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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-01-28 - Orange Coast Pilot) J 1 • ·~c Widow S11ing MOrtua~y Over Dumped Coffin DAILY PILOT * * * 10< * * * WEDNESDAY A.FTERNOON, JANUARY 28, 1.976 VOL. ... NO. n . I s•CTIOMS, st ~AGl!S .. ailing Bogart ., ' ~ ~ ~--_,,c.;. .. ~ • U~I T..._..... Tom Alderman of Chicago asked for a replica of the Maltese Falcon used in the famous Humphrey Bogart movie -by mistake Columbia Pictures sent him the original. Since Alderman received the falcon last week, he has been "threatened" in telephone calls and notes from movie· buff friends who also want to possess the bird. Alderman is Gov. Daniel Walker's director of com- munications. Wind Could Fan Contained U Fire .• LOS ANGELES (AP>--Fire breaks helped to hold a blaze in a tinder·dry canyon on the city's northern outskirts to a><> acres early today, but stron1 winds predicted durln1 the day kept flrt officials braced for the worst. · . "It's at a holding stage now but we'll have to see what happens," said U.S. Forest Service in- formation officer Ed Medina. "Ir we can bold the names don in the canyon, we'll be in great b " . 81 •• JJedlna said the blaze possibly started by an arsonist, broke out 1hortly before mldniaht in a roll- lnl bru1h area tn the An1elea Na· tlonal Forest, a few miles . nort.hweat of tbe Jhak: KountalD reareatlon area. "Things do look pretty good out there right now. The situation is hopeful, but we don't have a time for containment," be added. (See MAGIC, Page A.2) A widow who learned last Dec. 17 that portions of her husband's body and his coffin bad been found on Orange County's Coyote Canyon dump sued Westminster Memorial Park today for $200,000 In damages. C·ar Kills 6ill Ohio Tragedy GREENVILLE, Ohio (AP> - A car ran off a rural road near here early today, traveled about 300 feet in a roadside ditch, then knocked' down a tree and rammed into a house 25 feet from the road, authorities said. Two persons in the car and four mem- bers of a f amity uleep in the house were killed. "The car obvfously was travel· ing at a bigb .rate of speed," Darke County Sheriff James Irwin said. He said that the four killed in the two-story frame house ap· parently were sleeping in one room, irying to keep warm as the temperature dipped to 10 degrees. The four killed in the house were identified as Mr. and Mrs. Charles Feltz, their daughter Jacqueline, 15, and 8on Ralph, 11. Marnie Feltz. 12, was injured. She was reported in good condi· lion at a Greenville hospital. Bob ' Feltt, 16, also in the house, escaped injury. The names of the two persons in the car who were killed were withheld pending notification of relatives. - The Feltz home is on Ohio 49, in • eastern Ohio near ·the Indiana border. The owner of the house. Howard Long, said Feltz was un· employed and couldn't work because of a bad heart. "He raised a garden. mowed the grass and things around here," Long said. "They were all in 1ood health, happy r'' he said of the Feltz f amtly. There are five other Feltz children, all in their 20s and not living at home. fendant. on Jan. 23, 1975. for the cremation of her husband's r~ . mains and the scatteridg of his ashes at aea. Mr .. Harman died May 8. 1958. and his body was in· terred at Westminster Memorial Park. Sheriff's officers who in- Bomb Defused 1.1\e namea tpread rapidly in a southeasterly direction towal'd the t uburbl of Sau.-, Newball and Valencia. flt• oatclals said.. Genevieve Harman of Westminster claim• tn her Superior Court action. that negligence by the mortuary opeutors led to the dumping of PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI) Huch E. Harman's remains at Police said a bomb in federal of-. But 200·foot·wlde fire breaa. conatructed under a fire preven· lion procram , bel~oflreflahters hilt the advante, Medina said. ... the trash alte between Irvine and ftces"'tn northeast Phoenix was Newport Beach. defused this morning, one hour Mr1. Harman atat~ that 1he and '5 minutes before it was to made arran~ta wlth the de· detonate. ,. I • an ire· • j I Irvine Mrirder • Suspect Ret11rn. Sought in Mexico Brown Treau Peers Alike MADISON, Wis. CAP) -California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. apparently is not kidding about austeri- ty in government, extending it even to his relations with other governors. After requesting a copy of Brown's state budget message, aides to Wisconsin Gov. Patrick J . Lucey were mildly surprised when they received it more than two weeks later among some other fourth-class mail. The California budget message was sent to Wisconsin with a mere 13 cents postage. It was mailed ·Jan. 9 and reached Madison Jan. 27. Irvine Slaying Suspect's Release Sought in Mexico ByDOUGLASFRITZSCRE Of ttM o.ur ,.. ... ..,. Irvine police officers were in court in Guadalajara, Mexico, to· day attempting to get an extradi· tion order to return to the U.S. with Raul R. Figueroa, tbe man they believe com milted an ex- ecution-style murder in an Irvine orange grove Jan. 18. Police Lt. James Carrington said today the Orange County Distria Attorney's office has is- sued a complaint of fU'St·degree murder against Figueroa and police have obtained a no-bail ar· rest .,arrant. Figueroa was sought in con- nection with the slaying of Eulogio Ramos Vale0%Uela of Santa Fe Springs, whose body was found by a woman jogging through an orange grove near Culver Drive and the Santa Ana Freeway the mornlna or Jan. 19:· Valenzue la bad been s hot several times in the back with a vestlgated the lncldent decided not to take action ·a&ainst I.he mortuary after 'deten:nlnina that "human error" led to the dis· posal or the rem •lm. lnvestl1atora said mortuary workers apparently overlooked a number of bones in the met.al casket while they were transfer· rtna remains from lhe cOffin to the cremation contalner. Weatmlnater Memorial Part offlclala today refused to cohl· ment on th lawsuit. 'lltey earlier refused to comment on tho dis· covery of Mr. Harman•a remains at the county dump. • small caliber gun, according to . investigators. Irvine Detective Steve Nash . and Spanish-speaking Costa Mesa Detective Chano Camarillo, who jointly conducted an inquiry into the slaying in Los Angeles County barrios, flew to Guadalajara Tuesday to bring Figueroa back. Figueroa had been arrested by Mexican police foUowing caUs from the Irvine department, Car· rington said. Garrington said that within 72 hours ol the discovery of the body, officers had concentrated their investigation on Figueroa. After questioning friends and relatives of the accused man, of· Heers later determined he had left the country for Guadalajara Jan.I~ . Police contend the motive for the slaying was the purported ln- volvement of Valenzuela and Figueroa's wife. Valenzuela's car, which police °(See SUSP ECT, PageA2) AD R&PONSE DOCCONE GOOD uwe bad &ood response to the ad and sold all the puppies." That's the sales success story told by the Fountain Valley woman who placed this classified ad tn the Dally Pilot: Conte P\.tpplet, 8 wka, xlnt w/cblldren $251 ltXlt•XXXX. Ir you bave pets )'OU want to sell, call 6'2·5678. It only take$ a few words In the riaht place to find a buyer. Along the Oran~e Coast, the right place ls the Oa1tyPilot. , $45,000 Damage Reported By ARTHUR R . VINSEL Of tlle O.llr Pl!« SQff Raging flames from a small fire smoldering in an easy chair finally exploded in a west Hunt- ington Beach apartment com- pl ex Tuesday, trapping two peo- ple and causing $45,000 damage. Firemen rescued the two vic- tims. The blaze io the 286-unit Warner Wes t Apartments, 6401 Warner Ave., also claimed the life of a cat who might have been s aved had county animal control officers not refused to respond. Fire Department officials said the noon-hour blaze could easily have been far worse in terms of lives lost and property damage. Battalion Chief Jim Vincent. responding to cries for help and r eports that s omeone was trapped on the second floor of the three.story complex, found and calmed the victims . .. They were trapped by dense smoke so thick it was impossible to see," Fire Capt. Roger Hosmer said today. Battalion Chief Vincent, wear- ing goggles and a breathing ap- paratus, made his way down the smoke-blanketed corridor and kept the two persons in an apart· ment. · (See FIRE, Page A%) C o ast Weather Fair through Thursday with continued sunny and warm days. Chance of some fog near the coast Thursday morning. Highs 70 to 80 degrees·. Lows tonight in the 40s. ' I NSIDE TODAY Stat• plau to mcoem:tge long-range biCJlcliftg apptm" to be falling to budgd'•. =· EM proipecb for more baa lroiU of shorter dUtanca look promi&mg. 87. l•tlex · \ .4.2 DAILY PILOT s Wldnelday. Janu!t)' 28. 19'78 Dad No Quitter . ·--Despite Tumor MlAMI C~P > -First, hls •·year-old son died ot leukemia. Tht!n. 3 second son underwe nt surgery for cancer, ~rnd a third son had a leg amputated to stop the spread or the disease. Now , Raymond Southerland is in a hospital wilbJl brain tumor. "We told them what could happen, the pros and the cons," Southerland said Tuesday. "It was a bad blow. but they handled the mselves well. They tried to keep my spirits up. ••l\tY CHILDREN, AFTER WHAT THEY have been through, are very sturdy," said the 37 .year.old Dade County policeman. "When we talk about ca~er, we don't leave· anythini out.'' \ 1 Marines _ Sparked SC Fire By FREDERICK SCRoEMEHL' OftllltOeltyf'I ........ Preliminary investigation 1how1 that a 21400-acre brush fire that destroyed 14 San Clemente homes was caused by a spark from welding equipment beln1 used on Camp Pendleton one week ago today, M arlne Corps of· ficlals have reported. In a brief atatement, officials said a further investigation has been ordered that will take at least a month to complete. .. His son, Stephen, 15. o:Kide national headlines in 1974 when he and Ted Kennedy Jr. became friends after both un - derwent leg amputations to stop t~e spread of bone cancer . Stephen and young Kennedy, the son or Sen. Edward Ken· nedy, <D·Mass.), still correspond. Ste~hen 's 4-year-0ld brother, Jeffrey, died of lymphatic leukemia a form or cancer , in 1969. A second brother, Michael, ~ow 10. underwent surgery in 1972 for a malignan· cy in the lining of his spinal nerve. "The cause of the fire was shown to be a spark from elec· · trlcal welding equipment whJch was being operated by. a Marine al ·an abandoned pistol 1'ange," the statement said. ~ DOcrORS AT THE NATIONAL HEALTH Institute in Bethesda. Md., were to examine Southerland today in an at· tempt to learn if the tumor is malignant. The family already is the subject of a study by the National Cancer Institute. "He had been suffering from blackouts for three years," said Stephen. "The doctors thought it might be hls nerves because o( havirig all three kids in the family coming down with cancer." "I felt a di zziness ," said Southerland, who wo.rks in a school -police liaison program and sometimes subshtules as an airborne tramc ~epo!'}er.for a M,iami radi~ statio~. "But it was crazy, so weird ttiat 1t wasn t something you d com- plain about. ••f'VE BEEN SO WORRIED ABOUT Stevie that I never had time to worry about it." . . Doctors a t Miami's Mer cy Hospital last week d1s· covered the tumor in the upper right side of Southerland's brain. "Afterwards, they told him, 'Something i~ there, and it's serious,'" said Doug Taggerty, a county police sergeant and Southerland 's friend. Stephen, who along with Michael has sbo~n .no rec_ur· rence or the disease, said his mother, Sara, agam 1s holdmg a bedside vigil. .. WHEN JEFF WAS SICK, SHE was with him. When I was sick, she took care of me," said Stephen, who last year organized a group which give;; children w~o have suffered from illness a chance to talk with others their own age. "Now tnY .dad is sick, and it's her turn to be with him," he said. . "He told me that he didn't want me to be a qwtter when I went to Cincinnati for treatment," Stephen added. "He told me he didn't want any of his sons to be quitters. Now it's my turn to say, 'You 're not going to be a quitter.' " • John, Bob Kennedy The land wh~re the fire erupt. ed is leased lo the state by the Marine-Corps for eventual use as a state park. · In the investigation, ·the state- ment said, a senior Marine of· ficial "will probe all matters con· nected with the fire, ·including the matter of why electrical welding equipment wa.a being used on the state land. "Formal investigation of the type ordered involves acquiring sworn testimony, interrogation of witnesses and the collection of all pe rtinent documents," the statement said. Marine officials said the y would be unable to make any further comment on the fire until the formal investigation is com- pleted. Meanwhile it was reported that the portion of San Clemente ravaged by a fire that destroyed. 14 homes will not be declared a dilaster area by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. That was the word. from state Asse mbl y man Robert E . Badham (R·Newport Beach),. who s'aid the governor's staff de- termined. that a disaster area declaration would do nothing to aid victims who lost homes in the 2,400-acre blaze. Badham said the state Office or Emergency Services (0~) is free to assist victims with low in· terest reconstruction loans with a disaster area declaration. San Clemente City Manager Kenneth Carr said today that OES still is investigating the city's request for loan as- sistance, but that no decision has been rendered. F,....PageAI Patience, Folks The Department of Motor Vehicles staff knows what it's like to st and in line, too. New $285,000 building at 650 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa, was supposed to be ready for occupancy Nov. 15, but that was last year's story. The latest target .date for move from 720 W. 19th St. ls March l . Then public will be served from 38 win- dows instead of present 17 and there'll be parking for 142 cars instead of 24. ·Tiny Patty Hearst Dwarfed by Trial By JACK V. FOX SAN FRANCISCO (UPI> Patricia Hearst seemed dwarfed by her surroundings. Dressed in blue, the tiny ac· cused bank robber was the center of attention in the basketball court-sized courtroom. But a casual obs erver who did not know of her case -if there is such a person -would hardly have picked her as the likely de- fendant who took part in a bank holdup In which two persons were shot. Or as the glrl who shocked the world with her revolutionary rhetoric and rejection of her family and past life. Thin and pale, with dark circles below her eyes, s he sat quietly at her defense table with a demeanor that could best be described., meek. Her pantsuit was questioned by U.S. Dlstrict Judge Oliver J . Carter. She paid full attention as the jurors s poke into a microphone. Occuionally, she whispered to one of her de· fense lawyers. Albert J ohnson, who sat next to her. During court breaks, ·however, she appeared more relaxed. She gave her mother a broad smile as 'she entered the courtroom for the morning session, and exchanged ·chitchat with her two younger teen-age sisters, who sat about 10 feet away. Carter read from the indict- me nt : "Patric ia Campbell Hearst and others did by force and violence rob the Hibernia Bank branch or $10,690 on April 15,1974." ~:!:Se.'li~Uy too large for L4CK OF SNOW Her hair, changed from a flam- ing red a~the time of her capture CANCELS FEJ'E to a Ugh( brown with a !!UgbUy Fro•PageAI FIRE ••• They were escorted out after firemen battling the blaze finally controlled it within 15 minutes of arrival and cleared the smoke· filled hallway for safe evacua· tion. The two persons finally led to sa!ety were not identified. Capt. Hosmer said the blaze re· quired police to control traffic at the intersection of Warner Avenue and Edwards Street, which was ja mmed in the noon· hour rus h. Magnitude of the two-alarm blaze which sent a column of smoke boiling over the densely- popul ated area required six trucks from two fire companies in addition to paramedics. The paramedics treated. a cat trapped in an apartment upstairs from the one occupied by John C. Smith and his roommate for critical s moke inhalation, but their work was futile in the end. "We gave it first aid, but it suc- cumbed,'' said Capt. Hosmer. Called 'Dangerous' reddish hue, fell to her shoulders. RENO, Nev. (UPI) -Lack or Shew as brought into San Fran· snow has forced cancellation of• cisco's Federal Building, where this weekend's scheduled annual MAGIC· ••• Oranee County Animal Control <>Ulcers were contacted. for as- sistance and medical equipment especially for pets but they declined to respond to the blaze. Smith, the renter whose apart- ment was gutted, had gone to the beach about 10 a.m., accordln"g to Capt. Hosmer, while his room- mate was apparently away at work. DALLAS (AP> -John and Robert Kennedy were two of the most dangerous men America ever produced and "I'm not en- tirely upset" by their assassina· tion, says lawyer William M. KunsUer. .. Although I couldn't pull the -trigger myself, I don't disagree with murder sometimes·, especially political assassina- tions which have been a part of political life since the beginning of recorded history." Kunstler told a news con!erence Tuesday. "I'm not entirely upset by the Kennedy assassination. In many ways two of the most dangerous men in th e country were eliminated," he said. "It is hard to tell what the glamor of Ken· nedy could have pone. Kennedy. excited adulation. And adulation js the first s tep towa rd dic- tatorship." P,....PogeAl SUSPECT ••. believe was used to transport the man and his killer to Irvine and back to Los Angeles County, was found abandoned and burning in the City of Commerce Jan. 18, polices aid. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT R~rtN.Weed l"rt"4t11l•lld~llW Jack R. Curley vu""--"" o.-ti MINOW ThomHKHVll L411or ThomM A. MUfl)hlne .............. . O\arM H. Loot R leherd P. Nilll ~ ................. °'"'" c...-.. __ .., ..... ~~·-c.--...... ·~...._ ........... ___.. .... ---..v•-. w._...., ... ....,.,._ Asked by a reporter whether he felt his remarks might cause othe rs to attempt killings; Kunstler replied: "No, deranged people aren't made possible by my feelings that . . . maybe we're better off without the Ken· nedys than with them. Deranged. p eople are going to operate whether William M. Kunstler says one thing or another.'' KunsUer, here to address a political seminar at Southern Methodist Uni versity, was the defense counsel for the Chicago Seven group char ged with dis· rupting the 1968 Democratic Con· vention. He also is chief counsel for Symbionese Liberation Army members Bill and Emily Harris. Kunstler said he turned down offers to handle the defense of Patricia Hearst who went on trial Tuesday in San Francisco on bank robbery charges. ''I would never work for the Hearsts under any circumstance because I won't work for pigs," he said. "I only work for people I respect and anyone in the ruling class I don't respect. Patty Hearst will be the ultimate vic- tim. She was brainwashed after she went to jail, not before." Tot Tumbles 20 Stories, Not Injured SAO PAULO, Brull <UPI> - A 10-month-old child fell 20 stories from an apartment build· tng and baa only scratches to show for it, hospital authorities said today. Hospital spokesmen sald hish tension electrical wires broke the fall of the little 1lrl1 Ana Paula de Oliveira. One of the power lines snapped, nei&hbors said. Accordln& to the neipbon, Ana was playln1 wlth several children In a 2otb noor apart- ment in the S.o Vito buildin& ln a residential section of Sao Paulo. Ono of the children's dolls fell out the window and Ana rushed to. ~ nel1bbon aald, and 1he also 1e1'1 out the window, the · · neighbors said. ' A truck driver, Clebe Quetros, was cbatUn1 with friends on the · . .. -. I · .earner when be saw what looked llk• ••a blonde doll'' falUng. ••t.attr I ea• It won't o doll when I uw the body movin1. "I· tta)'ed. wltb her ~d ~ent aootJMr truck drtver to call the police," be 1ald. . . _ Tb_• .J>Ollc• took Ana to a Japltal wlMra X·rQl'lhowed DO fradar•. the federal courts are located, winter carnival of the University Medina said no injuries had Crom her Jail cell in handcuffs. of Nevada, Reno. been reported and no struciures But they were taken off before Eleven collegiate teams from were threatened by the n ames, she entered the courtroom. the West had entered the meet, which were fanned along through Miss Hearst glanced through but the Mt. Rose site is closed un· . The loss involved $25,000 to the structure itself and $20,000 to con-most of the night by winds gust-the list of prospective jurors, til more snow falls in the Sierra ing at 30 m iles an hour. then listened intently as each Nevadas. Firemen on the lines, including -==~==:....:::.:..:..:..:.:....:_ _________________________ --::-- crews from the Los Angeles tents. County Fire Department and the U.S. Forest Service, were assist- ed by bulldozers and a night· vision helicopter, Medina said. At least five more helicopters and air tankers began water. dropping missions at daybreak, he added. The blaze was the latest to hit the Southern California area this fire season, which officials said has been made more than usual· ly hazardous because of a conti- nuing drought. Woman's Arm Amputated Surgeons at Orange County Medical Center amputated part or a woman's right arm Tuesday after she caught it in the blades of a meat grinder while prepar· ing hamburger at a Santa Ana delicatessen. The victim of the wiusual acci- dent was identified as Michelle Holman, 25, of Anaheim. A police spokesman said the victim was pushing meat into tbe grinder when the machinery caught her fin1ers and started Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919 BICYCLE PARTS-TIRES-ACCESSORIES ·SALE Subl•d to Stock on H•d Tennis Dresses 20% to 50% off Smith Autograph Frames 19.95 Billie Jean King frames 19.95 Used T2000 19.95 & 24.95 pulling the arm ln. Paramedics L-----------------..., freed the mangled limb from the All Kawasaki Rackets At Cost grinder and ruabed the woman to Medical Center. Don't Cal,I,, Plwns Bray MONTCLAIR, N.J. (AP) -A 218-year-old halntylist hu won the laraest prize ever off ertd in a01 state lottery -fl,778 a week tor life. .·· . Erle C. Leek of Nmtb. •. ArllngtoD was 1etected ~· ! Tuaday at the final draw- lnl of. the ••1116 Imtant Lottery." If he lives to be 78, be w Ill collect more than ... 5 million. II hC9 doetn't, bit heir• are paraotffd •t.847 ,CMO. ..Pralle the Lord that ~ la all J)C)Hlble, add J ltOpe I can help a Jot of~ Pl• wttb thlt monv," Leek escleimed. • · . . · 200 Pairs Shoes At Cost or Below Random Sizes Wilson & Penn T BMIS Shorts 4.95 & 8.95 . . Wiison & Penn Tennis Shirts 5.95 & 6.95 Open 9 to & Closed Sundays Extra Duty Yellow tennis Balls-Can of 3/1.99 Warm up Pants Close-out ... · 4.95 Basketballs 4.95 & 5.95 Wednesday. Ja,,uary 28, 197'& DAILY PILOT A 3 . J~venile Justiee Plan Goes to Public By WILLIAfll SCUllEIBD .................... Oran1e County 1upervl&0rs have ordered their Juvenile Justice Study Committee to solicit broad public comment on lta proposed 31-point overhaul of the county Juvenile justice 1y1tem .and' report back by • Marcbl. At that lime, supervisors said, a speclal jubllc hearina will be sChedule to help determine wba~ course the county abould steer in comlng to grips wltb juvettlle crime. · & ~ W@M rr. @@[(WO©© The column appears dally except Saturdays and Mon\lays. · For De...o••trc,Cors DEAR PAT: Can you give me a· rundown on what the major automobile manufacturers offer to a buyer of a demonslralor car? L.L., Costa mesa Ford treats demonstrators as new cars by extendJng the war· ranty for 12 months or 12,000 mUea from the original date of delivery to the dealer, not to ex· ceed 24 months or 24,000 miles. General Motors does not offer an extension on the original 12112 warTanty. Owners do have tbe option to bay an extended war· ranty of 12 months and 12,000 miles (ap to 18/18) for $20. Owners of American Motors de· monstrators can purchase the second year or the Buyer PTotec· tlon Plan within 90 days after purchase, but there Is no ex· · tension of tbe original warranty. 'The Buyer Proted'9n Plan for the second year costs• on 1915 mode.. and guarantees against normal wear as well as defects. Ouysler's lZ·month, unlimited mileage warranty can be ex· tended to 18 months from the time of original delivery to the dealer. There Is a $ZS fee for the addJtlonal coverage, but general· ly the fee ls not passed on to the purchaser. Warrant" ~~terufo11 DEAR PAT: My new vacuum cleaner had to be returned to the manufacturer for repair. Obtain· ing parts~ cauted a delay, and I've been without my cleaner for a month now. The repair i1 cov· ered by w~rranty and I un· derstand why unavailability of pans has dragged out the repair time. What I think is unfair is that my warranty time is being used up while I do not have use of the cleaner. · W.P., Huntington Beach Calffonla law (AB 39T5) ex· tench tbe warranty period to cov· er time.qi repair for goods cost· lnC $58 or more. In other words, lf yoar warranty-covered cleaner cost $50 and 30 days bas been re· quired to repair lt, your warran· ty will be extended an addltJonal 30 days over Its regular period. Under this law, the consumer 111ast be given a. receipt showing tbe date of purchase. Uthe goods are retamed for service, a work order or receipt must be pro· vtded 1bowlng the date or de· Uvery of tbe good• to tbe mamlfactarer or seller and the date of retara to t111e conn mer. FrtdtPetpottrrl DEAR PAT: Could you publish a recipe for old-fashioned fruit potpourri? I've looked every· where. J .J., Laguna Beach The follo•ln1 recipe was pro- vtd.ecl by the lleme adviser's of· nee of tbe Co.peratlve Extension (lOlt s. Harbor Blvd., Anaheim, CA tZIH): ~. cup dtaleed cJsopped pl•eapple, ~ cap drained chopped peaches. 6 chopped m araachb10 cherries, J \-l c.,. 1•1•r, 1 envelope dry yeut. Place plaeapple, peaches, cbeniet, 1agu aiMl yeut ln a cleaa e911talaer at &eut 1 qt. 1lse. Sdr anCI cover. Stir 3 or 4 tlmes the flnt day. After two weekl add, Ill• 1tlr enry I• s kY•: 1 cap cMI»~• ~acMI er •ell· dniM4 trilt toektall, 1 ctlP •at· ar. Aft~ a.-er hf9 ween add, U... .Ur e"'1 J lll':J daft: 1 CIP clllo9Pe4 • ara1d1"9 cMrrtH or ·.-e11.ealllei caned r.-.. 1 HP ... ar • ., ................. ll9'1> llarter ............ frillt ... ••• .._. • .._., nen two w.eu.;_PW'l 'ltfOllPI' taste and .. -.. ,... ....... --..v, ...... ...,... ... , .... &ene llean11rhila, Count)':.Counul Adrian Kuyper and Couot.Y Ad· minlstratlve Officer Robert Tbomais will beain draftlnll an or· dlhance creating a new county Juvenlte Delinquency Com· minion. The panel, r•commended by the study committee, will over· see all delinquency prevention procrams. Supervisors lauded the study committee, which has worked on its re.port since October 197•. The panel was created after supervisor a were confronted 1976 wtth overcrowdJng at Juvenile Hall. Supervisors cbose not to pro· ceed immediately Tuesday with the bulk of the committee's re· commendaUons because of the continui.ng audit of county pro· grams by the Callfahlia Youth Authority. Tbat LI due for com-ple~n in about tbr .. weeka. The major goat of the pro. grams outlined In the commfttee report, entitled "Benevolence Gone Wrong," ls reduction of the size of Juvenile Hall by 215 beds by 1980 and a moratorium on all construction of maijor new deten· ti on facilities. The committee said most SO· called "status offenders'' - those committed to detention for breaking laws linked only to their age, such as curlew violations - could be diverted from Juvenile Hall. The committee report em· pbasized community treatment tor troubled youngsters and a coordinated effort by publlc agencies to provide &uc h services. The phJsed reducliQn program suggested by the committee for Juvenile Hall would begin next year with the elimination or 80 beds, followed by 75 more the following year and another 60 by the year 1980. The committee stressed that the eoal is not a firm plan, only u recommendation. To make up for the lou of bed at JuvenHe Hall. the committee ' suggested development of a network of youth resource cen· ters in the county, al>pointment of a youth services coordinator and preparation of a detailed plan or attack. The list or suggestions also in · eluded one asking the juvenile court to schedule hearing hpurs on weekends and in the evenings to prevent intake of youngsters mto detention facilities. Hicks: 'Hinshaw a Liar' By TOM BARLEY OftleDally~letse.ft Condemning convicted Congressman Andrew Hinshaw as a "heartless, shameful liar." Ora!lge. County ~istrict Attorney Cecil Hicks angnly denied Tues. day that political motives or re· venge had played any part in the prosecution of the former county assessor. "My job as district attorney is to root out political corruption wherever I find it and it obvious- ly led us to Hinshaw," the furious prosecutor said immediately after Hinshaw closed a press con· ference at the nearby federal building. "And I expect personal attacks oC this kind, especially when a man like Hinshaw has been found guilty by a jury," Hi.cits added. "It goes with the territory." "But I cannot forgive his seiz· ing on a three.year-Old incident involving the deaths of two children," Hicks said. "I find that callous. heartless and utter- ly shameful." Hinshaw had told newsmen during his press conference that Hicks' alleged involvement with a traffic accident that led to the prosecution of Mrs. Freya Murphy -she has since married Assistant District Attorney Ed Freeman -"has never been satisfactorily explained." Hinshaw commented that Hicks was later seen in bed at the All in a Lather Trinket' a two ·pound chihuahua, may be the cleanest dog in 1San Fran~isco's Golden . Gate ~ennel Club dog show . Especially m a mathematical ratlo of soapsuds to pounds of do g. Early Kindergarten Set for Saddleback woman's apartment. He told newsmen that Hicks "came very close to indictment" during what he said was the resulting Grand Jury investigation. Hicks lash~d Hinsbaw's com· ments Tuesday as "a typical at· tempt by Hinshaw to distract al· tention from the fact that a jury found him guilty on bribery charges. "It is ridiculous to suggest that I had any thought of revenge that would lead me to prosecute him or any of these other legislators or county officials he names," the district attorney said. Hinshaw told newsmen that what he described as Hicks' ··vendetta of reve nge" stemming from the Freya Murphy incident had led to the investigation of Congressmen J erry Patterson and Charles Wiggins, As · semblymen Robert Badham and Richard Robinson, State Sens. · James Wbetmore and Dennis Carpenter and Orange· County Supervisors Robert Battin, Laurence Schmit and Ralph Diedrich. "Baloney," Hicks said. "I don't keep a list of enemies. if these are supposed to be enemies, any more than I keep a list of friends. "Hinshaw was a har on the Superior Ct>urt witness stand just as he was a liar at the press con ference," Hicks said. "He called Slowdown Response Extra Help OK'd For Medical Center The Orange County Medical Center is prepared to hire up to 100 "extra help" employes to meet a ny influx of patients turned away from private hospitals due to the malpractice insurance crisis. The County Board of Supervisors told Medical Center Director Robert White Tuesday he can use his own discretion in hiring to meet the needs as long as the board is kept infoomed. ln a letter to supervisors. White said the center for the past Courses Set For Parents At Saddleback Three "how to" courses will be offered to parents• in the Sad- dleback Valley Unified School District beginning this week. Classes in child management will meet Tuesdays from 3 to 6 p.m . and also on Thursdays from 7 to 10 p.m . on the Cordillera School campus. Steps to successful parenthood will be offered from 7 to 10 p.m. on Tuesdays al Gates Elemen· tary School. . The courses are designed to provide ideas to parents and teachers' in the areas of dis- cipline, building of positive self· concepts, the use of positive rein· forcement, punishment and logical consequences. Instructors for the classes are Dr. Bruce Givner, Dr. Ronald Gray and Bill Yates. Further information may be obtained by calling &n·6270. ... several weeks has had as many as 400 patients -20 over its budgeted 380·bed capacity. But the administrator said the large patient load appears to be a seasonal occurence rather than a result of the malpractice s1tua· ti on. White warned that. any pro- longed period of maximum capacity patient loads will in· dicate to him that the crisis 1s having an eff~et. In a letter t~ supervisors. While said the Center's "func· tional capacity" 1s about 500 heds. "Depending on the severity of the situation, we could also take actions to restrict admissions to emergency cases only and to make early discharges where pa- tient safety would not be unduly jeopardized,·· White said. FuhPerish Like Dominos SAN CARLOS (AP> -A soggy version of the "domino theory," as applied to the Peninsul~ Tropical Fish· Store. makes for 1.000 goldfish pouring into the street. Firemen say that's what hap· pened Tuesday when someone forgot to turn off water to the highest of three tanks. That over· flowed into tank number two, which overflowed into tank number three. All those fish went flopping out the front and rear doors . Firemen managed to rescue half the fishes, but another 500, valued at $100, perished. me paranoid and all I have to say to that Js look who's talking." Hicks denied that any member of the district attorney's staff bad applied pressure to former mem- bers of the assessor's office staff during the Hinshaw investigation ' or to Thais Hinshaw, the con· gressman's estranged wife. "Mrs. Hinshaw testified because she wanted to," Hicks said. "In any event, Hinshaw • would have been convicted on bribery · charges without her testimony in court or before the Grand Jury." Hicks also dismissed as "absolutely ridiculous .. Hinshaw's claim that the distnct attorney's office had unlawfully mterfered in his civil divorce ac- tion by confiscating 16 crates of personal property taken from the Hinshaw apartment in Newport Beach. Hicks called trial prosecutor Michael Capizzi mto his office to confirm that the crates were · stored at Mrs. Hinshaw's request for safe keeping pending the judge's ruling on division of as- sets. "They contained china and personal possessions that have always been Mrs. Hinshaw's own property," Capizzi said. "She was afraid that he would destroy it -he is a vindictive man -if he got his hands on it." Hi c ks similarly rejected Hinshaw's claim at the press conference that the district at- torney's office had tried to force him to face trial 1mmedlate1y on conspiracy charges contained m a s~.ond Gr and Ju.ry indictment. Tie J~ In m .......... lint trial found him guilty on two counts of bribery. He will be sen· lenced Feb. 17 to what could be state prison terms of one to 14 years on each count. "Nothing of the kind.·· Hicks exploded. "In fact, we offered to send him for trial wherever (co- defendant> Jack Vallerga will be going for trial next week and have their trial there together. "Apparently he didn't want to leave Orange County." Hi cks s aid. "But there was never any question of our forcing him to go s traight ba ck into the courtroom." Jucige Hobert P . Kneeland, the trial judge in Hinshaw's bribery action, has now set March 1 as the opening dale of the con· gressman 's second trial. He will rule that day on defense attorney Marshall Morgan's motion for a new trial. "I understand that Hinshaw accused me during thls infamous press conference of trying lo divert attention from my own political affairs by prosecuting him," Hicks said. "lie was a liar yesterday and he's a liar today,•· Hicks added. "The purpose of his press con· ference and these idiotic com- ments is to divert attention from his own predicament." Early Age kindergarten will begin as a pilot program at two Saddleback Valley Unified School District schools next week. whether the youngsters will have difficulty attending a whole year of kindergarten after the early age class. Ladfl Sleb The program. allowed by state legislation passed last year. enables children who have their fifth birthday by Feb. l to sta rt school in the second semester. Under existing programs, ex· plained Agnes Meck, the dis· trict's director of curriculum. on· ly children who turn five by Dec. 1 are allowed to start kin· dergarten in September. Already, she said. there is a waiting list of children whose parents hope they can get into the experimental programs at both San Joaquin and O'Neill Schools. The program will be self· supporting, Miss Meck said. Bus transportation is not being pro· vided for the young students who wUl be going to the schools from thc-oughout the district. Parents, she said, ari! responsible for get· Ung. the children to and from the schools lhemselves. Some research has supported education for children ot an earlier age. But, said Miss Meek, "We are not really sure that this is an enhancement or that It wlU make that much difference." The program ts being established to help determine thb, she said. "You can theorh:e all your Ulc but eometlm~ you have to try somethlng," she ex· plain~. Other school districts have pro· moted children in the middle or the year, she said, but this would cost the district more money. She said the programs are be· ing designed to develop social, cultural, physical and academic skills in the children. Work with the c h ildren will be in· dividuall2ed. she 9aid. She said the program will be . closely monitored and evaluated to determine whether it should -continue within the district. Inf ant Slain By Dog Pack Gem Talk 811J C. IWMP//R lf,"S WHAT IS MOST VALUABLE GEMSTONE Car~ to guess? Considering a diamond, emerald and ruby. each top quality and weighing 10 carats, you could name your own price for the ruby, a15 no price is Impossible for a ruby of this size; and emerald would bring 25% to 30% more than diamond. Among SAN DIEGO CAP> -A 31.year· large stones, rubles are most old Los An1eles woman will be valuable because they are ~o arra.i1ned Feb. 10 in the death of scar~ ln those sizes. Emerald lS htt newborn baby who was at· next, and diamond last. tacked and partly eaten by In the 2 carat range value , neighborhooddogs. order is emerald, ruby and Mary Elizabeth Powers was diamond in equal quality and ordered held for trial on murder slze. 1 and child abuse charges Tuesday Regardless of scarcity based by San Diego M unidpal Court • Judge T. Bruce Iredale. dollar value. most oC u~ st~ll • T• l'alftst~ Gllt 8~ ••..,••• re•e•Wt- 1823 NEWPOITT Bl. VO .• COST A MESA Deputy Dist. Atty . Gary justlflable rate diamond fLrSt m Rempel charged that Mrs. true value when measured by Powers wrapped the infant In a beauty, durability, industrial CONVENfENTTEAMS eankAmet1can:S-Mut«Charo• towel and3laced it over a brick value and Us centuries old 30 YEARS IN THE SAMS LOCATION .PHONEW-3401 ........... cue. .•. , Another qucsUon she hopes lha t>Uot prorram1 wUl answer 7 .. wall behln her mot1'er'sh9l'eln symbolic meanint. )· k:===~s::au=:=:Jc:-: ~~~. ~ ' • Josi /9'\ Coating ,~J A4 DAJLY PILOT Saigon'• Laat Daya "' ' ' .~ :~ ··. '\~~~I/ .. <'•"' with $.. T Martin BaCks EVacUatiOn om a.rphi a e SECOND GLANCES: Officials of various levels continue today probing into the ashes of the dis- astrous 2.400-acre brus h fire which roared into San Clemente. one week ago. destroying 14 homes and damaging more than 60 others. You have to hope some good will come out of all the s tudies. . • It now appears that G-Ov .. Ed· mund G. Brown Jr. will not declare the burned-out section of town as a disaster area so aid is unlikely from the state direction. Meanwhile, U.S. Marine Corps spokesmen at Camp Pendleton have acknowledged that an elec- trical welder being operated on the huge military base probably touchedoffthe blaze. All of this, of course, comes in the agonizi ng r eappraisal. Others, however , are looking at the future. SAN CLEMENTE FIRE Marshal Don Hodgson has in- cticated the city is now looking at a possible change in law that would require r oofs on San Clemente homes to be of fire- retardant material. Hodgson says the city isn't go- ing to approach such a new rule ··on a panic basis" but he does expect such a regulation to begin work mg its way through the municipal planning commission a nd on up toward the City Coun- cil. There is strong belief that shake shingle roofs catching a fire caused the loss of all the homes that were consumed in the San Clemente fire. Meanwhile. San Clemente Mayor Tony Di Giovanni has been q uoted as suggesting that the city s hould make it mandatory that all roofs in the city be of Spanish tile. THIS NOTION ATfRIBUTED to the mayor drew a great cry of editorial anguish from the Coun- ty Seat newspaper up in Santa Ana which flayed DiGiovanni for offering, "an infinitely non- sensical solution." The paper went o n to s u ggest that homeowners have a God-given right to shake shingle roofs if they pref er that option. Some people might suspect there is serious question ii you have a God-given right to a roof that might cause your home to burn and tak e some of the neighbors· pl aces along with it. This aside. it will no doubt amuse som e long-time coast watchers to view Ma yor DiGiovanni gettin g bum-rapped for a "nonsensical solution" when he talked about Spanish tile roofs being m a ndatory on San. Clemente homes. Thi s s imply s u ggests somebody has a nonsens ical sense of coastal hi story. · WAY BACK THERE in the 1920s when t he city of San Clemente was founded by the Ole Hanson Organization, Spanish tile roofs were mandatory. You couldn't bui Id an outhouse without a Spanish tile roof. Also, white stucco exterior walls were required. You can still see a lot of these old places dotted across the San Clemente landscape. This kind of rule could never be applied today. Such a building require- ment would likely be struck down by some court as being arbitrary· and capricious. Also it would be pretty expensive today. RIGHTS AND COURTS aside, San Clemente looked pretty nice in the old days with all those tiled roofs. And they didn't burn very well. You suspect Mayor DiGiovanni senses all this. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Graham .Martin, th4' last U.S. am- basas!idor to South Vietnam and the target of criticism for tbe handling of the U.S. evacuation of Saiion, says he based bis actions on a secret CIA report that the Communists would not interfere with the withdrawal. Martin Tuesday told a congressional panel that he could not hav~ ordered evacuation of American personnel from Vietnam any earher than the helicopter airlift of April 29 1975 because a "panic situation would have resulted." ' . IN HIS J'.'IRS~ PUBLIC comment since the fall of Saigon Jut spnng, M.arhn said he was convinced in January of that year that only a miracle could prevent a Communist takeover. Ironitally, however, repor ts were ignored that a push would be made for a military victory . It was felt the war would end in a political settle- ment. Martin ~as been widely criticized for delaying in the order to re- move American personnel and South Vietnamese who faced possi- ble Communist reprisals. He was on one of the last helicopters that lifted off from the roof of the U.S. Embassy. · "I WAS THE ONLY person in Saigon who knew the North Viet- namese had undertaken on April 22 that they would not militarily in· terfere with the evacuation," Martin told the House lnternational Relations Investigations Subcommittee. He said he also had CIA information in mid-April that the North Vietnamese bad decided to push for a military victory but, "at that time that report was not given much credibility. So much so that the CIA station chief would not send it back through normal channels ... I put more incredibility on it than the station chief did, in fact." He said the Viet Cong were indicating a desire for a political solution at the same time, and that it was felt the information was Cease-fire lnLebarwn Still Holding BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI> Lebanese army troops moved in- to Beirut's ravaged commercial sector today, taking over from Palestinian security patrols. Munic ipal workers bega n cleanup operations to speed the capital ·s difficult march back to ( I N SHORT J normality a fter nearly 10 months of civil war. An announcement from the joint Leban ese-Syria n - Palestinian truce supervisory committee said the Lebanese would assume full control of the area by 5 p.m . Cra.,,lord Fired WASHI N G TON (l:PI> President Ford has fired H.R. Crawford. the federal govern- ment's top public housing of· ficial, and the Justice Depart- ment has opened an investigation involving possible conflict of in- terest, administration sources said today. The investigation centers on Crawford's possibly having a hand in getting government jobs for other persons. Spain Progra• MADRID . S p ain <UPI) Prime Minister Carlos Arias Navarro today announced a broad progr a m of political re- forms lo mo\'e Spain closer to western-type democracy. Op- position groups immediately de- nounced it as too little and too vague. Arias told pa rliament the gov- ernment of King Juan Carlos will move to create a two-house }Jarliam e ntary system, t o broaden political freedoms and to legalize political groups, ex- cept for the extreme left and separatists. OPEC Aeeerd PARIS (AP> -Finance ministers of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries reached unanimous agreement; today on establishing a $1 billion special fund to help poor nations wor.st hit by increased oil prices. ES TERN SAHARA ,. MAUl!llANIA AFR ICA , ....... .. . .. .. . .. MAl l UPI Newsmtp News m ap spots whe r e Algeria and Moroccan troops attacked Algerian army convoy inside Western Sahata marking escalation in dispute over mineral-rich North African territory. Nixon Helipad Not Hot Item On GSA's List W ASffiNGTON (AP> -The federal government says it may have to d e molish a $418,000 helicopter landing pad built at Key Biscayne, F1a .. for Presi- dent Richard M. Nixon because it will be difficult to sell. The 150-f oot square helipad was built on concrete pilin~s over Biscayne Bay, ma king it difficult to move elsewhere. "ll may be determined that it is a hazard to navigation," Quin· cy Culpepper of the General Services Administration's Atlan- ta regional office said in a telephone interview. "We ha- ven't decided what to do with it. We· may try to sell it and we may have to demolish it." GSA officials ac~owledged it would be difficult to sell the helipad. However, Culpepper said that no effort has been made so far to sell it. ''Our first step will be to off er it to federal agencies. We'll see if any or them have a need for it. If not, we'll offer it to state and local governments. Only then would we put it on sale to the general public," he said. Flooding inN ew Engla~ Tenepn-at•Pn AlbuqU4trQUfl Allen!• 111Klat1 Bllff•to 01~4!90 Onclnn•tl Oe~l•nd 0.11.as o.n ..... DHMol~~ Ottroif Falrt>.anll~ Hl>nolulu lrldlan.apoll\ K-.\(.Hy USVf9A\ Ni.,,. Ml'-~" Ml _ _.I\ .... 