Ci• ... '"' M r~•lt lf\r ft t 1•7 • • ·:::~:·~~.~~~"~::;;";nl\ ,~~~:~; ~:';,, tf't• tMhllft~U ol f~'"r:• ti Stll\.Joli'\I DOC fl·l-11 Save 50% now• Sizes 3-GX. Glrta' cardigan of rib· knit Acrllan" acrylic. Moppets .. on front. Sizes 4-6X. Reg. 6.50. Sal• 2.44. Girt•' 1weater vfft of Acrylan• acrylic rib knit. Muppets • • on front. 4·6X. Reg. 5.50. Sale 2.44. Boye' oardlgan of acrylic knit. Solid colors. con· trast tnm. In pre-school sizes. Reg. 5.50. Sal• 2.44. Available In Los Angel•, Orange, Riverside, S. 8erm1rdino and Ventur• counti ... Catholic family and you must not get involved with Oleg. He's a wonderful guy but it wouldn't work."' .. , LOOKED IN amazement. I said to him, 'Why are you double- croeslng me in this when your own daughter Pat married an ac- tor (Peter Lawford)?' I called hhn a dirty monkey but he stuck to his guns." a plan to marry him off to1 Marilyn Monroe who asked if she thought she had a chance. "Give me two days alone with him", the late star was quoted, "and of course he'll want to marry me." Miss Robyns said that before Rainier met Princess Grace some persons interested in a pros- perous Monlco, including the late Aristotle Onassis, concocted MISS ROBYNS SAYS so many people admire and respect Prin- cess Grace that it is difficult to make a book about her not sound • like a series or advertisements. But she was not. she says, the cool goddess s he was portrayed in screen publicity and most of her leading men. Uf'IT• ....... OLD TALE TOLD Princess Grace 20°k off men's work clothes that need no ironing ever. Sale 4.78 Reg. 5.M. Men'• no-#on wortc ltWt with soil release Styled 1n polyester/cotton oxh1de. Assorted colors In sizes S·M·L· XL-XXL Stock up and save nowt Al .. pnc.s •tfecttve through SUndey, .i.nu.ry 25. 1.49 Men'• wed glo~ Sturdy 18 oz. brown safety cuff. 2for1.79 ...... wCMtl aock8. • White cotton/ • 1pandex/ reinforced toe, hMI. Sale 558 Reg. l.H. MatcHng wortc pann with soil release. No-Iron polyester/cotton oxhlde in assorted colors Cullless. in men's sizes. A terrific JCPenney buy• Men's work shoes at a big 20% off. Sale s20 ..... 125. Men'• wOftl booC with full grain leather uppers and 011 resistant crepe rubber sole. Full cushioned Insole. Steel shank. Sale.1680 ..... $21. Men'•"°"' ollfOf'd. Cowhide upper. cushioned lnlOle. Oil reelstant comC)Olltlon sole. 1teel shank. I I -' A I z DAIL y PILOT 21, 1979 . Cooperation May, Ai · y ·outh . -1. In s ·everal Coast Cities By ALAN DllUUN °' ..... ., ......... because of Costa Mesa's experience in be.Ina the lt"ad agency for the youth diversion program •already in operation at UC Irvine, and wbtcb will be incorporated in the comprehensive approach. Several cities alODi the Orange Coast plus com· mun1ties in the Saddleback VaJley have agreed up· on a combined approach to help juveniles who get in trouble with tbe law. Sorsabal said each city will commlt $.1,500 in matching funds to tbe program. They have atreed to seek a $306,000 grant from the California Council on Criminal Justice to fund a Youth Service Bureau, which will provide both in· di vi dual and f am Uy counseling, plus residential ,.~are if necessary.for juvenile offenders. Sorsabal told the council the program will be for status offenders, often runaways, and for first· time ortenders in such offenses as shoplifting. 1 • THE FIRST STEP IN THE program• was ·~aken by the city of Costa Mesa Monday night when the City Council formally approved the request for the grant. The purpose is to keep juveniles from being sent to Juvenile hall, Sorsabal said. Offenders, wlll be diverted from the justice system to community agencies which will provide assessment, counseling and long-term followup. ' . Costa Mesa wilhieek the grant on behalf of a ll 'but one of the other cities and communities in what Al.SO AVAILABLE WILL be a residential care program, which will provide a temporary "shelter" for troubled juveniles and a setting for family therapy. is called the county's Mental Health Region 3. City Manager _Fred SorsabaJ said Newport Beach was lhe only city to opt out of the combined request and lo apply for a grant on 1ls own Two such shelters, able to take up to six teen· agers at a time, already are in operation, one in Costa Mesa and one in Laguna Beach. The cities that went along with Costa Mesa in thE' projE'ct are Laguna Beach, Irvi ne. San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano. and the com- munities l'Overed by the Saddleback Area C'.oordinating Council. A family development program will supple· ment the youth service and the residential care pro· grams. It will offer weekly counseling to multi· problem families for op to six months. Sorsabal explained that juveniles will be re· ferred to the programs by the police. There will be youth service offices in each community, probably in the police departments. THE OTHF.R BODIES CHOSE Costa Mesa to be the lead agl'nl'y, Sorsabal said, apparently &lution • t o Cancer Proposed .. WASHINGTO~ <AP> -Banning the cigarette would be the sin g I e most e ff e c . ti"e way to reduce the c anct'r rate for Americans. a n)oed1 cal spl>ctalist claims in a re- P«'t on the risks of the ~o. 2 cause of death "No siofle known m easure would lengthen the life or improve the health of the America n population more than <'liminating cigarette smoking, .. ac· cording to Dr. Brian MacMahon o f the Harvard Universit y School of Public Health. McMAHON 'S com· ment came in connection with a joint National Ca n cer In stitute- American Cancer Socie· ty study of factors caus· ing cancer and ways of screening potential vic- tims. It shows clearly that thet"e is probably no single cause or single cure for all cancers. lnstE'ad. some forms of the disease apparently are caused by two or even more factors work· mg together. "WE LIVE with thousands of things that have the potential of causing cancer either alone or in combina· tion ... said Dr. Frank J . Rauscher Jr . director of the National Cancer Institute. Rut MacMahon said that smoking increases the nsk of lung cancer by at least 10 fold When smokin~ 1s combined wlth other factors such as asbestos dust or ex· cessive use of alcohol, the risks J!et even freater. <tccording to the report Much 0f the· report de· alt ~1th "'prevC'ntive on cology," finding ways of screening the population 10 ictentif~ prrsons with higher risks ol getting cancer because of family backgrriund. Jobs. drugs they have used or lifestyle Oncology is the study of tumors 8i111M Activist ex-priests Denlel (above) and Philip Berrigan are nding 30 days ln jail for dlg1lng mock p:aves in the White H9use lawn durln& a p(otest against nuclear armament. . 1 ** ** - GetThe Savings of '76 At Singer Now! 860~ tn CJbtnCl STRETCH.STITCH MACHIN E WITH FLIP & SEW* 2·WA Y SEWING SURFACE Just flip a panel f()( free-arm sewing of cuffs, sleeves, pantlegs, etc. •Exclusively designed front drop-in bobbin. • Built·in 2·step buttonholer. •Trade in and save even more' Singer makes many other fine sewing mdch1nc\, priced from only $99.95. Used machines, from $19.95. There's No Place Like @~J~Q~.R HEALTH FOOD SPECIALS AT ALL J ·STOHS (Good Jan. 21 st thru 31 stJ SUPREME B-50 s5ts :..= ltC.vsuLB ... SUPER COMPEX 100 CAPSULES REG. 7.49 YllAMlll ''E'' D' ALPHA 200 l.U. I 00 CAPSULES \ REG. $4.98 • SPECIAL SJ49 HEALTH BEST UNPROCESSED MILLER BRAN ONE POUMD REG. 45• SPECIAL 35 c PAlllOIHllllC ACID 500 MG~UY I 00 ·TAILETS AMI> CHY A SO TAILET IOnU REI COASnlNE PROTEIN POWDER wmtUCnHIM AMDPAPAIM t.fOUMD .... 4.4' $~9 SPECIAL .a. - ~ ·$.,45 ............ , TUSnM .......................... ,. ............. ........ 144-7134 .... , ... \ Throfly's l1m1ted tome offer on Jovon Floral fro- gronces-Lily of the Volley, Loloc. Modern Flowers & Oriental Flowers '" big 8-oz bottles Di~ pltg REG. 2.50 $ ., BAUER & Bl.ACK MEN'S SUPPORT HOSE Provide mold support for tired legs Over-coif length-no gol!tefing Sizes M & L 1n Block "' 8'~ !Wle 'C-4. _.FOR EMERGENCY AID[[] ,_ y,~ I ~ -~ ;',Tf( STOii IT ANYWMml NElOS NO PRt.fflllZINGl COOL PACK "3 SECOND FREEZER" $' Juli pull bo1h end$ ot the bog on opposite di· rec11ons & shake for 2.j seconds & it's reody " to us.e. For fir st oid. lt.eep food from si><>d1ng. Con be re·used by put11nQ into freezer fOOl ~ MADE TO SEU FOR 2 FOR 1.78 ·~--iii"""'iii~iiiii:iil~ili~PSiiiil t;R!.1 ~ ~ BABY TIDY-UPS 5oft, strong, full size 7~8" pre-moistened washcloths \(eep boby cleon D•shwosher sot" Smooth inner sur face 4-oi ond 8 oz Choose from a · setectoat1 of "°velty des.gn~ ............... """' ..... ~ ...... PBllA CAT Fiii 14~ AllllSIN'I PIETZfll --- ca llTI9 4· 11 u1• • 1~ CllClfl . I Tlf IU .. llTl .... ~ .. II PLIMi faf --... CHECK OUil aooKDERBEf= YOU OR I PRESCRIPTION. V v'll f il'ld our o at ev•r'f Pre· ~p11on Center_,._....,_ SC" I ::..2 81 -· ftl 'fl VllllE EYE •DPS :•1 ~' ClllTY SIPEI SOFT PUFFS , .. • HI lfC. 2.11 DlllTAN amtn :w· .11 VANllPIAY H....._._. .. r.w;.. - IN 4 DESIGNS! $ 7" HEAVY IRONSTONE CEREAL/SOUP BOWLS A11roct1ve chip-ond-crock-resostont bowls for countless uses in smart lloral designs. Gteot for spogf..ett1, storing leftovers os o candy or nut dish Greot special buys1 ·~~.~~ 4F11 LONG-LIFE SOFT WHln BULBS Now-2,500 hour l1gh1 bulbs with more thon twice the life of ordinary light bulbs' In soft whore so eosy on the ~es Corro\10n proof br9ss boses In handy 4.pack ot big sovi1'19' 2PWMS Sl I Ox31/•" studded plastic cooled .prints on YI" s101ned wood 2 P'llS. Of 1 ,..... $1 9~x3 ¥." pflnts mounted on wood, rustic edge OtOla OF suuas I l i II 12 I ~~. 2 9 3 8 . . 4 ............. 5.69 MlflKIN or 4.69 BOLD I $ FOR Ekco "mRNA" EKCO SOLID STAINLESS STEEL FLATWARE Don't miss this spectoc;ulor buy of fomou1 Ekco solid stainless steel on streamlined contemp()(O<y dn19n with rich loolwig molded walnut-tone handles. No plating to chip, peel. corrode. Moke your own service .~t:::~$2 • 28.Qt. Wastebcntctt • 44-Qt. Wostebasbt • 32.Qt. Wasteba~tt EAC.H • °'°'"Top Containtr "COUNTRY MORN" DEC ORA TED WHITE PLASTIC WASTEBASKETS Cheer; & colorlul "Country Mom' decorator de'1gn on smooth· ly finished, gleomu~ white, matching plos11c wosieboslets. po1I "&dishpan for todays lutcl-\ens1 A Dollar Doys slJPt'r·»-c•al E II BOX $4 Of 24- S.OF:i>-OZ. 8·0F·9·0Z. 8-0F-12-0Z. HEAVY SHAM BOTTOM · CLEAR GLASSWARE Throw out oll your old glosses & stort out the New Year with o complete new set Yc..ir choice of ony 6 crystal clear shorn bortom glosses for SI or bo>.ed ser of 24 for $4 COMMEMORATIVE COLLECTORS' EDITION! BICENTENNIAL GLASS PLATES Buy I or molle up a set of 4. Eoch depicts o great event en American history-Independence Holl, Ame11con Eagle, Sport! of '76, Liberty ~II In beoutoful mdescent lnd1ono glon' ....-~-.~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~- YOUR CHOICE • 2.Qt. OouWe Boiler REG. 1.59 ··2,!J WOODEN WALL PLAQUES WESTCLOX ELECTRIC ALARM CLOCKS • 2.Qt. Cowtrtel s.c.,. $2 • 4.Qt. W'-., Pot • 3-Pc. s-c.,. Set PORCELAIN COOKWARE PLANT HANGERS ~Yi SJ ~VJ s2 ~I s3 ~ $4 BEAUTIFUL WHITE BISQUE OR TERRA COTT A PLANTERS Smartly styled woll plOQUts hondmode i,, holy Choice of bright prints on stained wood block' h1qhl19hted with bfou tocks ot mounted on rustic-edge wood. •· 510 ..... ~ s1 Special S Doy 1><ice on 2~" Monikin Oiolite or 2 I 5116" Bold II compact olorm, both with sweep second hand Accurote, 011roctive buys1 Get the enrire set of 7 pieces for the sPKial Dollar Doy price of $8 & hove a pot for every cool11r19 nt-td In 9leom1r19 white PQfCt lo•,, GE~ Forti ............. caM1r11. I c"bH. 12 ...... d-.... .. .. "°"Ind llwel R.•SACK mll·TOWEU ~ REG. 2 FOR 3.98 2}.$3 Choose from ~ popular sizes in Bisque or Terra Cotto "Wove .. plonters They look mony dollars more lhcri their $Doy price-odd to ony decor! TAIUTS 14x18" WOODTONE Atl> 81VB.9PES TV TIA Y TAILES 8utttrfly Bouquet, Favorite For extro psts! Parquet stylt Things dttion& in quality 01 ~" surfoc:., bn>sstone nottP«* ot ™ftv. lock•StOl'I\ legs. Folds eo1ily' Coster MtSCI HJ l 17tfa St. BToro .., ........... H•I~• leach Huntinaton ltach "'' MllillthtMlm.. 21 Ill IM&-N.tfA .... t----:--:-~----...,.-----::-:~~---.....,r----:~:-:--:-::-----t----:---:i~.~-----t---~~~~::.=...-+....:.~==::::~~u~ Costa MtSCI SCl9lhi '-Fountcin V•y ·Westminster H,~lhlton cl~h Hu"':f':.: ltaeh 1 1 1 2JOO ....... .tWltoe . JUllrWllttw.cNlw l6141He1Nr.t...... W•1t l nt•lf .... Wt1t • ......,.. _. ~ ................. ~ .................................... ~ ....................................... ~ ............... 511~~w~.,.; .. ;. ..... ,J n .. )lJ.f DAILY PILOT TOP EMPLOYE Lance D. Ishmael Laguna's lsh~ael Honored Lance D. Ishmael has bt>t>n named Employe of the Quarter for the Laguna Beach M uniripaJ St>rvices Depart menl Is hmael is a crew supt-r\'lsor, having start- ed with the city in 1969 as a tree trimmer During the quarte r ehdmg m Dec. 31, he was responsible for pro1ccts ~ Mai n Beach P ark, Heisler P ark and city Christmas displays Ishmael hves in Costa '.\tesa with his wife Bettv and children Angel and Amy. Standards For Pools I I Outlined WASH INGTO:"l (AP > -Mandatory safety s tandard s for th e ma nufacture a nd an · stallation of swimming pool s lides have been an. nounced by the Consumer Product Safe ty Commission. The rules. drafted for the commission by the '.'iational Swimming Pool Institute, pr escr i b e minimum strength re· qui r e ment s for materials as well a s restrictions regarding water depth a nd a ngle of entry. FOR EXAMP LE, the commission said slides for youngsters should not be installed over water less than three f eet deep, while those for persons 13 years and older should be over water at least four feet deep The standards also specify a low angle of en- try for all shdes "DISABL J ~G 1n - j ur1e s. i n c ludin g paraplegia. have oc· curred when sliders. usually adults using the slide for the first time, went head first at a steep <1ngle into shallow water and struck their heads on the bottom of the pool," the commission said. The standards call for ~h orter s lid es fo r children. while allowin~ taller ones in d eeper water for adults San Juan T<dkSet On Birth As part of its bicenten- nl a 1 p r o g r a m . t h e Newport Beach Friends of the Library is sponsor· idg a talk J an. 27 on the s"'allows and Mission Sfln Juan Capistrano. Persons interested in attending the 10 a .m . cof-f"' have until Friday to ~~ke reservations. Cost is $1 .SO. The speaker will be Pamela Hallan. a third· ftneration San Juan Capistrano resident Mrs. Hallan, a former Daily Pilot staff writer, will discuss her new bbok, "Dos Cientos Anos ~n San Juan Olpistrano." For more information reservations. phone L . Richmond at 1965. DAILY PllDT CLASSIRED ADS 142• 1 Caution: Pet 'Hazardous' to Longs . . By A.L ROSSrrER JR. U~I Scieace lf•ter WASHING TON -There has been widespread research on the possible health hazards of smoking mari - juana, and now a s tudy b y a California medical team raises a new possibility -heavy pot smoking can harm the lungs. Dr. Donald P. Tashktn and co· workers at the UCLA School of Medicine found in a study of 28 healthy young male m arijuana smokers that "customary social use" of marijuana did not produce a noticeable respiratory effect -but that heavy s moking did. · ...!'EFORE BEGINNING the test, the sutJje<'ts reported smoking marijuana at least four times a week.· After !'-'.! months of smoking an av~rage of five cigarettes a day, the subjects showed small but significant changes in lung function. The speed at which they could exhale diminished, the ability of oxygen and other gases to pass into the bloodstream was· decreased, and their airways nar· rowed slightly. Tbe ir lungs improved one month after the test ended. Tashkin reported the results of the studies in the New England Journal of Medicine and said the data suagested the degree of respiratory impairment was related to the amount of inhaled · irritants in the smoke. He said it was possible the findings were not clinreal· ly important. BUT IN AN EDITORIAL in the same i_ssue discussing the report, Dr. Louis Vachon, a noted marijuana re. searcher from Boston Uni versity Sc hool or M edi cine, said the phenomenon requires a careful look . The question. he said. is the biologic meaning of the differences that were det~ted. "If the changes observed after 10 weeks of s moking were to continue at the same rate, the person who s mokes five 'joints' a day would be totally dis· abled by respiratory insufficiency in a few years;" he s aid. "This obviously has not happened." ""' .. 'How w/Jf w• tn4w1' I I ,, \ 25%0ff All .Women's 2-Pc. Uniform Pantsuits Choose from styles in machine wash polyester or polyester/nylon Elasticized flare lt>g pants Short sleeve zipper front tops Whi te Sizes 7/8-17/18 Women's Duty Shoes 3.99 OVER. 20°/o OFF Men's Western Shirts Reg. 5.44. Vinyl. eyelet tie Assorted colors. Whole sizes 5 10 6.99' Reg. 8.99. Super shirts for casual wear. Choose from embroidered, quilted yoke or patchwork styles. Alf long sleeve. machine wash cotton blends. Assorted colors Sizes S. M. L. LUGGAGE SPECIALS Plaid Soft Side Zipper Luggage 9.99 26"' pullman. Cotton with embossed vinyl back 1n Black Watch pattern. 26" pulfman. 6.99 24"' pullman. 11 .99 29" pullman. BUENA PARK: ,, _SANTA ANA: 20% OFF Men's Sport Shirt 5.99 Reg. 7.99. Machine wash. pongee.textured polyester. Assorted prints. S, M, L. XL. 5.99 R9g. 6.99. Short -sleeves. I . :l'.1 i1 . I.~ • j I h ·~· ·t A .SAVE20% Men's Leisure Suits 21~so A • g . 21S • 8 8 • P o I ye s t er d o u b I e k n i t co-ordinates in continental styles. Assorted solids in sizes s. M. L. XL • Uft!T ...... DISILLUSIONID Edy WIHl•ma X-actress Seeking New Job HOLLYWOOD <UPI) -Edy Williams says she wants to become a respectable actress and help stamp out sex Cilms. T h e auburn-haired beaut y with 39-23-37 measurements -and a penchant for dressing in a bikini $nd mink coat at televised sporting events -announced her inten· tions on a television show hosted by former Mayor Sam Yorty. "I HAVE divorced myself from X-rated mo- tion pictures." she said. Miss Wil1iams, who also divorced herself re- cently from X-rated mo- tion picture producer Russ Meyer. warned that roles in sex movies can nun the careers of aspiring actors and ac- tresses. DRESSED IN a de·· mure blouse buttoned up to collar. Miss Williams cited her own career as an example of the pro- blems that can befall young people who in - nocently aceept roles in so-called sex films. ·After she-starred in the X ·rated "Beyond the Valley of the Dolls," she said, sh{> was unable to get a respectable rofe and finally had to go to Europe in search of a new image. NOW BA C K in America and hoping moviegoers "will look at me differently," Miss Williams wants to help "hundred s of other young peop I e · · who might fall into the X· rated trap. The time s he doesn't spend making respecta· ble movies, she said, she will spend exposing X- rated films that "portray sex without meaning, without a story. without tenderness, without warmth, without com- passion and without love." FVTot Signups Slated f''ountain Valley's "tiny tots" from age 3~ to 5 can be signed up for art today and Thursday, and for ga mes and r h yt hm on P'Ptday, through t he Fountain Valley School District ·s C',ommunity Schools Pro- gram. Registtation is open until Friday for the classes which open next week at Fountain Valley School, Bushard Street and Talbert A venue. Classes will be Crom 10 to 11 a.m., and the C05t for each class is $5 for five weeks. Registration can be completed at district of. fices, Newland Street and Talbert A venue. and questions may be direct- ed to 842-6651, extension 217. . "' .......... BIO-RHYTHMS Computerized c hert to i..,n your day t)y dmy Phys~. Emot1on11 ~ lntlllectu•I cycl•. Wtlte now tor your twelve month computer print-out chart aftd current lnfotmetlon . ._,... ....... .......... ,. IKMNAPH DATA P.O. IOI J4·A·l I LOSAMeals. CA t0024 .................... .. _, .... • ' . Wedneed!y, January 21, 1818 DAllYPILOT AJf Ne~Ort Grapples With Lo Income Housing F.4.TGIRL By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of .. 0.11• ...... """ Some~ime ne:ct month, the Newport Beach City Co\U\cil will consider chaneing zoning laws to allow for development ot low income housing ror senior cttbena.. While that proposed amendment is aimed at churches or other oreanlzations that want to build ho!"ing Co~ s~nior citizens, It has become entangled wi.h the city s bid to get federal funds to build a senior citizens center. MORE ~PECIFlCALLY, IF THE city does make the zoning change, it most likely will pave the way for the construction of 100 units of such housing SAVE NOW 1-2-3 Lube Special , on the Lutheran Church site at New MacArthur Boulevard and Pacific View Drive which will also be the city's ticket to the federal funds. According to City Manaeer Robert Wynn, the city wants to get funds from the Department or Housing and Urban Development lo be used tor community deVl'lopment. In fact, the city applled for the funds last year and received $115,000. This has been earmarked for the establishment of a senior citizens center in Corona del Mar. But, Wynn said, the HUD grants require an ef - fort on the part of the city to help in the development of housing for low and moderate income families. "The census data of 1970 indicate there ar<' UIOO families of low or moderate income rn Newport Beach," he explained. ACCORDING TO WYNN, THE income figures do not reflect s tock holdings or savings, so govern· ment statistics remove 600 from that total because there are probably that many with hidden assets. He said, federal officials determined that the city should aid 10 percent of the remainder, or 100 families as the city's effort at helping development of housing. "It's a completely arbitrary method of arriving (See HOUSING, Page A16) KIUSSELF GENOA, ItaJy <UPH. -A 17-year-old girl com. mitt.eel suicide becaus she despaired of losine weiabt, police said. Elena Raso hange¢. herself with a nylo1f stocking in he~ bathroom. Police Hid: the girl's friends told; them she bad been~ depressed because she was plump and her ef. · forts to diet bad failed. ~ Tire Closeout 4-ply Imperial Poly Whitewall Tires Size Price F.E.T. per tire A 78x13 1.76 4/67.04 6.88 2/5.85 E 78x13 4/89.08 2.27 F 78x13 4/89.60 2.40 Includes full chassis lubrication. 5 qts. ReliAride't 30 wt. H.O. motor oil, new Ace oil filter and RelrAride111 safety check. Most American cars. Call for appointment. G78x14 4/100.24 H78x14 4/111.08 G78x15 4/100.40 H78x15 4/111.96 L 78x15 4/112.44 All prices plus Federal Excise Tax as shown No trade·in needed Our lmpe"al Poly Whitewall 1s our own name and does not reflect any nationwide standard 2.56 2.77 2 .6~ 2.9. 3.11 of quality. Quantities limited With the purchase of our tires you get i . 1nsta11at1on Charge 1·t1 2. Tire rotation every 5000 miles • 93c 79c 12• 249 Miies One·A·Day Vitamins Plus Iron, .100's 63c Bayer Aspirin 100's St~le Hair pray ., Nt. wt. 13 oz. ·109 .... ~~ ~~ Maalox .............. ~ ... -........... Liquid ., .. 12 II. oz . Ben-Gay Greaseless Rub Nt. wt. 1 '/• oz. 12• Breck Shampoo 15 fl. oz. uc Ban Roll-On Deodorant Nt. wt. 1 Y2 oz. Tampax Tampons 40's .10• Cepacol Mouthwash 20 fl. oz. 93c Jergens Lotion 10 fl. oz. Health & Beauty Special prices good Thursday thru Sun., Jan. 25th, 1976. We reserve the riaht to limit quantities. BUENA PARK: Beech It Orangethofl>e • Ooen weekdl)'I a30 to 9:30. Sund•vs 10 toe . SANTA ANA: ( Qty Or. It Garden Grow BIYd. • ep.n --~ 1 o to~ Sund«)it 1 o toe.. 3800 So. Brlatol-No. of So. O:>lllt Ptara •Open WMtcdlya t«> to 9. Saturday 9:30 to 9. Sunct.vs 10 to e. . • . .. .. .. "' ,. Adds Book ~ ....... Walt Ros tow, former adviser to Presidents Kenn edy and Johnson, and now a te ac her of "Problems of the Presidency" at the University of Texas. has added ·'The Best a n d t h e Bri~ht est'' a book critical of Rostow to the reading list for his school. Catholic Chaplain To Marry STA:-.lFORD <AP> - The Roman Catholic chaplain to the students of Stanford Univers ity has announced in a bitter sermon that he has fallen in love and plans to marry, and has been "kicked out" of the church. Th e Rev. John S. Duryea sai d 1n his sermon in St Ann's Chapel, Palo Alto. where ile also 1s pastor. that the Catholic church's law of celibacy has "robbed the church of its mos t dedicated young men." T H E 56·YEA R -OLD pnest said he plans to marry Eve DeRona. 34, or P alo Alto. this spring She is d 1 vorced. non· Catholic and the mother oftwodaughters "The big ins titutional church out there didn't have much to do with what ·I sa w as the minist ry ,'' he said. "Now, at I ast, I have done the final thing that the institutional church will not tolerate: I have fallen in love " AR CH BISHOP Joseph T McGucken of the San Francisco Archdiocese issued a brief statement that said "We regret the step that Father Duryea ha s taken . W e are grateful for the many years of faithful priestly service he gave to the church .. Father Duryea has been student chaplain and pastor of the Palo .\Ito church. close by the campu~. for 15 years "IT'S VER V di(ficuJt. at 58, to leave the work you· ve been doing all your life." he said. He told his con~rega tion. "I'm being kicked out of the priesthood. I'm not resigning." FJVF: Vf:AR S ago, Father Duryea' brother, the Rev Robert Duryea. was excom municated from t he Catholic Church when it became known that he had been marned for seven years and was fathe r of a 5· year-old son. A.N'INSULT TO WOMEN WASHINGTON (UPI) -Rep. Pat Sch roeder <D-Colo. > says the treat- ment she received at the Touchdown Club's bicen- tennial awards dinner was an insult to all women and especially female athletes. Mrs. Schroeder said lhe was with h er husband when six men calling t hemselves "the floor committee'' told her she could not attend d\e all-male banquet. "We have never had a woman at one of these (llnMn in 40 )'ears, and we're not goin1 to have or>e .i the 411t." Hid one GI them. - Wtdnteetey, January 21, 1979 families and thus be eligible for the HUD comm uni· HOUSING IN NB • • • ty development er ant. ' BUT, STRES CITY OFFICIALS, the to-)f. i' * * ~ ON DISPLAY terdependence of the two projects does not mean * ~ * Dodge ASPEN & PlymOUth VOlARE <ConU.oued from Paie Al5) at a figure," Wynn said. <./_ that the city has to approve the iomng ordinance .....,. ...._ PRIZES!! JAN. 22·25 amendment, or subsequent plans for the Lutheran ~ ..,.. He said it was purely coincidental that at the same time that the 100-f amily figure was arrived at, the Lutheran Church of the Master began worklna on plans to build 100 units for senior citizens with low income on the church site. project. '1 However, developmebt Of the senior citizens "" • ~·outh Poast a•a center at Marguerite Avenue and Fifth Street is de-CElEBAA'*<i :'00 vtAJOs cJ '' 6 pendent on tbe HUD money. --=~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ...... ...:. Favorable action by the city could take the Corm of zoing on the site to allow construction or the housing. Favorible city action m~ans the church can get an FHA loan for the project, and the city can say lt i:; helping development of housing for low income The site cJiosen has a former school on it and ls owned by the state which bought it in the 1960s for right-of-way for the defunct Pacific Coast Freeway. The price tag on the ll·acre property is $442,000, of which $100,000 was paid out of last year's grant. Wheel Deals The Treasury's 20" Hi-Riser Boys' and girls styles Includes chrome h1·r1se 44.99 THE PRICES ARE RIGHT handlebars, coaster l&U.l-i...'I brake. full reflective package. The Treasury's 26" 64 99 Ten Speed Racer Men's and women's • styles. With front and rear side pull hand caliper brakes, full reflective package. The Treasury's 27'' Novus 4-Functlon Calculator 9.99 Packed with features hard to find at such a low ~ow price. 6 digit display. AC/DC operation. (batteries & adapter not included.) Floating decimal. Measures only 5x2l/2x ~. (750). MEMORY KEY Texas Instruments calculator 42.88 I' Reg. 49.11. Your SR-16-11 sli~rule calculator 1s designed to assist you in solving simple arithrret1c and complex technical problems. The twelve anthmetlo and special function keys. plus Independent memory, automatic constant and sc1entif1c notation. make the SR-16-11 a ver5at1le computational tool. (not shown). Unitrex Electric Adder With Credit Balance 59.88 Reg. 69.88. Desk top model. Full 8/9 capacity. Excellent machine for small business. (E2082). Special Buy· Personal-Size Steel Files Ten Speed 89.99 Disc-Brake Bike Revofutionary Shimano rear disc brake. Derailleur gea ring with stem mounted shift levers. Gumwall t i ~es, rat trap pedals. Steel Files ,1 111 1 With Locks & Handles (Not shown). Huffy20" Bamstonner 54.99 Single speed coaster brake bike with reflecttve pedals, front and side nameplates, chrome nms and lots more. All bikes come unassembled, but we will assemble them fo r a slight charge. And visit our bike shop where we have a complete line of accessories to meet your biking needs. Charge It! 47.99 4 drawer tan file cabinet with lock. 24" deep. 2 drawer tan ftle cabinet with lock. 24'' deep. 4 .99 Checic flle. 7t/4 x41f2xl01f2. Siie priced lttml effective Thurlday thru Saturday, Jan. 24, 1976 BUENA PARK: ...... °' ...... a,. •• ",. ft.It .. 9JM • ....,. It .. 6. OR ..._ ...,. G E City Dr. at Gar~n GrcM BIVd. An : •Open weekdays 10 to 9. Sundlyl 10 toe. SANTA ANA: 3800 So. Br1stof-Ho. of So. eo.t Plau • Open WMkdaYI 9'.30 to G. Satuf'd.:ly 9:30 to G. SundaYI 10 to 8. Sound Savers GENERAL ELECTRIC AM/FM Digital. Clock Radio 29.99 New, compact styling. With automatic volume control, electronic tone alarm, 4" speaker. General Electric AM /FM Weather Portable Radio 29.99 Receives 24 hr. weather broadcasts on special frequency. 3112" dynamic speaker. Circular instrument· look dial scale with rotating color wheel. (7 ·2855). GENERAL ELECTRIC AM /FM Table Radio Clock radio with wake-to- music control. Automatic volume control. 4" dynamic speaker. (7 ·4501 ). I , - fT • Estaneia, Spartans Colli I Vllla rart's Spartans •f'!d sixth in Orange County. Villa Esatncla s Eaales, bOtb ~.O tn Park, 14·3, ts No. 5 ln the Orange Century Lea1ue acttan. collide al County poll. Estancia Hi eh toniaht in a The game figures to be 88 close basketball l•~e pitting two ol as the two t~ams' statbUcs. In Oranee County stop teams. · . league, Estancia is scoring 68.2 Tipoff ts at 7 and the game 1s points while &iviog up so.2. Vllla rated even between two teams Park is "veragihl 67.7 points capable of shooting a> percent while permitting 49.2. from tbefloor. Both teams like to fast break .Estancia, 12·1, ls ranked ninth but that's about as far as th~ in the CIF 4-A poll and is rated comparisons go. Estancia runs a 1·2·2 zone while Villa Park usual- ly employs a man-to-man de· tense. And Dave Carlisle's Ea· gles mainly rely on 6-6 senior center Jim Mccloskey while Ron Lindsey's Spartans feature a more balanced scorinc attack. Mccloskey, wbo can shoot f~m 15-20 feet, ls averaging 24.3 points but has ~en the object of double teaming in recent games. "We can't let him get loose," says Lindsey. "He is one two best players in the and we'll have to try to k around 19-20 Points." The on\y other Ea double firures is Pete Ne a 6-4 foTWard wbo is av 12.9 points. Leading Vil are 6--3 forward Harry Cl4.0), 6-2 guard Jeff S· (13.0) and 6 ·2 1uar MacGinnis 02.0 >. ·Oilers' Backs tO the WallTbni ......... * * * * * * * * _) * * Sunset Cm ~ar.Ons, :Vik.es ~ ID I ~' Katella· In Key Loop Confrontation ~be stre.aking Katella High Knights, winners of 11 straight and ranked No. 7 in the CIF 4·A poll, invade Huntington Beach High tonight for a pivotal Empire League basketball game with Elmer Combs' Huntington Beach Oilers. Tipoff is at 7 and KateUa is a slieht favorite to improve its league record to S-0. Huntington Beach, 3-1, would seemingly be out of title contention if it loses. The Oilers are coming off a 5146 loss to Cypress and will ne-ed a near-perfect game to de· feat KatelJa which whipped the Oilers 72-54 in the Anaheim tournament. However, the Oilers beat the Knights 68·57 in the Hun- tington Beach tournament and don't lose often at home. The Oilers' biggest task will be to stop Katelle 's excellent forward combination of 6-2 Chuck Greene (21.0) and 6-2 Rick Neub•uer (17 .0). Also, Hunt- ington Beach will have to devise a strategy to break a swarming full court press that was decisive in Katella's win over the Oilers. The Oilers, who like to fasJ break and also display a run court press, have one of Orange County's best shooting guards in Perry Harbin, who is averaging 17.6 points. However. Katella held him to 12 and eight points. . Other Oilers scori.Jlg in double figures are 6 ·3 Jim Spowart C 13.l) and 6·3 Clark Sims (12.8). N8rnath Headed For LA? NEW YORK (AP> -You may be calling "Broadway Joe .. •Namath "Hollywood Joe .. any day now -if the New York Jets and Los Angeles Rams can work out a deal for the football star. Los Angeles owner Carroll Rosenbloom would love to make a catch of the high-priced Jets quarterback , who 's declared publicly that he wants to be traded to the Rams. "One thing Joe said interests me," Rosenbloom said Tuesday in an interview with The As- sociated Press. "He said he thought he could help the Rams. I am interested in anybody who can help the Rams. What we want to do is win." The Rams, of course, are stocked with good quarterbacks, although perhaps none with Namath's skills and experience. At 32, Namath is still rated one of the game's top passers despite gimpy knees and a his- tory o( injuries. The 1975 season was one of hi s worst -and one of the worst iri Jets hi1tory as well. They fmisbed with a 3-11 record, wind· ing up with the third wont de- fensive record in the history of the ~ational Football League. Dally Pllllt Staff ~ IN CRUCIAL$ TONIGHT -Marina High's Viµngs, with Dan Boldt (with ball), Matt Cook (44) and To\y Warren, clash at Fountain Valley tonight in SunsH League basketball action. Hwitington Beach's Scott !Weir (50) and the Oilers host Katella in a crucial Empte League tiff. Saints Sign Stram To $1 Million P(JCt NEW ORLEANS -The New Orleans Saints Tuesday an- nounced the signing of Hank Stram to a five·year contract worth "in excess of $1 million" as head coach of the National Football League team. "Hank and I have been talking for four months,·· said Saints owner John Mecom Jr. "We've talked to a number of other coaches, both in the college and professional ranks and the best man bas emerged. His record spew for itself.•• HGilft. rr1 ... p .. first appearance ~ the $75,000 Washington tenni~, tournament Tuesday night and ily defeat- ed Kathy Kuy kend , 6-2, 6· 1. In other action Francoise Durr of France defeattd Valerie Ziegenfuss, 6·2, 6·1. . Marcie Louie waJ ousted by Natasha Chmyreva ti the Soviet Union, 6-3, 3.e, 6-3; '.terry Holla· day downed Irish Reklel of West Germany 6·4, 612; Mirna Jausovec oi Yugoslaria beat Jo Ann Russell, 6~. s.; A•tlle••B••ered CIDCAGO -Earl Anthony, who established a money. winning record last year, today was named the 1975 Bofiler of the Year by the Bowling \\Titers' As· sociatlon of America. Marina 5th Stra .... · ~-t Loop Vi tory They won the nset League last year but Fou tain Valley's erratic Rarons co d Call out of ti- tle contention tonight when they host the powerfuf Marina High Vikings, the CI f 's No. 6 4tA team. Tipoff is at 7. If Dave Brown's Barons, 3·1 in league, hope to stay in contention for first place. they must defeat a Vikings team that is 4-0 in league and 14-3 overall. Marina is ranked third in Orange County while Fountair) Valley is un· ranked. Fountain Valley 1s 11 4 but has struggled to circuit victories over Newport Harbor and Los Alamitos. dtfealing those two teams by a total of eight points. Marina woo over the same oppo- nents by 33points. · If Fountain Valley shoots to its capabilities, it could defeat Marina but the Barons have been very im:pnsistent, hitting 30 per- cent in some games. Leading Fountttin Valley are guards Georgd' Barrios (8.6) and Mike Zumb6 (12.2). Barrios. a smooth play~aker, has scored 34 points in his last two games. Marina, defeating league oppo. nents by 19 pomts, has been get· ting excellent production from all five starters. Rich Branning. its all All-Cl F guar~. is scoring 28.1 points while ceoter Matt Cook is averaging Jl.6 points and forward Mike Buhler is scoring 10 points. Sun Devils Nip Trojans With 0:17 Left TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) -In a wild scramble around the basket. Arizona State guard Rick Taylor pumped in a 10-foot jump shot with 17 seconds left to give his team a 71-69 nonconference basketball victory over Southern California Tuesday night. The game was close all the way before two free throws by Cleve Porter sent Southern Cal aliead 69-67 with 2: 11 to play, but Taylor came back to throw one in from just inside the free-throw line with l : 14 left to tie it at 69. The Sun Devils got the ball back with 32 seconds left and called a timeout. They tried to set up a play. and had four tries at the basket but the ball, ap. parently heading out ol bounds, was touched by a Southern Cal player, and another trying to save it, threw it back in court. After Taylor caught the ball and pushed in the winner, the Trojans still had time for a try at a tie, but the attempt failed when Arizona State freshman guard Derek Davis stole the ball as the buzier sounded. As the Sun Devils took their 10th victory in 14 games. Taylor · ended the night with 11 points, all ·of them in the second half. USC ( .. ) -S.f'°"' 2•. MeloYlc 21, White a, Arflold 2, Jones•. w1111me.,.r 2. Por1ff s. 8o'td l.. 'htlltUMS. It. ARIZONA STATE (71) -TeylOr 11, LIOyd 17, JICk-21, Wright•. O.vls 2, Twrao1t 4, OreY1on 2, z-1. Harris 2. TOl•ls 31·7·14. Heltllme • A-State 33, S. C..I 30. Fouled out: A· SC.-, Ore.,,on. Total I011ls: S. Gitt 11. A-Sl•tt 20. A:7.-. Wedneeday. Jenuery 21. 1176 DAILY PILOT .,..-, _,._ °""' ..... a.ff ..... JIM McCLOSKEY (20) LEADS ESTANCIA TONIGHT. Official on Spot Lopsided Calls Shoot Down SC '1 ) R . , ., ,. ' . There should perhaps be a cor- rection made on the score of the San Clemente-University High basketball game played Tuesday night at the ft>rmer's gym. Instead of University 73, SC 71 in double overtime, it might bet· ter read: Bob Wetzel 23, San 'Clemente 9. That's how his c.alls went. Wetzel was one of the men who officiated the contest. Or perhaps it would be better to say he was there wearing an official's un- iform. I have seen pe rhaps 3,000 basketball games in person and my memory fails to come up with any for which I felt officiating was more lopsided. Never have I fell that an of- Ol.f:NH WHITE WHITE WASH ficial played a more direct role in the final outcome. Check the stats which I de· cided to keep whe n I saw Wetzel and Uni cage coach John Driscoll · chatting · together in the stands before the game. There is nothing wrong with that since they both coached baskettrall at Orange Coast College at onetime. And Driscoll tells me they have something else in common- Wetzel 's daughter is a Uni basket- ball cheerleader. , At any rate, on with the stats I promised. Wetzel made 32 calls during the game. Twenty.three went against San Clemente. Of 19 fouls called in the first half, 16 were against SC. Seven limes San Clemente players were battered to the noor in front of Wetzel. Once he called a foul against Uni. He failed to call one, however. ·when Randy Hallmark moved inside for the would-be winning shot in the ,last :02 of regulation and was belt· ed by a Uni defender.Nofoul. . Again in overtime Wetzet•s whistle failed to go off.~San Clemente player stole the balJ with 38 seconds to go in tbe ~cond overtime and started to go for the tying basket. He was shoved from behind, knocked down and the ball trirkled out of bounds. Traveling' was called and Uni got the balr out of bounds. Unbelievable. One person who was at tbe game, former Westminster Hig>i! basketball coach Ben Taylor, said afterward, "I thought Botr was a good official. But this was terrible.·· Taylor was never vocal about criticizing, refs while he coached. In the years of association I've had with Wetzel I've found him to be at times irresponsible and ob- noxious. But neve.r have I, nor would I. believe him to be anything but completely honest. . To answer one fan's inquiry after the game Tuesday, No, l don't think he cheated. Such thought never once crossed my mind. Why the calls went so much one way is ananswerldon'tbavC\ I do believe, however, that the' fact Wetzel was assigned to work' a game involving a school at· tended by his offspring is a poor reflection on the leadership and organization of the Orange Coun- . ty Officials Assn. It puts ever-- yone on the spot. including the man's children, who are subject to classmates' cruelty if their father makes a call that costs. their team the game. Wetzel has been around this area for a long time. ~ While at Costa Mesa High be admitted having ordered his junior varsity baseball pitcher fo throw at Newport Harbor bat-' ten;. Yet he was once a basket· ball star at Newport. At Orange Coast he and bis basketball tea~ dre)Y 11· technical fouls in one gafne at Cypress. And later he was on th~ ~arpet for taking OCC volleyball players to Utah without sChooJ authorization. So he's had his scrapes. To say that Namath didn't en- joy the year would be an un· derstatement. Afterwards, he deduced that the Jets were going with a "youth movement'' for next season and that he didn't fit in their plans. He expressed a ae11re to Jeave tor tne west Coast. However, he didn't tell Jets president Phil Jselin. "Joe hasn't said a word to me about betn1 traded,'' lselin said. "Sute, lt be wllhed, we would be willlnc to tnde bJm, granting we cot what we wanted.-'' BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -Alex Mayer beat Trey Wallke, 8-3, 7·6, in first·round action of the six· day $50,000 Birmingham Interna- tional indoor tennis tournament Tuesday night. In other matches, Erik Van Dillen topped Jiri Hrebec of Czechoslovakia, 7 -6, 6-2; Wojtek Fibak of Pola'lld beat Charlie Owens. M, 6·2, abd Billy Martin defeated Hank Pfeister, 6-7, 7-6, 6·3. Chargers' Svare Saeked by Book?. rt The Rama may not be able to. give tbe Jets what they want, however. In fact, the Rams may be bard-pressed alvinl Namath what he wants. He was paJd about $4SO,OOO last year .. We are not lo a position lo pa, that kind of money, never would be," Rosenbloom said. "It would hurt tho foqtball team. But tbe .Jet.a are commJtted to pay lt. So, if the JeU are really thinkfnl abc>Ut a ~-over· baal. lbe1 m41)' be wtWni to pay a ._ po~ft of .loe'a out· atancl.ln• contract." Wala LoeJt If~. PHILADELPHIA -Mon· treal's Pete MahovUch and Guy LaFleur each scoreil a goal and bad five assist. between them u the Wales Conference withstood a furious thlrd·period rally and defeated the Campbell Con· ference, 7·5, Tuesday nlgbtin the National Hockey League's 29th annual All-star game. Eeert Atl.,•aees FAIRFAX. Va . -ToQ· seeded Chris Evert made her ' SAN DIEGO (AP) -Harland Svare, OU$t~eneral tnanaaer "'t.be,.., Dte =· san be wu Ad .Q a. wbicb bun•t .... bteri p . yet. BreMJnf a tradltioq among lo•lag f ootba1l te~~·· the aw-,. ... 1pared coach Tommy Prothro ud fired Svare;m a sur- priH move Tuet.Jiay. No successor was arlnounced for Svare, 45, a former New York 011,nta linebacker who served as\ head coach for the Chargen and tho Los Angeles Rams. His dismissal came i.n a one· line st atement Tuesd.v from " .. Chargers owner 'Gene Klein, who gave no reason for the fir· ing. But in a prepared statemeot released at a luncheon ()f sportwriters and broadcast.ens, Svare blamed bis downfall on a book caJled, "The Nightmare Season,•• to be publilhed this summer by Random .House. Written br psychiatrist Arnold Mandell o tbe University of California, San Diego, it portrays Svare as a bumbling puppet or owner Klein. It was Svare who allowed Mandell to spend the entire 1973 HUOG wtth lb• N at.lonal Foot.- ball League club. "I'm deeply disturbed with Dr.' Arnold Mandell's book which h as destroyed my credibility in the National Foot· ball Leaaue and In football in gen•ral, ·• Svare·s statement said. Neither Klein nor Man- dell ;verc available for comment following the announcement. But Ip hls statement, Svare said the l:Jook contained "unfounded, malicious, and distorted (acts which have defamed me and sever"ely damaged mY charac.<ttt and reputation." "The first evidenec of this libel has 'been my term.in~ from the San Diego Chargers. u The book also describes an=' leged incident in 1956 in wbl Klein purportedly sold a car to Svare that was overpriwd by$500. . ,. . It quotes Klein descn1bl.n Svare as a .. cherry," car ·~ aler's slang for a pusbover,.ancl claims that Klein later ~ Svare as coach because he want• ed a man easy to manipulate. "I knew ... l'd have some ~ trol if Harland was coach,' Klein ii quoted u I~. n "That's an old joke bet~ Gen ~ ID.)'lelf." Svareaal~ • • - .. . . . t° ~ OAIL Y PILOT W!dn!!d!y. JanU!fY 21, 1978 Bucket by Bacon . Fries MV, 35-34 By ED BV RGA8T °' ... Delly~-...... Cool Ben Bacon sizzled when it counted Tuesday night. hitting an eight· foot turnaround Jumper with two secon~s r·e· maining. His swish shot com· pleted a frantic storybook ending for his Laguna Beach High Artists who stunned the heavily favored Mission Viejo Diablos, 35·34, in a key South Coast League basketball game at Laguna Beach High. Pat Roberts' Diablos, ranked No. 10 in the Orange Cqunty and CIF 2·A bas)getball polls, zone defense that won offense wer~ respo~ible the game for La1UDa for th~ Artists takmg .a Beach. · 25-24 lead wi~h 1: 46 left in Mission Viejo, which the third penod; once led 12·3 io the first From that point, it ~as quarter, had trouble get· close although Mission ting the ball inside in the Viejo went ahead, 30-2S, second and third periods with 5:59 left Ln the final when it hit three of 23 quarter. But Lagu~a field goal attempts. Beach rolled off six The Diablos' poor straight points-four by shooting combined with Dusty Dvora~-and took Laguna Beach's patient a31·30 lead with 3:08left. Boes Duel Dons; Cypress at GWC looked lilre winners with Surprising Orange tion against Cypress. 19secondsleft. Coast College, unbeaten Golden West is 1·2 in Trailing 34·33, Ed in South Coast Con· SoCal play and cannot Burlingtiam 's Artists ference play after two afford another con- lost the ball while trying games, faces its stiffest ference loss this early. to worlJ for a final shot. test of the circuit season The game figures to be But after Roberts called tonight, hosting Santa a low-scor ing affair time but, the Diablos Ana College. because of Cypress' slow threw the inbounds pass · The Pirates host Santa down passing game. The away' and the Artists had Ana College (1-0) at 7:30. Chargers are led by 6-7 o.ur l'tlot l"tlote• •r Didi~ one l~t chance. In another JC game freshman center Tyrone MIKE McCLYMONDS (30) WATCHES. Pllssing s m~othly Golden West plays visit· Branyan who is averag-____ .:._.:._ ____ around the pen meter, ing Cypress at 8 o'clock ing 15.0 points per game. the Artists ran down the in a Southern California The Rustlers' Paul Double Ove rtipae Century dock and with four Conference tilt. Scbilleci has an 18.0 Johnson Slwts seconds left, John Lif· OCC's Pirates have average in conference jestrom found the 6·5 knocked off San Diego play and is the leading Teams Vl•e Bacon open inside Mis· Mesa and Fullerton. but rebounder with 14 per sion Viejo's 2·3 zone. will get a much bigger game. Def eat Tritom ~nbt>aten Corona del Mar, ranked No. 2 in the CIF 4-A poll, is a heavy favorite to improve its re<'ord to 16·0 tonight when it hosts Magnolia By GLENN WHITE edge in the first over· in a Century League 0tui.o.11rP11ouu." time. basketball game. Keith Johnson hasn't But the Trojans would Elsewhere , Costa l>E>en doing muc h scoring have none of it as they Mesa is at Tustin and El in his past three South twice fought back to Modena travels to Santa Coast League basketball finally win. Ana. All three games outings for <'oach John u11iven11y rm start at 7. Driscoll's University •• " ,,. tp Corona del Mar. No. I , High Trojans. He had i!';:°c;' ! ~ ~ ,~ in Orange County. should onebasketineachofhis Poirier • 1 3 2s have little trouble • two previous games ~rmonds ! ~ ! ~ against a Magnolia team ., prior to Tuesday night's evtir.on 1 o 2 , that is 0·4 in league. s t r u g g I e a t S an =' ~ g ~ ! Center Alex Rlack paces Clemente. Toi.is n u 11 n the Sea Kings, s coring And he only got a pair s...o • ..,,.11 .. 1111 19.lpointsagame. · of buckets in the duel 11 11 ,,, tp Costa Mesa, coming with SC. Yet today he is ....,,,,.,." 1 o • •• off a one.point loss to the man of the hour at ::~~"' ~ ~ ~ : Corona del Mar, is 2·2 in Uni 1te•1r o o 2 o league and must defeat His basket on a re-~"::;: ·~ ~ ~ ~: Tustin 0 ·3) to stay in bound shot with one Hutching\ 2 2 s 6 <'Ontention . Reliable Dan seeond to go in the first ~~Id g ~ ! ~ Byers, who has been in • ,• overtime period pulled Toi.is >o 11 21 11 double figures in all 15 the Trojans even at 67 Scoror~mn · · 15 2 .. _, 21 11 11 10 L ~... games, 1s averaging . and made another extra ""' • ~· · t SanOftM11te 11 10 11 20 e •-11 pom S . session necessary. And his swisher from the top of the key with .. ------•••••11111111111111! two se<'onds to go in the second overtime gave the underdog Trojans a 73·71 victory It had been a game of amazing changes in momentum and lopsided officiating by Bill Vinovich and Bob Wetzel. who had 16 fouls agains t SC and three against Uni by halftime. Bacon took the pass, challenge from title con- tumed around and cast a t d s t A V _J _ jumper that caught en er an a na. angu&rU!!t nothing but the net. So Phom ore Dave By the time Mission Walsh and freshman Viejo got the ball, the Ph i 1 Bo 1 de n b ave F alJ 5 3 5 2 g u n s 0 u n d e d a n d sparked the Bucs to the ' • Bacon-who scored 10 two ':"ins, Walsh scoring FRESNO-Southern points-was mobbed by 3Spoints and 8?lden30. California College's ~is players and Burl· · Santa Ana 1s led by Vanguards lost a tough ingha_m. . guards Blake Taylor and 53.52 basketball decision While. B8:con hit th.e Steve S m ith a nd ~-7· to Freano-Pacific Tues. game-winning _shot, it soph<?more center J im day night as the winners was a smothenng 1·2·2 Cunningham. . . bit a tipin for the winning * * * Meanwhile at Golden points with no tim e left. West the Rustl~rs .race It was the only time M1ss1Nv1e1e1341 . another do-or-die situa-the hosts led in the ftfflllftll' ' o • 1 second half of a game ' • 1 1 ' ·T •t F ted that sec was forced to ~ ~ ~ : ft 008 e play without aces Randy 1~ ~ ,! ~ San Clemente High's Adams (elbow> and South Coast League foot. Dave Barron (sprained "' ~ ball champion Tritons ankle>. 2 10 will be toasted with a s.. catlf. ceoewe 1121 ; : sports a wa rds banquet ~ ': ~ '! : , s tonight a.t the San ,,_., 3 o • • ~ ~ Clemente Inn, starting at :-'~:c' ~ ~ ~ ! 3 2 7. Jolwlloft 0 2 s 2 •• >s Tickets are $3.SO for McNN• s J 1 u Thomes 3 0 0 ' t h e t h e dinner a nd Mela.,. o o 2 o awards presentation. Totals n • " s2 LA.-a.Kll(JS) ,. tt a.con • 2 LllJ"'1rom J 0 DwrN • 0 8. Smith 2 1 Pl... 1 0 T..,tor 1 0 •Evens 1 t Towts 1' s kwtllyONftlln Mlololl Vlojo 16 S S ~ 8ooctl • 10 7 \ ' Uni never trailed in re· gulation, once out to a 46·27 lead with 5: 27 left in the third quarter. Roger Poirier, a class y . '".UNl'S KEITH JOHNSON HITS WINNING BASKET. sophomore. junior Bill Halford and senior Mike JM JUST FOR MEI: McClymonds had been ~.Toro Catapults Into First, 59-49 making it a particularly mis erable evening for <'Oach Stan OeMaggio and his team. However, the Tritons changed from ~ zone to a man defense and even· tually momentum shift· By ROGF.R CARI.SON Of tM O.lly Pl lot SU.It On th e ~urface it ' seeJT)ed only a nother routine victory for coach Wendell Witt 's F.I Toro High Chari;?ers Tuesday evening at Dana Hills High where the hosts fell , 5949 But coupled with Laguna Bea~h High's triumph over Mission Viejo, the C hargers catapulted into a share of the South Coast League basketball lead as round one of three cycles is in the boob. Tuesday's win was keyed by the s harp out· side shootine of El Toro's , , quintet against Dana 'llills' man-to-man de· 11 '.!ense a nd clutch !ref!: throw shootine ln the t>w'th quarter. 1 Sophomore Bob 1 1, Clrarles was the key to El 1 T-0ro'1 success, clicking lor 18 points and connect· inc on three one-and-one situatiom in the f ou.rtb ttanza at the Charcers held off Dana Hills with-a pead,J procession to the flft throw line. El Toro bit 14 of 21 gatil shots in the final stanza H the winners ppenect up a nine-point ~ (.a.39) with 5:"9 to r . p, then went Urto a l our corner offense •to eue away with the vtctOT')'. One of the key plt,y1 came early in the fourth ed to SC. period when Todd Uni had made only Fraser's inside attempt eight turnovers at that was off target, but the juncture but San basket was ruled good Clemente started hustl· due to goal tending. That ing and pressured the gave El Toro a 42·37 lead Trojans into J 9 more and moments later it ·turnovers before it was Charles going to ended. work at the free throw The hosts pulled even line, clicking fort wo free With 51 seconds to go in throws twice. regulation on a three. Mark Hill added a pair point play by Tim of Cree throws with 5:49 Dunham, .who later left and the game was on fouled out on a tlcky-tack ice. 48·39, although Dana call by Wetzel. Hills kt>pt the pressure John Witherell, Mike on, slicing the _gap to Horvath and Randy 56·49 -but with 48 Hallmark made major seconds to go there was contributions in the· wasn't enough time left comeback. And it seemed for a bona fide rally. • they had victory in the Dana Hills' last lead bag when Hallmark and was 21·17 in the second Dunham gave SC a 63·59 period before .stalling tactics to take El Toro Basketball out of its zone backflred with th ree Dolphins turnovers. * Otorltf' $1. 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S11orlH Peclltge, One Mort Oot, J•ot>elle. Mr. T Cllarter, Ficltle Count Screlc,lleO -A~11rlly, H•rO TO C•lcll THllltD RAC£ -olOO yerck. J Yffr OIO\ Malden\, Cl•lmlng. Purse SllOO. FIHllOele ,Crel199rl lUO 8 80 1.00 4.20 4.00 soo Go C•I""' IC•ll I OttrkSelnt ITrNs11rel T1me -20'° AISO ren -Arnuir19 Love. LH's LllCk'f °'"'"'·Gimme Some Q>enoe, Sliger Whllllt. Zip'N Go, 8rlg11C Red Moon, Flyby Night !krel<lled -01<-•rs S4ve<lllSt TN OO'lerWoman.Jet Night, Fl<kleWe ve FOURTH •AC£ -810vards Jyecir olOl A up. Clelmong. P11rst i 1100 Truxs•n ICllrOor•> 6.80 l.10 1.60 Step N Felcll 11 <G•rra I 3.40 2.40 S.ncly V•nruill IMylul 2 80 Time 4S 67 Al\O r•n SheOOw Fht, J.,nole Petrol, 0 '01•1. Jay Jov. Ptrsnkkll'f Su ate heel -Alolle's Pet. Hilo Blob. Wll<ll Cree• Clllc, OlemonO B•rs "IFTH lltAC£ -400 'ftrds l yeer olcls Flllles All-•nce. Puru'3500 FtftlAnne fl,.,. -10 ., Aho r4111 -Tt1vttln9 Womep ... rni. Prldoe, Miss 'f• T Te. MIM TWo 8ll9J Mot.e:r•t<lle\ SIXTM •ACI! -lSO y.,o, l Yffr Old\ & WP Cl•lmlrua. P\lru UJOO v.1 .. ,a.av 1,.4199 1 44.IO 11 Ill IO~ Too Me•• CWerdl u oo 100 SnlttvOte ILl!lfteml HO Time -1•.2' AUo r•n -Miu Five Ply, Quet.1 T 8w90, Oii< Gold Ber. Tllet's Thi !iellrlt, M19f\IY Lovl11, Mr, Mars IMt, Alterlhollllfll Not.e:rttclles \I l!u«e -1·\ltlley ... ., & ~T­Mffl, h .. StiUt U\llHTM •&Cl ---3.SOverdS 3 "9•• olds & llt> Cl•lm1ng. P11rse uooo LHSle'STQfl~n (Mot'rl-1 u 40 10 10 ~JO JHl'f Henk IC..rOOul S 10 UO Aleqw lHer11 • 10 Time II. IS AllO rAn -Chick OOoll11, R~ll On Man, ~sler Georoe, Mr. ThluQht No t.e:retclles et~TH RACE~ 'flfO\. 3 yeer old\ & ...,,, Claiming. P11rn$3100. Rebel Aouner IOerlHel 17.00 • 10 4.40 Wllel• Rel11rn (AO•lr) 8.80 4 20 Molt ltoy•I (8•nltsl 4 «l Time -JO.SI AlliO ren SI. Louis Jr, Mr. Bo, Aocky O•n11•0o. Guapllo. Moon lloye9f, EHY 011sll Scretcllecl -Oup T0t1to, ~ Bar Wetcn, Corclt Fi,,., Luntr Oe4I O.clt, Flyi"9 0.YIO U Eaect• -l·Rei.I •ows-& ._ Wlwlta •etvni, paid '411.SO NINTH •AC£ -lSO v•rOs. 3 yNr 010,. Cle lmlng. Purse S2000. s-1Clly (AO.Ir I 7 .80 3.80 2.40 l.10 2 20 2 20 2110 Rosy Joyous IH•rt > OH·Frosly Ille IClerlsse I OH·Bokl M•n Pepeo (l(nlgh!I Tlme -lt.10 AllO ren -Satin Row . P•<• 8¥ 'Toni, FHtest Jet Yet, Lllllt R•-.i. Ooct°' c;1ec1, OllPt"S Astulsk S<relcl\eo -Tr11 S11n, Rattlt'N Snip. Mlche1e·s Oreem f~lchl 21,40 4 80 3 80 U laect.t -7·S•ftt City & t~ltas., Sonni~ 8oont tw1uonl 2 60 2.40 J9y-.s, '"•IGIS11.00 Aturt• Rocket (Hart> S 40 Allena.nee -S21t Sa11ta A 11ito Race Entries "orTtwnday, Clur & Fest. fiMl ,.Olt 12:0 ... M. • t:l Delly Double on ht & ?ncl ••c.tt. U Euclu Oft 5111, 1111 & "" ._CH "'ltST RACE 6 lurlongs. 4 yNr oios & up Claiming Puru MOOD Ctelmlng prke saooo -v ooo Mob•I• Ho,,,.. Tra•el Cl ubot \1•11• Park "IFTH •ACE -6 t11rl0<19\. Ftlll~ & mern, 4 ye.r OIOS & llP Claomt"9 Pune \1500. Cl•lmlr19 orlct $16,000 Sll,000 Tl\ursO•y Mornl11g C.lllb. l"tPl)er Rome <S«mklnl 111 H11ntlngton Lady IC•mpulll~ Rebel's Own (Fernendez) 116 Drive Of Rows (Pincer Jr .l 111 Devil Old II COIJv•res l 116 lmoellenl lS'-m•ller) 116 JM'\ Swep CS1<1nne rl 114 St""9 (Lamtltrtl 116 Com• Ca111 Me I Rosal•• I 116 AnVMooflll IM1111cu ) 11• El TorluQ<t !Ar•qonl Too(;hlttr I01azl 110 PHrl Alot tAoulnl ll• 11s MutttionMlss tGonieleil 111 ~•I Bo• f(;onralei I llS Glitter CMenel 11• Wine Co.iri1 tAamlrerl 116 AeaovToAun tOlul 111 Com•< A09~ (Sell•rs) Ill AIM Elltlble <;on()! SI (rt\Ptn (Ros\I llock nChatr O.n !Munoz I 116 !>uwn Sllbcle t Hew1ey I llS AqU41Sprlte (LOper l 117 llS r en,no Voll• SECOND RACE 6lurlon9s •yt•r OIOS & 111> C1a1m1r19 PurSf! WOOi> Chttmlno or1t• saooo - lllv•r\tcle T0<ir Club \1000. SIXTH ltACE -One mlle 4 year otct\ & up MelO.ns Purse \10,000 Pltrrh Aot•"f Club Mossy'' Prf)fllr (Mene I Royet Attle IS'-m•ktt I Oort's All Bye IHawt•y I Titular 11 I Harri' I 11S So<.corro IOllverul 1 i. Fon Old <Pierce> Miid Manor Pfln<t <Gonralul Ah \ T dnqo l~mkinl Tr•Ol'S«ret !Ramirez) Double Suri .o<• I Howard I Sllerg\llbraloon !Olivares I MY"<ll'N'•\\~ fAamlrttl OIOcol•t• F•ce IL•mbtrll OtdMemorlel (Selltr\I 1171 Pass Thru (Remlreil 110 Erin's Own IGonreletl 117 Mr T1rresto l Pincay Jr I 1 U Son Of E•9le I Colangt lo I 1 U Swu'91"" AOmlr•I (L•mbtrtl 11• NOl>feLer1l IH•rtlll 117 , .. THlllD lltAC£ -61'> l11r1on9S. l .,.., 010 ""'"'-"colts & 9"101~ llfwd in C••1t Cl•lminq ptt<• s20.ooo SEVENTll •ACE -1 1 16 "llle<s l "9•' old fillies Allow•ncn PvrSf! \12,000 C.I Poly FleldP•Y Rudiments tShoem•llJ' l 113 At Pl\11 Her (Men• l Ill GumtnllrTW (Alv•re1) Ill US 000 Pur\e St.SOO Oceana Cllltl. Etrly Nom1nM CGonralu I Ill l'"I A Ch•rrner CP1nc•y Jr I 116 Ben C.hetse (Al•artt I. 119 O.rl"9 Bebell• !Gonzalez) IOll Ool Tllfo RtQtll Track fHdwley 21 QWtk Pet iLOl>tl I '19 All Wtek Eno ICupeOts I t 13 119 Paacelutly ITorol tit King Sebastian (Camoasl Kl1>9Sorrtl lAraoon> K•lural CMtna I 118 Local Ce11w (Merlini> IOll t 1l Sliver Slip IL..tmbtrt I 113 111 Mini F•ll• ISltlnnerl 1 ll 00...bfe 01,counl I Ro,•l~s. 11.Vqgle \Bob IHertts 21 Flgnllnv Polley CTorol Pr-r Resulls fNoguttl Bolo Hiller Uo (Munoz I 119 Liiiie Night Music CSmllh) 113 119 119 119 119 EIGHTH ••c• -IV. mllelonlur1 4 yur olOl A up. Clt ulfleO el low•nces P11~ S 19.000. Los Cerritos 8errydown l\lelderl IU Also £htlble Shemrock Bey ISellersl Aoyel Armor I Hawley t l Lencl•ng Polnl IHarrts 1) WlnlerWhn I01ul 119 Sir J eson !Plncey Jr l 11• 118 c:Ntf H•wk E•r IL•mtlerll 111 119 GolOen Oo< Ray tH .. •ley) IU t 18 El T •rt• CSh<lemalter > 1 t9 "OURTH AACE -6 lurlOtlQS 3 y•etrolOfllltes Clalmi"9· P11rwWOOO. ClalmlnQ price s 12,SOO -i10,ooo. Hesl)4!rla Recrution & P•rkJ Di~ lrlCI Meleor CPlerul 114 Toy 1(1"9 (Toro) 111 Bolo tei.nt tMene I 118 NINTH AACE -II/• mlln. 4 'fNf o1os & 111>. Ster1ers allowilnces. Purw S.P<lelilly I Hawley l Flufflly Ul>Pll'f !Toro l LovtT•lt CP1ncavJr.) Tn.r1etntll Hope I Mena 2 l Flll<llt S1rl1>9 IGonralul Sn\lqoln IAreoon 21 116 \11,000. 116 SundM Knl911t CPlerceJ 116 Sliver Star l<iont••er > 116 Dual 0.0 1\lelCler) 111 IOI 1 U llJ 1 IS 11S 11S 110 111 Soe<lttWlsn IShMmekerl 10'1 N1clleh AnO Dimes tOlu I My Lill le MArgle ILambtrt> ()Ive Royal IAowlesl Orumy AY1hrn tCempesl His Boy's Pl• CLeonarOI Fourth Princess IV•IClerl 116 c;...y CTorol 11• Tlm'10lolo (Harris) 1" c;...cho Ster tAra9011 I 11' Bur9*0ft IC.mpesl '17 1u Le G•oconoe !Munorl 111 Htrclvnus (Skinner! 119 Reeldoe<ls'-(Hewl•yl ttS S.Ccl\Jot Mlvernl .. 11) Alse£ll9fble Something Flffl IRamtrezl SN sA Knlghl <O•UI 116 AIM £ti.1Me 11• Dena Strand CNogue1I IU Golf Roundup Marilyn Ha rt w as the winner of a field strokes tournament for the women's club at Foun· tain Valley Mile Square Golf Course recently. She had a 51. / Eloise LeSage -was second in A flight with 52 and Robbie Webb third with 54. Erlene Angstadt won B flight with 56, followed by Ruth Furr and Loret- ta Pacheco at 61 and Ann Ford at 63. Billye Meyer was the C fl ight winner with 61, followed by Ceil J aegger (62), Carol Lott (63) and Rhonda Jeffress (64). Barbara Stewart won D flight with 65. Betty Cissna and Helen Emert tied at 66 while Lorainf> Ackerman a nd Kay Knopf tied at 67. In E night. Dorothy Kronauge was the win· ner with 69, followed by Betty Groetsch (70). Louise Larsen (71 >, 1 Neva Lacombe (72 ) and a tie at 74 between Bea Cowie and Lorraine Spal. ai,,c ... ..- tn a partner's better balJ ev~nt held •t Rig Ca· nyon Country Club tt· cently, rout teams tied for Ural place lth scores of 60 over the new- ly renovated course. Included in the tie wt>re Neal Lakenan and Will Higgin : Jake Pivaro(( and Don Byers; Ja~k Banta and Ken Oliphant; and Leck Mer- ritt with Alan BlackJidge. Jn another similar event on Sunday, John Storck and Gene Parker finished first with 60. Jim Gianulius al\d Chuck Montgomery were second with 61. Bart McHugh and Ben Deane also had 61 . Me.,.._,lark A new scoreboard tor tournament play has been installed at Meadowlark Country Club In Hunti'neton ~ach. , Next bil el'ent at Meadowlark ls the an· nual Long Beach Second Guessers tournamant on Saturday, Jan . 31. Baieball lumtnarle!I from around Southern CaUfornla including re- cently slfned New York Yankees pitching coach Bob Lemon , are tcheduled to participate. The men's club will hold a sweeps this w end. Wednelday. J1nu1ry 21 1978 OAILYPILOT 83 Calendar T1lwM4y u111. 121 wt.\IU11t-<nte MH41 Ji. (oroM •Mer, H11m1nq1.., o .. '" "' ev"""' IMtll •I 7), fl Mooe11• at h ttnc1• Davis, Nichol .·: Gearty Switch Los Al Racing Entries 11 ~>. M•rl11• •• eo110" 1•:ao1. l.otor• ....... port HerllOr <•I. MIMlon \li.Je 11 II Toro <•. >Ol. S.n CJemtnlif 14 0.NI H)ll\, V•l-1• •I u"""'rwty' I~ 14 •I, '-9i AlllnlllM et ,OU!ll41111 \lt11e.,u1, kccer-Etl•"~I• •I \l•l•n<lt U ISi , Newpor t H•rtior •I -.s11'11f1Mtf <J. ltl, Fovnleln V•lle'f V'S £di~ •1 Huntl"9ten .. .,. m. Mlrlne •I S.1'111 An• Ill Swlnvnl"9 -San Clement• •I Monte Vis•• "91a'(S m. Glrl\ teMl5-UC lrvlM 11 Pti>- 119tCllN IJ JO), "tl .. y U•ft. t11 8Hkt\IHlll-Coron• Oel Millr al Ellencle, Meonoll• at Coslt Mt'9, Hunll"91on S..ch al Foollllll, l'oun· i.ln \111 .. ., el EOiloOn, WutmlMlfl' •I ~ Hel'tlM, Unl,,.rsny •· Ml~ 5lon ""lo, U To~ et Sen Clemtnw, '-"9llN a.Kn •I Dena Hills, l.oer••t MerlM, Go!Oen West el Lo. ~s CC. Cel L11llleren •t Orenge Coast t.11111), St P111llt ~ter Del 17 JOI fl!OR WllONHOA 'f Oeer, ,..... "'"' ""' •:u • "' ... ~ ....... ""''·ts lllK\Q ··-·"'"""'"'" "'"" ••C• -400 yero, ~ ., .. , Olds. Celll·frt•. (l•lmlng Pvrw '3• O•lmlnt Price il* Lindel_,., IMorrlSOlll 111 l'l<kle $un (HU'U Ill .....,.., .... ,,..1onrer1 m 1n119ttitr Cc.ttdOul m Joldle IHl<Henwt) 111 Fkkl•OMMI .. 10.nl<\I 111 0.VGlll'Jf\t CWet\Olll 111 0.11.,c;rlah ILlphem) ltt Wlfteavx IC:.11 1 121 SICONO a&CE -400 yarca. 3 '(Mr oletme~ Po,1rw '1100 Cindy Olarter (Tr•••ur• l S.-11 A••Y I K"1tf\ll Don'• Go Mlln-tCre419tr > S.~•-S11mp'11 (Myle'I Mkl\e ... , OrHtn (G•rn l HI' aroO•r I u oi-.rn l 86' Roe ken IH•r1l A l'metom Boy <Nkooem11~l Obeeve •-(Tr"o l Oot•r 01e C.orl ll•pfl•m, 111 ~ll\1IO•er IMtrtl ltt Wooy Warrtor <C•rdoi. I 111 EIGHTH lltACIE 110 Y•rft\ ~ ,,.., olds & up Cl•UTltf\Q Pur)e ~ Cle1mor191>'10 \7SOO &woe IT r .. •,ur•, 1 i. W•noer wn., (l •!lh•m, 1 ti Lynn (ft IO•r1s"" r II~ P•~ sle'' IMytnl '" Un °'•'9'0 f8en~•I !IV llott11'Mmb0 lllorooi..• 11• I.xi•' Gel Go-1>9 IOrOOt•I ti' 81«> Brother 111trl llV NIHTH AACI lSO y.irO• Jye<1r okh A ""· Cl••m•no p..,,.., \1100 Cl•1m1"9Pr1ceS1.00 81ec~ Cyn IMvl~S) °"''' L•ll• 8•rs 1Har11 I All l><Ol•I ITrt•surt I \II H•••1111l11 t8roohJ 111 C.lhCAI lw•rOI 121 O.wr\ TrMSllrt fCler1•W) I tt Count of l1ono< I !Uni<\ I Ill Mr ASlleOy l ... 991 111 V•I \Ber fNt<ock'mu\J tn F'tl\C.O Ff.ii\ 1Cret9er I II~ 121 U'I Golden We~t Collegtt runnin J? bac·k Mark Davis a nd dcft!n~1ve lant>man Mark NichQls "111 play football at Color ado State next seru;on. the Daily PlJot ha::. learned. And another area JC' standout. Orange Coa::.l guard Steve Gt'arty, will switch to San D1~go State. ·Davis gained 1,303 yards this se<.a~on for lh~ Rustlers and Nichols u. ~• two·time All·Soulht>rn Cal Conference pick SPECIAL VALUES FOR TODAY THRU SUNDAY COSTA MESA FULLERTON SANTA ANA WESTMINSTER 2946 BRISTOL ST. 1530 $.HARBOR BLVD. 120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS PHONE: 547·7477 15221 BEACH BLVD. SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY. PHONE: 870·0700 PHONE: 893-8544 PHONE: 549·1533 OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 8:30 A.M.-9 P.M./SAT. 8:30 A.M.-6 P.M./SUN. 9 A.M .. 5 P.M. CORNELL ''200'' BLACKWALL TIRES ----· 78. SERIES BLAC\i~:ELESS PRICE 4PLYNYLONCORD11---8-78-_-13~-+-$-1-7-.3-5-• C78-13 $19.35 ---------.-. $19.95 $19.95 $21 .33 G78-15 $21.39 --------------· G78-14 $21.95 H78-15 $22.95 Plus $1.76 to $2 .83 FET 27 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY $ ~CORNELL RADIAL llR78°13 PLUS S2 07 HT 36 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY* WHITE TUBELESS SIZE PRICE DR78-14 $29.99 ER78-14 $29.99 FR78-14 $32.33 GR78-14 $35.49 GR78-15 $34.99 HR78-14 $36.25 HR78-15 $37.88 LR78-l 5 $40.79 Plus $2.36 to $3.48 FET RAISED WHITE LETIERS BIG WIDE-TUBELESS 4-PlY NYLON CORD TltEAD 30 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY • T••n VW' rovor.As, MGS, onu, POii $ D.ATSCJNS AHO MA"'Y ~ OTHH 'Oll#OHCAIK ~s~599 5.60 x 15 OlY 5 Ox15 NYlON · .. co•o TUllUSS ILACKWAlU 21 MONTH UMfTED WARRANTY · 6.00 x 1.5 1699 6.00 JC 12 1599 ''800'' WHITEWALL TIRES 2 FIBERGLASS BEL TS PLUS 2 POLYESTER RADIAL BODY Pl VS • RADIAL TIRES SAVE GASI $37.99 $37.99 NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED HEAVY DUTY YALVOLINE MOTOR Oil S.A.1. GlAOlS 20 or 30 WBGHT M•tlt cor "'o\.er'\ tpectft tOhOtH I Wf th1\ high ':;;:' ·3 9~ OIL FILTERS FOR MOST AMERICAN CARS LIOYO OIL FILTER llEAll VIEW AUTO MIRROR crE1NERitORs /' \ ' QOOdbt' I ' '1,._"'.,' , • ht.vhl·~ _,.. 1.,1000, l .,. .... ,,,..,. t,..,,..f '" l)•dt: "'0"l• ' , .. , •• cf ,,.oft,;:•~""""' ''• ... FACTORY REMAHUFACTURED kl ON OHi OT. CAH 4 PC. TUNE-UP WRENCH MOTOR STARTING SPRAY Mo ••, oll '}o,ol,,..~ ond d1•l•J •ng•"•' t•o,, fo•'•' fdrof 10 , 011•Lou1dl &. power mo••" So .. u bo"•') • 11.S FLUID OZ. CAN ~y aac SLIP JOINT PLIERS CHROME SET c---m PlA TED IN IOMO ~ fOllGID t:::U..__1€1 ~ mn •13/1 6" SPARK PlUC SOCUI •l/8" ORl\IE •fltX RATCHEI •3" & I l/~" UffNSION 4'8 STRETCH STRAPS .. l •ttO •HOft9 eloJ11C ~ (Otd Wtfh "'"11 (tWtted(...-'-'" "°°~' on •o<h """· .' GfllUlllE ~ LOCKING GAS .CAPS BUY NOW & SAYE AUTO COOLANT RETURN SYSTEM 79c a INC.M I.ONO 98c WTTD USE 98 ADJUSTABLE TO 10 INCHES wmt CAP Ro•\.,., ff•or .f cot for oddi 5ss 1,onol t•rr onn 'rnd"' c1 .. or one•• Comr•l••r-w i th 4 'hO<~I• & •pr<0ol hord~ned ,p •: bolt t AL TERNA TORS t .. ptot• thot lovl~)' oh•• "ntar w••h 1h1-. pl'rf0""' Ol'lt • '•'twd '•plolf'""e,.t CHROME PlA TED CERTIFICATE . ,,~HOLDER~ FITS MOST AMHICAN C.AIS f(ue p• w•th b.,.,lt '" •01109• re9vlo'o•) 1595 LICENSE FRAMES r~ ;r ., · ..-, ~ .. _JJ ,. -----.._, PROnCT YOUlt ._,, 6c uaMSl Pt.Ans rA. RIGI> POl YlTHYl.£NE OIL DRAIN ~~·~ 77c ldeol fo, •0"'•"9 pot1s AUTO SPOTLIGHT ,lUGS INTO CAJt UGHT1I V~T 3'8 Sf Al ED IHAM 8 \ SYNTHETIC . CHAMOIS ''WATER SPRlll'' Wot ..... ..,,., orod ,..,,.~ w1f~ti1f ,,,..o~IA9 WC111f!-, M•ld•w Con be vted w+tf. d_,.,," 59 ¥· DAILY PILOT Uni, Tars Post Wins University High and Newport H~'r'bor · advan~d to th~ semJ.finals or the CIF' girls' field hOC"key playoffs while Edison was eliminated rrom further <'Oft\petition in quarterfinals gaMes Tut>sday afternoon. University upset Colton 2· l. Newport Harbor High's Sailors defeated La Habra l·O and de· !e1ulin1 champion Charter Oak beat Edison 3· l. Juliette . Deinum and Chris Pr~t'e scored goals for University a::t the Trojans knocked off No. 1 s eeded Colton. Colton drew 'first blood as it scored early in tbe rtrst half, but Deinum tied up the game about 111id way through tbe first period. Pritt scored the winrung goal with about fi ve minutes re main· mg1n the half. ~ewport Harbor scored late in th& first half on a goal by Marji Friday a nd then held its lead over La Habra, the second place team in the Orange· 1'reeway Le.-gue. Meanwhil~ Edison wa:> not so lueky as it played No 3 seeded Charter Oak, the ckfrnding champion. The Chargers· only goal was scored by Raedean Rona after a breakaway. The goal came on a ont-and one situation with the goalie. University and Newport will meet m the semifinals Thursday aftt-moon at Newport. University has had two at·horoegames while ~ewport has been the visitor twke. Game time is3 15 Finals in LB The CIF basketball finals for all four classifications will be held at Long Beach Arena, a change in the recent format from the Los Angeles Sports Arena. The CIF 4·A quarterfinals and ~emis will also be held at Long Beach March 5, 6and12 before the l·A, 3·A. 2·A and I A crowns are dedded March 13. Bask e tball Standings SOUTH COAST LEA GUE W L ...... A E1 Toro ' I 21'1 :i.t MIUIO<I V1e10 ' I 251> 214 ugune Bee<h l l 123 101 Un1~r\1ty 2 l m JI» 0.... Hills I • 11' 1'1 SM> Clemente 1 • 791 ~s Twtday•s S<eres LAQll,.. 8eecn lS, M1U1on Vot jol4 Uno'nlrslly ll, Sen Clemente 11 12 oil El Toro S,, Dena Hills" "rldey•1 G•mtt El Toro et Sen C1erne111t UQu,.. 8eacn at Dana Hills un1wrs1ty at M1ss1on V••10 ANO•LUSLEAGUE W L P" PA BlshooAmat St Anthony Mater 0.1 , 0 172 101 , 0 118 ~ 1 I 131 UJ ,....... ,...,, )( • L P•ul 1 t 109 107 0 2 130 ,., 0 2 10S 1:10 T•ld•'f'I Scores ,. 81YIOC> Amat ... Servile •7 l'Mter De170. P1ux X '1 St. Anthotly 16. St P•ul 4S "rlClay•s Games 4 Pius X et lllShoP Amat St Paul et tMtor De• t St AMl'IOlly •t Servott "ltEEWAY LEAGUE W L ...... A e.non s o 14' 141 -a . 1 Jlt -na 1 P•rll 3 2 321 321 , l 311 32S t ,,.nne 2 3 3!;1 ~ Valley 2 l 3SI loll lfroy 2 l 11• 19' Jw'nY Htlls 0 S lOI JS~ T~y·sscores Buen• Par!<"· S•v•nn• H (OTI Fullerton 70, Lowell 41 Vo V•llO 74, Sunny HollUI La Habra~. Troy'' "rlltay's Gemn u H•bra et 8uen• Park LO~ll •t Sun11y Ho ll\ Fullertoo •I SA Vallt'f Troy al S.tv•una ORANGE LEAGUE W L P" .. A Canyon 2 0 144 " 1 t 86 IS Oofa<IO 1 I 101 q\ •• .,,H I I 66 ~ I 1 I 111 ., ~11encia o 2 11 144 1 TunCl•y's kores Esporitf'lfa 27. Brea H C.nyon IO, Ve ten< 1e 4S Sonor• t.3, El Dorado 38 "rlda,•s Oemn CM> yon at Bree ~I Oor-•t E•peran1.i • Sonore et Veltnt•• Baske tball WOMEN'S 8ASKETULL UC,,.,,, .. cn1 Call O<Cl....ul 1:-":'tewrelt .. " ... s 0 1 2 0 0 • 2 • 3 1 I 0 2 on 1 0 • I 0 , • ti SMALL BUSINESS LOAMS s50,ooo.s400,ooo 5-J5 Years IM. CUWNTEED Stefl Grief & :An1cllllH OIU•iCOUMfT 9fflCI lit 10 ' 10 7 • IS 10 • 72 aturday Barons Mat .Ace Tough to Chase Aggressive, quk:t and in· telligent, that's the way Fountain Valley High wrestling ~oach Wayne Mickaelian sums up Bob· Chase. And Friday and Saturday, Chase will be putting those at· tributes to work at the Fountain Valley Five Counties tourna· ment. Recently the 129-pounder was voted the most valuable wrestler at the Costa Mesa Invitational. With a malch record of 13·1·1 so far this season. the S.7 junior is one of the top wrestlel'S in the countyr and Mickaelian spares no pr~e describing Cbue. "lk"bby has that intangible somet~ng that separates good wres.tlers from outstandlng wrestlers," he says. "And he may be the bes: wrestler to come om uf Fountain Valley." Chase is well on his way to proving that as he qualified last year for the CIF finals, narrowly missing sixth place. He was also all-league and voted the Barons' most valuable wrestler. One of the keys to Chase's suc· cess, according to Mickaelian, is his mat sense. "He knows where he is dn the mat at all times and does not get himself into situations where he will get into trouble, like expos- ing his back to the mat,'' he says. Mickaelian says Chase's ag. gressiveness and quickness make him a tough opponent to take down. "Bob is always aggressive and extremely quick," he says. "He's continually after his man, he nevers lets up and on top of that he has tremendous natural ability. .. All that makes him a tough wrestler to beat.·· Mickaelian, however, is quick to point out there are several very good wrestlers in the 129· pound class and Chase has not re· ally been tested completely. His championship match with BO. CHASE Costa Me~a·s John Ogata at the recent CM meet drew praise from several area coaches, and was largely responsible for his MVP selection . "And tre just keeps getting bet- ter," says Mickaelian. "What more can I say?" Nothing since Chase's record speaks for itself. Prep Soccer VANllJ Fountain Valley 2. Marona 1. Fv scorlno: Jenwn. Ste Ink• M.,ona scorl1111. Karman. Newport Hubor 10, W•Jtffn I. NH SCOf'l"9 8tetr s. Heug 2, Zim,,.,.~. Sllwrmen, Re1nwet., SMI C .. mtnte •. Dene Hiiis 2 SC sc0<tno. tMgneJ 2, Gere .. ?. OH SCOf'l"9 0.1• Torr• 2. Edl'°1! l. Wntmlnster l . Edi'°" scoring Webster, P•ulsen, 8oJle MIUlonVlejo4. CdM 1. MV Korl119 Brennen 3, Shore. CdMscortng: McC..ray. Jwnlor Verslty Miulon VltJo 2, CdM 0 M Y scoring McC..nn. Norris. SenCteme11te 3, Dene Hills 1. SC scqrln9 Chen 2, Go l~n. Ed•M>n I, WtstmlnSler 1 E<llM>tl scoring: Melltovl(h JC Penney Color Enlargement Special from your negatives or slides 8x10, Reg. 2.79 .................. Now 1.39 5x7, Reg. 3 for 2.97 .......... Now 3 for 1.39 Sale prices effective through Monday, February 2, 1976 • Frame Special 2.10 Chofce ot: 8x10, reg. 4.19 5x7, '99-3.A8 Special 3.49 both Frame and color enlargement comblnaJk>n. Choice ot: lx10, reg. I.II 50, reg. ... 2U·T • 135-J 117 ...,..,.,.... AACAOIA CANOGA PARK C>Jt10N DOWNEY FOX HI.LI FUUEATOH HUNTtNGTON ~ LAGUNA t9J.S LAKEWOOD ·M•MY MONTCUM NEWPORT BEACH NOf'THRl>GI! OAANGE 'TMI arr PUENTE HI.LS AIVERU. IAN NRNAROINO YDmllA WEST COVINA WHJTTWOOO. U.. your Jatenney charge o.d. I Caae Du~s Area Pr P . :Xi-ea Ace -e 'j ln,!~!1:~~!and Cage Report '!A~~'!'!:AN Westminster's Lions, u.t~~Jr~:.~ M1•Dt111twlfie-.:0t1•1•,T. BEACH-Cotta Mesan . trying to stay in title con· Aiillne cw ,. (11> "9dl.,_. :=~M.ter 0oi.~1-2•. Charles Coakley, the No tent ion, clash ln a Sunset ...,...., <101 F • umr~• ....._ Vte)e CM>& ... .-eoac111 c•1 1 singles player on the • 1 '"-s !ti C UOI::::: E..-n ca) U S . } d . Leacue basketbal game Hook cs1 o 11•1 1 " ct1 ~ • • nahona ba mmton .. MDwry (0) ,. (41 McMlt~ ton11bt at Edison Hilh-Fol•v m o 001...,,.... kott 1a1 c "'11,ot..,_, team, is in action Satur· ln other circuit 0 ames, Unhcorlnt•llO: vui.y•. l<ot"M U> o 101 ~·• day and Sunday as the e SC -Int &uMI Fost..-t, ICloln I, lootll Cltl G (II AndlfMtl Newport Harbor travels ... ,... 1. vi.111c1ou. u 1eert"' •I.Iba: ,.,.,., 10, OW.Id American team meets to Wes tern and Los ... 1"1me:sc.a..n. }Stt"01Metftt2.Mv1ubs:GeM1<Mn Canada in the Thomas Alamitos invades Loar6, sim11:nT<~1 .. >~>o.11am~ ..... 1f\lme:1.tvunea .. c11,2,.1a.. Cup semifinals for the All tipoffs are at 7. • =~=• <::t ~ m ~~= o.... J::~~,C:,~, Tert American zone. E d l s o n a n d ,.,_.. u> G cwi "'"*1t owistenson 1141 F 121 fll-,nn Action begins at 7 p. m, Westminster are 2·2 in Oler'" m G m PCtsMr .left.rs o•> F m Pwll Saturday and again at 2 lea.,.,,e and a loss would El T-scorint s11bs1 o.or .. t. •1.iir111 w1 c ce1 D1c11 Su d t th e-Str_,.,..111 •. t.e•flY 2. O..Hllta: Thomtonc21 o . ouw.111M p .m . n ay a e severely damage playoff 'nlorftpt0114. Hondrlckton 1101 G w Hutter Manhattan Beach Bad· hopes they might have. ==-~~:.~~tts.z .. zo, • • ~11~'"'''*1 Dyet.•ooi-t.. "minton Club on 18th St. The Chargers rely on DIM Mllfl 1651 en> S.• ~ ET 1eor1no JUbs: M."" 1 • .,,., 2. as the two collide in five 5.10 Bob Vogels ane P1a.er111 F <U>9-d Qutvtt,t.Scr•ftl•.~1110fl4• s ingles and four doubles (21 3) d 6 3 Bob ............ (41 F Cl•I....._.. Helltf~:OH,41·20, • t h . b h • . an · --·-~-._ .. r0o1 16•1c-1 .. 1".. mac es wit t e winner Mlklewlcz U> c (171 Hott111911 ' •• .. Herson (12.0 >. St11P111 02> o 1111 MltcMo Stenw• cm F m "-advancing to the finals N rt H bo 1 3 ·-11t1 G •121 R Shulu <41 F w "-· t M · ewpo ar r, . • _,,_, ' tdlllletr ~Ill c (II Ua~1n ag8111S ex1co. . · . ff 74 71 · DH uorlno subs: Tllompson 12, .._,. is conung o a · win Poldt, .. sc: Forrtsteri,f'OlterL 1r1ett1111 uo1 o C41SdlulU Coakley a former L a h · l ... &.... sc.--o.lney 121) G IOI enaroo Est · H! h d over o ra w t e .... mme: -· MDtc.orlng•ut1:1:AI01tolt,01:1te2. anc1a ig star an Western is 0·4. Bill .,..::Dot ~1 011 "'':;.~0den ~z. presently attending Wilkinson Cll.O) and HenMtt<12> F C41TOl'redas· H~t=~1e3:~~·1 .. 1u.-classes at Orange Coast Kim Cooke (12.3) lead ~0:111 ~ ~~..:.; ~ uo~ ,. 001 RlcMnbDn College, is in action both the SaHors . ~tt•n 11.2> o m l.IK,. .,_,m:; 01:1 • ~ t':di ::::Q days. Kr .. 11rc1s> o ci1>Moore The American zone Monarchs Win, 7~-61 The Mater Dei Monarchs, playing catch up all night finally over- came Pius X 70-61 Tues& day night in Angelus League basketball ac- tion. With 6: 22 left in the game, Mater Dei went Meter Del Oe> .. " o.i .. ., 2 0 MosbN<ller ;s o H•"t" 1 3 SchU(tz 1 ? Elef'll ti I Llellllus S 0 O.rco• 2 0 Stenwner I O Totels 32 t. "'"'x Miier Doi ~•1caw.mn U IS II It 16 II ,. ,, 0 • • • • s 2 " 2 u 1 10 I • 2 2 It 10 s-41 11-10 ahead 59·58 on a sbof by P aul Mosbr ucker and then extended lts lead. The Monarchs went in· to a four-corners offense and a tough ~ef ense aJ. lowed only tiiree Pius points in t he last six minutes. Pro Scores fMt ... 1 .. shlMll AH.Clltiofl Oatrolt II•. Weslllft91on 107 8\lffalO 112, ~Is 103 NewYor1t 107, Portlencl 1G4 Cltwlendtl. llostonlS Allente 100, 011C89016 Golden Sleto 116, Ka11su O ty 103 Ptllledelpflle 111, M llweuktt IOI Amwk .......... ,, .. ~ N"" YWI< 134, Oonvor 1U Kenhic:lly 111. St. Louis 100 o.c..1101 o mLn11e • 1·f· r MV scoring suDs: Aleunder 2.' WIDner qua. l teS Or a CUrnmna4. test against hos t · ~":!':;.,L,:i~•~~· s.n. 0_. Thailan~ in the world &e91rf cm F w Ha.--d quarterfmals. l(ubu (IJI .. "' Gednoy Hooper (0 C II) StodleM Revers c21 G m Ditto Maston COi G (41 MuUlgen Pro Hockey Uni scoring sub: Devis?. SC Korl119 SUM: C•rson 17, Duv1ll Wales All·Sl ... s 1, C..mpt.11 All· 10, Mcl<enzl• I, ,._,, 2, MeSOI\ 2,-'s~t•;;r':;':::;;======::;;:;:­ K•lbfl•rsdl 2. Heltttmo: SC, 2S.11. ~RHNMAN Ml1Si...Vlejo CMI CJll L.aw- Rottl (2) F (61 Andll'IOll Roaen.s ( 111 F (ti) UPSOn Ftlcht (121 C (41 Frloa OeC.S.. ltSI G · 141 Oerl< Sctwnldf' Ill G (21 81nley MV tcorln9 subs: Clouse 2, Slroulller 1, a.Mdl• 1. LB scorlnca subs Smith 2, c.oMr14. Hallllmo MV. 31·1'. MeWo.l IMI UJI P.vsX Sheec-14) F 111 Soto 5'lerl ISi F t•l Plcereth Callellan CO C 17l L.,_ry -5immon1161 G 110) KUfll Oonoven (2 I G 121 Mtur ... MOscorl1111suD. Sfffle 11. Hellllmt · Plus l(,:I(). 16, Lease Mark IV --< a --.J • --ii. ~·-.. ·0-.q-" . -3 Only . Exec. Cars WW..'1Ny&..st Sa•ta .\na Uaeer. ~lettary 5 4 7-0511 White Letter Wide 'Ilead -. "Polyglas GT" (&0-series) "Custom Wide Tread Polyglas" (70.miu) ~ Dl .. 13 ElG-14 Ul-15 ~40 A7 .. 13 070·14 EU.14 Plus $2.00 to $2.76 F.E. T, dtptnd1na on size. llld old lire. S45 Fl0.14 F70·15 f'4·14 Gl .. 14 G7D·IS GC0..14 Plus $2.61 lo Sl!O F E.T. clepel1ding on Slit, and old tire. Sso 1170-i4 /l&0-14 G&0-15 HlG-15 fi0-15 k5f.15 Plus $3 02 to ~63f If • depend1n1 on size. and old !I". Polyglas i>r Small Cars "( u"'ion lldl ~" IA>w Prices On Polyester .. ~Scrta~ .. 78forla~ (ar§ S25 =ktSOOO ru . .,.,.on Slit. •llldbft. WlllltWAW imtSl•t. $25 111acm11 flf·14 f11·15 G7a.14 G7a.1S H7f.14 H7a.15 n~wllttHlll .., .J.J Llf.15 A71·1l 11a.u c1a.14 Steel Belt Radials for IWeign Cm "1i 800 + S" «J,000 Milt T U't 532 535 SJ8 IWlllf 1SUIU4 llSS1113 11ss1m 17SSll1S 11SSll14 11$11113 15SSlllS 115S.11 1'5$11U 11511114 ~ plll $1.21 IO$t37 f tr. ~ouilt,llllloWhrt. "Pobldas" Radial \\ldtewalls fOr Smal~Mtdilm & Large (at$ SJ5 s45 SSS u1•11 0111•14 m •14 11111a.14 111111-15 m"" IRJl.U £l7a.14 QR7fo1S LAl .. U "'11 $2.112 lo $J '3 f [ T. •lld!i!I Oil Mlt, .. old lirt. WlllEWAU.S 111S1 $J lllOlt Wide Treads for Campers · Excellent for Light lrucks, Too S60 ~, s65tlll'r"I S70 56S ·-cl $7QraGrip"f s75 1~1'.S,.. IZ·li.S, ft 12·llS. llft IOollS... ~llSi U1 U·llS. lift ........... ,.u ........ wt .......... Auto Senice ... for more good years in JOUT car Lube, Oil & Filter Front-End Alignment 88 . eo.,lfl• dl•i• 111~\toa. 011 seas d111~ •• filter • Htlpt Usur~ lo11a "'"'Ma pttl• a '"'°°'"· quiet perlon118"" • Pletse plloet for tp· • CoMplele 111lysl1 end 1Hpaieot corNC1io11-10 lnctn .. trre mileege ind lll>fJO\'t iltertl11 tlf'4J I flttcialoll cqlljpin1111, u1ed bf uperincwd prof.., '1011111. htlpl tllkrt a p,_IJI0111ll111· pollll1M11t ................ ' J ·•lllt .. 1 Easy ~ IO Blty • C.ah • ~r~nC11ttom4ar Credit Plan • Master Chatw • AtnerlCll\ EKPteH Mo.,.y C•rd • Olnera Club • O•rt• Blanehe • 8inkAmericard ttEWPORT TIRE CENTE.R I JOOO I. CMtt Hwy. COIOMA DB: MAI 644-8022 .................. w.w \ ·~ L /ti. Bot1d Girls Wait To Marry TyplcaJ age for a girl to get married used to be 18. A lot waited until they were 20, true. But now a third again as many do so. Our Love and War man does not know precisely why so many young ladies choose to delay stepping into matrimonial harness, but he suspects that more of them now have a choice because or the rising popularity of the Pill. This big change in the average marriage age has oc· .curred mostly m the last 10 years. How do you explain the fact that the lordly lions in the Lake Manyara district of Tanganyika live in trees while no lions elsewhere do so? You knew the earth's surface gets 1,800 thunderstorms an hour, but were you aware that ram ts falling somewhere all the time'! ANIMAL QUERIES Q. "What would you be fishing for if 1ou went fishing with a large clay Jar?" A. Octopus, probably. That's how the Japanese do it. Q. "How soon after they're born can baby rattlesnakes bite?" A. Immediately. And painfully. Q. "How many men of average weight would it take to outweigh the average rhinoceros?" A. Figure about 30. Not many realize that the man who wrote that World War l ditty called ·'Pack Up Your Troubles In Your Old Kit Bag" was unable to pack up his own troubles satisfac· torily. I refer here to Felix Powell. He killed himself. And the man who wrote "There Must Be A Way'' likewise was unable to find his own way satisfactorily. That was Sammy Gallop. He, too, killed himself. BALD Yes, sir, William Shakespeare, too, was bald. One out of every four apples gets crushed into cider. T hat's not enough ... If you averaged a gain of one pound per year after age 25, you can consider yourself normal, say the medicos ... Odd that Sir Walter Raleigh didn't know how to spell his name. isn't it? He always wrote it • · Ralegh." Look, nothing you swallow will dissolve gallstones, remember that. Originally, it was called French Wine Cola in 1885 before its maket"s decided to take the wine out of it,,.spike it with caffeine, add flavor from the cola nut, and then rename it Coca Cola. That French Wine-Cola was sold in used beer bottles as a hangover treatment, and to some minor degree lt worked, too, ac· cording to the record. ~,. .. ,...u .. ~ .. ,... ~.o .... u ... Cel'-Mesa ftUi6 Wednesday. January 21 . 1976 DAILY PILOT 8 Welc9me Aboard Young Skipper Competes By ALMON LOCKAB,EY The Cruising Club of America (CCA), one of the most pretigious yachting organizations in the world and sponsor of the famed Bermuda race, has plunged back into the raging torrent of the handicap ratings for offshore racing sailboats and added a few more initials to the alphabetical soup. In a news release from the office of CCA com- modore Stanley Livingston Jr., the technical com- mittee has announced that the 1976 Newport, R.l., to Bermuda race will be sailed under a CCA modification of the International Offshore Rule Mark III. The modified handicap rule will be known by the initials IOR Mark 111 /CCA MOD . IT'S ALL RELATED TO the controversy over the IOR Mark III which spawned the equally con· JTJFl!~Mlllll troversial Ocean Racing Fleet or Southern California's modification known as IOR/ORF 75 (now 76) which in tum led to the IOR technical committee's attempt to placate it's critics by com· ingupwith IOR Markllla-dubbedIOR "small a ." · Getting back to IOR Mark 111/CCA MOD, Liv·-:_!;(. ingston said the CCA modification was in response -O~i to a governor's directive of April, 1975. after the technical committee had studied a modification of YOUTHFUL SKIPPER SEEKS CAT TITLE Roble Harvey With Alex Kozloff the IOR proposed 'by the Offshore Rating Council (ORC> at its meeting in London, and "concluded that in their present form the London proposals do--------------------not meet the CCA objectives." So what wilf{)ie IOR Mark 111 /CCA MOD do for LIVINGSTON WENT ON to explain that the the yachts racfog in the 1976 Bermuda race? Liv· CCA modification had been tested by applying it to ingston explains it in a "non-technical summary" the 1974 Bermuda race. Only the first five placing -meaning it takes nothing more than a simple yachts in each section were used for the analysis, IBM computer to figure it out,. ~~ys Livingston: "partly because yachts not crossing the Gulf "THE IOR MARK 111 /CCA MOD does five Stream in a favorable manner were adversely and things. It increases the rating charge for excessive unevenly affected." sail area, reduces the force of the forward depth Livingston said the study showed that some measurement <FDI >. adds a charge for the use of places would have been altered, but only a few . double bilgeboards (such a s Terrorist and "It was the committee's belief that if no places Hawkeye), places a minimum on the height the were altered, the modification would have been in· boom must be above the dick, and places a adequate and therefore meaningless, and if a large minimum on the speed the yacht must be able to at-numbt>r had been altered this would have indicated tain under power. the changes were excessive," Livingston con· ••As to the sail area, the modification· eluded. establishes a base sail area at the level relative to NOW IF ALL THAT "non-technical" explana· displacement regarded as about normal several tion dOt's not tell you something, you can get in years ago. Yachts with sail area greater than the touch with your friendly measurer who no doubt by base are charged with an increased rating; those now has all the mathematical formulae which can with less receive credit. In addition,Jhe modifica-be fed into a computer and come up with rating lion reduces the charge for mainsail area when it is your yacht will carry in the event you are entering achieved by lower aspect ratio. e.g.• longer boom. the 1976 Bermuda race. . An attempt has been made to equali~, as closely as Good luck and good sailing. possible, the speed potential with the rating charge. Or, as it says at the top of this column: "THE FORWARD DEPTH measurement (FDI Welcome Aboard. in the-10R formula) is reduced in its weight to one· third. This_ factor has 1.ittle effect on spe.ed a~d has Noted Boat Builder been used m newer designs to reduce rating without adverse effect on speed. It has also been used to re- duce rating by depressing the bow for measure· Di ment purposes and then adding enough sails art to Albert l.eDlOS •es restore the yacht to its optimum sailing lines for racing. "The charge for the use of double bilgeboards has been calculated for a recent series of races won by one of the new yachts of this type by a wide margin. To have 'equalized' this yacht in these races her rating would need~ be increased by 8.75 percent. (Witt} this increase she still would have won the series). The CCA ~ication increases the rating by five percent." WARREN, R.I. <UPI > -The dying art of custom boat building has lost a master. Albert Lemos, 92, of Warren, died Monday in a nursing home after a 70 -year career and a five-year retire· ment. Lemos built sailboats. from skiffs to racing yachts, for such famous designers as Sparkman, Stevens. and the Herreshoffs of Bristol. One of the youngest skippers ever to represent the Uruted States m international yacht match race competition w1l1 be at the hel.m of ~he LitUl' America's Cup challenger Aquanans V in the up- coming catamaran competition on Port Philip Ba1. Australia. Although Robie Harvey is only 22 ye~r~ old ~e 1& a veteran catamaran skipper -not only m lhe b1g C Class cats which will be competing in t)le t.eries, but in conventional monobuJls and smaller catamaran~ as well. Harvey, who has done most or his ~ailing in the Los Angeles-Marina de! Rey are-a, was only 14 years in 1967 when he won first place in the Windward Sabot national championship. In 1970 he participated in the Sears Cup finals. for the junior sailing championship of North Amenca and m 1972 he won the Sea Spray California state championship and the North American championship. IT WAS IN 1973 lhat he fi rst came to national at tention in the speedy catamaran compeht10n when be sailed Aquarius III to wm the U S. cham pionship. He repeated in 1974 and 1975 with Aquarius IV and V. Harvey was at the helm of Aquarius V last Sep· tember when the latest of the Alex Kozloff creation~ won the right to represent the U.S. in the Little America's Cup. But Harvey is never alone on the trampoline -of the C Cats. Kozloff. the owner-builder of the Aquarius series of C Cats has been part of the crew for the past seven years. During that penod they have managed to come out ahead in almost every C Class catamaran race held in th1 s country. THE C CATS ARE A development class that are highly experimental and reputed to be tbc fastest sailing craft in international competition. Basic limitations are 25 feet length overall. J4 feet beam and 300 feet of sail area. There are ma ny variations in hull and rig. specifically those which use wing mast~ s imilar to an aircraft wing The approach used by Kozloff has been to ref me the conventional sail shape rather than go to the more exotic masts and wing ~ails and to concen· trate on making the boats light and strong. In Aquarius V Kozloff and Harvey have come up with a boat which weighs only 470 pounds. With the light weight and a sophisticated ''soft n g" - which does not even uhlize a boom -they feel they are able to sail in a greater speed range than do the more complex, exotic and heavier wing boats. HARV E Y, INCIDENTALLY. IS the loft manager for Pacific Sailmakers in Santa Montca and is responsible for the sail rig of Aquarius V as well as the trampoline for the boat. In an effort to save weight and increase re· liability, Kozloff and Harvey have concentrated on simplifying the number of control lines on Aquarius V. In it's present state, A'!uarius V has only two lines on dee k. One of the lines is a combination traveler con .. trot and mainsheet. The other is a mast rotation line. The shape of the sail is controlled by the amount of mainsheet tension and its position along the curved traveler. To compensate for various wind speeds, the m ast ''diamond" shrouds -and consequently the mast bend is appropnately adJUSl ed before each race. AQUARIUS V AND ITS backup boat have been shiooed to Australia and are expected to arrive in time for tw.o weeks of intensive tuneup and training . before the February competition. Dress Yourself • 1n Profits Maybe you think you haven't got a thi ng to wear. But DAILY PILOT advertising representatives._have ideas in all sizes, shapes and colors. We 'll tailor a program to fit your needs. And we'll make it fit your budget, too. ____ ...,.1.141g;1t.)1 ·~:~·~ .. . - J ·" tl ......- Hc•<I .