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Martin also said be doesn't blame Congress for the Saigon col- lapse because the lawmaker's vote to bar further American military aid was prompted by "organiud campaigns of distort.ion ln the United Stales." Martin told skeptical lawmakers that the aid refusal decision was "inevitable" Jn view of the impact of the American antiwar movement, which. be called "one of the best propaganda and pre· ssure organizations the world has ever seen." He named one group specifically -the "Washington· based In· dochlna Resource Center. A CENTER SPOKESMAN later said Martin's aasertion that the center had engineered the congressional vote was "ridiculoua" and added, "Obviously there was a lot of antiwar pressure, but it didn't come from any one small group, it cam«: from the majority of the American people." UPI ,....._ 'AVOIDED PANIC' Ex .. nvoy Martin 'Go-ahead for Reds' • Angola Aid Cutoff Hit WASHINGTON (AP > Congress has convincingly re· buffed President Ford's plea for covert aid to pro-U.S. forces in the Angola civil war, but Secretary of State Henry Kiss- inger says it's a problem "that won't go away." quiesce in the massive involve- ment of Soviet military equip- ment and the intervention pf over 10,000 Cuban military forces in an area where the United States bas sought no special position for itself. This is a problem that will not go away." bluntest foreign policy .remarks of his tenure. "l believe that n- sistance to Soviet expansion by military means must be .a fun- damental element of U.S. foreign I policy," he said. . · · But Albert described the ad- minislration 's desire to send covert aid as "about "the most useless enterprise I have ever I seen undertaken." Ignoring Ford's warning that the two anti-Soviet factions need U.S. aid to survive, the House on a 323-99 vote Tuesday gave final congressional approval for a ban on covert militarv aid to the new- ly independent nation. THE LETTER to Albert con- tained some of the President's Congress OKs Bird 'Death Sentence' AN ANGRY Ford, who before the vote said in a letter to House Speaker Carl Albert that anti- Soviet forces in Angola "will be destroyed" without . "effective western assistance," said later FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP)--State officials are prep¢ng for an all out night attack on millions of blackbirds in Western Kentucky this week, but first President Ford must sign emergency legislaUon authorizing the e xtermination program. in a statement: . "The Congress has stated to the world that it will ignore a clear act of Soviet-Cuban ex- pansion by brute military force into areas thousands oi miles from either country." Both houses of Congress passed the legislation on Tuesday and state Agriculture ((ommissioner Tom Harris said the eradication program could begin within 48 hours of final federal approval. The congressional action drew fire from Christine Stevens, pre- sident of the Society for Animal Protection Legislation. "I was horrified to learn that it went through in a single day," she said. "Nobody knew about it. It is irresponsible legisl~tion and we very much hope the President will veto the bill." Kissinger, who testified nearly two hours in closed session before the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee Tuesday, told reporters upon emerging: The chemical detergent Tergitol will be sprayed on the birds, but the weather must be cold and damp for it to be effective. It washes protective oils from the birds' feathers, causing the birds to die from exposu~e. "The problem in Angola is whether the United States can ac- ' Promise her anything, but give her ~~e~ This Valenti ne's Day send your love a greeting all the world can sha re . Express · your love in a Dai ly Pilot Valentine. Your per sonalized Valentine greet ing can be "sent" in any of the border s shown here. Ads come In three sizes: $8, $15 and $2 for the special child's stze card. (You must be under 12 to qualify for the littlest greet ing). It's easy. Compose your personalized greeting -a love poem, pretty prose or. words your love w i 11 find specia I. We can set your message i n type to fit the size border you select, or your handwritten thoughts may ap- pear in the border of your cho ice. If you wish, you may create your .own de- corated greeting. Us- ing dark pen or· pencil draw your design to fit one of the dotted line "hearts" shown here. You may f ill the entire ...-----_ ,-----.... space. Only words and . ,,---.... :: ....... ~:,---......... '~ linesdrawnwlthinthe / I I ~ ...... -~:~:, -..... ..., , dotted line w l II appear , ,' ·' ' ' I , , , , ' n your completed ' , • t ' Valentine's Day ad. , \ ' . \ , \ 1'~,' • , ~or help witt\ your ad, , ',, "'~'..." .,• Just ca 11 642-5678. A ' , ,,, / 1 friendly Dally Piiot \ ' ,~ I 1 , '· ' ad-vlser will be happy. \ \ ', ,/ / to assist you. ',, "\.~;"' 1 1 And, If you like, you \ \ ', c,' " can ch a r g e your .,._ . .._~.I" I -.... ..,, • Valentine ad. Your ' ',' I creijlt Is good with us, ',. ~ or you mav. use your. , ~ ·, / Master • Charge 'o r: ,, · '-'-i;,,, Bank~mer.lcard. ...... '"~"' ,, , ' ,,. ~ , '.._, DAILY PILOT .. s E e ln a stor• dam1 JI fift.U' I no 11 area rece1 ·Sal~ Piii s told . buall ![ lnno. 171U We4 l Mau: Po lie WU den aske plalr in Hi day. kind went dert Mai I .raig1 : trair : the t. ., j Mun at fi limit Cow ftr pro" f elor cone • was said agal ceal IJF1 • " ft yin · patrl fron: .. • • • -· .... ·---.. --~------.... Safeway Hit. ByP~pe Bomb . SANTA CLARA (UPI> -A pipebombexploded m a power transformer at the rear of a Safeway store late Tuesday night, causing moderate damage, police said. . No one was injured tn the blast. The dollar f1rure of dama1es was not lmme,diately known. Police received no warning of the explosion and no group claimed reaponslblllty for lt. Several bay area st.ores ot the food chain have been bombed In -,~, .... recent months by terrorist groups objecting to · Safeway pricing policies. Pair Plead 1•-.eeat SACRAMENTO (AP> -Sandra Good says she told "the mean truth" but broke no law in warning business and government leaders they'd be killed if they didn't stop polluting. Miss Good and Susan :( ): Murphy, former room· State . mates of Lynette _______ .....,,, Fromme, who was con- victed of trying to kill . President Ford, pleaded innocent Tuesday to charges of conspiring to mall 1n threatening letters. 1t'el11er Follotef119 Or dfto•'! LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Deputy Mayor Maurice Weiner, on trial for allegedly fondling a policeman ln a sex movie theater, argues that he wu in the theater to carry out an inspection on or- ders from Mayor Tom Bradley. "The mayor will testify that be personally asked Mr. Welner to look into the problem" of com· plaints of pollce harassment of patrons of sex shops in Hollywood, Weiner's lawyer told the jury Tues- day. "Mr. Weiner went out to see for himself what kind of places these were, and what kind of people went there, and what kind of problems arose in or- der to advise the mayor on what position to take." 1'11111 Beld ~n T raftt Wreck EUREKA (AP> -A Fortuna man was ar- ' raigned Tuesday on a charge of causing a freight i train wreck by parking his estranged wife's car on : the tr,cks at a rural crossing. • · 'Dale Alvin Barnes, 47 , pleaded innocent before Municipal Judge Harold Neville Jr., who set bond at $75,000 and ordered Barnes to appear at a pre- liminary hearing in Humboldt County Superior Court Feb. 4. ftret1,... Felo119 B~ked SACRAMENTO (AP> -The state Senate ap- proved legislation Tuesday that would make it a felony in all cases for a convicted felon to carry a concealable firearm. . The bill by Sen. Alan Robbins, (D·Van Nuys), was sent to the Assembly on a 33-0 vote. Robbins said his bill was designed to strengthen provisions against ex-convicts carrying pistols and other con- cealable firearms. 'IJFO llqert• IHffelal~~ TRUCKEE (AP) -Reports of an unidentified ·nying object were discounted today by two highway 'patrolmen who scanned the skies with binoculars from a sum mil in the Sie~as. .. • UPIT.._... Won't Run Barry Goldwater Jr., with wife Susan at his side, said Tuesday he will not be a candidate for the U.S. Senate this year. Susan is the daughter of Dr. E. Mortimer Gherman oi Newport Beach. Goldwater said he thought ·he could win a race with Sen. John Tunney but gave the desire to spend more time with his family as his re- ason for not running. Senate Rejects •' .. Brown Fann Bill SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. showed no appetite today for relenting to farmer demands for an immediate overhaul of the Agricultural Labor RelaUons Board, even though the Senate soundly turned back his emergency $3.8 million bill to keep the would convince Brown to board alive. accept grower demands Brown's measure to for immediate altera- finance the board's lions in the fi ve-month- landmark secret-ballot old farm board law as union elections for farm the price for its survival. workers beyond Feb. 6 Brown showed no such was rejected Tuesday on inclination publicly. a 20-15 vote, seven votes He previous ly said shor:t o,t the two-thirds changes can be con- maJori ty needed for sidered in "due course," P~~sage. . but not as part of the I ho,pe th_e Senate will emergency appropria- recons1der its vote and lion. approve the appropria· Senate Democratic lion," Brown said in a Floor Leader David A. bri_ef st~te.ment. "I Roberti of Los Angeles. believe it is in the long-sponsor of the appropria- term interests of not only lion bill, said the gov- the growers and the ernor remained stead- farm workers but of all fast against any im· t be p e o Pl e of mediate overhaul. Californi~." Roberti was granted Repubhca!1·1ed oppo. permission to seek nents nouris hed hope another vote on the bill their .show of strength probably on Thursday. ' J ump in. The Ion~ leggy jumpsuic's the look of the moment. Tailored. Tucked. Topstirched to perfection by Luba. In a sand·colored poplin of polyester/ cocron. Jn sizes 8 to ·12, $84 Fashion Gallery Coats, Sujcs .. Bullod<'s ~utb Coast P laz1 1 San Oiexo Freeway ·~·Driscol, Costa Mesa, SS6·061 I . . ~· ..... -.,.i ~ ..... • J !:W:.:ed:::n~esd::.::::!Y::L:.· .-::;:,;.;n;.:;;;u.::.•'Y;.L.,;;2..;;.;8.~t..;;,;97...;.6 ______ o_At_L v PILOT A 5 $1.5 Miiii o n Bon d s · . 2 Gunmen Rob LA Firm LOS ANGELES CAP) -"It had t.o be a well· planned operation," said Police Sgt. Alan Varoer after two men ln business suits robbed a securities firm and fled with nearly $1.5 million in negotiable bonds .. An FBI spokesman in Washington said the rob- bery was one of the largest of ll8 kind. · Varner said the men entered the Century City offices of the MuniciCorp. of California Tuesday and said they were waiting to speak with someone about buying some bonds. But a short time later they accosted an un· arm~d messenger bringing two bags of securities to the farm from a nearby bank, the policeman said. He said they apparently were aware of the messenaer's schedule. "The total time was about 10 or 15 minutes, .. said Varner. "The messenger was coming back, on foot, and they were waiting for hjm. As soon as he returned, it was over. They pushed him into a room and came out with the bags.'· MuniciCorp's president, Kenneth Rogers, said both men were armed with handguns. "The men told the secretaries to shut up, then took the deliveryman into my office, told him to sit down, then took his bags from him," Rogers said. "They had their guns in his ribs all the time." . Varner said the two then made their getaway with the aid of an accomplice waiting nearby in a 1962-model van with out-Of -state plates. , He said police were investigating the possibility that the: two men were known to employes of the firm . MuniciCorp deals in municipal bonds, debt ob· ligations issued by cities and other governmental agencies. Such securities are frequently issued in "bearer" form, meaning that whoever has physical possession can cash them. Most of the bonds taken were municipal, wilb · the interest paid by clipping coupons, officials said. But they (the coupons) have the same serial num- bers as the bonds. making it a simple step to tr•ce anyonetryingtoca~them. Striking Doctors Face Liabilities· LOS ANGELES (UPI) Angeles County had not -Striking doctors today paid higher malpractice faced warnings from premiums by this morn· authorities, of legal ing. The Travelers Ii ·ab i1 i t y -and the I n s u r a n c e C o . h a s possibility of going to jail warned that those wbo -if abandoned patients do not pay the fine die and from an in· quarterly installment by surance company that midnight will lose their the y will lose their coverage retroactive to malpractice coverage at Jan. 1. midnight. The 28-day-old strike, Public hospitals in Los which has spread to Angeles , jammed by pa-thousands of pbys.icians tients who cannot find in a six county area with medical help elsewhere, 11 million residents, is in Tuesday for the first protest against the com." time exceeded the pany's 327 percent in- theoretical maximum of •crease in malpractice patients for which the policy premiums, with a hospitals can adequately provision obligating care. them lo pay a possible About 60 percent of the retroactiave increase to 9,500 physicians in Los 487 percent later. Welcome spring with a lovely rose garden! 1976 AARS winners • Choose from: America Cathedral Seashell Yankee Doodle each 595 #1 grade patent roses each Choice of: Song of Paris Troplcana Duet 399 Standard roses Choice of: each Bl•ze Chrysler Imperf al Ml randy Chin• Doll 199 Standard fruit trees 349 Grow s variety of fresh fruit, right in your own back yard! Choose apricot, nectarine, cherry, peach, pear or plum. Great for eating or preserves. Start your own orchard this thrifty w11y! 899 Genetic dwarf bing cherry. Big and dark fruit with a delicious flavor. Grow )'Our own I I 1976 JCPtnnty CO, In<.. 249 for p ack of 2 Have a grape arbor In your yard. Choose Concord or Thompson seedless grapes . A lovely trailing vine that bears fruit. DOWNEY MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTHRIDOE SAN BERNARDINO WHITIWOOD , .. I 3TXA IUV!RSIDE 0#---IL \_ •• . . . . I• ,/"' I o I "' .48 DAILY PILOT EDITORI~L PAGE \ Unnecessary D~pu~e A pla n for the Central L\brary to be open to Hunt- ington Beach residents on SUnday afternoons bas been snagged in nn unnecess al"f dispute between city officials and li b1· ary ell)ployes. The Sunday schedule was ~lted after one day when a Judge issued an inj\&nCt n on behalf of the cmploycs association on a ~om taint that the city failed to satisfy "meet and confer' s tandards. I The county branch Ubrarie~mbarked on a s imilar Sunday afternoon schc\fule n December. The problems seemed the same as file o es in Huntington Ileach but apparently they wer"atta ked much more s killfully. County Librarian Harry Rowe said numerous dis· cussions w ere he ld with the employes who would be workmg the extra Sunday afternoon. He said that the cmploycs agreed to all matters in the discussions and even worked out their own schedules. In Huntington Beach employes said they had a n opportunity to meet with city authorities for only three hours and that the meetings were insufficient to work out all the details. It m ay not be easy to say who is at fault, but an is- sue such as a city library opening on Sunday shouldn't hu\'e to go to the courts. T~e citizens are the losers. . l Let the Dust Settle The Orange County Committee on School District Organization will consider three m ore unification pro· posals for West Orange County at a meeting in Fullerton tonight. But committee members would be wise· to let the unification battle scars in this area hl'al tor :rn hile before tackling any new plans. One proposal calls for creating a combined Seal Beach-Los Al~mitos unified district along boundaries of both the Seal Beach and Los Alamitos elementary districts. A second calls for formation or a Huntington Beach citywide school district, and a third calls for carvin& up the Huntington Beach Union High and at least part of the Garden Grove Unified School Dls· tricts into four or five unified systems. Citizens, the courts and school governing agen- cies -from local districts all the way to the State Department of Education -have just finished agonizing months in a unification war. The timing simply isn't right. If the state Legislature gets around to revising school financing restrictions to ease some of the tax burdens in unifica- tion, the pros pects will become much brighter. Happy Solution Huntington Beach authorities have been looking for ways to get rid of two wooden water towers that have served the city water system well for 30 years but now have outlived their usefulness. In fact, city officials feel that the two facilitics - one on Los Patos Avenue and another on Anderson Street in Surfside-are liabilities. They've attracted climbers and officials s ays it could be a matter of time until someone falls and is badly hurt. Now comes what appears to be the perfect answer to the water tower problems. The Kiwanis Club of Long Bea ch wants to dis- mantle them and take them to a rural s anitation school in Mexico where students would use them to irrigate fields and to furnish drinking water too. It's not surprising that the city is j umping at the opportunity to tum a civic problem into a good turn for friends south of the border. H/F .. , . \ DOUBLE HOOK Difference Can Create Dear Gloom~ Gus Why Lean on.the Courts? Responsibility for Juveniles Harmony ( SYDNEY HARRIS ) A new book came across my desk the other day. all about the need to speak up, ·to assert yourself, and to s ay "No" when you Celt like it. instead of saying "Yes" when you didn't. I think this is fine advice for about half the people; for the other half, I 'd suggest the opposite book : about the need t o shut up, lo go along, and to say "Yes" even when you (eel like saying "No." Sometimes the world seems divided between the people who won't speak up and those who speak up more than they should. Most of us are on one side or the other of this line; very few personalities are able to keep a delicate balance between self-assertiveness and complaisance. MY OWN besetting sin has been the former; it bas taken me decades to learn that saying less can be more effective than say- ing more; and I still speak up before there is any occasion to. But at least I am able to ven- tilate my feelings, abrasive as the pTocess may sometimes be, to others and e•eotually to myselt. I think the non-assertive people suffer more than we do; after all, we speaker-uppers im· pose the suffering on others. But, of course, there are compensa- tions the other way: the non- Wh y doesn't someone JUSl d ec lar e Huntin g t on Beach city government a disaster area and call in the National Guard to replace the ci ty council., DC G'-"Y Ovs ~•mmo11h ••••*"'"'Ml lrt ~ ••,. _ M<nurlly Nfl«I tlle views .. tM ... ~ ..... ~ .,_ pet _,.. '9G!Mffty Giii, Oolly ~Nit. assertives are far better-liked than we are. WE LIKE the people who go along, who don't complain or ob· ject, who give in to us because it's less trouble that way; con· versely, we resent the people who speak their own minds blunt· ly, even if we are the sort who do the same. Non-asserters ap- preciate each other Car more than asserters do. The (act o( the matter is that some personalities need to be pulled out, and others need to be pushed in. And it is no pccident that they usually marry each other, with a more or less un- conscious desire on both parts to achieve this mutual effect. This is why it is said that "opposites attract." THEY ATTRACT because the non-asserter is looking for so- meone to do his (or her) dirty work for him (or her). Someone who finds it hard to express com· plaints or resentments can ob· lain gratification from a mate who plays this role; and con· trariwise, the bold speaker-outer equally feels a secret need for a companion to soften the impact o(his ego. Even two friends who are quite dif(erent can fulfill these urges for each other; in (act, persons o( the same type rarely get along well together . To the Editor: In your Jan. 7, editorial on juvenile alternatives you state. "The real burden Cot juvenile diversion programs is on county government through the proba- tion department." This position implies that once a child commits an aberrant act ·one that brings him or her to the attention of school offic ials. police, or some other authority - that c~ild is oo longer or our com- munity. but suddenly becomes the county's responsibility -not the family's, the school's, the neighborhood's or the city's. In other words, that child is no longer one oC our kids. In my opinion, the attitude ex· pressed in referring children in trouble to the county as a county problem is consistent with the pub\ic apathy toward our responsibilities in the develop· mentor our youth. IN THE interest of perpetual· ing our schools and communities in service or adults rather than children. we continually leave the developmenf of them into responsible citizens to chance. When chance fails we shunt the product -that misbehaving youngster -off to the justice system and label that child a failure rathier than ourselves. I submit the real burden for juvenile programs lies in the comm unit y and i s the responsibility or each adult: parent, neighbor, teacher, school administrator and the police that serve us. Eadi"must tnake every feasible effort to help each child develop into a responsible adult with a useful and rewarding place in society. We must stop forwarding our mistakes and the products of our own apathy lo the courts with the hope that the pro· blem we have created will be hid· den Crom our view. NORA LEHMAN ( MAILBOX ) Letters from readers au ~lcome. The right to condense letters to fit $JKlCe or eliminate libel is reurvecl. IAtters of 300 words or Leu wiU be giVftl preference. All letters mu.st in· chide 8ignature and mailing addreu but namei may be withheld on rt· ~st if ni/fic~t reason is apparent. Poetry will not bt J>Mblished. Step Ba~keard To the Editor: Why is it when Americans take three steps forward, they must panic and take two steps backward. I 'm talking in this particular instance about the areas o( birth control and abor· lion. And, I'm addressing this message to the women. Don't you like the idea of freedom? Aren't you enjoying sex without worrying about pregnancy? Recent statements I've been reading about Sen. Ken- nedy's pressuring for stronger warnings about the Pill lead me to believe that, with his in- fluence, you might not find this fantastic commodity available in a couple of years. Then where will you be? COMMITTEES and groups like to employ scare tactics against us. They quote inacur· rate fi gures like 400 deaths in 10,000 every year directly or in· directly as a result of the Pill. Whereas pharmaceutical houses' statistics s how 1 in 2,700 have direct side effects that are at· tributable without prior contrain· di cations (other disease$.) Bingo, Booze and Religion Right-to-Lifers are "strongly'' pressuring for repeal of the three-year-old abortion law. This group wants to reeuJate YOUR life; they don't want you to have a choice -and they are uslng your tax monies to do it! They use scare tactics, too, showing frightening and unrealistic pic- tures to impressionable high schoolers of abortion procedures. The facts are that since 1958, there have been only seven de- aths from abortion in Orange County, and NO abortion deaths since 1970. A recent action in Milwaulcee may well portend some op· position from an unexpected source to the constitutional ameooment which would legalize church bingo parties. The measure is ACA 3, slated for ' balloting next June. Ap- proved by the Legislature after many tries, it is a recognition that bingo has illicitl y become a part 0 f t b t' activities in m a n y dturches. But the threat to its Jetalliation comes m the form of • pre_test lodged by an attorney aC!tlllf"for the Wisconsin Tavern Owners Aasociahon to tbt serv- ing of alcoholic ~veraia in the <'hurchcs. J! It was not intended as a sranctstand play (or publicity it can only be catetorb:~;'~ a crass exhibition of ~ated '29etd on the part of the s.toon keepen. THE F ACI' that the incident Ottl&l'Nd in Wt.consln m-• it ol no lat lnt~r t in Ca1llomia. T.w tbe 1lru11la of thi COl'I· ' ( EARL WATERS ) gregations to bring in the sheaves can be no different there than here. And there can be little doubt that the fatuna away of tbe flock from the routJnes of church at· tendance bas been a major con- tributing factor to society's pro. blems o( today. While U~re have been many theories advuced as to the lack of interest in the churches on the part of the post WW JI ,enerations, certainly one bu beei the ,bilure of the churches to acij\llJ to the times. l( Soull can be saved b1 pro-cranu which will bring the pro- digala back to the fold, more pow« to the churches. If the aervlng of spirited beverages at- tract• people to th~ wholesome atmosphere of the church. brinl c:mthewin BUT THE BAR owners not on· ly protested tbat Catholte churchtt were urvlng liquor while bavm~ only llcdsel for bttr. they co mplail'Md that too many ~r li<'rn.ses were aranted churches with no limitations aa to the numbers. ,,. I That it wasn't a Christian con· cem !or the welfare o( the parishioners which prompted the innkeepers gripes but simply pet- ty greed over the presumed loss o( customers, seems clear "n the statement that "many tavern owners are finding it dill1cult to survive under the competition from the churches." Ain't that a shame. IC one wonders how anyone could obJ•ct to people p.therlng to hoist a few within the confines of a place of worship instead of swUHni suds In a smoke Cilled bar iJ\babtted by sots and worse, read Sinclair Le•it• novel 841t,. bitt. WHILE California'• liquor laW'I would not seem to affec! cmarcb IOclals here • .t.llce Ucens· bl& ls only required where drinb are told, the •varlclous fears of the Wlsconal.n barkeepers might ~-ell extend here to def eat the ii blftCo measure. For they <Udn 't limit their ob-,Jectiom'.ot the churches to the ls· aue ol li•uor but draHed in other actiVlt~ and apedfically ro- ferred to bilWO parties. Jud1ln• from that they would. al.a oppote church chofn end SUnda~bool. Jesua would have lat ~ ce with luch persons Lb• bad with the l,lomJW. Wake up, ladies, before it's too late. IC you've enjoyed the freedom or choice you've been experiencing over the past ten years -don't lose it in 1976. ANN M. BEAUCHAMP ltleane•t Thief To the Editor: What Is a more despicable act than the stealing or a bike? As a NHow can th•Y w•lk on on• lffl Md why do th•'I h•v• '1trlh •written on th•lr ,.~,.,.. T .\ ,, . parent who tries to provide a moral code for his children, I am fast becoming disenchanted with the general honesty of young peo· pie. In the last 20 years, I must have bought six new bikes and countless used ones, primarily for· my children but ultimately for someone else's children. The latest theft or a new bike from my front porch in broad daylight prompted this letter. AS A parent, what do you tell a child when she says that she un- locked her bike from the wall of a garage to clean and shine it on the front porch. She merely went into the kitchen out of view of her· bike to get the cleaning material and help her mother with a small kitchen chore and the thief struck. My children don't steal bikes, but how do you prevail upon them that two wrongs don't make ih right. Are my children to go about walking while others ride their stolen bike? I am a parent o( limited means and the purchase of a new bike is particularly a sizeable part of our savings. Apparently, the moral code is nonexistent among some children and it now is steal-but don't get caught. TOM C. COAKLEY Four-letter lt'•rd To the Editor: Everybody in Orange County who reads their newspaper knows that those in power in Laguna Beach consider growth a long four-letter word. So it was no wonder they shot down the South East Orange County Circulation Study -for fear it may. somehow, increase Laguna's population. In fact, during the study, anti· growth groups suggested that all building be stopped rather than enlarge the road networks. Some ·groups want lo downzone the pre- sent land uses so that a lesser network could serve t ilt! ~portation needs. OmERS attempted to Point tCt • the continued county growth anct the fact that one-half of our cou11 ty's 1.6 million are below the a~•· or 261h years as justification tn plan and build a system to match our predictable needs. The no-growthers themselves will try to g~t the population forecasts changed. reduce the size and number ol roads and generally delay actlon in the1 shortsighted hope that somehow· I if we don't plan for them, our children will go away. As it is, the present and planned county road network (i n· eluding all forms o( transport<•· lion) south and east or the Newport Freeway is alreadv nearly insufficient to handle the current population. So while the "leaders'' or Laguna are busy demanding no· growth, the traffic and environ· ment will gel steadily worse. GILBERT W. FERGUSO~ Orange County Council on Environment, Employment, I Economy, DevelopmenL ' A•k the Court To the Editor: Malpractice is an emergencv to us all. It must -be resolved for all people as soon as possible. The best and quickest way·• Ask the Supreme Court of lht• United States to decide an'1 declare the right or all involved; at once. 1 Ask this court to decide if anv doctor can be sued at all. Ask th is • 1 court to declare that hospitals ' are not liable. Ask the court to dl'· · . c!de who can sue and for what. I Set the amount or damages. Ask the court to explain and di· I fine the world "malpractice · I Ask the court to decide what in j surance is needed. CARLWHITS01"f \ Practical Fitness The first book on physical fit· ness to oCCer a practical, sensible and exciting program to anyone interested in getting more enjoy- ment out of liCe is offered by McGraw-Hill under the title, Shape Up! Progressive Fitness for Practical People ($6.95). As the author, Vic Sanders. points out, most past programs have had a serious drawback: they have presented physical fit- ness as an end in itself, demand· ing hours of grueling, uninterest- ing calisthenics without nextblli· ty in the program or considerations for the health, time or personal limitations of the partJclpant. On the basis of 18 years of ex· J)C!rience, Vic Sanden presentt a coher~nt. readable and interest· ing book that Hrves whatever end the reader has ln mlnd: in· divldual sport on a recreational or competitive level. team apol'U, 1eneral 1haplnj·up or weieht reduction. Tbe book is pro,aressJvely 1tructured and. can be. used by the individual or ln class 1itua.llona. SHAPE UP t pr enta three level• of lnten.alty, and each pro- a.ram conalsts basically of live ttaies: the wa.rm·up: the IOOIC!n· up: atretchlng, bendin1 and pu.Jl. tna ; mu.acle tonin&i and lbc cool· ( THE BOOKMAN ) ~ Q down. Offered also are valuabl<' information and tips on relax atlon, the physiology of the body. aod precautionary advice. VICTOR DE KEYSERUNG ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robttt N. W tfd, Pvb1Uh4!r Thoma• Kimi. E:di1or Borbara Krribfc~. EdUorlol Poge Editor The editorial page 0( lhe Dall:v Ptlot seeks to Inform and stJmulate readers by prtsftltlnfl en lhlJ page diverse commentary on topks ol interut by 11yndlcal· td columnists and cart.ooniats, by provldln1 a forum for ~•den' vtcwa •nd by preaenttns Lill• newspaper'• opinions and Ideas on curttnt topics. The edltorlal opinions ol the-Dally Piiot appear only 111 lhe editorial column at the top ot tht Pl&e. Opinl.ons es· 111'-..ed b1 the columnl ta and <'lrtooftl•ta ind lt1le~ writers th r awn aod no tndonemmt ot thftr Tk1rl by Ult Dall PU« lhould be lftfemd.' .Wednesday, Jan. 28t 1m . \ .. ·~ . '· • th l! • of no- on· nrv for ' I ay? lh<· and · ved; I any this : i.talsl · ode-·: ' tges.1 1 dt • .. e.·· I tin· 1 N" ( - . '· ~I • • Wednelda , Janua 28, 1976 ~ Monst er Du1nplings D~but · Col. Sanders.; Beckoned . New Show Has No 'Lear Sneer' .Oovemor Chat By Sound .. LITTLE ROCK Ark. {UPI) -First Col. Harlan Sanders of Med chicken fame made Gov. David Pryor an honorary Kentucky colonel. Then tbetwocelebratedoveraluncheonofshrimp. LONDON CAP) -A British electronics firm hopes it can lure the Loch Ness monster into view with a sexy sonar signal. Amid lt all, Sanders allowed as how there were chicken pluckers in Kentucky who made more money than the eovernor of Arkansas. Videomaster Ltd. has been te$ting a sonar THAT WAS NOT HARD TO ":isualize. The gov-·device in the Scottish emor make~ $1_0,000 a y~ar and is the lowest paid lake since August and a chief executive in the. nation. . spokesman said scan· Sanders, who is spending a few days m ning beams have pro- 'Arkansas, and the governor had lunch together. But duced readings that Pryor said at a news C?nference might or might not be the th~ entree was shnmp, not. legendary .monster. chicken. They are beil'\g analyzed. Sanders had little comment, except to say he never got tired of eating chicken -"my own" -and lamenting the governor's salary. "People o ught to be • ashamed," he said, and added l quickly. ·•not you.'' aside to the • SANDERS · . governor, which was good because someone really must do the job and not everyone can get on as a chicken plucker. A R EPORTER ASKED THE GOVERNOR if they discussed the possibility or bis runnine a Colonel Sanders franchise as a means of augment· ing his income . "I'd settle for one of those $5 gift eertificates he's carrying around," said Pryor. . A SPOKESMAN for the firm, which makes video tennta games and other eleeteronic .gear, said the n~ s~ep woitld be fpcusJ).i&.' a sound beam on tlte area that has produced readings. . "This sifllal may act as a sexual stimulant." said test director Bryan King. "W e beamed Beethoven's Fifth into a liver and this brought some sman fish to the surface." By .IOAN HANAUER , L6S ANGELES (UPI> -Can Geraldine Brooks find love and romance at 145 pounds and even beyond! She can on "The Dumplings,·~ the story of a pair of overweight lovers who run a New York City luncheonette. ;(Channel4, 9:30p.m.) When she and hubbie James Coco pat each other on theic well-padded bottoms, a customer at the counter says, "A bsol utel~ s ickening. Somebody ought to notify the Board of Health." YOU HA VE TO ADMIRE a show that will take a chance with a line like that. "The Dumplings" represents !he Norman Lear office's first production for NBC. The half-hour s how has been billed as a departure for Lear. whose characters have a tendency lo bark al each other -and sometimes bite. Actually, the Lear sneer also. has been missing from his new CBS ~1tu~: tion comedy, "One Day at a Tame, but it still boasts plenty of loud yelp-ing. COCO AND BROOKS between them couldn't raise a growl. They love one .another, romantically. passionately, so that they celebrate such events as the anniversary of the day they almost didn't meet. (TV REV I EW J The colonel began franchising Kentucky fned chicken at the age of 66 after he sold his Corbin, K~ .• restaurant. Now 85 and as familiar to Americans as the President, he sold his interest in the company in 1963 for $2 million and stayed on as a paid It was at exactly 7:30 on that rateful H Id evening some years earlier when she 3 Stu d ents e WHETHER THE told him the music al the party was legendary monster pre-her favorite song, he asked the title, LOS ANGELES <UPI) -Three consultant for life. fers string quartets or and she said she didn't know . Miraleste High School students have rock will not be known If Archie and Edith Bunker were been arrested on suspicion of planting for some time since the watching "The Dumplings," can you a pipe bomb at the school Monday. It sound used at first would imagine Archie's reaction to that exploded, causing $2.~ ~amage to a He said 2,000 persons a \'ear are booked on the s kinny -dip tours. The trip to San Diego and the tour costs New Yorkers ··They have to pay me $40.000 a year for the rest of my Ii re. whether I go nuts or anything," said Sanders. be very high frequency, one? But this show is aimed at Edith. building and two automobiles. like a dog whistle. ~::~:_:_:::_:::.~:.::.:::::..::..:==--=------=-------------------_:_-----------~ Sir Peter Scptt, well· known naturalist and director of the Loeb Ness i,nvestigation bureau, S350 to $400. THE COLONEL STAYS AC· PRYO~ live. spending muoh of hi s lime touring the coun- try promoting his chicken. aid he is against the scheme PRICES REDUCED $ FINAL MARKDOWNS OF OUR . . SEMl-AllllUAL SALE FINAL 3 DAYS -DOORS OPEN 9:30 A.M. 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Coast Plaza Buena P ark 3333 Bristol St. P hone '540·3333 8150 La Palma Ave. Phone 828·4400 ,. 0 l oca ted on the lower l evel , Oran2e 21 00 N. Tustin Aw. Phone 637·2100 . STOH HOUIS1 ~~JfWey 10 AM t• 9 PM S.tunloy •:>O AM te t PM Sun.day n~t•SPM I Al OM. y PILOT 4 Succes~ Smelled Too I ~"- ' :: ,, -~-:=-.Ir g z•-• • -!-1,- ( WASHINGTON (UPI) -A Cederaf judge, at the requ :st of monufac· turers, has blocked for 10 d!r.s tbe Food and Drug Adminbtration s pro- posed ba n on Ute nation's most widely used food coloring, red dye No. 2, District Judge Aubrey E. Robinson Jr. issued the temporary reslralnlng order Tuesday and scheduled a bear- ing on the issue Feb. 6. The FDA, \ Yet turers Association or Washlnaton, D.C., a trade group: H. Kohnitamm of New York, another manufacturer, and Monarch Nugrape of Doraville, Ga., a sott drink producer. n11:: FDA ANNOUNCED l a.t week it intended to ha lt use of the dye on grounds of t ests raising questions as to its s afety, including a possible ' FAMILY CIRCUS which planned to implement the ban ....:.. today, is expected to appe~ his ao· tion. 'If I w•s on th• jury I collld bt1 1111ry impartial. befo,.. I found h'" guilty!' potential for causing cancer . It is used to color a wide variety of foods and drink• -an estimated $10 ~Ulion worth every year -and once was employed extensively in coS'· • • • NEW YORK (AP) -Marijuana did not have t~ socially disruptive effects that alcohol use did in a :group of adolescent delinquent boys, Stanford UJiversity researchers report. l Despite the fact that the two drugs were used wih about the same frequency, alcohol use was gaater in fights . difficulties with police and other adthorities, trouble with family or friends and a.-omobile accidents. " Mi pist e r , . K eep er To Trial REWARD WE WANT DIAMONDS GEM·STONES AND FlllE JEWELRY HighHt prices paid for jtw1lry ft!Dm privatl illdividuals and estates. free examin1tion and appraisal by Grad· uatt Gemologift. Please call 536-7548 for appoint· ment. Ask for Mr. Terry. I UNIVERSAL DIAMOND INDUSTRIES 412 Olive, Suitt 203 Huntington Beach, Ctlif. 92648 714/536·7S48 \.lO ... l < ,()\l\f U~ WARD I VISIT THE OPTICAL DEPARTMENT I To fit, or not to fit: that is e qu~~!!~n~etnew n1£0l'JlCALD£1MlMF1f(AT. MONTGOMERY WARD L.: Costa Mesa l brlltol at. at un cllep 00 ·· · 714-549·9400 glasS(>s and not have them fit well. Slipping, pinching glasses a re a discomfort you can do without. That's why the Optical De- partment at Wards specializes in fitting glasses. We take a Ion~. ca reful look at your nose, ears. temples and eyes to make sure you get a fit that's just right. When you keep in mind ou r large selection of good-looking frames and reasonable cost, it's easy to see why the Optical Department at Wards has fit glasses on over half a million faces. So when you need glasses, come see us. We'll make sure you get a flt. just as you like it. Put~face in our hands. RALPH NADER•s IJE.ALT B Research Group, which has Wen pre- ssing the agency for years to outlaw red No. 2, said lt olso would seek to in· tervene in the court action. metics, although that no loncer is the ----------r case. Soft drink manufacturers use it to produce orange and purple beverages, as well as red. WEE~NDER Gets It ALL together Frld1ys Robinson ordered the delay on a motion by W arner·Jenkinson Co. of St. Louis. a major manufacturer of the eye; the Certified Color Manufac· FDA Commissioner Dr. Alexander M. Schmidt, announcing the ban, said latest studies .. cannot establish the safetyofredNo.2." In the i1M!QQU•ll ... . .. SALE STARTS TODAY ANAHEIM & COSTA MESA LOCATIONS -NOW OPEN WEEKDAY NITIS UNTIL 9 P.M. NAVY PATCHWORK DENIM ~ BOLTS & BOLTS c "first Quality" YD REGULAR RETAIL VALUE TO $4.00 YD. $1,000 2,500 5,000 10,000 20,000 ENTIRE SELECTION! ALL' WOOL & WOOL BLEllDS-l•t ouo111y * SOll>S * PWDS * OtECKS * TWED>S $ 66 YD. fUU BOLTS-NO REMNANTS REGULAR RETAIL VALUE $8.00 YD. ENTIRE SELECTION OF QUILTED COTTON PRINTS (POlYESTtR F1ll ANO NYLON BAO(} $ 85 YD. Isl Duality IUU BOLTS-NOT REMNANTS REG. RETAIL VALUE to $5 YD. * DOWNTOWN LA. 950 SANTEE Conter If OIJmPiC (213) 627-4471 lm.Mea.·Sltl>H·JI * COSTA MESA: ..... PWHTIA (714) 646-4040 HOUllS MON. TMRU Flt 10 AM TO 9 PM SAT. 10 AM-& PM SUN 12·5 PM SIMay 11 A.M.. 5 p .M. * ANAHEIM: 1110-C L IATlW s.u.., •110...1., ... (71 4) 772-4471 $1,590 3,980 7.960 15,920 31,840 $ 2,170 5,425 10,850 21,700 43,410 The figure• •bove based upon a slx·ve•r certlflc•te account •t the current r•te of 7. 75% with lntereat left In the •ccount to compound •nd rounded off to thl ne•r••t tena of doll•r•. . SO why g•mbl•? Let First Feder•l S•vlngs help you .,.k• tod•r • ar to remember ••• for• long, long time to come. • , . . t J 1 ' FluBitg Pesters Mankind By DK. STEIN«:aOBN Dear Dr. Stelacrolm·: Is there anything new for preventing or treating tbe nu? Almost every year some member of our family comes down with a bad attack. Do you recommend vaccines? Are there any spet:ial medicines that are helpful? A fri end tells me that binding cabbage leaves over the front and back of the chest breaks up an at- tack of the nu. Whal is th e mode rn r ecom- mended treatment?· - Mn.G. COMMENT: One at- tack of influenza i s usually effective in pre- venting fu ture attacks of that type , but un- fortunately there are many kinds of nu virus. Having had one type does not guarantee freedom from the many other types. What to do ? Ne w methods of nu vaccine are being perfected. DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE ... . -. 7! • • • I REG. 49.95 DECORATOR PECAN FINISHED 8-SHELF LIBRARY WALL UNITS A r:ica~l1'u! soiu110t1 to shelving problems 1n an vp·!o·dale .... an un<I wilh e shehies Sohd core tons11uc11on !ITTrr.hed m ""arm pecan and easily a~semtiled ""~h only a scteworivt" 65" 1all, .:a· ....Os & 12 .. deep Mlh sh01ng ~11a<gh1 hne door. ,;:@!! .... CONTAC fDICU . ~ .. ~-!(.O.k• .. q• ••• ' .. • " ' . r • ... 6 PAIR~0 FOR~- u 391 EACH PAii KAYSER KNEE. HI STOCKINGS Vl5 IAIR CllLllEN'S BIElllNG IAYEB AIPlllN ::77~ E27c •• llG. ( 76c 10.ll.IU JOlllY CAT CAJLITTll 10·lb. begs keep Cll'• .. bo• lfesher, longet. Stock upt .. . •. • .. O>me in & c~ OVI' prescrip· hon p11ces agalOSI those you've been oay1119 elsewhere. You can now companson·s/'lop prescr1p· 111:in Pf•Ces as you llllOulcl any other 1>1.uchase. To 1ransler a presct1phon, bring 111 l!'ll!'OIC1t11on con1a1~ or copy ot origll'lal & OlJ' pharmac1sll WIU ® tie fesl! @'t:L' PMARMACIES! • TllllITT 2 98 LOW NICE SWllG-AWAY CAI OPEIEIS Auooecl conltJuClon lor lorlg sertice. 3·Politlon, magne!lc. . -- -· Mmwa...._w .. kt0.1 *" ...... ""..,. .. u..i. ..-..... .... .. ..... INCOME z. TAX TIME '> SPECIAL!~ • Pll<llT llY . 7 •AUTOMATIC COllTAMT • Al"llAIC lO"C •AC/DC • lAI" I D"IT UD llAD-OUT • POCllT 51Zf. •AUTOMATIC ZflO SUPPllU • llOATll' DICIMAl IM4GINE •• ; FINE QUALITY 8-DIGIT · CALCULATORS FOR LESS TIIAN l 0.001 APF OR CALFAX ·a.DIGIT, CALCULATORS WITH 0/o KEY Top qualify calcu1a:or• !ea:ure 6·d1g~s w•tri peic&i1age key. LEO display with floa~ng decimal DOmt. aulc'TI~· c cons18nt mm us •nd•calo• ovef'llow inotCator & mote. PerlorrT\$ add1tt0n. sublracuor1, fT'Ul!tpl1ca11or\ 01vrs1on & oe1cen1ages. Th,,lty Low Price! • •• . , -. .. , ~ • \, .; ... i f, , . ,, i ll "'"·"' 1 • SHASTA Din DRINK • 12c ..,.. . ... CllW 50<lS ,. • llG. 1.•t t- OYR-Tlll·CAlf l •II,. l.l5 I TIDY TUii " ~n s1911 KODAK TllMUTt IDT sum & trim !or pOCkM: or PIJf'M. Accepts new ftlpft1shl Budoet l)ric.d I model fOf 11m I. shool l)kfur91 of lop ~ityl SUNSHINE CllEEZ·IT =-57c lff • - I ~ . , ... .4Jf DAILY PILOT Wednesday, January 28. 1978 I lA-Y•• • °'-AO'r$ ANN SAVUt, ,........ .. 0 c ~-9.,n•, Ce. Oete Of dQI" ~ ,, """ ""-·. ~ .. Cir.._ <-IY ..,_ LAI-llftClt "- .. • 1c1ent tlf Cllll'9nlllt .._. H1¢ ' lly lier cle119ht."· _,.." 5 01 \4'n o ..... C• _. u.tM ey of WtltMlMtff, QI.; Nttr, ' R099n .. "'"41"-Q.; ... t 1111c1re11 el\cl ·••• er-.h tld "-•• •"k• wlU lie 00 ... ""···....-a...-'Mortuw1 CM'91.' .... Af1llW ~ 'Ti ers1ey • ttl• l•Qu~ •ut1 ~erl.n Olur<I,, •M Rev Diii\ lit, Th•llly of The Cll••t Of T"9 ~~ ~ In Spring V•lley. otfkla'lta. ..... I w111 follow In WMtmlllt\ff ,..._..,., P•rll. Shetler ~ INth .,....,vdlrt<IOI'\ By O.C. HuSTINGS Ol ttle O.lt~ ~llol St•ft OlllAYeS VIOLET I! GRAVES. reslell!H1t °' 111 'W. CN\I Hwy., Ne.PQrt 8"cl\ c;a. O.to of •oth J •ll1tery H, ltJ&. SUrvl•td lly lier sbtor1 O.r.llty ~//wt· ... ,_ Se•"<tl<ts wlll lie Pf'lv•I•. e.ltr- llefveron Cost• MIMI Mortuer, Olrec· llJors,. HEND•lllSON ~ TTHl!W SCOTT tia .. oe!UOH, resfcle,.1 of ts• s.nte An•. c.osi. Mtse. C.. O.le of dHlll Janu••Y 17, 19~ SwVl•td llY -cM"9flt•r. Merv T.C. Julien ,_ 9rM1ckhlldren end llWW tre•t 9rand<lllldren Servl<es .Cll be Mid r11 .. rsd•y 1\ oo AM, 8•11r· lle~ron Costa MfH Ch•pel Inter· ment ln9fewood P•r' C~<nflery. a.Ill e.roeron CO\lt Mes• Mortuwy cllrt<tors COMM • ~ELM COMBS. rn11Mnc ot SHI Beach, C• Oat• of dHth J•nuar, V. ltJ6. Survlwed Dy on~ son, Wlll1•'l1 Mtsstnoer of Coron• dtt Mar, C..; 11••nd<lt11011ttr, Mr\ Oon•ld OrOLd ef lrvont. C• 9r•ndson, Wlllf•m Mtu~nver. Jr of Newport Bta<ll, C. .. shter\. Mn Je•n Bowmlln of Sunlitnd, C• .tnd Mn Miidred Schuo of S.cr•rnenlo, C• Gr•veslde services wllf be htld Tllursdly 10:00 AM. F eorhaven Mtmorl•I Park. 8• ll· &.r99ron Coron• clot Mu Mor1U¥y dtr~tors. 5AAR JE!SSE L. SAAR, M.O .. reMclenC of Lo19.,n• Hiiis, C• Dale of cle•th J•n,..ry 26, 197' Survived 11¥ his wile, Edith E S.•r; ll1tff tol\S, Ro chard E .S...r ol El C•IOn, C• , Or Jesw L.. Sur, Jr of Burlington, Iowa iW>d Dr• Jo11n w S•er of Chino. C• • OM d.tUQllter, Miidred P9terson of s.m11 Aro•. Ce flltHn 9"1ndch1IC1ren .,,. ll'lrM 9re•t gr•nd<h•ldr•n, llrolher, Hollis S..r ol C•11trol, low• five ''" ters. Ruby and Bern•<• H.irDtOge of On leroo, ~. Sar•h Smylht of Fort OoO!le. low•, M•r9uer1t• Ro .. ndt1ee of Twenty Ni ne P.tl m \. Ca •nd ll•tl• M<ComD of Miiton, low• Or Sear •u • gr41du•te of Loyola Mt-dl<al Sc'-1. • memt>tor of Ttlt Unit f'CJ MethOdosl Cllur<h ol L•guna Holls, Cot. precttced mt!dteone for S6 years on low•. was • ~mller of 0.W'nport, • lowe Ma\Ontc LoOQe, A<TW' rlc.., Ll'Q•on Democrats representing portions of Orange Count~itnbe llouse of Representati vcs voted with lbe m ority Tuesday when the ijouse, on a 310·113 roll cal vote, overrode President Ford's veto of the .. s billion appropriations bm for the Departments· of Labor and H ealth, Education and Welfare. Voting for the override were Mark Hanna(ord, ~ho represents western Orange County, and Jerry .Patterson, who represents the centraJ portion or the county. Republican Charles Wiggins, who represents northern port ions of the co\ll\ty voted against lhe override. • And Repu blican Andrew Hlns h aw, "'ho represents the south end otOrange County, missed the vote because he was in Santa Ana dealing with his various legal problems. • • • ASSEMBLY ASPIRANT Henry Quigley will appear Saturday at a cocktail fundrhiser planned on his behalf at Laguna Hills Leisure World. It starts at 7 p. m in dining room #1 of Leisure World Clubhouse ~3. The price is $10 per couple. Quigley, an Irvine C'ity councilman. is seeking the GOP nomination in the 74th Assembly District. He wHl be remembered as lhc man. who before he announced his candidacy for anything, plastered the Orange Coas t with signs reading simpl~, "Quigley -Leadership " • * • RE P. JERRY P.\TIERSON <D -Sunta ,\n:ll plans a swing through his 38th Congressional D1~­ trict this weekend. with 'anous speaking enJ!a~c­ ments and public appearances scheduled Frid a~. Saturday and Sunday . The closest he ·11 be to Orange Coast voters will be al 12:30 p.m. Saturday wh<'n he will greet ('onsll · tuents at Westminster Cit~ llall At 2 pm. Saturday he'll press m ore nesh and hsten lo more con!)tl · tuents in Dunlap Hall at Santa Anet College. • '* ..,., Tne Forty and Eo9ht He """'ed DEMOCRATIC \'OTERS '"Orange County can wolf• tne US Army Mt d1<•I Col'~ In · • S d I f h Fran<e duro"9 world war , ~rw•<•s part1c1pate un ay in a party pal orm eanni,: w.11 t>e 11e10 •• Joo PM Tnur~day,' which gets. under way at 10 a m in Cal State Pac1l1c voewCMe>el 0t11c1ettnqwo1111e Fullerton's Recital Hall Or Lawrence F Hawley lnler"'l'nt, · Pac111c view Mt m or1"1 Pa r~ In Congressman Jerr:v PattC'rson will be the Newport Buc h. ce Pecot•< 111•w kevnote s peaker at the C\'Cnt whith IS chaired h\' Mor~ry dlrtclof\ In lieu OI flower\, • ' , . ......_,,,.,contributions mav 11e ,,,_ former state senate candid ale F 1 ank Barbaro of to Sadd1e11.tck Commvno11 Ho\1>1ta1 ot Costa Mesa. L~• Htll\, Ce. B b h h h . k h f LaVtGNE ar aro notes t at sue· ean ngs mar t <.· 1r'>L MAURICE. Moe·· c L.tlll~E. re time in the history of the Democratic Partv that th e "dent ol La9uno Niguel, Ca D•l•ol de-d ' · d · k · f a111 Jenuerv ?4, 1974 Surv1wo Dy n1s \'Oler can be 1rectly tn\'oh·e an ma ·mg plat orm wife, J •n•I LeV19n" \on, Donald M pohcv decisions. LdV19ne of Strl 00990. C• , mo1,,.r. • ~II/Ina Lalll9ne. St\lfH , Thelma ~, ""' b o lll o l Spr lngl 1t l d M.tsS«hu~tts Mr L•Vlon" wn ..,,n tM Oty of L.19.,n.t B<!.icll for 11 -,..,n. on IM Wn~ Mene~rntnt ~parlmf'nt, w~ • memller of '"" S•n Oemente El_, c1.,o a nd Ille Lon11 Be.t<h v .. t.,ert\ of Forf'19h Wers Gr•~\od•• ~rwl<e\ will CM> held •I tO 00 AM Tl\un. CS.y, P•<1l1c View ~mort•I Per~ Ntwport Beuh. C• P•etfte View Mon ... ry CllfftlMS TIHTHEWlf"r SUSANNE J. TRET .. fWEY rnt dltnt of'Yl!un• Nill\ltt. C• Ollie of oe •th Jan.,.ry 21, 1'7' Sur"4ved Dy Mr mother, Mr\ H1rold B Jon.s of lallWlll 8eac h, Ca • Of!<' \Oft, .JoMOt't H Trellltwey, Jr of WestWOOd, C. , one Wolher, C•meron Jones of Llltle Ro<k. A•ll•nsat, 01 .. sister, EJlullNll Hamilton of C•ll1Prnla,Servl<.ei wlll l)C lltld Thursoey II 00 AM. M<Cofm•<- la91#\4t BeKll Q\epel with Rev. ROber1 L. Gcirnellson Olfl<.le.,n9. IMerment. El To,.. Cemetery MGCorml<k t..aoun11 Beach Morlµary dlrM 1ors BAL Tl-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 673-9450 Costa Mesa 646-2424 BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 McCORMICK MORTUARY Laguna Beach 49"-9415 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach. C..llfornla 844-2700 HEKl'AMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave Westminster 893-3525 SlllTHI' MORTUARY 827 Main St. Hu~ech , Cornpa11y to Map OC Flood Areas Ten sections of south Orange County creeks and \\:at.ersheds s ubject lO Sl'\'ere nood hazard Will be mapped and clf'arl~ defln<.'d under terms of a $40.000 contract awarded Tuesda~ b~ 01 cinge County Supervisors The mapping by VTN Consolidated, Inc will be th~ prelude to county ac· t1on t<> impose r<'slrictive flood plain zoning on the hazard areas to pre\'cnl O\ erdevelopml'nl and future flood damage. The count\' ha s already applied the special zoning to major s ections of San Juan Creek. Santiago Creek. Aliso Creek and others. BUILDING activity in such zones must undergo meticulous planning and a long hearing process. I n a repor t lo Tests Slated At Marywood M a r ~· w o o d H i g h S<'hool , the Catholic girls school in Orange, has scheduled pl a cement tests Feb. 7 for eighth grade girls interested in attending the school next fall . Details can be ob- tained Crom M arvwood's principal . S is ter Rosemary Borntrager, telephone 637 -145-0 . superVJsprs. county En vironmen t al M ana~e ment Agenc}' Director 11.G "George' Osborne said the county wi ll soon be required undc1 the Nationa l Flood Insura11c e Progr<Jm to appl) n ooa zoning t0 .i1iy hazaro area The countv h as parllc1paled in ·the in- surance raung s ystem since 1971 ADDITIONAL areas lo be mapped by VTN in- clude the upper reaches of Santiago Creek, m- cludinf.? M odjes ka Ca · nyon. Silverado Creek; Salt C r eek and it s tri butacy. ,\ rroyo Salada in Laguna Nigue l . Sulphur Creek a nd a branch known only as J03P01 in Laguna Niguel. Also th~ Narco Chan- nel near Aliso Creek ; La Paz Channe l along Oso Creek ; English Canyon, a tributary to Aliso Creek in Mission Viejo; an Aliso Hill s watercours e identified as JOS and the upper re· aeh of Handy Creek noar Peters Canyon. STATE FIU MARSHAL APPROVED U.LUSTED SMOKE DETECTION Al:ARM SYSTEMS S48 . .,..~ •BAlANCE BEL TED BLACKWALL. TAKE-OFF TIRES MAJOR BRANDS G78xl5 s19's H 78xl 5 SPECIAL PURCHASE FOR THIS EVENT!! 405 TIRES MUST IE SOLD -Umited to Stock on Hand General JUMBO 780 15 only C78·14 Whitewall 89 only E78-14 Blackwall 84 only F78-14 Blackwall 87 only F78·14 Whitewall W-1-D-E 78 SERIES The Dual Steel JI Radial Built with two steel belts for road hazard pro- tection, and a tough two-ply polyester cord body. You'll gat the long mileage benefits of radial ply construction at a fantastic price! i , ' ' t! •1 i • l ' '· . , .. .. • ~Runway Plan ~ ~· By WILLIAM SCHREIBER • ! OI ... DliltJ 11'1 let Slaff ' Orange County Supervisors Tuesday refused to •!4pprove In concept" a proposal to extend the main ~nty airport runway iJ7 feet north toward the San Oleeo Freeway. · Board endorsement was sought by the county deneral Services Agency, which contends the ex· tension would make major reductions in the noise ipipact area in Santa Ana Heights. .. : SUPERVISORS SAID they woullhu>t give their Qessin1 to tl)e project until a ~mptehensive en-, vlronm,ntal impact report on the airport is com· Pleted within the next month. ~ Meanwhile, supervisors told GSA Director R.I. ''Cuba" Morris, steps should be taken to determine ifthe runway project could be funded in part by the fWeral government. · : Supervisors also agreed to "receive and file" a d)nsultant's report on the feasibility of the runway C!Xtension. That study was completed last summ'er, ~t haa been in limbo because or the EIR prepara- Uon. ~ According to Morris, the northward e1(tension ~ld be built at a total cost or about $800,000, in· dudlne relocation of 40 light plane tie-down spaces. ' THE NEW SECTION of runway would only be ~ed by jets departing the airport to permit them to get off the ground quicker and climb faster to t b· duce the noise Impact on .areas near the foot of the runway. According to the consultant's report, the eJ(· ttnded runway couJd reduce by 78 percent the amount of residential property within the most ~vere noise area -the so-called 70 CNEL (Com- rtiuniJY Noise Equivalent Level> zone. • The CNEL scale denotes, in a decibel measure· roent, the average amount or noise in a particular spot over a 24 hour period. State law currently pro· ~bits residential uses Jn zoneS"over65CNEL. · • Much or the land within the 70 CNEL area was <feveloped before the passage of a state noise con· trol law. • The consultants said that the 65 CNEL zone viould also be cut 30 percent by the runway extension. . :. IN THE EVENT the county must condemn and ~rchase the land within 70 CNEL areas, the dollar ~vtng of a runway extension has been estimated at •• lmilllon. • · Supervisors Tuesday beard from several sbeakera, including homeowners and Newport Seach City Attorney Dennis O'Neill. : They supported the board's decision to dolay •ton on the extension until the EIR is completed IQ\d lls recommendations are publicized. ~ OPPONENTS OF airport operations have dalmed a loneer runway will attract luger, noisler Jett • • • • > ·FROM Fashion Island Newport Beach p su~ loto their comments despit• admonitions from board 'Cb•irman Ralph Diedrich lh•t the laaues were unrelated. Commiuion Chairman Osen ~ld supervilors tblat abortion is not 'an luue her panel eUher IUP· ports or oppo1ea since it has never come up." Most of the opponents of the commission objected to the use of tax money to support another layer of government. Several ob- j ected to the commission'• Ceminlat orientation. . Board Told At Bpwers Dr. John R . Hllsabeck of Santa Ana has been in· stalled as president of the Bowers Museum Founda· lion. The board or directors also elected aa · officers James W. Obrien, Corona del Mar, rirst vice presl· dent : Mrs . Carl K . Pearlman , Santa Ana, second vice president: Mrs. Beth Querfurth, San· ta Ana, third vice presi· dent; Keith Welputt, Newport Beach, fourth vice president; Mrs . Thomas Webster, Santa Ana, secretary , and Robert J . Nelson, Santa Ana, treasurer. W9dneeday, January 28. 117$ DAILY PtLOT A I ( Paramedic Service Area Vote Studied . Orange County city and county government officials are 1ett1n:- thelr heads toeether on a proposal to create a new county.wide service area for intensive care paramedics. County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas told the Board or • Supervisors Tuesday he has met with a special committee of city managers and supervlsorlal aides to bealn laying the groundwork. He said the county League of Cities should be asked to name at least 12 elected officials to the team that will study the possibili- ty of putting the paramedic service area on the ballot ln Nov· ember. SUPERVISORS approved a tentative hearing schedule draft· ed by Thomas delineating all the steps that will have to be taken prior to the November vote. The first deadline Thomas is facing wlll ~May 18. Tbe CAO will ask supervlaon to peUlion the Local Agency l'ormaUon Commission to atart proc~ngs on creatioq or the aervtce area. The LAFC rules on alt armexa- Upns, de·annexations and service area formations. Supervisors may legally create service areas without a formal vote of the people but it takes an election to set the maximum tax rate. The board has choeeo to put the entire matter to the people in November. Witt Gets Post On Water Panel YOUNGLAND oftl.DRBl'S STORE 2300 HARIOR HARIOlt CIMTBt COSTA MESA -·-.-~ ....._.___ --·-· .. STONEWARE PLANTERS glazed with water proof, lead free glaze, one of 11 kind pets. HANDMAOI OH OUI POmlS WHHl JANUARY SALE SAVE UP TO 60% AT OUR FACTORY . BEEFEATER'S $1 OFF or uo PUllClllSE Wl1I JllS CIUPGI • OFFER GOOO THRU JAN. 31 BEEF Best dam beef you'll ever put a fork . to-that's Ivey Ranch Beef! It's corn-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 bee£ .. We guarantee it! .... ·---- ~ROUND-UP PAK Tende~juicy. corn-fed, aged beef JO POUNDS ONLY$44.75 18 Different Assortments from SS.95 •Sides, Hind and F9requarters The Produce Mart Placentia at Victoria C.Osta Mesa 645 -1365 Available at: Ivey Beef Company 133 E. Alton Santa Ana 546-9330 Vermeulen Ranch 32382 Del Obispo San Juan Capistrano 496-0431 .--::. BankAmericard Master Charge Food Stamps -===-=-====2:=::a Open 7 Days a w_ee_k ___ ~ Buy direct from the potter High 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 FROM W JUTE $1 111. BEADS ON SALE WI ALSO CAHY 00-IT·YOUISILF MACIAMl S~"PUIS LARGI I'/•" WOODIN IUDS IEG. 15< NOW C)ot LAIGl CllAMIC IUDS IEG. 6Cr NOW 35c 1" ' 8" Pet Rq. $9.00 6'' Pot Reg. S7.00 4" Pot Rei. S5.00 ~~i~e $350 ~~i~e $250 ~~~CE '200 SIZH All APPIOXIMATI Stoneware World "'W& cA(..(. 011., o.,. !/)off.' 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I've still got a lot of .conlidence io myself." 1970, prompting some ABA en· tbuslasts to speculate that the jw\lor circuJt was 1n line for a I avorablt mer,ier deal witb the NaUonal Basketball Associa· lion. At 29, the former high school and college All·Amerlcan spends his days practtclng in the high school gymnasium where he starred over a decade A&O· " .. I'm not r~ady to get out <>f tbe game," he said lrom bis home Tuesday. "l think I'm in So fat. no team .bu shared that confidence. Four of Mount's Utah team· mates were picked up by sur- viving ABA teams when the Stars collapsed in December. But ~t. who ave.fa&ed over 30 ~tats a game in college and holdt a flock of 8ig Teo scoring records, Joined the ranks of the unemployed. The Indiana Pacers signed the Lebanon native to an $800,000. five-year contract in Mount earlier had been ' named the nation's outttand· iog high school basketball player ln a cover story in ••sports lllustrlr<ed'' and graduated as the Big Ten•s all· time scorlng leader. But his storied accolxrf>lishments of an earlier a.ge,J{evei: materialized in the pro,-; While the ABA played. its All· star same In Denver Tuesday nlpt. Rick Mount rested from bi1 worko1,1t. Neither· the mer1er nor Mount's career has proceeded as expected. His chance to break into the Pacers starting lineup as a rookie evaporated when he pulled a hamstring and missed the ahlbitJon season. Indiana coach Bobby Leonard said it was best that be be brought along slowly -and slowly meant the prize rookie sat on thebench. . . Mount eot his opporturuty lD his second prof esslonal season Sports in Brief Kings Win, 2-0 INGLEWOOD -Butch Goring and Marcel Dionne scored' goals 1: 33 apart in the second period Tuesday night and goalie Rogie Vachon posted his fifth shutout of the season to lead the Los Angeles Kings to a 2-0 National Hockey League victory over Washington. The Kings, back home after playing nine of their last 10 games on the road, took the lead at 7: 23 of the middle period on Goring's 20th goal of the season, a 35-footer which eluded Washington goalie Bernie Wolle. K•latoEagln'! PHOENIX -The Philadelphia Eagles of the National Football League have offered Arizona State University football coach Frank Kush their head coaching job, the Phoenix Gazette report: ed Tuesday. But Kush denied he bad received a firm job off er. 'J'azpa11er• S•ller NEW ORLEANS -Louisiana taxpayers will have to put up from $35 m illlon to $68 million over the next four years to keep· the Superdome in business, Gov. Edwin Edwards said Tuesday. In an extraordinary plea, he asked the city's newspapers and broadcast stations to undertake self-censorship and try to solve Dome problems in private before publishing bad news about it. The governor satd news stories about problems besetting the $163 million sports palace have made it a heavy political liability in much of the sta\e. Freti .. Tra .. len EL CA JON -Jim Freitas, a letterman quarterback at UCLA, pJans to transfer to Grossmont College. . His brother Jesse is a quarterback for the San Diego Chargers and his father Jim re- tired recently as head coach at Serra ffigh School in San Mateo. Wade Ad.,aaen CHICAGO -Top-seeded Virginia Wade moved int? the thitd round of the $75,000 Chicago Women's Tennis Tournament Tuesday night, defeating Sue Barker, 6-1, 2·6, 7-6. In other Tuesday night matches, third-seeded Martina Navratilova beat Julie Anthony 6-0, 6-3, and Natasha Chmyreva upset $eventh-seeded Rosemary Casals. In the afternoon round, Evonne Goolagong led a field of three seeded competitors into the third round, defeating Iris Riedel 6-1, · 7-5. HANDS UP -Mission Viejo's John Hattrup (3) prevents Tim Dunham (with ball) from driving the lane as Kelly Cox (34), Jim Hutchings (44) and John McDonald (11) Boyd Raps Wooden,. Def ends Successor LOS ANGELES (AP> -As coach of the University of Southern Californi a basketball team, Bob Boyd knows how tough it was to be on the·same stage with John Wooden and his UCLA Bruins. Now Boyd feels that Wooden's successor, Gene Bartow, gets much of the same pressure particularly after los- ing three games so far this campaign at UCLA, which won eight consecutive NCAA cham· pionships. "Gene Bartow has never bad anything like this before," said Boyd, whose Trojans play the Bruins in UCLA 's Pauley Pavilion on Saturday night. "He didn't have this situation at Valparaiso, Memphis State or Illinois. "Unless he can become con- ditioned to it, he can start to Drug· Scandal .At Kentucky LEXINGTON, Ky. CAP) -Six· teen University of Kentuck1 foot· ball players and seven other stu- dents lfave been disciplined by the school as the result of a probe. Into drug use by the footbaU team, school president Otis . Singletary said Tuesday. None of the students was ex- pelled from school and none or the players has been prohibited from continuing on the team. Singletary said 20 of the 23 persons involved had smoked marijuana. The other three com- mitted "amphetamineoflenses," he said. • Singletary said that In keeping with the uni versity'a student code none o( the students could be id~ntified. He said some of the athletes Involved "are.not at all likely to play . next season, but ibere is notbin~ in the P,uniah· ment that says they can't. ' Sioel.etary said that conlr:lry to rumors circulated earlier this year, the investigation showed about 90 percent of tbe Kentucky football team bad no er,. .nect.lon in any way to drug u11e. · Left unanswt>:ed were allega- tions that NCAA regulations and rules may have been violated. A probe Slntletary ordered Into those charges is not yet com· plete. The charges began Jut JHr u the football team lost ... eral close aamet, .and even· tu.Sly escalated Into widespr~ad namor1 ol dru& abme and point lh•vtna. The rumors were denied by all iaj'Un ,nd none bad been proven mW Sbilleta?Y'• announcement . ~Y that J6 foot.ball playera had used aoro• torm ct ctruss. , ,, think he's a lousy c,oach and he's not ." Boyd criticized Wooden for a statement just before he re· tired. "I think he was wrong to say this was his best collection of athletes," Boyd commented . "Why would he say that? It could only cause heat for the new man." UCLA, which beat Kentucky in the NCAA finals at San Diego, opened the 1975-76 season by losing t<> Indiana, currently undefeated and No. 1 ranked nationally. The ~rwns also lost to Oregon Stale in Pac-8 action, won two of their conference games by just one ;ioint, and lost a rematch to Notre Dame last Saturday. Victors over Notre Dame 86-70 at Pauley Pavilion, the Bruins lost in South Bend, Ind., 95-35. Boyd said that Wooden's situation at UCLA, with nine NCAA titles and 15 conference crowns before he added to both last season, "made'his situa- tion impregnable." c' "Winning gives you a posi· tion of strength," said Boyd whose USC clubs have finished second to UCLA five times in tbe Pac-8. "U coach Wooden says there will not be any of this type of shooting, say, he has a better chance of making it work." Boyd is having his own troubles. After his club opened with an 11·1 mark with national ranklngs. it bas lost five· straight and dropped from the rankings. DRIVING FOR TWO -David 1.ogg (25) drives for a layup as San Clemente's Bill Neely (45) and John Witherell (21) try to def end. lJCI Bags 70-69 Verdict Anteaters Keep Playoff liopea A.live· By CRAIG SHEFF OftM0.11., .......... Tim Tivenan 's free throw with 10 seconds to ao in lb& gam eaeured UC Irvine ol a 'JM8 vie' tor)' over visiting UC Rivenlde 1\teeday nl1ht ln an intense hard· fe>Ulht coneae ba1ketball duel. Tta. win over the def ending NCAA reitonal champs kel)t UC1'1 "°9eS for a post-season • playoff berth alive. The An - teaten face another top Division It ftve Saturday night, boeUng UC Davia. Tivenan's 1bot aave UCI a 70-67 lead, but Riverside's Reg· 1le Mims acored with three seconds lert. The Highlanders then intercepted • long inbounds pass by uc1. but. ~root shot at Oae buuer b1 UCR's Larry Reynolds tnlaaed everythln,i. • The Anteaters, shooting well from outside, appeared headed for a comfortable win mid way t.broupthe flrstbalt. Coach Tim Tlft's dub. hittin1 11 of Its first u shot.I ht lhe second ball, bad taken· a !e-4'1 lead with 11:20to10. But UCR ii~ aotecl rOr lU late comebacks and coach Fteddle Goss' club almoat pulled of{ another one. • With its pres forcing tµmovera, JUverslde got back in the game with m mloutes lell, cutUng the UCJ m8!,lln t.o 61..sG on three straight bUl<ets by Raul Burke. But the .\oteaters' St•ve C)aveland acor~ from ln close aft•r a nice pus from nvenan and Nate Jones ·hit Ctq'i{l 12 feet away to put UCI ahead, 65-59. Riverside eot to within two asa.Jn (68-67) OD a Mims basket wtth 51 seconds left, but Ttvenan's free throw put it away for the Anteaters. "It was a key win fdr us," said Tift. "If we can come back Satur- day nlaht •nd wtn, then we'll be back In the running for the pla,yoff1 ... "We shot well tonight, but we didn't play that ell oo offense". UC ..... 8'1 ""'"' . .,,.... ,.,. Ml-• ' •• " ~ 10 • t tO .,,..... " •• t2 Wiiia J f \ • ·-•• 2 0 IA'cl'191llk 0 l 0 I (?ll UC trvl• .. " .. " 'n'flfMn 'I I I S JOMI • 0 0 tt• euttw 1 o ' t• Jti\tlll'lt • • 2 t 14 Cl•'i.nd 1 t ' ,. Dnls o I O I Hair t 0 t • W•IM>n t 0 t 4 Totals n • It 10 ToUla • J tt .. Ht1'1llM: UClrvlM.~l. ~ and made the most or It, averaging 20 points and five as- sists per 1a,me. But Leonard pulled him from the starting· lineup and cut his playing time dramatically, citing lack of leadership and inadequate de· f ensive play. Mount spoke out, a c~n· troversy erupted and he was traded to the Kentucky Colonels at the end of the season. "Things just didn't work out in Indiana," he said. ••1 don't know why. 1 don't know who to blame." He averaged over 20 points a game in Kentucky bUt his ~tq7 there lasted Just 1¥.! yearf Then, in succession, he wri traded to Utah, Memphis, anct back to the Stars. .. A series of debJUtating i~­ juries -including a repeatedly aggravated hamstring muscle and a shoulder separation - complicated matters, cuttl~ down bis playln• time aw hurting his reputat~on. . . After rus d. isappomtti rookie season. Mount told a porter: "A lot of J*.lfle ha already sold me down t river. But I'll be all right.·· 0.llf ................ tllc:Mrd lt9'1111w stand by Also seen are Mitch Adams (33), John Witherell (21l and David Zogg (25). Diablos Breeze ~, J Mission Viejo Tri~ ' Too Much/or SC } By GLENN WHITE Of llw Oellf PHCll Slaff It was Mission Viejo's Mutt and Jeff Duo plus one that did most of the damage to San Clemente High 's basketball team Tuesday night tn South Coast League battle at the MV gym. The tall and short tandem of Steve Sawyer <6 ·5> and John Hat- trup (5-6) combined talents with Diablos teammate Kelly Cox to put Mission Viejo in command from wire to wire Victory leaves coach Pat Roberts' forces in a lie w ilh El Toro for the loop lead and the two pacesetters will collide Tuesday at El Toro Sawyer riddled the nets for 21 points, making nine of 14 shots. Some were fall -a way jumpers from 10-13 feet Others were closer m He also bagged 11 re- bounds Hattrup, the fireplug who plays Huskies Coach Raps Qfficials like his trunks might be on fite,. was inspirational. He ne~r stopped hustling, popped tio points through the nets and ls called for two body contact Co ls after havinJ? blocked shots. Cox was deadly from eve · where, gunning. in 10 of 15 stfOts for 20 points. He was shooting from both sides of the key, then just to s how it could be done, he took a pass on the run and go( a lay-in near the end of the thi;d. quarter. San Clemente could find lilUe Ito go 1ts way, except perhaps the keen shooting of Mark Sherrydn the last half when he got all of his 10 points on 17 -footers, despite having four foul s most of ~e way. He was about the only Triton able to cons istently find the range as coach Stan DeMaggiO's outfit made only 30 percent o~·ts shots for the game after hitti at an anemic 18.5 percent clip or the first half. , The losers did have one sta~d· out stat -only three turnover~ in each half. . Mission Viejo shot well, cfm· ning 50 percent of its field goal tries and jumping to a 5·0 1¢ad SEATTLE CAP) -Washington . and never looking back. 'Jhe coach Marv Harshman says the Diablos were challenged mildJy University of Hawaii basketball in the last half when the Tritons program is hampered by the in· once cut the gap t~ 40-95. competent officiating which But Hattrup hit one fro~ lh:? favors the RainbQ.ws. ~top of the key. and Cox got his _.y. Speaking to tbe Puget Sound in lo make it 44-35 after tt\fee Sportswriters and 'Cas ters quarters and SC could .never get luncheon Tuesday, Harshman closer than seven pomts afer said he had spoken with Hawaii that . athletic administrators about the s.a-.. .em1 situation. • '' n '"" CUI MlssMtt lne6 .. tt ti .. Wll!M>rell I • J 6 The sixth-ranked Huskies ran Sherr-, s o • 10 their record to 16-1 by beating the Ha11mar1t 2 t 1 " Rain bows t w lee over the :,,, ~ ! ; 1! Adams 2 O > • ZOgg 30J• S.wyer 9 J ' tt Coit 1oot20 weekend. HDrva111 2 2 o " ~ 3. 110 Kennedy 0 2 a t Harshman said it was the first :;.';',!.~1nv1 ~ ~ ~ ~ time he knew of where he'd seen McDonald ' o l 2 ~ter OO\O a 7-(oot center play two games Totaia 18 is 11 si Toi.is )) ' u" witbout gelling a free throw. kor•ll'tOVaftln "It's a good thing James Sefto-Me • 1J '' ..-S1 Edwards has been weight lift-M1u1onv1eio is 17 12 ~ ing," Harahman said.of his lead· lngscorer. "Hewas1lbletocarry Lutz 'rops Foe two people to the basket.•' Hawaii has received criticism from other basketbaiJ coaches about inept officiating. As a re-IUl~ the university has included a malnland official ror two-same series. Dave Phillips of the Missouri Valley Conference worked the Huskies' 1ames, Harshman said. "If be badn 't been tbere, we woutdn•t have won either nlght, '' said Harshman. who also re- called one official asking him, ''How am I doing, coach, })ow am I doine?.. as he passed the Washington bench durtna the aame. Harshman sald he thought Howaii bas the most talent of any team the Huskies have raced but that the Ralnbows teod to- peycholoaically rely on tho of· nctaung. I PH IL A D E LP ff 1 A -San Clemente's Bob Luu defeated Karl Meiler 7-6, 6-3 in the Ont round of the $115,000 U.S. lndOor professional tennis toumalnelrt Tuesday. · ln other action, Arthur Aaho beat Fred Stolle 2-6, M. 7-S; Charles Pasarell downed Alex Metreveli 7-6, 6·3; lie Nastase edged Brian Fairlie M. 7-6; Dick Stockton upset Roscoe Tanner- 7-6, 6-4. • I Also. Tom Okker def eoted Clift Richey S.4, 7-S; J&n Kodes o.ailed \ Ray Moore 7-6, 6·2; Tom Gorman n1pl)M Anand Amritraj S.7, 7-6, 6·4: Andrew P atUson shocked Raul Ramirei 6·3, 2-61 6-3. In doubles, Uie Nast c and Jimmy Connor! be9t Karl Meiler and Wojtek Fl~k 6·~. 3-6, •i.. -.. I· .... ~LY PILOT WednMda January 2&. 1978 h El Toro Keeps 1st With 48-46 Viciory By ROGER CARLSON the game into overtime. Of t11e 0111y ll'l1ae S..tt Resftrg~t Dolphins Bite Again By ED BURGART Of UM Dllty ..... Mt El T oro High 's Chargers rallled rrom a 10-point deficlt, toot lbe lead for the first time in tk final quarter, then hung on to ~~ a 48-46 South Coast League ~~etball victory over visiting ha.l'Jna Beach Tuesday night. And the Artists shook J005a at the fr~e throw line, but the al· tempt hit the rim and bounced off-thus Laguna Beach trail6 Jn the ch~mpionship race by two games-and it was El Toro which nipped Laguna Beach earlier in double overtime. . Playing like pacifists only three weeks ago, the surging Dana Hills Hi&h D~phlns have suddenly become aggressive enough to win three of their lut four South Coast Le-sue basket- ball games. Their l atest vlcllm was lJniverl\ilv. which fell behind 19·4 after one quarter and was buried The wln keeps coach Wendell Witt's Chargers even with Mis- ision Viejo in the championship tlce. It was a toug b loss for coach Ed El Toro managed only 18 of 42 from the f 1eld for 42.9 percent while Laguna Beach was hitting 19 of 39 for 48. 7 percent. 61-45 Tuesday night at Dana Hills High. llngham 's Artists, who shot ·• to a 10-0 lead in the firs t peiiod and were unscored upon for the first 5: 44 due to five El 'n)ro turnovers and four missed sbou. Ben Bacon and Dusty Dvorak were the keys to the Laguna Beach attack with 18 and 12 points, although John Uljestrom also came through with some key plays. · Mark Hill and Greenwood led the balanced El Toro scoring col- umn with 13 and 12 counters. Art J e nkins' Dolphins c!ls· proved the theory they couldn't shoot by canning 9 of 11 field goal attempts agains t University's 1·3·1 zone in the firslq'\larler. Dolphins center H e nry Mlkiewicz, playing one of his most aggressive games this year , had seven of bis game-high 20 points in the first quarter and was particularly effectjve inside. It was the seventh straight game that Mikiewicz has scored in dou· ble fi gures. The Chargers chipped away at tbe lead, however. and took the lead for the first time in the fourth period on shots by Tom Ql:eenwood and Mark Hill for a 3&-32 lead. 1t was tied again at 36 and 38, then the winners got a free throw trom Tracy Singh a nd a 16-footer from Greenwood. Marty Heim stole the ball and it was Mark Hill sneaking through the lane The oCficiatiog of Geoue Selfridge and Myron Brown was tough on both sides, although Laguna Beach was crippled twice in the tense fourth period by poor calls. l.1911U aucll C••I 14'1 •ITeA I• II pl IP •• 11 "' '" Taylor 1 0 , 2 CNrlff 3 0 ' ' R Smltll 0 1 0 1 Wlllte 0 0 2 0 B.c;on 1 4 3 II Singh 0 I 0 I Ptu 0 0 4 0 I for an inside shot to put Witt's crew ahead. 43·38. LllJestrom Ev•ns Dvonk 4 1 ' ' 4 • 2 ' 4 0 s 12 Mike Hiii 3 Mark Hiii ' Fr•wr 1 Rlcktt 0 3 1 0 0 ' • 0 13 0 2 1 0 John Driscoll's Trojans, com· ing off two emotional wins over San Clemente and Mission Viejo, didn't play with their usual in· t ensity. Com m ittinK eight turnovers and attempting only six shots in the opening quarter, they were never able to recover. Laguna Beach hung in there, however, and managed to gel the ball with six seconds left after an El Toro miss at the free throw line with one last chance to send Helm ' 3 2 5 GrHftWOOd . • 1 12 Tot•ls 19 • 21 "' Tol•IS 1112 14 .. Sure~, Qvat111n t...gunaBeach 11 11 10 ""'"'" t!I TMO 4 13 IS 16-4 Gauchos, Riverside In Crucial Tonight Saddleback College's basket· ball team faces one of its bigge::.t games in its eight-year history tonight when the Gauchos take on· Riverside City College in a M1 s- s1on Conference crucial at Mi s- sion \'icJo High t8 o'clock). "We 've never been more pre· pared for an opponent." s<t~ s Saddleback coach Bill Mulligan, who led RCC to flve Mission titles before becoming the Gauchos coach last s ummer . "We've been preparing for Riverside for 10 days." The Gauchos come into the game with a 3-1 Mission record, a Mulligan. ''We're in a slump · .ight now and I don't know why. We were better a month ago when we beat LA Harbor. It could be the grind of practicing at 9 o'clock at night. But I really can't put my finger on it." Mulligan figures he'll get some abuse from Riverside fans. .. A lot of them took my moving personally. But it was simply for a better climate and to better my position. 'I'll probably get a lot of abuse." Trailing 23-7 with 4:52 left in 'the second period, the Trojans switched to a man-to-man de· fense and played the Dolphins even thereafter. Despite a distinct height ad· vantage-University started 6·6 Steve Wood a nd 6·5 Roger Poirier-the Trojans were badly beaten on the boards and only got off 47 shots, sinking 19 for 40.4 percent. The smaller Dolphins connected on 23 or 50 for 46 per- cent. Stu Hein came off the bench to score 10 points for Dana Hills while starting forward J eff Paulson adde d eight and played an e xcelle nt d efensive game, holding Poirier to eight points, 10 under his average. The Dolphins denied Poirier the ball, having a player sag in front of him and putting Paulson behind him. Uftlwenlty COi •• 11 ,. tp JotlMoll 2 2 l • Halford 0 1 I I Poirier ' o 1 a Wbod 4 2 4 10 McCl'tlndS S l 2 11 Grfffl 1 0 3 2 Eykholt 1 o 4 2 Howitt 0 0 2 0 Parcell O o 1 C> C.IUO 1 1 2 S l6tl Dalla Hiiis Paulson s.rr-Mlklewlcr Hoffman Crapo 8aur AQuil•r Hein t1 n pt t11 , 4 0 • 2 , l • 7 6 l 20 4 0 0 • l 0 ~ 6 1 0 1 1 0 I I I ' 2 2 10 • game behind Riverside and Southwestern. Riverside's Tigers (13·7 for the season} base their attack around their quickness and a full court press. "We have to keep our poise with their press. We also have to get back on defense in a hurry," says Mulligan. ToUts 19 7 23 4! TO(els 2) IS IS 61 Score Irr O...ntn Ulll..,.rslty 0.N Hiiis .. t 16 16~5 It 10 IS l•-61 "We're one down and we can't afford to be two do\.\n," s ays Area Calendar Tllu~y (Jlft. 2tl Wl'"Hllln<1-Corone def Mar at El Mode,,., Katell• •t Hunto"Qton Beach (both al 71, TU\11" at Go\la Mew, Est•ncla at Santa Ana Cbolll •t 7 lO), MSlmlnSler •t Edison (6: JO), MlrlN al "-l•on \/alley (51. Newport Harbor at W~t ... n U >OJ, Mltollioft Vie jo at San Cle...,,., 0... Hiiis •I Uf>lwer'Slty (bolll 116 l • Riverside is led by S.11 guard Mike Linden, but the Tigers have six players averaging in double figures. Saddleback is sparked by freshman forward Dennis Smith who is scoring at a 26.2 clip per conference game. HB in Action A 17-game winning streak over the past eight years is at stake tonight at 7 as Huntington Beach High's Oilers invade Anaheim for an Empire League basketball test. Socc;er-Ser,.ite lit Estancia 13 ISi, 'WIKlmlnuer at Marin• CU, ~ern •t Fo .. uaon Valley, Sant• An• 11 Edison (llGthlt l JO). BftUttMll-5outMr" C..lllonn Coll~ • Gii Stale INort11r1e199 I a. Glrl$ bnkeUNll--Aruu et UC lrvlne (11. . l'rlday Uat1. »I BHketball-COrona del Mar at Et ModeM, OKia Mew at $anti Ana, Esl•ncla at Tustin. Sad· dleback •' Huntln91on Bea<h, Edison el l.os Alemllos. Westminitu at Fountain Vell11v, HeWOOrt Hubor •I Marina, o.N Hiiis 111 Miu.on Viejo, Unlwr\lly et El Tol"O, Sen Oemente •t ~ Beach, LA Soulhwt!st at Golden ~t. LA a.lit at Sout...,.n C.lllon\la Coll999 1•11 at II, ••• 0.1 •t s .. vlt• 11: JOI. Other starters for the Gauchos include guards Randy Carlisle and Mark Lovelace, center Buck Day and forward Mike Bokosky. Lovelance and Bokosky were starters for Mulligan at RCC last season. The Oilers of coach Elmer Combs are embroiled in a three- way tie for first place with Katella and Cypress and are heavy favorites to extend their winning streak over the Colony to 18 R"ames. lOthRa~OK Anaheim is winless after 14 starts and would appear to ha ve little manpower to stop the Oilers. Socur-COrona def Mar al S4n Cl111Nnt11, t...,._ S.ach et Dana Hills, HunUnvton Buch at tCtmotcty (a II •I ) 1S I SWlmmlnca-<tF Rel•YS p.ellms al E•SI LCK MoelHCol~. ~tun1ar u .... n> 81iMletlNlll--Orange C4H1 a1 Grosamonl (1;301, SoutllwHtern '" Saddlebaek at Mission llie10 HIQh, VD D•vlsat UC I< vine lboth•lll. The California Horse Racing Board has approved an applica· tion from Los Alamitos for a 10th rare on Friday and Saturday nights during the 58-night har· ness season that begins at the Orange County track Feb. 25. Leading the Oilers up front are Perry Harbin (17.6), Jim Spowart (13.9) and Clark Sims <13.0). Guards Kevin Karkut a nd Paul Finch amp round out the al· tack, which has compiled a 13-4 overall mark to give the Oilers the No. 6 rating in Orange County. SWlmmtng-EI Toro at Cost•Mtw <••.m ). Glrtsgymnastlu~CCCIAC Mttt at Groumont Qne9I Cl •.m >. Post time will be 8 p.m. on weekends as well as other nights during the harness season. Prep Hoop Standings Area Basketball Wrestling S11mmaries SOUTH COAST LEAGUE W L P,. PA ElTol"O S 2 N 371 Mission VltJo s 2 ll>l 33'l 'Oalltl Hiiis J 4 338 m "'9UM 8Ncll l 4 312 303 \JDl""nlty 3 4 38S 411 SM Clfllw"~• 1 S '40f> 'IS TWMlay•s Sceres ~-loft Vlejo6l, SM Cle~nle SI 0.... Htl1s'1, Un4ftrs1ty o El Tol'941. L.olguna Beach 4• ""*''' 0.fftff 0-. HlllUI MIUlon Vle10 unlvenltyal El Toro $-.. C._.,1e •I U9u,,. S.Kll OllllANOI LEAGUE JUNIOllll VAllllSITY thllvenltr (SJI CSU Du• Hlllt Mllchel1 C61 F 141 Br~ Hook 110) F 115! StUOfn Thomas (16) C (41 Bethke Foley IOI G (01 Mll<iewlc1 Halagan Ill G 1111 Pol$y Uni tcorlnv subs: Vesley 11, Buck 2. OH scoring s ub$: Pllsker 10 \/olmerdlng 1, Wiison 6. H•lfllme: OH, 30-22. M. Viejo < .. l 1411 S.ft Cf"""'" Wio-y (161 F (Bl Mllcllefl Scott 1111 F <1ll Hetllnoa Getlllcflell 1161 C <IOI Frank Oloffl• C41 G 141 Forrester &ooch (ti G 111 ICleln MV scorln9 111bsi Egtrslon 2, KOtOlb S, R1nt1 I, Wldtt t, H•wtllM t . SC scorlnv sub: Ntllf'IY 1, W L P~ PA H•lttlme· MV.'2·21, C..\'Olt J 1 M 1'1'1 uguM (411 (411 II T-t:I Do<"ado J 1 m l" AndenOtl (2) .. "" $1mpsott SCllor• l 1 HI 206 Bf'otf\erton (12) F UI Holmes j'119r.tf\U1 2 1 160 100-Gr-eenouQh m c 121 Pftr•ll• ~.. l :J no V1len<l1 0 4 11M ?OS Mc.Manut (!Cl G (121 °"°"9e 1'1 Fr•ltr (21 G (121 OWlrlet ~y'sk­ ElootrtftUd, VPleM114l Uot> ~a ... ~YoflU El Oor•do'7, lt<N SS 111111•aWAY LIAOUI W L ,_. f'A '11Mler10fl 7 0 lt1 110 Wt Hdr a ' t 4'2 4lO ~II 4 I 4J) 4$4 ._. P•rll 3 .. ~ 4J1 itYMlll I 4 JU SI' ~r... , • flt 41S SA ll•lley 2 S 471 '7t ~yHlll' 0 1 .. IJ fl1 TllHUY'tk_... 'rnl't'1. ~· Parll.JJ &.II Halwa IO, lavtnM ,.. • ....,.11n.u.va1i.y4I Nltflllll .. Sul'lftYHlll1St San Clemente ffip's ••nlty footba ll team, rh1mplon of the SOuth Lii -lno 1ubt. Purcell 4, Bryant 2. ET tnrl119 Slit>: t..eal!y t. Halftime ET,21·21. '°""°MOiiie ~-(Ml ($7) 11 T- ltl<Nl"ftof\ Ill) F ~41 ~ ~ 10 F (6)Nultet ~ 11'1 C 1101 Olcll &..\lie (6) G f?IWtlH Mool't 17, G OJI MllnlOll LI tcorlnv 111~: 041vor s. ET scorlno 1ut>: We titer'· H•lftlmt. Lo9'H\4, M-24, Pro Scores ............... A~· l&lffalo 1,., N-~INn' 10S Ali.I• tt4, New Yori! tta o-•.,,., u. o.1,..i1., HWllOl'I 111, "'llNllptila I •• 0Wute UO, O.lcJtf> lllte IW .,_.,City I07, Mllw•vkHlt ll'Wtlarld llt, W•\lllfttlOll 10~ , ~a.t•ttMllAtMCI ..... C)olll..r 16', AIA ~IHlat'S la Dau Hiib U4) CSSl Unl"""°f Jeffen (11 F Ciel 8aQI~ Owl$!09N•r (141 F C2tl ICllOM HltnOmklOn m c C61 Hooper Tia nton C1I G C2I R091f"S Allbf'afl 1221 G <OJ Davis DH scorlnv su«>: OISOfl 2. uni •corlnv sub: Maston 4. H•llUme: Unl..,.nUy, 21-13. fttt•IHMAH DIM Hiiia CMI IHI U11lwrsHy Hawtllns 121 F (181 !>tol1off Sarnuols Ill F 10 8orsult ~-' UI C (21 McCl'(lnOfllll Smyth Cl) G IOI Mlrvl<k Andr9ws 1131 G IOI ..Upluncl DH tcOflng lllbs: Graham S, $Illies .. Uni scorl119 subs: Lanqmade 4, 8'Cl'#ll S. Dellltman 2. Half\I..,.: Unlver1l1v, U ·U VAllllSITY OfM CJ1l CU l Saftt• Alla '7-<ha11ez ISi pinned 8. Orr 0:35. IOS-Mor9a11 CSI pll!Md Mlwjon 1:30. IU-llornlnkhof CSl pinned SCllaQ S;OS. 122-6. Orr <Cl tied Lerum M . 12'-ctouen CCI pinned Cha.,..t1:4S. 1ls-llllkllmond CCI Clec H•rtson 12~. 140-5Cfll.Wr ICI Plr!Md MlllOney ,. SJ. 141-Gr"IY ICl dee POMCtl ~. 1S.-Ve<01a CSl dee J. Hachlgl.,..._5. 167-&>nsall CS) dee IC Hach!Ql.,,._2 • 171-t<emble CCI Dinned Ar'\tl9ue 'so. 1t3-t<ul1> CSl pll\MdWl1104rCIS:OS. tfwt-Cl•Y (Cl doc NH 3·1. '") l•l alT JUNIOllll "Allll•ITY u.1111a, -................. <•> ('41 l•ttKI• UPSOn (~J F (4) Wlltol\ __... 1.M U1 F (1') R~ll t1-ft•nt11 (El •Inned EdWer'd' Ford C2l C C2I Of"IJ.tve S.3'. Smith (11 G (161 Ricker 10S--OllO!ler IEI pinned Kn•uer3 • lllnety l'2l G (41 G4bb5 tH-8eavor IE)-by forfeit. LB \(Orh19 'ubs· Anderson 2. 122~ VtroH (fl e>IMICI....,,.... O'C-112. 3 37. H•lltlme: LB, 24·21. t~trom IE> doc Olen 11..J. <See MAT, Page83) Prep Swim Summaries * VAaSITY ~•V•*Y Clttl 11'1 ~ to0 Mlelley "•1-r-t. f'V t. flV 3. i.ow.11. Tlmet: .... s. 100 lllr•-1. Kelly CF ) 2. S..cr ILi 1 HoU41M Cl'l. Time: 1 S4 t. 300 ~M-t. $1Jtl1r (FI 2. l(.._tet Cl'I I. YMMfUClll Ill. Time f 'It '° l'ne-1 l(rlltl " I 1 UIM (f I J ~ 11111. Time n 1. Otwlf'I0-1, l'OfHttr (LI 2. Hlnlura "' 100 l'lr-1. Mlklllll CLI 1 A~iCll fl'l J S.-llWl..W (l'l. Tl,,. I&. I. 100 irr .. -t. MOltt Cl'> J . .......,.,,, CFl l Krllll CPI. Ti-· •t.1. ioG ,, .. -t. H.ilanct cir> 1. "-llY t'l). lilvll l'I. Tlfnt: ! •1.e t• IM<lt-1. Kelly (1111 t ICl\Cl'llilf'+ !I'll.Minn Cft). Time; t•O..J JUNIOllll VAllllllTY "-\1111\falley CP I <Ml ~rt 200 Medley Relay-1. l'V. Time: ,,,. .. too ,,.._,_ Cl\flllt (,, ,, ,..,. (LIJ. loMle CLl. Tlme11·0'10. 200 IM-11. Mellel•llOfln <,, Tl'"'· , .. , so ''"-'· '"'''°" 11111 2. ~nclal' "U.Camtlblll fl')Tlme:M 1, IOOll'ly-1. llllotitn Cllll Tlfne• I to' 100 ,,...._, CN11ey (_.I 2 TWylNll Cl'U Wll90" (L). fhiw• SI._ tOO IKk-1. NeftM Utl l. I'~ (LIS.°"9qt"°" 11.l. TllMI 1 IU. MO arutt-1. Mtllftltoflfl '" t. Nitltofl lfl J. Vralllll CL), Tlll'lf· l.t~ .. -l'rN Atl.-y -t. ,.,, t. ~II. 'Tl,,,., .... u . Cout Leaaue, wm bG honored wllh a sports awards banquet lanilhl ~ •t San Cleme nte Inn, ,bl DI at?. ........ I MIU9yU .. llO tMAnttie<s2, Wml"910110 N'f Isl..,...., 4, MIMttot• a AllllMI .. "9111 .. IPfll•. .,..,. .. 1. V•ll<IU .... r 1 file) Ottr .. t a. uvt• t ,.. .,..,,_,, *""'" 11'1 t. Uldt 11111-. YM!ttllt;lli C\.I. TllN I 01._ -,,. ,_,...,_,, '" t. ,.., a. ~. '"-91 J1M.t. PtfOSiM·IO 'tf ,._...•YIAef~) Clft~ ., I I 'I - Century Basketball Edison-NII CdM, Spartans Vie; Tiit Tops Mesa Tests Ellgles Sunset Play Corona del Mar Hlgh's un- beaten Se1 Kine• ba~e already taken <>Qe m a jor step toward the Centutt-League basketball crown widu win over Estancia. Tonight coach Tandy Gillis• ;l.7-0 Sea Kings can take the second step-but to d"o it they must succeed in tbe Villa Park High gym where the Spartans of coach Ron Lindsey await. Villa Park {5-l > on the other hand can throw the league into a scramble with a victory. Th• two have met once before with Corona del Mar, the CIF 4·A's No. 2 ranked team, escaping with a one-point victory in tourney play. Estancia, meanwhile, will be trying to rebound from its re- sounding loss to Corona del Mar, but also llas a tough chore with a date in the Costa Mesa conf'mes. Tipoff in each case ls at 7, as are two other league encounters that don't mean much in term s of champions hip a s pirations - Tustin at El Modena and Santa Ana at Magnolia. Estancia, 13·2 overall and S·l in league, must contend with Costa Mesa's 4-2 Mustan gs, who gave Corona del Mar all it could han· die at Mes a recently before tumbling by one point. The Mesa-Estancia conflict pits two driving offenses against each other, although coach Dave Carlisle's Estancia quintet en· joys the advantage from the p e rimeter with 6·6 Jim McCloskey capable of hitting consistently from the top of the key. ' Mesa bas forward Danny Byers in the fold and that means The wild race for eeconc! placo an automatic double figure out-• ln the Sunset Lea~e contbuies put. He's scored in double naures tonight and Ed.laon a Cbaraers in each of Mesa's i.7 ces-ed will be trylnq to bold on to a one- Mark Oman has alto eonsis· 1amo mar11n wben they clash tent, hilting double fi,ura tn 11 with tbe sutprlsing Newport of the past 14 games. Harbor Sallon. Victory is virtually mandatory Tipoff la at 7 at Newport for Costa Mesa if coach Larry Harbol' Hlgb in a 1ame pltUng Sunderman's Mustangs are to the 4-2 Chargers against the 3-3 get into the championship pie· Sallort. ture. ElHwhere. league leader Meanwhile Alex Black a nd Marina (6-0) figures to defeat the Jacque Tuz, the two Corona del host Western Pioneers (0·6>. Mar juniors, key the Sea Kings Fountaln Valley's Barons (3-3 > attack. Black has averaged 16.6 travel lo Loara (3·3) while\ per league issue and Tuz b.{lS Westminster <2·4) hoata Los chipped in at a 10.3 rate-Alamitos (3·3). · although in the Estancia Hme it Not only will the Edison· was Pat Ahern and Ste_ve Newportgamefeaturetwoofthe Scbloer_ner who sealed . the v!c-league's most improved .teams tory with 13 and 12 points with but it will also match coaches their clutch shooting. (the Chargers• Lionel Purcell and the Sailors' Ken Ammann> Pirates Play Orange Coast College tries lo snap a two-game South Coast Conference losing streak when the Pirates host circuit co-leader Mt. San Antonio College tonight at 7:30. · Mt. SAC enters the game wlth a 3-0 South Coast mark, the same as Santa Ana-which is at Cer· ritos {2·1). Mt. SAC's Mounties have a season mark of 14·4 and are led by Angel Santiago (6-6). Tom Pokorski (6·7> and Duane Harding (6·6). OCC counters with a balanced attack centered around Skip Jeranko (6-5) a nd Phil Bolden (6~). who both teach at Edison. On paper, the Chargers rate as favorites because of guard Bob Vogelsang (21.8> and forward Bob Herson (12.1). Vogelsang does it all and should be particularly effective in an ex· pected run.and-gun game. The Sailors , 1·7 in the pre· season, are coming o!f an easy 74·56 wln over W estminstcr and have a top scoring threat in Kim Cooke 02.1). In his last two games, Cooke has scored 47 points and is another who likes to ' fast break. Off statistics, Marina should bury Western. The Vikings are averaging 73 points and allowing 53.6 while the Pioneers are scoring SS and permiUing72.5. · ~_Foreign Cars ~. __ : ~· · We Have Steel Belted Radials In Si~ .•• And Prices.e:foFtt "GSOO+S" Radial-40.000 Milt1ire WW PRICES ON POLYESTER ~14 C18-IC H1$.IC ff& IS QI! IS 117&.l~ "POLYGAS" RADIAL \VHITEWALLS for~Mt...,IJ ,,.,,on 535 AR78-13 BR78-13 OR7S.14 ERJ8.14 545 fR78-14 GRJ8.IC GR78-15 s55 HR78-15 JR78-l5 lRJ8.15 Plus si02 to ll'I , (.T. ~Ill& on "le 1r>d Gld l••t WHll(llALLS JUSI 1l1110t• "POLYGLAS"WHITE . LITTER WIDE TREADS .. IW!pCr(60-imn)& "'C.-. f+Wr 'ftr# PolffJas"~) A7M3 070-13 070-14 00.14 £6().lC EfiG.15 GJ0.15 Ffi0..14 G60-14 Pt111 $2.00 to \JO F.£.T. ~IC C11 $•le, "'° ale) ,, ... "POLYGlAS" for SMALL CARS "Cushion Belt Pol}glas" WIDE TREADS for CAMPERS F.xttl1ent for Light 1ivcks, Too ~2'5 blackwall '1 A7&-13 en u C73-14 1'1111 S177 ro S110 r ET. dfpelldlnt on tlze. and onl lite. WHIT£W&LU /uit u-.. "(' .... 1~\911" S6011>1Uft 565 IL16.UP1t s70 12-IU. l<PR "(' ... fat <;ti," f6Stl>llS.ft • S70 LJ.tUIPlt S75 U.llS. l<PR Auto Senice.e.for more good years ta ,our car Lube, Oil & Filter 59ss U01Ut1' ...... , .. ""'"'..........,'"'"' • (;(1"1plfle c~mi• lubrlutl°' ~ii rht111t and lilt~• • Htlp1 •n1ute 111111 .. u11•a p1m a 1moo1h. ~uir1 1•nform1ncc • r"lrut11-phoft,. hir t p• j>nlnlm•n1 • ladvdu llpl lrvda GOODYEAR TIRE CENTER COSTA~UACH 1196 N•.,. I ltwl. .; I 6tll St. 548-9383 M ..... ~ .. 7•W.M Front-End Alignment SJ388 ... ui-···-ulll . .. _ ··-h_ .. __ • <:omplele u1ly1l1 •nd e1i.-11t cornc:tlon-10 llKtHH Utt ,.11 .... 91111 l111p101 tt111ln1 ul•tr • P-.ltloft ~ulp•tnl.111~ by t~periti!eed pttl- llnnal" hf pt ttllltt • p..:ltloct al~ .... , . - Wedneeday. January 28. 19715 DAIL V PILOT 83 O.lly Pllee ,......., •l<M ... ll .... ,... MAT· .. Coatlaaed from 82 1~ <•> ll'lltMd Pylt 1 ,., ,..._,,, V•f'tH ( ) ,1,,_. ~ t lO. '47-GtJowen IU *< Vtrbtr9 a.J 15'-W111i.n• un-by I011e11 '47-CMl<Mi• (I) ,_ed E.1r~11 I ot. '"~ (1)'9< U.l' m-«JI .. (£) dK ·"llew\ 1·~ H#t•SIOMI CIE)-lbt' fot1t1t VA•l •TY ~I llO (IU M•llllfl.,. ... ~ tt-e. Lin (HI plnnH HlrKlw'rwltt ff. IOJ-011-lF) plMtcl 8 w. .. 1._. s.a 1 112-C. Un CHI*< Sm ll\, l 1 \10-Sell(llldeCF.NleMI,.. IOI 121~ , .. , dt< l.O<"""'t, 1-0. tU-OuffY oo •c lkl<llltY ~l \AO-W .. Mr "') plnMd 1Ctllo!J9) S.. M~Y-klft (ff) piftfttd RO\\ C M 1JoC-W69Mf (ft) dK We9•t•t1.a.1. 16~tr (HI dtC lltolbOtn\. 11 • 1n-T11Klt 00 diec Irwin.• 1 1t1-Rou OOdt<,Jt>uram. $-0 .. lolt-«etnlk CF l dlt< Brown, 4-0 JUNtO•VA•SITY ----.... u ...... 8HClt uu lltl , ....... -tS-Tolbln CHI dt< Grlmet;. 1a.11 143-0SllOl'M (l'I •<Yeo, IHI 111--Gerflef' IG Cl"> OK lit H-. ~ 1 IJD-M<COwell CH) plnMd N-7 311 1%7-M. H..s. IM I plM4td Milc,...11. ·u. 1*3~. TIIOrlon IM) dt< 8erl1Ck, 3-0 l<IO~ .... , IF) de< .#Oflff, 1·0 1•s-<:Mne 10 II'> dee Aoultrr l 1 1$4-5m•ll (F) plnnecl Wortnylo~t: 2.~. 14~1t ~ween «enMdY <>ii 4'r>d Goldtn, •-4. 11S-l.upPenS IHI de< Venl.,,\k1•, a.1. 1tl-Wllson IHl tM< ElcMr. •·O HWt-MurPIW IMl plnn«I Mulhnc Ila.• P•OSH·SO"H ir.otlllll (tSI (!JI H1t11t. 8ffcll •S-CH I dtc L.oOl\trl Sllley, S-1 l•c•~·---1IXl-W111& (HI plnr>ff Z•r•la :35 112-BrtrwMn IF J cit< Htl'IJltY, 2.0. TRITON REBOUNDS -San C lemente High's J ohn Carson goes h igh t o grab a rebound during sophomore game with Scott Spear (35). Jim C umming (22) and Mike Brawley (10). San Clemente player s include C h arlie Hammond (30), Sean Mulligan (50) and Pete Ditto (20). 120-tle bttwun ThOrton (HI ind LOOK OF FRUSTRATION -Mission Viejo's Roger Huffman (34) is ~:1~ei~ro1i IHI dee plnne4fl(~1• c losely g u arded by Gene Gednov (40) and John S~ephens (22) in 10-1. -Mission Viejo Tuesday. Others in photo in- clude Mission Viejo's Roger Huffma n (34), sophom ore basketball action Tuesday. Another Tnton moving m ::_~:l~l=~~~~· is Pete Duvall. u~i. bttween M<C.01ey tH> _, -~------------------------------------~-Id,~. Tri tons HandMV Los Al Entries Alamitos s'oCal Wins, 72-69 Prep Soccer 1s.e-~nnMr <Fl dee Shlt10s1 s.o. 1's-Al~I O·OOKW•9ner,z-O. 1n-Tertnll (Fl dtc Plough, S-0. 1'1-Me~ (Flplnn.OGrosc:otl :11. -iwt-Ell,,.s IHI dee B•ll•st•r .~L lst Loss l'trTllvndlly CIHr, Track l'•s1. Plrst ... st 7:4S ... M. SI Eucta l'lnt ltact. U Eu<Us 6Qt, et.II•• Ht1 fbc.n l"lltST ltACE -400 yard.s. l yMr old maidens. Clalmlnv. Purse '1700. By GLENN WHITE C1almlnvprlce~500. . OftlltDally,.lletStaff Ot11"sLltti.Oo11 (1.lpllllml 117 Victory Ola'1t (Morrison I KlntCatcl!Me IMvlesl Marvarll• Orlvtr IN1COC1emusl Leo's 8•11y (1.lpllaml Rularks Van (WelClll Nevada Flyer (C•r001•l 119 "' 111 11' 172 122 SIXTH ltACE -810 yards. 3 vMr oldS & up. ClalmlnQ. Purw '3200. Ctalml"ll price $5000. Tiit Pioneer Oldsmoblle. Gypsy Lady 8ar IBroou 111 San Clemente High's Slllp'sCoffeeCup IBanksl m _rnite tB•nksl 119 Racing Results FerT•Hday CM•r, Tree• Pest Tri tons Pl ay.ed hustling Deal For Ru1 !Adair) 117 A-Glory Pf\entom (Nicodemus I 122 Almcnt Putwdtd IWelchl 122 tl9 PllltST •ACE-400 ytrds. 3 1'!•r d r d h t 53 8 Klebur9's lnttnt !Gar ~•I e ense an 5 0 . OualotlCLtriSW) 122 0.WlbelTrnsurel 122 o~.IM~.Clalmln9.Pur~S1700. percent from t h e field to Ai·mr~0t~e1•11'.;a"!d1 i:~ Rov•1 Pus CL.lph•ml 1" M11,.!~11M•1'°° 5 20 4.20 3 . .., h d h M • . v· · "" • Sll9nl Trutment ICre•verl 121 """' ""' an t e ISS IOn teJO TwoGr•os IMylesl 117 84'xup IC.Ill 117 Ml"O•llasOu• IBroolls) 12.60 7.00 SOphOmOres their first But GOH On !Rlchud.sl 117 Le Olnero (1Cnl9M) 119 GoOll Tory (Watson) S.20 Tlme-20.70 SANTA BARBARA- Freddie Glaster scored 22 points, David Barron hit 13 points a nd h ad 12 assists and Doug outings. The Vanguard.5 return to action Thurs- day night. facing host Cal State (Northridge>. pl tp I 22 3 4 3 9 3 4 4 13 1 10 3 l 0 0 4 18 n SoC.I Colleoe 1111 McLean had a top game ft n defensively in s parking Gr•sier 10 1 Southern Cal College to a :OO:~s ~ ~ 72·69 COiiege basketball Walkon~ "2 0 win over host W eslmont '~~ ~ ~ College, here, T u esday '""-tstud 1 o night MCNe•I 1 o • MCLun 2 u The win was SCC'e Tot•rs 3A third in five NAIA league H•t1t1me:Soeai,lt-29. loss in 17 games this SECORDltACE -400yuds.3rur . SEVENTH ltACE _350 .,.,ds.l Alsor•n-Hewallen 1s1e,Prewnt season. olds &. up. Clalml"'J, PurH $2300.· yHr Olds &. up. Allowance. Purw Arms, Jo's Martini, Bunny Hunter,i------------- b d Cltlmlnvprlce$3000. 1t9 saooo. Tiit SI. Jude HO$Pll•I and 8elllena,KIP1ydee,TreQicEnd PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE The osts ease to a ~ltraln(Otf1SM) "' AetielbllltatlonCenter. Scretctwct -Fortunetelltr, Rrst.__ ____________ •• ___________ _ J5-3J halftime edge and The Count (Watson! 119 ,.._8y "•nc•r IMorrlSOft) 11, Hetlve, l'MA Rosi•, Arm•oette flCTITIOUS IUSINESS STATEMENTOP'WITMDltAWAL dded .tstead"l totake SonOfGoldCupld(ThomHI "" .... 