\rlill<•n I Come in today and browse around the shop that produces the best-dressed newspaper in town. It's a fashion show in pictures and print. And your product, goods or services will be displayed in the most respected showcase you can find. Call 642-4321 -We'll send a Fitter* *Ad Representative DAILY PILOT I .. DAil Y PILOT Business Courses At Coast Four business related courses are being offered in the Orange Coast College evening schedule this spring, ranging from credit . administration to protecting an invention. The courses include: -"Credit Administration." a new banking course which meets Tuesdays from 7 to 10 p. m . at Estancia High School. -Savings Association Busi- ness. covering the origin, nature. development and chartering of the savings association business. Class meets on Mondays from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. at E.5tancia High School. -·'Inventions and Writings," outlines the laws designed to pro- tect inventors and writers. Class meets Mondays from 7 to 9 p.m. at Maude Davis Intermediate School . -A three-unit insurance class that deals with contracts and codes and is geared for those with a background in insurance and general insurance contracts. Meets Thursdays from6to9p.m. at Estancia High School. Spring classes begin Feb. 2 and registration is under way through Feb. 6 in OCC's Ad- missions and Records office. For registration information, call 556-5735. * * * Secretaries' Seminar Set For Saturday "Assert Yourself in '76" is the title-Of this year's Orange Coast College Seminar for Secretaries ~lated Saturday, in the OCC Science Hall. The program, which is co- sponsored by the Bahia Chapter of Newport Beach, runs from 8 a.m. to2p.m. The registration fee, which in· dudes the seminar and IWlcheon. is $7. Checks s hould be made payable to the Bahia Chapter, BSA and mailed to the Evening College, Orange Coast College, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa, CA92626. .. ,. A Unique-horn? No, he's not an overweight unicorn, but a Hereford from Lincoln, Calif. who is the victim of cutbacks -of the horns, that is. Rancher George Magonical said the steer originally had two horns but when he cut them back, one horn grew in their place. The rancher puts the value of the steer at $2 ,000. Veggie Smoke Are Lettuce Puffers Safer? JERUSALEM (UPI) -Israel will soon become the first C'Ountry to market a nicotine-free cigarette made from lettuce, scientists have annoWlced. The cigarette, developed by Argentinian scientist Gregorio Rubenstein, tastes and s mells like any cigarette made of tobacco, said one of the scientists on his team. THE CIGARETJ'E JS named "Long Life,'' and is made without chemical additives and uses only natural materials, he said. "While other nicotine-free cigarettes have been produced before, they didn't succeed, because the taste and smell would evaporate," a spokesman for Rubenstein said. "Our cigarette has all the qualities of a tobacco one, but it's made with regular lettuce," be said. The cigarette also has 60 to 70 percent less tar. according to the spokesman. RE SAID THE SECRET of the process is guarded by three in· ternational patents but said a 10-stage biomechanical process is used to process the dried lettuce. Certain properties or tobacco taste and smell are extracted for use ln the lettuce smoke, be said. Mercedes-Benz lower leasing costs ••• Charter Move National Jet In- dustries, a Southern California corporate aircraft charter or- ganization, announced its recent move to the Executive J et Terminal at the Orange County Airport. -. 1 because 1t retains its value to .-< ~ -\ the end of the lease. Call our , . . . · ~-~ •\ . leasing spec1alfst today . -· :--.. ~· ~ Mission Viejo Imports ,, :~ 1.1=0'.-· . -°"'° k--r .. ""'"' l'riw9f, Mk'* Ylejler.i UC IJl-1740"" 4'~17o0 First Federal·Savings and Loan Association of Santa Monica Statement of Condition as of December 31, 1975 ASSETS First Mortgage Loans Loans on Savings Accounts Other Loans Real Estate Owned (Foreclosed Property) Loans Made to Facilitate Sale of Real Estate Investments and Securities Cash on Hand and in Banks Office Buildings and Equipment less Depreciation Def erred Charges and Other Assets TOTAL ASSETS LIABILITIES Savings Accounts Advances from Federal Home Loan '3ank Other Borrowed Money Loans in Process Other Liabilities Specific Reserves General Reserves $8,293,881 Undivided Profits 8,292,151 TOTAL LIABtlmES Ftrst Federal~ ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION OF SANTA MONlCA $234, 282,395 957,186 523,383 -0- -0- 21,953,884 4, 107, 943 6,628,136 4,623,390 $273,076,317 $228,741,435 6,350,000 6,335,000 9,938,262 5,125,488 100 16,586,032 $273,076,317 Costa Mesa OffiCe ' ·-• Baker near Harbor Blvd. ~1!1$= e • \kmb~·r r ,,1.·r.1l I l11ml' l11.10 tt.111!.. «;~ .. h'm -~-• • . OHk~" <;anl4 Monic<t, We!-twobd Th ou!>.md O.ik._, F.1irfox. West Lo~ A~gelM. L1gle RllCk, V~nicv, Culver City, Co~t.1 :Vlt''.1, Mid-lo., Angt>le<;, Oc..-tlnside -1 FCC OKs Rate Bid By AT&T I WASHINGTON (UPI) -The American Telephone & Tele- graph Co. has been given permission to raise its rates for interstate calls by $225 million, the Federal· Communications Commission said. The FCC approval, announced Monday, allows an overall rate of return for AT&T of 9.5 percent, compared to the cul'J'ent 8.74 per- cent. The $225 million is in addi· tion to $365 million initial in- crease granted last spring. AT&T NOW must file new rates based on the FCC decision. Until that is done, it cannot be de- termined specifically bow the ruling wlll affect customers' bills. "While we are pleased with this aspect of the commission's aC'tion," a company spokesman said, "it falls short or what we believe is required both to pro- vide high quality service and to raise the necessary capital on the best possible terms in todll>''s economic climate." Last January, AT&T had re· quested an increase of $717 million but the FCC found that additional proceedings were necessary. THE FCC ruled that while AT&T may now file tariffs de- signed to earn only the pre- scribed 9.5 percent rate of return, the company may subsequently increase its earnings to as high as 10 percent, as long as it is achieved through increased effi- ciency and productivity and not through tariff changes." The FCC ruling came after an· administrative law judge's de- termination which recom- mended an initial rate of return not to exceed 10 percent. FINANCE Nuclear Power Risks 'Low' Says Engineer RICHLAND, Wash. (UP1} - The bead of Massachusetts Institute of Technology's nuclear engineer department says nuclear power could be made safer, but its risks are already about 1,000 times lower than other normal risks of life. Dr. Norman Rasmussen says it would require infinite funds to make nuclear power safer and a trade off must be made at some point. ''Nothing we do is perfect and that is where the discussion should be: What level of safety is adequate to protect the public so ·we can have power without un- due risk?'· Opponents of nuclear power argue that an accident at a nuclear power plant could result in thousands of deaths and billions of dollars in property damage. But Rasmussen contends oppo· nents are poorly informed and their understanding is biased by -emotion. Over The Counter MASO UstiftCJs SS Hike, Tax Cut Proposed WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Ford tode.y proposed pt"rmanent tax reductions for in- dividuals, businesses and in- vestors, but said taxes must ln· crease in 1977 to meet rising de· mands on th_, Socia! Security tmst fund . Ford also proposed special new tax advantages for lenders de· signed to pump fWlds into re- sidential mortgages, and for builders in high unemployment areas. IF CONGRESS should follow Ford's plan, outlined it) his fiscal 1977 budget, individuals w<>Uld gain additional tax cuts at mid- year, and businessmen and in- vestors would receive s ubstan- tial tax savings over the next three years. Ford estimates this additional tax cut as $JO billion, but the 1976 benefit actually wou.ld be far less. partly because it would be effective only six months of the year. While Congress probably will ·give a sympathetic ear to some of Ford's proposals, most stand lit· tle change of passage. Many already have been considered and rejected by Congress tax- writing committees in the last two years. AN INCREASE in the Social Security tax rate, now the greatest single tax burden on low and moderate income Americans, is likely to be ig- nored until Congress eventually grapples with basic changes in Social Security funding. C'.ongress almost eertainJy will vote to continue current lower in· dividual tax rates beyond their July 1 scheduled expiration date, but probably will direct them more toward lower income. persons than Ford suggests. Thew quotallOM llrenco I 2H4 22"'° E~on Ulb 2'1.,.. 2'~ I• So Ull1 »~ 2J~ Nat Ubty 3~ 3~ So <Al Wt 12 12"2 Unlv Fdl 21'19 21~ SUl)C)lled by ti. 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Bob Clay, president of Tustin based C11y PubUcom, a public relattons couni.eltng nrm , has been elected a nation 1 director ot the coun:;elors .seclmn of the Public Rel lions Society of America =.:: : ~ t:Yt -~ =o.o, ,, 1f! m~-.~ ... Jd .~,·~ !1, ~ • ~ ~ •. d,J .ft .;:;,~ HDUOll M . .0 ' 2l 14 ..• MctCff A I• S 9 tJ + Va l~C 1 IS 1ff ... • ll •L-HoudllO .to. • 10 12'41+ \'a Mclllrr ·* • rtlO <M\Ci -1 ~I l"'fl't .. It ~... i If I~ u~-; ""'t ~sl<ob .IA 12 1t 1~-v. McLff!l .IO 12 2' 47\Ci -Yt -f'C 1.10 t 114 " J ,. Clay has headed his own f 1rm since 1969 and is a paat presid~nt or the Orange County Puuhc Relatlons ~lety of America chapter. .... • ._MF I 10 ) 497 t1'4-\It Mc~trl$ t 6010 81 tt~-.. .,.tneY 8 .60 t I~ ~ + '61 1._ •; ... IS:-+t:: ' ~ plJ-•. j ~ ~ McNtll .to t 10 tt -~ .-,tForo .IOQ • .,._ ~ _ • ,.. 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Mangino hvl'S in Corona del Mar. • Newport ReaC'h resident Howard E. Greene, Jr. has been appointed director of planning for Travenot Laborat.rtes' Hyland Diagnostics division. He was formerly administrative assistant to the president of Raxter Laboratories. • Carlton M. Higbie Jr. has been elected to the board of ctirectors of Amcord, Inc., Newport Reach-based manufac- turer of cement. pre-engineered metal buildings and con· sumer leisure products. • Bert R. Ott, of Irvine, has been appointed western area sales manager for data services for the RCA Service Com· pany. Prior to Joining RCA, Ott was with Microtech Data Systems. • Joseph C. May has been named resident manager or the new Lagun1 Hills Mortuary. May is a longtime Saddleback resident with 28 years ex- perience in mortuary service .. • Thomas B. Bigford of l,aguna Beach has been named director of marketing for Idaho-based Rogers Brothers Food Company's potato division. Bigford was most recently a .. principal in Thomas Rig!ord Associates, a Laguna Beach. consulting firm. Prior to that, he was president and founder of Sterigard Corp. in Jrvine. a10ll'OltO His wife, Anne snd daughter, have joined him in Idaho Flllls, Idaho. • Reynolds Environmeptal Group •. of Newport Reach. has named Nicbo1as Del.oren10 a s associate landscape architect. • John M. ••Jack" Swan has been named vice president and controller of Plan Hold Corporation in Irvine. Swan. a certified public accountant, joined Times Mir ror in 1972 as senior financial projects analyst and wa~ named a group controller in 1973. His responsibilities during this period have included accounting liaison with firms in the information services, magazine and book publishing or "' ,.,, ... ,. ,,. • I I ,r ,. ... I " I. t•r i• I ·I I .. .. ' t' • •J t' KAlnPLt I S2 I 21 1• NIM~I0.60 . z610 103 +2 Roy•ICC .n 14 71 "''• + .,,. 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NAmPh 1.2013 70 24•.4-~ s.f9•rO ln<I 1J 33 2YH '" Unlroy•I .so • 291 '"' KancllU.SOll St4 J.4 _.., NCnAlr .t°". 14' 3 + Yt ~Slf•WtJ.-Slr:~:g ~:! ~~·;.-.~ UUtnolroy:~~·.·.·'1:0, ", +.VI KY Utll 1.IO 8 33 21 • 14 NoO.Alrl WI . 3 1/t-Mt ••--a 1"" 31 8t .. ..n Kerr Git 40 1 330 IO'o+ I NooflVt un 'j 272 tO'lll .. . SUoLi~ 1:ji a j2 111,.._· ~ Utd 8rftd pt .. 2 114 + \.'I Kerr MtG I 14 1"8 70'1+ ~ NotM El .60 It' '2 JO.,,_+ Vo StLSlnF 2''> 11 3S 29~-IA utUnO~nc:1'1n.20bb ·,· .! ~: •·' ..C.ystone la • 11 18 .. i,., No 111Gas2 7 21 24 -\It ....... s ~-.u 11~ ,.. -t<lclo.W•ll 1 S 20t 2l '" \'\ NllGlor t.tO . . c 24 + 'Ao ~r.ul ,.,_ .. "' UGosPL .n 6 Ill U~ ~ ..... t<lmbCI 1 60 11 254 42"-~ NolnPS 1.)6 t '2 17t'o-Yo StR99ls l.Sl 10 30S 1' -Yt U.O Gue'1y 16 20 9V. + \It KlngsOS .40 ' •1 •v.-·V. NOH1GI I .... 7 413 ~+ V. SllentC.1411 tJ 12 7Y.-Vo Unltlllu2.l2 S 2' 24~+ lo\ KlrKll c .90 n 14 1w .. \It NONGpf s . .0 .. Z10 71 +' =rn11,-: 'l ~ '~~ t: UnllldC • .oa s lS I°"' ... KL M Alrl • ? 30•1•-~ lllOSC-1.tc ' IJl 27"--v. S.....r A!to IS 51 '"" ... Vtd lnns.11) 9 113 r• · · l<ltl"'I A S4 18 51 3'~ .. " lllOStPw Of 1 •• 1100 11 _, SolnF In 1 IO 7 UJ ss•,i, + \It Uf\Jsy8 U)t 7 14 I •• KoohrlRQ Co • 19 'All+ v. = ..... R-60 • 31,-, . .. SF ..... "" 21 ,.L IL Utd MM .IO .. St ISV• , l t S1 41~ '-,..., ''"' ~ eln'" "".. n+ "" Un Nuclear :M 311 1111 •. KOCIPl'S 40 1 • llroc> CO 6 S1 11¥. + '!. SoFelnll .30 t '3 2l -\lo Utd Pt<C Mn .. 20 t• .-11o l(~r Pl 4 1110 Sl • · NwstAlrl.4S 14 7tS 77 + "' Sarli wtl 40 I " 11~ \.\ UnAefno .ct > J7 10,, l(CN'ICOf'p In 24 I 3,_+ ..... Nw&lft 1.1010 1) 47V.-"°' S.UfBF RIE •• ?S 4 -Yt USFIOtl 2.4112 127 36*-llo\ l(raftco l.'2 10 12 42 -"" Nw IEllOfllY .. " 17~-.... S.VEPw .60 • ?I tV•-'Ai USFot-..... . 11 17'1.o + \'Ii l(rft99 .24 )I 1040 3311>-1 NwCAQYd 2 • 24 17'11-"" ·-E•rt.... .. IJ\lt ~ ,_ KroehMtr'MI • ,. 12~+ 14 _;t''l:i'us , "' • -v. ,..v ..... -... us Gyp1.M121 UI 1th _ .. Kr009r 1.3' 1 1S 19YI-~ ~ Ind ws • • 7 17V.-1 SovEI I 34 · • l 14 USOYl!f I.to .. 2 2flf•-\It Kvsor In .10 . 11 6'h-v. Nwst In p1 s . . 22 1 u -1 t::B ~ii ,. : -· ~ USHOine iii · · 1a. •~-"' LIKGest~l.atw-•;. ::=::~~:: ~1~~Vt=2~ S.VO..Or .201J I~ 'y,• ~ ~.n '7 2:: :r: ... LamsnSri IJI S 24 tW.-V. -Mtl .2Sd 13 Jt 10¥>-" So_, Indus T ..., 4 + U 5 RHllY .. 14 2\.'I+ V. La,..Bry .7J t 20 u:v. .. NwSll 1.ZO. II 1 1th+ v. see.Service.. CJ 2"" ... US~ .9S 10 61 U -.,.. i-rSloo .l2 6 S31 1¥1+ 'h Nrln Co 1.70 9 14 21-.-" =~ ~ iO 11~ J:::~1"°" USSllltl 2 IO 7 tel 1'14+ ~ Lt.wS pl 2v. . ' :w. . . . Nortnsi 50g u ,.,, 2• -""' Sc1111u B ... u w 12.... • . • ~J~~ 1; 1~ ~r= ~ * Walter Mitchell has been appointed to the new post of national sales manager for Computer Automation's Naked Mini division. Mitchell joins the Irvine·based minicomputer firm from General Automation. Inc., where he was Eastern, re- gional sales manager and federal government m arketing manager. • Newport Beach resident Pat Krone has been named customer operations manager for Pacific Telephone's Santa Ana district. , She will be responsible for ad- ministration of residence customer rela- tions for telephones in Santa An a. Tustin, Irvine and parts or Fountain Valley and Costa Mesa. L.e•swy ,70g 11 14 JO ... ,., NrtSi pf 1.60.. ' SI~-... Sdlh1ml) .IO zz S'3 ~ .... utdT.O. ... . 3 ns .. l...H$&.N .SO I I 11~ 'I\ N11<0<~ .2t S 121 10"" + ~ 5C.M c.p 70 S " 1>"' 14 "'' 1..HtoN .0 S 34 14'°"-,,_ NVF Comp 4 1•S t 'l'J + YI SCOAlnd .60 6 ts l2 = ~ UnlTel 1.12 10 Ill lS,.._ Yo Ltlll P\C .IO 9 11> 12V•-'.4 --() 0 -Scot Ltd ,)6 4 SS ~ • .. Uni Tel wts , 2l 1~ • • un V•llnO 19 1'1\ .. O.k lftd .co II 10 ·~ • . SCotJFll.OI" Ill 22\.\ ... UnlTpfA lV... 12 10'1'-v. L.tNm .n11 . 3'I 11~-'" Occldnflitt 1 s 10tt 16\4 + YI Sa1ttFor .74 7 " 11 , • • ~~:' ·1~ : t4? ~:,: ~ l.Af>Mr CJ> .. 37 , '• Qc(ldP\ pl'.. • SI"'-'-Scot1Pllj) ... 10 712 """' .. • \JnlYLT 1 12 1 ,, 11n+ .,., 1....-'" 12 11 27 21'14-'"° Occf>llll )..O .. 1' S1~ + 'iii ScOl1V' I .1020 1• I""+ Vo UOP I 11 11 10'1\+ Yo Mrs. Krone joined AT&T in 1951 al'> f an information operator in Compton. • L.AvorOI FO • 23 ·~ + V. OccPI of2.SO .. 11 12t'o-l'o Sa>vlllMlg 1 lS 14 12\11 + \'II n«>rp Lfy Inc .7S... 1 12:\1.+ 111 OccPtllf 2.16 .. , 17"-1 $c.ovll pf 2Vt .. 3 Jl'h-14 Upjohn .9UO 347 o v .... Ltvl St" .... t ti 41'111+ "' Occcl P.1wt .. 111 1t\+ "' ScuOOerO v .. ll WI-.... USLIFE .l2 6 121 12~-14 Ltvlll Furn .. 451 •'lo OQcltll Crp t 4 39 llV.-~ Scucs pl 7111 ., 20 l.\4 .. . UsllteFd .'6 11 lt 1~ '-' LFE Gorllfl 1 1 l~ . OQOr> pf 1.87 .. a tt V, SlldC:Ln I 40 1 lt1 2S + ..... ~~ 1.20 ' 12 UYt-Va L O F 1.10 10 '99 7• -1/t Olilo Ed ,.66 10 19' llh v. SNContr .JO t. lS l7lh-14 tlSM: IV> .. tlOO UV.-V. Cat Insurance Rate , l .. • l LOF pl 4.V. . • 4 UV.-v. Oii E .pl 3.to .. l20 43V. . SNW Alrl SI 1 63 4YI + \\ ut.11 rntN~ jj ~ ~.,,,::I~ Ubby McNI ' 2 7'111 . .. Oh e of~ .. l30 47 SNor•m .IO is 7 tt~ \It UtlllPL 2.4010 3t 1'14-\(,, Lll>r1vQ> AO • SS 12 -V1 QllE pl 10.16 S.-1vt 1 4 WI "' Liberty Lon , • 6 2'14 •• 1170 IOT•t.. +. l'I• Soofllow .IO tO 6 1~ 14 Ut Pl.41f 2.IO · · 16 30\4o-v, Llbtr1y L pl • • I 41/• . . . OtlE pl 10.'8 •. z130 10411> . . . So«IGO .S2 '4154 """-~ UV lnclus to s 149 23\IJ-.... L1og My l'h ' 6' 3'h °"""' l)fl4A .. 1310 lit + 'I• S..n 1 . .0. 27 704 70 + " UVlnOpfSV... I st +I"° LIOyEll 1 10 1t STO S01to "' OllPw p11.i .. r100 110 + l'h Sllllt1ln Lin .. .. 2""+ Vo UVln pf ~v y.!__ 'a + ,.,.., · Co~parison Outlined ~ Llnc:N111.013 73 ,,~ ~ OhPof81.6 .. d10 1S .,.,., SEOCO .11. 40 ~..., V•llevln..IO 3 ,. 14"'-Yo Llnc:Ntl of l , • S SS -I OKC Cp .IO S 32 101/+ • • SlrvlceC .12 S 13 5~-.... v.,l•n .10 12 lll 13"" t YI LlnNF l)MI , • 4 1714 De!laGE 1.44 12 SS tt""-Yt Sorvomn .6' ' ti 1314-~ Vwdtf' I .IO I 2 111'1 + V. Lionel Corp t I~-YI De!laNG UO 7 1' 25 + V. St1141totO .2111 27 •V.-Yt __._ ,.._ 1• 4 v, L.lltOll 2\IJlt ' »t ,.,.._ " oun ep 1.12 • la? a11o • " ~11 .10 t S4 lll'e-14 v ... _ ""· · ' t" • Capitol News Service You may be paying too much for automobile insurance• • • • • . Llt1n cv Pl 2 · 12 17~ '" OUM.ran t ' J1 11-. + 14 511ofl()l1 uo ' " 50" • • . Venl<.eln •20 14 24 ~ Llttonln pf.A . m 10~-V. ()rNrltln .60 S •• 1014 • . ShollorG .5' 6 117 tlV.-'4 ~~~ ci:~. i ~ ~~ ~ LMI In-tr 18 1 . • ()nolaL .7' ' l 10 • . • $11ellrpf I 40 • • 11 ll'h • .\i VF Qin 1.10 10 ,. 27*-Yt Locl!NOd 2 104 7tw OpellllAI M 1 I 3 14\lt + 14 $hellrpf I U • • 1' 21 ~ VilcoM IM ti .. 9V. • V. L.oewCP t.20 1 ,,. ,,~ •.i. an-eo .11 10 11 1 '"-'" SMrWll 2 20 u u a. . . . """ ~ 1• 4y, Lomes~ 40740 71 7V. · .. Or Atkl 1.lt I ... 14~+ Yt $1VW j1f '·«> .. 1100 '2YI+ I •~ .. • ... l.mMo t .tiOb I 115 l4Ya · · · (Xis El 2.20 1 S.S Jl.h-\'\ SitrTePI: .t2 t JO lot\+ "' Va Eloc 1· I 6 QJ t4V.-V. Lndtwn • 100 I I '1 24.V.-'t. OulbdM 1.20 14 S6 27 ... .-'-' ~IC .900 7 13' , • ..._. \.\ ~:t::= !: : : n= mr. z~ Lone S Incl 1 ' 104 , • .,..__ \/< OVtletCo .7S 6 2' I~-V. $IO(:oclf 2.10 • • t '7VI-11'1 YaEIOC of S • • z10 S4V, + '4 A guide published by Consumer Action of San Francis<·o • shows automobile insurance rates can range from $216 tu $582 for tbe same coverage for the same driver. LOnollU 111'1 I 1• 17V.-'Ai ~ IS 4 126 ll~+ Ir\ ~ 114 26 J6 E ).:2t t>O n v, Y) LIL Of NU ·· tU0 111\IJ +I OWrTm M It S6 21"-\IJ SfinPrcn 12 t 2• Slllo-· ii: Vl&r.: . '' 1 + LIL pl't 12 .. 1270 t.3~-.V. OwoitCF M 11 13' Wh-'-Slf'f'fltC ... IS lt 12\.\+ V. ~-:071~i6 ~ ~: : ~112.~ ji ;: ~f"= ~ 0.011111 1:n II ftl st -"' Slmof'•I .40 1t 2S.C 16'--\lo VS1 Corp ... 7 14 14~ 111 Lol'•I Corp • st 1'--11. Owllll P ~ .. 10 ~-1WI Sino..-Co .. .et u..-· · VlllCllM 1.IO 7 II aJV. .. LaLAllCll.1210 SSI 24'-"Oxfofcfln ..... 11 19""-" ~iv,,. 61 J2 -\Al --WW-UPe<llc 20 II 05 14"--~ -,._ .6014 114 >Jflt+ '" WiAApf4Yt .• 14'° 47 L.ou<lo11 • t 10 2•1'11 PKAl11 1.20 .. tt u~ v. Sk ., ·* • n '"" • 14 w.c11 QI .1• t 11 nv. ... L ' I .,. lO ll''I ..__,.. I • e -· .,.~ •~ Slill Coron 1t • 1014 + "' Mdlpl ?.to , • 1 '6V.-\IJ ~en ·-. r ... _,.s . -..,..., + •• Sliy11nCp 14 .. IS.C. ,,.__ "" Woo-I• C . . J7 l'-Yo t ~ ~~ ~ "l n~ + v. ::~~~ 1~ ~ ~:--. ~ SlnltllAO .60 1J 12 11 -14 W•m 1 10 103 14'4-YI L ~ 9! pf s .. 1 cc . .. P9cflittr1 .to12 ta 11-..-"' ~11~11111..:..,,_ 1,os 42~ ~" ~ " w!:1 ~.!.:~1,1 ,• !... • ·..:. 1..;,;,.iOl'c~ 17 71 41"'-1~ Pec:Pwr t.70 ' 140 10Vo+ V. •'"" '"' '00 • -.., W., """·-.voe .,. LucllyS . 12 1M 16V.-VI Pc T&T 1.20 9 SO Ulli+ \II Smltl\6 T 50 t 12 Ull\ \.'I WtllMr .to. 5 4S I~ ... LUOIOwC . .. Sf 7 -\Ii Pc T&T p(' .. aoo ,,....,.' Sftwcllff .IO • 12 17ll\ t .... W•IMl'1.0l 23 as 14'h \It LU!mSUl . .O. 51 2~ •• ~ P.cimn.IO 7 I '"" ... So418M.701 S) 13'1> w~oolb .IOlt ,,.. Ull\+ ~ Lvi.n vno 1 1 113 it~-l(o "-lnow .»it c 112 1 + ~ ~ti tnll t 10 3\11-.,... w Feb SI ts 2 '""' .•• Ly.._ pf 1Yt .. 17 ~-~ P.I,.,. t,)O .. 6 IJ ... + Yt ~ .02o '2 1130 I~+ "' WI .to .. JO ,,_. ... l.yr><:l\Sy ,IO U UJ00 Cflt+ .,.. Palm 811 .U S 7t S¥o+' ~ I.Ii t.:IOll ! 24 2'l4 + -. WeMCllf IYt · · I 2111> +I --M M-Pamldl .OSb 10 270 71!. . . . Oli ·'° 20 l:\11-v. womCm .so 7 MO It -¥1 ...... _ .,.,,, t n--& Al 11 5.._ $ C-111 t.41 102 1114 • WtrnrCo .50 I I 8Yt •.• ,....AF ...,. 13 4 .. • ....., ""' ' .. 11 .. .. · $C.lrEll!f 2~ •• I ttYt t V) W.,Llm .t2 11 407 J7 -\IJ ~Oonkl > 10 '" • 11t PenMIS 2.1~ • .. >111• + "' SoJ llld 1.S6 • IS~+ v. womrs 1.20 1 t1 11~ + 111 k• .ao 1 n SV. + \'II ~kit ."! $ '7 914 • .._......_ , .. S •t It •• .,,.._ I• 7 12 , ... ~ cmlll .u s tt •flt-v. ~ .'18 t 17 ll -.,.. _..... • .,., • " w_._ · ... . .. *<Y t. 10 10 Jt JO~-... e1'9rliu Orlll s 21 20 + ~ 5°"" e! uo I' • 21" "' W~I ,IO 7 .. IN •.. 5 olA4\4 • 110 .. +lYI rkHn 1.12 I 3' 2 .... + V. ~~':sf& : ': 1}t-;;: ::..:11~: : u ,~ ~ Jrtl .tob • . tS;J .... _ Vo rllrPn ·* 1 2' 12Yt . • . •M 1 )tot 21v.-" W.itenJ .lOlt u so ~ v. SQuen • ~ '"' + "' Puco In 27s 11 23 2\Yt + "' !Al> 1 M4 IS~+ " 5.,.. MMl<OI .n l. ·1 .... . . . P9Yl.ttS .IS 10 ., 1'14 "' Sol t q ' J ,.... • ... = .?, ·1)(40 t~1 2' .... .. • MtPlrYCo 114 12 24\6-t~ PMbOl .121> ti IOI 1111<+ 14 ~!1t.' 8 t .,__ ---40 i tO 7 + 'i,4 --)f ,,. II I 14 -YI PltM Olntr . • 5t I* · · $eN t 16 )49'1-It ~Cl> tO t J~-V. .,_,lld .O.,. 4t '"' · · · ,._y 1. 1',. 3IO S3V. · • 51PIK J,14 14 tU ,,.__ 11' WMIMcL .ei>%2 ti 84'+ ~ ~I...-·• tc a 14\11 • . . PltnDI• .2Aa 11 47 S"• • "' 51 .-.111 12 ti 121 ... -14 WllllMkt .60 ' t 2IM .. 4 Mtn "" tAO 1 241 JI~-'-PltMPL 1-'D 7 112 10Yt-Yo tal• •• ., t• s-. . w.lls "\\" 7 I' 17-• 14 ~PCX> .90 t4 tt6 40\lt -t P~ IJ.GO .• UM! t1t . . . II.,. • 2 s.-+ \It ..... I " '11 ~-•~ ,,..,..,_Mt 2S I .. P~ IUO .. 11401ri\IJ+IYI ,...1.1•·; 6 Jl ;_:0,11 .o'e It 1~: ~ MM Ott t.• 10 OS '4Yt + "' P PL pt 1.70 · • zJ0 1 · · • •• 1• 20I JSYt . WPlt~ 4Yt • • alt S•Yt• t ~111< t tt 5'4 JO"' •• ~PL llft.40 . 1160 ,, + "' · P'r .. " 110 t•+ 141 w..tl't Pltpt t n ,,___" ~!"*' Jf t .. 1 60 + V. P•ll"l pr I .. dO 12 •• ,..,., '"' 6 It.,.._'-w..n.v .«11121 10 tOV.-~ };;,f'ltMl tt l1J '°"" ... ~PL otUO •. llO 47\lt-1 ... ,. •• b ti UYt ,, W\BMI< 1 40 • tJ7 ttll\-11' -= 1: k': :J~:-~ =-~\=i.· 10 a: r.~+iii; .i4111'1 ,! yn:-" W\lnNA .~.,s .!! 1~-~ ''Most consumers can save significant amounts on their • insurance by shopping around," said the consumer group's z spokespt>rson. The 82-page booklet, called Consumer Action's Auto Insurance Guide. ex- plains different kinds of insurance and how to shop for it comparative· ly. The book lists over 2,000 sample prices from 16 insurance rom· panies. (CONSUMER) THE CAUFORNIA auto insurance industry is one o! the most loosely regulated in the nation, accordlng to Ute book's authors, David Oavreux and J .B. Moore, so inform a· Uon on shopping for auto insurance is crucial. Enmples of the kinds of information found in the guide are the following examples · - -· A 24 year-old married man living in a densely populated central city such as San Francisco would pay $216 annually for 25/50/10 insurance from St Paul Mercury Insuranu Company: $372 for the same coverage from Aet· na Ca~u.alt,y; and $58'2 from Financial Indemnity Company (1'be 2S/5q/10 figure means the Insurance company wrn pay up to $2$,000 for bodily injury for one person in an eccl· dent, $.W,000 for bodily injury for more than one per.son, and Sl0.000 for property damage.) ... ~ -..... .. 1 • ... ¥111mP\lll .. , 11• 14" .. ,,.. ~ t ll ~ ._ 1. 1 _,1 ...-"• 1• 10 474 4lflt-16 WUlllClll I tO I )11 11-.-V. ~ tott 1~ " ' .. Jill-"' .rs ti 1 '1V.• v. 1 u40ms ""'• '\, Sdlll Nat· s.. * w.. ~ Me ~ 24 i 1 ..,._ \41 n• 2 ' • • • 11 ,., '" + "' E' 60 2 47 Mei , II 6 >7\"1-... 1 .. ti tt\.\-11' , ... w.t Peclftd 1 ,_ ... +.,. ~~ t.24" 104 • \4 1 60 ,. eo 74~ .. 0 I '° h "' ~ -~ ,·.,, 11 ., 171111. "" , t 11*1 Diii 0.. , f NII 0-Oto pr (IOI ac.. tr,o .,, M UO I m l"'°-.... lrl.IO n I:} D~ .. • to i7 4'1 ~ . , ~ l.2t I > tt'A + \6 -w-I w----an-=K~ jg,\ a It~-; t: l~':S !:~· J ii:f~·~ ,.11 r!1J 4tt r=: =:i;-i::~ jm ~~I-:::::r.~, ~ tr=~ ~'1 a: ~i : mt.:~ )(wow !1" m S11I.-~ fNIOftl,o .Sci.J I l4 ... -V. .... !if.IOI d ,.,.., ...... dO 1611'-" WN!ltt'w.4011 101 ....._.,. ---.tett .,, S -\\ WOIVWI Ml• 11• "'•Iii )ttta 1 n M t\'t •• ,,.. l"t 1 • "" .•. ....,.St~ 111 ~ .ntc ni §g-'""Er Ml<"'·· '!! -· ~ ~ ,.., '"' • -"• • ,...._.'via' ,. tt l • Mo: yn·= ~ ~\\-~ =tt .l,..:" g.1caitt ... ..., d& .~.... ..... lJ ,._ '4 --~··*,, .... 1Dr ..... 1vh7-4 U ~';° "'' jllij1.,. • 61U tor,:::~ ~T.'~it qt.,..,~ =·=t'_ 010 ~\.'t+'~ ''14 ~~] ':~-·~ ·~,;' Jl ~.__:: :I.'°,,~ .' MlltNI 1~ t7 !.! -.... ~D t.21 u 1 ft• ;li n-. Wllf1Pl!Of •n 1H ,.~ " n a--.... ... ... 2... ti ...... "' • .. i tu tU• •• MllY O'$ t.60 ll n Y.-~ :;:\li"l 1~ t = ::-~ [1\'111] •• •t f .,._ " WhlttCll to • "1 12 1" ~~ 90. ti 1n\.'t + ..., ~ Alrw 1 40 Mi+ ~ l'" OW. S.. 1'4 ._.,__ ~~.w.~ 10 •, ,~ ::: "'~1':1,.-:.~ 11 : ""· ""':'.::'. ~ &:-.~ =~~:: "' ~: M'iiifJfUS .~ rt:+~ =~~~~ ~ ~--:"" ~~~ m ,1~~t M"Ut1 I )Cit ~ N u +. '61 Ptllll.lpf r\ii • dCIO 71\'t • .. r • , ~ • . . ... I I' .88 OAILYPtLOT Wedn..say, Januaty 21 1979 TV DAILY LOG d d (R) The Scoulab Nett .ale lfOUJ, We nes ay drwed ill ta.tu ,.w, ~ 1t1 C041Ctrt. Tiie JOUlll llllslciana 1rt Evening 111t 1111mhr OM~ II\ £ncttnd 0 (Iii} (f)) Cl} at llntta "Tllf JANUARY 21 D1ppe7'Yitiilt~it1tlfll a 11u1. dtr, Btrtlta is aided by the "minute 600 0 117 t3 ,al Dtmocullc Rt· man," 1 teadltr In tllt trt of plcli. sponsr ~enator ldmuM Musk•e ~ PoCbb. Whitman Mt10 1uests. &i>U the Demomtic v1tll' in rt MM: (C) (bt) "Wlll'a AlflW ~JK)nse to President Fords State ot Yirchlil Wolf" (dl'I) 'M -Eiu· the Union Mess~ btth Taylot, Rdlard 9ut10ft, Geoff• 0 1i16) ~ W Dttll9'ratlc R.. Setal. ~nM (!)TllellldOlel 8o11111Z1 EB Y"Mau • r.m•ly Alfa•' I ():j oo m flll fttblre 0 <'9 l• l Lil CD Dt1Mer1ttcl ID DOUf Dua I• AMrtca "Tiit R"'°8te Jotff1J Ballet" ()Irons~ m l'lrtndae FH1lly 9:30 €E) B Clleftf m Ad•111·12 10.00 o KlOO llMlt: <C> "1\e ....,, .. fl) $cl111llll Ora1111 I (wes) '6'-Robert Culp, BNti Kttlh. 76 Sur Trt• O @ QJ [6) m PltNclll Mrelt· ED Mysttty Murals ol S.11. Cat1t· 1na Sia(' Guest $11r Kell Cums emia (R) portU)'$ a onct·l•mous westem IC· rn um. Rucals '°' wllo ii ICCUMd of slaJilll • 6 30 , 6 m Andy Cnffrth Show lllOlion plcture P'oducer. 10 Mtrv Cnfflll Show 0 0 ID News i7 L3 mm Ftttvrt 0 New Night! New Time! I Electric tomp1ny *THE ROOKIES rop Cots Ille Ctuntty 0 a. RMlts "from Out of the C.lloplnc Coul'lllft Darkness'." Rexhtdultd from last 7:00 f) 0 D ~~ r6 m CD Nt•s week. Wiien In U·~ IS mom lly 3 lronildt "oundtd by holdup men. Terry re· O Bowline_ for Doll111 ulls the romanc. he shared with l6 ('9 8 ) BOlluza the dyt11a !Mn's blind daughter. (i J To Ttll lhe Truth Q) Wilcllill M'Mllln M Conctntutlon ti: (]) CJ) H• Ftabirt I lo¥t Luo 'if lM Alntricao ~t !ht Fii fI) IJ!ffiID A Mo.met Conctft 117 (3) el~ &unsmoke A cOiiCtrlOl all·Amertan music I La loba lu turrna the works ol Stephen fos· Woman Alive! ter, John Pt11lltp Sousa, Scott Jop· Otamabc Stria Im and lou11 Moruu CottKhalk. The Acld11111 f a11ily ( Q!I (I)) (I) ED Staf1lJ & Hlltcll 7 30 0 8obby Vinton 511ow "Silence" A cop k1lhn1 safecfacker O Don Adami' Scrttll Tut Jane -posin& as • pntst '" a hallway Russell & Robfrt Wainer "' the hou$t for e.i·cons-luds Stallky & celebrity i uuts Hutch on a wild chase. Cul Bttz O Liwe Amencu S~ auests. O Lers Mah • 0.,1 10:30 I €E) ~ 8 ID flame Tti.t T unt Muslul Yeridy 0 Tht Protecton . Mufu• reoci1t 10 Pnct ts R11bt (I) Brady lunch 11:001 CI)0 m!! Ncotn 23 • ust of tilt Wild • (I)@ @ News ED OCBUT 0111 Man's Chlru" The lat II C ftop•ts Communes·· First ot ~en1 ~ ~~ ~~0~/ms t~~h 1~~e ::!~/~: 1 ~~~ Maty HtrtSllH, Mary Htrt.H tfre"' asptct of contempomy hie lll ~ CD Doi Rulhn Sliow EIJ llebtrt Madftit Rcpwt 8'00 O 17 3 8 Tony Or11ndo ind ('9 001 T111tll or Collsequt11m o .. " h1hn 01v1dson. Bob Ketshan ED Cinema 34 (TV 1 Capu1n ~ng1roo) •od Ruth 11:30 O fi7j (3) CiS Litt MOfit: (C) Built guest "You'lf Nevtt Set Mt ~II" (dre) 0 23 6 10 m CifiSJ!D Jon· '73 -David Hartman, Jane Wyatt, athH W1nt111 Presents Two Hun· Joseph Campaflffla. drtd Yun ot Amencan Humor Q @@9 m JobnJ Canot1 Jon1th10 Wmlers portrays 20 d1I Ann M1r1e. Pohtamo (Miss Universe) lerent chuact"s ranging from ~ests. pilgrims to pol1hmns as he takesl Tiit Htnty!lllOMIS 1 humo1ous loo~ 11 two centunes, Mowit: "tamp to Suet' (adv) t1I America s history and hentaae '43 -Warren Williams An11e Sav· Hr 11 ioineo by Scat Man Crothers.' qt. ' 01v1d Doyle. Ronny Graham. Mary U CQ! (])) CIJ W'Nlt WorW Mfv. Grtaorv. Julie McWh1ner and Ch1tl ie· ··Aun, Stranger. Run" All om Carr Old Person protech•e mother attempts to shield O Movie (C) (2hr) "House on her dauahter from tile truth about Green A9~e Re11d" (mys) '10 -her lather's death Patnc1a Hui, C~rostopher G'°ree Jao~t Leigh Clons Leachman, Bobby 0111n and Ju e Har"s Waller P1d1'°n I Ron Howard star 6 (!) Mod Squad a Tht f8I O (29 I ) 3 CD Bionic WtmUI 0 Mfwie: "TM Mlwf Cat Tttr' "''""-ome Home J11mr' Pan II (CCIII) '51 -Didi Powell, P1aa O M1n1on $ MO'fit: (2hr) ·initrt Dow Chilies [)qke Victor(' ldra " -Anh Jr Ke" I '"ost & Mn.. Mu11 nedy. Pew Dow, Jul•e Adams. Cet s..art m Crm Wits . ~ RtflJlllSt 11 Sllte ti fl) NtwS flit U•iel Addrm 76 MO'lle· (C) (Zhr) "Advuttum !2·00 0 Triipt z... ol 1 Younc Man" (adv) '&2 -RiCll . ID . • ard Beymei Paul Newman Movlt. "Stice Dool" (com) 37 ED CJ!!!!ID Zulu Romeo Sail ;~~::: e~(burn. C1111e1 Roe· plane ihd1ng •s captured as th1m «> M ·e: "Tht Livi Hud'' (h ) p1ons lrom 23 co~nlries tDmPtte '!Cl "" 111 or '" lhe 1913 International Glider -Abtl Salaur. Compet11tons '" W11ke11e, Aus1ral11 112:30 0 Ma~'? RR> , ED Ch.tmp1onsh1p Wrut11n1 (!) MO'fit: looMtnn(' (du) 41 al Jap1nese Lanruare Procnm -lee J. Cobb, 01111 Andrt'l!l. 8·30 m MtrY Griffin Sito• 1:00 O @@®J m TOllOmlW · 0 litat AU1ij . 9:00 l:lS f) Movie: "Ma1lc Ton" (com) ·47 f) REVENGE KILLER'S -Jane Wyman, James Stewart. *TARGET-CANNON!! l:JO (!tffiMO'fit: "The 11a•111 JunfW' O 11 3 8 Cannon An alrnosl (adv) ·54 -Charlton Heston, [J. lorcotttn chapter 1n Cannon's m1h· eanor Pa~er. tary Stf'f•c' 24 year~ llfO tn Koru 2:00 m All·"11ht Shor. "nit Wild llut p1npo.n1s him u the tarcet of 'I YOl!dtr." "HudMlll's llr" r-.outh ~omn ofticer's personal 'tell 3:00 f) Movit: "Tiit ~ f-ult gnnc~ F1ekl~ (COlll) '53-0an Dailey, Ann 0 mmID Tiit ~J Crty Rollui Bancrolt. Thursday DAYTIME MOVIES 9 JO 0 '1he Clp1A1n'1 raradiW' (com) ·~3 -All!C Cu1nnw. ~YOllne Of. Cirlo (C) "A lllll(s Stor(' (doc) '6/ Narrated by Onon Welles 1:00 0 "Tiit M1ttrd" (wes) '52 - 1'11ld 811 £11001, Myron Healy, Pttyt. Its Col le$.. Ot. "Tht OM Thlt Ctt ,_,-( dra) ·sa -H11dy Ktu1rr. Colm Gordon. 2:30 0 (C) "Wyomllf Md" (wa) '50 -Slephen Mc:Nally, Alt111 Smith, Howard De Silva. 3:00 i'lo (C) "Tendtr Sc.aulldl'll" (dre) '&7 -Jean Paul Belmondo, Robert Money. 10.00 6 "All Mint to Clvt" (dra) '56 - Cameron Mitchell, Glynis Johns 12.00 m '1ht Cross ol Lorraine" (adv)1 3.30 Q (C) "The Htbd s,." (wes) ·44 -Jun Pierre Aumont, Cenel '53 -James Stew1rt, Janet Lelrh, ~elly Robert Ryan. KOCE Television (50) WEOMESDAY 10 09 IN SCHOOL PROGRAMMING n·• ELECTRIC COMPANY U·ot SESAME STIUEET 1 09 IN·SCHOOL PROGRAMMING 1 09 NOVA "W•11tn9for Sll..,,._y,. (60m1nl > • WOMAN "BreHI C•nur Contrownlts" >JO MISTER ROGERS HEtGH904tMOOD 4 IO SESAME STREET (60mlnl S IO ELECTRIC COMPANY S JO Vlll.AALEGRI: 610 THEEHEROYPOLICY:A""'W.,.Bel_T,_Slatts> 1·oe l~I ~ORGETTHl!I! 7 JO SHOWCASE "A Sl>«l•ITrobuteto R•y Bot;ier'" t ·oe MASTERPIEC• THEATER"Vll't.in. Oo-t.in" l60m111I t 01 PICCADILLY Cl RCUS "0.wAli.<l•t LAr;ie l60m1nl 1 tt IO TOM T. HALL· T HE STotllYTEU..ER (60mlnl ·FROM Fash ion Island Newport ·l3each Movie Tops TV Ratings NEW YORK (AP) -"Jeremiub Johnson," the Robert Redford movie whichABC·TVbroadoa.stlas t week, was the week's top-rated evtining entertain- ment program, according to A. C. Nielsen audience sainples. · 1 And ABC's new "Bionic Woman" also was a rat- ings winner, as was the second episode of the network 's "Eleanor and Franklin" drama; both were among the nation's 20 highest-rated programs last week. · • Man" (all ABC); "Maude," ''M-A-S.H" and "Mary Tyler Moor•" (all CBS>; "Welcome Back, Kotter" and "Baretta" (both ABC): "The Jeffersons" and "Good Times" (both CBS>; ''Eleanor and Franklin, Part II" (ABC); "Rhoda" and "Bob Newhart" (both CBS): "Happy Days" and "Starsky and Hutch" (both ABC>; "Emergency" and "Sanford and Son" (both NBC ); and "The Waltons" CBS). But Howard Cosell's flnalshowlnhis ABCvarie~-2~'17 ty series ended at the bottom of the ratings list, ac-tJ{;/ cording to Nielsen findings for the week ending J a. 18. The ratings weremadepublictoday. Movies OK'd For Oscar Entry According to the Nielsen figures, tbe\,?O most· popular shows last week were .. Jeremiah Johnson" CABC>: "All in the Family" (CBS); "Hap\>i: Days Special," "Bionic Woman" and "Six Millio~ Dollar Andy's Voice HOLLYWOOD <(UPI> LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Motion Picture Academy reports that 227 motion pictures have qualified for the 48th annual awards. -Andy Devine and Sally Kellerman will prbvide voices for the animated cartoon "The Mouse and Hi!Child." Eligibility requirements: the film must be feature-length, in English or with English subtitles, in 3Smm or large r , shown for at least a week for paid admissions during 1975. The list includes movies made in Canada, England, Hong Kong, France, Italy, Japan, U.S.- S.R .. Sweden, Switzerland as well .as the United iitliliii States. :2' 1 Nominations for the Oscars will be announced at ••••• 9:30 a.m .PSTFeb.17. .,...,, .. • '1!1NCUNATION OF PETEI PIOUD" lllM.-.,f;>t ALAIHDllOM "N~ WAY OUT" (RJ 4:0$-7:15 "DfiTH WISH" (R) 2:20-5:10.t-.20 iltE BUCI BIRD" (PS) 4:05-7:50 iAlE THE MONEY & RUN"J:IM:OM:41 , FOUNTAW VALLEY < I NrMAI • U U ()()li1 ...... \1Atl~l• e,e • 4'<1' it~ WAY OUT" IRJ 1:10 "OfATH WISH" 6:JS-t:50 "wtl.O PARTY" (R) 7:50 '1!1NCAINATION OF PETEI NOUD'' 6;00-9:40 "Wlll PAITY-llJ • -...cbMATIOH Ofl PIT& NOUD .. llt THE CITY SHC>f'f'ING CENTRE ORANGE •5J2-t721 ~CITY CENTRE CINEMA!> S.A. FRWY IMANci4~TEA EX.I G.G. FAWY ICITY DA. UC.I "WILD PARTY" (R) A ··REINCARNATION OF V . PETER PROUD" (R) , A "'FLESH GOIDo.r llJ Y . '"THE CHEHLU.DllS• A "U1"'S DO rT A•Mir ~ "DOC SAYA ... "llUUFOltcr '"STRA w ooas· 111 'Jhe maslerpilre of bi1.11rre /()ve that stunned France. Apm1raitof loveond submissi{)fl to disorder the senses. A1t Afllt.d Artuu R&ast cm ® llO Cliff -.lOWTTUI ~WAIT. cun LAUv- '"YAMSHtMG POINT"' ~ .. 60 SIC()M)S• CNt llOlllf ~. fATI ...... , i DArS Of ntl CONDOI " Mal ....... e •An WWAT OINATOWN,. °"" '"• ....... _, &W ..a=J..1=~~-· "4~00GDA~~ .. ,,~, .............. _____ __. ..... •'-!••... DIOWNING POOL .. llnQa e MAOCMAH e -.U LUCXY LADT .. IACI WITH nt1 DIYIL"' IOllT,ND,._. ..,...,.. ....... ~.v.-.. , CllNA10WN .. 11'9KA1"" ~,.. NOWAY OUT ... +"' .. CIDl9 l&.000 SWIAT & MAI " ....... TOU .. -.n AMlllCAN o.unm "' NII~• IA llXNWTION "' \ 1975 BIC' , FOR FILMS NEW YORK (UPI) - More Americans have becomt moviegoers than ever before, according to Variety. The newspaper report· ed. total U.S. box orlice receipts last yur were in the range of $1.8 billion to $1.9 billion -up 7~ percent from the . cverall take in 1974. an R nlfed, rather kinky tale of survlvlll ~ ~ ~m Gue@ @]cQxgJ r NOONEAOMn"T'n>~~esnouriw ... I ~~~-n.--•'!!:!": Pin: "DEATH RACE 2000" Techn1col0f. [R, SURF THEATRE C.... Hwy .t ltlt St IWll9• .._.SU.HU " * * * * JACK NICHOLSON'S PERFECT TRIUMPH!" Kat~l~e~~:';1 11 ,,. ...... ,,.,., 1Jn11ed Arhsts SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRES SAN DIEGO FWY. AT BRISTOL SO.COAST PLAZA W.-7711 SO.COAST. PLAZA w..JUJ ..oa•• c. scon. AMe at.HCllOFf "HINDENBURG" (PG) .,.. OAll Y 1:10 a t)>O SAT/SIM-1:10-l:~4'-7:S.9'U FREE PARKING JAca "ONE FUW OVEI THE CUCKOO'S NEST" (R) o.,..._.,.,.."'a••' "'',.,_.....'~.7:41-• ... •.• .• CllElllWD THIEE :G1 "HO WAY our CRt 9AIL T 1:41 SAT /MMo-1:11--(1 •"IOOSTER COGIURH" • aAf.Y 6:41-19:JI U.TfiiM-.1.-..U.. lacM .""DOG DAY AFTIRHOOH"~ •AILT 6:ee.19:11 U.T~lt:ll ••oROWMING POOL .. OAll.Y 1:20. SAT.-.1:50-t:20 FREE PARlttNG "STORY OF 0 11 CX) 6:45-1:30-10-.25 SAT /SUM-I :30-l: I s.s:OCM.'45-1:10-1 0-.25 NIYllW-SAT. OHLT~JO P.M. © HOW FAR DOES A GIRL HAVE TOGO 10UMTANGLE HER TINGLE?? ADULTS ONLY COLOR SEE TllE UNCUT, UICEISORED ORIGIW 35 MM PRITS! • • --·PlUS THE SECOND MOST FAMOUS __ ..... AOUL T FILM OF OUR TIME ... The Devil in Miss Jones ONLY ORANGE COUNTY SHOWING! PUSSYCAT • 873~ 709 E. Balboa Blvd1 Newport Beach OPEii DAil Y AT 12 NOON ~~DDla;n: Mirage· in :'Vast W~steland ~ By TOM TITUS Of .. a..., ......... "WILL MARY'S GRANDFATHER, the F.mwood Fto.sfwr, find hopptneu with. a JIOl'1IO M>Cfol tDOr~? And con our h.,-ofne rekindle Mr' husband'• ardor by reading au monualf from t>i. lfbrary? Tune in tomorrow ... " Uthe above prose bits a respo~ive chord, then you're one of the millions who have kich;ed the late TV news habit in favor of "Mary Hartman, Mary HartmAA." the adult.II-only soap opera that is to its genre what • 'Blazine Saddles" was to westerns. Around our house, Mondays through Fridays, it's definltely Channel 11 at u for a brief mirage in the midst of the Vast Wasteland. Not since "Bat- man'' spoofed the comic book }leroes in the middle. 1960s has there been anything quite like "Mary ·Hartman'' on the tube. BUT SATIRE IS THE ONLY common de· nominator of those two shows. "Batman" was stiU fun for the kiddies, though its tongue was firmly im· planted in its cheek. "Mary Hart~mf:" i not kid stuff -which is probably why it's · ed at 11 p.m. when the progeny have been s ucked in for the night. Norman ("All in the Family") ar's latest creation concerns itself with such topics, in its ftrst week, as indecent expe>sure, a mass murder in the neighborhood and our heroine's husband who has trouble making it in the bedroom. Small wonder all three networks shuddered and looked the other way when Lear came around looking for take~. NOT THAT THE NETWORKS haven't grown up a bit over the years and handled the sa.me themes. particularly on the medical shows. But they're apparently not quite ready to put them in a comedy format. And t~ ts the focal polDt of .. Mary Hartman" -it's one hell or a twuiy ahow. Not with a Mel Brooksi4h wave of aags and schtlcks, nor with the strident tones of an Archie Bunker or Maude, but <u much u artistically poeslble without dragsing its b.ela) in a natural, al.molt realia.Ue style. And the a~ence of a laugh track is an immeasurable plus -you can do your own laucblng, and you do. · This is the 1ort ol comedy at which Woody Allen excels -and with Louise Lasser (Woody's ez.wife) in the title role, Lear hu come up witb the ideal heroine for a soap opera utire. She's cute in a pathetic sort of way, a bit dense in worldly matters, and she's an actress with consummate skill in the art of comic understatement. You can love her, feel for her, because she is real, with genuine human foibles. · SHE AND BER HUSBAND (Greg Mullavey) play it for realism, which makes their problems all the more hilarious. He's somewhat of a clod, though net altogether witltout empathy. whose views on marriage were out of date long before the ladies of liberation burned their first bra. While the Hartmans don't play for laughs (even though they get them), some of the other cast mem· bers do -boy, do they. The best of that bunch are Mary Kay Place as Mary's best friend, a sexy housewife trying to make it as a hillbilly sil'\ger; Victor Kilian as Mary's grandpa, the nototious Fernwood F1asher, and Dody Goodman (remember her from the old Jack Paar show ?) as Mary's mother -from whom, it must be imagined, Mary gets her inherent dingaling qualities. An'ER ITS FIRST WEEK -both in Los Angeles and New York -"Mary Hartman .. has Vinton: Polish and Proud Bobby Vinton, who got a second lease on life as. an en· terlainmg song &tar, has a whole new following added to tM old. Here are some of the Q's and A's of newly in· tere1W reader1. ' Q. Would you please ask Bobby Vinton bow be came to record that Polish song that brought him back to life? A: "My mother suggested it," Bobby reveals. "She said, 'We 're Polish, and proud of it, so why don't you recofd a Polish song?' Well, I prepared it, had arrangements made, paid for a recording session, .studio, musicians, etc. Then called on four of the top labels in the industry. 'My name is Bobby Vinton,' I said, 'and I've sold more than 30 million records -how do you like this one?· Then they played the record and I got flat no's from all the executives. They seemed to agree on only one thing -that 1 was crazy! Final- ly ABC Records said, 'It sounds good -let's give it a whirl.' VINTON Which is how they and I hit the 'Glad You Asked That' by Marilyn and Hy GarcMer added to the new. Laughingly he recalls his fint fan dub -organized by two middle-aged garbage col-lectors! Q: Is It true that Bobby once sued a fermer manager! If so -on what pounds! A : That the latter "failed to deliver on a pro- mise he made to make Bobby a movie star.•• Q: Is it true that even In the old days Bobby Vin.' ton was as great a prom«Mer as be was a singer ? A: Definitely. When bis first smash, record, .. Roses Are Red," was released (it sold over three million copies> he went off on a promotional tour of radio station disc jockeys. Preceding his visit by sending a doze n red roses to every jock in town - starting in Pittsburgh. Send your que1ticms to Hy Gardner, "Glad You A&ked That," care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 11748, Chicago, Ill. 60611 MarilJltl and Hy Gardner will anJtDeT. as man~ queltioru as they can fn their column, but the volume of mail moke1 per1cmol replie1 impouible. lent ita reapectJM 1tauom• ratinJrs skyl'Oelketing In ita Ume slot; to'lbe point wbere it was cbaftenalnl the 11 o'clock news .-OWS tor aU<lJence supremacy. Wheftier the abow' will maintaio that upward n>obWtr, or whether the novelty will wur off and re· le,ate 'Mary Hart1n111" to competition wltb the pr•World War II movies on the independent cba.n- nelsi.sstlll a matterol~ecture. If Lear's burgeoning stable of writers, beaded by the noted playwright Oliver Hailey, can keep up the pace, net the quality, o! the show'• first two weeks, "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman" will become a landmark in television proiramming. If they can't, lt;U most likely go down as another noble experiment. like Mel Brooks' ''When Thinas Were Rotten.'' Whatever happens , .. Mary a ·artQtan" has made her presence felt. WINNER 7GOLDEN GLOBE AWARD NOMINATIONS tNClUDINO BEST ACTOR Of RECTOR SCREENPLAY It,"" '"f #o -.111 l ~ •;J'tl> w r.ivcr (R) lfflfA/tH IM'SIJCOl«J< ·OflS~ reOWWll~1£,1.1Jo" ..D!l'lllWlllllWt~k,.Uj ~WA1I01 ..... "Jilifi)W(1lll.llr'1;1 llf(. ~lll!Df'ti j,(l r .. blb UIJll.L.1~ 1u>•CD(Jc• fQOWl'Uf llifOiO• ,,,,.to : ~~()J.UHI For the price of a movie, }OO'U feel like a million NOMINATED FORS GOLDEN GLOBE AWARDS Metro Goldvvyn ~Pfrsent'S stitiri1"9 a RdY Stark PrOdvctO'I <:J d ~ ~s f*n ., ~: , Walter Matthau & George 8u(ns in Nei ~~s ·The Sunshine Boys· C<>st.wnns Richard Ben Jamin · P¥1c!v'\10ri Mt!fOCOO SctfCT'l~tiyNe1ISimon· Ptoducedb'f~Stafk IPGI O.rcctej1JY ~ R~s ARd'lldrf<atlJlf MGM.~ ..... edwards BRISTOL CINEMA .. STOL AT MACAITHUI 540.7444 Written ror the &ereen and dlrecied by I ~ <iTANbEY J<YBRICK ~ BEST PICTURE AND BEST DIRECTOR National Board of Review "A MAGNIFICENT entertainment, sumptious, lush, gorgeous thrlJllng and haunUng. It is Kubrick's masterprece. It has become one of my favorite movies of all time." Rex Reed, syndicated columnist jackpot to the tune or some two million discs, win- ning a whole new audience of fans -and leading to our own television series. I suppose," Vinton chuckled, "you could call this the best Polish joke o( the year!" R R ' .~~~~~~~~~========7============-----~~~--~~~~~~~~ Q: Is It true Vlnton was a high school dropout? Oy oger8 A: No. The singing star with two lives earned his way through Duquesne University doing one-N M • nil.ht stands as a bandleader. He tried to keep his ew OVJe college education quiet in the early '60s. "I don't like to talk about having gone to college since I don't p • • think kids identify as much with someone who r e lDlermg knows more than they do," ne explained. "I keep it vague so nobody knows how old I am or what I've I, U BB 0 CK, Tex been doing. 1t ·s a question of keeping your image (UPI> -The premiere going the right way.'• of Roy Rogers' first mov- Q: We understand Bobby Vinton can't read ie role in 20 years will be music and never learned to play an instrument. held Feb. 5 near the West Right? Texas ranches where A: Wrong. Bobby majored in music and, being •"Mackintosh and T.J " an admirer of Mitch Miller, learned to play the was filmed. oboe. The star of 87 movies Q: I read a quote in an old Variety In wbJcb Bob· returns in a contem by Vinton said, ••Stnging on TV or in the movies is porary western filmed like singing with botb fingers In my ears." Now that on two 1 arge ranches be's a replar on TV bas he changed Ilia mind? east of Lubbock -the A: Obviously. 6666 and the Pitchfork Q: Jn bis resurgence u a top singing star, has Rogers' co·star in the Bobby Vinton a lot of fan clubs going for him? Did film is Clay O'Brien, who any remain from bis earlier days? . . was born six ye~s after A: We don't think so. He feels he bas an entire Ro·~ers' last picture. new generation of fans applauding him, the old ones "Sein of Paleface." SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES FOR THIS GREAT FAMILY PROGRAM -GENERAL ADMISSION $2.50 CHILDREN UNDER 12 $1 .00 The Lile and Times of· jGj· .. ~·:~-···1 GRIZZLY ADAMS Color by Deluxe .. The True story of a man exiled In the wilderness and how he learns to survive 1 3 DAYS OF THE CONDOR AOBEAT REDFORD FAYE DUNAWAY PLUS "NO WAY OUT" edwards BRISTOL CINEM~ ..-StOl ., M.AC.ilTMUll $40-7444 ·~ •• ., l .. I 8 J8 DAIL V PILOT TV Newsman Elvis Hands Out Cadillac From Wart.-Services lfol•k singrr •:tvllt Pre lt-y bought a $13,000 C:t<hll~•l' for ~1 tl'lt•v1:.10n ne-ws man beca11se he liked '"'story Hbout his gift of hLx ury sedans to four police offi cwb "It 's brt>n quite a day Just a ball/' satd Don Kinney of :.t.1t1on KOA-TV "Ile said he liked the way I read t hl' story. It 's~· Cadillac Seville." Presley. va<'atloninj? at the ski resort of Vail, wbert' President und Mrs. Ford spend Christmas, heard Kinney on th<• "Dt•nver Today" morning s how tell of his gifts of luxury ('a.rs to !our police of· f1cials. IGnney enrlt.•d his story with ... , wouldn't mind an economy t•.:1.r ... • First Lady RE-tty Ford joined m a television salute to singer Pe arl Railey, who was given a "sur· pnse'' farewell a::. she prepares to end her stage <.·areer this " eek Mrs. Ford Jomt'd a number of celebr1t1es on the te)ev1sion s how "Take It From Here" who ~alhered m Washington for the taping of an hour -long program honoring Miss Railey It was shown thls morning in the Washington • Priee Controls Harris Tells Taxing Plan ' WASHINGTON <AP> -Democratic presiden· tial candidate Fred Harriis advocates price ei>nlrols on the oil, steel and automobile industries as the way to fiatht inflation while he seeks to break up the nation's largest corporatjon. Harris contends that America's largest in· dustrles have monoPQlistic power, and says he would seek to split them ~art tor the sake of economic competition and to curb coru;umer prices. He claims that heightened competition would put to work marketplace forces that would curb prices and lead to more production and more jobs. HARRIS PROPOSES A MIX OF antitrust ac· tion, government price ceilings and public service jobs as his answer to economic woes. The plan is couched in generar, theoretical terms. It does not include s pecific revenue-raising proposals lo cover projected spending to create jobs or the other economic programs he wants to introduce. . . Harris said if he becomes president he will ask PUBLIC NO'ftCE ,,CT•nout •uttMSSS NAM• ITATaMaNT TM ftllowlnt ,..._ I~ OCll,. butl· _ .. : l'RO,.l!SSIONAL INCOMI! TAX Sl!ltVICe AHO INVl!STM£NT COUNSaLl.INO, JUU M.,9'*11• ,_., .. Ml.._. v~. CA '1.,~ Deftltl Kt¥111 •n11M11, u.i2 S.... Dr.,M1..i.V1tje,CAft67S Tiii• bualne" ts <OfldlKted by an,,... dlvlclwl 0.lll•l ICt,,ln 9'•""4111 Tl\lt tle'-11t w•t ti~ wlttl Ille °"""" ,, .... Of or ... ~ ~y on "1C11TIOUS ausu11au KMIAE STATaM•NT The IOltowlne •-• .,, Oolf'9..., l'aS& .,. l"RO SCRIBE. 1ot11 c.hetTy SI I.Oii Atemll01, CA '0710 Honl9 Rulll Wiicox ..... -..ion. ~.CA~ $1Wtrtn Mefle CM11\lln, 10»1 CM roiwoocs. s1 ... 1on, CA Tiii\ but4neu la onctucted by • 91Mrel pertntrshlP NO.V.R.WllCOll • Tiii• st•tefNnl Wtl Iliff wltfl 11'9 QDunty Cl9"1 of Or•n'" ~,., .,. ~:rt.ltlS Jenwry "· "" ...... l'JU14 f>\lbll\lwd on1t11t Cot\t O.lly Piiot PubllsMd Of'e!IOt Coast Dally PllOI., DK :s1 1t1hndJen.1, 14, 21, 191' Jen. 21, 21 MCI Ftllf'lo!My <I, 11, lf7' . • "'91-Jj . 2.40>16 1----------- PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Congress for the power to control prices -but not I----------F'ICTITIOUS 8USINE!SS NAME STATEMENT wages . Government figures show that between November 1973 and P UBUC NOTICE Tiie follow•"!! persons ue cloh-o bull neun fllCT1TIOIU IUSINE.SS LENN Y'S EUROPEAN CUISI NE NAME SftTUHNT AND LOUNGE. 1~5 Harbor 81Vd .• areli Pearl ha d launched into an She's Competing intervlew on the show and was . . . . , November 1975 the Consumer Price Index rose by 20.3 percent while average hourly wages TM followlnt perJOns ••• cloOrlQ busl-Cmla Mesa, CA 926U neues: L<!Ollard Anthony Renda, 1204 Oo1t· SAIL UNLIMITED, 35302 0.I nleRd.,Newport 8 .. cll,CA926eO Ol>lsPO St'"'· Oen• West Merine, Karin l1t9ram Renda, 2204 OoMlr expressing her fondness for Mrs. L1.sa Regina Cro1set.te, Miss Sa~ Cleme~te, Ford. when the First Lady made will be among 50 girls competing for title went up 16.1 percent. Harris claims those statistics are evidence that wage controls would not be needed. Dene Point. CA '2629 Rd ~wport Beach CA 92660 Gery Robert McAvoy, 2390 Htrbol' Thi\ business h c~nducted by •n In 81\ld. #2m.CostaMese,CA92626 dldual ht>r appearance on stage. of California Citru~ Queen at annual Celvln Teylor Swlher 11, 11$1 Leonard A. Renda a.-Vista AWi .. Coron•, CA '1120 llis statement was filed witll !hr • Orange Show in San Bernardino March 11. BAILEY Gov. Meldrim Thomson of The 20-year-old brunette enjoys snow This bu1lneu Is conducted by • nty Cler• ol Orange County on l'Mfel !Nlrtnenlllp J1111uary 16, 1976 New lfamp::.h1 r<' 1s dc>manding $375,000damages for skimg, scuba diving and volleyball in her , libel fr<'m nt.>w::.man Kt>vin Cash, author of the book spar e limf>. YET UNDER ms PLAN, HAltlttS there would be no limits on what unions could de· mand in wages from industries whose prices would be government·controUed. Gwy R. Mc.Avoy FSm• TN• st*-t wH fllecl with Ille PubllWd Oranoe Cout Daoly PUOI, OMlftty Clerk of Or•nge County on Jen 21 2hnd Fel> ~ 11 1916 "Who the tll'll r-. William Loeb?" ---=--------------------~23. lt1S . ' . ' ' 1''2-16 F50tQ .'\ suit filt>ct 1n Hillsborough County <N H l Superior Court ;1lleges Cash libeled the governor by stJtmg he '"took with him cN tain a<'counts" of a law book publishing firm for which ht-had \4(1r!<ed, "hen T homson mo .. ed to :"Je .... Hampshire to found }us ov. n pubhshmg company Thomson, whose name ap- Pt':.lrs m Cash's book about tht' hfe of William Loeb, publisher of the ~tanchester Union Leader . said the book li be led him. held T"oMS.ON him up to pu blic scorn and ridi<'ul e and 1nJured tus personal good name and professiona l reputation. • Henry Ford II, 58, board chairman of the Ford Motor Co . was r<'pcu1t'<i in good condition in the coronary <'Me unit of St Joseph Mercy Hospital in Ann Arbor. Mich .. where he underwent diagnostic tests &. company spokesman said there was no con· n<><'tion betwe«.•n Ford 's hospital stay and a planned business tnp lo mamland China that was to be~m next week with stops first 10 New Zealand, Australia and the Ptul.J ppmes · We are :?01 nj! ahead with those plans for the tnp, .. the spoh.C'sman :-.a1c1 .. Pn .. ~ident Ford's half brother s ays the national news med1<1 <.lre trying to paint Ford as a stum blebum to hurt his political future. ( I~ lie "Bud" King, a Cookeville {Tenn.) tire store ow ne r, said he's • J tired of being "Mr. Nice PE()PI E Guy·· and is going to let -' "' r eporte rs know how he • reels a bout criticism of Ford. He tol d th<' Nash ville Banner reports that the President 1s (')u msy are untrue. He said some of Ford's f('('C'nt stumbles were due to an old football inJ Ur}'. .. Wht>n President Ford chose revolutionary Tom Paine to quote 10 h.is State or the Union address. he del.J ghted ~ group that seldom finds delights iA gov- ernment Thf' Peopte·s Ricentennial Commission, a non· ~ovem .nental oq~aruzation involved in social ac· ttvist and anti" ar causes. lauded Ford for quoting Pame m his Monday night address. Ford ·•ud. "To paraphrase Tom Paine, 1975 "as not a year for summer soldiers and sunshine patriots .. He also said that "common sense" calls for a reali~t1c approach to the nation's problems · Common Sense"' was the title of Paine's first important pol1t1cal treatise, published 200 years ago this mlmth It v. J s one of the major for'ces leading the American c·oloniPs to decl are their indepen· den<'e from Grt'<1 t Rnlam • Los Angelt>'i City Councilman Dave Cun- ningham calls him "one of the heroes of the com-. munity ·· But Robert PortPr views his accomplishments -bringing frN• Chri:-;tm as trees, toys, decorations ;md food to the homl':. of 100,000 poor people -more modestly. "It ·s not me It's all the other people who really aredomJ!it l 1u~t 'shove' a little." Porter, "ho is crippled and blind from diabetes, startE'd the holiday program in 1969 in south central Los Angeles • T he Hom.<' voted hy voice lo authorize $25,000 for creation Of ::i bust of the late Martin Luther King Jr. and to inst al! it m the nation's Capitol as the first black person ever s o honored. The m easure, which still needs Senate ap- proval. noted Kmg's contribution to the civil rights mcwement and his Nobel Peace Prize The Houst' Administration Committee, which drafted the bill. s aid the tribute was fitting .. because of Or . King's pro· minence in American history and becaust' of all the black Americans who have done so much to contribute to thi.~ coun· try's greatness, not one is now honored amon~ the 681 works of a rt in the Ctlpitol." • KINO With a vow to forge "a "'ork1ng partnership" with all citizens, Charles C. "(1111" Ftnch became Mu.s1ss1 pp1·s 57th llOvernor. F'mce. a 48·year-old Batesville attorney who campaicned last summer as I.he "working man's candidate." prom~ to work !or the development of Mississippi'• human resources and economic growth, but off Pred fews~tfics In his address, no mention was made of the ,.adal issue which once dominated Mtut.sslppl I :J>Olitics • • Prnident Ford appointed author Tay Thom11 • 4f Anrhorut-. Alaska. itnd Carolee Leek, an at· : tomt"y in Overland Patk, Ktn .. to acrve on lbe ·"'Cituens Advisory Councll on the Status of Wom n •· 1 Quake Shakes North Japan TOKYO <U PI) -A strong earthquake was re- corded today in the Pacific Ocean east or Japan's northe rnmos t is land of Hokkaido, causing authorities to issue a short.Jived tidal wave warn- ing. The quake, with a magnitude of 7 on the open- ended Richter s cale, was felt in weak tremors on Hokkaido but there was no damage or casualties. the meteorological agency said. The agency had is- 1-,ued a tidal wave warn-l IN SHORT mg along the island's Pacific Coast but lifted it ..__ ________ _.. about an hour and a half after the quake was re- <'orded at 2 06 a m PST. It said the center of the quake was m the Pacific about 180 miles east of Ne muro, southeastern Hokkaido. Angola Otlnine~ LUSAKA, Zambia <UPI> -Soviet-bacJced forces claimed today to have captured the key supp· ly town of Cela in a major offensive they said bad opt>nt"d up the road to Angola's souU:iern capital of Huambo. Spokesmen fo~ western-backed forces said the attack against Cela had been crushed short of its goal. No CIA \'folatlon WASHINGTON <AP) -Justice Department lawyers have determined that no federal Jaws were violated m the CIA 's assassination plots against foreign leader s. the department's chief spokesman s ays. "They've looked to see if any federal Jaws are applicable" to the activities described by the Senate intelligence committee in its report on CIA death plots las t November, said public information director Robert Havel. "The law has been checked. and there's realJy no federal statute applicable to it," he said. "In the first place, we don't know if anything happened, if anyone was killed·• because of the CIA planning. Con~i Slaoot• Sell CLOVIS. N.M. <UP() -A convicted murderer, rebuffed when he asked his seventh kidnap victim to kil1 him, shot and wounded himself Tuesday in an atte mpt to avoid capture, state police said. Officials said J ohn D. Burton-, 42, who avoided police for three days while crisscrossing northeastern New Mexico, was in fair condition at Clovis Memorial Hospital, where he underwent sur- gery for a gunshot wound in the chest. The former Oklahoma senator, making his second bid for the .Democratic presidential nomina· Nbllll\ed Dr•nve cont Dally Piiot, 1-----------JM.!t. 21end Ftbruery 4, 11, 1971> 237-76 PUBLIC NOTICE tioo, also s aid if be succeeds, his administration F1CT1T1ousaus1NESs all NAME STATEMENT would go after "shared monopolies" by ch enging PUBLIC NOTICE Trw fo11ow1ng penon 1s CIOing bus. them in court and by seeking new antitrust laws. nessH : l • • · OTA -CHEMICAL INDUSTRY He defines a shared monopo y as a situation m fltCT1T1ousaus1Nes.s oF THE AMER ICAS. •m Pa1r1c:e which four or fewer corporations control 70 percent Ro.cl. '*wpor1 ~"'"'·CA92660 NAME STATaMENT Jeffrey Charin Bo sllop, '117 O( an industry. TM followlr19 penon It doing bus!-P9trlceRo..S,Newpo rt 8ucll,CA92'60 He also attac ks oil companies that control nesses: 91"'° gasoll·ne product1"on from the well to the service sta-ROYAL LAWN MAINTENANCE. T111s business is c:onc1ue1eo 1>y.., ln-Mmw. Werner, Hut11lngton Beech. CA dM~I tion pump. Harris contends if different Ci>mpanies ,,.... Jettrey o ... ,,.s a1s11oc> Controll-..a the VariOUS Stage!) Of production, the re· Rlc:herd L. Ros.In. HOO W. This statement W4\ Med wllh llW! ft:\! Wemer,HunOngtonBeec:ll,CA~ Count-; Clerk of Orange County on suiting competition would inevitably drive down T111, Dvll""' 11 concluded by en In-Jtnuery 12 1916 . clvldlNI .. ' "SIJ9' pnces. IUclNtntL. Ros.tes Publlshed Oranoe coast Dally Piiot, • Tllls sttt-t wn tiled with ti. JM. 14, 21. 28, and Ftl>ruerv •. 1976 THE OIL COMPANIES WOULD ALSO be pre-Olullty Clerk of o,.nge County on 161.7, J_,., 14, tt76 vented from controlling production of competing "mu l----------- 1 H · ·d d lb t als ld fllutlllthed Dr•nge c.o.ut Delly PHot, PUBLIC NOTICE fuels such a s coa • ams sa1 , an a o wou Jan.21,21enc1Feb.4, 11, m• 2311-1, tend to lower prices. 1---------- Harris s aid in an interview that there should be 1"1CT1T1ous austNEss a S28·billion tax cut in 1976, but only for individual PUHi.JC NOTICE The foi~:W~:Vs~~!!,~~':irov '*· taxpayers. not for businesses. I ,.ss.s· That would be $15 billion higher than the break .,1dmous aus1111ns·, om~~ ,o: ::2~D, 00 Esnier SL. individual t axpayerS are NAMa ITATEMENT LeRoy H. Grannis & "°"r9'1'1!1 G. g0 tting this year. Harris TMfollowlnopenonstr•clol'l!IMI· Grannis, 5042 Cll•leau. 1rv1ne. CA. , IWSSH: WIOS said he would offset the NEJJ'~Al\'ALYSI~ THE PLANTSMEN . H612 Tllls l>uslnenls<onduct•dl>y•n 1~ b · · hi h Rldgtwooa Cl~I•, El Toro, CA 92630 dlvidual. ('Ut Y 1 mposing g er Robert Cll.,lts Trown, 620"'1 LeRoy H Gt-•nnls taXeS On large COrpora· 0rdlld,Qwoneclt1Mer,CA.9'162S This staleme1tt WU flled 'Wiii\ Ito. tions and On the Wealthy, EuoeM Y. Hlt80, UO El Rty. NO County Clerk of Orange COi.iniy on 12, l"ount81n V•lley, CA. 92708 Janultry 2 1976 but neither he nor his advisers COuJd Spell OUt Tiiis t1111lneu Is conducted by a ' FStCl74 spt>cific measures or their potential revenues. 01Nr•1 oertn«shlP. Pu111;s11ec1 oranC)t' cout D••IY P11ot. "The tax cut. .. ought to be coupled with a tax TNs .~=~~~·~~! ~~.:" ... ,,.. u. J.., __ ry1, u .21.11• ms il-7• increase for the Nelson Rockefellers and the J . Paul QMinty Clerll ol Or•nge County Oii ----------- Gettys, not now paying their full share of the dues," -'-"''· "" l"s•• ' he said. · Pu110S11eC1 Or9n9t eo.st D•ll Y Piiot, ----------- But the Harris camp had no details. Jan"'9ry 1•· 21• 21.•nd Fe1><utry'·1~~. PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STAT£MEHT TM foll-•ng person Is doing bus< "WE HAVE ONE·THIRD IDLE PLANT ness;~~DER HORN. ,.,0 A Newport capacity, primarily because consumers don't have PUBLIC NOTICE 11ou1emd.eostaMua,cA enou0 h money." Harris s aid .. "A tax cut is . KentRoberts,J11tG11>ra11er,em1a "' ff "ICTITIOUS aUSINESS Nina CA particularly necessary now to o set new price in-NAME STATEMENT Thi~ business is 1>e1no con0~1ec11>y creases which otherwise would take money out of ,.,. touowino person "d91rov bid· "'1ne11v1dua1 -es: I Kent Rol>erh jhe economy and further SlOW recovery·'' TECMA, lt<llS Sendc:eslle lJ'I., This stalemenl filed wolll tne County Harris said temporary price controls on some Huntington e .. ch. CA '2641 O•rlt: °' Dr•nlJll Counly on Januery "· . . . . W1111am Osor Mont90mery, l'MIS "" industries are needed until pnce-competition 1S Senc1ust1e Ln .. Hunllnvton Buell, CA 0stff,Mlllarc1&suct1m•" restored. ,,.. A1ton1er111t uw "In our economy," he said, "µnemployment 11!:'~ IMlllnes' is mnouc•ec1Dy..i 1"" :=:!.!~m°' does not tend to bring down prices, it tends to force wi111em o. Monteomery ,514. 54 them up ... Because of 'monopoly control, in· This Sl•tement wu "'" with t11e Publistwd orange cout Dally P1101 County Clttk of Or•nge County on Jtt1 21 2tMdFeb • 11 1976 · dustries such as the automobile industry are al-o.c.ntiwl1, ms · · · • · FS1t14 %31·16 lowed to act to the detriment of both workers and PUbllllled Ortn99 co.st o.uy Pltot, consumers and, in the face of falling demand, lay Jen.1, u,21.21, 1t1' lt-76 sul'EtttoRs-~t'noFTHE j off workers and reduce production, but make up for STATE 01" CALI 'ORN•A "DR lost profits by increased prices consumers must THE couNn ol' <>RANGE PUBLIC NOTICE .... A ... na ... pay." NOTICE OF HEARING 0, f th .1. fltCTtTIOUS •USl~SS PETITION FOR ~ltOIATE D' WILL Harris said his restructuring o e economy AND ,oR LETTERS TESTAMEN· h l t H NAMIESTATIEME T TARY.,.OAUTHOIUIATIONTOAO. would eventually lower t e unemp oymen rate. e °"" followlllQ s-son is c1o1no tiuM· M 1 " 1 s TE R u N 0 E R T" e says that as the economy reacts to increased com-ntSs;.:~IFORNIA FACTORY STORE. INDEPENDENT AOMINISTltATION petition, prices will decline. In addition, he says, ms1c.minocap1str•no.CAw1>1s OF&STATESACT. consumers will have more spending money in hand Th0tn.n Josep11 s1s10. Jr .. A$<1 Alte o!:.~ of PEARLE STURMTHAL, be ft t H · · ed de d Vlst•W•y,Le9unaBeech,CAW651 NOTICE IS HERE BY GIVEN thal Cause 0 ax CU S. ams Says lnCreaS man This business Is conducted by art In-EVA MOERKE llas rn~ IMrelll d Ptll for lower priced COnsumer products will lead to fo. clivlcluelThomlK J. Sisto, Jr lion for Probet~ Of Will 1nd for luu.tnc.e Creased prodUCtiOn and more jobs, This ll•tament Wff t11"4S with tlle of ltlte~ Testamentary lo ll'lf! Ptlo· County Clerk of Oren9t County on tloner and Aull\Orozalion to Admi nister FOR THOSE . STILL UNEMPLOYED, Harns Drttg Probe· would establish a permanent reservoir .of two WASHINGTON CAP) -A half-year federal million locally conti;olled public service jobs m .Jenue ~ Ille 1nci.pencltnt Admlnls!r•tlon ry '· 1976 f'JIW of Estates Act refuenct to Whlcll I~ Publllfted <>r111111 Coe1t O.Uy PlloC, mede for furtlltr parllcul•rs, ana 111a1 Jen. w,21,•,enctFeb.4, 1976 160-71> the time and plate of llurlno tllt..,,... probe of a major drug manufacturer s hows that health care, day care centers, transportation and "sloppy" research techniques may mean that environmental clean-up projects at an estimated lwls been 9tt for Fel>ruery 10, 1'76. at -----------10:00 a.m., In the courtroom°' Oep.art ment No. 3 of s•ld court, •t 700 Ovoc Cent., ~Ive West, In lhe City at s.tlla ---; .... CT .... l-T-IO_U_S_8_U_5_1N_E_S_S __ , ~;:I~:~;;: 1976 millions or Americans are ta.king drugs that are not annual cost of $6.4 billion. completely safe. "We ought to commit the country PUBLIC NOTICE Initial findings of a $500,000 investigation cf employment and mean it." he said. G.D. Searle & Co., the Food and Drug Administra· . . . 1 . 'th t ·f· to full NAMa STATlMtENT WILLIAM Ii. SIJOHN, The fol towing perlOI\ Is doing bUll· County Clerk ,.,, es: LEWIS & LEWIS tion said Tuesday, show that research data sub-The Harns. eco~nuc P an is w1 ou spec1 ic milted to the government were riddled with inac· • proposals for financing the measures he wants to curacies that have led the agency to require new take. tV.RARI BOOKS, JStl ~nn Sl., Ahen'8Y1•tL..ew lrvllw, CA '1714 -Loeg .. Kii alwd. l!llyellou H•rtrl, Utl FeM St., Swtf1 Gelt CA tttlO lrvlnt,CA'2114 . AttwMys~: jletitlontr labeling prohibitions for some drugs and to keep For example, Harris bas no proposal for financ- ot.bers off the market until further testing can be ine his jobs program, saying only that revenues will' made. increase when the economy picks up. This bullnHS Is <on¥ted by en If!-PubllShed Ora1199 Coast D•lly Piiot clvl-... E . .._,.,, J8'1.. 21. n. 21. 1'76 234-1& Tiiis W11tmen1 •es filed with the Coullty Cler~ ot Orenoe County on PUBLIC NOTICE For the Record .............. , •• rrklfje ...... , ..... ,y. S.._,, P•UllN end ... ,old J. Sl..,,_M, J.t<ll. l and "9netope T..,,,,u, O.llOf'•ll•ndTllomes Smllll, Oorlncle 8. end Robe<1 AIH• . .,.,., She ...... l<tlth •lld !lMI JMl.ttt S.ll•rcl, 8rucealld S:.,Mft G. P9oc>IM, Neflty •nd Otlt D•vld ""'II>. Q.eylt Allnend MkhHI GlllM1 SM.tlwOl!d, Joel\ AINI,. 4Hld llllcfl.tnl R- l"le<:UM ... I', ANI C • .,,. Ctr! H OWl'Mtl, (OllMI\ Meri. 1111ct AIH· Mlllfr ,, l'lnt191t,51\1rleyL MdWeyMS McCalfrte, ltOlft I(. •nd 8•'1*•M UI...,, 0.~ M.tr14111 eftO -"*'ti.a ..... .>tMI"', .H.-M MO ltld\enl IE.. INtt«, Olffl&IM I . M4I ...... . l'WfM!ltlw, ....... c. ~ ... . ...... u. -~ H, """ te.tMe1'I '-Y'lt 0.-ey. AtffM It. aM MlrtM .. (Non, ,,_ ... 11114 MicMel f'ltltff•ld. elllle .... ,. MkNe4 ~"' ~11111e.-es.1.,e9NW.tt, .......... JMll f .eftlt lt4*1f1 4 "'-'91,l!lllMMJl~IA_.. -~~CM.iMl4~,...... ........ ~1. • ...-~I(. ~IMl'l,.._,.L,8'"' .. rnlte I. Hlllwl.~•---o.¥.-~ _.,..&. JM'e Martl11 ltllQ C"'911 AM ·~; bl• .. A. .,...,,,....'"' DKembtrJ1, 1t7S ----------- ll'S1ftS Cl' Hot Harris maintains that over-all there would be f'l*IWdOr ... eo.st o.uy Pliot, HOT1uo,.1NT£,.T10Nro d h. JWl.7,14,21,21,1'76 »76 CRIEATESIECURtTYINTEltEST little net increase in Ceder al expenses un er is pro-<seu. •m -'101 u.c.c.1 """'als '--cause higher spending would be offset by Nolle• Is 11er eby oiven 10 "'" ....,.. UC PUBLIC NOTICE Creditors Of DENNIS s. KL.ARIN •ftd increased tax revenues as the economic situation ROBERT tc. VAN ANDA. oeA R10<Y improves and people get back to work. •---,.-1-CT_t_Tl_OV_s_•_U_S_IN_IE_S_S __ RICI< SHAW'S CHINESE GALLEY NAM•ITATSM•NT Otbtor,w11ose busln•U•ddressb Im THAT IS A COMMON THEME" AMONG Democrats, who ba84J it on estimates that each oae percent of unemployment costs tbe'government $15 billion in lost revenues and increased social wetra.re costs. But that theme remains a theory without proof ln practice. And comervatlve economists alonf with Republican critics say job spending programs like those Harris advocates would not pay for t~mulvts but would 1lmp.ly rekindle high infla- tion. The fllllewl,. ..-la dolno .._, "°"'Arthur Blvd., City Of 1rvlne, eoun -·· ly of Ort1'199, Sl•I• Of C.llfornl•, tllel e HOWA•D J ~STLt COMPANY i«urlty lnltttst Is ebout to be ci.tted ,,._....,.T°rMUl.,lrlllne,CAt211S by Debtor •nd grMted to SANTIAGO "-"* J . KHU., t/6-5equo1e llANK, • C•llfornle corporellon, TNl\A ,,..,.._ ~tVIS Sec.urtd P•nY1wtloset>us1nesuo1nn ,...._-.,...·ta COflllu<ted 1ry .-i If!-!~SU£utl"lrstst.,Cltyotfustln,Coun-tl~I 1•YOfOr11nge,StlttOfC•llfornle. ""'entJ Kestle The Ol'OOerty, In ~rtl, fn wllltll Tlllt ...__nl. wes fUed wlCll tfla Se<wlty l~rett will ii. creetto h Ila ONMr (ltl"tl tf Ot'MM (qunty 4lft luru, tQulpment, furniture •nd .lenwryl. "" lumltt\l119uf Dtblor w11ow 111rt1ness Is ~""' ._ et Ol!NNtl $. KLARIN end fll*lt'IM Orentt C..11 Deity Pl._ :t::.rtw·~A~H~:~~:a:A~~c:.; '*'· '• 14.11, II, 1W. MCI !Kettel _, 11,U Me<A'""" _,,.. ,..,. IOtT flf ,,.,,.., -•Y of °'Mtt· ~ -----------101Cellfotftl•. .,..,. NOTICE The •fortsalcl -.curny ''WKlltll On energy, Harm said, "By Jaw, we ought to ..-v.aLIC Wlf111e ~~"°"or., uw lb t lb t bit n i-no l ~ean • ••• .. , .. .,.,.IAI,..,, ,.,,,., 9111111• say a . ese au omo e com~an ... ~ o .... "'11TtoU•HS1••• .-. ..,.. "°"" 1• uJ ••film make or ten new cars which averace less 22 ...,...,, .. T ... lfT St.. T••lfl,cafi1orn1• mlles to the daUon." n. ~..,.... 11 ...,._ ....._ ,.,.,.,,,"-totties.a.ni.,..,. • ... I ty, Ml ...... ,.U Mme' 4lf'd ~-bu U lbould take U&JI INMIAAHCe AOUicY, llMd ity "-Debt# fot tM PMt ....._ He said a pu c t'J>tl'QCOTPOra ~ _.. .. " ..... , .... ti ..... ....,.. r .. n •••1 O"Af4T AYINUI overt:• developme-.ntof MWIOUl'CeSof enera --.CA.--tHYt!UM•NTI O•A RICKY ._.....,_--. .. ,Hett•· 1t1a<1MAW'\Qfoca10A1..1..1EY. Ukeg ermalandsolarpower. ...,.,,._, .... INm.~.,... .. °"*'"-"Yu.1916 utmues should not be allowed to encour11e ln· ~ .. c...-..c "• s=t~:=.~ duatrtal us.era to wute electridty by tlvlDI dJ.I; ,..... ••: ;.~ ,,..;,. .-111:.,_ i.a ~ic:~~i..m count• to larte customers. be 1aJd. ~ c-... ., 0r-.. CewMy •-1n1AOO a.wte .......,., t, m. '--DJMV'CwkM (8dit.or'I Jiot1: T,. fl t1w /oUrl.h fft a ~ ol orl~I "" "-.. .. ._ l'tnt""" <OJ--t t.t--"-·-....., ... PHO&°" 1~ ......... .,,..... CMtl Olllty ....... ,...~,.... thal ..,UI ~r /Torn ,...,.,.. • ·-'" " ... -. i ,_,.,M.tt ......... ,....,_.,~ ~ ....... ~ c... o.iiy.,. 11-DrmoeraftOpt~~.) Ult --'w lt,ttn ,...~ ' I I ' ... I '· • 7S In· ,.. on ,. 1S E I& n n 76 • ' v I ly '· at 1- k le 76 . • I ~ I I . -DaYs J Nunibe·red for Requi~ed Ems?·~,....0:_~:_~~:_ry 2_1 19 _ 76 __ 8_y _::;,_:,:_·~:~_,:~:; By THOMAS D. ELIAS Pressure ror t hange has been buildlng ever :;~nee the 19?2 court decision that compelled en· v1ronmental impact reports tot virtually every new dev~lopment ln California larger than a single- fam1ly homt>. . This year, for the first time, it appears there will be som~ changes made -and at the urging of the professional planners who must themselves write and ev~luate the reports. The changes wiU at-tempt to mitigate both the delays and added COS· ~--:::S~O'.":'UT=H_,E_R_N __ ts caused by EI Rs. CALIFORNIA PART OF THE\. FOCUS ~ M 0 V E M E NT F 0 R ____ ...;:_.=.__...; streamlining environmental impad reports is the result of a study made for the state Assembly's Local Government Committee. which found that EIRs. cost .betw.een $00 million and $150 million a year m Cahforma. Part comes fro~ a rear-old group of planners, the st~te Assoc1at1on of Environmental ~ofess1onals CAEP>, whose 500 members think it's time for some changes in the California Environ- mental Quality Act which mandates the EI Rs. • "mln1·1mpact report" prot'ess ror projects which involve onJy minor impacts. • Either a change tn the law it&elf or a change in the enforcem ent ~uidelines issued by the state Resources Agency would be needed to cut c06ts and :$treamline the .Process. Guideline changes, at the very least, are m the offing, with the recommenda- tions ofthe AEP playing a major role in them. CHANGES IN THE LAW AND guidelines will probably encounter little resistance from environ· mentalists as long as they involve only "minor" im- J>aCts. And a move to ease some CEQA require- ments could take much of the steam out of a planned effort by developers to get the act repealed eoUrt>ly. Even CEQA 's most ardent supporters agree it's about Ume some changes were m ade. The present guidelines were handed down hastily by former Gov . Ronald Reagan·s re&ources secretary Norman l.ivermore. in 1972. He was forced to act quickly in response' lo a court decision. ~ut the present resources secretary. Claire Dt>dnck, can revise the regulations to make them more workable and those changes will come early this year. analyzt"d earUer and shorten the EIR~. ma)ong them more understo.ndable · · .. STREAMLINING THE PROCESS IS definite- ly a desirabltt goal," notes Carlyle Hali, the Los Angeles lawyer whose lawsuits twice have caused extensions or CEQA's imp~ct reporting rt•quire mt"nts. "But 1 Bon 't think any attempt to weaken CEQA will succeed -just as J don't see any effort to strengthen it succeeding." What's coming is a sideways movement, with new gujdelines that exempt more minor projects from the requfrements and a possible restructuring of the way reports are written. These <'hanges were called for by the AEP, most or whose members are environmental officers at various levels of government. Understandably, the government officers alsp want fewer El Rs writ ten under direct contracts with developers THE PLANNERS MAJNTAIN THAT MORE s hould be made under agreements financed by de nlopers but s upervised by the government agen- cies which eventually have to evaluate them anyway. This, they say, would eliminate many of Ute "sweetheart" El Rs now beir.c. •vntten. . - 1 . I • The associatio~ has. t!ied since August to have the EIR proeess s1,mplif1ed and to set up a new . "One of our big ideas in this is to streamline the process," says Norman Hill, a top Dedrick aide. "Just about everybody is pushing to get projects But neither II all nor the AEP is naive enough to believe that more chang~ in CEQA will eliminate opposition to the law. "Don't let it bolhtt you. I go through I.his all throu&h the basketball season." Grandma Not So Special By DR. STEINCROHN Dear Dr. Stelncrobn: I disagree with your con· clusion that Grandma didn't need tranquilizers because she was too bu.5y to take them. Millions of farm wives c,ontinue to slop the hogs, feed the cattle, chop wood, cook three big meals k>r great big families, w ash , iron. mend, clean, plus driv· ing a tractor, cbauHer- ing the pickup truck to town myriad times a week for parts a nd sup- plies for the farm opera- tion, plus keeping all the records. accounts and books necessary in a suc- cessful farm business to- day, plus filling out the tax form s, actively working ' for a better community, and doing other things. THE ONLY difference between Grandma and her modern-day coun- terpart is that electricity and automobiles enable us to work 18 hours a day, whil e Grandma could turn off t h e kerosene lamps and go to bed at 8 or 9 with no reel· ings of guilt. I a m s ur e that Grandma was never re- quired to spend four or five hours taking a load of cattle to market. With t>lectricity turning night into day, we can scrub floors, wash. and sew in· to the wee hours of the morning, thus recaptur- ing the time we lost dur· ing the day performing t he umpteen tasks Grandma never had to do. F RANKL V, DR. Stein· <'rohn, I a m sick of read- ing about what a great old gal. Grandma was and how tough and hard her life was compared with ours today. At the same time, we are fed a constant diet of how dif. ficult our husbands' lives have become -and how arduous. Nobody ever writeS" about the hard life Grandpa had -about his 12-hour work day. How h e c hop ped wood, hitched up the wagon, hauled water, handled the family finances, at- tended the town meet- ings and helped govern his community, read the Rible every night, took the family to church, etc. IF THE TRUTH be raced, our modern-day conveniences have done more to alleviate the lives of men than of women. The husband's manual labor consists of pushing t he button o start the car and turning the dial on a TV set. Incidentally, as hard as I work, J don't take tra nquill!ers, vitamin pills, or aspirin. -Mn. s. / CO MMENT : I'm almost convinced, Mrs. S., that Grandma bad it easy. Yet, in all fairness, I wish I could hear her aide of the atory. (OUTDOOR ) A bre•th of frHh •Ir. • c-In the ) DAILY PILOT 3 5 • CARPET, PADDING AllD INSTALLATION FOR ONE LOW PRICE! YOUR CHOICE OF WAFFLE OR FOAM PADDllG • 1ST QUALln UME llAID UIPETS AT LOW DISCOUIT PllCIS • SIUCT FIOM THE LAIGEST CAIPET lllVllTOIY II THE WEST • EVERY IOU OF CARHT IS MARKED AID PRICED FOR YOUR SHOPPllG COIVEllllCI • ALL LAIOI UICOIDITIOIALL Y GUAIAITllD DUPONT NYLON TRI-COLOR SHAG 100% DUPONT NYLON PILE. RICH. DEEP. DURABLE SHAG IN BRIGHT. THREE COLOR DESIGNS. 100% CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE PERFECT FOR KITCHENS. DENS. 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YOURSELFERS FREE-wnH MINIMUM PURCHASE OF 12s REMNANT SILF ADHlllYI DOUBLI FACI VINYL TAPI I %"x•2' WHILI THIY LAii! • lo.M-to IAYS, IO tmllST • (OIVl•llT ClllfT PlAIS All UR RIMS AYAIUIU • U ll FOi flH SltOP-AT-llOMI SBVKI • VISIT OUI CVSTOM HAPllY •AllllllT NO. HOLLYWOOD VENTURA WHITTIER LONG BEACH MONTCLAIR ..FOUNTAIN VALLEY EL CAJOK 7007 L8Uf'et C.nron 25011. M•ln ltrMt 15913 !. Whlttter II~. 3008 Bellftower Blvd. 4189 Hott Boulenrd 15145 H•rbor Blvd. 2'7 I . M•tn It. Blvd. -112·2200 (IOS) 941·5041 M S·01t1 421-1134 (114) t 2t-3517 (114) 139-1700 (1'14) 44CM2'2 HOLLYWOOD TORRANCE PASAD~NA CANOGA PARK COVINA W. LOS ANGELES NO. CALWOANIA LOC AT10N& • CAMPHLL • UN CARLO• 1122 Vine ltre« 423t Artnl• Blvd. 2tl0 1 . Colorec:IO l wd. 21 038 Sherman W1~ 280 E. Arrow Highway 10525 Venice Blvd. • MILLIAA! • SAN FlltANCllCO 412.;f2'2 542·ffH sn.1too 347-2S34 ttl-4471 H t -1510 •MT. YtlW . ( .., I I 8 J 2 DAILY PILOT Wedn!!d!y. Jenuary 21, 1978 Parents Lose Bid to· Free· Son From Moon Colt ~ NEW YORK ''W PI) -Mark Goodman, a disci· -plt' of Un1f1t>allon Chureh founde r Rev. &Jn Myung Moon. re mained behind the walls of bis church while his mother and uncle, ch arged with abducting him. were behind bars Goodman's mother . Mrs. Fay Goodmao, 42, and h1::. uncle. Milton Mosk, 46. both or San Fran· <.'isco were ht•ld sn lieu of $5,000 bail at the Tar· ryto~n. N. Y .. Jail. They were arrested in an al· -, LISTERINE ANTISEPTIC r or general oral hygiene, bad breath, mmor cuts. 32 OL bottle ORAL B TOOTHBRUSHES ~ Firm bristles for thorough cleaning: Adult size .1---.DJ I : 69C · KERN'S STRAWBERRY PRESERVES 2-1.b. Jar . SWEET 'N LOW SUGAR SUBSTITUTE Witlloft Cyclamates. Plcbts " ,. I l\ leged attempt to remove the youth from Moon's had left home and Jolned the Unification church. Tarrytown headquarters.. PATRI AND A WOMAN IDENTIFIED only GOODMAN WAS FOUND AT THE Hawthorne .Motor Inn ln Mount Pleasant on Sunday along w1th Patrick and Miss Socks, according to Aiden Barry, another church •Pokesman. ALSO CHARGED WITH UNLAWFUL im· prisonment of the 19-year-0ld Goodman was Ted Patrick, apparently retained to "deprogram" the teen·aaer o! bis belief in Moon's sect, and four other men who took part in the alleged abduction. Patrick bas been involved with several at· tempts by parents to "deprogram" children who Miss Clairol HAIR COLOR BATH Covers Gray Completely ! 2oL ggc NORFORMS FtMltlNE DEODORANT SUPPOSITORIES Each sealed 1n sanitary toil. J.....--~ :f~2's99c Johnson's Baby Shampoo Excellent for adults ~~ 1.19 AD PllCES Pl£Y&ll: m. JAN 21 TJm¥ SAT. .wt. 24 'IMt.lillfl!Wt •ea SHOP 7 DAYS A WEEKI t.3' AM TO 1:31 PM •-SAT. 11 AM Tl 7cl0 PM S09I. as Sandra Saeks were re~ by Mount Pie ant, N. Y., police on $100 ball. Tbe charge agai.nat them, unlawful lmprisonment .. ls a misdemeanOl'. Goodman was achedllled to tell bis story of the incident at a news conference at Unification Church headquarters, 4 W. 43rd St., but the conference was canceled because Goodman was "exhausted," a church spokesman said. Barry said Mosk was visiting Goodman at the Tarrytown estate Moon maintains, and took his newphew to lunch at a restaurant in Tarrytown. Goodman said that after lunch he was grabbed by four men while the uncle stood aside. ·~u~;r: SPECIAL HOME tAUNDRY SIZE "ALL" DETERGENT Controlled low suds 20-lb. MISS BRECK Lasting Hold NON-AEROSOL HAIR SPRAY Super & Super Unscented Hold F;--?" l YSOL SPRAY DISINFECTANT Kills household germs & erases odors with a clean scent! 1:j: 1.29 • 1 BRECK "CLEAN RINSE" The oil free creme rinse for fresh clean hair. Ant. frotrWKff 8 9 C 8 oz. Bottle VICKS "SINEX" Nasal Spray Help$ blocked sinus open Ip gs, & hay fever sufferers; ~ l J 7 VICKS COUGH SYRUP NOXZEMA MEDICATED SKIN CREAM Hl•DRI TOWELS ) 2-Ply sheets per roll. Pa stel colors. Jumbo roll KAL KAN DOG FOOD Assorted flavors 14 OL Size u ~ n I I I . Tripl ·e Treat's Tempting By CAROL MOORE o.u,~ ........... ._ I "Peking Duck is for such occasions as New Year's and wedding banquets,'' ex- plained Stella Lau Fessler, midway through the masterpiece in a South Laguna · <X>Oking class. "Few Chinese prepare it. at home: many don't even have ovens. lt's easier to order from a specially shop, like you get bagels or · pizza.•• Mrs. Fessler held the large bird by the neck and basted it by hand -"just like washing a baby" -with the tangy glaze. Although the Oriental specialty is a culinary coup, tbe 14 women watching the New York instructor were "fainting" more from hunger than vicarious f aUgue. They knew the preparation took 24 hours but were surprised when Mrs. Fessler pointed to a duck suspended in the back of the kitchen. It had been started the day before so sbe-could finish the piece de re- sistance. · ' lOofferlngs and tbreeaoups. "They start with assorted cold platters and dellc•te atJr fries but tbe guest of honor bas to arrive before the shark fin soup is served. That's a must that shows the host really ~ares." After viewing tbe skills Mrs. Fessler learned ln Hong Kong an<! Paris, the cook- ina students were in total awe. To quote one: "My stove wouldn't survive, much less me. I think 1 '11 resort to fried rice tonight.·• For th~ who are more adventurous, the recipe for Peking Duck is quite slick. Most or the time is used for drying the glue. Be sure to empty drippings several times dur- ing roasting; otherwise they eate humidity. Serve duck skin and meat with Mandarin tortillas, sauce, scallion brushes and cucumber sticks. MANDARINTORTILl.AS 2 cups all-purpose flour 7 ounces boilinf water 2 tablespoons 011 Put nour in mixln bowl and pour in boil· lngwater: · cksorhand.sun- til so ough is r ed; knead for 5 mi r until h Is smooth. Cover dou a da oth and let it set for 30 Shiny with dried glaze, that bird roasted ~~~Wl~,(G~~~~~~~f!2~~[!( as the dio;alnutive visitor told bow to m . .,. r'l ......,.JJ·tl-t'.tilllll»~h~~~~ sure the skin is crisp ;;lbow to o ~ ili entree in a restau t. ~~ "Those in the ow ne-w tWO·W8Y. ~en f ek· Duck: sh~1d. "Th fi st is delecta.Wl~c.yt(Uld only. u can hav meat r-f e w h includes..JU'q).-~~~# from the a ~~~r;~;;;~J~ "The J custard too rich Amid way" CUCWn panime brushes. AlthouM~WltiJ~r"u!~ duck, sh because ing and...:.'.'1P11--11r""'Yi1mCI ytbing intact." Her other clues includ . -Poach the duck to mak s on- tract. Don·t cut the skin or else fat will be released, preventing crispness. -Be sure every part is dry. Force the legs and wings apart with chopsticks for maximum drying. -Corn syrup works best for the glaze. Honey browns too fast; if you do use it, use Jess or dilute it. No sooner had Mrs. Fessler said, "There's not much we can do but look at the duck for awhile,·· than she set about sliver- ing lamb, chicken, shrimp, mushrooms and spinach for other dishes on the menu. "Banquets used to have 27 courses," she said. "Now the Chinese, like everyone else. have cut back on their entertaining to about SAUCE C\r!l~""'ll saucepan. combine Holsin ~llNF~J.IJ.~~~,.,Jll;.tr. soy sauce and sesame oil Li~k:!r.o4or~~~~~fi~~J~,~,~Ot 2 minutes and pour into a bowl eek airy place ay or overnight or until very dry. (Use chopsticks to nd legs spread for maximum Pl"llllMllllPY'IVen to 325 degrees. Set a rack on top of a roasting pan and place duck breast side up on the rack. Roast duck on the lower part of the oven for 1 'h hours, turning twice Remove duck to a large plate or carving board. Cut the crisp skin from the duck into 1'12·incb by 3~inch pieces and arrange, crisp side up, on a plate. When the skin is all re- moved, cut meat into same size pieces, If.a inch thick Arrange on plate. CUCUMBER STICKS Scrape cucumber skin and cut off tip al both ends. Cut cucumber crosswise into two or three 3·inch sections. Remove seeds and cut firm . part or cucumber into lfJ ·inch square sticks. SERVING METHOD Let each guest assemble own portion. Us- ing scallion brush (or spoon), spread small amount of sauce over middle of tortilla. Top with one piece of skin, one piece of meat and scallion or cucumber. Fold over to enclose. Allow about three roll·ups per serving. Stella Lau Fessler arranges chilled buffet trays that might be the first course for a banquet celebrating the Chinese New Year of the Dragon which starts Saturday, Jan. 31. The lettering reads, 'Happy New Year.' Today's food pag~s offer numerous oriental recipes that emphasize speed, freshness and health. . • . i • ' ' : t .'! Food Bills Rising . But • • •• Wednesday. January 21, 1976 American food shoppers, like this mother and son in Chicago, wm get a breathing spell in 1976 after three years of rapid Inflation. C1 By BERNARD BRENNER WASHINGTO~ (UPI) -American food shoppers will get a breathing spell in 197& after three-fears or rapid inflation in their grocery bill!> government analysts predict. Food pnce!t won't stand still, but the increases forecast by Agnculturf' Department economists sound moderate by com- parison with higher costs that forced a 47 percent leap in spending at supermarket checkout counters in the past three years. Here is what the experts say grocery shoppers can expect: -Meats· An upswing in supplies of choice grade beef and a decline in lower-grade beef in the next rew months. This means more special sales and price cuts on high grade roasts and steaks, but fewer bargains in hamburger. Pork, while down from recent price peaks, will remain expensive through midye·ar. ZOOMING EASES -Dairy: The butter shortage which sent prices zooming re. cently will ease as milk production recovers in early 1976 and farm milk prices turn down. Last fall's wholesale increases may keep retail dairy prices edging higher for a while, though. -Eggs: They recently have been selling lower than a year ago and probably will stay that way for the next six months. -<:hicken: Little price change in the months ahead, despite heavier supplies. because pork-often used as an alternative for chicken -remains scarce. With work food reserves so low they cannot take up the slack in supplies, American and foreign consumet s are at the mercy of year-to-year changes in weather conditions that make the dif· ference between bumper crops and poor harvests. . Tbe long-range outlook for food prices, says the Agriculture Department's Kenneth Farrell, is "instability -much of it tied to weather both here and abroad." In the first half of 1976, government specialists expect average retail food prices to advance by a little more than 2 per- cent for an annual rate of 4 to 5 percent, down from 9 percent in 1975and14.5 percent in each of the two previous years. . ME_ATSTILLBEmND BeCfUSe meat and poultry productUon won't keep up with growing consumer demand the January-March increase pro· bably will be slightly faster than in April-June, when farmers are expected to ship bigger supplies of beef, pork and poultry to market. Under this scenario, most price hikes posted in supermarkets from April through June will reflect . normal ~asonal increases for fruits and vegetables plus continued gains in foOd processing. retailing and transportation c-osts. · Even the 4 to 5 percent forecast for 1976 could be trimm~ if grain export sales lag behind earlier predictions, holding down domestic grain prices.and spurring bigger·than·expected produc- tion or beef and poultry. If this happened, January-March food prices would rise oniy fractionally, and consumers might actually see a decUne ln the following three months because off aster·than-expected recovery in pork supplies. I( export sales exceed forecasts, farmers would cut back mut production ln respoMe to hlper 1raln prlc., and eon- 1umet1 wo\lld be hit by sharp retail bikes from April through JUM. Tbt1 rorecatts are based on record 1975 wheal and com crops and a bll soybean harvest, which the government says were- enoqb to cope with unexpectedly larae salea lo the Soviet Union andltill support a recovery ln meat, milk and poultry production. The analyst! arest\ying away from predictions for the second half of UY76 because the outlook depends heavily on production of J978 crope that mostly haven't been planted yet. The so-called 'marketing spread' -all the costs and profits jnvolved in processing, transporting, handling and retailing food -will continue to rise in the · next six months although at a slower rate. - -------- • - . ,,.,, --.. -.. -- Until the early 1970s, heavy reserves of grain enabled economists to make confident food price predictions a full year ahead. Even if the coming year's crop was light, they knew that food supplies could be kept steady by drawing down surpluses. NOT SO PREDICTABLE Now, even after a record 1975 U.S. harvest and forecasts that American wheat, com and soybean reserves will increase ln the coming year. the outlook is different. World grain stocks are expected to decline slightly again in the 1975-76 season, which means that grain prices beginning next summer will depend almost entirely on the outlook for 1976 harvests. . . Last year's giant harvest has sent prices of key grains. in· eluding com and wheat, plunging sharply below year-ago lewls. Tbe price decline, which many angry farmers blame largely on the administration's temporary moratoriums on export sales to Russia and Poland last summer, bas not yet been converted in· to lower meat prices because or tbe normal time lag in livestock production. Present prices for beef, pork. milk and other livestock foods • still largely reflect last year's poor com crop which sent feed prices aoarln1 and led many caUle feeders and hog producers to trim QPerations. Beaida farm prices. the sO-called "marketinc spread .. will be aper atln1 ln 1976 to force some increases tn grocery bllla. That '4 spread includes all costs and pronts lnvolved in proceulna, transportlng. tlandllnc and r tailing food. and they probably will continue to rise in the next&ix months, althouah at a slower rate. Ot1em-.torelementwlllbewqaforfoodmarket1n1wonera. ~tween now and June, contracts covertna about a quarter- mUUon unionized food workers wm expire. the covern.ment aan1 ' and the new t'ontracts are likely to "continue •trooa upwara wage trends ln the food lndustty. • • · • \ - ... I J MeUnda Lane Couple To Wed Former Corona del 1ar High School stu· ents , Melinda Karen ane and Paul Francis ayl. plan to be married ay 22 in El Adobe. San Juan Capistrano. The bride -to-be. who raduated from San iego State University here s he wa s a ember of Chi Omega nd Sweetheart of Sigma hi, 1s the daughter of )1rs. Beverly Lane of ewport Be a ch and .,.1 a r ,. 1 n L a n e o f ·'.Bakersfield Mrs William '.'11ms of F ullerton and Gerald flayl of Newport Beach are parents of the f1anc<' w.ho g raduat e d from Arizona State l 'n1vers1ty Wedneeday1 Januery 21. tt7f Kr1ow Who to Call for Help l DEAR A-NN I.ANDERS: We want to • tbank you for prtnt.Lna two letters from adoles· cent females who wrote in about sexual abuse they were receiving from f amUy members. This type Qt incident is tragic and on tbe rlse. Alternatives are Dow available for desperate youngsters who don't know what to do and can· not get support from other family members. Addressing specifics from ·'Afraid of the Future.·· we'd like to point out th at ( 1} a chain· locked door affords Uttl .. protection from a de- termined assailant, (2) the child bad already taken the steps a 14-year· old could be expected to take, and (3) a 14-year- old is still a child ant1 needs, deserves and is legally entitled to prote<:· tlon b y her moth· er tfather and society against all persons who may abuse her /him. . The actions of the un· clt' in your most rffent letter constitute child abuse and criminal U · sault under most states' laws. The mother's do- nothtne response con- atltutes chltd neglect. At a minimum, the actions of this mother s hould have been to demand the house key from her brother and to make it very clear that he would not be welcome unless she was home. 1f parents are unwill· ing to protect thelr children fr om a molester -relative, the child should aeek out.side help from a Rape Crisis center in her area, a 1cbool counselor, th~ rleru or anothe r adult family member who can be trusted. H ·none of these work, the Child Protect ion Agency or police should be called. -JANE LEESON , PROGRAM DIREC· TOR. RAPE CRISIS AL· LIANCK, B O ISE , IDAHO Shifting Trends DEAa JANE LEESON: I wlew tltl1 columa u ao opportmt. ty to edacate people and you 1ave me a 1reat U · 1lst today. Thank you nry much. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I can't be the only person in the world-with this pet IJipe. Perhaps if you· print my letter in the paper people who are l\.lilt1 bf eauatna the probletn mteht re- cognize tbemaelves and stop. It would b~ a n4- tiooal blessing. t ..-.rer to individuals who ~hew on tl\e i~e in lhtir drlnki. the 1Jua. J never said anythtna. I aimply atopped 1eeln1 him and he never knew why . Maybe that was a mls- take. Wbat 's the answer, Ann?'-HEEBJE· JEtJJIES DEAR H.J.: Wbat'a the qoestlon? Should you .bave told bhnf YES! To &vp a man because ot an irritating habit wldcb ea.aid be easily sto,pped wu ja1t plain stupid. If you bave any rt1ret1. mall this col-..,_ .. lllm, wltb ·a note ..W-1 U be ls atill chew· lnl Ice. It could revive a '* httpdtbip. I aitually quit gftlog J) E A R A N N wt\h a MAD who wantoo LANDERS: Recently I fp m~ m~ because he fU" for divorce. For the dlft this . <He w ~s rich, thlrct time today I w~ t<>Q,) Mr. J(lwbre{l~er asked, ··wh._t tillP· WOUid c>Fder {l 8cotQh op pe"'ed T" I reall)' dori 't the ro~kr •nd for aO ti\rt te diSC\ll, the de· minutes 'd 11ear "ca· tail111 Ttle people l really runch -choPlp -csre allQut KNOW what ca-runch." tt c'rov• rpe, h•P1"'1\ed. How sho\,lld I banllP.itS. I thobught fQr deal wlth clods who pry? sure he mu•~ e eating -"1' t IT L E D TO • Ol(}NlT\' Freshmen Motivated A'4NOUNCING Randi . McDowe:JI What wer~ Fall '75 col- lege freshman like? Some moved slightly left and s ome right politically. wo men are pursuing more tradi t i onally mas culi n e careers and more than half plan to go on for ad· vanced degrees. These are some of the Other results: -The ratio of men to women planning careers in law . medicine. engineering a nd busi- ness dropped to 3 to 1. -Education students are at an all-time low. to PhDs and advanced professional degrees. -Enrollment of blacks is up to 9 percent. -Average income of students· parents is up. -For the first time in 10 years, high school grades failed to show an Increase. ~~"' Ann(t Landers USED BOOKS WANTED By Brandeis Women's Committee tor Annual ~Sal• FOi RH rlCK·~IP CALL 640-1 Jt5 .,. 512-7299 All Donations are Tax Deductible AEBISCHER SPEOAlllfS IN Df~ICUl T PROBlEMS ~-· ,.,_.. .. c_.,_ HAI. AEBISCHER l40t L C...t Hwy. c.... .. ....._.71-JUJ ANNOUNCING Jet a :J')ier£er lllNG TN15 AD WITH YQU AND 11e11ve AN ADDITIONAL I 00/o OJ' 0~ YOUR PUICHASt . LOMG GOWHI -JHOIT Dltlll' PAMTIUlTS ..,C~llMAJll ---------resul ts of the 10th annual -There is a trend toward "applied" fields such as engineering and away from the humanities. -The number of stu- dents holding the tradi· tional view of women's roles has been cut in half at 250 De. "-a ~~ Come In and Qet ~lJqint«tQ I"' .. Closing ~ I Stocks , U same day fresh •I• in the i 1hn141r.11 s urvey of entering freshmen conducted by UCLA and the American C'.ouncil on Education in Washington. -Half plan to pursue in the past five years. graduate or professionat:, degrees. One fifth aspire Ourf1fth great SAlE starts Thurs.Jan.22 me.n:. rml 5nlr' <:. I col \er\ (_ 'V ->lfYif ( c..ord be.l 1 ~ ( reA614 TVJJ~i 1"" st.uOlri 512liS reg_:12 ro»tgl9 ~,_ ____ ..L.J. ____ _.__._.; spu:18I... .. 5CX)~rof m1~d \an wus 1CN1 jUl~ es lOIN as ~4 QQ met'6 sl-ca. t.or>"idtr, tr~tom. t.aylor-made.. I r5: I I • with the other rn•rn~ of th~ atiff at Hair ... •Judy Wright •Nancy Weinberg -Gene De Filippi •Nails by Sandy Logue JIO MIWPOIT C9Cm IMUYI • DISfMe PLUA s.lht 100 .... '*7170 673-8530 34 77 Via 0Porto • Lido Village Newport Beach from our Gal's Cwn\ry ... Jones NemYorl<, Outlander, Norman Todd, John Meyer etc. la1lorul shuts and blOUSll.S , from our mms dress se,cl,ion ... f1rsL lime 'J>'Gial. .. st.lt.Ctui t.albot.l L1~ 10000('.$ , 005\c four 'oorsard school &.ripr.e to•12~ n CN/17® • ·v ~ irdu:hf9 assort.me.rt. at. g ~ supu spec1a' f me. summa"7~ '111eS"Chand15e. bloU5e.9 slacks sk;rt,s upto75Xoff up to!)()% off our yearly SJX.el81 ... ti"-bes\c ye.Br fUlnd oxford ~shirt ~ I· ___ J.._' __ ,, blue. white. -.ye.\\ow ttg. & 15Qll 1"0JJ ~ \\ QSI ~~~@)~~ 44 f~n llland, newport center 644-5070 ,-., ., Wednaday, January 21. 1976 OAILYPILOT fC':,.i:~1 -~, ... ,!r~~:. I •• -.,, ......... ~~."'';#'-, lllo) ~-, • • ..)nOIOr ,.,, en , BRUSH .... BLOWER SCISSOR STYLES An HOW TO DO THEM STEP BY STEP yone can care tor a Brush & Blower hair style. or ~~,~~e~,;~~ co101tng, fuss·lree, full functional • POO' 0 S which ate as easy to do as just sham· ur lamp cuts. fmger lumble cuts. curltng iron =· wash towel dry, ~rush ·n fluff cots or simple wash styte~eG~s ,are SCISSOQD, all take-care-of·yoursell Filling • 1n the ·Blanks .. ~ERENITV Skin Care Center JANUARY SPECIAL FACIALS -10% OFF 1 · or any age, any hair. No teasing no mo.-.:; no Pins. no POLLUTING HAIR SPRAYS . Wf PUMAMIHl W4YU. YOU WAY Nl'I• W4N'f TO HT TOiie H411 ••MM. <?PIN JOS~PH'S SCISSOR STYLING 3568 T . 1.,,..10,..,u r .a suM.,.s • usltn Ave . Orange ~564 Hamilton Ave .. 'Huntington Beach :SOS N. Harbor Blvd . Fullerton flOCATEOAT l~E FA$C1NATING\lllV.OElSOll 9'1-1 IU 961·353.S 179·316J THE MIRACLE ~AU IHM WAmMG FOi. . .A WEIGHT PROGRAM THAT WOAKS -T •PIUS• SHOTS• RIGID DIETS •WRAPS • Ell~• HIGH COSTS OA NON.$ENSE!ll · By E R!tlA BOM BECK Comedian George Carlin once made public the five words that you cannot say on television due to censorship. Although they are rarely spoken of, there also are five ordinary words and phrases which are considered obscene to small children. Because the reaction to them is violent, many parents have stricken them from their vocabulary. I respectfully suggest that if there are any re- aders of this column to- day under the age of 16 who are not accom - panied by a parent, the following language could be rated · 'Objectiona- ble.'' WORK. Although this is the ultimate word in obscenity to youngsters, some of them use it for the s hock effect. Oc- casionally, you'll see ::\ line, "I worked today," that child is 17 years old ~ just to see rum suck in and still remembers the ... ~ his breath and look incident. small child whisper to child, I sald in anger, ~ another kid in a lunch "Go to B · · ! " Today, around to see' if anyone BROCCO . '" ~ else heard him. Another LI. This is the ---- AT WIT'S END child was isolated by the word that children, when they wan t to be really who used language that entire third grade when naughty, wtll write in would make your hair it was discovered that he public places. I've seen it curl, but this is one engaged in it after o n grade school phrase youngsters won't school. restroom walls and on tolerate. To them. it's a W A L K · M a n Y construction sites. Once derogatory, ethnic slur 1 youngsters do not know when d ht ·t directed at one of the j the meaning of this my aug ersaw1 on t h e school menu world's most pathetic word. They only know by blackboard, sbe threw m in or i t y gr o u P s : reput ation that it is her body across it in a fit mothers with cold feet. something dirty. It is of decency. It was used When it's too risque to usually accompanied by one evening on television make a trkycle bumper! a gesture -a foot d · h I l · k f · raised in the air. Most unng t e ami y hour sue er out o 1t, you and drew 3,000 protests, know it's bawdy! children don't even ex-saying they could have periment with this word used ••squash•• or until after they are mar-.. 'ed asparagus" and still n "Go TO BED! .. If you g;~~tain~ the integrity want the respect of a plo · small child, never, but "YOUR MOTHER never, resort to this sug-WE A RS W H IT E gestive bit of obscenity. SOCKS!'' I• ve been Once when I was arou nd some pretty babysitting a neighbor tough kids in my time ' The shopping and super busy ! season is over and 1s1i't 11 tune· • to do something for you? An hour and a half of pa~ng and relaxing. A taaal designed for you-to help a prOblent slun or to maintain a 1oveiv ; complexion: the Eurcpean · way. Call '°'your Sef'enlty · appointment. • Gin Cert1f1cates $20 ; 'oc•ol• -•up ~ E:ur-n M•ll>Od -. Gte1 eo.,.,.1oea t Menoc"'" hcoal • aooy wa.one j In Lido Village \ . i 3400 Via Oporto Suite 6 · ):' on IJ\e -dwell< u,,.t.,"' • ~ Newport Beach .. :~ .. ~1~~~?.5-_6·1·9~ .. :<::o·.J Horoscope: Leo UPTO •PANT SUIT~ ~ HOSTES~ GOWNS •INTIMATE APPAREL •SUPS •BRAS Diplomacy Pays IF I CAN DO IT ANYBODY CAN My name 11 MIKE TURIN. The pictlle I cm showing is of m~f just 4 'l"IO' Ol)O al 255 pounds. In I I '/J rmnlhs I lost 120 pounm ofter cc:rry· "1 the O¥~t for 35 ~ I was on fudeds of 9mmict aeh I ipent my &fe up ord dowTi i\e o yi>yo. FVdy I rdzed there must be 0 belt•, 0 permOll911f way, ord fhse I\, without snors, poll\, ngd (JI loplided ~ eaercise, h.c1i cost\ o nonsense. I ho.oe developed o pion tailored IO yos family tastes, wirh all the f<XJd, you 5\e to eat. No foced r~ of f,,h or ~ .... (JI onythinq else you don't li\-e. My POU""5 Cff' PERMANfNTl Y proqom ....11 enc> ble you to lose wei<;/lt and leep 11 off PERMANENTl Y It's a MIRACLE ofter spencfonq yeao\ on &et ofter diet ofter dier I di~ co.i.ed there os no reo~ ro be OolfJIWefC/rt, not even by 10 ~ There is no reo~ lo give up me foods you '~e There is no reason to battle wirh weight I hove eolen rrore hot fudge Si.ltldoes 1n the ~ 5 yeas t+oi alt t+.e rest of my 5fe corrOned. . COME: TO A FR~E LECTURE Ari() GT READY TO BE A THN PERSON THE REST 0: Y~ LIFE. COME AND ~ A80tJT THE FAKE. FADS /lt-0 FAl..l1'CIES THAT tfiP KEEP US OVERWEIGiT. JON Tl-£ QUESTION~ ANSWER PERIOD. FREE LECTURES THURSDAY, JANUARY l2 I 0:3 0 cun. Clftd 8 p.m. tfOLIDA Y INM-COST A MESA l 1 J I lri1tol St. -at S-°'l90 Fwy. EAT & IETHIN WITH P.O.P. & ••.•• AT THE "\\oe&d>a•' S)w.o.:_ IUA.IJIAST • LUHCH • DtMoB • DISSEITS TOOi DAILY: 6 A..M. TO 10 PM. THURSDAY,. J ANUARY22 By SYDNEY OMA.RR ARIES (Ma rch 21 • April 19): Friend aids in extricating you from what could be a red tape, legal tangle. Consolidate gather forces together . Hi ghlight security. TAURUS (April 20- JANUARY CLEARANCE 1/3 to 1/2 Ii i~ Lorraine Sutherland ot /oltwpon 6eult &Jv..,..jp (} e>I J.:JIT'br,,.,. ~ood t lf•wpot1 8-•r:itn o7531dl 1-b.s 9 30-5.30, Sun 11 -4 HAMS Spiral Sli~ed Wlaol~ or Half "So Good ... It Will 'Haunt' You 'til It's Gone"· JCftlCl"Y Special · SAVE 20c r.r ,.... HONEY IAKED HAMS .-:iJ~--•...., .. Sene wittl H..y .. Spice Gome • ~ SHc.ed ,.,._'•to lo"- '~ · w. ,_......ct sr.1p tra. eo..t to c:o.t. a.,,,.... c......_ ...e ~ • 3700 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar -673-9000 1-W ... ellC-- 1222S. lrooliliwlt, ltl•llcl, AMl!tirw 635-2461 Y, 71HO Hlgliw., #111•1-=-Mlreft Ci. lmdle MlttJ 714-l4 .. Jn4 Assorted Dress & Sportswear Prints NOW88~d . Reg. $1.29-51.99 yd. e 44/45" w•de •Machine Na~'iablt 1003 Polyester Doubleknit Flat Folds NOW •1.97yd. Reg. $2.99-$3.99 yd. e 58/60" wide •Machine wlihable •Choose from solid colon ind fancy pa1tern1 Many other Fashion Fabrics at reduced clearance prices Most fabrics at rrost stores. _...,.,.,._ There's No Place Like ~1t? SJ!:!Q§.R May 20): Basic issues <.'an no longer be ~hunted aside. delayed or sub- s tituted. Face issues squarely, inc 1 uding health, employment, spe<.'ial services. GEMJNI (May 21-June 20): Be "on the square." Means don't equivocate. Say what you mean - and mean it. Member of opposite sex may want to play word games. CANCER (June 21· July 22): Be ready for <.'hange of scenery, varie- ty of e~periences, messsages which could lead to trave l op- portunities. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Hold off on decisions - take time to be analytical. Impatient re- lative should be ignored. ~diplomatic, not weak. Travel plans are not set. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22): See as is, not as you wish places and persons might be. Steer clear of wishful thinking, self· deception. Someone tries to get something for nothing. · l.IBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 1 22>: You are able to overturn plans which were basi<.'ally unfair. You gain support, are capable now of setting long-ra n ge poli cy. Member of opposite sex does care and makes no secret of it. SCORPIO (Oct. 23· Nov. 21): You can learn.1 publish, interpret . gain respect for ability to in-1 terpolate and to reach understanding-in-depth. You close transaction .. You gain added recogni-. tion . 1 lvJf '0 OFF MO 1.AY-AWAY •MO UTURHS 370 E . 17th St.-Costa M esa Next to Raloh's M ar'<et BE co ... rOPT ... BlE .N tt'JIJP C\JP•, 8 thtu 00 SAGITTARIUS (Nov.'r-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-L~ 22-Dec. 21): Get started in new dire ction . Welcom e contacts, chances for added in· dependence. Accent on lovers ' quar r e l s , creative endeavors, re- conciliations. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 -J an. 19 ): What ap- pears a setback is mere- ly a caution light. Get se<.'ond wind_ Review procedures . Cash flow is but temporarily im- peded. You 'll get news which renews faith AQ UARI US (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Light touch brings best res ults . Means go slow and easy. If you insist on forcing is· sues, you could be in for rude awakening. PISCES C Feb. 19· March 20): You may have to tear down for purpose of r e building. A<.'cent on necessity to dig beneath s urface in · dkations. If Jan. 22 is your birth· day you never follow the crowd . You are a specialist, aq individual, . unique a nd inventive. Family of 6 .die in fire Neetlless tragedies like this happen every day. An ..ty .. ning smoke detector system may han saved theseHYes. Lido Constructors wHI permanently •d professionally lnstlll -11ow lnte lfae electrical system of your h.,.. This Includes a DIC back-up unrt and a 5 lb. class ABC fJre exti19alsher. THE ENTIRE PROTECTION PACKAGE Including ta~ and installation $98.25 LIDO COL\1STRUt;TORS lr\1C Quality Craftsmanship with Concern'for Safety (714)631·0290 UNFINLSHED FURNITURE IN TUSTIN AL'S WOODCRAFT SOLID OAK PHONE 544-5470 Chcrmi119 Country Encjish Styiin9 Ins.+ parquet tops with distinctive detailing. LAMP TABLE COFFEE TABLE 28¥," wide 57W' long 15" high C~lty selected oail for its antique chcrader and beauty. All Pieces Pre-sanded Ready to Fin ish CHOW TAB~E 19k' x 1914 " squar_e. __ l5" ~1gh PRICE: $54.45 SALE s4900 PRKl: $103.55 SALE s932s SOFA·BACK TABLE 1s~ wide 58" long___ 2r high CORNER TABL£ !83~ ;:X2H. :.qu.m• 19" h1Fh -- PRltl: $95.70 SALE 58625 YOU ARE INVfTEDTOVISITOURCOMftLETE DEftARTMENTOFftlNISHINOMATERtALS • - • t .... .. .,, -Vf DAIL V PILOT Wednesday. January 21, 1976 VIRGINIA'S Snip 'n Stitch JJ34 E. Coast Hwy. • Corona ct.I Mer • 613-1050 REMODELING SALE OML Y 11 DAYS LEFT TO SHOP OUR SPECIALS! Take advantage of our biggest sale in our 26 years of selling high fashion f abnc in Orange County. Come. February 1st. the workman will arrive with buckets of paint. new floor cov- enng and saw and hammers to give our store a new look and restocked with Spnng Fabrics. We've slashed our already low sale prices of trims. buttons. and fabric of all descnpt1ons We need more room to work. So hurry in and SAVE! SAVE! SA.VE! -See you soon, Virginia Hn.: Mon. thrM Sat. 9:30 to 5:30. S..n. 12 to 5 FttEI PARKING lcmllAIMrica Lot P.S. We clW -U e ipKW a.,. WMt. Twry et I.ti y'll U.. 4,.. $1,200,000.00 ATHLETIC CLUB IS PROPOSED FOR NEWPORT BEACH The Gnabb & Bis Co. hos announced plans for a S 1,200,000 Rocque+ loll mtd Health Spa FocJlity in Newport hoch to be Wtt by lllch Sc.hliebe & Associates.. Mr. Schliebe, a ranked member of the National Rocc:ptef loll ~iation, has dneloped and acted as a consultant for athletic clubs throughout th• United StatH. The Athfe+ic' Club wiR include me11's mtd wornH's Heaffh Spas, conditioniftC) rooms. My equipped enrcise rootM, a pro shop, a children's nurs«y, iogglng track, and a c'"'lo-•ascul• t•sting room. 0... of -the combination hand ball and racquet ball courts wll be an exftibition court with glass playing walls for spectator •l•wing for local and national amateur and profHsional tounte11Mnts. The foclllty will accommodate more thmt 120 •lewing spectators. A six-metnber professiOftal staff will direct eurciM and ski fllnffs programs as well as conducting hand bait and racquet bclll IHSOM. A resident physician will pro•ide ccrdlo-•ascul.-tntfng as a recjlllcr Hr#ice. The 27,000 squcre foot fociUty will accommodate I 500 IMrNMn. They will also pro•ide a fine makh senice, when they wil gucranfH a match with any player on an individutil basis. The anticipated c0fl1l'letion of ffM proiect will be Sept. I, 1976. Calendar . SHRINE CLUB: The El Bandito Shrine Club will hold its annual benefit dinner dance at 6:30 p .m . Wednesday, Jan. 28, in the South Coast Plaza Hotel. Music will be provided by Freddy Martin and His Orchestra. Proceeds will benefit the Shriners Hospital for Crippled Children in Los Angeles. The event starts at 6 :30 p.m . Tickets are $15 per person. Reservations may be made by writing to Carlyle Dennis, 207 French St., Santa Ana. MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION: Therapy Techniques is the topic of an experien- tial workshop from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m . Friday, Jan. 23, at the Community Recreation Center in Buena Park. The workshop is free and open to the public. Because seating is limited, reservations should be made with the association·soffice at547·7SS9: FAJllVJEW OLYMPICS: Representatives of the Orange Coun ty Medical Association Aux· iliary and Bicentennial Quilt Exhibition Commit· tee will present a check for $2,600 to the Fairview Special Olympics program at a meeting in the activities center on Monday, Jan. 26. The quilt e:thibitton was a joint project of members of the auxiliary and students frQm Orange Coast College and Golden West College quilting classes. SYMPOSIUM: Ninety-minute instruction classes will be presented by Estella Cimperman. consultant, on Wednesday and Thursday, Jan. 28 and29. Tips on pattern fitting and design will be given during classes at 10 a . m., I : 30 and 7: 30 p.m . in the Cos ta Mesa Inn. There will be an admission fee charged. Weddings~ and Engagements To a\'oid disappointment. prospective brides are re minded to ha ,·e the!. wedding s tories with black and \\hile glossy photographs to the Daily Pilot People Departme nt one "eek before the wedding. Pictures recei,ed after that lime will not be used. For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story. also accom· panied by a black and white glossy p1c · lure. be s ubmitted six weeks or more before the wedding date: othern ise 1t "Ill not be publis hed . To help fill requirements on b'lth wed- ding and engagement stories. form.i are available in all Daily Pilot offices Fur· ther questions "ill be ans"ered by P eople Department staff members a t 642-4321. • * * ON DISPLAY: * .,~ * Dodge ASPEN & PlyinoUth VOCARE -tr ~ ,._ PlllZIS!I JAH. 22·25 • ............. ~ ... • South Coast ?tua . li~fk©)f1 tf~rm~. OF OHIO OLD·l'ASlllONID NICKEL DAB . THURS., FRI., SAT. JANUARY 22, 23, 2~ ., WE'LL BE SERVING A -sc SANDllCI ·~1 WEST CLIFF PLAZA 17tt. Ii IRYIHE • NEWPORT HACH • P'HOHE '42·0'72 MOM..ffl. 'TIL t SAT. 'TIL 6 SUM. 'TIL 5 JACK WINTER S$2 ~-•inter have arrived at ... Fashion Boutique JJJ L 17a ST .. COSTA .-SA Behind the International Pancake K~ the New Spring Fashions Include: Jackets and Pants Made of Luxuria Plus Long and Short Sleeve TOPS Made of ... 100 % POLYESTER Sizes 6-18 Colors : White Melon Yellow Green Black 333 E. 17th Street • Costa Mesa Behind the Pancake House ~ 1nV1tes you to save10Cand tick Up for Breakfast. .. Save 10-and help your youngsters enter Kellogg• s 3rd Annual Stick Up for Breakfast Contest. They could win $5 a week every week for a year. 555 winners will be chosen. Just clip the coupon below. Redeem it on any two of the Kellogg products pictured on the coupon. Each specially marked package has an entry blank and complete contest details. Start your children today. And Stick Up for Breakfast every day. . _,., -~~--,, .. Wednelday. January 21, 1976 DAILY PILOT Cf 1 VVok Wizardry: Quick-fry a·nd Subtle Tastes · -- Tb•te examples of wok ~ were ·~'fl>Plled by the S. Francisco COnventlon and 'Vk1ton Bureau. 2 sreen onions with stems, and add 2 tablespoon oU. Wben diagonally sllced lnto l ·lncb bot, swirl the ginger slice around strips the sides and bottom and then 1 teasPQOo salt discard. Add onions and shrimp 1 white onion sliced into h Inch pieces 3 cups l ·incb chunk\. of chicken and oyster sauce and stir well. Serves four. BEEFKWANGTON l 'h tablespooDI peanut oil 1 Y.a·incb piece gmserroot '14 teaspoon auiar Mt teaspoon ·cornsta blended with ~teaspoonwater. Swirl the peanut oil In a heated frying pan. St1r ln 'stnl for flavor and then dJsc Quick·fry tenderloin 2 minutes. -.. • .,._ ......._.. '4 teaspoon monosocUum and quick·fry for 2 minutes. ~~"v•vn.auDU" .iutamate Add bamboo shoots and 1 tea9poon light soy sauce l tablespoon dark soy sauce 'h teaspoon sugar 1 pound tenderloin beer cut across the grain into 2xlf.,xY•· inch strips 8Dll 1 'i::!!l.~hrhlu>, deaned 'A teaspoon 1e1ame oil walnuts and stir well. Then add Wt -~ Put the cut-up shrimp in a bowl salt, monosodium glutamate and 1 tablespoon oyster sauce Then add bamboo shoot , mushrooms, pea pods an chicken broth. Cover for l"lwpooaU,bteoysauce and sprinkle with soy sauce, sesame oil and stir evenly. I teaspoons dry sherry wine, pepper, cornstarch and 1 Serves four. Preheat wok or skillet over high flame. Add oil. Swirl garlic around sides and bottom and dis· card. Add pepper and onion and stir 1 minute. ~ cup sliced bamboo shoots 'h cup sliced butto n ~ teupooo white pepper tablespoon oil. CIDCK~N Wlm lteupooo COrnatarch In a preheated wok heat 1 ~ OYSTEfl SAUCE mushrooms minute. ~ Uncover and stir ln oyat 4 Y.a tablespoons vegetable oil tablespoons oil. Quick.fry the 3 tablespoons vegetable oil ¥. cup diced bamboo shoots bamboo shoots and walnuts for 1 1 clove crushed garlic 1 cup snow peas 'h cup chicken broth 2 tablespoons oyster sauce ~ teaspoon dark soy sauce \4 teaspoon sesame oil sauce, soy sauce, sesame oil • sugar, thickening with co nstarcb blend. Serve immedia~ ly. Serves Cour. 1 ¥1 cup walnuts minute and set aslde in a bowl. l large green pepper cut into l allce Bini er, '4 inch wide Clean and dry the wok, preheat I-inch squares Add chicken and stir another minute. Add soy sauces, sugar Or Improvise Orient CO pied Ingredients for a qulck·fried diah are cut u.to small and uniform pieces, so that they cook quickly and finish cook· iq at the same tlme. You can cook OrientJI dishes in your own bonie Ullnl the basic utensils 1U'I already bave in )'OUr l:ltehen. There la no need to purchase s pecial eqtlpment. SWEET SOU: PORK WITllSBSAME SEEDS a PoUDd lean pork, cut Into ~~IA(h pieces ~ cup soy sauce ~ cup dry sherry lllUer: l egg. beaten , ~cup flour ~ cup cornstarch ~ cup chicken broth Cooking oil SDce: l cup chicken broth 1 15-ounch can p ine app le chu nks , drained ~ cup pineapple SJl'UP ~ cup cider vinegar 'h cup packed brown qar 2 teaspoons soy sauce 2 tablespoons brown Jravysauce 2 tablespoons cor· mtarch ~cupwater 2 ll'Mll peppers, cul i nto ~-in ch p ieces, blanehed. 1 I-ounce can water che stnuts, d r ained, sliced % carrots, pared, cut into 2~·ln ch pieces, cooked 2 cloves garlic, crushed 1 tablespoon toasted saameseeds Chow Mein noodles Co mbin e pork, soy s auce a nd sherry; marinate in refrigerator 2boun. Draln. Combine ingredients for batter; stir in pork p&eces. Drain. · Heat oil to 375 derrees F. Deep fry meat until IOlden brown ; drain on absorbent paper. Fry meat 1 minute longer to keeptt crisp: draio . Com bi n e chicken bJ'oth, pineapple synap, vinegar. brown sugar, soy sauce and brown g avy sauce; heat until augardi!solves. ~-=~-==,,-----~~~~~~~~- .e No SURermarket can consistently promise prices lower than Lucky's everyday low prices throughout our entire store. Our pricing policy has always been to keep food prices as low as possible to Insure our customers true value for their food dollar. Lucky was FIRST to take action against high food prices over 13 years ago, when we eliminated stamps, games and gimmicks. Instead we gave our custome~s everyday low discount prices. • We promise to continue with everyday LOWER PRICES OVERALL. LUCKY'S BEEF PRICES ARE EVEN LOWER THIS WEEKI !~d~8.k~;~_8.,'. 75c !.;~~Y.~<LB .. L •• 53c ~1~~~~~~.!~~,~ 77c ~~!!!.~.:~'. .. 44 Large End 129 Cross Boneless Lady Laa ~!~ ~~~~~ .... LB !!~s~!!!! .......... .LB 138 ~~-~-~-~--~~~-~-~ .. LB.129 ~~-~-~!~ .. ~~~-~~ .. 1 2 !;,~!n~ .. ~~eak : ............................ L •• 198 £~~-~~.~.~~8.s~ .. : .. !..:~.~~~ .................. La 93c ~~!~~! .. ~~!' ................................ -...... La 65c ~'~-~-~.~~-lb~~~.~ ....................... La. l 11 !!~PNO~~!~!u; .. ~~.~~I~~ .................. le 138 ~!~ ~o.ast .. -.. ~m~-~-~ ... ~n~ ...................... La.149 Rib Steak 1e1 Brisket 151 Bottom Round Steak 1 a• SMA.ll lHO , , • Lii BONF.U:SS 8EEf .. .. ......... -... .. L8 BONELESS· BEEF • .. .................. lB ~~~z:.~::~~s _ .. ~:: ~~f~~,1.~'~ak :~~~~'ess .. ~:: ;fp);~o~~:~!,:~--· ···-·-·" ~:: llEULOIH •• • • • .. ...... -..... -....... • ..... UI ..... -·-·· ..................... -.. ..-.......... -.. :. ........................ .LB. laEEF l'OlllfO . .• • ........... -...... -......... _.; ___ lJI. B•f Liver -Sliced 78 SKIHUSS ANO 0€VEINIED ............... _. • ......... -. l8. Boneless Top Sirloin Stak 1 HU LOlfl ................. -....... ··--······ .................... -.U. Farmer John Sliced Bacon 1 ..................................................................... l·LB P!tG Oscar Mayer Sliced Bacon 15 (2·lll. THICK· :S. t&t ............. ,,_._,, ... --... -......... l-l.8. ""0. --• lt1'" Lmr ...... .Ill ... 1111111* ........ _. ......... _ .. ___ _ !ml .... --• ~ 11111. YOU'LL FIND LOWER PRICES THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE STORE. Pineapple 45 c ;K ft ' N"bl ts Delicatessen. ~~~efruit ,!':~~~ M~yonnaise . 59c c!r: ~ 29c ~\frm~~:~!:~Filiiks;:l., Harvest Day age IMHATOON .... ,,.o,., •• ~ WHO""""·'"······''"°'·°'" ............... ····-····. -··········-···-·· -~· 99C Cling Peaches CY"" K fl K . ~~~N~.~1.~~.~~.~~-~.~~ .. ~.~!~~:;1 1• HALVES OR SLICED 19·01 t:AN ra r1spy Hebrew National Sausage Unkll 35 ~~~::s~::z, ~ 2oc Dinner ~25c crackers 39c ~~~:!~n.!·s!.~!!.~~11s~~~89~ cur 16-0Z CA.It MACARONI & CHEESE.7Y..-OZ. BO)( SUNSHINE .... 16-0Z. BOX ~ Harvest Day 29 c Kraft American Bread "'~. Cheese ~gee . Frito Lay SLICED..... . .. ....... 12-0Z. PKG. :-~··•a~~~:·-~ 5gc !~;;~!~ ... ,~~ 42 c rasca a ggc Lady Lee . Health & Bea~ Aids Listerine Mouthwash ~ 11t- 20-0UNCE ,_ ...... _ .. _,,,,,,_,,.,,., .. _.,, __ ._, __ -- Eff erdent ~ 1 ' eos ......... .... .. .......... _ ..... _.,,,,.,, __ ,____ • Bromo Seltzer gg AEG •·,.OUNCE ........................ -........................ _ ...... _ Schick Injector ~ 1 •f • 1SS ............... ·········-•• ......................... -......... -•• ·•·••· ~C.~~~-~ .. s~~.~~ ... ~~ ...................... ~ ...... ~ 1 a1 Produce , Mix cornstarch with w~ter; stir lnto brown ~ q ar mixture. Cook on low beat until thickened. Beverage .. ,,,,~ Cottage Cheese ~55c Treesweet Citrus Juices tf' 75c ....... · · · · ... · 16 0z (.1" JrlAllORS •• · • .. II& oz CANS Lady Lee Cheese Spread ~ 15s Fir~de Gr~halll ~~~~~!~ 49c !!!~!•et Orange Juic~,::~58c J Ripe ~~~·~----------.. 15 :~ Md pork, pineapple, ve1etables, garlic and MNJDe seeds. Heat tmti1 hot. Ser ve over chow mein noodl~. Seconds· Sparkle ~~Nll!!~P~!.~'P'.l'_S -'""' ~ 59c Ore Id• Potatoes .,.-77 Swis.s ~iss_~o~oa ~'~-,,~::; 9 7 c a;qUBi'Ciif Ck&n Oinriir"=; 53 c Beechnut Strained Ba~y Food 12c ·-· ........ ....... .... .. . ... ...... 11.QZ. .. ~O. C AllVAAIETl£S .......................... ~ ... ••.-oz ~ Gino's Pepperoni rizza tf'l 21 Harvest Day Preserves f{4 112 . __ ,, ...... ·--· . .. 19-0Z,l'l(Q. ~OT.f>INEAPPU .......... -.............. _ .. 32.oz.JAA Treeton Apple Juice tf'53 Canadian Mist . tf' 411 COHCIHTM,; .. ... ... . . ..... -... ,.oz.CNI C ruck;woil Gin ..................... STHITI.. ass ~~~!1~ .. Sa~d~ich Bags ~T.~ 39c Apples 4 l B 59 r' CAUf.,INECOOllERS ........ ··-·----llAG ') ( Cauliflower 2QC , ()(UCATfF\.AllOll.efU0~--·-·-1.1. I Solid Gr•n C Cabbage 9 . . ............. ______ ta. Navel Turkey, a 1ood value, can be stret ched farther "-'------------ ~i'~!~~t~i~~.::~ -~·:.:;,: 1,. ~!~nash Bags _ .u~. 1 n llOOOflllll.IS AVAlll\BLE ONLY AT STMUWITH l'°"°"OEPT. c:.J!!! .Y~.~e~. ~ldne~ ................. ~z.c~ 32c Or1nges 19 C 'by plannln1 wise use or JtftOvers. Here is a de-Hdoua "second act." C81NUB NEW YEAR SANDWICH u -owace can cream dmuab.room soup l cup cllced cooked turtey . 'ced \4 cup thinly sli e.lcry ~ cup allced water cb1stau&a ~~c~ped onlon 1 t...,ooo IOY aauce 4 trutfmtber buns, ~tad touted Com bine a ll ln1re· dleuta eacep t bona. Spreect mtatme evtnl)r .,... baa balvet; cover -..eempletely. • t Iron about ' tnehes ttolD beat until bot, about 7 m.mua.. Mak• a opeil· fMe aamtwlcbu, enqh .......... I I • , ITEMS BELOW AVAILABLE AT , DISCOUNT CENTERS ONLYI . .. ~~ CRUSHED · VELVET 3·PC. TANK SET I ,. ·· Eight cotors. 411 WOYEICHRK LADIES' . --~ ~~--~ POLYdrD I • -;,;.IUPB;.;.:;.;.;-.-UE-3------~-..oiili..-..;;;;;: Kin TOP. • -· -londt 1n ~.,.' dfOp ~· 1.000 tbt. PIESTOIE Am.flmE 1 ~ttr •hOn 3 9 7 The one )l«I oen trun Ofl• 9d0n. :.~~ 1911ZOtl MOT81 Oil ~~ ::, ~=r.M~ 30 weight Oii fOf your ear. a-. 55c Ylllfi'• A I ~ ;.;-=~-==-·~::= ~ • ...... amt ctW• •vt. • Hm ..,.. .. awn ....._ ,.. • ~... • .,... IMCll .,_. ·' · • .. n ll H&aA A¥PM .. , AlUllTI ..... SfOIB OflJt AT • CllTA -... A.& ,.. -• ._.. , ........ ClllCA ..... • ' LAMJE Ofll"'Al.L ...... -..... • .... ____ .... I • • DISCOUNT SUPERMARKETS LOWER PRICES OVERALL n•• Jtst UTIUA AVL .. ntlhl um.....navwa ... ,.... ... ""' ......... ue11 ..-Ml s111n • ""'"'9 lMSILM-llfll. fur~ DtSCOWr MH' HUTI INOUllllClmnY AIU to 8YI TOI •••• I I , f:W OAILYPILOT Wedtl!!d!y. Jenuaryt1, 1&18 Tangerine: G>rientcil Wisdom By BARBARA GIBBONS One of the joys or winter is the sweet harvest of tangerines, a dieter's delight at only 36 calories each. If you're a collector or culinary trivia. you might like to know that the tangerine dates back nearly 4.000 years and its name derives from Tangiers, as m Morocco. Tht.> simplest way to enjoy a tangt>rine is to zip one open and e.it at. But tangerines can also Orient Yourself . Japan ·Favorite •Provide Inspiration a.s 8n lngre. ,dient in your Slim Gourmet kitchen. MANDARIN CUCUMBER SAl .. AD 3cucumbers 4 tangerines or mandarin oranges :v, cup tow-Cat yogurt or low- cal sour cream dressing 1'2 teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon brown sugar or brown-sugar s ubstitute Romaine lettuce Peel the cucumbers and quarter lengthwise. Cut away the seeds. Cut cucumbers in one-inch lengths. Peel the tangerines and separate into sections. Seed the sections with. the tip ol a pointed knife. Toss together lightly and serve on rom aine lettuce. Serves six. 59 calories each (42 calories without sugar). Adapted from "Cooking Without Frontiers·· by Thelma Lay, published by Morrow. 1'10CK CHIN F.SE DUCK WITH TANGERINES 2 turkey thighs Garlic salt ood pepper Monosod1um atutamate (OP· Uonal> 2 tablespoons soy sauce l cup water ~ cup unsweetened tangerine or orange juice l tablespoon vinegar ~cup dried apricots 1 teaspoon grated tangerine rind 3 tangerines, sectioned and seeded With a sharp knife, split open turkey thighs and trim away the bone. Sprinkle inside of the me~t with a little aarllc salt, .,eppcr, some monosodium 1lutamatt: and soy sauc~. Roll up and place in covered oven-proof roastln1 9an. f*.da re· maining lneredients -except tangerines. Cover ,.nd bake at 350 degTees until turkey is tender, about l lh hours. Remove turkey and keep warm. Tip pan and drain ofr fat from sauce w Ith bulb-type baster. Slice the turkey and pour on the ,sauce. Garnish with tangerine sections. Makes six servings, 268 calories each. ANOTHER ALL NEW STATER BROS. MARKET AT 19050 LA PUENTE RD. IN WALNUT ' . America has been (':llled a ''melting pot" of many nationalities and certainly American food has evolved from the favorite dis hes of many lands. Here's a favorite of Oriental cooks which could add an interna- tional note lo your next pJrty. HUCK CHUCK GROUND . STEAK BEEF AST ~CUT c :f.'.c:~c J.\PA:'(f:SE ('HICKEN 'NLIVERS 12 cup soy sauce 1 ~ cup sherry J tablespoon sugar J teaspoon ground ginger '"cup water 1:? pound chicken livers, cut in half 1 lar ge whole chicken breast, split , skinned, boned and cut in J-inch rubes ·I scallions cut in 1· mch lengths 1 cup rice, cooked 2 tablespoons white vinegar 2 tablespoons s ugar ·2 teaspoons dry sherry Combine soy sauce, s herry, sugar, ginger and water. B oi l 1 minute, cool . Marinate chicken livers. chicken cubes and scallion pieces m mix- ture 15-30 mmutes, turn- ing once. On s hort wooden skewers. thread a chicken cube, a chicken liver piece, a scallion piece, another liver piece and ano ther chicken cube. Grill over hibachi 4-5 minutes per s ide . brushing occasionally with m arinade. OR. oven broil 3 to 6 inches for 7 to IO minutes. Serve w ith rice pre- pared as follows : Cook rice according to package directions. Meanwhile, in s mall saucepan, combine vinegar, suga r and sherry. Bring to boil and stir into rooked rice. Serves I or 5. Quick- In Wok Traditionally this en· tree is preceded by a fish chowder and crystallized spun apples complete the meal. MU SHU PORK 1At pound boneless pork loin 1 tablespoon dry sherry 1 tablespoon soy sauce 1 teaspoon cor- nstarch '2 teaspoon sugar Peanut oil 3eggs, well beaten I cup firmly packed shredded cabbage lh teaspoon salt ~ cup f i n ely chopped scallions 2 cups bot cooked rice Thinly slice pork and cut into very fine strips 1 'i!t inches long: mix well with sherry, soy sauce, comstarcb and s ugar. Heat 2 tablespoon.I oil in • wok: add ego and 1CT&mble antn very dry; with a spoon break loto a mall plecea; remcne t.romwok. Heat 2 tlbletpoonl oD In the wok. Add tbe pork mixtuTe, 1tlr·fryln1 tntil the meat be'1D• to turn color and aqarat• Into lhredl. Add e111 and ~allionl; 1Ur aJMI cook for l minute. Mt. In well 2 teupoon1 peanut oll. Serve at once wltb the rice. Maka 4 1maU serv· iql. , LUNCHEONIOMUTS0 • 1 v~ 4gt BEEFFUNKS PICG wie.HS 08 &9· ilic'EoaoLc>GNa· 141 "' 0 &9• iWiWKs0 .. ag· OICAI MAY11 • lf0 OI TMICK • 12.01 rlUJ. s103 SLICED BOLOGNA .. 05CAa MAYP • I-I.I .. 0 . s109 WIENERS " m'.s HO«Mll • IUl& • COUNTIIY • llfG ., HOf s1 59 SMOKED SAUSAGE .. . •. r ........ 01 •-Y 8ACtl (;llA8All'R -ouauT"<'••11 n1••...Ct0f••••I\ V'll(.OlollfOOll&4.1 • (.v.U-TllO •O*IUoHfOU Ot•O<JI'•°"'' \... ...... , ............ ~ ~ BEEF 79~. 59~. ·' BLADE-CUT c RIB ROAST Bfff SMALL END ... LI. $1 .49 LB.~·~! 1 ~9 LUNCHEON MEATS LAND O'FIOST 7-VARIETIES • 3-0UNCE PKG. 39~" ' ~--~~ 1n1ALlAH $119 _,•CHUCll 99c IUl•llOUNO•--.UI ., 69 ..... •LOIN •1" ta ., GROUND BEEIF..... .. 7 ·BONI ROAST. .. .. ... TIP STIAK._ ....... _ -·-·--·· ..... PORftRHOUSlnwc.ia • ,-OUIUOUI•__,.., $•9• IU'•O<lltll•-..SJ $149 -·O<UOl•_.U •149 ... lOIH •101 --------CANNED HAMS SHOULDER ROAST .. SHOULDIR STEAK ia. T-aONI STEAK .......... .. 98• ~·J4'0UND $109• IHl•ICM<O•-ISI $169 -·IO!eUJ lall~ •127 -·WAUINO .. la.116• ··1~· 1a CANNED HAMS. TIP ROAST .. ROUND STEAK.,.. ... 1a Ria STEAK LAaot ..... ia.. FUSH•fllO~ TURBOT FILLET. . .. Rl6N • NOnN • ICaAHOIC HALIBUT ........ . _,, SUCED BACON ... , • ICM<O. _. ... RUMP ROAST .. • 1 27 CU•ED STEAK ., .9 HUM•-.iff• •13• ·--IA. allf aRISKn . --.. MB •-.ii STEW MEAT s 1 49 -. O<UOI. '°1 .. AllM ROAST w.95 4 i'o'Piiiio1Nnua .. '2" EL,AT0•7Y.-O.Z:.·M•X•CANSTYLI • •••·. 23 c FOLGERscoFFEE .... _ .. _ ................. 1~s1AS .t~~ ~ ?~ PiUuL 'TOMATO SAUCEf__ FOLGERSCOFFEE ........................... ~ s4.16 • ft\JHX EACH . HILLS BROS. COFFEE ................ 1.a. s1A2 rlCTScuWWT1•'4-0cl.o••XRIDYIOCYN A.asOI • 62 c PO. LYUNSC• TICK 75c HILLsaRos.coFFEE ......... J.a.s4.oa rlmWWT·n.cMQ ............................................... ·-······ , -·-·---·-EACH KRAn NATURAL . STEW VEGETABLES ....... -.............. 78 .,,_ .. AACK MPERS {• $1 20 SLICED swiss $16s ~;i·-~----~ ~~r~w.L ---~1., OVERNIGHT iJ-12-0UNCI ............ -................. -.. ~~~·------• IW~IUDA . - FOLGERS INSTANTCOHll s1 80 UJIQUET DntMHS 54 iii;uitnT·.RJICf ---30' M'iiiGAR.i'N-E 4 7 c FOLGERS INSTANT=::::~~:: sis2 ~~.='::_".:'-_•1• iUi'NS:_".:" ___ 33' -----MJB DECAF INSTANT __ ...: ...... a.oL '2.32 BLUEBERRY PIE ···---··--··-····-..... -.. 1 47 .. ·s,GUHLA·A·ASSOttsTtTD .A,2-0UNDCECARN INKS 1 a c MARGARINE ~Y·STIClt ................ -.!~ 43· _.BR·i-··D~GIOA•vnoRD BREAD . • 93' YUBAN COFFEE s4•2 s .. _ .. _ ........... . , ...... -···· ... . ·--·_........ . ' ,8.LLSaRu.,.0,AM.lw''UDGIN·22-01UNECEs·t-. . 81 STATE• ••os ~ '4ldf,& ~ .jl,~ ?'luU. ~;.,,,,~,_,,,.~ ---. c ~~~!.~~~~l~ .. $119 ~--~ -·~ DATRIL DA'llUL 'PAN'(i"i(E SYRUPf_ $1 59 'ifu~~iE~~tWlSSiNG::·~~·J: .. I _:xu99c I . ...:0 ffc • VITA ,AKT. 2•·0UNCE ' 6' 2 c AMERICAN CHEESE:::ll".:m .. ,)L•1.21 " LEMON JUICE BORDEN LITE LINECHEE$E .... -1-0L94• ·:.-:,:= SWISS CHEESE~ ..... -................... ~L 67' f 89c SMOWD TO lllOWD UTHPOWDn I--.79c ORANGES , PUil GOU>• NIW aa. • fNCf SWllT NAV&.S LONG • T1NDll • OlffN • CIJSP c EACH ~·MllCY·-·-• 57c CARROTS GRAPlfRUIT ·-0-1.L IAO LAIGl. flUH nn-..Mlet·--·n""""'•,_. 19$ TINDll• Cllltt SQUASH ··----~-·-\a. 1 •nu•-.·-·-'*ICICM 19 c 12c " APPLES .................. _._ ............... La. LI. PKO. • ,,....~ ANOTHll ALL NEW STATER BROS. IJ'~~Wtl MARIO AT 19050 U PUENTE RD. llWA~UT 1 APPLESAUCE SIMCA--· ...... ·-·--·-·······-·· 2$41. 45• l.-0 GRAPEFRUIT JUICE~ ...... -.. 4M>z. 54' --... --un-.,.---t----IYY-u __ _ IMITATION MAYONNAISE.,'::fi. 69' TULITI MAI• IPllAY ti NDER R LOHGou1N ... 1~~>1 sl.37 -$119 OROWEAT !~~·~·--~~-~~ ... 7 2 C "!"U'=KADU "=" 76c · ...__ . .-69' SCHICK IUNa II UZOlt•LADU ·-. 96C CHOW MEIN NOODLES=.:... ~45· SOY SAUCEww-..,.f.--.. ·--······-····M>L ~,..--------------. SWEET'N'SOUR SAUCE=: ... 12.01:89' OUR DOORS OPEN AT 8:00 A.M. TERIYAKI SAUCE~----......... 11.or. 7fr--' ----..........__.....__ _ __, CLAUlllN PICKUI S 95' ,, l l l ' l • I . , 1 I J i ' I i ; Boos ·Meaty Q~.ality Easy.to-make, speedy, modest cost en- tree -for family or company dining. Coutd use cooked turkey. The mushrooms add meaty quality to a •small measure or chicken and their own dlstinctlve navor. CIDCKEN AND MUsHROOM HASH 1 cup (1 ounce) Japanese forest mushrooms ~ cup finely chopped onion 2 tablespoons butter 1 chicken bouillon cube, crumbled 14 teaspoon garlic powder 14 cup white table wine 21h cup1 sliced or diced cooked potatoes (about 1 pound) 2 cups cooked chicken pieces 1,3 cup chopped parsley Simmer I n ~teaspoon salt ~ cup arated Parmesan cheese Lemon slices and parsley for garnish Cover mushrooms with hot water and let stand 30 minutes. Drain, clip off and dis- card stems. Cut mushrooms in slices. Saute mushrooms and onion in butter. Dissolve bouillon cube and garlic powder . in wine. Add to mushrooms; remove from heat. Stir in all remaining ingredients, re- serving 1 tablespoon cheese for top. Tum into shallow 3th-cup baking dish and cover. Bake at 350 degrees 20 minutes. Un- cover, sprinkle with remaining tablespoon cheese and bake 5 minutes longer. Garnish with lemon slices and parsley. Makes 4 servings. Savor When using Japanese forest mushrooms for Chicken Hash, at left, or any other recipe on this page, soak them in hot water 20 to 45 minutes. Time depends on size and thickness of 1T1ushrooms. If In a hurry. add a teaspoon of sugar to hasten softening. Oversoaking will cause loss of very distinctive flavor. A deliciously flavored natural gravy results Crom cooking the popular pot roast with a can of beef broth, water from soaking the mushrooms and a variety of seasonings. lO'h-ounce can beef broth 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 medium onion, sliced Cooked spaghetti or noodles Cover mushrooms with hot water and let stand 30 minutes Drain, reservine liquid, clip and discard stems Cut mushrooms in pieces, leaving the small ones whole PRI W.tneeday. January 21. 1978 DAJL v PILOT C7 ) • l PRODUCE SAYlllS 1854 NEWPORT BLVD. fCOl*t OP llOADWA1 A MIWPOIT ILVD.I l t OPEN 6 DAYS 9 to 6 PHONE 642-6025 .. , <fl LET-US 19H~ .1 .. ) A;;Lis 2~29c 'MUSHIOOMZ 38.~ IOMAYIOES 25~ I, THOUSANDS OF ~~ ; ' "Cn'Al.11 TUIS . JAi. 27, "''· DI I ' , . IOSAUS TO 1 DUlftl oe fOI I llUU °" t OMMOCW \'SI ... o4 E L EDI • ~ The mushrooms themselves are added the last 1~ hours of cooking so they retain some of their deliehtful chewy texture. Combine marjoram, paprika, . must~ salt and flour. Rub well wer meat (saving' .my remain ing mixture). Brown meat in heated oil Add 1,7 cup drained li· quid from mushrooms, broth and lemon juice MARKET BAIKD II DIDICATED TO GIVING YOU LOWER PRICES SAVORY POT RO~ 1 cup (1 ounce) Japanese forest mushrooms ~ teaspoon marj oram, crumbled 1 teaspoon paprika l teaspoon dry mustard 1 teaspoon garlic salt 2 tablespoons flour 3 to 3t.1!·pound beef pot roast 1 tablespoon oil 112 c u p w a t e r f r o m mushrooms New Robust Combo Cover and simmer 1 hour Add onion, mushrooms and any remaining seasoning mix. Cover and continue cooking until meat is tender, about 1 'h hours longer Serve with the natural gravy and cooked spaghetti or noodles Makes 4 to 6 servings Greens Mushroom S.e tht Kello99'•• Stick Up for Brstlcfast coupon 1d in this pepeT. cheese, 1 tablespoon chopped parsley, 11"2 teaspoons seasoned salt, 'iii teaspoon cayenne and, sliced mushrooms. Mix well. Makes 1 cup dressing. f.he FISH MARKJl , ..... s...,c •• , 145 E. BROADWAY, COSTA MESA 64...WJ .m · FRYING ~CHICKEN CUT ·UI' lllXfOPAllTS C:OHUJllS l lllHOQUAllT(llS WJllACl(S l fOIVOU~Af(AS Wl8ACJ(S WINGS, NW lS Gl8l.£TS sun'°"'°" , .... - .SMOKED 88~ HAM '~ -. ,.,,...,,.....,LI. . ' ..,. ' ~-~----.., WAS HOW .,D ,., .... _ ' tM\ s1JI 2:~ Slk•d leco" .....•... · ·. · :.·. " ~ ...... ,_ w 49c l~ l•rtl ...................... :..l& .,,.,,· *'o ..... , ... .,,. ••• -· 69C Z'-= Wieeet1 •••••••••••••••••• '.,.o .,.., ...iD-""'"'"'"oo h'4 SIM ~ .... ,,.,.,., ............. l.'t -,... .. ,....,.mas• W/U(I Nl'no8 __, ' :flYEI 88* i LIGS !~ ~ -~eca LL ·~ ·- WAI NOW ~~ c:.1,'wd. .............. "'" ~· l•: ., .... ~~ ..................... 'l.":I ~ $" l'9 \=.:~ ................. 'l:E' ')( 3~c ~ t"..-ite4Mft ........ 'I:! )It ~~ CAIADIAI RED SPADAI APPLES ...... u--11----~· 5 H1iic1:S~ AUCll9S MJB COFFEE 1-LB. CAI He; SUGAR WAS MOW WAS 5NOW8 l&llOllTIWT '" ~";1"'1;S.,.p ••••••••• ':'.: ~· 41' !~ r~;;-::::::7 ........... ':o\' M· 23' ·~--IEAIS U!» ~ ..................... ,~ ~ 49' , !~ ii~ ....................... ~o.: • ' GIEll 251~ t~ 39' f(D i;~"'. ................... ·i:: )to 29' ii• IML y-.,;;~Peste ........... ·:::: )(' 14' *"" l.'l""·-M. 77c f~ UI ' t(!» T;;;i;'i-t ........... ·:~ • l'\:" 111ecwMI ................ '1.t' ~ "j ~~--------~.-S-HOW-IUlllT IASUT ~(!» ,~~.: ............... ·~.~ "= '':~.a 0111 21~ . , ~(!» ~ .. ~ ............... 'l.o.: }If 54 f{~s _.._, ' it'--..r;-.r "AL, 73c ";' , •• IMI. '-~ •• .................... ':.~' "'4 !~ LOAf !~ ;i:..~ ................ 't:/ x• 53c I .s..-. WAS NOW ~'~ -.a+,1 ._...., ''1 ............. ..., ... ·~D r""··-···:::-' nr ~ 49' *11' .... s1 SI I ;~ ~~6:;;::::::::::::: .:; ;. 5l< \ ~ FOODS 89" ,(!» ~:.: .................. "·°'' ~· aa: 'W ·~ ,u.. ~ 'to a.:..n. ....... -......... ·:.~· M' 59 ..... -~ JAi ..... . ._.. __ WAS NOW iriD "-'J"'-"" 'M'i 20' '~ ·-" s..., ............ .'' .~·,.: it•o .. ~ ,..,, ~ 52< L '\:: ... fl!._ .,, ......... ,_ "' f D htr~a-........... ·~:: .. 43c • o ·-·· . ~ 3zc z PMt 'Cetrett .......... i::: ~ ,. : . ' . . ...... -------- IAYIL ~~39~ ! DT;.;...s... ........... u1 ;; if; ;.:s~.19" -OIAIGIS ~~~·-::::: ............... us )f 67'\ .. ~\YOGUIT Yi • 4 LL !(! s;..~, ............... 't31 'X' 'I"'. "6' * D ~ J ••. t' .. , t(!t (:;.;;, ................ '-!' )(· 83' \-'~'--_'" __ ____;;..;...... __ _ "'·-. WAS NOW WAS NOW ~ ~ .............. ·:.r )ct 78' ;iito 28~ !~ i;'i..,'"'-""· ·::· )f 94c ~ ;;.:g ........ : ......... ·i~· ~ 11· IEAIS '" ~(! i:;'l:.T. .................. ~ )«' 24" " !_(!i;:'CW .................. ·:.r ~•9 c ~-···"1<1,"f' •• IPl'"4!1-~Dr;;......1 s-e ........ ?~SJH ! • i;'.:X ................ -~ )(' 24' ~~ .... ,; .. ; !(! ~'-"-........... ·~ ~ 97c ) ~ ~lliillliii0i"=-...:·"f~X1f ' ,_."-... *'• _,,,_ 2 #,, .. -...AP-r r .... 1"'"·· .. ~_U8P.·J·~ 1·· os · ~ .... -............. ; '" I n!" 1t-liH'&: .............. ·~ ,.. 5•· !~ ..................... ,,.. ~ sp• !.~ 1:&111 .. .___ .... )f• 16' . ... DAILY PILOT WtdnMday, January 21. 197e -· Diners Get Second Chance Th.anlls to the Chinese moon calf'Ddar, )'Ou'll have a second chance for a happy new year be(inning on Saturday, January 31. That's when the Year of the Dragon (4674 in Onental reckon· ing) starts. This menu features Stir-fned Ctucken Breasts. prepared with frozen Chinese veget ables. served with hot cooked rice and Cantonese Soup. Tea and fortune cookies complete the meal. STIR-FRI ED CIOCKEN l clove garlic, finely minced 2 thin slices fresh ginger, finely minced, or 1 2 teaspoon ground ginger No Waste Habit's Healthy The Chinese h ave ba~ed their eating habits c.nd methods of food pre- par ation for centuries on good nutrition with little or now aste of food. 2 whole chicken breaits, '6 Pound each. skinned, booed, end cut into ~ incb squares 1 tablespoon cornstarch l tablespoon sherry 1 tablespoon soy sauce 2 tablespoons oil 10 ounce package frozen Fancy Chinese Style Vegetables, thawed "~ cup unsalted roasted cashews or almonds Place chicken squares in large bowl and sprinkle with cor- nstarch. tossing to coat evenly. Add sherry and soy sauce, toss- ing again to coat. Place a large skillet or wok over hiah heat for about 1 30 stt0nds. Add oil and swirl to coat pan. Add carlic and ginger and cook, stirring, until golden. Remove from pan with slotted spoon and discard. Add marinated chicken and cook. stirring constantly, until chicken turns whtte and firm. Add Chinese vegetables and cook one minute longer. Add nuts and stir to heat through. Serve at on- ce over 4 portions ot Chow Mein noodles or hot cooked rice. / CANTONESE SOUP ~ pound lean pork, sliced thin 2 tablespoons cooking oit 2 tableapoons soy sauce 114 teaspoon peppar l tea.spoon ground lincer 1 ~Auarts chicken broth 3 cups thin sliced Chinese celery cabbage Chow Mein nood.l Jn large saucepan, liihtly brown pork in bot oil, stirring fre- quently. Stir In soy sauce and seasonings; cook 5 minutes. Add broth; simmer 15 minutes. Add cabbage to soup; cook until cab- bage is tender, about S minutes. Garnish the 6 servings with chow mein noodles. 0 s Current concerns in this country over health and economy can be minimized with a lesson in Chinese cooking. The other courses for this dinner might be fish with black beans, nee. pickled cabbage, frwt and tea. Join Ralphs war on higher food piceswith , supercoupon savings and more new low prices. PORK I~ LETTUCE 1 tablespoon oil 1 :i teaspoon salt I garlic clove, smashed and peeled •••4W-••• «911'>••• 1 :i pound ground lean pork 2 tablespoons sherry mixed with 2 tablespoons water 10 fresh or frozen snow peas. each cut intoJ crosswise pieces 4 cann ed water chestnuts. minced 1 tablespoon ('Or - nstarch blended with 2 tablespoons cold water. I teaspoon s ugar and 2 teaspoons soy sauce 2 tablespoons slivered almonds 8 large iceberg let - tuce leaves Heat a medium-size skillet or a wok until very hot. Add 011. salt a nd garlic and stir·fry until garlic is brown, discard garlic. Add pork and stir-fry for 3 minutes. Add sherry mixture and stir-fry for 2 minutes. Add snow peas a nd water chestnuts and stir- fry for J minute. Add cor- nstarch mixture and cook and stir for2 minutes. Garnish with almonds. Serve pork and lettuce in separate bowls. Each person scoops pork onto a lettuce leaf, folds it tightly and eats it with the fingers. Adapted from "Chinese Cooking for Beginners ·· by Ali ce Schryver< Dodd, Mead). Broccoli Blooms This colorful vegetable presentation makes a light supper when served with crisp bacon. toast, coffee and pineapple cake. BROCCOLI )llMOSA 11 2-pound bunch br()('COJi Water and salt J tablespoon butter or margarine 2 teaspoons flour 12 t easpoon dry mustard 2eggyolks 3,,. cup light cream l tablespoon lemon Juice J hard-cooked egg, sieved Cut flowerets from was hed broccoli. With a swivel-blade peeler. pare 1 outer fibrous covering from stalks; sli ce thin. Bring 2 quarts water and J tablespoon salt to a • rollinf boil: add broc· coli; boil gently until ten· d er-c rhp -3 or 4 minutes; drain Melt butter over low heat; stir In flour and mustard, remove from ~at. Beat egg yolks and crHm to blend; stir into • "butfermlxture. Cook over low heat, : •tirrlnC constanl17, until allptly thickened -do [ llOt boil. SUr In lemon i> juke, broccoli and salt to J taste. . Rebut without bO•llni. Sprinltla wltb eli· ltaltes •aervtn11. Meat Master Meats Beet-Bone In l;z] Full CUt RiJu~d Stealf 1.29 C•llfomla Grown -FrHh Whole Stewing ~Chickens lb •• 29 Save .30 with Coupon #823 Save .23 with Coupon iiiiPhi~Frozen 5c iiiiPhik . 11b.10C P I as 10 oz. with Coupon end $5.00 Margar1·n I pkg~lth Coupq,n end ss.oo k minimum purchue minimum purcha .. P g • ••t'~ etooMttc-Hot•t•t.. ••c~ ••"-ouc be•e,.,. .. tobtCC:O 4 fluid'""· JUod'llClt. ~ 4 ft• ..... ~ ptOdv<ft limit One Item and One Coupon Per Cuttomer Limit One Item end One Coupon Per Cuttomer ~sliPii ,i:Oii'PON sUPiiG;UPON Both coupons may be redeemed with one $5 purchase #824 Pot Roast Round Bone ~ !~!t~.!!SI J. 09 iiiiiiii; ~i:h:Ck ..... 1.15 D !~!.~!!. ..d89 a5q.14ayg.:.ot{• Super Deli Super Bakery We1tern ;es;• 27 ~ ieib.ce ~Bread ,~:!i • ;:::====·=·ch =.19= ... ::~:: ~;e::: ... te9 lb .• 89 ~w.~1-4oz .• 27 u KSr•wrss": 5'tceCd heese ~ &oz •• 79 l;z] A;tj;t.'$' Bologna , oz. .49 U eAmericanorden-~Ingle s1C1ceheeseFood ~ 12oz. 1.19 D ~i~1 Franks 11b. 1.29 [-;i Knudsen -All Flavor• 25 ~ Cheese cake Dessert 4 oz. • D Treuweet-Grapefrultor Orange Juice 111110~ .98 D Ralphs Pure Florida Orange Juice gallo~ .87 D R~tpTh~ Margarine , lb .• 49 D 1..LaOkengTo Lhomake Cheese 901. 1.02 [-;i Buttermilk or Country Style ~ Ballard Biscuit 1 .... oz. .13 D R•lph• Non Dairy Creamer Morning Blend pint .31 D p:;~kMargartne 11b .• 49 Super Spirits L•kHhlre Gin or D White or WhHt-Sendwlch or Split Top 2 49 Larve Sunkl1t Ralphs Bread 41:!; • Navel ~er~;,.;~~ Rolls ~:~ .49 u Oranges 15 ~ R•lpht-Chocolate Chip 89 ~ per lb. • ~Tea Cakes . HCh e ----------------0 ~1~i~haAPP1es U Mild.SwHI ~ Brown Onions Super Flowers .. B1ckJard Entertalnment"-A11orted 10 0 r;;ncy0 Tangerines ~ Freth, Crltp pkg. • ~Cucumbers .-ie ~seeds ~ cy~ Plants Heh 1.27 ~ (i~•n liiJl.t§ltik.tmt9 perlb •• 29 pertb, .19 perlb •• 26 each per lb, .15 .15 From Super Buys to everyday low prices, Ralphs has more new low prices to help you win a victory at the checkstand. Plain or Iodized Mort Ill o Salt Cont1dlna Tomato o Sauce Ev.por•l•d ClflllllOll 260L pkg. Macaroni & CheHe Kraft .18 ~Dinners Golden-Whole Kamel Nlblets ·c~~ .13 . o Corn Globe A-1 LOlll. 71401. 22 pkg •• 1201. 29 can • 11b. 39 pkg •• o Milk 2 99 AllPurpoH fifth • Rllphs Plastic l;z] Pitchers Sandra each • 77 ~Vodka ",~~ .30 o Spaghetti Oki Faahloned Ralphs !lb. 59 Yl gel. 89 ~&;;id'Art~heners ~:::.42 ~oiet~w.=1• ~~:~ 1.79 ~Flour u Kiiis HOUH hold Germ•-14 OL Aerotol C•n 1 48 ~Relph•-& YHr Old full 519 ~Lysol Disinfectant .. ch • ~Kentucky Bourbon qu.rt • D T~;tt&J;~ Gallon Sire HCh 4.59 D Q;bi~mSuHv~rbon qu'~~ 5.49 r--«m1 --., r--cwn·--, r~ "I I Sn• .06 wttll Coupon n21 11 I ~ ::~• ................. ~-I Del Monte 11 Rah I ::.:~7 Health U Beau~ ~ Si~ N8sal Spray ~B;~Aid~Ps ~~Pads ~ N):q~it"~lne Frozen Food I Catsup ~~ .33 11 Sticks 1!:;: .79 I D ltol,h1 I limit One lt•m end Ont Coupo11 '" Cu•tOfll•t 11 Umh One l .. !ft end Oft• Coujlon Per Cuato'"" I tverycloy Low '•k• ~ ~~~t~ C011pOft £ffectlvt J•n. 22 thlough Jen. M COflpOll !flecthoe Jen. tt throvtf\ .J•n. llt ;-...::; ~,.! ~ oiOJIGW L COUPON . IL COUPON . I ......... .-"-- ________ .. --------.. ~ ~ ~Cilcrapeh·•-LaJUt; r Copprlgllt 197' &y A•lpft• Grocery Compenp AN Algllt1 At .. rYH ~ APPteJU.: w fuper mmtcet · b•g • Yl oz. 99 bottle • .50 et. 86 pqi •• 30cl 148 pkg. • &oz. 1 49 bottle • 21b. 79 pkg •• 120L 69 c•n • 120L 66 can • ~Ice Cran c.rton 8 1&0L 2fj can • pkg •• ai 32oz. 86 bottl• • pkg. 4' of2 • 't 1401 ... bottle .'II 1101. 28 cen • 100' 48 '°" e q11•rt 88 llr . 4IOL 1 • pkg. ••!I • • RALPHS STORES ARE LOCATED AT· 380 E 7 HMIOI & WILSON 9901 ADAMS BLVD.., HUNTINGTON IEAOt 1501 S. BROOl<HURST, WESTMINSmt • .... 24167 PASEO Of VAUNOA, lAGUNA HIUS 172~1 f1h7:~·J.~~~:SA COSTA MESA .Ol N. lOAIA, ANAHEIM 6CU2 WARMU, HUNTINGTON IEAOt STORE HOURS: 9·10 Doily. 9-9 Sunday 4 • 9 9 5 5 5 \ . f .. We Welcome FOOD STAMP COUPONS SAFEWAY FRESH PRODUCE Green Onions Fresh. Zippy Fl:tVOI fOI S.1lads BllflCh 12' ~:,,~,~~~~~!,~,;e~tts . . Jar 5 ge ·APPLES Red Delicious Variety 4 -lb. Bag fancy Quality, Golden Ripe lb. Green Cabbage Fresh. Firm and Gleen ~ads Red Radishes Fr csh and Crisp For Salads . lb 12' ~ Bunch 12' Rose· Bushes s12s Potted Plants4~99~ u.s.11.1...,... .......................... ra ....,...., ...................... . \ I Roll Bakery Shop Buys ! I BREAD c J;Vi ne Depart 111e111 .' Price5 El1ect1Vll In l.tcensetl Safeweys TABLE WINE Gallo~lgg In Our Dairy Case ... gi~ ORANGE JUICE -~ ~. ~ \ Tropicana 3 91a \ ~ ~ Pure 32-oz. Y ~~ lili Carton Large "AA" Eggs ~i:i:~ 'c~1 72' M . ~ 1·1b 33' argartne Cotdbroo~ Cubes • Ctn Lucerne Corn Tortillas ~~2 23' Lucerne Potato Salad '~;~~ 49' Variety Deparunent Pepsodent Too1hpas1e @ ~u0~ 59' Suave Shampoo e:~1~' @'~;:: 66' Sure Deodorant Ron on 1 i,z~ s1o9 Excedrin Tablets ~;~, o~:'oo '1 37 Cut From Fresh Eastern ,ork Loins. It's top grade pork • the kind that comes from select young pigs which have been fed to produce sweet tasting fine textured meat. • ~~ Suggestion U.S.D.A. GRADE 11A 11 Fryer "Fresh" Whole, Southern 3-lbs. and under. There's nothing like crisp, f rled chicken to make a hit with family appetites! lb. !~!e~,~!.~~:!! ............... lb.$1 29 ~~!:~l~g ~!~!~ ..................... 1b49 c !:!!~!.~:!~~~~~,,~Avg .. ~. 6 9 c ~~~!~~~~5 ........ ~~~~~~~:!z. Pkg.98 C ~m~~:!!!!!~.~~ .... ~:: ,_u. 39c ~t~~n~~u~I~.~.~~~ .............. ~:·99C f ~~.~~!.~~~~~~.~ .. ~~~.~ .. lb.$1 19 ~r~~.t;!!~!'J!~~J ......... ~.$149 ~e~~s~u~!A ~!~ ... ~~.~~~: ....... 1~$1 49 , ~ BEEF SHORT RIBS Pork Loin Rib Chops $16 9 Cenflr Cut IUll Cllops ....................... .lb. =:.A J.~~ .................. lb. 59¢ ' Center Loin Chops P;~et~,n '$1 79 I~ P k S Si>'e>\3'/ • ~ ~ 2·0l 99' Or ausage •'lee!•ufU f101 P~g. C Dubuque Boneless anned Ham Fully Cocked J.tb 5696 Can • S:"IO~ A Roma 1·1b Sliced Bacon a~a111y Proe1uc1 Pkg sp9 Leo's Sliced Ham imported 4 01 89' Pkg Polish Sa usage More Big Values! Farrrer Jo~<1 Random We gnts 9-Lives Cat Food e 5 ~~0;s s1 °0 Mushrooms :i:~~·~F;;~~ ~~~ 39c VarietyPakChips ~~~~~le i:~age Cr.anberry Cocktail ~= 3~;:· 69< Quick Oats H~,~~:ar e 4~~~· age Pooch Dog Food Royal ~ 16:~ 23' Fabric Softener s1a-Pu1 ~ ~·,~l 79' Fabric Softener eour1ce :~o 53' FROZEN FOOD BUYS! BEL-AIR • Baby Limas, 10-oz. • Broccoli Spears, 10-oz. • Brussels Sprouts, 8-oz. • Cauliflower, 10-oz. • Strawberries (Sneed), 10-oz. • BEL-AIR A • Green Beans lll (Cut or French), 9-oz. • Chopped Broccoli, 10-oz. •Cut Corn, 10-oz. • French Fries, 9-oz. • Peas, 10-oz. Pk gs. Pk gs. Eggo Waffles =::~~~' 1~-:-49c Bel-air SpinachJ:~:· :.:.:.·' i5 ~:.·$1 Rhodes Bread=~~=~' i2l!;~~,39c Bel-air Macaroni & Cheese a.oz. 31• P'«g. Scotch Treat French Fries ~:· 49• Pancake Mix ~.:: 1 :;· 4gc Bel-air Mixed Vegetables winter ~· 75• Scotch Treat Orange Juice 1t:-4gc .. I - CJO DAILY PILOT Wednesday, January 21 , 1978 Inscrutable?. • • Tht> au ra o r a Chinese restaurant 1:.-. hard to re create But for people who want lo c~ebrate thE> New Year al home, the:,e re{'ipes made from conve- ruence foods are d1stmctive and complementary. Dragon Ribs (pork spareribs baked in a fruity barbecue :-;a uce > Hre lesty and nicely" glazed F.GG ROLLS WITH GARLIC MAYONNAISE 2 packages (6 ounces each) frozen eg g rolls 2 packages (6 ounces each > cream cheese. ::,ortened 1 cup m ayonna1:..e .!. garlic <'loves, ~led and mashed 1 teaspoon Chinese-style mustard (from packet in egg roll~> . '• teaspoon celery salt Dash paprika Remove mustard packet from egg rolls, measure out 1 teas- poon and set it aside. Heat egg rolls ac{'ording to package direc- tions . Meanwhile, in a medium bowl, combine cream cheese, mayon- naise garlic, reserved mustard, celery salt and paprika; blend well then beat with rotary beater until smooth. Chill until ready to serve with hot egg rolls. Makes 11"2 cupj. Store any remaining dip in tight- ly covered jar in refrigerator. DRAGON RIBS 6 pounds pork spareribs 2garlic cloves, chopped l small onion, quartered 14 cup dry sherry 1" cup honey 1 can < 16 ounces) apricot naives (include syrup) 2 teaspoons salt v• cup teaspoon pepper v, cup red wine vinegar Ribs should be trimmed or ex- cess fat and cut into two-rib or single rib sections. Place ribs in large saucepan and cover with water. Bring to boil and simmer gently, covered,! hour. Remove ribs and place rib-side up in a s ingle layer in 2 baking pans. Place remaining ingre- di ents in an electric blender; whirl until smooth. Brush ribs with some of this mixture. Bake rib-side up at 350 degrees F. for 20 minutes. Turn ribs, b1ushing with more sauce. Bake 40 minutes longer or until cnspy and brown. Makes 6 to 8 servings. TO THE BONE {)NtY BAR M SHAHKLESS -2 9 ZAOl.3ARMS or FOSTER FARMS 59c FRESH CUT SHARP CHEDDAR CHEESE COSTA MESA 19th and PlACENTIA Store Hours: 9 to 9 Daily -Sunday 9 to 7 '"CH Effectlye Thursday. Jan. 22 Thru Wed., Jan. 28 P'ricH ~to Stocll a.I ll9d W~ Gtodty Accept Food Stminps ---·------- FRESH PRODUCE ~.~ Tl/£ SMOKEDw::i· 1 LI LEGGED FRYERS LI. ~ 8£fT HAMS half • ._IHF_L_O_IH-10-H-EL_ES_S _________ _.. BAR M EASTERN 10P s1RL0111 2z9 1.49u . FRESH ITALIAN SQUASH PORK Pluttortc 1 ~~ STEAK DJ= LB. wEIHERS T BONE _R_OA_ST ____ ~~GROUND 119 BEEF LOIM LEAN BEEF LB. 89~ STEAKS 98 HORMEl BEEF LOIN PORTERHOUSE STEAK SMOKED STEAKS BEEF RIBS . .... EEF--Ro_u_N_D ______ ..... _________ .... L•. sACON SIRLOIN TIP 1 •LB9. BARMEASTERH 149 STEAKS ~~STEAKS LI. ~~ 1.39EA GINGHAM DISHWASHIMG ID 32oz. Bottle 39c ii~!.~~ ____ ...;. ______________________ ...... 39c , ANTHONY'S ELIO MACARONI Small or LarcJe I Lb. Pkg. ---~' --GOLD MEDAL FLOUR c GINGHAM PURE GROUND BLACK PEPPER 40Z CAM 19c 19~ MILD SPANISH ~~ONIONS 15~ SWEET 1N JUICY NAVEL ORANGES 17~ LOMG GREEN CUKES10~ 5 Lb. Bag Jim's Ranch FRESH GRADE AA LARGE EGGS CI PINTO 19~ 303 CAN 'BEANS $PRINGFIELD DARK RED KIDNEY 300 c. BEANS I Pound CartOft 199 UTTER $PRIMGFIELD. MAYOlllWSE f: Fulq.wt 24cn. Bottle MEW CASTLE •• 9T. 399 · PLUS TAX I ... .. • '~ . , _ ....... ...._ _______ ·-·---- ) Weclneeday, Janu.,y 21, 1918 OAll Y PILOT (;J I r • • ,. Not With Help of Convenience Foods • <From P11eCIO> IMP.ER I AL SllJUMP 2 pounds medium to large shrimp Va cup bottled oil and vinegar dre.s!ing wlth savory seaaontngs 2 tablespoons chopped parsley 1 garlic clove, finely chopped ~teaspoon salt 3 bacon slices 1 19 ounce box stir-rry sweet and sour entree 1 tablespoon lemon juice ~ teaspoon bottled hot red pepper sauce .Spareribs Glaze's Jellied Chinese cooks in America often put fruit preserves in that sweet sauce that comes with hot mustard to a.ccent egg rolls, roast pork and fried shrimp. Take your cue from them and use apple jelly in· the sauce for these spareribs that get the tender treatment in an electric slow cooker before they are basted and broiled. GLAZED RIBS 1 cup waler l teaspoon salt 4 pounds fresh pork spareribs, cut in J-rib pieces Apple Jelly Sauce Place water. salt and spareribs into an electric slow cooker. Cover and cook with heat control on low until tender -8 to 10 hours. Drain. (Broth, after chilling and removing fat, is fine for soup.> Brush both sides of ribs with Apple Jelly Sauce and arrange on rack in broiler pan. Broil .J to6 in· ches from high heat. turning once , until browned -15 to 20 minutes. Makes 6 serv- ings; accompany with Chinese -s tyle hot mustard. APPLE J ELLY SAUCE Yi teaspoon cor- nstarch 2 tablespoons cider vinegar 1 teaspoon cbili powder 1 zteaspoon salt \/9 teaspoon ground ginger 1 small clove garlic, minced 1 cup apple jelly V.. cup water In a srr. all saucepan, s tir corns tarch and vinegar until smooth. Stir in remaining ingre- dients . C ook over moderately low heat, stirring constantly. until jelly melts and thickens. Shrimp Saute Ir good health is your New Year's resolution, try this slimming fare. CUCUMBER SHRIMP SA UTE J pound fre s h shrimp, shelled and de- vei ned or 14 -ounce package frozen shrimp, partially thawed l tablespoon dry sherry · 1 tablespoon corn starch 2 teaspoons salt l teaspoon sugar 3 medium cucum- bers, pared 5 tablespoons corn oil Cut shrimp in half leneth wise. Combine with sherry, corn starch, l teaspoon salt and sug- ar: set aside. Quar ter cucumbers leftlthwise a nd remove 1eed1. Cut into 1-incb dla1onal pieces. Heat 2 tablespoons corn oil ln 3-quart saucepan over medium heat. Add cucumbers a nd l teaspoon salt. Cook, stlrrlng frequent- ly, unW cucumbers are slightly t ransparent, 3 to 5 mlnute1. Remove cucumbers; set aside . • Heat a tablespoons corn oil wlth remainjng oU tn sauc&pan. Add 1 shrimp 1Jllxture; cook over medlum heat, stir· Hot flu!fy rice Lemon slices for garnish (op-tional) Shell and devein. raw shrimp. Wash and pat dry with paper towel. In a large bowl, combine dressing, scallions, parsley, garlic and salt. Add shrimp and toss to coat well; marinate 1 hour. Meanwhile, in a very large skillet, fry bacon until crisp; drain on paper towels; crumble and reserve. Pour off all but 1 tablespoon of drippings from skillet .• Remove glaze packet from en- tree and mix contents with shrimp in marinade. Add shrimp mixture to skillet and stir-fry un- til they turn pink and are done, about 5 minutes. Turn ~an of sweet aQd sour sauce into skillet. Add lemon juice and pepper sM; beat un- til bubbly. \... Place shrimp on bed of hot rice ; spoon sauce over top. Sprinkle with reserved bacon. Garnish 6 servings with lemon slices, if desired. I Every week most markets fill these pages with "one-week specials" that usually go back up again to regular prices the following week. But the thousands of prices that Alpha Beta has lowered are now our everyday low prices! (N(> need to buy a membership card, either.) MOO GOO GA.I PAN 1 ~ pounds skinned, boned chicken breasts Salt and pepper v.i cup dry sherry 2 tablespoons peanut oil I garlic clove, chopped I bunch scallions, trimmed and sliced 1h pound mus hrooms, trimmed aod sliced thick 1 16 ounce can water chestnuts, drained and 5liced v.a teaspoon ground ginger or 2 teaspoons grated fresh ginger .... 3'Ai tablespoons cornstarch 14 ounce can chicken broth Hot fiutry rice Slivered ham and /or Chinatown style noodles for garnish (optional) Cut chicken into l ·lnch cubes and place in bowl. Sprinkle gef!erously with salt and pepper. then sherry and toss to coat. Let stand at room temperature 1 hour. In large heavy saucepan, heat oil over moderately high heat. Turn contents of bowl into oil and stir over high heat until chicken becomes . white and opaque. about S minutes. Stir in garlic, scallions, mush.rooms, bean sprout.a and waler chestnuts. Stir over high heat 2 to 3 minutes. Meantime, in a small bowl,. mix ginger and cornstarch, then gradually stir in chicken broth. Stir into chicken mixture. Cook and stir over high heat until sauce bubbles and thickens. Taste, and add more salt and pepper if needed. Serve witb rice. Gamlsh 6 servings with ham and/or noodles. So, Instead of worrying through a newspaper full of grocery ads every week, look inside your nearest Alpha Beta Market. You'll find more food for your dollar ... substantlal savings in your food budget..t ALPHA BETA. TllE UlST WORD IN I.OW PRICES. 'rtn1 con1t antly. until shrim p are pink and tender. Add cucumbers and cook 2 to 3 minutes. POUNTAIN VAU.IY-tlllO WlfMf' MUN'T1Nem* ~ AdelU HUNTINGTON llACH--41411 lfoffhWlt HUNT1NGTON ~_, N. llhln a COSTA mu noo Hetbcr ltwd. COSTA •M-M1 E. 17th It. l LAGUNA tlu..a.--43$41 Cell• d• I• L ...... Serve tmmt'diatcly. *akcs4eervlnas. 1~~.....:.------~~~--~~~~!.....~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~-----------------:-_.. ______ _......., • l I .f~l~2~0AJl.=Y~Pl~l'-'O"-T-----W:.:.Od="""='l~·Jll\U~21, 19~ BOOMER All RIGllf, ARtlot.D, 1~ 'Ibo MAO PAUi.. NEWMAN'S eve:s. ~OUll.T ~EOF'ORD'S MOU!" ,ANO 5T€ri; No.C QUUrl'S Cuu.i . lllt~ MAY86° I'D /U.tN You. ....... _. __ .... TUMBLEWEEDS SO! '\llU WANT AN Alt-~XP~NS~· PAIP TRIP10 fl\RIS ... UH, MAY I ASX WHY? FUNKY WINKERBEAN THE.SE BIRD FEEDER& WITtl THE BACJJN GREA5E IN THE liT1LE HOLES ARE REALLY CDNVENIEMT I FIGMENTS I J.! ,,. .. .,_._,_ ·1 NANCY by WIL F. lroWll Cllld Mel Casson ~--~ ~t'f'. AIA~. t1sre.i, I~ Ybo HAD fl\UI. N~lllA\Arl'S EYES, fOSfH i'EWDRO'S MOU!~ AND Srtv't !#,' QUU/l'S Qi/N •• I I I .. 'l!lu 'D 8t UT~ell OFF Sltl6Lt.. by Tom Batiuk l 'UE 5EEN THAT HUMAN5 HAVE PLACE& THEY GO EXCEPT THE<,) GET THEJ R WAD OF GREA5£ 01' A (IUt.l I 10 AL5QI by Dale Hale by &nie Bushminer J'LL NEVER CATCH ~'--~THAT MOUSE --- THIS SHOULD STOP HIM I r • J ., ,, ' HE ALWAYS ESCAPES THROUGH THERE ' ' PEANUTS ----_; u " TODAY'S CIDSSWDRD PUZZLE ,. I HEA~ ~0"11 Fl1/END HAS A VAl'D/1 LOCK ACROSS '2 C•11ad1a" I [ lnd1¥1 oeninsu1• carpet 4l F•m~v S Eiec;l with memM1 tom empt 44 Pott!'f'I 9 Young mat!!!!~ henll'lg 45 Succeuful 14 Cunnm9 looli: play 15 C1l•!0<n,. 46 T~hon• ·'"' "" 16 Sod1-brone 48 HHllBted depOSft 52 Mike 10 ii 17 A lol'ldbe•gh norm 18 Ni111C, e g. 56 Pub product 19 Tome·lludv 57 -----de Leon: m•o Sp. explo•er 21) Oisentumbei S8 Veteiiope1;i 21 Hurl 59 Pic1ure downw&fll 60 Nol 2J MLS1il\el; e•ourgaled ~Have 61 Cake pee~e deco•ato• 16 Vene•ab!e 62 Mon!hs. 27 R11oon ...... 29 Oi111nc11ve 6J Color th!'O•V charogef5 rntor,..al 64 Make loans l2 W11bl!! 6S Wooi:ty p~nl )!) Roll C1M DOWN ....... ~ 1 c;;,t 10 11ms 36 c,,d game 2 Hoghly 17 ... 1a1e111ed Moun\ial'IS peaple USS R. J lea1'5 sv11em 4 liw' J8 Cail:IO<\a!ed 5 T1~d donk1 6 Suldes )! Umed 7 Form&! poef!t s.ecu•elv 8 African «! Sh~ vellev 41 R,.,,,3,, 9 Mull•·tolored ta~e lab11t l 1 " " lO YKlef.;.v's Puule $ol¥ed: 10 Talk idly I 1 A~em11ions 12 Calude ····: F1. nove-1•51 13 Carton we;gh1 21 lnlluence. lnl01mal 22 S 1it1..es 24 Pull Of' ice 27 P°'tpOne· m~I 2! U9lld in the -'" XI ····awil'r. "' ... 31 Spect 32 Hirtts J3 Shiu irl mvtl>olotV )4 Lndlan t1ibal Cl!fttmOl'f: 2 wOldt l5 Oanceol R"~ia l ( Ji ( H ( O E A l Pet•• Buit1 J8 llind ot rn.,. 42 Contribute 4.41 futu1e officers 45 Danger 47 Runinlo 48 Mike gu~ate• 49 No. Ameri· c•n snake 50 Milfry ....... "~ ""' .. 52 f>ot.Jto. Slang s:t Show biz -Md 5o4 S1ee1 mill pfod\lCI 5S &act· -.... 59 ranaric· Sult•• 10 II 12 IJ JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH a ~IR Pl510L ANO BLACK INK• I ,, ;• ' .. IT wfJ6 /4. &AD HOOSE, MR. SHORE! 11'5 DIFF1CUL.T TO GIVE YOUR &ST &FORE AA ALW'.)$T EMPTY HOUSE ' 1-'2• I DOOLEY'S WORLD 0 Oo 0 0 l 00 0 0 o · 0 ! 0 1 0 ! ' Q 0 . " DR. SMOCK GORDO DELIVERY ROOM. veAH , ?!,UT S~AF' A PAIFt OF et...eVA,..OR. &OOT"l6S 0""' 'T"HS: KIP. At-J ' WHO'S i"O t<,....OW!" MOON MUWNS $3? JIMGOlll<; TO BE HARC>10 LIVf; WITH I~ I DON'T ~l''J. <in A CH/IN<;i; OF 5Cf;NE, WILL-Y,AM ... ANIMAL CRACKERS by Chew !es M. Schub ~~-----~ NOT A VAPOR LOCK! llE HAS 'TllE VAPORS"!! by Harold Le Dou by,Mell -------.!...~f' r11>mT~~ Wl'T'M THE~ OQC.,. , .. , by Chestw GClllld ~-'l'OllR · SKIJRl'N ~ 11'\IL!Q 'Tl4E BAND1!5 HAO GMN 'THf UflS A DlllNM ~INK 0 ~. • • 1.) . by ltodgtr lradfielcl . • by Gus Arriola 0 <J ':f- ,"(.l'-' bf! by Ferd Johnson . " by Rodger Bollen 1 WA"li° IT /~ I WRmNG . 3 . .,, --·~iw . .,, ..Then:: now, that wasn't so difficult, was ii?" DEH~41S THE MENACE 0 'CAA YA TAU< UlJOER ~ 1llERts A LOT a: YEW.'I' 60ING Ql HERC I• . . . I ' len • • I t ··~--· f U: --.. -11"1110 .. ~W .... • -- Wedneeday. January 21 . 1978 DAILY PILOT CJ3 Slice, Chop, Stir! ~ere•a a colorful, fteat-tuUn1 stlr·fry dtab -Chlnme Pork -tb~t IOfS toeether In a matter of minutes on e the tnlUal sllclnc and cbopplnc of the meat and ve1etables ls completed. A 1reat company let.a since most of the ereparaUon can be done ahHd aftd your SUUts can watch you cook t able l <>J>1 CHINESE PO}lK 1 pound boneless pork . · Natural meat tenderizer, seasoned or unseasoned 2tablespoons cooking oil 4 rlbl ~elery, thinly sliced dia1onal1y ~. pound fresh mushrooms, 1liee 4 cups shredded cabbage 1 Pound can mixed Chmese vesetables, drained, v.. tea.sp00n pepper Trim excess !at from pork. Prepare all surfaces of pork, one 1lcle at a time, with tenderizer ufollows:- Thoroughly moisten meat with water. Sprinkle tenderizer even- ly like satt over entire meat sur- face. USE NO SALT. With sharp knire, cut meat into thin sli~es dlaconally across srain. Heat oil until very hot in large U2·inch) skillet or wok. Add pork strips and stir-fry-toss 5 minutes, until brown. Stir in green onions, celery and mushrooms and stir-fry 5 minutes. Add cabbaae and cook. stirring constantly, over medium to medium-high heat about 5 minutes. Stir in Chinese vegetables. pep- per and Yl teas Poon tenderizer; heat through, stirring, about 3 to 4 minutes. Serve over rice. Pass soy sau<'e. Makes 6 servings. Spicy Head Start Spicy Sweet a nd Sour Cabbage from '"Florence Lin's Chinese Regional Cookbook," is a nice ac- <' om pan i m e n t for chlcken. SPICY SWEF.T AND SOUR CABBAGE 2 tablespoons sugar '~teaspoon salt 2 t a blespoons soy sauce 2 tablespoons white vinegar oil 3 tablespoons peanut V.Z teaspoon crushed red pepper or 4 whole dried red peppers, crushed 6 cups cabbage <l s mall head) cut in 1-inch squares Combine s uga r, s alt, soy sauce and vinegar; set aside. Heat wok over high heat 30 seconds . Add peanut oil. Reduce heat to medium. Add red pep- per a nd s tir-fry 5 seconds . Add cabbage; stir-fry 5 minutes. Stir the soy sauce mixture and pour over cabbage. Turn heat to. high. Stir until well mixed. Serve immediately. )takes 8 servings. Finale's Fi-tting What <'an you serve for an Oriental dessePt bes ides fortune or almond cookies? SNOW PUDDING 't:i cup sugar 1 .. cup corn starch 1 , teaspoon s alt 2 <'UPS milk 2 egg whites 1 teaspoon vanilla Combine s ugar. corn starch and salt in double boiler top. Gradually blend in milk Cook over boiling water, stirring constantly. until mixture thickens. Cover and continue cooking over boiling waler, stirring oc- cas ionally. 20 minutes. Meanwhile. beat egg whites until soft peaks form when beater is raised. Gradua lly stir com starch mixture into beaten egg whites. Stir in vanilla. Pour into 4 individual molds, or in flat pan. Chill. Un mold to serve. If molded in pan, cut into rectangles and de- corate with mandarin orange· slices or as de- sired. Makes I ser vi ngs. Sprouts Relished This condim ent will distinguish your Chinese buffet. BEAN SPROUT R EUSH 11. cup corn oi 1 v. c u -p f i n e I y chopped scallions \4 cup pimien to stfips 2 tablespoons sesa- me seed 2 table s poons vieegar 2 tablespoons soy sauce 1 clove garlic, nUb~ '~ teaspoon salt t.~ teaspoon pepper 1 pound can bean sprout., drained Lettuc e or wltercreH Combine corn oll. cbopped 1callion1. Pl · mllnto, aeurne seed, v~esar, eoy eautte , 1•Uc, u lt and pepper. Pour over bean 1prout1J. Tou. ChJll. 9 rve on I ett uce or ·watercre11. M 1ke1 4 auvin11. l bunch green onions (6 to 8) including tops, chopped Pierce deeply with fork at "'4- inch intervals. co PARE -OUR LOW PRICES •OUR VARIETY -ouRCOUPON v ALUES-OUR QUALITY p\.US •A WEEKLY IN STORE BEST BUY GUIDE r~~~Re:;:~~~~ JANUAR" 28. 1976 eCONVENIENT PARCEL PICK-UP ~ PUREX . DETERGENT •XTRAFANCY RED DELICIOUS APPLES SOLID REC ·34• RIPE TOMATOES ..................................... lb · JADE GREEM 29• ' ITAllAN SQUASH .............................. II~. CREAMY TEXTURED 29• ANJOU PEARS .................................. '"· ·FRESH : 12• GREEN CABBAGE .............................. I~. Soitng11e1c1 ii SPRINGFIELD ICE TOMATO CORN CREAM SAUCE TORTILLAS ASST. FLAVORS age 10<= 10<= LEM ON. LIME, PINI< J20Z. 45c BTL. FRESH DAILY GROUND BEEF Thrif·T·Pak 4 lb~ or mort 63~ EXTRA LEAN GROUND BEEF Thrtf-T Pak $119 LB Vi GAL.SO . Ill ROAST 8JEF LARG.~ .. ~~-~ ....... 5148 tb. TENDER BEEF . S CUii STEAK . .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .... . ... l78 lb. BONELESS BEEF S 9 CHUCI ROAST .............................. 14 1b. BEEFCHUCK $ 49 IONILISS CLOD ROAST ................ 1 lb. BEEF CHUCK IONEUSS FAMILY STEAi ............... 51 5'111~. 8 OZ. CAN GAL. 57c BTL. # MOJAVE TOM TURKEY 0 12 OZ. PKG. FA'!:1ER JOHN PORK LOIN SllqDBACON ...................... ~1.N1b lOINENDPORKROAST .............. s1•9 lb. DUBUQUE ROYAL BUFFET PORK LOIN SLICED BACON ... )-~-~ .................... s1 3~b. CENTER-CUT PORK CHOPS ............ 51" lb. FARMER JOHN 'h LB PORK LOIN PORK SAUS· llNKS ................... ' ........ 55~b. COUNTRY STYLE RIBS ........... 51 .N lb. HILLSHIRE FRESH , SMOKED SAUSAGE ....................... 51 591b VEAL RIB CHOPS .......................... '1'9 lb COOKS FRESH SLICED :4 PORK SAUSAGE LINKS ................ spC> b PORK LOIN ........................ 5159 lb . TREASURY COUPON •••••••••• TRFASURY COUPON : • • • CAMPllllS SUNSHINE KRISPY CRACKERS 16 OZ. BOX REGULAR PRICE 64c Good Thru 1 /29176 WITH THIS COUPON (Mlrri,,,um $1100 pummel Ont Coupon per cuuo1rw LIMIT 1 ITeM b clud•s Liquor, Toblcco -'d Oairv Pfoductt WICOUPON r • • • • I I I I • • • WE BOUGHT THEM LOWER 8ecauH of unu1ual \'Olu~ purchlll'~ or manufacturer s : -~~ VEGnABLESOUP : \Jegetable 1ov. oz CAN ••"'• REGULAR PR ICE 21c 111mporarv promo I t'• •I!'-' 1.. ~,,.; Good TtTru 1 /29/76 11on1I 1llow•nca' 1 ~ __..-~ wtult lhty 1,111 WITH 'fHIS COUPON (M1n1lftum SS 00 Ptirchutl • Ont Coi.po" ptr C\IUomer LIMIT 3 hr Coupon WE SELL THEM I Ewctud!I L1q~r, Tob'l:Co ~nd Dairy Productt W/COUPON • • 10<= •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• QRAHAOA HILLS I lllOOl>lANO Hl~lS I Rl\/lRStQl I lOAf\ANCl LOWER I ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• f9ll!O CKATIWOllTN AVI J•l-M VIC'!Ot• ll VO JUO TVl l 11 A~ >7-t HAW 0'4011"1 •vt ...... ,., ........... ,_,.... -,, .................. , -.......... -"... -hl•Jll ... llO .... lt••• ' I AKlWOOO ' 8U[NA ,AMI( I ORANOl I SANTA ANA n-.nru•JOfri:ll' nl"'•••rH1""''' ~C"H•OlllVf IO .._ t0\1fMa11u1fOl .... .... • to "' • JO .. ~ 10 ,. ' ....... ~-~ • '• "'400~·'· ..... , ....... ~ ,. .. • ..._ ................ -.. . ' ... j r SPARE s 109 1 L RIBS II Fresh! Iowa com-fed pork! Sliced Bacon ••• 513? El Rancho'~ thicker ranch style slices Game Hens 2• oz. lie-s l 2! Grade "A" . from Checkerboard Farm!'' Turkey .QUAlltl ••• 59t From El Rancho's own turkey! TURKEY s 149 BREAST n. El Rancho;s birds! (w/rib cage) Liquor Dept. Values! un~ VoDia 5899 Special price on the half-~allon Old Crow •••••• s499 Straight whiskey reduced 50c fifth Black & White • sg4t Great Scotch! You save 1.50! Quart Canadian n ...,, • s459 El Rancho's whiskey! 86 proof! fifth Cribari Wine ~ 111. s 219 Roee. Branco, Burgundy, Chablis Be • I · s311 aUJO a1s •••••• Fine wine from Louis Jadot! fifth Seagram's s9tt Giii Now! Reduced 1.00 half-gallon! Beat those January budget blues with our Ground Meat Sale! ... Beef ... Lamb ... Pork ... Veal! . Meat Loaf omuv89! Meal Balls omllbDv512.! Our own blend of grounds meats, aeuoned and shaped ... ready for the oven! They're so good! Braund Ba ~~~~---······ 11! Hearty flavor at a budget minded price! Compare the value, and ch~ El Rancho Braund Ba :: ........... II! Our rr.ost popular grind ... and your first taste test will tell you why it's preferred! Braund Ba ~::~~ ..... 1lll As lean as we can make it, and still keep that preferred flavor! (a.PO STUlS, tM 3 111f .. ) ~ Top Sirloin Steak ::! s2 2! Loin cut of beef -and U.S.D.A. Choice -you're aYurance of quality and value! ,..._ Triangle Steak u.uiChoice ••• s2 1! Top Sirloin cul8 of quality you can ch00&e with confidence -loin cut, aged just right! · Chuck Steak • • • 89~ 7 Bone Roast •• 99t 0 Bone Roast •• 511! Center cut1 U.S.D.A Choice beef Chuck cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef . . Chuck cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef Compare the quality to judge the value! These are "Extra Fancy" ... from Waabington State!. BROWN 2 29c ONIONS lbs . U.S. No l quality all purpose Banana Squash 1 Ot Excellent for baking ... Fresh! TANGERINES Sweet and Juicy 4 s 1 "Mineola Variety" lbs. Water Cress 2 tor29c Fresh bunches •.. with tanCY taste! RED YAMS 25! U.S. No. 1 quality! Fine for baking. For uariety ... for ualue ... for savings ... it'sEl Rancho! . . BEEF L.IVER 79! Fresh! Young beef fot mild taste! GrollMI Veal • ~. s14? . Lean! Genuine milk-fed veal! Pork Salasage •• s1•? Our own old-fa.ahioned style! Sausag rr.. s1s1 e snu..... • We make it ourselves! Authentic! Chili Grind • • • • • 89t Coarsely ground beef .•. hearty flavor Beel Roast IOllJ.ESS· s 11? Chuck cut choice beef shouJder clod Veal Cutlets muss S2'? Round and loin cut milk-fed veal Ham Loaf owouv. s1 •? Freeh pork with our own ham! BROWN 'n' 9 9 ·- SERVE ~ Swift's ... Original, Maple flavor, Country Kitchen, with Bacon or Hot Halibut STEAK Center cut from firm Northern f1Ah Flolllder Fillets 89t Serve a change of pace! 1 lb pkg. Crab Meat •••••. sl4t Alaskan King (5 .. Ml ••• 15M) Cooked Shrimp s11t How 'bout cocktails this week? Snapper,MHm •• s11t Fresh fillel8 for finer flavor! SAllD DABS s1•! Fresh (or flavor -large for value! Ketchup 111NZ ••••••••••••• 39~ Cottage Cheese &sc Creamy Springfield! Pint carton B • I s10' r1que s 10Lt.m •••••••• Krispy Crackers 49c The thick one -rich, flavorful -the one you prefer on 80 many thinp! 14 oz Pepsi Cola SIXPACK •••••• 98c Sixteen ounce bottles! Regular or Sugar-Free! Serving 'burgers? these go with them! Teri Towels11cROLL .. 49c The ones so strong ynu can use them for 80 many jobe! And they come in colors, too! Cheerios • • • • • • • asc T ohato Cookies 59c Enjoy better breakfasts! 15 ot Honey and Sesame -10 oz package Kosher Dills ••• 79c Chun King ;:o ... s l 39 Beef, Pork, Chicken, Pepper Steak! Crisp and tan1Y! Heim 32 02 Frozen Foods! Orange Juic~ soi .. 29c Treeaweet, from Florida's Indian River country! (12 ll ell ... 570) Enchiladas • • • • • 9ac Green Beans • • • 33c Van de Kamp'a -Beef, Cbeete -19 o~ Bird1eye -Res. or French Cut! 9 oz Petite Peas . . . . 39c Waffles • • • • • • • • 49c C & W . . . 1weet and tender! 10 oz Oownytlake -heat and serve! 12 oz. Apple Juice • • • • 49c Tree Top concenttated eoodn .. ! 12 OI Vegetables rraa •• 79C C • W'a delidoua combination! 20 os. Ill.I( ••••••••....•••••••• SI.II Im~, for authentic llttel BertoUJ -pt -WFEE •••••••••••••• $111 ,.,_ dMd lm\ant lft 8 ou.nc. jar ., From the Sunshine bakers! 16 oz Chili con Carne 49c With beans -Nalley'a. 15 oz. Noodles ... • • • • 23~ Top Ramen ... all varieties! 3 oz Spaghetti . . . . . • 45c Globe A-1 ... 1 lb package Spaghetti Sauce·23c Lawry's Reg. or Thick! 1 ~ oz pkg Prlct1 in effect Thur. Jan. 22 Through Wed. Jan 28 Open daily 9 to 9 Sunday 10 to 7 No 1ak1 to deokrt DAISY IRS ............•.... 59c Tha tNly all pur;oet towel! Pkt ol 10 -·--·--! I Barbecues are never out of eeuon! Eapecially when it'e hamburgers! Springfield Tomato Sa-.ce ... 14c Del Monte's, for the quality to be relied upon! Stock up at this price! 8 oz. can Burger Helper ... 59c Betty Crocker'• famous Hamburger Helper worb magic with meate! All varieties! Nllcoa •••••••••• 49c The famous name in margarine! 1 lb. Dog f Ood •••••• · 21 c Save on Ken-L-Ratlont 16~ oi Zee Napkins ••• · 35c . Luau colon in 100 count package ~e lags .• a9c Olad'a large iJize • • . packap of 16 Delicatessen Sp~cials ! Beef Franks uus ... 69c Always a favorite -and there are IO many ways you can offer them I 12 oz pkg Kosher Pickles. -8' Dressilg ltcaL • • • • 9gc Ctau ... n'a Whole or ,cicJ•I 82 OI • ssnc. Wanda 1000 or ~luel 12 01 .. Cheese • • • 99c Fm Denica -really Danish! ' oa . CllllDLl 1111 ••••••••••••••• lie• N1tuN V11ley ..• •It vari«111f fka ol 12 ' I • c c I > I ' llSTIUY ., IN TUITl.l IOCIC .. U.S Sp9cioua 4 bedroom erfertainment home with valley .,_. night light view, many unique custom features. 5«re tennla 9nd awtm dub plus your own ~frice lust 1117,000-whlch inctudealand. Call 67~. PARADISE MANOI .3 11·2 STOllY POOL. -135.000 -BEACH. Formal entry to dr= ltving room. Huge Qarden vtew kitchen. Mistie. st.Ins sweep to aeparft "'-ater aolte plus chi n'a wing. Secluded 22 ft. ballroom sized party room U\at overlooks walled courtyard. Hurry for thla. tall 913-7881. ' EHGUIH !STATI $44.t .. 2 STOllY -VIEW I Winding roadway leads to secluded driveway amidJt towet1ng pines & eucalwltus trees. Spiralinp stalrcatit ._,to private 2nd ltory entrance! LIMstt llving room over1oob surrounding areal European gourmet kitchen! Dining entertainment. Sweeping master bdrm retreat! Separate mother·ln-law quarters or guest or maid rOC¥11 with bath! Wotbhopl This hilltop estate canbeYG'Jrs for $4500 tot" down or take over existing loan at $215 ~r month to'r qUfck appt. to see call 847-601 o. MNIAMCH $36.500 311-Gl,MIODOWM • 1"e lined approach. Mmllve 23' living room. Formal dining room. Large country kitchen. Huge grouods with covered dance pavllLon to ent~ain or just 1'6am. Separate wing for bld-.w.y mLster & childrens suites, And to call J:letl this SACRIFICE BARGAIN! Call 963-788 # i-( GI MO DOWN -2 STOtlY -• WAUC TO SURF Priced at government tppraisal. Prime residential beach neighbothoOd. Elegance with a tontlnental acceht. Tiled entry. Stately llvlng room with fireplaoe. Pub type gourmet kitchen. Formal dine. G...a<>us family room with crackling firepllCe, commanding view of grounds. Huge muter retreat. Secluded children & guest suites. Owner transferred. Anxious! Call 963-7881 . 2 STORY 3 IB>IOOM BelUtlfully decorated thn><>ut. Huge IMng room with fireplace, gourmet kitchen. endosed patio. Loca,ted ~ par1t & pubflc golf cnne. Price just redllceO-to $41,960. Hurry! C&ll ~767. ~ '' ~ IEACH CUSSIC! $1.300 down 2 bedroom classic with floor to ceiling firepleoe in living room, private & enclosed patio. Sharp & clean thru-out. Full, price $28.000 Hurry! Call 963-e767 . HISITATl-At'D MISS- Thia model home, 2 story, 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, fa'!'Jfy, room. two master suites. new carpets thru-out. H & F pool. prestige Huntington Beach location. Tak• advantage ll'.'83ume 5\4% FHA loan -payments 1255. per month. cau 963-6767. IA YSHOn llAUTY S IEDIOOM S IA TH Brand-new kitchen with W8IY wif...vtng convenience. 3.000 square feet of ab9olute luxury. Master bath has l<Mtr't Jacuzzi. Huge 3 car garage. View the bay. Problems cause sacrifice below in1rket at S 175.000. Clll for details 646-7171. 'AMIL Y HOM641EWPOIT HACH Exceptionally fine home in BAYCREST area of Newpor1' Beach. four bedrooms, new drapes, walMQ wall carpeting. Reoentty riidec:xuted, terrific location, priced at 179.500. cau 673-8550 for rrore details. 4M+IOMUS HUIOllVllW MIWPOD -$96,000 Super Portoflno Model -IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY! Cathedral & beamed wrought iron gste entry. Sunken . living room. Massive red bride wall fireplace. Formal dining room. Chef's kitchen w/nook. 25' Family room-plus 300 sq. ft . ...,.... bonus room! DETACHED ·MOTHER-IN-l.AW OUAATERSI Winding wrought Iron *6n::all9 to aectuded mater wing. Heavy redWOOd cowentd patio. All aprinld.-.d. Take~· Cell 752-1700. • fi ~HIMKING? O"°ITUMTY... EARN WHILE YOU LEARN We offer per10Mfized training In a pleasant and exciting office environment. Lota of ~Ip a an .. opportunity, to grow. ..._.ping omen Is rewarding; real estate la exci11ng ..• with THE REAL EST ATE RS vou can complete more transactions with less frustration and participate In our profit sharing bonus program. l.et'a talk about ltl An extensive training program held monthly by our h!Qhly suooeaful management Pleaset~ Gail Gritton for an &PPointment J,.,.a/J "/! PhD ' at 752-1700. Thanks! 'fl ~ • TIM.IV&. .....,IUC .. IELOWMAUIT Pride of ownership street -n111nlcured landscape. prestige entry. Elevated •ibule. Open beam vaulted ceilings.' Huge formal banquet room. Bright garden kitchen overviews "sunken" family room with cozy fireplace. This Is truly an exceptional home at an unmatchable price for the wea. Seller bought another· .,_. would like Quick sale -hurry for thfs one! Call ~2313. IEACH~ Wealthy atmosphere of executive living. Quiet. private pride of ownership area. Fomlll entry and dining room. Stepdown '8P&fate den with fireplaoe & wet bar. High ceilings. Kibg master IUite + 3 rrore bedrooms. 2Yl baths. 26' covered Pllio. Professionally landscaped. Call for a private preview. 8'42-2535. 4 ID. + FAM. ROOM RB>UCED $4,000 For the large family: 2.500 SQ. ft .. super sharp home. Formal dining room. rressive family room with wall to wall bttck fireplace. 4 baths. & many more extras. Owner answers hurry! Hurry! Call ~767. .. AIAMDOMED CASTU"" 2 STOIY 1/4 ACRE Enter secluded drive to enonrous 3 car storage! Raised • prble entry leeds to llVing room with stone hearth! European kitchen! Huge nuter bdrm with lode stone fireptace and sunken Romm tub! Soaring staircase to 2nd level ~ith 8 foot wet barl 2 private bdrms! Pool table! Sun terrace! Vacant and ready to move Into. $72,000. Call Quiel( for guided tour1 847-6010. EXECUTIVE ISTATI ~STOIY 4 ID -POOL + HACH ~I ral9ed tJI• entry. Elegant living room with floor to celltng firepl9Ce. Banquet sfred formal dining room is etoquently served from huge garden view kitchen. Enormous family room owrtooks sparkling pool & jacuzzi 1 lueh terr11ees. Spiral stains to massive 2A' master suite & retreet. Spacious chlldrens quarters. Ball room sized flmlly recreation room. Hl#ny-EZ terms. Call 963-788f. AnamoMIMVESTOIS Multiple unit In the heart of Corona del Mar~ Just a bfock from the beach. One of the most unusual propertlea on the mart<.et. On an RS 45 foot lot -has IWt exceptionally good intorre, and W9 ~ it can be ~ -we're excited about t"'9 llaflng -call us 18 5 .. SIASIDI CHAL!r Summertfme beach retreat. Few steps to ocean. Total prMicy with high wall&. .Mranw stytln51. HouM of gllQ9S. Indoor D•den atrium I~ with tropical plants & fem•. Rugged beam celllngs In all rooms. Log buminQ flreolace. Winding · staircase to loft landing. Private sundeck taTlice off massive master suite + 2 more bedrooms. One bedroom downst.irs could be a den. Formmt dining off bttc:k decorated kitchen. Courtyard patio + Olympic lwlmmlng pool & tennis courts. 842-2535 COMTEMPOltAIY ESTATI Green Valley·s 11nest! From the immaculate grass landscaped front to the low in1intainence rear yard nothing but excellence! Secluded raised entry to sunken llvlng room! Formtl dine! Sunshine gourmet ldtchenl Family room! Spiraling staircase soars thru innovative shingle deoor1 3 kid sized bdrms! For more details on this splendid property call 847-0010. OWNER DESPERATI S IEDROOM + .-OOLVA -MODOW¥ What a buy! Don't miss rt!• Abondoned 2 story. Beautiful heated pool. 5 huge bedrooms with lnlssive master suite. Immediate pOSSeSS1on + + + assume low interest loan or new VA with no down. Call today &46-7171 . EXECUTIVE HACH IETRIEA T 4 IDIM -2 STORY Formal entry to step down living room. formal dining room. Overlooking patio gourmet kitchen with breakfast area. Separate family room With crackling firepleoe. 3 car g¥age plus ac~ for boat or camper. Located near the beach and across from golf course. For appt. to see call 963-6767. ARTIST CHALET HOUSE OF GLASS . Atrium entry to artistic beach chalet. Tile ehtry. Entertaining sized living room overlooks lush grounds. Gourmet kitchen with ISiand breakfast bar. Hideaway mister retreat with adjoining atrium & wall of glass. Separate wing for children & guest suites. Sweeping stairs to magnificent 30' artist studio & loft with breathtalung open beamed vaulted ceiling. First to call gets this unique bargain! Call 963-7881 . PIOIATI SAU · Hird to find "F" plan in Early Bluffs. Located on a quiet ~ with a beautiful private green belt. Priced at sea.600 but open to a bid. Hurry and call -the heirs \llllW'lt to eettle the estate QUlckly. Call 673-8550. * * 1'" * * * '* TOP PRODUCERS * * * * * * * , HUNTINGTON IEACH 17931 8Hch BIYd. 21030 ~rat 9014 WtmtK """?ft.'8 93&4717 847'«>10 I 11109 erootthurst 963-7811 DAILY PILOT " OPEN -'TIL 9 CHAR.-. IAYSHOll con AGI °"" y $64,toOU Mingle with the movie 1Un only atepa from the prestige of Newport wateffront. Auttlc cottage with huge tNM ,provides once In a llfetime bar9'1n. Home is loaded with personality + +. You muat '9e to believe for thtt price -huny -owner mutt oo -take edvlntage -call nowt 540-2313. WAUC TO llACH 2·STOltY $67,toO Magn1f1cent 2 story beach home with charm and penonality. Private sun dedc complete wtlh wet-bar . Super luxury In downstairs master wing & 2 additional bedrooms upstairs. 2 full baths. Massive fireplace and an enclosed glass atrium wtth on:hids add to i"Of1Wnoe. Wlf4H8Ver country k.itchen + + +. Aexible flnanc1ng. Donl miss this beauty! Call ~7171 . .. AIAMDOHID" HACH CUSSIC Owners have packed-up and moved out! They have vacated this 4 year yoong beauty and have P\lt a "sell·1t..qu1ck" price on ltl Child-safe cul-de-ucl Execul1ve entry to so.Ing cathedral oeilinga -lush ankle deep carpet -squeaky dean paint -sunshine ltitchen with walls of glass! Party-patio and expansive rear yard! Toast-yoor-toes fireplaoe! Sweeping mast9r bdrm retreat with sepwate dressing areal children's rumpus sized bdrm! Bail him out at a conservative S51,950 or assume existing loan at $251 per month! Act fast, we need HELP! Cell 847-6010 . .. AIANDOMED"" IEACH UTllEA T $36.000 Steps out the door leads to the tranquil waters of the bay! Cr0$S P.C.H. and the pounding Pacific! Winchng walkway. secluded entry1 Comm. pool and steaming J~w! Owner has left and 1s begging for an offer! Take advantage of this gourmet kitchen and sweeptng muter bdrm! Are you beach people? 847-0010. SUIURllA ESTATI - WAUCTOIUCH Tree hned street. Secluded entry. Specious llvlng room. Gourmets kitchen serves forrrel banquet area. RUMPUS ROOM. 4 family sized bdrms. Includes secluded master suite. QJSTOM POOL & JACUZZI. OWNER MUST GO -MIGHT HELP FINANCE. ~2313. ''NEGLECTED"' llEACH GIANT Price slashed! Owner bought another home! Oesperate1 Prioed below market! Take advantage of this soaring 2 story! Secluded entry to huge living room -dining entertainment. rumpus sized family room! EurOPean kitchen! 3 children's suites! Spirillng staircase .to master bdrm retreat! Vaulted oeilings -executive office -Romeo & Juliet balcony! Paint & uvel Help this seller -try any otter -2400 SQ. ft. 2 story bargain at $53.900! Helpll 847-60~0. RUSTIC FAaM HOUSE Tree lined street in established area Minutes to the beach. Features 4 bedr<>Om$. Dining area. Newly remodeled kitchen. Endosed stairwell to maSS1"9 game room. Pool table. table tennis. TV lounge or anything you would want. Assumlble 7% VA loan. Priced S3.000 under market for fast sale. Take advantage now! Call &42·2535. SPACIOUS & GltACIOUS 4 +POOL Exdus1ve Mesa north locatlOl'l. Total front privacy with gated entry and sun-filled pool on grounds in front. Parquet entry. Sunken living room. • spacious bedrooms. Dining area Sweeping stairs to 2nd story munmoth recreation room. New carpets. paint. paper thru-oot. Best yet! Assuma S43.000 VA loan. Minimum down. No-qualifying. No new loan costs. Owner bought another. Must sell fast. Bargain priced. Call today 842-2535. NEWPORT lllAUTY l llD +POOL Superb luxury in every 'lnfi. Massive rooms -huge pool & jacuzzi. Every possible coovenienoe for you and yours. Excellent location. Too much to tell in one ad. Call for more details. Call &46-7171. OWNEA TRAMSIHRED STEPS TO GOLF TAKI ADV AM'I' AGE Custom home on cul~ street. Around the corner from Mesa Verde Country Oub. lmrTaculale condition throughout. EnloY huge separate parlor. Enormous family room with fireplace & wet bar. Gourmets kitchen of tomorrow + formal dine. Secluded grounds + loads of privacy -ow ner transferred & must go! Take advantage. Call 546-2313. . Pmt.aAIU OWMEA LIQUIDATING UMDa $50,000!! It's true. Here's one that's "under fifty & nifty" -Quiet cul-<le-sac. 3 bdrm + family room -fireplace, new roof -squeaky clean & ready to go -owner liquidating - he must go -take advantage call ~231~. $45,000 4 II MO DOWN VETS LOW DOWN -AU! Very sharp Irvine home -~iet neighborhood. Split rail fence. Spacious 4 bedroom model. Decorator sharp ttlru<>ot. NO DOWN PAYMENT to vets OR low down to QU811fled FHA BUYERS! Donl hesitate. Call now to pt"eview. 752-1700. 4 IEDttOOMS $47,950 ASSUME $246/MO. 4 bedrooms -Irvine Ranch location par excellence! Quiet street. largest floor p4an in tract. Spanish accent firepl11Ce. Spacious kitchen -family area. Covered patio. Large fenced yard. Assume VA loan -124e/MO. Plus OM1eC will carry oontrac:tt Take advantage. C.11 752-1700. IRYIMI ~ , , ... Mar:Mtv __ __;i. ~1700 -... PUBLIC NOTI B lllCTIT10UI aUllNIH NAMllTATIMINT ... Tiit fOllOWlnt .-Mii ~ ....... ...... MY lltlHNING WHEIU, IOS 'Min SC • ,._~ .. ~,. CA MOfltt N. S.lltr•, I ••n Melody lller•Dfl .... ~Otfl~o .... CA .._ • Tllls M ll\eU ll (Of\11'/(ltd t>y .. ~ . OIYl~•I Moflte N St•lt•s This s1ai...,.nt Wll llllO ,.."' tiw c_, c 11r11 of Or•noe COUl'lly on 0.c....O.r 1', t t/S ,,_, l'uOllll\eo Or•n111 Cotst Otlly l'llOt, _,.,..,.rv 14, 11, H, •no ,,.,,.,.ry 4, ",. 1~7' PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE 111f:f1fiou1 aUllHIU •4'M8 ITA,..MINf 'nit ....... ,..,.,. __ ...,.INU- NU .. . LAICI "OltlSTWOOOS, I.TO., W Ne•port Ce11ter OrlH, Suite MO. ,....... .. 41d\, CA. 92ttO I.AN lltOH UfTtEA1t1t1sn. INC., I .... W1*1 CHI« ~ ..... S.. 10D,. .......,. ...... CA. '1660 Tiii\ Minni 16 <tftdll<l94..,. • llmlt- .0 Mrtnersl\lp. LAN·ltON ENTEltPRISES, INC 8y O.nltl D Ullt, Prft,_ Tiii• ileltl'lenl •U flltd wHI• ,,.. eo.i"'"' Cltrll of Orenve C-ly on J~1.1'1• ""* PllbllUIM ~e!\99 Cotst Delly PllOt, JM. 14, 21, 29, et\G Fto. 4, 197• 1•1·1• PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUCNO'DC PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUtausottu HAMl ITATIMIHT . PUBLIC NO'l"ICB f'ICTITIOUS aUSINIU HAMI STATIMINT T ... followlnQ perM)n IS OOlrlg b;ni· 1-------------Tiit followlnt ,__ la dol119 11181· "'""' PUBLIC NOTICE AHSH. STAGE WEST REAL ESTATE, ~ w B•ker Strffl, Coue Mell, CA f'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS HAMI STATEMENT TN fOllowlng penon Is dOl"<J OUN· ,_UH 20TH CENTURY VENOOM,. 7«12 l!lolw A,..IM, WUl!ftlftiltr, CMlfonlle ttta. ~IC'TITtOUS aUSINllS HAMI STATIMllNT Tiit foO-lnQ pwlCll) Is •nt llull· W11t111m • H•wl,,.,rne. nu Mllnlr O(lve, !>ent• An•, CA '7'16 T111s blnlnts. I\ tonducttd by an 111 dlvicll;el LIDO LEASING COMPANY, 310> Newpart Blvd Suite 20s. NeWPOrt 8eecl\, CA '7~ SERVOMATION COltPOAATION A Ot•-nr Corl*-'lon. 7.CU llolw AllenUI, wiutml11st~. Call..,,_• ttm. Thi' tluslMH la conchicted by• co•" porfllofl. -··· PAEVl!NTIVE HEAL TH CA!tE CEHTEi. L TO., 2117 Vilt• EhtrlCN, Htwpott .. ecll, CA '2'90 Wllh•m A H••ttiornt AICN"' Ar0.11 S"°llV. 1:MS1 HewH Aw , S...te Ant, CA 9770S This Jt•i.ment wes lllto Wllll the Coo1ftlr Cler• ol Or•n~ C9"nty on Dtcemoer U, ltH ,.,.., P...cM1sMd Or.-ioe CO.