111 NAMESTATEMEHT l'AOM pa 1 1 Y Bid~ (Broollll In Slw"sAGo llCnlQlll) 11, U EXACTA ._M11t11ttr14Mt60900 & 6-The leUow•nv Ptrson is dOlnQ Ml .. AR'tMIEASMl l'Ol'IEAATING a 75·58 basketball HllvaGOoOO•r(UOh•m) 1n T09Exp1~1on1c1erlsse1 MluDalla10M,,. it . nesut UNDER trt. mph Tuesday an."'r Top""er 1\19) 119 Frff&ars (CllrdoHl '" WHITESWAN JANITORIAi. SUP· l'ICTITIOUS•USINESSNAMIE U "' • Run 810bby Run (Treasure) 122 Black ThoUQhl I Brooks) ::; SlCOND ltACE -870 yardS. lYNr PLY CO .. 23341> Vie San MIQutl, 1.l19UM The foll-Inv oerson l\H withdrawn noon to tie with Mission lmpre"lv•ly(Adalr) 117 ~dS!ue>.kc••.lml119.PurseS\'IOO. Hlll~Calllornta936Sl H. Qeneral parlner from th• · • ( h S th Co t 'TMlllO"ACE -400yards.3yellr EAlsy AltaJtt(C•lll .,._,AOC t Cl A C 1 23344V1 Sa I V1e10 or t e OU as old -·ldens. ClalMi"". Pur$tl $1700. Crimson a-er (Watson) 117 ("·-~ ) 36 60 ,. 20 • .IC) ark norew ., er, • n parlner\l\lp oper•1 nQ under Ille ht-.,_ ... .... .... ... s · · · Ml9Vfl, 1A9una Hiii\. Calllornla 92•SJ tlllous lbuslnest nam• of League lead. c1a1m1nopr1ce'6SOO. Got"•MlulNlcOdemus> 111 Wllllam~lchlHartl 1·80 63·~ Tllhlbusonesilsconducttdbyen ln FITNESS ENTERPRISES OF John Car son and John '""-ry'sTeddyBarlOHY•rl in Aw•ySlwGoesll.lpflam) .... dlvldu•I CALIFOR NIA al 3101 Mo tll•Q•" KlptyGOO(lle tBrooksl 117 IEIOHTH ltACE -870 yardS. 3 yNr Time -0 ,77 Clerk A C•s•er A,..nu.. Costa Mesa. Callfomla9!6'6 Stephens gave coach TIQer"sTale(Hartl 1n olds .. up. Clalmlnv. PUr$tl $1100. Also r•n -Proud Possession. This slAlternenl WU filed wHI\ the TM flctltlou\ bUS•MiS name state Mike Reed' S troops the l.ucky L Miss (Clerlsse > 117 Oelml"ll price""°°· FIMtlerll.. Pennlck.lty, Bold Tornado, County Clerk of Onnge County on ment lor thf: parlnersnop w•s lllecl on Stiesta Go INll <My lei I 122 Gall~'s 8oy (Cr••Vtr > 122 Ouvter 8enctff J-ry u. 1'7•. Julyl, 191• lfl lhe County of °'•"9f • firepower as they COm· GlddY'I Rocket IRlcllardt) 122 Palm Gold IC.rdozal 11' Scretc!Md-Wltch Crttk Cl'uc f'J1... Full N•rne and Addrtl' of 1,,. Person bl.ned for -'2 po1·nts to help Mr. Wiiiow Sprfnvs <W•tsonl 1 12217 Jack Simon IHertl 1" PubllPltd Orange Coast O.lly Pliot, W1t1>e1raw1-: Leon c;.na su1e. 10626 'I • (T I "--rSporl (W•t•Anl "' THlltDR6 C,. •ooverds.3-arOkl .... i f l • For'tune1el~r reuure ~....... -,. ,.._ • •-JM. :it.and F•lb. •.It, II, t916 353-16 e1 Toro, Fountain V•lley, Ollllomla Varslly O.na Hills I, M•S\•on Viele:>. OH scor•nv de I• Torre. Newport Harbor 1. Edison l, San c1.rnente •• Laguna 0. SC \torong: Gue•• 3, MagM!Y t, Berba 1. Marina•. Western t. Mlrln• scorlnv. 8rebric, Klepller, ICarm.n, Wlclbur9. s.nta An• 1. Foun11ln Valley o. JUNIOllt VAltSITY Fowoteln 'Valley I, NewPOrt o Unlvel"Slty t. Mluoon VieJoO Unlve.l"Slty scorlnQ-M<C.arlty 1, Mlulon Vle}o-n by lor1eit. Mar IN•. WHlern l . Newport Herbor 1, Ed•so~ t. Sant• An• I, Founlaon Valley o. t..a9ur>a I, S.n Clemer1te O. PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS aUSINISS ,.AME nATEMENT TN follow•nv per$0n IS 00019 bull· ness• SPEC IA LIZED SALES COMPANY, '"' S.llne Ortve, Hut>l· •fllllon Beach, CA 91646 Otvld ,1... Wltk•rst11m, •m Saline Ol'lve, Hunlonqton Buen, CA 92"46 This lbuslnt\S Is tonduct•d bY en,,.. cllvi~I Oevod L WlOenl\am This Sl•ttmenl was 111.0 wllll the County Clerk of Or•nve County on Otctmlbff JI. 1'7S ,...,"', Pllbllshed DI'•~ Coast o.lly Piiot, J.,., 1, "· 21. ,., ,,,, ~s avenge 3 pa r 0 ear ter f'l"tNllllve (.Adair) 122 HMlvetwlst (Nicodemus! 119 mtldtns.Cl1lmln9.PurwS1100. 9210I.. losses to Mission Viejo~ . HelC1l'sAnve1 <C•ll> m Hilo B1o111 l1Cn191111 m TrulyAVe11ture Leon G. Skeit PUBLJC NOTICE h d 8 f S Oltme>nd B•rs IC1trlsse) ll'l INl<odemut.I • 20 1 80 MO PUBLIC NOTICE ,--.......__ -~ l'·JSJ~ They a l 0 an l"OUlllTHltACE...,yerds.)Yffl" AmldlVllRlcl\ardsl 122 S.venteen~lvelC .. doHl 3.60 180 ----PubllVwdOr•nveCoulOallyPllol. -------------.,...--- Clemente's 23 points in old$. Allowance. Purtt" ~100. Tile °''Limits 8arCMylesl l .80 FICTITIOUS IUSINES JenueryJ, 1•.11. 11, 1'76 19-76 "~C::,.T~~~!:~:,,1::~s th ( rth ter as the Oorh Benner Retlrtmenl Pitr1y, NINTH ltACE -400 Y•rds. 3 YMr Tlme-20.S6 NAME STATEMENT JUNIOllt VARSITY UM 1421 1111 Sa11ta Atta 97-1.oz•llO (SJ pinned croucll 1:.0. lOS-Hern.welll (Cl IMC Mltc,.11$-1. 114--Uller ICJ de< R•YH 2 ... 122-n..ye< ICldec Ptdrozo44. 12'-£11.s (Cl dee en.,,., 2.0. ;~~ IC~ed McMlstt!r~ 1«1-&aws IC> ~n by~ U7~1cldo CS> pinned A..,molldl SS \S6-8rown (SI dee P•nnlnvton 11.0. t67-£vans ICl dtc Btclltol 1-4. 1n-v.rr-elt IC) plnlled Hughel~:lS. 1'3--'loll ICI dee Gall-s 2-0. Mwt·Goe99el <C> ponenMd GanU>.s l .•S. T-.1tWl"fttffttt 1. FCM\teln V•llty l. Westmlrmer J. t..o.ra •. Cyprwu s. <:Mon• del '""-r6. Pecltke 7. Marine •· Ml,slon \'ltJo 9. '""-9"0lle 10. 0.M Hiiis. PUBLIC NOTICE ~ICTITlOUS auseNHS NAMEITATSMENT • the folloWlrl(I PfflOll 15 doi1'19 llUSi-- nesses: RADIO CAL.I., AEAI. ESTATE. '140 w.,,_ A,,.nue, F-i.ln Valley, Calltornl•, 9?708 Ernest H. l.eBlanc, 1'171 Klee Orlw, Irvine. Calllorn1a 9270S This DUslness ls condu<t.O lb'f on in- otlvlcllil•I Ernest H Le8lt11< This s1at•menl wes IHed wltll trwo Counly Citric of Or•nve County on Januery 14, It" lt09«1tT A. EAST MAM ........ yatuw Z7tO H•rtler llttltwlrd Solle.JU ea.tll Mele, CA n.24 f'J1414 Publli.Nd Orange CO.st Dally Pll~ Jlll'I. 21. 21 end Feb. •• 11, ",. 2:)6.76 e OU quar Con'-r•le Jet (1.lpfltm) 122 otdS. O•lml"'J. Purse $t900. 01unJn,,, Also r•n -Scarlet BrllClll'S. T,._ loUOWlnQ oersons t redo<nQMI· PUBLIC NOTICE The lollowonv person Is OOing !>IN· hOStS pul it away ror RomanOutsl (Ce111 122 proceMOOO. Dividend's Crook', Top A•on ,,,,.n, nr\U\ nessH-;.·RARI &OOt<S, JSt\ Ftm Sl., I good when Carson hit a D\lllllNow (Werd) :~ =~~~~~:~:rnl lit Fickle Wave._A•.nt s INn, Re~ltts BEACH AUTO MART, 192616H<h1------SU6--,-----lntone.CA9211• PUBLIC :'elOTICE 9.root basell• n e s h ot and a Azure 8ar2 (Hartl .,., I I I :~ Wind, BertN sS1Uer Blvd HunllnQton 0.Kh Clllllornl• NOTIC"' Of"T•UST"' .. 'S «•I.£ Ellyallou Harari, 3S91 FtM St., RoyellyAuur•d IClerlsse> lu Tllree Pollcys Ada r 1 Sc;r1lched -Lucky L. Miss, S.al 92641 ' ' i.:.n ...... VALENTE-lrvlnt. CA •UI• pair Of free thrOWS tO Jet Accordant (Ad•lrl 111 ~~=·~I~:~::: ::7 GOH On, Gypsy l...adY Bar, Wont•r O•nktr Corp. 14162 Rollingwood, T.S. No. 11\14... Tiii\ lbuslMSS 1s condUc1.0 by an In· f'ICTITIOUS a USINESS NA.ME STATEMUIT k "t 62 51 'th 4 22 9 3 Spud(Cr I 112 Winds EIToro,C•lllOr!lia9?6'0 SADDl.E8ACIC ESCROW divldual m a e l . Wl : 01:~7"up~AA~~--;:e. y:~~!;. = =!The Wes:~~1':,.ssal t21 ~UlltTH ltAC~OO yards 3yur G•rv Wllll•ker, 74162 Rollingwood, COMPANY •s duly •ppolnled TruslM E Har.,I ness::~OER HOAH, 2"° A HewpDtt left in the game• Tiit V.1.P. Aoom of Wntmlnsttr. G1"91r A911in (Ward) 111 otdS&. uP· Cl•lmln9. Purse S2500. El Toro, C..lllorno• 92.ao ~ the foll-lnq Otscrlbed deed Of TNs Sl.llement was Ii~ wltl\ lhe Boul•v•rd, Cost• Mna, CA Tt'oe following person Is doing lbu!>i- The Diablos o( coach Wln-L.ad tBanksl 119 Mr.88ar (Card0Hl 122 Hlt,lhlSc>Md O•n•~· McGowon, 40CM Via En· trust Wll.I. SELL AT PUBLIC CA>unly Clerk of OrllRQt County on ICentRolberts.3119Glbralt.r,Costct Joe Re· id were s hut OUl or SneallAttack (Clerlue) 119 l..oolo.s Like It !Treasure I 111 (l(nlfhtl 10 00 S.00 3.20 tlnas, Cypr.S\, ~allt=~lb\' AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIO. OKem~ 31. HIS P'Slt1S '4Ha.CA TlmeMdAoeln (LIC>n•ml S.10 J.«I This bU\IMSS \ c a Cor• DEA FOR CASH lpeyabl• •I lime of This '!luSlnttS Is being <Ondl.dld lb'f their inside S h ootin g Ki"llOThtRoadlMl\chtlll ).po poratlon. t.ale In lewtul -y of lhe Untied P\ltll1SNdOr1n99CoaslOellyPllOI, enl,.,ivictlHI g and Could make 'Ani . . E . . Time -20.24 SlllttSI .. , rlQht, lille llfld lnlerest con-Jllft.1, U, 21, 21, lt16 I0-76 Kent RolberU ame • t t Al50 rllft -Cllld:amoor, Go Silenl· Danker Corporation ¥eyed to llllCI now lltld by It -~od This stat-I hied wllh IN County only 27.7 percent of their • a n r1es ly,RllythmOusler,Sotom•n's'Mlrld, ~;~:~~l•ker Oetd of Trust In the property PUBLIC NOTICE OtntofOnnveCountyonJ,.,..,.yl•. last half S h OtS. ZAndy Moon Thi\ \l'11ement WU filed Wiii\ the llef'efnafttf'des<rlti.d: "76 · 1) th Noscratchts ---"'-··nly Cl•rk of Oren"t County on TRUSTOR: VICTOR A. VALENTE Oster,Mlllant&SucllrMtt Addition a y. ey """' .. "'°JEAN VALENTE, hut.lMnd end PICTITIOUS•USINESS Atterneyutuw were s creened Off the l"or Tllvrsd.ty TM 1.edyStrHker (Gonzalez) lot l'lt•TH •ACE -S4'1 yerds. 3 yNr Janueryll, l'14 wl.. MAMIE STATEMENT 444-ltTellt" Cle.w&l'Ht "-1•11.ovelVervaral 113 olds &up.Sttrtertll-•nce.Pllrse l"Sl"7 e ENE F 1 c I A~ Y : ThelollowlnvpersonlsdOlng~ .. _..A-•,'"A'2Tot boards a nd got f e W re • 6' ...,..... Pvbllsl\ed Or•nve Ca.SI O.lly Pllol, ---• Fl"l .. HtU:O........ OurMlrktt(PlncayJr.I \IJ '1800 ···16 ENVIRONMENTAi. HOOSING, INC., -2·0,TH CENTVRY/SUP'"'AIOA· """ bounds. a DallyO.wllleM lft a tM bcft seiurotr Jan.21.•nd Feb.4, 11, 11, lt7• .,... •Cellton.1acorp0rellon .. PubllShed Oranve coa t Oalty Pltot. They ml.SSed seven SSEu<Unt1J111,7U1 6HtllltcK SIXTH •ACS -•furlongs.JyNr IMyltsl 13.10 76.20 t.20 Atcorded July76, lt74 H lnstT Ho. MA TIC, H O? 8olu Avenue. µan l l 2lllndl"•b 4 II :,14 Old maiden colts & geldlnQ1 Ind In Amit 1Hllr11 •.60 3.60 2'010 In boolt 1120S peoe '46 of Offlcoal wutrnlnsle<, C.llfoml• 92613. · • · • • 2Jl7• free throws in the fourth PlltST ltACE-1 111• ft'lllH. Fiiiies Calif. Cl•lmlnv. Pu•St J7,000. Oelm-IClnt,J Rapid (Adatr) S.«I PUBLIC NOTICE AecorOs In"" offk• of the Recorder of SERVOllM TION COA POAATIOH, • q U art e r t 0 f Ur the r & rnarfl, 4 YNr olds & uP. O•lml!lll. Ing price US,000-UO.OOO. L.~ Tl--27.'1 °'envt Cou"IY; uld d .. d of trust A Oel•••rt Corpor•llon, 7402 Bois. Purw $1,000. Cl1lmlnv prlct $8,000 -Senior Cllllt"'· Also ran -T ruuan, J•Y Joy, l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESJ des<rl~ the loll0Wff'9praper1y: Av.nue, ~stmlnster, Cllllfomle 9261l. damage t h eir cause. $1,000. 819Wt00y IRamlrtzl 111 L.~tnlnQ Watch. Frtncl\ Mllle,O\ull· NAMaSTA'tEMaNT 1.EGAL. OESCAIPTION: This DUlinnt Is ,;otlduc;t9e1 lb\' e CIOf'· S S d ta. ...,.Oompanlon (Umbtrt> 111 Vendltl Boy (Gllllganl 111 nb•n Eighth Wondtr B•rende's 1 i. dol lllnl por111on COtl pear pace <1ie AavlShlnQ IV•lvnzuelel 116 A-1'\'lnct'tHonor (Ollvared 114 CNrQ. ' :llS~low 119 Ptr50n !IQ • PAACEI. 1: An undlveded 7 1241 GEORGE P . COVL TEA losers with 18 points. C.lw y IL.otttzl 111> Dlsel)9'.wlnv Act 1Rou1esl 11• Scqtclled -°" 1.lmlts, Sir O.cu, TECMA, ,,.15 Sendcastl• ln.. Plf''ent Interest 1n •nd 10 1.011 o1 Tract AtlorNY tor R•vl•trant SMO-fltt (1SI ISll Mlstle!IVlt)e Rutellell <Aravonl 10'1 1Cl1195elblstlen (C.mpasl 11• ""'-•Trax HIMllngton Beecll. CA 92441 No. 6027, rn the City of NtwPOf1 eeacn, Tll•s st1ltMtnl wn flltd wlll\ the Q\atagal (8an) 110 OttOCM'\P IGonultll 1IW ~ H ~on a Map tf\ert0f rec.orcseo in County Clerk of Orange C-.Cy on ._mm•nd Ill II" llllSOtllf Cac>S-tness (Harris) 113 ~ Atwlts (Novuezl 11• SIXTM lllACIS -300 y•rds. l yeer Wllll•m Ot.c.ar ~ntoon;.~ CA ~ 310. PllOff 1' end 10 ot Ma· J-rv•. "74. Mc!Cenz'-(II F (9) Huffman Mllrnl"ll O.ncer !Rosales) 11S JustlceJ.A. (Aragoni 11l otc11 &. up. Cl•lmln9. Punt $3200. :::'estlt ln., Hun nvton · ' cell-Ml~, In tht offtce OI the Carsqn USI C 1121 &rllWley OrHmsot FortUN IGon~IHI 113 Or. Sc:MenholU (Leon•rd) 11• Just Jim 0.ndy ~-• I Ofld ttd..., I County Recordtrohllld county. ~ 1111 G (7) K,,.ar Glorlfled ICampasl 11$ ~ro Glolmen (Toro I 11• IMylftl 11.60 11.<IO 14\.i) e11!:'.!!.I""' 1 c uc wr lln ~ EXCEPT •II mlntr•ls, -and MulllQlln UI G <•ICummlft!I Ledy Flu (Olar I 116. Aor•IArmor (Hewleyl 11• e-Go (Cltrlss.l 1•.20 ·IS.00 WllllMn o. Montoornerv metetsol•,..,.., kind and cllerac:terend PS1114 Publisl\ed Orenvt Coast Delly Piiot, J-ry 1•.11. JI, 8"CI Ftbnl...,,, 197' 144·76 SCKOf'lnvsut>s: c;.d110v 4,0uvall4, Benni CVervar•> ns Mavvlt 't8olb !Harris I 114 TopTOp (8rookSI 10 . .i) This st•tement """ flltd with ti. ell coal, l!SPMlturn, Oii, end othe< like Olt1o •· MV scorlnv wt>s: OtCaws 4, Bold 11\'0ducer 1~11 1u. Alsa Eli1lltle Time-tS.SS COuntr Clerk of Orenoe County on wbstances In or on wld lend. but, Altxendtrf. SICOND•ACS -lfurlQ"9S.lYNr Mister Dan (Ollveresl 111 Alto ran -Five IC. 81r, Mr. T09 OKftftWtl, tt7S llOMvtr, welvlno aM relHslno any H•lltlnw: S8ll Clemente, 3S-J3. ' 500 Shllmrocll B1y 1se11•rsl 114 Tu. COmt>et Man, H•rt B•n, Tiny PS1t14 end ell rlfht of entry lo tilt -1.Ce of . PltSSHMAN old fllllts. Clalmlnv. Purst I'. · A-Satin Pr I net !Olivares) 11• Bert, Ro<llln See. DUIMS l.o Mlsmo Pllbllltled OrMVe Coast Dally Piiot. Yid property encl edelltlol't waiving and Sa!ICJ-11te (41) UOI M. Vlelt ~~~":f,!"~~lv~:~!°° -t ll,OOO. A·Mn. M.C.Mortonownedentrv. ScrlltclMd -PH Apollo Jey, Top Jen 1 14 11 • lt71> J1·1• ~Int ""Y end all rlvht of enerv to O'HllllOfllft (ti F 11•1 Rlltltr1S StMN!lsJIBlonde (Hawley) 1111~ Sl[Vl[NTH •ACE _., .. f·-....._. • TOfltoBars, Copy Rlglll,QulckGN«t --·-·-·-·-·-------11\eSUbiSUrlll<AlofMld ..,.._rtytoedl1-Parker co F 131 Btnedl• I MyL.lttltM1r9ie (L.emlbutl .. .... vn -~........ PUBLIC NOTICE ._of soo ... , lbel-the sunece of l)uNvln (10) .c (16) P'tlcl\t ................. (' ~z1 11S ........ olds .. up. AllCIW•ncet. Pww .. RACTA W..t JIM 0..,. Mid property to . Olsten<• of 500 feet MulllQlln (U). G (OlSdlrnldt ~;;F.;;;;'s <B•HI 113 Jll,000. s-e-o.,,.10 m.sa ------------lbeloW the wrfK• lbY dffd recorded HDrvltll U) G 1151 OeC.SllS T;j' T ldT•1-(Toro I 111> N9ver Short IHewley) lit PICTITIOUS IUSINESS Acwll I, t"6, In llooll 7tts, Pll'JI 511, Of. SC scorlnv subs: Pettit •• AnOenor. 1.0..!'t.:. IAr1111011I IOI PWKl'IO 5eQur• (Toro) 11) SIVIENTH ltACE -•oo yllf'ds. ' NAM• STATEMENT fklel Records. 4. Tlltor Mlt Buda (011VlrH) 116 COrnlsfl Coast (Plnc•Y Jr.> 116 YHr olds .. up. Fii llH & mwes. Tiie followl"ll ptrSOM ere dOinQ lbuSI· A L $ 0 E x c E p T 1 N G MV scorlnQ sull: SofTMrs 7. Oreft ON (GonUIHI 111 lold Wltntn (Muno1 I I 1' CIHSlfltcl •11-•nce. Puru 57000. "'91M: THEREFROM Units 100 to Ill, 201 to Hlllftlme:MV,29-18. .-.-rtcllnScout (Campesl 114 CNcPlttOO SAIL UNLIMITED, 35301 Del 212, 301 to l\2, «11 to '12 lnclUSive H Basketball eeii..-... unau Almy S1, Col911te .. &oston U 1S, ..,_ HemPstlln 13 Cornell12, NleQ•rt IO o.nmoutl\ sa. Hofltr• S6 Mempl\ls SI 91, LllS.lle 71 Pflnr;eton69. PennS2 Autv•n 102, Pltl.slbUrOh 11 VlllllnoveM, St. 8on1ventu,.12 Duke ... O..,,hhon 7' Miu. Stl7, Mluovrl w 1' ArlZOl\ll 111, Portland SI .. E Hew NledCI lot, N.M. HIQlllMdt " Nt"'l!CM·L.H Vt9H 11'. N Ar11. IOI NW Ntrartne ... COl •f ldllho. 0rt90n Tecll n, ClllcoSU1 jllt. L.o1N 49, I.a Vtrne 43 TMl•D .-ace -• furtOflts. 3 .,.., old m111den fflllts. Clelmlno. Punt '6500. Cl•lmlr19 prk• 520,000.su,ooo. TroM Elkl L..ocl09. ~ly Halo (Valentvtlel 117 1..UCkyP\'ttendtr <R•mlrHI 117 Ult Ott (Martlnll 111 OW Trudy (TONI) 111 PrcMHIFtewer (Hewl..,) 111 All Marie IArllOORI 109 .JoAUe Me• St•r (L.emtiert> 117 OutenM4dts (Rotella> 10' Cend'f'• Pet (Howard) 111 SeM aeo <Gonnl•r> t09 Pe• The Ollffit. (Mofelts) 111 MllAl'NU (IMM) 112 POU•TM aaca -I ,.,,.....,_ 3 .,.ar 014 lftlldt" fllllH. Clelmlf'9. Purst U ,SOO. Clolml11Q price m.--.1s.ooo. TlleBlvf••n. O\frt Mlfl ewo1a1111 117 Urttto5Ptu,,.. IMI-) 114 Tl'llf!IPtt 81\MS (Pl11cey Jr.) 114 -..::::;ii1iiii;iijillliiiiiijjjlllliiiiiijiillliiii;iiilliiii;-.. tty'•"°" (Gdl\ultt> 112 ... ~k.1to (Ar09lftl 112 SMALL BUSINESS LOAMS . sso,ooo.s 400,"000 5-15 Years GOVT. CUAUllTEfl Steve Grief & .......... OIAM61COUHTY OfflCI. 131-3117 ..,. ...... Me NY ~OP .... w..-Utl ........... _, "'.,. ... ... .................. ,..., Oetll(ious llt•tnl ,..,, 1 t7 lleautlful ,.,lnctH 1"4Ml9sl 117 T,.,tly Cue> ltastlldtt I 117 c.NyStlar 1011.,,aresl 117 S<Mft (lllC8'Ctl ti) C:..\lllO Coutll (Meno I 11' ICliltMtr Se.renedt ff-• m ''"" utc -Ai-c •¥a --on ttlrl. "111'" • "'""'° ' ~.,-.. & up. Al•~· ,...,,. ,,,..,......., T,.wl Chle>ef t1ktf'•flt1d. t<Jille'• l'\'W (!Wwley) I ::..~:7~wn> ~ DtM't ICMll"9tl C.....LH'(fOH•ttttt Maul f"r ~~ell (!'411'\H!I I Galloplft9 Pine (L.embtrll Ill IKn19M) 7.00 •.OO 3.00 OblltlO Strfft 0.n• west MlrlM, sno-upon llW Conclomlnluin Plan,... PflnceHarold (Ara90nl 11• Ml•~rCopy (Adtlrl 3.«I 2.60 t>Me,...nt,CA''262' corclad In 8oOll 107>4, P-oe 313 of Of· Sii-soi Glau IVel•.squtll 111 5"e1letr's(:llok1 IWud) 4 • .i) Gery Rebert McAvoy. U10 Harbor tlclel At<orOs of Orenoe County Md Truly LuckV fV1lde1) 116 Tlme-tt.• •~ •2ft,CostaMew,CA'2426 _..,.....,,thereto rteordtd on 8oolt Clove'• f'ector (Ceceresl 113 A.llD ran -Mick•~ Sun ~. C•lvln Taylor Swltrer 11, 11S1 ~. "-99929of Offl<l•I R9'ordL Sonk Sfluttlt (MeMI 1 IJ Deer OM Glrl, Rllytllm1c Pl\yllls, Bold i1119fte VIile AW., (Oronll, CA '1120 PAACEI. 2: Tekeelk'kll (si-rnakerl 11:1 "-9gyGel Tllll tM1$1ntss 11 conducted lby a Unit •OS H sllown upon tl\t Al1t lll1lilllt 113 NII tcn~htl tllftl"al per1Mrshh> Qlndornlnlum Plan rteorded In 6ooll Holst•Wln (Pltr<t) . Gery A. McAvoy I~. Pt(le m of Oftl<l•I RK«Cb In CNef's Holld•y IV•r9•r•> 119 •tOMTH lltACE -350 y•rds.) .,..r TMs statement was flltd with the 11\e offke of the County RKordllr o4 Sllverltar(Oonzalul 10I elcts&up.Cl1lmln9.Purs.s1t00. CovMY Cl•rk of or.nge ~r on seldcountyenO•-ndtntflttMffto,... Nacho (H•.,,l•Y > 1 ii Oust Otvll t Oec:el'Mef u, lt7S cordld In BOOll 101•, P•Vt m of Of. •IOMTH lllACa -1 .... mlle1onturf. .. llllts & l'l\ff9S, • ye•r Olds 6 ..,. CtatSffled eliow.ncts. ""'" $20,000. (Wettoll) 17 .40 11.60 • •. 80 I P.U fkllll RecordS, In ttlt office of Illa Collf'I. ICl!lllVllnl• (Nicodemus> 1.<IO UO PW!lsMd 0renve Coast O.llV POot, tyRecordtrofsaldcountr. Aocuts 8ar Rt4"1 (Htrtl 7.00 .i.. 21, 21end Ftl>Ntty •, tt. 1m • 310 Fernen4o Avenue No . .OS, T11M -11. 9' UM6 NfWpOf1 BH<h, CA. SllverCretk lt•nch. Or'Ollft9 (Alvererl Lt.'t .Joy (Pll'l<•Y Jr.I JollV~t <Olivares I FestCourler CTorol Kernadore (Lotter> WllllnQ #Mkt CSlloeft'l•ktr> Aclmlralbllllr Vo\ln•) $otltran• II (Gonllled AMW810f'O (Hawley) SI Ink (Sft'l 1111) 114 '" 114 114 "' 11) 11• '°' 114 114 Al.so r•n -Sn•nnah GhOSt, Hy "(If • Slrett address or '°"""°" Str~. T"'1's "•lb, Ven's Slw. No PUBLIC NOTICE d1sl111Mtlon Is._.. •bOve, "°_,_ Sect So"llS• Lite Cargo, c.l•b«ltn tylsll_.1tttolbcomP1tt.-or<.or· 0Uttll8ff 1---------~~--I rK1nK,I." ICraw.d-OoB•lbyJoe PICTITIOUSIUSINU$ The befltfl<lffy uncttr &aid Doted OI NAM•STATl[MSNT Trust, tty ,...ton of ll lbftech orel9fault U WICACTA •0111t 0 .. 11 \. 6 1• Tiit followlfld perllOll Is dolnQ Ml· In tht olbll~llO"t teeured tllertlby, lllfltVHtll,,.ldMH.to Nttet: llet"ttofon U•<uted eftO dell-.CS lo HOWARD J, KAST LE COMPANY, tllt ""°"''191*1 t wrltttfl OK1¥etlon NIMTM aAC• -..0 ytrdl. S....., 11611SlquoleTrwl.ll., lrvlne,CA921U 01 Olfeult...,., Otmend for Seit, and elcb. clalMll\9. Purse UO()O. .._nt J . KHtlt, 11'311 Sequoj• ""'1119" t!Otlce ef llrHdl llftd Ol el«t!O!\ Ltd'f Le O'elnll T ... l.ft .. lf'VIM, CA t27U w ~ tN """"""*' to ... , said <a.Mt) J.60 '00 uo Tiiis -.1-IS cOlldll<t.O lb'f lift '"' ~ '° Ntltfy Wld MllvetloM. - iel'I'-,, ... (Cltf'hM I J.40 l.40 ..,..... tMrHttllf the lllldtni..... CllUteCI MIO Stl,.. <w.rf) S.40 .......,.. J, KUllt 110t1<1 If ..._II end of elteti.,., to bl 114 • TI,,,. -t2.12 TM• &w.mtfll wn fl!W "4th !flt ~ S.,..efltMr ta, 1'7S a Instr. 120 Al• ,. -i.licllt~ Clllc, '1cllte ClWMY Cl•rk of Oftn(lll c-itr on .... 1'01• lft bo04lt us11 Pf991.S\ oh•ld , ,. CllUll\ ~·· Prldtv '4erO to c.tdt, ~ J. 1m Ol'tklet AKOl"Ch. 11• IMdlttwrttullll'!,O-.nor'Motl• PJM7S Seid Nit wlll Iba mao., tiut wltllOul 1iJ .. tef'etclltt l'litllltllff 0r'"'9 CO.ti 0.lly l'llot, C0"9Mf!l or Wen'Mty, tllPAU or t,.._ 101 -.lllft, 7, t•, 11,». 1t1• Dlltd. f'tOlltdlflt tltlt, posseulon, or 114 U IXACTA t I.Hy &.e ~ • Jol.1• ~BftCtt, .. f>'IY tht -!NftV tt• l'fCl!ftlfll Pll .. , .... Ut.00 prlnclpel \UM Of lllt nott (SI steund b'f '°' ,.. ........... u1~ PUBLIC N011CF; Yid DoN4 .. TNst, wt111 '""""" lft ... »id,..-Pf'W'.0, edVenc"" If lll'IY, ' 109lf ~:::==;::===:==-=~:1 ------------vt* IM~ et Yid Deed llf T'l"ult. ... CTtTIOUS auttMIU ..... t l1•r90 tfld ••llBflMI Of ttl9 ~llfATlflllNT TndM _.. f1f the lrvttt < ........ lrt '1ief9110wtnt~«tdtl1'9MI-~o.MofTl'\IJt. .... I Seit .... *Ill M Mid Oii ""*y, THI 1111,.AHTSMIH, ton ....,,.ry6,1"6,11 ll;OOAM,etlhtof• !': ......... Qf'(lt, Cl TOl'O, (A.""° flee of 'T .o. ltf\llU Com!*IY • ..,.. Of ._,.._,, t11erlt1 T•o•n, '20~ ~ ,.....,, Ol'll City 81\111,, ~ Clrdlld, Cw.w9tl MM, CA. ftW Wta llM.Or-...CA.. t2* u.~11~.:;~e:i:~ .. y.ND O.tMJsTo'O'~t1:~c1C HCltOW 'tllls twtlfltO I' COflftCltd by t COMPANY ..., ..... ~~•· nMld T'li11t" ""8rtc:Mr!e1Tf'OWll 8yT O.$lltVICEtOM .. ANY, Tiii• ..... -"' .... fli.G wltll the ~ =:.,~~:,\of Ore1199 COulll• er1 !:si~~:~=l•rv Nt_.. P\lt>lhl\tO ... wporl HtrllOf ,._M """I"'"' °'""' Cl>alt 0.lly ,.lot, l'NU combined wllh The Ortf\OI O>Ht .--,., "•ti, 21, anc1 hbf~4. "76 0.llY l"llot, J141uarv 14. 21. n. l 'l . ,,..,. ,.,. lot 1• f • PUBLIC NO'l1CE FICTITIOUS IUSIMUS NAMI STATUdMT The tol IOWI 119 ptf:IOM 8n doirlg IJUU. neuas LAKE FOREST WOODS. LTO., 180 N•wporl C•nter Drlvt, Sult• 100, ~ Be1c:h. CA. 92WO LAN RON ENTERPlltlSES, INC., 180 Newport Cante< Ori,,., Ste. 100, Newport Beach, CA. 926'0 Tl\ls OUt< ness I' conclUCled tw • llmlt· eel ptrtnerslllp. L.AN·AON INC. av t>anl•I o. une, Prtsldent "''' stat-nt was fllld Wit!\ the ~ly Cltr1l Of Or•noe County tn ,,_,..,1, ,.,. ff1• Pulbll"'9d Orenot COia Delly Pltot. J811. "· 21, ,., end Ftb ••• lt7j 1•1·7• PUBLIC NOTICE P'ICTITIOUS BUSI NHS NAM• STAHM•NT The toltowi"9 ~ IS OalftQ Ill.di- PUBLIC NOTICE PICTtnous •UltNISS MAMaaTAflM•NT ,,. ........ ~ IS Cloono ibu9ol· ---= .... avtNTIV• H•Al.TH CAltl! C£NTlll L.TO., Jltr Vlsle £Mf ... ........, 9Mdl. <;f m.o c:.11,_. ,.._u.,. Htoltll c- 111C .. a tel lf'e""uONIOf l llOfl. "27 Vh\ll ll\tr ... N.....,ert .. tc.h, ~9*6 Ttfls ~···~clM lb\'• llml• tdpe,._...,,, Qlllol'lll• ~11"' HHflll CM• Inc. ~.,.ltl'toefl,Jr. O\alr'11'1811& TrHIUl'W 1'\I\ \ltt-.t WU flMd wltll fie Collflty Cl•rt OI Ofa11 .. Cevnty e11 J-ry14t, 1'7• ... ,.,, l"l*llllittel °''"" toe" Dally ...... Jiii. 11, 2t"'4t Felb. 4, 11, 1t1• PUBUCNOTICE nix Bae B arrOn Sets P ower Record ... J PHOENIX (UPI) -Brent Barron of Torrance ~ a wwtd tecord Sunday in the Ameri~an Power ~~lA.asociallon's 1976 Wintematiouals a\ Firebird ....... e IOUtb of here. Barron, driving a boat owned by Du Durham of WhJttier, cover" the flve·mUe eamse in an average 87.591 miles an hour in lhe jet nd.na runabout division. The old mark of 80.501 m.p.b. •as set last October by Durham in the s ame boat.. BOATING Jamie Jamison of Phoenix established an averaae speed or 78.363 m .p.b. for the new pro competttlon class. It was the first time a race was run in the new clan, which includes unlimited jet ski boats with carburetors. More than 150 boats competed in 17 classes in the one-day event. Three boats flipped. One of the drivers was taken to a hospital for ob· servation. Dean Warren of PortJand, Ore, drivmg "Friendly Plumber II," won the seven liter division for hydroplanes. Julian Pettingill of Phoenix competed in four divisions, winning two and finishing second in another. He won the racing runabout division in .. Cold Fire," and the ski racing division in "Angel Fire." . Pettingill finished second in "Pride" in the superstock class, which was won by John McCrea or Downey in "Never Enurr." New Hydropl ane D esign Announced SEATTLE (U PI> -Plans have been announced for a new, all·aluminum unlimited hydroplane to be based in Seattle and driven by Seattle lawyer Jerry Bangs. The new thunderboat, owned by Jerry Kalin of Detroit and sponsored by Vernor's Soft Drinks, will be powered by a turbo-Allison engine system which will allow the use of nitrous oxide. • Ads Sho w R ecord For '75 NEW ORLEANS (UPI)'-Dally newspapers earned a re- cord $8.43 billion in ad· verUJlng revenues last year and will do even better ln 1976, according to the president of the Newspaper Advertising Bureau. Inc. • UllttTt._.... THOUSANDSOF ACRESOFSOLARMIARO RSINCONCEPTBYARTIST Space Shuttle (Ctrcled) Indicate• Scale of Proposed Energy Project NAB President Jack Kauffman said newspaper ad vert11lng increased despite the re- cession. He predicted 13.S percent lncrease in advertising revenues in the firat ball or the year. and a total $9.3 bi111on for the year. 'Space Power '"NEWSPAPERS alone provide the max· imum level of reach that any retail advertiser can ask for," said Leo Bogart, NAB executive Solar Heat Plan 'Gargantuan' WASHINGTON (UPI) -A new type orbital power station using thousands of acres of mirrors to turn solar heat into electricity has been proposed as a possi· ble answer to the world's energy needs in the next century. The satellite would be immense -something on the order of eight or nine miles across . It would generate enough electricity to light and heat a milli on households. turn alternators to generate electricity. Both generators would be placed in stationary orbit where their orbital speed would match earth's rotation and they thus would remain over one point on earth. Solar energy in such an orbit would be constant nearly 24 hours a d ay. cent oxygen, 20 percent vice president and silicon and 20 to 30 per· general manager. cent metals by weight. .. These metals are mainly People actually read a 1 u m i n u m i r 0 n the newspaper because t i t a n i u ~ a n d they're interested in the magnesium. information advertisers . The idea would be to give them.'' ship campacted moon Bogart said advertis· soil to space processing ing should be judged on plants. ~hich would t~ whether it sells rather the so~l into construction than the number of peo- 1!1atenals for power sta-pie it reaches. tions. Because of the low "National advertisers strength or lunar gravi-have been bung up on au- ty, O'Ne ill said rockets dience because the would not be required to measure of sales have get moon material into been so hard to come up orbit. He s aid s mall with," Bogart said. He v eh i c I es c o u l d be said new technology at launched continuously the cas h register from the moon by the use checkout is producing of ground machinery us-dramatic evidence of ing advanced magnetic newspapers' ability to acceleration techniques. get imme~iate results. FINANC E OCCO/fen Hostelry Courses Openings are still available this spring in Orange Coast College's hotel -motel manage- ment program. "Career opportunities In management are virtually unlimited ln the expanding hotel·motel industry-," said Kenneth E. Scripsma, coordinator of OCC's hotel-motel program. ''It's an Industry that is expected to continue to expand for many years tocome." OCC offeTs individual cours es in hot el·motel management in addition t o a Certificate of Achievement program and Associate in Arts Degree program. Classes are available both during the day and in the evening. Spring registration on a ''drop-in" basis ls be· ing conducted through Feb. 6 in the OCC Ad· missions Office. The offi ce is open from 9 a.m. to 8 p .m. Monday thrQugh Thursday, and 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Fridays. Bangs said the hull configuration will be similar to the Ron Jones· built boats which have dominated the hydroplane circuit in recent years. However. the boat will come from the shop of Les Staudacher of Detroit Bangs drove the Miss Madison -changed to Hamm's Bear for the northwest races -a season ago. THE ENERG V would be beamed 22,300 miles to earth in the Corm of microwave r adiation. Ground antennas about five miles in diameter would receive this energy, convert it t o alternating current and feed the electricity into the nation's power grids. The idea or an orbiting generator was first pro· posed in 1968 by Dr. Peter E . Glaser or Arthur D. Little, Inc., Cambridge, Mass. His idea is to use massive banks of solar cells to convert sunlight directly into electricity the same way sqlar cells are used to power m ost spacecraft of today. ONE MAJOR problem with both types of space generators is that they would require huge ro ckets to launch satellite components into orbit where they would be assembled. Boeing estimates its power sta- tion would weigh 100,000 tons and Glaser's would be about 25,000 tons, de- pending on power output. America's largest spaceship, the Apollo, weighed 50 tons fully fueled. Glaser estimated at the Senate hearing that development or new launch vehicles to handle such a job would cost $24 billion. Over T h e Cou nter MASO UstfftCJS Crew chief of the new boat will be Bob Espland, former crew chief ofthe Notre Dame Publ ic Pressu re J avits ' Wife Quits PR Job From Wire Services Under increasin g public pressure because or a possible conflict of interests. the wife or Sen Jacob K. Javits a nnounced she r esigned her $67.500 job as public relations consultant for Iran's national airline. Marion B. Javits said it was "very hard to maintain an objective point of view about my work and my res ponsibilities" because of "critical com· 1nents from those concerned that the senator might be influenced by my work for the airlines "On the one hand, I have been a champion or the right of a wom an and a wife, no matter what her ·station m life, to pursue her own career and ac- tivities. "On the other hand. l recognize that the family of a public oCficial has some -as yet I believe un- clear -accountability to his or her constituency " • Ronald Re agan began a campaign swing through_ North Carolina with a quip at President The latest proposal was presented last week to a senate subcommit· t ee by Richard W Taylor, vice president of the Boeing Co. It would use heat concentrated by plastic film mirrors to drive a set or helium gas turbines which would PUBLIC N011CE PICTITIOUS austN•U NA~U STATIEM•NT Tiit fol IOo#lnv '*''°" la cto11111 bull· ""'" CALIFORNIA FACTO"'( STOllE. J11s1 c-.1noc.1111tr-. CA nvs Thotnfl Jos.pti Sllto, Jr., ...W Ali. VINW•Y, L.le-S.ec:ll, CA'26SI Tl'lls blnl11ns Is condu<ttcl by .i lft. • .,, ... I 'fllomes J Sisto, Jr This 1t•t.me111 w•s llltcl with tN Co~mly Cl•rlt of Oran91 County on .lelluery '• "1' PStM6 PUDlllNd br .not Coe st o.l ly Pl lot, Jen., .. , 21, 29,Md Feb •. lt7• 1~76 PUBLIC NOTICE Ford, his opponent in the Rellublican pres idential suPuio"""ci,~uoPT"a race. . . ITATI OF CALIPO"NIA "°" Rea gan began a nt•couNTYOFOaANGE Nt. A·14tt0 s peech to some 150 sup -( 1 N OTICE OF HtEAalNO OP porters at an Asheville PEOPLE PaT1T10H POR PRO•ATE OFWILt. AMO "°" LETTIERS Tl!STAMIEN· hotel by kicking over the TAU' ANO UTTIERS OF AD· microphone. The former ----------MINllT•ATION WITH WILL AN· • NIEX•O Ca lifornia governor Eu.t• o1 "OHRT Lee wet.SH, quickly looked over the audience and s aid, "A few DK..-. h. J"k h d h '11 a}l J " NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN t"-1 more t sngs 1 et at an t ey c me erry. wtLLIAM M. wAuAcE ,.., "'" • The Senate voted to confirm George Bash as director of the Central Intelligence Agency despite contentions his political past will further jeopardize public con- fidence in the intelligence com- munity. The nomination wu con· firmed 64·27. 'Sen. Jesse Helms CR ·N .C.), was the only ·Republican to vote against Bush although Sen. Lowell Wekke~ <R·Conn.), voted present. Bush won praise from sup- ausM porters and opponents for hones· ty, integrity and a distinguished public career. But it was his chairmanship or the Republican National Committee during the Nixon itdministration that brought Bush's nomination under fire. * The Cnllfornia Supreme Court disbarred at· tomey Donald H . SecreUJ from the practice of law tor two years ~ause ot his ••dJrty tricks" role dw1nc the 1972 presldential campaign ot ale.Uni M. Nixon. Segrettl, 34. pleaded guilty ln 1'73 to federal charges of con· 8J>1racy and illegal distribution ol poUUcal Uterature and served a sentence In prison . He wu accuaed ol diJtrtbut· ln1 Jett.en alleaedJy wrttten by the .. Citizens for Muskie Com· ... nt mltlff," Jalstlf accusln1 Sen. S.bert Hampllny <D·Mfnn.>. and Sfll. Beary Jat'Uoll (D·Watb.), of &GU.al lmproprteUe.. • Sinaer Harry BcJafoate and bl1 wife of 19 yeara were rem rried ln a civil ceremony at a Lu Ve1u ••&rip" hotel. • Belafonte, 48l and hLa wlfe, J.Ue, 47, recited the. 1"dd.ln vows beror• Diltrtct Judae Jefm Mendela. ;;, Actbr aey Polll ulhobatman. ,. ~ . ""'''"•petition for Prot>tlt ol Wiil •llCI for luuenct ot letters Tes1-..i.,v ~tor 1.ttt•n of Adml11l1tr .. 1on w4111 Wiii ,.,_•td. reftrtllCt to 'llll'lkll h ~ for fur1tltr pertlcul.,.s, M'lt that IM time Mid jMec:e Oi .. Hrl119 lflt - l\H llt9" Mt ~or FttlfV•ry 10, lt1 .. et 10 00 .. m., I" Ille c°"rtroem ol 0epert. mtnt No. > of s.14 c°"rt, et 100 Ov1c eem.r Orlw W.tt, 111 the City ol s.nte AM, c.tllonlle, DetedJ.n. tt, 1976 Wlt.LIAM•ST JOHN, c-t't(lfftl •tCNA•D MOa RIS -~·1 .... ...... .. -1, Hiiia. CA"" t Attlnley fir! ,.C"'-" 11\;b!IW*I Of'tlftOit CCM11t o.lly Piiot Jeill. ,., "•nd l"tb, ~. '"' aAS-16 PUBLIC NOTICE -- Dr. Gerard K. O'Neill, Princeton University physics professor noted for his plans or huge space colonies in orbit, told the Senate panel that he thinks satellite power makes sense but he said there might be a better way of building or- biting generators. HE SUGGESTED that the raw materials could come from moon soil which Apollo s tudies have shown to be 40 per. PUBLIC NOTICE l"ICTI TIOUS aUSINl!SS NAME S~ATl!Mlf NT Tht lollowlnQ persons •r• OOh'IJ lllnl· MSSH ~ & 0 DOOR CLOSURES. 190 ... mil Ion St., Cost• Me~, C•llloml• Ri<M<d Lee Smltll, 1m1 8Nctl 81¥0., Huntf119ton Be.ell. Calllomla .,.,1 Hurtll All•11 Vl11ev•rd, 710 H.-nl llon St . eosu Mtw, C•lllomt• , Thi$ ~lntts Is conducted Oy • llmlt· tdP¥111er-sl'llD Ric Ila rd Ltt Smlttl This stett..,,.111 wu filed '1111111 tN Covnty Clerk ol Or•ngt County on J<M ... ry2t, 1911> PSI• Putlllshtd Or•nQt C~st O.lly Piiot, ,..,, 21.•nd Feb 4. 11. 11. 1976 UNt PUBUCNOTICE NOTICE TO CR E DITOaS SUPERIOR COURT OF TN• STATE OF CALIFORNIA"°" TMECOUNTYOl"O"ANOE .... A.U.01 Est.It DI HAROlO GLASSER, Dec.Nied. NOTICE IS HE A EBY GIVEN,. the CIWdltors of tllt •l>ove Mmed -...... tllat •II persons NVl119 <l•lrra ~ tN wild de<-.r.1 "' required to Ille tlwfl\ will\ tht M <fl!Wlry YOU<tltn., lft l.... Clff lc.t of 11\t C ltrk Of t.... ..... 9"tllled <OUr1, Of to f)f'Uellt I'*"\ .. "' "" nearswry VOUCMl'S, to tl'Mt -Der"9ned •I Ille Office Of GOLDel!"G ANO STEIN, Attorneys •t ~. 612:5 s--t lllwd. Sul• .o., Los ~' C.llfoml• toem, Wfll<11 Is Ult Ill&• o1 bull...u ol tlle Uflo.rsJ!lftM '" .. 1 me!· tws ~1111no to tllt n~• d MIC!-. ~. witN11 tour months .,.., tlw ll"t publ IC.I kwl OI tllls notice. 0.tedJ.nUMyt, 1t1'- CHARLOTTE S.. GC.ASSla l!HCUfrl• Of Ille Wiit of lllt tbo .... Nmff ~ OOU>l altOANDST•IN .......,. ....... '121'-et81M.WW41M LM~ ~--,,.........,. ... _..,..& PUO!tthtcl Ofef'I .. ONtt Deity Pl!ot, ~1, U,21,lil, t•76 52'1t PUBLIC NOTICE .• MUTUAL FUNDS \ Natio n's ~rts ·Incr e ase WASHINGTON (AP) -A spurt ln Imports, part i cu l arly In automobiles and raw materials and machinery for American Industry, cut the nation's foreign trade surplus tor December lo its lowest level in eight months, tho 1overnment bas an· nounced. The Commerce Department reported that exports exceeded imports by $578.6 million in December, off sharply from the $1 .1 billion sur- plus in November. BUT THE December surplus was the 11th monthly surplus In a row and enough to close out 1975 with the biggest an· nual trade surplus on re· cord, $11 billion. The 1974 trade ledgers were In de- ficit by $2.3 billion. The previous record surplus was S7 billion in 1964. Oil imports, an in· creasingly crucial (actor in the nation's foreign trade and its "domestic economy. declined In volume for the second year in a row. The drop in 1975 was 2 percent; compared to a 3.5 per- cent decline in 1974. THE OVER·ALL 197S trade surplus ha s generally been attrlbut· eel to the U .S. recession, which slashed demand by Americans for im- ported i:adlos, electronic equipment and other consumer goods that make up most of the na· tion's imports. • ( = t .-- W edoesday'e Afternoon Prices NEW YORK ·sTOEK EXCH:NNGE --'flW VOIUc; • 1'"1)' -............ frt lll'lcH 611 ~ ...., v.~ 11~ ••<hMet· If\ Nel "e. ~ LIM Ole. ~,.,a,jftf 1~~-~ AcmlClv • U 8"° , , • AIMmOr. 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Tr6llKO .IO 11 17 10 + Vo On 8ttll 1.60 t 12 !Ml+ ~ ~lllilt .to 6 217 1m-V. I TT 14YI. 16 SJ:\4-.... Munford • 6 23 1\11+ Vt ltepFl11S .to 7 1 11't • . • Tmt<Ltll .4S 11 7' ti!. On OM 1.64 10 6S 18'14' + \ti =: 1.60 6 II ~ I T& DfJ 4 , 12 SO -\\ ~ Df ·'° · · 2 6\lt ·" Ree>Mcle llw • • 42 1~ + 'lo Tronohl" .20 S 60 I ''-~ Oft G E pf 4 • , ~ .. -Ill Fil 1.20 • J I lit: . . I ff pfK 4 • , S. 4t -V. ~ 1 •• 20 I ltV.-l/J Rep Sll UO 7 tJ )?V. + Vt TrenUll l.60 19 13 Jl~ ''• OnGEpf •Vo • • Sl\.la + 11/t -gnl AO • U n ,_.. I fH 2'4 , 214 ll"°-:\\ ~ 1.20 8 3 19'1>-'It ResrvOll 16 1 213 114 • . • 19~ OllMll• uo • 0 22~-v. ~ U• IS m SI 1~ I .... & llfO J • • 8 ss.... . . . Mllf1lllOI .tO • '1 1914 + " RllWCJOOS .40 20 142 " -lY. TTr,M-W'f ,.._,, 7 ..... I ' :'..! CIT 1"1112.20 I 40 >4\'o + Vt ~I, 1. 0 t M 27W.-llo 1..,-1.20 7 10 U.llt-~ ,,,...,., Of! 1 1 I 16\lo + V. Rewrt ,._ • . 110 IV. . . . " W.., • • .., -•• " ~ 7• 11 14 ·~ ~--I -12 1SW. ._,. Tr611JWA DI .. 4 13"" Olleof1> .• 11 1716 JO -w , • -llltP\ltll ~ I • 14 ..... + 14 ,__.., ·-• • • • • "8vloll UO 1t SI 71Yo-~ Trevlrs I.GI 1S t1J ~ '·'\ Cl1M"' 1.10.. ~ 1CW. • • • ~ s 22 ... • • lnb1 8rd •• s • ,, -~ ~ L M 2'4 " ,..._ Vt Ru,..,,, .20 8 n 4:t\-.... T Qt s.rv 2.40 8 '1 42V. + Vt fi«llk t.«I 7 1 ~ Vt lnl.ltPw 1.40 9 S U"' • ~ ~ ,._ R .. nrcl 1.20 6 31 2>'14'-14 3 33.,.,_ ,,.. Qtzn.SO .450 . . " 2,~ • • • ~,~I ,.s 5'20 '.~ ... r,i I nit Ullcl .1• • 2' s-.-.... NMllKO uo 11 140 ,g .. v. ,, .. ,, "'u•.. a 3'14 +I Tr•Rv1Ers Df ?. ·.•. ... ··-.... Qty In¥ .. 14 206 .. rnv"' -P ,._ .. lowt8"1 In S I 18 27 :\lo "6kD Ol .n 11 •7 ~ ~ Rey Incl J 01 t 410 62lllo-h a. #0 .. Qtyliwwu •• S t. '.:'. fllft(IS8 .J06 111cw.--.1-.EIUOIS 14 14\.'t';" ~Sc..607 2 12 ••• "-=tv. .. 124 11 -2\.la r~~i ·j fl rg:;:.·~ Wtdneed9. January 28. 1178 s DAILY PILOT 85 Cheek Pantry _Proper Storage Saves You Money· BySYLVIAPORTER . (/Alt flt Q s.riti) A year ago Christmas, we received a large box or shelled nuts ns a gl(l. About halt of the nuts were consumed during holiday gatherings at our count.ry home. After that, I put the box on the pan· try 1heJr. near opened boxes of crackers and similar dry foods -and then I forgot the nut.s en- tirely . Ju s t befor e Christmas this year our Money's Worth housekeeper thoroughly cleaned the pantry and threw away not only the nuts. but also all the opened boxes of crackers . cereals and a substantial load or other perishable foods. I would prefer not to recall or disclose the precise details about the condition of the pantry that prompted the herculean cleanup. MORAL: PROPER storage of nuts is Important. Unshelled nuts can be held at room temperature up to ~ix months. But other nuts should be stored in 'air-Ugbt con- tainers in the freezer or refrigerator. As Tuesday's column stressed, storing your food.pro· perty is as important as shopping properly. You must knbw the rules to save money when buying food ; and you mvst know the rules to save money on storing the food in ybur kitchen and guarding your family 's health. To proceed with key guides: • -When checking your pantry. reread the labels on the foods stored. Perha~ some should have been refrigerated.• Not all boxed or canned goods can be held at room tem- perature. Canned cheeses such as Brie and Camembert, lor instance, should be kept under refrigeration even before opening. -Under no circumstances. taste fooct that you fear has gone bad. You don't have to swallow food to be poisoned by the toxins that certain types of bacteria produce -and taste is not necessarily an indicator or safety. anyway. Am°'* Vst ., 20 SV..-"-ADul pf .... • • 4 13\oto-V. AlnEkPw t 9 1CMO 12YI-V. Alilemlly .21 I 04 1 I"'+ "' Am l"ilC S'l'll.. 4 2'h-Vt Am l"ncS pf •• lAOO IOYt •• , A Gnld .16d •• 24 24 -"-AGeflSc 1.Ja . • 13 17--.... A Gn Ins .60 t .. u-.-\lo A Git pf 1.10 • • J3 ll"'-\lo AmOnpf.90.. J """ •.. AmHollt..., s 4l 1•~ .... Am Hom .'2 22 12U ~ .... A HDm1 pf 2 •• 11~1"' AmHoto _,. 2A 12' ~ .... g::"&r.i :~ 1~ ft:~·~·: fid.: .. 101 :,· ; t1;=. ~ r::;r~~ ! li ~=·: e~;:~ 1! Ht:~ =~~r:Z .; :; ~~=·: =~ 1~ ~~=·: CLC Am .14 t t Slh • • • ,..,.. .....-..... , -... IK• Hetc>ltl II "' M + ~ NetJ (an .SJ S '2 12.,._ l'I Rlcllenhn 1 • 18 10 .... -'"' TltW In 1.20 1 111 21\lt-YI ow Clllfs11 17 Sll/J •. FsUlcSl.1011 .. --·"' IT~tmci .IOll 121 ,, __ 14 Pfl0tpf1YI •• 3 uv.-.. Rlc!IMff .Mll llt 22t.+ ~TRW pf 41i't . 50 '2'h-V. -DOUBLE ·CHECK the directions on your container of grated Parmesan cheese. Some containers require refrigeration after opening; other containers don't. , . f Am''""""" .. J ,~ .... A MMl<l.12 8 13' 8 -l/J A Mitdlc«11 S 178 ~ ... Ntl Moton • • 260 • ••• NnNG 2.StQ 7 70 ,..,.__ .. Arris.to .106 1 u 10~ v. A SlllpB Ilk 12 21 1~ •• Am St.Ml 1 I 237 2011•-~ 1 .. 4\lt •• 21 61\/'t-l/J erll .JO 11 7' 7 \l'r-Yo ' uo 4 47 27'1't-Vt T 3.<40 11 t31 S4Yt-.. MIT t Df 4 .. 101 S7~-14 AT1'DfA UL. S7 "64-Vt ATl'Dfl l.74 . ~ S7 471'.-.,._ AmWttr .70 ~ 11 t--. \lo AWtr Pr 114 .. 1100 13\lt+ "" A'Mr pf U3 .. &SO 1~ ••. Ameron Ill I S IS 1~+ Vt AIN.S. , !Ob 6 14 ~ V. Nntliek Ill I 9 ,, 2 I--14 Nit~ 1111.24 12 211 :ll'MI-\lo AnfK In< I S 12 I~ Vt AMP lllC .ST a6 400 ,.,,.._ Y, Nrtt1C4 •• • 2 10 ... Anlptir a. • • 12 s....,_ Yo Ann9Cwp .• 11 2 -Vt NNtM 2.40 6 IO lt~ + YI Amstr pf ... . . 2 7"1.-VII ""-led In 4 S 31 .a;.-"' Amal 111 .:n • t ,,,.._ Vt ANc1'dA .60 •. 21S 1111<-Vt AnthHc 1.2010 7t 27""-v. AndnCI 1.20 I a Jf\'i>-W. Nlotlk• .12 9 so •'h-v. Adx 8'o . 16 4 IS I ... ..,_. Co 4k 4 1S6 10\IJ+ .... ~·'° 7 "t2 -\/• ~ Oii ... • • s 2'" ... "'1K:A eo,. . . se , -v. A~ 4~ • 60 IS -\ti """4 led ,. • JVt ... AAA Sv 1. 1' '2 521'o-\It Are.etaN .M 8 107 12--Vt Arctwf 0.111 14 ... 24~ ••. IWctk El'otp 18 S 1 3-h ••• Arlttlr lllC • • 12 211. • •• Ariz PS I.» 6 96 1•.\'• ... APS pf 10.70 •• 1340 10.YI + 11/J Arll lst ·°"' . . so 6\11 + .... ktlLllG 1.70 t 78 23~ ... Ar1tt1 RllO• .. to 31/J + YI Annco UOe I 125 31 + l/J Ami pf 2. 10 . . 10 29\.'t + Vt Arms Cit .IO 1t 47 261'1-~ kmC pf 3W. • • •lO 49.... , •. Amis A .?Cb I U 17\lt-Vt Al'OCofptn 1 I I I Ml! -V. AN!nln .131121 37 12\lt-14 ASA Ud .IO . . 141 2'\lo + -AHr(O .60 IS 404 141/J-V. AllllnOll 1YI ..S 111 2~ + '141 AIOryG 1,40 14 99 31 -V. M ,_.,. 1.40 1 4, 2S\.'t -" Atltlane .60 ~ '2 1~-14 Aiko M .150 • • 16 'llo + V. AtlCyEI 1.S4 8 t2 lllilt •1: AllCElpf SMI .. 2 69~ + '"" AllRlchf 21/J 14 ... 12"'-Yt Alkll pf l\lo •• ;rOO .. .,.,_ l/J AIRc pt 2.IO . • 1S 5'1/J ••. All•s Corp S7 1M 4 -\lo ATO In< .14 7 .. I~ •.. At.A O.te .40 ?1 11 StYI + 14 At.Aoml11 .lO • S6 S\41-14 A.co Corp., 1154 7"'-~ A.co a. wt\.. 12 1Yt • Yo AWCllCorp pf • • 22 2411o + V. A_.,~ .~ 47 SS 2•~-ll'a Avis lllCorp 10 t2 I'll. -"-A-11nc: .SO 7 :IOI 1411• + Vt ·-~ 1.60,. sn 11v.-~ AZl«OG .20 >4 1099 nv. + Yll ---·-a.tl&Wll .IO 1 161 22"'+ 14 IK,_G .10d 6 207 7"'-V. a.lier 111 .24 t 4t 10 -Vt .. "'°41 ,41 IS 121 ••14 + v. 861dwlll .60 • • t~-v. e.llCorp .70 10 23 23\lo-v. S.ll'l'M .cm> 10 24 12\.la--BellGes 2.0I t IO 2411'a-Vt 8611Cll U4 1S 10 1411o-14 a.ndeg Ille 21 50 31Yt + II\ hn9CW "" 3 '° •Yt-"' Ppf~.. 1 IS\a ... Pt •• 1 10 •.• BM V2. • 31 l114+1-BMll V• ... • 123 13"'+ ._ 86tlltTr111t J • Jl7 33\lo ... Bltf pfA 21'1 • • 39 27 -Vt ~lt.60 •. 21 2t -~ 8W4 CR .22 IS 131 1t\to-441 a.kine .60 • 10 I"'+ "' Balln Df 21/t •• 1100 21 -'.~ 1e11tt Mf .IO 4 II 23\a-.,, IMndll. .60 12 JS• 34 + "' Ballttf' L.21'0 121 41,.__ .... 86'(5t0 1.• 1 21 !ti'-.... .. .,.,., .40 10 7 2211\ ••• ltet Fdl .16 1• 5>1 20•-,_ 8ecltmll .S.11 20 .. ...,_, llectClftO .SOU S1 '9~-YI lt«M .7SQ 1 Ut llV. + -8etl9f' In .21 3 Id 1SV.-~ hlcoPt .60tl J '' '' • • • ltldln 1.20 10 102 181 ... + ~ 8elellll4 .JOG u ... -.. 9'11 lfwl .&I • 20S """ + "' lefftl• Co 'f t S2 1'11'1 ••• !Mftdl11Crp ,. ., 4'V.--9tndllt f.13 .. 7 71 -1"' 9tll a. .is s nt ~-v. 8en(4)f 4.30 .. 7 54~ + v. Std Mtg .. 10 2Vt ... Con • s 10 1'141-v. 1'1' Pllo •• JO a"+ V. Prodct 21 "' 20lll-14 tet!ISttel 2• • 411 ""'. " 1111111141 SJG n 1' ''"" ... !icU0 .40~ 21 29 -~ lr.U"" ·r' z ft ,:~::: ~ kH'f ,ll.11 160 1m+ ~ 11 .iO • 20t 421/'t+ .. lrllt.. SI J'n • ~ no .eo. 8 12t 21"t-"' •C:-... It ~ 271/t .. uo 10 " '1Mt-~ us 14 1d " -"' ~Ill 1 4 2~-\1ii '410 JI 24"'-14 t ••• 1170 ~·' .tt.. _tt 11--~ .,. n • ;o ._._ \4 ~~.:a1~ " ::~ 5 "=1 .la ~! 'lT ~m-... P9 , JO I ,.,H ,1: ::: 06 i.71 ,~ •.•• Cllf?I• ~ •• U011 .-.+ " ~:a,: ,.r ~-·" ~ ·!~ ., m: •. " TMle .ill: . 41 11111-~ '""~ta * n:_·(,\ •• I -'ii£ ll'""Jlr->\I~ u 1 • u . .,. ... ~ ....!n:=·~ g-~., I f:-·" I f ~~-.: i ~·~ , t "'=·~ 0... El2.5' t :rt 291/J ... f'stMlss .36 10 IO 111'1 ... l1ellC«Jw1117I .. 11-. , • "'°""""..J22S • 1'\lt-V. Rcllmnd .I0 17 15 12\\-Vt TRW.,,,... 4 61 l'l't ~E~~.~·1:i ~':~~t ~".:rs~~~ 13! w-~~ :iE~"~r ::: ll ,~::-·\.a =~~:~·s 3f .t: ::: ==·~'~ ~ ~ u~~~ ~f~,': m nv.=.~ Outt1 p .30 .. 110 ..... .• h ... Cp 1.Z212 150 1~+ -IU IMI a.•. 1 JO\to-"' Hurst 1.20 7 Its 19""+ 14 Rl°°',J:('°.. 17 10\t-.... TYotOLAb .20 10 33 13ltr-.... Clu.ttP pf 1 .. l 11\lo+ V. ~U~EMCI. 1•2. 107 121YI-+ 1~ IU lj\tlpf 116.. 2 11 -1 ~11 r'!!'pt.I °'os 171 4 .32· »1.~ ·;;_ Rite d .1617 >ti 1114-Ill Twter Co .60 s 1' ui..-~ CMI Inv Cp ., '7 10~ Vt ,..... "' .9' .. --.J J -m ,..., • -•. ,.-.. Rlvlene ... II 30 22',j,-V. ' ---U u- OIA Flnecl .. i1J I + v. FstVBnll .4S t lS 5\41+ " ~ , ... 12 St 1•14 + "' HMI Honw1 • • "' ,.,.,_ ~ Rollslwlw .70 u 41 Ulh-~ UALlnc .60e 21 87J ~ .... OIA pf 1.10 .. 21 IJ\lo+ 14 FsWlsC 1.16 7 .• IC* •.. Jel\IJ:tll .70 1 37 17~ • • Net lnclli .ao s IOI ,.. • . • ~'" 1\.'a s 14 241h •.• VARCO I.JO 6 ,. 211/J-\4 OIAln 1.0 .. 11 22 12 . • ~ F ... • 4J 11.,.._ V. Jte>Fnd .DI • • 4' 101M .. . HM lpfB 1'4 · • 1 UYI + V• ROblM .2 .. 11 1't 1!11e-\lo UGI Co 1.:12 7 17 IS*+ 'Ml -Protect your syrups from mold by keeping them in the refrigerator. If crystals form in refrigerated honey or syrup, place the containers in hot water before use. ~~~1~·:. ; s~ ::· ~~:~J J: H~~ ~~PMl"O:>:~~~il~,t:~·.~ :=~1~ U: ~t"'! ~ ~~i~b2~.~ ~,~-;,~ ~c'~ii'h~ ~v.+'4' -Keep peanut butter in the refrigerator after opening. · Let it stand at room temperature for a while before use~ ~Sl51'a..1. '11 101/J •.. Flenllng .IO. • U'lt+-v. JCn 7 .... 110 1S +I NUSemlcoll3S "'4'Yo-1l'e RO<h'Tel .8011 32 12 + .... UMET Trst.. 10 , ....... SGDf I.It . 30 17 ••• A11Van .!Md 10 1,g 1014+ i,.. J• C 4 •. zl10 40 , .. Net $er¥ .14 9 M 12 -\IJ Rocko-MIS 4' 1314+ llo UnMGO .SO 4 10 ,.,.._Yo ~ l.IJ •• 14 , .... 14 FllntllOt 1.1611 .. 1tl4t-\II ,,. .. , c .2010 ,. 23 + Yt H1 St.llcl .to I 21 1•14+ ,.. Rockwllln 2 7 2U ,..,.,_Vt Un 8rlc:p ... • Sl ll't ••• 2.l02' Ill~-,... iC.OHtll 15.21""-"" ,ltw.kOr In .. 4S s--" H1SlMch .I020 1• Sl'lh" RollmHl.2137 100 .. YI+ v. u ,._ •1s ,. 17 •• I .4017 179 l'Ao-14 fie GM .to t 3' IS'h-+ Vt JlmW.1'91' I 10 1 .. ,g -"4 IWI Sii 2..,._ 14 10. 44Yo+ YI ROllr 111 .Sttl .. 2t S\lo , • , J:c';;~.«) 11 771 ~I" 8~iid~~~ ~~ 1~.·v. ~::::tr.:,~=-·~ ~l:='f.'J:: 1~ ll""-i~ S:~i ·: m gaf1: :::::. 1"c;.3:U ~! ~~-.~ ~~~1~ ~ ~ .... ·v. .1• u 13'5 tt1a-tv. F1elSteef 1Yt s 3 21-. •• • JHenrn .12d •• Jt 11Y1-~ ,._,.,_ .:so , 47 17 _ v. ~,·c.1 .. 211. 11•1 !r !',.lf._.,;. Un e1ec 1.21 , 11• 14.,._"' -Get clear in your mind that refrigeration and freez- ing do not kill bacteria in food ; they simply stop the bacteria from spreading. When food is thawed, the bacteria become active and resume spreading. Thus, foods should be pre pared as soon as possible after thawing. Col k .JI 1• 70 12~ \/t Flt.1111' Q> AO 12 27S ,. .... + ~ JHanlY .Atcl • • ,. 21 • • . ·----".... ---• .. UnEI ,,n.n.. 2J 2t -~ Colllnt l'ood 1' 5' 6 -Vt FNC. <MD I I 20I 2~ ~ JoMNW 1.20 14 1'9 211141-YI NtY Pw UO 8 4 19"'-V. Rolarlo .'°'II 11 71 2J + ~ VII EJ pf 4V. .. 1ll0 ._,..__ 1"" Col l'ltm .JO 11 • 26.,._ V. FMC Df 214 •• 17 ~-YI JoM&J .toe 2t 147 '2111 + ~ NvPwpf 2.lO •• J700 2lY.+ Vt Row611 .20 4 24 26'9 Un FlcMlll 11 >i Slo') CoiclnSt us 7 33 2'""+ .... l<GodF., .20 •• ,, s + v. '-" Cll .IO • 21 U:t\ .. "" .....,...,. 1·74 .• z:sso 11 + "• AoyelCC ·n 14 n 11~ : : : UnOCal 1.~ 1 1l4 .,._· ij. Cooll llllN• 2 s " J4 -"' Foot.ca ·'° • 7 1~• -JenLogll ·'° 21 .. ,....,_ ~ NtvPDf l.60 •• z500 '71/J+ "' RoylO J16b 4 9U 4)\/t + .... UnOICpUV... 22 s• -.... CdWfAl.60 . 22 21\lo ••• iton&MD2.40S7 S74 .. ,.._1~ WQIOlll.60 4 )4 301">-Vt =~{111.-:J~ ~ :;:-;:: Ror_e11 :1SblO lO ~+YI UnP8c2.I012 '3 7~,. ~1111 pf..... .. 2 s.v.-" For Mctl .'2 6 1U ,._,_ .. Jo6fefl1lnc 1 • ,. ,,.,.._"" HEP Df 2.76 .. 7 mi.+ ~ =~~ ~ ;i, ~ 2:~~ ~ u Pee pl.47.. 1 u._ ... GM 2." a • ~+ " ~~1 t-!'. 1'1 •1s~ ~ JoyMf9 , io 10 100 :1111'1 + "' NEAl'T 2.» 11 11 2~ ~ --~-c ·.20 s 111 17'L-~ ~m •. 1 1~+ lit COIO pf s.•.. 1 se . .. ...... ..... ·--.. ...-... Mtlc• Mio . • " 2\lt-v. ~.. I ... 1 2 I ... s.. ""'"~ ... ... Unlniy ... so I 158 IYt-v. ~Picture~ 7 1•1 •14-Vt f'onHwcl i14 520 35 + "' __. K-...... , ·-• l...