\I O.llv PllOt, Dtc.. l1, lt1S 11\0 J•n I, u , 11 1'1• •'»IS Tiiis l>uslneu Is cond\lcttd ov ..., 111 dlvl-1 Rl<~l"d A Sholl'f TlllS ,t.ttmenl WitS f iled With the County Cieri! of Or•n<Jt C~y on Dtor110.r 1', tt1S GEORGE P COULTER AflorMy for Attlllrenc TN1 llet•ment wu llltd Wltl\ ~ c-1., Cltf"ll of Oun111 c-ity M J_,-y s. \t1,, C.lltoml• Prevt1111 ... Ht.itti <Ar• lflC., • C:.llfot'llltcor-•t1on, 2tt7 'lllte Elltr.-. Htwpert lleecll. CA f2'tO Tiiis llullnesa I\ conducltf by a llmll· ed P8rtnertlll p C.llforfll• Prtvtntlft Ht•ltll Cart Inc. A09erPt1tl"IOfl,Jr • e>i.lrman& Treaturw ,. ... PWlllSllotel Oran• C:O.st Oell'f ,.. '°'. PUBLIC NOTICE .. ~ Pv1>111Nd Or•noe Cont Da11v PllOt, Dec )1 191SendJ•n 1 u . 21, 1'16 .,.._H J-., 14, 21, M. -Fel>Naf'y4, It,. 14H• FICTITIOUS BUSI NIESS NAME STATIEMEHT Tne lollowlng perM>n is CIOinQ l>us• ~\\ii\ PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NO'nCE f'ICTITIOUS •ustNHS NAME STATIMINT Thh teat--.t was flltd ...,. the Couflt't Otrll Of Oran .. County on ~1'.1'7• ..... ,. B & S CO., 1101 W M.KAr11"1ur Blvd S-1a AN CA '17101 FICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAME STATEMENT T~ follo•lng per\On •• dOlll<J Ouso· tW-H,•!t The followl119 per tons •rt doing bu$1· nusn. Publ llNd Or lfllJe Cots• Oel 1., Pl lot, Jan 21, lt itlld Fcrb. 1, 11, 1'1' "'"7' Ja m9' D S1Dn<!tlPMr 1001 w Mole Ar111ur Blvd., ~nl• A11•. CA 97101 RADIO CALL, REAL ESTATE, 1140 W•rner Awnue, Fountain V•ttey, C..llfo.nl•, 97108 BY WHIZ, ·~ H. 8•1•vla, 0r.,.. C.llfornl• '26'7 PUBLIC NOTICE T111s buJ.tneu '' conducted by "" 1n QIVlduel J MnH D Stone<1pller This \lelement wu f1ltO '""'" ,,... l!rntU H Lt8tanc. U171 Klw Drive, lrvlM, Calltornl• •Vos t<tnnttl\ Roger Wl\h 11er, t141 Mlldl-., -slml11sfer, C.llfomla Paul L. Owen. '~' M•dlMln. Wtuml11st..-. CAllfornl• f'ICTITIOUS auStNHS HAMI STATl:Ml!NT Tiit folloWlngp penon Is doing Dusi· nnses: Coo1nty Cieri!. o f Or•nQe Countr on Oectfllber 24. 1915 Thu D<alneu " conouc led by ..,, In :llY10Ulal Er"nnl H Le Blanc Tr.ls Du•lntu h conouclect Dy • oeneral pertntr,hlp. (I) HOLi. Y-LANDERS ,_ K•nntlh R WlllVl<!r P\JDllSlllld d ranoe C<Ml\I Dally 1'1101. Dec JI. 197So\n<I J•n 7 I•. 21, 1t/6 41116-IS Tiiis s1•1emtnt WIS tlled wltll IM Counly Clerk ot Or•n!li> Covnty on JenUitry 16, 1914 This stelemen1 was flled w1111 !ht County Clerk or Or•nve C9"My on De<er11ber 1, 1915. 12) HOLLY ·LAHOERS, STONEWARE (JI HOLL Y ·LANOERS, GIFTWAAE ll!OIEltTA. IEASTMAH AttorNy-' L.A • ~ Hitrbor ao1111vi1rel P URI.I(' ~OTICE -------------1 S..ittJU 1'5021' PllbllShld Oran99 Coast Delly PllOt, Dtc. JI, lt75 encl Ja11. 7, 14, 21, lt7• 4'»15 (4 1 8 . L AN DERS AND COMPANY, 3110 So. Cout Plea Or .. S....WAN,CA. Btrnlt• Gibson L•llCltrs, JQlt6 Citllt Son Ftll119, S.11 J"4111 c:.ptstr...,. C:..le Mu.a, CA tJU• FS1614 CA.ru1s S·IUJ SUPERIOR COUltTO" THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA R>R THIE COUNTY OF OR.ANGIE P\Jbt1~0 Orange Coast D•llV Piiot, )II\ 11, 2'anO Feb. 4, 11, 1916 PUBLIC NOTICE This t>vslneu 15 <ondllcte<t l)y"" In- -------------CllvkNll. .... A·t61U STATIEMIENTOl'WIT"OltAWAL BtrMtaGIOSon l.Jt"°"'5 l'ltOMltAltTNlltSHIP Tiiis stitlttntnt "'as llltcl wltl\ IN HOTI CE OF HE.AR ING OF PETl'flOH R>R P•OIATE 0" WILL ANO FOR LETTEllS TIESTAMENTAltY PUBLIC NOTICE OltlEltATINOUNO•lt COunly Cltrlt. of Ora1191 c_..., on l'ICTITIOUS aUSINISS HAM1! -*-rv 2. 1'7l. Esutt of VIOLA G AUBE FICTITIOUS 8USIHESS NAME STATEMENT ,....~~~~~~wl~~ "~ u • 11ner11 P•rlf\tr from tllt PllOllSfotd Oranot Coast Diiiy Piiot. Dr<N\ed NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thitt ERIT 8. Mc TERNAN ~s ftlf'O htrt'tn • i>ellhon for Pro~tt' of Will •no lor ''" su.ance of ltll•rs Tut•mMI., y r• ft'r..-ct lo •llKll 15 "'"°"' for furtller Pitr1kulers. •nd 111•1 I,.. """"....,pl«.• Of htitrtn<J IPW S•rr>e llitS Dt'M M'I 19' Ft'OrUitry l, 191•. a1 10 00 it m tn lllt' tour1room of O.p.art,.,..en1 Ho Jot s.t1d COUr"t, •t IOOCI YIC C.nler OrtveV..,st, 1n lllt' City Of Sant.a Arwt, C•lllorn1.a ~ loll-1n9 perM>n is 004"9 buso· ,..uas 20TH CENTURY/SUPERIOR MAT IC, 1402 Bois• Avenue . 'M\lm1nster C.l•fornl• 92"83 SERVOMA TION CO RPORATION A O.••-rt Corporation, 1¥11 Bol~ Av•nu. Weslm1Mlt'r, C•llforn1.a"1ll83 Tlus 1>us1MU IS COndUCtt'CI l)y. Cor· pertfttrSl\lp oper•llno under ,,.. l.J--, 1, 14, Zt.?l, 197• ..-1s fictitious Duslness ne"" of 0.lect Jan. u, "" WILLI.AME SIJOHN, "°'""°" GEORGE P COULTER Altorney for Rt91str•nl Tn11 Sl•••ment WU ftlt'd wtlll Ille Coun1r Cltr• of Or•n~ Counly on Jtl\Uitry '· 1976. FITNESS E NTERPRISES OF 1-------------- CALIFORNIA ., 3201 Mlchlg•n Avenue. Colla Mew. Callforlll•~ Tlw fktlt1ou' lluslness ,,.,.,. itllle- mtnt for tllt r»rtntrslllp wts fllt<I on J uly 2, 1'14 In tllt County of°'"""· Full N•mt •nd Aeldrtn of the F'Ot,_ Vt'l llldr•will<J leon c;.ne Sk•••. IOl.26 El Toro, Founl•ln V•llt,, CAll'°'nl• '1'170I. Leon G Slltle PUBLIC NOTICE Clt·1W NOTICI! TOCltliOITOltS SUPl:ltlOlt COUltTO,.THI! STATE 01' CAllfl'OltNIA llOlt THE COUNTY 01' OltANGE ........ -s Ellete of EDNA MAE SAT· TERFIELD. 0.<HH<I. • Counl y Cttr• EltlTa.M<TERNAN u.011 ...... ,A .... Los Anttlts, CA. 'Dt27 Af10nleyf«: lnprep.r l'-Jn4t Pvtlll"'"' Ot anoe Cotst Diiiy Pl IOI, FS111' .uin.7, 14,21,?7, lt7• ,,.,. P\J1>11~ Oren91 C<Mlst Delly Ptlot. NOTI CE IS HEREBY GIVEN to tlle cl'9dltor1 of ,,.. at>ovt rwmed decedent ui.t all 119,.,_ llavl119 cl.i"" it<J81nst tM Miki dt<tdtnt .,. r"equlrtcl to tlle tt.IY\ Wltll I .. MCM\ilry VOUCl'le", In ,,. olfl<t Of tllt ,,.,. of tl\t ~tin· titted court,°" to prewnt t,,.m, wUI\ tlw! r.<•Jtory VOUC:lltrs. to tl\e ~ et P.O. Dr•-r U, FonlMUI, Citlltoml• '2lU, wt>l<ll Is '"'place of bus!Mn Of tht undef'slgned In au rno111n pertain- ing to lPlt est•tt of said de<tOtnt, within four ...-1\s •fter tr.. flf'll puC>llc..atlon of tNs llOtlct . Jll\Uitry 14, 21, 28, el\d Febru•ry •. 1'7• 144·7' PubllSlled o ... n~ Co.t\I Dally Pl lot, Je-ry20,11,27, 197• 21•,. !------------- PUBJ,JC NOTICE HOTICE TO CIU DI TORS SUPERIOR COUltT OF THE STATE 01' CALI "OANIA "OR TitlE COUNTY Of' ORANGE Ht. A-IS7JS E'l•le of PAUL FRAHKLIN CARTER, SR , DtcH\+O NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to ti. creditor' of~ •l>ove 1temeo dK--.1 tN1 111 per-sons having <l•lrM ~""' tne \aid de<tdent •re requireo to file them, will\ the neceu•ry vouc:lle" 1n '""'office of Ille clerll 01 ti.. .co-. .n lllled c11<1rt, or lo present them, Wllrl IM necns.vy vouc:ller\, lo Ille undt<'s•Qnl'd •t Ille Otf1ce ot C LOY MASOfol, Al· tonwy ill Litw, 411 South Hiii Strft1, Lal Angttes, C.llforn•• 90013. w111cn Is IN plac;e of l>U$1~S of Ille Ulldt~ tn •II INll\ers P9rt•lnl119 to tlle Hlate ol w.4 dt<-nt, within fO<lr montt\'l alte.- 1hefl'11 l>Ul>llcatlon of 1n1, notice. 0.ttd Ja11u.,y 1l. lt76. PAULFAAHKLINCARTER, JR. Adtninlllr•tor of tllt Est.ie of tr.. a11o ... n•mt o OKedllnl. C.LOY_~SON An_,. et law 411 So.1111 Hiii Strfft LosA...-IH, CA. toOU ""°""'few Aelml11l1tr•tor \. Pvt!!llllltd Ore1191 Coast Diiiy Piiot, ~. 71, ?l,•nd Fel> 4, 1'76 154-76 PUBLIC NOTICE S·lilt SUPEltlOlt COURTOI' THIE STATE 01' CALI f'OltNIA "Olt THE COUNTY OF ORAHGE No.A·t6n1 NOTICE 01' HIEAltlNGOI" lt£TITION l'Olt ltltOaATE OF Wll.L AHO FOlt LEnE•s TESTAMENTAltY ANO AUTftOltlUTION TO AOMINISTIElt UNOElt THIE INOEPENOUfT AO. MINISTltATIOH 01' ISTATESACT. Estate ol HELEN A. SCHROEDER, DKH1ild NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thel GEORGE R SCHROEDER 1'ilS flltd heffin • petltlofl for Prot>.tte ol IMll •nd tor Issuance of Ltlttrs Tnt•meniary 10 lht petltlo.-.r itlld Au111ortr11ton to AC). m1n1s1er under 1r.. llldti>endenl AO rntn1slr•t1on ol E ''•IPs Ac I reft'rtn<t' to '"'"ell •S meae for furtllt'r p.arttcul•r\ """ tllit1 lhe time ano place ot ,.. ... ,"!I '"" w~ llits bttn wt tor Februtry l, 1'76, et 10 00 • m • 1n 1r.. counroom of 0.pertment No l 01 \lld c0<1r1, tt 100 Civic Ctnt•r OrtvP Wtsl, In the Clly of SMiie An•. Calllornl•. 0.-Jan. 16, 1916. Wll.LIAM E St JOHN, County Cltr• 1tOaE1tl M. IUltK NS WllM!lrt 81 ..... , Sullt 711 ..... ,,., Hiiis, CA. to2n Att-yfcw: petitioner Put>tiV..CS Oran<Jt' Coa.1 D•lly Piiot, J""uary20, 21, 77, 1976 21._16 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICEOl'SAl.E Of' ltl!AL PltOPE •TY AT PltlYATE SALE A74t:JI IN T"E SUltEltlOlt COUltTDF THE STATE Ol'CALIFO•NIA IN ANO FO• THE COUNTY Of' OltANGE 111 lh• Metter of Ille E'tatf' of ARTHUltJ MARTIN,•n lnt~tlll Pot non. Notice Is l\treoy olven lllat !ht un· ~....,_.II sell al 1Wlvalt salt, to tM '"91'"' -btsl DIOO.r, 'ub)t<I to <Oft llrrntllOn of \aid SuperlM C-1 Ori or ~ tM Htll dity of J enutry, 1'1'-ill IN offk e Of ADAMS AHO &RADY, SoilM DI, 410\ Long llHCll toulevlrO, 1..an<J INtcft, C-ty of Lot Angelts, 514'1• of CAllfMnl•, •II Ille rl!lftl, llllt •lld lf\ter•tl of u ld lncompel•nt pe"°"• In itnd to ell Ille rHI propffty 111 .... tf In IN Covnt., of Or•noe, St.,tOI C.llfoml•, CNtrtlcul•rly dt~rlbed ti f'Ol--,h)..wlt• lOt.I •. S •nd 6 I" 8 loc II 121 GI S<#'lvt .. Kii, M ~ Of\ a Mtp reeotCMd In Sook '· P•lll• )t •11d 40 of Ml\ ,.,.,_ MePJ, rt<ofel$ of 0r...- Coutit'i, Gtflfor'nl•. MOre <--Y ~ 1U4S f'IClfk COfll H..,.,_y, W>Mt .. tKI\, C.llfof'lll•. T."'-Of ~• UM\ In lawful monrf of ,,.. U01tf'd Sl.,tt .,. tOflflrnwtlOfl Of ,.1 ••••• part C•'" Oftd O•l•ftet ........... OT llOte MC"'" Oy _....,. .,, T,... De.-911 ttw ""°""' to tetd T•,.;c.eMfll-1 Mf tt .. -.ii ......... ................ ..,., ....... " • ,....,. et lM ~N141 tlfflc» .. -·· ... ...., u. Jlnl .WtC&llll ....................... PUBLIC ~OTICE NOTICE TO CAEblTOltS SUPEltlOR COURT OF THE STATE Ol'CALIFORNIA FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE No.A-U.01 E\tal• ot HAAOLO GLASSER, 0e<H\eil NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEH to the ~ltors of ll'te •Dove ftl~O dK- thet •II flersor>s /\itv1119 <•••ms i19elns1 the Wtd Oe<-t ••• requlreo 10 Ille lfltm. wilt> ll'te fttCn\ilry voucllen, In Ille olfk e of tr.. cterk ot Ille allow ent1t1eo cour1, or to prnent tne<n. wltll IM nectt\ilry voucners, to ll>e ...,,_ Oonl<Jnect •• ,,,. office of GOLDBERG AHO STEIN, AllM ..... S •I l.Aw, 6ns SunMI Blvd Suite ~. Los AnQeles, CAI lfom1 • '°°19, wfl I c II Is I lie place ol MIMU of Ille unden1vn.<S '"•II met· ''" pertllnlng to tht estate ol wld c»- c-..i, within f9"r montn\ ilfler tht llr\I pUl>lk•lion of tl\I' notice. o.1eo Jitf\"4try 2, 1916. CHAR LOTTE S GLAS.SER E•t <utrla of the Wlll ol 1he •Do,,. """"'d dK-..1. OOl.08EltOANOSTEIH •non..,. •• La• un s-wt .,..,., Swlt• 404 l.otA111J9i.s, Cal Ito"". 90028 ""°""''for E ncutn 1 PubllsMd Or•n<Jt Coa\t 0.lly Pilot, .uinUilry 7, u , 21, 78, 1916 S2-76 PUBLIC NOTICE S.tn1 SUltEIUOlt COU ltT OF THE STATE OF CALI FORHIA FOlt Tl41 COUNTYOFOltANGE Ne.A·t61't NOTICE M HIEAIUNG 01' P£TITI°" l"Olt PltOBATE 01" Will ANO l'Olt 1.ITTl1t$ TESTAMENTAltY ANO AllTHOltlZATION TO AOMINISTllt UNOllt THI: INOIEPIENOIENT AO. MINISTltATION 01' ESTATES ACT. Estate DI ETHEL I RENE IRISH.iso krown as ETHEL I. I A ISH, DKH.w<t NOTICE ISHEAEBYGIVENtl\at WILLIAM MORLEY tRISH ~ fll«I ""•In. petition'°" Pre>Nft Ol IMll ilflO for •nuance of Ltlltrs TeUtment"'Y to Ille Ottlhontr eno Aul,,.,rlullon to A6 mln1\ler un<ler the Ind•-Ad- rntnhtritllon of Est•les Act rtft'rence to '""'"" I\ medt for lurtner Pitr1Kutitf1, -1Nt tl\t time and place ot ,..,,no 1111 5itmt flits been wl lor Fel>ruary 3. ""·•I 10.00 • m ., In the c°"rt"'°"' ot Dtr»11rnent Ho. 3 ot sa id cour1, at 10> CIYIC <Anter Drive West, In the O ty ol Sel\I• Ana, CAlllornl•. 0.1td Jtl\, 14, 1'76 WILLIAM E. St JO"N, C.Ounty Cieri! ltOBIEATO. HAltKIElt 4'2t N. 8ra!MI Blvd. S••"•• OMMe&t, CA. tlltJ A.....,,.'ffw: P9Uti-r Publllhld Ot-•11111 Col\1 Dally PilOt, Jlf'IUitry 20, 11, 21, 1'76 21f.7' PUBLIC NOTICE 464$2 NOT1CI! 01' $Al.I 01' It EAL PROPERTY AT PRIVATE SALE IM.PW'67 In tne ~IM Court Of .... St ... "' Calllorn1e, for the County of Lot An91lft In tr.. Metter of tM Esi.te GI Ev• F. How•rel, 0tc.H~ Hotl<• Is Pltreoy 9lve11 t"-t.,.. ~ ctenlgntd _.II wll •t Pf 1¥•'9 Nllt. to lfle l'tlghest ilflO best Olddff, s~t IOcon- flrmttlon of said Super kw c-1, °"or after '"' 1st o.., "' Merell, 1'76 al tM Offk t Of Rodd ICtlwY, 424 Soutfl llewr· ly Ori ... , Beverly Hiii~ OMlnty Of lA& Anlltltt, Stett of C•llfornl•. Ill IN rl<JM. tltl• •nd l11t1re1t ot s.10 ~ et IN tlmt of OH\11 el\d •II tlllt rifl'll, ti· tie •nd Int~ ... th.at IM est•t• ., Mid dKM...S Ilea acquired by operallon of •-., etlltnW!w otMr tfWrfl., Ill oct. dltkwl to 11\0t of Uld dKtitMCI, M Ille time fl/I ... tfl, 111 •nd to •" ,,. WWfl rMf ~~alt~ In h OIM!CY of Or ..... Sta .. of Callfff'nl•. "'1Jait.w· • ., OlkrtMd .. fOl'-s, to-wit: Utll 1', a1tc11 F tf TrtC't H•. I, et ..., ,.,.. recorded In took t , lteoe I, Ml• ctf'--... lltGOrck c:oun.., Of Ortflllt • ,..,.. CAll'NTIOflly ... _ •: , .. SH4 'Nay, IMf .. 8(11, CilllMftl• Te,.,,,.., .... (ecill lfl lewtwl _,,., tN VllltH lwtes °" cwlmwt• ti Ult, er ••rt catll •11cl Nl•Ma l"MIMM ~ .... MWf'llcl..,..,.... w Trwt Ott.-art tN ,_,_,.,,, ....... Twl~eltlMYl!lWiolle._... ... .,_ ...... PUBLIC NOTICE S.1517 SUltlltlOlt COUltTOl'TMI! STATE 01' CALl~ltNIA l"Olt THI COUNTY 01' OltANOI Ne.A.-nt NOTICE 01' HIAlt INO 01' PITITtQM l'Olt ltltOUTI 01" Wll.L ANO l'Olt LETTEltS Tl!STAMl:NTAltY Esl•le of BEAT E. DYER, JR . Oe<•itwcl. • NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lNt JUI.IA ANH DYER has riled ..... In• peU\kwl for Prollitlt of Will •net for Ltt· ten TutarntnlMy rtterence _, wN<h I\ ITWde for turtr..r p.artkullr'S, tnCI thM 1,,. time and place of ""'Inv ti. WITW ~ bffn WI tor Ftl>. l, 1'76, .. IO Lm .• lft tr.. c11<1rtroom of ~M No. l Of wld C9"rt, .. 100 CJvk ~ Orf"' WH1, In the Cit.-of s.nta Ana, Callf9m4•. O.ttcl Jen. 1•. 1t1•. WILLIAM I . St JOHN, County Clertc ltlCMAltO L M<Ml:CHAN J10I c:a'"1 .. C.llfs., ... Sllltlm S..Jw11~r-. CA. mu ht: 17141 DM121 ~ fw: ..... ltlellff Publlllled Or•noe Co.st 0.11., Piiot, JitnUitry 20, 21, 17, 1,,. 211·'6 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TOCltlOITO.S • SUltEltlOlt COUltTO~THI STATE 01' CALI fl'OltNIA l"Olt THIE COUtfTY Ol'OltAHGa ........... E\t•te of ARTHUR oe PAUL, 0.C..Md. NOTICE IS HIEltEBY GIVEN to the Credi I.on of I .. itOO ... Ill med dllc.edwtt tf\al all ,,.,-.shaving clalf'l'4 11911MC Ille Slld Oe<edtllt .,. requlr..s to Ille ttltm. -'th tN fttCtUert -.c:rwn. In tN otfkt of t,,. cltrll of -...,_. entitled coun, °" to pt"IWflt tt1em. ,...,, ttie M<ttwry vouc"'''· to ,,.. un- d9nltne0 •t IM offk t of WILLIAM C. HAYES, Attorftty •• uw. fOOWlllfllrw 81vd., Suitt I~. Hiiian Cefller, l.os AftOele,, C.llfo<nl• '°°"· Wflldl Is IN pttce ol ll<Klnns of,,. Ulldtrslgntd In all mett&r1 penitlnlnq to IM Htatt of s.ald dKecltnt, within four month& ett.r lhtllr1t PllDllcetton ol '"'' notlc•. 0.tt'<I J•nu.,y l , 1'7' GRACE F E LLIS Eucutrl• of llW Wiii of Ille •bo,,. Mmed O.c-t WILLIAMC. HAYU A.,._.,.tL.Aw MOWlllMrtBl..i. Sut•1Mt Hltt..ic.M.r Let A ..... •. Callton1I• *17 Ano.-., for EH<utrll Publlll\td Orange Coast Delly PllOt, J"'""'Y 7, 14, ?I, ll, 1'76 S~7' PUBLIC NOTICE S.1491 NOTICE 01' SALi! 01' ltl:AL ltltOltl: •TY "AS IS" AT f'ltlYATa SALi Ne.AW777 Ill .,,. ~kw Court of .,,. SIMt .. CAllfwftl•, fw tl\t County ot Or-.ot 111 u. Men~ of tht Estate Of CK11te J"6d StHlt •kl Cecllt Y. St ... t , DtC9MICI. Notice Is 119rtlrr 91.,... 1"81 IN - clllnlgried wUI wll at 1Wlv•I• Slit, tD .. ~·Md llts1 OIOdtr, s~ '° c:M- flnNtlon of Yid ~lor c.owt, on or ilft« ,,.. ~ o.., Of Jan lt7• .. ""flf· fk e of .Jonitl\ -'-'l, Jr. Attorney .e uw, Suite 1000 JtrglM Trust B..,._, 120 E. Ott91 Blvd., LOllt lleacll. CA. 90C2 County of l.os A111111t1. St•t• If c.llfomla, •II ti. ''°"'· 1111• encl I~ 1-1 of Mid~ ....... .,,. ti_ Of .. atfl and ell !tie rloht, tlttt •1111 lnlWllSC tNt IM •State Of Saki dtCH-"-k • Qlllrtd b'f operetlofl of l•w ot °"'8f'Wla Clltltr tNn or 111 edllltlOft to I.Nit "' Nlld -..eMd. •t tht time of Cltetl\, In.,... .. ell .,,. <•rtllft ,...1 ~ ""'""" "' .,.. ,... lleatll Olllflty Of 0r.,., st• of cetlftlntle. ~rti(vtWl'f "9crlllM .. tol...,., to-wit: I.CH a ef Tr«t tM 111 tlle (It., tf Seal aeacl\, Co1111ty tf Ore11e•, lt•t• ef c.llfortlle, N ,.r _. reeerClfd In .... a....-111to•.lflCMl .. .,,M1 .. Olfl-MIPI In Ille oHka of ... OIW!ty "-'<wdltt llf NICI CcM!Cy, ,_.. __,.., ,,.._ .. : 121 '4Mtl SMre, s.et9"cll.CA TenM of ltle ctNl lfl lewfllt ,.......,., .. UlllW ..... Oii <tflfll'fNlllofl .. t•l~1 er ••rt <•tll e11c1 ••l•flet f'MMCM~--lt(Wtf ........ • TIWt 0.... 811 Ult ..,.,.,., "...._ :-=.:-·---....... ...... .............. .,.~ ...... " .. ~lf .......... eft'bllf ...., tlftlt ..., ... '"'*' ,. ... ~ ........................... 0.ted 0.ctmt>tr?t, 1975 JOYCEANNOOWHING Admlnlstr1tr111 of ll'te E Slit It Of Ille ellovt ft-CIOKedent ltAOllt. llAOl It, WlNSTl.AO ANO BltlGHT AL.aw Ctr_ .. ,_ .. IUltrr•A- lt.O.OuwwU ,..._, CallfenlittUU PIA:lllsMct OrMOlll Coosl Delly Piiot, OK. JI, lf7S °""' JM. 1, 14, 21, "7• ...U-75 PUBLIC NOTICE MMf NOTI CI! Ol"TltUSTEl!'SSAUE '--Ht. YALl!HTE T.S. Ht. 1t12M SAODLEBACK ESCROW COMPANY as duly ll9POlntltd Trvstw l.ftltr tr. fol-1119 CIH<rllltd -ol trust WI L L SElL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIO. DEA FOR CASH ICNl'tabie •t lirN o1 .... lft lawtut "'°"'' of "" United St.Mt\) •II rltM. Uttt end l11ttntst con- ""fed to lftd 110W l\tlO l>Y It under salO Oteel of Trust In Ille Pf'9Ptrly ,..,..!Mft ... Ottcrll>td: TRUSTOlt: VICTOR A. VAl.£HTE tnCI JEAN VALENTE, ~ and wife BENEFICIARY : ENVIRONMENTAL HOUSING, INC., e c.llfoml• CM-•tlOfl ~ July 2', lt74 as Instr. No. 2IOJO In booll tt:IOS ~~of Offklat "9cor'lb lft ttw Offke of 1119 R~ Of O..t1191 C.-ty; Miid died of lr1nt dts<t111tt"" following ~y: LIEOAI. OESCRI P'TIOH: PARCEL I : An undl'ltdtd 2.1247 per ce<'lt lntMtst lfl Ind to Loe 1 ol Tract· -fltll1. "' .. City Of ~ llttd\. es 1'-1 on • Mtp "'8f'eof ,_... in Boolt J10, P-..s 1t and 20 of Mis- Ctl'-t Meps, In 11\e office of the County "-Corder of \aid COUllty. EXCEPT all minerals, --metals of ewry llllld and chitrac1tr ilfld itll coel. tW>flilltum, oll, anct on.r llke Wlllt1ntes lft or on Wld llftd. llUI, ._...,, walvlnQ •nel reltnlno ""Y .,... e11 rltflt of emry to tlW surlece of said IN'OCltf1y ano Idell tlon w.ivt ng and rwlMslnQ .,,., and •II right Of entry to tllt llillwrlkt of w ld property toa Oh· lane• of soo fff\ Otl-the surltce of Mid propeny to • distance of MO tttt i.iow n. wnece .,., dttcl recor'ded Aclrll l "''·Ill 8ooll 7"S, Paoe SI 1, Of. fklitl "-cords. ALSO EXCEPTING THEREFROM Unlti 100 to 111, 201 to 212. J01 to Jtt, 401 to •12 111<.11111 ... as sno-UWIOft '"' C-l11lum Pt.an,.. conled In Boolt ion.. P•9e m of OI· fklel Rtcorft Of Oritf191 County ~ -•ldineot ,,,.,. .. reconled In S- 1G716, "eoe mot Offl<lol Rtcorels. ltAltaLJ: U111t 40S •• 1llew11 UPOn Ille c..19ofNlliwfl Pllft -Old In 8ootc tc11». P99e mot 0Hk1a1 Alic.,."' .. .,,kt °' Die ~ ... ~ .. '6111 COllllCY Md -•lldt•-t.,.,.... ,.._ cw-.. ...... '""· ....... ., Of. fldel "9cords. !ft VII offl<o of tN Cilufl. l'J~ofaoi4<-'Y. J~ """"'"'° AWflut No. ~. ~a.tell.CA. ''ltf • tirttt ~"'or~ OIMtMtlMl•IMwll•lllwe. ,. __ ty l•t!Wfl • • lttcom~orttf• rtCWtit"" TM beMfklwy tllfdtr Mid DMd Of TNtt. ~ rMtt11 Of I llllr'M<ll or clUf4llllt lft IN Ml19al(OI\• HCUrecl t.....,.,, .......... Ut<llted Incl dellWIAl:I '9 • .-.. ...,... • wrllttfl Otc.l.trlt*' of OtfMllt •nit O.INIMI M S., 4lftd wrlttllfl f\OtlA ef W.tcll Mel el '*'loft -~ .... ~-.... .... llAIM'tY tolllll.t't Mid Mll ... t .... .,... tfllfMftw tile llfldtttl .... ~ .... ~ ., Wetcll tftCI Of "9Ct1911 to ... -.C-'M ,..."" .... 2J, "7J • lllltr . Na. *'4 lf' ... 1Ult"9e WS,of Mid Offldel .... . ........ wllt ... ""'*· w ....... _...... w -reflty, ,..,_..or• ...., ,....,..,.,. tltlt, II* II,..,. or ._.,,.,.__.. t• ..., ... ,.....ll!Hlt ,,_..,_ .. ___ ,,, ..... ~ Ulcl DIM of Trvtt, wlttl .___Ill .... "* ~. ~ ff.,..,, _..,flt~ tf Mi.I °'"" T,.._ ..... c..., ... Mcl • ...._ tf -T,,.._ _," ._ lrwte ~ llt; Mlcl DIM of TNCt. .... ......... -. ..... .......,, ~---··~-.-....-· 1kit ti T.O. fltrllct ~ .... II 0-..911••"" tf J.-y,,.,. ~a.STOHl9'.._. ~J.STOffl .. c. o...--"{toe ............... • ..... A.,.HU,_ J,,.,_.,-IN, '!kwQUls .. ..... ~ .... ltl-ltlfltMll ... '1 .. ,....... •t "" ...,....., tlf1tt .. _, ...... ...., u. fll"lt ~ ...-... w...~• ..... 0..WIMdflt«J~,,..._ v .... M. s.M9ftofl l-tll1'1 .. tN HU• ,..._ ....... , .. ,,., f'7 .. ... ....... .., MMMltllrM'ffllllf tllte..,.. fllNl4~ ~ T.,_.,, oi. Clt'f llW. • ...._ ..... ,, ... o. .. ,CA.-.. 1' 0.-~i.'t'::-clC llCltOW COM~\' ADIY96 MA•"r ..... , ...... ·-· .. "-......... LiCICl~CA-..._.,.. Or .... Qu.t o.1., l"lct .JM w.. tUt.. ...,. to ,. ' "' .... °'~ ttOeO•IUIT ..... '"""'°""' ............ CA...,, ""'811.,,.. or... Ol9tJt OlllY l"llCIC, "-11._ IS;J\, it16 J'216 ,,_...~U.MI. Mllrllltf .. "9w .............. T,_.._ .. •. oc.. ...... ...... -...o.ca.-. ~ ............. . "'*ltfltd Ofllflt' CMtl .,...., ,, .. -'-T1A, 1J.t1, ftt6 UW. .... 1'nictce lyT.o. M•v1ca C»###NtY. ..... ::..-:::.~ 1'*1-.M ... ~ Ha,..,. ....... ...._.......,_.,llT!le Or.,...OIMr. ~ ....... ...,.,'4.tl,tt, "" .. ,.,. 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E ~:!!.~.~ ••••••• ~:!.~.~ ....... !~!.~~ ...... . • •••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 JUST LISTS) MESA NORTH 4 Bedroom, 2 baths, /pie. comp lete carpetlna thruout. Drapes. Blt.ns. Dble sar. Covered patlo. All in very good condl· tlon. Reduced to 544,500. GeMrat 1002 G9MNll 1002 G....,..a 1002 Roy McCardJe R.attor 1810 Me~ Costa Mesa 548· ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• NO QUALIFYING Loan Assumptions • 4 Br, 2 Bu fixtlr upper on A$ler/ Westm. $47 ,000 • 3 Br. 2 Ba. corner lot, on Miller Dr .. Tustin $59,950 • 3 Br. 2 Ba. 6 yrs old Oakf1eld, 5,.A. $38,500 ~----------·I • Eoshlde lonaoin AT LAST YR 'S i"RICES Fabtastic 3 Br 2 Ba, Fam. Rm, Pool, Shake Root, Hdwd floors. New cpts &drps. Only $56,900 . DENNICK REALTY 645-4516 646-1514 3 Br, 2 Ba, Sharpest home on Estella, Anah $S3,900 839-1710 LIVE LIDO STYLE IUCK GUUY IY GOUY Sandy beach and ---·5•5•5•,,11111 0•0---1 Newport's main channel at your window. Two & Lovely a yr old Mesa three bedroom Con- Verde home. 3 BR, 2 BA dom.iniu01s with den and w/cathedral ceilings, wet bar, from $179,500. patio kit & corner lot. OPEN DAJLY: 320 Via Low m aint. yard w/lge Lido Nord. Oh here's a goodie! Cedar, glass and brick 3 bedroom, 2 stories and a fanta~tic deck .overlooking the trees and streams of Buck Gully. Country kitchen, hardwood floors, porch off the master bedroom and huge brick fireplace for rainy days. The price is $129 ,500. That's good, by golly, for Buck Gully U ,._, l()U I: li()Mf:i patio & fruit trees. Call 1 Yr warranty inc. ~-~ compl details. Call 675-7225 REALTORS®, 675·6000 ,~.a. HERITAGE • • REALTORS MEWUSTIMG Sea Wind Condo, Npt. Beach . 2 Bdrms ., 2 baths ; upgraded carpels, draperies; washer /dryer. Never lived in. Spacious & airy comer unit. $57 ,500 673-3663 642-2253 Eves associated BR OKERS Rf/\LTORS J021• VV Salbr •.J t '1 Jehl ·-~ ~ •THESEARE • SERIOUS SELLERS PLEASE CALL OUR OFFICE f'OR PETAlLS ~ * 4714 CORTLAND DR. Choice Cameo Hig.blaods 4-bedroom home or 3 & den with private beach. In beautiful condition· ready for quick move·in. OPEN DAJLY 1·5 ~ * 701· ROCKFORD RD. Cameo Highlands ca· nyon and ocean view 4- bedroom or 3 & den. L-A-R·G·E covered patio on canyon side. Room for pool at the front. Privale beach. In fine condition. COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 2515 E. Coast Hwy. 675-5511 DO YOUR OWHTHIHG On t.hU ~ acre lot with a cozy 2 Br home. room for anything asking $42,999 839·1710 REX L. HODGES REALTY Meredith Gardens This Select. Property of- fers superior decoration. in a spacious and com· fortable 4-bedroom, 3· bath home. Features in· elude a pan~led family room with an inviting fireplace. 3·car garage, large access able s ide yard for boat and trailer storage. and it's localed in one of Orange Coun- ty's finest communities. For information, call 556-2660 ~SELECT -· I PROPERTIES SECRET BEACH This spacious 4 BR home faces on a little used beac h . H as an un - obstructed view of the bay & harbor entrance. One of the area's best possible loc ation s. $258,000. HARBOR COMptANV REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar GeM-ral 1002 GtMrOI 1002 ESLEY N I ~YLOR CO REAL TORS Sllll't' tU-1 IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Of this uniquely designed 4 BR home on a N.B. quiet St. Tremendous living rm w/Jovely corner F.P. Lge fam rm. O'looks Cherry Lake area. $89,500 2111 S•JOCICfllinHil1Rood ' NEWPORT CENTER. M.1. 644-4910 General 1002 Getteral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• THE STARTER $38.750 Rust ic tree s had ed c hal e t . Unique Townhouse design by architect/owner. Aban- doned.must sacrifice. CaJI 645·0303 FOREST OLSOM IMC Try Condo Conversion 8 UNITS facing fabulous EASTSIDE TOWNHOUSE COLONIAL STYLE 2 bcdrm with brick fireplace, formal dining. large bedrms,bllns"' patio & l' 2 years new~ ) Prime location near shopping and bus lines. Only lO"o down. •$:1~·~ ~.;.8811· ANYTIME Back Bay Estuary. See~~~~~~~~~ the sun come up from view a partments. For a ppt. call REDUCED 4coo.M.E.1r:*. FOR.~.l! Lido ISLE CORNER. ·-,....,... Formal .dining, f amily Ar .. · .. -"'::~ room, 2·fireplaces. Nowj ~~-!Ii!•!!!!!~·!~~ $122,500. Owner helps j1 YOUR VEHICLE TOA 9UICKSALE Carriage Realty 675-6060 IAYFROMT finance. HALPIMCHIM REALTORS 2727 E. Coast Hwy CLOSE to 675:4392 WESTCLIFF Shake roof. 3 BR. 2 BA. LOWEST PRICED beauty . Fplc, formal LEASE WTTH OPTIO~ Vacant, beaut'ly de- corated 2BR. 2ba Condo w/Cantastic vu from balcony & li v rm . $525/mo. or $88.000. JACOBS REAL TY 675-6670 SINGLE LEVEL dine. lg brkfs t area. CONDO Located on culdesac st., --------- Hard lo find, easy to buy good n e ighbo rhood !l•---------Bluffs Anita model. End Terms flexible & priced unit, covered private tosell-$70,500. patio, quiet area. Newly Ruth Laurie.Agent decoraf:e<i. 3 bedroom. 2 646-4380 bath-ltreplace. Vacant, ----1 owner will consider lease ~~'"-~ option terms. Pnced LIDO ISLE $64, 750. New listing' 3 Bedrooms. C.f. CofHworthy 2 baths and family RHllton 640-0020 kitchen-extra wide lot. JUST LISTED!! Hard to find Mesa Verde 4·Plex, in lip·top cond, 3 BR. 2 ba. owner's unit + 3 2-BR. 2 ba. rentals. On- ly $115,000! · lolboa lay Prop. Redton * 675-7060 * S©\\~lA-~£trs· That Intriguing Word Game with a Chudle ..... "'""' .. POU.AH---- Super location, near ten·j~~~~~~~~~~~ nis courts and park .................... .. L owest p ri ce on Lido-$95,000. HuntinC)ton Beach . PETE BARRETT -REALTY- 642·S200 675·4060 FOURPLEX D I DEXOUT I ........... 1 _I I""--'-' I ~' -4 Deluxe studio apts. 4 Blcks from beach. Each unit has fireplace, patio, & a ccess to double enclosed garage. Ex- MWPT HEIGHTS cellent tax sheller. Max- Duplex-2 er & 1 Br, imum depreciation with minimum maintenance. I· i51Yi Ii 6 ... I __._I 8__.i•_v_.1_ 0 _.j....._.I ! An •irplane la the ~Iv . • • • • _ pltc:e wftefe you annot w•lk I RIMTAN 1 011tonad11ll-. ... , 4 'I I I I' I•~:::~-~~ YOll ct-lop ..... ..., No. b.IM. • ,.INI Nt.MU(O Unfits IN r r 1• 14 Ii J 2 _ mm S21J1im _ _ __ _ . • 6 ~=N~~l mms I I I I I J • 5 6 7 8 _, scaAM.&.ETS Aaswn • ~ 11 oo· \ 1002 .... , .. maonab I Irvine raalty 3 Br ~;~;9::::·huge XJnt owner's unit always rented. Call now for Custo~~-::1v5f:'~ home price and additional in· fee. $98,SOO formation. . . WESTCLIFF ~MUPEERSB . 4 Br 2 Ba. $89,500. EASTSIDE Co.ly 3 Br 2 Ba Colonial. 1SSS W. lo .... $53.SOO. Make offer. Ne•t t• MMlcet losk.t DENNICK REALTY 549-8655 6'$-4)16 646-1514 j~~~~~~~~ • 1002 .............................................. IOOJGetteral """'" 5-lti tp. ... ,. CB ,, • , 1()11 644-7270 ' ·1 I • ! , I ! --. -- , I HonnForSde -Ho.MtlWS. ....... Fot-W. • · W!dnt!day,Januaty21 1978 * OAILYPILOT 03' ....................... ....................... ....................... I KeeMs ..... W. • t•.aForW. HotrsetFcwW. Coroao .. M_. 102 ColtaMeto 101.4 l ... l-•leac .. 1040 Hoe#IForW.,.. Ko.HForWt ~!!!.~.~ ....... ••······•.•··•··••····•• ................. ..:.... ••••••••••••••.•••••••• ••••••••..•....••..•.. • .............................................. ·······.-··~····· ... •·••• ··;;;i·ia;;;.····io6; ~ .. K.. 1 o" Gwnil 1002 Ga••• 1002 • IOOJ Duplex. Pnce reduced Coll P k ab Zb • IUlLDEIS Irr• 1044 ••••••••••••••••'••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••-• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• $70,800. Corona del.Mar. C!Je ar . r, a , flll.COMSTl. SAU ••••••••••••••••••••••• _.L 1'-..or u le by owne~•· t pool. S49•500. Owner will Vruv. Park Home..fBra s" I! FBl. THROUGH ~ll~t cond. See own c 0 n sider I 0 d 0 w D . 32-4 Bedroom horn lo FR, 3Ba, Pri va.te yard • •.. now tho pressure is on. Tb.is beaut. ~!:";._a!:vS~TY at 420y, Larkspur, CdM 548-8204. Huntln1too Beach. 2 $83,500own/•it 6'4-7770 +BR a"vecut1·ve horn t be ld .,.._' or"•ll"""·7"""'. u-a v-.....ie .. BR, 3 .. _, BJocka to ocean. Now • ._ e mUS SO PretUglou1 location. -.... """ .. F ... /R •-'CTUO/R ... Chol-cu.or. ~.· bomealte reserva· ~-------im.med. A for mer model, it includes a Stroae sales support-Fourplex. Price reduc °' '""' UWlll RARE Fl ... D huge fam rm & formal din rm. Hi&h commla ns. Call to $161,300. Corona del $67,500.0wnr540-~ UOHSESTATES "" s parkling heated pool too _ Make an Vic Stuart, 901 Dover Dr, Mar. l'"or sll.le by owner W-2$'19 <213) 592.5010 Ideal home for active re· offer. Sulte 130, Newport Excellent cond. Se NEAR,O.C.C. tired or starter home for Beach. • owner at 420.,., Larkspur ONE-OF-A-KIND 3BR,i---------young couple. One or SPANISH HIDEAWAY Delightful tile roof highlights this immac. home. Huge master suite + guest bdrms. den & din rm., all set on a ranch.size lot. Call today. SPORTSMAN'S MAMOR Beaut. Calif. ranch home with fantastic view, a spart.llng pool, waterfall & jacuzzi, noor to vaulted ceiling fireplc adds elegance and warmth to living area. Move up to a bew style of living. $195,000. ~CALL NOW {/~ 752-7315 DONALD M. BIRD Auotiei... •eohon BAY ANO BEACH 675-3000 24C'7 E COAST HWV CORONA OEL MAR VIEW-POOL- PRIV ATE BEACH!!! $96,500 Beautiful 4 bdrm. home in one of Corona del Mar's exclusive areas. Vacant & ready to move into. Open for your inspection Tues & Wed. 1-5 4507 CORTI.AHO CAMEO HIGHLANDS BA y I & BEACH REALTY OUl 27tll YEAR 675-3000 !:~ .......... !?~~!!:~!'! .......... !?.~~ Sfwrecf;ffi C,rona thfma, Custom 3 bdnris., 3 ba., fam. rm.; high beamceil.; 1-story; pool. $160,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boy'.>1dt· 011ve N B b7S · o lb l 645-3111 CdMorcall644-7326. 2BA,larteeH/Fpool,cor· LARGE!!! Irvine's finest com· CdM ner lot with boat gate, munlties. 2 Bedrm & CHARMING g~ bltns, fireplace, Jrg. Corner lot with lots of family room . SS0,000. By Owner· lm sn ac. added family room. Only fruit trees, lovely Sol Vis· Owner moving out of custom bullt hrnily $56,900. Call PRESTIGE t• home wlth an ex· state. Shows like a model Spacious family bayfront. Pier & slip for large boat. 4 BR, 41h ba.1 dining rm. &ram. rm. SO Ft. lot. Via Liao Nord Just Listed $39.900 VA-FHA As1Ulftable Tb.ls comfy 3 bdrm home Is oo a beautlJul tree lined street in Costa Mesa. FHA assumable loan or will sell VA or FHA. A Quall Place exclusive. l!I~=-~ Pl optrrtiea 7S2-l920 KOO QUAIL 5t. Nt HACH Public Notice llDUCED FOi ACTION! $375,000 home. 1 Blk lo Ocean. HOMES, 645-6646 cellenl floor-plan. 4 home. With many extras. Beamed celling, lge Bedrooms, with an 18x18 CaJ1540-1151 LIDO REALTY 3377 Vla Udo. M.I. 671-7100 brick frplc, 38r, 3ba + Eastside 48r, 2ba, frpk, panelled bonus room in den . Appoint only lg gar, fncd yd. Nice garage. Covered P•Ui>. 673·9082 quiet neighbrhd. $58,SOO near everything and onl)' by own. 642·5299 W,.,-f ... IJl!lli>'J!ll!lrTIRM L091ftC1 leach I 048 Minion Vieio I 06 7 VIEW lf f · · ' · ~~~~~~~~~1······················· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~HERITAGE • • REALTORS lRVIMETERRACE Coll~e Park .962~TI r.u·548~ Owner's Card'1ff Model OCUHFROHT By owner. Charmkingh3 Front Row Cu:slom YOUR C ICE f thr Spectacular nt!w home BR, 2 ba.; country ttc I Dol h. T 0 . ei! "The Terrace". Plush overlooki'ng Bird Rock •-fam. rm • beaut. paOO/ Home on P m er-homes w1tb or without crpts drapes many °' race w /4 BR, .seclude pool, pine trees and rami· Park Street, J:tu.nt. Bch. 2 xlras. • Altached •garage. the dramatic coastline or BBQ. $55,900. 581-9154 swimming pool, newl Jy room •. from $48,750. B~k.s from C1v1c Center, Lndscpd patios lots of Laguna. This 1s the ul Newport Beach I 069 remodeled kitchen an lmmaculateJor 4 bdrm. ~ghl ~ch0J.d3 BRd, ~n1.~ privacy. $55,ooO. Eves. t1mate 1n e l ega nt ••••••••••••••••••••••• PANORAMIC, NIGH Call',...ay rrp cs. con ........ -c:c:.,_...,..,., s1mplJc1ty & quality. 5 be h •c2500 Gd LIGHT, BAY, OCEAN wu54"3666 lot. $68,000 .. By owner. ..>oK. .-.... Bdrms , 4 baths, incl. 2_ ac u0 1}t2s . ..., 1• t ·G ISLANDV]Ews "'" 0 ""'9970 ft 5 30 mstr. sw'Le with ·J·a cuzz1 income. • cor 0 · II\· · '"'. a · · pm. Uruversity Park Village 1. F l e r l tr TRADE · : bath & sun balcony. Sep. n Y o r u 0 • • m~ i ArtlanddiWc GNdlaH End unit twnhse. 3 lge studio·, walled garden for 675-7520. for other residence, in bdrms, could be 4 2 --------- GoYft"IHIMttt come property. Roll baJconies, 2 frpks., 212 privacy. Leasehold. An PORT AssllftKllbl•Loan1 Royce, Bentley or?. 51R-2Story ba., kitchen/faro .rm .. amazingbuyat$295,000 NEW Available to everyone. SELL A "House·sold" name Natural toned wood ex· spacious masler s uite ~ . HEIGHTS Low interest & rent like $199,500.f•~. terior, heavy shake roof. w/frplc. Recenlly de· ~ payments available. 3 & Call 644·7211. . UNDER $40 OOO. Galley kitchen has latest coraled, xJnt .cond., close 1·•• .,~llf• 3 BR. 2 Ba . just like new. 4 bedroom homes avalla· cuslom fixtures. Open to pools, tennis &schools, WAI• ..:-$69,000. PrinC'. only ble.Toseeifyouqualify, 3-Bdrm, 2·bat~ home family ·rm, roaring By owner. $55,000. Prin / 11,.,,1,..,... .. Agent. 549 ·0812 u1 c a I l T A R B E L L , with 2-car garage. $1200. fire p I ace. Winding only· 552-8515. HOS N. Coosr Hwy., Laguna _64_5_·_420_3 ___ _ REAL'I'ORS moves vet in. Bicenten· staircase! All rms are 494-1177 DUPLEX w /SLI p 540-1720 ---------• nial bargain. Hurry, call oversized. 3 Baths. 3 Car · VACANT NOW Bill Carroll G40·S5f.< ---------540.3666 gar., l4x36 patio. Just l 'h Make Y CMlr Move BUCH Hastings & Co. Reallor Colm.g.Pork POOL HOME Beautiful 3 bedrm, 2 ba ·comer borne. Compl with large family room, rirepla ce, oversized DUPLEXES 711 IRIS, 2·2 BR + gues1 $94,500. 406 FERNLEAF, 2 D + 1, xlnt cond. $82,000. years. $6J,OOO. Bkr Lowest priced Cornell in MOBILE HOMES • -- 962·S51l Univ. Park. 3 BR, 2•1~ '63 Maynower 12x60, on Spy Glass Hill . 4 Bd, 2 ha Bl.ke fo Beach ba., ram. rm .. dining the oceanfront. Hard to ram rn:i -· din.rm., ~>ol rm., 2 patios. Make of-come by at$13,950 Jacuzzi. maid rm., I Jn fer! AskingS56,000 view. Owner, $175,000 Unbelievable, 3 A "House.sold " name kitchen and very pnvate Ea tside T • I pool area. Vacant, ready $ np ex ~' l I I •. l'i I I 1~· t 1\'-I\ ( Ill~ •I'-• •If \1.1 I t II 11 bedroom, 2 baths , huge added 23xl8 fam rm w /sep bar. 2 Cozy fireplaces -& bltns. 2000 LE RAISOR '58Trails man 12x40; con· _64_0_·1_75_1. ___ _ vert. to 1 or 2 bdrms , REALTY with double wide cabana. Xlnt cond., with new paint, carpets & drapes 1 year new! $21,500 Cor your inspection. Just Costa MHCI 1024 .. with Westside price- listed. Hurry! ! Priced Only $65,000. Call for de· Sq.ft. of luxurious living. 4.523 Cmpus Dr .• Irvine All this for only S54.950. Campus Valley Shop Ctr. Hurry on this one! ! o n I y $ 5 3 , O 0 O . C a 11 ,.·.·.··.·.·.• •.•.•.• •• •.·.·.• ·.·.·.•.• ·.·, tails 546-~. ~HERITAGE • • REALTORS 54"3666 ••1"7'1111•-__ C_A_L_L_B_3_3-8_6_00 __ , '68 Newport 12x60 ex pan· REALESTATESALES v-rII d ..... b ~ I I I • ~creen'l;U in ca ana Are you ready for a fan ..,.,.,., tastic 1976? We are-DON'T with offices in Orange FENCE ME IN '70 Commodore 24x60 Tustin, Huntingtor. 842·SS41; 213 :592·1644 Although it's a condo. over 1600 sq. ft. of ocean MEW LISTING! Beach, & Costa Mesa there's a lol of wide open view lavmg. A real Jt!wel Harbor View HC>tne'S MESA VERDE Don'tsettleforless-853 _A_'_'H_o_us_e-_so_l_d_"_n_am_e_ ·--------.. space surrounding this at$37,500 PH.ASE Ill commission paid l e DUPL~v $29,950 end unit with its green· SOMERSET PLAN $35,000 * 5A * SUPER LOCATION! bell location. Desirable ' Super, upgraded, im· salespeople for sales & Mesa Verde, stde by West of Beach, north of kitchen with lots of m:p: fi'i::ZficB'Ulel 5-BR J-ba, fam rm. wet mac. residence conve-listings. We're interested side, 3 BR & 2 BR, near Heil. Large lot with cabinets, bar and nook. 3 ..:.;;; OO@~Il~~ Pa~c:~~f~sdseic~~:t~ nient to schools, s hop· in you! Call Phil everything. $67,500. shadylrees.Thlscutelit· Bdtms .. 2 baths, formal 499·2800 Vacant.Beaultfulhome. ping, parks & recreation. Gibilisco at 549·9511 Agent. 540-2345 . Ue one bedroom home dining and even a utility OPEN SAT./SUN. 10_5 Owner will sell FHA ~"~ By Owner, 3 br, 2 ba. Anx-with terms. room. $62,SOO Laguna Hills I 050 2301 PORT LERWJCK Cinancing, or you can _1 ... -.-"":~~· 1'oustoseU. Nice&clean, SCOTT REALTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673 7601 purchase subject to ex· ,. , ·::=~.II<_':-.> ts 7 0173 536·7533 552-7500 LIKE HEW • isling low interest 77, _.._,.....,~ newcrp ·55 -I~~~~~~~~~ Relocating. 3Br, 2Ba anytime loan. Just introduced tol~~~~~~~~~IDmtaPoint 10261: red ht' II $45,900-0wn. Assum GI.----''------the mark el. 646·7711. ••••••••••••••••••••••• A RARE GEM 586-2811 l'~or Big Canyon pro Open Eve Mesa Verde Luxury condominium Selin green gardens that perties, Call Big canyon 4 Bdrms +Fam. Room overlooking marina. rencct the tender loving realty LOCJll"G Miguel I 052 Realty 644-1193 Owner Anxious Pool & jacuzzi. Many ad· care of ils proud owners. ~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------• Top location, beautiful ditiona1 features. $69,900. A smaller home in a neat ~ I 002 G.-ral . . home! Big rooms in neighborhood. 3 Bd's, 2 -------Laguna Niguel. Newoort Condo 1002 plush decor. Entry hall ~ANCHORAGE ba & a perfect pool----------a.L.-ch . . ~ k 3 ---------offers a hearty welcome J a c u z z i . Ca 11 Bob UllC; Otce community $4500. low mar et ....................... ....................... , ... VESTM~Ts r I ---·-h l 048 . u NTA 1 N d Bedrm 2 bath 2 story 2 ADULTS ONLY Robust fireplace in lb£ " En Dickenson Agt or an ap-~-acoc • • M 0 an · . · · _ Newport lmER THAM lt ving room, separate 1714) 496-7711 pointment to see this ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEAN VIEW lovely Car gar . View or pool & NEW One st:re Condo d1n1ng r oom, dream -jewel. •OCEANFRONT• 3-Bdrm. town home. tenrus. S62,500. Call for He.• -.I.ts 20· 30' I ed g· rden kite.hen. Xtra big master ---.--,---1-0-3-4 979-8533. Rare a t $199,500. By M a n y a d d e d appt. 962·7771 __ _ ..,.. 71/4 VA LOAM x wa a swte. Orange trees. frw'I FountCINt Vol ey f S69 000 m~ $49 500 patio, ankle deep shag •••••• owner. 752·1171/499-4384. eatures... • · 1111' I 1 • Can be purchased sub· ca~ting_. brick wood· ~~17!20$69,950, BKR, c~ll ~·~·:;~·~;.;;•!••;:buron 2 STORY VILLA Laguna Niguel Realty 1 I I 1 Mini-orchard on a large ject to 73 4% VA loan. burrung. fireplac.e. Walk .......,. Townhome, 2 Br + $42.950 THE OLDE 830.5050 496-4040 ' lot on a cul·de-sac street. This lovely airy home h d · · t h 1 bd 2 b 1 1 to maJor s oppmg .an TARBB.L formal din rm, $43,500, Maritime a mosp ere . GRAY MARE ·----~ ~--.,~;-~~·~~-~-~;~ Walk to shopping and has 3 • a, ge am. bus transpor tation. Bkr645.7440 Just a hop to the surf! ~ ·~ - schools. 4 bdrms. 2 baths rm., vaulted ceiling $41,000.10% down. CALL ---------1 Boat storage! 21xl2 SHE AIN'T WHAT SHE ---------and 9 kinds of trees . w /heavy shk roof. Appl. o o o '*I • c....11f • " •-h I 040 • h · • --/Opt· u9 C 1 od $58 900 K E Y C N •'Tl" 1n uu onuo HuntinC)ton acCIC multi -purpose area. US~DTO BE! Neil er IS Blfl Pacesette r view ~e aon•n ir iQPl~::I. ! ~ 1 ~~,f-545~~~1. ay. ' · SPECIALISTS, 962·7788 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sunlite galley kitchen! th 1 s DAN A p T . home. Jbr, 2ba. Owner. Close to beach, tennis. K€Y 1/l Mi.le Dining views manicured ~UPLEX. Just a s~ort $55.900.675.5982. pool. 3Br, J<'R, open t I FORMAL DIHIHG pa ti o g a rd e n ! 3 distance to the Marina. beams. atrium. sundeck. Pr --a.I•• . , · • · REALTORS ft Beautiful large pool & Oversized BR's. Obie One unit is spacious 2 2-BEDROOM. 2·bath Con Lse 5450 mo, $2000 opt Dp;r,-_~920 , . : ~ . family r oom-central To Beach gar. Property overlooks BDRM., WITH OCEAN do. Immediate occupan· m one y. Full pri re 1-ooGUMUT.NfWl'O TllA04 Mesa Verde, near coun-$37 500 park. Tennis & pools VIEW. Buill·in kitchen cy. A/C. refrig. Close Lo $65.500. -----SI0,500 try club 3 Spacious • steps away! Sacrifice withrefrig.,openstodin· beach & golf. Only WoterfrOfttHames Get1eral I002G....rol 1002 CashtoLoan bedrooms, 2 bath and Greatopportunity.Three bargain!!Bkr962·S511. ing area. DECK $41,900 Call631-1400 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Bedroom home with completely appointed years old and full of W/OCEAN VIEW . BOMDREALTY payments of $294 per kitchen Outstanding -warmth & love. Entry to Lower 1-bdrm. apt. has 831 9411 DUPLEX HIGH A TOP SPYGLASS Beautiful 4 bedroom, 21h bath home. Fantastic view lot. 2 Fireplaces, family room. Custom decora~ed. Open Daily 1-5, 53 Montec1to. NB. 640.6161 BIG CANYOM- REDUCED Exquisite 3 bedroom, 3 t>ath Condo. Popular Bordeaux model. Custom decorated, many extras. Owner is ·anxious and will( s-eU or lease. $1.23,000. 640-6161 BAY-VIEW PROPERTY Beach and Bay home, 3 nice bedrooms, formal dining rm, only 6 yrs old. Huge enclosed sundeck. secluded study. Vacant ready for move in. Its bargain time!! Call now 546-4141 HURRY! HURRY! Step right into' this 3 bedroom home with a neat family room, and the island kitchen with au of the bltns. All for only $47,500. You can't top this anywhere I Call 546-4141. FREEDOM 1976 This charmlng 4 bedroom, 2 bath FREEDOM HOME is located on large Westside comer lot. Full price,' $39,950 with !Jexible financing. 1t•s vacant, move tn fast!! Call now 962-4454. VIEW SUNSET sitting by the crackling fire in ll ving room and watch ~e sunset. Gracious 5 bedroom m exclusive Mesa Verde. Large lot has mini-farm and orchard. Absentee owner says SELL! ! $69.900. Call ~ Officr\ locate-d iin Coda Ml''a Hvthnriton Beach -"'"""port ft("ach --------~---------- month. Assume FHA Ooor plan Our exclusive big entertainers living liv. rm. & bilt·in kitchen • 200 Ft. to West Newport':-. loan. Dee p 70x120 Lot. at$71,500 Call 540-1151 room, djning room area with refrig. Property has -----best beach! 4 BR. up. l served by an .all modern 1 d 0 I Id Great for starter home or chefs kitchen with coun-a separate aun ry room down. n y 3 yrs. o . investor. $39,500. Owner & storage cabinets for $118,000 will carry small 2nd trust try wood cabinets, con· Real Estate each apt. Low main· CAYWOOD REALTY deed. Bkr 536-8836 vertible den. Lots of ex· tenance lot, needs weed· 5 8 I 290 I~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~I lras,BKR,call842-8854. by~ ing & landscape care * 4 • * UHIVEttSITY PARK Jn lovely Irvine 1s the prestige sett.mg for this spac. 2 story. 4 bd, 3 ba exec hom e. Close to parks, schools, & shop· ping, but on qui el cul·de· sac. Only $56,900. Call 646-7711 Open Eves. • . . . FtXEtt! FIXER! TAR•l!l1. Bring your paint and DS• elbow g rease. $48,500. ..*I in Cafifonlio" Buys great polenltal on __ w ______ _ the East s 1de . •4 Rare 2Br Beauty . bedrooms, fa~ rm •4 Seeluded. J'h yr old, cul- BR., fam rm, giant fplc d·sac. $46·500. 581-2306 •Qwel cul-de-sac •Yards • of concrete & block walls _o_wn_. ------- • E nor mou s yard for SHORT TERM LUSE pool, courts. garden, or· LUSE onlOH chard •Encl lattice PURCH"'SE courlyd •Lge green "' house •Spc for boat,-RENT -------... -I camper •Hurry!! By Vacantroomy4BR,3Ba applonlyeCall540-9922 including IN -LAW-2 In Eastbluff A beautiful decorator's house reduced to S7•,500. A hard to find single story full of ch arm $79,500. Centur y 21/ Professional 640-4950 QUARTERS. Formal Dining, family room, quiet s&{eet .. Ready for occupancy. $78,000. Call&U-~ . •3 Br, 2ba, pool, jacuzzi, lalboa Pentnwla I 007 hdwd firs. frplc. very ~N l(1[L 01\IL(Y & ASSOCIATES •••••• ••••••••••• •••••• clean. By owner. 979-9607 1975PRICES ------- Cottage, Balboa SS.S,000 •l!I'" & l!JNll Duplex Newport $87,650 .S1 ft r1 PORTUGAL Duplex Balboa $105,000 Duplex Newp't $113,400 Triplex Newp'l$129,000 Marshall Rlty 675·4600 Capisfrmto hoch I 0 18 ••••••••••••••••••••••• For Sale by owner. Near new Spanish Duplex on Palisades . Below morket. Principals only '93-l827 ConlM .. Mer 1022 • •••••••••••••••••••••• CHARMING DUPLEX ~ cute as o bug. thlA quaint duplex hus beom ceilings. knotty pint walls, wood burnina fireplace and sunny paUo. Near Carna~ park.& beach. $16.000. Wllb private assumable loan. Call 6'4·'1211 ~N H.r t l\AIU 'f !.. ,, 'l'lUU I\ r r s 0 L A K B E P A H I l S E V A H C S 0 H J C E R N C A R H 0 N A R P 0 A I 0 R S A S S 0 E 0 A R R E S 0 S B P N U C B P Z A 8 C A B R A L R Z A E E A 0 T 0 M l S 6 G A Y l T C 0 R Y E S R A A G 0 C I R S E R 0 Z A R B 0 S R I PG ENEL S 0 NB AP 0 TR F PE V' T U D I I V A H I R A T G U S L I V A 0 S N Z D C 0 W I N E R D G B A C I T N R 0 C A P A E P E D R 0 A S G H R A A 1 M 0 M E 0 G S A L A U C 0 E 0 L T V E D I A S B A R 0 8 I N K S L R I E E P A M E R I 0 R I E V A B S t U D ARAZALASPOBOVARONOR C I C V 0 U G A ! U A R B M I 0 C D A l•••llri-•T'-• ..... -............... , ....... t ~-............. ~ ................. .. w... ..... ~--aM..-.i : ,,.Ave1ro Douro River Say of Lagos • Braga Mldt1r1 C.pe Mondego . Cork Porto Strra De Ossa Lisbon Sal1z1r T1gus River Tc-.orrow: txc1Aftllt1ons Enjoy 11111ch lerpr "S..li 6 rlad" SN.nl• with ower Ml d*°"tn.t ptr Ptntl In aa all·-..-el 14·,.. "-lli.c. To Older vol11mn I. n ud DI, MNI II b MC.It. ..ail ... ..U pay1bli to .. SM.II A r 111d" 111 tan ol ltlt. .....,..,.. • The l·bdrm. unit needs Home or Income. Cute 2 20th CENTURY carpel, decorating, etc. bd, 2 ba. Qui et street. FOX No major repairs Frplc, lge rncd yd .• . necessary. With a little $54,900. 714 -338-3835 or personified elegance m effort this income pro· 548-4123. the c losest tract to perty could be a real be h 'd to Ne port VACANT. Owner must ac • si es w showplace. Offered for Sh Beach. Xlnt. apprecia-5621500 Full Pric... sell JSR, spacious LR & Mp Donr ores ti f ctor 4 BR 3-ba "" sep. dining. with E -Z Pool , 4 bd. 2 ba home on on a · . ' ' SEETODAY !! 1· all the Xtras Of an exec care yard ..... $74,500. extra lge log. Lge tv.rm .. . GONETOMORROW 1•1• f h me Comparably low En'-y the Good Li e! open to covered patio p~c;d. 968-4456 MISSION REALTY ati'25So. Coast Hwy. area. Newly carpeted, PANORAMA 985So. Cst, Laguna 499-4584 extra clean, $105,000. surrounded by loveliness Phone 494-0731 Shown by appt. 645-5412 . in a breezy development. I---------BY Owner-Harbor View "'BR Condo nr. beach, OCEAM VIEW 3 Bd, 2 ba, lge yd. 11 .,. u d d $47 500 Home. Moving must sc 2·ca r gar! Pools ! ***LOT*** pgra e ' ' • exec. 4 br. 3 ba + fam J a c u z 1 i 1 Sau 0 3 ! 50x100 n. buildable lot in Owner. 831 0648· rm. Lrg master suite Clubhouse ! Tennis highly desirable area. Mi11lonVieio 1067 w/sittingroom.lrg coun· Courts! Under $45,000. s26.000 + owner will ••••••••••••••••••••••• try kit. professionally 91)8.44S6 carry. HOWARD H. "AIAHOO ... ED.. done in/out. Open House ZAGRODZKY. Realtor. Brand new, never lived Sat/Sun 10-4:30 or by 4 Br 3 Ba, 3 car gar, lge boat storage. A beaut. ••494-8611 •• in home. Assume $36,0SO appt . 640-1770 days. FHA loan al 8'7o interest 833-8575 e\'es, 2033 Port house by owner. All $82 500 968-7444 3 BR & pool. . rooms ....:_....;'-------nice size. pvt pool, dirung WAUC TO IE.ACH rm, sunny. kitchen, m~h . more! Pnced for qwck Be au t1 (u I Se ab u ry sale. $72,500. Rita Myers Home. 3 B~. ll\4 Ba. Real Estate, 494.5420 or Country Kit, Supe ~l701 clean, close to schools,--------- parks 4' beach. Owner OCEANVIEW 3 Br 2 Ba, anxious. Should go fast custom built. Reduced le Tod a Y, s b cs t bu Y . _P_r_o_ve_n_c_e_. N_B ___ _ $45.SOO. VIEW LOT Lovely 3 Bdrm., family room home with large country kitchen. tasteful- ly decorated & close to school. HURRY! $52,900. MISSION VIEJO REALTY . 58'·1000 837-9500 DOVER SHORES BREATHTAKJNG . VIEW!! 4 BR, 3 Ba, private master suite w /view Pool, jacuzzi. Lowe.st price on Galaxy Drive. Shown by owner, wkday!-. by appt. Open Sat/Sun l-5, 1824 qalaxy Dr. 645.a.498 or 642-6630 at$5.'ib.~. . M==~::~:: Excitingly decorated. 4 Hewpori hach I 069Hewport Beach I 069 bdrm., 3 bath home w1~hh ••••• •••••• ••••••••••• •'• •••••••••••• ••• • •••• •. EMIRYHALTY 846-3301 lots of wood, big ~amed ceilings; pro----------i ress. landscaped, with IYOWHM 9112 1.,_ Dr. H.I. Ant" ... offlt"ecl- Thls beaul 2 1tory, 3 bd, 2"11 ba . beach hme pool & jacuzzi, In a pro· tected patio. Outstanding ocean views. $.187.500 TURNER ASSOC. nosN. Cst. Laauna 494-1177 w/formal din.rm., --------- ram.rm ., hl11hly up.,1--------· fraded w/cu1tom wood stair rail, new crpl'g, freshly palnted Ii wall papeNd, elk 1arafe opener, ltte red woo patio cover. Ce men drive4calcM 1ton1e are for t>o.t or trlr. Walk Bcb a. all schools. Hlahly desirable Newport Wes tract. Showl\ dally nam· Spm. 96.S,000. (Prin. on· \y)11C·~. vlOlan REAL. [STAT£ 'J(J() l ·'· ,.,,, ' • \t l'lw' ..... • ,J •• Half-Acre! Hill1lde wonder: ram. rm .. den, hobby rm, 1ame rm, 3 BR Is a kitchen you won 't believe l sn~.ooo ~c~~~ ELEVEN BEDROOMS 1 n a b r' an d n cw 5 unit apt. ' development. All wlits have priv. patios. dishwshrs, washet" /dryers, ranges. ovens. L~h lndscpg, too! Presented at $185,000 lo lhe discriminating Investor. A C0t.DWaL .._..CO. 644-1766 .... ~f)'-4;:..........;0AJ~L::....:Y....:P...:.IL:.:0::.T:.,_-,---....!!W:!ed~n!?Md~•!l:Y·~~~l.l!!a!l!l~2!_:1._!19~7~0 HcM•t UftfurWt.hed . HMM1 U8,..llald ~ftth ~ ....,._, Fw ~ 1accMine h'Of11r+y 200 a.cw"° 1rt1 1000 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • -,. ~ . ., ..,..~ ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........... ~.::! ....... c.taMaso ll24 ~ a..__,, 3241 COltoMesa 3124 .,...._._.. U.WW... l>.ftal .. .tsu.fmw. ......,.. • '-wpart leach I 06t Multi tenant indUAtrial H uml opt btda. In Dana •••.J••••••••••••••••••• ~·••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••.•••••••• •••••••••••9°••••••••••!> ...................... office bldt. OrHae Co. Pt 1 yr old 2 blk~ bcb £x~pUonal 3 br, 2 ba, SWIM nus WINT£ 2035 fu~ CM CClf"OCMI dtt Mw 3122 Coste MeN llZ4 Me'wpart leodl 1169 • OPEN HOUS L• s Airport Location. Prio. Orn \IU '193·5616 xlnt toe $37$ mo. Refs re • b r I R l BR Fu 2 l;..J. I ·-••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l • • ..... un onl "~9 --q'd MO lS4.2 •~., ~60 .. r, llh<', mq. view. m, •• r osr ... , c 1 f • H Goodw•ll Cou<l >· -. USO. ~~.-:/, • --Hi.:ATl::D POOL quHnalae ba~, prl v .peetuu • r V' w o UTILITllS PAID Rexl. HocJaes lS391710 P 2 100 &ck no Condo. 4Br, 890 Canyon Vlow dreutnc rm xtra lae Ocean le Bay. Upperun• IASTSIDI BLOCKTOOCEAN SHAR,4·PLEX ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3be, new cpta, drps, 497l5"32 •room•, en'ct. 111r IL, new duplex. !-Tpk. 2br, near nu crpta & Delux P11vate2Br.2ba. 1 XLHT C.M. LOC. For sale or lease·~ Ii n paint $425 mo 492 2796 W/111.Qrage. Ad\llls onJy, encl gar, 3 Br 2 BIA, 5495· drps, ronae & rcfrlg· t .. ae walk·ln closet1, 1 Rulll Ill\, i.pr1nkl"r". 10n~ M 1. H i,:,. A/Cq •. UNTA1.S _no pets. 67~·~31·2333 f.~01~7AdulU, uu. bllns. aaraae. cable TV •• c.tPPORTUNITY KNOCKS ONCE! .. ., --... FOR u .:AS Jo.: lBR 2 BA UGU"""· ·ll!·cH V'tV'... Ad Ila/ u saoo I c o J> P ~ r PI um b 1n1<, improved -100 ump. Dy 1 nA -N~ l ·BR wJrrple. Walk u no t>e • mo. • pnv.icy. Very well muin ownel'. 883 s. East SL, rg fncd yllrd. $4~/mc SprawU~ • BDRM. & $l BR Furn. $l~ lo bu ch. $27S. mo Ne-W 2 BR. lw ba. pallo, UJl June lS. $375 mo. on • L.trl(e .i UH home, 1 blk from bt.•.tl'h W ,ilkin.C cl1~ tum·t· tu Lulu & shopping Ubl (nd .:jr. bUndl'{'k, mod k1t1·h1•11, vrul dee ~lOS.000 Uon't dt!lay, 4 .di Mr . Arm!>lroug. t 7 t l IK83·86ti6 or gSG 1575 huned. Anaheim. ~·116SO 63l 1830 ;~de~k . ~~'O~ il'1~ Lou of bltn:s, pOOI, walk 675-721.5, Bkr. _ 1arden: •~Ila, no _pela. ~~=:!t~~~!·u ~/0.::i I 587 ~11•0~--~ w LohfOf'sale 2200 ~aullful 3-BR, 2·ba Con Vll£W. Bullt·ln kitchen. lbeo ~hopping . 1~ Ml. Costa Mesa 3124 S23S.&lZ·lti03 551-60'2after6PM. . 1 A enl . . /(. o n ••••••••••••••••••••••• do. All xtrs. pool. club-dbl. garage. $400 mo ach. 931W.19th St. ••••••••••••••••••••••• New Dix 2 Br. S2~ mo. ---------- g ~9 08 Builder wantis H 4 te.ar h.ll~. $325/mo. MS.3'777 2 BDRM. & RUMPUS 548·049'l CASA VICTORIA bltns, cpl.:s, drps, gar, no PAAI HIWPORT 100/o SPEHDA.ILE downs or vacant lot.sin Fo.talnYall•y 3234 RM . home. Bulll.fn l,2&3br,OeluxeUnfur. pel:s. 121 L~aa Ln.CM APARTMENTS Two Col>lu Mesa 4.Plexe Costa Mesa. area. Mail ••••••••••••••••••••••• kitchen, d.bl. garage. STUOJO or Furn. gas/wtr pd. _644 __ 1869 _______ ., Bachelor 1or 2 buy one or both. Eac r~p!Jes to Ad 11628, Oaaly BRAND rww house, 3 br, 2 Quiel residential section. WIOL y RA TES Adults· No pets Sec. gate Eastside Costa Mesa 1 bd, Bedrooms and S C l $88,500. Scheduled rents. Pilot P .0 . flox 1560, ba, comm. p0ol & tennis. $:m5 Mo. Fu Pool, rec rm, elevators Townhouses .~ .. ~~!~ ..... !?!.~ $U20 per mo, $13,50 Costa Mesa , Cu . 92626. Nr. Crwys. $325. call ln So. Laguna. 1 Bdrm. Ll~~~t~hJn~~ 525 Victoria, 642-8970 ~l~~~d garage, $ 185 · Fr. $239.SO 11own. l'rtn". Only R 3 V l L l . S 01110."".,·"""'' apt. Located 1 blk. above CLOSETOOC"'AN Open 9-6Dally TOCl.llSI·: ESl'/\TI-: 5 4 7. 6193 or 5 40 . 7 tf 23 ucan o . rn . un ""° '""""" Coast Hwy. W:tlk to shop-.,.. Dana Point 3126 · .. spa·Pools-TennlR ,\g1•11l 01·1•.111 l>lull '11.'w Owroer Agt · Clemente. Partial view 3 BR, 2 ba. bllnx. 2 car ping and bt:ach. /\II ulll. l!xKUtlv• Sultn •••• ••••• •••••••••••••• AcroH from Fashion 11\0ti C.1111• Lo!> ,\ljmus. -of oc.ean. Must see to ap· gar , community pool. pd. by owner. $200 Mo. 2080 Newriorl Blvd VI 2 0 1 Island 11l Jamboree on ~ J.lli S!ol5,00U Mf:SA VER OE 4·PLEX prec1ate this lot. $30,000. Mor1:. Kids ok. No h:t:. MISSIOH REALTY Costa Mesa ~f:~ 8~~ ;11~r s2ts j~ ~n Joaquin Hills Road. Santo Ana I 080 Absolutely b1.•uutifut ! 9794t9'l $265. lst Pioneer Rily, 985 S. Csl Hwy. Laguna 642·2611 493·9577 /830·3215/496·5079 (7141644·l900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pnm·ipalsonlyplease. Attention In vestors & 8"2·«2l Phone494·07ll ElherloMesa •----------De 1 J I I Lrg 1 br. crpts. drps, YRLY 3 br, 2 ba, by beach. Near new, bltns & garage. S390. 548·4063 ---------·I 4-4 UN ITS best renta ve o~rs, argc ots 4 Br2 Ba, fncd b\yd very l ed A ·1 U r I IB>ROOM stove. frig. Sl65/mo. $2 4, 995. an•a in t"ullerton in Apt. Complex, llunl rlean Children & ' pets ':;rm cl~se v~i 'tt· s u~n 12 No children. no pets. ..1 ... ECREEK 496 7058 aft 6 or wknds. u~ L1\ l'li L', Lll1' ·.• I' I I 1 ington Meach, 2 blk!> to .OK $375 581-4852 '1 o I c oo "ool & R""C"eatlon r" ' .-i 1nc1pJ,\:.G?E~NYTP case ocean. Fantas li{ o p Sec uded. $300. 497·1970 ,,. ~ • LIVES UP lkcl1111 l bJth A.,. I'>. ~OU 1959 M ..J.. A CM II\ It' I Tt•rm.,. i.J\ ;.ulalilc l>l:!·H5SOe\t~S 546·lOl:ll portumly. Fir~t lime or Hwmngton leach 3240 a,.... ·~. TO ITS HAME Vl:.:RY Ir~ 2 BR 2·b a w/tt>rracc. upslrs. no 3 Br, 2 Ba, yrly 2 blks lo pct:.. SU5. 675·5205, beacb$350 mo. 675-382·1 642·3188 . I . I 1 • 1 I Ut•.,.t bu\ 1n U l'Jll~l' ---fered 213 963-51!).i •••••••••••••••••••••••Mission Vi~jo 3267 $185. & UP. l & 2 Hr <ht?r 500 tull lrt•cc; :ind • .. F()''PPlE'XG d C M ••••••••••••••••••••••• G . l;ounl\ "' • ·,. · oo 1 • VACAHT 38 28 F /P , arages, green lawns, 111 st 1 t' u m.,. " 1 l h SCOTT REALTY !ix· lJmhhaH•bwltns + COST/\ MES i\ co m 3BR,hugecornerlol,all rr:,; 581~71280;~~ punfi1:d w~ter. Adults. "~ll·rfjlh r•rp;itt a 536·7 533 ll1:.h\\J~h1.•rs, FA heat. mere1:.il lot. corner of blln:.. newly painted T . MV no pe~. 2020 Fulll'rton n ·l,1x111 i.: sl'lt111 g 1111 S Toro 3832 $365 Yrly Ocean Front 2 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Br, 1 Ba, bltins, deck, 1 Nl.'t'\120', do\\n.S69,500. 19th. and Walla"" $3 ''5 l'"1de out ''ov patio erccro, Avt•. l block E . of ~our 'pac1ous nl'~ t or YEAG/i:.61~7E1'ALTY Sq. ft Quall ... ~Pla ;c sharp. $35().t~o Ask fo~ Hewporthoch 3269 Newport Ave & l block 2 twtlroom a µ.11tnw111 FORMAL BEAUTY I Properti-.s (7M > 752 19'l0 Kl'1th or Faye, 960·2501 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• So. of Bay t-'rom $220 Fu I n11 u1 t' ,.'{ r.1rc f111tl in J custom 3 U ..... ITS 962·4471 llrkr Univ Park Home·4Brs, 64 __ 2_8_690____ <I' allahl<' Small pnt~ I I I J"'lll 01\ i\dull-. unh <Hf11'(' 1utl iomt• 2500-.4 ft Choi ce R·l lot . 210 HUGE FR.3ba,Privateyard 1&2 BR apts furn. No opcn!lllOtofiOO ::!:lOO Beaut. Condo 2 Bd, l Ba. garage 645-36SS. patio, gar, no child, pet S265. 586·5197 -----------New 3Br, 2ba. air cond. l'pls, drps, bltns, no pets For lease. Terrace apt. 60' bay view. 2nd floor. 4br. 4ba. 30' liv rm, din rm, brkfst r m, air. Call 675-7030. w 2 J.:Ul'!>l hou.,.t•s + µool EASTSIDE Ma gno II a St• ,. M lease $575. 644·7770 children or pets. Adults F:.i11 \o If'\'-II rt . l'r1:-.ta F ormal cntr). formal " Presl1Rc2story4bedrm. I Gd I dining, br1..•al..tust n1om & llou.,.e plus lwo units 50xl25' /\skin...: $22.500 formal dining rm. 212 36' Dock 3 br condo on y, · oc. 645 · 0032 M1..·::.a l'hon1..• 5.iS 2:1Uo ••\er} .tml•nity. Thi !> 1tleul to r income or By own<.'r, Saund1.•rson. bnlhs,upgradedthruout 211:1 ba.Double gar.$675,Huntl_.onleach 3740 FountainValley 3834 3 BR. 2 ba, ~ar, patio, 1 house could ni·H•r ht• ownc•r Ot'l'Upancy. Two days li'12·0212, nights 2 Yrs old Walk lo oecan 545·7645after5 ••••• :~••••••••••••••• LRG 1 Br, pool, nr. shops u••••••••••••••••••••• block to beac ·No pets. n•plaC'l'rl .1t th1-. f1gurl' bdrm. 2 b<ith house. 3 54ti·2277 $ 4 5 0 I mo i n t' I d s ---BEAUTIFUL 1 br furn adlts/no pets. Ul1L pd lmmac 2 Br, ADULT Con· Yrly. W. Nwpt 542 · 1603 S385 mo. 586-8137 Bt•autitul qut1•t :.t . i' ~: l>drm. 2 bath unit with Ranch;s, Forms, gurdcrwr A~k for Keith 4 Br 3 Ba Con~o. Fam. apts s170 & $l80 S . h 1884 Monrovia, 548-0330 clo. air t•tmd. pool, nu cpts Lido Isle 2 br. Ulil ind ~Jn t :.1 ,\ 11 a I' 1 1 ( l' r1 :-.umk,·k only .i year oltl. Gr-oYH 2700 or fay c \HiO· :.!501 o 1 Rm. pool, tenn1 .... many style bldg pvt ~ ~anu & drps, $225, 968-7431 aft 213·281·8406, Eves/wknds ~l:.!5.UOO For fur lht•r 111 plu~ 2 IJtlrm, 2 bath unit. 962 4471 Hkr xlras. $475. 631-0797 ' n gar, Off Beaten Poth 5 675·2342 'fh . 1 ••.• ••••••••••••••••••••••• _ ___ --pool. ~aun<i lndry adlts 1 2 & 8 ----1t1rrnat1or1 ph-j.,l' t·.tll t'. uurm. 2 bulh is t·or1 • •17301 K I' ' ' . . 3 r. Adults, nc ----------John\\' Hnn•·' n·1 t1hll· rnlo ;.i molhcr·in· 14 /\<'res nl'ar l't•rns Super 4 br. 2 ba. cpts, Back &y. Lge 38r, 2ba, ee son Ln, 1 blk pets, dshwshrs. shaf! Oceanfront w/Vu or pier 2 ' 1'.l·khulf&,h-.ol.' .llH IJ\\ unit Spcndal>lc wilh 1.akt'. path or .:rowth drps. B t O. S345/mo. frplc. 2 car.gar, beaut W.oflieac~oCfSlatcr. ~pls, closed ~arage , Huntlngtonl~och 3840 Br,furnorunfurn. 541 2 t>:?l ~·, do\\n. lcH•I, view, ~ood farm & 963 45ro 963 1786 garden & view of golf IW2·7848 frpk. BBQ. Gas & water ••••••••••••••••••••••• 540·20l8 536.362,i I-,,., & "'kml t:r. 1 , .. ~ hor ... e country. JU.,.t cM No r<'ntal foe course. Cpt/drps/bltns pd. Pool. Walk lo bch $180 & up. Ne s •·' · · " I i:i jQuail ~ II"~ 60, S2500 A. 10•, dn. V1llaJ(e Heal &.tale Exec house. S375 mo. STUDIO LA MAHCHA APTS Summer increases. Pool, Steps to Sand 2 Br 2 Ba. Mobil~ Homes • Plac• . pnn only ~71 ~675 fMii5 F'rplc. 3 br, 2 ba. enclosed 968·6525 & 541-9134 $49 WEEt<LY 778 Scott Place CM rec rm. drps. crpt. Adlts, frplc, deck, bltns, $300. for Sol~ 11 0 0 Prap•rti•s ReolEstat~ patio . erpt!'I drps. Spacious 4 BR, 3 Ba, FullKilchen&TV 642.5073 ' ' no pets. 220 12th St 548-3869&642·0282 ••_••••••••••••••••••••• 752 _ 19 20 1:-... h--2800 ri Linens & Utitilies 536·9505. 219 15th St, _ wo.A ... -·'7-$345 1 mo . 963·456!1 / Wale ront home. Avail. M 5367031 2BR·PartlyCurn. ).J;iOO Cost.i Mes.1 10<'..i 14oo ouA1l)T N1w1>ou1ucH ••••••••••••••••••••••• 963·li86 immed. S650 >rl} only' ILETOOCEAN Newly decorated lge . . lHousetoOcean 111111 Lot:. ot extrj" Cut{' 64c ~ 06 d becuti•e Suites studio. Patio. 1 adult. Cat ---~Lt kt· ulft•r. 1711 ,R.E.SALES Sell trade for ut•u<·h No RenlalFee .,.,4 ay:.,or631·3155 ok Appliances. Util pd ForRentlBdrmi\pt. Call673·7180 ••I:! llXU START THE house. spectacular 45 > r ~age Real Estate P:\l"s for appt 7 27 Yorktown ll•d.. Sl60 859 w l9th 642 3452 S180 per mo. E old ~Iountam hornl· 1111 • , Beach Blvd al Yorktown · · · · 515 7th St. 11 B. LG 3 IEDROOM MEW YEAR + acre.Green hou<.e 11;01 Spotless small house, BAY CREST AREA 5 36 -0411 CAS .a. HERMOS ._ Splitlevel. frplc, :-,qft. S39.500711 33h3KJ!"> beaut yurd.S330mo 4br. :Iba, fam rm , "' A 2 Br 11:: Ba TwnhH sundeeks.S425 mo. L.1i.. .. ·~1ll1• ~lotJ1lt· I h11r11• I' \HI-. :-01',\l'I-.~ $751 mo It ·., tnw' Mobile ho ml' &. If.I\ d trcitl cr !-Pal'CS U~l.\' 5 l.Ef'T' Stl'~ lll P'l bl'h , pool , R <'e µuv1hon + mut·h m11rC'. \::.k for mgr, .John (7 14 ) fi7112112. Jn-xso Mt'locl y llomt' :'-i1n· II B Hrk 2br. :.iwnini.: nu 1T!Jh, :..hcd S l.;jlll) l0.\t'~l .. ill817 j:J7 1 •w,1rl;. nl'\\ hugt•, (2 h lJ 1 ), 2 lll'llroom. 2 hJth in nn<: of thl• 1·ounl) '-> best adult park:. Famll} room ~•th v.d har. d1nini.: mom lircJkf.a st b.ir <Ind 400 !.Q It II\ ing room t\ full\ landsl·apl.'d 1J1..•<1ut) RIGHT! or 5-l8·"1l2J inc. watt-r & grdnr. $500/mo lse. /\vail 1m-SMALL BEACH HOTEL 148 W . Wilson, CM w/d!>hwr, range & patio. 645-8964 S~I Homes 96l 7787 a~k for Nan med1atedly. 557·4281 Rooms $23.50 week D-t•ful pool nearby 531i·5006 or RHI Estat~ /\pts$110. mo. 536-7056 DCCIU 1 536·7542 Part. furn. 2 Br. Yrly. Nr. L~ontln•Htm~nts want~d 2900 3 HH2ba,famrm,lrpk.4HR.3ba,l'.,/R.frplc.tcn TownhouseApt Bch/Bay. Only $275. EornMore ••••••••••••••••••••••• S3'50. per mo. Call ms. pool, gardener. $400. ADULT gar den apt, 1 JustComP'eted 3 Br l'".l lia Twnhse 673-1909leavemessage. Our residential d1v1 s1on Client wants 8 lo 12 units. ~·1739 640·0008 · bdrm. pool & BBQ. No A pt Ch'ld & w/dshwr. ran~e. yd &. lisL'i a nd sells more in· f h children. no pets. 1035 cce t P•t patio , pool nearby , YRLY. 2 Br, H 2 bn, frpk, un urnis ed in Wcst 1\dulL-. ov<>r 40. sngl or Bluffs Condos; le ases 12lhSt.Sl55.mo.5.,.,.7 .. 47 AllAmenities 536-5006or 5J6-7S42 . 1 blk to bch. $300 Call w stmcnt properties than ~.C. <3 must ht! 2 br un-married. 24hr s~c. Comp from $390 to $595 ""' " 2BR • .,.,c -645-7054. most inn·~tmcnl offices. Its. >Call Uon Bak<.'r (213) rec incl. <tdult classes. 2 A"cnt 644 J 133 Mewport Beach 3769 ~SPAC IOUS NEW TRI Personul Trainin,g , 2A" 'llU ct f I' ., 28Rw/frplc $345 · --------- r ' u... or sen in o to >r 2 Ba Nt!w furn or un ••••••••••••••••••••••• J""R ... ,.... PLEX 1 mile to ocean Bayfront apt. Doek ovuil. r<.'stigl' Offices. Full B<.ikC'r Rl'all), 467 Wt•!>t furn 1:? m1 fr ocean. Call 2·Sty. /\·fram<.': 3 BH. 2 '"A" WK UP 1•-" Bdr & 0 _.,., SJJO 3 B 3b 2b d k f F u,·1l1t1l':... Propcrt) B d GI d I b Dbl P I i/{NV ~ Inquire next door: r, 2 Ba bllns, lg ~· a. sun cc . rpk . l'urrhasc Plan, Frin"l' roa wa y. en u (' 5Jtill74~aft 6PM a . gar. oos. lcn Bac·h Color TV maid Hacienda De Mesa frplc, scp J~~r w/lndry $465, ulll pd. 673·8800. u ,., !Hm7 ru.:>. S4<!5. Agt. 548 1290 ~er ·pool Tll L' 'l\t L'" \ 60 w w 1 conn 546 "'""'' wknds or Btwn 6 & 10pm .,enl'11l:.. Supt>nor Com WALK to beach bach cot ---" '· · "' c-.::>1 • 1 -1 son. Apt Ill · """"' · · m 1s:..1o11. V \ n am 1 c Re-ntcils tai:c. ulll pd S1S5 IS<mt Juan 41~ ~ N1:wporl Bl. NB Cosla Mesa aft 6 2 Br duplex, newly dee .. Oq::a n11at1on. °I.earning ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BH condo. frpk S220 Copistrono 3278 646'9681 2 Br. 1 Ba . Pool, liltns, $245 LGE 2 br, 2. ba. D/W, (rplc, magnificent view Environment. Full time Hous~sfvrnish~d 3 BH condo fncd yd, fp, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Olx furn duplex. 2 Hr, Drape:-;.Sl90mo R&O . cpts. drps . of harbor, boa ls, hceru.(•es who will work ••••••••••••••••••••••• S250 J Bd. 2 ba. crpb. dr~. luwi•r unit on Sea~horc 642.9367 Aft. SPM Brookhurst & Hamilton. Mariner's Mile. $475. mo. for ('arnings IO CM'C~S ur Hewport Beach 3 169 4 BR. rncd yd. garagt'. r~nCt'd ~d . dbl i::1rj~t·. " gar. Winter/ summer. Agt. 'No fee. 846-l3ll' 645·6392 days ask Cor SZS.000 per year are en ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• boat ~alt' S300 'er) dt•.in S:llS 5Hti 547X ,\j:ll'nl 640 6161 l UR EASTSIDE. cpts, 846-4938 ' Ted.or 962·9666 eve!i coura~cd to apply for a Heighls·2Rr. l'"a. }<>n lot HOM El-'JNOERS drps bltns dshwh $195 pos1t1on w1lh our ln\est· Wtr,gardcnl'~ pl' ... S30o 642 9<.IOO Santa Ano 3 280 1or 2 Br, adults. no pets 642.6i4 3 ' r . EX lge, 2 br, 2 ba, dlx East Bluffs . 38r, 2ba menb or Res 1cienl1al mo 548 _ 3011 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• $170 Sl90. 2421E.16th St poolside apt nr. bch. Townhouse. DW, dis· 01v1 ::.1o ns. <.:all Don -·----_ .. BR. 2 ba. frplc. crpls & F1rcpla{·e, ::.upl'r cleJn 1 N llls.6461801 • $325. Near new 3 br, 2 ba. Adlt, no pets. $195. posal. dbl gar w/aulo- Herman. President. HousHUnfumished drps, nr II B lhJ?h. S375 br. 2 ha. bllns. npt..., -frplc. gar. no pets . .t:: 536-8362 o pener . Pool & Rec CetMtery Lots/ Q U ,\ I L p L A c.: to; ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo .. 1st. la!>l & :.ccurity d rp s . s J .i 5 I m 0 OCEANFRONT Deluxe 2 C.M. 642·1603 · • center. Adults only. $.132 Crypts 1500 PHOPt:HTl£S. INC . Corona~IMar 3222 96890117 9bJ.4~19ti3·171!h Hr 2 Ba. $225 v.k ; $.385 Nf~W3 Br2 Ba Twnhmc, mo.Leaseavail.644-7232 ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• 752·1920 ~··•••••••••••••••••••• lrYiM 3244 . ~o Henl<il i-:t•t• mo 211 lo 6/1176. (213 ) MESA DEL M/\R, h~e 3 dbl ~ar, pvt patio. nr pnced for riu1ck ~al{• by owner SJ C. 4!J6 1795 · Lv'g area 2 pl ots Harbor 3hr. 2ba: s lo\e, refrig, ••••••••••••••••••••••• __ \~~l~)!~HcJl _fo..,tjtl' 001·0018&1213)698-1383 BR. 2 1 :: Ba, $2 75 . llrltg Hbr $350. 846·51071----------Resl Memorial Pk $300. h Children OK. 751-0704 Eves. OC!AMFROMT m 3994 aft 6pm 12 U ..... ITS ~;" wshr. :-'r. bC'h. Sol<!S B l'.:A UT. San .J oaqu1 n South LGCJUna 3286 Lgc2 br, 2ba. mclud's util, -------l ·Bdrm. Yearly S325 ----J"'lll 3K Hegoma. 675·7927 Twnhmc L • .rgc 2 Hr. 2,~, ••••••••••••••••••••••• S325 mo. Poolside. Call •2Br Mesa Verde. lower New Deluxe Triplex. 2 & 3 STEPS TO BEACH :! cc m d t'r )' Lo ts :l t Costa Mesa 4 8 R Ba. 2 sty . \'l('W of goll 3Br & ouest hou~l'. Lower 63l·Z395. Garage. adults S200. N1. lirs. Nice. qlriel. Nr. s lfarhor Rest S275 ea. · 2 12 Ha· 11 e w l'Ours & 1 k SS .. () ., Ar h,.. u -pets. 833·8974 Point Shopping Cntr. 2 BR, 2 ba, yrly, furn. All 2 bdrm. units. Open Spyg lass 11111 home. e <I ·e. ·• ., c oay. S500 per mo. OCEANFRONT $250 & S.140. 18482 llunl· $37S l1rm~,9f>80afl 5P\t beam cc1 hngs in hair, Panoramic Ol'l'an \ll'W. 547704_4__ 2 yr leat.e. No dog~. 2 Br it~ Ba. brand new in&lon St. 5S7·4Gu.8 & 3 8R.2ba.Wntr.$3SO ComrMrciol man th Lease. /\va1l immcd. REHTALS 4993429 Modern2Br.WinterS350. Twnhsestyle.t'rplc.Lgc 5305775 3BR,H~ba house$375 P _..... I .d Y w1 new carpets S850.mo.li44 -9229 yrly $450. Phones · .. t' .,.,"5 24 ----------51:•w1o.1D ro,....., ., 600 an paint. S215,000. Will 2 Br.1 ba ~375 18r. !Ba. 1st/last m o 1>75 2016or675·7533. p•-. pa 10· gar,-' · 47 !(;A " ••••••••••••••••••••••• lake exchanges. 3 BR. 2 ha. dplx. Older :? Hr+ den, 2 b.i 5525 rent. $50 deposit. S23S. __ Elden 979·1658 Sharp l Br apt in 4·Plex Condo: 2 BR, 2 Ba. Un· 2 B b B f l P . Adults, no pets. $195 f rn ye rl $400 BAYFROHT , .... jQuail ~ ch1ldrcn.nopcts.S375. · r,2 a SJSO per mo. Call 623·5678 ay ron anoram1c Like New 2 Br, walkini: S42·S4S4orS4G·lS48 u · a y, .., 1\,gentli40-7000 2Br,3baNB $12()\) aner 5. Vicw2Br2Ba.S450yrly distance to 17th St. S22.'i ---------- <Hf1cc buildinS?. ~P<'C· Place . ---3Br.2ba S<130S470 H £. •• hed 81tpavail.67S·0236 mo.548·•9il lacul.ir view. luxurioul> Properties Xtra lrg lhr. frpk.' Mon· 3 Br 2•2 ba 5380 ouses rvrn1s or ----------HOW REHTIHG 1"11·cu t1veofhces 752_1920 ~ thly 01 bl' SJSO. ut1I pd. 38r2•2 baN8 SI~()() Unfumishe-d 3 300 ~tments 2 Yrs new 2 en . 2·bu, associated BROK fQS-RE l\l TORS l 0J', Y'f ft lib.-O 6' I If.Id R ..... d t ~"'"" 000 631 055S · , ·> u---·-1·,h .. d Meadowlark Golf Course C"UUCC Oi:NVV. ltOOOUAllSTNIWPOltlUCH -. Ail 3.30, 4Br,2'2 ba s:l25 ••••••••••••••••••••••• nTVnl ... vaulted ceiling,hv.rm , BILLGRUHDY *. -673·R267, Sull1\'an. 403 4Br 2\.7 ba ssoo Outstanding 1 Br .•••••••••••.•••••••••••• enclosed garage. S24C DELUXE ReoltOf' 675-6161 WAL!<TOBF:ACH• Jasmme UpJ)('r LERAISOR walk/bch. patio, frp1c,Batboo,..,1nsulo 3807 mo. w/r e frig. s230. One, lwo , three I :12. x 300. C2 Lot 11 n :"e""port Bl\d C ~t \'ac. prime loc. Prin. only t>.\6-1762 HunhnC)ton Dupln ----S26S Unfum, S285 furn, ••••••••••••••••••••••• without. Call 642.5270 bedrooms available all 6 MO. sub-lease. Exciting 3-BR&2·BR,garages ~staM•sa 3224 REALTY 673·8617CdM . Custombuill,prof.dec2 have bllns & dish · ParkNewportApt.s,N.B. SSl,500. l'l Yr old ••••••••••••••••••••••• . ,... • • BR, 1 Ba. Steps to ocean, 3 Br. 2 ba, !rplc. bltns. washers. Localed in pre· l br sunny & lovely. Tenns Rexible Sharp,newderor 38R 2 4523Campul>Dr,lr\'lnt• ::ondominnnns gar. S335 mo. 64o.S650 dshwhr. patio. No pets. sllg1ousarea. Adults only. $269. :\le VAY INVESTMENT Ba. pool. l\o pets. $J95 1 Campus Valle} Shop Ctr Unfurnished 3425 days, 642·5225 e\'cs 549-0812 after 5 631·2018 •3 BR fplc, 2i.: ba, $375 •2 _&i_o._12_1_8_<-_____ _ CORP 842·7481 r~~s~~:~~i & clcan1ng1 CALL 833.S60~ 1 ~·e-;;;;;·;:~~~-~~;·n•e•; I Corona del Mar 3822 18~ W /W cpts, drapes & ::: ;~~t~afc~~dy :i'f •I ~ Lse. Newport Isle. 2 Newport Beach . Umv Park Terral'•· 2 Br 2 2br. 2ba w /patio & ex· ••••••••••••••••••••••• paneling wt bltns. Above will consider children r 2 Ba, upper duplex Easts1de 4 br, l'' ba. S385 8a Twnhsc. frplc, ~0. tr as. Su per location carports w /patio. $16() Sec u l intersection Delux. (213) 791-4348 COVINGTON per mo bt. la~t + SlOO. 5S2 7896&51!611955 $350/mo.67J.2749. ..., mo.642·7973 art 5 pm Craham&He1l,H B. Bayfronl 2 Bd, 2 Ba. Pvt 4-PLEXES Bkr546·0814 -Brand new .. 2hr T<'rrarc Huntington Landmark (St ... " NEW Bay Chalet apts, kent R~n Realty Bch & pier. $550. yrly. LESS THAM COST Nol rc all.v because Cov· S. A. Hi;!hts 3 RR. 1'1 ba . twnhs c. Crpt . rlrps. Condo, Adults, l Br $265 Tl very private & umque. 2 840·260lorl!488300 979·1935&644-4510 211 213fi2ndSt N H 1n1..rtonrl1rtn•thu1ldthem. fpl c. SJSO. mo l!.t, h1!>t patios. frplr S350 W16 mo.968·2549aft6PM·. 11 J,.C:':~ Br. 2 ba.~ 1 Br w/loft, ----Sub·lease. Park Nwprt 2500 Sq fl bllu·k hudd but s h<1rp or sharper +SlOO. 8kr 546 0814 mo.mm.be. 552 3016 ----CORONA DEL MAR s unken living rm, ~rick BIKE TO BEACH 2br 2ba tennis pools To C·2 Zone art shop "1th room for c'puns1on un lge lot Ideal fur ant1qul'!'I ur ::.1m1lar Oan1.1 HPall> h45 2020 <1r 642 li.'lliO ing. Cont.1<'l ;\lgr than the other brand. -;--d -T rll k --H.B. Lease, 2br,l'r' ba. frpl cs . pvt p&t1os, 1 2 3n~d /\ Ap,ril .30th /toge fi 12 . 825 :! or Ownt•r Nl>e act1vcrt"t1rC'dC'plfor u eroc 3 BR. 2 Ba. l S250/mo.Frplc. patio 2 Br Townhouse, frplc. garages$240.377W.Bay. · <><: ~oom pts n r. (;/\NGl,<2\:ll:?I? 21 :.!0 l'nccrl at only $ll2,500. 2 Br, frplc . lRe fenced yd, blk to pool. S440. mo. Ciosetoshpng. 963.5267 Pool, tennis. continental 642·0758or642-422G ~JONS !:;STATES $325/mo 644 ·5564. \ou ran own Newport 1!ar No pcb or childrt•n. lease. 64b-1086 · breakfast. Some ccean & 536·<!5 79 592 ·50l0 WESTCLIFF 2 br l1h ha ~i:::~e 1800 :>~l~:·~~;i~s;~; :~'~:~i~ G75·~9~_ -~EHTALS * To=~:h~d 3525 Catali!la view~. Close to 1:;f~i2g br gu~I=~· stc~v~, By CENT Pk 2 new 4 Br 3 twnhse. Adults ~nly. no •••••••••••••••••••• .. • \na or lluntin~on Beach Sharp ;1 br. lam rm, 2 UNIVERSITY PARK ••••••••••••••••••••••• shopping & fin<' beach. llamillon nr Ha~bor' car ~ar, lse. $495 & $525. pets. $300. mo. 17 28 Bed· unit~ Close lo the water , fplcs. 1mmac cond., 1·ul· 4 BR, 2' a ba. furn ... $500 Newport Riviera in CM . 3 644·2611 S2 2 5 /mo. No pets: ~-06871840·2850 ford Ln. 548 - 75 33 FOURPLEX HR. OCEA M Thi s has to ht• the :.harpesl available along the coa<.l <I I 3 UH. (2) 2 BR. C 1 > 1-BH Only SH3.000 OPEN Sal Sun I 5 321 ltith St . U B. R E ALT Y INC. 714/846-137 1 ELEGAHT LIVIHG & INCOME TOO! 1 Blk fr('lm beach. pror decorated, mod. kitchen, dbl encl. 11tar, sundeck. Sl05.000. L>on·t delay. Call Mr. Arrn~lrong , < 714 Hl83·R666 ur ll81"1575 too $132.500. de· s ac, $375 VaC'ant. 3 BR. fam rm, 2 ba .. S4SO Br, 2 Ba. 2 sty Cathedral . 675"5800. Bkr. No fee. 4 BLOCKS TO DE/\CH NWPT'S !"INEST CONDO I jQuail ~ ~~~~ow. Call Larry 3BR:~~}.~·~~.'~it43S ~:~:~oo~ec~sra~~~ s:f~: 2E~cl3 :a~io:b~t~5s~ ~~: ~~~1~ ~~·~tsba$2~lt~:i ~f~.~~~.~~~~~h~r.e. ~i::o~:~~ 1B:;r~:~l Pia!=• 3 br, fam rm . pool TURTLE ROCK TERR. Sullivan 673-7183 WalnutSt 673 0041 · S475.Shpavail.67S·3464 Prap 7 er 52 _t,!!f 0 S enclosed gar. frplc . $.TIS. 4 BR. 4 Ba. Pool mainl & · · 2 BR. Gar. Child OK. i•oo OUAIL)T NlWPOllT HACH Aft G, 646 . 5911 gardener paid Ndebwl port Crest. 3br, 3ba, 2 BR.J~~~dofrplc, si25, 2 Br, drps. crpts $2Bo115sa0Chlca /Heil area. For lease. Terrace apt. ............... -.. $1000 gar,sauna,Jacuu.1& frplc, pvt patio, adj'. . ays, 431 ·2527 Mr. 60' bay view. 2nd floor . Lux. Dplx 3 Br 21ri Ba. Din DEER.l"IELD tennis. Avail Mar<'h 1. 673-7~ or 979-~ shopping. 213.592.5227 Thomas. 840·1438 Eves. 4hr, 4 ba, 30' liv r m, din 40 UNITS Rm. frplc , pvt yd. dbl 2 BR. 21') Ba ... --... S3SO $450/mo. 673·5268 aft 7. Costa Mna 3724 ,. _ _..._ M•t"" 372~ '"ine 3844 ~~:1~·~Jst rm, air. Call 0 gar. $425. 637 ·7091aft6 3 BR. 2 Ba ·········. $425 .,~ Cont 2 8 ~•111 .. ., range WALNUTSQUARE ~· r.l~Ba,ten· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Br, Fam. Rm. newly re 2 BR. 2 Ba .......... $325 rus. xlnl fac1I. .no rhild New :lbr, 2ba . Sep. din rm 3 Br. lower. Refrig incl, 2 County decor. S395 R(•f's a must GREENTREE under 16. 8/10 s ml to We've Opened The Doo & den. trplc. ull xtras. blks to ocean, $360 mo. $490,00d. :_.!_t 3337 er. grdnr incl 'd 2 BR,l Ba ........... $340 bch.S275.842·2070 rs Ja cu z11. community 673-4452eveli/wknd~. Twos and ones. 30 units -"'"°-------RanchoSanJoaquin On A New Concept pool. College Park. CtldamW..terlrotd n "" l d d 2BR.2Ba ........... $S50 •--=lmcnt1fvm1shed 537-6363213/923·6684 . 3BR b r "w Y re ecorate . 3·BR. 2·ba. frplc, hi~ 2 a R 2 b d $4 ~ I . 3 a, rplc, bltn.~. S pendable. Will ell· family rm. /\veil now ' ' a . en 60 /SOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• n LCICJIMClleach 3848 beaut newcrptg,dblgar change. Quail Place ln· s 3 5 o . s E L E c T RACQUET CLUB lcdboa Island 3706 RESIDENTIAL MOTEL ••••••••••••••••••••••• & boat sllp avail. $595. vestment Div. (714) PROPERTIES 556-2660 38:£~~RT.BEA'c;~50 2•b•r••a•pt••.•p••a•l•1.0•.••n•e•a•r•b••.•y•. LIVING Drop a pebble in\.o the mo. 752·1920 ' 3 BR 2 Ba $37 Ocean from your Apt. JACOIS REALTY 2 BR duplex, fncd yd, 48a· ........... 5 A vailabl e J a n 1:5 . Lease.Luxury,securlty, 675·6670 HAVR CLIENT with eon· frplc, garnJ(e, $235. ,21h Ba ......... $500 67:J..34.58. AMBASSADOR Mature adults. 3J755 Cst. ---------de~natlon mo!ley needs 3 BR, yd, stove, children H tQ 1n\'CSI some 1n good in· ok 1275. Comp. refurbished luxury wy. 4 99-2835. 2 BR. l lh Ba townhouse c~ome properly last. Bill 3B'R.fncdyd,frnlc,gnr. 552-7500 apt. 2 Br, no children/· INN ·OCEANFRONT style. Bltns, cpts, drps, F· d ·,.. • ts R r 'd u"" • year encl. patio, htd pool, ernan ez, 8kr. 67S·7225 pool. $39S. red h ,111 pe · e S req ·-""mo $round .2 br '375, bach Adultw. n o pe ts. $2l5. htcCMM Property 2000 HOMEFJNOERS yrlyS73-S099. 17S. Kids/pets. Ulll pd. 548·2682 •• • ••••••• ••••• • • • • ••• • I I UH ITS 642·9900 Corona .. Mar 536-0321 ----------UOHS ESTA. TES 111i....1 rf OCll:! •H VU ~ IR "••lty ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Jacuzzi & Ocean vlew spoc. 1 br. NEW Yearly deluxe 1 BR, i\l(cnl ------- Ruild<'r/Broker s <"lling ..... ewpo ~ ., ~ 1275 Se n..... fROM Heated Pool frplc, bltns. 207 cedar, property. 3 To 111 units in Beach 2 Ru . 2 <'ur ~urage, bltns, ~ or t'enf.' Vu~r;:ic: q~l~t: •All uwitt ... Pald ~~~l:g..~9~1ona Way, N.B. art. 6p.m. P o me areas fn Hunt cpts. drps. $39~. S4R 0259 ---------~ 0 •f' ""'"' ~ $ 36 ·Wkly Maid o.... b N •-Pride of ownership, orS48·11882 • 040 a.v.__... ' Service Ai t f tE....-.1-&!.....1 mat on .....-ac ew "' modero bu1ldlog, only Logmo leach 3241 ,._.._ ...,.__ 1 Br Apt. ln N. End, lh Blk 441uww1 ,...,....._ nearnew 3 Bd d 1 ., b ood • _"',.,._, •Kltc:Mn to Shaws Cove. Many aru..twWIMd JtOO 53 ._ 257 · 9 59 .., 5010 $240,000 Two blocks • en, ... ~ a, I • ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• F.:llltlee Ava1I. ttffs. pvt patio,*""'" _0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -from beach Owner will local, many exlru, avail ELEGANT UVlNO • Washer & -·~ •Co•&......6-helpf1.nanceandwillex· soon. REFS. UU. •MONARCHBAVV1LLA 537.IOWHIC&UP wa:i:rt ·y o iocl'd uUl.4942791 ....,....... cunae down into house 54.5-5133. New 2 Br B 2~11 Ba. Ocean •Studio l tl BR Apta l;U\I. • w~ S:r/''R ~llff * or t m•llf'r units vi w, balcorlies, 2fr,,lcs. •TV & Maid Sen Avail Ref 1 It Hewpwt leecll 316' J.•nd of ownership. xlnt · 4BR, 3bo, P'IR. frplc. ten· pool. aaun•. 1ecurlty. •Phone Se:rv, HW POOi • rv,b~ gf!1 ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• loallscond.,2buildlna• JI .• QuaJI ~ 31.1ard«>ner,$400 leaseowner644-1Slt •Childrt.nSectlon PhonesAllalL U VEN .. rTbeBea~bl "' FVly. s120.ooo eo . 1 Plac• •Low monthly rat . c .... $ot bM}ld1n" 1n lfuot.Brh p ~'--3 Br 1• b"' ...,.. 1 -1 La1una Charmtr 3 Br, 1 •$$0FFweek'arenl Furnlahed Slnote Apt/Motel Untta Beautiful AdwlAPll ..... .-...... i op....-~ • ..,, "• ".,,, AYO a . Ba 21., blks to bcb $385 •l•d For 1 ---• ._ .... ooo. li> owner. Pnn. n 2•tno 1350. Brad Coons, mo . ·557.1989 • (l) 2l'18Newa>0rt Blvd,CM lf'llQf'fnBtiotJ ~SlfO ool.)'$28~. IAOOOU.IUt.MCwPOITN~ _M$3~7~~9951) 688-7638 or S48-97&5ort4S.3&67 COITAT~F.::...~8!\ld, 218fl=~rHJS .~-==-----:....~::.::.::.:.:.::~~=-==.J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .• Wednesday January 21 1976 .. CAIL Y PILOT Ba SERVICE DIRECTORY Plum 1t ... Patch 1t .. Pipe 1t. .. emo e 1 ... .~tid Jt. .. Build It ... Diaper it...Hammer It ... Carpet ... Cement it ... Wlre lt ... Hoe it...Clean it ... Move r ... Press lt ... Palnt lt...Nell lt...Plaster tt ... Fix it ... Roof it ... Landscape 1t .. Tile it... Trim it ... Sew it... · Haul it .. Add 1t ... Pl nt 1t... Alter 1t ... Learn it... 'f1M•c•I.,.... C.,.Mar HGlll .-J-r .............................................. C.••t/Cwre.. ,_..._.~ Hoesed..__,, Mo"""9 f'obttira9/Pa rin9 Pfumbinc) • :APPLIANCE R£PA1R. •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• $10 -ServlceCaJl CUSTOM CARPENTRY :ustom Brick Work. 3trippln1. rertnishinl, Ha11Un1 •nythinlJ, gara1e Honest. rt.:lhtble tad)' to \10\'lnRlllauhnl( Student Int £Al lnt $1Srl1). l'Xl DRAINSCLEARf;D (714 )549-2422 Pat.lol,remodeta, Patios~ wall sour KlTCHENS,Omrm sct.a. cleanup. Reliable, fast cleao your bom~. Sat. w/largl' truck K~at. l btry 21'lr~>S2%<'ompl Crom$700 -QAll -.......~ add.JUons. S41M1S9 specially. Fasl·efficlent. Chem Clean 892·6389. service. 963-6452 Guaraot~e & references. Hurry~ 9723/839 5779 l:l :,try <!dr' 1 $J95 1 onipl Moto Rooter t>3G 5001 .._.,. ........ .., ~12 ft. • l-_ 538-1297 1't'd63ti7~ ---....................... ROOM Addhions •• .._, $12aLoodl MOVING? Let 2 1·xpr ----RooflftC) ChrlatJan MoOI r will aJt. 1ara1es, patio cover & Free EsUmates! Philhpe ••••••••••••••••••••••• Getndotumugbll)' llou11ec lean1 nM . Own men move you nc.ii.. PAJ>f:R, Pi\INT 20 yr~•••••••••••••••••••••••. I l'"'ncd ynt, hot lunches. cabinets. Mr. Ke rn Cement Co. Patio•, ~able. expert garden· TR.ASH& DEBRIS transportullon. Refs. rcfs.S45~or83.3 3944 cxpr. Need work Suvc $$ R£1'AIRS ALL.1'YP&5 ~ T. L.C. 645-6321. 54'1·1334 dnvew1o1)'1. I.Jc., .Bonded. mg. Mo rnau1t. •Prklrs, & College Student•548·6428 835 7014 a fl er 4pm Pai • no w 1i11 t. Sot 1s r a ct 10 n Jteu!>. free esi.,, lie J 751·~hfterti lndscp'a. Plants a t nN!icJ/Poperin9 ~uar. l''re<'e~tss-i 3929. Walt8J0.5020 anyt1mt • f Cab•1t MalllacJ Cablneta forConnolsseur w b o I cs a le pr i cc s Housecleanln9 ........ • ........ •.. ... ] ....................... EuropeanTrained Colthoctor 646-1072 ....................... Janff9"1ol PETERSPAJN1'1NG WALLPAPERlNG·All Tile Kitch cabinets, cstm wall Sean Banfield S48-1914 ••••••••••••••••••••.••• want a REAL CLEAN ••••••••••••••••••••••• lnt/Ext·Reas Rates Kinds. Wurk Guuran· •••••••••••••••••••••-J unlta, latUce•patios boat r--tServlc '1ter1o1tlona. rm add ns. Lawn maintenance, mow· l:IOUSE'!Call Glngham Wkly Cl{'un -Windows, <.:a11 Geneat552-0458 l ~l·d Frt.•t" Estimates. CERAMIC TILE. New & rmdta 648-5219 ' -.-• · paUos, cement wrk. Lie ing, edging, trimming, Girl. f'ree ests 645 Sl23 cptat, floors. Store~. of· . -l.111 Norm. 1iJ5 3705 or rmdl. fo'ree e:it Sml jobs • · · ::_:•••••••••••••••••••• 548-0786, 646.9203 · free cst 962·3408 0 S fices, 24 hr svs. 642·0357 Prof. Painter. lnt & Ext. 675 7012 welcome 5J6,2A28 f c.,..ter :xuampoo & steam clean· •H U ECLEANINC • -----Qual work &. rea~. l<'rt•c ~ ....................... lng. Color brighteners; GERWlCK &SON G101r-' S..ices By r~Uablc couple. Good est 751·0684/MB·2759 1 REMODEL·BUII.O wbt carpts 10 min ADDITIONS-••••••••••••••••••••••• references.536·7711 Lanchca pinCJ ---Plasttt/Repalr TrHService SP~ClALon Insulate bleach. Clean liv rm, din REMODEL U c Bl-310942 I DO IT ALL! ••••••••••••••••••••••• PAINTINGS I 5 /Rm ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• j' REFS, LIC. 645-3439 rm & ball $15. Avg rm 549-2170 673-00U Electrical, Plumbing * HO\!SECLEANING, Rototilling $25. Landscup Llc·XJnt work 837 -~ V 1-:H Y N EA'r I' ATt:U Hemovals. limbing, top-,~---------1 $7.50, couch $10, chair $5. ROMARO CO S etc.Reauate:c.6424957 exper~en ced, H.B. & mg, Sod·Bluegruss 16•r,• lst cl"~" ... xt/lnt Paiiit ,Jons & ttl-:S'l'U<.:<.:O p 1 n g . pruning , I .EMODltl •Mr-Guat elim pet odor. Crpt N ~RUC · Westmm.ster area. Call Sq.Ft. Tom 960 2110 ....,.. .... l•he dt 893 1439 ·nu.:wooo .,g,. rd/ J ~"., repair. 15 yrs expr. Do Tl<?N room a dditions, HANDYMAN-Homes & belorelOAM, 892-0560 ing, Papering. a1rle!>S " _., co • Aherat1001, repairs, work myself Refs patios, concrete work& Apts . Conacientiou i . ---spray,25yrsexp9795294 • !~.~1.~.,~~c /bondJlo~ I ~tores. additions, baths & 531-0lOl · remodeling. 531.2225 craftsman 645-6558 Spic & Span house & boat Mcrsotry . -Plumb1n9 '" "'"" kUchens, cabinets, . . . cleaning. Call 645-4387 or •••••••••••··~··••••••• Custom paml/14allpaper-•••••••-•••••••••••••• patios, cement work. CaJ I United· Professional Electrfcol Complete & capable can 631·17S9 Bnck. Block, ~t? & Con· mg. Paint. intr $20 . rm, )1Anv·s 1'1.UM BING Upholstery Contractor does own Carpet, uphlstry, win· ••••••••••••••••••••••• for your home. car & yol crete work by Stew.in spec 0 n c x t er 10 r • H46 9807 • 1··••••••••••••••••••·~· work. Palombo Con11l. dow & floor cleaning. ~LECTR~CIAN -~mall by couple. Llve in. gc MIZ MOPPETS Masonry 536·1108 968·74~ ;\OJOH TOOSMAI.L Bilrs Upholsffly · ~~~.~?4~· All work ~j~~.~;J_~~ .. Balboa ~~x;~i~t~{~~S~ refs.64Z-s299. BE FREE! CALL ME! MAS ON RY·Tile brick LOTSA PRIDE & f''a1r DHAlNl..'LEANl':Ufrom S4•rving Orange Co over i •HAULING• ~:rr~t~~u~~~~~·=ft a~ blo~·k. concrete'. stone: Prices ·Lie ins CJhco ~ .>O i::H':. v. knds :.ame :W yrs Recovering/ re l ~·t~rop the ball! Get a Don't give up the ship! Have something you want YARD CLEANUP pm. Lie rl 968 2504 Pa 1nt 1 n g X 1 n t . pm·c GuJr 558 7380 p;.1111ng/ rc!.tyling. Nu ~with a low:C?St Dally "List" it In classified. to sell'! Classified ads do •• 556·0347 ** . Rcferencc:_s. 979 ·:!_335 Job loo small . get our P1lol Classified Ad. Ship to shor~ results! it well _ Call NOW ""-.. h t . SELL di 't . h . WILLIAMS &SONS Plumht'r n:pa1 r, rep1P<'. pnce before you deridl' Phone642-5678. 642.5678 642.5678, 'rmu w a you want m 1 e 1 ems wit a MJ!>OOry /Bnck/Block HOUSE COATS Mn1c1· lim•s & in::.t<illa Wm.G Czykosk1,ownu. · · Daily Pilot Classlrieds. Daily Pilot Classified Ad. & Stone Ca ll 58 1 ·7~ By Larry (71-t >54& 47-15 tum L t.1dlcy 64<! !1315 1'46·5910 645·6105 ~L';t~~:J~~~ Rftltalstoshare · 4300 lusinnsRental 4450 lusJMts Lost&Found 5300 HefpW•ted 7 100H•lpWanted 7 100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ()pportunity 5005 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Help Wonted 7 1 00 HefpWOftt~d 7 100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Gal to share my apt. lge IDEAL shop located ln the ••••••••••• • •• •••••• ••• . br, pvt ba & drsg rm. Pk mall at the Factory Can· Lo s t. Co 111e·Go1 d en R Es 0 RT Npl. Lots of extras. Call nery Village, N.B.' SllO. DELICATESSEM Retnever puppy, pleai.e .t.f•ofl'• Nila 8:30·5 at 834·0960 or mo. 673-9606 : 573.9393 '"NETS SI 800 MONTH ~.all 5~-,3798. answers to 6 -9:30pmal644-7295 Massively e qui pped , Brute ·Reward. SERVICE .A "VISQR 600 SQ FT store or office re at u r es go u r m e t ,,,._, Male to share w /same front. $155. 646-2130 or · · FOUND Lge puppy, possi Npt Crest Condo, 2 Br. 2 679-3709 cheeses & fine w1r:ies, ble Pit Bull. blk & tan. no . BOYS AND GIRLS If you are 12 to 16 years old and ~ould lik~ to earn $20 to $.50 and more per week, with a c hance to win a trip to Philadelphia. Cape Kennedy or Was hington, D.C. and cash awards. bikes and other prizes, I have a job for you. If you are willmg to work hard. learn r espons ibility and the value or money, cal l Mr. Scott, 549-8956. Transportation will be furnished. This is not a paper route. LIVING From $170 -----------I does carry out catenng. collar. has been sick. Ba, gar , Ocean Vu, Should pro t h $200.incl'd util. 642·1039 Lido Ille Atta wine pa~l~:~. e~s:t. 17th&Orange.548-8034 br644-1230GeneThlbauJt Store or office avail. nr. 531-4460 FOUND young female R entrance to Lido Island dog vie Brookhurst & .mmate to share lge a pt Agt.673-7300 . Adams. S1'lver/"rav •-an CdM. $225 ea. l child ---------Po °' OK. 556-3106, 640·8034 lndlntrial Rftltal 4500 BURGER HANDOUT! ~=~.' ~~~g collar & eves •••••• •••• ••••••••• •••• Located on Fairview Rd. --- S day week. Foreign car experience pref er red. Position av ail able immediately. Please call Mr. Goetz for appointment. 0 a k wood offers the near Orange Coast Found : Blk/Wht Ma le fl~t in resort hvmg a t a GCll'OCJ" for Rent 4350 AIR,ORT College. Average $100. Poodle. l /17/76 Vic. Hun MISSION VIEJO IMPORTS 21701 M~ ihPnway Equal Opportunity Employer prtce you can afCord . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3200 Square Feet per day gross. Excellent tmgton Center . 842-4067 There's $1 mil!IO~ lnGarageforrent . l9S9Ma-191-r PerSq.Jo't. lease with renewal 131-1140 Mis Vi.to 49'-1700 U.A•rrP......,ld.litllf•Me.-Hw recreation fac1ht1es. pie Ave Costa Mes a S25 2 Air-conditioned oflices, pnvilege. Call for de·~: Ca~. Black & 6r~r NlGITT LIGHTED TEN· mo ' . . ample parking. tails. Tiger st~ped M. "l ger · Hfip Wanted 1 I 00 Hfip W ont•d 71 00 NlS COU RTS. A full lime . Harbor Invest. Co. $ 12,000. ~.8~.1~ ~rt~3a;~eld Penonals 5350 H.lp Wanted 71 00 activities director wh 1533 Baker (Harbor Realtors 673-4400 ED RIDDLE ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• HcJuly Opt•ralor Counter help. Week-ends. p lans parties, BBQ's, Blvd .>. C.M . Lge Realtor646·88l1 LOST Jan 16th,smal1Blk trips & more! Free Sun· enclosed area. $25' mo. 2000 Sq . ft. o ff. & & Brn male Yorkshire HAPPY ~t 1n1cur1 s t full t1ml' Apply after 3pm. Di m- mui.t have follo\\tnJ.( 1\:. mitt Cleaners . .J200 E ~l~lJnt mu!>t bl' lll·cn~cd l'1't llwy. CdM. daybrunch. 540-2200 warehouse space direct· Terrier Big Canyon Plus beautiful singles G . I ly a cross from OC LAU~DROMAT , good area. Re~ard.640-1021. ASSEMBLERS Hec(•pl1onisl full llml'. ----- 1~2 bedroom apts arage Cor rent, storage Airport.549·1480. location. Costa Mesa.-------BIRTHDAY fpraished & unfurnished. or wk.shop. Nwpt Hgts . 545-5941, after 6pm. 1922 Silver Dolla r with gents from $170. Model 548·4258 New bldg 2500 sq. ft., M·l brass Buick ring. $20 re· apep l~ to 7. Sorry nope Offlc• Rttttol 4400 w/fl ofc. Lgc rear dr. 17• Distri~~~;J>SIBLE ward. 646·2291 F or s mall electrr. mechanical devices. ~x per 1n mechanical as sembly of small part~ prerd STACOSWITCH, INC R1l·hard Ouellt•ltc 200 Newport Ctr Dr N n BEAUTY OPR COUPLE for mortuary work . Sal. + apt. San c1 ... mente area 494· 1535 at' children. Room mat ••••••••••••••••••••••• sq.ft. Days 540-5710: PERSON FOUND·. K1.tten. bla"k & M 0 M service available. Mont eves. 646·0681 ... tomonthoccupancy. ISOIWesfcllffDr. Want ed t o own a nd orange, Fem. Placentia Newport Financial Ctr Office/Industrial space, operate candy and con· Ave. CM. Aft. 5, 631-1229 . 1139 Haker. Costa Mesa 549-3041 F/l1me. Nu lollnwin~ Crt•d1tClerk to$600 net· Comm i.:uaranlct: CHECK THIS 1;.15 1050 Superb oppor. for credit BILINGUAL? w1~c int11v. w/maJOr merchandiser in art 1v1• pos 1t1o n. Call Mary Lewis 848-1288. Dennis & Dennis Personnel !)l'n ice of Huntington Beach, 16168 Beach lilvd Suite 121. Oa.kwood Garden Apartments ... .,... .... 880 Irvine Irvine at 18th 645-0550 IM COST A MESA near Irvine & Newport Lag Niguel area 400/3000 fection route. Cost a1----------L.as"'9 Offlc~ Space s. F. Nr Frwy 831-1082 Mesa and surrounding FOUND Toy white mate Dad Narda 1.J-.t· Your Spanis h Call on Sate Manager I area. Pleasant business. Poodle. Vic Hunt. Bch. In Thi:. Bui.y BU!>lnCS!>. Equal Oppor t-:mployer (714)642·3111ext246 . 1200 Sq. Ft. M·l space High profit items. Can Me rri delh Ga rd ens Assistant needed parl To $600 w/front ofCice. lge r ear start part time. Age or 963-4739. Dott1•e & Ken time by Lawyer for work Manl}n Jame-. 540·5001 WESTCLIFF BLDG. NEWPORT BU~CH (" • ~ .. , A+~• t •1 r , •t' ,.net , ••"ii' .. .,,. Call Mr. How ard 6 45·6101 door. $189.50 mo. 629 expenence not impor-. in Orange Co Need in Snelling & Snelling of Terminal Way. 540·5710 tant. Reqwres car andFOUND:VacofAllan!a& lelligent. pleasdnl NewportlleachAgency days, 646-0681 eves. $1!i00. cash tovestment. Bus ~a rd ,. H · 8 · 1' e m &np1 ment & person. age 25 30. Write 4340Campus DnH' I----------I For details write: HuskJe. w /liens. 968·3973. Pr:lwotion Occupant. Box. 1596, Lm Dftivery Man ~ *COSTA MESA* "CANDY ROUTE#23". FOUND; Germ . Shep, ••••• -.r.;••••••••••••••• Angeles Daily Journal,1----------1 Perm p1t1me early mom ' 2500Sq. Fl .. 3,000Sq. Fl., P.O: Box 14. Rosemead. female. Vi c. Laguna Schools & 210 s. Spnn~ ~l. LA Bovs & Girls LA Times dehv to Costa ~~.~~l~~s~e~~·l~: Calif . 91770 Inc lude Bch. 494 -9983 days, Instruction 7005 _90012 Hlto t l'ye::ir ... ofagt' OJ1 Mes a homes. Pref. 97n ,,c:71 phone number. 673-8064 eves. or 497-3438 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ly Pilot deli H~ry route.i. l'~ono!_Tiy_car. 546·448_1._ ~ A TTENTIOM! .... b lmiMssWantH 5010 LOST · Diamond Engage rn.1y ll\.:..1\a1la ll'&nyouroell\·erymen over 21 . FOR lease 1665 Placentia ••••••••••••••••••••••• ment Ring, Walnut Shop-BE A 3-6 Mo's Work ..1rc..1 J::arn profit ror de perm. p t. Early morn Ave CM 1680sq ft $195 I 8 & O ver hH•ncs & cash. trips or LA Trmc!> dcliv. to C.M · · · · · Wanted-coin operated ping Ctr, Irvine. Sen-& 2400 sq ft $275646·1164 I aundry .. going bus i· ti mental value. Subs ta n· TRAVEL AGENT merchand1:,c for selling homl's. S250 mo. Call " 9202 W{' will train you 1r1 our new 'ubM·r1ptrons. For ~ 17tOberorellAM. ----------rOFFlCE suite approx. 800 nesi; 4 · 17 tial REW ARO. 635·9100 business. No :.Cnkes or inlormut1on please call $140 up store-offices cpts s q. ft. w/encl. patio. Ll'-'UOR STORE Ext.22 Days CLASSES START layoffs. plenty of work JI 642-4321. From S Jn DENTAL drps air bath. l7301 Completely furn .. incl T LOST G MONTHLY you're ambitious & Clemente San Juan Exp. Chair side assist 0 -ach Rl.H.B.842·"°.,A draft1'ng table w /plan C:.tll : erm./Aust.Shep Eurncomm1ssmn l..' t II °" ~ 80S 96 3797 Mix. Fem . "Sunshine" would like a position out aµ1~ rano are<J. ra for busy HB ofr. Part DISTl ... CTIVE drawers, draped, crpts, • 4· v· L C Rd L wbJleyoulearn or lht· ordinary. Call 495·0630::ind M1ss1on Vic ltme.963-4581 " FREE RENT A/C. s tereo, Ideal for In .....__.. ic. ag. yn · ag. JO t-:1 Toro area. t·all ---------Ac:Uf Apartments Offices as low as~ per contractor. Burglar Vff""'"" • Bch. REWARD! Day PACIFIC betwn 9:JO&Jp.m. 51H ·li310 DENTAL. chairstde Beaut1rut new develop· sq ft. Mission Viejo & aJarm. Ample parking. Opportunity 5015 494·923SAft.5•495-0056 TRAVELSCHOOL Sl 9-l JB3 EqualOppor F.mploycr 11ssistanl Exp'd.5Day ment with all amenities. Laguna Niguel. 200 to $325. m o. 2318 Nwpt ••••••••••••••••••••••• t Pekingese fem, brn lilO E 17th St, s. Ana week :l lo6. 548·5602 clubhouse, pool, lenms. 2000 sq rt. 831-1400 Blvd. C. M. 548·2616. If you have availa ble & blk, in vie Newport 543-6655 DENTAL-AS--SI-ST-AN_T_ gym. Great floor plans. funds-join me in a highly Shores. 2 heartbroken BOAT REPAIRMEN private patios/decks FREE RENT. NpBch at Storage 4550 profitable farming busi· boys Reward 645.786l Accredited by NATTS AVON Gelcoat exP<'r neccss. l' ha 1 r s id c · ex Per beamed ceilings. Avail airport.. Ulililies &••••••••••••••••••••••• ness. I do t he work. evesor642-0307days Estabh:;hed \963 MarGregorYachtCorp nel'e">sary.N.B.644·9211. fumorunJ'urn. janitor .incl. Garden Need 1,000 sq. ft. storage LeBeau. P .O. Box 1651,•----------r Financial Aid Programs START SAYING _1631 Placent1..1. C '.'Yf _ OcntJI Assistant, i:ha1r tro.$230.fllOftth suitesfrom$88.979-6666. wk .• area lg. door , H.B. Costa Mesa,92626 OST: small tri-color 555,-..1--t CM area SlG-7059 Beagle. female spayed. AGAIN BOOKKJ::I::PER highly i.idc., part t_ime, 2 day!> _....no, •l MO FREE RENT• . . INACTIVE ASSOCIATE qual partllme Sat. OK. Mon s & Fri s Ex per prt: ,714,5491302 2 R ff. r Ans. to "Tabatha'', J-&...W--1....-'. 707 5 f'd5570700 • l · ·3 m. o ices rom •~ w--a-... 4600 $5000loSLS,OOO ·ng mac r me col UV> mTRV Sell quality products ma M K . P. 0 Bo-.: 2112. _._, _· ---- N Fr th k $13 5 m N ~--unY~ F I ed wean a · ••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • C M ' pt ysou loBa er . p e r o . ear ••••••••••••••••••••••• uly secur lar.V1c.Mesa&22ndSt. M . d nearbyTernlory Noex osta esa.Ca 92626_Deta1l Man, exr>cr. rightatPaularino. airport.Noleasereq. &guaranteed C.M. Reward.645-""20or1 ature, ex pe ri ence cc s~ Xlnt c l' k I Tll 3 or 4 BR house W/l Yr .,.. per. n e .~. arn HOOL L'L~EPE I~ 1t•cewor App ' .111 Sales office O""n from 833-3223 9 noon 24% PROFlT PER YR c.•o .1.,,,., woman dnver, will take '"' ,._ ' " ..-~ lease Laguna o r ....., ...,.. ings, p /l ime . Call A'"'ount1n " firm ·1n '""r">on. Costa Mei.a C:ir 9AMto630PM • Pd t I (71•) youanywheremSoCal ,, ... ~ ______ : ____ ,For Lease Prime Loe. on Newport Beach. 645-1184 c:'>'>6lq0u2 a r er Y .. Phone642·5556. NB 540 7041 or Ze nith 7 1359 lnme is an nei.>d of J full Wash. 2059 Harbor. C.)l ROOMS . 4000 Coast Hwy in CdM . JJ.>" ---charge 'boo kkee per . - ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1400sqft .newly renovat· Furn. bach. Cd M · for Personals 53 50 °-b --' Bo Pubhl· ac·<"ountm" CX""'r DRIVERS W A NTED mature e mployed non DJ y sitter wanku. y 3 & .. r-'·"en or Women e d . P e r f e c l f o r . · • ••• ••• • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • t d ... Rooms $25 wk up . w /kltchen. Apts $37 . wk up . 548·9755 or 645-3967 moker Xlnt ref 5 u-rt-s T--t Sal.12·ti Pi\1 $JR, meals yp1ng require ~·lust'--2Sorov"r Showroom. Real Estate s . . ~ T"".'.'r' • '.... Drinking problem? Select1've H' ousehold. & l\1 c· 833 9791 I• "" ... C:Al\9402 o-~ 5035 trans. rs. .rayson, . Apply In Person Ofc, Boutique, or store. .,...,. ....-u> Call AJcohol Helpline N & F ·1 Ca PO L B h --- C II E 493 2718 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 24 h d 835 3830 ursm1t ami Y re Box 12· ag. c · Business man lookm" for Y--llow Cab a ves. · or Student, quiet, trlr/apt. rs a ay Personnel <Jr H 0 h & ''Ouni:: "iris " .. 6751434 LOANS 803 · 1 " " "' µar t time :i ssot•1:ite. 11251Slater Avenuc . w/prk'g nr. N.B. $125 up to 0 SPIRITUAL READER Employer Pays Fee must send age grade & L' Laguna Bch. Pri home. ~"hl'"I . ' .-.::irn $500(! yr. G45 I lli2 Fountain Valle} Llght cooking facil. Executin Suites mo. max. s7s-7o30 1st TD Loans-8>/4 % Open 10 AM-10 PM 4500 C~~f~6~~~~ N ' B. ~, rv · '94·6176or838·9615. Full service s uites FamilY looking Cor 2 or 3 lndTD Loans Advice on all matters , BABYSITTER. Grandma CAR WASH EXEC. SCTY ----------• available iR airport area Br, house to rent or lease Fairest Terms since 1949 312N. El Camino Real, 0 u l of St ate Li c type Nwpl H~rts area. 5 HELP WANTED Newport Center Offil·es,. R 0 0 M w I k i l c h e n 833tN._~!0starting $200. Call $150-$175 mo. 527·8657 S-AAA-MhJ. Co. San Clemente. For appt Cosmotologist desire~ days wk, 5·9PM 548-4258 Ftl1me only. 20+ Ski 11 c d in t v. Pin .... priv'lgs, employed pre· ...,. lllTl'C1" 492.9034 492·9136 Receptionist nn.:ition in -. ----METRO CAR WASH "' f4 ed 962 7520 ..-~ Babvs tterneeded shorthand, filing and err . . i-e-p_a_r_a-te_L_a_n_a_a· _b_e_h_1.-n-d •--L.-6s 642-2171 545-0611 Lose your cool w'1th your Beauty Shop. Refs .. i . . 29501la rbor Al, C.M. ho Sal C II ~ 5005 Laguna HiUs area pref'd MUST BE, P ne. a ry open. a Now renting. Singles, private home. Pri. en· Opportunity For Sale: $5000. 2nd trus children? Help is ava1la 581 0677. DEPEND AB L F. own Child care needed to help Mr. Letterman, 640-4550 klt.thenettes. Pools. TV. trance, Unfur n . Lge ••••••••••••••••••••••• deed, 10% secure invest· ble24 hrs. 549-8939 transp. 2 to J days per Mother with 2 toddlers & FACTORY WORK. Lite Dally, wkly, monthly. s pace, s helve s & DRESS shopfor sale.Top ment.Bkr496-0917 FOXYGIRLS Qualified !'Jutritionis t week. 12 Noon to 6:30, ababeonlhcway. Flex Adults.536-4170 cabioeu.heated,lorent. CostaMesalocation.Call D1 ver s 1r1ed ex p e r . N.8.6426455 schedule. o14 n trans. NeatAppearance s:fG.7300 bet 9 & 5 Linda. Paul 831-1400 or 645·SOOO Announc.....ts/ OUTCALL·MASSAG E Laguna Niguel. 493-5589. --:-Call ss7.3588 645 2702 aft 12 noon CitlfttHCMM 4150 apt218 P....-s/ MODELING Babysitter wanted, m y -----•Fashion B,usiness needs •••••••••••••••••••••••FREE RENT. 1 month oo Lost& FoUnd Home-C>rfice-Studio. home or yours Mostly sharp gals. Sales lo Loving care for elderly 300-UOOsq. ft. deluxeofc. •UQUOR LICENSE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 542·3169 Help Want.ct 7 I 00 mornings. Cd M 640·4167 CLERICAi ... al ( Bal di ts N CM .,~"2200 ORANGE COUNTY ON 5100 ----------••••••••••••••••••••••• - -management. Full or m e or em. . . e , o. . . .,...,. . ~etMtlfs PREGNANT? BARMAID W ant {'d . •SecrefariH p/time. Mrs. Castrop. bomey, patio. 544·3833 S A L E G E N E R A L •••••••••••••• •• • • •• • •• I · , .....,...__,,,.....,.11111111._...__.,,....,,_.. I * Acc--ffnn C lks 846-7959. PA or Prof. wanted to "COCKTAILS" Caring con ident1a A ct Cl k/ f $600 mmed opening 3-t hrs _,, .. ';II ----------• .........._. t .. ~ 4300 h · 13 1~ r 1· g & ererral c ng er mg + nor wk . Sun/Mon otr T · t "-' o ,,_.. s are su.1te x .. o c. Low, Low Price! HAPPY l'ounse in r . Order Desk $62! S .. ~ G . n~ * yp1s s Food service attendant. •••"-•••••••••••••••••• $200 mo. lncl's recept & Abortion, adoption & tart S2 50 nn n uo.:er Sal o~-D le Call: Mr . Winston, Accnt/prop mgmt to$85( · * H ~r H part time .. Near Orang<' Responsible non·smoker phone. Acctg secy avail. Collect. (213) 272-4249 ~;tt~E !">47 .2563 Recept/type lo $55( It. 543·9949-Immediate Openings Co Airport. 8:30 am to Mor F'to share new No. Nwpt Ctr, 1303 Avocado. Irvine Personnel Agency Barmaid. days & night:.. TcmpoTt:'mporary Help 1:30 pm Mon.-Fri. Call l.qu:na ocean view ex· Suite245.640..8500 IEAUTYSALOM BIRTHDAY PREGNANT? Abortion 488E17lhCost a Mesa Apply 10 person, Tin 17!!02SkyPark lrvrne 639·4214aft9:30am. ed!Jtlve unit. 2}1 bd'a w/2 ELEGANT EXECUTIVE NETS$1,400 MONTH Counseling & referral. 24 Su1te224 642·147C Lizzie, 752 St. Clair St, C<ill 540-4455 6&. $200. +ulll. 675-&W. OFFICE SPACE ALL HELP RUN hr helpline, 547·9495. ~~~~~~~~~ Costa Mesa. 1--------•I GENERAL OFFICE Refs. Plush, aJl services avail. Orig. owner movin g GRAN OM VERT S N Publication background , 0 l M "'SS ..a. Al ADSALESMI Al No Bartender pos1·t1'on. 0 -er Clerk T••p1st Trainee t t Newport Center rom area. n y reason ,.. ,..., °" J o assume managemen U•lftt Alo•• 644•7190 shop for sale. Located fll!!...URE MODELS for Speedway Motor CY· & wine. CaJI lor appl. START HERE position in Speedway C• le a 1-...r e:xcJuaive Misalon Viejo w cle magazine. exper 411 _an_e_r _3.;;.p_m_._54_9·_944_6 ___ 1 In unique training posi· Motorcycle publication. 1 fo'INDSOMEONE 60' PH 5qff area. Gd ler.ma. Xlnl Rh d ESCORTS vitality counts. lop com IARTEHDEI I.Ion for \ar1ety minded Exper. only apply. Cilll DEPENDABLE 1811 WESTCLlFF·NB lease. Agt. 837-•200 on a OutcaU,Appt. only mission646·3234 ind iv. Ou t s ta nd 1 n g 646-3234. I Exper'd. P /Ume. could b f't!l C II p ttl ---------toshare houaln1 with ACT. 5'1-5032 llUI "'ID p "'RLOR Home·C>rfice-Stud o -----be (/•Im"'. c Aa ,9006 "ft cne 1 · · a a e CALL HOUSE MATES "' "' & 631 3811 • • ......, .. Preston, 848-1288. Dennis General office/rccept. 1:12·'1'4 Alk.forJlm MAalMUS MILi NETS$1,000 MONTH • Alterations 6pm. & Denni& Pt'rsonnel Must type 70-80wpm ,.,. • SQUARE Open only 60 hrs wk. Grmd "-ni TA QR S 1 Serv1ct' of lluntington curately & huve fia14V Ry p. Youo1 woma 2700 w. COAST HWY. Much hlcber net with aa· RI.Ch -,.... "9* IL ES EAUTlCIAMS ncach, 1G1G8 llcuch l:Uvd. a Pl i l u de . Sm al I ~anted to sha.,..28rapt. Now leutna-sround a reastve, promotion A..PARk Part·Timc Mus w/f Cor top °"'· NB Surtct21. munuhclurtng flrm , :~ walk ~itc1'. U M, floor commer cial s pace minded own er. Near MASSAGE Please Call 644•5070 Salons. S40-8582. 644·0661 plea&ant workina cond. It hswtte 646-1801 days 1000·~· and upatain HlgbSc.bool&BoytClub. Lott&Fomtd 5300 $5.0FFComboMassage &ask for IEAUTICIAN C-:!~~~~~i~cad~a\e:iaerxb· 6ld co mpany pa id ~e:d'.95·2011 E vea otnce apace 300'·2800' tn Owner movln.a & must ••••••••••••••••••••••• withlhiaad. Mr.Carbajal I f II r n.... C II f benefits. TapmaUcCorp. -.. 11 L ow ren t aood SAUNA w some o owing or v~n. a or appt. Ro 1851 KeUen. ng St. lrvW-.., • tho beauUful new build· · • Lo 11 l : · M • I e G e r • busy shop serving Hunt. Vanllergan, 833 O.S70 Ex. "'" 1t I lo a b lnl rWna from tbt ubes t.erma. A,at.83'7""200 Shepberd/Collle mix • PRIVATE ROOMS Harbour area. Ca.II eves 283. _979_G_i080 _____ ~-_l!!;. .. 1~.L t·• hoa r ol the old. We olfer tbe ..... ~T--Blk/bro/wht f ur. Has Routs : 12 n oon ·IOpm PT NAOER alt 6pm a•k for Ell ~-~· -llf. m ,,. ,.,,_ ....... I l d b k Mon.Sat. A MA (COU • "' en. ,,~ ... ~Ya,;*· t75·11U =~:u:s:!:i· i:~u!: MehS2500MoMh ~h:i~~.~S:OS. c 0 e lW·BParkAvc. pie> .. r.1At~~· ~ndhab;e 846-4046 ~~~g:t~r ~;a~~ CHM'LOfC $550 _.....,....;_-----~co WCH. Ready tor oc· Owner retlnnt of\c1' 13 Costa Mesa :;(':-"pt~acnai::,:cn': ~: B EAU TY ·Ha1rstyl1~t Csl Villajte Mon·Fr1. Accurate typlnc. Will IP YOU cupan cy J uly 4.Call yn. in bualneu. Thia LOST Jan llth. ftmale 646-9944 mun be able to do lit wtfollow. Needed Im 10.30am·l.30pm. Start take CUlllomer Ofde'*. A baveaHrvkeloolferor SM-21.Jl loncest.tavernhaabecn &olden lrtsb Sett.er. 18 plunft>lna & elec r e med.644-8762or644·~ $22!5~r hr.S40'4151 very good job fCM' l liDCldl t.oMU,oJtcea•ad '..:..~..;:;...------·• awlnner fbr )'e•ra Good mo. old . V ic. In· Reti red Gent wishes tc Cot. M · -"not too cx1>4nen~" ht O•• Da llr Pl lot 8Ul Waterfront offtce to pme action. Lota of hi· clianapolis. Magnolia & meet attract. latty r.o or paira. ta esa area BEAUTICIAN · full or pt Cosmotolugist Lie n.aed pe rson Call c lf 1 Qalall\ed Section •.. aha.re. View, roomy. can da.t. •local trade. Act. Newland, Hunt. Bch. les.'I. Not over 5'4", rm No children. Salary + tlme. with followi ng, for hair cuUln• only. career' Emplo;:i :l ftiioMMNITI. •ntt.N.B. m-4480 968-G641 compAnlonsblp.613·30Gl npt 838-7~ 644-71roCdM. 714338-383.Sor:MS~m. _Acency.~~ · l ... D8 DAIL\' PILOT * Wedneaday,Janu!!X2'1, 1978 HetpW..ted • nooltiwpW..ttd 7100 ......... 1100 I .... W.ted 7 1001.....,W~ 71 00HelpW..t.d 7100 ~ ................ , ..... , ............................. -.-................ . . ~I ' . l"•fl ... , ................... '•••••••••••uo•••.! .. ~• ....................... WEU PAY YOU ......... 8050 ~ 1010 t W 08J "\'h'' ••m111-----------------· Phmt maanl. pc~on ror SALES MANAGER TRAINING TO LIAlH ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••................... !(t•• indoor comm. off. & , , A SKlU. Shop & Save· new & Wied '· ·»t• somecxter. Somecxper .. New~paper promotion company ·h. as ArmyOppc>rtuniUcs fu,tn., sifts. m••c . ·-'M JUNIOR SALESMAN req. Star t $3. per hr. opeomgs for peopJe with vans or statlon Costa Mesa 645-1163 wuson ' oar11Un Nook · UNCLAIMED ....... . 494.9724. A s k fo, wagons. Earnings $lSO to $30()'or more llunlingtonBch 962·8822 SUW. lllhSt.C.M. PIUO ... AL -......v SALi 10 To 15 Years Old Margaret per w eek . Good chanc.e for SllntaAoa 542 ... 13c **I BUY** " ~·· ~ . ., PUI LIC advan~ement. M~t be able to work SAT. THIU wa. . ... REL•Taous with teenagers. This is not a paper Merchcmdlse Good Used Furnilutt & A. LLSPAC'"E ... ,. Earn $20-$40 per week working alter " " ••• ••••• • •••••••••••••• A 11 OR I UI 3 Yrs exper in hospital route.· •,jJ Pf ances-w ·d··-1 Pit _..., 8005 Sel ror You. • .;• &/orBAinpubUcre· Call Mr. Scott at 549 -8956 for ••••••••••••••••••••••• MASTERS•UCTIOu •·.· . school & Sat urdays. Huntington Beac~1.& Fountam Valley areas.only. Leave na!!le. address & phone numbe~ on tape recorder . Call 536-4298. lalionli, adverllslna: or · t l ~ " • related aru. A.utrcssive appom men · •JOMATHAt4S 646..8686 & 8 13-9625 CMIHt.S&P STOl.AGI WAUHOUSHI ' " ~n;onulily. Background . Equal Opportunity Employer AMTtCi)UI S• Aft 61-Cdl 842· 1542 116• HAMILTON ST. ..: In newspaper arUcle Is having their annual in· H Uton •-N 1 d) writing. Knowledge or veutoryi;aJe. COFFEE TABLE -New (Corner am ~ ew an ·. news media personnel in Up'to40% om ! c us tom made walnut WIMDAYS 1-7 ~ ... So Calif. Ability to or· tt.lp W.ted 7100 ... W..ted 7100 4223lslSt. N.B. conte mporary table, ganiie & administer all ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• 673-6001 18"X51' '. Never used, H.tfp W onted 7 I 0 0 Hetp Wont.ct 7100 programs directed lo SALESPERSON Socy/F.6crow To$800 $65. Call 979·8123 alter MltcetlaMOUS 8080 Mlacellaneou1 8080 ••••• ••••• ••••••• ••• ••••• ••••• •• •. ••••• ••••••• bolh doctor & lay com· E & k d S H---'s Ht H 1 SPM & wknds. ••••••••••••••• • ••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• •., • munity. Also, able to .ves ~ n s. eren· ~ w , ome. ANTIQUE ,, •..-: • G IRL FRIDAY Lite Machine Shop . further employee rela· daplly. S57-'Z702. ls w/fasl moving realty Dinette s~t. chrome glass Custom made cabinet. 10' GENIE Ca r age O~br • 1..J~ht typt!. Ille, clerical. & A ~ tions. Abihly to develop a Sales1Merchand1ser co. for knowle~ge<1ble AUCTION & leaiber like vinyl. xlnt. long, SS" ,hiith. Suitable Opener w/auto. opeAen. plumt:s. S.'>50 rno 848-1400 Good l st~ y .. realistic brot:hure .. $I 0 2 00 + take charge ind1v. Call cond. 846-9025. fOI' store d1Spluy or china Works fine $75. 642·128Z , ... llunt'.: lkh. s ar mg w~e & Good appearance. Su·b· • H IMftH I Cecli.a Will , 848-12811. Wed Jan 21st, 7PM cabinet. Dest offer over -----· -------rnef1ts. Phone for .ippt. m it r es u m e l o : + company car. Denms & Dennis Person· Inspection 5pm 't.il Dining rm set, pedestal $500. 673-8050. , Fender Jaguar GUitar' &, G IRLS -G IRL S 0 m Pu L 1 t e C 0 r P • Classified ad no 629 c/o MaJor nut ·1 co. seeks nel Service of Huntington sale time. lbl. expand.able, 6 cbrs, & . small Amp $1 lO. BO(en t-:usy tun Job, day or 71J-Fl2 W. 17th St, CM Daily Pilot. PO Box i560, sh~rp pro to join t~p ~.ach, 16168 Beach Blvd, Carpenter's Union Hall buffet. Ant1qut whl. $300. Playboy magazmes. Aug. Receiver Model R1'800«r iu.:hl Nu exp nt•c .• we ~S-1501. Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626 team. Relocate.So. Ca hf. Suite 121. 1916 W . C h a Pm an ' 673-5268 aft 7. 1957 to 'Feb.,'72, make of· 75 watts. $75. 2 Sa.a1W tr•11n you You must like Mnn C ard 11 Call Bob West 848·1288. . . Orange Klngsize bedroom suite, 2 £er. 963·3279· Speakers Model SP200. 1i.·oplc & bt.! al leu:.t 18 . -~ • Rt.1diator shop male, 18·22 Dennis &. Dennis Pe rson· Service Station Allen-T be Id h Odds L d · 12" Woofer + 4 speak~rl"; \pply any aftn or e\.e. & Accounh n9 C lks yrs. Must be mechanical-oel Service oC Huntington danl, exper 'd. Day & 0 so to the highest couc es. ., en s. Atlas Aquanum. 45 gal & in ea. Xlnt cond. ·$156, ..!u'"'W ('<>a"l l'wy, N.u. I 00010 "'--Pa1'd I . l' d Beuch 16168 Beach Blvd Eves. fouU & p/time. Ap· bidder, ma ny different & 644·~39 . . acc. Must sell. Like nu. '1-.N ° • o '' rc-c Y inc ine . $2 .50 hr. .. • . 1 Sh 11 St -7th & unus ual items. Singer . . $60. 494-4778 968·2333• L1.t Reinders Agency 557-1770 aft 6pm Suite 121. PY! e at!on, 1 sewing mach. circa l896, Secy desk $125. Secy ch~1r . . ----------'-.•• G irt to Deliver 4020 Birch St. Ste 104 · S •LES Irvine, NB. full sz oak weight scales, $25. Ex~c. desk $125 .. Ex-S~LL, bikes $10, mml-Miacellaneous •, • Fl~crs Ill lll'W tn1rt Ncw1><>rtBeach 833-8190 RodiolOCjy Tech "' Servic St Atl d t Victorian organs, beaut ec.chaar$2S.4classroom btke $70. He ad brd W_....... ana.-1, home:.. 0 .C: Sat murn-Call for appt/ L'~tab '65 CRT. A RT. Fu ll·ta· m"' MA.._. •GEME..._.T e a. en an ' tab! 36 72 $25 Call "kl " $50 I $ 30 urn.-u '"'" """' " ""' " 111 lime. Ex per 'd only. Belgian tile cook stove es x · ea. ng • va ue 1 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ;~.g! :;~~a~~n~1~4~ 501 MAID:PERMAMEMT ~:~egl~~~n~:· c~::e~!i $ S $ S $ S Avtttl eves & wknds . table top phonographs, j aft5pm 556-7ll8 Eve~. 551·4397. Wanted: Upright p~aii9 •• -----!Nt'wpor t Ut:ach Hospital,71-l/496-!122 lnsuranc e Career Neat a ppear . & pcmahogbdrm set,l~gATTENT ION ·Do you For sale, 2·spd girl's very bad cond . to r'f!1 HAIRDRESSER Travdtxl).!c. G201! w Cst Your success is our re-handwrihng. Apply AM, Oak roll~op desk.' ~htf· have qua Ii t y u a e d Schwinn stingray bike, construct. 640-7074 •.. , With suml' folluwmg, for Hwy, NB REAL ESTATE SALES wa1·d ! Old established 2590 Newport Blvd, CM fomer display cabinet, furniture you would like $30. gd cond. Boy's . nt:w :.a Ion, top pl•rcen---. /\TI ENT ION Companr looking f,or Service Station, day man, car~a 1870· pitcher & bowl to sell, but don't want the Moto·Cross $50, over $225 Wa n l ed · So ~ 1 d. wood tJ)!t'. Hair at 250 Design 1a le & PI t1 me help LICENSED. car~r minded men. Ex· some ex per preferred, set:;, washst?nds, hall bothersome phone calls int.o bike. 2 end tbles. & d,0,? r ~; M 1 n 1 m 4 r.n, l'la1a &10·7870 needed. Kentucky Fried UNLICENSED, penence not necessary, 3928 E. Coa:;tHwy Cd M stands & many .sm all or traffic thru your matching coffee tbl., sm. 6 8 x32 · ;1 , ---Cb1('ken . 2929 E. Cst GETTHE HEO but helpful. Ground floor · glass & wooden items. home? Let us sell it for Maple co!. tbl. Call aft 6 545·0630 Half Day Mice Pay Hwy,CdM CARPET opportunity due lo ex· Shaklee Distributor s Plenty of oak fu_rn , you on consignment.Call pm,645·7857. w ed H b r '66 TR '•'AT"'• L'N'f ' . . 0 C ta_ bles, sets of chairs, for inlormat1·on. 548-7951. antF :d LuTDcapC olrl ~l;,im 2 JOpm or :i JO llpm . c. m c. pans1on m rang.e . mm· wanted. Training pro-1'."•"n SI()()++ .... ,. wet•k MannnerTra1nee We tr' 1 l 11 ty Xlnt comm1ss1ons 'ded 6313"" f sideboards, r ock e rs,. FIREWOOD or · a ,,J! d~1g enjoyahl;~•ork in Stable i~div. w / career homes ~i~h ~~~Cl'~le~!t-m~nlhly & q uarterly vi · · ,.i or Appl. dressers, Larkins desk, Sel~d Used Fum. Euc. $78. Oak, $89. Cord. 559 - 1490 • •1ur brand m•w ok 0.-..on am.b1tions sought for ed rourse that st<1rts im-bonu. s. cs, sa l _ar. y if Shampoo Assistant clocks, cam el back & This Week's Specials: Del.830-9740. Musical .,.~ Id d ed e.1 f If d b s late mantel clocks . Mt ltbl4 h $125 I a... a••-1r1~ near o c. Airport. so 1 a vanccmcnt op· m 1at y. I you are in-qua 1 1e . Am 1t 1on & Wed thru Sat, J im Scott German wall clocks. On-ea c rs 24" cir. RCA TV $55, nstnlmettn -' :\Int uppnrtur1ily for por . Ca ll Ra c h a rd terested in earning big honesty only r equire · H air Design, CdM. lyapartial listin _ Glasstpcofl~l . $75 Refrig $35, Girls 26" lO· ·~·•••••••••••••••••,..,• pmoti\e n1111ded 1ndiv Lanzer, 833-2700, Dennis money from the start. ment. AH interviews con· 644-7321 g 1635Supenor\]mt4 spd $7S, Skis boots bind· Hiwatt 200 Stack wf18v · Fnr pt•rsonal interview. & Dennis Personnel get 1ndiv1dualized free fident1al. Ph. 547-5122 Costa Mesa 548-7951 ings$70. 675.8859 Vega's, $850. l'all833·8098 Service of Irvine. 2082 trainingonlhejobinone (9-12 daily) ask for ShfftMe talShop BeauliJ'ul Antique Settee OpenMonthruSat 551-3975 H ' --Michelson Or. of many lop offices locat· George Clark. Needs fabricator. Exper. C / d h' ltnslt'ss. must ht• 21. App-ed thruout Oran~e Coun-not necess. Apply at, 2031 ane w woo cus ions Kitc hen set, s4o .. dbl JAKE WILL SELL YOU '73 Gibson Les Pa~~ I) in pl'r:.on ht'tv.n 2 &Management ty, rail for further de· SAL ES REP. Good oppty S E M · · lncL 495·6648 aft6PM. bdrm set, $175. Small $450 be ff A k f PEOPLE PERSON for , mb t t . . am St, lrvine. desk, $15. 546·7945. Color TV $69.95 guar I st o e r. s or :.pm llolJ Uurns . ' tail s. Arlene. (7 14) a _iious per~on ° 546-2901. B/WTV $29.95guar Jim.546-5632 •,,.,.,.· l<l" .. t.turant 37 Fashion Exec looking for part· u,•o.8742 sell office suppli es IO A--.ll 80 I 0 • • • <>00 N 8 W' IJ t . ....,..-ances ~ • 4 LG E w HITE Va. cuums $19.95 guar Offic• Fu-itu-& 1,l,Jlld.Nli time associate 111 .-_ .. area. 1 ram.1 SHOESHl ... EBOY •••••••••••••••••• ••• Ki b v $6995 "" ... '"' ----wholesale supplies. Fully R~AL ESTATE SALES S I S " -• • naugahyde chairs, new r y ac . guar ii:-.i--.t 8Q85• · a es exp. nee. a.lary & Must be 21 & ex per. App-Apt. sJZe Maytag washer set or twn beds, some out· JAKE'S· 645-6421 .....,..,.. ........ llousekl·eper. II ve -in. capitalized. 673-22~ Joi'n # 1 comm. Beach Stationers,, ly in person, 3333 Bristol & dryer combo. Xlnt. door furn. 645.4319 460 N Newport Bl, CM ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bt-ttul. :'-<ewport Beach MANAGERS. ASSIST 'Tt 4020Campus Dr., N .8. • St.~Coast Plaza. $100. 963·8738/ 645-8913 EVESCALL642-5666 IBM TYPEWRITER. ~(j"' o~n room & bath. must Ladies Sportswe<1r Chain Tarb~U. Real I C. ted inside the eve. KJNG SIZE Mattress & CAR R l AGE. L il(i: dnve Ref's. salary open. Immediate Openings •Free l5 da • training sho ping c nter. Twen· frame on rollers. $75. 62 Yds or home carpet. NEW . $ 2 9 S. 1'67 9 h40·1596 t1r 673-8914 For Appl s.15_2666 cours~ SCRAM-LETS tieth Century Ltd. Whirlpool Washer, 5 642-7282 dark & lite avocado s hag. PLACENTIA. S48·34J4; .. ----•Cadillac c program cycls, $100. Hotpoint Elec Like n e w 675-5205 ; .. · HOUSEKEEPER t Hrs, 5 dayir wk. Own ltansp Lido I s le Hus mss phont·. 1>42 1;830 MASSAGETRME. •Hawaii, ap11lcotrips ANSWERS SOLDIERS Dryer $50. Guar/del Misc furn, beds, couch, 675-:!824 COMPLETE O_FFI.CE l t 1 · 546-8672 tbls, used books, etc. FURN. Secretarial & ex· Young lady 118·28) ~for • s P . ce-s <1 es 111 Tuxedo-Virus -NO EXPERIENCE sacrifice631·2867eves. Compass Metal Deteclor. ecdesks,&chrs,conf.-tbl legitimate full time posi· Oran Count~ Above -Martin -NECESSARY WATER softener, used 6 · with earphones. $100 or w/chrs. blk leather sdfe, lion in massage. No exp. • lace-listings taken MOVIE Army Oprcrtunlties mo. Cost $325. Make of-Riviera Sofa Bed. dbl, best offer. 642-1282. reception chrs, miS<!. ne<.' We send to sch1 m Orange County H •:-gt h 962 8822 f I II •-lllof ~lpseck~cDp·er LkauAndlry earn whal e you learn Ap: I •lst place·hstmgs sold in An airplane is the only un...... on c . er. 631-3281 ; 548-9410 a most new, ye ow °' tbls, lamps, pictu'te s! ~ r :i a~ w pp y, I 0 . C t , place where you cannot Costa Mesa 645-1163 buff plaid. Hurculon. WATERBEDS credensa, storage c~¥.: Bus. ore. Raleigh mt'ts ply m Pt"rson any after· • rang1~ ?~nd) w a 1 k 0 u t on a du 11 Santa Ana 542-4130 S EAR S Co l d s Pot Washable cover . $100. Com plete $l29.95 del'ived 979-4373etc. r ' llosp l!'>OI E ltith St. N 8 noon o~ eve. 2112 Harbor lst. P ac~·a \ ertismg in Refri gerator, white, 16 673 9571 t;4S 57117 Bl\'d. Co:;ta Mesa Ca11forma . . MOVIE. Stock Room Attendent .. cu. ft. 2 dr. $200. 551·0374 . . NEVER UNDER SOLD 0 FF ICE DE S KS & -----•Isl place-ad\'ert1sing m SEAMSTRESS lo $3 .60 hr. Day shift 7:30 aft. 5 AquaHeaven 830·7062 CHAIRS. Must Sell. "Ph~ ''l)usf:.'k~~pu r , ('hristiari M_ature Housewives p. l the U.S.A. to 4 Min 2 yrs exper G $...l · 8055 640 8180 '' " -· Westsail Corp. h as a n Outs.tandi'ng Company.· DBL. OVEN & Surface CIMICJe me McLane edger $50. Lg. · 11011 ~mo kl'r li ve in Cleaning Serv Top SS •!st place winner RELO _________ ,.,_ , S!''lil wi'ek. 3 ·Arch Bay, Gmg~~'.!:1Girl.645-512.1 Home Buyer's Contest immed. Vacancy for an Santa Ana . Anaheim Unit, Tappan, bolh work •••••••••••••••••··~··· off. dsk $00. 19" B&W Pianos & Or'C)ans 8090 So L<.1gun<1 499--1131 1f unlicensed , let us as· exper 'd seams tress VIEJO EMPLOYMEMT fine.$90.642-7282 Gara~e sale, Magnolia~ port. TV $60 . Elc . ••••••••••••••••••_. • ....,.~ ----Med I c .a I assistant s1st you Ill oblainjng your w/min 1 yr exper. w/sail-AGENCY Garfield, H.B. Thurs, Fh typwrtr $75. '45 rblt J eep OAK UPRIGHT P IANO Housekeeper all around pnmanly back omce Heal Estate license Call seaming on heavy duty &Sat. 9-6. eng. $100. 642·7552 aft Reconditioned· Beautiful live m or out. must be Huntington Beach phys1 LEE COLLINS equipm e n t. X lnt co. 8 3 1-9240 Auc:Hon 8015 RUMMAGE SALE' 48 5:30 Cal153&-877S bondablc. lul'al ref S20 cian. Wnte care of Daily 9 62 5566 benefits. lop wages. Own ••••••••••••••••••••••• 22ndS Co · 1 lllllllll .. -. ........ _. ..... iilj .. jiiijiiiijj~ _ µer day 5 to 6 day week Pilot Box 11650 Costa • transp. nee. Hrs 8-4:30 Telephone Sales-Need 15 t. sta Me~a. Jan . • ,.2_7191 Mesa.Ca 926'Z7 Mon th F' · J\p 1 · Sludents p/time 211h hrs AUCTION 24, 9·3. Huntin g ton ,,.._ ru ra. P Y rn pe r wk. Easy' work. Valley Christian School. person only to John, 1638 I d. J I Placentia Ave.CM. 497-1034, or apply 1027 n Jan ttwe ry Honn No. Coast Hwy, Ste G & Artifacts SEAMSTRESS, wanted Lag. Bch 4·7PM. Wed En Jan 21 mRDEll=: 1926-1976 31h yr Bay Gelding. H:>ekpr. li\1• 111. m<1lure MEDICAL ••••••••••••••••••••••• to make banners 7 :30 PM REAL ESTATE 644-4208eves. TELEPHONE Previe w6:00 PM woman. I cirl 5 yrs. old E x P e r . M e d i c a I ~tolher It>::. s hme. Call Secretary. General prac· aft n pm. 042-G523. t1ce Salary negotiable. ---------•I ---Send resume Woody Thoroughbred. 16 hands. 644-0665. 11:.kpr 5 <lay~ per wk !J 5 Sebaugh. 801 N . Tustin Hs kµ1ng & rouktng ,\ve. Santa Ana. 9'Z705 193 :525!.I ·l93-iiti5 MODELS· MASSEUSES Huntm&'lon Beach ·s finesl Figure Models. Escorts l1t"alth 'ip<i needs younJ!, needed. Top money. New <iltro.ict1\e massuese:.. in-Studio. 6:H-3811 ·.tructors & sa les--------- persons Call Town & OTEL MAIDS, full or 1'uunlry Spa. 963-7723 part-time. Exper. not l.1etween lOam & JOpm req'd. Apply in person, lurmter\'1ew. Costa Mesa Inn, 3205 Harbor BIVd, CM Sec t /R t' . t Experienced telephone Holiday Inn OPPORTUNITY re ary ecep •oms s urvey person. Part 3l3l B · ls c M Well located RE office. General office work. time. Mon·Fri. 547.5122 nslo t . . . 1h Arab, 1h quarter, 8yrs. Opening for 2 licensed Duties include. typing, (9.12 daily) Ask for Mrs. at San Diego Fwy &405 geld. Exp rider. $425/bst salespeople Your own filing, etc. Appointments Moore of r . M u s t s e 1 1 . deskand phonc. ISYears Mon thru Fri , 8 ·5. Large collection of fine 673-4467/494·5043. tn I t ,~~11 f 897-7623 H.B. 1----------i silver with turquoise & same oca 10n . ..,.. or 1----------coral jewelry handcra rt-Reg._TB, 17 h •. Bay, 10 yrs. interview. SECRETARY P /T TOOL & DIE ed by American lndian Tm d, hurMJump. $3600. 646·3928 ; eves 673·4577 Typing, s horthand. some silversmiths of the Nava-Pr ply. 640-2668 bkkp'g. 9 AM to Noon. MAKER i?• Zuni & Hopi reserva· Western Riding Lessons, Laguna Bch. 499-4017 for lions., Baskets-pottery-$6.50 your horse, $7.SC · appt. (Mold Making Ex per. NavaJo & Pueblo rugs-my horse p/hr. 557.9359 Also Desirable> old guns and other-----'----~ Lachenmyer Realtor Need Money? Beeline Secretary/Bkkpr Small precision tools. artifacts. Don Mcloud, Jewelry &O f O INVENTORY Fashions has 5 p/time Recept/Secy to $700 Exper. Good skills req'd. Exper. in shortrun stam-Arcadia. (213) 447-9520. ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLERKS eve openings. Will train No fee. Airport area. Get 0 . C. Airport loc. To $750. pings & precision pro· WA..,.TED you & supply samples at Growth Hi·Fi speaker co. gressive dies. Able to ---------f"lll involved in fast paced k · d d ti •-Bt'cycl•s 8020 no cost. Car & phone nee. Call Dick Neu, 549-3833. wor 10 epen en Y °' "" TOP CASH DOLLAR advert1sm0 field. Grow h t l S 11 • 557-0453,963-7470 "' ave own oo s. ma • ••••••••••••••••••••• PAID FOR YOUR 2 into ofc manai!er. Also SECRET•RY h d k ' M 00 ~ A s op, goo wor ing en'slO·spdbicycle, JEWELRY, WATCHES, o.1URSES •IDES Fee Jobs. J\b1ga1l Abbot d l'k " ~ Over 40 onJy. Competent con s. 1 e new cond. ART OBJEl""T'C, GOLD, & Personnel Agency, 4500 STACOSWITCH 11oo..1c "'.L~ Needed Fullorp/t1me.AM PM Campus Dr, Suite 102, w/good t yping sk ills , " 545-0630afler5 SILVER SERVICE, shifts. Exper pref'd. Ap-N.B.557_6122 needed for small busi· 1139Baker,CostaMesa ForSalebananaseatStin-FINE FURN & AN - lmmedl.ately ply Park Superior ---------' ness concern. 40 Hrs. 5 49·3041 gray bike, ga'rls sa·ze, $'O. TIQUES.645-2200 H eal thcare. 1445 Recepti'onist t c-clV\ $2 .75 pe r hr. w /op· to'~ 10 E l • S A NB o"""" .&;Atua ppor. mp oyer Gina 847 ·3106. u--'-i-8078 , uperior ve, . PERSON/\LfTY + portunity ror raise & ~ .. -., VOLT 642-2410. E .O.E. sought for unbehevable medical benefits after 6 GIRL'S S h · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Temporary Services Nursing Attendant, ex-op por. 1 n plush of c mo's. Quiel, garden ore TOW!RUCK DRIV~R .gray, $30, ~d ~~~~. ~~~~ Millerfalls 3" belt sander. w/great location. Call in CdM. Call wkdys only exper d; G & W Towing, moto-cross, over $200 put $30. :j)H8CJmpus Urt\l' perienced. Bayview Julie Maloney, 833·2700. betwn 9am & 4pm, 1000Irvme,NB642·1252 i'nto b1'ke, gd cond. $50. 494-2417after5:30 546-4741 C.:onv. Hospital. 2055 0 673 2356 l \('r<1.,,.., L'riim Thunn Ave, CM 642·3505. ermis & Dennis Person-, __ · --· ------Tutor for elementary re· Got new bikes, must sell. Misc:ela..ous 8080 r nel Service of Irvine, 2082 Call aft 6pm wkdave & ' OC ,\1rport > -• Michelson Or. SECRETARY ading &math.2dayswk. J~• ••••••••••••••••••••••• i-;qual Oppor 1-:mploY<'r Ofc Adman. to $850 ---------Est. Corona del Mar firm 646-7582CM . aft 12noonSat. 64.5-7857 . WA..,.TED ----------Min 2 yrs college in RECEPTIONIST needs full time secty. --------• CCllMras& f"lll Jt'dro·~ Re~laurant, male ~~~~n=~i~~;. ~:~~~h~~ Need s harp well or· Type 60 WPM, SH, It. Ecppnwnt 8030 i1~ DCA:g RD~LJ-t: or fem ht'lp. Uay:, or T.B. Must be articulate & gan.ized person for busy bookkeeping. Call : •UTOTEM * ••••••••••••••••••••••• JEWELRY, WATCHES, t!\'e~ Apply in person. well groomed . Lots of position. Medi-Cal exper Mr. Riblett 675-6700 EMPLOYMEMT Brooks Enlarger, xlnl ART OBJECTS, COLD I 4pm.3000Bnstol.CM responsibility. Call Con· helpful. Also admitting/ ecretary-Life Ins . & OPPORTUNITIES cond .. dark room equip· SILVER SERVICE . • --------~ trol Career Employment discharging, cashiering Pension Sales & Svc. for FullorPart-Time ment,$75.548-5737 FINE FURN & AN· 50 exper. Sub·acutc psyrh N E Afency, 556·8 5.' hospital Garfield Care, ·Chartered Life Un· o xper. Nece$sary Docp 8040,_Tl_Q_U_ES_. 64_5_·2200 ___ _ KEYPUNCH QPR 7781 Garfield Ave. H.B. derwriler. Salary open Age21-65Eligible •••••••••••••••••••••••Firewood Org, Euc. -" (){flee Help w/lile book-847.9671 Exper. pre£'d. Lovely Go To The Nearest ...., N'e1·d 1nd1v1dual to keeping for lge Hntg ---------Beachorc.673-6087 TICTOCMARKET •PETWORLD• cord, de!. Oak. Coast Cr ;insn1be & verify Uch. Drug Store. exper. R.E.SALES •----------• ForApplications&lnfo Pit Bulls . Pekes, Firewood Supp l y, toun<' for entry 1nt.o pref'd. 714-847-2563 ST•RT THE SECRETARY OR CALL (714 ) 642-7702 Chihuahua, Poodles,1_58_1-_1_122_. _____ _ EDP !>ysl1~ms. 6 Mo s A Diversified position for TicTocSystems, Inc. Shih·lzu, Maltese, G. King size bed, new, xtra tum.'n\ wor'kmg ex per. ORDER DESK HEW YEAR entry level skills. Im-Shepherd, . Poms. 100 firm $l95 incl d el. Usual· t11• <' c1•·11 on e 1 t h l' r Service co. accounts mediate opening in sales mixed puppies. Stud svs ly home 835.2263 k•·y punch. key tap<' or on the phone. RIGHT! department. Heavy typ· WAITRESS/WAITER most breeds. 2525 W. 17th · kt>y ll1sl· ~1ust be a hie to Start Today! $650 Sell Homes ing, sh, (speedwriting For 10PM·6AM shift. at Fairview. SA. Open Cancelled Contract. 2000 t1•stonJRM029orUnivac Marilyn J ames 540-5001 LeantlnYeshneeh ok). EOE. Rosan, Jnc. Sambo's Restaur ant, eves.531·5027. yds carpeting, below lilO nr · Jnforex. Will be Snelling & Snelling of E M 2901 W. Coast Hwy, NB 3001 So. Brislol, SA. cost.. 547-8729 ""rkmg a swing s hift Newport Beach Agency am .or• .. _ 548·5533. 54S-4479 Dog OBEDIENCE Class w .1 -.1arttniz i;alary o 4340Campus Drive ~r residential divasi.on to Start Thurs Jan22 Wanted-Juke Bo>< or Pin· For Stretch Knits $.'>i:i t 10, 11 ~lurt lliCferen lists and sells ~ore m · SelJ idle items 6'2· Want ad r esults 642-5678 7 ;30 PM. Newport/ ball Machine. Working ti;il Part-Time eves &Sal AM. vest~ent properties ~han Irvine area. 546-4928 or not. 839·1946 aft. 4. Use ONLY stretch knit fabric f'leuseCall Pe rfect for s tudents. most investment offices. HelpWanttd 7100 HtfpW..ted 7100 -.--------•---------f Ill 1 !Pu 1;1.i 1 i><1o-3527 Inside work, guaranteed Personal Traioiq.g, Video ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lnsb Setter Puppy, 4 mos., fender M..usic master t:~ ~O: :if ::,:P ski~~ PACIFIC MUTUAL wage. Call Al. Aft 4pm, 1:'raining, Presti~~ .of. · AKC reg,~-549-3l12 al\ Baas Guitar. Excellent -tum sleeveless toP.S with -110 N l Ct DT S.A. 542-9013 or G.G. rices, Full Facahhes, SHARP &ALS 5pm. , condition. Make offer. shorts, 'ulottes for active liv· 1 • cwpor r 530-8460 Property Purchase Plan, , . • · call s.6-9933 alter 6 pm & 101. t-~v.Port Beach 9266 Fri 01 0 Benet l t a. We have the followmg.pos1taons open Btrt fem Argban, f ull weekends. Prlnte..,attem 93991 Misses' t:qual Oppor. Employer PART TIME Sales, Gift Superior Commission, for employment if you have a good breed, champagne color•---------Sim 8, 10, 12. 14, 16, 18, 20. ~--~~~~~~Shop. Sundays & some Dynomk Organization, retail selling background & are ~~:~~k!:u$s~5 7c~i B~!:[NSWICKH pool '1•blo ~:~l$t}~ ~: ~C:C::tt.m. t.ll\JY wno nds $500 & up a eves. IWO·l567 or 962-8910 Learn1nJ Environment l k' f · . . . ' · 8 WlUJ acc. eavy I ate. .15¢ ttJ lf\O. Sales oriented. ph: Cati weekdays btwn !MO Ji\111 um~ licensees wh~ 00 ~ng or a p~r.m. posthon lD 642-3318aller5. Sacrificel350. ~~t!tntf0~1::'1,pa~n~:~ _!!:inl~ 968-8378 am. will work ror earning~ in Cash.ion mercbandismg w /a i rowing FrM to YOll 1045 548-4987 s..-"' LEGALS£CRF:TARY exce-ss or $25.000. ler co. ••••••••••••••••••••••• FrozenFood.Locket'1 ...... .... ~ecent Cahfornia litlga-Gathe~~~~~urcs ror ~p1tprlyufreor aen~.urt•l•o1tncw.lttoh A ~2tA1~1t..,t1•; • EMER GENC Y. 3m torhntln Ncwport • ..... ..,,.. ...... 442 ijon & domestic relaUoo .. """ ~ ggress1vc girls w /at least 6 mo's pups •. t ml dogs, almoa Beach. 6'1S..256S ~. November Ballot. $5.00 our Jn vestment• or lling & . lraln~ nd lovina home. m W..t •• St., Mtw l.wpyeTr~P ~kl IB!ls . p2 yt~ng atoft$84P,OOM. per hr. 551-4407 Reaident.lal Divia iona . se C management expenence. 960-2900. USED U'l1L. TRLRS. '19", MT 11•11. Prlttt ·'· ,. · r llwlC Call Don Berman. Presi· 4J ,..n..s.tP.... Allaizea; aoodcond. ..... Mlf'IS. W . - <tClce.848·1400. dent. QUAIL PLACE With r oom for a d vancement. AlaskanM1l1mutcm t. 893·3C28or531·1428 ... snu,. .... _L Lt.ke kids •-work loo". PHOHE SOLICITH PROP~RTIES INC F h ' l thi toagoodbome De"' bn hw It pt 1 °' Work In your home, top • as 100 c o ng e xpe rience · I wtU fhc -·r pl .. ball or "9ttln "'81 "" ""' fer Youth agency ,._..._top 752·1920 na..essary. 673-0ZJ&. ,_ u 1-.. ra•·~ .... .. ~ dollar. Full or part time. ---------""" _____ ;..;,..;.. __ -l juke box m1chi nc. .. ......... _ ~···.,.. ~ch 1t1rl Fr1.ct.1. U!lh.t 831 9171. lHTAUIAMT C2tP .... TIMeS.SP ... 1m 3 Year Old Male Golde 83t-1Mhfte.r•pm. flWlt-cllt..,..J•ll•kr 1"<> r r e s P <> n d ~ n c e , ---------IC!:..llin peri f Retriever to "'ood b m .~. Jlttlf ";.. .. 1 ,. • ...._ 1ier1ca1, bulk mamnas. ac IF TOU MOW Hll.IMG cic I ex ence necessary. I you ., 0 Brasa Bed, queen aize, -71;_,. 1 1~hc~ machine exp 1'.ave &M'rv&rc to offer or Cooks, Waltrcana " meet these qualifications & arc _ool.Y __ ._ea_U_a:3&-_Z2_i_s_._--1 Wicker tu~ P•lnt.loga, f::.\' ..... :'rra1t1.· ~':it "-'lpful. SUU re.dins? Soods to aell, pla.ce an Id Kit e hon Help. Apply interested In an interview Free Puppies, Malemu Sculptur es, plantera1 l•atM1 ,._... loll _ .tit For Bicentennial! 70 94 '' Capture the Spirit of ''?W with flags in 4 sizes, ~~ 2% x S inches to 11 ~ I9. • · Crochet Betsy Ross, Ben· nlnaton, 50.Star flais in sllr~ • or double bedspread coUolt! 8-cord cable or rug yarn, P.af. 7094: Di rectlons. St.00 for each pattem .. -AQ• 35• each pattern for fin~ 1innall and handllnc. S9'1f. ~· ~...... . ... , M I• :s• h,t. IOI • • .-~ ....,.... . ..... .. 161.0W~tita, "9w f-'. MY 11111 •• IMit.: .._. ........... ~ ........ ......... ..Jt' MORE" than evar beforet • ioi dWJlls_ptus 3 free pr1nte{fll: sldt ~ 1976 NUDUGIWl'. CATALOG! Hu tvtrytllln1:751t11 Crtellet wtt11 ~tllfU .Gt: c,.c11tt • w.,.... 1• Nifty Fifty Qlllts U9 11,,1e Creci.et . J C* , !-• + Dlt ''°" -. ~ ....... ,., ..... _ Fltwer C*'tt lffic tcat,,r. Crtclltt ...... ~ l11ttltlt Crtdlet leek l11tbwt flltcnmt ... -t lim.t....., ... -' ce..,1ett Ifft 111t . . .110 c • ., .... =·· #14 ~ 12 Ma. A IU -SO·~ I Ml 1f 11 Witt 'l __.. 901, ......... lt ... 11 2 ... ts t lllta ftt Te., u-·~I w ee " '"" aap :'w.· ~as::.l~ ad. ic~ • ..-.~.f~~oc.'_1..!ronP.il.o l. ;m~3 ~l~p~r~°M.. Cal 540.4500-THI LOOI " Lab. m ix. BIHi••· Dlants. pot.a " t,'Olledor ........ S.lM& .... -, ... ~ nuoi 6C2-~ &U,5679~· C.M""'..,u. :,:,:u.;-. m at k l o a a . Items. E"~~n11oet ~ ...... lllllllllllllll-"'llllllllllii .. lllllllllllil• l ' - .. .., ~ "\ Autot Want.d 9590 I. Import.cf Aldo~. lmporhd WtdneSday. JanulfY 21. 1976 OAILY PILOT 07 ... ~ " ~ ioto locd., SU I . t r• ••••• •••••• •• • • •• • • •• • • •••••••••• •••• ••• •••••• ••• •• • • • • • ........ •••••• -liil ...... ~!·•••••••••••••••• Doc:.....: ps 9070 ruckt 9 560 T BMW 9 712 Merc-..a-, a.-97 .. 0 Autos, '"'ported A.utot, 1,..-...... ~.Used • ~ , ;-.. •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • OP ..... ..... .. • • • • • •• • • • • • • •• ,,..... .....,.. "" C d OAK •••• ' •. • ••• • • • ••••••••••••••• • ••• • • ••••••• •• • • • • •••• • .......................................................... : ;ar ve Upr\1bt • • ...... •-••••••• 1 74 BMW L II T Piano. Gd fiolsh, tono Sllp avallforGO'boat.~ PICKUPS $ . · ow m es. Le oyota 9765 Vot.o 9772fof-d 994g • ladion. $200. Ph: S&l·Z1*l anoo&h. Pacl!ic Tl.des A~ { ~ M 'X j I f • 11 ~ w Ole ••••••• • •••••••••••• • •• •••••••• • • • • • • ••• •••• • • •• •••••••• ••••••••••••~ li4t.t13-8540. 70-0~-Pa1"d ~90~», n cond . H.w-UMCI '71Corona2dr HT: Near '64VOLVO.Exctlleot . '75FOROLTD .__.'-Goods 1094 NeechUplor~·sailbo.at ~ • OVIR 100 nu tires, eng. replaced. conditlon.$900. Ukenew.tsascQR) ...................... pref.pvthomedock.Wll' 4·Speedtifr~~·)~ealel'. FOR e... 9715 MERCEDES 1-!x. cond. $16U/ofr. 644.01.54.A.sklorJlm Call fUR.FBOARDS. Custom pa~ reasonable rate ' ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• OH 968-0290 WALT STIVB4S ,des11(ned, custom ~•du. ~1.msa1t 6:\lM $1099 Used YW 's '7o& Capri vs. auto trans. DISPLAY '71 Toy Corollt.t 2 dr, vinyl Alltos, Used at lSuperlor wotkmanu1p. , Paldf Mt AC, sunroof. AM/FM, HolneoflMDOrh roof 33 MPG AM/l"M· ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• BAVER MOTORS •Intro price $8S 9GS-427l '7~ Mcnda or or 0 deluxe int, very clean. Al1THORIZto cart' stereo, ~cb, $1495 1 Gentf'al 990 I 29'.l.S Harbor Blvd. for 968-647J. • T ...... portation 4 SpeM, AM radio, step $3900. Pvl pty. 631·2136 MERCED£S DEALER 833-0008 ' ....................... Costa Mesa l)lr. !-------------1 •• .. 0 ••••••••••••••••• bumper. Reduced to s:elll , 6862 Manchester. '67 Rambler Station wen. 979.zsoo ••art. Skis, Ge:e bindings, ~rs, W•/ (544698). 74 · 2000. l>uper! 15M mi, Buena Park '72 Toyota Celica S. T. clean, gd cond, $450. --------- i oles. 18Scm. Great Rent 912" AMffM & Deck, New 523 7 $2000. 962 7531 a i __ _._ 99 .. 5 ond .,.,,. " $1799 °unt. Bch Mich••lln". $3000 firm • 2 50 · ~-• • -· MD--3141. ••••••••••••••••••••••• n. • . 14%-443$ v .. On... S t A F. 551·3975 l------~..;.;_;....:.;:...1 830-5190 u.ie an a na wy. a . .a-L 99 I 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l":u:tory Direct tampe~ 7 _,... "" Lin l all $895 Sh 1 3Cflevy'lz Tott TOPIUYER ,73 fSOSE 35000 m · 71 Corolla Wgn , gd •••••••••••••••••••••••-con xtra.s. + %14.ba Gear, complete ·~·· outfit. $115 •. Slee;..~~: 858 ew18 1 1!lr9;.50M 3·Speed, AM / FM radio, See us first, &s last.I To Dahun 97 20 $ i o, 9 o o. ' 8 u ~ 8 u n d iy. transmission & mileage. '68 Riviera. New eng, all tape deck, 4 door. Od 642-8471 -""' camper shell . dollar paid for imports. •••••••o•••u ••••••••• w Is add i e b r n int . Nds. some work. 962-6123 power, Great cond! Must oond. $950. 646-8003 Sf«e, Rnt-.t, El C . R (79404N). COSTA MESA ~~LJN~~J'~8~. 640-604(), days. 675-8876, a1t 4PM. sell. leaving country. ·11 Mark m. full pWl", .... '1 642-ICM3.. lor 1095 ammo . anchero. $2999 DATSUN ORVOLKSWAGEN .:VCR. '72 Markllwgn. $900.548·2676. clean,Jomileage, ··~--··•••••••••••••••• ~abbover campel'. wtr PAID FOR Merc•de-s --reblt eng. $1650 '71 a . .:-'" Ri .. i-a 548·5612 . ice ox. stove. 110·12V •73 Hilu 2845Harbor Blvd. ,.. -~ ....... Freezers . scales, d.1splay 673-3512 X Costa Mesa 540.641 OR NOT. 492· l643 t Owner . Ll.lte new. M«-cury 9950 cas~!I. candy Jars, etc. 4 Speed, radio. heat"r TOP DOLLAR • Triumph 976 7 (''"9·LHT) ,... • ., 21183 '62 Ch ,.,.-U"t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~· evrolet Van w/bed. <70962N>. ORANGE COUNT'r'S CALL '74 4 50SL ••••••••••••••••••••••• TV .aacli stove & ice box. Very SAVE HIGHEST SAL BERNADENE Only 3,700 mt'les'. <17277) .. 0 TR Call 1967Station Wagon . •". 0-clean. Must aell $650 540·0442 6 3 rei;torud. Xlnt Sl75. 642-2847 -H!Fi, stereo 1098 Call aft 4. 545.4453,' • cond. $1100. Wall consider WALT STEVEMS ••••-••••••••••••••••• •75 Long a.d $ '74 260Z. Drk brn, mags, '71 6.3 S~an trade. 675·564:1/963-1170 at MustGnCJ 9952 Pi<>neer SX 990 receiver, 1 '66 VW Bus Camper, rebll 4Speed, deluxe paint. am/Cm. air, sharp. Only Onl' of the nicest around! Volksw-9770 BAUER MOTORS •••••••••••••••••••••11 • Pr . ARo&X speakers eng. nds minor trans (16644Ul. BUYER $5,60().Bev, 673·9225 eves . (3111 c·N) -r·• 2925Harbor Blvd. '67 289, New vin"l toP. Cassette deckw/Dolby 'i wrk.$650.675·8859 SAVE or673-3130days. ·' · • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa Mesa Dlr. paint. MPX8·T~ Xlnt pr. mikes, 60 pre, ON '------979-2500 cond$1200.962~972 d IMPORTS '75 Datsun 8210, movin", '71 3.S Convertible •7 3 VW d $300 ..... ~"' ua must sell. like nu, $3000, ost desirable or the '73 Buick R('gal 68 Must. Good tires & jn. -recorde tapes. Exe. Motorcr:I•"'/ '75 I --Be~-" M ' WC · · 499·2805 AM Scoo rs 9 150 sSpeed. 497·1244aft 5:30. classics! (01811 ). CAMPER Bestoffer terior,newtrans. Gnl~ · ••• ••••••••• •• • ••• ••• •• (714 )·833·36~ or 4!17 ·Z391 Please call 545-1178. Panasonic cassette deck '74 ~ullaco Pursang, used SAVE 73 Datson 240Z, air, mags, All are ex;ellent. high 4 Speed, radio. heater, W/CRo 2 , 2 mikes, tike 3 times._ $695. 675·0970, am/fm, clean, $4,650. quality Rolls Hoyce low miles. <557JLW). 'SQ Estate Wagon. Xlnl ·05 Mustang 6, auto. re· new. $lOO. 557-8393 after 8 ask for Bill before 7pm. • DeGJt l'9u~ 1 842-6738 trade-ins! $4495 cond. Low Milage. cent brake job, tune·up, <I UUW $1500.644 -5464 good tires. Reliable ,. pm.. '75 Suzuki RM·l25, very ~ . '72 d 240Z. stick. xlnt #1 DEALER IN U.S.A. Jim Slemons Cocfll 9 economical transp. $450. pa rt as 0 n i c st ere 0 I clean. many xtras, must ~ TOYOTA 1. want yo~r '61-·69-vw ~252o~:!~i~ mags, rm ROY •••• !.~ ........... ?.'.~ cash. 548·5148 . - AM/FM 8 track, w/Gar· sell. 673·1933 · . Junker. Will pay up to CARVER lmDorts "CAO · rard turn ll>le & 2 spkrs. ONE OVER EASY· 1973 .1966 ~orbor. c M Mb 9303 $150 for frame, body, '73 610 Wagon. AM /FM AOlLS·ROYCE 1970H"arbor Blvd ILLAC" ·~6~~~a:~~.1::.~b~~'.' 979;-4946 GT~ Suzuki. So.clean OfrerExpireS 1·26·76 transaxle.Call 494·7738 stereo tape, air, 4 spd., 2 •• ".IJthSt. Costa Mesa 0 1· & M ti d t ' . t $2800 .-1: 63 ua 1ty Pr1"ce $30°os0 /bys tro0r3r . Cma1·1 Boats & Marine Yf~ could eat a~ e~g off 71 Chevy Pick u 6 c 1 Autos, Imported ~~-~67f. a in • . COSTA MESA I· 127 6 Equipment ~ar\.i$~~~u~p~ce1snot economical, sti~k. dr~p ••••••••••••••••••••••• S•6-u.u -----O n r70 645-47S58etw5&8pm, ••••••••••••••••••••••• noon . 97 2076 art. side. Lo mi, long bed, General 970 I Rat 9725 ClOSED SUNDAYS ·71 u ~~~~ t rc~g $~~;;1g: to Choose f'.t'om Oldsmobile 9955 8Dals. Maint .. ance/ . 497-1193 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 7 0 Mercedes 997-2748 For the best pnces. the •••••••••••••••••••••••. ·Service 9020 '7Jlh BMW R75/5, LOW --. '66 SunbeaM · F1• • ~ 2 S lowest lease rates. & de· Sales and Service ••e.'!•••••••••,••••••••• MILEAGE. LIKE NEW. 74 Chevy 12 ton PU 80 E Exceptionally clean •n !)t!ndable service.· see OLDSMOBILE Boat Builders Cstm SEVERAL EXTRAS 6cyl, 3spd. Alpine Tiger Auto. trans., factory air Super Beetle. AM/FM N•BE S Design. repair , 'reslora· $1 ,950.Call497·3547. · Mustsel1642·7288 V·8, 4 s peed, AM /FM Bef conditioning. power win· stereo. l owner. $25-00. ft R CADILLAC GMCTRUCKS lion. Wood/alum/fbrgls. . V 9570 radio. A rare find. Col· oreyoubuy .. see! dows , s t e.reo radio, 675-5982. 26001farborBlvd HONDACAR.S 645.2417 &646.5602 CLASSIC 1958 Triumph ans lectors item! (213NSY). heater. Ni cest you'll COSTA MESA 540·9100 Uni"versity O .. _..,,, ______ . __ 650, comp. reblt eng, Jots:•••••••••••••••••••••• Ml ... on Vlelo find. (308BEN ). '74 Super Beetle Convt. OPEN SUNDAY Boats, Marine of chrome, $550 or ofr. 70 VW Bus. xtnt cond., $AVE Imports AM /FM tape, air. Pvt ---2850Harbor Blvd. Ecppmnt 90 30 646-2652 great buy at $2,250. Call $5899 pty. S3800. 673·7985 '70 Sedan de Vi lle. Xinl Costa Mesa 540.9640 ·~•tt:TT•••E•:i•T•l•O•:;••••• '74 Yamaha Street 250 645·2194. <IJDltllll le.wiA Avery 8~~i~1 ?~·Fwy. Detut l'911,.: l '67 Fastback, very clean. ~.g76~~~~r. $1,650. '68 CdullaMss Suh premrfe. Xtnt . ""' " "* 1 fairing custom seat $500 75 Dodge Van ~ \WI. cg UIJW Runs strong. nu tires. ----· ~n · ec · pe ·. <?nly 19p8 50 Horsepower askforTom846·0707. 'Only 3 months old. TOP ·~.:: TOYOTA ~ $700 Cirm642·4897 '75EIDorado.Loadedincl 60M. $850. Hurry its a Mercury outboard. C.D. 675·7410aft 5PM. " ' .:~: TOYOTA . moon roof. tape stereo, steal. 837 ·5670; 675·0044. Jg~tionwithmercontrol. Four Sail '71 Honda, . 71 Squareback. Auto .. steel belts. e tc. etc. Pint 9957 New wa t er p um P . 350SL, Xlnt cond. Like 71 :i..T. V8 . auto, air, 1966 Hotbor. CM 646 9303 clean. nu sky blue pamt. ~l 9420 d · . 675 0339 ° Engine in excellent cond. nu. Bst ofr. 642·3013 some b It n s. $2 300. Offer Expires 1·26·76 1966 Horbor CM 646 9303 radjals. $1650. 499-4456 ·. ays. · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUPER CLEAN. $650 or , . . 645·7358 Offer Expires 1·26-76 eves. P.P. MUST SELL near new ~t offer. Call 963 _ 8738 73 125 Suzuki. 1000 rn1. , . 1969 Maseredi, Ghibli. '72 VW Super &;t>tlc. FM~ '65Cadilla<:. Pl'.rfect condition 197!1 ALSO 5 r Looks nu. Must sacrifice 65 lntr. Slepvan. ·1~ Ton, 6 Auto. air, custom paint. 9742 tr~ck, new radials. 54,00(. Gd condition, $450 Pm to Runabout. Low eveli.b t 1 ootglass Plus Bell hel m e t : c.yl., xlnt._cond .. new $10,500. a m -898·3500. mi.Gdcond.$2,000/bst Callaft6549.3762 · miles.$2,900ormakeof. r.un~ ~u ne~ seats, 532-9189 tires,lowm1les,windows pm·968·0327. ••••••••••••••••••••••• offer.548-7116. · fer.642-4489 o~peting, ~1th good &floor perfect. Previous· '71 Midget. excel cond. . • PAMPERED, 1972 Cad.--------- traijer. Hwl m excellent Motor Hom4ts, ly used for storage, con· Audi 32+mpg, $1850. or best 69 VW Sqbk, gd...£on~. Coupe de Ville. 1 ow[\er. Plymouth 9960 Wp<i· $400 or best offer. Sal4t/Reat 9160 vert to camper. take ••••••••••••••••••••••• ofr.968·6010aft 5. Sl.200. Good gas m1. Only$3.450.498·2614. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Will sell both for $950 or •• .. •••••••••••••••'• ••• carpet with you for in· '70 Audi lOOLS 4 dr .. 4 spd, Eves, 842·4925. or wknds. -~------- orrer. Call 963-8738 eves FOR RENT 20· Mini terior finishing. $1000. FM stereo,Asking$1600. '74 Midget, AM /FM,. . Camero 9917 1&" Swordfish Plank w/ Motorhome, very clean. Call645·3269. 536-7977or557·7236 mags. xlnt cond. $3100. 72 Bug. Yellow w/blk m· •••••••••••n••••••• .. • s tainless pulpit $300 self cont. w/gen. Reserve . Pvt pty. 546·2.455 te~or. AM /FM, $2,000. '1>9 Camaro wt.;JS-0 engine. 540-2307 · ·now for hol idays. 75.Cbev.lOSurfer,mags, '60.Goodcond .. xtraparts MOTORS 962'1489· loaded :dnt cond. $1750. , · · 962·6103 air, icebo.x, AM I fM incld'd. $900 FIRM. Call Opel 9746 '72 Super Beetle. AM /FM 642·7282 • Boats. Power 9040 . • stereo, sw1v_e1 chairs. :>45·7277. llJO'Sfi ....................... tape, mech xlnt. many c-... -..,.-ol-et----,-9-2-0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RENT-Titan 28. Sips 8, all Must sell. Ph .. 968·0982 " .69 0 ""1 L·adctt RS, R&H. extras ~190 644 o"c:" u 5 8 c h · r xtras. By day or week . BMW 9712 ,,_ "' -· -· · """· ••••••••••••••••••••••• h r iRs c rba t 645-3370art6 . . 74 Chev Van, Cust. air.••••••••••••••••••••••• t~ACTORY new tires. good cond. '70 VW Kombi bus . CONNELL ma ogany una out. · tape, sunroof 15,000 mi. \UTHOHIZL'D Sl:l25. 675-3793. Sl800/b t ff ~e.stored, Chry Mar. Auto Senice & $4795. 644-1755 Eves. ORANGE COUNTY'S s'a1 • S ·•:· es o er. 675·~ erft., ~hrs. Mint cond., Parts 9400 OLDEST es en 1ce Peugeot 9748 eves. CHEV Q • -.. ,,CIVI, 213·796·4162. Parts • Leasinn ••• •••••••••••••••••••• 71 VW B . R LET -~ ••••••••••-••••••••••• & · w w ~ ·-1 p l ''"• N us, new paint. 22" So C . 2. 10X15 wheels for 5 boll Auto Leasing 9580 120 . arner .it !\l ain ' eugeo """· ~ ew cng. reblt eng new tires ·•• . oa.st type Bay FordPickuptruck .. $20a ••••••••••••••••••••••• S;mtaAna ss121n & paint. ~~l /FM . lltr. manyxtras.675.'1729 • 89,lllt, eng. JUSl majored, · .,... 1976 V Sales-Service·L.easing si 4so. 963·1:1<!1:.!. &bOatrefinished. Lots of pair.673-4266,eve. ....ew olYO Ro C I ! ·1:1 fiat 124 SC. am/fm p h Yellow 71 VW Super Bee· SALES&SERVICE 2828 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 546-1200 ATLAS Chrysler /tfymouth Open Daily & ~n .-'til 10 PM 2929 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa 546-1934 '69 Roadrunner wreckl'd, 383 w/440 heads. hi prof. trans. 3.23 Positraclion rear e nd. Best offer. 548·4798 all 6, ask for• Henry. '64 Valiant, good cond, $'l50 g~ar. $3,750. MINNEY'S, A/C. comp. could convert 2-Door Sedan Y crYer, nc. stereo. Xlnt l'Ond. ~285-0. one e 9750 tie Convert. Like new. 548'_,725 to hse. $60; Lugg Rack 1976 Volvo, 2 door sedan, Rolls 'Royce BMW Pvt ply. 5·1~·393'.l aft 4pm ••••••••••••••••••••••• S2200. 644·8197 r 234 E.17th St. 197 0 Porsche 911 T . 1----------645-5293 15~ ..Brchcft w/lrlr. Nu orwgn, S20. 646·7582 ~c~. AM (FM radio, fuel Costa Mesa 546-4444 Honda 9727 sportamatic. 9IM . $.5,200. 72 Bug, xlnt cond. '74 Chevy Impala 4dr., --------- 45h1S Chry O~ elec. CG VAN Windows 2 n ew ~nYJe~t 1 on._h4t s pd . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646·5807 Porsche Slrasse 846·2064 xlnt cond., full pwr. lo Pontiac 9965 safety equip. $1800. 16 20 I'd . nc ~omes r a ns . 1976 BMWS AskforStan. mi .. new tires. Day,••••••••••••••••••••••• 54&-98S 2 x s 1 e open w/ Rear wmdowdefogg~r,4 '72 HondaCoupe ,am;fm8 '71VWBUS. 83().~.Eve,644·2877. '69 Firebird, xlnt cond ----------1 screens. $15. ea. 642· 7282 wheel disc brakes & steel track, new tires, super Porsche Wanted· 1'n need S2500 b t f I · be h Sl500 b f • or s o r .70 El C h 11 P us new pamt, tires etc. 28' LUHRS Antiques/ 1~.while wall radials, ARE HE s arp._ . · or est O • of mechanical or body Call aft 6 840.23i4 . ammo · s e • $1150. 675-0970 ask for CABIN CRUISER Classics 9520 rechnmg bucket seats. RE for. 846·8563 repair. Top$ pd. 546.5889 --• vm~I roof, ('hrome whts, Bill before 7pm'. $10,500. 548·7765 fully carpeted, tinted ·-------'69 YW L M·• nu tires. 536·1351 John. -----'--------------1 •••••• ••••••••••••••••• I & h JCIC)Uar 9730 . Bl ~ • O I S S ·ri . l920FordTruct. gass eater. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 73914. k/blk.J\ppGrp .. Mag&xtras.$l2SO/ofr •. 00 N 6 1 3 d '69 Catalina sedan. all acn 1ce·l time only! 23 ' '-' 36 Mo. open end lease. Mags, 5 spds. 35,000 m1. 675.1706 eves. ova cy · spee pwr, A 1C, R/H. Perr. Chris Cabin.Chry6inbd, Original. First mo. rent plus pro· '67 JAG 4 dr. sedan. 420 $5295.581·7862. runsgoocl.$800. cond. in /o ut. $950 fully equipt, pleasure/ Call aft.5,84.2·9783 rate of partial mo. & sen es. auto, P/S, P /B,, . '68 VW 9 Pass. Bus, 997·2748 548·03-01or645·5795 • fis hing. Top . cond. '57 TB' d Sh license fee. Cap. Amt. Q AIC. wire wheels. Must 74, 914, 1.8 litre. 5·spd. a m/fm tape dk clean 1965 I 1 . R $2550 /or ofr. days d . ir . owroom $6435.Leaseendresidual l ST a.HOAOWAY sac!$2200.842·9783aft.5 AM /FM s ter~o . Xlnl $1650. 546·9l22 o~ A/C mpaa. a~ti· P&~, ·73 Fur}: m. Very good 540-3666 evesS48·6392 con . 351 Shelby. Cobra $3594.25. Additional SANTA AHA cond. 17M mi. $5,495 497·3551. G .d magsd. 5/40'.os3'0: cond., Contact Joseph or • . eng & trans. Ong eng charge for ea r ly 835·3171 Jag '72XKEV122+2.AC, 497-2274. 546oo9754con. • leavemessage.646·2820. 20· Cabin Crw·ser good avail. $5,000. 673-8800. wire wheels, 1 owner. ,74 vw B l · , · • termination . Seria l TH!VlTIMAt£DAIVINGMACHtNE 2 000 · $ '67 912 Wh /blk XI ug, O mi. xrnt1----------· 3 f' b' d cond.$795. BMW ' VC24".5E065 5. m1.,. 6750. • . t . nt. cond. s2750 AM /FM l"'"'lEIC . . d. 7 ire 1r FormulaY·8, 846-7275 . 64 1800. twin carbs, ut 168. 675·6167. 1-owner. All serv. reeds. ' ".' ammo. air con 1· auto air a m/fm p/s fu el injection. Recent LEASE ME FOR HAL GREEllJE x stereo t1oned, $1200. ' '. • • 18'0ue yr. old Koni Ski motor overhaul. $1500. n Ka11nann Ghia 9735 tras. $5.300. 496·7089· 960·2844 Ca ll 556·3131 ~~t ~%~~~e~7~\~a;~t : B Gfl t Jet w I Hi · 962·1369 $138.54 BMW ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71·~14 Ap~r Grp, Cogs, nu '70 Sqrback VW. 40,200 6pm, ask for Bob. ~ormance 454 Chevy Reueational 1971 Karmann Ghia paint, tires, A~ /FM mi. Orig owner. $1650. 283 'G6.Chevy ~I SS, -: w /tunn el r am & V-Lld , 9530 MO & Yellowexteriorw/black cassette exceptional Superauto963-5876 1iaiu:'1r con .• Mach '72 Lemansconvt.4 spd, • hluopr 'nte ot en es • · 1·nteri·or. Immaculate· cond. $4500, 673 ·440C e y,$500.645·9659· Hurstshift, .. 1 rs m or. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 d &!lancedw/tandemaxle . J) l • Sales&setvice Mustsee! (757HTQ ). · ays,673·8267eves. '62 ,YW Su nroof. "Beat '64 Impala. Gd cond. Nu 552-0259 trfr., Approx. investment 19_64 Che~y 1 T?n· 11 • ltllll '911'1 l "LA. Area's DO ... BURNS '67 P h up . Good Dune buggy carb & wtr pmp $375/ n.. .. _ .... _rb. d S8900. Price to sell $6000. Kamp King, Camper \WI. UIJW ""' orsc e·91 I 5 spd., chassis $150494·3124 bs r . ,.._..~ ir 9970 53 .. 04350 r. 6 38- 3373 $2800. 642-2847 ~ New•st Dealer!" VOLKSWAGE... ~adials. Mags, New brks ' tor. 557·4971. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ~ · VOLVO 7707 Firestone Blvd. 11711 H bo Bl d lights, clutch, pressure '73 '1/W. 32M mi. Nu tires. Monte Carlo '72 Clean Clean, gd cond best offer 1948.~2· Mahogany Run· 4 Whe.t Drins 9550 Downey (213 )927-f.635 ar r .., pl~tc & t rans Trim. $2.175. l owner. Yellow. Loaded, bra~d n~w tires. '65T-Bird. · bollt. Perfect Bay~·••••••••••••••••••••• 19M Horbor CM 6469303 3MilesWest of605 GARDEN GROVE paint. Xlnt. Bst ofr. 4·spd.548·5219 Below""1ilsle 675-9063 540·6490. Launch. Full covers & 67 Scout, runs good. Twin 514-41 00 968-2333. . -----:__ · ----bit}tini top. Xlnt cond. tanks. Pvt party. $1495. Autos Wanted 9590 68 Bug .. runs xlnt '58 Chevy 2·dr. Gel trans. Ve9Q 9974 64}.0792or646-4131 493·7060art6. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mencia 9738 '73911T, mint cond. Musi newt1res,S750, Bad interior. $200. ••••••••••••••••••••••• "WANTTO SELL ••••••••••••••••••••••• see.5$8m73 488.9 f 644·4258 554-0543. '74 Vega Coupe stick. xlnt 80ai<on Whaler 13 w/Merc Landcruisers YOUR CAR?" 73 Mazda RX2 Rotary, -4 a tcr 5pm Volvo 9772 Comet 9927 cond. 19,000 mi, $1900. ~ •. Mercontrol, cover. Let us sell 1.t for you, AM/FM. Tape Deck, sur· Rolls Royce 9756 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PP. -l93·4725 • ne\v'.paint. $1300. 642·7282 '71 H dt LEASE .._.OW fbo d k ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ar op CASH! We take in trade n ar rac s. Ask t or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ORANGE COUNTY '73 CT. Auto tran .. , new 74 Vega GT Wanon, 4 spd . lo~ 5-11 9060 <SllDLJ ) k Ed. 540·31719·5PM Days #l DEALER IN U A .. "' -, ... • 11. n Y m a e 0 r 1976 2002 .S. . VOLVO tires, xtras. Real ly AM/FM, rack. cust. int. •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• $3499 model. .. cars, trucks, '73 RX2 Rotary Eng. Air sh arp! $2195 firm . Jmmac. $2,750. Days , .DOL~HIN 24' sloop, S&S J>wi lennA' vveahn.s.I re ~reatitona.~ AAmolowoasE$llL6.29 o+ tAa.xc~ cond, r adio. ext ras. rm CROAYRVER ELXaCr~uesStlVV0EtvLoYOVeOal1e'vro 751·9549. 644·8650 x 57, Eves. des)gn. Manufacturer's 1 c es 1 m po r 5 "' · · · · • · · · 31,000 m1. Nds a littk "' 633-0956 display boat. Brand new! <I domestics. Must be in Includes 4 speed, tinted body work. $lSOOtbst ofr. ROUS-ROYCE m Orange County! Continental 9930 -------loc!l's 2 sails, winches, ~ running condition&meet glas$. tors io n bar S5Hio42 2,..l .J7thSI. ~UY orLEASE •••••••••••••••••••••••Fiat 9725 lffelines, galley, head, all ~ TOYOTA California safety code stablillzers, radials & de· COSTA MESA DIRECTr '62 Lincoln Continental. ••••••••••••••••••••••• . Y~·~S~.,~~fl~:~~: ,:':,"~••• c M .. ~~:~ :J1~'!1RoAuto~:f., ~~:;g.~."• + des < ·~;,~:~{!:/!fa,!~?: s....;,os•o7u;;;.\m ~., U1~Zi·T~~;~~'. .... ,_ 7 • Jna. 996-0241 ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• WE PAY TOP DOLLAR BEST COLOR ·71 RX2. nu eng. & tires, ••••••••••••••••••••••• FIAT ~rate. Must sell. 30· ''9 Chevy truck. Xlnl FOR TOP USED CARS AM -FM stereo J\I C. Subaru '74 OL. 4 dr, 2025 ~·Manchester Contttt 9932 128 WAGON wood ketch. xtnt cond. cond. $1250 or bes\ ofr. FOREIGN, DOMESTIC SELECTION IN SlOOO . Dee 830·3415/ red/wht vi nyl top, sharp, Anaheim 750-iOll ••••••••••••••••••••••• M~ke.OCfer. 493-6616 · 646·53'73 all.. 5 on wkdays or CLASSICS THE SOUTHLAND 831-1203 · 15,000 mi , $2895, 963·5875 •TOP CASH! 3.'Y-.Sailboat for saleatour GMC :}lt TON,8'PICKUP. !~:~i~:r.lsex~raclean SADDLEIACKIMW Mercedtslens 9740 Toyota 9765 '76&'75 Volvos ~:~dco;:~~te~a~~u~t~:~ c~sl! Buyer out of TWENTY SEVEN IAUERIUICK 811·2040495-4949 ••••••••••••••••••••••• n••••••••••••••••••••• lvyorLeOH HOWARD Chevrolet. rf'Joh~y. Same hull as two THOUSAND MILES. 2925Hatbotmvd. '71,280SE,3.5 \ MEW 1976 Dove & Quail Sts. Near time Trans·pac winner. $1,495. 1679 PLACEN· Costa Mesa 979.2500 723.0CS, xlntcond. Convert Topcond TOYOTA \feLease all makes. Jamboree, Bristol, & $27,500. P . SQUARED TIA, COSTA MESA. SI0,500. 544-9638 Call497·3012. MacArthur, Newport BOATS, 541-2873 ·548·3414. TOP ooa.ua OUR LOWEST Beach. 833-0555 titGo Aux. basic sailing '59 Ford PU/Camper PAID STAR GAZ.EK•.. PcrpwntEver! Dodge 9915 ehaas a tarts 1 /23-76, w/rack. ~T. 6 cyl, 4 IJpd, I IMMIDl~TIL y Br CLAY a. POLLAN on a 1976 model •••••••••••••-•••••••• Tustin H.S.7:00PM,Rm run !> gd . n •w ' • FOR'"'LL ~· Ji.. Yow0..11Acti""1o..icle 1> $10.00Dn.& Dodge '74 Monoco ~ C{lll 838·2499 ' C3rb/ generator /(ue l A Atcordift11 10 1~• siott· Brougham Nr perfect S750 6757850 FOlllGMCARS ' ~~~~~~h~ SIO.OOPerMo. l•f~·J1t>e.r1lass Sall Boa pump. . . . . a ......,WU'V> ...... _... ..... ,,.v cond., Only 15,500 mi., w/trlr. motor & other ac· '74 Ford Courier w/ahell, CALLO" COMI IN fru~1bli!.~ Radio, 4 speed, syn . Pvt pty. $3200. 640·4769 . ..u\.• rt ld n.. b I t HD TO SH US 2 s..c1o1 n" <'tomesb trans.. power ---~-..."-----'--"0 es. l yr. 0 • uel oot . a m m. rn....... P.~ front disc brakes, healer Ford 9940 qij.'$81·0347. bumper. 5600 mi. 6inM )O-JH..., & flow thru ventilation. 171 Vol•o •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• 2-tfl~ "11 wood sloop. New old. pp S52•1822 ~$:''"_.'"' ~~,.:...i (Underseal). 48 montb 1800 C" '7S Elite. w6ite on white, m\om w/oul board In For sale ·or assqme lH, =~~~;."' ~H::;• financing, Deferred pay· 4Spetd,aircon.ditlorung, ~3~~· $4850 P .P . .,i~~Up. ss~200 •. ca11 ~~~m~!\:ed..!M~i~ !!=: ll~;. if:Cn~s:39i01n'~;~ ~ AM /FM stereo radio, ~·.,, 'di -l t d ,,.._,. ., $13.640.A.C. T£3ll03257 healer, overdrive, mags. '74 Ford Ltd Stnwgt\ .. 6 r . • · ro o, '· •~· ~ n con • "~ " Mu.st see to appreciate. .. ..... low ml, br":t'm l>PEll 21. Cd c.ond. 844·4'181 days, ~1·1075 ... "°" •U•-" l ........ .. • u ,Lrlr.$3000. • ev-1 31M ".C.Ut ... lll. IJ~~ :t~ ,,.11· ~,.,;& C3592). trim, PW. PS, P B, \Cl •'" •, (9&-'2335.. ..... •.a2 nAOI:::~ s-.i """ WIW $AVE rack, stereo AM /FM, ----------••••int .,.._ ""t 6 vi-. ~..., :t · :;TH Green w/wood \rim, 24• Hull. Sau, partlally ';ya., r~irrt~v::~;. c::'~w SIW .. VOUI CAlt7 ne-ri~: TOYOTA . " . l . $3,fnS. 988 -07'8. 48Uked, needs to be com· u.ru low m.llea w1,n.dows TOP P•Cll PAID ,, .,_ ti'""" lt• 11 U11i4 p• .. \aak for JlO\ ~ 1c n~rperfect.'Prevloua• ~t~ t!:. 1966 HO!'bor: c M.646 9303 UUI. '66 Galax)'. Gd cond. ~'-')t»IOD • l _... t •"' Forlmporte ,..,_ "°"'"""' .. ,.._._ ~1 1 1267• 64,000actualmi.$600or •1x y us~sotaor. •,con· Pald 'or-"'Ol !?~ ,,....., 11"'---"•t.t Vl _erexpres • ·.. . ol*••,oua ...... 1, verL lo camper. take '' ""j~ g H'-' .. ~ · VOLVO • ._ --Monttomm'YS•bol carpe~ wl\h ~OU (or tn o ... L.-lthRoor+I >O ... ~~ ... :~ '71ToyotaStationWarron, . f '72 LTD Brouatiam lull ~-~~'.55°· terior ttnishlng. $1CIOO: 1068Harbor.C.M. ,.__, .4>. • .._:_ I\~~ new radial tires. R/H .. 1966 Hurhor CM'64H303· I • ... ...--Calltc.S-3269. 646·9303 -\81,......_ ..,-$1395.675-8038 <XforExpircsl·26·76 ~~2c .an, l700, l \ • DI DAILV PILOT AND INTRODUCING THEALL NEW FOi 1976 AT TYPICALATUS SAVINGS. RILL SIU COMFORT IM A MEW SMAU CAI. IM YOUI CHOICE OF THE PIEMIEI COUPE, PIEMIEI WAGOM. PIEMIEI FOUi DOOi SIDAM. Wl1H THE ISOLATED TIAMSVBSE SUSPIHSIOM SYSTEM. FOi GHAT& COWOIT AND IJDIMG. ALL REMAINING 175's AT SUPER SAVINGS TOP QUALITY NEW CAR TRADE-INS '74 PINTO IUMAIOUT 4 cyl .. 4 seed. radio. heatflf. trlr,s w/raised white lettered tires. (729KXU) $2195 '73 CHEVY SUUBYAM '66 PLYMOUTH •YIDHI WAeoM v-a. auto. trans., alr conditioning, power brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tires. roof rack, etc. (TGA508) $795 '73 INTERMA TIONAL '73 MERCURY MOMTMOMI IAMMI 1/a TOM PICIUP v-a. auto. trans.. POW9f steering, v-a. auto. trans., 8 foot bed, power power bfakes. whitewall tires. vinyt steering, radio, heater, whitewall roof, AM/FM stereo. (828MWZ) • tires. (161162) . $2095 $2395 171 FORD 173 DODGE COUfl v-a. auto. trans.. pawer steering. '-TC* P1C1UP v-a. auto. trans.. air conditioning. v-a. euto. trans.. POWlr steering power brlkes. r.ctio. bucket lelb. v-a. auto. trans.. a1r conditioning, power st~ng. POWer brakes. radio. power brakes. r.ctio. helter. vtnyt' ,custom intenor. (21596N) power brakea, radio, heater. hellter, whitewall tires. (320FAX) root (877HRH) $3395 11 '2895 $1295 $1295 • ,. .. • OMPLITE "HE.A YY DUTY" SERVICE 4 Y AIL.AILE FOR YOUR LY. OME OF THE ptMIST SERVICE FACILITIES IM ORANGE c:tMINl'Y! OPIH SATURDAYS 1.-00 A.M. TO 5:IO P.M. MONDAY THRU FllDAY: 7:30 A.M. T05:30 P.M. , l l ) J I \ · Laguna/hutlt _Coast EDITION VOL. 69, NO. 21, •SECTIONS, SO PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today'!i Closing N.Y. toe"- TEN CENTS Prankster Eged • ID OC Girl's Death Five days ago, a bom·blasling motorist spooked Dana Sharp's horse in Modjeska Canyon and she was thrown to the ground. The 14-year-old ~irl lingered in a coma until Tuesday at Mission Community Hospital and then she died. Orange County Sheriff's Department officials believe the • driver who leaned on bis born last Friday afternoon did it slmp· ly to see ii be could scare the horses. "The girl and two companions weren't even on the roadway of Modjeska Canyon Road,·• a Sheriff's spokesman said today. . :They were at least 25 or 30 feet from the road.'' The spokesman said Dana's two friends said the lone, male occupant of the big sedan, "didn't even look back as he sped off." Dana lived with her parents in the north Tustin area and was a top student at Santiago Junior High . The sheriff's spokesman said family members told officers Dana was afflicted with a disease that stunted her growth. "She was only about three and a half feet tall and her feet barely reached the stirrups," the spokesman said. "We were told she had just started learning how to ride." When the unknown driver blew his horn , Dana's friends managed to control their animals but Daoa was thrown bead first onto a pile of rocks. She was rushed to Mission Community Hospital where she was comatose until Tuesday morning. A hospital spokesman said las t ·dit c h emergency measures failed to sa'lle her life. Sheriff's investigators are working almost around the clock to track down the driver of the . car but. ironically, they think no criminal charges could be brought against him. The spokesman said he might be cited for using bis horn wtthout cause but noted that the main reason for finding him is lo "tell him what he bas done." ire ___....a uses ow er Eight Towns Affected By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL OlllM OAHJ Pll9CSUH A 400·acre brush fire on the Camp Pendleton Marine Base south of San Clemente knocked out power early today to 22,000 homes in eight south Orange County communities and forced evacuation of a port ion of a base housing project. A Camp Pendleton spokesman said the blaze was about 80 per· cent contained at midday and that full containment was expect· ed this afternoon. The fire was being fought by Camp Pendleton firefighters, backed up by San Clemente city firemen and five brush trucks. -Delly Pll•t Staff f'Mto FLAMES AT CAMP PENDLETON FIRE 1ltREAT!Nl!D BASE HOUSING PROJECT ' Heat and flames from the fire knocked out power at 4:16 a.m . to San Die~o Gas and Electric Company custome rs in San Clemente, Capistrano Beach, San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point, Laguna Niguel, and por- tions of Mission Viejo, Laguna Hills and South Laguna. The out- age included the home of for mer president Richard Nixon . Residents Were Evacuated, But Allowed to Return When Danger Passed . Parole Seen for Yegg? Electrical service in the 70- square m ile area was restored at 6:23 a .m. when the names moved away from the high tension lines that cross the northern por· ti on of the base. Viejo 'Bank Heist Figure Serves 3 of 20 The outage affected fire and police agencies and three ma- JOr hospitals in south Orange County, including San Clemente Gt'neral, South Coast Communi- ty in South Laguna and Mission Community in Mission Viejo. By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL OltMO.lly"MCSUft A Cleveland, Ohio, man con- victed of involvement in the $6 million Laguna Niguel bank burglary thr.ee years ago wlll be paroled from federal prison next month after serving only three years of a 20·year sentence. The decision by federal. prison officials to release Philip Bruce Christopher, 32, from prison clearly surprised at least one federal court judge who pre· sided over a portion of the legal procedings against the former CleveJand·area tavern owner. Christopher was arrested by Federal Bureau of Investigation agents at bis Cleveland home about three months after the "Mission: Impossible" style bank burglary, the world's largest. It occurred over the weekend of March 24-26, ur12. A team of bigbly skilled burglars, using a Laguna Niguel Coast . Weather Gusty northeast winds 2S to 3S mph seen for Orange Cotmty Thursday, making for sunny skies and fair nights. Not as warm Thursday with beach highs 68 rising to 78 inland. Lows tonight lnthe 50s. INSIDI! TODAY Palutfnlan gutrrUlas crOIUd into ubcnoft from SJl'fa .and ha~ owmm ,a Chrhtian village .and tight~ a lftllt on tM bfg- ~lt toumfn tti. Bekoa VallfV. St"'1f, map A 4. l•dex MV.S..ke Al Mrv J a •• ,.....-.n ca • a.. ... . ., ....... , ...... .. .,,.. .... , ... .. o,... ~tt cu l ...... °"'' QUI tr• ~II...... 1-4 .._...... At._,.. lt-4 .....,....,... ,,. .......... ,,, ..... , ..................... , ..... ...,~ .. ,_. OMftMllWS ... . =::.=' Att•~: :,.-;... • ... ~: townhouse as a base of opera- tions, entered the attic above the Monarch Bay Plaza bank office and blasted, drilled and chipped theirwayintotbe bank vault. Later investigation showed that an audible alarm had be~n filled with foam and that sensors linked to a Santa Ana alarm firm had been carefully bypassed. Inside the vault, the team punched 458 safety deposit boxes. They removed cash, jewels, rare coins and negotiable securities wortl!_,4D estimated $6 million. The bank itself lost about $45,000 in cash. The exact amount of the loss probably will never be de- Monarch Bay Protests Girls' . Fund Raising An attempt by 20 Dana Hills High School students to collect money for the March of Dimes Tuesday in Monarch Bay ended abruptly when the girls were or- dered by security guards to stop and their adult sp<>nsor was flooded with complaints. "l haYe never heard of anything like this, that people wouldJet so angry. "I'm asbam for those who acted as they did," Judy Monto of 41 Monarch Bay, said today. "It was kind of like Scroofe, tbe girls bad doors slammed in their faces. I'm appalled these 20 kids 1'bo woalcl stve aptbeirtlme and then these people give them all this nu, .. sbe said. Monarch B•Y is an exclusive private community of 400 homes in South Lapna. A Monarch Bay Community Aatoclatlon security guard said today that soliclttni ol any kind is not permitted without autbori1atlon of the usociation president. Mrs. Monto Jatd $200 wu col· lected by_ th• 1lrll, all hllh school aopbomoret, before the drive wu called off. She said the l\latd bad dlspatcbed patrol cara to halt (See DIMES, Pa'e A.2) termined because some safety deposit box holders apparently had tucked cash away to avoid paying taxes on it, according to investigators. At the time of his arrest in June 1972, FBI agents seized two $5 bills that later were identified by a Dana Point woman as currency that was stolen from her safety deposit box. • The woman testified at the trial of Christopher and two other Ohio men that she had recorded the serial number of the bills because they were souvenirs from a trip she had made to Tex- as in 1969. The trial spanned six weeks in late 1972. Prosecutors revealed during the proceedings that the defendants attempted to bribe witnesses and create alibis. Christopher was arrested on a parole violation when in· vestigators offered proof that be bad left Ohio for California while on parole for conviction of hi- jacking a truck. Christopher drew a 10-year sentence for the parole violation <See YEGG. Page A!) Officials said, however, that e merg ency generators im- mediately kicked into service. There were no incidents, they said. ' "We were concerned," said San Clemente Police U . Clifford Gates, noting that the outage left street lights and traffic signals withQut power. : As a precaution, Gates said, additional personnel were placed on dyty. They s pent a good bit of their time· manning telephones to answer "What happened" calls from anxious residents. Another man concerned was Jerome Thornsley, superinten· dent of the Capistrano Unified School District. He s aid he learned of the fire at s a. m. and was told told that power would be out until at least 9 a .m. Thornsley said he hurriedly contacted school district ad- ministrators to lay a contingency plan to keep schools open despite <See OUTAGE, PageA2) Not Her Day Lamp, Potty Foul Up Tot Tuesday just wasn't Wendy Westhoff's best day. ' Firemen received a call at about 9:39'1l.m. from Wen· dy's mother who said the 2.year-0ld had i lampshade stuck on her head. . Sonya Westhoff told firemen that she had been cleamng her home at 1621 Baycliff Circle in Corona del Mar and little Wendy was "helping." SOMEHOW THE ClllLD bumped the bottom of a wall lamp and the baU-round shade fell down onto her bead wMre the wire spokes held it firmly in place. . Mrs. Westhoff said she tried for 20 minutes to get 1t ofr, with Wendy telUn• mcft and more unhappy. By the time ltremen arrived to cut her out of th~ lamJ)Shade the Utll.-aitl was '"scfeamlng bloody murder, her mother said. Once firemen cut the shade orr, everythlnl seemed to be golnJ just fine. ..... , .. , .. , ............... , ..... : ····~·-· . .... Delly ...... ~, bJ HM'I O'llftl SHADED AREA SHOWS WHERE BLACKOUT HIT Pendleton Fire Also Endangered Housing Project (asterisk) $394 Billion U.S. Budget Unveiled WASHINGTON (UPI ) - President Ford today proposed a "major turning point for the American people" with a $394.2 billion budget which, he said, concedes the federal government cannot solve every problem in the land. Laced with cutbacks and sure to be controversial in an election year, the fiscal 1m plan em- phasizes stronger national de· fens e, the search for energy, higher tax cuts for wage earners, business and investors and mak- ing elderly sick and working poor pay more of their own way. Social Security taxes would go up to s ave the troubled fund which pays retirement benefits to most working Americans. !f passed by Congress. it would Tri~ Date Set in Child :Death Case A San Clemente couple ac- cused of inflicting bums that brought about the death of their S·year-old daughter were or- dered Tuesday to face trial March 29 in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Kenneth Williams set the trial date for Jose Molina, 21; and his wife, Yolanda. 23, of 2723 S. El Camino Real. The couple is held in county jail with bail set at $100,000. It is alleced that their treat· ment of Laura Cruz, 3, Mn. Molina's daughter by a previous marriage, led to her death Nov. 22. Doctors said bums over the child's body apoeared to have been caused bf d&arettes,~ scalding water ed hot metal ob- jects. lt ii also alleged via medical testimony that the child was severely beaten and denied an adequate diet in the six months immediately preceding her de· alb in San Clemente General Hospital. tt " ... mean a federal spending record. But Ford said its relative austeri. ty would strike a proper balance between the needs of the nation as a whole and Ameridans who are actually poverty stricken. "We will give more money to those below the poverty line and cut off those above," said the $101 BILLION FOR DEFENSE-A7 FORD SEES HIKE IN S.S. TAXES, 86 President while outlining the budget. "This represents what we hope will be a very major turning point for the American people," he said in signing the 955-page document. "But it does not hold out any promise that the federal government can or will solve every problem." Despite Ford's call !or reduced welfare spending, more than half the budget would be spent on peo- ple. Defense spending would jump to $101.l biJlion .,_ better than one.quarter of the budget. Three of Ford's top economic aides -Treasury Secretary William Simon, Budget Director ·James Lynn and chief economic adviser A Ian G\-eenspan - praised the budget. "We have come to a point of de- cision In this country." said Lynn, who warned that continu- ing to run up bigger deficits each <See BUDGET, Page AZ) Shell Cuts Wu Price Sh~1?UJri~ ~~::~ aJ.' nounced a penny per talion decrease in the. pri~ ot gasoline efrectlve Jm- mediatel,y. The naUonwide reduction applies to all CIUMI of trade, reselltt1 and coo.sumen . ~11 aaJd the reductJon . reflects current' market conditions. ' j~ DAIL. Y PILOT L/SC Wednwl11 • .i.nu!IX~. 1979 ( OC Costs Higher Than U.S. I.OS ANC El.ES (UPI> The c:ost of Uvina in 1,os Angeles .od Oran1e counties rose futer than th<> national averaae hut year, 1ncreaaln1 0 .7 percent In Oecember alonl', the ll.S. Labor Dt>partrnent 's Bureau of Labor Statlstlca s ald today. . ~ctmbt'r's price rbe in the Southern California area booeted the Consum~r Price Index to a record 163. 7. meanlng that good11 '75 COST OP: LIVING 'ONLY' 7%, A4 and strvices costing $10 in the base price year of 1967 were up to $16 31 at lhE' end of the year Price::> gained seven pt>rcent nettonw1de durtng all of 1975 but an Los Angele-s and Orange coun· t 1es mo' rd up 9 .1 percent. reOttting increased <'Ot>ts In all ma1or areas of t'Onsumer spend· 1ng, accordlng to Bruce llanchE'tt. lhC' r egional com mi!lsioner of labor statlstic~. The 1975 increast• was less thnn the 11 9 per<'ent rist• in 197·• but higher than 1973 's 7 8 ix·rcent. Housing. up 12.3 J>('rcent. and transportation, up JO t perC'ent. made the bi1?gest gains during 1975 Food <'Osts rose 5.8 percent. apparel and upkeep were up 1.9 perC'ent and health and recrea· t1on up 8 2 per<'ent During Oe<'ember. housing <'OSts tn<'reued l. 7 per<'ent, health and recreatlon mo\'ed up ()9 percent Rut tromportation ctropptod 0 3 per<.'ent and apparel .md upkeep <'osts dipped 0.1 per· l'ent Ht!!her mortl(age Interest rates ::liong \\1th in<'reas~ in main· rt>nan<'e and rep1tlr <.'Osts <'On- tributed to the housing Increase <'Osts in Dt>cem bN f\Jels and utihll<'s mo' <'d up 0 7 percent .ind household furnishings such ~$ sheets. !'lofas. refngerator!'I .md lawn mowers "ent up O 8 per<'ent State Aid Centers Hurt SACRA .\1 F.:"lTO I AP> State rehab1lltat1on centers "'ere or- dered today not to ac<'ept new clients for 30 days be<'al!!.e of senous budl!et problems Ed Roberts. d1re<'tor of the Departmt>nt or Rehabilttation is· ~ued the order m telegrams to c1btri<'t :edministrators Roberts blamed President F'ord 's \'eto of Health, EduC'at1on and Welfare agency funds fnr th<' temµorary <'Ut back I ·01MES ••• t.belirls from golo&doortodoor. "Some of the people Just came throufh t1rrlfically. some were terrl61y 1eneroua and com · pUinented tbe 1lrl1 too but there were glatlrtg horroN." Mrs. Monto said her home was used as a base for the o~ration. She receive-d 12 telephone calls complaininc about the 1irl1' col lee ti on. She said the guard had a long distan<.'t-telephone <'all Interrupt· l'd with a message to call him im· mfldtately. "Hert I had thest-20 girls out. I thought there was som e emergency. flt called lt sollclt· ing. Ht' said 'I'm reportlng you to thl' association'." Mrs . Monto said. "Hert you have a bunch of klds who are trying to do somethlni good, to be helpful. and then this happens." she said. Bad 'Breaks' Make Escapee Call Police SANTA C R UZ (A P ) Deputies say a jail inmate who broke his legs trying to escape knew <'Xa<'tly what to do. lie <'ailed for help -on the walkie talkie he stole from the sheriff's office before fleeing. The o fficers said Danny Westmoreland. 23, awaiting trial on rape <'harges, was butting a jail floor Tuesday when he de· <'ided to let him1elf out the wln dow on the elf'ctric cord. II<' slipped and tell three stories to a parking lot, breaking his llmbs . Ht' managed to crawl a blo<'k from the jail then.gave It up. us ing the walkle talkle to message, "Unit to dispatch. send an am bulan<'e." He got his ambulan<'e --and a nock or deputies and police. Two Laguna Markets Sued Ope-rator11 of two Lasrnna &>a{'h markets were sued bv the <'ity and the !'late Tuesda\• for their alle~ed refusal tn rC'mo' c• sig that do not <'omply with city zoning standards. Named as defendants in an Oranie County Superior Court ac· t1on filed by both agen<'ies are Ti<'-To<' Systems In<' and l ' 'Totem markets. It is alleged that pole ..,1~ns maintained by the rlefend:rnts 1n locations at 885 Glennevre A\'e and 1390 N. Coast lli1?hway arc "garish" and \'iolate cit) plan· ning requirements Probes '89 Return IRS Reopens Nixon Tax Investigation From Wirf'. t>rvices WASHINGTON The Internal Revenue Servi<'<-' has reopened a d vll tax fraud investigation into Richard M Nixon's 1969 tax re· turn. the Washington Post and the New York Times reported to· day In a story by Rob Woodward. 00e of two reporters who galned fame th rough reporlln~ the Watergate case. the P08t noted thE' IRS had concluded in 1974 it did not have sufficient evidence to <'harge thr former president with civil fraud. Now. the paper reported, in· formed sources said the agency "belleves It can show that the former president had h ad knowledge of a back-dated deed clalmlng an llleul deduction for his gift of papers to the govern. ment." , ... ORANGE COAIT DAILY PILOT ~'::'.:t,;~~~:.'·r. ~~: . .:: :r:: ;:.~.,. (Qol\I "'*''VI'"' (;Of11D•"• ~t•lt•fll-U•* OVOl1\h•(t Ma""'" thl O'il•h t ,._..,,. '"'" (O.t• ~ ... ~ ...... ,. l'•Hll, H uM I .... .,,. li.eth ,_ 1•111 V•lt•t. '""""• \AOdl£••O \/•'l•y 111"'9 i..t""'"~"" ~ ... c .. u ... ,..,.,, • .,....,,'°' 1-I• ~IWf hh1td•y, -_,, '"" o•lllfollfl OUtll•lll ... Pl•lll t• •• J1CI Wt•I .... ~t .. 1 (~I• Nit••· C..l•l•r "" tJtN. Robert N. WH(J P••"dtnl ~/\Cl P.i1>11-1 Jeck R. CurltY \i1u "''"d•"' '"•~""'•'Ml~•"' Tt1om11 KHvil t dllo• Tnomu A. Murphlne llMl\flltl<I ldllO! Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nall ......... ,,, "' ...... ,.. .., .... uauna •Heh OfOc• T! .. GlellMytt Sir ... _ .. ,"' ........ p 0 ....... .,.,., OfUCH (O'\I• N ou JJOW .. I tt<ty \lt~"1 11 .... 11 ... tOf' lllte<I\ 1111) "-'"'" .......... ,d ...,..,,._,_ VtlllY f1>t1I.a ... ,11-e1._ 0.._ ,,_.., IRS offidals would neither con firm nor de-ny the reportfi. If fraud Is proved against Nix - on, the Post said, he wouJd be fort'ed to pay $222, 121, which would include $1 '8,<Mll for a 1969 detl<.'lency found by the JRS in 1974 plus a~ per<'ent penalty for fraud of $74,040. Nlxon could challenge a fraud assessment in court. Nixon had no legai obligation to pay the 1969 tax deficiency . because the lhree·year statute of limitaltons had expired. But fraud has no statute of limita· tions and m akes the ba11lc tax de· ficiency also collectible at any time. In 1974. when the JRS ruled Nixon's vice Presidential papers were not a legal claim asainst his taxes. Nixon paid the amount due for the 1970·72 returns and said he also would pay the 1969 deficien- cy althouah he was not required to do so. ' The Post said its sources re· ported he has not done ao. President Ford ·s pardon of Nixon covers only criminal mat· ters and would not api>ly to ciVll tax fraud. Meanwhile. Sen . Barr)' Goldwater says he doesn't think Nixon "ever told the truth about his conn~cttons with Watergate." lntervt~wed Tuesday on NBC's "Tomorrow" ~how. Goldwatar was asked If he thoueht Nixon was honest. "No. I don't think so. and 1 think that was his trouble." he • sald . Laguna Woman, 72, Found Dead Latuna Beach pollcf found th• body of Mer)'l R•>'nold. 72. l1lnC on tbt uoor or her north Laguna S.ach home Tuesda,y a_fter ao- mtorte peered In o window and reported tht' incident. Mrs. Rtynold died of natural causes, apparently n heart al· tack, the Oranat County Coroner's ortlu rtported todA¥. l'\tnetal arranumtntJ are pend. lna. PROTECTING HOME One Wer) Realdent I' rona Page A I OUTAGE ••. the outa1?e. The district encom· passes nearly all the areas that were affected by the blackout. "Al the last m inute, the lights C'ame back on." 'rhornsley said. The fire <' ast a pall of orange· 1?ray s moke over San Clemente :tnd produC'ed a <'OlorfuJ sunrise fo r early morning <'ommuters on the San Diego Free"' ay The fire startE'd about 8 p.m . TuE'sday nlJ?ht in uninhabited :l<'reage east of the San Onofre Housing Project along Basilone Road. Dry. gusty Santa Ana winds drove th<' flames west toward the hou.sin~ project. "I could see the fire about 10 r m .. but r w<'nt to bed. anyway." :'aid Jim Mane. a resident of the base housing area. "I k~pt one eye on the fire. and one eve asleep.·· Mane said he was awakened about '1 a.m . when the names moved into vacant land across the strt'et from his home and By DOUG FRITZSCHE °' .............. .... When is • beef not a bee(? That is the essence of a d.lapute that soon will bring the Orange County Dlstrid Attorney's office and Safeway to1ether-ln the courtroom. The DA'1 conaumer dlvislon has filed a s uit contendin1 Safeway has a misleading ad- verttslnt campalgn that says, "Every beefsteak ar\d beef rout we cut at Safeway Is USDA (United States Department of Agriculture) choice or better." County Health Department in· spectors found calf for sale at Safeway. The calf either was un· graded-the USDA has eight grades for beef -<>r was graded .. ,()C)(I.. ~. The consumer. according to R. Richard Farnell, the deputy dis· trlt't attorney handling the mat- ter, cannot tell the difference between beef and <'alf. The ad, he <'Ontends, leads the buyer to believe the calf is choice grade or better. "Bull," answers Safeway at- torney Fred Dl Bernardo. A calf is not a beef, he says. cltlni three klnd1 of meat avallable from bovlne animals-beef, calf or vtal. tr Safeway labeled lts calf as bet"f, he contends, the USDA would me suit a1alnst the stores for mialabellne. Therefore, he continues, when the chain advertlaes beet, it ls not talking about calf. And, he adds. thf' t'Onaumer knows the dif · ference between a calf and a bt"ef. On the other hand, Farnell con· tends all that areument just muddles up the waters. "If It comes from an anlmal that goes ·moo,· it's beef," he says. Veal comes from unborn or newborn <.'attle. 1'ht DA 's office plans to ask the <'OUrt for civil penalties against Safeway as well as n <'Orrectlve advertising <'ampaign "to dh;pel the belief ln the mlnd~ or con· sumers that Safeway has sold nothing but USDA prime or choice beef products.·· Di Rernardo believes, "Safeway has built a reputation on stiling hitzh quality beef. All of the beef in the stores Is USDA <'hotce or better. I can't un· df'ratand what the problem is. Call is not beef." Penalties could reach Sl.600 for each <.'Onviction against the stores. But Di Bernurdo. citing testimony by the Los Angeles Coun ty Health Department, 8$10ng others, contends those who are ''sophisticated" in the field or meat sales and grodin1 a1ree with him. Safeway, DI Bernardo says, turned down a settlement ortered by the DA 's orrice, "because I cannot accept a 5ettlemenl when my client baa done nothing wrong." So the DA took the beef to court to let a judge decide who is giving whom a bum steer. Free License For Spayed Laguna Dogs Owners ot female dogs 1payed 1lnt'e Jan. 1 are now ell1ible for two years tree La•una Beach dog license under a plan approved by the city to encour aae neutering or pets. Dog owners have until Aprll 1 to liceruse thelr animals and may do so at city hall or the SPCA ln La,una Ca~yon. Fees are '6 • y.ear or $10 tor two years for spayed females: fl2 a year or DO tor two )'ell'S for un- spayed fem ales, and; ts a year or $10 for two years for male dogs. Two year Ucensea wtll be 11· sued only it rabies vaccinatlona are good throuah Dec. 31 , 1977. The free Ucenaea apply only to . dogs spayed since the rtrat or the year because the polnt of the city's neutetlna p rogram ls to en- <.'ourage spaying by provldlng an economic incentive to owners. The $20 saved through licenslng will partially pay for the spaying operation, Cynthla Fuller of the city'• Pet Reaponalbllity Com· mittee, aald. In addition, the . dty has in· formation avallable on low-cost neutering. For further lnforma· tion <.'all 494-7848. The alm o( the program ls to cut the pet population and help solve problems or unwanted animals being born, Miu F\Jller said. -... Fre9P.,_.;u 1 BUDGET ..• year "ls not where ·we wa.nt to 10.'' ~n. Frank E. M'06S <D·Utah>. expressed what ta likely to be u t'ommon Democratic concern wh~her holdina the budget lower . than projections wlll place a drag · oo the economy which only now la emeraina from a rec etalon. Tbe Prealdent propoaed ~ater cuts tn individual income truces beginning in July, but also asked for a maximum increase of $49.50 next year Jn the Soci1d Security payroll tax -the one that cuts deepest Into low and moderate Income workers. His prop()sed revenue sharing and other r.tforma •. woutd require r~li>lents of some federal aid. such as Medlt'are. to contribute more toward their benefits. In his only new initiattve, Ford proposed "a so·called welfare czar'' to coordinate federal welfare, housing and food pay- ments by setting uniform na- tionwide standard.a for benefits He offered no detalls. but sald be would ask Congress tor authorization. At hls briefing, the President stepped away from the podiuni and pointed to flow charts that depicted responsibilities at lhl' Department of Health, Edu<'a· tion and Welfare . "IC you look at those _mess charts, you'd have to believe that ·any one with common sense would want to change lt, '' he said. The President said detense and energy received the highest priorities ln his proposal for Cts- cal 1977 being sent to Congreess today. . Banquet Set By Boys Club The Boy1 Club of the South Coast area will hold lts annual banquet at 7 p.m . Jan. 30 in the San Clemente Inn. Attorney Bernard A. Allen Jr. will take over as president. Other officers to be installed during the meeting are Richard R. Smlth, Jr .. first vice presi- dent; Attorney William G Kearns, second vicP. president; James E . Arnold. treasurer; and June Mann . secretary. Dr Robert P . Beasley. first presi- dent of the club. b the lnstalUng officer. The club la running a cam- paign to raise $:50.000 in public pledcet to help construct a new eymnaalum as a bicentennial project ln Bonita Canyon Park. Start now! STONEWARE PLANTERS G~t your kids st•rted in the Kellog9 • s · Stick Up for Brt•kfut Contest. glazed ~ith water proof. lead free olaze. one of a kind pots. HANDMADI 0.. OUI ..OmH WHlll directly under the high tension ::::=:================:::: lines. JANUARY $ALE SAV·E UP TO 60% Residents of houses bordering the flre area wer e evacuated about 4:30 a.m .. but allowed to return when firemen headed the tlames off. "l 've got 18 years of marriage tied up In this place," sald Mane as he wetted his roof with a garden hose. The bast spokesman said the <'aUSe o( the fire is under in· vestlgatlon. Rut San Clemente Fire Chief Ron Coleman said he belleved it was started by a hot tralnlna flare that <.'ame In contact with brush. Coleman said firemen ob- sttved three Oares ln the sky over the base Tuesday night. San Clem ente firemen were <'8llttd in to bat'k up civilian base firemen. About 100 men and five brush tru<.'ks !ought the blate. * * * Second Fire At Pendleton A s~t'ond brush rtre was report- ed bumlng thl!! morning near the Portion of the Camp Pendleton Marine Bue that former!)' housed Vietnamese refuaees. A base spokesman was unable to provide any additional in- formation. I.ft said the ltre wu spotted nur the Chtistlanitos Oate in Talega Canyon. Area near the gate wu the IO<'ation of the ma11ive tent clty that housed the war ret\Jg111 la1t year. l'rorea Page A J YEGG ••. Md a 20-year sentence ror hf• role In the bank bur1Jary. U 5. Dlatrict Court Judie Thomas D. Lambros said he was surprised that Christopher wu ~lng paroltd. partteula.rty since most or the loot taken in lhe burglary has never bttn found. l•mbros Hntenced ChriltoPber to the 10·year sentenc~. It wa~ set to nan cont'urrently with the 20- yt ar term . ADVANCE REGISTRATION ICE SKATING LESSONS • lnhance your child'• polae and po&ture. A planned program ol ltuona with the exclutlve lee C1padt11 t11y learnlng method glvea you or your child healthy e1C1rcl1t In pleuant aupttvluo 1urroundln91. REGISTER NOW .. ,. ............ WISAYllOI C1"Tll H...W & A-., c.h MtM Ttf.1114t'7t.tll0 , AT OUR PACTOIY $1 OFF llY I.II PUIClllSE WITI 1111 OCUOI I OFFER GOOD THRU JAN. 31 Buy direct from the potter High quality hi-fired pots. handmade, and glazed, ont of a kind ston,ware pots. Dealers welcome HEAVY DUTY MACUME 4 n. LONG $9.00 VALUI ON SALE fOI $3.50 OTHIR ltZH PROM 99' JUTE '1 .. BEADS ON SALE WI AlSO CAllY 00.n·YOUlllLf MACIAMI tWPUll UIGI 1 '/•'' WOOOIN IW>S llG. Uc NOW 9' LAIOI CIUMI( WOS llO. 60' HOW 35c 7" l I" Pot 111. SUI Our $3SO Price • 6" Pot Rtt. S1.00 our •2so Price ., .. Pot Rtf. UDO OUR 2 PRICE$ OO 11111 AH A,,.OJUMAft Stoneware World .. 'If, ~ o .. , o..,... 