-.... Ru"TOIJ .7, 30 161 U~ + ~ Uni lpf 1 1130 nvr-111 SOf\2.14 7 9S 2J"'+ .,._ FotM1.1 1 11S 271">-\.'t KAlwAl110 • JS 21\lt--Hwmrot l .60!4 •l 2'YI •·• Ryd«r Syt1 .. 312 10\'o ••• lM"'lr~.'.' 22 •V.+ \1ii •II Mtg .. 33 111'a •• FOltllOro , 10 61 3lYI+ 14 KAI-Ct .SOJO J4 ... • •• Nwmllllf 41/J •• 1 IZl/J •• • ___. S-Utd Brncl pf.. 1 l"t--v. -MANY FOODS THAT are stored in the refrigerator deteriorate rapidly and should be prepared for the table within a day or two or home storage. For instance: broths. gravies, stuffings, chicken salad, potato salad, poultry, fish, · liver, kidneys, brains and giblets. Con'ICld C.om 10 .. 1~ \\ Fnlllll M .50 u 967 ~+ ~ KAlsctpf ,..., .• t 21 -YI HYSEG 2AI I 20I 2t -,_.. S6blnt R .60 11 1 36111-~ UftCorp .m .. 6 I~ , .. Comtl EI.to 10 IO ~-~ F,_M 1.60 • 1"4 ~" Ket ptell'MI .. • 14 + 'It ~,V~LIO •• di '2 +2 ~911rd Incl IS J6 l ... UldFl!Cll .'IO S 4' 7" .. CmE pf' 70 .• 4 ,. ... +1\Q Frutl'llll t.IO 10 SS Z2"" ••• KAneMll .24 4 27 15"'+ "" ~l.)ol 1 1ao l)\lo ••. s.teweySl2 t 11S 43 ..... UGMPL .n 1 1n 16\lo + .... CtnwEd2.J011 99 31YI-~ FllCllM lnclUI~ .. ~. V. ~nebS .toQ 1 SO H ... NeMpl~::= nt::~.~ S-~2011 110 2 1nn ~=~ Uld Gwrty14 11 l 'h-"" CWE~l..O . 12 '4 •• ..........00--KACPl..12.?t I ,. 27"'+" Hl*M 1060 15110107 +~ Sl.IMllrtl.: .,, ,.. Unlllllu 2.J:2 • 11 24"'-"" CWEGIPI 2.17 •• 3' ~ lit G-. lndit .• 11 ·~Yo IYllC3ou 111 • S 17\4i• Vt • •• . o ,, St.Joi.IP 1.lt I t 121'+ 11. Unl"""'C A09 • 1l U V.+ v. CWEcl!Pft.• •• 4J ~+ V. GAF "'.SJ 7 20S IA -Yo KA11 GE 1 ... S H 1t~-" H ll'\lt " Ill 111 --Stl.~F 11'1 t S7 ?IM>-%. '"' I •42 -Wrap fresh meat for freezing loosely enough to allow air to circulate but not loose enough to let the product dry out. But leftovers s hould be tightly wrapped and covered. -Always arrange food in the freezer so that tbe oldest package is used first. Cw'-1..U.. 10 ti • . . uo • 10 UV.-"' K.tnPLt 1.Sl I 17 19\tt.-\It =60 1 s. 17 ,... StReal• 1.~ 10 3SO Jt~-14 UllJ. ~1•04 7 u IOYt-y. , OlwnEdpr2 •• 1 22 + V. ~1.20 .. ta 1Mll ... KAMN1,J2o I 17 1' -V. t'~ncNi!O.:·e 3g :~·i4, SIPeulS ...... 6 11'11 •• ~J":!.1::10·; ~ rr:=~ 0.. pr UO.. S 21._, ... IAO.. S !:= "° IC.tty llldUSt • 12 J\1.-'1' t 1 ... 7 ~ S.t.n\C .24Q 14 17 1'1t-V. Vld IO •• 17 (id wt " 2 10!it •• • .AO.~~ 4.te)l T ""--~ ~ty pf 1M ., 4 14 ,. , .! •1 '"I l~~ ~ SeftOGs 1.JO 13 161 12 ........ "' ' '• .,. •. • I 1twt • • 1 1~ • • • .7' ... 4 ~ .. KM!trn & Ir . • ._ IY>-~ ~ • ,..-•• Sen.J R 11,.. 1 16 1~ On Hue'-U 709 1Mt-"' -Don't stack foods. Refrigerator shelves should not be covered since this impedes air circulation. Produce belongs ·in lower compartments. This prevents crystalization. 1411 .. 154 10 -14 ... t 12 1~+ Vt KAllflof 11/J •• 1J 1'V. + V. Non'k 1.20 8 9S 21i.c. + ~ ~AHO 16 20 7~-·-Vld Pl<C Mn .. 2 11/J •·· .1.72 •• 7 21.,..._ Vt 1.20 I ,. 1~ Yll K.ewe<k .4071 S 1111-Yo ~~I:, : .. ; l~ ·~ SellF 1111.IO I 325 >t:V.-V. t:'S:rJ."Pi.: 1~ ~ m~~1l: -Immerse leftover egg yolks in cold water and cover Comm Sat 1 s :&S2 2S + "' ~., 111 IS 21 .... • • • KetneC.P .211 s 3S s~-~ ~. , • ~ si=.111 pf .JO 7 ,..., _ v. USkSc .So4cl • • 7 18 -.... . e I 1"9 2J'\lo ... GATX 1.IO 1 '2 2t + ..... KtlW 111 .201' I• 711e-'Ml NAm 1.JOlJ li ~;:-S.Ftl11t1.JO ·; S2 11111-~ US Gypl.6021 13' 1'"--14 them in the refrigerator. . . ln sum, draw up your kitchen checklist: follow through on your inspection, for it's most improbable that you'll get 100 percent on your food storage test, even iC you pass. And if you flunk, learn how lo store your foods properly, You will save money and protect your family's health, too! sc112 12 sv. •. • GCA C«lt24 34 s -'Ml Kel ........ 90 11 to:J 7311. + y. N~u1'1•1002 8 .. 1 ........ S.r<J Wei • .o • 11 11:i.-~ u<,.~...J 1111 1 24:v. ·'° 2 61 1~"" Gemini CtCI •• 3J 12\o't ... Kel-.ao,. tT 14Vo ••• ~El ·..,.,. "'1•0 ~ _·;..: Seul8F RIE •• 9 J"" ... ~.... • •• • .. 20lt I 171 '1V• + V. ~In t.lde • • 20 13 -~ KtllCtt UJt> 4' l*' J1 -1111 ~1•11• ,.....:.-2 t" 21 ~ ..... _ ;: S.vEPw .60 • 11 '"'" , •. USHome Cll • • '6 It'll-V. Olnglm .GI 30 12 14~ V. G Ami 1.4*1 . • 34 IOV• •· · Ky Utll 1.IO 1 79 22\.\ + Yo N._ll:K.,..'·-•• I !::~ :~. S.vEI D(l.21.. 9 12\lo + Yt USlnclU\ .20 • 2J7 ·~-V. ' CoMMt 1.6011 21 1~ 14 GnAOll AOll 1l IS7 40 + ~ Ken Gii .40 I , .. 16"'-'I• "' .,._ •• S. A SI 19 4 USLAeH .?t 1 35 9'141-'h · ec-ecc .10 • m 21v.-~ a..i1111ca • .i>1• 1 P9-~ 1<enM<G11' 111 nv.-~ "°1" 1-» • u 11""•"" s.~1naMc°l:i7 16 1"+'~ ~55~·~nio ,: 2~:-·v; (ollllcl I.toll s 144S 17V.+ 14 OenCaM .n 1 221 11 ••• ~ 1• s 14 19 -"'' No~~:·~ ~ 19; ~::; S.vOnOr 201l 31 I~-" USSl"l 2.IO 8 100S 79:\4 + ~ Cont Ed pf 6, 17 '4 +2 Gn CGr 1.20 6 13 1' · · · I( ett 1 S .. 22\'t-~ ND 1· rio 43 1 SHOft lnclu\ I 180 S + \Iii US foti .90 11 132 20 + Yt Cons Ed ptS. U SO\.la + ._ Gerl OM .S4 t 13' 22"'-~ l(lfnbCI 1.60 10 ,... .. -~ NDSPpf 60" I > ~+ SCA Servi ca .• 47 2'\'o + l/o UtdTedlnl 2 7 209 SJ -'h CollEDf4.6S .. a110 ..... 0.. ~. 20 Sllt-14 Klngs()S,,g t 32 911. ... ::,::.10t•10 ffl 14"41 ·~ Sc'-f•rCp . l4 ...... -~ UtdTe<llpfl .. IS127 + v. CoMl"'d US ... ~ 21Vt-V. G9n ~'*" • 99 44'11.-~ Kll"S<ll C .90 23 U IS'h-V. Nc>rtlVOp &, 6 S1 :tS~ y, kllotrlng .• l1 196 53 : 1._ Uni Tel 1.12 10 449 ISV.-:i. Conf:dpfrt4·""101·3· -·1 2011 •• -.'~ Gn~El~IAO. 11..0 Sl'A-1~ K= Alrt.. t """-"" ~r1Al1• 542 %7~ Sc.hlltr8.612J ISi 27'41 .. UnlT•I wts.. 23 1¥o-Yt "' n ,. ~MOU 2S3 Ill -'i't Kii R .5418 S4 llllei-1...., ....... _ 17010 1• •1u..+·;..:. Schlutnl).IOU 496 79~-2 '""ITpf•1•• •• 21•~+ •• 2.2• 7 " 21'1/0+ "' •* ,, 52 1~ ~ •::r ,._ S _,. 1¥1-·~ ,...._,. • • YJ 'n ~ #'a 70 • '" )4~ I,\ "" "" .-. '• L• YW ,. g 1 .,.. ..... -"" ,..,.~· . • s1 21~ + 111 sc ..... i'nd ._10 1 16 m•= .... Uftltroct ~ 10 " ,,... Pw2 I 14' 20V.-V. GenHett1 ..... ~ .~ 1 l• °"' ICoelw 2"' ·· 2 JOV.-"" Nw 4 33 27YI+ Vt •-oc~.... ... • ..., ''·•-le. Unlnr i ... ' 14 3'!1'1 -·~ pf 4.16" l200 oQ +2 a., IMC..,."' 1,40 t 1t 4414 • • • Nwst 111 7S l 1Sll J7 1'At ..._ ......, ·-• ~ UnlvLT 1.12 7 7 21~-~ ()DnPDf4V. •• Z20 4SYt-1 .... GllftlnttDfJ .. 1 JO\lo ••• Korecorpln23 31 2"4-\\ • 1....="" ScottFr1.0l10 99 21'h-¥t UOPlllCOf'P11 ,, 111.'o• \lo ConPpt7.'5 .. 1170 n .• GenMH.20 10 71 1~~ Krettcol92 t 113 44~-YI HwStllldws •. 26 1 lire Scottl"or 7• 1 77 16¥1+ 11'1 UploM .9621 167 4Slll -"-ConPpf7.72 .. ~,g 76 ... Geft.Wlls ... 11431 ~"" l(r"419 '.24J0977 ,, ... _.,.. HWlllllpfS. 1~1~ ::::;v. ScOltPep: .. 11 7'1 19~ •.• USLIFE .n• 111 1?\11 -~ (AlllP pf 7.76 .. laGO 76 •• . GftMOt2.40b 1' 717 ti.,._ V. l(l'Mfll6f Ml . 1 12"4+ ~ =::::::c,: 11111.,,.._..,._ Scottys I 10 1' U 11'1+ V. UsllteFd ... 11 )1 10f'I+ ,_. (AlllP pf 7.61 .. JAO 7~ .... GnMatpf :WO . • SIVI.+ "" Krog• 1.3' • IOI 18"4-v. -MCl.Ud,, at ,~ .. . ScovlllMIQ,. •• u" ... U5MCP 1.20 7 26 21 -1 GonPwr,... •• 1 IJV.--... GeflMD~ s .. 2 .. . ICnor In .20 . l ,....,_ "' Nw$ll 1.209 11 • 30Yt-" Sco¥11 DI 2\11.. s ll -v. USM pf I ...... 1700 21'14-14 Return Envelopes FroID IRS 'Wrong' ~!'.DIS!> .. 1!l u, ... -~ Gen~-.... , 11nd ..... ~ 1~~·;.:. -4. L-Nrtll Co 1 70 I 1S 29~ ScllddffO V •• 10 Sfl ••• USM pf J.lO .. t lll/J-I .._.. ... L 1-. . "' -• • • ........ • ,... ·-....-IA<Oes 1.60 1 14 11~ Nor1nSI -12 16) ,,.,.._· ~ I.Id pf .m .. 31 I" • • • Vt ... Intl 1• 12 .. ~-v. CllllClll uo • ts 29\<o-"" Aefr .-l u ~"' ~Sii ig 4 10 ,,..,. MrtSI pf·uo 11 S2 -1 1.40 I 20I 24--~ UtehPL 1.40 10 .. 29~-\lo Cllll~.50St3•S1 6YI •.. ilgllal.1412 u 40 ••• l.ene9ry.72. 4 1414 •. ~~~·-·s· ... 21"·+ •L SNCoftlr .30• 20 17YI--VIP' .... 2IO 12 30~ ~ Con11C,J.'°1333141~+1"' Gt!Slletlnd• U 4 ••• Leer'Sltlll2• 97 l'lo-llt ~vF"'~. ,••1 .~.:::_ S..WA1r1Sll 4l 4~ •.• -·. •• -CnUQ) pf2\l'I • , ;a SO-. , • • G T I 1.IO 1S 971 2~ + 14 l..N~ Df i•r. , • 27Vt-\lo " -~ C>--" .. S.-em .IO 1 s 10 ~-14 UV 11\du' 19 J y~23V.-\II ~c.iot• 2V. . . 7 Slll'J-.... OTE pf 2\11 • • • 34 -~ Leeswy l'O!l 11 ' ,, ... + "" OH Ind AO 12 13 .... "' s .. ,,...,. 11 n • . . . V•ll•Ylll .ao 3 60 17 ••• 11JICD 2.22 • S4 40f'll+ 111 G Tl" 1.109 1 2lt 2!'\lo-\ti LMcl~&H .SO I 1t n~-"' Oltklte~ .'2 1 11 ll"'+ "' ~~ ..tO.•• :: 21: m:= ~ Ver I en .20 11 11JJ 14'~-~ llPi' .J2d 16 U m• · • • 0.-lllC •• ,!! ,!'II-~ l..N$0M .'60 S 12 U l/'t • • OccldllPM I S 217 1~ V. ~-I_,:: .. i••A , ..... _2,~ Vendo CO .. 27 4~ + \9 SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The Internal Revenue Service says it has inadvertently included the wrong return em·elope with tax forms mailed to thousands of Southern Californians. tlnUOll 2 11 502 '7\.lt-llo\ QefMll11P .W 14 "" -+ '" • ..... , -c 10 9 2• l\'t-\\ S ....__ u. •• -.... _, .,.. .. u....1 I 20 IS 22 6' t'ZV.-1"9 Ge I'll< IOa 20 IOIJ .-...... 'Iii ........ ... . Occldf't DU.. 1 h,-.. rel11 Liii •• ,, ,._ ..... '""'Ct n . • ... ~;l~}fi lio 11l 1411 .. V. GePWpf2:Q 74 ~ .... l...tflVellncl . 2.S lt: 'i.<; O«Plpf).60 •• 9 ~~ 0C0 ,II. 27l 2,__\/t VMIMl0711 .. 48 u-. Q;;1r1 0.t• 16 S4J ,_. ~ ~ 1.10 ·; • Ullo-v. t!::; ·~ · 1l: 1:14= 14 Occl't pf2.SO •• .S6 :n • ·. Servlc:eC 12 s " 6 Vetco Off~ 1 4'l ?•~-'It Coll0tpf4Yl .. 1llO 4~ , •• GettyOl.SOd12 10t1W +Slh Lenoxl11 .12ii 4 2)" ••. OccPt~t.I~ •• 1 27-+ ._ Sotrvom11 ' .. t 124 14 ·-~r.c~lj~~n ~ r~~::;; ~Utd '}~ • ,1, :tOJ,... •.• OtttOF.,.., '·~is·· J 1?f!. ·~ l.efllel"y ,,g 10 2' ' -v. 8=n c!,,"1 ·4 ;~ ,~::: ~ ~-esf>I :u,02t1 l's ,?~~ :-!: Vlctr Compt •. 1l s -.... The wrong envelopes are addressed to regionatprocess· ing centers in Philadelphia or Andover , Mass .. said Frank Busalacchi, IRS public affairs orricer. The envelopes should be addressed to the Fresno center. E-n 1.'44 ·; 1SS 52--·~ ~ .. ;:~. :tO 10 IS 10\4 ••• ~~.r:-.r~ :. 'l I~~=~ Ofilo Ed ... , 10 m ,....__ .... ~~'. i 60 6 101 .;;_ ~ V• Ele< 1.11 • 611 Wh-Yo pf2'h .• I tallt•1"" OieirFlftlSk s '2 12\4-"' ~Sin IO. 3SI .. "'. v. ~e pf4.S. .. JIO 51Yl+1\IJ Sl>lllT I 13tl 4 1 JO'ili-llo VeEPplHO .. 28 tt~+ ~' L.-1121 IU 6\lt+ Vt Gldclt.w .400 4 124 7 -YI t:;jtl ~urn tll ~-Vt E pf 10.16 •• 170 101l'o• 'II< SMflerG 5' s t'l 13 V. VeEI pf 4.IO •• uo SI + ¥. CooQT!n .601S s. 11~ .... OIHHlll .U 7 14 ,, .... _~VE corpn 'j ,. l~-Yt Epfl0..41 l2l0106Yl+1 Shtllrpf l:ls. .. 2 21 =v. ~:.E~':'~ij ~ si =~ CoooTpf 1'1• • • S IS'-' • •• Gllteae 1.SO 13 "I M -\4i t 0 ,. 1. '° 10 121 2SYt . . . OflPw pfl4A :: 1740 120111 • . • =!;?2~ is .~ ~~~-tt VSI c.orp ... 7 ' 14'11t-'I• =~,_;:~~ ~ ~"'=: ~~k~~ 2ft 1::;~ ~OF~~~·; 1 ~~='~ ~~cf':h~'l~·~ Sl•rr•Pc :cn 9 36 1o:v.! YI vu1c11M~w.?.2s -14 However, added Busalacchi. taxpayers who already • have mailed their returns should not be concerned. Returns can be processed easily at any one of the seven national cen· ters and should not delay a lax refund, he s'aid. dUf• Co • · 2 ,.._, \\ Glotlll MM 7 144 tV. + "' U Co 40 7 12 12~-V. OkleGE IM 12 131 2i11o-V. Signe IC ·~ 1 34 11 -11• WeRR~41/J,, J160 .. -1 GtwnO t.Mt12a ao 10371 "J~tz:: ~ EY•'c•1 91 1!? »13... .. • L 1..0n • . 30 2:v. • .. °" Glpf .ao .. 1790 10.,., • • . SleMICollf •• t '"'-" W.Cll .7' 9 21 22 _ ,... OMllM 10 •• -.. .,. "" •'' ~~ y 2YI I SJ )Jt.'t-V. ~eNG 1.IO f St UV.-Yo $+OCOPf 2.20 . • 2 Jtl4 .. • W.CllOY • C .. 7 3Yt ... Bl'd .As u JO 3'YI+ "" k 1.1211 2n n~ .,.. LtMNll 1 60 12 •34 26~-~ °'l::.~:"'i 9 1'J 21 ... ~ ~ ~"'Prc'~12 • ~ ,,.._. i4 W:1i~.o. 11 2 » .. ~ ;;; llH C 40 ·; S -Vt plA .71 •• 18 U~-Vt wEll l.20 21 ••• ~---11/t rA .,. I 1•7 •"' "" $1-.,....._ 115 1S4 '7 W I 1 10 76 14"" .... Those taxpayers who haven't yet mailed their returns can scratch off the wrong address and use the correct Fresno address found inside the instruction booklet. 1i:.11•11 2~1 • •;"":;1 .... 1!"' 1·:1~ 4l~ f:t::~ LlncNtl ciu .. 3 SJillt-"'-Orrwkln.60 s 21 1ot'o ... rM1C ... 1S • 22'1'+ Vt we11au1.6010 6 21'11-~ ~ l'1 .i 1i '11 ~ ~.. :··,. ' 290 3214+1 U11HF Dtll .• i 17 ... =.... ~Ilg M 1 I s u~+ ~ mDP« .40 20 = lt~ ~ W•llMr .toe ' 0 '~"-.. u "u ,... Lionel Corp .• 2S 1" Vt 110tCo .1e10 :u WM-\li "lllW Co .• m 1)'11-'lt, w.1Mert.oen "'••"' ... lier t .6' 1 4'l Z4 • ...,, + .,. 2 k 9 1" t Vt Or Ackl 1.tt I 20 14-\11 + Vt ~111'1 •• 21 JI"'--"" Wene Lb .10 16 12 14'~-.,._ ltrN11U • .t I~ ... GfaCt 1.70.S 11i 27'4-Vt t:;;:'cv~3 •• l JO!\-.,. MIS ft Ml\-\\ Wtn!FebSllS t t •.. K.nl .IO 'J 11 12 ... + t ~elnger ,30 22 ;a) r._· it; Ult11 cv pf 2.. • 17 ... -Vt g:,-,::i. l:~l~ 44~ == ~ .2ilit t I .. 14-V. Werneco .to . . 63 10~ + V. -H .JIO t H U~ OrMd u.eon to ~l11pfA 1 1ott-Vt 0ut1etCo .1s • 11 11 •...., ~· s 't\ •·· wemem 50 7 112 ~-.,.. 0-Qlr'9t 8 I 1t .. Or-lle.IO 1 1.st U\6+ ""· • ..... ,11.,..,, :: 16 1""+ v. ,... ... hp ~ 4 -1.... "• 1!! 11~1... ~ we,._,~., •• 1 71"'--114 O'owllZ 1.ao t4 41\6-1 Gr11YDr1.so 1 n 1•111-v. ~ .......... • 3 1,, , -"" .,...._, · 'w ...... .. • " .... .. • ,.. -·~· .... 40 1 en Co .so II 71 1114+ "' ~ A&P .. :» 11~"' ~-~ 1 20 1 116 2S\t+ ~ ETm . 11 ,, U'41-"' Smlltllnt ·,. 10 , .. »'n• -We()npf 111. • . 1 -,. .• •~ -10 2 ...... •• '"-"tf~l.20 • •• _..._ -__......_ · Cl" .ti 19 II S3'4-~ · 1, It 61,.._ ... Wenv(A.50 7 1 I"° ••• _,._., ..... • ....,..+ .. ~ Ir ."""I• ] f<;:::: -~SP U02S2 ?S 1V. + Yo 1111.72 11 ISi SI~-~ S.Wtl*llne 2 1 v..-.,.. WerLllrn .92. 17 292 36~-14 Cummlll• 1• u w llllir-"' ~N.._.. ,~.IO • 116 s.~ ~ LomMO ·* t ht u .... + .... din ... • SI 22V. + " Srnudcer •• • 19 17"'. -W•mrS 1.10 • SI tt~-"" ~II Clf7.50 •• 1100 IS -~ ..... ......... uica-I~ 11 12 u -p Sol• llM .70 ' 10 1J -~ we··--~ I .. 1 3 19111 + .... Ofo ,U 10 1 •~+ V. GHH pf 1.60 " J !~'\It c.-s lnct 1 t 1U 1.-. ••• --.--Sollnl• Intl I t4 J~ • •• w~! .• 7 2 12"'-,... lnf.OlllH 9 11\11+ V. GCWSlllnMIO '10 1 ~ ....... ILtlVJI 11l 17\oto-.\4; ~lnl.JO.; ~ ;r.t-Yo 5onyQ>.oi.t•11'9 ~"' WeNt tl'I .• 2 29\/•-Yi Firm May Bri,,g Car Tuneups to the Horne u AOt> 1 m 12Yt• \IJ G4Wtu1m J 17 2•~• .. ~L,. "1• •. 1110111v.-111 ,.:<>ML 11• ... • 8 •s 11 ·u. Soo L.111.Jlld • 12 JO.._• "" we·" 1. , 1 u ... •.. C"pitol N•wsc-r . .1ce INWA J . 1 2J¥o-"' OftW"' 1·•.. 1 11" • • • t "' .. ll ISO ... + .... fliecL:. 11• 47 3016~ ;:; sos a. AO • • 10Yr-" We W.t I ,. 8 JO 20;: .. " '1'11: YI l«H uo ' ., >m ... om~ 1·• 11 .. 1~·· "' .,. .. )S "" 110 .. ~. 111o "9<,...,, ..o u 11 21-..-.... scare •A • 10J 11 ...... \\ Welt•~ • ll 1~-·;..; sACRAM ENTO · -what CY<~J ·e ~ ~·-~1·:1.~ 2J: 1 1s;_·14 L 1.IO.A7.u J!! ,1':-Hi ~'"-UO t SU ~-\It SaJ llldl.~10 4 1'' W.llUIJ .2001S ISO ~+2"' f th CYPNS -o o--Orollw tl!C .. iJ ~· " 11 l; ' .._ 16 ~1,!."~ ~ : ~ 1f~~ ~ Iii!.' .e; ;i...._·~ =s.~: 1•1 z: ,:-• ~ may prove to be one o e l:n~011::~ ~ :U+~ g:::;:,~,\ ,. t. -'"· ~ 1.~r, ~ H~: e.!l~11'j;·• ,;: 1:-..·~ !"1m ... ,1,1] ,11:, •• :·~ ::'IM~i'.'i>'i 1~ :,. ::. Fn~htespe~~~bJ!J~~~~~~~~dg~~! =~~~44 I~ ;~ ~~.~ =rr.·=-~·; ll t'~ ::: Ill~·~ gr~·-~~·~~~ ==~ .....,_,,E•2.1~171 Ml ll~~ =:"~~~~: : ~-·~ tune·UpdoneatyOUrhomeor Dertlnd pf • • it • -14 Gulf Mtge RI •.! IO ~ • • cor;c • 5'13 12 -\II .... nflncl 1.10 7 .lJ )l:V. -·--... -.. !NlllaMkl 72 t , 211Jc Del• o.nr • m ,,_._.,,. Gull oir 1.10 , n1 2 + "' H .. 1 1s--.1 ..... ••• ....... "" 1 .s 8 10. sew.-"' · 1 •· · ofri·ce 1·s now bei·na developed ~..,,. 1 S 14 1M ..,_J.., __ I • 1•• ILM.+ "' TV ~ 1 .. ,A ... Pe•rtfl .60 6 JO I~-~ ~""-T.I) lO t ... ...._ V. #tllS FO .96 • II I f'o+ ~ , ~ -~-' 6 ii\>\> ••. .._,,_ " • ...., · • ..., .. -.. PertH .91 I 21 13"" .• ·. f!"p!'.!i',t.•• t• lOf ~ Ito WlFMQ OSd • • 12 •flt ••• by · ti E~"'°"Pu'"i"'_.." u~ 1w 1jt-~" GHR llfA .20 •• ' t• • 1 1 1• '" ,,..,_. -P•rw °'111 s 14 1~-v. --.. .. ... •• ~"" .70 8 14 13 _.., a maJor corpora on. ac- ' nr-=f 8 UO •• S II "' ~tiyS • 12 121 l~ ••• r::;r11H11 l.!l I U 24~+ "' 5o R .. I t.l2 l2 n S't - -#tKtr UO t S 2)1/J-V. COrd;"g lO the CUrrent l.SSUe of . Df , I 7• + t.11 9 140 1414-~ • ..-......C .. 42 7...,_ Yt I ....... _ .... Sott.lltlf SO U ""' w--.. ,... .-•·•• u "' ONnW.• i ''"'• ~ &W•~ ,,,.. ""'-111 ~"·'° • 1• u11o+"" P•~~i7$1~ 12 ~r;=14 SoUnoei'.1•t 2t u-.-·~ 11V11Pi'P.i2 ·; ·n ;.;;:~ Motor Magazine .. 1.tO ' ~ ., Gulf&W' .. $f1 s.-.-Vt L.,._ y,,g 1 il 140 U"41-14 P41yLM& .40 1o 7 ttllo-Vt leuWflO AO 14 It 141--"' ~tMr ,<IOe 12 117 •I'>-IJll • &L1.• • Jl:' • ~ GffWspu .. tt n -1 L.,..,. ra •• •-..Vt ~•.ttttn 74 ,. -~ SoWwtFr .20 • •2 e....+"' 1111taenc 1•40 1 1u ,,~."' In the system now bemg ..,,...,, "' °'-•••·· '" .,,._,. ,_,,_,.,.,_' -~ ""'"°'""·· " •~-~I"·• • __ ,. '"'""'·" • "'., __ ,.worked out. the motorist Deli.Alr .602' ,. "'Gullonllldit10 22 '" ••• -M,._ ~'f 1,1627 S:IO SlVt-4 ;:1r 4' 12''1+ YI 11¥11Ptc llld11 60 ai.c.-v. Otl~M_!I! Iii 2111 4t.t"• YI II W:i_...8 M-;-., MKA' A911d 1! ~-I m •·· I• .24Q 10 2S • ..__ V. ' 1141 "11 1'2~+ ~ WtltPllb .IO 7 U Ullo •·· WOUld call in and ajve the Oel,..,,. ..., ·• 4 "' •• • • ... MM:Don • ••• PL 1,., I 101 ~--"" " #Union 1.40 I ... 11\\-\\ e DtnnlMlll 1 1 " 0 ••• IF 8, • 131 M 1 6 1""_'1: ~ .JOj • "' t:i 1>.gg •• oo 119\1)-111 •• ·E't '° •, .ut--~ =""pf'.. s s•~+ 'lj; make, model, year and type EMllll pf 1 .. l f: ~ ,.... t l W ~Ill .tJ t Siii-" I 00 09 V. I .. W\ f HO 3 SJ 2. nn.,,1.»n 1 1o1t 11111t111,n1s "i1111-1 INl<y 1.101 acM-Yt 1• ·•11 'i,1 -15ii 1111 · ·• • ofengineinhiscarand setup .... 1., .eo 11 • • 1.20 • , r -14 Mty ;4'4 •• JllO .. ~ ~ .. PL"' 1.60 .. J200 3 + l/J 0 1·10 19 122 t•v.+'~ W.UllPf 4.60 .. ' jC) •• ., .2s w . •• ~ 1 10 • • MM ·•.. .-s 10.-"" PP~ uo · · t60 so•• ·.. Squ1111:> • 90 11 eo a."'+ YI Wtstll e1 .t741 •SI> 1614 • "' a specific appointment. A van tolni -5 40 i ti ~-" ....... -n 6 . 5~+ \4i Pell I 1 ... 10 16S ~-Y,• S1411'f M j IO S 2s• 44Vt-"' ~It lpf UO ·1· 110 '3?~-:! carrying al) the n1>1>es•"ry di • t6 .._ ; , • H 22~-~ ,,,_, < .~ 127 1'4-.,.. ,,_"""" 2~ •• 12 ..,...-.. • 8 120 111 ""'' vco 1~ 1 .. .,.. + ... .... "''' :fl .. \.4lo-·"·· u m~-\lt ...,cc 1 4 ., 21~~ !'l'lwlpfl.60 •• 10 n't+" ~=~1 },0 ~ .... -1 .... •"''"',,. • 10 19¥1• ~ • t ld b d' -•m .. 11 + IWCll t.a 1 tt ul4-,., =::J..s. 1 , 14 -i. ,.""1ol1.20 11m nl'l-Yt saueint..tail "41 !16 l'ltm-.ao1111:11 .,,,.._~ equ1pmen wou e 1s· ~ .. ··· 1••J " 1:t-" MMIMI a . u t-. ... =~llf 1·t*' ·; J 1:~+1.,_ ltll01fc.12 •If 11 ••• ~i._:ii :1 {:~-': patched to the motorist and ..... , .~ Ji: '1f ~··~ =.-,:'1:;1# ,.: k4:+~ 11 as n~+ " ~~t~J,.., :r'-; ~ "'"lfPfiisu 1 " 18"-="' the driver would do tbe ~J • 1:1 ,. ,.,. " MA~ ·u" 'ff,.,._,_ 1nc1y, 2t »: U--·" sc,_1,-. .. 42 ~-~ :"N.Jii 11!1 ~~.~.\. needed work. lnttl ......_•.i.: 1 ...,1S ., .. t .... ·;;. erl ftltl 1 I ...... ••• hlellf1 ., t ""'•\It ~~-1!' .. ' .. l ~.)')•,,, tflt\~01 :90 • 12• 20~• "-,.-• . ·-~· ---·oi· t. ..,...... • • • I ,,. • ~ 1~ ~-':: ·~ 12 I ~ ..... Mii pfC l .. ) )6 .. • A N 1 N 0 E p ID ND E NT r.'i 1 .. V. ·u ,. .a 11 lr'-" ·~ 11 1!f 1· "' ~·!!!it i; 1514 + ·.y; a..wi• ... • ... M11 Motor .• 111 1...,-"" .. ;:J·· t11 • 11' 'i : ~-·\4 · <i I -~ ,,... .... "".101 "' tm14~1~ •-~ ':f: ~~ "-: :':~:W,~~ ':1 1m:: ~ mechanic in San Dle!'O has ... • ._ ~ 1 • 4 1 "' •1 r ~ m ' •• \fl trtc t.iJd .. • + .,. errett 1 • ' -v. Met1o1c11 ,. 10 a s -" jumped ahead of lhe big cor· ~ l t . 'Ill (» •• t• • 1*$ 1 ~ ~ I 1 .. H ... + Vt I l'I .. U ,,._"' INl1ll.-C I S 4Ja H• •·· l d _, 00 lh t ~Ji.. ~ ... 11e ,f6 • 4' • 1 . ti ~ ~ 1.r o 'uo is " ,.,_. " •Sc 1 os .. l~ ~·-wt•""" .ow • ,1 , __ ..,. poral on an peuorm a H 1 • ! ?: ....., J: 11 ~ ! • ; ..l l ·-• 1~ • J: ff~-·;t ".: ': 'Tl it=,. #11110• 1 ... u • ~ • v. precise service ror more than • t 9 _._ ~· U 1J -'6 •u •·• :.J::w ·· LIO ~-~ en0rtt .1tw, IJe 1 ~ =~11 1~ M~-·~ 11ix"monlhS with (relt SUC• .. ~ D" ... '· ., to --. j ... ..,.,.as :: ''° 7 ., ~.!."j,, , ....... _ \:; ... ;1r,.·1-.. m• ~·' _ _..._, f 1 If~··~ • n --'· • ,._.. ._ .-1 t47 ""-" -, 1 .,._..-.... =o., 10 1 l " ... cess. He had been a ~u•mc • .. i.. ..,., .... l11 " MllCW ,.. c•fi .. , ... , ........ 1 ~, ~" ..... ~, .. al H Vt , I tr kl ft th t ...... w ·' +11 ,.:141 -• ~ 11 l • r1 -1 111 ..... -ii "i"" _ • 1. • • "' ..... .., · m ..... or a ar~ uc n1 rm a "'" t " ••• ' ••' .U SI lit 2$-f9 i ._ •• I ~ ._ l r + " MK 11 10 ~ -'" a} ' t hed hiftl to do Ail IS ' ·w ' ·u . t s ''' 2•"-,. 1 iJ _. ~="' .1 ' -. = 1. ;i '• :,. -· ways spa c 11 111 • -. M -• ~· . • Jt 11~-. ~ •• 1J ~ M i d ~" -..,.ce . .o • ,. m,-·~ such on the scene work with ;1 ! :: . ii 1 ·~ ~ \, ., ii -~ '1'.ll : 1 ;:= '~ 1 1 tM-t: ::S::rTi~ : 't ,::; = broken down tractor trail~ • u 1? ~ T • • 'll ~ ~ ,. • m t•-" ·gs "' M1 :'.!';' ~ ..., "',:.. 10 ,, -" n · · l,.. ~ ~ ... , 6 it J: " i•" f.2'" 1 J a;+"~ AJrw t 11 •w. .ij Such • aervlce, on a .. , ,......_-• ' I .J... ::: i +" ai~ • f., ,?!.~!_~ .. " 11 !.'" #Y'r,Y!::~! 1ll 1~" widespread basfS Would be a 'ti 'l &-·; ' \f"" ··• ~ .,-.; l ,.. f1 -h "'Mi. ii 1 lf,... 14 -"Tl boon lO the consumer. ';,.. + I ',"': ~ 1 i,l WI • 1S 1:M U="'• " l9ft t f 11111-¥1 -----t 1 + I s:-ft • tt pjen I !! _._ s, l .t~• ~ ~ruc:p 11•1m 61~•1 * 1. ;t .L • ·: 1 ~ C2 ~ =:.":':: 'i , 1n.-'f; I 1h J! HY: : ~~· ·.:::: » m. ·v. Wlth more and more of 1lS ,. • • -1 •""-~ ~Mt · '° n 6"+ ... 1p12~ i&. ;! ~ • ~ E' t ~ ;!~.: ~ taklna the auto option of tho e. t '.~. ' , !!-· ~ .. .It Ir' ... vtn,l landau roor, lt ls Lmpor· · ~Ii • ~ ~ ·4 4 n\\-~ ~·~ TJ llt w• ;== ~ "'i~· ., ,,._.'°' c.. 1i ::: tant to takalroper raro of tt.. 41'1 ~ • .. .. :1: ti n 2'u~= ~ -. PortOri. ' ·~. \; ' ,. 1 -Iv-lllRM l UI t ---"' ' __... l ld lh b -om :: • ~ • 6 m )' •.. -\II ~f.m'i\.'itiial "°•'"1; j1 ~-". 1~.n t tr t -\\ ~un1Cr 03 e eavy._~ .. • ( IN iIIGH GEAR ) pense of replacirtg the cover-r ing after a relatively short • time. NEVER USE A metal or any other stiff-brisUed brush to scrub your vinyl roof. The material is rugged, but it is slill comparatively thin. Use a sort brush dipped in mild soapsuds or dish de· \crgent. Make sure you rinse it thoroughly after washing to get an the residue of the clHnser orr. For the more dlf · ficult stains and streaks you should use the commrrclal vinyl roof cleaner available in most auto supplies stores. * If you are headed for the snow eountry ror a blt of ski· in5t end other wlnteT apons you may be an for sotM'frttv ing problems that really take tho edf e off the fun .••• particu arty when lhe car start&, dies and lbeo woo't stan a1aln. 1 Here ls a job for the Gld 1 fashioned ~t water bot- tle ... wedge one acatnn the fuel pump and pour bol waltr over lhe nearby fael line. Wllh A UUJe luck you'll have solved the problem. You can avold t.bc problem If )'OU keep 1our lan~ked, ~o uot~ ' WA~r con tlqn. Pf' · , . • I I ~ t .. TUMILEWEEDS FUNKY WINKERBEAN N\R. BURCH. &ET A LOAD OF BUU .. BUOHKA '6 IQ. 6COREI FIGMEHTS JOll A MINUE> TulaV£1? I DON'T !lEL.IEVE rT I by TomJlatiuk BUT H00J COOUl HE HAVE CH~A'!EO~ . .. ~ J NANCY by &nie Buslimiller 6EFORE 1 SAY SAY HI, . "AH' ---HERE'S A - -DOCTOR • "AH " CHECK FOR THE MONEY WE OWE ~ YOU • • PEANUTS TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PVZZLB FALSE?WM'f' DID\IJU M OOlJN 'FAJ.SE' CIWCK? , ACROSS 1 StlongbolM Ii ···-· Sedl": ......... 10 Kt1ighl'1 ... 14 Accuttom 15 •·•·Wlfll!lf 11 81.e•: Poet. ., ...... slat• capital 11 Biid lour: 2 WOl'd• 20 NOC heahlty 21 Elbe tftlullfV ,, ..... -24 An.nded I meeting: 2 -·· 211 ,.,...,llOf ,._' ..... ,....., --,,._ ..... ,,._ JI Sc.t9:Abbl'. """"""'° -Jiii Lit.ail 46 Fftll 21 hotn: 2 11rord• 49 ••••• H1rt>o< SO Growing outward 51,Rafsed Ind '" 52 Min Lupino 55 Actor Rudolph 58 Audaciou5 pefJOn: Slang 80 Bnebllll' 1 ••·· Sltughte< 61 Symbol Arehlk 11 c>p.r11ie Q FfOl'M or 11 Cut 'hort highligh1 Allen 12 Wifelen .i Mottportlv 83Violefit code 41 Ol1long lpftlth inVMllOf lime-oo M TV P'09'"" 13 9ecome I 42 °"1NPINI e snw1t'd "*"tier Q ~ behind: 19 Hindu tMlftrill Prefix •MQious 45 Cliendat" DOWN telCheor lbbl'. 1 s,an11tt 22 n• ot honOf "8 UftMg dtvic• •ffirl'n•ti\19: 25 a. \ll1Well 47 PN.,.._ 2-• 25 ~ • LafgltOOnl 2 AnMogw: T1 Hound'• "9 Un*illed Abbf. q""'1'Y lebor ... JC~ 28 Nuts 51 ~- 4 sooner thM 29 &11th'• m.r knowteagt 5 ""'"'· •.g. JD Ed 53 O.llhed • • JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH AH! 111 I • DOOLEY'S WORLD MAX! CAN~· l!ltl CI005£ 'IClUR COIN'Allf AMY eE!l EK 1!W< lHAT ?J... GORDO. MOOHMUWNS by Mel -JI E.-odd•: ,_ .. '2 ltffugfl .. Afltw+lh. grou,: Vlf. 45 Zodllc lign I SkiceMtir J2 Closefrilnd 5" Pi&a'sriwf 1 M..,,. ot ••it .13 'Auto 56 Mlltll I Busy K!Mty • KceMOrY COfttainer 9 1mpH 34 F~ 11 AW. MlrfK>I llr.A , YOIA ADMIT YOIA'RE THE MOST NWlfCTIC MEM9EC: Of' THE CLA~, a4T YOO WON'T /1£ FO/f LON6 ? HIJW DO ::!--,"•o~ f.XPECT TO EFFECT ( _') THAT CHA>j6f ? · _____ __.__\ 10 GIYfl IUtfil 59 Lll..idenl of: ttt1imOllV: 35 RoclMtl S"1ful p :o I lo I DICK TRACY 1 • • . . l'M 601"6 TO Ol!IVf THE OTME/fS C'-4 l.Y.,. I . I , ' l )_....,,..~ I ' "Well, as I understand it. we're supposed lo lolcrntc Russia and China lo help keep pe1ee -you know, like witb husbands.", •• ' . . . • . I ! 1 . ~ ,. , -- .. ... .. W!C!M!d!y. January 28, 1078 OAILYPILOT 87 State Park Planni-lig Reassessed BJ TllOllAS 0. EUAS dlaedvant,aged area -another change in depart· lariest cltJes -.Los An&eles, Sacramento. San The "era or limitations" that Gov. Edmundo. ment thinking announced last year -wlU car,., Diego, San Jo e and Oakland.. Brown Jr. contends ia upon Calltomia bu come to over into traJI development. The mona.v comes from an annual $1 fee paid by the state park 1yatem. "1 Th On ... or the most arnbiti ... •• pl• .. • of the park de· ON• ll 8 T E ER . all motorists •i part ol their car registrations. e ... ..._ --~ E UL OF111 S EVISEDpriorilte1 f t t bout $H million a year with Plrtment under former Gov. Ronald Reaaan was wlll be that less land is purchased and that it will ees n1°11W1 am°"'1 koeda • th t ail • for 8 statewide network of trails linking state parks cost taxpayers far more per acre. SlO m on eatmar '°" e r s. and providing hostels for non·m. otorized \tavelers. For elabt years, many or California's s'tate park Even tho1Jgh $10 million a year won't buy a The idea was to encourage lona·ra"n•e hilting purchases were made wlth matching funds from 1reat deal of l•nd near bit~ltlea, past performance and bicycling. the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund. indicates Rhodes la p~ably on the ri&ht track with Park officials would arrange for landowners to bis current thinking. BU'l' BER Bf; RT RHODES, B.ROWN'S director donate half the market value or their property to the of parb and recreation, maintains that the bullt of state, then use that donation as their 50 percent FEW PER~ONS BICYQ.E THE LENGTH of the~tedon'treallywantanythini soambitious . share of the purchase price. The result was that the trait aloqf' the California Aqpeduct, for ln· 'LOcal government agencies and lnteresteil tbouaands of acres of prime parkland came into the stance, fewer 1ttill hike the distance. Other am· iJ'OUP• •• :Indicated that the greatest tr~il need1s system at no cost to the state. bilious long-distance tr all projects like. the Pacific for bicycling trails and that most bicyclists prefer But that kind or purchase won't be possible in Crest trail iet sfmilarly small usage. tralla they can reach quickly from their homes, use urban areas. Only a lack of ready buyers ever con-It is also obvious that long·distance trails used fbr a few houra and return -------vtnced landowners to donate half the market value by only a few persons are inconsistent with the new home the same day," ' SOtrrHERN "' of a potential park to the state. There is no such lack emphasis on cost-effectiveness conslanUy .Pushed Rhodes said. CALIFORNIA with vacant, attractive urban land, which also is by Rhodes' boss, Gov. Brown. Rhodes' aoceptance FOCUS priced much higher than rural acreage. "Our overriding objective is to encourage de- QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi -• ..;;..;:~;.;.;... ________ ..._ ______ ~ll l • 'l -1 I I T olthla finding means a re-'--------velopment of safe, convenient facilities that will al shift in the type of land THIS MEANS THERE WILL BE less new land generate large amounts or use," Rhodes said. lhe park system wUI buy In the near future •nd a comlng into the park system and that state tax-Those kinds pf fa cilities are far more likely to L...:....:.::_ ____ :--""'-'.--::------- rad.ical change in theflnancingof t.hepurchues. payers will fool the biU for all of it. be located in large cities than out in the countryside .. Your 'Ex' is here." Tbe shift in department thinidnt also means Funds already have been earmarked tor buying between them, eyen though financial realities will lhattbeemp~aslsonurb:an~par:.:k:s~an:d::_:ser:.:.:ri:ce:_::fo:r~u~p:.._:la:n:d:....:.::ro:r_t:r:a:ils:...._:n:ear:_:se:v:er~al:._:o:t~C:a:li~fo~r~ru=a~·s~d=i=cl=at=e~a~r~el=a=ti~ve=~::...:.:sm=::..:ruls~iz=e~fo~r~th=e~m=.======::::::::::==:=:::::::::::::================:;;;;;;:;;;;;;~iiiiii~ Speakers Bureau . Formed Two Capistrano Unified School District principals have or· ganized a spe akers ' bureau to provide in· formation on the upcom- ing $30 million school constructioo bond issue election. Clubs and organiza. lions may secure speakers by contacting Phil Grignon, principal at Dana Hills High ·School, or Edd Kincaid, principal of Niguel HilJs Junior Hi&h School. Voters will be asked March 2 to give approval to tuuance of $30 million in bonds that would be used to finance construe· Uon of schools ln Mission Viejo and San Juan Caplatrano, both rapidly •rowing areas in the sprawling district. Bond i11uance will require two-tblrda voter ap- proval. Projections estimate that the enrollment of the district will climb from 14 ,000 to 22,000 within five years. Taxes, Schools Pondered Dr. James Gutbrle, an auoelate professor of education at UC Berkel97. will discuss .. Are Turayera Lasing Contro of Their Scboolt?" at a 7:30 p.m. meetln& Feb. • at Mesa vtew School ln Hunt· lngton Beach. The public wu Invited to the Session, 1pon.sored by the Mesa View PTA. The school ts at 17a>l Avilla Lane. School officials said Dr. Guthrie, a trustee for the Berkeley Unified School District, favors decentrallzed manage- ment of schools and citizen advisory councils with decisive pow en. Those wishing to at· tend the meeting should call Mrs. Georae Ward at 842-6268 or the school atao.eeoa. Moulfun Honored A Moulton Niguel Water Diatrlct sewage treatment plant has been liven the ,.Plant of the Year'' award by the San· ta Ana JU••r Basin AC!· tlon of the California Water Pollution Control FedtraUon. • It Is th• HCond year that the dlltrtct•a .. 3-A" treatment plant. which r.rimarilt treats wute rom Mlsalon VieJo, baa ftCeived the.aw arcl. The award II baaed on an lnspectloa ol tbe plant •r, ea1tneers Jn Nov· ........ IYLOI LEVEL LOOP IODIL • Ill TIP SHEARED HI.LOW llSIALUD PllCE ••• DUPOIT NYLON . • HT QUALITY IAMI llAll CARPETS AT LOW DISCOUIT PllCIS I • SELECT FIOM Ill Ul,ST CAIPIT llVEITOIY II THI WIST TRI-COLOR SHAG • IVllY IOLL OF CA.PIT IS MAllED All Pll(ID FOi YOUI SHon11G COIVlllllKI q • AU UIOI UICOIDITIOIALLY HA a ct u HERCULON® IV SCULPTURED 100% HERCULON· OLEFIN PILE IN A TIGHT LOOP WEAVE FIBER THAT RESISTS STAINS AND WEAR MANY COLORS AVAILABLE llSTALUD PllCI ••. 'llGl\rll O IUOfllUI Of 1111<.il\ -C WllM "Oll DlllWUI IOI Ill 011111 fltll KODEL® Ill SCULPTURED DUPONT IYLOI SCULPTURED 100% DUPONT CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE. FASHIONABlE THREE·LEVEL COBSLESTONE DESIGN. II STALLED , •. ,, ... · IODEL• Ill PLUSH 10096-KOOEL • POL VESTER PILE. A DENSE. SHORT PLUSH MADE OF' LUXURIOUSLY RICH FIBER. MANY ' ATTRACTIVE COLORS. VENTURA 250tl.Mlln .... (IOl) .... IMt TOIUtANCI 42H Artllll llvd. 542 ..... 41 SQ. YI. WHlnlEA 1111' I. Whltta. llvd. 1Uo011t llSTALllD, PRICE ••. : ... " FOR DO-IT. YOURSELFERI · FREE .. WITI •IMM .... ASI OF A US .. AIT Oii IOLL Of SBMlllSIVI IORU ' VllYL TAPl IV1"142' ... 1 snr . !L C~ON 237LM11nlt. tn•> '4M2t2 HO. CALIP0Mt4 LOCATIONI • CAMPllLl • IAM CAM.Qt • MIUIRAI •IM •ftANCllCO •MT. VllW •\ '1 '' T L { J ' I ) I ~ \; Tonight's .TV Highlights KTLA 0 8:00 - ''Where Love Has G<?ne:" Susan Hayward, Bette Davis and Mike <"Mannix "> Conners head the cast of this 1964 movie version of the Harold Robbins novel. · KCET.@ 9:00-"The First'Breeze of Summer. "Three generations of a black family are profiled on this drama in KCET's Theater in America series. NBC EJ 9:30-The Dumplings. The premiere episode 01 a new TV series based on the comic strip characters of a chubby couple who run a lunch counter. James Coco and Geraldine Brooks play thetiUeroles. -TV DAILY LOG Wednesday f vening JANUARY 28 Qj Mttlt: (C) (Zlw) "A lie ....... ltr tllt um. U4Y' (wtS) '66 - Heory follda, Jolw Woodw11d. m=. a..u ·1he first Bittle of Sumllltl" l.tshe Lee·s _. 10C11Se$ 0111111 .. ttMfltlOlls of 1 sinclt bl«\ l1m1ly who mu.sl ~I. 1nce the soe11I and economic rut .. litS ot tlleK put and prnent •rtll t11e11 ch1ldre11·s upi11ho11S !Of Ult future. t-.JO o oo ~ oo m PllOtlCIE ni. Du!llPI.., llmtS Coc:o alld Gmld- •ne Bruoks ~star as .lot and All· 1el1 Dllmphna, 1 cllubl>y Romeo • and Juhet who ope11te a busy lunch couoter in 1 llew Yolt City otfa bulld1n1 • i!I 0 Cllttef 10:00 6 GEORGE K£NNEDY IS * THE BLUE KNIGHT!!! O @(l}({)Ht ll1t h 11hl Bumpe(s belt be<:omtt 1 powder kec al rmuder and theft when two hoods decide that 1t would be sale1 to rob othef lawtl1uq1s, and an ex· a>tWict who is 1111st1kenly accused ol 1 crime decides to hive his re- nnet by fllttly ICQISlne I pollce ottic:ef of usault. 0 PETROCnu STALKED BY DESERT KILLERS! O CIJ ID Cll m Nroct111 ''Sur. ~ TOllJ l'etrocelh helps I U.S. M111t111 rec111m 1n escaped bU~ sv~ (<:Ms ConMlly), but on tht !!tum tnp they are ~d. th1 l!IM'Sllaf IS slltn, Ind l ony Ind !ht PftSOntf llt trapped II the wilder· lltU. Bam""" EB T1tt IMieJ "'The MllUM!t' _ The motlier of a doctor who worls lll)lll's llCJIPllal IS ~ and dllS Md Ille lloctor tit~ It "°" lum· wit to lff rmnre. Jolin Rubtft· stt111 r1MS1s.. tlJ W'Mft AMtlblre ~""" 0... ...... Hoitt Dame n. Def'tlll. 19 Ci)) CIJ Stlntf & Hcrldl "Tht Omaha Tl&tf" Slallty & Hutdt lit· ves11111e the UllCCldental" deatlls of concessionfifH at 1 spons 11111', Hd ~ embroiled 111 an old· lnhiontd murder mysteiy lnllOlvinc 1 beautiful prop11etrm, her loYtf, two crooked bU$1ness m1n1prs and her 11101!1et coes With htr. an ISSOltnlent ol wratlers of both 0 .... (C) awl "'Wlteft lM . Ha ~ (d11) '64-Susan Illy-10 lO Mil~ Nfts ward. Bttt• o..m. Midtfel ConnOfS. ; I ~ Varidy i ;'$ ........ "An1e1 o1 I mmm T1tt ..,. <R> " MtftY" Jlimt, drscvised as 1 ttSQlt unique \'isual eiplo11!ion into t._ 11une, ftlts into 1 '"'" war·J Maura RIWl's '1lole<o, wrtll Zu· t.om South Amtf'an COU11try wrth b111 Melita and Ille Los An&elu PM· 1 hot·sllo« ltellcollCtr pilot to 11sc.utl hlrmo111c. ." Amcoclll ambassador llld lllS ll:GOI mo m El) ..... wife. An4f Gnffrtll cums.. Resdled I 00 @ @9 """ ult4 from fist wttl lest of ~ fJ lllliM $ .._,.: (C) ~ "Tllel letlt 0.IM labtW Hoitt DtMly Alf.tit" (111ys) '67 -Jlrae:s Dlmt vs. DtPaul. lllSOll, Simone Scnorel lllalt aldtln e ems Wits ,..,, HartiMa. 111ry HMU1111 I) fllotrt O.• lasUtW Motte Tltm Stoeeei Dan n. DePaul. m s.ww.t .., ; 6'trt Madlell Rtpllt w MM: (C) (21w) "Tltt MIUdl' ( ())) Trvtlt • CIA'l,lllllft .... .,..,. (d11) 'SI-Aldo Rrf. ' Cill9I )4 fD am:lID A Sbtilic Spedlcv--ll:JO 6 Q1) (}) CIS Lite MM: (C} ·~ llf Per1oml11a by MVtrll of tilt t.n. '-t" (dr1) '71-[d Ntlson. '°' u s. lieut• sklttrs ·nclud·n· I@ (IJ ~ m Jell•"' C.rsoa Gordo!I llldlelltn, 1973·74 US. Se·i Tiit llMl,_HRlll mor Men's Sbtlnc Chfml)tOll. (Oj ()))Cl) Wide Wtlld ~: II ())) c:mmD OM It OM (R) (C) °'1114J'we !Oi.,,,.. A11ne 8ue· ~ Wmtliflc did" (R) Robftt Waaner. t G. Mii· ..,.... LMcuc• "'er,.• s111n and Lloyd H<M1n star. l:lO Mm Clfflll Sltew CJ) Tiie Fii 9:00 fJ Mtwlt: "'Tiit All-AmtrlaR" (dll) IJ CANNON TUNES IN ON '53-TOllJ Curtis. LOfi t111son. *ROCK CONCERT CAPER l ;w1114 Mn. M11t 8 @CIJ Cl) C.-Ralph Bel· W s-t l.ity suats ., 1 111ullt 111illioclllre : llled JHl..i • ~ fraud 1n the IPjlettllf l?:GO e ,...,.. - kidn.IPPl"C of his oandson and Ciiis CD MIN: ,...., T1IW' (111us) '36 ea-In to U., the me out <M'I -Fred AstM. ~ Rottrs. pola .,... m .... ""' ........ (hor) '63 o CJ)@@ m C1llce ... .. -Abel s.imr. CanMn ~teio. lllH "'TM Be B111sh Ott" Chico ll:JO O 5-,.,, btcoNs "') fnalllftd whtn lie IS Cl) MMe; (C} "W• " ... .WJ" 11"8blt to •"" tt1e ... "' °' •I (sci·f1> '53-'-a.riy pl ....... looks ructty hu 1:00 I ~Mi m ,~ htf U·boffr1111d T CH1Y Orlando iifi cuats. Radledultd. l:IS .... "f...,., KM" <-> <1) Cd s-t . -BlfWI StlllW)'Q. Joel Mdnl. 0 <9 CD CJ) EB"'* .,.., @(J) ,...: (C) "CIKli 1R tilt or Ott" Niti latt11a MtS up a ~ (tc:Mi) '6S-Da111 AlldrM. Cl1lllt INd« fOf Ill Mm(. ht fun ?:GO • .._... ~ "lnl DNM." llllt WlflcM pncl111d fldlOns will ........ SU' utttt fer CORll'OI ol tilt laderless J:GO I) llllie: ""'"' A Diii lillellltlr ¥rce aclMtiti. (COlll) 'SO-frtd Mldilumy, ·KOCE Television (50) ltlltMI ...... u ... .... ,. ----.. ,_ UI 1111 1111 ~1 llMI --· _ .... ,_..,. m1111 --_., ......... .. , . .., --, ........... .. 1he masterpitre of bizarre looe that stunnd Fronce. A portrait of love and submission ... to dJJt»'t.kr tJie senses. ,_,CMN ICU.UI 111'1 lie ""'. 10 um.I INDIAH5 "' _,, .. ..__, NAM. w !UT! !OI ..,.,_ ---' ~ e •An MINA'#AY J DlYI Of 1MI CONDOI .., Al NCIMO DAT AmlNOON• _.._..... DIOWNIMG POOl,.. ,_,__.an, llO..saa LR a ftMll Of lllUL T AMMS 111 Ml.M"'8IM9ILl 111 ....,..,___IUftl\'M.I WINJllHAWK "' .... ....,_ umJ llO MAN ,.. ,. ... : .... RO ky Reviews.for Hudson . LONDON (AP> -BrlUsh critics panned Rock Hudson here after his opcnine night performance in lhe Broadway muslcal "I Do' I Do'," saying one of hls dance rouUnes "could only be equaled if ~osi Be,ar danced Fred Astaire." Herbert Kret2mer said in the Daily Express that Hudson "oozes that puzzl~ boyish pomposity which women seem to find so en· dearing Crom 19 to 90. Certainly they go wild over a laboriously executed dan ce routine he performs. Sue)l an effect for such· an effort-. c'ould only be equalled if Yogi Bear danced Fred Astaire • • Grady; Cop Axed LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two midseason replacements, "Grady" and .. The Cop and the Kid," have been canceled by NBC after coming in last in the Nielsen ratings last week. A new variety show starring Mac Davis, who previously had a show on the network, will replace the two comedie~ in the ·8·9 p.m. time slot on Thursdays, beginnjng March 18, NBC said Tues- day. CBS' "The Wallons" took first place in the rat· ings with its two-hour special, while the usually top- 1 rated. ''AU in the Family" was pre-empted in New York by President Ford's State of the Union address. 1:1 5-4~5:50 7:3S-t:25 '1.EfS DO IT AGAIN" (PG) l."45-7:40 'U SAVAGE" 1:00.5:50.9:40 "GRIZZLY ADAMS •• IC'il 1:1 0.3:15-1:45 7:l0.t-.JO • "1&.AQllAID"S •HOST' .. JOWNIY IAQ TO or , •. "WIN ER HAWK .. "D!ATH WISH" 6:3S-9:SO "'fUSM 601DON'"., -nt1 Cl I 11...-.S- "ROMEO AMO JULIET .. °"'" DO rr A•Alif" "'DOC SAYA..r CNt Now mont than ever you need the Information printed every day In the •1,"'f .)"'H"'j..-ij"'i(P.111t)~I '"SUHSHIHE IOYS .. IPGJ '"TAU THI WOMEY AMO IUM'" .IACll MICHOLioM "'MAH06AMr IN> '"OMCI IS MOT BtOUMr Ill 93 DAYS OF THI COtilDOI'" Ill •c.-.TOWM"'lll SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRES SAN DIEGO m. AT M STOl • SO.COAST PLAZA J46.J711 ...... c.....,. .... ......, "HIN~IUG'' (PG) M&'tt.Je•tt• ... ,~, .................... Hite PAAIONO • ,.ruwaw1 TH CIClll'S llST" II. N&'tflll .... ltlt ..... ,,... .. 1 .. he worried about breaklng his ankle. and di.splaying little of that omnisdent repose that made him so de· tightfuJ ln GO's Hollywood comedy." The show. based Qn "The Fourposter." traces a marriage from honeymoon to grandparenlhood. The play generally gQt worse notices than Hudson. "A revival best left unrevived," said Jrving Wardle In the Times. HUDSON'S COSTAR, JULIET Prowse, fared better. "The saving grace of a dismal evening is Miss Prowse," the Guardian reviewer said. ThE! Financial Tl mes said she literaJly danced ·rings around Hudson. The notices were unlikely to have much efCed. The two.month limited engagement run is nearly a sellout from advance bookings. PLUS TELLY SAVALAS PETER FONDA 0 . J . SIMPSON •N "THE KILLER FORCE " ' HUNTINGTON CINEMA "' IUCH AT RUS. H.I. ••7·960I . 147-601 7, ADVENTURE IN ALL ITS GLORY 'I~ •• .,;. . ~ !ml ... s111·cau1rq.m1c,aa1 c~nn c'nst1Ja1r ftummer '11 *Im•• ii llB man Wbo would 11 ~11 ~ .,.,. Hi-cilllMlll fl*'-cmJa* Mill Mii CALL FOR SHOW TIMES CINEMA WEST WUTMIHSTtl ATGCUDCWHT ..._WESTMIM.CBml ltZ-4491 .... I w.dnetday, January 28. 1119 I DAIL V PILOT 89 Hustle 11 In 1 clH~ by ltaett -• superb tribute to th• thrllltrl ot the 40'1. . .Steve Sh1gan'1 acretn play de~ve,. ch1rader development and •tCHy-teutng t'A!cturiquea that are ctiaalcal ... County POps _Concert Enjoyable Gene Slsker, Chica~ Tribune -~· (R) '\ • • Rich In ChlNCt.,, tough, CYf!fcal and yet 1trangely romafttlc-'Hustle' it the kind of muMMaytrtd, complex crime thriller that used to be Holty~ood's ~lalty -a film to relish." . PlUS ' ~oger Ehert, Chicago Sun· Times "NO WAY OUT" dwards UD CINEMA Hf'WfOll II.YO AT '14 UOO MIWPOllT KACH 67 J.IJSO CINEMA WEST WlSTWIH\Tlll AT40t.Dl"WIU WESTMIM.Cetrlll "M4U Thls writer normally has little time to spare ror what many concertgoers rather patronizingly call "li,ght classical--rnusic" -in other words, the William Tells, Light Cavalrys and other plinkety· plonk placebos thnJ adduptothepops concert. But this wraler always has plenty of time to spare for the wishes or an undoubted majority of said concertgoers. And the majority often makes it clear that the likes or pops personalities Arthur Fiedler. Andre Kostelaneti and their ilk are here to stay. Proof of the local pudding, in that sense, came Saturday night with standing room only at the San· ta Ana Hlih School for an Orange County Philharmonic Society concert that was a blending of two alms. NOTABLY, IT WAS OUR first OCPS pop.41 con· cert of any season and, worthjly, it was d.evoted to a bicentennial theme that one overrated music critic in um area has labeled "tiresome ... The really tiresome portion of that condemna. tion lies in the personality of the man who delivered it. In this writer's view. it is going to take all of 1976 and much of 1977 to do anything like justice to the many Americans who havt! left their imprint on the concert repertoire. Kostelanetz and the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra got us off lo a grand start in this respect With splendid airings of two works by Louis Got· tsc::halk his thoroughly exciting Grande Taran. telle for piano and orchestra a nd his tempestuous and bea~tifully sung "Escenas Campestres." CANADIAN PIANIST RALPH Grierson added to some already Impressive laurels with his work in the Tarantelle after earlier nobly tryin!l: to find 'Heidi' Cartoon LOS ANGELES <AP) -"Heidi ," the Johanna Spyri children's classic who provided a 1973 Shirley Temple movie a nd a recent television special, will now get the cartoon treatment. Hanna.Barbera Productions h as completed preparation on a musical animated version, "Heidi's&ng," to be re· l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;lge~a~se~d~in~la~t~e~l~9~7~7.~Th~e~~mpMyp~~oosbm~e ; the Paramount release. "Charlotte's Web." Groh in Film BEST PICTURE and BEST DIRECTOR -NATIONAL BOARD OF REVIEW "MAGNIFICENT ENTERTAINMENT, SUMPTUOUS, LUSH, GORGEOUS, THRILLING, HAUNTING ... TRANS- PORTING THE VIEWERS INTO A WORLD OF LONG AGO, AND CREATING THE KIND OF MAGIC FEW MOVIES ACCOMPLISH AND FEW DIRECTORS ATTEMPT IN A LIFE TIME." ~ex A~ ... , - LOS ANGELES CAP> -Rhoda's husband, David Groh, is making bis debut in theatrical motion pictures with Universal's "Two- minute Warnin . " · • ''""by in some of the more evocative later passages of this superbly scored Gottschalk work. All in all, it was a pleasing pops concert and never more so than in the second half of a program soothingly presided over by the urbane Andre. Bernstein's "Maria," Kern's "Showboat" selection and Grofe's "Grand Canyon" music particularly pleased the OCPS audience. something worth listening to in George Gershwin's AND IT w AS , PERHAPS, fitting thatthe official ~ond Rhapaody for piano and orchestra. A great program should close with "Old Man River," a Kern p1ty, that; the man who wrote ''Rhapsody in Blue" classic that ~quarely put the name of Paul Robeson should have known better than to lower his sights before us. That distinguished American voice is now and 1tandar"8 Jn this fashion. silenced forever. alas. Soprano Kathleen Brown, tenor Michael Sells So, fortunately, are most DI those voices that and baritone David Myrvold were our capable chose to condemn this splendld artist because he soloi.all in an "Escenas Campestres" that, on oc-· d casions, had problems for them. EspeciaUy M1-s chose to defend his political persuasions an con· '° demn racism 20 years before the world was ready for _B_ro_wn_._w_h_o_n_e_ve_r_s_ee_m_ed_w_ho_1_1y_su_r_e_o_f_b_e_r_r_a_n_ge_such honesty. ) -..: . . .. , (THE WORD IS OUT ALL " OVER THE COUNTRY . THIS IS THE MOVIE TO SEE! "LET'S DO IT AGAIN" IS THE KIND OF MOVIE THAT SENDS YOU OUT OF THE THEATER FEELING ESPECIALLY GOOD. . .CHECK IT OUTI /¥, 'lfT/ A1 llttt. (,.,.....,1,,., r.ro> tc. r•llJcr P ',1 A,';\f WA~OOll!n ·Olr·1, -;·.; A'UJ~ <lll<J·;.;.·{' i;o,1r, r;~ "'""YI0.•"4""1~.-ill l•111,<1t~~~·t,.H)Al.~,,-,;1~;1,111./1 ~'<•Ot'JHt (Ml 1.-!.t•• cm ~u·1 r(Ot.tJ••>o~ J..m1,....~·tu,Q~1..,.W·1 ~t1.A!1tt.n""N" " ... Paclno, Lumet and the film itsetf will definltety be up for Academy Awards." Robert Q. Lewis, KF• STAJ\l!:EY J\lIBRICK HARBOR ot ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 546·310l Q!LHAlllOR BLVD._· ONE Mil( SOUJH OF SAt(OIEGO FWY.I SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES FOR T"itS GREAT FAMILY PROGRAM-GENERAL ADMISSION $2.50 CHILDREN UNDER 12 $1.00 The Life and 'rtmes of ~:3 GRIZZLY ADAMS Color by Deluxe~ , I The True story of a man · exiled In the wilderness and how he learns to survive .. MON.-FRI. DOORS OPEN 6:30 mumv: 1:00-10:35 ROOSTER: 8:40 SA.T . .SUN. DOO"S OPEN 1:15 ROOST!A: 1:30·5:05-8:40 mum Y: 3:25-1:00-10:35 ftYAN O'NfAL • MAlllllA HJllENSON ...... 0 .. 1,,cun '"TfAUINfllUIT, IU.,TUOUI. LUIM. OOAOIOUI. TMlllLllMG . llAUNTlllG . ~flNO Tiff ~INTO A WOllLO o~ LO"O ••o AllD CMATIMO 1'* lllMD ~ --1110•t1• acco•,u•• AND nw OlllfCTOlll Alfflll't IN A lt'f 1-... ..._, .... \f"'D U.tt.Ot.C-.\JlfllMIO )1 llllCffAAD 8EH.JAMIHE. 8£ST SUPPORTING ACT'Ofl KIT PICTUlll:-<X>MEDY edwards BRtSTOL CINEMA STARTS FllllOAY. JAN. JO ""~···"-"~· --~ ~rlisMiira " .. ,,. . ... WlnTelHDWK lf~OAE THE WIST EVflll IAW '"a AMUUC.&N COW90Y -WIHTUIHAWK HAD llMOME A 8LAQ(R>0T LIOINO 8Jf °"8l Y PILOT -. ·- . '• .. • it . ~ . . : . Researchers use smoke is to isolate keY:llilvor .ingredients of tobacco-low tat MERITwith 'Enriched FlaVOCachieVed Not all ingredients of tobacco in cigarette smoke dcliverthe same amount of taste. Or tar. .. That's what researchers at Philip Morris discovered using an analytical fractometer to "crack" cigarette smoke down into its various parts. . Relying on this very sensitive, very special instrument, over 2000 separate ingredients were isolated and analyzed. What this analysis revealed was startling: There are ingredients in cigarette smoke-key flavor-rich ingredients-that deliver taste way out of proportion to tar. · Ingredients that, when packed into a tobacco blend, result in a cigarette that delivers extraordinary flavor without the usual corresponding increase in tar. . · The discovery is called lEnriched Ravor: It comes in the tobacco of a remarkable new cigarette: MERIT. 'Enriched Ravor' is extra flavor. Natural flavor. Flavor that can't burn out; can't fade out. can't do anything bur ' come through for you. . In fact. MERIT delivers the flavor of ' · c'igatettes h~ving more tar. s. : Up to 60% more tar. Yet MERIT has ·only 9 ~· of tar. Lott-er · ~--...... .,,. t ~/ ' · than 98% of all cigarettes being sold today. ; If you're looking to become a low tar smoker, or don't particularly enjoy the taste of the low tar brand you smoke now- you '11 be ·interested. Taste-Tested By People Like '\bu · 9 mg. tar MERIT was tasteo-tested against five current leading low tar brands ranging from 11 mg. to 15 mg. tar. Thousands of filter smokers were invplved, smokers like yourself. tested at home~ The results were conclusive: Even if the cigarette t~sted had 60% more tar than MERI! a siptificant majori~ of all smok~rs tested reported !leu1 · Enriched Flavor MERIT delivered more taste. Repeat: delivered more taste. . . In similar tests against 11 mg. to 15 mg. menthol brands. 9 mg. tar MERIT MENTIIOL performed strongly too. delivering as much-or more-taste than the higher tar brands tested. . · You've been smoking "low tar, good taste" claims long enough. No~you 'vegotjheciga.rette. . MERIT. Incredible smoking pleasure at one of · the lowest tar levels in smoking today-only9 mg. tac From Rhilip Morris. •· # • ~ ........ cf<Al•l!WOpla•S&--MlillllltfNI• ..... tftlllp Monte lac .. Ille .... Ya. 23261. ..... -.,.,.mi .. .. . Healtb~ Clues Come • 1n Small Print By A ON DEEllR Ottlle ,,,..,....,. T h e c h e c k e' r s a t t h e supermarket call Beverly Ritch, "that crazy lady." Mrs. Ritch reads labels. So does her husband OCee. The Incentive is their son Charlie, 9, who is hyperactive and allergic .. to almost eyery· thing.'' Concerned with the use ot the drug Ritalin ror their son, they found another option in Dr. Ben Feingold's book, "Why ls Your Child HyperacUvo.·· <Randorn House> Feingold contends that with many youngsten, the cause ls artificial flavoring, c:oJorlng and preservaUves lo lbe Coods they eat. Thi•, h~ believes, accounts for the Increasing number of youngsters being dlagnos~ as hy6eractlve, directly related to the number of additives now found intoods. So, lut October, the Newport Shores jamiJy began r eading labels in earnest. "Our f irst trip to the supermarket took four hours. Now it takes no longer than it ev¢ did because we've learned what to avoid," Mrs. Ritch said. ._eop e 'CAROL MOORE, Food Editor ~lday,Jift~ryH,1'16 P•!l'CI 'Eat, Drink • • •• Be Wary' By BEA ANDERSON IJ .. pleEdllcw Are food additives harmful to health? The answer gle aned from a two-hour lecture by Dr. George York is. ··1t all depends." There are so many variables and subtleties that answers ar e filled with perhapses, may~s and sometime~. he s aid. If there a re any imbalances, such as allergies, an individual can react to m ost anything. . .eggs, wheat .. color . Even if a person is •·nor mal .. some things are poison if too much is ingested, York said. Discussing Eat, Drink and Be Wary at Santa Ana College, the UC Davis Extension food technologist talked about the safety and nutrient content of Wday's foods. TRIGGERS PROBLEMS "The r e are chemicals i n food ... in nature," he said. Cer· tain chemicals can trigger pro- blems in some people. An exam- ple is soybeans affecting a goitergenic. The only thing that doesn't have chemicals is water ... if it is pure, he said. However. if too much is ingested, like overeat- ing. a person can get sick. "It's a m alter of dosage." An example of lethal level, York said, is what happened to a San Diego couple who thought that if a few apricot kernels were beneficial more would be better. They made milk shakes, but the wife didn't like the bitter taste so only had a sip, York re- lated. The husband dran)J both and the result was cyanide poison· ing. The food expert pointed out that a few ke rne ls are not harmful. "When a couple are dropped into a quart of fruit before being canned. they are alJ right and enhance n avor." <1ASSIFICATION For a chemil;al to be classified as a pres ervative, York said it must meet certain require· ments: -It must do som e good. -It doesn't cause acute lox· Icily. -It doesn't produce tumors in animals. -It doesn't prod1.,1ce ·birth de· fects or alter genes. -Abrosptlon and metaboJism information must be known. PRESERVATIVES York listed som~preservatives and told their functions: -Sugar and sodium. The most common. We don't need as much as we •et ift our dlet. -Vitamins A and D, and salt. Examptes of chemicals 1lwn the ".,randf ather's clause ... whith means they have been 1enerally •ccepled over the years . Howev~r, Dr. York 11ld, new studies ar-e btln1 done. -Prnrionlc acid. In hot dog and ha burie r buns lt retJrds arowth of mlctooraanlsms. It hu lh navor ol natural Swiss cheese which contains 10 times the concentr a lion. -8odium be nzoate. Also an an· tiseptic and intermediate rn dye manufacture. It is only effective in low pH and acid foods <soda pop and some fruit juices) and good only when used at 4 percent or less. -SOrbic acid. Effective as a fungicide. Used in cheese wrap· pers. Chees e mas ks its un· pleasant n a vor . -Sulfur dioxide. Keeps fruits and potat oes from turning brown. On plants, it will dis- courage insects and retard mold. -BHT, BHA. May have some effect on us . Used in foods with a trace fat cont~nt. s uch as cereals . "If we'd learn to eat foods that a re slightly rancid we wouldn 'l need these.•• -Nitrate. Used in pastr ami and corned beef wtiich are aged. -Nitrite. In ba m and bacon, it preserves color and has some in· nuence on flavor. ICtoo much is ingested a person can become cyanotic from nitrite poisoning. ONLY SUSPECT Is it a health haiard in the dosage used in ham and bacon? York s aid it bas yet to be as· s essed . Wh eth er it is carcinogenic or not has not been established. It only has been found suspect in bacon. Color, which is not classified as a food additive and has a code of its own, could be a subs titute, but it will not inhibit botulism, York said. . Although recently banned Red No. 2 is the most used color, it is found more in cosmetics than in food. the speake r pointed out. In high dos age it ma)-cause carcinoma in r ats, Yor1c said, "but what about a low level? Will it cause cancer ? We don't know. "This is where we get into sub- tleties and complexities. "We can't tell how or if cancer is brought about by what we eat." However, if we have all the in· formation about each additive we can tell the interplay when several are used, York said. "If we use anti·vitamln chemicals in large a mounts with vitamin food we inhibi\ something." Whatever chemicals are used, York said, "remember they aren't stored very long. This has even been proven with DDT in animals.'' PESTICIDES He asserted that pesticides are like preservatives in that ''It's not the res idual on rood that gives us the problem but the danger Is in working with them. suc h as making or applying chemicals." Discussing cholesterol, York said, evidence just isn't th1t good any more to Unk this dletliry ele· ment to heart disease. A student asked for comments on a vegetarian dlct. York sa id , "It l!J your responsibiti ty to balance re· quired nutrients . ••1 don't care how ~ou dolt, and 1 don 'l think the bo<b' cares.·' She's the first to admit it isn't easy. Rule No. 1 is that the entire family be involved. "You don't want to stress what your child CAN'T have, or make him feel strange." Feingold's book is a eood place to begin research, she said. It of· fers a list or no·no's and recipts that adapt to what can be eaten. "The next thing we dici was to go through th~ cupboard, box up everytbinf we couldn't eat and give it away. That way there was no temptation," s he said. She advises that families not assume anything i&Qkay. "When it says 'natural' be wary. 'Natural' can mean anything." The couple found many of their discoveries surprising. "For example, good old natural c heddar c;heese isn't yellow, it's white. The yellow is artificial coloring." The f amity uses only sweet but- t er "because all of the salted but· ters have added coloring. The same goes for m argarine." They have found one Souther n California dairy where they can purchase products without ad- ditives. Yogurt, she said, must be un- OaVQred, because the flavored product is artificially sweetened and colored. EDUCATION PAYS' "We could use no baked goods or cake mixes ~ I have found only one cornbread mix we can use and no pancake-mixes." One buttermilk baking mix, which contains only flour and s hortening s can be used, she said. • Baked goods at some health food stores. such as bread, hot dog buns and hamburger rolls. are allowed, "but they are ter· ribly expensive~· And. hot dogs, because or numerous additives .and fillers, are out anyway, she said. The family m ake their own sausage. Because of the high ttitrite and coloring levels in ham and bacon, the family had gone without . , these product. until reeenUy. Now. they order from a New York firm , M cArtt)ur 's Smokehouse, which treats the meat only with hickory smoke. ''The nitrite level is that which naturally occurs in the meat and from the smoke, well bel9w the level allowed by the govern· ment.'' Mrs. Ritch is particularly ca~Uous about buying poultry, noting lb ere are only two or three brands which do not contain the us ual artificial coloring. She buys fresh, not frozen, meats and poultry and opts for a butcher sho p over th e local supermarkets. PLAIN BEST Vegetables, whether fresh, frozen or canned are usually all right H plain , she stressed. Sauces and fl avorings are not. Most hyperactive children are highly allergic, Mrs. Ritch said. Charlie's allergies include milk, raisins and nuts. Cooking oils are on the okay list · but most solid shortenings aren't. "Natural" peanut butter, without preservatives, is a lunchtime mainstay. Mayonnaise must be avoided, so the family u~es sweet butter instead on sandwiches, made of course. with Mrs . Ritcb's homebaked bread. "I always en· joyed bread-baking so that was no problem." Ice cream? .. You have to make your own. Even the 'natural' ice creams can be a problem, and the flavor isn't that good." NO NO'S Anyone accustomed to cooking with canned soups and bouillon c ubes would have to find alternatives, she added. If chocolate c hip cookies 8l'e a favorite you may have to break one brand of G erm an sweet chocolate into bits. Others con- tain vanillin, an artificial fl avor-ing. Doesn't all of this cutting out leave little to eat? Not really, they believe. Snacks include pretzel~. Doesn't cutting out foods with additives leave very little to eat? Not so, says Beverly Ritch. natur al potato chips and a m1x the family make themselvc~ that includes soy beans. When eating out they must avoid the franchise hamburger stands, but can easily eat .breakfast and do well in fish and Chinese restaurants, watching for excess MSG at the latter. The entire family has become educated in label reading. "Charlie read Feingold's book and occasion a lly he 'll catch something we mis s. He knows as much as we do about the sub- ject." Mrs. Ritch taught for 11 years after earning her home economics degree, wrote one cookbook and edited two others. Sh e was fo od editor for a magazine for three-and-one-half years and has always been in· terested in nutrition. The effort has been well worth it. Although her son still is on medication. his behavior and health is much improved. Even- tually, he hopes to go without lhe Ritalin altogether . TWO SOUPS PLUS CfUSP BREAD AND VEGETABLES EQUALS AN INEXPENSIVE PARTY MENU .... ;-t·TWo (Soap)'Party System Remember when you started entertaining by grandly planning the qienu. listing party foods you most like to se'flve, and then mak· ing out.the grocery list? You shopped fi,rst and worried about the cost later or not at all. Now, if a dozen people are in· volved , you may fee.I that you shoulll settle for a ~ore or after- dinner gatherinc with just a s mattering of refrelhments. But by cat~~· pre.planning, you can serve a complete meal -appetizer~ mafn 1:ourse a nd dessert ..-ror only ·a dollar a diner. ' The secret to J.his buffet is two distinctively dirlerent and salis· fyinJ SOQps that correSpopd to the tradllional fish and me•l courses : Seafood Bisque and Tomato Beef Soup. Serve a vegetable atJck platter and fruit sherbet with coc:onut cookies to start and flni h this peMy·wlse party. Lobster, white fis)l, onion. celery, bouiltorf and ftavorlngs simmer in the first soup, tinted on appetizing plnk with tomuto paate. The creamy taste 11 achieved with minimum rat con- tent and expense by using instant nonfat dry milk, crystals. Tomato Beef Soup is hearty enougb to please any meat-and· potatoes palates in tbe crowd. Potatoes, green beans and spinach are added at intervals, spiked with a lltlle lemon pepper. Most guests will want to try both soups 10 plan to have two dozen HuP bowls. or c~ps on the serviDl table. Borrow from friends aAd nei&hbors. Don.'t hwtall! le> mtx patterns· and sha)es, paf\l~ularly if you serve lrotn tbe ltltch~n which fits t.ddN'• cuual life.tyle. Gueats can put soups and clwnks of crusty peasant bread °" a platter or small tray, carry it to the ti~eplace or f amlly room and f«l rt ht at home. E FOOD BISQUE ~ cup (6 ""'·ounce can> lobster meat and juice 2 'tablespoons a berry \11 cup butter 1 cup chopped onion 1 cup choppe d celery - lcup nour \4 cup tomato paste 8Y.z cups water <t chicken bouillon cubes 1 bay leaf 1 tablespoon seasoned salt 2 teaspoons steak sauce l 'h cups (about 'h pound> diced white fish 3 cups instant nonfat dry milk crystals Drain lobster; save liquid. Chop lobst er ; combine With lobster juice and sherry. Reserve. Melt butter in large soup pat ov~ medium heat. Add and saute onibn and celery until tende'. Beat in nour. Add tomato paste, s ~ps water, bouillon cubes. bay ltar, seasoned salt and steak sauce. Cook at boiling, about 10 mlnOtes, stlrrtna constantly. Add fish a~d lobster mixture; cook 5 minutes. Dissolve instant milk crystals in remaining 3 1,A, cups water. Stir in small amount of soup into ins· taut mmt Lower heat and slowly stir back milk mixture into pot. Heat to serving temperature. DO NOT BOIL. Garnish with parsley sprigs. Makes 12 one-cup servings. TOMATO BEEF SOUP About2 pounds beeCshank 1 cup chopped onion 311.z cups (28-ounce can) round peeled tomatoes 1 teaspoon Italian seasoning 9cups water 3 cups diced peeled potatoes 2 cups cut green beans 3 tablespoons lemon juice 1 teaspoon l e mon pepper seasoning 11 :i teaspoons salt 3 c ups (2-inch pieces) spinach leaves Combine beer s hank, onion, tomatoes a nd liquid, Itallan seasoning and water in a large soup pot. Break QP tomatoes. Heat to boiling. Cover and gently boil 1 ~ hours or until beef is tender. Remove beef; debone and dice ' m eat. R eturn to soup wltb potatoes. green beans. lomon juice, lemon pepper and salt. Cook onr medium heal lS.20 minutes or until vegetables am tender. Add spinach. Cook S. minutes longer. Makes 12 ont! 1 cup servings. \ .. I . ' q DAR. Y fti OT • I ifwh-ite HoUse Her Beat BJ CAaOL MOOB.E . °' .............. ! 110\lr pollUeal aceae ts be-dt ot t new Jdeas. Eacb undidate bu • chosen hla owo brancl of , Ntren.chmenL · , '"The old pros are ~ 1 : Hu~ Humphrey to wind uJ) I ~ wiU. the no~lnaUon. And Nelson f •Rockefeller probably ts waiUn.c ln the wlnaa. Once ~ have the I :.~JdenUal bug, lt ~ with "There's no queatloa the pre--I . aent White House la not exC'iting. ·But neither is it a bo1tlle ' Neluaive fortress. President { FOl'd can be j ustty proud ot clear- -in& the air and ta..kiq command ol a job be never coveted but does DOW." Those were some of the ••nnplde seat" obsttvations \'eteran Washington COtTespon- dent Helen Thomas made for Laguna Beach Town Hall's debut of the 1976 lecture series. As United Press International Bureau Chief at the White House, she bas traveled to Ouna. the Soviet Union a nd the Middle East. "Maybe we have been over- protective of Henry Kissinger became so much of what he tells us is background material or off- the-record," she said. "Many of his remarks are at- tributed to 'a high rankirlg American official' and I've often wanted to add 'with a thick 'German accent · "But in Washington, power is where you are and he 1s no longer 10 feet Crom the Oval Office now that he 1s n 't N alional Secunt' Arfairs advisor .·· · Earlier in her cautious, anec- dotal I:Jure. Is. 'lbomu had desert Kissinaer as bnlhant, witty and urbane by recalling some of bis retorts to doubling re-porters: "We can't have a cruus today. my c•lendar ls full. ••ir you don't thlnk that's the ~e tnatb. you are now a part of fOtetgn Policy. "Why do I spend so little time ln W asblngton? I only go to friendly capitals." Famous tor her penetrating in· qu1ries and important sources, Ms. Thomas conUnued: "Most President.I don't want to be asked ANY questions. That's why press conferences are so vital; in no other institution can the President be challenged directly. "First Families generally re- sent us always being there. They want us when they want. But many of the children are Joining the media ; there mus t be something that intrigues them. "Julie Nixon "Eisenhower has hosted TV &bows. David Eisennower wants a news col · umn. Lynda Byrd Robb is into magazines and Susan Ford goes on photographic assignments " And Ms. Thomas indicated that Julie and David were accorded more of a red carpet treatment than President Ford on their r espective trips to China "because the Chinese leaders "ant to· thank !\tr Nixon and show their dis pleasure with de tente." As for her own three lnps to the pre\ iousl~· forbidden tern tor~ .. The first time at "a:. as though ~e had ldnded on the moon. Every UtUe ~ was worth a 1tory: that~ ti ~·s ~old mine. Our press-badaes aaid 'New Ear' but artuall,y we were th~ new eyes. "Those people have purpose but no freedom. Ruasla bu uUer domtnanace by secret pollce but ln China you set this all pervad- ing sense of horriflcalioa. "The tours were cut down to s(ze for President Fard -not so lavish or so open." Adept at fielding as well as asking tricky questions, the pre- sident of the White House Cor- respondents Association 1ave her Insights on Wateriate: "The tragedy dlminished us all but reaHirmed that no man is above the law . Secrecy is destructive. Both Watergate and Vietnam were results ol failure to keep faith with truth. "IC President Nixon had listened to his wife more and Halderman less, he would have filled out his term. . .. Martha Mitchell is probably the only heroine or the tra1edy: "I don't know who (the infor- mant) Deep Throat was or else I would have got closer for better stories. I am convinced it's a_t\e. not a !\he." The audience also wanted to know : Why wasn't President Ken- nedy's pe rsonal life reported more accurately? ''There was no collusion or cov- er-up. These alleged affairs are being accepted as f 3(( but we shouldn't stop in pursuit of truth. "The pr ess has had gentlemen's agreements, believ- ing that everyone has a few pro- blerm. But with today's instant communlcatlon.s, poliUcJans are m<>ff vlllnerable. "When your namdbows up on a police blotter or ln a Senate ln· vaU1atJon, that'• aw.bole new ballaame. "Reporters are not doctors, Judges or p1ychlatrhts. Newamakera have a right to private Uves until they mlsatep." Will Ted Kennedy be cnteified If he runs? Ms. Tbomas's preliminary raponae that Ch-.ppaqulddklt wouldn't die w aa met with such a hum from the audience that she added, "I can tell he will be." What about exposing the FBI and CIA? "They need to be watcbed carefully. They should stay within tbelr charters and not de- liberately initiate or foment trou- ble. Perpetual abuse hurts de- mocracy." Doesn't the press over-ridicule President Ford? "We s hould record the tumbles; he m if ht bu:rt himself seriously. Actua ly. on those last ski scenes, he liked the planned photo session so much that he in- vited us back the next day which was when he ran into trouble. "Ford is probably the only President who's been asked publicly in office if he is capable of handling the job. And he en- joys the r ole which his pre- decessors would never admit. "He is amiable but one- d i mens ion a I, not a dreamer .... He sleeps at night and that worries me." Turnabout's fair play . In M s. Thomas's book, "Dateline: Wh ite House.·· Presi- dent Ford is quoted. "H the Lord made the world in six days, He rouldn't res t on the seventh. He would have lo account to Helen Thomas." 'Each day is an educatiqn: .going to Peking, talking to Martha Mitchell or prep aring for a press conference, ' says Helen Thomas UPl's bureau chief at the White House. RK=HMD 0.Hl£TTE BOUT.I QUE Pisces, Trust Hunch ' t Rite Foates ~Told ,. . • Vicki Harrelson Harrelson-Ehrhart Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. Harrelson of Mission V1e10 have announced the enga~e· ment of their daughter, Vicki Lynn Har- relson. to Dennis Alan Ehrhart. The couple are graduates of Mission Vie: jo High School. The bride-elect now attends Saddleback College. Ehrhart is the son of Mr. and Mrs . William J . Ehrhart of El Toro. An Aug . 7 wedding is planned. McCaJla-Dove All Saints Church, Lone Beach will be the setting for the July 10 rites linking Karen McCalla and Raymond Dove. Their parents are Mrs. Dean Nicodemus and Robert McCalla of Long Beach, Mrs. Harry Alsup of La Palma and Wayne Dove of Huntington Beach. Miss McCalla gr aduated from Marina High School and attended Golden West College. Her Ciance is an alumnus of GWC. THURSDAY, JANUARVZ9 BySYDNEYOMARR ARIES (Marc h 21-April 19): Finish old busi- ness -free ~·ourself of long:_standin~ obli~ation. Assert personality. needs. TAUR US (April 20-May 20): What wag hid· den could be revealed. New Ught is thrown on subjects wbicb had been obscured What you feared is diminished. GEMINI <May 21-June 20>: Trust hunch. Give full play to intuitive intellect. Learn and leach share knowledge. Your ability to look beyond the obvious is emphasized CANCER (June 21-July 22) · Relax -be re- ceptive to calls, messages and invitation&. Spotlight on publlc relations. responses, reac1 tions. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22>. Check details; be thorough -refuse to substitute fantasy for Cac· tual information. Ught touch wins -jf beavy- handed you create frictJon and opposition. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Avoid permitting Apple a Day? ~::>! CA~2?.a~~~~nob and other raw fibrous foods have long been con- sidered "detergent foods," thought to help clean food residue and plaque from teeth and eu ms. But, says Dr. G. Conrad Hornbuckle of ~ar Rapids, Iowa. the "apple a day" approach to tooth care la a myth. And the American Dental Association agrees. Dental plaque .is a sticky, colorless sub- stance which constantly forms on and around teeth. It harbors bacteria and is viewed as a primary cause of tooth decay and gum disease. impulse to completely dominate logic . Un'· derstand feelings, but don't throw reason out or window. LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 23>: What appears a setback will rebound in your favor. Be ready for change of scenery and a "new view." SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Much that bap- peM could occur betlind the scenes. Know it and be ready to deal wlth unknown factor. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Money picture may resemble a jigsaw puzzle. Take one step at a time. Gel priorities in order. A friend, who claims deep feelings, could be advocating destructive action. CAPalCOSN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Perceive J>C)UntJat. Reject the superficial. Imprint your own style. AQUARI US <Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You have in- formation which enables you to uncover mystery. Be independent, crePtive. selC- asHrtive. Accfnl ii on aura of glamor. PISCES-Feb • .._March 20): Trust bunch. Heed inner voice. Volunteer for teaching project, assignment. Friendship coulc! become more serious than ln!Ualty intended. BRUSH..., BLOWER SCISSOR STYLES HOW TO DO THEM ST£P BY STEP Anyone can care for a Brush & Blower hair style. or our other curl cojolinQ. fuss-free. lull functional • SCISSOI snLIS which Ne as easy to do as just sham- poo! Our lamp cuts. finger tumble cuts. cor11ng iron cuts. wash towet dry, brush ·n fluff cuts or simple wash and wear cuts ate SCtsSOllD, ell take-car~f-yoursell styles. Good for any age. any hair. No teasing, no rollers. no pins. no POLLUTING HAIR SPRAYS. ALSO MO Wf ~WA ... 'rOV _, ..... WAMT TO Mr fOW MAii ..._. Of'IM J<fSEPH'S SCISSOR STYLING 40% OFF-SALE 200 NE~T CINTER DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH, CAL IM-6071 Every LA-Z-BOY CHAIR :N a.JR SHOWROOM AND W ARB-iOUSE WHITE'S SHOWCASE SEE THE LARGEST SELECTION IN SO. ORANGE COUNTY OVER 130 CHAIRS OM DISPLAY Exclusively La-Z-Boy Rediners •I While the fibrous foods do remove some of• the plaque Crom the surface or the tooth, it is not significant enough to justify promoting these foods for dental hygiene, he said, although they do have good nutritional value. # •-· 10,.SAT.I SUM. t-S 356 S. Tustin Ave .. Orange JI CALENDAR For dental hygiene, Hornbuckle said, "there is nothing to replace the toothbrush and dental 9564 Hamilton Ave., Huntington Beach ·~s N. Harbor Blvd .. Fullerton ILOCATEOAT THE 'ASCINATINGVIUA~LIOLI ffMltJ ,. .. JS)(, 17t·ll6J . l f J • l I 1 t l I floss ." • EMBROIDERERS' GUILD: A needlework exhibit will take place in Island House, Fashion Island. Friday.Sunday, Jan. 30-Feb. 1. Crom noon to6p.m . each day. CONSCIOUSNESS-RAISING GROUPS: A new series will begin Monday and Tuesday, Feb. 2 and 3, at 7:30 p.m. in the Fountain Valley Teen Help Center, UW90 Euclid. Spons'lr is the Elizabeth Cady Stanton- Huntington Beach Chapter of the National Organization for Women. AMERICAN PEN WOMEN: The Laguna Beach Branch will meet Monday. Feb. 2, in the home of Mrs. Frances Vanderbilt, Laguna Beach. She will entertain with a sonata redtal on tile violin. A luncheon will follow. The Pen Women will sponsor a poetry con- test with several categories a nd cash prizes. En- tries may be sent to Laguna Beach Branch, NLAPW, P. O. Box 687. Laguna Beach 92652. Oostng date Is Feb. 22. Tb ere is a $1 entry fee for each poem. LAGUNA BEACH PANHELLENIC : A deuert luncheon to raise funds for scholarships la scheduled for 1 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 4, in Clubhouse 3, Pacific Island Village. Laguna Mguel. A treasure auction will be included. WEEKENDER Geta It ALL together Frldey1 In the For A Career ••• NOT JUST A JOll BE ,. "WOMAN IN WHITE" H'Ynm~ • l/,.J;,.,( ut />,.,.flll Auulrlllt 1114 01 7 n1nntlt1. DAY & IYI. Cl.ASSIS STilT FEB. 9 FEB. 16 ~~ NtW CLASSfS SfAlTIHO MOHTHlT. "-AU· MlNT AUISTANCf. MIOICAl ASltSTINO HOOi.AM A~NOVIO IY AMA/UMA &CCII-' IMHO MIMH" NATTS. VUtlAHS UNlflfS AYAH.AIU. PAYMENT PLANS AVAILABLE . 623 W. 17th, SANTA ANA· 541-446 1 • DAILY PILOT 'j . • J a~r1W3f'l,1 ... Clearance .... . •••... ~!9f'ti>" 1FMr!>'4'4'1i .. /?> .. ~.JANUARY 29~ 'l/ QC"tO :OO ~.,,. • Cos ta ~/ .. ···. Mesa· ~i:v··· ·~t~""' Wl1'i~°'oLJt1 ~-··· ~ j ·"" ·····-···' 1 ;' ; .·· : : .. Blouses.. .. Skirts ... . _sweaters ... .. Pants ... .. Dresses .. . • .................. -.... . /'iJ~...[e,. ... i.p -ti::·-.... ·· .. _.:IM % /.,.o i \ ~ P.. "--«I ~ i \() 4'1'~ ~f,f~fl'l~. .-· .·· ..· .. Jackets .. . -·. .. ... . . ..... . .. . . . . . ..:·, '"' '1w'I ~ .. 1eef,ffO(it,j .. ./ .. .. .. . · ... .... ·.: ·• · ... .. . .. ...• :··•.i. .............. ····· ........... :.~~.:.~~ ...... ···Special savin.gs for ~EN al~o .... ••• ~ • • • • . • . • • •• •• . ,.,, 0\4~ ... . tV/D ~-q ~·~ ~" c I , er . . . ' 5ouf h Coast ?lu• .... -&ot~ "''" .. . . ' . ••• \ .. Ann ·(;,, ·Landers ........ .. DEAR ANN LANDERS: This ta no phony from Yale. I live in Hartford and I don't drive a car. My problem is real and I D E A R A N N approdmately ts. 75' per mont.b If It rullt U hours a day. ely have hit hlm. From the time .you let that child out of your door un- supervised, this was his inevitable fate . only tell you that the heartache and pain will never leave m~. 1 -A M U R D E R E R WITHOUT GUILT DAILY PILOT C : BIO-RHYTHMS Computwfzed chart to IMm 10U' day by d91. Phyeicel, Emotional and lnlelleduail c:yc .... Wrttt now for your twelve mo n t h c o m.p u t • r print-out chart and c:un'9nt lnfotmetlon. need an answer. How do LANDERS: Plesae con· parents introduce a 27· suit one of your experts ---------year-old son who has had and settle a family dis- a sex·c~ange operation? pute. You wouldn't Do we say, .. This is our believe the fignt.B we've Better keep quie t about tbls or he might take away all your elec· tr1cal appllances. D E ·A R A NN LANDERS: May I bor- row from a recent letter in your column directed to "Dear Pet Owner''? ''Since that day I have felt sick inside. I love children, too. We have some of our own. But in addition to the sick feel- DEAR FRIEND: I can add nothing to your let· · ter bul my thanks ror your bavlagwrilteo lt. s-1,..,. ........ 0-.tif-Tec • MAYIM& A HIAllM PIOIUM? I SPECIALIZE IN DIFFICULT PROBLEMS WtlfwM ..... ecfwtn ............ II Y ...... c--. .. .... HAI. AEBISCHER . HEARING AIDS J40t LC.-Hwy. ~ ... ...._.71-)IJJ son Bob," or, "This is had over this. our da~ghter Roberta"? What is the approx- We are trying to be imate cost of runmng a broad-minded about the color TV for 17 straight whole thing and it hasn't hours out of every 247 been easy. Please give My hus band cusses a us some assistance. -blue streak when he sees S T R U G G L I N G the utility bills, but he DESPERATELY TO sit s in front of the BRIDGE THE GAP damned boob tube f<W DEAR FRIEND : hours on enct. Thank you SiMe Bob has gone to v e r y m u c h . - considerable lengths to B U R N 1 N G I N be "Roberta," he surely BIRMINGHAM "Dear parents: I killed your child today. He dashed onto the highwa y, hav ing climbed a low security barrier. IO feet in front of my car wheels. Being on- ly a child, he didn't know an automobile going 50 miles an hour is unable to stop instantly. Had he cleared the wheels, an oncoming car would sur- ing, there ls cold anger D on't flunk your 11041APH DATA P.O. IOI 24-A·S I LOSAMGaES. CAf0024 -anger at you for allow-chemistry test. Love is • ing your child to run more than one set of • free, especially siQceyou g I an ds ca 11 in g to Ii ve alongside a very another. If you have bus y and dangerous trouble making a distlnc- highway. lion you need Ann's ''I grieve at the loss of booklet, "Love or Sex "fFZ:5i:Eiiiiiiiiiii:=:=:========= your child, but if you and How to Tell the Dif- ha ve other children, ference." Send a long, please keep them behind seif-addressed, stamped a fence or' watch 'them. (13 cen\s now) envelope Spare yourself and me with your request and 50 the agony of their ~-cents in coin to Ann ath. '' Landers, P . 0 . Box 1400, MAJOR INYEN1'0Rf CLE..41UNCE ' • 11 must be <tressing In DEAR BURN! I have feminlpe attire. To . In· some bad news for you, troduce llim as .. BOb" dear AccordJni to com· ----------------------------.i1 would be ludicrous. It mon~ealth Edison In Thank you, Ann. I can Elgin, Ill. 60120. REDUCTIONS ARE IJa to% OFF / seems to me that you are Chkago. lt costs 81/100 b e i n g e x t r e ,m e I y ol one cent to run a stan-· cooperatll'.e and be (or dard size 200-watt color she) should help you out TV for one hour. This ls ' . Peering Around AMONG GUESTS at the annual cocktail party for the Bob Hope Desert Classic Ball's Committee of 100 were Mr. and Mrs. .Charles Billman and Mr j ... ' In Lido Village i 3400 Via OportO, Suite 6 ~ on -~-"'" .,. ~. Newport Beach :,:·; ~,;~ .. ~-· -~;.~~·--· -~-.. ~J~:~?.~-~~-~~ .. ~~,J THREE STUDENTS · in the Coastline Regional Occupational Program were honored by the Laguna ~ills Rotary Club as parts of its Youth Recognition Progri~m They are srxerry Albers, Kenneth Petring and Tana Turney Each_· received a $25 prize from the club during-a luncheon Albers attends Mission Viejo Hi1h School and the others are stud.ents a El Toro High School. '·c\ A ANNOUNCING di : _}(af~'l_Kell'I '1AffiQfl'S Formerly at ""-Eastbtuff C.Oittures SPORTSWEAR now at the M::ira1FF PlALA "'BAl.BOAISLNll 1fif;/f/Olffl p1// rw.i~~ittaS Newslor1 Beach 216 "°1ne AYe 548-4121 675-1904 1107 Jamboree Rd .. Newport Beach 640-4740 On sleepwear & clothing for sizes O to 4 year. Also -quilts -blankets-furnit.ure & toys. We're moving across the mall from our , 1 present location in South Coast Plaza -in II March 1976 to a larger store -where we will have clothing to size 12 year. These will be our only reductions for this year. ,... •• Cea•• ..... C..&aMeea I £eJh~ ... u.,' •FOR CHILDREN ZONTA GIRLS-of-the month for January have been nam e d b y the ' Newport Harbor club They are Susan Kane, Susan Aronson, Kathy Schweitler and Stacey -------------------Kirkpatrick .. rc=::lPhotography Stud.lo ~portrait~/pa~s1><>rts/t:opies f'RAM£.S NOT INCLUDED ' .. . . CELEBRATING mElR 25th wedding an piversary were Mr and Mrs George L Mitler. residents of Costa Mesa for the past 12 year s They were honored at a party hosted by their sons, Mark, Craig and Gary. Assisting with pre· parations was Tammi 'lbomas. Cal says. • • ''You'd like to meet ~AN HODGE'' ..--~.pa ~joiWigrt. Velvet fu9, fOll"iy offering her specialized tdenls for all cha i11i IOfir19- f~ QIS!olMr" Or~ ;, and~' 'f04I hair problems CN9' 0 freshly. brewed Q4) of coff ... , AND. • • you'd like to meet, ANNETIE HORNSBY . . .specializing in porcelain nails. T uesdoys and Wednesdays, day otld evening. by appointment GERRI MIRAKIAN .. oor regulor monictKist, ovo1oble oo Thursdays, Fridays · and Saturdays, to render specioi1zed services. and timely, fashion hints. JOIN OUR CIRCLE OF HAPPY, SATISFIED CUSTOMERS AND ... you'd like to meet, An ito • Cal • DeeOee Gisela • Nino • Steve ' Melinda • Yolanda •Tina Doug •Janice• Sarah ( \ ~·. .. . . • I .. .. . . .. . ' ... .. . . ... . . . . . ' .... . . . . ,. . .4 ....... __ _ I ..... ' " . ... _.,. .......... ~ ................... ___ .... -... ~., .. "'"''f.J 'l'"..'.'\;"',\.'\t"J .... : ••• \ Roast Beef:· f!atri.otic Thomas Jefferson, enamored with Frencb cooking, was chided by a fiery patriot, Tom Paine, for "abjuring his native Victuals" and neglecting good rout beef for foreign delicacies. Jefferson had a dellcious beef entree called Rump or Beef with Sauce Hachee, served at the White !louse during his ad· ministration. Our updated version uses a gravy mix for the sauce. It aJso cooks this less tender, less expensive beef cut in an ove~ cooking bag that provides the moist-heat, self·bastlng method so right for less tender cuts. ·BEEF ROAST SAUCE HACllEE S-pound rump roast. Salt and pepper lpacka1e (~oz.) brown gravy mix 1 tablespoon nour 2 tablespoons finely chopped onion or shallots 2tablesp<>ons crumbled fried bacon ,\;cupwhltewlne ~cup tomato sauce 1 tablespoon vinegar Preheat oven to 325 degrees F. Sprinkle roast with salt and pepper; place in faml- 1.Y size (.14 x 20·1nch) oven cooking bag In two-inch deep roasting Pan. Combine re· malnlng Ingredients for Sauce J{achee; pour over roast. Close bag with twist lie; make six half· Inch slits In top. Cook 114 hours or untU meat thermometer registers 160 to 170 degrees F . Makes: 8 to IO servings. • HAMS .. "So Good .•. II WW '. 'Haunt' You 'W l~'s Gone" ' ... Dish for Topsy-Turvy bay Spiral .~li~ed Wflole or ff•lf J-,~, SAVE20',..,..;.. HONEY IAKED HAMS' ~~;-· • ......,lo s.r.. wM ....,. .. Spke ...... ~~ .... , ........ • W. Poc.kup 9tl Slillp ,,_ e..t lo C.... • ... ·tWa.... _, Wlw quality vegetable protein which helps extend the protein in the ham . , 8 V.. ounce can package.directions. Pour toothpick in serted into crushed pineapple batter over lima-ham the center of the com 3700 E. Coast ti9Jw0y, Corona cW,Mor ~ 673-9000" I tablespoon pre-mixtureinskillet. bread comes out clean. , __ .,,'--.._..,.. pared mustard Bake in preheated 400 Let rest 10 minutes. In-112:1s...........,.,.tWl4..~ ' •ls-2461 The topping combines pineapple. ham and hearty Fordhook Jima beans mixed with a zesty sauce of brown sugar. mustard. barbe c ue sauce and cloves. Serve this hearty dish with cole slaw and milk. Forget about additional vegetables, bread or dessert: everything is in· eluded in this main dish. I tablespoon degree oven f or 25 verton servingdish.Cut ._~,..I ~ 711HIRP••p#lll•l.cllieMnpl .. awt.lrild.J71 .. J46.Jlt. 4 barbecue sauce 1m:'.'_"in~u"..'.:te~s~o~r~u~n~ti~l__:i_a__'.~~t~o~w~ed:".!'g~es~.~~~~_j~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::~~ v. teaspoon ground .· t Combine all this in a skillet, then top with packaged corn bread mix and bake. To serve, simp- ly invert the skillet onto a serving plate and cut healthy wedges for each memberofthefamily. Ford.hook limas are a good source of Vitamin C and thiamine and iron. They also contain high LIMA BEAN. UPSIDE DOWN DINNER ":o's cup butter ~ cup light brown sugar. firmly packed IO -ounce package frozen Fordhook Hrna beans I cup cubed ham cloves 15 or 16-ounce package com bread mix Melt butter in a IO-inch skillet with a n oven proof handle. Add sugar and stir until dissolved. Stir in Umu, ham. pineapple and juice, and season· ings. Si mmer !\ minutes. 1' Meanwhile prepare com bread according to Naturally Good You don't have to be a \-lz cup soya nour, natural food s e nthusiast sinediilumpy to enjoy these moist. 1~ cup all-purpose cake-like bars <A'ilh their .white nour, unbleached old -fa s hion e d Rtrt · ifavailable termilk-Caraway Icing. 1 cuP non -fa t dry· ll "s 11lw ays n ice to milk kno<A', how e ver . that l cup dark bro<A•n :uiyth1n g so delicious is sugar (packed) made with nutritious in-3 teaspoons baking gredients. powder This easy recipe calls I teaspoon salt Mix flours, dry milk, sugar, baking powder. salt, ginger and cin· namon in large bowl. In another bo•.111 or large measuring cup, combine buttermilk, oil . bananas and eggs. Pour banana mixture into flour mixture . add almonds and mix. for both soya and whole I teaspoon ginger ~ wheat flours in addition I teaspoon cinnamon to generOus amounts of I cup buttermilk natural (un blanched 1 ~cup vegetable oil Pour batter into greased and floured 9· inch square cake pan; bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes or until pick in- serted into center comes out dry. Cool. Cut Into 18 bars and glaze . almonds. bananas and 1 '12 cups mashed buttermilk. Ginger and bananas (about 3 large) cinnamon are the perfect 2 eggs Oavor accents. B u t t e r m i I k • ALMOND BANANA BARS I cup chopped natural almonds l cup whole wheat floor Caraway Icing Spread almonds in shallow pan and place in 350-degree oven for 10 to 15 minutes or until toast- ed : remove almonds from pan and cool. Buttermilk· Car a way Icing:: l\.1ix 2 tablespoons buttermilk, \h teaspoon caraway seeds and •/~ teaspoon almond extract into I V: cups sifted powdered sugar. DELANO'S SEAFOOD MARKET I AT THE WATER'S EDGE! 2800 LAFAYETTE ST. 675-9450 NEWPORT BEACH LARGEST SELECTION OF SEAFOODS IN ORANGE COUNTY Red Snapper Fillets ....••.. $1 4 ! " Sandabs ................ $ 16! English Sole FiRets •••.•..• ~ 1 1 ! • Dungeness Crabs •••••.•••• $1 4! • c:ooked Medium Shrimp •.•• $239' ~· IYa la.I SERVING THE ULTIMATE IN SEAFOODS ... > I ....... ..-.11 .... 1 FROM THE OCEANS OF THEWORlD I " l • • ,, .. ' NIQSlmCTIYI WID .. JAi. 21 01U MS .. RI. J, 1 t7• • UUS fl MWll II Ill IDlt.I II ctMllQAl WU ' l MARKIT BAIKIT 11 DIDICATID TO GIVING YOU LOWIR PRICll ROuND ~ . HAIT IU<AIOll 6 CIBSI DINNER ' ' WAS l+OW *i' _....... X 'I" ~.: ~.::':'.. """' .......... '" 49' ,,., °'' !I• 10 ~ "!~ '.:'.'.'.~::: ................ "' )t': 63, . CARROTS ~ ....................... 'l.'I.' lt. '"_' _-·_-_ ... _ ... _. ___ ~_·1~" l\1· LI. ~~ ..., ,, ................ .:.',! -,...... \..\; WAS MOW .. ..:. --"'l 1. tunn11s11n IUYOllAISE MELoOoSOFT BEST BREAD FOODS ~27~ 89 l tij * la-tL i I > ... . .t ~ l ' W4J NOW 1.,.._ , ••• -·-·"""""' ,. I·"• ' JllSlflUll "'"._. ...... , ......... >.:•;)I! • . 19~ ••• -··" .. 5· 9' YOGUIT r'\: .....,_n., ......... ·.:r x ~-... !•··--~52· "-=--\_.,_ \:' ..... ._ .. , ••.••••• 'lot' .~: ( . . ..... .. . !~r:w. ..................... l'J( 51' '.£.. .•. ~:"": . "'•I HOW i f,f~cf.';~1' ·91;· ti• ;;.:;a.-............ ,., '><' 'I" ,..., ::~~~. ::::::::::::~~: ~~--~.;;2~~ --···---69• ,,. , ..... ""' ........... "f;-.>sr. , STEAK '!' ~ ~-... !(o ·~ ... =.-e_.,.,,. -. WAI NOW !\o ;;;:;.:;; .................. " ~ 9 3' ••. --~----""' 'I .. ,.~.,_....,.. ............. ·1.r ,,,...., !(o i:;,;:,;;;,~ ........... ~ 69' !I! g:.a;;;, ............... )I[ 29' .. -""'96• !(! .......................... ,.... • •• _,,__ ~64' r.'t l.lflttT-...... , ... .,.,.';I,.... t~ (.;t;. .................... 1::-" ,.,, --·1.•· • ··~~~ .. '~~~~.-.-.-.... --' !(o;,:;i ................ .'111: ~ 53• !l!Wi--......... "' ••• .... --·-.. --631 .. ~C-.•• ................ ".:.."',., IVTAIAUSOI · .... ~..,,.. • __ .., GllD . ' !(oU::~O:.... ............. 1'1)1(' 11· ·~10~ !t! ... • ... -·-·-""' 71' L,.~ ........................ l:J ,,,,...:. IUIS 25" !\o '1:1 y I ;,;; !(! J,111 . ROAST "' 'I' ... ....... ... -.• -~ 13' tie:Mfhit4 .••••• -....... ''13'.....,. ..... ----., .. !""C" ........................ 14 )I( ' ~;,;,·w: ............ .'IJ' )II( 33' ... -'I" ,.,,,-............ -V ll( •) . ~ , l I ' I l l l • • • • • • • , : • e • I I . . • . ' . • T I f I t • t ' • I I ' I ; r I ' f I .. t • .. - I Frozen berries and canned peaches were teamed in deep < dish cobbler to collect bake-off prize. Crust is made from biscuits. Bake-off .Entry Rules ChanQing America's best known culinary e·vent, the BAKE·OFFS contest. will award double the number or cash . prizes this year and has changed the rules to make it easier lo enter. Recipes no longer must be original. Long.time family favorites also are eligible, as long as they have not been winners in national contests or been published in national cookbooks or magazines or by food com- panies. The 100 finalists, who will be flown to Boston August 28-31, will compete for 13 cash prizes, total· ing $81,000. Flour is in a category by itself this year. giving "scratch" bakers an opportunity to compete with their best recipes for main dishes, desserts or breads and rolls. Such a r ecipe is Golden Honey Rolls. Spoonfuls of honey.flavored yeast·dough a re dropped into the baking pan and drizzled with a honey butter topping that turns in· to a golden glaze as these not-too- sweet rolls bake. Flaky Biscuits are eligible in the Refrigerated Foods division for the first time. They can be en· tered as a sandwich or a main dish or a dessert, such as Strawberry Peach Deepdish Cobbler. Entry blanks are in food stores now , or you can write to Dept. 1177·Pillsbury, 608 Se<:ond Ave. So .. Minneapolis, MN 554-02. SfRAWBERRV PEACH DEEP· DISH COBBLER 1 pound 13·ounce can sliced peaches 1,2 cup sugar 3 tablespoons cornstarch Va teaspoon salt 2 cups U pint) fresh strawber· ries, sliced 'or frozen whole strawberries. partially thawed. 1 tablespoon lemon juice l tablespoon butter or margarine lO·ounce can r efrigerated flaky or buttermilk naky biscuits Cinnamon-sugar Stir in peaches, strawberries. lemon juice a nd butter; cook until hot and bubbly. Pour into 2·quart casserole or 9·inch square baking dish. Separate biscuit dough into 10 biscuits ; cut each in half, forming 20 half.circles. Arrange cut·side· down around edge of casserole. Sprinkle biscuits with cinnamon· s ugar mixture. Bake at 375 degrees 20 lo 25 minutes until golden brown. If desired. serve with cream. Makes6servlngs. Generic Term: refrigerated flaky biscuits or buttermilk flaky biscuits GOLDEN HONEY ROLLS lcupmilk lh cup cooking oil 2 tablespoons honey 31/• cups all purpose or un- bleached floUT lpackage active dry yeast 1 teaspoon salt 2 eggs (reserve 1 white for Topping> Topping 1,~ cup sugar or powdered sugar 2 tablespoons butter or margarine. sortened l lablespoon honey 1 reserved egg white In saucepan. h eat first 3 ingre, dients until warm (1.20 lo 130 degrees F.). (Lightly spoon flour into measuring cup; level off.> In large bowl. blend l 1"i cups flour, yeast, salt. eggs and warm liquid. Beal 3 minutes ~l medium speed. By hand, stir in remaining 1314 cups fl our. (Dough will be soft and sticky.> Cover ; let rise in warm place until light · and doubled in s ize, 45 to 60 minutes. Generously grease two 8 or 9-inch round cake or pie pans. Stir down dough, beating 30 seconds. Drop tablespoonfuls of dough side-by · side in single layer in prepared pans, making about 10 roll s per pan. Combine Topping ingre· dienls and drizzle half over rolls. Cover ; le t rise again in warm place until doubled in size, 20 to 30 minutes. Drizzle remaining Top· ping over rolls before baking. Preheat oven to 350 deerees. Bake 25 to 30 m inutes until golden brown. Im mediately remove from pan. Makes about20rolls. ·-· ·~··--· ............. Honey and egg white form topping for flaky biscuits. PRODUCE SAYINGS ... owe .. .,. ........... ................. ................. ........... CLOSiD SUHDAY .... 1854 NEWPORT BL VD. IC~·=~=:~t:;AY OPEN 6 DAYS 9 to 6 PHONE 642-6025 11~ Italian SQUASH ARTICHOKES r' Just se nd us two box bottoms, one from any Betty Crocker· Layer Cake and one from an\' 13cttv Crocker . . Frosting Mix. along with the coupon below. Then we 'II send you a coupon good for a free box of Betty Crocker Layer Cake or Frostin,g l\.li x (your SEAFOOD SPECIALS FUSHOIEGOH ........._.-n .. We4,.,..4CW, ¥11119 ...... L..tt COMPARE OUR PRICES! STEAMER CLAMS Fl.ESH SOLID DUHGEHESS <MB MEAT 39~. HOUIS: MONDAY THIU RI. I O.S:lO SAT. 11:»4:>0 C&.0$ID SUM. The FISH MARKET Ji•cmdS..tyC.....- 145 E. BROADWAY, COSTA MESA 64S.522J choice). Now there's an offer that take!-> the ca"r, or the fr osting. An<l it's an offer you're su re to enjoy because Betty Crocker layer cakes are deliciously moist, and Betty Crock er frost ings arc rich. smooth and cn:amy. --------------------~~, -r----------------------- . Free Cake or Frosting~ I I I I I I I I I I 1;, ,.'(',·I\(', ..... , ••'Uf'I'" >-""" 1 ... J frl'l' 1,., 4'1 ti..11,· cn. ... kA." u~ ... C.1Lc "'"' '" °''' ~n.l'lltr,,.: Mui. n1.ol in 1h1' hwm "'''h t'IOC ~ h.oe11-m tr.wn all'\r 1Mt11 Cn"lc..,. Lt,,,. c.tc•· ~''' •nJ •>nc frOIYI any llo.11~ Cr.It 1.,., Fn"'li...i l\\h ll'Joc~•l' "'Ki' lh.•t<'(' o4 Caler or Fn:aS. 1,.1..,,. .\l.ul "' <A1'1cf.I M1ll•. lnc . P.O. fl.,, HI~'). MH1._pei*~. l\lmni. .... •1.1 '\ ~1<10 1• I I I ~~~~-~~~-~----~·· r,I\ __ .-..-...__....._.---.. __ SfMt•---7~ l :"or••..,,. 111u•t lo '"'""""''' "'"'" dorl~m \\itcl 111.a.....i .. ~"' t IOI• l'l411f I• hmott'\lt(•f{ll "'"I•~ r-:-1.,,.IY•'f Mlllrt"' \ )ft'f •·•~ ,_ \(\ NOT A STORE COUPON 10'11 l'lli• COl.'PON MU~l ACCOMJ>AI\\' \IXJR IU..l)UC} I L -----------------~-------~------~-~ ---------- I # I ·"'• •• " Ir ,,. • . , ' ., "' .. \or n ·' I •' ., ,. ... .. .. . .. ... .. .. .. . ... . .... .. . ..... ;, -....... •• ' Orange Juice I c . Minute Maid 100"1. Pure 32-oz. • Carton ·Margarine , Coldbrook, For · A 1! I Spread or Cooking. Jill ·' I We Welcome mA 1 ll.4cm) USDA Food Truly Fine Bathroom 1: Tissue, So Soft. 2 · Stamp Co.upons / ---------- SAFEWAY FRESH PRODUCE ,. 12c ~~B~nge . . ... ~. 19c Green Cabbage fr111 M1:1 Cf119ttuds. ...... .. ~."l~u~~~rs .............. " 29c ~~~R!~r~it .................... ~J 5c Delicious Ag les ' ,•< •. , lied or &olden DellclouS. lb. ~ . . ' ' • -roll . Patk fttc.: lllOll hi ~ llltnp! BURGUNDY •-terJ Vineyard !l II or Chablis, ·.-Vin Rose W Premiwn Wine M. LaMont Barbera Filth '1 ff La Mesa Vermouth ·.~· ""' 99' i ·anel\ D c{'ar/111('/ll.' . @Head· & Shoulders ~~c:'m1 u,:, 1111 @Vicks,Nyquil c.:,\gl>.:;:,. '~ '1" Anacin Tabiets .~oo 'l" In Our.Dairy Case ... ~ LARGE EGGS . -·, ~-75c ~ l·daz. . ClrlDn • I . I !l.!U~!Sc.1 .4°. Lucerne Party Dip :1 ~· 45' Lucerne Yogurt ~:i , ~ 29' Lucerne Potato Salaa ·~· 54', . ~:~...'~ ....... !129 • u.s.o.A. CHOICE GRADE BEEF Chuck Ro.a Blade Cut To Pot Roast -· ..... -... IMrldl ftnor yo1 111 aaly In lt.S.D.A. Chol i;1 l11t. This Oloice cul 11w1s you a cllunky, m11ly roast Ulll M1111s Mori i1llclo1s m11t lor your ..... ,. USDA CHOICE u.s.D~A. CHOICE GRADE BEEF T -Bone Steaks ./ .,.,, OR . PORTERHOUSE STEAK lwery cut 1xpll1fy bind tn.M11 If HOlll bone lfli 111 to ft¥t fOll "'°" IMll 1D Ht for your mon1y. • 97 lb. ~'c.!"'-':.1!!.~.~~ ....... "" ggc ?;.~'!:.8:!.. ..................... 8 gc ~.~~':' ......... lb. $·139 ~~.~ ........ ~189 ~.~.8:!'.-....... I0.$139 ~~.~----......... ~1~' eor.etess Beel Roast $139CariitedHams 4 ... s99a USDAQlliolllefCN:Qab.di ...... fta. SlfewarwO-.................. C.. SLICED BACON,_........ ~~.r=~ .. ,....,., 69C I 1::-;os 1 l·lb. s129 llorlale••SlrlpSteak s2a~ \.....!·==-=~-~-..!!:....-=.._.) uso•--...,1:."r.lr ........ Pork Spareribs ,,:~~~... " 99' Premium Ground Beef us. ~·1n19 lb. 11" 9 F k Mtat l·lb.IJOI Sliced Beef Liver """'· °"'"''° ,, 5 ' Oscar Mayer ran s • •~• ... ,. •Breast W/Ribs •Th19ns 98' B !I f' h f 'll ! 6"' Fryer Parts •ll.,mslicio {f<"'I " u er IS I e s ''""'· llt•osted lb. ~· BIG VALUES AT SAFEWAY! I • Niblets Corn y=~~ 1 ~~ 29° Fresh e·read Mr;ts~hfl 1 ~~· 39° Ivory Liquid :.0~~. = $1 14 G.lad Bags --~ .... 1, :1o 29° , Detergent u:~~~ 4~~ 99° -@Coff~e Mate ,.,;.&".;i~ '\:'11 '9 Nu·Made Mayonnaise Tar age @Beef Stew """-. '~ 89' Spaghetti Sauce J.:; ''i:59c @Horm~I Tamales ~~. ·~ 49' .Highway Apple Sauce '!:25' @Chow·Mein Oinners 'l':~11° Shasta Preserves or.1ei~ 32,:-ggc .. ...... ..... Qullly .. . I . ! . ..... DAILY PILOT £1- P~ a chi ,n g's Allowed · i PrQvldlpc a subtle back· er.ound for tJila delectable varia· Uon of Eggs Benedict. are honey wheat berry English muffins. Topped with Canadian bacon a poached egg, and this de: liclous, but easy to prepare Bearnaise Sauce, this is a dish which will b e pleasing to ev- eryone. Served with this might be half a grapefruit laced with sherry and run under the broiler for a few minutes. Tea, coffee and milk will round out your m'eal. EGGS BEUNAISE 3 egg yolks 2 teaspoons tarragon vinegar 1.4 teaspoon onion salt Y• teaspoon dried tarragon lh cup butte r , melted 6 pre-spilt honey whe at berry English muffins 12 slices Canadian bacon 12 eggs Paprika black olive slices Place egg yolks in blender along with vinegar, salt, and tarragon. Cover the jar and blend this mixture at top speed for two seconds . Uncover, and still blending at top speed, slowly dribble in the hot butter (do not pour quickly as lbe sauce will not thicken> until all of the butter is blended with the egg mixture. Keep sauce warm by placing blender in a pan of warm (not hot) water. Bake muffin halves in a 350 degree oven for one minute Top each half with a slice of Canadian bacon and return to oven until bacon is warm and muffins begin to brown around' lbe edges. Eggs Bearnaise, broiled grapefruit and honey wheat muffins Just before ser ving, poach eggs 2 t o 4 minutes. Place on Canadian bacon. Spoon warm Bearnaise Sa uce over each ser ving. Garnis h with paprika and black olive slices. tempt at brunch. TO THE· . BOllE ZACKY FARMUOSTElt FARMS ~T~ "'!P 2'' .. ~ rf i:RiiNG 59c iliiil i.