9'ot4'1 °" ..k-llM" 19041. lcfl"ltr.Aw. l9ftta AINI Phonl 55~1714 HOUU1 MOH. TO Paa. 1 1 IAf. 1 CLOllO SUNDAY I UIGll SIZES Ml &fAJUll( I ... . . Al DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I (.'lo' Fund Use Misplaced WE CANNOT TOLERATE SOVIET INTERFERENCE WITH ANGOLAI ANOIASSUREVOUFARMERS THAT I Will NOT ALLOW ANGOLA TO INTERFERE WITH OUR GRAJN ~------~~--------~-----SALES! Now that the San Clemente City Council has de- cided to seek $125,000 in federal Housing and Com- munity Development Act funds, only one question remains: How will the money be spent? · The act provides that the money be \.ISed to up· grade the lives of low and moderate income persons wlthln the community. This means the mone~should be reserved for projects of a social nature. . This provision or the act basn 't daunted one city department head who wants the money to be used for replacement of sewer lines, sewer pumps, water lines, pier pilings and pier planking. • The suggested public works projects may be necessary, but they certainly do not qualify for fund- ing under a program that is designed to improve the social character of the city. This and any other attempts to use the money for other than stipulated social projects could jeopardize the city's eligibility far these useful out· side funds. Delaying Action The Laguna Beach Planning Commission must learn slowly, or have a bit of a masochistic bent. The commission was rebuked recently by the ci- ty_ council far delaying planning for Sycamore Hills. The commission was contrite and promised to get to work. So much for Sycamore Hills. Now, what about Crescent Bay Point? . In mid-October, the council directed the com- mission to iet to work studying the best use for the privately owned lots there. The council stressed the urgency of the matter and applied a f our·month freeze to stop building while the ·study proceeded. The commission, however, dawdled and has avoided doing anything of substance for the past three months. That ls an inordinate delay. The council should direct the commission to find some speedier path. Saddlehack in Step Saddleback College, at long last, is getting into step with other Orange County .educational institu- tions by abandoning the quarter system in favor of the semester system. The change begins this fall. . The "early semester" system adopted by the col- lege should provide smoother transfer of students with most high schools. other community colleges and the state college system. It also carries several side benefits. Among these is a better crack at a summer job because the semester will end late in May. Another is the elim~ation of one registration period which col- lege offidials estimate will save them $10,000. The extra weeks of the semester system also will allow the college to offer several half -semester courses of eight weeks' duration, providing additional flexibility in the instructional program. Saddleback's shift to semesters leaves UC Irvine and Laguna Beach High School as the only public secondary or post-secondary schools in the county on the quarter system. L/SC #fAr< ! HEAfl ! \\ , c~~v.r ctAPI ' \ \ Placebos . I Can Be Powerful ( VON HOFFMAN ) WASHINGTON -...lf Listerine ean't prevent colds can it cure warts? The Federal Trade Com· mission, which knows 101 ways to waste its insufficient staffs time on the trivial. is in full chase after Warner-Lambert, the com· pany that makes Listerine. The Fl'C wants millions or dollars worth of future Listerine ads to contain a s tate ment saying: "Contrary to prior advertising, Listerine will not help prevent colds or sore throats or lessen their severity.·· It's the commission's conten- tion that this best known of mouth washes can do none of those things, but that de- cade upon de· cade of ad· vertising has convinced million upon million of our fellow citizens that Listerine does in fact prevent colds or lessen them. Tsk, tsk, the com· mission may in its zeal be about to give American an extra case or the snifnes. The findings against Listerine are doubtless scientifically im- peccable, but if people believe that bad-tasting stuff is good for their colds, It could be. This is the placebo effect. D~tors long ago discovered that you give sick people sugar capsules, but if you tell them it's strong medicine, and they believe it, there is a very good chance they'll get well. THE PLACEBO, for instance, is the drug of choice in curing warts, according to at least one doctor. Better than any drug with active ingredients, better than surgery. He reports complete re· covery from warts by the use of lead pencils, five dollar bills and I can't think or what else, The operative therapeutic agency here is faith, and so effective is the placebo when people believe in it that it has to be considered the single most powerful druf known to modern medicine. Faith in a placebo may be only as strong as the fattb of the pa- tient.in the person who aives it to him. It can be engendered by the kindly, old family phyalclan. Since he's about as.common a sight as the cop on the beat or the· milkman with the hone-drawn dairy wagon, the function ol the Dr. Welby/Robert Youna characters on TV m11 be to rein· force this fading legend and keep it vivid enouah for us to project onto the medical mechanlcal ma whose valuable tlmc we takeap at the clinic. mE FAITH inspired by the doctor'• bed1lde nwmer ll chaacy. Some doc· tors""'Gon"t have Robert Young's bedside manner(· and ewn ii they all dicf, a phys clan leelnl up- ward or 120 patient.I a 4-Jdoesn 't ha\fe the time to cUIUftte his customers' conftd1t1e1 lD bla uni· que tbor~peuUc skilla;; Dear Gloomy Gtis It appears the one decision the Laguna Beach City Council is capable of mak· ing is "Refer it to the Plan- ning Commission." B.C.J. It's more convenient and effi- cient to encourage the belief that the doctor is the custodian of magical powers which operate for your good regardless of his personality. In much the same way the validity of the Catholic Mass isn't imperiled by that state or grace or lack of it of the celebrant. · "I'm not even sure bow many patients I have In the hospital right now. I don't have as much time to devote to patients as Marcus Welby," says Dr. Peter Sullivan of Houston's Hermann Hospital. "Good doctors don't have time to take a personal in· terest in their patients these days." As quoted from Roger Rappoport's "The Superdoc· tors," Playboy Press, 1975. > DISTANCE can create awe. The unknowable doctor whom you never see but who knows you. Doctors are accused of playing god sometimes, but in this rela· tionship they are most certainly acting as god surrogates. Dr. Sullivan's description of bis rel a· tions with his patients isn't all that different from Moses' with the Lord in the burning bush. God must be omniscient. Dr. Harold Scheie of the University of Pennsylvania's Scheie Eye Institute has a fis heye telescopic lens in bis office that allows him to inspect the work of his recep· tionists. Rappoport writes that Dr. Scheie also has a "desktop control panel -equipped with 53 buttons -designed to let him tune his office TV sets to an over- all view of his operation room (and> a close-up or each of the five operating tables. . . When be sees or hears something be doesn't like, Scheie can pick up the phone and bawl oul the sur- geon through an operating room apeaker." Dr. Kurt Wagner of BeveT"ly Hilla wears a gold whistle around bis neck which he blows when he wants his nurses to come to al· tention. God is all-powerful, and one of the signs of power in our society is money. "lat year l made a mllllon dollars.'' Dr. Wacrier ways. IF MOST people's faith ID medicine is 1tronger than theit' faith in the Divinity, you have some inklin.t why. '11\e optimal conditiOM h ave been created (or the placebo to work. No African witch doctor can have more cooperative and credulous pa. ttents. Tbe drawback. ol course, ii. a body of lay people wttb such strong medical depenctency they abdlcJte responslbWty for their own bodies and their own health. There are no athctsta, netther tn the fox boles nor the waiting rooms. Lislertne, nurul Soak ~ wartl ln Ulour times a daJ. Homesteaders Are tlle Intruders ~ The ~oyotes Were There First · To the Editor: Something should be done about the coyotes around San Clemente. For s tarters, they ought to be protected. I certainly can sympathize with those unfortunate people in the Shorecliffs area who have lost pets to coyotes. The loss of a loved pet is a personal tragedy and a heartbreaking experience, whether the pet dies in the jaws of a coyote or under the wheels of a car. But if we are to assume our proper responsibility in such matters, we have to admit the coyote is no more to blame for our pet's death than is the driver of a car in most cases. If we took reasonable precautions and kept our pets from roaming about freely, especially after dark. they could not be dragged away by coyotes or run over by cars. AS FOR coyotes being "blood· thirsty," a coyote eating a cat can hardly be considered more bloodthirsty than the same cat eating a mouse. Such things are always relative. I think the residents of Shorecliffs ought to keep in mind, too, that it is they who are the in· truders, not the coyotes. That area has been coyote country for thousands of years. As far as the coyotes are concerned, suburban homesteaders are upstarts and nuisances. The Navajo people called the coyote "God's Dog." ;md held him in high esteem because or his intelligence. Since the coming of the white man, the coyote has been the sub· ject of the longest and most in· tensive eradication campaign man has ever launched against any of his fellow animals. Despite mountains of accumulat· ed evidence that coyotes are im- portant and be neficial in the ecology of most areas they in- habit, the federal government is spending $8 million of our money in an ongoing eradication pro· gram I can only describe as "bloodthirsty." I CAN think of several more useful things the government might use $8 million for. 'lbe pro- gram doesn 't work anyway, because the coyote is a beck of a lot smarter than the federal gov- ernment. As for the present coyote pro- blem in the Sborecllffs area, if the people there can be patient and keep their pets corralled after dark, the pro~lem will solve • ( MAILBOX ) Letters Jrom readers are welcome. The right to condense letters to fit $JXJCt OT eliminate libel is reserved. Letters of 300 word& OT less will be given preference. All letters must in- clude 81gnature and mailing address but names may be wilhheld on re- quen 1/ suf f1c1ent reason is apparent. Poetry unll not be publisMd. itself. Coyotes don't abandon their old hunti.rlg grounds easily; but if pickings get really slim, the pack will move on to new ter· ritory where food is more readily available. MEREDITH GORMAN ltulgeNot To the Editor : An answer to the many good comments concerning many animal owners (Mailbox, Jan. 18). Ralph Rollin s i s a new neighbor, but fast became a good neighbor. His small pet had a large fenced·in backyard. Rut Ralph happened to see a strange s mall dog squeeze through the iron gate and bis pet follow. Ralph immediately went and bought mes h and put it on the gate. Now the mystery is, how did his pet get out? A dog following a dog's instincts? Judge not your neighbor' If you should be so unfortunate as to hit a dog. take what action you can to find the owner or to see that it receives care. LOUIS and RUTH MELLO It' rotlflltl Acrrued To the Editor: Jn rebuttal to the various let- ters and to the headline in your Jan. 18 newspaper. I feel that I must answer the accusations concerning my mis- treated, unwanted dog who was struck by a car in the cold, cold night. AS IT was for my three pre- vious dogs and another I current- ly have, my terrier was never al· lowed to run free in violation of · city leash laws. He was allowed, however, (as is my other dog) to sleep on the chair, bed, near the heater, or in any other part of the house he desires. In other words, he was well taken care of and well loved. ( How did he get out in the cold, cold night? I do not have any ans wers for when I returned home shortly after midnight the gate was tightly secured. It seems that the general con· sensus indirectly blames me for the dog's death (as well as so- meone's friend). I ap0logize, but feel I am wrongly accused. Only I know the truth of the care and protection I gave m y dog; therefore these accusations are irrelevant to me. My conscience does not bother me. . RALPH ROLIJNS Co•p,..non To the Editor: The police departments and the men and women who com- prise the law enforcement teams are so often maligned, I feel im- pelled to te ll another side of the story. The compassion. concern, and competence exemplified by Officer Mark Everton deserves to be heard and read. The following is my story: On Saturday night, Jan. 3, my daughter and another young girl were hit by a car on Coas t Highway while crossing in the crosswalk. MARK EVERTON of the Laguna Beach Police Depart· ment arrived on the scene within ? minutes. Orricer Everton·s pro-· fessional competence in controll- ing a serious accident situation was impressive. Officer Everton's courtesy, pa· tience and concern were evident to all of us who were involved. or. ficer Everton waited at the hospital for over an hour to de· termine the condition of the two girls hit. He attended the funeral of the child who died in the acci- dent. Subsequently he took time to stop at our home a nd visit South Coast Community hospital where our daughter will be con· fined for many weeks in traction. We are indeed indebted to Mark Everton and to the Laguna &>ach Police department for training a young man as they do. CARROLLD. BRYANT •. ......,,., To the Editor: The Pilot is correct, J think, in saying (Jan. 16) that Laguna's council candidates showed· "sur· prising unanimity" at Thursday night's forum on what have been "the hottest issues in town." Why are au the candidates agreeing? Well, by now everyone bas figured out that you have to say you're against btgb·rise, con· gested traffic and oU-rtgs if you want to get elected. . But five of these seven can· • didates have done next to nothing in terms of leading or even help- ing to work for the values we now seem to agree on. They have not understood problems early enough to do anything useful when It mattered. WHERE, then, can we ftnd leadership for the Mure? Cer- tainly from Hano, who led the ftght against bigh·rls@. Certalnly not from McDowell. whose votes on the planning commbslon do not support his Thursday nilfbt statements on Lb Issues. In con- trast, Bellen.ie's work on the planning commission ts far superioT to McDowell'• in terms of .sensible lona·ranae dec11loDs that will actually accomplish what we all seem to agree we want. Dawson and Gumbiner have been relatively little help and the other two candidates have done nothing. Thus for five of the candidates, their first interest or statements on the "hottest issues" came months or years too late to be useful. They have not shown the kind of foresight that will meet future needs. We can't afford the hindsighted council they would provide. H. HAMBURGER Na..e-drop~• To the Editor: Only in Laguna! The latest election campaign l actic : bumper 'stickers r eading, "Please, God, Not Hano or Bellerue." If this is not heretical it is at least the ultimate in name- dropping. We have faith that He ls honest . Without that we have nothing. For these name- droppers to suggest that He would get involved in a campaign without being a registered voter I is to say He is a carpet-bagger. If Laguna can't fill two council seats without such t;>laspbemy I fear we 're losing our creative im- agination and inventiveness and m1:15t soon give up our claim to 1 uniqueness. WM.W.LEAK ·Paramecf~• To the Editor: I want to s hout from the housetop praises for the Newport Beach Fire Department and the ' paramedics; and I don't know any better way to do it than through your newspaper! We baa an emergency recentl.y and the Fire Department and the paramedics were here within a few minutes after our call. They took over and saw that my husband had emergency treat- ment and then took him to the hospital, wher e his doctor was waiting. Only someone who bas gone I through this can know what a blessing it is to be able to call a number and have help there. J notice there is some question regarding the financing for the paramedics -they are worth everything it costs and I hope our I supervisors realize that. MRS. J. LEONA.RD SMITH ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT RoOerl N. W~ed. PublWter Tllonw:u KtevU, f:dttor 8arbora Krl!ibach, E'd®rlal Patlf! Ktfil.tw The editorial page of the Dail>'· Pilot aeelts lo iolorpt and .stimulate readers by P~t.ina on lhlR page djverae commcntaiy on topics of interett by syndk• 1 td columnists and cart.oontsts, bJ providing a forum for radera" views and by pre•enUnt UQ newspa~r'a opinions and ..._ on current topics. The editorial· opinions or the Daily Pilot ..... I only In lhe ~ltoriat column at tM • top or the p:tge. Opinions - pressed by tbc colwnnflt.'J uc· cartoonis&.s and letter wnten .,. their own an<t no endorsecoent e( thrir views by the Dill)' PM should be lnfernd. W~Olda)', ho.21, JN . . ldettiit9~ate Police Free FBI Fugitive SAN DIEGO <UPI> -Police had one or the FBl's JO most wanted fugitives, an alleged radical bomber. in jail for three days last month. but re- leased him before finding out bis true identity. Dwi1bt Armstrong, :U, a suspect in the deadly bombing of a University of Wisconsin building in 1970, was arrested Dec. 12, after be was 1rabbed by a market owner who accused him of trying to steal cbeae. He gave bis name as ( State ) Dou1las James Hardy. "He bad quite a bit of ---------identification in that name." said an FBI s pokesman. "He was placed in jail, convicted on the charge and sentenced to 30 days. He was gone by the time bis true identification was established through a fingerprint check." lt'efaer'• Trial Begf11s LOS ANGELES (AP> -Tbe lewd conduct trial of Deputy Mayor Maurice Weiner has begun in Municipal Court, with the prosecution saying it in- tends to offer an overall view of vice enforcement in Los Angeles. · · Weiner's attorney, Douglas Dalton, waived his opening statement Tuesday until the prosecution wraps up its cue. O,,.rette Taz Propo•~d SACRAMENTO <AP> -A proposal to raise the ta."< on cigarettes by one cent a pack is befo re the California Legislature. It was introduced Tuesday by Sen: Arlen Gregorio, <D·San Mateo), who last year sponsored legislation to increase the tax on alcoholic beverages. The alcohol bill was vetoed by Gov. Ed- mund Brown Jr. Gregorio said the increase on cigarettes would bring in $30 million a year. .....,, Bl .. t• Rnt ROOM REDWOOD CITY (AP> -A bomb has blown up the men's rest room alongside the fairway of the 13th bole of the Stanford University golf course, San Mateo Count)'. deputies reported. They said a pipe bomb apparently about six in- ches long was detonated about 10:30 a.m. Monday, wrecking a toilet bowl, other plumbing and fix- tures. Deatlt Plot 1'f a11 Gtdlt fl LOS ANGELES <UPI> -Gary Desure. 32, a former Montana mental patient, and Michael Mayo, 24, of Warren, Pa .• will be sentenced Feb. 9 for threatening t<> kill President Ford . Desure pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court Tuesday. Mayo pleaded guilty Dec. 16. The Secret Service accused them of plotting to kill the president in Sacramento on Sept. 5 -the same day Manson follower "Squeaky" Fromme · leveled a loaded pistol at Ford in an unrelated as- sassination attempt. --- \ Wednmday, JlnUllY 21, lWO DAILY PILOT go .-tehls SACRAMENTO (AP) -The pbyslctans• poled "Medical Peace Corps .. had been tra.nslerrid malpractice slowdown appears to be progressint ln toadUferent level ofnegotlatlons. Southern Calilornla but Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. re-Brown said the doctors should spend 20 days• HAWTHORNE <AP> ports no proaress ln talks with doctors and year treoUni the poor without pay ln return for -The toymaker that leattlaton. state taxpayer help with malpractice wurance gave you Instant puberty The medlcal staffs of two San Diego area costs. in a teen-age flrl doll hospitals heve voted to join the slowdown by Lo: * * * * * * now bas an "anatomical· An.ieles doctors to protest the hlgb coet of malprac• Mal s t !fu1{?rrect baby boy Uce:r:!~a~~octon on the medical staffs of Bay practice uit · Mattel, Inc. said the General and Community hospitals ln Chula Vista newcomer is called decided Tuesday night tojoln the doctors strike, as s· $675 000 "Baby Brother" and it did 50 opbthalmoloaists and ear, nose and throat . et•'W ....... Q Uf'I T•....... has au the equipment specialists at San Diego's University Hospital. ·-.....: JLaC ' To Rusn ARgaldnl h . :=~~!:~ry to show its ANOTHER 200 San Diego doctors at four By Mre Servlcea Victor Morbaim. White State. e"l. an ~ p RAY WAGNER presi· hospitals voted Monday night to stage a two-day LOS ANGELES _A Memorial Hospital was Colll er' 7 3, f:rst dent of the coa'ipany, work slowdown, handling emergency cases only.• woman who ls ltvine with abs o 1 v e d o t an Y elected to the Senate "d . t Tu Alter meeting fat" two hours Tuesday. Brown ·a broken needle m' her responsibility. sai m a statemen es-Id the year Gov . Ed-day: "In this age of re. to reporters he was optimistic that a solution to spine baa been awarded Mrs. Smith won the the problem could be foWld. 1 ti j d mund G. Brown Jr. al ism we feel It's ap-The physicians blame the slowdown on sudden· $675,000 in a malpractice ma prac ce u gment was born. said Tues-propriate to offer 1 suit -the largest local against Dr. Morbaim d h ll k t b b bo y increased costs of medical malpractice in-malpractice award since because the wayward ay e w1 see re-youngs ers a a Y Y surance. The spokesman for one doctors' group edl · t f · elect ion to a not her doll that is a boy not only blamed state government Tuesday for any "serious a doct.ors' slowdown ne e tn er ~res with four-year term. in costume f>ut right med.icalconsequences"itmayhave. began in Southern hmarner s~axgelif.~. ruining her ---------down to the last detail." California on Jan. 1. A company spokesman BROWN SAID the talks centered on whether She sued the doctor, Quak~ Rocks said pack ing will have payments into a state malpractice fund should be The a w a rd b Y a charging that during a to be extr ely clear mandatory. and who should pay claims if the state Superior Court jury biopsy 00 Nov. 1, 1971, he Humboldt Ar a l because retaile want to fund ran out of money. came during the doctors' inserted a needle "some e.,.make sure parents Brown's chief aide in the matter, Deputy slowdown protestingris-distance away" from the . d h Health and Welfare Secretary Robert Gnaizda, ing medical malpractice correct location and it PETROLIA (U PI> -aren't surprise w en called the mandatory payments issue a new snag: insurance premiums. broke. A moderate earthquake they get the do.ll home. The doctors want them to be voluntary. One of the doctors' prime A piece of the needle is registering 4 .5 on ·the BUT ADS will be~ pro-GNAIZDA TOLD reporters that doctors in the 0 b j e ct i v e 8 in the still lodged against her Rl.chter Scale rumbled ble m because, TV slowdown1'•are is· f low-risk fields wanted to stay out of any state "' v ion ° spine and cannot be re-through Humboldt Coun. codes won't even let us the tort or advers~ d u · bot malpract\ce insurance plan. But the Brown ad--moved, her lawyer said. tyTuesday. show a 0 · s ba!e.. · ministration's proposal includes mandatory pay- -system under whic During sexual in- There were no reports tom, much les~ this, the ments into a fund from which malpra. ctice claims malpractice cases are tercourse. the movement of injuries or damages. spokesman said. ttried The sei·s mographi'e sta-Th_ e s ame. toymaker would be paid. Th. . d id d Tu of the needle near her l ed f al Specialists in high-risk fields such as eJury ec e es-spine causes her great tion at the Un1·vers1'ty of earlier re eas , , a _em .e. day that the $657 000 I d Sk neurosurgery have had the sharpest increase in in· · pain, her lawyer argued, Call.forn1·a 1·n Berkeley dol name . ipper should be pa1·d to Mrs tin d surance costs -nearly five-fold to $30,000 a year in · and she and her husband said tbe epicenter of the who_ se bus_ t e grew an_ Ve'-a Ba1"ley S "th 40 h l d b t t some cases, they report. 1111 mi • • have separated because early morn1·ng ~remor w_ a.ist w itt e Y WlS • by her phys· · D h Already,thedoctors'oppositiontoBrown's pro-. ician, r. oftbeproblem. was 40 miles est of~ID:::sz....:.:.::e~r~a~r~m~·---~-------------~~----------------"-------~ Petrolia under the I Pacific Ocean shelf. Stick ·up! Set the Kellogg• s · Stick Up for Breakfast coupon ad in this pap~r. Jr\C~fl'S SPORTSWEAR wt:irwff Pl.ALA SAlBOA ISlN() NPwoor1 Beoch 716/t'.alnrA't'f 5411,4171 675 1904 ------ --""' ----. ----·-- --. -.. Save30% with United& . d n '' ''Free om rare. ltSthebest reason to vacation now instead of later. You can take a vacation now and save :mcx,-or go this summer and save less. That's why we say "Now's the time:· Adults save 30% off round-trip Coach fare . and children under 12 you take along save 50%. There are no mileage restrictions. no holiday or weekend restri ctions. Freedom Fare does not apply to travel within same state or to Canada. Different discounts DtltlnaUOn lound tr1p tour O.Unallon City F'reedOlll ,.,. IHlnp CltJ available to Hawaii. Your Travel Agent has information about specific cities and flights. Or ca ll United at 537-7521. Just pay for your round-trip ticket within 10 days of when you make the reservation -and no later than 14 days before departure. Stay 7 to 30 days. There are a specific number of Freedom Fare seats on each flight. so make reservations earl y. lound tr1p Your Datlnmllon Round trip Your F'ltedOlll Fare 8avlnp City Preedom fare s.mp BEEFEATER'S Akron/Canton .S225.00 s 97.00 Greensboro/ Pendleton $120.00 152.00 Allentown/ High Point/ Philadelphia 258.00 110.00 BetbJebcm/ Winston· Salem $235.00 $101 .00 Pittsburgh 234.00 100.00 . Easton 256.00 11 0.00 Hartford/ Portland 113.00 49.00 BEEF Best darn beef you'll ever put a fork to -that's Ivey Ranch Beef! It's com-fed, aged to perfection, no hormones or harmful chemicals, neither. Whether it's stew or ste~ Ivey Ranch Beef makes a meal to remember. It's bcefeater's bcef ... We guarantee it! --· --- CHUCKWAGON PAK Tender, juicy, com-fed, aged beef 11.75 POUNDS ONLY$20.25 18 Dilfercut Assortments from $5.95 •Sides, Hind and Forequarters Available at: Ivey Beef Company 133E.Akon SanaAna 546-9330 Vermeulen Ranch · 32382 Del Obispo SmJuan Capistrano 496-0431 FoodSamps Baltimore 251.00 107.00 Birmingham 202.00 86.00 Boise 102.00 44 .00 Boston 274.00 11 8.00 Buffalo/ Niagara FaUs 239.00 J03.00 Cedar Rapids/ Iowa City J 78.00 76.00 Charl eston, W. Va. 224.00 96.00 Charlotte, N.C. 2.30.00 98.00 Chattanooga 210.00 90.00 Chicago 199.00 85.00 Cleveland 22S.OO 97.00 Columbus 217.00 93.00 Dayton,O. 211.00 91.00 Denver 113.00 49.00 Des Moines 168.00 72.00 Detroit 218.00 94.00 Eugene, Ore. 105.00 45.00 Flint 218.00 94.00 Fort Wayne 211.00 91.00 Grand Junction 95.00 41.00 Grand Rapids 209.00 89.00 - •• .. Springfield Huntsville Kansas City Knoxville Lansing Las Vegas Lincoln Medford . Memphis Milwaukee Moline/ Rock Island/ Davenport Muskegon Newport News/ Hampton/ Williamsburg New York/ Newark ·Norfolk/ Portsmouth/ Virginia Beach Omaha 267.00 115.00 Providence 273.00 117.00 202.00 86.00 Raleigh/ 161.00 69.00 Durham 241.00 103.00 213.00 91.00 Reno 69.00 29.00 214.00 92.00 Richmond 249.00 107.00 48.00 20.00 Rochester 245.00 105.00 153.00 65.00 Saginaw/ 94.00 40.00 Midland/ 183.00 79.00 Bay City 218.00 94.00 199.00 85.00 Salem.Ore. 109.00 47.00 Salt Lake City 102.00 44.00 Seattle/ 182.00 78.00 Tacoma 123.SO 53.00 206.00 88.00 South Bend 204.00 88.00 Spokane 123.00 53.00 Toledo 217.00 93.00 256.00 110.00 Wubington, O.C. 2~1 .00 107.00 Youngstown/ 263.00 113.00 Warren / Sharoh 231.00 99.00 256.00 110.00 \ 157.00 67.00 Fares subject to cbanae. Security charges not Included. Beginning June 1st, the summer discount / begins: it's still 50% off for children, but 20% for adults. 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"' ).. ) S'1olt-1"' -..0.1...,.10 J~-'II • l /SC DAIL V Pfl.OT •z~ Bob Clay, pre1id.ent ol Tubtin·b(i.Scd Cla)' PubUcom, a public relaUoM coUDJWlin.gfirm . has been elected 8 national dlrtttor of the counselors section or the Public R.elauons Society of America Clay hu headed his own firm since 1969 and ls a past r, pl'Wident ol lbe Orange County Public Relations Society of 1 Amcrtea cbapter. • Andy ••nlJlaO has joined Schenlty lndustri_.!I, Inc. as chain store mana~er for Southern Cahfornia of its Schenley World T&I Co. div1sion. 'Now budqu.arlered at the distiller 's North Hollywood MANGINO orr~. Mangino has been associated with several wine and liquor distributors since 1965. Mangino lives 'in Corona de! Mar. • Newport Beach resident Howard I!.. Grfffte, Jr. has been appointed director • of planning for Traveool Laboratories' Hyland Diagnostics division. He was* formerly administrative assistant to the president or Baxter Laboratories. • .Carlton M. Higbie Jr. has been elected to the board o( directors of Amcord, Inc., Newport Reach-based manuf ac- turer of cement, pre.engineered m etal buildings and con· sumer leisure products . • ~rt R. OU, of Irvine, has been appointed western area sales manager for data services for the RCA Service Com· pany. Prior to joining RCA, Ott was with Microtech Data ·Systems. • Joseph C. May has been named resident manager of the new Laguna Hills Mortuary. May is a longtimeSaddleback resident with 28 years ex perience in mortuary service. · • Thomas B. Bigford of Laguna Beach has been named director of marketing for Idaho-based Rogers Brothers Food Company's potato division. Bigford was m<l6t recently a principal in Thomas Bigford Associates, a Laguna Beach consulting firm. Prior to that, he was president and founder of Sterigard Corp. in Irvine. His wife. Anne and daughter, hav(' joined him in Idaho Falls, Idaho. • Reynolds EnvtronmentA.1 Group. of Newport Beach, has named Nicboih DeLorenzo as associate I ands cape architect. • John M. "Jack" Swan b;lS been named vice president and controller of Plan Bold Corporation in Irvirie. Swan, a certified public accountant, joined Times Mir- ror in 1972 as senior financial projects analys t and was named a group controller in 1973. His responsibilities during this period have included accounting liaison with firms in· the information services, magazine and book pubLishing areas. • Wafter Mitcb~ll has been appointed to the new post of national sales manager for Computer Automation's Naked Mini division. Mitchell joins lbe Irvine-based minicomputer firm from General Automation. tnc., where he was Eastern re- gional sales manager and federal government mark.etmg manager. t".•~ ~!!~ ' ~. ' --. "· . "*' . ' -• '1: -/*. ICllK>NE • Newport Beach resident Pat Krone has been named customer operations manager for Pacific Telephone's Santa Ana district. She will be responsible for ad- ministration of res idence customer rela- tions for telephones in Santa Ana, Tustin, Irvine and parts or Fountain Valley and Costa Mesa. Mrs. Krone joined AT&T in 1951 as an information operator in Compton. Car Insurance Rate Co~parison Outlined Capitol News Service You may be paying too much ror automobile insurance. A guide published by Consumer Action of San Franci~ shows automobile insurance rates can range from $216 to $582 for the same coverage for the same driver. "Most consumers can save significant amounts on their insurance by shopping around," said the consumer group•s spokesperson. The 82-page book.let, called Consumer Action's Auto Insurance Guide. ex- plains different kinds of insurance and how to shop for it comparative-( CONSUMER J Jy. The book lists over 2,000 sample prices from 16 insurance com- panies. THE CALIFORNIA auto iMurance industry is one or th~ most loosely re-gulated Jn the naUon, according to the book"s authors. David DavreuJt and J .B. Moore, so informa· tlon on shopping for auto insurance LOJ c~ial. I l """""··-·-- ldentitt1 Late P.oliCe Free FBI Fugitive SAN DIEGO (UPI> -Police had one of the FBI's 10 most wanted fugitives, a n alleged radical bomber, in jail for three days last month, but re· leased him before finding out his true identity. Dwiabt Armstrong, 24, a suspect in the deadly bombing of a University 9f Wisconsin building in 1970, was arrested Dec. 12, after he was grabbed by a market owner who accused him of trying to steal cheese. He gave his name as ( Stale ) Douglas James Hardy. "He had quite a bit ot ---------' identifkation in that nam e," said an FBI spokesman. "He was placed in jail, convicted on the charge and sentenced to 30 days. He was gone by the time bis true identification was established through a fingerprint cheek." lt'e!11er'• Trial Begin• LOS ANGELES (AP> -The lewd conduct trial of Deputy Mayor Maurice Weiner has begun in Municipal Court, with the prosecution saying it in· tends to offer an overall view of vice enforcement in Los Angeles. Weiner's attorney, Douglas Dalton, waived his opening statement Tuesday until the prosecution wraps up its case. Cigarette Ta% Propo•ed SACRAMENTO <AP> -A proposal to raise the tax on cigarettes by one cent a pack is before the California Legislature. It was introduced Tuesday by Sen. Arlen Gregorio, <D-San Mateo), who last year sponsored legislation to increase the tax on alcoholic beverages. The alcohol bill was vetoed by Gov. Ed· round Brown Jr. Gregorio said the increase on cigarettes would bring in $30 million a year . .... B__,, Bl .. t• Rnt Rao111 REDWOOD CITY CAP) -A bomb has brOwn up the men's rest room alongside the fairway of the 13th bole of the Stanford University golf course, San Mateo County deputies reported. They said a pipe bomb apparently about six in· ches l<;>ng was ~etonaled about 10:30 a.m. Monday, wrecking a toilet bo,l, other plumbing and fix- tures. Beat• Plot /ti an Gtdltfl LOS ANGELES <UPI> -Gary Desure, 32, a former Montana mental patient, and Michael Mayo,·24, of Warren, Pa., will be sentenced Feb. 9 for threatening to kill President Ford. Desure pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court Tuesday. Mayo pleaded guilty Dec. 16. The Secret Service aecused them of plotting to kill the president in Sacramento on Sept. s -the same day Manson follower "Squeaky" Fromme · leveled a loaded pistol at Ford in an unrelated as- sassination attempt. U~ITe.._... To Ran Agafn State Se"l. Randolph Collier , 73, first elected to the Senate the year Gov. Ed· mund G. Brown Jr. was born, said Tues· day he will seek re· election to another four-year term. Wedneed• . Janu San Diego Joins s:u~e~ing r DoCtors'Sl It's Bby 1Fo Cast Detail SACRAMENTO CAP> -The phystclans' Poled "Medical PeaceO*ps"badbeenlransferred ' malpractice slowdown appears to be pro1ressJn1 In to a different level of neroUations. Southern California but Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. re· Brown said the doctors 1bould spend 20 days a , HAWTHORNE (AP> ports no progress in. talks with doctors and year treatin1 the poor without pay in return for • -The toymaker that leplators. state taxpayer help with malpractice wuranc gave you instant puberty The medical staffs ot two S~ Diego area costs. in a teen-age flrl doll hospitals have voted to Join the slowdown by Lo: * * * * * * now bas an "anatomical· Anaeles 4octors to protest the hJCh coat of malprac• ;. ly correot baby boy ticeinsurance. Malpracti·c SUI•t doll." Some 60 doctors on the medical statfs of Bay e Mattel, Inc. said th~ General and Community hospitals in Chula Vist• . newcomer is called decided Tuesday night tojoln the doctOl'S strike, as R $675 000 "Baby Brother" and it d.td SO ophthalmologists and ear, nose and throat . eturns has all the equipment specialists at San Diego's University H06pital. ' necessary to show its ANOTHER 200 San Diego doctors at four gender. hos 1 al By Wire Sentte. Victor Morba!m. White RAY WAGNER, presi-Pt 5 voted Monday night to stage a two-day LOS ANG~ES -A Memorial Hospltal was dent of the comp•nv, work slowdown, handling emergency cases only·~ woman who ts llvtn1 with ab 1o1 v e d o f an Y _..., Alter meeting far two hours Tuesday, Brown ru said in a statement Tues· told reporters he was optimistic that a solution to a broken needle in her responslb "ty. day: "In this age of re· the problem could be found. \ spine bas been awarded Mrs. Smitb won the al ism we feel tt 's ap· Tbe physicians blame the slowdown on sudden-$675,000 in a malpractice malpractice judgment prop r i ate to offer ly increased costs of medical malpractice in· suit -the largest local against Dr. Morhaim youngsters a baby boy surance. The spokesman for one doctors' group malpractice award since because the wayward doll that is a boy not only blamed state government Tuesday for any "serious a doctors· slowdown needle interf~res with in costume but right medicalconsequences"itmayhave. began in Sou thorn her sex life. ruining her down to the last detail." BROWN SAID the talks centered on whether California on Jan. 1. m~•::~ the doctor, A company spokesman payments into a state malpractice fund should be The a w a rd b Y a Quake Rocks said packag~g will have mandatory, and who should pay claims if the state Superior Court jury charging that during a to be extreh\ely clear d . biopsy on Nov. 7, 1971, he be t .1 t t fund ran out of money. came unng the doctors' inserted a needle "some Humboldt Ar cause re 81 ers wan ° Brown's chief aide in the matter, Deputy slowdown protesting ris· ea make sure pa rents distance away" frotn the 't . d b Health and Welfare Secretary Robert Gnaizda, ing medical malpractice correct location and it PETROLIA (UPI> -aren surf{tse w en called the mandatory payments issue a new snag: insurance premiums. broke. A moderate earthquake they get the .11 home. The doctors want them to be voluntary. One of the doctors· prime BUT ADS w1Jl be a pro-A piece of the needle is registering 4.S on the " GN .. •zoA TOLD reporters that doctors 1·n the 0 b j e c ti v es i 0 the till lod ed i t b Rl.chter Scale rumbled blem because, TV ~ 1 d . . . of s g aga ns er • Jet low-risk fields wanted to stay out of any state s ow own is a revtston spine and cannot be re-through Humboldt Coun-codes wont even us malpra·•uce i"nsurannn. plan. But the Brown ad· the tort -ol' advers~ ed h I aid tyTuesday. show a doll's ba_re •. bot· \;" ~.. s stem d hi mov • er awyer s . h 1 th th ministration's proposal includes mandatory pay· -Y un er w c Dur 1 n g sex u a 1 in. There were no reports tom, muc es~ is, e ments into a fund from which malpr~ctice claims mt !ledlpractice cases are tercourse, the movement of injuries or damages. spokesman said. would be paid. t n . . . ot the needle near her The seismographic sta-T~e same toymaker Specialists in high-risk fields such as . The Jury decided Tues· spine causes her great ti-on at the University of earlier releas~~ a ~emal~ neuro.surgery have had the sharpest i"ncrease i·n t'n· day that the $657,000 California in Berkeley doll name~ Skipper should be aid t Mrs pain, her lawyer argued, said the epicenter of the wh?se bu~tline grew ~d surance costs -nearly five-fold to $30,000 a year in . P 0 · and she and her husband t wh ttled by twist some cases, they report. Velma Bailey. S~ith, 40• have separated because early morning jremor ~a1s 1 • Already, the doctors' oppos1"t1"on to Brown's pro· bY. her phys1c1an, Dr. was 40 miles west of .~U\~..:.h:...:;e.;;...r...:;a..:.r.;...m.;.... _________________________________ o_f_th_e..:p:...r_o_bl_e_m_. ___ -. P etrolia under the 1 · Pacific Ocean shelf. Stick up! • Su the Kellogg's· Stick Up for Breakfut coupon ad in this paper. JJ A \rem offs SPORTSWEAR Wl!>ltllff PlALA Newporl Beoc.h 548-4121 BAI.BOA ISlANO 216Mor1neAve. 675-1~ ------ -_-.. \ Save30% with UnitedS ''Freedom Fare:' ltSthebest reason to vacation now instead of later. You can take a vacation now and save JO%-or go this summer and save less. That's why we say "Now·s the time:· Adu lts save 30% off round-trip Coach fare. and children under 12 you take along save 50%. There are no mileage restrictions. no holiday or weekend restrictions. Freedom Fare does not apply to travel within same state or to Canada. Different discounts llatJDIUoD llUDd 1.11p Your DettJoaUOn Clty freedom ran 8a'11lp Clly available to Hawaii. Your Travel Agent has information about specific cities and flights. Or call United at 537-7521. Just pay for your round-trip ticket within 10 days of when you make the reservation-and no later than 14 days before departure. Stay 7 to 30 days. There are a specific number of Freedom Fare seats on each flight. so make reservations early. Deltl rta Uon llound-lrip TOllr Clly Freedo111 f'an sannp lound·lrip Your frtldOlll rare Sawlnp BEEFEATER'S Pendleton $120.00 S52.00 Philadelphia 258.00 I 10.00 Pmsburgh 234.00 100.00 . Portland 11 3.00 49.00 Akron/Canton S225.00 s 97.00 Greensboro/ Allentown/ High Point/ Bethlehem/ Winston-Salem Easton 256.00 110.00 Hartford/ $235.00 $101.00 BEEF Best dam beef you'll ever put a fork to-that's Ivey Ranch Beef! It's com-fed, aged to perfection, no hormones or harmful chemicals, neither. Whether it's stew or steak, Ivey Ranch Beef makes a meal to remember. It's bcefeater's bee£..We guarantee it! ------~ CHUC~WAGON PAK Tender, juicy, com-fed, aged beef 11.75 POUNDS ONLYS20.25 18 Different Assortments from $5.95 •Sides, Hind and Forequarters Avail.able at: Ivey Beef Company 133E.Alton Sana.Ana 64>1365 546-9330 BiokAmericard Vermeulen Ranch · 32382 Del Obispo San Juan Capistrano 496-0431 Food Stamps ·Master Charge Open 7 Days a week -------- Baltimore 251 .00 107.00 Birmingham 202.00 86.00 Boise 102.00 44.00 Boston 274.00 118.00 Buffalo/ Niagara Falls 239.00 103.00 Cedar Rapids/ Iowa City 178.00 76.00 C~arleston. W. Va. 224.00 96.00 Charlotte, N.C. 230.00 98.00 Chauanooga 210.00 90.00 Chicago 1.99.00 85.00 Cleveland 22S.OO 97.00 Columbus 217.00 93.00 Dayton,O. 211.00 91.00 Denver 113.00 49.00 Des Moines 168.00 n.oo Detroit 218.00 94.00 Eugene, Ore. 105.00 45.00 Flint 218.00 94.00 Fort Wayne 211.00 91.00 Grand Junction 95.00 41 .00 Grand Rapids 209.00 89.00 • Springfield Huntsville Kansas City Knoxville Lansing Las Vegas Lincoln Medford . Memphis Milwaukee Moline/ Rock Island/ Davenport Muskegon Newport News/ Hampton/ WiUiamsburg New York/ Newark ·Norfolk/ J>ortsmouth/ Virginia Beach Omaha 267.00 115.00 Providence 273.00 117.00 Raleigh/ Durt\am 241.00 103.00 202.00 86.00 161.00 69.00 213.00 91.00 Reno 69.00 29.00 214.00 92.00 Richmond 249.00 107.00 48.00 20.00 Rochester 245.00 105.00 Saginaw/ Midland/ 153.00 65.00 94.00 40.00 Bay City 218.00 94.00 Salem.Ore. 109.00 47.00 183.00 79.00 199.00 85.00 Salt Lake City Seattle/ 102.00 44.00 182.00 78.00 Tacoma 123.00 53.00 206.00 88.00 South Bend 204.00 88.00 Spokane 123.00 53.00 Toledo 217.00 93.00 256.00 I 10.00 Waahington, O.C. 251.00 107.00 263.00 113.00 Youngstown/ Warren/ Sharon 231.00 99.00 256.00 110.00 157.00 67.00 Farea aubfect to cban~c. Security charges not inc udcd. ' Beginnjng June 1st, the summer dlscount / begins: it's still 50% off for children, but 20% for adults. So now's the time. Q . ' ... 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" =Of 1 • . 21 S'Yt + 14 ,.1t_. t6 .. I ll + \Ii ifl , t 20 W.. · · W.YN c) .eo tl4 4 SU.+ 'Ai !O 11 UI ,_.. •• Pt \. llr t . 1 8' l '" ~~] 14 14' 14 " ..... _ l ... + fO t 1t1 at• V. ~ ~'-40 •. 41\41-1 I I li IS1 M -h Wff'Uft I~ t' ~" ·~ ~L n 10 J07 I • ~ ~~r "'° " rJ '° . . . . . *' s... . . . ==· Cii ' I ,.. \Iii ""'1ty ,toll t • -.-l IAIO HI JIV. •" IPf J ., >,."°_Vt -.. \ L /SC DAILY PILOT •z~ Bob Clay, president of Twltin-based Clay PubUcom, a publi c r~laUons counaeling firm. has ~en elected a national dll'e('for of the couo.selon sect100 of the Public RelalJolllS Society of America. Clay bas beaded his own firm smce 1969 and is a past president of the Orange County Public Relations Soc14!ly o! America chapter. • Andy Maailmo has joined Scbenl~y Jndustrie , Inc. as chain store manager for Southern Ca1Jforn1a of 1ls Schenley World T&f Co. division. Now headquartered at the distiller's North Hollywood offioe. Mangino has been associated with several wine and liquor distributors sa.oce 1965. Mangino Jives in Corona del Mar. • N~wport Hcach resident Howard E.. Greene, Jr. has been appointed director of planning for Travenol Laboratories• Hyland Diagnostics division. He was formerly administrative assistant to the president or Baxter Laboratories. * Carlton M. Higbie Jr. has been elected to the board of · directors of Amcord. Inc .• Newport Beach-based manufac- tureor of cement. pre·engineered mett1l buildings and ccm ~umer leisure products. • lk-rt R. Ott, of Irvine. has been appointed western area sales manager for data services for the RCA Service Com- pany. Prior to joining RCA. Ott was with Microtech Data ·Systems. * Joseph{', May has been named resident manager of the new Laguna Hills Mortuary. May is a longtime Saddleback resident w1th 28 years ex · perieoce in mortuary service. · • Thomas 8 . Bigford of Laguna Beach has been named director of marketing for Idaho-based Rogers Brothers Food Company's potato division. Bigford was most recently a principal in Thomas IMGl"OllO Bigford Associates. a Laguna Beach consulting firm . Prior to that, he was president and founder of Sterigard Corp. in lrvi.ne. His wife. Anne and daughter, have joined him in Idaho Falls, Idaho. * Reynolds Environmentl\I Group, of Newport Beach, has named Nicholas DeLoren10 as associate landscape architect. • John M. "Jack" Swan h;lS been named vice president and controller of Plan Boid Corporation in Irvine. Swan, a certified public accountant. joined Times Mir· ror in 1972 as senior fmanciaJ projects analyst and was named a group controller in 19'73. His r esponsibilities during this pt>riod have included accounting liaison with firms in the information services, magazine and book pubLishing areas. • Walter Mitcht.JI has been appointed to the new post of national sales manager for Computer Aulomation's Naked Mini division. Mitchen joins the Irvine-based minicomputer firm ·from General Automation, fnc., where he was Eastern re- gional sales manager and federal government marketing manager. • Newport Reach resident Pat Krone has been named customer operations manager for Pacific Telephone·s Santa Ana district. She will be responsible for ad- ministration of residence customer rela- tions for t elephones in Santa Ana. Tustin, Irvine and parts o( Fountain Valley and Costa Mesa. .Mrs. Krone joined AT&T in 1951 as an information operator in Compton. Car Insurance Rate Comparison Outlined Capitol News Service You may be paying too much for automobile insurance. A guide published by Consumer Action of San Francisco shows automobile insurance rates can range from $216 to ' $582 for the same coverage for the same driver. "Most consumers can save significant amounts on their insurance by shopping around," said the consumer group's spokesperson. The 82-page booklet, called Consumer Achon 's Auto Insurance Guide. ex- plains different kinds of insurance and how to · shop for it comparative· ( CONSUMER J ly. The book lists over 2,000 sample prices from 16 insurance com· panies. THE CALIFOilNIA auto insurance industry ls one or the lf_OSt loosely regulated in the nation. according to the books authors. David Davreux and J .B. Moore, so lnforma· tion on shopping for auto insurance ia cTOCial. ·' I ' .J I l .Ba OAILYPILOT Wedneed!'Y. Jll'IUl!'f 21, 19"79 ·' . TV DAILY LOG" Wednosday Evening JANUARY 21 (R) Tht Scottish red music lfOllP, dresud In tlrttn 1111c1. "'1oml In c:oocert. Tiit rou111 11111Sicians .,. tht number ont •IOCAll in Entllnd. ~ 19 m> mm 9ltWtb "Tiit 01ppe?7 Whilt Tnvmw1tina • mur • der, Btttrta is 1i4ed by tltt "minute &:OOl)@C3)())D1moc11tle Rt· m1n," 1 teacher In lht 1rt Of pick· fllOllN ·senator Edmund tllu~k•e ;, pocbts. Wllit1111n Miro &llt.Sts. arvu Ult Otmocrahc vuiw In re· Movtt: (C) (Zllr) "Wiit's Amid • sponse to Prrsident ford's State of Ylrr.= Wolf'• (dra) '66 -£Jiu· ; ~00 'ta;·Dt!llOCntk R•· ~betll 1. •1'«. R1e111rd Burton. Geora• :i::U11ia ~ OIU ~ f1111!1J Alflir Ci) m f111 Ftatm D <9 ())> lil ED Dtmocr1tic Dllllr Da11ea 111 AlleTlu "Tiit RtJPOnw Joffrey 81Utt" GtlMSldt m l'•rtrida• family 9:30 m El Cllof• ! Ml•lZ 10:00 fJ KMXT Mowle: (C) "Tkbakrs" $plaish Dr1m1 (wes) '64-Robert Culp, B~itit. Stlf Trek 0 (I) ti) (1) a;) Pttroalll "ftll· fID Mystify Murals of 8aj1, Cllif·, inr s11i1' Guest si.r Ken Curtis 0111i1 (II) portrays 1 once-famous western IC· aJ lJUlt Ruclls tor wllo is KCUSed Of Sllyin& I 6:JO (6) Q) Mdy Gt1ffltlt Sllow motion pldure producer. I Mm Grilfla S110W 0 0 m News [3J. Ah m Fubl,. 0 New Night! New Time! t.iedrlc Com111111 *THE ROOKIES 1'11p Sou Illa Country D • a.llopi•& Golmnet Tiit Roo.its From Out of the D1rkness" Rescheduled from lut 1:00 tJ O D @ @ m ED News week. When an ea-cop 1s mortally I froM!dt wounded by holdup men, Terry fl· lll>wllnJ tor Dolli" ulls the rom1nc. ht shared with (tlf _{1) ll4n1nza the d)'lng man's bhnd ~&hltr. To Tell tht Truth I WildUft Advttltm Conctntnllon J CD (f) Fii• Featurt I love lucy Lewt A111eric&1 $'1lt The Fii : aHmiJ A Moasttt Concert f @ ~ Gunsmoke A cOiiCeitOl 111-American music I ll loba featuring the WO<ks ol Step/len fos· Wom1n Alive! ttr, John Phillip Soust, Scott Jop- Dramatic Seriu lin and Louis Moreau Gottsch1tk. The Addams family IS CIJ> m a> Stt11Q & Hllfdl 7: 30 B BobbJ Vinton Show "Srlence" T cop· k1lhna stfeaadler , 0 Don Adams' SCfeen Test Jane -posing as • pnest In a hattw1y Russell & Robut Wagner are the house for eHons-leads Starsky & celebrity guests. Hutch on a wild chase. C.rt lktz O Love Amrrican Style auests.. fJ let's Mah 1 Dal 10:30 m el News 8 m Name Th1t Tune Musical VarftlJ O The Protecton : Museum Peoplt 1'o Prrct Is Riehl ll ·OO tE e y· NN~ m 811dy Bunch I . • •• @ ._6) I.ISi of the Wild I · · ID DEBUT One titan's Chin•" The 8e!st of Ii 0 People's Communes" First or sevenl The Honeymoo11t11 programs on the emergrng 'New Dark Sllldows China' -each one oovennr a d1f·j Miry Hlrtmin, Nary Harttn111 rmrit aspect of contempomy life 1 ~Su~., CD Don Ruffin Show I : Robert Mldttll Report 8:00 I) JI (3 (j) Tony Orlando and, ( (IJ>Trvtll Of Cotueq11t-- Oawc John Dav1d50n, Bob Ke~an I Eil Cinema 34 (TV's Captain Klnearoo) and Ruth 11:30 i)@ (3) CBS Litt MOYie: (C) Burn guest. I "You'll l1Mr See Mt Aplll" (d11) 0 @ @@) m c:nmm Jon-'73 -OIVid Hartman, Jant Wyatt. athao Wlnten Presents Two Hun-, Joseph C1mpanella. dred Yun ol Amtnan Humor O @ (1) ~ m lohtlllJ Clnon Jon•lhao Wrntm portrays 20 d1f. Ann Mane Pohtamo (Miu UnrveBt) rerent characte~ ranging from guests. pilgrims to polilittans as he takes O Tiit HoftfYmoonen a humorou~ look at two centuries @ Movie: "Pustee to Sutt' (adv) or America s history and heritage '43 -Warren Willrams, Anne Sav· He 1s 101ned by Sut Man Crothers. age David Doyle, Ronny Graham. t.lary1 0 (Qj Cl)) CIJ Wide World ~ Gregory, Julie McWh1rter and Chref ie: "Run, Stranger. Run" An over· Ear1 Old Perwn. I protectrve mother attempts to shield 0 Movie: (C) (2hr) "House on her daughter from the truth about Grten Apple Rotd" fmys) '70 -her lather's dearh. Patnc11 Nul, Chnstopher George. Janet Leigh Clons Leachman, Bobby Dllnn and Julie Harns. Walter Pidgeon. Ron Howard star. '6 Ql Mod Squid (!) The FBI 0 ( 29 (8 ') ~3J CD Bionte Womu 0 Movie: "You ftttttr C111 Ttll" .. Weltome Home Jaime" Part 11 (com) '51 -Diel! Powtll Pew O MiRlon $ Movie: (2hr) "Brielrt Dow, Charles Dr&ke. ' Yictory" ldra) 'S2 -Arth1n Ken m 1i11ost & Mrs. Mulf nedy. Pee11 Dow, Julie Adams. Get S1neft m Cnm Wits : DttllOCtltic Response to State ti fl) N~ . the Union Address 26 Movtt: (C) (2hr) "Advtfttures lZ·OO O Twilleht Zont of 1 Young Man" (ad~) '62 -Rich I • Q) Movit· "Stl .. DOOi" ( ) •37 ard Beymer. Paul Newman j , • •· com ID U!mEl Zulu Romto Sail -K.rharrne Hepburn, Ginger Roe· plane gliding •s captul'd as cham· ers. luci!le Ball. . " p1ons hom 23 countnes compete! &) Mom: "Tiit Uv1n1 Httd (llor) 1n the 1973 lnternatron1I Glider -Abel Salazar. Compelilions 1n W11kene. Australia 12:30 U Ma~ny RFD gJ Chlmpio11ship Wmt!inc Cl) Mow1t: "8oomeran(' (dra) '47 aJ l111111ese llnguage 'rorram -let J. Cobb, DIN Andrtwl. 8·30 m MerY Griffin S11n 1:00 0 Q) @ @)a;) TolllOfmf · O lieaelariij 9:00 1:15 I) Movie: "Mlaic Ton" (com) '41 8 REVENGE KILLER'S -Jane Wyman, lames Stewart. * TARGET·CANNON!! 1:30 [t(])Movie: "Tiit Nl•ld Juncte" B l] er ra1 ~nnon An almost (adv) '54 -Charlton Heston. El· forgotten chapter 1n Cannon's mrli· eanor Parker. tary seMte 2• yurs ago In Koru 2:00 Q) All·Nialrt Sllow: "T1lc Wild lllue p1npo1n1~ h•m as tile tuget of 1 londu." "Hu41011's 8IJ" South !Wun olf~r's personal YtO· 3:00 B Movie: ·~ lhd Frotn ult aunce Fiekf" (com) '53-Din D11ley, Ann 0 amJm T1le llay City Rollen Bancroft Thursday DAYTIME MOVIES 1:00 0 "The M1vtrict" (wes) 'S2 - Wild 8111 Ell1ot, Myron Huly, Phyl· l1s Coates.. ~"The One Th1t Cot ~ (d11) '58 -Hardy Kruttr, Colin Gordot!. 2:30 G (C) "Wyo11in1 Mail" (wes) '50 9:30 O '1he ~ptain's P1radiW' (com) -Stephen McN1lly, Alnis Smltl1, '53 -Alec Guinness, Yvonne De· Howard De S1lv1. Cano. (C) "A Kin(s Stoty" (doc) '67 -Nanaled by Ors)n Welles. 3:00 fiQI (C) '1encler Stoundrtf" {dra) 10:00 ,..6 "All Mine to Give" (dra) '56 _ '67 -Jean-Paul Btlmondo, Robert Cameron Mrtchell, Glynrs Johns. Morlty. 12:00 Q) '1he Cross of lornirie'' (adv), 3:30 fJ (C) "The Naked S,.r" (wes)' '« -Jean Pierre Aumont. Geoe1 ·53 -James Stew1rt, Janet Ltlah, Kelly. Robert Ryan. KOCE Television (50) WEDNESDAY 10:00 IN·SCHOOL PROGRAMM,,.IG 11:JO ELECTlllCCOMPANY U:OO SESAME STREET 1:00 IN·SCHOOL PllOGRAMMING 1:00 NOVA "Waiting ror snumway" (60minl l :OO WOMAN .. Brust Cane.er Controwrslt'S" l .JO MISTElt ROGEllSNEIGMllORMOOD 4·00 SESAME STREET !60mlnl S:OO ELECTRIC COMPANY S:JO VILLA ALEGRE 4:to THE ENIEllGY POLICY· ANewWarBe~ThrStattt?. 7:00 IFI FOllGIETTMEE 7·JO SHOWCASE "A S~lal TribUle to ~av Boloer" 1:00 MASTERPIECE THIEAT!Elt "UDS!Alrs, Downstairs" (60mln) t :OO PICCADILLYCtltCUS"Oe~Aflenall.arl}e" !60mrn) 10:00 TOM T. HALL: THIE ST~YTIELLElt (60rnln) ·FROM Fashion Island vNewport ·'Beach Morie Tops TV Ratings NEW YORK CAP) -"Jeremiah Johnson," the Robert Redford movi~which ABC·TVbroadcast lest week, was the weekta top.rated evening entertain· ment program, according to A. C. Nielsen audience samples. . 1975 BIG. .FOR FILMS NEW YORK <UPI> - More Americans have become moviegoers than ever before, accordlna to Variety. The newspaper report- ed total U .s. box ofllce receipta last year were in the range of $1.8 billl~n to $1.9 billion -up 7~ percent from the. ·cverall take in 1974. And ABC 's new "Bionic Woman" also was a r.at· ings winner. as was the second episode of the network's "Eleanor and Franklin" drama; both were among the nation's 20 bighest·rated programs Man" (all ABC); "Maude," "M·A·S-H" and .. Mary Tyler Moore" (all Cbs>; "Welcome Back, Kotter" and "Baretta'' (both ABC); "The Jefiersons" and ''Good Times'' (both CBS>; "Eleanor and Franklin, Part II" (ABC); "Rhoda" and "Bob Newhart" (both CBS): "Happy Days" and "Starsky and Hutch" (both ABC); "Emergency" and "Sanford and Son" (bothNBC); and "TheWaltons"CBS). I · lastweek · . 227 Movies OK'd But Howard Cosell's final show in his ABC varie· ty series ended at the bottom of the ratings list, ac· cording to Nielsen findings for the week ending J a. 18. The ratings were made public today. . r;t According to tbe Nielsen figures, the 20 most-.I' or popular shows last week were "Jeremiah Johnson" Oscar Entry <ABC); "All in the Family" (CBS); "Happy Days Special," "Bionic Woman" and "Six Million Dollar Andy's Voice LOS ANGELES <AP) -The Motion Picture Academy reports that 2Z7 motion pictures have qualified for the 48th annual awards. Eligibility requirements: the film must be feature-length, in English or with English s ubtitles, in 3Smm or larger, shown for at least a week for paid admissions during 1975. IAqu& WB.SH "WllD PARTY" The list includes movies made in Canada, England, Hong Kong, France, Italy, Japan, U.S.· S.R., Sweden, Switzerland as well as the United -Wliiii States . · !'!•illlM ' Nominations for the Oscars will be announced at • 9:30a.m. PSTFeb.17. HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Andy Devine and Sally Kellerman will provide voices for the animated cartoon "The Mouse and His Child." 4:tl-7l41 '1!1NCARNATION Of PETO PIOUD" J:IMll .. '1H ALAIMDB.OM "Hit WAY OUT" ·(R) 4:05-7:JS "DfATH WISH" {I) l:J0.5:50. .. .20 "THE BLACK BIRD" (PG) 4:05-7:50 "TAKE THE MONEY & RUN"i:1 M:OO-t:45 "Hit WAY OUT" (Rl 1:10 "D~TH WISH" 6;35-9:50 ''WllD PARTY" (R) 7:50 -,!1NCARNATION Of PETEJ PROUD" 6:00.f:40 ANl*m • 6J5.710t .SUNFLOWER W T .M~tc A '"l'Nl llUB·anr INJ V "llLLa FOICE- "'W!L! PARTT" llt • ·wAIMATIOM OF Pita PIO~D" llJ . _ THE CITY SHOPPING CENTRE ORANGE 1 532-6721 ~ CITY CENTRE CINEMA!> S.A. FAWY CMANCHESTEA EX.) 0 .0. FAWY (CITY DA. EX.I "WILD PARTY" (R) "REINCARNATION OF. . PETER PROuo·: (R) 1he masterpilrt of bizarre 1 love that stunned Fnma. A portrait of love and submission to disorder the senses. A1t AJJitJ ArlsstJ IW#.st CD ®NO Oii( UNOO 10WTTtD -M.Atto.AMT-.,., '"OMCI .IS MOT IMOUefr ~ •3 DAYS OF THI CoMDor I .. -CHIMA TOWW llJ LA MIRADA WALK-IN IARGAIH PRICE nso MONDAY th•v SATURDAY(Euepl ttolld1~1) 12:30·5:00 MMC*D ~~1'..Al1M1l1· 1@1Q11i•L .. .:~::7":•:. ... _,J ~=£: • \.!.J 0NM lwt e .. ,_NAT l/21 PAMl.TIMllT.......n I un a n.s Of GIWLT ADAMS • CIWllOr Of ntl GODS 111 • tcmT,NOMlld C»INla.ateN ...... MllT IOlllY llao.D e fATI llUNAWAT a Mrs or '"' ClONDOl 1111 Mat MCMOllON e IATI WWAT ClllNATOWN fl! OftN 1•• e MAT!Nllt MAT WMT.....,.. u 111'"' I SNOW WMm l IMN DWAllS..1 tt-ISLAleAfntl .__ ... _,._-J n» Of 1'H1 WOILD 111 .... ..._ ... ,. eox OFRCf Of'ENS DMT AT t:OO •• ...,. ITMQ AT •. l•POllT .. T IOTlctl CMllDlfl 11111£1 U '11ffl llct,i S,tcltl frl•• { ,. , ltltw • C.l!lltt 1-1t * . llHt•. ,..., --_., i;_. ..... tf1-91 MNCINO DOG M'f UTllNOON Ill .......... DIOWNIMG POOl "' Al. NGllO DOG MY AmlNOON .......... DIOWNINO POOL,.. HUm.l .i Mar ........ e Mn IUNAWAT CllNATOWN.- lnCllCAln." ex-re» NOWAYOUTa.. +Ullo.COM ILOOD SWIAT & flAI fl! · WMlll ... YOU .. 't1t AMOtC.AH GUnm,.. ..... ....,,.,.. UIXNDmON,.. NO~AOMfTT8D~~~ ... I ITHA9 TO--..P'ftOM T>e ~I ~ "DEATH RACI 2000' Tec:Mlcotor• tR,J SURF 1HEA'l'RE C.... Hwy ..... st • ......_ • .._.. 136-tJH .. * * * * JACK NICHOLSON~ PERFECT TRIUMPH!" -·':/·~•Jr:J;,-.:~'011 SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRES SNf DIEGO FWY. AT BRISTOL SO.COAST PLAZA ~27'1 SO.COAST. PLAZA S4t·SU2 ._,... c. sc:on. A*llA*l!On "HINDENBURG" {PG) •• DAii. T J:JO & f:lt SAT /SUW-l:l .. J.•t.-4~7: ... f:H FREE PARKING . '"ca "ONE FUW OYER THE CUCKOO'S NEST" (R) DAtl y l'•1" &.••« SAT JSIM-l!l~.J:4.~.1_1t,l.S •• CllEMALAID THIEE ==1 "MO WAY our' IRJ eA&T 9:41 SAT ,.,.,._1:1~41 "ROOSTER COGBURN" • DA&T 4:4~1 .. JtS.\T,.,..._._"41. lltH ."DOG DAY AFT'EllHOOM'_' eA&T ""''""SAT/RM l<*lt!I' "DROWNING POOL'" DAil. Y a:20. SAT./9UH. 3:!04·.211 ~Rf PARKING "STORY OF O" IX> 6:45-1:30-10-.15 . 5AT,ISUM-l:l0.l:IS..l:OCM:4~30.I0-.25 PllY1IW-SAT. OM.Y-e:JO P.M. © HOW FAR DOES A GIRL HAVE TOGO TOUNTAMGl.E HEITINGLE?? ADULTS ONLY COLOR The Devil In 'Miss Jones ONLY ORANGE COUNTY SHOWING! PUSSYCAT • 873-4048 . 709 E. ialboa Blvd. Newport Beach . OPEN DAILY AT 12 NOON STEREO. SOUNDS OF "Et=IE H~RBOR . ' . ! ' . ., I f \ t . ) . Saddlebaek EDIT ION ;; " r * *. VOL. 69, NO. 21, 4 SECTIONS, sd PAGES, • • • Today's Closing N.Y.Stoeks TEN CE~TS , Prankst.er Eyed in · OC Girl's Death ; I , .Five days ago, a horn-blasting ; motorist spooked Dana Sharp's bone' in Modjeska Canyon and .she was thrown to the ground. The 14-year-old girl lingered in a coma until Tuesday at Mission Community Hospital and then she41ed. . driver who leaned on his horn last Friday afternoon did it simp- ly to see U be could scare the horses. "The girl and two companions weren't even on the roadway of ModJeska Canyon Road, .. a Sheriff's spokesman said today. Orange County Sheriff's .:They were at least 25 or 30 feet Department officials believe the. from the road.'• The spokesman said Dana's two friends said the lone, male occupant of the big sedan. "didn't even look back as he sped oU." Dana lived with her parents in the north Tustin area and was a top student at Santiago Junior High. The sheriff's spokesman said family members told officers Dana was afflicted with a disease that stunted her growth. "She was only about three and a half feet tall and her feet barely reached the stirrups," the spokesman said. "We were told she had just started learning how to ride.'' When the unknown driver blew his born, Dana's friends managed to control their animals but Dana was thrown bead (jrst onto a pile of rocks. She was rushed to Mission Community Hospital where,she was comatose until Tuesaay morning. A hospital spokesman said last-ditch emergency measures failed to save her life. Sheriff's investigators are working almost around the cloclt to track down the driver of the car but, ironically, they think no criminal charges could be brought against him. The spokesman said he might be cited for using his horn without cause but noted that the main reason for finding him is to "tell him what he bas done." a uses ow er EighfOC Towns Mfected By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of tllt Oally Pl tot Slaff A 400·acre brush fire on the Camp Pendleton Marine Base south of San Clemente knocked out power early today to 22,000 homes in eight south Orange County communities and forced evacuation of a portion of a base housing project. A Camp Pendleton spokesman said the blaze was about 80 per- cent contained at midday and that full containment was expect· ed this afternoon. The fire was being fought by Camp Pendle ton firefighters, backed up by San Clemente city firemen and five brush trucks. o.fry PUet st ... Pllo•• FLAMES AT CAMP PENDLETON FIRE THREATENED BASE HOUSING. PROJECT Residents Wwe Evacuated, But Allowed to Retum When Denger Paesec:t Heat and flames from the fire knocked out power at 4:t6 a.m. to San Diego Gas and Electric Company customers in San Clemt>ntt>, Capistrano Beach. San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point, Laguna Niguel, and por· tions of Mission Viejo, Laguna Hills and South Laguna. The out- age included the home of former president Richard Nixon. Judge Upholds Charges Electrical service in the 70- square mile area was restored at 6:23 a.m. when the names moved away from the high tension lines that cross the northern por- tion of the base . .. ~ Says Allegatiom Against Battin 'Sound' The outage affected fire and police agencies and three ma· JOr hospitals in south Orange· C.ounty. including San Clemente General. South Coast Communi· ty in South Laguna and Mission Community in Mission Viejo. By GARY GRANVIUE Of tM Dally Pli.t SUlff Superior'Court Judge Kenneth Lae ruled today that allegations lodged against Orange County Supervisor Robert Battin in a grand jury indictment are con- stitutionally sound. Judge Lae's tuling had the ef- fect of turning down a plea from Battin 's attorney Matthew K.urillch· that the indictment failed to. specify specific charges agJ.lnst his client. As a result, the seven felony counts charging ~attin with grand theft aJld misWJ\' or public funds stand. · It was after Judge Lae spent Tuesday reading grand jury transcripts of testimony leading to Battin's indictment that he concluded the charges were specific enough. ''Having read transcripts of the indictment I find it states Coast Weather Gusty northeast winds 2S to 35 mph seen for Orange County Thursday, malting for sunny skies and fair nights. Not as warm Thursday with beach highs 68 rislnf to 78 Inland. Lows tonight in the sos. INSIDE TODAY P.olutl nian ou.rrflla1 crou«J into Libation trorn Surla .on4 ba~ oot'n"lm .o Chrfltfan uillag1 .a nd tfghteMd.o liege on tlw bfo· gtlt tOtDn in the Bekaa Volley. St0f'1/, mop A4. l•dex ·~ , l facts constituting a public of- fense,·· the judge said. "The court rules the allega· tions are constitutionally suffi- cient," Judge Lae concluded. Kurilich had charged a grand theft count included in the indict- ment failed to state what Battin allegedly stole and who he stole it from. · However, Judge Lae found ~Reopens Nixon's '69 Tax Probe From Wire Services WASHINGTON -The Internal Revenue Service has reopened a civil tax fraud inves\igation into Richard M. Nixon's 1969 tax re- turn, the Washington Post and the New York Times reported to· day. In a story by Bob Woodward, one of two reporters who gained fame through reporting the Watergate case, the Post noted the IRS bad concluded in 1974 it did not have sufficient evidence to charge the former president with civil fraud. · Now, the paper reported, in· formed sources said the agency "believes it can show that the former president had had knowledge of a back-dated deed claiming an illegal deduction for his gift of papers to the govern- ment." ·IRS ofDclals would neither con.- <See NIXON, Pace AZ) Planners Approve Viejo Development The Oranae County Planning C.Ommlsslon bu approved the Mission Veijo Company's plans for development of 89 acres south of Antonio Road and west of Los Alisoa Bowev ard. The development wm include 347 ·atnale tamlly homes, two open ,space lots, a greenbelt trail and a school ai~. otherwise after reading the 'transcript of testimony leading to charges that Battin cam- paigned at taxpayers• expense for lieutenant governor in 1974. Yet to be ruled OJl ia a 38-point motion for discovery submitted to the court by Kurilicb. Judge Lae recessed Battin's pretrial bearing until later in the day to allow himself time to read Deputy District Attorney Jack Ryan's rebuttal to the discovery motion. (. I Lawmen to Lecture At Viejo Drug Talk Two investigators from the Orange County Sheriff's Depart· ment will be the guest speakers Monday at a "Special on Drugs" being presented by the Mon· tevideoSchool PTA. The 7:30 p.m. session, operi to the public, will be held at the school on 24071 Carrillo Drive, Mission Viejo. Officials said, however, that emergency generators im· mediately kicked into service. There were no incidents, they said. "We were concerned," said San Clemente Police U . Clifford Gates, noting that the outage left street lights and traffic signals without power. -· As a precaution, Gates said, ". additional pei:sonnel were placed on duty. They spent a good bit of their time manning telephones to answer "What happened" calls from anxious residents. Another man concerned was Jerome Tbornsley. superinten· dent of the Capistrano Unified School District. He said he learned of the fire at 5 a.m. and was told told that power would be out until at least 9 a.m. Thomsley said he hurriedly contacted school district ad· ministrators to lay a contingency plan to keep schools open despite (See OUTAGE, Page AZ) Not "HerDay Lamp, Potty Foul Up Tot I Tuesday just wasn't Wendy Westhoff's best day. Firemen received a call at about 9:30 a.m. from Wen- dy's mother who said the 2-year-old had a lampSbade stuck on her head. • . Sonya Westhoff told firemen that she had been clearung her home at 1621 Baycliff Circle in Corona del Mar ~d UtUe Wendy was "helping." SOMEHOW TRB C1DLD bumped the bottom of a wall lamp and the half-round shade fell down onto her bead where the wire spokes held it firmly In place. Mrs. Westhoff said she tried for 20 minutes to get it off, "1th Wendy aetUng more and more unhappy. By tbe time aremen arrived to cut her out of the lampshade the little girl was "screaming bloody murder,'' her mother .sald. · . Once firemen cut the shade off, cverytbmg seemed to be goina just fine. UNTIL WENDY WENT S,.O use the potty a,_ Dilii~tes lat~;She 10t locked in the bathroom and it took me a good five mlJiutes to get herout,".Mrs. Westhoff said. o.tlly 1'1..C Map ..., "-cnint SHADED AREA SHOWS WHERE BLACKOUT HIT Pendleton Fire Also Endangered Housing Project (asterisk} $394 Billion U.S. Budget Unveiled ' WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Ford today proposed a "major turning point for the American people" with a $394.2 billion budget which, he said, concedes the federal government cannot solve every problem in the land. lligher tax cuts for wage earners, J business and investors and mak- ing elderly sick and working poor • pay more of their own way. 1 • Social Security taxes would go up to save the troubled fund ' which pays retirement benefits I to most working-Americans. Laced with cutbacks and sure to be controversial in an election year. the fiscal 1977 plan em- phasizes stronger national de· fense, the sea:ch !or energy, Doctor Strike Effects Felt If passed by Congress. it would' ·s101 BILLION FOR DEFENSE-A7 FORD SEES HIKE INSSTAXES,86 mean a federal spending record. But Ford said its relative austeri· ty would strike a proper balance between the needs of the nation as a whole and Ameridans who are actually poverty stricken. Ar d C t ''We will give more money to OUD ODD y those below ·the poverty line and cut off those above;· said the The effects or the doctors• President while outlining the slowdown were beginning to be budget. felt in a wide area of Orange "This represents what we hope County today as more hospitals wi~l be a very ~ajor tumin~ reported dropoffs in surgery. pomt for the Amen can people, Doctors at Huntington In-be said in signing the 955-page tercommunity a nd Pacifica document. "But it does not bold hospitals in Huntington Beach out any promise that the federal have stopped'performing all but government can or will solve emergency surgeries and both every problem." . . hospitals have reported a subse-Despite Ford's call for reduced quent drop in the number of pa· welfare spending, more than half tients. HIH is running with a the budget would be spent on peo- skeleton crew, but Pacifica has pie. Defense spending would not reduced its staff yet. jump to $101.1 billion -better Doctors at Huntington In-than one-quarter or the budget. tercommunity Hospital were the (See BUDGET, Page A%) first in West Orange County to eliminate elective surgeries. An official said today that about 55 staff members bad been . laid off. She also reported that the number of patients at Huntington Intercommunlty Hospital has · rlsen to 55 to 60, up slightly from Tuesday. Officials at both hospitals said that emergency operations are being carried out. Doctors at Huntington Intercommupity voted to cu·rtalt the1r performances Thursday ni&ht. John Chrlsthnson, ad- ministrator of Fountain Valley Community Hospital. said today . (See DOCl'ORS, Pa&e AZ) • tt H Slwll Cuts Gas Price· HOUSTON <UPI) - Shell on co. today -.. nounced a penny per gallon · decrease in the price ot gasoline e!fective im- mediately. The nationwide reduction applles to all classes of trade, resellers and consumers. · Shell said the reduct.loft' ~fleets current marht condlUons • '; I I \ • Al DAILY PILOT SB Dall, ll"li.t S&Mf ,._ RETIRES TROPHY Decor Champ Reader It's Her Sixth Win For Yule A large j?old trophy was retired this week when Mission VieJO Aeautiful awarded the revolving s weepstakes trophy to Rose Reader for her entry in the Christmas home decorating con- test. Mrs. Reader and her husband, C'harle s. have won the sfeepstakes trophy six times in ttf> contest 's eight years. Each ti~e the Readers have won the revolving trophy for the third time, they have been given the prize to keep a s a permanent re- minder of community apprecia- t1c>n for their efforts E,·ery year I s ay will be the la.-t .. Mrs Reader said. "But by Septe mber or October I 'm al ready trying out ideas for an "'ri~inal,decorating scheme." This year the Readers, who lh·e 31 21322 Chrisanta Drive. created almost life-size figures out of news pape r. paper bags and dishcloths sprayed gold for their prii e·winning Nat1v1ty scene The Readers were among nine couples hono red Sunday with a champagne brunch at the Mis- sion Viejo Inn. The M1ss1on VieJO Ae aut1ful committee had s elect- ed their homes as the most out- standing entries in the Christmas home decorating contest Chairman Letty Skeen and Ron Pott£. who ran th<.' contest. aw3rded color photographs o( their winning di:.play to each couple People really noti ce th<.' de- corations ... Mrs. Reader said. I'\'<.' had people knock on the door at one in the morning and ask us to turn on the lights. One time a whole busload of tourists from Chicago landed on our doorstep ... How do the Readers respond to soch mt rus1ons,, "Oh. we're used to it by now, .. ~trs R E'ader said "We have them in for coffee and Christmas cookies ·· Mwkie Talk Answers Ford WASHINGTON (AP) Sen Edmund S. Muskie's presenta- tion tonight of the Democratic view of the state of the union might be the s park to launch him as an alternative presidential candidate. some supporters say 1 6 p m .. Channels 2, 1and71 ·It ·s a great opportunity for him either to blow 1t or to show what he has, .. s aid one key Oemo{'ratk aide. "H he does a good job and he usually does ~pie will start comparing him to the others who are running and say he makes them look like pygmies " ORANGE COAST ''-t"'Or..,.. C.o.t\t 0 .11fy ~llot ••l't\•11ffl,.Otl\tU"'! t.t~ t1-.,, .... , Prn "pvnttvw-n r, ,,,. Or....,.o (M1t Puolt\nfnQ Como•"" SrfN ,.et• fO·ll~, .• , .. OV'bhlf\t d MOl'tGAJ HU(luQh f ""•Y tOt (O"C_. ,,,,_..,., NewCIO'I M •cn • .-.untu"Oton bf'"'" ,...,.,,.. t•'" V1 ll9y lrw•n•. SAddlf bo\(lt V•llf'loy ,.ni(t L.oQUN!Mecll SoUlll(O .. I ·~·-tf~l •Go OOft '' pul)U~ S.turdd't" M\d Svnd.4•' th .. prtnc:t~I pVC»tkt"nq Pl•f"t I\ ._ U"' \Yf\t b"Y \lrMl.C.O•i. Mcw,C.•hlO<n••'7" Robert N. Weed rr•\HlvM al'(! Pul>li- JaCk R. Curley V•rt P1•~tdenC •net GtntH' .. ..-.~, Thomas Ke.vii EdllM Thomas A-Murphlne M an•Q•"9 CdlW S..dd .. Ncll V~lteyOffa H>Cll l • P•1 Ao"4 •I \•n 04f'911 r .-.. Offices ( 0\ I• Mna JIU W• \I Ila' )4 '~ ..................... , .. llt11S.et .. ...,.._., l .. ..,... .... 11 11 .. G••-"""'"' .......... .,.,. v., .. , ..... ow ... St1-4J10 ',.,.. ia11 C•'"'-4ts.tl>O ~· ,.,. °'-'"'' l'uell•\11•1\t ,_ ..,,, ........ , ........ 111 .... ,., ... ,. .......... . f"'•tttr et ""''tt'•"'•"h flW"r•u11 m•Y b• ''''""'.c •d "'''"•wt •.-<l.tt ... ,.,.,, •• " et (Wyfo9M-· 5">< .... c l•U t ••l•t" 1t•N1 "' tl'tlf IN•" <>•.....,,• _,,.,,., "' ._.,,.., ~H -..... 11¥"'•" .. U"""'lllly Mll1t .. ,_1i,..t._ ~,,,,_,,.,, Wedneed.y. January 21, 111'& . ~ t Seizur.e 'Biggest' l?,.._P~AJ OUTAGE ••• ~ outaa~. The district cncom· -puses nearly all tJ\e areas that w~re atfected by the blockout. ''At the last minute. the Jighb came back on,·· Thomsley said. OC SW1pecta Held/or "16.76 Tona of Swff v~ntura County Sherttt"s lft. \'eSt11ators discl.osed today that marijuana seized from the trawler "Red Baron'' wei&hed 16. 76 to , . not eight tons as original believed. The alleged contraband, weighe on a commercial scale, has a street value of approx- imate y $9.7 million and was desc ed as the largest amount of marijuana ever seited on the West Coast. Three Orange County men ar- rested in connection with the -, weekend seizure on the high seas between Oxnard and Ventura re- main in Ventura County Jail in lieu of $10,000 bail each. Facing charges of possession of mlUijuana for sale are Philip Samuel Mo:skios, 27, of La~a Hills. and Dennis Latter, 33, or Buena Park . Gary Eugene Smedley, 28, of El Toro. w MS charged with smuggling. The three m en, agents said, were part of a 13-man dope smuggling operation which brought marijuana from Mexico into the . United States for dis· tribution. Authorities said th~ marijuana was evidently shipped from Mex- ico on the 68-Coot trawler that anchored JOO miles or more out to sea while three smaller boats. also seized during Saturday's raid, ferried its cargo ashore. The ·'Red Baron," based in f'rma Page Al DOCTORS' SLOWDOWN. • • doctors there are continuing their normal surgery sch<.'dules. "The patients need s urgery and our doctors arc providing it." he said. He said there has been no slowdown and that 32 operations. both elective and emergency in nature. were performed Tues day_ He s aid that the patient census is high with up to 75 percent of the 214 beds occupied_ In Los Alamitos, I.cs Alamitos General Hospital which serves residents of Seal Beach, ad- ministrator Richard Skillman re- ported that all but emergency surgery had been eliminated_ In addition, he said, patients visiting the emergency room were being referred to Orange County Medical Center for follow up care. Skillman s aid no employes have been laid off but with the pa- tient load at 15 percent below normal levels, hospital employes have been put on a four-day work week. Similar measures were being taken at Hoag Memorial Hos pital in Newport Beach, where a 10 percent reduction in the patient census was recorded as doctors there began to stop elective :.ur gery. Admini s trator Mich al>! Step~ens s aid "urgent and emerj?ency surgeries are still be- inJ performed, but our surgl'ry schedule is down 30 percent." He saiq eight employes had been laid off and 95 were put on a four-day week. He said th<-'y an- ticipate a continued reduction of surgery and patients which will lead to a further reduction of employes· working days . He etsimated that the slowdown is costing the hospital about $10,000 per day. In Costa Mesa, no employe lay offs or work week reductions have taken place at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, according to administrator Tom Richardc;. Richards s aid that while elec- tive surgery was being c.-at back. Front Page A J BUDGET •.. Three of Ford's top economic aides -Treasury Secretary William Simon, Budget Director James Lynn and chief economic adviser Alan Greenspan praised the bud.get ··we have come to a point of de- cision in this country," said Lynn, who warned that continu- ing to run up bigger deficits each year "is not where we want to go.·· Sen. Frank E . Moss <D-Utah). expressed what is likely to be a common Democratic concern - whether holding the budget lower than projections will place1l drag on the economy which only now is emerging from a recession. The President proposed greater cuts in individual income taxes beginning in July, but also asked for a maximum increase or $49.50 nen year in the Social Security payroll tax -the one that cuts deepest into low and moderate income workers. His proposed revenue sharing and other reforms would require recipients of some federal aid, such as Medicare, to contribute more toward their benefits. In his only new initiative, Ford proposed "a so-called welfare cur" to {'OOrdinate federal welfare, housing and food pay ments by setting uniform · na- tionwide standards for benefits. He offered no details. but said he would ask Congr~ss for authorization. At his briefing, the President stepped away from the Podium and pointed to Oow charts that depicted responslbllltlcs at the ~i>artmeot of He3.lth. Educ•· Uon and Well are. "U you look at those mess charts, you'd have to believe that any one with common sense would want to ch1111e it," he said The President aald derenstl and ener1y recetved the hlahest priorlties in b.lJ propoeal tor fla cal 1'77 beln1 sent to Congrea.s today. the hospital's occupancy rate was holding and he does not an- ticipate reducing staff hours this week. ln the south county, however, business was normal at San Clemente General Hospital, Mis- sion Community and South Coast Community hospitals. In fact, a spokesman for South Coast said the patient load "is SAN DIEGO DOCTORS JO IN SLOWDOWN, Page A5 better than it's been in a couple of years." He said the surgery schedule was showing 10 to 15 more surgeries per day than normal. In another development, the chiefs of staffs of hospitals in Orange County, were to mf'et at noon today at the offices of the Orange County Medical Associa- tion in Orange. Everett Bannister, association dire{'tor. said the purpose would be to assess the situation in the county, whether there would be a :slowdown, and in what areas. From Page Al NIXON ••• firm nor deny the reports. If fraud is proved against Nix- on, the Post said, he would be forced to pay $222,121, which would include $148,080 for a 1969 deficiency found by the IRS in I 97 i plu~ a 50 percent penalty for fraud of $74 .040. Nixon could challenge a fraud assessment ir. court. Nixon had no legal obligation to pay the 1969 tax deficiency because the three-year statute of limitations had expired . .But fraud has no statute of limita- tions and makes the basic tax de- ficiency also collectible at any time. In 1971. when the IRS ruled Nixon's vice presidential paper~ were not a legal claim against his taxes. Nixon paid the amount due for the 1970-72 returns and said he also would pay the 1969 deficien- cy although be was not required to do so. The Post said its sources re- ported he has not done so. President Ford's pardon of Nixon covers only criminal mat- ters and would not apply to civil tax fraud. Meanwhile, Sen. Barry Goldwater says he doesn't think Nixon "ever told the truth about his connections with Waternte." Interviewed Tuesday on NBC's "Tomorrow" show, Goldwater was asked if he thought Nixon was honest. :·No, I don't think so, and I think that was his trouble .. he said. ' Gas Utility's Rate Increase Bid Assailed SAN DIEGO (A P > -The city's utility r ate consultant says San Diego Gas & Electric doesn't need any more money from its customers than it's already get- tiniz. Consultant Manley Edwards recommended Tuesday that the state Public Utilities Com· mission turn down an SDG&E re- quest for a $67 mllllon rate in· crease for gas and electricity. Both the city and consumer groups are opposing SDG&E's proposed rate hike in heartng~ before the PUC. FAwards said the company hu received eight rate boost.a in the la1t aeven months totaJUnt near- ly $100 million and is ~Utte'IUy making a return of better than nlne percent. The city also charges thJ\t SDG&E ,-ros~ly underesUmated Its earnJ.na tor the last year. The company Fiad told the PUC Its ex- peded uming1 were 39 cenu a Iha.re, but reported Tunday that it actually earned 91 cenu a share. .. San Dle10. was captured at sea alter an eiabt·mile chase. Agents said its hold was {'rammed full with plastic·wrapped parcels of weed. Last month, a ton of the con traband washed ashore, tipping authorities to the operation. Authorities said the three small speedboats were usually lifted out or the water when they arrived at Channel Islands Har6or in Oxnard and taken by truck to a warehouse In Ventura where some of the marijuana was seized. It was speculated that the operation moved north from San Diego because or intensified en- forcement efforts there. The skipper or the "Red Baron" was identified as Frank Maybusher, 35, of Lopez, Wash. Also aboafd the trawler were Kenneth Bennett. 27, of Hunt- ington, N. Y . and Smedley. Los Angeles County Sheriff Peter J _ Pitchess said the seizure supports his earlier prediction that California's liberalized marijuana law would lead to in- creased smuggling In the Sou~hern California area. "I find little solace in saying, ·1 told you so,' "said Pitchess, not- ing that the alleged smuggling operation reminded him of a Grade B movie plot whose script had been "written in Sacramento.'· Ventura County Sheriff's in- vestigators speculated there might be further arrests on con- spiracy charges because money from the operation had been traced to Laguna Beach, Seal Beach , San Ysidro and Washington state. PROTECTING HOME One Wary Relident The fire cast a pall of oran1e gray amoke over San Clement~ and produced a colorful sunrise for early morning commuten on the San Diego Freeway. The fire started abQut 8 p.m. Tuesday night in uninhabited acreage east of the San Onofre Housing Project along Basilone Road. Dry, gusty Santa Ana wind$ drove the flames west toward the housing project. "I could see the fire about 10 p. m., but I went to bed, anyway." said Jim Mane. a resident of the base housing area. "I kept one e9'e on the fire. and one evf' a.Sleep.·· Mant> said he was awakened about 4 a.m _ when the names moved into vacant land across the street from his home and directly under the high tension lines. Reside'nts of houses bordering the fire area were evacuated about 4:30 a.m ., but allowed to return when ffremen headed the tlamesoff. ''I've got 18 years of marriage tied up in this place." said Mane as he wetted his roof with a garden hose_ The base spokesman said the cause of the fire is under in vestigation. But San Clemente Fire Chief Ron ColemaQ said he believed it was started by a hot training flare that came in contact with brush. Coleman said firemen ob· served three flares in the sky over the base Tuesday night. ~ Viejo Highway Work Okayed State Aid Cemers Hun Second Fire At Pendleton A second brush fire was report- ed burning this morning near the portion of the Camp Pendleton Marine Base that formerly hous~_gVietnameserefugees. A $336,000 contract to extend Los Alisos Boulevard in Mission Viejo from Jeronimo Road to Muirlands Boulevard was awarded by Orange County ~upervisors Tuesday. . . SACRAMENTO (AP> -State rehabilitation centers were or- dered today not to accept new clients for 30 days because of serious budget problems. A base spokesman was unable to provide any additional in- formation. He said the fire was spotted near the Christianitos Gate in Ta leg a Canyon_ The pact was let to the Strecker Construction Company, which presented the lowest or 13 bids for the project. The high bid for the work was $565,000. Ed Roberts, director of the Department of Rehabilitation is- sued the order in telegrams to district administrators. Roberts blamed President Ford's veto of Health, Education and Welfare agency funds for the temporary cutback. Area near the gate was the location of the massive tent city that housed the war refugees last year . County road planners con- sidered the project unusual because a ro11ssive old sycamore tree along the route must be saved through special paving and abutment procedures Strecker officials estimated it will cost $11.400 to save the tree Start now! Get your kids st«Jrted in the Kellogg's• Stick Up for Brukl•st (ontesl. ADVANCE REGISTRATION ICE SKATING LESSONS . • Enhance your child's poise and posture. A planned program of lenons with the exclusive Ice Capadea' euy learning method gives you or your chnd healthy elltrcjst in pteuant 1upervi1ed 1urroundmg1. REGISTER NOW ~ ........ MISAVUDI C8fT1I ~ ..... c.... ...... Ttl.17141t7MllO STONEWARE PLANTERS glazed with water proof. lead free glaze, one of a kind pots. HAHDMADI OH OUI POmH WHlll JANUARY SALE SAVE UP TO 600/o Al OUR FACTORY $1 OFF UY UD PURCllASE Wiii JllS .,.. II OFFER G<X>D THRU JAN. 31 • Hign quality hi-fired pots. handmade. and glazed. one of a kind stoneware pots. Dealers welcome HEAVY DUTY MACRAME 4 n . LONG $9.00 VALUE ON SALE FOR $3.50 OTHER SIZES F•OM 99' JUTE s1 ~ ... , I BEADS ON SALE WI ALSO CAllY DO-rT-YOUtsn• MACUMI SU,,llll lMGI t '/•" WOODIN IUDS 110. 1 Sc NOW 9< lAIGI CllAMIC IUDS llG. 60' NOW 35< r· ' I" Pot Rea. SUD ou.r $350 Price &" Pot ·Rq. SJ .90 our $250 Price 4'' Pot Re1. S5.00 OUR PRIC£ $200 SlllS Alf APNOXlMAft Stoneware .World · "'W, ~ {).,, 0.... !P.ttt•y °" L~·· 1904 I. Edinger Avt. Santa AftCI Phone 551-1714 HOUU: MOH. JO fll. 10.S SAT. 104 CLOHD IUNDAT I UHH SllfS Alt AYAIWU ' •Al D A ILY PILOT EDITORIAL P A GE . -... . A ¥o~e · for Density . The Mission Viejo MunJelpal Advisory Council appears to be somewhat out of step with its neighbors . in calling for adoption of Alternative 3 the high-d~ity alternative of the Southeast Ora~ge County Circulation Study <SEOCCS> t~ Management Agency. According to Irvine of- f1cials, .the ~uesti<;>~ now is how much Irvine permit money as untierwnting county overhead for which the WE CANNOT TOLERATE SOVIET INTERFERENCE WITH ANGOLA! - ANOIASSUREYOUFARMERS THAT I WILL NCT ALLOW ANGOLA TO INTERFERE WITH OUR GRAIN SALES! . ~hat propos,at calls for a maXimum density or 1.23 null1on people m southeast Orange County plus the construction of two "tr~wJ:tatlon corridors" (nee freeways), one through the foothills and the other paralle~lng Pacific Coast Highway. _While ~he communities of Laguna Beach and San .Juan ~ap1strano, along with the Satldleback Area Coordinating Council CSACC)~ are advocating fewer ~ads and l.ower density, the MAC voted 3-2 for max-1mum density. · . . T~at action appears incongruous with the MAC's ¥stoncal. st~nce of stror,ig controls on the quality of J.!fe for Mission Viejo residents. More freeways, traf. f ic and people do not help to support that goal. Whil~ Alternative 3 doesn't exactly encourage gf"<?wth, 1t doesn't control it either. Those MAC of-fic1~ who voted in favor of it may live to regret their dec1S1on. , Building Revenue . Some rather startling questions of the economy of scale of qrange County's building department popped up in Irvme last June when the city learned it would not receive revenues from building permits issued by the county this year. . Revenues from the county building department, which .handles permits for the city, declined dramatically, in the past two years. It was partly a re· suit of the construction slump. But during the same period, county government w~s restru~tu.red into a series of "super agencies," with the bwldmg department under the Environmen- city receives no benefit. · That study is still under way as the city hopes to re-coup some past lost revenue. Meanwhile, Irvine has decided. to set up its own building department. After costs are paid, the city expects between $166 ooo and $593,000 in building permit revenues next year'. ~!though the new department means expanding the city bureau~racy by 20 employes, the promise of local accountability and increased revenues and con· trot makes the expansion worthwhile. Saddleback in Ste p Sa~dleback College, at long last, is getting mto step with other Orange County educational institu- tions by abandoning the quarter system in favor of the setnester system. The change begins this fall. The "early semester" system adopted by the col- lege s hould provide smoother trans! er of students with most high schools, other community colleges and the state college system. It also carries several side benefits. Among these is a better crack at a summer job becau.se .the ~emester will end late in May. Another is the ehmmation of one registration period which col- lege officials estimate will save them $10,000. The extra weeks of the semester system also will allow the college to offer several half-semester courses of eight weeks' duration, providing additional flexibility in the instructional program. Saddleback 's shift to semesters leaves UC Irvine and Laguna Beach High School as the only public secondary or post-secondary schools in the county on the quarter system. .. ytAr< ! HEAi?.' ,, , ci~v.r ct API . . \I t. ~ ~ SB Placebos Can Be Dear Gloomy Gus Homesteaders Are the Intruders · Powerful ( VON HOFFMAN ) WASHINGTON -If Listerine can't prevent colds can it cure warts? The Federa l Trade Com- mission. which knows 101 ways to waste its insufficient staff's time on tt\e trivial. is in full chase after Warner.Lambert, the com- pany that makes Listerine. The FTC wants millions or dollars worth of future Listerine ads to eontain a s tatement saying: "Contrary to prior advertising, Listerine will not help prevent colds or sore throats or lessen their severity.·· It's the eommission's conten· tion that this best known of mouth was hes can do none of those things, but that de- cade upon de- cade of ad- verti~ing has convinced million upon million of our fellow citizens that Listerine does in fact prevent colds or lessen them. Tsk, tsk, the com- mission may in its zeal be about to give American an extra case of the sniffles. The findings against Listerine are doubtless scientifically im- peccable, but if people believe that bad·tasting stuff is good for their colds, it could be. This is the placebo effect. Doctors long ago discovered that you give sick people sugar capsules, but if you tell them it ·s strong medicine, and they believe it, there is a very good chance they'll get well. THE PLACEBO, tor instance, is the drug of choice in curing warts, according to at least one doctor. Better than any drug with ·active ingredients, better than surgery. He reports complete re- covery from warts by the use of lead peneils, five dollar bills and I can't think of what else. The operative therapeutic agency here is f aitb, ·and so effective is the placebo when people believe ·.in it that it has to be considered the single most powerful drug known to modern me4icine. Faith in a placebo may be only as strong as the faith of the pa· tient in the person wbo gives it to him. It can be engendered by the kindly, old family physician. Since he·s about as common a sight as the cop on the beat OT tbe mllkman wlth the horse.drawn dairy waeon, the function of the Dr. Welby /Robert Youo1 ~baracten on TV may be to rein- force this fading legend and keep It vivid eqougb for us to project .onto the medical mechanical men who.e valuable time we ~e~at thecllnlc. TBB P AITH inspired bf the docto r '• bod• de manner Ss ab~. Some doc· • tori don't have RObert Youn,g's bedside m uner1· and even tr they all did~ a pbJS clan aeeina ~­ ward ot 120 paUentl a d.,-doeln t have the ttme to cultivate his • Custoq,en' confid~ In bJa UN· quet.buapeuUc 1kills. Question : Where does Irv i ne Tomorrow go between Irvine city elec· lions? CURIOUS Irs more convenient and effi- cient to encourage the belief that the doctor is the custodian or magical powers which operate for your good regardless of his personality. In much the same way the validity of the Catholic Mass isn 't imperiled by that state or grace or lack of it of the celebrant. 'Tm not even s ure how many patients I have in the hospital right now. I don't have as much time to devote to patients as Marcus Welby," says Dr. Peter Sullivan of Houston's Hermann Hospital. "Good doctors don't have time to take a personal in- terest in their patients these days." As quoted from Roger Rappoport 's ''The Superdoc- tors," Playboy Press, 1975.) DISTANCE can create awe. The unknowable doctor whom you never see but who knows you. Doctors are accused of playing god sometimes, but in th.is rela- tionship they are most certainly acting as god surrogates. Dr. Sullivan's description of his rela- tions with his patients isn't all that different from Moses' with the Lord in the burning bush. God must be omniscient. Dr. Harold Scheie of the University of Pennsylvania's Scheie Eye Institute has a fisheye telescopic tens in his office that allows him to inspect the work of his recep- tionists. Bappoport writes that Dr. Scbeie also has a ~'desktop control panel -equipped with 53 buttons -designed to let him tune his office TV sets to an over· all view of his operation room (and) a close·up of each of the five operating tables ... When he sees or hears something he doesn't like, Scheie can pick up the phone and bawl out the s ur- geon through an operating room speaker." Dr. Kurt Wagner of Beverly Hills wears a gold whistle around his neck wbtch be blows when he wants bis nurses to come to at- tenUon. God is all-powerful, and one of the signs of power In our society is money. "Last yeo.r 1 made a mJlllon dollars," Dr. Wqnerways. · JP MOST people's faith in medicine i~ stronger than their faith in tho DlvlnJty, you have some inkling why. The optimal conditions have been created for the placebo to work. No Mrican •itch doctor can have more cooperative and credulou.s pa· tlmts . Tt>e drawback, of couna, is a body of lay people with such strong medic al dependency they abdicate rnlJ')nslblllty for their own bodies and their own health. There are no athelsts, neither in tbe foxholes nor the watUng rooiu. Lilterine , nurse! Soak 10Uf warU In It four Umes a day. The Coyotes Were There First I To the Editor: Something should be done about the coyotes around San Clemente. For starters, they ought to be protected. I certainly can sympathize with those unfortunate people in the Shorecliffs area who have lost pets to coyotes. The loss of a loved pet is a personal tragedy and a heartbreaking experience. whether the pet dies in the jaws of a coyote or under the wheels of a car. But if we are to assume our proper r esponsibility in such matters, we have to admit the coyote is no more to blame for our pet's death than is the driver of a car in most cases. rr we took reasonable precautions and kept our pets from roaming about freely, especially after dark, they could not be dragged away by coyotes or run over by cars. AS FOR coyotes being "blood· thirsty," a coyote eating a cat can hardly be considered more bloodthirsty than the same cat eating a mouse. Such things are always relative. I think the residents of Sborecliffs ought to keep in mind, too, that it is they who are the in· truders, not the coyotes. That area bas been coyote country for thousands of years. As far as the coyotes are concerned, suburban homesteaders 1 are upstarts and nuisances. The Navajo people called the coyote "God's Dog.·• and held him in high esteem because of his intelligence. Since tbe coming of the white man. the coyote has been the sub- ject of the longest and most in· tensive eradication campaign man bas ever launched against any of his fell ow animals. Despite mountains of accumulat· ed evidence that coyotes aie im· portant and beneficial in the ecology of most areas they in· habit, the federal government is spending $8 million of our money in an ongoing eradication pro- gram I can only describe as "bloodthirsty." ( MA ILBOX J Letters from Tfaders are welcome. The nght to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel ii reserved. Letters of 300 words or less will be gwen preference. All Letters mu.st in- clude signature and mailmg address but names may be wilhhel.d on re· quest 1f sufl1c1ent rea.ron is apparent. Poetry will not be publi.shed. ~ow the mystery is. how did his pet get out? A dog following a dog's instincts? Judge not your neighbor! If you should be so unfortunate as to hit a dog, take what action you can to find the owner or to see that it receives care. LOUIS and RUTH MELLO It' rongffl Aecaued To the Editor: In rebuttal to the various let· ters and to the headline in your Jan. IS newspaper. I feel that I must answer the accusations concerning my mis· treated, unwanted dog who was struck by a car in the cold, cold night. AS IT was for my three pre· vious dogs and another l current- ly have, my terrier was never al- lowed to run free in violation of city leash laws. He was allowed, however, (as is my other dog) to sleep on the ehair, bed. near the heater, or in any other part of the house he desires. In other words, he was well taken care of and well loved. How did he get out in the cold, cold night? I do not have any answers for when I returned home shortly after midnight the gate was tightly secured. . It seems that the general con- sensus indirectly blames me for the dog's death (as well as so- meone's friend). I apologize, but feel I am wrongly accused. Only I know the truth or the care and protection I gave my dog; therefore these accusations are irrelevant to me. My conscience does not bother me. RALPH ROLLINS '""°'"ed Cfifzen . To the Editor: I wish to correct some im- pression left by your Jan. 2 art1· cle titled, "Paramedics Bring Back Man." Thank God our par- ty was sitting at the table next to the Frank W. King family on New Year·s Eve. When Miss King stated that her father bad turned blue and my husband im- mediately went to bis aid. He at· tempted to give mouth to mouth but could tell there w as a blockage in the throat. Two to three minutes passed when the Costa Mesa Fire Department was called. My husband con· tinued to give mouth to mouth after dislodging the food in Mr. K i n gs throat until the paramedics arrived on the scene two or three minutes later with their equipment. My husband continued to work with the paramedics until Mr. King was taken to the hospital. The management of Reuben's, Catherine King and Sgt. Tom Lazar of the Costa Mesa Police Department expressed their gratitude. Here was one citizen who got involved and was well trained enough to save the lire of a fellow man. MRS. THELL E. GLASCOCK Para•ed~• To the Editor: I want to s hout from the housetop praises for the Newport Beach Fire Department and th<:' paramedics; and I don't know any better way to do it than through your newspaper! We had an emergency recently and the Fire Department and the paramedics were here within a few minutes after our call. They took over and saw that my husband had emergency treat- ment and then took him to the hospital, where bis doctor was waiting. Only someone who has gone through this can know what a I CAN think of several more useful things the government might use $8 million for. The pro- gram doesn't work anyway, because the coyote is a heck of a lot smarter than the federal gov- ernment. Story of Congress As for the present coyote pro- blem in the Shorecliffs area, if the people th~re can be patient and keep tbei r pets corralled altef dark, the problem will solve itself. Coyotes don•t abandon their old hunting grounds easily; but if pickings get really slim, the pack wilt move on to new ter- ritory where food is more readily available. MEREDJTHGO~MAN l•dfle'Not Totbe Editor: An answer to the many good comments concernin& many animal owners (Mailbox, Jan. J8). Ralph Rollins ls a new netl)lbor, but fast became a &ood N!lghbor. His small pct bad a large fenced·in badyard. But Ralph happened to see a ltrangc 3mall dos 1queeu throu&h the lton gate and his pet follow. Ralph lmmedlafely went and boutht mu and put non the pte. Books about Senators and Congressmen, a nd about various aspects of their two shops are rife, but The American Heritage History of the Congress of the un- ited States by Alvin M . Josephy, Jr. Is the first to put the slarl·to· finish story of these raucous, in· transieent. and vital Congressional bodies into one historical narrative, lit wllh many pictures (McGraw-Hill, $27.SO). • ln fast-moving prose. Josepby lifts the Capitol's lid and takes the reader down tbe main cor- ridor of America's history, along the thundering hall of politics. As h(> points out, politics is at the core of o ~nate and a House that have always been tumultuous. engaging, clownish, and -e,aain and again -patriotically, de- mocratically insplrina. "CONGRESS is the people," growled Thaddeus Stevens, and her' are 94 sessions or wonderous people with the bark on, Ml of brllllancc and rascBlity, oobility ·--·----'f ( THE BOOKMAN ) and pett:iloggery, magnanimity and meanness. Th' "people" o! Congress are a major theme. A second theme is the evolution of Congre5s as a basic institution of government; and a third is the constantly .shifting relationship ot the Congress and the Presidency. - This first mustrated history ever published on the subject presents more than 300 historical pictures -.many ln color -of the most motley. posturing. dynamic, important m~n and women the U.S. has ever pro- duced. Hlstoric cartoons, little· known paintings, action sketches, and a wealth of portraits olf er n unprecedented visual hhrtoey of the lmtJtUUon that tries to be tnvt&tble when il is in session -no photos or sketches arc allowed. . VICTOJlDE KBYSEBLING \ I blessing it is to be able to call a number and have help there. I I notice there is some question regarding the financing for the paramedies -they are worth I everything it costs and I hope our supervisors realize that. MRS. J . LEONARD SMITH Dbflf~d T.o the Editor: I was among the 120 people al- tendi.og the first Irvine city coun- cil candidates' forum Jan. 13, at Rancho Junior High. All 16 can- didates were present and I was pleased to hear many of them voice s upport of citizen participation in the decision· making process of city govern· ment. However, durinjt'itie question and answer period, all 16 can- didates were asked whether or not they, if elected, would re- verse the city council's decision !or a two·lane Michelson Road extension. I was surprised and disillusioned that 11 out of the 16 candidates said they would vote to reverse the eouncil 's decision and be in favor of a rour·lane , bridge and extension instead. Cl AS JAM sure everyone wilt re.. member, a large group of con.' cerned citizens spent seven months testifying before tbe Transportation Commission, Planning Commission, and the City Council. pinpointing the many problems or mixing re- sidenti al and industrial traffic. We emphasized that the decision on the Michelson extension would be a precedent setting one. Walnut, JeCCrey. Moulton Parkway (Irvine Center Drive) and others already face such pro- blems. We urged the council not to pass four·lane bridge and road extension, and we were pleased 1 Wlth their decision. How can these 11 Cat:Jdidates support citizen participation and then turn around and say "yes" to a four·lane extens ion -t thereby reversing not only the council's decision but seven months of citizen participation? The five candidates. <Gaido, Martin, Morris, Sills, and Vardoulis > who are for retaining the two-lane bridge and road ex· tens ion demonstrate to this citizen that their positions are consistent with citizen participa~ lion. ISADORE SCHNEID ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robt'rt N. Wted, Publishn" Thomo1 K•evil, Editor Borbana l(,...bfch. Edttorial Pa~ Editor The edltonal page of lhc DaiJy Pilot seeks to inform end sU mulate readers by presenUn• on lhis pa1e diverse commentary oo topics ol interest. by syndkat· ed columnists :ind cartoonists. b1 providing a forum lor readtw11' views and by presenUna lb.la tlewspaper's · opln1ons and ldMS' Pf\ current topics. The ec:lltoriel opinion~ of the Dally Pit~ appetr only in the editorial column at the top of the PHt. Opinions • presst'd by the coluauusts arid urtoonlsts and lettel' wrlteri art their own and no ende>rMment « lhc!lr •lews by the Dilly PUGt ,Jl>ould be interred. • Wedn•dy . J an. tl;Jl'll ldfttlt9 Late Police Free FBI Fugitive SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Police had one of the FBl's 10 most wanted fugitives, an alleged radical bomber. in jail ror three days last month, but re· leuedhlm before finding out bis true identity. Dwi&ht Armstrong, 24, a susped in the deadly bombinc of a UnJversity of Wisconsin building in 1910. was arrested. Dec. 12, after he was grabbed by a rnarltet owner who accused him of trying to steal cheeH. He gave his name as ( State J Douglas James Hardy. ''He bad quite a bit o! ---------identification in that name," said an FBI spokesman. "He was placed in jail, convicted on the charge and sentenced to 30 days. He was gone by the time bis true identification was established through a fingerprint check." • lt'ef•er'• l'li_, Begin• ' WS ANGELES (AP) -The lewd conduct trial of J>:ei?uty Mayor Maurice Weiner has begun in Municipal Court, with the prosecution saying it in- tends to off er an overall view of vice enforcement in Los Angeles. \:Veiner's attorney, Douglas Dalton, waived his operuog statement Tuesday until the prosecution wraps up its case. . ~retie l'az Propo•H SACRAMENTO (A P) -A proposal to raise the 1 ta.-c on cigarettes by one cent a pack is before the CalifornM Legis lature. It was introduced Tuesday by Sen. Arlen Gregorio, CD·San Mateo). who last year sponsored legislation t o increase the tax on alcoholic beverages. The alcohol bill was vetoed by Gov. Ed- mund Brown Jr. Gregorio said the increase on cigarettes would bring in $J0 million a year . B_. Bl•t• Rnt Roa. REDWOOD CITY <A P) -A bomb bas blown up the men's rest room alongside the fairway of the 13th hole of the Stanford University golf course, San Mateo County deputies reported. They said a pipe bomb apparently about six in- ches l~g was ~etonated about 10:30 a.m. Monday, wrecking a toilet bowl, other plumbing and fix- tures. Deatlt Plet /tfa" Gtdltg LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Gary Desure. 32, a former Montana mental patient, and Michael Mayo, 24, of Warren, Pa., will be sentenced Feb. 9 for threatening t<> kiU President Ford. Desure pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court Tuesday. Mayo pleaded guilty Dec. 16. The Secret Service accused them or plotting to kill the president in Saoramento on Sept. s -the same day Manson follower "Squeaky" Fromme leveled a loaded pistol at Ford in an unrelated as-sassination attempt. ·--~· ... ---~ It's Boy;· To Last Detail I DAILY PILOT .45 I San Diego J'olns SACllAMJ,:NTO (AP) -The physicians' posed "Medical Peace Corps .. had been transferred !ftalpractl'Ce slowdown appears to be progress Ina ln to a different level ol neaotiatlons. Soutb•m CaUfornla but G<>v. Edmund Brown Jr. re· Brown Hid the doctors abould spend 20 days a HAWTHORNE (AP) pons no pro1ress in talks with doctors and . year treat1n1 the poor without pay in return for -The toymaker that lectJlaton. state taxpayer belp with malpractice tnauranco gave you instant puberty The medical staffs of two San Diego area costl. in a teen·age girl doll holpltals have voted to join the slowdown by Loi * * * * * * now has an ••anatomical-Anaela doctors to protest the high cost ol malprac• Mal • • ly correct baby boy Uceln1urance p ti SUit doll." Some 60 doctors on the medical staffs of Bay rac ce _ Mattel. Inc. said the General and Community hospitals in Chula Vista newcomer is called decided Tuesday night to join the doctors strike, as R $675 000 "Baby Brother" and it did SO ophthalmologists and ear, nose .~~d throat . eh .. ,......11:::J '"'' T•._... bas all the equipment specialists at Sao Diego's University Hos\)1tal. Ll.l.a.0 .1..1.e ' To R•n A9aln necessary to show its ANOTHER zoo San Diego doctors at four State Se'l. Randolph gender. hospitals voted Monday night to stage a two-day By WlreServtees Victor Morhaim. White Collier , 73, first RAYWAGNER.presi-workslowdown,bandlingemergencycasesonly.. LOS ANGELES -A Memorial Hospital was dent or the company, .,. t· , h T d B ~ woman who ls living with abs o Ive d of an Y elected to the Senate said in a statement Tues· ~~er mee ing ,or two ours ues ay, rown a broken need.le in her responsibility. the year Gov . Ed-d<>v : "In this age of re· told reporters he was optimistic that a solution to ft\ine bas been awarded Mrs. Smith won the d G -v the problem could be found. ... ... mun . Brown Jr. al ism we feel it's ap. The physicians blame the slowdown on sudden· $675,000 in a malpractice malpractice judtment was born, said Tues· propriate to offer ly increased costs or medical malpractice in· suit -the largest local against Dr. Morbalm day he will seek re-youngsters a baby boy surance. The spokesman for one doctors' group malpractice award ~ince because the wayward election to another doll that is a boy not only blamed state government Tuesday for any "serious a doctors• slowdown needle interf~res with four -year term . in costume but right medicalconsequences"itmayhave. began in Southern her-sex life. ruining her ---------down to the last detail." B.ROWN SAID the talks centered on whether California "f' Jan. 1. marriage. A company spokesman · She sued tbe doctor, Quake Rocks said packaging will have payments into a state malpractice fund should be Tb e aw a rd by a charging that during a to be extremely clear mancfatory. and who should pay claims if the state Superior Court jury biopsy on Nov. 7, 1971, he be t il tt fund ran out of money. ~ came during the doctors' inserted 8 needle "some Humb ldt Ar cause re a ers wan ° Brown's chi· er aide in the matter, Deputy slowdown protesting ris· 0 ea make sure parents distance away" from the 't . d h Health and Welfare Secretary Robert Gnaizda, ing medical malpractice correct location and it PETROLIA (UPI) -aren surprise w en called the mandatory payments issue a new snag: insurance premiums. broke. A moderate earthquake they get the do.ll home. The doctors want them to be voluntary. One of the doctors' prime registering 4.5 on the BUT ADS wall be~ pro-objectives in the A piece of the needle is . Rl.chter Scale rumbled ble m because, TV GNAJZDA TOLD reporters that doctors in the still lodged against her I · k r· Ids ted t t t t t t slowdown is a revision o( in d be through Humboldt Coun· codes won't .even let us ow·ns 1e wan o say ou o any s a e the tort _or adversary sp e an cannot re- ly T•,iesday. show a doll,s ba.re,,bot-malpract\ce insurance plan. But the Brown ad· moved, her lawyer said. " · · t t· • al · l d d t -system under which D · 1 . There W ..... e no reports tom, much les.s this, the m.uus ra ion s propos me u es man a ory pay· 1 u ring sex u a 1 n -"' ts · t f d , hi h al ct· 1 · ma practice cases are t th of injuries or damages. spokesman said. men mo a un 1rom w c m pr~ ice c aims ttried. ercourse, e movement The seis mogra ~hic sta-T~e same toymaker would be paid. The jury decided Tues-of the needle near ber tion at the Umversity of earlier releas~ a ~emal~ Specialists in high-risk fields such as day that the $657•000 spine causes her great California in Berkeley doll name~ Skipper neurosurgery have had the sharpest increase in in· should be paid to Mrs. pain, her lawyer argued, said the epicenter or the wh?se bu~tlme grew ~d surance costs -nearly five-fold to $30,000 a year in Velma Bailey Smith, 40, and she and her husband early mornl·ng tr"mor w. rust whittled by twtSt· some cases, they report. b b ~ a;arated because " Al d th doct · ·t· t B · • · Y. er .,bysician, Dr. was 40 miles west of ~1_n..._h_~_r_a_r_m_.~~~~~---r-~a_y_,_e __ o_rs_o_p_pos_1_1o_n_o_r_o_wn_s_p_r_o· ____________ -=-..._b_le_m_. ___ ~ Petrolia under the I Pacific Ocean shelf. Stick up! See the Kellogg's· Stick Up for Breakfast coupon ad in this paper. \\t!>IQ.lff PlAlA 'BALBOAISlAI() NewportBeoch 216Morn't'A~. 544121 675 1904 _____ __, ........_ ___ ·---·-· --_---... --·· -· .. Save30% wi nitedS ''Freedom Fare:' ltSthebest reason to vacation now instead of later. You can take a vacation now and save JO%-or go this summer and save les.5. That's why we say ··Now·s the time:· Adults save 30% off round·trip Coach fare. and children under 12 you take along save 50%. There arc no mileage restrictions. no holiday or weekend restrictions. Freedom Fare does not apply to travel within same state or to Canada. Different discounts Delllnlloo Round trip Tov DeltlaatJon City Freedom rare S&'1np City available to Hawaii. Your Travel Agen t has information about specific cities and flight s. Or call United at 537·7521. - Just pay for your round·trip ticket within 10 days . of when you make the rese~v t1on-and no later than 14 days before departure. St y_ 7 to 30 days. There are a specific number of f:'reedo Fare seats on each flight. so make reservations early. Round t.rlp Tour · Deslln11lon lovnd lr1p Tour Freedom Fare SaY!n(S City Freedom fare Sa.tap BEEFEATER'S Akron/Canton S225.00 s 97.00 Greensboro/ Pendleton jJ20.00 S52.00 Allentown/ High Point/ Philadelphia 258.00 110.00 Bethlehem/ Winston· Salem $235.00 SlOt .00 Pittsburgh 234.00 100.00 . Easton 256.00 110.00 Hartford/ Portland 113.00 49.00 BEEF Best dam beef you'll ever put a fork to-that's Ivey Ranch Beefl It's com-fed, · aged to perfection, no hormones or hannful chemicals, neither.. Whether it's stew or steak, Ivey Ranch Beef makes a meal to remembet: It's bccfeater's beef ... We guarantee it! -·-· -:::::-:· -:-::-:.:-:..· ·-.. -···-·----- CHUCKWAGON PAK Tender, juicy, com-fed, aged beef 11.75 POUNDS ONLY$20.25 18 Dif£ercnt Assortments from SS.95 •Sides, Hind and Forequarters Available at: ... " .. Ivey Beef Company 133 E. Alton SantaAna 546-9330 Vermeulen Ranch · 32382 Del Obispo San Juan Capistrano 496-0431 Food Stamps Baltimore 251.00 107.00 Birmingham 202.00 86.00 Boise 102.00 44.00 Boston 274.00 118.00 Buffalo/ Niagara Falls 239.00 103.00 Cedar Rapids/ lowaC1ty 178.00 76.00 Charleston. W, V$. 224.00 96.00 Cbarlolte, N.C. 230.00 98.00 Chattanooga 2 10.00 90.00 Chicago 199.00 85.00 Cleveland 225.00 97.00 Columbus 217.00 93.00 Dayton.O. 211.00 91 .00 Denver 113.00 49.00 Des Moines 168.00 72.00 Detroit 218.00 94.00 Eugene, Ore. 105.00 45.00 A int 218.00 94.00 Fort Wayne 211.00 91 .00 Grand Junction 95.00 41.00 Orand Rapids 209.00 89.00 Springfield Huntsville Kansas City Knoxville Lansing la Vegas Lincoln Medford . Memphis Milwaukeo Moline/ Rock Island/ Davenpon Muskegon Newpon News/ Hampton/ Williamsburg New York/ Newark ·Norfolk/ Portsmouth/ Virginia Beach Omaha 267.00 11 5.00 Providence 273.00 117.00 202.00 86.00 Raleigh/ 161.00 69.00 Durham 241 .00 103.00 2 13.00 91.00 Reno 69.00 29.00 214.00 92.00 Richmond 249.00 107.00 48.00 20.00 Rochester 245.00 105.00 153.00 65.00 Saginaw/ 94.00 40.00 Midland/ 183.00 79.00 Bay City 218.00 94.00 199.00 85.00 Salem.Ore. 109.00 47.00 Salt Lake City 102.00 44.00 Sealtle/ 182.00 78.00 Tacoma 123.00 53.00 206.00 88:00 South Bend 204.00 88.00 Spokane 123.00 53.00 Toledo 217.00 93.00 256.00 11 0.00 Washington. D.C. 251 .00 107.00 263.00 113.00 Youngstown/ Warren/ Sharon 231.00 99.00 256.00 110.00 157.00 67.00 Fares subject to cban~e. Security chatges not inc uded. Beginning June lst, the summer discount / begins: it's still 50% off for children, but 20% for adults. So now's the time. .. • ) ) ·- Irvine 1 Today's Closi11g N.l'. Stoeks ' VOl-69, NO. 21, ~ SEC'flONS, .SO PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1976 TEN CENTS I PrOnkste.r Eyed • tn OC Girl's Death B1 WILLIAM SCHREIBER Qilii; 0.ui ,.._....,. Five days ago. a born-blasting motorist spooked Dana Sharp's hoc:se in ModJeska Canyon and she was thrown to the ground. The l4·year-old girl lingered in a coma untU Tuesday at Mission Community Hospital and then she died. Orange County Sheriff's 400-acre Fire at ~ndleton ..... By FREDERICK SOIOEMEHL °''"0.111f't ........ A .fOO·acre brush fire on the Camp Pendleton Marine Base south of San Clemente knocked out power early today to 22,000 ·homes in eight south Orange County communities and forced evacuation of a portion of a base housing project. A Camp Pendleton spokesman sald the blaie was about ,_, per- cent contained at midday and that full containment was expect· ed this afternoon. The fire was being fought by Camp Pendleton firefighters. backed up by San Clemente city firemen and five brush trucks. Heat and flames from the fire -Cnocked out power at 4:16 a.m. to San Diego Gas and Electric Company customers in San Clemente, Capistrano Beach, San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point, I.aguna Niguel, and por- tions of Mission Viejo, Laguna Hills and South Laguna. The out- age included the home of former president Richard Nixon Electrical service in the 70- square mile area was restored at 6:23 a.m. when the names moved away from the high tension lines that cross the nortbeni por · tion of the base. · The outage affected fire and police agencies and t)l.ree ma 1or hospitals in south Orange County, including San Clemente General, South Coast Communi ty in South Laguna and Mission Community ln Mission Viejo Offit'ials said, however, that emergency generator s im- mediately kicked into service There were no incidents, they said. "We were concerned," said San Clemente Police U . Clifford Gates, noting t hat the outage left street lights and traffic signals without power. · As a pTecaution, Gates said, additional personnel were placed on duty. They spent a good bit of their time manning teJephones to answer "What happened" calls from anxious residents. Another man concerned was Jerome Thornsley. superinten· dent of the Capistrano Unified School District. He said be learned. of the fire at 5 a. m. and was told told that power would be out ~ur at lea.st 9 a.m. Thornsley said he hurriedly contacted school district ad- miniltrators to lay a contingency plan to keep schools open despite tbe outage. The district encom· passes nearly all t he areas that were affected by the blackout. "At the last ,ninute, the lights came back on,•• Thomsley said. The fire cast a pall of orange· gray smoke over San .Clemente (See OUTAGE, PageA2) Coast Weather Gusty northea11t winds 25 to 35 mph seen for Orange County Thursday, making for sunny skies and f alr ni•hts. Not as warm Thursday wltb beach highs 68 rlalne to 78 lnl and. Lows tonlaht tn the 50s. INSIDE TODAY P.ale.Unfan gufrrHla• Cf'OfHd into wbonon from Suno .and haoe ov.rrun o Chrhfton vtllogt .oftd tightl'Md a liege on t1-~ girit '°""'in the B•koo Vallq. StorJ/, mop A4. Ia•ex Department officials believe the driver who leaned on his horn last Friday afternoon did it simp- ly to see if he could scare the horses. "The girl and two companiorui weren't even on the roadwa.>: of Modjeska Canyon .H.oa<1, · a Sbetiff's spokesman.said today. ·"Ibey were at least 2S or 30 feet from the road." The spokesman said Dana's two friends said the lone, male occupant of the big sedan, "didn't even look back as be sped off ... Dana Jived with her parents in the north Tustin area and was a top student at Santiago Junior High. The sheriff's spokesman said family members told officers Dana was afflicted with a disease that stunted her growth. "She was only about three and a half feet tall and her feel barely reached the s tirrups," the spokesman said. "We were told she had just started learning how to ride." When the unknown driver blew his horn, Dana 's fri e nds managed to control their animals but Dana was thrown head firsl onto a pile of rocks. She was rushed to M1ss1on Community Hospital where she was comatose until Tuesday morning. A hospital spokesman said las t -dit r h emergency measures failed to save her life. Sheriff's investigators ar e workmg almost around the clock to track down the driver of the r ar but, ironically, they think no c riminal charges could be brought against him. The spokes man said he might be cited for us ing his horn without cause bul noted that the main reason for finding him U. lo . "tt>ll him what he has done " T~ing Point? Ford Unveils U.S. Budget o.uy ,..._ •• w ".,. o-. WASHINGTON <UPI) - President Ford today proposed a "major turning point for the American people" with a $394.2 billion budget which, he said, concedes the federal government cannot solve every problem in the land. Laced with cutbacks and sure to be controversial in an election year, the fiscal 1977 plan em- phasizes stronger national de- ~«:n:se. the search for energy, Slowdown Affecting Hospitals SHADED AREA SHOWS WHERE BLACKOUT HIT , Pendleton Fire Also Endangered Housing ProJect (asterisk) The effects of the doctors ' slowdown were beginning to be felt in a wide area of Orange County today as more hospitals reported dropoffs in surgery. Doctors at Huntington In- tercommunity and Pacifica bo&pU.ls in Huntington Beach have stopped performing all bul emergeMy surgeries and both hospitals have reported a subse- quent drop in the number of pa- tients. HIH is running with a skeleton crew. but Pacifica has not reduced its staff yet. JUdge Nixe.s Battin Indictment Appeal Doctors at Huntington In- tercommunity Hospital were the first in West Orange County to eliminate elective surgeries. By GARY GJlANVILLE °'"" 0.11, ...... ~ Superior Court Judge Kenneth Lae ruled today that allegations lodged against Orange County Supervisor Robert Battin in a . grand jury indictment are con· stitutionally sound Judce Lae's ruling bad the ef · f ect of turning down a plea from Battin 's attorney Matthew Kurilicb that the indictment failed to specify specific charees against his client As a result, the seven felony count s charging Battin with grand theft and misuse of public funds stand. It was after Judge Lae spent Tuesday reading grand jury transcripts of testimony leading to Battin's indictment that he concluded the charges were Is Lovelace Book Dirty? LONDON CAP) -A legal bat· tie has been joined to see whether an autobiography of porno movie star Linda Lovelace is obscene. "It is not a book like those dangerous worts of the late Aealha Christie which deal with poison and sudden death," said defense counsel John Mortimer, representing Heinrich Hanau, publisher of the British edition. The government. which charged the publisher with publishing an obscene article, said 38,000 of 50,000 copies or the book published in Britain were sold in thf' summer of 1974. specific enough. "Havirrg read transcripts or the indictment I find it states tacts constituting a public of- fense, .. the judge said. "The court rules the allega- tions are constitutionally suffi- cient," Judge Lae concluded. Kurilicb had charged a grand theft count included in the indict· ment failed to state what Battin allegedly stole and who he stole it from However, Judge Lae found otherwise after reading the transcript of testimony leading to charges that Battin cam- paigned at taxpayers' expense for lieutenant governor in 1974. Yet to be ruled on is a 38-point motion for discovery submitted to the court by Kurilich. Judge Lae recessed Battin's pretrial heap.ng until later in the day to allow himself time to read Deputy District Attorney Jack Ryan's rebuttal to the discovery motion. V. . SI ·' 1ctun a•n In Bus Heist MEXICO CITY CUPI> -Three armed bandits shot and killed a bus passenger because he re- fused to band over a plastic bag he was carrying, police reported. Inside the bag were two bottles of milk, two notebooks, a pe.acil and note from the victim's child. "Daddy: buy a 300 page notebook, one with lOOpages, and a pencil," it read. An official said today that about 55 staff members had been laid orr. She also reported that the number or patients at Hllntington Intercommunity Hospital has risen to 55 to 60, up slightly from Tuesday. Officials at both h05pitals said that emergency operations are being carried out. Doctors at Huntington Intercommunity voted to curtail their performances Thursday night. John Chri s tians on, ad· rninistrator of Fountain Valley Community Hospital, said today doctors there are continuing their normal surgery schedules. "The patients need surgery and our doctors are providing it," he said. He said there has been no slowdown and that 32 operations, both elective and emergency In nature, were performed Tues- day. He said that the patient census isJligb with up to 75 percent of the 214 beds occupied. In Los Alamitos, Los Alamitos General Hos pital which serves residents of Seal Beach, ad- ministrator Richard Skillman re- ported that all but emergency surgery had been eliminated. In addition, he said, patients visiting the emergency room were being referred to Orange County Medical Center for follow up care. Skillman said no employes have been laid off but with the pa- tient load at 15 percent below normal levels, hospital employes (See DOCTORS, Page A2) f.-.,ine Sister•ood? Jopan City 9ffers Trees Since Irmie bfcame a city, trees have been a topic dear to the hearts of much. of the cttimuy. Perbape with that in mind, the dty <,t Matsu•, Japan. bu st'en its efforil to woo Irvine at a sls· tfl' city • blcentennlal twist with the offer of 100 chcrrylt,eeS "as a tok ell o t tnrernit1-on • t frlendlblp." Despite dlscusf fon and • C!Om· mltlM etudy of the poaibtllt.Y of adopt.1rt1 a slater city, lrv'inG has avolded an ollkla& al~ .. The Clty or Matsue un-Matsue Junior Chamber of Com· dentanda the dlfnc.ulty ln a merce, Mayor Art Ant.bony bas speedy alliance as the 11.ster city asked the Irvine Jaycees to help to Irvine, but to celebrate the coord.1.nate the project and asked United States Blcentemdal, lbey city employee to determine wish to present a lift to Irvine whether the trees will grow In ·and ber citliens, .. eaiid Tadayuld Irvine. Sekiya in offertn• UM • CoUncllman Joh11 Bu.t'\<*'a, wbo :•Arter much dllcUulon, play1 0 OUt Waahtngtort ·ln cherry trees were '·decided up-ttftlb relafld to Jf'Yin 's bleeo· on-for thelr colorful blossoms tennlal celebration, eaid he is un- would be a vivid representation detlded about whether the city ot thelrfrlendJhlp for you, the cl· 1houla accept the tttes, "But l tyandlheunivenlty,"heaaid. t•rtalnly don't want to cbol> R•pcmdlnt to tho offer. ~ lhc _ down the uu1,yor. · · ' •• t • • • • ~ ~ I -' tugher tax cuts for wage earners. business and investors and mak- ing elderly sick and working poor pay more of their own way. Social Security taxes would go up to save the troubled fund which pays retirement benefits to most working Americans. If passed by Congress. it would mean a federal spending r~ord. But Ford said its relative austeri- ty would-strike a proper balance between the needs of the nation as a whole and Ameridans who are actually poverty stricken. "We will give more money to those below the poverty line and cut off those above," said the Pres ident while outlining the budget. "This represents what we hope will be a very major turning point for the American people ... he said in signing the 955-page document. "But it does not hold <Stt BUDGET, PageA2J Not Her Day Lamp, Potty Foul Up Tot Tuesday just wasn't Wendy Westhoff's best day. Firemen received a call at about 9:30 a .m. from Wen- dy's mother who said the 2-year-old had a lamps hade stuck on her head. Sonya Westhoff told fire men that she had been cleaning her home at 1621 Baycliff Circle in Corona del Mar and little Wendy was "helping." SOMEHOW THE CIULD bumped the bottom of a wall lamp and the half-round shade fell down onto her bead where the wire spokes held it firmly in place. Mrs. Westhoff said she tried for 20 minutes to get it off, with Wendy getting more and more unhappy. By the time firemen arrived to cut her out of the · lampshade the little girl was "screaming bloody murder," her mother said. Once firemen cut the shade off, everything seemed to be going just fine. UNTIL WENDY WENT to use the potty a few minutes later. "She got locked in the bathroom and it took me a good five minutes to get her out," Mrs. Westhoff said. In Canta Banas Neighbors Aiding Gun Victim's Wife By DOUG FRITlSCHE OI UM O.llr Pilot SIMI For eight years, Eulog io Ramos Valenzuela made his home in Canta Ranas, an area in Santa Fe Springs named after the ranas cantatas-4he singing frogs-that serenaded through the night on what once was the Flood Ranch. Monday the bullet riddled body of Eulogio Ramos Valenzuela was found lying face down in an Irvine orange grove a day or more after his execution-style slaying. Valenzuela was shot several times in the back with a small caliber gun. a shooting that has Irvine police mys tified . Evidence at the s cene -blood- spattered leaves and the pos ition of Valenzuela's livid body -led police to discard an earlie r theory that be had been shot elsewhere and dumped in Irvine. But there were no signs or a struggle in the orange grove beside the Santa Ana Freeway east of Culver Drive where a woman jogger.found Valenzuela's body and police have been unable to decipher the events that led up to the shooting. With the help of a Spanish- speaking Costa Mesa officer, Irvine Dt>tective Steve Nash to· day was to begin questioning the family, friends and acquain- tances of the dead man. The Canta Ranas area is a de- ceptive 1 y quiet residt>ntlal neighborhood that on odd oc- casions is shattered by a shotgun blast from a passing car- usua.U.Y aimed at the clusters of teenagers who hang around un- der the street Jlgbts and 1n the front yards. The Taids pf'ovi>ke nprisals and a torm or 1nterneclne warfare d.iat\lrbs the area for a whllc untll tlme and a heavy tratk-do'wn by the Los Angel" County SherUf's Department restotts calm to the ba.rrto com-munity. .. ' , The area also is laden with con- tinual rumors that are spawned on the street corners and race in Spanish through the community. So far, no on e is saying much about the shooting that left Z.Oila Valenzue la a widow with seven young rhildren. The people of the area re-' member Valenzuela as a rather quiet man. but one who came and went on his own. Over the years, he worked off and on as a laborer at Pacific Clay Products, a manufacturer of brick and ceramic goods locat- ed across Telegraph Road from Santa Fe Springs City Hall. He came to the United States as an illegal alien. Five years ago he asked the people at the Santa Fe Springs Neighborhood Center for help in going through immigration. Two years ago he finished the process. Although an American citizen. he spoke almost no English-a common trait in the increasingly Spanish-speaking southeas tern corner of Los Angeles County. The family was in marginal 1 financial condition, according to friends a nd social workers. The periodic layoffs at Pacific Clay . (See VICTIM, PageA2> Shell Cuts Gas Price HOUSTON (UPI ) -. Sb~ll Oil ~o. today mk nounced a penny~ galJon dttrease in the price of gasoline e ffective im· mediately. The nationwide reductlon applies to all cl~ 1Jf trlll1e, rtsellen and consumers. Sh~ll said the reduction reOects current market rondttlons. • . Al DAIL y PILOT F,.... P"fl'! .4 J DOCTORS have been put on Cour day work Wffk. SimlJ r measure<1 wt-r<' being taken at Hoog MrmonaJ ll<>-'>p1Lal in Nt'wport Beach. wher<' u 10 pereent rf'duction 1n the patll'nl ~us was r~corded as doctori. there began to stop elective ~ur· ~ery. Administrator Miehatl Stephen:. aid "urgt>nt and ~meraeney aur~eries are still be· mg performed, but our surgery schedult> 1s down 30 percent · · He said eight employes had been laid off and 95 were put on a four-day week. He said they M · ticipate a continued redu<.'l1on o( surgery and patients whkh will lead to a further reduct10n of t'mployes· working days. He et s 1mated that the slowdown is costing the hospital about $10 .000 per day. In Costa Mes a . no emplove la v offs ti r work ~eek reduction~ have taken place at Co La Mesa Memorial Ho~pital, according Lu administrator Tom Richards Richards said that while elec- tive sur!'?ery was being c;.it back. SAN DIEGO DOCTORS JO IN SLOWDOWN, Page AS the hospital's occupancy rate was holding und he does not an- ticipate reduring s taff hours ttlis week In tht' south rount~. howrn·r. business was normal at San Clemente General Hospital, Mis· sion Communitv and South Coast Community hospitals In fact, a spokesman for South Coast said the patient load "as brtter than 11 ·s been ma rouple of yr ars ·· He s aid the surgery sthedule was s howing 10 to 15 more s urgeries per day than normal . ~n another de\ t>lopment. thC' cb1efs of staffs or hospitals in Of an~e County. were lo meet al noon today at the offices of the Or a ng-e County Medical Associa- 11on 1n Orange. Eve rett Bannister. association • dirertor. :,aid the purpose would he to assess the s ituation 1n tht' l'ounty, whether there would be a slp"'down, and in what areas. Fro• Page AJ OUTAGE ... a nd produred a rolorful sunrise for early mornin~ rommuters on the San Die~o FrC'eway The fire started about 8 p m Tuesday night in uninhabited :tcreage east of the San Onofre Housing Project along Basilone Road Ory. gui.;ty Santa Ana winds drove tht names west toward lhe housing projert "I could see the fi re about 10 p.m .. but I W<'nt to bed. anyway," s aid J i m ~tane. a resident of the base houstnS? area. "I kept one eye on l he fir('. and one C'Vf' asleep." Mane said ht' was awakened about i a m when the names moved into varant land across the street from his home and direct)) under the high tension Ji nt'S Residents of houses bordering the fire area were evacuated about I : 30 a m . but allowed to return when firemen headed the Ila mes oft "I've got 18 years of marriage tied up 1n this place." saJd Mane zis he wetted his roof with a garden ho!)e 'fhe base s pokes man said the cause of the hre 1s unde r tn· \'t.'Stlgat:on Rut San Clemente Fire Chief Ron Coleman said he believed it was started by a hot training flare that. rame in contact with bnis h. Coleman said firemen ob· served three flares in the sky over the bas e Tuesday night. San Clemente firemen were ('ailed in to bark up civilian basC' firemen. About 100 men and five brush trurks fou~hl the blaze. The blaze burned within about three miles or the nu<'le ar generating station at San Onofre. The plant was not endangered ORANGE COAST fN> °'....,. (Oll\t 0 tttf r'tlf1t .. JU\ '#f'tt ht\ I fK tw,,._O '"" N•w\ P;,.,\ 'PM"i•\lwoa h\' lht \.,•'"°" ( .. \1 P\Jbfl\IUnq Comf. "'~ \.to.ar.-u f>f°t1t1M4. .u t s:u.A>fl\~d -..onO•\' 11\tQuQh ,,1f1.ty IM (• .. ,. ...,._~ N••pOtt 6f'l(I\. HvMfnqtun '"" ,, " t , ut1 ta1n V•tlt•. ftvln• S•oOlttMt• V•ll\t •NJ L.aq\lft.I ... ~ft ~ulf"I C.O•\t A t.1nqN> tW'QtOf'WI ~~ ·~ ,, '"'°"ll'f'd S.t..,,d.y'\ ~ \~... ,.,, ~~=~~~~~:~~~.~:f~~!,.~J,!,.»J W.\I U•1 Robert N . Weed Prt\tdfnt 4'M Put>U\N'f' Thomas Keevll ( dltor Thomas A. Murph1ne Ml"•Ol"O ((lo!N Charles H. Loos Ric.hard P. Nall AUl\1-N'•Mt+"t rt111°" Offices ( ... llA<'•H J.ICI WUt1My\tr<r1 l ~WN ~·c.~ ti .. C.-1'•• 'Wt .. I ··-··~ llt1C.ll '"'' .. a( ....... ,, •• ,., \-w-11 V•lt.y U101 l• ~., 119M ., ,_, 01.., f ,_, OC Cdsts Higher I Than U.S. LOS ANGELES (Uf'I) -The rost of living In Los Angeles and Orange ('ounties rose raster than !he natio!lal average last year, 1ncrl'as ing 0 .7 percent In Derember alone. the US. Labor Department's Bureau or Labor Statistics said today. December's price rise in the Southern California area boosted the Consumer Price Index to u rt>rord 163.7. meaning that goods '75 COST OF LIVING 'ONLY' 7%, A4 and services costing $10 in the bast' prke year of 1967 were up to $16.37 at the end of the year Prices gained seven percent nationwide during all of 1975 but i~ Los Angeles and Orange roun- t 1es n:i o ved up 9 1 percent, reflecting mrreased costs in aJI major areas of ronsumer spend- ing, arrordin g to Rruce Hanchett. the regional com · missioner or labor s tatistirs. The 1975 inrrease was less tban the 11 .9 percent rise in 1974 but higher than 1973's 7.8 percent. Housing, up 12.3 perrent, and transportation. up JU. I perrent. made the biggest gains during 1975. Food rosts rose 5.8 percent, apparel and upkeep were up J.9 perrent and health and recrea- tion up 8.2 perrent. During Derembcr. housing rost s inrreased 1. 7 percent. health and rerreation moved up 0.9 perrent. Rut transportation dropped 0.3 percent and apparel and upkeep rosts dipped O. l per· cenL Higher mortgage interest rates along with increases 1n m ain· tenance and repair costs ron· lributed to the housing inerease costs in December. Fuels and utilities moved up 0. 7 perrent and household furnishings ::,urh as s heets . sofas, refrigerator~ and lawn m ower s went up 0.8 per rent. Front Pag~ A J VICTIM ... often left Va lenzuela wtthoul work a nd s eeking help <.tl th1 • ~eighborhood Center "He was a verv nice. <·aim guy." recalls SO('ial work<·r Mercedes Diaz, ~ho ht.•lpect Valenzuela through immi~ra tion. "He didn't seem to bt• tht.• kind of person thts kind of Lhrng would happen Lo.·· The Valenzuela children werr in srhool when they learned of their father·s death. Word went through the dose-knit communi ty quirkly and in less than an hour. :\1rs. Diaz and Gusta\'o Velasco. dirertor of th<' centt'r, were trying to rontact the widow to see what they could do to help Mrs. Valenzuela was on her wa> to identify the body. "The last time I saw him was Dec. 21 when h e l'ame 1n to pick up h is C hristmas bas ket," Velasro said . "I remembe r berause that was the day his wife had their seventh babv ·· The Canta Ranas ·rommu01ty was leveled to the ground in 1962 as an urban r enewal project. The battle against urban r<.'ncwal. the reunion "'hen the area was r e built and the fact that few of the people move out of the area by choice h ave made Flood Ranch <.t close ('Omm unity The people or the community have joined together to offer what help the y ('an to Valenzuela's family THE BUDGET DOLLAR (ftSCAl YEAR '97i' E~l ) Where It 10•• .••. U"tTe...-t CHART SHOWS BREAKDOWN Of THE U.S. BUDGET DOLLAR 'Major Turning Point for the American People' Fro• Page AJ BUDGET ... out any promise that the federaJ government can or will solve every problem." Oespite Ford's call for reduced welfare spending, more than half the budget would be spent on peo- ple. Defense spending would JUmp to $10J. l billion -better than one-quarter of lhe budget. $101 BILLION FOR DEFENSE-A7 FORD SEES Hf KE IN SS TAXES, 86 .Three of Ford's top economic a1~es -Treasury Secretary William Simon, Budget Director James Lynn and chief economic a dviser Alan Greenspan - praised the budget. . ".We ~ave come to a point of de- c1s1on 1n this country," said ~.ynn . who warned that co:itinu- mg to run up bigger defi'!ils earh year "is not where we want to go .. Sen. Frank E . Moss CD·UlahJ, expressed what is likely to be a common Democratic conc.ern - whether holding the budget lower than proje<'tions will place a drag : ~n the e~onomy which only now 1s emerging from a recession. The President proposed 1-'reater ('Uts in individual income taxes beginning in July, but also asked for a maximum increase of ~9.50 next year in the Social Secunty payroll tax -the one that ruts deepest into low and moderate income workers. Finklea Murder 'Senseless' By TOM BARLEY Of .. Dellyl"IMCMMt Orange Coast College wrestl- ing star Stephen "Mike" Finklea's murder on Oct. 31, 1974. was described today to an Orange County Superior Court JUry as the "senseless slaying or a de(enseless young man." Deputy Dis trict Attorney Frank Bris eno used the descrip- tion during a final argument in whirh he demanded a verdict of first degree murder against de· fendant Hugh Daniel Hean. 24. H th<' jury in Judge William L . Murray's rourtroom comes back with that verdict, it v.ill return to the s am e rourtroom to dt!· termine 1f Be;.1n s hol\ld receive the death penalty for the killing o(tht' 19·year-olct markC't clerk. Rriseno told the jury he has given it "ov~rwhelming eviden('e' · to prove that Bean was one of two mC'n who entered the 7·11 market at Warner Avenue and Euclid Street in Fountain Valley and pumped six shots into Finklea, 19. The defendant and his brother. Charles Dennis Hean. 22, were arrested 24 hours later in Santa Ana on the basis of a desrription supplied by the clerk who was about to relieve Finklra when the shooting took place . Santa Ana police said they re- covered the 38-caliber and .22- caliber revolvers used in the kill- ing from the Bean brothers' car. . OC Ha$ Beef With Safeway By DOUG FRIT7SCllE Of .... 0.11'( ""' ..... When is a beef not a bMI? That is the ~saence of a dispute that soon will bring the Orange \,ounty District Attorney's office and Safeway together-in the <'Ourtroom . The DA 's consu~er division has tiled a suit contending Safewtty has Q ml!leadlng ad· vertising campaign that 1ays, "Every beefsteak and beef roast we cut at Safeway is USDA <United States Departmettt of Agrirulture> choice or better." County Health Department ln· spectors found calf for sale at Safeway. Tbe calf either was un· graded -the USDA has eight grades for beef -<>r was grad~d "good." The consumer, according to R. Rkhard Farnell, the deputy dis- tri<'t attorney handling the mat· ter, rannot tell the difference between beef and cal[. The ad, he rontends, leads the buyer to believ~ the calf is choice grade or better. "Bull." answers Safeway at· torney Fred Di Bernardo. A calf is not a bee(, he says, cltiltg three kinds or meat av•ilable from bovine animals-beef,. calf or veal. If Safeway labeled its calf as beer, he contends, the t.,JSDA would rue suit a&ainst lhe stores for mislabeling. · Therefore, he continues, when the chain advertises beef, it is not talking about calC. And, he adds. the consumer knows the di!· reren('e between a calf and a beef. On the other hand, Farnell con- tends all that argument just muddies up the waters. "If it comes from an animal that goes 'moo,' it's bee(," he says. Veal romes from unborn or newborn rattle. The DA 's office plans to ask the rourt for rivil penalties against Safeway as well as a rorreetive ~ldvertisi nj! campaign "to dispel the belief in the minds of con· sumers that Safeway has sold nothin~ but USDA prime or choire beef products." D i Rerna rdo believes. 'Safeway has built a reputation on selling high quality beef. All of the bt>ef in the stores is USDA rho!re or better. 1 can 't un derstand what the problem is. Calf is not beef ... Ptnolties could reacb fl.:IOO for each convlcUon aa-et121t the stores. But 01 Bernardo. citing testimony by the Los Angeles County Health Department, among others, contends those who are "sophlaticated" in the field o! moat sales and gradin.g a1re~ with him. Safeway, Di Bernardo says. turned down a settlement offered by the DA 's office, "because I <'annot accept a settlement when my client h as done nothing wrone." So the DA took the bee( to court lo let a judge decide who is giving whom a bum steer. HB.Police Chief Hurt In Accident A two-car collision at a Santa Ana intersection Tuesday after· noon briefly hospitalized Hunt- ington Beach Police C.hter Earle Robitaille and caused major damage to both his city sedan and the other rar involved. The occupants of the second vehicle were shaken up, sustain· ing bruises and abrasions but were not hospitalized according to Santa Ana police. ChJer Robitaille. 44, was off du- ty today nursing a bad leg bruise as a result of the 1 :40 p.m. col· lision in central Santa Ana. Investigators said his car wa!'> struck in the left front portion at First and Fairveiw Streets by a rar carrying a woman and her two small children. No indication was offered re· garding the length of time he may be oCf duty as a result oC the injuries. A s pokes man ror the Hunt ington Beach Police Department said today that Robitaille was on his way to a meeting with Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich when the accident oc rurred. No citations were issued, pend· ing further investigation, Santa Ana police said. HB Student Sues Casino In Las Vegas A Huntington Beach college student, who claims that casino employes grilled him all r.ight :met murh of the next morning Start now! STONEWARE PLANTERS after he won the S500 jackpot Get your kids started pri1e in the Stardust Hotel gam · in the Kello99 's · JOI! room . s ued the Las Vegas Stic~ Up for Brukfast hotel Tuesday for Sl.l million. Contest. M ar('e 1 R. J . P oetoehena Ill :==================== slates in his Orange County Superior Court lawsuit that he won the Jackpot on Jan. 24, 1975, while visiting Las Vegas on a day trip advertised by the Stardust in Orange County He claims that h e was prompt. ly ac<'used of tampering with the gaming machine and derued the balance o( his S500 until the next. day whe n he missed hts return flight to Orange County. Poetoehena claims that three raslno employes interrogated him for several hours during whi ch they ridic ul ed his accent and m anneris ms . ADVANCE REGISTRATION ICE SKATING LESSONS glazed with water proof, lecld free glaze, one of a kind pats. HANDMADE ON OUI POmls WHHL JANUARY SALE ... SAVE UP TO 60°/o AT OUR FACTORY $1 . OFF UY 5.80 PURCllASE WITI nus cewm • OFFER GOOD THRU JAN. 31 Probes '69 Return IRS Reopens Nixon Tax lnvesti • at ion From Wire Services WASHINGTON -The Internal Revenue Service has reopened a rivil tax fraud investigation into Richard M . Nixon's 1969 tax re · turn, the Washiogton Post and the New York Times reported to· day. In a 1tory by Bob Woodward, one of two repOrters who gained fame through reporting the Watergate cue. the P08t noted the IRS had concluded Ln 1974 It did not have surrlcient evideooe to <'harge the former pr~ttfent with civil fraud. Now. the paper reported, in· formed sour<'es s aid the agency "believes it can !!how that the former president had had knowledge of a back-dated deed claiming an lllegal deduction ror hi! glrt of papers to the 1ovem- ment." IRS official!! would nettbeT con· firm nor deny the reports. H fraud is proved asainst N•x· on. the Post said, he would bt rorred to pay $222.121, which would include S148,0S> ror a 11189 d~ritncy found by the IRS •n 1974 plUJ a 50 perc nt ~ally for fraud ol $74,040 Nixon could challen&e a fraud NMNment in rourt. xon h:id no legal obligation to pay the 1969 tax deficiency cause the three-year statute of I' itations had expired. But aud has no statute of limits· ~ons and makes the basic tax de· ciency also collectible at any me. t In 1974, when the JRS ruled ixon ·s vice presidential papers ere not a l~al claim against his , "'xes, Nixon paid the a mount due for the 1970·72 returns and said he also would pay the 1969 deficten- ry although he was not required to do so. The Post said its sourc<'s re· ported he has not done so. President Ford's pardon of Nixon covers only criminal mat- ters and "ouJd not apply to cl vll tax fraud. Me•nwhilt>, Sen. Barry Goldwater uys be <toc.n't lhlnk Nixon "ever told the lru1.h •bout hla connection• wlth Wateraate." Interviewed Tueaday on NBC'1 ''Tomorrow" show, Goldwater wu asked if he thootht Nixon wuJ\o.nest. "No. J don't think ao, and J tb1nk that wa1 ha troubt•." he Hid. • Enhance your child's poise and posture. A planned program of lessons with the exclusive tee Capades' easy learning method gives you or your child healthy exercise 1n ple asant supervi sed aurround 1ng11. 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By KATHY CLANCY CM lllleQMty Pflee SUit • Fountain V ailey councilmen ann6unced an lmpasse in con- tract talka with the city's 34 ftremen Tuesday and gave them wiW Monday to respond to their "last and final offer." At the same time, Mayor Bernie Svalstad lashed out angri- ly at the firemen's Teamster· Union representative, accusing him of "threatening" to elect new council members. He also called the Teamster conduct "distasteful to me and to the council." But Paul Barrett of the Teamsters Union charged the city's conduct in negotiations also was "distasteful" and ac- cused the city's bargaining team of lying and presenting false figures. The city's final offertoftremen ca.Ua for a four percent pay hike this year and six percent next January. Svalstad said that by the time the entire 10 percent bike is im· plemented, a firefighter with two years on the force would be in· creased from $14,828 annually to $16,344. Fire engineers would go from $15,981 to $17,616 and captains from $18.216 to $20,088. In addition, he said, firemen earn about $2,000 extra each year in overtime. Firemen have asked the city for a seven percent boost this year and 7.5 percent next year. In addition, city officials said they want an extra 11 percent in benefits. Off-duty Fireman Dean-Bacon said today firemen would not DOctors Protest argue s pecifically with Svalstad's figures but he. said "we definitely don't agree with them.'' The proposal .also calls for ~limination of an educational in· centive pay program which gives firemen a 2.5 percent, five per. cent and 10 percent pay boost for completing college credits. The city has offered cash pay· ments upon discontinuation of the program Instead ranging from $500 to $5,200. Firemen want that program continued, and Barrett said he may take the matter, as well as the impasse, to court if necessary. Fourteen off.duty firemen attended Tuesday's meeting. The city's negotiation impasse .actually was declared by city of· (See IMPASSE, P•geA%) . \ Strike Spreads in DllllyPli.tRlff ....... JESSE GALLOWAYCROWNEDATHARBOURVIEWSCHOOL Students Promised Campus Cleanup During 'Jesse's Week' Jesse Honored :,., 77 4 Pupils Laud Cwtodian Jesse Galloway -a custodian at Harbour View School in Hunt· ington Beach -is a celebrity this week. The 774 students who attend the school, at 4343 Pickwick Circle, have declared the week in bis honor. And seventh and eighth _graders pledged to keep the restrooms, playground and hallways clean Thursday and Friday to make Jesse's life a lit· Ueeasier. "I'm not much for speeches," Galloway told a s tudent as- sembly Tuesday. "But work has been a pleasure as far as this school is concerned.•' School officials said students had been planning J esse's re· cognition week for several months. They all wore special buttons, saying "1 love Jesse," "Today is Jesse Day," and "We Like Jesse." Two boys even had pre· pared a banner reading, "Jesse Does It the American Way." He was presented with a band· made crown, several student gifts, a janitor-bedecked cake and commemorative plaque from children at Harbour View. And the custodian admitted that U.ntil Tuesday morning, "I didn't know a thing about it." His wife, Lois, on band for the celebration, noted, "I know this is a day he will remember always. I wouldn't have missed it for anything." The effects of the doctors' slowdown were beginning to be felt in a wide area of Orange County today as more hospitals reported dropoff s in surgery. Doctors at Huntington In· tercommunity and Pacifica ~pitals in Huntington Beach have stopped performing all but emergency surgeries and both hospitals have reported a subse- quent drop in the number of pa- $394 Billion U.S. Budget Presented WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Ford today proposed a "major turning point for the American people" with a $.194.2 billion budget which, be said, concedes the federal government cannot solve every problem in the land. Laced with cutbacks and sure to be controversial in an election year, the fiscal 1977 plan em- phasizes stronger national de· fense, the search for energy, higher tax cuts for wage earners, business and investors and mak· ing elderly sick and working poor pay more of their own way. Social Security taxes would go up to save the troubled fund which pays retirement benefits to most working Americans. If passed by Congress, it would mean a federal spending record. But Ford said its relative austeri- ty would strike a proper balance between the needs of the nation as a whole and Ameri<jans who are actually poverty stricken. ''We will give more money to those below the poverty line and cut off those above," said tbe (See BUDGET;PageA%) BB Student Probes '69 Return Sues Casino IRS · N. In Las Vegas Reonem ixon A Huntington Beach college r student, who claims that casino employes grilled him all night I t • t • and much of the next morning ax nves iua ion ~er be won the $500 jackpot ~ pnze in the Stardust Hotel gam- ... From Wire Services WASHINGTON -1be Internal Revenue service has reopened a dvil tax fraud investigation into Richard M. Nixon's 1969 tax re· turn, the Washington Post and the New York Times reported to- day. In a story by Bob Woodward. one of two reporters who gained ~ fame through reporting the Watergate case, the Post noted the IRS bad concluded in 1914 it did not have suf Cicient .evidence to charge the for mer president with clvil fraud. Now the paper reported, in- form;! sour~es said the agency ''believes it can show that the former president had bad bowled&• of a back-dated deed elaimlng an illegal declucUOG for Im lift of papers to the iovem· meot." . IRS oftlctal1 would neither ccm- Jlnn nor deny the reports. 11 (raud la proved ag~ Nix· on, the Post said, be would be forced to pay $222,121, which would Include $1'8,080 (OT 8 1• ' deftclmcy found by ~ IRS ill 1'74 .aua a 50 percent penalty for fraud of ,,,,040, Mlxaa could chal,lenge a fraud ..... ment Sn court. Nixon bad no letal obU1atlcn to pay the 1989 tax deficiency bee• .. UM thr"·year statute ol . ~mltatlon1 bad expired. But ' • J fraud bas no statute of limita- tions and makes the basic tax de· ficlency also cottectiQlo at any time. In 1914, when the IRS ruled Nixon's vice Presidential papers were not a legal claim against bis taxes, Nixon paid the amount due for the 1910·72 returns and said he. also would pay the 1969 deficien- cy although be was not required to do so. The Post said its sources re- }lorted be bas no.t done so. · President Ford's pardon of Nixon covers only criminal Q18t· ters and would not apply to civil tax fraud. Meanwhile, Sen. B~hl~ .Goldwater -says be ctoe.n't Nixon .. evu told the truth abti&t bit connections with Watergate." · Interviewed Tuesday cm NBC1 ''Tomorrow'' show. Goldwater was asked lf be t.boulbt Nlxocl wasboneat. "No, I don't think so, and 1 th1nk that wu his trouble," be said. Anon Suspected SAN DIEGO (AP) -Fire ap- parently caused by anon burned a ~1uburb1n Clairmont com- mercial •1mnaslum for the Hcond co111ecutlve day, ln· ve:sUcaton say . i ing room, sued the Las Vegas hotel Tuesday for $1.1 millii>D. Marcel R. J . Poetoebena Ill states in bis Orange County Superior Court lawsuit that he won the jackpot on Jan. 24, 1915, while visiting Las Vegas on a day trip advertised by the Stardust in Orange County. He claims that he was prompt· ly accused of tampering with the gaming machine and denied the balance of his $500 Wltil the next day when he missed bis return night to Orange County. Poetoehena claims that three casino employes interrogated· him tor several hours during which they ridiculed biS accent and mannerisms. SMll Cui. . GtiJIPriee HOUSTON (UPI) - Shell Oil Co. tod~ an- nounced a penuy ""m· decrease 10 the ce of aa1ollne effect •• lm· med.lately. Tile naUanwide reduction applies to all cl111e1 of trade, resellers andCOGlumen. Shell aa1d 1bo reduction reflects current market conditions. tients. HIH is running with a skeleton crew, but Pacifica bas not reduced its staff yet. Doctors at Huntington In- tercommunity Hospital were the first in West Orange County to eliminate elective surgeries. An official said today that about 55 staff members had been laid off. She also reported that tl1e number of patient~ at Huntington Intercommunity Hospital has risen to 55 to 60, up slightly from Tuesday. Officials at both hospitals said that emergency operations are being carried out. Doctors at Huntington Inte rcommunity voted to curtail th eir performances Thursday night. John Christianson, ad - ministrator of Fountain Valley Community Hospital, said today He T1:1rned Too Late Huntington Beach city employe Ron Phelps, 28, rests while under treatment by paramedics after being hit by runaway motorcycle Tuesday as he worked at Marilyn Drive and Diane Lane. Police say motorcycle driver Leonard Hill, 17, of 6772 Marilyn Drive, spotted buddies in parked van, waved and swerved, hitting the van. He was thrown to ravement and sustained minor injuries. Wit- ness Danie Wills yelled at Phelps, who turned around as the riderless bike slammed into him. Recreation Bond Vote Plans Okayed Preliminary plans for a J\D'le 8 recreational bond issue were ap- Pto'Ved by the Fountain Valley aty Council Tuesday night after M people spoke at a public bear-lnt wtth only three of them in op- posltion. At the aame time, eouhcll" members recommended that the staff and a 10-member steering committee hold a community meett.n1 on the proposal before a Ona1 bond amount la set by the council. And Coundlman Roger Stan· . ton suaested a poaaible divisloo ~ tile entire $4 to $8.2 milllon pachle into unlts to allow voters to approve only a part or all of Uw!f~WUn. 'lbe bond iuue would finance eon1tructton of a three-pool mm complu. a cultural arts bulldlq and addftiooal sports facWUu in the clb''s 55-acre recreation complex in Mile SQuanPark. 'l'be proposal also may lnclude a •mall park at llapolla Street and Ellis Avenue. Council Candidate Sheila "Marcus spoke Tuesday night in favor of giving voters a choice or approving part or all of the pro- . ject. "I am not opposed to all of ·these things," she said. "As much as people would like to have all of these things tbey have to vote on what they can afford.'' Fred V05!1 another candidate, said in Wauting door-to-doot to 200 homes. many residents ex- pressed preference for a cultUl'al building over other f adlltles. Bonnie Tiede, a member of the city's Fine Art• Committee. ex- pressed the same view. But Jim Dick, a member of the city's 1teerin1 committee, 1ald he favored 1otni for the enUre package and many others wbo spoke agreed. Councilman Georce Scott 1ald he believed a dlvisloo mi&ht cause the aquatics fans to vote for their complex but not cultural arts a.ad vice vena. doctors there are continuing their normal s urgery schedules. •'The patients need surgery and our doctors are providing it," he said. He said there has been no slowdown and that 32 operations, both elective and emergency in nature, were performed Tues· day. He said that the patient census <See DOCTORS, PageA2) HB Police Chief Hurt In Accident A two-car collision at a Santa Ana intersection Tuesday · after- noon briefly hospitalized Hunt- ington Beach Police Chief Earle Robitaille and caused major damage to both b is city sedan and the other car involved. 1be occupants of the second vehicle were s haken up, sustain· ing bruises and abrasions but were not hospitalized according to Santa Ana police. Chief Robitaille, 44, was off du· ty today nursing a bad leg bruise as a result of the 1 :40 p.m. col- lision in central Santa Ana. Investigators said his car was struck in the left front portion at First and Fairveiw Streets by a car carrying a woman and her two small children. No indication was offered re- , garding the length of time he may be off duty as a result of the injuries. A spokesman for the Hunt- ington Beach Police Department said today that Robitaille was on his way to a meeting with Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich when the accident oc- curred. · No citations were issued, pend- ing further investigation, Santa Ana police said. Police said the second driver involved was Mrs. May Hamad. 23, of 12612 Morningside Drive. Garden Grove. · She and her son, Iman, 2, and daughter Imin, 1. sustained minor injuries in the broadside collision, according to police. Chief Robitaille was treated at Huntington In terconimunity Hospital following the collision and released following x-rays and patching-up, according to nurses. Co ast Weath e r Gusty northeast winds 25 to 3S mph seen for Orange County Thursday, making for sunny skies and fair nights. Not as warm Thursday with beach highs 68 ristnc to 78 inland. Lows tonight in the 50s. INSIDE TODAY PalHtin'ian guerrilla• crwud into ~ from S)/1,io .and have o1'e1Ttal .a Chrhtian village and tiglttcn«l. o litge on tM big. gat town in the 81koo Vallfit • stmJ/, mapA4 . Ia•ex ( ,4J DAILYPILOT H/F F,...P...,AJ IMPASSE. • • ftdal.I after a SatW'da,y bar1aln· ing session but was not an· nounced until a.rter a rouncil ex- eeutl ve session Tuesday. The alle1ed threat Svalstad referred to was comtained in an "C>pt"n letter to the council mcm· bers and <'itizens of Fountain Valley" signed by Barrett. Jn it. he said, "We shall help the citizens of Fountain Valley elect repre1entatives who are responsive to the needs of both t he electorate and tht> employes. And, gentlemen -we will be Mt-e1ong after you have gone ." Svalstad said Tuesdll)' night, "l don't like the silWttion where YQU write threatening letters to the city and the council.·· He also &aid city orriclals have not lied or been deceitful, and he critlC'l!f'd firemen for allegedly inviting council candidate Sheila Marcus to a bargaining session. Firemen have said Mrs . Marcus expressed an interest and was told by firemen she could attend a session. Svalstad also said Tuesdav ni ght the city has asked fo.r mediation if firemen "'on't ap- prove the fin al offer. He said that rf'quest came after 13 bargain- ing sessions "to which yo u were late and dragged your feet by the way." He continuc>d , ·'So gentl emen, we are rf.>ady to work with you - we have been. I don "t like the way you have been rondut'ting yourself through Mr Barrett to us -to receive the threatening letters particularly.'' Harrett then responded, "It "'on'l be th e last.·· .. That 's good." Svalstad ·s hot back , ''I hope it 's on tape." Barrett then countered, saying firemen would not write ''threatening ·· communications but would write more com- munications -'"just for your tape that you fee l is so precious.·· .Woman Sent To Hospital In Forgings l\ Fountain \'allev y,·oman y,·ho was arrested by Fullerton police after they allege she passed forged checks totaling more than $600 was orderc>d ~tonday to un - dergo atreatment in Metropolitan State Hospital, Norwalk . Orange County Superior (,ourt Judge Kenneth Williams order.?d the detention of Sandra Kay SC'arborough, 22 , of 16076 Mt. l.ister Court, Fountain Valley , afler s he pleaded guilly to forgery charges. Officers who arrested Atiss Scarborough last Sept. .23 said she passed forged ('hecks at the Bank of Newport, Lloyd's Bank and Bank of t\merica in the l-larbor .·\rea !:isl ~l ay . Parole Topic Of Huntington Watch Group Par sons ~lol lada y or t he California Adult Authority will speak to the Huntington Beach Neighborhood Watch Organiza- tion Wednesday night at So'clock at the Police Auditorium. Holladay will spea k on ''Parole; Justice or Injustice." Ken Whit e . president or Neighborhood Watch, says ques. lions will be asked concerning the effectiveness of parole on fo rmer conv icts returning to society. White says that according to authorities, most burglars are second and third time offenders. White s ays from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. that evening. he will con· duct a "nuts and bolts" course on what Neighborhood Watch is all about. Newcomers are invited. ORANGE COAST "" DAILY PILOT ,,,.. Ot-CN•I 0.Uy Pl ..... M iii """'<" " , __ ... N•M·P'rn1, " pUtili\l>e<I ..,, I"" °'-eo." ~ ... 1 ... 1.,. C-y -"'· ..i.1-. ••• _,.,..., MOn<l•y !"""""' f,..,_, "" """" ........ ,.. .......... -... -'""'"" •• .. 11/fo..,,,...,,. "'"""•· 1 .. 1-.1. ~!•I>«' Voll•• trd LMI...,.. e. .. 1>ne...11 ,,_,, A ""'11• te;-l ._i11cw< ",..Dlh ... <I ~-·· -i..,. ..... , ... ptl.,.lp.ol -ll•l>lftu pl-11 .i 1lQ -•I .. , M-. C...~ lrMu. Cal~"'"'•,,. •. Robert N. Weed ................ "'""'' ....... J•ck R. Curlev V0<• ..... -1 •NIGl_lll __ Thom1's Keevll ......... Council Ac.lion ' Here in capeule f<M"m are the maJor act.tons taken TUM· d41 nl&ht by th• •'ountaln Valley City Council. 1 nllfl•EN: AllMUnced an lmpUle In contract tallul and save tir1m1n unW Mondliy toretpond to the C)t7'a ''lut and final" offer. · TE.,MSTEJtS: Mayor Bernie Svalstad accused Teamster Union officials, representing firemen, or "threatc-ning " city officials as Teamsters accused the city ot ''lying'' at the bergaiNn1 table. .BOND ELECTION: Approved preliminary resolutions calhng for a $4 to '6.2 million r ecreation bond election in June, although the final election and bond amount won't be set until later. · SIGNS: Informally called for a study of the city's sign ordinance after a lengthy hearing over a restaurant area. ZONING: Gave first reading to an ordinance rezoni ng the 14~ lots in the 38·acre Colonia Juarez community from agricultural to residential. F,.._P~AJ DOCTORS' SLOWDOWN. •• is high with up lo 75 percent of the 211 beds OC'Cupied. In 1,os t\lamitos, I.as Alamitos General Ilospitat which serves residents of Seal Reach, nd· ministrator RiC'hard Skillman re- ported that all but emergenC'y surgery had been eliminated. In addition, he said, patients visiting the emergency room were being referred lo Orange County Medical Center for follow up care. Skillman said no employes have been laid off but y,•ith the pa- tient load at 15 percent below normal levels , ho spital employes have been put on a four-day work week. Si milar measures were being taken at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. y,·here a 10 pe-rcent reduC'tion in the patient census was reC'orded as doctors the-re began to stop elective sur- gery. Admini st rator Mi c hae l Stephe-ns said ··urgent and emer~ency.,urgeries are still be - in£ performed, but our surgery schedule is down 30 percent.'' He said eight employes had been laid off and 95 were put on a four-day week. He said they an- ticipate a continued reduction of s urgery and patients which will l~ad to a rurther reduction of employes· working days. He etsimated that the slowdown Is cost ing the hospital about $10,000 per day. In Costa Mesa, no employe lay 'offs or Y..'Ork week reductions have taken place at Costa Mesa 1 Memorial ~lospital , according to administrator Tom Richards. Richards said that while elec- tive sur gery y,.·as being cat back , SAN DIEGO DOCTORS JOIN SLOWDOWN, Page A5 the hospital's occupancy rate was holding and he does not a n- tiC'ipate reducing staff hours tftis week. In the south county, however, business was normal at San Clemente General Hospital, Mis- sion Community and South Coast Co mmunity hospitals. In fact. a spokesman for South Coast said the patient load "is better than it 's been in a couple of years." He s aid the surgery schedule was showing 10 to IS more surgeries per day than normal. In another development, the chiefs of staffs or ho5pitals in Orange County, were to meet al noon today at the offices or the Orange Count)' l\tedical Associa· lion in Orange. Everett Bannister, a:isociatlon director, said t he purpose would be to assess the situation in the county, whether there would be a slowdown, and in what aieas. Huntington Roamer Faces Robbery Rap Oil.Bids Probed By U.S. WASHINGTON (APl - Congressional auditors are. ln· ve1tlg11ting why bids on Southern Califomla offshore oll fields feJI fa r below government predlc· lions, the state's two senators an· nounced Tuesday. The Interior Department sajd in advance of the Dtt. 11 bidding that it e:<pected bids of around S2 billion. Instead, they came to $438 million. Sens. John V. Tunney and Alan Cranston, both Democrats. re· quested the investigation by the General Accounting Office and said it would be finished by Jt1ly. The senators, in a joint state· ment, expressed concern that the public may not be "receiving fair value for its resources." ''Preliminary investigation~ by GAO indicate that the Depart· ment of Interior prepl;lred two separate estimates or._<the value of the Outer Contlnenta:?Shell re· sources,'' the senators said. In addition to the we ll - publiclzed $2 billion estimate, the Geological Survey valued the lands a t about $200 million, the senators said. T he GAO fou nd that the Geological Survey, an agency within the Interior Department, disclaimed any responsibility for the higher projections, Tunney and Cranston said. GAO told the senators that the study will determine what the dis· parity in evaluation of the lands means for future lease sales and the agency will propose recom· mendations to eliminate similar problems in the future. '' 1 r ecognize the n eed for developing the outer continental shelf oil and gas aS expeditiously and safely as is practicable,'' Tunney said. "However, l cannot support a wholesale giveaway of our pre- c ious n ational ene r gy re- .sources." "Clearly, the results of the Dec. 11 lease sale provides com- pelling evide nce that the existing leasing procedures mus t be changed,'' Cranston said. Wher It ce .. w fr••· .• , • THE. BUDGET DOLLAR J (flSCAl YEA.l 1977 EST.I Wh•r• tt 10•1. •... D•fl•lll P•YM•fll• " ..... 1<.111 ... 1. H •11on•• , O•l•fl•• 26• Oltl•• '•••••• Op•••l •O.,,. u ... ,......... CHART SHOWS BREAKDOWN O~ TH! U.S. BUDGET DOLL.AR 'Mojor Turnlft9 Point forth• AIMricon People' S. County Power Out . FromFi .. e Fro. Page AJ BUDGET ••.. ' Preaidetlt while Outlining the budget. ''This represents what we hope will be a very major turning point for the American people," By FREDERICK SOIOEMEHL he saJd in signing the 955·page 01u,.o.11,~1e1.... document. "But it does not hold out any promise that the federal A etubborn bruih fll'O on the government can or will solve Camp ·Pendleton Marine base everyproblem.'' knocked oqt ,.power to 22,000 Deapite Ford's call for reduced homes ln elsbt south Orange welfare spending, more than half County commu.nttles and forced the budget would be spent on MO- evacuation of resident& from a ple. Defens e spending wo uld base homing project early today. jump to $101.1 biflion -better By midday, the blue bad COD· thanone.quarterofthe budgel. sumed 400 acres at the north end Three of Ford's top economic o'-the base. (:)fficialJ said the aides -Treasury Secretary blaze was about llO percent con· tained. "111 COl\talnment wu eJt· $101 BILLION pect<d later today, Ibey aald. FOR DEFENSE-A7 Power to San Diego Gas and FORD SEES HIKE Electric Company customers -IN s s TA ES B6 including former President Nix· · • X • on -in San Cle:mente, William Simon, Budget Director Capistrano Beach, San Juan James Lynn and chief economic Capistrano, Dana Point, Laguna adviser Alan Greens pa n - Niguel, and Portions of. Mission pralsed the budget. ·Viejo, Laguna Hills and South "We have come to a point of de· Laguna went out of service at cision in this country," said 4:16a.m . Lynn, who warned that contlnu· Service was restored at 6:23 ing to run up bigger deficits each a.m., according to the SD&E year "is not where we want to go ... spokesman. The fire broke out about 8:12 Sen. Frank E . Moss <D·Utah), p.m . and San Clemente Flre expressed what is likely to be ll Chief Ron Coleman said the ap-common Democratic concern - parent cause was a training nare whether holding the budget lower lira Protected that came in contact with brush. than projections will place a drag The fire moved in a westerly on the economy which only now ROME <U PI) -Italy stopped direction and f or a tim e is emerging from a recession. all foreign exchange trading to· threatened homes in the San The President said defense and day to stem an out now of dollars Onofre Housing Project at the ex-energy r eceived the highest that threatens the Jtalian lira treme north end of the base. priorities in his proposal for fis- during a period of government NO structural damage was re· cal 1977 being sent to Congreess J\ former Huntington iseacn man. s haken a wake by a policem an patrolling in West Palm Beach, Fla .. a week ago for the city ordinance violation of sleeping in a C'ar, is back on the Orange Coast today facing five armed robbery c harges. of being the Bolsa Chica Street ~c=ris=i'=·==='====;-----po_rt_ed_b_Y_b_•_••_•po_k_ .. _m_en_. ____ tod_•_Y_· _________ _ Bandit. ·, Michael A. Rutledge, 21 , is held at Orange County Jail today in lieu of $25,000 bail following hi s return Friday night. He was brought back for pro- secution on the five holdup counts by Huntington Beach Police Detective Jac k Welsh. Rutledge was arraigned Mon-' day in West Orange County Judicial District Court. Investigators accuse Rutledge, a former Marina High School stu- dent who was graduated from Westminster High School in 1972, • Fuzzy Bandit Hits Valley Home Bank A fuzzy, red·haired bandit held up the Home Bank in Fountain Valley Tuesday afternoon and fled with m ore than $1,000, ac- cording to FBI a uthorities. The suspect, armed with a handgun, got all his money from two tellers. He ordered a third teller to empty her cash drawer, but left when she told him she didn't have the key. He Was described as six reeet tall or over with reddish brown hair done in a "fuzzy " natural style and wei1bin1 l!iO to 175 powids . He was believed to have fied in a maroon colored automobile. The robbery occurred at 3:19 p.m. Tundax.--at the bank at 17010 Ma1nol111 Ave . Smothering Case Settled LOS ANGELES (U PI) -A woman accuaed of 1mothertn1 her 70·ye•r-old mother wttb • pillow following an arrument wu found innocent by reuon o1. ln1anity Tuesday by • 1uperior coortJudl•· Judge Edward A. Hin& Jr., hued hla de<lllo• on r_.u by 1've payeb1atrl1ta, four of whom 1ald Carol LH-Ba1heller, '2, w111 inlane. The flllh 1ald ahe aul· fered from dimlllbhed capacity. The gun man uniformly described by victims as swarthy a,nd in need or a shave for approx- imately two d ays' growth of beard struck at least five times between September and Nov- ember. Detective Welsh said the gµn - man, who often wore a ski mask and brandished a .38 caliber re· volver, obtained St.00 to $700 ln the series of robberies at small neighborhood shops. Victimized firms \\'ere virtual- ly all ~ocated on Bolsa .,Chica Street 1n the general area of Warner Avenue and included two dry-cleaning businesses, a hair stylist's salon, a hobby shop and a fried chicken o utlet. Employes robbed in each in- stance closely described a man fitting Rutledge's appearance, although one victim told police he thought the man who held him up probably had a toy gun . Florida inve&tigators who round the s uspect asleep in a car booked him for investigation of auto t heft when the auto in- volved was discovered to be list · · ed as stolen in a records check. The vehicle was returned to its rightful owner and authorities on the eastern seaboard chose to drop auto theft charges in favor 'of sendin& the suspect back to the west coast for prosecution on the more serious complaints. Investigators agreed Rutledge is somewhat unique among im· prisoned fugitives, due to the fact be was c:aptured in OrMge Coun· ty, f1a., then returned to Orange County. Calif., for prosecution. Bad 'Breaks' Make Escapee . Call Police SANTA CRUZ (AP) Deputlea aay a Jail Inmate who broke bls legs trying: to escape knew exactly what to do. He called for help .-on the walkie talkie he stole from the 1berlft1 ofllce before neeing. The officer• 1ald D1nay Wat.moreland, 23, awaltin_I trtll on rape charaea, wu ~ a Jail noor Tuesd•1 wflen M' df· clded to let hlmselt out the wlii · dow on the electrlt cord. He i ll»l>ed and leU tbrH llorl• to a poililn1 l01, brealdi11b11Umbo. He mauied to crawl 1 block from tbt Jail then 1ave It up.111· 1111 the walkie talkie to 11>111a1•, "Unit to dt.patch1 .•encl "'1 am· bu.Janee.'' He 1ot DJ.I amb\ilante -and a nock of dePulla llnd police. Start now! ADVANCE REGISTRATION ICE SKATING LESSONS •Enhance your thlld"• poise and po11ure. A planned progr1m or le11on1 with lht 111:clus ive Ice Cap1d11' cu11y learnlng melhod glvet you or your child hea11hy eittte~ ln pleasant 1up1rvl11d 1urround,lng1. 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Stoek~ N/C TEN CENTS ~rankster Eyed • ID ·oc Girl's Death By WJLUAM SCHBEJBElt. Qt .. °'"',,. .. .., Five days aio, a bom·blutlng . motorist spooked Dana Sharp's hone in Modjeska Canyon and she was thrown to tbe ground. 1be l<l·year-old girl lingered in a coma until Tuesday at Mission Community Hospital and then she died. Orange County Sheriff's Department omclals believe the driver who leaned on his horn last Friday afternoon did lt •imp- ly to see 1t be could scare tbe horses. ..The girl and two eompanions weren't even on the road war, of ModJeska Canyon ttoad, · a Sheriff's spokesman said today. "They were at least 25 or 30 feet from the road.•• O.lly ...... Map by H8nl Ottm SHADED AREA SHOWS WHERE BLACKOUT HIT Pendleton Fire Also Endangered Housing Project (asterisk) Marine Base Blaze. Cuts C·oast Power By FREDERICK SCROEMERL Ot ... 0.11\' ll'lletStaft A 400·acre brush flre on the Camp Pendleton Marine Base south of San Clemente knockt¥1 out power early today to 22,000 homes in eight south Orange County communities and forced evacuation of a portion of a base housing project. A Camp Pendleton spokesman said the bla~e was about ~ per· cent contained at midday and that full containment was expect· ed this afternoon. The fire was being fought by Camp Pendleton flrefigbters, backed up by San Clemente city firemen and five brush trucks. Heat and flames from the fire knocked out power at 4:16 a.m. to San -Diego Gas and Electric Company customers in San Clemente, Capistrano Beach, San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point, Laguna Niguel, and por· tions of Mission Viejo, Laguna llllls and South Laguna. The out· age included the home of former president Richard Nixon. Electrical service in the 70- square mile area was restored at 6:23 a.m. when the names moved away from the higb .tension lines that cross the northern por· Coast Weather tion of the base. The outage affected fll'e and police agencies and three ma· Jor hospitals in south Orange· County, including San Clemente General, South Coast Comnnmi· ty in South Laguna and Mission Community in Mission Viejo. Officials said, however, that ell)ergency generators im· mediately kicked into service. There were no incidents, they said. "We were concerned, .. said San Clemente Police U . CU!fol'd Gates, noting that tbe outage Jett street lights and traffic signals without power. • AB a precaution, Gates said. additional personnel were placed on duty. They spent a good bit of their time manni.ng telephones to answer ''What bappened0 calls from arutious residents. Another man concerned. was Jerome Tbornsley, superinten· · dent of the Capistrano Unified School DJstrict. He said he learned of the fire at 5 a.m. and was told told that Power would be out until at least 9 a.m. Thornsley said he hurriedly contacted school district ad· ministrators to lay a contingency ·plan to keep schools open despite the outage. The district encom· passes nearly all the areas that were-affected by the blackout. Adult Education The adult education program in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District is•spotlighted to- day on Page A 10. The spokesman said Dana's two friends said the lone, male occupant of the big sedan, "dido 't even look back as he sped off." Dana lived with her parents in the north Tustin area and was a top student at Santiago Junior High. . The sheriff's spokesman said family members told officers Dana was afflicted with a disease that stunted her growth. ''Sbe was only about three and a halt feet tall and her feet barely reached the stirrups," 'the spokesman said. "We were lold she bad just started learning bow to ride." When the unknown driver blew his horn, Dana's friends managed to control their animals but Dana was thrown head first onto a pile of rocks. She was rushed to Mission Community Hospital where she was comatose until Tuesday morning. A hospital spokesman said las t ·ditcb emergency measures failed to save her life. Sheriff's investigators are working almost around the clock I to track down the driver of the car but, ironically, they think no criminal charges could b<> brought against him. The spokesman said he might be cited for using his" horn without cause but noted that the main reason for finding him is to "tell him what he has done." Abortion Bid Defied OC Board Action May Prompt Suit The Orange County Board or Supervisors tosjay flatly dis· regarded a ruling by County Counsel Adrian Kuyper that the board's decision last month to ban abortion counseling in the county's family planning pro· gram is unconstitutional It was learned after the board action today that the stage is now set for what , may prove to be a landmark legal action by the Slowdown Affecting Hospitals The effects of the doctors' slowdown were beginning to be felt in a wide area of Orange County today as more hospitals reported dropoffs in surgery. Doctors at Huntington In· tercommunity and Pacifica hospitals in Huntington Beach have stopped perfon1!ing all but emergency surgeries and both hospitals bav~ reported a subse- quent drop In the number of pa. llents. HIH is run.ni,pg with a skeleton crew, but Pacifica bas uot reduced its 1taU yet. Doctors at Huntington Jn. tercommunity Hospital were the first in West Orange County to eliminate elective surgeries. An offi<'ial said today that about 55 staff members had been laid off. She also reported that the number of patients at Huntington Intercommunity Hospital has risen to SS to 60, up slightly from Tuesday. Officials at both hospitals said that emergency operations are being carried out. Doctors at Huntington lntercommunity voted to cu·rtail their performances Thursday night. John Christianson, ad- ministrator of Fountain Valley Community Hospital, said today <See DOCTORS, Page A2) DOW SUSI'AJNS 3-POINT LOSS NEW YORK (UPI) -Prices closed lower today in active trad- ing on the New York Stock Ex· change in a battle between prfit takers and investors jumping on the new year rally bandwagon. The Dow Jones industrial average, off more than 11 points at the outset, lost 3.62 points to 946.24. The blue-chip average had gained 97.45 points through Tuesday. Declines led advances by about a four·to·three margin (Tables, B7). Turnover amounted to 34,470,000 shares. down from the 36,600,000 traded Tuesday, the second busiest day in NYSE his· toey. Orange County American Civil Liberties Union·CACLU) A spokesman for the ACLU chapter based in Costa Mesa said a vote was taken Tuesday Jtlght to file suit against the county in the event supervisors fail to r e· verse their decision on the basis of Kuyper's findings In a confidential memorandum to supervisors. Kuyper said the la nguage approved b y supervisors when they voted on the county's application for federal family planning grant funds was "of questionable legality." On a split vote at their Dec. 16 meeting, supervisors agreed to apply for $800,000 in grant money to support the program, which in· volves not only county agencies but also such private entities as Planned Parenthood Inc. and the Not Ber Day Lamp, Potty Foul Up Toi · Tuesday just wasn't Wendy Westhoff's best day. Firemen received a call at about 9:30 a.m. from Wen· dy's mother who said the 2·year-0ld had a lampshade stuck on her head. Sonya Westhoff told firemen that she had been cleaning her home at 1621 Baycliff Circle in Corona del Mar and little Wendy was "helping." SOMEHOW THE CIULD bumped the bottom of a wall lamp and the half -round shade fell down onto her head where the wire spokes held it firmly in place. Mrs. Westhoff said she tried for 20 minutes to get it off, with Wendy getting more and more unhappy. By the Ume firemen arrived to cut her out of the lampshade the little girl was "screaming bloody murder," her mother said. ,.. Once firemen cut the shade off, everything seemed to be ~oing just fine. UNTIL WENDY WENT to use the potty a few minutes later. "She got locked in the bathroom and it took me a good five minutes to get her out." Mrs. Westhoff said. I IRS Reopens Nixon Tax Investigation From Wire Services WASHINGTON -ThelJltemal Revenue Service has reopened a civil tax fraud investigation into Richard M. Nixon's 1969 tax re· tum, the Washington Post and the New York Times reported to- day. In a story by Bob Woodward, one o( two reporters who gained fame through reporting the Watergate case, the Post noted the IRS had concluded in 1974 it did not have sufficient evidence to charge the former president. with civil fraud. Now, the paper reported, in· formed sources said the agency "believes it can show that the former president had had knowledge of a back-dated deed claiming an illegal deduction for his gift of papers to the govern- ment." IRS officials would neither con· firm nor deny the reports. H fraud is proved against Nix· on. the Post said, he would be forced to pay $222,121, which would include $148,080 for a 1969 deficiency found by the IRS in 1974 plus a SO percent penalty for fraud of $74,040. ~xon could challenge a fraud assessment in court. Nixon had no legal obligation to pay the 1969 tax deficiency because the three-year statute of limitations had expired. But fraud bas no statute or limita- tions and makes the basic tax de- ficiency also collectible at any time. In 1974, when the IRS ruled Nixon's vice presidential papers were not a legal claim against his tues, Nixon paid the amount due for the 1970·72 returns and said he al"<> would pay the 1969 deficien- cy although he was not required to do so. The Post said its sources re· ported be has not done so. President Ford's pardon of Nixon covers only criminal mat- ters and would not apply to civil tax fraud. Meanwhile , Sen. Barry Goldwater s ays he doesn't think Nixon "ever told the truth about <See NIXON, Page A%) three county free clinics. Supervisors inserted the pro· viso that any private entity r e· ceiving the grant money from the county must refrain from all abortion counseling and referral services. In his memo, Kuyper said it is his belief that the county legally could only restrict such counsel· ing that is paid for with the grant <See ABORTION, Page A2) 'Austere' U.S. Budget Presented WASHINGTON (UPI) President Ford today proposed a "major turning point for the American people" with a $394.2 billion budget which, he said. concedes the federal government <'annot solve every problem in the land. Laced wi.th cutbacks and sure to be controversial in an election /. year, the fiscal 1977 plan em· phuizes stronger national de· fense, the search for energy, higher tax cuts for wage earners, business and investors and mak· lng elderly sick and working poor pay more of their own way. Social Security taxes would go . up to save the troubled fund whkh pays retirement benefits to most working Americans. If passed by Congress. it would mean a federal spending record. But Ford said its relative austeri. "ty would strike a proper balance between the needs of the nation 3s a whole and Ameridans who are actually poverty stricken. "We will give more money to those below the poverty line and cut off those above," said the President while outlining the budget. "This represents what we hope will be a very major turrung point for the Ameri<'an people,.. ~ be said in signing the 955·page document. "But it does not hold $101 BILLION FOR DEFENSE-A7 FORD SEES HIKE IN SS TAXES, 86 out any promise that the federal government can or will solve every problem.'