~•· ;;~c:R sreAK L•. .. .:.,;. BElT_ CHIC KEM. &a. lDBSTll _ LOBSTER TAILS .... I OL 3.49 ..... s;Aii: 1 29 &°irii1 RIBS F::v~~ • LI. BEEF . LIAM lllSKET 1.39 .. FAIMRJOHM TOP 9UAUTY SUCB> . LINDA'S CORM FARMHOUSE BRAND BAR M POLISH BACON TORTILLAS FRANKS SAUSAGE 1.49LI. I DOZ. 19C PKG. EA. 69! 98~ .. AUNT JEM1MA-COMPLETE PANCAKE MIX 2 Ll.IOX DEMMISOM'S HOT or REG. CHILI CON ISn. CARNE c .. SPRINGFIELD BREAD WHITE OR 1 u. LOAF WHEAT COFFEE ,,o~ 1.19 59C BUTTERNUT · COFFEE · . ALL GRINDS I U. CAN AUNT JANES DILL PICKLE • POLISH •KOSHER SPEARS :.~~~LAA c c GALA PAPER TOWELS JUMIO ROLL · JAR ~~~_T_E~~~~~~~~~K~~N·~.To~o 4 '$1 SAUCE 70%.CAN SPRINGFIELD CUT · &REEN BEANS IZOZ. IOTTLI . . : DELMONTE PEaCHES HALVIS OR SLICm SCHILtlNGS BLACK MIXOI MATCH 303 CAM C PEPPER ·40~c•H - ... COSTA MESA 19th and PLACENTIA Store Hours: . 9 to 9 Daily -Sunday 9 to 7 Pricft lffKtk• Thui-sday,Jan.29 Thru Wed., Feb. 4 Pricn ~ .. Stedl -~ We Gtodty Accept Food St-.s . ------ FRESH PRODUCE SNO-WHITE CAULIFLOWER 19~ FIRM LARGE SIZE TOMATOES 29~ SWEET 1N JUICY EASY TO PEEL TANGERINES 19~ STUFFING SIZE C THICK MEATED 29 BELL LI. PEPPERS FRESH ITALIAN SQUASH SPRINGFIELD FISH STICKS 19~. LIQUOR DEPT. COUNT MICHA&. VODKA 74=' Va•AL MADllA +. MADllA SA.N4111A ~ :WINE •• . ... . .. • t • t • • • . . . . , .. ,,~··-... Cl DAJL Y PILOT * Wednesday, January 28. 197' I • Casserole Says Ole! Cubed or whole, chicken needn't be bland if curry or chi/es are added. Chicken Marinates • 1n Glazi e By CECILY BROWNSTONE AlllCI..._.,_.,.._, ... Jkcause the author ba1 extensive ~ro · feaslonal experien~ ln the food field, ls • eifted hoeteu and writes with clarity and generous de- tail, her book is most re- wardina. -C.B. ~lemon "' CuP butter 2 ~ ta blespoona curry powder Squeeze lemon juice over lt. Lay pieces, skin side \q) and one layer de· ep, IJJ large 1tove·lO· table bakins dish Cor 2 is tender nod richly glazed. Do nol overcook. Baste chicken oc- casionally wltb sauce. Decorate ed~e of dish with gr~n onion plumes (below) when you're re- ady to serve. Rice (OH naturally wilh chicken and even makes meatless dishes in~ eomething special, too. These are Ju.st two of tM ways that rice can .help to make tbe most of the money spent for food without sacrificing navoror nutrition. aDCKENAND lllCE CASSEROLE 2sUces bacon, diced 1 cup tbopped onions 2 cloves garlic, crushed 16-ounce can tom a toes, c bopped (about2cups) 10-ounce can con- densed cream or mushroom soup 1 cup cubed process American cheese IO-ounce package frozen green peas, thawed . ~ cups cubed cooked chicken 3 cups cooked rice 2 teaspoons salt v. teaspoon pepper 3 to 4 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese Saute bacon, onioos, and garlic until bacon is crisp. Add tomatoes, soup, and cheese. Heat, stirring constantly, until bot and cheese is melted. Stir in peas, chicken, rice, and seasonings. Turn into a greased shallow 2 1h·quart casserole; top with Parmesan cheese. Bake at 350 degrees for ~to 25 minutes. Makes 8 servings, each 352 calories. GREEN CHILES CASSEROLE 1 cup chopped onions 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 4·ounce can sliced mushrooms, drained JO -ou nce can con- densed cream of mushroom soup ~cup milk 4-ounce can chopped green cbiles (less, if de-· sired> 1 teaspoon salt ·~ teaspoon pepper 3 cups cooked rice 2 tablespoons diced pimiento ·Brunch Ter:npts Fresh squeezed juice. sausages, s crambled eggs and a coeonut cof- feecake warm from the oven make a tempting brunch menu. The coHeecake and link sausages can bake while you prepare the scrambled eggs and pour the juice. Then gather around the table, sit back and enjoy your day ofrest. COCONUT COFFEECAKE 3\-2 ounce package instant toasted coconut pudding 3 tablespoons margarine 2 cups buttermilk baking mix 2 tablespoons sugar l egg ~cup water Mix instant toas ted coconut pudding and margarine until crumbly; set aside. Combine buttermilk baking mix, sugar, egg and water ; beat vigorously about 'h minute. Spread batter ln greased 9-incb square cake pan. Sprinkle top- ping over batter. . Bake at 400 degrees F. about 20 minutes or until •done. Serve warm . Makes 9 servings. Vitamins Relished This luncbbox slaw goes well w ith eeg aandwtcbes, cookies and ~veraee. CAallO'I' aEUSH 2 caps finely grated CttTOt. not packed down ...... cup thin strtpa ueen pepper • Orated r ind of l lemon l \1 c ups grated Oleddar cbeese ~ cup prepared mustard <Dijon or another dishes). • Saute onions in butter \.Dltil transparent. Add re- mainine ingredients, re- serving 1 c up cheese. Tur~ into a greased shallow 2 -qu a rt casserole. DEAR CECILY: Don't for get that you promised to Jive me'tbe recipe for the delicious Curry Glaze Cb1cken I tuted al your house last week. - YOUR KENTUCKY NEIGHBOR. 1ood variety) 1 cup natural hooey 1teaspo0nsoysauce 6 or 8 small green Melt butter slowly and atlr in curry powder. When heated through, blend in mustard, honey and soy sauce and pour sauce over chicken. Cov- er with foil a nd refrigerate. Green Onion Plumes: Earlier, cut green onions into 1 ~-inch pieces. Fr- inge eacb by makln( several cuts about &At in- ch long all around each end. CURRY GLAZE CIUCKEN 8 whole chicken onions Top with r emaining cheese. Bake at 350 decrees for 20 to 30 minutes. Makes 6 serv-in&s. each 319 calories. DEAR KENTUCKY NEIGHBOR : The recipe you want comes from "Fifty Great Buffe t Parties'' by Ruth Conrad Bateman. breasts, split 6 chicken thighs e chicken legs Clove of garlic, cut Salt and freshly groul)d pepper Wlpe c h icken with paper towels and rub all over with cut clovtJ of garlic. Season with salt and plenty of freshly milled pepper. Warm to room tem· perature before cookini. Cook in 350-degree oven for 1 hour, until chicken Dip in cold water, shake and chill in plastic bag. II II YOUA,WAYS SAVEi WITH 5TATIR BROS. 'ow-,ow PRICl5 . HUCK ST SMOKED .. !!!!OI IUTT PORTION . • • 1.19 LB. ·109 SHANK POltTION LB. 55~ SlA'flll~• 120L PICO.' WICHMSOC&9· IEEF FRANKS _ .. _.. .. ........ u • TURKEY CHUCK C ~ DRUMSTICKS STEAJ< OSCAI MA YR • UNOWICH Sl'ttlAO 59• IUUllSCHWEIGER = _ a.oL DPft • • v~ • 10.01 ,.o 39• IURRITOS .... ·--. .u.. OAUO • ).Qt.. PllO SLICED SALAMI .. ...... 69' 0SCAa MA Ya • llOUNO • SQUAU •.. '1 39 VARIITT PACK UOL,.O ........ OAUO. 1-0L PICO. s1 a SALAMI CHUB ..................... IA. ~ ..... ·--·•J.Ol "" s1 n CHEESE SMOKIES .......... .... llOllllll • ~ SllCllCID. -Ot NOf s 1 • BULK SAUSAGE ... _ .......... ... unn IUUI w.es oe 79• SLICED BOLOGNA .. -.. --1.1. ~To 1-4&. PICG s11• SLICED BACON .. .. 1.1. NOff't . ,.a. PICO. s1 n SLICED BACON ·-·-··--·-· .. -1.1. DUM•IUUI s1 n SLICED BACON .... "' ... 1.1. 1T&naait0s. llCHftY •ACJI GllAeAlfTU .. ctvAunMIAn IV••• ••a Of •4••" \M(O-.•~· w ......... . to Plt.au •ou oe '°"' •°"' • WIUNCMtftlllA.lt f'tfWHOtO ~ ~ fllUM • fllOZIH 4a. WHITING --··-···-·----... u. ii ..._. fll()~ go. TURBOT FILLET -----1.1. o COOKEDLONGOSTINO'S...aa. '29' • 9CINUIJ • 1 29 snw MIAT _ .. __ ... ii'uMPRoAIT _ ... '1 27 -·lllWl.900 '-I.fl.ff • 100 ma ROAST_.,._ __ .... caiimD HAM--u.'898 CANNiD HAM _ .... •1 o•• OOUUAH •1 •• GROUND allf -.. IA. U.S.D.A. OIAl>f.A l&f ll.ADE CUT 39~ 79~ -·-.SS .. ,Jl.Jtll. • 127 ROUND ITUK.:..1.a. -•1•• CU81D ITIAK .. -1a. -·-·POT 99• AltM ROAST -----la. 7'~iON1 aoAST_ ... a9• ctiii'Cii 'iOAST _ta $1 ~9 -·~·•••us $• •• TIP ROAIT--·-··· _1a s: -1.C*•tTIMI • 1 •• PORTllUIOUll. -...... -·!Ollt . • 1 85 T·•ONI STIAK ..... _ .. ia. -·IMMl-.. ......... 'I" ata ITUIL._ ~-ia. -·l.OIN•SnM •-.UJ • 1 •• TOP SlllLOIN _____ ia. -·--·-•1•• TIP STIAK__ _1a iiiOiii.Dii ITIAK_ia.' 1 ~· :: MPS * LOW-LOW PRICES P ~ CUP·A·SOUP:'°"om."=. ___ .4 ... 52' WATER SOFTENER:~m·-··--...... s1.oz. 8~ LIBBY PEARS _ -_1M>z. 47' FRUIT COCKTAIL\M'-·-··-'~z. 39' PUSTIC LEMONS:=:;._ .• IM>Z, 21• WHITE KING 'D' -·------··-···-"'°1.11.54 REFRIED BEANS ~.--2'-0l. 53' MIRACLE WHITE~·-.. --·-··-~L 11 AS 1·=~~--.. ~ s32:a j 1 :-::i~····-·--· ..... 22cl TAMALES G9MAIDn .. -.... ··-···-1s.oi. MJB COffEE vAcUUM,AOt ..... __ ......... J.a. 14.16 1J U'I ~: r 0 ~ r 0 ELBOW MACARONI~ !Mil. .. MJB COFFEE VACWM ,AOC··-~~-·-·· ........ 1-U. 11 AS I 1RYE FLOUR~---· 2M>l. sr CLAUSSEN PICKLES ~~Offl .... J2.()l 95• ' HEAT FLOUR =::'~'-Ml. 69' INSTANT COFfEE-.xww.tHOUSllCM>l. '2.52 " . 11 Nucoa sncK 49 c j --ORN WHOU KlllNIL 2 9 c MARGARINl _.~ ......... 1 LI. .. oa cauM STYu INSTANT DRY MILK ~.-.. -·-11A9 1-0L . 1000 ~. ITAUAH W/OIDI. llD WINI I OtL • SAN flANCJ1<0. fll.NCJ4 4 9 c FABRIC SOFTENER~· 11 .63 »-Cl.88' * LAWRY'S DRESSING_t STA·PUFCONCENTRATE :..~.11 · "',,.,. ,...,._, 23 C FINISH KING SIZE;:> ... ~:,.,,, '1.05 ~!"! .. !~EW Val\~ l:{ampa. SKIPPY I PEANUT BUnER I 93c :.~~~ ~~t.Nry $144 ,..,..._ 69' =-79-PEANUT . . ••·OUNU•UMIUQUIO I 47c ::-------- BUftER .................... 21-0t-.... .......... SWEETHEART E-~ r;.-~!!!! L~ ~ ~ 1..4 Aau. Giiiit....,GiiNT RICE-·-··--41 c ..,, • n PACS . '4..QUNCI • 1 24 CHEESE PIZZA ·-·----~·---_.. • ..._,, ""' -... __ -=.!!:!.I_ '1 J2 CUT OIU ---. ·-llfV CMM 11111 unnE _ 1.01.11.-r•uz. &5' oo..._. ,._ ·-Ont SllU.OIM TIPS _ ---_ PEPPER OllENTll . ~ IOI.II lllll • M>I. 3"' -• t><CMOCf 55• ClllJ & IUft_ ·--I NAWAJIAJI PUNCIL.. --·· IOMld1otl I•~ • 1 56 BOYSENBERRY PIE ... ·---.. ··-··· iiOt.TiWiiiAT ~READ-"-3 9 c G'RiPicoNCJNTRATI __ , 57c ~tA/d, & ~ea4 Auu.. Sa"""J4. STYU HAI• STYU IPltAY POR MIN SHAMPOO .. _ 99• . .:.. 69• ........ TULITI -•117 UITl .. 111 MOUTHWASH .:.. ., .. liLL:oNC• 1 9c PANCAKE SYRUP _ 81 c CWIEANS __ 32• LiiiiPKCAKE MIX_ 63 c iiEYIPOTATOES 43• wii£ToMATOES so• LETTUCE STEWED TOMATOES _54• __ s1 ~ W.lfN#•m II 2 tabletpoons temoo '""!;'.!r'"' · Juice 2 tablnpoons sugar v. cup commerclaJ 10Urcream 11• cup plain yogurt Ur to.ether carrot, areen pepper, lemon .rind. lemon Jui~e and ausar. Stir ln aour cream and yoiurt. Cover and chlll. Makes iiHrvfn ... ' r -.-aa·I uDli11oull YOWD.I _ CO!IB 2 4 ua. 'I '2 • .. t ........ ....... ~39 4 Sl0t•• I I . I Sesame Contrast Crunchy Contrasts or textUre, such as succulent chicken and crunchy sesame seed~. make Oriental cooking so memorable. SESAME CHICKEN 2 broiler-fryer chickens, quartered 'h cup sesame seed ~cup corn oil ,,,,.. 4 tablespoons onion, minced 1 clove garlic, minced 2 teaspoons salt i.; tea s poon cardamom ~teaspoon ginger Dash cloves Dash chili powder Place chicken s kin side down in shallow baking dish. Combine re· maining ingredients ; brush chicken wilh mix- ture, reserving some !or basting. Bake chicken at 3SO degrees, basting fre- quently, for 30 minutes. Turn skin side up; con· tinue baking until chicken is tender, about 30 minutes longer. . Serve with Sesame Sauce, if desir ed. Makes 4servings. Sesame Sauce : Remove chicken pieces from baking pan. Blend 1 tablespoon corn starch wilh 1 cup water; stir in· to pan gravy. Cook over low bea~ stirring con- stantly, until sauce thickens. Serve with chlcken. Baking pan may be lined with aluminum foil to facilitate cleaning. Loafing :Halved One square layer is halved to make a loa!. MAPLE WAL NUT CAKE . 1 cup sifted cake Oou.r 1 teaspoon baking powder 41 teaspoon salt 14 cup butte r or margarine 'h cup sugar 1/2 teaspoon vanilla l large egg 1-a cup milk 'h cup chopped (medium-fine) walnuts Maple Frosting, see below On wax paper sift together the flour, bak· ing powder and s alt. In a medium mixing bowl cream butter, sug· ar and vanilla ; tboro-ugbly beat in egg. stir 1n sifted dry ingre- dients in 3 additions, alternately with milk, just until smooth. Stir in walnut.a. Turn into an B·inch square cake pan that has been lined with buttered ax paper. Bake in a reheated 37 S·degree ven until a cake tester serted in center comes ut clean -25 minutes. Loosen sides and tum ut on wire rack; re- ovepaper; ce>OI. Cut In half and fill and er top and sides with aple FrotUn•, putting ether to resemble a ... .. Meat Master Meats Beef Loin BoftefHS Tbp lirtoln StHk-lb. 1.H lb.1.59 U.S. Grade A-Southern W•ter Added-Shank Portion Whole lb •• 44 fljfy Cooked . ~.BB ~Fryers ~Smoked Ham BMf Chuck-Shoulder Cut Pork Shovldef-Pienic Style Round Biiie ·~·99 Fresh ... 88 ~BeefRmt ~PorkRoqst ~ Rib.eY&'st.:k~.. lb. 2.aa ~ leef Plate or Chuck ~English Short Ribs 1b •• 79 ~ ~o~Butt Rt. l.6B ~ PorlrLoln-Contaln••---•-... ....,. 148 ~ Mixed Port< Chops lb. • ~ Bite Size 1 49 ~ Boneless Stewing Beef 1b. • ~ i-;Jc:YD'rurnsticks I~ .49 ~ BHf loln-T .. Removed 2 09 ~ T·Bone Steak 1b. • ~ i;'"bk 'Steaks lb. 2.49 ~ .dHe,, Turkey 1b .. 89 0 U.S.O.A.. Choke 1 08 ~ Lamb Shoulder Roast lb. • ~ ar:;u;:rcii~ck pl~ 1.19 ~ ~~b"s~iCJer chops lb. 1.88 ~ J;Ph&'s&~;1 ... t19 ~ G'~;;crF\~nct ~ 1.21 ~ C1lllorni1Grown-Whole 98 ~ Fryer Legs or Thighs 1b •• 0 ""•'°'Soup 10 ~ Fryer Backs or Necks ..... ~ Sklllleta-Slced 79 ~ Fresh Beef Uver .-. • ~ Pedftc-Uoz.Pkg. a 89 1!£..1 Cooked Lobster "' • 0 1$ket-Potrlt Cut 1 49 ~ Ralphs Corned Beef lb. • ~ SIMutanda-Precoolted-1Rha.-.,.._, 99 ~ Veal or Beef Patties ••· • ~ Ffull F~ Det._-Body Attecfled-Alalbn 1 09 ~ Snow "'1"BD Legs lb. • ~ F.;;S.,sa. ltout lb. 1.99 Super Deli WUIOft'I C.rtfted Beef .... 79 ~Franks 12oL 59 pkg •• 1tOL .43 1fb. 1.06 401. .41 1101. 1.08 Wecm.td9, January 28, 197& I ~ . :::" SNrtlot-.-t ...._ ~ .t ,..,i. ~ lte -.lvl,., o volvoble ~ fuU flf llM!fvl W..-ion ~ lcolpM. TM bMk incl11dea '!'><• chom, wtM ...... ,_......_ fM ...ury ~ Ch.t Wile..,, ond ~"°"' thot nin - --120.00 lluriftl tfl. -· • ..b. If yw don't -elft , .... " by ~ ,__ s. .... ~..., ltolpkM4 ~ -"''You'll .. -that whfft it -19 -"its. aolphs -the llMIL DAILY PtLOT Q • Super Bakery Super Produce Ralptts-Pllln H1mburgar Buna ot Desert GrOl(n-1 lb. Cello Bag RllbyRed ~Grapefruit ..... 59 HatDog oBuns pkg. 39 otl • ~ New Crop Artzon• S••Jt ~Juice Oranges loz. 79 pkg •• perlb •• 15 HCh .89 D Vine Ripened 29 Salad Size Tomatoes per lb •• Super Flowers 0 Beat fol B•lllnf, Ema Fancy 25 ~ Rome Beauty Apples per 1b .• 0 Be1utttvt Mixed ~Rower Bouquets bu~h .97 ~ FG"reen'h· Fun PPeasod on ~ perlb. e£V 04House'Pot-A•aortPlantsed 11 ~ eaefl • 1 ~ t;'~~·sqncJash P•' n> •• 29 I: t.Ut{§ if,] 0111 i! t#) Super Spirits Hotder With 111 Retwa l1kelllite Gift or Iola ~Cozy Cups pkg. full 3 79 quirt • OClunwlPreMtY1tlve-Aeroto1Can1 157 ~ JuanV11dtz ~Scott's Liquid Gold ·~~ • ~ Imported Tequila D Aowe~uorted Fn11rance1 49 D Sindy Mee All•r Air ners pkg.. Imported Scotch 0 Aftlel-llue Knit Lined-Sitt., Med., Lg. 1 89 D ltlllan Swl11 Colony-Wine ~Household Gloves pair • Emerald Chablis Super Grocery MKal'Oftl I~· Contldln1 Krltt ~Di•ers Tmnato N ... ~ .22 o Sauce AUOftH '"*' Ot Veptabt.t Plain or locllzed Mortmt , ... 13oSah AllPurpoH Gerblr-Stralnad oBabyFood Gotd1n-Whoft Kernel Ralphs "~ .29 ~Flour Nlbletl oCorn Fun Gallon Bottle Old Fashioned fifth 8.99 fifth 4.59 magnum 2.49 8oz. 13 can • 26 oz. pkg. .1B Sib. 59 bag • -Ill ..... 57 ~Ice Cream "~' .B9 Pura oBlaach ~alth8Beauty Pant~rtllers ~ CMll-~s,tay ~ S.VO-Auorted Fl .. on ~ Anti Perspirant 'C: .89 ~ Liquid Diet Food n 8""' et..aMf ~ Kitty St .. or Methlfne ~ Phisodenn ~ 1.22 ~ Kai Kan Cat Food D Autof1 -Aatorted Coforl ~ ,.._., °' Uneototild 11-. 1 2I Toilet Tissue ~ Ploteln 21 Hair Spray Clft • ~.,._._..•-bf.orHot-Wlthlhana n ....... Moutllwnft 12 OL 1 65 ~ ChHI Con Came ~ Chloraseptic. bottl• • n Wtl1tr Kendal-Flv11 Blscutta Froun fOod ~Dog Food ~ 1Nel...C-Un1.....,.ild 1 28 D W*'-'1 .. R4Mt Olwtllle f'}!J GrapeftUtt Juice :.; I Grape Jelly ~ IUclt'a-NoeO.llJ 1toi. 28 ni.au,. ...... r ~ Coffie Rich ctft. • ~Potato Chips ~ Wlttl ,......._ ""'""* tt 69 ~ Moa'a ~ r:wo watnes ,: • ~Apple Sauce ~YH0.1C_,1t-a...eor8"f II 00111-A...-.~ ~ Encttada Dinners ~ • Paper lbrJlls come 100L 35 can• 6oz. 20 can• 2rol 48 pkg .• 15oz. 51 can • 210&. 64 ,... . tooa. 88 ,., . .--..... --r! .... OAll. Y PILOT * Wednesday. January 28, 197' Casserole Says Ole! Cubed or whole, chicken needn't be bland if curry or chi/es are added. Chicken Marinates in .Gla~es . . BJ CECILY BROWNSTONE ...................... Because the authoT' ~·· e&ten1lve pro-ftaiooal e>tperience ln \.\lemon \.\ C'-'P butter 2'1\ table&pOOQI curry powder Squeeie lemon juice over it. Lay pieces, akin aide up and one layer de-ep. to lar1e 1tove.to- tablo bakinf dtab (OI' 2 di.shes). • it tender ~ad richly sJued. Do not oveROOk. Baate cblcken oc- culonalJy wltb aauce. Dteorate edie of dlah with ireen onlon pluma (below) when you•re re- ady to aerve. Rice 1oe1 naturally with chicken and even IDMes meatless disbes ink> aometbing special, too. These are just two of the ways that rice can help to make the most of the money spent for food without 1acrificin1 flavor or nutrition. CIDCKEN AND lllCB CASSEROLE 2 sllces bacon, diced 1 cup chopped onions 2 cloves garlic, crushed 16-ounce can tomatoes, chopped (about 2 cups) 10-ounce can con- densed cream of mushroom soup 1 cup cubed process American cheese 10-ounce package frozen green peas, thawed . 3 cups cubed cooked chicken 3 cups cooked rice 2teaspoons salt '4 teaspoon pe pper 3 to 4 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese Saute bacon, onions, and garlic until bacon is crisp. Add t omatoes. soup, and cheese. Heat, stirring constantly, until bot ac.'cheese is melted. Stil'\n peas, chicken, rice, and seasonings. Turn into a greased shallow 2'h-quart casserole; top with Parmesan cheese. Bake at 350 degrees for 20 to 25 minutes. Makes 8 servings, each 352 calories. GR EEN CHILES CASSEROLE 1 cup chopped onions 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 4-ounce can sliced mushrooms, drained 10-ounce can con- densed cream of mushroom soup ~cupmilk 4-0unce can chopped green chiles (less, if de-· sired> l teaspoon nlt 14 teaspoon pepper 3 cups cooked rice 2 tablespoons diced pimiento ·Brunch Ter:npts Fresh squeezed juice. sausages, scra mbled eggs and a coconut cof- feecake warm from the oven make a tempting brunch menu. The coffeecake and link sausages can bake while you\ prepare the scrambled.eggs and pour the juice. Then gather around the table, sit back and enjoy your day ofrest. COCONUT COFFEECAKE 3Y.i ounce package instant toasted coconut pudding 3 table spoons margarine 2 cups buttermilk baking mix 2 tablespoons sugar l egg ~cup water Mix instant toasted coconut pudding and margarin e until crumbly: set aside. Combine buttermilk baking mix, sugar, egg and water; bea t vigorously a bout 'h minute. Spread batter in greased 9-incb square cake pan. Sprinkle tap. ping over batter. . Bake at 400 degrees F. about 20 minutes or until ~ done. Serve warm . Makes 9 servings. Vitamins Relished This lunchbox slaw goes well with eeg sandwiches. cookies and beveraie. CAU OT &ELISH 2 CQPS finely itated carrot. not packed down ~ cup thin 1trtps green pep~r • Grated rind of l lemon 2 tables-poo~ lemon · juice 2 tablespoon• suaar '4 cul> coi:omerclal sour cream v, ~ J>la\n yogurt SUr to1ether carrot, · are ea pepper, lemon rfnd, lemon Juice and 1u1ar. Stir ln aour crcam andyoaurt. Cover and chill. Mnkea <taervfn .. I 'I r 1 h cups grated Cheddar t'heese Saute onions in butter until transparent. Add re- maining ingredients, re- serving l cup cheese. Turn into a greased shallow 2 -quart casserole. DEAR CECILY: Doo't fora-t that you promised to live me'th• recipe for lbe delicious Curry Glaze Chicken I tuted at your house last week. - YOUR KENTUCKY NEIGHBOR. the food field, Is a aifted boste11 and . writes w1t.b clarity and generous de- tail, her book is most re- ward.Ln1. -C.B . CVRRY GLAZE CIUCKEN 6 whole chicken '4 eup prepared mustard (DlJon or another good variety) 1 cup natural honey 1 teaspoon 101 sauce 6 or 8 saitU green onions Green Onion Plumee: Earlier, cut green onions into 1 Y.a-lncb pieces. Fr· tnge each by maklne several cuts about ~ in- Top with remaining cheese. Bake al 360 ·degrees for 20 to 30 minutes. Makes 6 serv· ines. each 319 calories. DEAR KENTUCKY NEIGHBOR: The recipe you want comes from "Fifty Great Buffet Parties'' by Ruth Conrad Bateman. breuts, split 8 chicken thighs 6 chicken legs Wipe chicken with paper towels and rub all over with cut clove of garlic. Sea.son with salt and plenty of freshly milled pepper. Melt butter 1lowly and stlr in curry powder. Wben heated through, blend ln muatard, honey and soy sauce and pour sauce over chicken. C.Ov- e r wifh foil and refrigerate. Warm to room tem- perature before cooldna. Cook in 350-degree oven for 1 hour, until chicken ch long all around each , end. " " Clove of garlic, cut Salt and freshly gr'OUl)d pepper Dip in cold water, shake and chill in plastic bag. YOU Al.WAYS SAVE I WIFH srArlR BROS. 'OW•£0W PRICIS STATaMOS.• ltOLKO.• ..--oe&ftt BEEF FUNKS -··-.. ·-·"' _, OKAI _.,.. • SAHO'M04 SlllU<O 59• WUllSCttwtlQER = .. .OL ZIPff • 4 V~ • IO.OL 1'110. 39• BURRITOS ............ ··-.. --· "'- OAUo • ).(IL f'l{O. 69' SLICED SALAMI ··-··· -· --"'- OKAll -ra · llOUHO • $OUA&I • .. s 1 39 vaR1m PACK "oz. ... o ........ GAlLO • l..QL KO. $149 SALAMI CHUB ·-··········-···--··'-'· OICM llATll • - -• IJ.ot. M '1 29 CHEESE SMOKIES .............. IA. ~. CCMlll'I .... -Ol llOt '151 BULi SAUSAGE ... -.. ·-···-lA. unn 1UU1 WllNlllS oa 79• SUCED BOLOGNA __ ... _ la, ~·141'1(0 51 19 SLICED BACON ...... .• ····-ll. "°""' • '.a. .. o. s 1 n SLICED BACON -········-···-ll. ll. s1 • IT lo TU IMIOI . MOWIY •ACll •utoe AlfJU •OUAUn MIAJI 1¥f•t NO Of .... ," \lllllCO....•llOJt.&M.t C.U••• .. ttt• lOAUN'OU .. ,0"9_...r W.U.MOft.-..U.•MI~ ....,.. • fllODH AM WHITIN8 ···-···-····---LL-..:J l"ll'IM•flODH 98' TURBOT FILLET ............ ___ la, COOKEDi..ONGOSTINO'S...&a. '2"° ~~.&.~';-~ GiiEN...,GiiNT RICl.m-··---41 ' JINn•llH.Ol•~ •12• CHEESE PIZZA ..... _ .. _ .. ____ ...... __ •OY\'f·-•N -·--·•-11n CUT OKU __ --llfV ~IH PfTIU KOlO all• M1Z. &s· • 11-Cn • -Oftt StRLOllTlPS _ P •utAL __ u.i ·-...,·--3r •.. .._ l':l:t CHIU & IWIS_ -· llAWAHM PUG_ -·~ iOYiiNBERRY Pll '1 56 iiONIYWiiiAT aRIAD-.. _ 39c GRiPECONCJNTRATI __ 57c ~t4td& B~ ~ Sa"'-J" STYU HAIR ITYU SPRAY POR MIN SHAMPOO "-99• .:;:.. 69' ·-lnlllDINT TULITI -'1'7 ••••• XftA.XTltA DlilT "=" •1 • . . UITl .... I MOUTllWAlll ~ '1" HUCK SMOKED .. !!!!t. ST IUTT PORTION • • • 1.19 1.8. s100 55~ .__. •1• ITIW MIAT ... --1.1. iuuiiAST--1.1. '1 27 -·-IND 11.llA• • , 00 ... ROA.IT -IMCM--W. UNNiD HAM_u. •9•• UNHiD HAM_ ... • 1 o•• IJlllA UAH • 1 ' 9 , GROUND 811f _ .. ia. t I SHANK ..OITION l8. TURKEY CHUCK C . DRUMSTICKS STEAJ( U.S.D.A. OIAl)l..A IUf MAOICUT 39~ 79~ -·-..SS ...•.. ,,.... • 127 ROUND STEAK..:. ia. CU81D ITUK.-w '1 69 -• CMICll • '°' 89. AllM ROAIT __ .i.a. 7;ao..1llOAST_ia.89' CiiiiCK.UasT __ w' 1 39 -·-·-•••9 nP ROAIT __ i.a. c ,, -IOIN•SllAll • 1 89 POltDIUIOUH .. --1.1. i.aoNI STIAK-1.1.' 1 as -·tlMll& ..... I.I...... 'I" ma ITU"-. IAllOl-1.1. -• IOIN • JftAI • _,,, • 1 91 TOP llllLOIN .. ·-·--·ia. -·-·_... 'I" nP sftAK __ ... -'8. --ITIAK..1.1. • 1 ~· , . II ti I . I 1 --... . . .,, __ _ .. ._, . ', ' ... , • W-'X· Jonuary H , 1970 :All Y PILOT ~ Home News : Cool Weather C.rops Bountiful , ll1DOllOTRY.WENW cir.,...a...,...,.,..,.... I <' Wben you cook lh<se strong QUESTIONSWll!AJIE-.UUD: nav«ed vegetables, cook them Q. Nobody ln my family Ukes quickly in somewhat more water broccoli and J think tt•s because than you use for other vegetables o( the way l cook it~ In oqler to (to dilute the flavor). Avoid over· get the stems tender I alway11et cooking -the longer these the fl owers overcooked and vegetables are cooked, the mushy . What's the answer! Winter brlng1 the cool weather <Ole •rops -particularly cab· base and cauliflower -to Oranie County ranm. Perhaps thla la why mll!lf peo- ple prefer to eat these vegetables raw instead of cooked. When faw their nl.vor 11 mild; cooki~g br- ings out tbe IDlelly. flavorful 1uJ. rur-eontajnlng comDOWlda. vegetables. All or th••• veaeubles w:tll have more vitamin C If you eat them raw alnce cooking does c1U1et0me tosaof t.bis~mln. · You may have noticed the puncent "cabbacey" odor when drivioc through areas during Other Popular co1e crops tn ad· ditlon to cabbage and caullnower are broccoli and brus.sels sprouts. A half·cup ••rvlnl ol cooked cabbage or ~•ullnower ~ 1upl/.: 1j about • fourth or your day • need for vitamin C. Both cabbafe and caulillower have laP>rtant amounts of other nutrtertta such as iron. lollc acid. and B vitamins. Both cauUOower anctlbroccoli taste delicioUJ when served in bite al.le port.iona u an appetizer with dip and have tar fewer caloriea and more outrient.8 than com or potato chips. strong:ertbeirnavor. A. If you want to serve yoar b.arvestlug of the crops. · The odor is caused by the fact that cole crops all contain sulfur. And ti la sulfur compounds - particularly hydrogen sulfide - which give theae vegetables their ttrong odor when they are cooked and when they decay. You can grow all of .these vegetables in your garden at this time of year 11 they all thrive in cool weather. All of the cote ves:etables have the advantage of beiftl especially nutrltlou1 because they have more vitamin C than many other But lt'a broccoli that's the real winner. A half.cup of cooked broccoli gives you more than the total amount of vitamin C you need ror the day, IDOlt of. your vitaml.n A, r.•u• worthwhile amounts of · roo, calcium, B vitamins, and follc acid. Another way to serve raw broc· coli ii with a dressing made of !OW' cream and lemon juice with a little onion or dill ror flavor, ii you Uke. Raw caulifi<nter is good 11llced thinly in lettuce salads. If you leave the lid off the pan broccoli in whole stalks. split tbe some of the flavors will escape in stalks lengthwise in halves or the steam (making the room quarters part of the way up. smell more "cabbagey" and the Or, cook broccoli cut up iD· vegetables taste milder). stead of in stalks. Slice the items stir-frying quickly in a small into pieces and cook tbem fOI' a amount or oil or rat ls another few minutes; then ad' the good way to cook these strong flowers for the last lew minotel flavored vegetables. of cooking. . ' • Sesame Contrast. Crunchy Contrasts of texture. .such as succulent chicken and crunchy sesame seeds, make Oriental cooking so memorable. I ~ --------,,-----------t :Si> fnl!S I , SESAME CHICKEN 2 broiler· fryer chickens, quartered lh cup sesame seed ~cup corn oil SS ~11ing in the mail soon ... I $ 1 tlL ... "Ralphs S~per Savers / ~ Ji Almanac and Coupon Book'' ~~ ; 4 tablespoons onion, minced l clove garlic, minced 2 teaspoons salt Ya teaspoon cardamom 'so\ teaspoon ginger Dash cloves Meat Master Meats Sf..ti.-1 w.elr, ..........,., .......... ..._, ..... ,_.n,j"I a YOl!IOl>ft ltoolo fuU "'.,..NI lftf.nnehon from lolpht. Ti.. '-'lo lndudeo 'f'"' chom, • ":!~ ~ .,W... ,......,,_ lor ...i..i-, i.,. OMf Mll.t lty, aowl ,..,po,..1hat "'" ~ -!'M -S!O.OO ilvri,. IM ""'' 4 -i.... ff.,...,....,.,--'"'"'"' lo~ n.-lay.,.. s. , .... ~..., lal,... ..... fl'ldi-llf'· .,.... • ., .,_ !hal ........ it_ .. ..w.. ......... -........... . - Super Bakery Super Produce Dash chili powder heflolft-10·14 lb. Avg.-lold Whole Ontr "-tpM-ttt.ln H1mburv•t Buuor Dnert GIO'lf'n-1 lb. ceuo B•g Place chicken skin Whole Bonel ess 1 59 Hot....... Ru"" Red side down in shallow OP SIRI ·QIN "VII UJ 59 bbmakinrusa;nhfnchld~schki.necn.~!.:th1~mlx~;:: ~ I .. lb. • oBuns •:,•; .39 ~Grapefruit ." .• r Beel LOln lonelffl lbp Sk1oifl Sleek-lb. 1.il ture,reservingsomefor 1 :;:::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:==:~;::========================~'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~-' basting. ~~Bearll•-'c"1awsklig• ol 4 • o~ 79 Bake ·chicken at 350 ~ pk; .• degrees, basting fre· ~RAutu•lptl•-m..,n-Tea' Cakes 89 quently, ror 30 minutes. ~ ••ell • Tum 'skin side up; con· tlnUe ba'king until chicken is tender, about JO minutes tonger. Serv e with Sesame Sauce, if desired, Makes 4servings. Sesame Sauce: Super Flowers ~ 84l1utillrl Ml1ed ll!.J Flower Bouquets bunch .97 EA •House· l'ot-A1aor1Plantsod ll!.J OKhl.17 perlb .• 15 p ... lb. .29 per lb .• 25 per lb .• 29 pet lb. .28 Remove chicken pieces from baking pan. Blend 1 tablespoon corn starch with 1 cup water; stir in· to pan gravy. Cook over low heat, stirring con- stantly, until sauce thickens. Serve with •: t.J! U§ II·' t m 11 ti) Super Spirits chicken. Baking pan may be lined with aluminum foll to facilitate cleaning. Loafing Halved One square layer is halved to make a loaf. MAPLE WALNUT CAKE . 1 cup sifted cake Cour 1 teaspoon baking pawder 14 teaspoon salt 14 cup butter or margarine 1hcup sugar 1i2 teaspoon vanilla I large egg J,flc upmUk • lf.z cup chopped (medium.fine) walnuts Maple Frosting, see ~ rub!Eye's;.knml••• I& 2.88 ~ .. ef Pt1te ot Chvtll 79 ll!.J English Short Ribs lb •• EA •••••• 149 ll!.J Boneless Stewing Beef,~ • ~ Bfff Loin-Till Aemowed 2 09 ll!.J T-Bone Steak ... • ~;v~15teaks ,..2.49 ~ G~:rcii~ck 17,: 1.19 ~ f'GiiPhs'~ ... t19 ~ G'~;:CrR~nd . -: 1.29 ~~~Liver -. .79 EA .., __ ,,..c., 149 ll!.J Ralphs Corned Beef ·~ • ~ ltnut.nc11 -Precook1d ... 1Alioa.-.,.llded 99 ll!.J Veal or Beef Patttes. ••· • ~ M~n JJutt AL 1.58 ~ Portrl.offl-Coflt.IYtl•_,-'_,•...., ... .._. l 48 ~ Mixed Pork Chops ... • ~ T-Drumsticks 1b •• 49 [']II U.S.O.A. Gt1de A 69 ll!.J Ralphs Hen Turkey lb .• ~ ~~b.Shoulder last I~ 1.09 ~ ~b·~ider Chops I~ 1.88 ~ F;;L;.is';°Thlghs lb.o98 ~ Flfiefor lou, 10 ll!.J Fryer Backs or Necks I~ • ~ ~LObster lb. 3.89 EA ....,,Fmo,1..,.,-... ,•.,....,_...,..,109 ll!.J Snow l,;J8D Legs 1b. • EA ~" ... ,.,. 1 99 ll!.J Fresh 1l'out ... • Super Deli Kr1h Sllcld SWISS ~Cheese Beef ..... 79 ~Franks ,, ... 59 pkg .• below ~ ASharp11ph1 a i1c1Cheddar-• Mont1t1 1 89 EA •Polato•lphs Salad On wax paper sift ~J pound 1 ~ together the flour, bak· oA•lpttt4¥11ilY, D CUtehlfton-Spread1, ... 140&. .48 illgpowder and salt. Sliced Ham 176 Jn a medium mixing lu. • ,,.,,fj/ D aorc1 ... -Cltocolltt Fudge or V1nlll1 bow~cream butter, sug· OMG•oudarb•dEdomCoheese• 99 Frosl8d Shake 29 ar and vanilla; 1oz.1 t'Ncu.1 thoroughly beat in egg. D MBal"''rWparkltl'I v.11Franks 1 29 o Prtc\04'• 1"" Stir In sifted dry irlgre· 11~ • Ricotta Cheese dients in 3 additions, D R1lph1 alternately w,lth milk, o '!fl< .... ....,,,...,.,. 97 Shrimp Cocktail just until smooth. Stir in Rondole Cheese •~ ... • walnut.a. ~ Hffraw N1doft•I Knockwvrat or l 2Q [""JI Rfl9h•-Slf11'9 Ilk:• Spre1d Turn Into an 8·inch ll!.J Kosher Franks 12,. , ll!.J American Cheese square cake pan that has D Viti P•lrt D Pul'dl-ON~·Gt•~ been lined with buttered Orange Jui-41 oL ,85 Ralphs HUit Drfnk wax paper. Bake in a ~ ''"' 1.06 ..... 41 1r oz. 1.08 ~ .... 39 ....... preheated 37S ·degree Prices Efftctlve January Z8 through Febr111ry 4 oven until a cake tester - in•erted in center comes r • -~· -• .. r • • llftWl'wDI ... • .. outclean -25minutes. ~..1 • ......._,.,_. .. Loosen sides and turn 1 S.v•.11wMhtovpOll Hit 11 sa.,.,,,, .. c..,. •• I out on wire r ack; re-Qocoi.ll• FllVOf 1ttty Crocket-t11 ... 11t '°'8tNI m~~r:~.!i ~~J·,m a1111 1 llaella's " 11 Po, tato I cover top and aides with IWOllll 89 88 r.:~.~~~!i!"~ I ..... ·: I 11 lllldl ·.: I I loaf. I -.:'!m •ltdOn•C~PetCUltOnlef 11 Ullltl OMhnl•ltdOMC...,.,..,Ctr.11£a11 I Maple Frosting: Beat Ulllll--ln.cttv•Jan.•..,.,.,• .. 4 CoupwLlrrtcM .lllft.tl.,......,.._, togetller 14 cup -or, Cott"D • I L c . · I marsart .. ,wtlll Mo cup 1 _________ .. •••••••• .. confectloaen' 1uc1t N>d ..-. 11o cup mopJo· 1yrup: •:::=£" __ _ gaduollJ beet In l cup ., __ ... eonfecttOQll1• 1ui1r or· enousb ot It to· make •ood tpreadtn1 con; Oii!-. t:r:" dilllpt f llFEUle Hotder Wlrh "ID RllWI L1k•lhlr1 Gin or Iola Slllllra ~Cozy Cups ....• 17 ~Vodka .. ~~3.79 ~Ctt1nwAPreNrv•Uw1-A1rosolC•n 14 157 r]ll Juan Vaid•• ll!.J Scott's Liquid Gold ,~~ • ll!.J Imported Tequila D Aower.1.__~~-~!~~ ff911•flC•e 49 o Saftdr MK Alli•r Air "1ISl1f1el'S ,.,. • Imported Scotch ~ Allffl-Ehre Knit lined-Sm., Med., lg. 1 89 D tlllllan S•I•• Colonr-Wlne ll!.J Household Gl<NeS ,.,, • Emerald Chablis Super Grocery Macaroni I Cttff•• Kraft ~Dinners Al10rttd Frulb or Vtgetllbtff Garllef-S1ralnad o BabyFood Gotden-Whole Kern1I Mblets o Corn f un Oefton Bome Contldln1 Tomato "'.:~.22 osauce Pl1ln or lodiltd Morton I ... 13 oSalt All Purpo1e Ralphs ",: .29 ~Flour Old F•ellloned ...3.99 '"" 4.59 magnum 2.49 ao.z. 13 "" . 260L pkg. .18 Sib. 59 big . Purax o Bleach Ralphs .K •• 57 ~Ice Cream ~~~.89 ..... 35 .... .... 20 "" . .... 48 pkg. ' 15u. 51 .. .. ..... 64 ..... ..... 88 IM' ..... ..... "i:;.84 ... .... 68 .... come _..,lft tllo I RAllllS SICMb Ml IOCA AT: 310 !. t7111 ST., COSTA MHA HAllOl I WllSOll ' 9901 ADAMS llVD .. llll!milGTON IEAOI 24167PASfODfVAL!ilCIA,LAGUNAlllUS 1726117thST., TUSTIN IXISTAIMSA 401 N.LOARA,AN~IM 6942WARIP.HUllTl~llEAOI 1sm s. ._tUsT, WB1ua1a ~ .... ..., ... ,s..,· I I I t < . . (· .... C..,.'.lmif~DAll;;..;;;:;.;..Y ;;..:";LOT:.:_ _____ W:.:;!dn!!d!Y:::::.::=:i;·:.:Jan::.·:=.u:::.!!Yz..:21.:::::...:1.::.:97~t • Calories Sliaeel ~r:om Meat laaf · THE SLIM GOURMET By BARBA&A GIBBONS There's no law ttiat meatloaf bu to be meatloaf. Why not ••meatrina?" llutamat-e (optJonal) Ya cup finel y chopped mustard Combine first ten lniredients and pack lnt.o a ring mold. Invert on a •hallow nonstick routin« · pan and carefully lift the moldf>tf, retalnlna the meat in a ring shape •. and clears. Season .tth addl· tlonal soy sauce to tute. 2 packages (l«Hunces each> sliced frmell carrota. Sweet, Sour Combo Serve rice and snow peas with these chicken wings that stay crisp and have a light s weet-sour flavor. A nut torte would bt> suitable for dessert. CIDNESE CHICKEN WINGS Cornstarch 14 cup white vinegar l tablespoon catchup lteaspoonsoysauce 1/3cupsugar 15-ounce can pineap- ple chunks, in heavy syrup 12 chicken wings, about 21~ pounds J large egg, slightly bt>aten 14 teaspoon salt Solid white vegetable shortening 1 tablespoon oi l Stir together until smooth I tablespoon cor- nstarch . the vinegar , catchup and soy sauce; stir in sugar and the syrup '(2/3 cup) drained from the pineapple until sugar d issolves; set aside. Partly cut through the top of each wing tip joint and tuck tip under the drumstick-shape bone so wing forms a wide closed triangle. Dip wings in egg; roll in 1 2 cup cornstarch mixed with sal t to coat generously. Heat enough shorten- ing in a 12-incb electric skillet to have '1'J full; fry 6 wings at a time at 425 degrees until golden col· or on each side and cooked through. Drain on brown paper and keep warm in a low oven. Pour off fat in skillet and wipe clean; add oil and pineapple-juice mix· ture; cook at 325 degrees, stirring constantly, until clear and thickened. Stir in pineapple chunks and heat. Add chicken wings, s pooning sauce over them and turning once, to glaze. Ser ve with rice. Makes4servings. Think Chinese Serve· this quick sup- per special over crisp chow mein noodles. Add a salad -desse rt of pineapple rings, orange slices, and grapes. And you can't go wrong by adding gingersnaps and hot tea to the menu. CIONESE SKILLET 1 1 2 cups cooked pork, cut in J 1 2-inch strips 1 cup diagonally sliced celery Y.i cup chopped onion 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 10 -ounce can mushroom gravy 1 t easpoon brown sugar ~ teaspoon soy sauce I/,. teaspoon vinegar Chow mein noodles In skillet, brown pork and cook celery and onion in butter until tender. Add remaining ineredien ts except noodles. Heat; s tir now and then. Serve over noodles. Makes 4 portions. Sunshine ·'Bite of aunshine plate" is what children wlll call thia. Peel 1nd alic' 2 oran•n.· SpUt • Mted fip and Mt in center~• glass aervin, pl&te, Jina with oran1e s lices. Sprinkle 1rated coconut · owr orufet, lf dnir«t. Mu a qUiclr detlel'l lft6· Picture • aavory clrcle of seuoned beef fresh frona the oven, lts center filled with ala.zed carrots or crisp Oriental vegetables. BEEFRl~G WITB ORIENTAL VEGETABLF.S 2 pounds fat·trimmed ground beef round 2eegs, beaten ~cup skim milk 2 tablespoons soy sauce l teaspoon monosodium 2 cups hl~·proteln cereal, crushed V. cup dry white wine or water · 2tablespoonssoys~e 1 beef bouillon cube 16-ou nce can Oriental vegetables, drained 1 larae peeled onion, cut in half, then sliced 2-ounce can mushrooms, in- cluding liquid IA cup cold water 2 teaspoons arrowroot or cor· nstarch Bake in a preheated 350-degree oven for 50 minutes or more. About 10 minutes before serving time, prepare vegetable filling: Combine ln a nonstick skillet re- maining inaredients except ar- rowroot and cold water. Cover and cook four to five minutes, only until onions are tepder·crisp. SUr arrowroot and cold water together and stir into simmering vegetables until sauce thickens At aervlne time, fill the meat rin1 wltb ve1etables. Serves etaht, 224 calorie• each. B E.EFRING WITH GLAZED CAllllOTS 2 Pounds fat· trimmed ground round · 2eggs · Small onion, minced 2 teupaons garlic salt V.. teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons horseradish 2t.easpoonsdry mustiifd 5 tablespoons catsup (regular or sugar.free) y, cup chopped sweet pepper l teaspoon parsley flakes 2 c~bes or envelopes beet bouillon lhcupwatt-r ' Combine first nine tngred.lenls and shape into a ring as In pre· vious recipe. Bake al 3SO tor :SO minutes. About 20 minutes before serv· Ing time, combine filling in(l'e· dlents in a covered sauce pan and • cook only until carrots are tender butstill crisp. Serve meatloaf with carrots in the center. Serves eight, 220 cafories each. No supermarket 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 customers everydfl/ low discount prices. We promise to continue with everyday LOWER PR ICES OVERALL. • LUCKY'S BEEF PRICES ARE EVEN LOWER .THIS WEE!« ,, Blade Cut &gc Any Size Pkg. -C USDA Grade 'A' C Top Round 147 ~~uck Roast Grou~~ ~~~!B 63 ~!Y!~~ . ... l844 . ~J!~"--··--··· .. LB Boneless Round Steak BEEF ... 7 -Bone Roast BEE~Cl<UCt( . Small End Rib Roast BEH Boneless Rump Roast BEEF AO\INO SIAl()ltj CUT T -Bone Steak Btf"F LOIN LB 121 l B 79c l8 141 131 l8 198 ~!b~~~:.r .LB 129 ~;;~t~~~ .... LB.139 ~!;~~~~~~~LB 75c Pork Loin Roast SIRLOtN CIJU.-1.8.AVO WT. .. ................. , Country S"le Ribs POPI! lOlti .•••• /l .. ,.. . .. • .. Pork Loin Chops CEl'ITEA C\IT ••• .,. .. • Loin Cut Pork Chops .. lB 139 . ll 139 . lB 189 l8 118 !~~~ o!e~!. ~i.~8.~ ...... ... ~ .. ta 79c Farmer John Sliced Bacon,.i_. ,. 110 131 9~~!! ~,ave~ ~~iced ~acon.·lB PKG 151 ~!':!P.A~ryin~-.~~.!~~en t• 53c Porterhouse Steak BElif tOIN ........................ , ........... .. Biii Round Tip Steak !!f ~ss~!~oin . ~t~ak . Fresh Rainbow Trout .,.ll 2°' ta. l &I ll 111 LB 179 YOU'LL FIND LOWER PRICES THROUGHOUT THE EN'flRE STORE. Lady Lee Preserves STRAWBERRY Lady Lee Tomato Paste ,,~, 37c Betty Cro·cker ~~~!~ni~!~ .. !... 53c Mott's Appia ~auce . . .. 3-0l ! 49c ~rema R~~--~itted_ ~h~~~~!f 45c ~!'!!T~!2~~!!,E!!~~J~~ ·:o~ 79c Jiffy Com Muffin Mix •. 01 ~-2oc ~'!ft Parmesan Ch111~ .~{ "-"" 135 Lady Lee Cottage Clleu~•oz ~ 55c ~~E!;:A·Roni Rice ~.ixes •.. oz c!o. 3gc ~N~~p!~R~JE!~!.""~ ........... 4~02~AN 45c FILM DEVELOPING KODACOLOR ·GAF ·FOTOMAT FUJI COLOR PRUllT f lLMS Developed and Prtnted 12 exposure rolls s2.&9 20 exposure rolls 13.89 . !' .. ~--. -~= ) ~ ._ ... ~ . --·' :.-. DEVELOPtNG Aw..-.. CENTER at .. --•• Of .... ~"' IPUf PAL _..,. llOIUIAT Ill& 15 a1(1 .. u TAT IOACll TW llt..-o 11• ., --19' 3" . Lady Lee Harvest Dayd'1 1 DelicOtessen . !!~3.~~e~~o~ 29C ~~~~~ ~~~ .. 3gc ~~;~~~~~~Di .i: ::: Lady Lee Lad~ Lee :!:u!;..!!~~. Fruit .~ocktaZ.CAN n~49c 1 ~.8.. ~!.~!!!AAECTN. age Cblddir Ciil8Se ... JV-0 lMCl TO LAllE LOHOHOAN IH'Lf 11.C~G. 53c .. M::a.89C 1-0L~O gac Wagner Citrus Drinks ~ ORANG£ OA GIV.PU'flUIT .. Kraft Mayonnaise IUITATl()H ,Krall ·Dinners .. .•• 11.4.ol en. Lady Lee -~uc~~~-~~t~:.:?89C Nib lets 29. corn ~ o~ •••• • • , 11..0Z CAN Health & ~ut~ Aids Jllllson a Johnson ~ 1 •1 tlAIY 9HAMl'C)O .... -· ·--· ..... -......... • • . ••• 11..0Z. -!''~'!! 5-~.~b~~~~ ....... .. __ :c.ggo .!~,!!!!~~~r's .. Sham.p~~~ 113 !!!!!!!!a.~~ ... . 14~ 181 Vlt1Hs ~up.~~ ~old .. !:: 1•1 Ftoduce !:.~--•• m •• O O •••••• •••< " 24 ° lt1H1n Squash OIUCATE 'L'llOl'I ... Ll.29° Fresh ~AHC)fENOUI ••• • • ···--····•"•'""U~ 29° S111klst ~!!L~L~.~~~ ..... ·--r·-·-· l• 1 g~ H111ID1 Pll1l1 AUOllTEO UIAOE • • •• .• •• ...... .. .. . .. l!A. ,.... ........... ...,.,._. 432 w. -""*' °' ' ~. 11780 1. W!lllllp ""° 288 " ..... \ COokies Picture Past Tight" Budget? Think Codfish If you think today's in· nation is bad, consider tbe plight of Abigail Adams two hundred years ago. From the homestead in Massachusetts, sbe wrote to her husband the President, "Our money is very little better then blank paper . . . no arti· cle can be named, but what. costs more than double in hard money what it once sold for." A New England economy measure in those days was codfish ~ cakes, parti.cularly when served for Sunday morn· ing brea~Iast or with gnvy over rice for din· 0 '" .. NUWENGLAND OODFISH CAKF.S 10.ounce can codfish cakes, flaked • 11 -ounce can con- densed cream of chicken soup I egg, slightly beaten I tablespoon finely chopped parsley ·~ cup fine dry bread crumbs 4 tablespoons butter or margarine •14 t easpoon onion powder ~. teaspoon mar- joram leaves. crushed ~ cup chopped fresh tomato V.. cup water In bowl, thoroughly mix codfis h, 2 tablespoons soup, egg, add parsley. Shape firm. ly into 4 patties. Roll in bread crumbs. In skillet, brown pat. ties in 2 tablespoons but- ter ; rem ove to heated platter. In same skillet, cook ( nion Powder and mar. Juram in remaining 2 tablespoons butter. Stir in remaining soup. tomatoes, and water. Heat; stir occasional. ly . Serve with codfish cakes. Makes 4 ser vings, about l 1'1l cups sauce. Variation: Substitute 8-0UDce package frozen fish cakes for codfish cakes. Prep a re fi s h cakes fOllowing package directions. Proceed as above for preparing s auce using 2 tablesPoons butter and 1 whole can soup. Dowdy DOndy This dessert is a mix· ture of tart apple slices, molasses, and raisins, baked in a pie pan or earthenware dish. "Dowdy" describes the method of cuttine tbe crust in the apple filling. APPLE PANDOWDY 6 cups thinly sliced apples (about 1 pound) ~cup raisins · ~cup dark molasstm v • .cupaugar v. teu~n ground allspice · i,.w teaspoon ground nutmeg 4 tablespoons butter oc margarine, melted ~cup water Pastry for 2·crust pie (10.lncb) Vanilla lee cream Combine all lngre· clients exeept pastry and ice cream. Pour into 10. inch pastry-lined pie pan. Roll out and slit top crust; ftt over apple mix· twe. Seal ed•es· Bake at 400 degrees F. for 10 minutes; re.move from oven.· Reduce beat to 325 de,reea F. Break ~top cr'Ult with a sharp tatfe: stir Into awl• llilXt••· ...... I boor mor . ~with ice cream. .. CAllBRIDG B, M ... (AP) -Are )'our ·lin•enn•r telUnc tales •bout:rou . They mJsbt be, •• the oreanhor ot a ·_.. HarvarcS Unlver1tt7 • 11na""'• ~blblUoa ol aooktt,•-. rrom u. r~ud"'°" .,•-•1ta•ttt• mOldl fOr cooih '~ .... ........ ..rt11e ... ola b\aqs,an deatre to beautify tbe humble ~«• of life and endow them with special mean· ing," said Anneliese· Harding. The show features 130 wooden cookie molds wb.ltb tell tale1, serve as campaip buttons and poke fun at the mljhty. The oldest OD display tells the famWar •&ol'Y ol William Tell, the· lwlts P8J'tilan who retuMd to bow Won tb., batoltbe Aultrtu emperor ad Wbo aublequently wca 11111 freedom b)' •bocltinC U QPle off his IOll'I be84. A1"7 mold, Dr. Hanl-laa laid, W.. Uled b)' German Emperor Frederick Ill for 4,000 1ln1erbread cookies bearina hi.I likenea. Another, from 1'195 de- plcUnc an Austrian bWy1oat rider wearing a Napoleonic hat, •H meant to ridicule the f)'eocb conqueror. Tbe earlieat cookie moldl were made &om clay and used for meHurlne dou1b Jo Mesopotamia, Greece and EJYpt, Dr. Hantinl laid. Later, bakers In medieval mona1teries .. ,.ave ideaa to tbe tecul&J' bakers," 1be aaid, and an intricate wood-carving style de- veloped. "l don't think these challenging molds could be done today,'' she said. "You have to have a special mind, a special lnu1fnatton . The pleasure of eattoa carven were apeclaliata them," 1be said. # in negative forms. To-.. People'• aatiaf ac.iMJD day, craftsmen cloo't In recopiztng familiar have the traiDtna.,. picture typea wu u lm· By the late 18th ceo-port.ant fD the choice ol tury, cookies ~rved as a aestsm u it ii In today'1 delicious picture service. cartoon• and comic "Few people bad strips." boob, but everyone bad The cookie• alto cookies," she said. Some served ait educational depicted contemPorary. _eurpose. According to street scenes, while Dr. Harding, lt was others showed theatrical thou«bt that eaUng an cbaracten or religious alphabet pleture biscuit figures. · would facilitate tho "Successful confec· 1 earn in g of that Uonera realized that the particular letter. appeal of the cookies Jay "We get the same idea f l r s t i n t h e i r witb the Sesame Street paychologlcal impact Cookie Monster today," and second In the shesaid. These are our 1·1weekly specials!' Taday and· every day. .. . Have you ever mlsaed out on a specially reduced food price becauae you didn't get to the market the right week? Well, that won't happen when you. stiop Alpha Betal You aee, Alpha Beta ha1 rolled beck P-rlces on thousands of foOd Items. And our new low price policy w111 stay In effeCt day after . .. UNTINCITOM llAttt-:-11411 ~ MUMTINGTOM ~ ..... M.11. IL '°""" &..WINA -..-M-1 L ,m. It LAGUNA ttu.a -crJft1 c.h .. le L4llM •Vltea-4'"4 C.., UMloa.,, P9llr , DAILY '1\.0T CJ J -~ I •. t " .. r • . • • • .. -. • •• • • ---.I~ ... # -•• , •• . . . .. Sllll llllCllll 'llln lll •T WIT TD ·-lll -.MlllW: TMn OffDll IT "l'lfM · • lllSIQ". • 1WU. • 1111m111 11111 a -11111, ... -• 111111', ... -LOISlll • ftl,. ,., .... • ., Price1 in efftct Thur. Jan 29 throu,h Wed. Feb. 4 Open daily 9 to 9 Sunday 10 to 7 No &ale1 to dealers , Iii. . " , , TOM -59c TURKEYS . • Norbest Grade "A" -with "Pop· Up" liJp llir/ain ......... : e /12.t/L VEAL SJ19 , ~~!~!., ... chuck cut~. Loin cut of U.S.D.A. Choice beef ... just the thing i.o serve wi_th Jobeter! Enjoy quaJity with economy! 1enulne mtlk-fed vea1 · Pepper Steak .. s21! Loin cut of U.S.D.A. Choice beef Pork Roast ....... s. sis! Boston Butt · Fresh! Iowa corn fed! Ch&Baubl'illlld ... 8 . 12.ll · Ground Veal ••• 514! Lean ••• geunine milk-fed veal! Veal Cube Steiks.2'! Plain or breaded ••• milk-fed veal! Beef Cubes s2'! Tenderloin of U.S.D.A. Choice beef ... naturally aged, careru1fy trimmed, for epicurean dining! Veal Rib Chops 525! Loin cut for fondue -USDA Choice Split Broilers . • 59f Fresh! Grade "A" large meaty fryers P tr · s139 as am1.. .. . . • • El Rancho's milk.fed veal! fl1Bli Mignon........... • 1l!!l Brea$t of Veal. s12! El Rancho's milk-fed ve81! Sliced Bacon ••• 513! Treat younielf to tendemess! Superb steaks for supreme satisfaction! Tenderloin of U.S.0.A. CboiOE beef Top Quality! by the pitte. (stm 1.St .. ) LAMB $109 SHANKS .• Western lamb! U.S.D.A. Choice Chuck Steak • • • 89~ Center cut from U.S.D.A. Choice beef Cabbage Rolls • 49~ Stuffed, oven ready! Net wt. 6 oz ea. Wines PAUL MASSON WmNES $2 39 Flank Steak., •. s2'! Beef Rib Bones . 692 Delicious broiled! U.S.D.A. Choice beef Meaty! Choice beef? Bake or b·b-q Ground Beef ••• 5 1°~ Meat Loaf • • • • • 992 Extra lean! Chooee bulk or patties El Rancho's oven ready! with fresh egp " Super ·Fresh . DI/ FR£Ste ••••••• 21! ' El Rancho's own • thicker ranch 1tYle BEEF s 1s9 BRISKET • Fresh! Choice! whole or ~1( Liquor IDUCED $1.00 29 SlOna s4 Burgundy, Chablis, Vin Rose! Quart Garden fresh .•. all green ... ao taaty, from tender atalka to delicate Ooret.a! Bottled roi El Rancho! Quart Classic Sherries st 19 Swiss Colony Ory or Cream! filth ~ Chenin Blanc ••. s275 Ch&11. Krug · just dry enough! fifth Mouton Cadet=: 399 Phillipe de Rothschild ... fifth BAKER 19 RUSSETS ! U.S. No. I premium quality! Cucumbefs..... 19~ Fresh Lemons.. 39f · Jin Beam 111u.11 •. 51099 Long end green .•• firm for crisp allcea. Heavy-with tart, tangy juice! Straight wfuakey • "200tb"! half.pl, ANJOIJ 4 s 1· PEAIS ' ·• Sweet, juicy.from Northern orchards ITALIAN 39c SQUASH • Garden fresh ••• all green • .tender! BOord's Gin •••• 5899 Make a fine martini -or two!., Half-gal Tequilae--11,u.oo 5499 It's h!ally fme quality!