· Despite Ford's call for reduced welfare spending, more than half the budget would be spent on pe<>· pie. Defense spending would jump to $101.1 billion -better than one-quarter of the budget. Three of Ford's top economic aides -Treasury Secretary William Simon. Budget Director James Lynn and chief economic adviser Alan Greenspan .-I praised the budget. · "We have come to a point or de· cision in this country,'' said Lynn, who warned that continu· ing to run up bigger deficits each year ''is not where we want to go." Gusty northeast winds 25 to 35 mph seen for Orange County Thursday. making for sunny skies and fair nights. Not as warm Thursday with beach highs 68 riling to 78 lnland. Lows tonight in the sos. Judge Upholds Charges NB Seniors Get Break on Pet Licenses Senior citizens in Newport Beach who own pets will get a break on license fees for their animals if the city council gives rmal approval to a new law on Sen. Frank E . Moss CD-Utah). , expressed what is likely to be a common Democratic concern - whether holding the budget lower than projections will place a drag : INSIDE TODAY Palutinfan gunrilla• croned Into Lebanon from Sttrla .CJ714 have 0111mOa .a Chrhttan village .and tightnt«l.o 1lege on ti.-~ ~-(ocon in the Be"® \loll.er. StorJI I mop A4. .•••ex ::;::~ Al IM I.. 0 . ~=-......... .a ~ n=.= .,,.. ~ 0c~ior ... c.-y~': =.... -c:n.... Ct-4 === -~r. ......... •.\~ ·r=_.. ... , ........ _.. ........... 9W .... ct-.:~ .:; ..,,..._,. A ... llt ...._ M ..,..,_ " ............ At,lft I Says Allegatiom Agairut Battin 'Sound' By GARY GllAN\'ILLB ........ " ...... SUpenor Court Judge Kermeth Lae ruled today that alle1ations lodged qalut Orange County Supervisor Robert Battin ln a i:rand Jury indictment are eo& ttltutlonally IOUQd • Judge Lae'1 rulln1 had the et- . f ect of turn!ng down a plu from Battin '1 ·attorney Matthew Kurtllcb that the indictment f alled to tpeetti-spedl1c cbarces aiatnstblt client. >.. a re1.tt, the MYeO felony counts cbar1ln1 Battin with p-ai_wi theft and mlaUM of public • .runcts stand. It was after Judge Lae spent Tuesday reading arand jury transcript. of testlmony leading to Battln's indictment. that he concluded the tbar&H were speclfle enouab. "Havtn1 read transcrtpts of the indictment I ftilid it states tact& constltut1n1 a public of· f ense," the judce 1ald. ''The court rul• the ell~te•· ti., are con.ltituUonall)':1urn. cient, .. Judae Lae cone~. Kwilich h•d charged a crand thdt count lncludod tntbe indict· ment f alled to •tale what Battin aJlegedly stole and who he stole it from . However , Judge Lae found otherwise after reading the transcrtpt of testimony leading to charees that Battin cam· palgned at taxpayers' expense tor lieutenant governor ln 19'M. Yet to be ruled on is a 38--polnt motion for discovery eubmitted to the ~ourt by J{urllich. Judce Lae recessed Battin's e.retri•J hearing until later in the dN' to allow himself time to read neput)' District Attorney Jack Ryan'• rebuttal to the discovery motion. . . Monday. • The proPosed ordinance whkh received initial approval at the council meeting of Jan. 12, calls for a halving of all animal fees for resident& who are over the age of 65. According to the proposed law. that would mean that senior ctli.zcns would pay SS for a re- iuJar dog Ucenfe. $2.SO fol' a license for a spaYed oc neutered dog, SS for an lmpoundedq and S2 .SO for otber impounded animab. lf the ordJnance ls approv@d Monday, lt will 10 into etf ect in 30 day~ . <See BUDGET, Page A2) Shell C~ Wu Price HOUSTON (UPl ) - Shell Oll Co. today an· nounced a penny per galloo decrease m the prtoo or gasoline eff ectlvc hn- mediatety. Th nallonwid reduction appUes to all classes of trade, resdlers and consumers. Shell aatd the reductioo renecta current market condltions. N/C Passing IJp Pavilion This Lido 14 s kipper leans into the wind as h is s ailboat whips p a s t th e B alboa P a\'ilion building in Newport Harbor. Northeas t to C'ust \\ind:-. up to 35 knots m ake for a s a ilor's heaven along the Orange Coast and the warm air and sunshine don 't hurt either . By DOUG l'JUmatE 0tui.O.lty,. .... ~ When is a beet not a beef? That Is the ~Hence of a dt1put1 that soon will bring the Oranae County Dittrict Attomey's office and Safeway to1ether-'n the courtroom. The DA '1 con1umer dlvl1lon has filed a suit conte ndtna Safeway has a misleading ad· verti1in1 c1mpoi1n that says, "Every beef1te.k and beef roast we cut at Safeway ia USDA <United States Department of Agriculture) choice or better.·' County Health Department in· spectors found calf for sale at Safeway. The calf either wu un· grade d -t he USDA has eight eradn for beef-or was graded "good ... Tbe ~onsumer, accordtnt to R. Richard Farnell, the deputy di11- trict a ttorney handliog t.he mat· ter, c annot tell tl\e difference between beef and cal!. The ad, he contends, le adt the buyer to beUtve the calf ts choice grade or bette r. "Bull." answers Safeway at- ;\ .. tomey Fred Di Bomardo, A calt ta not a ~ef. bt ea ya, cttll\8 thrff kind• of meat available from bovine animals-beef, calf or veal. It Safeway labeled it• calf 11 beef, he contends, the USDA would tile suit 1111inat the ator• for millabollns. · Therefore. he contlnue-s, w"en tl\e chain adver~iaes beet, it la not talkin1 about calf. And, he adda, the consumer knows the dlf · ference between a caU and a beef. On Ult> other hand. Farnell con· tendi all that areument Just muddies up the waters. "ff it comes from an animal that &oea 'moo.· it's beef," l\e says. Veal comes from unborn or newborn cattle . The DA 's office plans to 11k the court for civil penalttee a1ain1tt Safeway H well H 1 corrective advertising campalin ''to dllpel the belief in the minds of con· sumert that Saf ewey hu a old nothina but USDA prime or choice beet products." EQIJier. To Stelzl Roaer Humph r e y Heubner. • 48·Y••r·o ld counselor, p robably is less ~hcemed a bout the theft of bta water bed than the dama1t the b u ral a r wrou1ht. Before the burglar car· ried off the king-size bed from Heubne r 's home at 796 Joann St., Cos~a esu, he drained It. Police were told T day the w1tti1r ran all r two bedroom•, the hall, the llv· ini roQm . Heub n er estlm•ted th• value of the bed, lMludhif wood frame, destal, and h eater, at . But the dam age to the rarpet, which m ay have to be replaced, was put at $500. The police noted that the thief, if caught, may not simply be char ged with b ur g l ary, b ut w ith malicious mischief loo. FrOM Pag., A J Fro• Pq~ A J In Canta Banas Di BePnardo bellevea, "Safeway haa bullt a reputation on selling htfh quality Mif. All of the bee( in the •toree la USD,\ choice or better. J can't un· derstand what the problem it. Calf is not beef." Living Costs For County Exceed U.S. BUDGET ... on the eC'onom y wh1C'h only no"' 1s emere1ng from a recession The P r e?.1de n t p r opo sed #?re at er C' uts m inch v1dual tn('ome taxe$ be~1nn ing 1n J uly, but also a:;kl•d for a m .u 1mum increase of St9 5(l nl'xl \ear in the• Social Secu nl) payroll ta:\ the one that cut!" d eepest into J.)w and mooer:ilt.' tnC'ome workers His prorost.•cl revenue• l>hanng Mel otht.•r reforms would reqw re rf.'C'ip1ents of som e federal aid, -.uch as Medicare, to contribute more toward their h<'nl'fll~ In his onh· nl'w m1llative, Ford proposed .: a so-called welfan• rzar ' · t n <'oo rd in alr federal wel fare, hous ing and food pay ments by setting uniform na tionwide ~tandarcls for tx.•nefits He offered no dC'lails, but said he w ould a s k Co ngress f o r authoriza tion At hi s briefing. the President steppecl aw ay from the podium a nd pointed to flow chart::. that depicted re?i pons1b.il1ties al the Department of lll'alth. Educa twn 3nd Welfare tr you look at those mess charts. you'd h a ve to believe that any on·e with common sense wnuld want l~ chanee it , .. he said · This 1s not a policy or the qtUck fix ; it does not hold out the hollow prom ise that we can wipe out inflation and unt.>mploymt.'nl overnight." F'ord s aid For the firs t lime , a president's budget will be reviewed by the new J oint Congressional Budget Committel' It is likely to bt.' fris ky and indl'p endent both in dealinS? with F'ord 's propos als and suggesting it:. own . NIXON ... his connections with Waterr.?ate " lnterviewed T ul'sday on NBC's Tomorrow " s ho\\. Goldwater ,\·as asked 1f he thou$!hl :\1xon was honest '.'lo, J don 't thtnk so. and I think that was his trouble." he . id Hammett Wins Post Costa Mesa Vi ce Mayor J ack Hammett has been eleeted vice c hairma n o f t he Cali fo r nia Aeronautics Board He has serv ed on the seven-me mber board 11lnce 1974. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT ffW C '•NI' c. .. \I L•llw P11ot ~I" -..t-~' r.,,..-c11Nrd o .. "''wrir\ ,.,.,\,, '' ou••••V-.d l·• tt ( ''"9' (04\t ~uf\U\P'l1f'IQ (•'"l-••nv ~, .. , ..... ti01HM'\t .,. pwbu~• Mtrft.tY ,...,~ ',.d .. v '""' C.o\•• ,.,,.,.. Nrwri.p"'\ fh .ct'I H,,,,, r•qtf'"• Att•lf'I rount•1" V•Hty ''"'•"• ~,.o,.,,,.t·.u• y,,11,., •nn l"""'"" tu •1 P\ '°'""''' (n.H.I IJi. -..nvh ,, o .. ·f\cil •d1Uon '' r>""' , • 11 \.th,",_,,.., il"d '"" ff•'I\ '"• pt1,,t 1p•I publl\t 1ng bt•nt " ~I JJM ""' '' h.t., \trt"f't Co•t• ,,;, ,. C•t1torf"W• .,.,, Robert N. Weed Prt\1Clt'"t •~ Pvt~h\IW!t Jack R. Curlev V•t.r .,,,,1ckf\t •M C.en~r•t M.tf\il\il"' Thomas Keevlt l 1111or Thomas A. Murpt\1ne Aol•"•t l"t [dllM Chart~s H. Loos Richard P. Nall L DOCTORS c1octors there are continuing thl'ir norm al surgery schedules "The pat ients need surgery and our doctors are providing ll ... he said He said the r e ha!> been no s lov.down and th at 32 oper<.1t1on~. both elective and e ml'rgency in nature. were performed Tues· eta \' ile said that lh<' pallC'nt cenl<.us 1s high with up to 75 percent of the 21·1 beds occupied Jn Los Alamitos. Los Alamitos General Hosp ital which sf.'rves res idents of Seal Rt-arh. utl ministrator Richard Skillman re ported that <111 hut l'mc>rgerl<'y surgery had bN'n eltrrunatt'd In addit ion. he said, put ients visiting the C'm Ngency l'Of>m were being rderrC'cl ln Or.ingl' County Medical Center for folltm up rare Skillman said no t.'mployt•s have been laid off but \\-1th the pa t1ent load at 15 percent twlo>w norm al levels. hosp1taJ em plu~ t.'i- SAN DIEGO DOCTORS JO IN SLOWDOWN. P•ge AS have been put on a tour-day \\ork week Si m ilar measures w<>re b<>1ng taken at Hoag Memonal Hospital in ".'lewport Reach, where a 10 percent reduc tion in the patwnt census was reco rdl'd as dnctors there began to stop elecll\ c sur gery Admin is tr at o r Mic h ae l Stephen s s aid "urgent a nd emer gency surgen<'S are still be mg performed. but our surgery ::chedule is down JO percent " He said eight employes had been laid off and 95 werl' put on a four-d av week lie said lhcv an tiripate a contin ued reduction of surgery and patients which will lead to a further reduction of employes' wor kinll days H e etsi m ated th a t the !-lowdown is costing the hospital about $10,000 per day In Costa Mesa, no employe lay offs or wor k week reductions have taken place at Cost a Mesa Memorial Hospital. according to administrator Tom Richards. Costa Mesa Eying Japan Sister City Cost a Mesa civic leaders have agreed to e nter into a sister city proeram with the city of Mltaka in Japan. The 5 to 0 vote authorizing the program was taken th.ts week after t he s taff had submitted a report on the experiences of other cities in Ca li fornia in hav· ing sister cities in Ja pan. The report by assistant city manaeer Robert Duagan said such progra m!) usually involve the exchanee or students, buti· nessmen, sifts and art work. The averaee <'Ost for a progra m Is about S2.000 and this is funded through a city budtet, communi· ty fund raising or both. The Costa Mesa council agreed to allocate $1 ,000 to the pro~am in next year's budget. 'Tl\e money will be to hoat people com ine to Costa Mesa, not to 1end people on a Junket to Japan,'' Pinkley said. Mitaka i11 a city of about 155.000 10 miles west o f To~yo. Neeotta· tlons wtth the city have been ~ade by the Costa Meta OJ>· Umi1t Club and the Sumitomo Bank. Tom Maru)luma of the Op· tlmi1t Club, the 1roup Which pro· vided the J 3pane1e 1arCS.n ln front ol the civic center. •aid th• club hopes the prosram will ln YOlnexchanae vi•lts by the youth ofthecommunlUes. ' ·Neighbors Aiding Gun Victim's Wife Penalties could reach $2.500 for each c011v ictioo against the stores. • But Di Bernardo, citing testimony by the Los Angeles County Health Department. among othe rs, eontenda those who are "sophis ticated'' in the field of meat s ales and g radine agree with him. l.OS ANGELES <UPI> The coet of living in Los Angeles :ind Oran1e counties rose faster than the national average last year. inrreaslni 0 .7 p e r ce n t t!"I December alone. the U.S. Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statiatics s aid today. By DOUG FRJTZSCHE Of'"' Oelly ll"lltl sqtt F or eig ht y e a rs, E ulogio Ram o~ Valenzuela made his home in Canta Ra nas, an area in Santa Fe Springs named a fter the r anas ca ntat as-the singing fro{!s that s erenaded through the night on wh at once was the Flood Ra nch Monday the bullet riddled body of F:ulogio Ramos Valenzuela was found lying face down in an Irvine orange grove a day or more aftf.'r his execution-style !"lnying Valenzuela was shot sever al times in the back with a s mall caliber gun, a shooting that has Ir v i n e p o l ice m ys tified. F:v1dence at the scene -blood· ::.pattered leaves and the position nf Valenzuela 's livid body -led pohce to discard an e arlier theory that he had been shot elsewhere a nd dumped in Ir vine. Rut thNe were no signs of a ?il rugale in the or ange grove h<•side the Santa Ana Freeway east of Culver Ori ve where a woma n jogg er f o un d Va lenzuela's body and police have heen una blc to decipher the 1.•vents that led up to the shooting. With the help of a Spanish· spel\king Costa Mesa officer, Irvine Detect ive Steve Nash to· day was to begin questioning the family. friends and acquain· lances of the dead man. The Cant a Rana s area is a de· ceptively qui et res idential neighborhood t hat on odd OC· casions is shatte red by a shotgun blas t from a passing car- usually aimed at the clusters of teenagers who hang around un· der the street lights and in the front yards T he r aids provoke reprisals l'r°"' Page A J ABORTION money and not the coun1elin1 that Is provided through the use of private funds . ·'Any alternative interpreta· tion of the al'tion that would com· pletely prohibit abortion, abor· tion coun1eling or referral• it or questionable legality," Kuyper said. He c ailed it "an unronatltlu· tional infringement ol J woman's right to t erminate her pregnancy and a counselor's ript to discuaa abortions." In pre1entin1 hls tlndlng1 to the board, Kuyper aaid he con·· sidered the matter a "free spe~ch i11ue" that the board could not legally legl11late against. He apologized to supervisors for taking so Jong to render an opinion and denied that he had been put under any pr ... ure from 1roups and lndivtdualJ op· posed to the board's action. He said U was an extremely difficult decision to research because there hne been IO many test <'ases in California and other states regardine abortion le&isl•· 1 lion. Meea Concert Band Perfornu Sunday Cotta Meaa Ht1h School'i con· cert band and orchatra wm 1lv• a ptrformance In the Oran1• C4ut Colte1e audltodum at 4 p .m. Sunday to rain tunda for MW band clnllorm1. Tickett a an bt boulbt at the door. The char11 wilf be S1 for adult• and 15 cent• for hllh 1chool atudenta with elementary school puplla admitted tr.e. an ci a ro rm o r interne c ine warfare d iiturbs the area for a while until t ime and a heavy crack-down b y the Los Angeles County S heriff's Depa rtment restores calm to the barrio com· munity. The ar ea also is ladl'n with con· tinua l rumors that arl' spawned on the street corners and ral'e in Spanish through the community. So far, no one is s ayi ng much about the shooting that left Zoila Valenzuela a widow with seven young children. The people or the area re· member Vafenzuela as a rather quiet man. but one who came and went on his own. Over the years . he worked oCC and on as a laborer at Pacific Clay Products, a manufacturer of brick and ceramic aoods local· eel across Telegraph Road from Santa Fe Springs City Hall. Safeway, Di Bernardo says. turned down a settlement offered by the DA 's office. "because I cannot accept a settlement when my client has done nothing wrong." Masseuse Charged With Soliciting A m asseuse a t the Physical Therapy Massage Parlor. 2626 Newport Blvd., Coala Meo, was arres t ed Tuesda y night on a charge of soliclttng acts of pro- stit ution. The arrest of Sha nnon Sorrells, ?7, of Los Angeles. was based up· on a visit to the parlor by a vice squad offi<"er. Decemb~r·s price rise in the Southern California area boosted the Consumer P rice Index lo J record 163.7, m eaning that good:. '75 COST OF LIVING 'ONLY' 7%, A4 and eervices costing $10 ln th(• bau price year of 1967 were up :o $16.37 a l the end of the year . Pril'es gained seven percent nationwide d uring a)I of 1975 but in Los Angeles a nd Orange coun ties m oved up 9.1 percent . refl ecting increas ed costs in all major ar<-as of consumer s pend i ng , ac c o rd i n g t o Bru ct· Hanchett. the r egional com m1111ioner of labor statistics The 1975 increase was less than the 11 .9 percent rise in 1974 but higher than 1973's 7 .8 percent. I Start now! STONEWARE PLANlERS glazed with water proof, lead free glue, one of a kind pot5. · Get your kids st•rttd in tht Kellogg's• Stick Up for Brukf.st Contest. ADVANCC. REGI STRATION ICE SKATING LESSONS • Enlla"et your ehlld'1 pol11 and poaturt. A planntd program of lesson1 with the exclusive Ice Capades' easy learning method gives you or your cll1ld htalthy t•ereitt In pleaunt auptrvlud 1urround1ng1. . . RIQllTE" NOW """' ........ • I. HANDMADI ON ou• POmH WHHL JANUARY SALE SAVE UP TO 60°/o AT OUR FACTORY $1 OFF UY UI PUIClllSE WllllllSOOINI I OFFER GOOO THRU JAN. 31 High qu1llty hi·flrtd pots, h1ndmade, and glazed, one of 1 k ind stoneware Pots. Dealers we I come HEAVY DUTY MACUMI 4 n. LONG $9.00 VALUE ON SALE POI $3, 50 OTHll SIZIS PROM 99' JUTE 11 IL BEADS ON SALE WI AUO CAUY DO.n·YOUHIU MACUMI SU,,UH LM01 t 'l•H WOOOIH IUDS HG. l 5c NOW ~ r & I" Pot 1t1. suo Our 13so Price LAIOI CllAMIC llAOI HO. 60' 6" Pvt ffq. $7.00 Our •2so Price 4" Pot R11. SS.DO OUR 2 PRICE $ OO Sllll All A....OlfMAft Stoneware ~world , ' NOW35' lHQEI SIZlS All lYWIU ----~··~~---- 'At .,. DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE llo111e0Wner DiSputes . . A primary tuncUon of homeowner assocf atlons ls • to help maintain property values. If every homeowner is required to follow the same regulations regarding upkeep of his resldence, chances are that campuses and what to do with the old sites. WE CANNOT TOLERATE SOVIET lNTERFERENCE WITH ANGOLA! -- ANOIASSUREYOUFARMERS THAT I WILL NOT ALLOW ANGOLA TO INTERFERE WITH OUR GRAIN Some of the schools could be used for joint com· munlty/school purposes. Others may be restructured. with the lower primary grades at one campus and the SALES! general property values will not &lip. · The associations in Newport Beach have g~neral· ly served their purpose of maintaining and even up· grading neighborhoods. However, a recent battle In the Harbor View Hills Homeowners AssociaUoQ has spotlighted some Wlpleasant._ negative $ide effects. Residents there have been battling for several months over tree heights. The issue still ls not finally resolved but now the association ls polarized into two feuding factions. Other associations have turned their neighborhoods into battle zones over concerns ~uc~ as basketball hoops and cable television. It is unfortunate that a congenial neighborhood atmosphere would be strained over such relatively minor issues. In the long run, the effic~cy and the value of community associations must be based on bringing neighbors together to maintain values. School Population· ~ Within the next six months, Newport-Mesa school trustees will decide how best to handle currently declining student enrollment. It's predicted that by 1980 5,000 fewer pupils will be enrolled in the school district. Already, 117 classrooms are empty. Jn discussing the matter at a recent board meet- ing, Supt. John Nicoll urged the school board to view the enrollment drop as an "educational opportunity" rather than a tragedy. He spoke of positive aspects that could result from the smaller census and urged trustees to keep an open mind when considering whether or not to close higher primary grades at another. · It is important that trustees not hastuy sell school sites that may be needed in the fuutre. Population ex· perts have predicted that in the early l~, the number of elementary school age children may very well increase again. .. Today's surplus space could be tomorrow's godsent opportunity if youthful-population figures re· verse their trend. Pleasant Prospect It has been more than 20 years since the Pacific Electric tracks were removed from Newport Beach. Much of the former right of way has since been made into roads or incorporated into lots. But one seven-acre piece bas remained a general- ly unused eyesore that has greeted visitors who enter Newport Beach by crossing the Santa Ana River on Pacific Coast Highway. And in all the years that piece of land has sat va· cant, the residents of west Newport have had no parks. All that is due to change as plans are being pre- pared for the West Newport Park which will turn the eyesore into something scenic and give west Newport residents their first real park. The city council bas allocated $188,800 which will provide for the first stage of development and has wisely directed architects to include lots of landscap- ing in the first phase at the expense of recreational facilities. With two tennis courts. restrooms, a bicy- cle trail and two parking.lots, the park will have plen· ty to offer. It also will give residents and visitors alike something pleasant to look at. N ytAr< ~ H~AR.' \ ci~v.r &tAPI . \\ Homesteaders Are tlae Intruders t Placebos Can Be Dear Gloomy Gos The Coyotes Were ~here First Powerful ( VON HOFFMAN ) WASHINGTON -If Listerine <'an't prevent colds can it cure warts? The Federal Trade Com· mission, which knows 101 ways to waste its insufficient staff's time on the trivial, is in full chase after Warner-Lambert, the com- pany that makes Listerine. The FTC wants millions of dollars worth of future Listerine ads to . contain a statement saying: "Contrary to prior advertising, Listerine will not help prevent colds or sore throats or lessen their severity.·· It's the commission's conten· tion that this best known or mouth washes can do none of those things, but that de· cade upon de- cade of ad- vertising has convinced million upon million of our fellow citizens that Listerine does in fact prevent colds or Jessen them. Tsk, tsk, the com· mission may in its zeal be about to give American an extra case of the sniffles. The findings against Listerine are doubtless scientifically im· peccable, but if people believe that bad-tasting stuff is good for their colds, it could be. This is the placebo effect. Doctors long ago discovered that you give sick people sugar capsules, but if you tell them it's strong medicine, and they believe it, there is a very good chance they'll get well. THE PLACEBO, for instance. is the drug of choice in curing warts, according to at least one doctor. Better th an any drug with active ingredients, better than surgery. He reports complete re- covery from warts by the use of lead pencils, five dollar bills and I can't think of what else. The operative therapeutic agency here is faith, and so effective is the placebo when people believe in it that it has to be considered the single most powerful drug , known to modem medicine. Faith in a placebo may be only as strong as the faith of the pa· tient in the person who gives it to him. It can be engendered by the kindly. old family pb)>slclan. Since he's about as common a sight as th4! cop on the beat or the milkman with the horse..drawn dairy wagon, the fUDctioo of the Dr. Wei by /Robert Younc characters on TV may be to rein· force this fading legend and keep it vivid enough for U& to J>TOject onto the medical m@chanical m~n whos~ valuable time we take up at the clinic. TRE FAITH inspired by the doctor's bedalde manner is cttaney •. Somo doc· ton ~·t have Robert YOUDJ'• bedside roaoner; and even it lb~ an d1d1 a physician seetns up- • ward or 120patttnta•G7does1'l't have the Ume to cullivate his C'U5tomers' confidence in his unl· quo therapeutic akllls. • The Harbor High regi.stra· tion fiasco was a perfect example of some of our so· called "higher educated" educators. Every good pro- du c in g fru it tree periodically bas to have its _ non-functioning growth re- moved. Why not Harbor High? R.P. It's more convenient and effi· cient to encourage the belief that the doctor is the custodian of magical powers which operate for your good regardless of his personality. In much the same way the validity of the Catholic Mass isn't imperiled by that state of grace or lack of it of the celebrant. ''I'm not even sure how many patients I have in the hospital right now . I don't have as much time to devote to patients as Marcus Welby," says Dr. Peter Sullivan of Houston's Hermann Hospital. "Good doctors don't have time to take a personal in· terest in their patients these days." As quoted from Roger Rappoport 's .. The Superdoc· tors," Playboy Press, 1975.) DISTANCE can create awe. The unknowable doctor whom you never see but who knows you. Doctors are accused of playing god sometimes, but in this rela- tionship they are most certainly acting as god surrogates. Dr. Sullivan's description of bis rela- tions with bis patients isn't all that different from Moses' with the Lord in the burning bush. God must be omniscient. Dr. Harold Scheie of the University of Pennsylvania's Scheie Eye Institute bas a fisheye telescopic lens in his office that allows him to inspect the work or bis recep- tionists. Rappoport writes that Dr. Scheie also has a "desktop control panel -equipped with. S3 buttons -designed to let him tune his office TV sets to an over- all view or his operation room (and) a close-up of each of the five operating tables ... When he sees or hears something he doesn't like, Scheie can pick up the phone arid bawl out the sur- geon through an operating room speaker." Dr. Kurt Wagner of Beverly Hills wears a gold whistle around his neck which he blows when he wants his nurses to come to at· tentlon. God is all-powerful, and ooe of the signs of power in our society is money. "Last year I made a million dollars," Dr. Wainer ways. IF MOST peopte•s f aitb ln medicine is stronger than their faith lo the Divinity, you have some lnkllnl why. The optimal cbndltlons have been created for the placebo to work. No African wltcb doctor can have more cooperative and credulous pa· tteni.. Tbe drawback, ol course, ts a body of lay people with such stroni medical dependency they abdicate respon.si&lllty for their own bodi• and their own health. There are no athelstl, neither ln the foxholes nor the waJUng N>Orm. Li1terlna, nurser Soak your warts ill it lour times ad~. I To the Editor: Something should be done about the coyotes around San Clemente. For starters, they ought to be protected. I certainly can sympathize with those unfortunate people in the Shorecliffs area who have lost pets to coyotes. The loss or a loved pet is a personal tragedy and a heartbreaking experience, whether the pet dies in the jaws of a coyote or under the wheels of a car. But if we are to assume our proper responsibility in such matters, we have to admit the coyote is no more to blame for our pet's death than is the driver of a car in most cases. If we took reasonable precautions and kept our pets from roaming about freely, especially alter dark, they could not be dragged away by coyotes or run over by cars. AS FOR coyotes being "blood· thirsty,'' a coyote eating a cat can hardly be considered more bloodthirsty than the same cat eating a mouse. Such things are always relative. I think the residents or Sborecliffs ought to keep in mind, too, that it is they who are the in· truders, not the coyotes. That area bas been coyote country for thousands of years. As far as the coyotes are concerned, suburban homesteaders are upstarts and nuisances. The Navajo people called the coyote "God's Dog,'' and held him in high esteem because of his intelligence. Since the coming of the white man, the coyote has been the sub- ject of the longest and most in· tensive eradication campaign man has ever launched against any of his fellow animals. Despite mountains of accumulat- ed evidence that coyotes are im- portant and beneficial in the· ecology of most areas they in- habit, the federal government is spending S8 million of our money in an ongoing eradication pro- gram I can only describe as "bloodthirsty." I CAN think or several more useful things the government might use $8 million for. The pro- gram doesn't work anyway, because the coyote is a heck of a Jot smarter than the federal gov- ernment. As for the present coyote pro- blem in the Shorecliffs area, if the people there can be patient and keep their pets corralled after dark, the problem will solve itself. Coyotes don't abandon their old bunting grounds easily; but if pickings get really slim, the pack will move on to new ter · ritory where food is more r~adily available. MEREDITH GORMAN Pu11~1t ( MAILBOX ) Letters from readers are welcome. TM right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. .Letters of 300 words or less wiU be given preference. All letters mu..t in- clude rignature and mailing address but names may be withMld on re- quest if suffici~t re<L!on ts apparent. Poetry wtll not be publUhed. ludgeNat To the Editor: An answer to the many good comments concerning many animal owners <Mailbox, Jan. 18). Ralph Rollins is a new neigtfbor, but fast became a good neighbor. His small pet had a large fenced-in backyard. But Ralph happened to see a strange s mall dog squeeze through the iron gate and his pet follow . Ralph immediately went and bought mesh and put it on the gate. Now the mystery is. bow did his pet get out? A dog following a dog's instincts? Judge not your neighbor! If you should be so un!ortunate as to hit a dog, take what action you can to find the owner or to see that it receives care. LOUIS and RUTH MELLO Wro119l11 AcrtUftl To the Editor: In rebuttal to the various let- ters and to the headline in your Jan.18newspaper. I feel that I must answer the accusations concerning my mis- treated, unwanted dog who was struck by a car in the cold, cold night. AS IT was for my three pre- vious dogs and another I current- ly have, my terrier was never al- lowed to run free in violation or city leash Jaws. He was allowed, however, (as is my other dog) to s leep on the chair, bed, near the heater, or in any other part or the house he desires. In other words. he was well taken care of and well loved. How did he get out in the cold, cold night? I do not have any answers for when I returned home shortly after midnight the gate was tightly secured. It seems that the general con- sensus indirectly blames me for the dog's death (as well as so- meone's friend). I apologize, but feel I am wrongly accused. Only I know the truth of the care and protection I gave my dog;· •t undontand that down below they eall ll thunder." . -- therefore these accusations are irrelevant to me. My conscience does not bother me. RALPH ROLLINS ln1'ol1'ed C'ltfzftl To the Editor: I wish to correct some im- pression left b:y your Jan. 2 arti- cle titled, "Paramedics Bring Back Man." Thank God our par· ty was sitting at the table next to the Frank W. King family on New Year's Eve. When Miss King stated that her father had turned blue and my husband im· mediately went to his aid. He at· tempted to give mouth to mouth but could tell there was a blockage in the throat. Two to three minutes passed when the Costa Mesa Fire Department was called. My husband con- tinued to give mouth t9 mouth after dislodging the food in Mr. King s throat until the paramedics arrived on the scene two or three minutes later with their eqwpment. My husband continued to work with the paramedics until Mr. King was taken to the hospital. The management of Reuben's, Catherine King and Sgt. Tom Lazar or the Costa Mesa Police Department expressed their gratitude. Here was one citizen who got involved and was well trained enough to save the life of a fellow man. MRS. THELL E. GLASCOCK Para•edfc• To the Editor I want t o s hout from the housetop praisei.: for the Newport Beach Fire Department and the paramedics; and I don't know any better way to do ii than through your newspaper! We had an emergency reccnt ly and the Fire Department and 1 hc paramedics were here within a few minutes after our call Tht'" took over and saw that my husband had emergency tr<'at ment and then took him to the· hospital, where his doctor wa:-. waiting. Only someone who ha:; f!One through this can know what a blessing it is to be able to call a number and have help there. I notice there is some question regarding the financing for the paramedics -they are worth everything it costs and I hope our supervisors reallze that. MRS. J . LEON A RD SMITl I C'est l..nltlftl To the Editor: We feel that the Coast Com· munJty College District should respond to the Daily Pilot's Jan. 14 editorial which questions the expenditure for the District's new annual report, "Accomplish· ments.'' The Coast Community College Dlatrlct ~s a $50 million-per-year .. corporation" whose 1tockbolders are the taxpaytrs residing in our 76-square mile district (settled by more than half-a -million persoos). By law we must pubtisb and · m~e avaUable intormatidR per- tainln1 to budget, income, growth and other pertinent data. We feel that the new readable format wllJ bett~T enable us to share with tbe citizenry that in- formation along with OUT pro- fNll· Naturally It would be UJ\· feasible to publish a fine quality annual report for every tax· paye r. Therefore. we have chosen to distribute a couple of thousand reports to citizen ad- visory groups, libraries, cham· bers or commerce and civic dignitaries plus other outlets where the reports can be easily obtained by interested citizens. YOUR WRITER labeled the annual report as "selfaggrandi.z· ing. ·• The District and its two campuses. Orange Coast College and Golden West College, and KOCE·TV, Channel 50, are de- dicated, energetic and creative institutions, the facuJty and staff or which are proud and en- thusiastic of their efforts on behalf of their studenl5. They rightly listed their Accomplish- ments. . t In reference to the report's "poor contents." this new-styled report is a first for us. and the contributors or the content were exploring. However, important· Jy, the chancellor's office re- ceived many letters from college presidents and district ad- ministrators and politicians praising our institution on the ex· celleoce of the publication and on the District's accomplishments. Th.is annual report admittedly has enhanced the Coast Com· munity College Dis trict's already excellent national r& putation. • And why is a national reputa- tion important' Our district either produces or collaborates on the production of television courses for college credit as well as designs the academic support material for these telecourses. This annual report -"Ac- complishments" -was sent to the chief administrators of every community college district in the country along with a letter from Chanc ellor Watson focusing on our aviilable TV courses for credit. The res ultant orders have paid for the cost of the annual r~ port. thereby relieving the tax- payer!' from purchasing this pubhratton Six thousand dollars out or an annual huci!!et of $50 million truly is~ modest amount to pay for the returns C'nJoyed by our college d1stnct RJCHARDV.SIMON Direct or of Comm unity Relations Coast Community College District ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Ro/lert N. Wf!ed, Publisher Thomas Kerv1I. Ed1tur Barbara l\mb1ch. t.ditorilll Page Ed11or The editorial page of the Daily Pilot seeks to inform and' stimulate readers by presentJns on this page diverse C'Qmmentary on topics of intf•rl"st by syndicat, ed columnists •ind nrtoonisu. by providing a forum for ~ade.t1' view~ nnd by presenting thl n~"Spapcr's opinion~ and ldus on rurTent topics. The t'di\<lrial opinions or the Dally Piiot •Jfi>ear only In the editorial column at the toP of the paac. Opinion$ ex· prMSed by the columnlsU and cartoonlsts and letter writers arw th~r own and no endoa~mcnt or th 1r ''lews by tho Daily PUot should be tnrerrcd. • ldentlt9 Late. Police Free FBI Fugitive SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Police had one of the FBI's 10 most wanted fugitives, an alleged radical bomber, ln jail for three days last month, but re· leased him before finding out his true identity. Dwiabt Armstrong, a.t, a suspect in the deadly bombing of a University of Wisconsin building in 1970. was arrested Dec . .i.a., after he was grabbed by a market owner .wbo acctJ!!ed him of trying to steal cheae. He gave bis name as ( State ) Douglas James Hardy. "He bad quite a bit of --------~ identification in that name," said an FBI spokesman. "He was placed in jail, convicted on the cha~ge an.d sentenced to 30 days. He was gone by the time hts true identification was established through a fingerprint check." 1t'ei11er'• Tried Begin• LOS ANGELES (AP) -The lewd conduct trial of D.ei;>uty Mayor Maurice Weiner has begun in Murucapal Court, with the prosecution saying it in· tends to offer an overall view of vice enforcement in Los Angeles. Weiner's attorney, Douglas Dalton, waived his opening statement Tuesday until the prosecution wraps up its case. Ogarette Taz Propo•ed SACRAMENTO (AP> -A proposal to raise the tax on cigarettes by one cent a pack is before the California Legislature. It was introduced Tuesday by Sen. Arlen Gregorio, CD·San Mateo), who last year sponsored legislation to increase the tax on alcoholic beverages The alcohol bill was vetoed by Gov Ed- round Brown Jr. Gregorio said the increase on cigarettes~ould bring in $30 million a year. Bom• Bl1Ut• Rnt ROCNll REDWOOD CITY <AP> -A bomb bas blown up the men's rest room alongside the fairway of the 13th bole of the Stanford University golf course, San Mateo County deputies reported. They said a pipe bomb apparently about six in· ches Jong was detonated about 10:30 a.m. Monday, wrecking a toilet bowl. other plumbing and fix- tures. Beotia Plot Han Gadltfl LOS ANGELES CUPI> -Gary Desure, 32, a former Montana mental patient, and Michael Mayo, 24, of Warren, Pa .. will be sentenced F eb. 9 for threatening t<> kill President Ford. Desure pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court Tuesday. Mayo pleaded guilty Dec. 16. The Secret Service accused them of plotting to kill the president in Sacramento on Sept. s -the same day Manson follower "Squeaky" Fromme leveled a loaded pistol at Ford in an unrelated as· sassination attempt I .. _::::::_ It's Boy . To fast Detail San Diego 4'ola OoCtoi-s' Bl SACRAMENTO <AP) -Tho pbyslciana' ~alpractlce •lowdown appears to be progressln1 ln ~rn California but Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. re· HAWTHORNE (AP> port1 no profreas ln talk.I wlth doctors aod -The toymaker that leplaton. eave you instant puberty The medical atatra ~ two San Diego area in a teen.age girl doll hospitals have voted to joln the slowdown by Lol now has an "anatomical· Anael• docton to protest the high cost of malpr•c• Jy correct baby boy Uceln.surance. doll." Some 60 doctors on the medical staffs of Bay Mattel, Inc. said the General and Community hoapitals ln Chula Vista DAILY PILOT A5 posed "Medical Peace Corps" had been transferred toa dllterent level of ne1otlations. Brown aatd the doctors should spend 20 days a year treatlnf tbe poor without pay ln return for 1tate taxpayer help with malpractice insurance costs. * * Malpractice Suit * * t * * newcomer is called decidedTuesdaynlghttojointbedoctorsstrike,as R • $675 000 "Baby Brother" and it did 50 opbthalmoJogiats and ear, nose and throat . eturns u,., T•._.... bas all the equipment 1peciall.at.1 at San Diego's University Hospital. ' To R11n A9•f11 necessary to show ila ANOTHER %00 San Diego doctors at four · gender hos itals t d M nd n1 b By Wire Services Victor Morbalm. White State. Sen. Rand!>lph RAY0WAGNER, presi· p voe o ay g t to stage 8 two.-day LOS ANGELES -A Memorial Hospital ·was Col her• 73' f :rst dent of the company, work slowdown, handling emergency cases only. h ii abs o 1 v e d of an Y l ed th s After meeting for two hours Tuesday, Bron woman w o living with e ect to e enate said in a statement Tues· told reporters he was optimlstic that a solution to . a broken needle in her responsibility. the year Gov . Ed· day: "In this age of re-the problem could be found. spine has been awarded Mrs. Smith won the mund G. B~own Jr. alism we feel it's ap· The physicians blame the slowdown on sudden· $67~.ooo in a malpractice malpractice judgment was born, said Tues· propriate to ofter ly increased costs of medical malpractice in· suit -the largest local against Dr. Morbaim day he will seek re· youngsters a baby ,,boy surance. The spokesman for one doctors' group malpractice award since because the wayward election to another doll that is a boy not$nly blamed state government Tuesday for any "serious a doctors' slowdown needle interf~res with four.year term. in costume but i:ight medicalconsequences"itmaybave. began in Southern her sex life. ruining her ---------down to the last detail... BROWN SAID the talks centered on whether California on Jan. 1. marriaee. A company spokesman She sued the doctor, Quake Rocks said packaging will have payments into a state malpractice fund should be The award by a charging that during a to be extremely clear mandatory,andwhoshouldpayclaimsifthestate Superior Court jury biopsyonNov.?,l9?l,he be tail t to fund ran out of money. . came during the doctors' inserted 8 needle "some Rumbold Ar cause re ers wan Brown's chief aide in the matter, Depaty slowdown protesting ris· t e&make sure parents distanceaway"fromthe 't ·s d when Health and Welfare Secretary Robert Gnaizda, ing medical malpractice correct location and it PETROLIA (UPI) -aren surpn e called the mandatory payments issue a new snag: insurance premiums. A moderate earthquake they get the do.ll home. The doctors want thern to be voluntary. One of the doctors' prime broke. BUT ADS will be a pro-A piece of the needle is registering 4.5 on the • • GNAIZDA TOLD reporters that doctors in the objectives in t be still lodced against her Richter Sc ale rumbled b 1 em be~ au s e • TV low·risk fields wanted to stay out of any state slowdown is a revision of spine and cannot be re- through Humboldt Coun· codes won t, even let us malpract\ce insurance plan. But the Brown ad· the tort -or adversary ed h ty Tuesday. show a doll s ba:e .. bot· _ system under which mov • er lawyer said. There Were no reports tom. much les.s this, the ministration's proposal includes mandatory pay-During sex u a 1 in . t · t f d r hi h al t ' lai malpractice cases are of injuries or damages. spokes man saJd. mens m o a un rom w c m pr~c ice c ms tried tercourse, the movement The seismographic sta-T~e same toymaker would be paid. t · of the needle near her tion at the University of earlier releas~~ a !emal~ Specialists in high-risk fields s uch as da;11~~~7 ~~~ids:s:ft1.~ spine causes her great California in Berkeley doll name~ Skipper neurosurgery have bad the sharpest increase in in· pain, her lawyer argued, said the epicenter of the wh~e bu~tline grew ~d surance costs -nearly ftve·fold to $30,000 a year ln t~~~ :=u~~i~~?th~~.· and she and her husband early morning tremor :-vaist whittled by tWlSt· some cases, they report. have separated because was 40 miles wes t of . ...;m~...:.h...:.e..:..r...:.a,....r_m_. _______ A_l_re_a_d_Y_._th_e_d_oct_o_rs_' o_p_pos_i_ti_on_t_o_B_r_o_Wll_'s_p_r_o_· _b_Y_. _h_e_r_p_h_y_si_c_ia_n_,_D_r _. _of_tb_e-=-pr_o_b_le_m_. ----. 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Hind and Forequarters Available at: Ivey Beef Company 133 E. Alton Santa Ana 645-1365 546-9330 BlnkAmcricard Vermeulen Ranch · 32382 Del Obispo San J um Capistrano 496-0431 Food Stamps Master Charge Open 7 Days a week -------- Bahimore Birmingham Boise Boston Buffalo/ Niagara Falls Cedar Rapids/ Iowa City Charleston, W. Va. Charlotte, N.C. Chattanooga Chicago Cleveland Columbus Dayton,O. Denver Des Moines Detroit Eugene, Ore. A int Fort Wayne Grand Junction Grand Rapids 251.00 107.00 202.00 86.00 102.00 44.00 274.00 118.00 239.00 103.00 178.00 76.00 224.00 96.00 230.00 98.00· 210.00 90.00 199.00 85.00 225.00 97.00 217.00 93.00 211.00 91.00 113.00 49.00 168.00 72.00 218.00 94.00 105.00 45.00 218.00 94.00 21 t.00 91.00 95.00 41 .00 209100 89.00 a Springfield Huntsville Kansas City Knoxville Lansing Las Vegas Lincoln Medford . Memphis Milwaukee Moline/ Rock Island/ Davenport Muskegon Newport News/ Hampton/ Williamsburg New York/ Newark ·Norfollt/ Portsmouth/ Virainia Beach Omaha 267.00 1J5.00 Providence 273.00 117.00 Raleigh/ Durham 241.00 103.00 202.00 86.00 161.00 69.00 R~ 69.00 29.00 R mond 249.00 107.00 213.00 •91.00 214.00 92.00 48.00 20.00 ' Rochester 245.00 105.00 153.00 65.00 Saginaw/ 94.00 40.00 Midland/ Bay City 218.00 94.00 Salem.Ore. J09.00 47.00 Salt Lake City fQ2.00 44.00 183.00 79. 199.00 85.00 Seattle/ 182.00 78.00 Tacoma 123.00 53.00 South Bend 204.00 88.00 Spokane 123.00 53.00 Toledo 217.00 93.00 206.00 88.00 256.00 1 lo.00 Washington, D.C. 251.00 107.00 Youngstown/ Warren/ Sharon 231.00 99.00 263.00 113.00 lS6.00 · 110.00 Fares subject to change. 157.00 67.00 Security charges not included. Beginning June 1st. the summer discount begins: it~ still 50% off for children, /but 20% for adults. So now's the time. 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Vetco Offsll I "' 21'--~ 4,40 ,, 1100 6t'lt +I VF Qin 1.10 II '4 11tli ,. , ,ft 7S '°"' + \lo V'4Kofl' 11'11 II t2 t \A + '111 UI 17 .. • Vklr C0mot .. tJ 4'11 + Yt W111910I!-' I 1~-Y, Veiec I.le • 11* u•-Yt • • • '7Yt-v. ve ""uo .. ;· 2914-\11 S'iilOil.0 I i4 tt. •v.+ y, V• ,.,.._CM .. 1 411Wo+211. 1~ 1! P. D.,.._ \4 ~ IM f'_,I :: 1t ~~! ~ lAlt d'J It --Vt JJ:'Jt .. zUO ,.V,+ \oll c. ..... ~ '41 ~·flt " " !t-·-1~14 .= ~""; ~ ""'"""' t.'# ~ ii ;:" + '"' ... I ., .._. .. "" ---·-c.'" 7 10 -\lo ~m.~ 4\.'i •• t2JO ., ... -'ll'ICO,,,. ,.,. ltllt-~ .1• • •• n~-" t~M ~ " -14 u• .. • • •• ,,. .M •1 S..\.'i+ ~ )1'111191iyl• c . . " ~~-.... lllt t u 141 ""'-~ Wi•tnl" 1 10 201 14-.-" mat ff ' 11 I•~ 14 W.l~H I 40e II 11 n 1. 1114' ' u 11 • w. Well ltus .60 t I ~ t 4' • ,. l>'Wi + 14 W.llMr .. s 4) ,,.. . . 1 JO i°"'-~ WllMAl'1 .• t2 If 1•~ ,,_ .oaeq ...-, 19"• Va W-UI 1011 21, I~• Ito 1.t• 1 71 ?'Iii + ._ ._,,, Fd\ SI 1J J ''-' , • , «) t n tf't Wit l'lllCO .to , J 1 t~ , . COt 1' .. I 111 1114 ' ' WWl'l(of lft • i l 21 + \Ill pf JYt • J tt\.'i+ ill 'tltmC'l'l'I ~ 1 m 1111'f-.. Ind 1.)t ' UY, Wernr(o jo I ~ 1"'-+ \lo S.OW.n ,UI s ~ 1111o + i4 W•rl.ll"' '111 631 37\lt~ -., Sclwfl C..':: 1.. ,~ n:..· "' =::Js \ ~ ~ H l~~ • · ~ I'S )I t ~. ~ WlllllNtl .IO 1 " It .,. 1.. 411 11.,,, Weift pf Wt · I ?ft\• "' I «I 7 1M I~+ • '4; W-" Sii If t 1 !1._ • l.. . , )4\U 14 ... Wtt I S. t S• 1 -~ 5oN"9s ll'f : 174 4' Ya I =~ llM" I~ ~ ~-; : rl>..24 14 I~ e ~ •YM G 40 1)4 4 5"' • 1.-. 11 t., I) 1~ $1 -h WMllUl'l ll'IC S 4 4 -. ,,.. ... ~,.. ~~ '° • 12 I • " 1,,. :: , ,.11.-· ... _,-.1u10 • ,,._ • .. Wedneed!X· J.nu•ry 21. 1m N UAIL y PllOT ax, Bob Clay, president of Tustin-based Clay Publlcom, " public reltttions counseling firm. has been elected a national director of the counselors section of the Pubhc Relations Society of America. Clay has headed his own firm since 1969 and n; a pasl president o( the Orange County Public Hclat1oru. Society ol America chapter. • Andy Mangino has joined Schenley Industries, Inc. ai. t'hain store manager for Southern Caltfornla of its Schenley World T&l Co. division. Now headquartered at the distiller's North Hollywood '°"'NGINO office. Mangino h:t:-been associated with several wine and liquor distributori. since 1965 Mangino hves in Corona del Ma.r. • Newport Reach resident floward E.. Grttne, Jr. has been appointed director of planning for Travenol Laboratories' Hyland Diagnostics division. He was formerly adm in1strative assistant to the president of Daxter Laboratories. • Carlton M. Higbie Jr. has been elected to the board of· directors of Amcord, Inc., Newport Reach-based m anufac· turer of cement. pre-engineered metal buildings and con· sumer leisure products. ft Bert R. Ott. of Irvine, has been appointed western area s ales manager for data services for the RCA Service Com· pany. Prior to Joining RCA. Ott w<i!) with M1crotech Data Systems. • Joseph C. May has been named resident manager of the new Laguna Hills Mortuary. May 1s a longtime Saddleba'ck resident with 28 years ex· perience in mortuary service. · * Tboroas 8 . Bigford of Laguna Beach has been named ctirector of marketing for Idaho-based Rogers Brothers Food Company's potato division. Bigford was m05t recently a principal in Thomas Bigford Associates. a Laguna Beach consulting firm. Prior to that, he w as president and founder of Sterigard Corp. in Irvine. His wife. Anne and daughter, have joinro him in Idaho Falls, Idaho. • Reynolds F.nvironmentP.I Group, of Newport Reach, has n:.imed Nichoias DeLorenio as associate landscape architect. • John M. "Jack" Swan has been named vice president and controller of Plan Hold Corporation in Irvine. Swan, a certified public accountant. joined Times Mir- ror in 1972 as senior financial projects analyst and was named a group controller in 1973. His responsibilities during this period have included account.ing liaison with fi~m~ in the information services, magazine and book publishing areas. • Walter M ltchell has been appointed to the new post of national s ales manager for Computer Automation's Naked Mini division. Mitchell joins the Irvine-based minicomputer firm from General Automation, Inc ., where he was Eastern te· gional sales manager and federal government marketing manager. .. Newport Beach resident Pat Krone ·has· been named customer operations manager for Pacific Telephone's Santa Ana district. Sht' will be responsible for ad- m inistration of residenct' customer rela· lions for telephones in Sant a Ana. Tustin. Irvine and parts of Fountain Valley and Costa Mesa. Mrs. Krone joined AT&T in 1951 as an information operator in Compton. Market lndexe• Due to late transmission today's llstlng will not appear in the Dally Pilot. Galfter• and IAHn-• ,._ Vor1t tUlfll) -Tiie following llst _, tllt stoch 111411 haw (lllNd most and lost Ille "'°'' bls.ed Clf'I ~I Of cNnot Ofl lftt N-V°"' Sloe.I< EllC'flll9. Nat and oe,..f t'11eot clltnQIH .,.. the dl"9rencto "''-'" T lie previous c~l"9 price and the currMt clof>lno 0t1<.e. GAIN .. IS I Teciti«r .10 ].4¥1 + 5'h lJp 11.7 2 OlrYslar wt 7-16 + 1-16 Up 1'.1 1 CNA Llwtn t'O • 11' Up 16 1 • I OS Realty ,._..-+ l9 Up 11.• N~ l'orlt J5Most A~tl~ NEW YORK (UPI! The IS most ectlw stocks lr•O&<I "" Ille New Yori( Sloctt Eacll•nQe Wednesd•Y ~.,., CIOW 0.. .. Sl3,000 I"' • ~ SOl,000 I0'111 • w 461.100 ,.~. ~ ouoo 1• Yo 32•.IOO 24~ • "'° lOJ>S:O ~~ : ~ ,,.,100 s~ • ,,., 16S,IOO ?Wt V. m:: I~ .... \,; . • 2U,700 6" • Ya ns.soo ~ .. v. •. 211.100 JS>,4 ... ~ .. 211,700 ~ + 2V. S ITT CS pf 4 60 + I Up ll 2 6 NIPn 1.'lOI 34V. t 3~ Up ll I ~-------------- 7 "-' Crp 4,,,,. 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Qtf 7 I ff fft , __ " °" 1 I kllltftf CP J~-14 E • 'I 1='40 IS~-1'-' U 1 11 Ml99 , __ ~ 6.7' 1t =Alfl WI ~-··" Olf •.r ID ,.,.. ~--~ 6.4 A...,ro1 lll111t Pr,.vitlu' drt¥' w ....... 11(1 M<Jntn ,.uo Vt tH 1'Q~ Twu Ytt-'' ·•Ou J•n 1 IOd·~I• 1•14 lo 4•1• It~ lo dal« a1UPI . 88 DAILY P1LOT Wtdneeday. January21, 1979 • I r . TV DAILY LOG ( R) Tht Scottllll rock lllllSlc lfOllP, Wednesday drwed in tartan pjed, peifol1lt 111 concert. Tht JOU'll muslNllS art Evening the numbtr Ont JfOllP 111 Ellit•114. 0 <tni CU> rn ED tamta "TIMI JANUARY 21 01ppei'' Wli1lt liivesticati111 a mur. der, Barette Is 1ldtd by tht "minute l.-008ri1)(])(J)Dt111tmtlc Rt · min," a teachtf in Ille art of pick. ~-Senator Edmund Mus~te '!'! pockets. Whitman Mayo auestt. INtS the DtmoCfltte view 1n re 09J Movie: (C) (Zh,, "Wiii's MrlW sponse to President fOfd s Stille of tf Ylfpll Wolf' (dra) '66 -Ell11· tht Un1011 Mewj_t beth T1ylo(, Ridllrd Burto11, Gto<11 a QJ dQI m Dtll!Otratlc a.. Se11t. ~~a.. "::'Alfalt 01 (i) m ,.. ftetm ~ > Lil CD 0t1110C111.1c EB DOUf" o... 1a Me1ka '1ht 1._. Joffrry Ballet" 0 1....we m httriQ• fa.O, 9:JO m EJ Qeftf ! Ml•lZ 10:00 0 MXT Moorie: (C) "TM bWtt's'" ~ DfatM (wts) '64-Robert Culp, 8Nn Keith. Star Tn~ O @ Q) (61 fl':'~ "fall· ft) MystlrJ fllllflls of a.,1, C.llt· inr SUI"' Guest star Ken Curtlt tn111 ~) poftr1Y1 a onct·famous western ac· m Uttlt lt&IC.lb !Of who IS accused of slay1111 I 6:l0 I m w, ,nttllll Show motion picture producer. Mtrv '1\ltle SMw 0 0 ID Nfts , C:i} fll• Ft.at1111 0 New Night! New Time! : £lldnc C..p11111 * THE ROOKIES · '°' 5tu t11t C..lltly O 1bt Rool1es "from Out of the "11tpl111 5"19ft Du~ness" Re$Cbedultd from tut 7:00 0 O @@HI:HE NeWs weel When an ll-coj) is mort1Uy lra.sldt woundtd by holdup men, Terry re· Bowline tor Dtll,trs calls the rom1nce he alllred with 6 1 (Q9 a ) Btn111L1 the dy111r man's bhnd d1uchler. To T tU tllt T111tll ~ Wildlife Adwttln • C111etntr1Uon t (]) (]) film • Feltutt I love lucJ ~ love Amerka strt• T11t F11 m rnmm A Moasttt CNctrt I Ql ~~ liurumo•t A c:OiiCert01 all·Amtrian music u I.obi tuturinr the works of Stephen ros- Womu Alive! ter, Jolin Pl1tlhp SouSI, Scott Jop- Dnm1Uc Serlts fin and Louis Moru11 Gottschalk. Tiit Addams f1111ll) (~{I)) (]) ED Slanty ' Hllfch 7:JO 0 lobby Vinton ~ "Silence" A cop-k1lhnr u rec11cker 0 Don Adams' Scretll lut !ant -posm1 as 1 pnest in a h1ttway Ruuell & Robtrt Wainer are the house for u cons-luds Stlrsky & ctlebnfY &utsts. Hutt/I on 1 wild tllase. Cart Bell 0 u.t Aintncan style cuttts. 0 !At's Mab • Dul 10:30 m al """ I m N1111t That Tu11e MuJicat Y1rit!J 0 Tiit h'Oi.cton : Mueu• l'toplt W =,1~:t 11:001 mo m m News ~ 6J Ltstof tilt Wdd I CL @ @®I Nen fI1) DEBUT Ott M111's Chin•" The1 lat of lilMdlt Peoples Communes• f1111 of seven ~ ~rt~ pro111ms on lht emer11nr 'Ntw ,.,,, ltll'tllln, Muy Hlrtmtn Chtnl' -ucll one cove11n1 1 d1f Thr StDttes ftfent ·~ct of conttmpomy life uz m ~rvinl CD Do• Rullin ~· W Robert M.adfeil Report 1:00 0 (fjl r3 ( .. 1Tony Orlando Ind (tJ9 ({))Trvtll Of Collsequtncts D1wa John D1v1dson. Bob Kee~1n ED Cinema 34 (TVs C1pt11n Kan11100) and Ruth 11 :30 B @(V CBS ute Mtvlt: (C) Burn guest. · I "You'U Never Stt Mt Acaill" (dra) 0 ® '"6) \9, m am:1ID Jon· '73 -David Hartman, Jene Wyatt, 1tll1P Wlntm Prtseliii"lWO Hun-Joseph Camp.1nella. drtd Yms of Amtnan Humorj 0 @ @@! m Joll11117 C.nt1 Jonath10 Winters pontaY1 20 d1I f Ann Mine Pohtamo (MIS$ UntVer11) terent characters r1n11n1 from ~Sis. p1l111ms to politicians as he la~es U Tiit HontJ1110011trs a humoroos look at two centuries r 6J Movie: "l'usace to Sau" (lc!V) of Amencn history and hentaae '43 -Warren W1lhams, Anne s,v. He is 101ned by Scat Man C1otllers. ~ 01.id Ooyle Ronn; Graham. Mary U (~(I') aJ W'idt WOfld Mo¥· Crerory Julie McWh111er and Ch11fl it: •·Run. Straneer. Run" An over· hr1 Old Pmon. protective mother attempts to slueld 0 Movie. (C) (2hr) .. HOllw en her daurtiter from the t111th about C:ru11 Apple ROid'' (mvsl '70 -h" father's death Patnc1a Nul. Chnstopher Ceorae fanet le11h Clom Luchm1n. Bobby Oar111 and Jul·e Hm:s. Voller Ptdaeon Ron Ho1ord 111r. 6 m Mod Squd I (a' Tiit FBI O (29 t I l J CD 810111C Wou n g Mft1e: ""f• ...,., Cu Tell" 'WtlCOITlt Home J11me" P111 ti (com) '51 -Dick Powell Peuy O Mill1t11 $ Mtvlt: (2hr) •ancht Dow Charles Of•ke ' Vtetory" Cdral '52 -Anhur Ken I Ghost l M11. Mu nedy, Peuy Dow, Juhe Adams. Ctt t.11t m c.,. w-its • Dt1Mm11c R.,.... 11 St.ate " EV""' Ille U1itl Addms Q' Mme: (C) (2hrl "Ac!Ytatllres • O T iii Y--of 1 Tounr Man" (1<111) '62 -Rldl I lZ.OO 91 ttllt...,,,.. ard t~fc'~c ;•ul Newman. ID Movlt: "Sb&t Doti" (com) '37 fD 1 Zulu Rolllee S,ill -l<lth111ne HepbUm, 61naer Roa· plane 1 1d1ng 1s uptured u ch1m Ill. Lucille 8ilt. p•ons from 23 counlrtts compete Q) Movie: "The Llvln1 Had" (hor) '" the 1973 lntem1hoo1I Gllderi -Abel S4laur. Competihoni 111 Waiktne, Australia lZ:lO 0 MIJberYJ RFD al Cllampienshlp Wrttaln1 00 Mom: "Boomtru(' (dra) '47 lf) Ja!MlntSt u n1u11e l'rocnm -Let J. Cobb, 01n1 Andrtwl. 1:30 m Men lir1ffl11 Show I :OO Ra~ m Tomomw 9:00 1:15 e Movie: "Malle, ..... (com) '47 6 REVENGE KILLER'S -Jane Wyman, J11!1e$ Stew1rt *TARGET-CANNON!! 1:30 \!t(I)Mwie: "Tiit Miked Ju11c\t" B fY7 (}'l I Cannon An ilmost (adv) '54 -Charlton Heston, a. fOflOtttn chapter 111 Cannon's mill unor P1riler lary 5el'<ICI 24 JUI\ •co tn Korea 2:00 m All·lliellt Shew: "TN WIN 11111 pmpotnfs him u lht t111et of 1 YOl!def." "Kudwl's "1" South l\orun officer's pet10l\ll vtll· 3;00 e Mtorit: "Tiit l'ld '"" left '""" fltld" (com) ·~-Dan Dailey, AM 0 mm!rJ at llJ Crty Rollen 81naolt 1:00 O "The Mntritt" (wes) '52 -Thursday w~d 8111 Erhot. Myron IWIJ, Phy1. hs Co.Its. ~"The °"' T1tat Sot '-!' (dra) DAYTIME MOVIES ·~ -Hardy Kturer. Cohn Gordon. 2:30 Q (C) ~ Mail" (WIS) '50 9:30 O "flit Captalit's l'al'MIW' (com) -Stephen McN1ll1. Alexis Smith, '53 -Alec Guinness, Yvoone De Howard De Stlv1. C1rfo (C) "A 1Cl1(a Sttly" (Ooc) '67 -N1"ated by Orson Wtllu l :OO '101 (C) "Ttndtt Sctundrel" (d11) JO:OO 6 , "All Mint to '""" (dra) '56 _ '67 -Jun.Paul Btlmondo, Robert Camtron Mtlclltll, Glynis Johns. Morley. 12:00 ID "The Cross of Lorr1lnt" (adv) 3:30 0 (C) "The Miked ~ (wes)· ·44 -Jun Pierre Aumont, Gene! 'SJ -James Stew1rt. Janet Leich, Kelly. Robtrt Ryan. KOCE Television (50) WEDNESDAY If IO IN·SCHOOLl"lllOGlllAMMINO 11 ·• IELIECTllllC COM I" ANY U ... HS.AM• STltlEIET l'IO IN-SCHOOL l"ltOGltAMMINC 2:00 NOVA "W1JU1>9 tor Sll-.y ' l60m1nl >:• WOMAN "8"•" C•~•r CDni,,,"°"l'\11'\" J .• MISTIElt lllOOl!ltS NIEIG+iM>ltHOOD 4·IO SIESAMIE STltlEIET l60n11nJ s·• IE LICTllllC COM,.ANY S • VILL.AALl!Oltl '''° THIE INIEltOYl"OLICY:AHewW¥8tlwffnTMSlaln"• 7:IO 11"1 l"OlllOETTHIEIE 1:• SMOWCASIE "A Soecltl TriblM to R•v 8ol~r" .... MASTl!lt .. llECIE THIEATElt UPSU1lr1,0ownst•1r·s" 160ml"I t :IO "ICCADILL 'I' Cl ltCUS "OltwAllen•l 1.Ar99•• (60minl 11:• TOMT MALL: THIE STOttYTl!U.IEil (60mlnl 'FROM Fash ion Island Newport 'l3each Cosell Flnulaes Last Movie Tops TV Ratings NEW YORK CAP) -"Jeremiah Johnson," the Robert Redford movlewhicb ABC·1V broadcast last week, was the week's top.rated evening entertain· ment program, according to A. C. Nielsen audience samples. . And ABC's new "Bionic Woman" also was a rat- ings winner, as was the second episode of the network's .. Eleanor and Franklin" drama; both were among the nation's 20 highest-rated programs last week. · But Howard Cosell's rinal show in his ABC varie· ty series ended at the bottom of the ratings list, ac· cording to Nielsen findings for the week ending Ja. 18. Theratingsweremadepublictoday. According to the Nielsen figures, the 20 most· popular shows last week were" Jeremiah Johnson" CABC>; "All in the Family" (CBS); "Happy Days Special," "Bioruc Woman" and "Six Million Dollar ............. "' ,,,,. ....................... -.._y•11 • • ::::11 .;•.[-t".-:...-·•I• Uqu&. WR.SH iYILD PARTY" ..,,,o '1!1NCARNATION Of I• PETEI PROUD" :t J::IM:l .. ttH ALA .. D&OM '1Ut WAY OUT" (R) . 4:05-7:J5 "OrATH WISH" ti) 2:J0.5:10.t:20 "'TH[ BlAC« 8110" (PS) 4:05-7:10 "'TAlE THE MONEY l IUN"i:1w:to.HS , iil.•.• ... :•••'I .. ~-., ..... ::a. "Nit WAY OUT" (R) 1:10 "OrATH WISH" 6:lS.t:SO "WIUJ PARTY'' (R) 7:$0 ''RbNCAINATION OF PETER PROUD" l 6:00-9:40 ~ltl•Q.7801 Andy's Voice HOLLYWOOD (UPI) I -Andy Devine and Sally K 11 ill provide e errnan w voices for the animated cartoon "The Mouse and Ins Child." , ....... ·-·'l"iii~ IJ.ltlla:.a..-, SOUTH COAST VILLAGE opp. Sovtfl Coelt ,,. .. UAI!• , •• , ... '" .. 11511 W. SUNFLOWER W OF 8RtSTOl c M. 640-0llM t 'THI IJLUif B.ITI'" CNI -.....aro1cr· t "RISH GOIDON" -CHIHLliDBS• CIJ • ~-c11 -...C: TIOMOP PIT& NOUD" Cal . THE CITY SHOPPING CENTRE ORANGE •532"721 -..... 1• .. --. .. .. . S.A. FRWY !MANCHESTER EXJ o.a. FRWY (CITY DR. ()(.) "WILD PARTY" (R) + "REINCARNATION OF . PETER PROUD': (R) + . "'RISH GOIDOtr Cll -ntl CHHIUADBS• ·~.· 'UT'S DO fT A6AM" "'DOC SA YA6r ~ ... IUllFOICF -STRAW ~s· Cll Spec:t.1 Pr1C912:30 to 2:00 p.m. ,....,.S.a& -· . ..:sus ••~•1.-n~.,•1m i 1he masterpia:.e of bizarre Jove that stunnui Fnzna. Aportmitof Joveandsubmission to disorder the senses. A1t AJ/iui Atttits R.dMut (D ® NO ONt: UNOtll AOMl1"1ll -NAH06ANr CNJ "OMCI JS MOT INOuetr' W °"l DAYS OF THI coeo.• Ill "CHIMA TOWN" W ""DIUT MA.IT, Curt LMIY'" "'YAMISHIM6 POINr' -.0 .. IN 60 SICOteS"' &Ml ""HUSTLF .,,.. ........... : Man" (all ABC>: "Maude," "M·A.S·H " and "Mary Tyler Moore" (all CBS>; "Welcome Back, Kotter" and "Baretta" (both ABC> i "The Jetfersons" and "Good Times" (both CBS); "Eleanor and Franklin, Part II" (ABC); "Rhoda" and "Bob Newhart'' (both CBS); "Happy Days" and "Starsky and Hutch" <both ABC); "Emergency" and "Sanford and Son" CbothNBC); and ''TheWaltons''CBS). 227 Movies OK'd For Oscar Entry LOS ANGELES CAP> -The Motion Picture Academy reports that 227 motion pictures have qualified for tbe 48th annual awards. Eligibility requirements: the film must be feature-length, in English or with English subtitles, in 3Smm or larger, shown for at least a week for paid admissions during 1975. The list includes movies made in Canada, England, Hong Kong, France, Italy, Japan, U.S.· S.R., Sweden, Switzerland as well as the United States. 1 Nominations for the Oscars will be announced at 9:30a.m . PSTFeb.17. u--........... _,. MNCmO DOI DAY 11111NOON • ........... DIOWNING POOl "" 0..1 ..... ,_ ... ., 1(21 llOlllf _,... • tAn IUMWA'f i DIM Of ntl COHDCll • Mat ""IQIC* •Mn WW&Y OIN&10WN11t ......... ,_ ... ., 80ll Of'flCf Of'fJiS OAllT AT l .Q) e •IHOW ITMTS ATIM , .... nu IOJICll CMll.lllll MU u Fifi! trall4 1,.c111 flt•• 1 ,. , h i"· on'"" 1-11 * · "*' • ,,..., •• MNClllO DOG DAY AmlHOON • ... __.. DIOWt•• POOL"' ---------i -C. ICOff • ....,, ...... m .. :lli, ! .. !lll{~~lill· .... ~.l .... ..;L:-;;,;.~.;;;";.;. ... _i} • : :SE: ---· ... ..... .., .. ... ~ DOG DAY Anll:N04* ... _ DIOWNIMG flOOl ,_ .......... HUSnl ~ MO! lilCllOUOlt e Nft llUMllWAT CllNAJOWN• ITMICA'". II -""' NO .WATOUT-.. •UU.COM ILOOD IWUT & PUI "' ~ .... ....... ..,, AMlllCAH M9fl1I "' 'LUI MIWIMIWI • IAIXMlmOH"' STEREO. SOUNDS 1975 BIG' .FOR FILMS NEW YORK CUP!) - More Americans have become movteaoers than ever before, accordJ.na to Variety. The newspaper report. ed total U.S. box office receipts I ast year were in the range of $1 .8 billion to $1.9 bllllon -up 7~ percent t~om the. cverall take in 1974. I · • R 1111ec1, ,..,_ ldl*y tale al survfvlll >-l'A t ~ ~ ~ [}u~ @l®;ID I H00t«A011tWt '*°~~m ... I IT ...... TO __ .....,.....__Q,••«at "-: -OEAlH IACE 2000' Teehn1colo•• l~ SURF THEA TIE c:..t Hwy• ha St .......... IHdl Sl6-tlH .. * * * * JACK NICHOLSON~S PERFECT TRIUMPH!"~''::'·~·;,:.·~~···" --United Artists SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRES W4 DIEGO FWY, AT BRISTOL SO.COAST PLAZA •aoe .. c.scon.-~ "HINDENB&.l«G'' (PG} ,. W..t711 DAii. T 7:JO & t:JO UT/SUM-t:l .. MO-lc.41-Jc:St.t:H FREE PARKING , SO.COAST PLAZA Sff.US1 ,. "ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S N£Sf' (J) M tl'f f"te&....._, U.TfSUM-1:1~7;4.~.t.•_I.! •• .. MO WAY our CRJ .... ., "41 .. .,~ ........... "'aOOSTER COGIURM" • D.U.'f 6'4'-1•.JI $UIM' -..... lltR "'DOG DAY AFT&MOOM'' ...... , ......... "''~'"" "DIOWMING POOL .. DAIL T 1:20. SAT.iSUN. :t'9IM:20 F "STORY OF 0 11 IX> 6:4M:JO-I0-.2S SAT /SUM-I :JO.J: I '"5:00 6:45-1:30.10-.25 l'aVJlw-SAT. OKY-e:JO P.M. HOW FAR DOES A GIRL HAVE 10GO TO UNTANGLE HER TINGLE?? © The Devil In Miss Jones ONLY ORANGE COUNTY SHOWING! PUSSYCAT • 873-4048 . 709 E. Balboa Blvd. Newpbrt Beach OPEN DAJL Y AT 12 NOON I Al DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Sehool Pop-Wa;tio_n Within the next six months, Newport-Mesa school trustees will decide bow best to handle currenUy declining student cmrollmetlt. , and it seems to be the consensus of those wbo at- tended or participated that the event was well run and informative. we CANNOT TOLERATE SOVIET INTERFERENCE WITH ANGOLA! ~-----ANOIASSUREYOUFARMERS THAT I WILL NOT ALLOW ANGOLA TO INTERFERE WITH OUR GRAIN SALES! 1t 's predicted that by 1980 S,000 fewer pupils wiJl be enr<>lled in the school district. Already, 117 classrooms ore empty. · In discussing the matter at a recent board meet- ing, Supt. John Nicoll urged the school board to view the enrollment drop as an "educational opportunity" rather than a tr agcdy. He spoke or positive aspects that could result from the smaller census and urged trustees to keep an open mind wh~n comidering whether or not to close campuses and what to do with the old sites. Some or the schools could be used for joint com- munity/school purposes. Others may be restructured with the lower primary grades at one campus and the higher primary grades at another. . It is important that trustees not hastily sell school sites that may be needed in the fuutre. Population ex- perts have predicted that in the early 1980s, the num~r of eleme~tary schoo~ age children may very well mcrease agam. Today's surplus space could be tomorrow's godsent opportunity if youthful-population figures re- verse their trend. Forums Help. Voter Candidates for the Costa Mesa City Council are off and running, but with 17 in the field it is not easy for voters to determine which three they prefer in the election March 2. One of the easiest ways to evaluate candidates is to attend a forum at which they all speak and make themselves available for discussion. Last week a homeowners' group called the Community Progress Committee of Costa Mesa staged a candidates' night, •• _voters w~o attend such &essions have a better basis for makmg decistons. But the trouble is only 125 att~nded that one. No other candidates• night is on the honzon. . . Th.at's a pity when the~ignillcance or the election, m wh1~h two long.time incumbents are stepping down, is considered. Other civic or service group.5 should look into sponsoring a forum. It woul<J be a good community service. Head Count Pays · A census is being conducted in Costa Mesa to get ~ accur~te count of the city's population and to gain mfor.mat1on useful for the future planning of the com- munity. In addition to any long-range benefit, the census will have an immediate payoff. Every resident of the c.ity brings in $22 from the state, through the alloca~ llon of state gasoline and motor vehicle tax monies. So every person the census takers find beyond the ~ffici~l estimates of 78,600 for Costa Me,sa's popula- tion will be a bonus. There may be many such bonuses ~cause the city staff believes the current population is about 82,000. ~en questions ai:e being asked in the survey. They are mlended to provide information on densities traf- fic P.atterns, ethnic ~~gins and the earning pow~r of a family. The data will be useful to industry, com- merce, government and schools. . All indications are that residerfts are cooperating with the survey, and that is commendable. Such s~~eys are a s~cial service and ultimately aid the city s chances to improve itself. ufAr< ! HEAR/ f/J ll , Ctf.Y·' CtAPI \\ c qou fft~ '~M,l~t~Y I I I ,'I 1 Placebos Can Be Dear Gloomy Gus Homesteaders Are the Intruders t ·The Coyotes Were There First Powerful ( VON HOFFMAN ) ,, WASHINGTON -If Listerine can't prevent colds can it cure warts? The Federal Trade Com- mission, which knows 101 ways to waste its insufficient staff's time on the trivial, is in full chase alter Warner-Lambert. the com- pany that makes Listerine. The FTC wants millions of dollars worth of future Listerine ads to contain a statement s aying: "Contrary to prior advertising, Listerine will not help prevent colds or sore throats or lessen their severity." It's the commission's conten- tion that this best known of mouth washes can do none of those things. but that de- cade upon de- cade or ad - vertising has convinced million upon million of our fell ow citizens that Listerine does in fact prevent colds or lessen them. T sk, tsk, the com- mission may in its zeaJ be about to give American an extra case of the sniffles. The findings against Listerine are doubtless scientifically im- peccable, but if people believe that bad-tasting stuff is good for their colds, it could be. This is the placebo effect. Doctors long ago disco,vered that you give sick people sugar capsules, but if you tell them it's strong medicine, and they believe it, there is a very good chance they'll get well. TIIE PLACEBO, for instance, is the dmg or choice in curing warts, according to at least one doctor. Better than any drug with active ingredients, better than surgery. He reports complete re- covery from warts by the use df lead pencils, five dollar bills and I can't think of what else. The operative therapeutic agency here is faith, and so effective is the placebo when people believe in it that it bas to be considered the single most po~ul drug known to modern medicine. Faith in a placebo may be only as strong as the faith of the pa-Uent in the person who gives it to him. It can be engendered by the kindlY,. old family physician. Since he's about as common a sight as tho cop on the beat or the milkman with the hone.-d.rawn dairy wagon, tho fwlction of the Dr. Welby /Robert Young characters on TV may be to rein· fOl"Ce this fading legend and keep it vivid enough for bs to project onto the medic.I mechanical · men wbose valuable time we take up at the clinic. THE FAITH ln.splrt'd br lbe doc.tor's bods de m.,.., i• chancy. Some doc· ton don't bavo Robert Young's bed.tide manner; and even If they all did. a physician steing up- ward Otl201MlUefttl a ft)' dOelnl have the time to cultivate h11 a&1tomm' c:onfidt'QCe In hi• uni· que therapeutic sk.llla. How ca n the Mes a Chamber or Commerce help finance a candidate for .city council by paying Nate Reade full time salary while during bis working hours he is raising campaign funds, politick- ing on his office phone or holding meetings in his of. fice or elsewhere? ' CONCERNED It's more convenient and effi- cient to encourage the belief that the dO!'tor is the custodian of magical powers which operate for your good regardless of his personality. In much the same way the validity of·the Catholic Mass isn't imperiled L:y •'-~• state or grace or lack of it or the celebrant. · 'Tm not even. sure how many patients I have in the hospital right now. I don't have as much time to devote to patients as Marcus Welby," says Dr. Peter Sullivan of Houston's Hermann Hospital. "Good doctors don't have time to take a personal in- terest in tbeir patients these days." As quoted from Roger Rappoport 's ''The Superdoc- tors," Playboy Press, 1975.) DISTANCE can create awe. The unknowable doctor whom you never see but who knows you. Doctors are accused of playing god sometimes, but in this rela- tionship they are most certainly acting as god surrogates. Dr. Sullivan's description of his rela- tions with his patients isn't all that different from Moses' with the Lord in the burning bush. God must be omniscient. Dr. Harold Scheie of the University of Pennsylvania's Scheie Eye Institute has a fisheye telescopic lens in his office that allows him to inspect the work of his recep- tionists. Rappoport writ~ that Dr. Scheie also has a "desktop control panel -equipped with 53 buttons -designed to let him tune his office TV sets to an over· all view of his operation room (and) a close-up or each or the five operating tables ... When be sees or hears something he doesn't like, Scheie can pick up the phone and bawl out the sur- geon through an operating rootn speaker." C.. Dr. Kurt Wagner of Beverly Hills wears a gold whistle around his neck which he blows when he wants his nurses to come to at- tention. God is all-powerful. and one or the signs of Power in our society is money. "Last year I made a cnillion dollars~·· Dr. W~erways. IF MOST people's faith in medicine is strortger than their faith in the Divinity, you have some inkline why~ The optimal conditions have been created for the placebo to work. No African witch doctor can have more cooperative and credulous pa· tients. The drawback, o( course, ls a body of lay people with auch ttroni medical dependency they abdicate responslbtnty fOT' their own bodies and their own health. Thcr! an no atbt!lstl, neither ln the foxholes nor the waJUng roomt. lJaterlne, nurse! Soak your warts in lt four Umes a day. To the Editor: Something s hould be done about the coyotes around San Clemente. For starters. they ought to be protected. I certainly can sympathize with those unfortunate people in the Shorecliffs area who have lost pets to coyotes. The loss of a loved pet is a personal tragedy and a heartbreaking experience, whether the pet dies in the jaws of a t'oyote or under the wheels or a car. But if we are to assume our proper responsibility in such matters. we have to admit the coyote is no more to blame for our pet's death than is the driver of a car in most cases. If we took reasonable precautions and kept our pets from roaming about freely, especially after dark, they could not be dragged away by coyotes or run over by' cars. AS FOR coyotes being "blood- thirsty," a coyote eating a cat can hardly be considered more bloodthirsty than the Mme cat eating a mouse. Such things are always relative. I think the residents of Sborecliffs ought to keep in mind, too, that it is they who are the in- truders, not the coyotes. That area bas been coyote country for thousands of years. As far as the coyotes are concerned, suburban homesteaders are upstarts and nuisances. The Navajo people called the coyote "God's Dog," and held him in high esteem because of his intelligence. Since the coming of the white man, the coyote has been the sub- ject or the longest and most in· tensive eradication campaign man has ever launched against any' of his f ellow animals. Despite mountains of accumulat- ed evidence that coyotes are im- portant and beneficial in the ecology of most areas they in· habit, the federal government is spending $8 million of our money in an ongoing eradication pro- gram I can only describe as "bloodthirsty." I CAN think of several more UHful things the government might use $8 million for. The pro- gram doesn't work anyway, because the coyote is a heck or a lot smarter than the federal gov- ernment. A!J for the present coyote pro- blem in the Shorecliffs area, if the people there can be patient and keep their pets corralled after dark, the problem will solvd itself. Coyotes don't abandon their old huotlng grounds easily; but if pickings get really sum, the pack will move on to new ter- ritory where food is more readily available. MEREDITH GORMAN l•d,,eNet To the Editor: An aoswer to the many aood comments concerning many animal owners <Mailbox. Jan. 18). Ralph Rollins is a n ew oeiabbor. but fast became a eood neJabbor. Ha small pet bad a lar1e f cnced·ln backyard. But Ralph happened to see a at.ranie small dog squeeze throuah the tron pte and his pet follow. Ralph Immediately went and boulht mesh and put it on the sate. • ( MAILBOX ) Now the mystery is, how did hi s pet get out? A dog following a dog's instincts? Judge not your neighbor' If you should be so unfortunate as to hit a dog, take what action you can to find the owner or to see that it receives care. LOUIS and RtrrH MELLO Wrongly Arnued To the Editor: In rebuttal to the various let- ters and to the headline in your Jan. 18 newspaper. I feel that I must answer the accusations concerning my mis- treated, unwanted dog who was struck by a car in the cold, cold night. AS IT was for my three pre· vious dogs and another I current. ly have, my terrier was never al· lowed to run free in violation of city leash laws. He was allowed. however, (as is my other dog) to sleep on the chair, bed, near the heater, or in any other part or the house he desires. In other words, he was well taken care of and well loved. How did he get out in the cold, cold night? I do not have any answers for when I returned home shortly after midnigttt the gate was tightly secured. It seems that the general con· sensus indirectly blames me for the dog's death (as well as so- meone's friend). I apologize. but feel I am wrongly accused. Only I know the truth of the care and protection I gave my dog; therefore these accusations are irrelevant to me. My conscience does not bother me. RALPH ROLLINS l111,ol1'H Citizen To the Editor: I wish to correct some im- pression left by your Jan. 2 arti- cle titled, "Paramedics Bring Back Man." Thank God our par- ty was sitting at the table next to the Frank W. King family on New Year's Eve. When Miss King stated that her father had turned blue and my husband im· mediately went to his aid. He at- tempted to give mouth to mouth but could tell there was a blockage in the throat. Two to three minutes passed when the Costa Mesa Fire Department was called. My husband con- tinued to give mouth to mouth after dislodging the food in Mr. Kine s throat until the paramedics arrived on the scene two or three piinutes later with their equipment. My husband ~ontlnued to work with the paramedics until Mr. King was' Quotes "That's wh8l Father F1anagan bad in mind in Ille rtrSt place, helping kids.·' -T he Rev. Robert Huff. director of Boys Town, in commenting on plMS to i!Klmlt girls to the Oma.ha boys school. I taken to the hospital. The mana~ment of Reuben's, Catherine Kmg and Sgt. Tom Lazar of the Costa Mesa Police Department expressed their gratitude. Here" was one citizen who got mvolved and was well trained enough to save the life of a fellow man. MRS. THELL E . GLASCOCK Ironic! Contrmt To the Editor: Your editorial on Jan. 7 con· cemed with a group foster home reflected the frustration many feel about having such a facility in our city. Your second editorial on Juvenile Alternatives stands in ironic contrast to the first. Kids know, very clearly, when adults lie and are hypocritical. When they hear demands that they act respons ibly and at the same time see that adults wish to shirk responsibility by sending them <t he kids> off to be hidden from view, they understand that they are in the same category as the criminal and the dead, to be mourned and r egretted, but to be locked away som ewhere else than our neighborhoods. YET we want these children to be able to re·enter society ap- parently rehabilitated. How· can this happen when they go away to live in an artificial, walled world where terror and monotony are their companion? Juvenile alternatives should mean that we take responsibility for our children and work with them in our community. Yet I' understand that recently one of our civic leaders opposed a small home here that would have housed children who had been sexually abused, saying that he didn't want that "trash" in our town. I can't get rid of the sense of horror I have at this attitude. "And they too will reply, Lord. when was it that we saw you hun- gry or thirsty or a stranger or naked or ill or in prison, and did for you? And he will answer, I tell you this: anything you did not do for one of these, however hum- . ble. you did not do for me. And they will go away to eternal punishment..." There's balance in our world - we get what we deserve most of the time ROBERT JORDAN ROSS. Minister Ora nge Coast Unitarian Universalist Church c..i1 .. i1tfn To the Editor: We feel that the Coast-Com- munity College Uistrict should respond to thel>Mly Pilot's Jan. 14 editorial which questions the expen~iture for the District's new annual report, "Accomplish- ments." The Coast Community ColJege District ls a $50 mllU9n·per·year "corporation" whose stockholders are the taxpayers residing in our 76-square milo di.strict (settled by more than hal!-tHnillion persons). By law we must publish and malt~ available information i;lltr· tainln1 to budget, lnt'ome, lfl'Owth and other pertinent data. We feal that th~ new readable format will better enable us to share with the clUzcnry that m· formation elotti with our ~ '"91· Natura.11)' it would be UD· i ' " feasible to publish a fine quality annual report for every tax- payer. Therefore, we h ave chosen to distribute a couple of thousand reports to citizen ad- visory groups, libraries, cham- bers of commerce and civic dignitaries plus other outlets where the reports can be easily obtained by interested citiz.ens. YOUR WRITER labeled the annual report as "selfaggrandi%- ing." The District and its two campuses, Orange Coast College and Golden West College, and KOCE-TV, Channel 50, are de- dicated, energetic and creative institutions; the faculty and staff of which are proud and en- thusiastic Of their efforts OD " behalf of their students. They rightly listed their Accomplish· ments. In reference to the report's "poor contents," this new·styled report is a first for us, and the contributors of the content were exploring. However, important• ly, the chancellor's office ~ ceived many letters from college presidents and district ad· minis trators and politicians praising our institution on the ex. cellence of the publication and on the District's accomplishments. This annual report admittedly has enhanced the Coast Com· munity College Di s trict'~ already excellent national re-- putation. And why is a national reputa· tion important'? Our distrlcl either produces or collaborates on the production of television courses for college credit as well ru; designs the academic support material for these telecourses. This annual report -"Ac:· complisbments" -was sent to the chief administrators of every community college district in the country along with a letter from Chancellor Wat son focusing on our available TV courses for credit. The resultant orders have paid for the cost of the annual re- port, thereby relieving the tax. payers from purchasing this publication. Six thousand dollars out of 8Jl annual budget of $50 million truJy- is a modest amount to pay for the • returns enjoyed by our coue,- district. RICHARDV.SIMOM DirectorofCommunityReJationa Coast Communi~ College Dist:rl ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wud. Publi.Wr Thoma• ICtttnl, Editor Barbclra Kr.tbtch, Editorial Pog• Editor • ldentitg Late Police Free FBI Fugitive SAN DIEGO <UPI> -Police had one or the FBl's 10 most wanted fugitives , an alleged radical bomber, in jail for three days last month, but re· leased him before finding out his true identity. Dwight Armstrong, 2', a suspect in the deadly bombinl of a University of Wisconsin building in 1910, was arrest~ Dec. 12, after he was grabbed by a market owner ~ho accused him of trying to steal cheese. ' He gave bis name as ( State J Douglas James Hardy. "He had quite a bit ol ----------' identification in that name," said an FBI spokesman. "He was placed in jail, convicted on the charge and sentenced to 30 days. He was gone by the time bis true identification was established through a fineerprint check." lt'efner'• 'l'rial Begin• LOS ANGELES CAP> -The lewd conduct trial of ~uty Mayor Maurice Weiner has begun in Muruc1pal Court, with the prosecution saying it in- tends to offer an overall view of vice enforcement in Los Angeles. ...... -.. -.. -... It's Boy To Wt - San Diego .Join SACRAMENTO CAP) -Tbe physlclans' ~practice slowdown eppea.r1 to be progressing ln Southern CaUlornla bu~ Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. re- HAWTHORNE (AP> ports no proeress ln talks with doctors and -The toymaker that lelislators. gave you instant puberty The medical staffs of two San Diego area in a teen-age girl doll hospitals have voted to join the slowdown by Lo: now has an "anatomical· Angeles doctora to protest the hlgh cost of malprac• ly correct baby boy ticelnsurance. doll." Some 60 doctors on the medical staffs of Bay posed "Medical Peace Corps" had been transferred to a different level of neaottatioos. Brown said the doctors should spend 20 days a year tl'eaHn1 the poor without pay ln return for state taxpayer help with malpractice imuranec costs. * * * * * •* Malpractice Snit Mattel, Inc. said the General and Community hospitals in Chula Vista newcomer is called decided Tuesday ni&t1t to join the doctors strike, as R $6':15 09(} "Baby Brother" and ii did SO opbthalmologu;ts and ear, nose and throat . e ........... ~ u,.1 T• has all the equipment specialists at San Diego's University Hospital. LU;I.~ A~ ' To Raat A9al11 necessary to show its ANOTHER 200 San Diego doctors at four State Se!l. Randol gender. hospitals voted Monday night to stage a two-day By Wire Se"lces Victor Morbaim. White C u · 73 r· t RAV WAGNER, presi· work slowdown handlingemergencycasesonly LOS ANGELES -A Memorial Hospital was elo ier, • :r dent or the company, After meeting for two hours Tuesday, Bro\vn womanwhoisUvlngwith absolvt;d of any ected to the Senat said in a statement Tues-told reporters he was optimistic that a solution to ·a broken needle in her resMponsisbllitiytb. th the year Gov· E · day: "In this age of re· the problem could be found. spine baa been awarded rs. m won e mund G. Brown Jr. alism we feel it's ap· The physicians blame the slowdown on sudden· $675,000 in a malpractice malpractice judgme:nt was born, said Tues-propriate to offer ly increased costs or medical malpractice in· suit -the largest local against Dr. Morhaim day he will seek re-youngsters a baby boy surance. The spokesman for one doctors' group malpractice award since becaus'= the wayw1:rd election to another doll that is a boy not only blamed state government Tuesday for any "serious a do ct ors. slowdown needl~ r~terf~~es with four year term in costume but right medicalconsequences"itmayhave began in Southern her sex life, rwnlng her ,h· r down to the last detail." · California on Jan. 1. marriage. c , A company spokesman BROWN SAID the talks centered on whether She s ued the doctor Quake R~'--said packaging will have payments into a state malpractice ~und. shou1d be Tb e a.,,, a rd by a charging that during ~ &e to be extrea>ely clear mandato!"Y,andwhoshouldpaycl8lmsi!thestate Superior Coµrt jury biopsyonNov.7,1971,he HumhoLJt Ar becaus e retai-want to fund ran ou~ or m~ney.. . came during the doctors' inserted a needJe "some !&ti e&m ake s ure parents Browns ch1er aide m the matter, Deputy slowdownprotestingris-distanceaway"fromthe d 11 Health and Welfare Secretary Robert Gnaizda, ing medical malpractice correct location and it PETROLIA <UPI> -aren't surprise w en called the mandatory payments issue a new snag: insurance ·l>remiums. broke. Weiner's attorney, Douglas Dalton. waived his : opening statement Tuesday until the prosecution 1 wraps up its case. A moderate earthquake they get the do_ll home. The doctors want them to be voluntary. One of the doctors' prime A piece of the needle 1·s regl.sten'ng 4.5 on the BUT ADS will be a, .pro-o bJ" e ct 1· v es j th TV GNAIZDA TOLD reporters that doctors in the n e st1·u lodged aga1·nst her R1"chter Scale rumbled blem because , I d i · · f 1 t low-risk fields wanted to stay out of any state 8 ow own 5 a revision o snine and cannot be re· through Humboldt Coun· codes won't even e us th tort d .,. .. ~ h d 11• b bot malpract\ce insurance plan. But the Brown ad· e -or a versary moved, be"" lawyer 531·.., ty Tuesday S OW a 0 S are -S t rd hi b • u-. h I th. • • th ministration's prorvwal includes mandatory pay--ys em er w c Dur 1· n g s ex u a 1 i· n . I ! Ogarette Ta% Propo•ftl SACRAMENTO <AP> -A proposal to raise the tax on cigarettes by one cent a pack is before the California Legislature. There were no reports tom, muc es_s is, e It""' mal t· .. k d ments into a f\and from which malpra. ctice claims .prac ic Cdes are tercourse, the movement of injuries or damages. spo es man sai · -.c: t tried The s eismographic sta· T~e same toy maker would be paid. Th~ jury decided Tues· of the needle near her tion at the University of earber releas~ a ~emal.~ ~ Specialists in high-risk fields such as day that the $657,000 spine causes her great C lif . . doll named Skipper neurosurgery have had the sharpest increase in in· pain her lawyer ar"ued a ornia 10 Berkeley · surance costs -nearly five.fold to ~.ooo a year in should be paid to Mrs. and s'he and her bus·ban-d' said the epicenter of the who_ se bus. time grew ~d ~ V 1 B il s "th 40 t h ttl d b t t some cases, they report. e ma 8 ey mi • • have sep0 .. ated because early morning tremor w_ ais w 1 e Y wis · b h b i i D -It was introduced Tuesday by Sen. Arlen Gregorio, CD-San Mateo), who last year sponsored legislation to increase the tax on alcoholic beverages. The alcohol bill was vetoed by Gov. Ed· mund Brown Jr. Gregorio said the increase on cigarettes would bring in $30 million a year. h Already, the doctors' opposition to Brown's pro· Y. er P ys c an, r. of the problem. was 40 miles wes t of ~l~Dx.-.;.~e_r~a_r_m_.~~~~~~~~~~~-~~----------------------=------- Petrolia und e r the I ~ Pacific Ocean shelf. B__,,Blfut•Rntlloom REDWOOD CITY (AP> -A bomb has blown up the men's rest room alongside the fairway of the , 13th bole of the Stanford University golf course, San Mateo County deputies reported. Stick up! See the Kello99's" Stick Up for Bre1kf ast coupon ad in They sa1d a pipe bomb apparently about six in- ches long was detonated about 10:30 a.m. Monday wrecking a toilet bowl, other plumbing and nx: tures. Deailt Plot Man G•ltfl LOS ANGELES <trPI> -Gary Desure, 32, a former Montana mental patient, and Michael Mayo, 24, of Warren, Pa., will be sentenced Feb. 9 for threatening t<> kill President Ford. Desure pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court... Tuesday. Mayo pleaded guilty Dec. 16. The Secret Service accused them or plotting to kill the president in Sacramento on Sept. 5 -the same day Manson follower "Squeaky" Fromme · leveled a loaded pistol at Ford in an unrelated as- sassination attempt. this paper. Jrl A \rem offs SPORTSWEAR Ytf!lfUlff Pl.ALA BAI.BOA ISi.Aif) Newport 8'och 216 Momlt' Ave. 548.'121 675-1904 -----4' --~ ------__ .. --· -· .. - BEEFEATER'S BEEF Best darn beef you'll ever put a fork to-that's Ivey Ranch Bedl It's corn-fed, aged to perfection, no hormones or hannful chemicals, neither. Whether it's stew or steak, Ivey Ranch Beef makes a meal to remember. It's beefeater's beef ... We guarantee it! ---·--. -- CHUCKWAGON PAK Tender; juicy, corn-fed, aged beef U.75POUNDS ONLYS20.25 18 Oifferent Assc>rtmcnts from SS.95·Sidcs, Hind and Forequarters Available at: l'f'ey Beef Company 133 E. Alt.on SantlAlu 546-9330 Master Clwge Venneulcn Ranch · 32382 Del Obispo San Ju.in <Apistrano 496-0431 Food Stamps Open 7 Days a week _____ _ Save.30% with UnitedS . ''Freedom Fare:' ltSthebest reason to vacation now instead of later. • • You can take a vacation now and save Jocx,-or go this summer and save less. That's why we say .. Now·s the time:· Adults save 30% off round-trip Coach fare. and children under 12 you take along save 50%. There are no mileage restrictions. no holiday or ·weekend restrictions. Freedom Fare does not apply to travd within same state or to Canada. Different discounts Dllllaatloll loUM-trt• twr DeatiHlloa CllJ ftlldonl Fare Satlap CltJ Akron/Canton S225.00 s 97.00 Greensboro/ Allentown/ High Point/ Bethlehem/ Winston-Salem Easton 256.00 1 J0.00 Hanford/ Baltimore 251.00 107.00 Springfield Birmingham 202.00 86.00 Huntsville Boise 102.00 44.00 Kansas City Boston 274.00 118.00 Knoxville Buffalo/ Lansing Niagara Falls 239.00 103.00 Lu Vegas Cedar Rapids/ Lincoln Iowa City 178.00 76.00 Medford . Charleston, W. Va. 224.00 96.00 Memphis Charlotte, N.C. 230.00 98 . .00 Milwaukee Chattanooga 210.00 90.00 Moline/ Chicago 199.00 85.00 Rock Island/ Oevdand 22>.00 97.00 Davenpon Columbus 217.00 93.00 Muskegon Dayton,O. 211 .00 91.00 Newpon News/ Denver 113.00 49.00 Hampton/ Des Moines 168.00 72.00 Will iamsbur& Detroit 218.00 94.00 New York/ Eugene, Ore. 105.00 45.00 Newark A int 218.00 94.00 ·Norfolk/ Fort Wayne 211 .00 91.00 Portsmouth/ Grand Junction 95.00 41 .00 Virginia Beach Grand Rapids 209.00 89.00 Omaha , I -.. available to Hawaii. Your Travel Agent has information about specific cities and fli ghts. Or call United at 537·7521. Just pay for your round-trip ticket within 10 days of when you make the reservation-and no later than 14 days before departure. Stay 7 to 30 days. There are a specific number of Freedom Fare seats on each flight. so make reservations early. IGaDd trip Tour Dtltlaatloa llolU!d trip Your , ....... ,.,. Savlnp CllJ f'nledonl rare Sufnp Pendleton SJ20.00 S52.00 Philadelphia 258.00 110.00 5235.00 5101 .00 Pittsburgh 234.00 100c00 . Portland J 13.00 49.00 267.00 115.00 Providence 273.00 117.00 202.00 86.00 RaJeigh/ 161.00 69.00 Durham 241 .00 103.00 213.00 91.00 Reno 69.00 29.00 214.00 92.00 Richmond 249.00 107.00 48.00 20.()() Rochester 245.00 105.00 153.00 65.00 Saginaw/ 94.00 40.00 Midland/ 183.00 79.00 Bay City 218.00 94.00 199.00 85.00 Salem.Ore. 109.00 47.00 Salt Lake City StatUe/ 102.00 44.00 182.00 78.00 Tac:om:i 123.00 53.00 206.00 88.00 South Be"d 204.00 88.00 Spokane 123.00 53.00 Toledo 217.00 93.00 256.00 11 0.00 Washington, O.C. 251.00 107.00 263.00 113.00 Youngstown/ Warren/ •Sharon 231.00 99.00 256.00 Jl0.00 157.00 67.00 Farei subject to cban~e. Security cbaraca not Inc uded. Beginning June lst. the summer discount / begi~: it's still 50% off for cruldren, but ~% for adults. So now's the time. 7