-Quart You'll love the variety, the quality, the value at El Rancho! Cake Mix -..i11NES •••• 59c Your choice of moist !ayer cake varieties! Get several and bake up a storm Ice Cream HALF-GALI.ON ••• g9c • Smooth and creainy Springfield, in a variety of palate pleasing favond flavors! Tab or Fresco s1o 9 Refreshing navor, but so low in calories ! 12 02. cans. sa PICl1 . Apple Sauce . . . g9c Peanut Butter,. 5131 Apple Tim~ in the big 49 02 size Skippy Creamy or Chunky! 28 oz jar Tomato Sauce . 39c Presenes l1WI *'. ggc Hunt'a navored . all varieties! 15 oz Smuc"ker'1 -heav§ with berries! 18 oz. Delicatessen Sharp Cheddars ·11.9 · • Land O' Lakes, where they really know cheete! Robust navor in the 9 ounce package CAT FOOD Nine Lives -all varieties -6 ~ oz Cereal = ...... 79c Reg., with Fruit, Apple-Cinnamon! 16 oz Hot Cocoa Mil. g9c Carnation -pkg. of 12 envelopes Apricot Nectar • 59c Glorietta · real fruit taste! .f,6 oz MJ.B. Rice.. • • • 69c Long Grain .•• 28 ounce pack.age CUP-A 55c SOUP Upton'• Chicken, Green Pea! Packa1e of four, envelopes. Scotties FACIAL TISSUE ••••••• 49c : It's wi~ to have extras on hand! chooH-white or colon ••• 200 ct. pq . Crisco 3L8.cAll •••••••••••••••• s 149 The digeetib1e shortening ••• for use in baking or fl)'ing ••• and priced for aaving! Gra,pe Juice wncws •.. 69c " ' Choo&e the .. regulu'' that you know to well-try the newer Red or White kinde. 24 oz. Yuban Coffee •• s-1 •• One pound con (3 IL CM ••• $4.411 J Liq id s105 OJ U •.• • • • • · . For a good refleciion~ 32 oz. (lit tfrJ .: Vegetable Soup 19c Campbell'• 10 \o! os. can for .• hearty lunch Cheer ••'*'If ••••• ·s121 All temperature ute! 49 ~ (lff Ill) Frozen Foo d ' Orange Juice=r _.59c . The one that'• become known for ,it'• (mer Florida flavor'! 12 ounce. can , '. Sliced Ham . . • . g9c American Slices 51°9 &" Rolls ••••• 69~ Macaroni n·:, • igc Z p, Chicken, Meat &: S hrimp) 6 oz Van de Kamp'•. )() ounce paeb:p • • Oak · choo&e from two 1i:r.e11! 4 oz.. Cocktail Sauce. 55c Fisherman'• Wharf 8 01 (TMTM. T•J STlllG $ 169 CHEESE It's • fun food! Sierra · 12 oz • llSTMT FOi.BS .... ; ....• "•1 . . -Thoee navor·laden cryslaltl 10 01 ' • ' llSTAMT Ylllll •..........•. $2..23 Flavor worth • aecond cup! 8 oz ' Gingham • individually Wrapped! 12 oz Egg Baskets.· •. 27c New for egp • fl'Oll'li Pil~ry! • oi ~~~~: ,79c . -Clffll ..................... ~ Max Pa• • choice o( two srindll 2" oz . . men wim ............. s1,11 Laundry Additive • hall·1allonl l!ft tll) r . ' MR 81.Y ................ . , Welch'•· the one yo1.1 know best.! ~ os .am.,.. ...... , ....... tao C.n1dfi Dry'! 12oz. NR bottld .. ..~' . Entreis •••••• ggc Fish Filleti ••••• &Sc Van de Ka'l'p'• w~-oi:,Ri'!' GUPE · '59c ..-icE Woleh'• • 12 'ol <;all .0-oo tu -·•-.: ............ . Collin•, Gbipr Ala, Voclko, Wink! 28 .. ..,~~ .............. , .. Imperial • apmda -ny,,IUteo Soodl 1 lb . ., • j_ • 'lM llJ ... iiiius59C .. L~llfl\llllCl ••..••••••••••••• ·llO , Vita P .. 1 ml "11-"' ••.. :U OUDC:O ~le • Fmle .............. ~. 41t llounct • • whOla naw ld .. I l'ki of 10 . i . t t I I I " r F c I c ~ c I ' ' ft ' I I I • I u F • • • tt 0 n ~ G F ~ • • 8 i d -' . - I ':, .,..,., I M TUiTu IOClr la1S ~ 4 bedroom ~nment home with vellflf n Noh'· light view. UftlQtJe custom fMtum. &«r'e tennlt and swim ct r>e1111 your own POOf, Price )ult f117,000-whlc:h Ind land. can 873-8550. OWNH DISMIA115 •llOOM + POOLYA-NODOWM wt'9t a buy! Don't mta tt!t AbondoneCI 2 stOfY. Beautiful helled poof. 5 huge bedroo.,. with m118ive mast• suite. Immediate pa1se11lon + + + assume low Interest loan °' new VA with no down. cau today 846-7171. FAMILY HO~ln' llACH Exceptionally fine home In B,\YCRES'r area of Newport Beaah. four bedrooms. new dras:ies, wall to •I c.rpettng. Rec:entty redeootated. terrific location, priced at '7&,500. CaJI 673-8550 for iwre details. ( UMIVIRSITY PAik S6 I. too I IEDIOOMI Gorgeous 6 bedroom two StOfYf Prlpt out~ location. 2 Patlotl Tiie entry. Maaa11e rfd'4>rtck ....,._, Gourmet kltche!I with garden vtwc.~ldeaway master ground floor. Winding stalrcae ·To 4 huge bedlooow.. Seplir• laundry room. Perfect big family "°"'9. H~. all now 752-1700, anxious! \ ~:~-= \ MEWPOU -$96,000 \ Super Portoflno Model -IMMEDIATE occOPANCYI Cathedral & beamed wrought Iron gate entry. Sunken living room. Massive red brick wall fireplace. Formal dining room. Chef's kitchen w/nook. 25' Family roorn·ph.11 300 sq. ft. &eplnfe bonus room! DETACHED MOTHER-IN-LAW QUARTERS! Winding wrought iron llairc88e to secluded rmster wing. Heavy redwood c:Ovwed patio. All sptlnklered. Take advantage. Call . 752-1700. · GIEAT STARTBl UNITS . WTSIDE! Four tw<M>edroom units! What a chance to make SS and llw In Eastalde Costa Mesa for V9f'Y few dollars. Priced betow market at $91,500 -just reduced. Call today 648-7171. FRENCH CHATEAU 2 STORY llACff.flOOL 1 °'*Ntlc Uvlng room. tom.I dining room, garden view kitchen, artistic open stairs to separate matter-& children's suite. 22 ft. ballroom elzed party robm • CMrtooklng courtyard hu1T'yt ~7881. ~­HACH GlAM1' $53, 900 Price sluhedl ?$eller noyt owns TWO hotneal l>Mpev8tel Pric9a befow nrkel1 Take advtntage of thla .-ring 2 story. Executive entry to ravish llvlng room. Ofnlng entertainment! Rumpus tlze family room. Scandinavian kitchen. 3 chlldren'a suites plus I08ring· staircase to montter master bdrm with sky.hlgh- calhedral ~Inga & Romeo & Juliet. balcony\and .-ate atudyt Helot Walk to beach from this 2400 SQ. · . ft. bargain. Nowhere elee at Ulla. prioet FOf pri~t• • • \llewlng call 84 7-601 Oo . ' I I r .. CUSTOM ESTATE + .. 2 STORY GUEST HOUSE $49.SOO , A long wtndlng country lane. shaded beneath an UfNnlla of towering ~leads to this rustic hideaway! Plltdng for 5 carat Big' wooden 4 .bdrm custom plus __.e 2 story gueit chalet on oversized lotJ A ha11dyman'a dream WOftcshopl SWeeping party patio wltti huge brick BBQ! Separate glllden area for green thumbat Storage facility Of playhouse for klddleel Your own prtvate waterwelll Soari~ 2 atOfY guest house or rerUll Shovel ·em out. paint ·em up and you've got ~,..If an estate! Priced dirt cheap-for all you git-don't hesitate. Call 847-«>10. l( • • JBIOOMM + POOL WITH YllW Hlah on a hill with panoramic vtew. huge IMng room wtfh fireplace. gourmet kitchen, Drivat• cou~ patio ·with a, breath taking view for entettalnfng. rtt to call q1t1 ttllabargaln at $48,600. Call 96:M7d7 urry. 4 llDIOOM $32,500 F«mll entry Into huge living room. watt to wall ~ts through-out, treshfy painted IOQtted near shopping c:ienter. tchools. jog to beach. Assume FHA loan. $253 per month. Paye an -hurry on thll one! ee:HS7~1. THINKING? ~·... . OPPOITUNm... . EARN WHILE YOU LEARN We Qftlr C*'tONlllzed trllnfng In a pleasant and exciting office environment. Lota of -help & It\ cpportw11ty to orow. . ~ .,._. .. ""'91'dtno: ,... ... Is ucltlng •.• wtth THE REAL ESTATEAS you can comcHfe' more tranudlonl wtth IMI fn.tstnlHon and participate In our profit lharing bonus program, ut'a talk lbout HI An extenaive training program held monthly by our highly eucceafut fnan.gement. Please= G~I Gritton for an appointment l. ~ 11 /:J ~ A PhD at162-1700. Thankst rn~ . w....~-...-..c· I IELC> w MAIK11' Pride of ownership an.$ -nwnlc:ured landscape. preitige entry. Elevated ~"'-tie. Open beam vaulted ceilings. Huge formal banQIM room. Bright garden kitchen ovetvlewt N...,..,_.. ,_,,.,ly room with oozy ...,,.,.. This Is truty an exoepflonat home at an unnatchlble price for the area. Seller ~"lUQht another· and •would like Qulc:k tale -hurry for t~ one! Call 54&-2313. • ' "PARI HUNTIMGTOM6• 5 IDIM +POOL Sunken living room. formll dining. kitchen with party room with conversation pit and fireplace. Guest suite, etairs to master and children's suites. Access for boat or camper. Try $8,700 down. F0t quick appt. tc. aee call 963-6787. llACH LOYlrS -.. .. IJ IA YSHOl.E IOt •SI= ' 3 bedroom 2 bath beauty. MMetve fireplace & huge bedrooms. + e•tra large garage. Purr-feet for enteftalnlng Of Just comfy livfng. What more can you ask for? Ju.at call 848-7171 for more d91alta. A-RAMI HOUSI OF •LASS · ASSUME S3S.SOO AltistJc beach chalet. Tiie entry to living room with ftnlplace a view of lush grounds. Gourmet kitchen & breakfast bar. Family room. Hld-.aY matter retreat with wall of glatS. Wing for children & guest. Mlgnifl08nt 30' studio loft wi~ ooen beamed ceilings. Take over 7M~ VA loan. No new loan costs. '327.33/peya ell 983-7881. I EXECUTIVE ESTATE Z.STOllY 4 ID-POOL+ llACH ' f'on'NI rWled Ille entry. E1egMt living room with floor to celling flrepleee. Benquet liZ8d fOfTNll dining room la etoquentty Nfved from huge gsdln view kitchen. En«mous t.mnr room O'Mloob IPl'l<Jlng poof & jacuuJ a lush terrecee. Spiral etaira to ....... 24. master suite ' ,.,_. S.,.clou8 chllchns quart.._ Bell room sized flinllJ recreltion room. ttmy-EZ.tetme. call 983-7881 . ... ~SIDI CHAU'r &Jmmertlme beach retreat Few steps to ocean. Total pnvq with high wills. A..frwne atytlng, House of glass. Indoor g11rden atrium loeded with tropical plants & fems. Rugged beem c.lllngs In Ill rooms. Log bumlnQ flreplaoe. Winding staircase to loft landing. Private aundeck taTace off massive mast• euite + 2 more bedrooms. One bedlooot dOwnstalra could be a den. Formal dining off bri<* decOrated kitchen. Couttvard patio + . Olympic llWlmming pool a tennis CXIUtts. 842-2535 COSTA MESA CHARMER omYS4Z.SOO 3 rwuslve bedrooms -SU08f' ctean family home with lsge country kitchen, huge double garage + + + e&aulhable tow Interest loan. Prl~ betow market at «2.500. Call today 646-7171 . COMTEWOIAAY ESTATI . ,. or.en Vlfteyt Finest! 1"1n'eCUtate landacloef Executive entry to step down II~ room. Formal dine. Sunshine gourmet kitchen. Rumpus sized family room wittl-toutv firepfacef Soaring atllircale to sweeping n.ster bdrm retreat + 3 child's sultesl Walk to ""*8. SlPOl1 and tennts courts. For more info about this apljndid property caJI 847-«)10. "PRESTIGE HOME'" 5 + POOL Outstanding curb appeal. Shadowed by tall trees. Giant 2 ltOfY, 4 bedrooms up + master bedroom or guest quarters on lower level adjoining lavish oool, board & slide, low maintenance rear grounds lined with .palm & yucca trees. Huge covered party lanal. New doeskin tone carpeting. Rock fireolKl8 5\4% loan available at $255 month or new fln111dng OK. Call 84~2535. , EXECUTIVE CUSTOM ESTATE OMTtfEtGLL Prestige area. Maaalv•' 32' parlor with sunken oonversation pit. Kitchen. elegant formal banQuet room. Enormous family room wfth wet bar. Musl013ame room + hobby dark room with double sinks, cabinets, etc. Huge private master suite with dressing room + sewing room -separate chlldlen's wing + much too much to mentron here. a.11 and eee now ~2313. OAJLYPILOT CHARMING IAYSHOU COTTAGE OM.Y $64.9001! Mlnole ~Ith the movie stars onty steps from the · prwp~ o.f Newport wafeffront. fWatlc cott.ge with huge trees provldee once In a lifetime bargain. Honw i. loeded with penonellty + +. You must see to ~ for this price -hurry -owner must go -flke 8dvantAIQe-C8JI nowt 540-2313. ' •AIAMDOMBr' IEACH CLASSIC 0wnen have ~~ anc1 moved outt nev NN9 wc:ated thla 4 year young beauty and have CMat • "HIHt-qulck" price on It! Child-safe cul-de-eact Executive entry to SOlting cathedral c:eUlnga -lulh 8'1lde deep c:.rpet -IQUl8kv dean paint -9'.lnlhine klehen with walls of glaaf ~lo and expwwfve rear yard! Toest-your-toee fireplace! Sweeping Mat• bdnn retreat with separate dtesslno areal children·• ~ sized bdrm! Bail him out at a c:onl8f°4tive $51 .950 °' assume existing loan at $251 per monthl Ad fast. we need HEUlf Clll 847.f3010. SUIURllA ESTA'll - W ALX TO llACH Tree lined street. Secluded entry. Spacious living room. Gourmets kitchen serves formal banquet .,.._ RUMPUS ROOM. 4 family sized bdrma.. Includes eecluded mater suite. OJSTOM POOL & JACUZZI. OWNER MUST GO -MIGHT HELP FINANCE. 546-2313. IUSTIC FARM HOUSE Tree lined street in established area Minutes to the beach. Features • bedrooms. Dining areL Newly· rwnodeled kitchen. Endoeed etalrwell to nuaJve GM* room. Pool table, table tennis. TV lounge or anything you would want. Assu"9ble 7% VA loan. Priced $3,000 under n.rket for fast sale. T aka advantage nowt c.tl 842-2535. SPACIOUS a GIACIOUS 4 +POOL Exdusiw Mesa north loc:ation. Total front pt1yacy wfth gated entry and sun-filled pool on grounds In front. Parquet entry. Sunken living room. 4 spacious bedrooms. Dining area S#eeplng stairs to 2nd ttory mammoth recreation room. New carpets, pelnt. paper thru-out. Best yeti Assume 143,000 VA loan. Minimum down. No-qualifying. No new loan costs. Owner bought another. Must sell fast Bargain priced. Call today 842-2535. OWMEI TUMSFIRRED STEPS TO GOLF TAKE ADVANTAGE Custom home on cul~ street Around the comer from Mesa Verde CountJy Oub. lmnaculate oondition throughout. Enjoy huge separate parlor. enormous family room with fireplace & wet bar. Gourmets kitchen of tomorrow + formal dine. Secluded grounds + loa.ds of privacy -owner transferred & must got Take advantage. Call 5-48-2313. 3 IEDIOOM RANCH HOME 3 bedrooms ptus family room with fireplace plus endoled patio. Located near the beach. Be first to call for appt. 963-6787. TWO STOIY-$36,500 ANXIOUS! Prime Irvine location. Stepdown livtng room to c:ortc and smoke'glaaa walls! Gourmet kitchen. Winding wrought-iron stairway. Oueen-&ze bedrooms. Separate laundry area. central air conditioning. Secluded patio. SpartcJlng Olympic-size comrron pool cau now. NEED FAST SALEI 752-1700. A-RAME GLASS CHALET ART1ST RIETREA T ey..th&-sea. Towering A-frame chalet nestled In the trees. Courtyard entry. 3 bedrooms Include separate master wing, Family room. Rock fireplace. Island kitchen. Sweeping staircase to 30 foot Iott studio with beam ceilings. It's unlQUe. No QU81ifying. Assume 7\4~ kJr8I at $327 month incl. taxes. Call nowt 842-2535. IAMIUMG MONTIREY YILLA SPANISH· IEACH Gated entry to private villa Secluded In lush gardens & walled courtyatd. Old Wor1d charm is tastefully blended with carefree California llfestyte. Every room hu a private terrace in an atrium or oourtyard. Plush interion are dnlmatlcally brought together with lush exteriors trvouof'I Wlflt of glass. careful use of woods complete the mood. ~an kitchen. Formal dining. Huge Baroefona tlreplace. rmsalve living room. Aeata party room & wet bar. You must see to believe. Only $72,900 fuH prtoe. ez term•. Call now. 963-7881. aDUMPO POOL-$43,500 H's low down and dlrtyt looks like a house Where the bufflk> ro.necfl A handymen's paradise! Paint and sw'Oftll Wlrdng oottllge Wlll<waY ttvu OYefgtOWn bNlh PMt des1rted fount.int tt.ige comer lot with winding blcdwtll fence -looks like the desert but what potential! Dumpy llvtng room -but ceiling to flOOt. ~ fireplace -European kitt Rare hardwood lloora -dining entertllinmant -~ 'em out, paint 'em up and you 've got youraelf an eatatel ~no poot-<>CMred patio-priced dirt cne.., which seems only rfghtt GI no down. Grab ~ur c:hedlboc* and e11U MNI010. DAILY PILOT • w.dnad ! f'ICT1Tt0VI e'1ttNl.U NAMl ITAHMIH'T ,,. '°' ...... "' ~ 1, ......... ...... "'°f'DSIONAI. INCOMI TAX SlltVICE AND INVISTMINT COUNSE l.1,ING, th41 M•r9Wf'lll fllly.. Mlwlon VllJ•, CA n.Jt OM.Ml Ke ... 111 tr-. tJ..sl SA1M Dr., Ml•I.-. Vlelo, CA t»JS TlllJ MIM" I• ~t" .., M I~ ........ 0.lllel Ktwl11 lrlNIMI 'nlf.l 1tt1W"n41.,a WH fll.O "'411'1 .. c:-i, Clertc of Ortn" Ceuril)I Gfl ~, .. ,,,. . ""™ "'*"'*' 0r.,. Coelt Delly Piie(. •.-_tr,•anol'tbr1M1ry•, 11, 191' ,.,. PUBl.IC NOTICE f'IC'TIT10US eUSI NHS HAMR STATeMaNT n. f11Mtow1119 ""'"' ,, .... Mi ...... ~f PAT ICNUT~EN CO.. 1Jal2 .,. Hele• Sl., WHtml llSllf'. CA '2413 1119tricll J. Knutnft, 1""2 NMce $&.. Mml\IN .... , CA ft"3 TWs .WIS IS CCll\dlKted bY 4111 I~ dl\'I~ P•l~kll J ICnvtrm 11\Js St.lemlftl WH lllld Mlft lhf Collnty Cl•r• ol Or•119e C-iy on ,_ry 14, lt7' """' fll*llMO 0< •r>Qe Cot SI 0.lly Pi lot. ~ ia. • ~ Febru.r y 4, 11, 1'7' 1Jt.1' PUBLIC NOTICE PICTtTIOUS 8USINESS HAMaSTATUHNT n. followlnQ Pffton Is Oolno IMI· ...... : ~I.I.IS INSURANCE AGENCY, 441 ,...II Aw., No. •1, HIHlllng1on lldtll,CA.92M• $uHft l.ynn Joni\, 4841 Hell A .... NO ••• Hunlihvton 8HCll, CA ., .... Tiiis t1ws1...,, 1~ conducted by ~ In· dlwlca..I. I Suwn'l,JOMI T~• stetomtnt wH tiled wllh tht • ~Y Cler• 01 Orenoe Ciwnty Oii J-rt•. 1'16 P'S1>12 P'\lllllttled 0.-•"99 C~11 0.lly PllOC, ~Y 14, 11. zt. •no Febru.ry4, 1'7' ISl-1 • PUBLIC NOTICE P'ICTITIOUS eUSINESS NAME STATEMENT TN follOwlng Plf'ton IS OOlnQ ll<fti. neu.s: MY SPINNING WH EELS, 10$ Mein St.. N-port lie~ 11, CA. Monte N. S.lle"· llln NleloOy ~"Drive,~ Grov•. CA W..O n..1 bo"lneu h COllClutl.O by.., I~ dM~. Moftle N . Sollers This , .. tement wu Ill.a Wllll the County Clerk ol Or1n9t Counlr on Dklftllber 1'. 1'7S. F-1 Pl.lblli.heel Oranve Coatt 0.lly PllOI. ;.,,_.,,IA. 21. 11, and Febru•rv•.1'1• 143-1' . PUBLIC NOTICE STATRMENT 0" WITHOltAW,._1. P'ltOM PAltTNEltSHI POl'EltATINO UNDER "ICTI TIOUS 8USIN ISS NAMI! The lollowtnv person ll•s W•lhdr•wn as • 9entr•I oarlner lrom Int ... ,,,,.r1111p OOtr•l•nv under llW '" hlioU\ bu11neu n•me ol WESTERN MOUNTA IN PUBL IS HERS OF ORANGE COUNTY •I HO E111 11111 s1r.-. Suite F, c~ .. Mew. C.llfo.-nia 92621. The llcllltou1 bu11,,.u n.,,... 1t•lt ""111 tor IM perlnersll1p wn l1lf!d on M.i')USt tt. 191Sln the Counlyol Or.nQt Oouvlu E T•n9B. 711S P•l•u · Plll<t, Cost• Mew. C.lllornt• '1626 OoUQIH E T•nves 1'4ml 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p ' L 0 T . The~· ........... a.a.c-.. DAILY PILOT CLASSIRED ADS You Can Seu It, Find tt. ( •A2-~ ) Ot'9 c:. ... ._ Tl"lde tt With a w.nt ltd V-W ilV•U Ai1t 0... ... Estate Fors. II I I .... Silt, • ..................................................... T .............. . ..... A IS\1-MIW-MMMlfllCINT Just pure elegance! Perfect design! Pool & J acuizi. 5 BR, FR, form. DR. billlarel ~.lo.6th ba, pier /slip, 3·car gar. PRIVATE GOLF COURSE ... •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• EIRORS: Ad•lrilsen lholild check their ads OCIAH ILUFFS HARBOR·VlEW·POOl. SECURITY. All new and yours too for $72,000. TERMS/TR1'DES 16 Ll'ND~ i~LE DR. open daily 1-5 .,., ............. ood Beautiful 3 bdrm .• or 2 bdrm. & den townhouse, on the 7th tee at E;l Niguel Golf Course. Some ocean view from tbe large carpeted patio. Absent owner will sell, lease or lease with option~ Yoar choice. Im med. occupancy avail. $54,950 cWy .If report "'" ron lmmecMatefy. TM NIWPOIT CIMftl. tc.I. 644-49 IO• ., DAILY PILOT OH4lnM• Uabillty for the flnt -. correct IRwrtion ooly. HAL PtNC.HIM REALTORS 675-4392 Price leduced Ga .. NI ·1002 .... ,.. 1002 . ...................... ···········~··········· BAY & BEACH REALTY PMblfsher's Notice: All real estate advertised in Uus newspaper is sub- ject to the Federal Fair Hous ing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "an y pre· fe rence, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin, or an intention to m ake -any such preference, limita- tion, or discnmmahon." NO QUALJ FYING Loan Assump(joft • 3 Bf. 2 Ba , corner lot MiUer Dr., Tustin $59.~. • 3 Br. l Ba, remodeled klt on Moran/Westm $39,900 * 2 Br, l Ba, lg. ~acre HORS~. Elliott S.A. $42,999 • 3 Br, 2 Ba, Sharpes home on Stella, Ana * 4Tl4 CORTLAND DR. to$83,SOO (l)oice Cameo Hi11hlands ~ciom tmM or 3 & dell wn private ...... ln beautiful cHilllt'41!1t• ready forquick ~.....-. OPEN DAILYl..S COU °' HE'WtlG«t' ltlALTOI$ !SUE. Coast aw,. 611·55 It 4UNITS Ocean breeze, great for owner occupancy or in· vestment. Tip top CC*U· This news paper will not tioft ·close to everytaiq . knowingly accept any $79,900. $53,900 839·1710 advertising for real PETE BARRETT estate which is in viola· tionofthelaw. -REALTY-OC£ANASOUTH HousesforSGle SPANISH 642·S?t0 OCE~SIDE •••~··••••••••••••••••• COMPLETELY Gefteral I 002 funU&hed, prolessiooally ....................... MANSI ON Y•• Sin•· decorated model! ($4,000 • l..W lAventory) 2BR, l~BA REAL ESTATE SALES $3Z cno single story condo. e you ready for a fan· Decorator showplace in ,.ru Enclosed garage. Patio astac 1976" We are-area of finer homes. Invest rot futur. ap-witb wrougbt fenc~ & with omces in Orange, Dramatic winding preclaUoa and present gate. Adult (over 40) Tustin, Huntington staircase overlooks lU write-offs. Lov~ly 2 commu.nity,pool, Beach. & Costa Mesa. cathedral two-story liv· bedroom _Cond~ pool, jacuzzi, clu~e. Nr. Don't settle for less-85% ing room Rustic family ~. Sasbide. CM. Open El Camino Plaza sho commission paid t o room, formal dlnio Satl&&a 1..., 2400 Elden, ping center. Walk to bus salespeople for sales & overlooks heated pool No.. K. line. 30 min. t9 San ~~~x.:~;-~;:n~?~~ ~~~~~ $82 .... ~~ g$~~\li{:•s·~ 1 'p,., ~......-:fl) 'lEJDI R€ALTOP-.Sh -----ARCHITECT tw:i€"°' ~ DESIGNED . . -.. ~~ IUILDERS SAN CLEMENTE --------11111 Two ol t.be last bWldable •·Col~ Parle Contemporary Custom ----------1 C·2 lots in downtown POOL HOME home on Golf Course --------.... Lacuna ~view on Beautiful 3 bedrm, 2 ba w/Ocean view. 3Br, 2ba. JUST LISTEQ good maia street fron. corner home. Compl with All CedU" exterior. Top MES A N 0 RT H t.qe, suitable for multi· large family room , quality features inside. $27,500 OU1 27• YUi 6-75-1000 RUSTIC CHARMER . $38,750 Eucalyptus tree shaded chalet. Unique Townhouse design by architect/owner. Aban··---------- doned·must sacrifice. *SALE * Call64S-0303 FELL THROUGH FORESTOLSOM INC This beaut 4-Br exec * EXCLUSIVE * . Ballln lstnl Bayfroot · Large duplex w ith 6 bdrms. & 5 baths.. Excep- tionally desiped ! Quall· ty built. 3 Car garage. Near new. 2 J'rpks. Just reduced $20,000 for im· mediate sa le! Furnished, pe r inven- Sbown by app 't. ••••• ~ali!1l11t1·11 " Hr\l.nOA ISl.A.'\1) * 673·6900 ~ home must be sold im· 2 OFFERED · med. Pormer model in· eludes huge lam rm.•---------- COST A MESA ~;la:~~~~:;. heated "BIRD STREET., 3-Bedroom 3 Bedrooms, 2 bath.. nea.t. $39 900 CALL NOW clean, s harp home on • Crane Circle. Full price AssumJble loans, one 752 ·7315 $45 500 avafiable at 10% down, ' • the' other VA or FHA. -~l • • Tr'eelined streets, large Auociotes, Reolter1 yards, l>oat or trailer ac· ----------• eess, easy terms. For an 1: ... STSIDE CM A .. NTIME appointment to see these _._ ""'"'' • and other newly listed 2 Bedroom home, big R· propertiescallforaoap-lot. 60x130. Room l poinimentoow. build. Very good loca-MEWL Y LISTED Bedroom, 2 baths, fplc pte residential aod com· fireplace, oversized Many trees. O~/Agnt complet'e carpelio mercial F"ll price kitchen and very private _4:_98-_Z'm ________ ,,,. IQPl3 thruoul Drapes Bltns. $53,SOO Owner will pool area. Vacant, ready ~ Obie gar Covered patio. f10ance CALL5S6·2660 for your inspection. Just NEWPORT ..___...__ ~dn ~~eiZedg::1$44c;;:i CSELECT listed. Hurry !! Priced HEIGHTS ~·-.;;;.;-· Royt..tcCcrdle T'PROPERTIES ~laac,$Sl ,OOO. Call MOOGU&llst NACM tion. Shown by appoint· menl. Asking $37 ,750. Call 540-1151 ~HERITAGE • • REALTORS NEW REDECORATE Fantastic buy needs re- d e co rat 1 n g . This beautiful 2000 sq. ft. ranch style home has 4 bd, 2 baths, formal din· ing. lge fam. rm. & can be purchased subj. to 6% VA loan. 545-9491. Rf'Clftor 18 I 0 Newport s A L E s M E N 0 r Assumable Costa Mesa 541.7729 BROKERS, sbare office Loan OCEAN ·---------4 & · 72<'1 -80% 90 ~ Block • best renta11--------~ receive -,,, · ~ $49,500 o 1 d 1 Ea.,... 'd J I comm., it's the way to area. e UXe Uj) ex; 3 ~\~I e ewe Classifaed Ads sell bag go. Call Sam or Gene,.---------•t N•--'y '4 acre on a cul· BR., 2 ba\M + 2 BR .• l "'2 items. small items or PILOT REAL EST ... ..-. baths lli'P..lc each uru-l Intriguing 2 bedroom + any item. 642.5678 ATE, Sell thi.ngs ra.st with Daily de-sac, this 4 bedroom 2 • • • .., • . dining rm, bu1 IL Ii kc . . f>utlll\lled Oranve CoHI O.lly PilOI, --------!.---S4G-OSSS Pilot Want Ads. bath ramily home has a $1l.3,000! Gibraltar!! For young or lovely orchard, room for .. lalboa lay Prop. retired. For appt. caU ---------J ... g-ana Feb.•. 11. 1e. 1'16 30).16 PUBLIC NOnCE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NO'nCE PUBLIC NOTICE SUM f'ICTITIOUS eUSINESS NOTICE TO CltEOITOfU NAME STATSMltNT P~C::,.~~:::::::s SUl'lltlOltCOURTOP'THE Ho a.as1u Tiii l•llowi119 person Is OOI"' tMI-Tllefollowing11Wsons.,.•dolngbusl· STATEO .. CALIP'OltNIAP'Olt SUl'lltlORCOUltTO .. THI! ...un. flHSn· THECOUNTYOf'OltANOE STt\TI o .. CAl.IP'OltNIA P'()lt El.TRON INOUSTAIES, 9420 Sii I.ENNY'$ EUROPEAN CUISINE No. A·ISl72 THI COUNT YO" ORANGE 'lllA ..... Founl•ln V•lley, C..I t77'0I ANO 1.0UNGI! 2645 H rllac' 8MI. NOTICE O" HEARING OF tn Ille Matter ol tllt Est•lt ot WAl.TER FAANIC JOOS,2316$. CosUINMCAftu. a • t.MENOEO l'IETITION FOR MARCIA L LISTON alla MARCIA Get>tlelOr .. Pomona.C.111.'21... • l'R08ATI 0" Wll.I. ANO f<Olt I.ET· l.OVISE LISTON, aka MARCIA I. This bWiftHS II conductecl by Ml I~ .... ~~~ ~·;,::Ooft.. TEltS TESTAMENTARY BUCl(NELL LISTO"' aO.a MARCIA dllriGIMI KWlll t Ill nd 220t Oomle Est•ll' of WILl.IA M ANTHONY 1.ISTON,Oecenl'd W•llerF.Joot Ad ~1191',,:n II ~A;;..., GOM8EAG, Oecu"d. Nollet Is 11.,eby 91ven 10 Ille This ll•leMenl WH 111.0 with tht This bvsllle\S r ~ C1 Ob NOTICE IS HEAEl!IY GIVEN NI crectllot\ having cl•lm• a9a1nst Ill<' Counlr Clerk of Orenge County on dMOU.I s c u e y ~ ln-AAVMONO H. JOHNSON Ms fllto wld IM<~nl lo lilt sa1o cl••ms In the J.,...ryJl, 1976 i.e-dA "-nd llereln an am•nOeO pell lion,.,. Prooatt offlu of lhe tier II ol Ille •forHa10 coun P'n• This st•llmtllt ·was f~I04 wlttl Ult of Wiii •nd to.-lssuenu ot l.etlH'\ or 1o prewnt O>em lo Ille unOer~ •' Publl\hed Orange C:O.sl Delly PllOI, Count Cl k f 0 COlft Test•m•nlery lo Ill• Othll-r rt· I,,. offk• of AICHAAO J llAAICH, Al· J•n 11.eno !Cob 4, I 1, "· 1'16 320-1' ~ •• •;,,. 0 r•nge ., on 19"nCe to whl<ll Is m.Oe lot lurthor lorney •I Lew, MOO So SipulWOe 1'76 ~76 ' FSUU P«tkulen, tnd !ft•I IM time M>GptKe Blvd., Suite 804 In Ille Oly ol Lo,1-----------f'l*lsNd Or.no-Gout Dell., PllOt, of heMlng Ille Mlmt llH -wt for An09~. In Los Anveles County. -.ch PUBLIC NOTICE Jen 21 aano F ~brwry 1', 1'16. •1 10 00 • m . In'"' 111tt ... office I• 1111 01.ce ot 11us1._, oi l · · •b. 4• 11• 1916 cOIK1100m of O.parlmenl No J ol w•O n,. unden•QntO on •11 m•tters ~,,.1,..1-----------_________ m_-1_• c-1. et 100 Civic Cenltr Ori_,. Wresl.1n •nv to wlO ttlate. Such cl•ims wlln Ill<' FICTITIOUS •USINESS IMC•lyof Slant• An<i, C•lllorn••. nt<KSM.,VOU<Mnmusttwf11edor1><tt NAME STAT•MENT 0.11<1 J•nu.ry11, lt16 '°"'ttcl ft aforn•IO wttll1n lourmontr.s n. followlng Plf'ton Is doing bull· Wll.l.IAM E. SI JOHN, ell«lhellrstpu1>1icationoftll1snot~ rese. ' C:O..nty Cl.,k Pl EC£S OF GOl.D, 430 Es!Nr St.. ....... w. Qwlllff Del-' J.-.ry 23, ,.76 c.1• Mew. CA. '1627 ...... Y•t LA• JAMES HENRY 1.ISTON 1.elloy H. Gunnls & Mal"Qef'el G P.O .... Ml Eucutorollllewlll ~-h. ~2 Ch•INu, Irvine, CA. MA-Id• ~•ud• of s.10 oeooenl '2'70S S...Oeme"'9,C.._tt6'1 lt1CM¥0J.8AlllCH This Minns Is <Of>du<ted bY Ml ln- Tet; (7141 ffZ-4111 A.-lli\r .. I.Aw dlvldl.YI. ,.....,fer: l'eutlefter ... s..~1,,_..81.,.. LeAoyH ~-Is Publli.hed 0r•"9t C6Ht 0•1ly Piiot, 54111•* This s ... _. WU filed wltll the Jan. 21, 2'. •nO Feb •. "" l.M .,....,,CA 90045 Clllunlf Clerk ol 0.-•nee C-y on ----------.:::3.o.=16 Pul>l1-Or•-Cusl Oallv PllOI '*-"Y1. lf1'-• ,... , • '51114 J.., 11, •nO Feb.•. 11. 11. 1'16 3A7·76 f'IAlll"'9d <><•nee Cout o.11y Pliot. PUBl.IC NOTICE Jan\Nry 1' "· 21• 21' ms u.,. PUBLIC NOTICE f UBI.IC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE P'ICTITIOUS eUSINUS NAMRSTAT«MENT The fellowlng ""'°" Is doing blal· -ft CITA -04£MICAI. IN~Y OF THE AMERICAS, •n1 P9trlc• -..0, NewPOft Beech, CA ft6tO Jeffrey CherlH 81u.op, 4217 """k.e Road, Newpot'I lie~ 11, CAfl* ..,.... This IMNMH Is concNc*f .., .n I~ dlvldlMll Jeff,...., Olerlo1 81Wlp Tllls s\•tement w~'-filed w1111 tt-e C.0Vn1, t1er1t. of Or~nve eou.,ay on Januery 12, 1916 1'5U'6 Publlslltcl O.-•nve cou1 Delly Pllol, Jan. 1', 21, 21, ~ February•. 1'76 161-76 PUBLIC N011CE c L A s s I F I E D 6 4. 2 a pool or two and lots left. Reaffon $36 950 over. Walk to shopping "! 675-7060 * ' and schools, fresh palnt1---------•t Every inch of this pride and lo clean, move-in•-----------1 or ownershJp Cam home condiUon. Call for an ap-1•--------·l ~!!:e!!!~~ will make you smile with point.matt now. ~ ... • S... Sp-1$h I• delight. Huge bd.s, im· Stvt. Ho-. mac. Uiruout, on huge lot 1·1. ·~ E Stvt. LOWEST PRICED with dream kit. for the nter 'iftrou1h the lady of the house with wrought iron gates into SINGLE LEVB. lovely cabinets & tile Pt ap•rl... · the. ceramic tile entry. CONDO work & sparkling bit-in 752-1920 The decor is in warm H d t f' d t b 1· w 'l I _uoo OU4'_1lst 911 llACN arth t N . ar o m , easy o uy app 1anccs. on asl. e ones. ew paint, Bluffs Anita model. End 646-7711. Open Eves. •• a.._THT ... wl .... G new carpets, wallpaper. unit. covered private - tuOA -" 4 Bedrooms. extra lge r · N I VIEW family rm, 1Sx30 covered pa 10• qwel area. ew Y decorated. 3 bedroom, 2 or the blue Pacific from patio. Fruit trees. A bath-fireplace. Vacant, this magnificent VIP re-home with love. Offered owner will consider lease · · sidence. H~e .C.R with atalow$64,900. option terms. Priced ---------- noor to ce ling frplc. ~ • • $6t,1so.. MORE FOR SS Ideal formal entertain· OMl'PEEHSn ing. Owne.r transferred-C.F. Colesworthy IM ORANGE bring all offers. 646·7711. Rffffors 640-0020 3 Br, a/eond, pool on •hrd Open Eves. lSSSW.lakw.C.M. •----------•a cre. Quick possess • ~ Walker & lee Real f state Next to Marttet laslcet Find what you want in $m,900. 1333 Hickory Ln, 549-86SS Daily Pilot. Classifieds. Orange. 633. 7479 owner. ----------1SEU. idle items with e Find what you wanl 1n · Dally PilotClass~ied Ad. Daily Pilot. Classifieds. 642-5678 . ---------~ 1002 GaMral ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• macnab /Irvine realty ll<i CANYON Magnificent new 5 bedroom. 7 bath estate w /family room. billiard room, high ceilings, stained glass, '4" wood parquet flooring, French doors. sauna & over 6000 sq.ft. "50.000. Appt. o~ Lynne Rothell 644~ (569) 141.Ull '4+6• ..,'*-~ ... ~ .............. ~'"" 1002 G1Mral I 002 GtMral I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• BIG CANYON CUSTOM Luxury home with magnificent view o golf course. 3500 Sq.ft. of executiv Ii ving in this 3 year old home Outstanding value. $195,000. 640·6161 HARBOR VIEW HOME Popular Palermo model with beautiful swimming pool. This home wa formerly the sales model and is highl upgraded inside and out. See t appreciate. 640·6161. FREEDOM 1976 his charming 4 bedroom, 2 bath FREEDOM HOME is loeated on large, W_estside ~orner lot. Full price, $39,950 with flexible financing. It's vacant, move inf ast ! ! Call now 962-4454. VIEW .lJ!iSET sitting by the crackling fire in hvmg room and watch the sunset. Gracious 5 bedroom in exclusive Mesa Verde. Large lot has mini.farm and orchard. Absentee owner says SELL!! $69.900. Call 962-4454 FAMILY WITH BUDGET ere ia a well built. 3 bedroom wltb add-on living room. oak noon . ._ice 10xl5 collate ln back. Pool alse Ja1n1, In north Costa Mesa. Walle-to Tennis wlm Club. JustMt.950. CallM&-4141 • I I : I I I ••• - T M aJ c st ~ C• re $l - •••-' - ( t I -Ge. ••• -B anc thi hor wit Lai tre S34 J -- Wa bca bdr Ille wh; for' 673-·1 -p .. ne Of I are. ha I bea bit-: mg . yo hon +d rec cus ball r a1 con you Pate ~ IEJ 4 Lust cxqt. leve bdrr for $285, l c I Clasl Honea For s.M Hou1ea For SGle Wedno$day,Jenuary28. ,979 * ....... For S. ts For S. House1 For S. , · ••• • • • • • • •••••••• ••••• • ••••••••• • • •••••••••••• -· -· ...................... • .................................. _ .... CotteMeta 1024 Hwwl"'-oaleoclll 1040 Ho•n PorS. HoetnForS. 2000 1Ka• Prop9ri, 2000 DAJLYPILOT D3 tl1Mrll I 00 ....-.I I 002 Costa Mesa I 024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••a.•••••••••••• ••••• •••••••••••••••••• ••••••• • ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• •••••••••• •• .. •••••••••••••• •••• ••••••••• •••••••••••• •• •••••••"•,•••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11111..11! •R 0 C C llG OU llACH Mlwporl lndl I Ot.t Ml.,,.... leadt I Off THAT HEW .. OLD" LOOk This duplex has it! In Old Corona dcl Mar. it Is la rge (3 bdrms -3 bdrms> and new and yet it looks small and old. Cover ed with shingles, dotted with stained glass. it ha8 spacious m aster bedroo m suites and drwmatic cathedral ceilings. It also features revenue rewarding income (12 times gross) at $124 ,500. A listing of AJlan Heller's. U ~ l()U t: li()MES REAL TOR~ 675-6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona dei Mar ~~:'! .......... ~~~~,~~ .•........ ~~~~ S!w,l!Ct;/fo C,rona Jelmar Custom 3 bdrms., 3 ba., fam. rm.; high beam ceil.; I-story ; pool. $160,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bo~~1dL• Drive N B 675 · 616 I I 002 Generol 1002 4 •• '""~ • • • H e .. 0 --a-2 a....... ••••••••• • • •••••••••••• •••-•••••••••••••• .. •• -OO. ONS·OF·A·KINO 3BR om · .. ~m. ""'"'• S•• 500 UA, larse tt/f'pool, eor: added den with hu~t ~ fa,, ~. ntr lot w1tb boaL gale (pie, lge klld» n • bi1 t CotMtry •'TrffS a:u bltns. fireplace, tra '. din. rm. Blln,, tpt1. 'DeC QCU Un~Uctable value! Lota added famiJy room. Onfy ~P Jol on -1Jey. O~ao ,- ol t.recs~addedtharm $58,800. Call Pllt:STJGE view from up1ta1ra. Bag 'U Ill & priva~. Plont.y of RQMES,64W641 Zoned for $ uoil1. 'I Ill room tor parldoa your Blocks to ocean. $49~. WW••• boal or trallor. Kentucky Eut.shle 481', 2ba, frplc, Wu 536-8831 Sl y Ii n a. Lot 1 o I le gar, tncd yd, Nice character. Tako advao· quiet oei&hbrbd. $58,SOO BY Owner, Pa.rk Street 2 Lage & aavc BKR call by own. 642-5299 bib from Civ1t Center. 3 "'""1720 ' • BR, den, Z Frplc'1, ~ · 50xl50 lot. $68,000, EASTSIDE 842-997oor 536-4'129 DREAM HOME "#1 inCallfornla" YOU BETHEJUDGEol' LAGOON TOWNHOUSE Spacious ramilY bayfront. Pier & slip for large boat. 4 BR. 4th ba.1 ~rm. &fam. rm. 50 Ft. lot, Via Liao Noni lllDUCm FOi ACTION! U75,000 LIDO REALTY 3377 Vie Udo. H.L 67J.7l00 1----------1 W s Old Fashioned, large Meso Verde 4 BR, 3 ba, 4 bdrm home, 2 full F/R & D/R. Choice tor. baths. Today only $67,:;oo. Ownr 540-4484 $49,000. Has Country HsbourArea The best of both 11 ves-3:S ft. dock + best Iota· L...,_.leoch I 041 l.oglllna leoch I 048 uoo on Seagate Lagoon. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• $39 999. Roomy 4-bc\rm + 2-bath home w /2-car garage. Choice corner location. Veterans welcome. Low down &: Low monthly, Exclusive.Will not last. Please call. .. 540-3666 kitchen with garden atrl um. Extl usl ve- Pleasec:all 540.3666 "We're Here To Help" &Toro 1032 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CUstom decorated 4-BR, •OCEANFRONT• 3-ba. Asking $92,500. Rare at $199,500. By OCEAN VIEW ***LOT*** REALTY INC. 714/846-1371 A.JtTISTIC DESIGN owner. 7SZ.1171/49!M384. COMDOMIMIUM 50x100 n. buildable lot in LIVING highly desirable area. "'TITS IEST'. $26,000 + owner will "' carry. HOWARD H . CHECK THESE ZACRODZKY, Realtor. RIVIERA * * 494-8611 * • EXCLUSIVES custom built. Reduced to 3 Bdrms., 2 baths. XJnt $71.900. 499-1112 aft S hrs. 499-1188 location, close lo shop----------1 ping&: beach. $59•500 Laguna Hils I 050 2 llDROOM CUTIE -$27,916,.6) You should buy them all day at this price. We orfer 6 such uruts at $1.67..500. best location. Eastside Costa Mesa. located on 2 big lots. A liWe sweat & couple of checks will make this a bargain! University Realty 300 I E. Coast HkJltwey CoraMdelMar 67MSIO • •••••••••••••••••••••• Mobile Homes ForSde lfOO Newport a.ach I 069 •••••••• • •••••••••P•••• •••••••••• • • •••• •• • ••• • $3500. Co:sta Mesa JocaUon LIDO SANDS :::.s~1~::::> M'Z ~f~~: Well kept 3+ Oen home (714) 642-C780 w/beautlful covered _ __..;. ______ _ Lanai nnged with col· 5 Star Family Park, S. J . orful flowers & greenery. Cap. '73 24x60 2 BR, 2 Ba. Only 144 pares from :a Sl9500. Pri. pty. Gs·2038 sandy beach & short walk to pool & proposed 4 yrs. new .. Adult park park Newport He1gbte. 2 bd, H~w Reduced To all sklrting & awnings. Only $63, 9 50. $10.000. 646-5'179. Call 644·'1211 qukk ! 1600 /Jn NIG(L OAILEY & ASSOCIATES BAYFRONT IELOW MARKET IN LAKE FOREST BEA.CH HOUSE Dramatic entry to spacious entertainment r oom wilb massive fireplace, & vaulted teil· A 'H Owner says Sell!!! ings. Secret stairway ' ouse-sold" name $8000.00 below market. leads lo artist's studio or Big ocean view. Lge. 1· ••••••••••••••••••••••• l--D-U_P_L_E_X_W_/_S_L-JP-- bdrm., with many extras Town home •. 3 bd, 2 ba~ Bill Carroll 640·5560 incl.eJevator.$47 500 Cent ral air .& heat. Office building,' speC'· tacular view, tuxurious executive offices Reduced to $600,000 2A00sq. ft., 4 bedrooms & bunk room. Master, COLLEGE PA.RI( fresh paint. Today's best small den, nursery. Cher • $39.900. Pr in only. Hastings &Co. Realtor. 645-2957 or 586-9865 appts only. Nice 3 bdrm., 2 bath buy. $62,000. kitchen w/ gourmet fix· family home; corner lol. MISSION VIEJO lures. Loads oC glass for 1 --Ml--' I 052 Offered at $4~~ REAL TY view of gardens, approx ......,..... 'r""" 2 Bdrms, 2 baths. Beaut. garden setting. Close l everything. $52,500 833•:nuo 837-9500 581-1000 250~sl.ckys OloU sOurtW.NlnTHlhEe Large l ·bdrm. on ground ••••••••••••••••••••••• -floor, with patio area. 2-BEDROO~. 2.balb Con· BILL GRUNDY Redtor 675-6161 VACA.NT COMM&RC. Good location, Hunt· ington Beach.130'290 Sq. ft. ~~~ ~~~.!~':!. ... !~.~! _LAN __ :-~-:-:-r H_962_o_·:-s-1~--:;: view. 2 Bdrms., 1 ~:a~~~~~1if f~{I~ J •CKIE 0. New paint, carpeting, 3 .,. th 'th 1 · $41 900 MEW LISTING! " ya • w1 ge. view '10 .... D Re"'LTY H_... __ Would envy your btn 4 Br, 1~ ba, frplc, dbl deck. Priced right a " EA _.._-View Homes REPOSSESSION 4 Br, $.15,000. Lo dn. Agt. 646-3013; 546·7739 bdrm home, your garage, fncd yd w/patio. $42,500 831-9411 PHASE Ill superior neighborhood Near Eleme ntary SOMERSETPLAN Cm•teryYm.. RAMBLl..,G where your children (K schools & bch. $12,500 for ~... A 11.-S·BR J.ba, fam rm, wet " thru 8th) h ho l & equity & lake over gov'l R · uWLk::I~ • b p r · I I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• BARGA.I.., ave as r -...... tt'>'7\-=--~ Laguna NK1uel ar. ro ess1ooa y SM •LL HOME " safe walk to their school. loan of $34,000. Pvt ply. ~" v •;, landscaped & decorated. B "' Nearly V.. acre.w/many As yo u e njoy you 898-4714. 4 99·2800 thechoic£communitv Vacant.Beautiful home. Corner lot, prime 'f 0ca- tJoo, attractive building. All rented-Good i.ncome. Cal l MERRELL REALTY,6'75-7900 aY. Wl.ndows LRG. WAREHOUSE custom touches. 3 BR privacy, you will b '"' OPENSAT./SUN.10.s 1 PLUS OFFICES w/space for work s hop. secure in knowing you BUILDERS OCEAN VIEW * * ELEGANT, large 2301 PORT LERWICK andalreellnedstreelin .. allononehugelot.ren· Buill·inkitchen.Lotwill have an outstanding in PR£.COMSTR.S""e High on a hillside; 3 and gracious executive 673-7601 132' x 300' C2 Lot on Newport Blvd, C.». Vac, prime Joe. Prin. only. this rozy 3 bedroom lrallylocatedmC.M.for hold another untl. Act vestment. "'~ bdrm s., 2 bathrooms; home, located in home. Huge living room only Sl25.000. CALL now! All for $43,900. $49,900 32-'& Bedroom homes in nearly new! Open beam Monarch Bay Terrace. anytime with hardwood floors 675·6060 546-8640 18709 San An•oni·ost. Huntingt on Beach. 2 teil's., fenced yard with 5-Bdrm. 3-bath, formal -F--.--=-----1---G---...... --2-0-0-0 L d · h r ~ Blocks to ocean. Now ceda d k ' g A b t dining & family rooms, or Big Canyon pro· ncome ..-ropeny arge Yll r wil ruil ~ By owner. "'-JI for appt. t k' b · r e<: m ' uy a k · h rti. Call B' Ca 646-1762 t VA TERMS AT ...,.. a mg omes1te reserva-~ 500 gou r met 1 t c , pe es, 1g nyon ••••••••••••••••••••••• rees. /1 · ~-• -"A".8584 or ""'0 5319 l ' .,_, · Real 93 .,.,A950 C II .://U'Ule,~ .,....... """" ions. TUR.._.ER "'SSOC. whitewater & Sad-ty.644-11 Multi tenanlioduslrial & ...,.., ·a nowtosee! OpenHouseSat/Sunl·S LIO..,SEST T " "' · n ~~ u.-.t.t~ •-h 1040 536-2579 (213) 592-5010 .. 94 1177 appt. $189,500. Lease/Optio,....B Airport Location. Prin. Ii ________ 1 REAL.TORS · " A ES • 1105 N. Cst, Laguna dleback views. CALL for office bldg, Oranee Co. 646-8811 Corono del Mor I 022 ---------nurm.":f"on _.ac "' • Laguna Niguel Realty Close to beach, tennis, only. 549-1480. ••••••••••••••••••••••• UPPER BACK IA.Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------830-5050 496-4040 pool. 3Br, FR, open --------- . ANYTIME $62,500. Country living at Pool! \_...) HARO TO BELIEVEI · WHY RENT? beams, atrium, sundeck. LIONS ESTATES Duplex. Price reduced to city prices, located in de· ai·ke To D-ach • Lse $450 mo, $2000 opt Builder/Broke r sellinrJ ----------S?9,800. Corona del Mar. sirable Bay Back 811y U-L-fleucvable This elegantly decorated $l200. down could buy money. t:ull price property.3Tol8unitsin'Q for sale by owner. Ex-area. Owner very anx-nuC' beautiful 4 bedroom + lovely 2 + den or 3 br ---------1 $65.500. prime areas in Hunt· ________ _. C<'lknt l'.ond. s~e owner ious.Save$Sonllus4BR "Shorecresl" 2-s tory, family rm, bonus room home on Bluebird Ca· MissionViejo 1067 WaterfrontHomH ington Beach. New & VIEW at <120~2 Larkspur, CdM home. 546·8640 gorgeous in detail, full of and step down formal nyon Road. 494 -0159 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call 631·1400 near new. WITH INCOME or cal~4·732S. hfe & color. Near bake dining room. lOOO's of Contractor's Home "VA.CA TED.. ---536.2579 592·50 I 0 Want t o live at thl• , ~ ~ . ~-~-trails, not far from the dollars in upgrades. 5 Years young; this one Abandoned 4 or 6 HARBORVIEW --------- hcach:' Live tn the Fourplex. Pnce reduced .;/M't/1(.£ ,~ beach. Entry hall to step-Cathedral ceilings. Floor has it all! 4 Lge. bdrms., bedroom with spiral PORTOFINO R.E. SALES bdrm .. 2bathunil&rent lo Sl6~.300. Corona del REALTORS down ltvmg room over-toceilmgfireplace.Lots 3 full baths; s uper s tairway to artist $99,000owner644·2839 STARTTHE the 2 bdrm .. 2 bath unit. P.Jar I-or sale by owner. looked by meandering or used brick. Wet bar master suite off pool hideaway. $19,354 FHA MEW LISTING whatmorccouldyouask Excellent cond. See sta1rcasc.Brightmodern andtbelistgoesonand area; k itc hen loaded ~umableloan a~6','i7o LovelyJBR.2 Ba .home. NEWYEAR for., owner at 42012 Larkspur. VA/FHA OK kllchen & full dining on. Only $79,500. Won't with goodies; family rm. interest w/no qualifying. close lo Harbor lligb In RIGHT! 673:3663 833-0523 Eves CdM or call 644-7326. 2958 Croftdon room overlook the pool. laslE:it!111!11m--=-ir.-;;mo-.. has huge frplc. & wood HUR.RY! SS4.900. " super cood. Don't let this Sell Honlft DELUXE 3 BR, added family rm, Xlra big family room lJ . paneltng. Sunken h vmg 'HO DOW. M one gel away. $69,000. associated * pal.Jo. 2 baths, compl re· with a fireplace tn rock & I AWIW:·lil)i.._MAilii6MLl~ h be ed .1 & v t H th Learn lnnsfmetlfs DUPLEX 962 4471 (""': 546 8103 rm. wit am ce1 . e er ans-ere ts e op-pr rn c. 0 n I y . Age n l * furbished in and out. surrounded by wood • ... • Lile e ntry. Lge. htd. & porturuty you have been 549-0812or645·4203 Eorn M~ BPOKEPS-PEALTORS 202\ W 8olboo t.7l .)66i F.xcellcnt 3 BH. 2 Ba . Elec gar opener. $42,000. panchng. Giant masterj~~~~~~~~~ filtered pool. Ocean view wailing for. Large 3 Br Our residential division ~round floor owners unil Pr inc . on I y . <:a 11 swtc with a full wall of gazebo. Lots of private & Fam. Rm. home w/ ltsts and sells more in· w 2 pnv. patios & lux· ~-7711 : after 6. 644·0072. closets. 2' ~ balhs. Owner Irvine I 044 deck & patJo area. Sep. 3 country kitchen. view lot $5,000 vestment properties than urious master sw tr. [<iJ ~ anxious for sale. call lo· ••••••••••••••••••••••• car garage for storage or & many extras. $52,900. REOUCTI OM most investment offices. PAINT & WATER PLUS day, BKR.842·8854. h 0 b b y • x 1 n t MISSION VIEJO Personal Training, .. needed to matt:h pnde 2 BR Rental w/large RARE flllli..ID neighborhood, close to RE•LTY Owner bought new home, Prestige Offic!\Full of ownership homes an putiodeck. TARIEU. n schools. Pnced nghl at llOA will help finance. See Facilities. p crty urea; has 3 bdrm:!. 1 ·1~ BOTH Ideal home for active re-$125,000 837-9500 581 ·1000 anytime. Beautifully up-Purchase Plan, inge baths; overlook1ni:: · MESA VERDE 3-BR , tiredorslarlerhomefor ---------•graded Baycrest pool Benefits, Superior Com- beau•. P"rk. Hdwd flrL , with wood burning fam. 2-ba, 2-car gar. ''#I in California" ' young couple One of m ..,_wport•-ach 1069 home; 3 bdrms., formal mi ssion , Dynami c • " " fireplaces, vaulted wood ""7 n50"' d OK . . · :o· ·: fiWfi©IPfil l"'IC _. d · · · bll·ins,dhl. aara"C Ask •·-1 d .,.. ·" ara es · Irvtne's finest co m ·~ ~n ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1n1 n ~. J ac u zzi , Organization, Learninl? ., ., ""am ce1 rngs an super AND -....-~ EVERYTHING• mg$42,000forfaslsalc1 so .. of llwy location . * • RARE 2 Br Beauty. munities. 2 Bedrm & · .:; WESTCLIFF . Environment, Full time EVERYTHING 5-BR North Mesa. onl y Secluded 31,2 yr. old, cul· family room. $50,000. 499·2800 LE RAISOR licensees who will work • . S 115. 000 . fee . Ca I I $58,75()_ A beauty. Trade de-sac. $46,500. Owner Owner moving out of ---------Lovely 4 BR, 21h Ba for earnings in excess of h you ~e e~e; wantf.•d dn a 644-721 l 0 K -p IL 0 T R EAL 581-2306. stale. Shows like a model,_________ home in choice area of S25.000 per year are en· o~e ._ 4 rm~. + en ~ ESTATE 540.-0555 home. With many e xtras. Newport Beath. Walk lo REALTY couraged to apply for a +dining rm + IJ?e ----·------11 hool d W I ff t . h Call 54().1151 a sc s, an estc 1 .. ., .... Campus Dr., Jrvi·ne pos1t1on with our lnvest-recrea ion rm .. wit ~ Mesa Verde By Owner. h · E · 1· · ......., I bl 3 •-s opp1ng. asy 1v1ng CampusValleyShop,....-. ments or Residential rustom poo la ~: 1 , Pool. 4 bd. 2 ba hme floor plan w/lge country "u Divisions. Call Don baths. 3...frplcs .. htd & Form din.rm., ram.rm.. kitchen. duaJ frplc, lge CA.LL 833-8600 Berman, President. f I 1 t . d . p 0 0 I : d I r . $77.500. 549·2072. d d b • r 1 yar an eaut1 u NPTJIGTS/ QUAIL PLACE <·ondittoned. Sec fo r CORONA HLDS . ed J ds . PROPERTIES IN yourself, Sun. 1·5. 1839 y 11 b • MF.SA VERDE West, for Real Estate SECLUSION manicur an capmg. OCEAN VIEW • C. pt . C M ou ran stt see t e ca.t· sale by owner. Open Hse T h e b e s l o f Lg 4br, pool. $98,500. By 752-1920. 1 cairn. osta esa. lie gr azing from this Sal & Sun l·SPM. 1a,,., by~ SALE BY OWNER, Univ. End oC hillside easemt. neighborhoods and you c: .. o cc= 1--------- 10 ... ed & h\·ed an hom e 3 Rhodes Dr. CM . 4 &, Parkbll. LBa ~alkle 4 Br. Gazebo, vu, hdwd nrs. own the land. $87,500. owner................. OCEANVIEW. 6 units Bdrms., filled with good Den. 3 Ba. 3 frplc's, 20th CENTURY 2 ~2 . a.. r1c pa.t10 open beam clg. Wine Principals only. Agen Beautifu1Colonial3600sq. H.B. priced to sell at PYRAMID EXCHANIOflS thrn~s;Onl>:S79.500 game room, + huge .. FOX.. w/f1rep1t ovei-looking rellar.3Bdrms.$97.500 549·0812or640.6710 ft. borne on Golf Course S l l0.000 prin only University Realty 1-~am. Rm. w/wet bar. greenbelt. Waterfall &ii• --------•I SOUTH COAST in Santa Ana Hts. $82,000. 752-8710 eves & wknds 3001 E. Cst llwy. 673-6510 Walk lo schools. Pnnr personified elegance in fountain in entry way.·---------Investment By Owner. 640.4082 752·8595 Onl $95 000 0 II t he closest tract to Principals only. 552·7215 R.E. lNVESTMENT IE.Al TORS · 833-'768 . -.. BAG DAD OH THE BAY Lush Italian tile entry. exquisitely furnis hed lli · level waterfront home· bdrms. FR & den. Hoom for pier a nd s lip. $285,000. ree. 1 Yr warranty inc. Call 675-7225 • ,, •• , .. • 111fJ ''""'"'' ,., \'&tut \·.\I JJ~:)· HE \1:1 '' A Of RC ENTERPRISES CO RARE 4BRDUPLEX SO. OF BAYSIDE with a 3 Blt, 2 Ba rental. Only l 1'J years old . f'eatunng beam ceilings, natural wood and brick textures a nd perfect location. Call 644 -7211 Ima • I I SIEK & FIND~ NORWAY A l U N I F U M F I 0 R B S T R 0 N 0 P U N E I P N M J A P P A l S K E N H l A 0 0 H 0 U I B E R G E N A 0 P R B E R G A N P 0 ~ P 0 ~ A l R 0 A P 0 K S A 0 S K N I G H S E N l S S G R E P l R N N I P 0 A I U S T A H N P P K H R N G C l M l T 0 M T E I R A E C N H II 1 U R 0 K N S U 0 T l C E A C B N T 0 0 R S 0 N N S V R R H S G G U E B S S T R R E N A U N 0 0 T P N M G J U N U I 0 s u J A u I N T E R N r N r v A J N N H U A E T A L P S U 0 N I A T N U 0 M l K R 0 M E R 0 T S E N R K I M U l A S K I M G 0 S l A M I 0 N I S K I G S 1 .. trw&I_,,.._....._ __ ~ .......... ,fW99,., r "9cll..,.., .,. .,_, "' ... .-.u, a. die...._ ra.. _.., • .................... 1........... ; s.rpn A 1 um1num Os lo • Ffofd5 •Jo Vt Elsker• Sa!IWlorsk Krone Mfdntght Sun Skfing l app North Cape Storting Tomorl"OW: Marx Broth~ . 4---~~--~-----------------------• • ltUoY •uch 1.,.., "Sttlt 6 r ind" punl1t with over 50 l itcownt• ,,-r p1n1l l11 111 1ll·11t• •trill fl tt..pqr lloollet•. T• ~ ¥fllumH I. II 11111 DI. ..Id t1 A>r llK'h. llldin1 clwclu pey.1111 lO .... ~ 6 Fi~" 111 eatt f1' lh • """""'* y. . · · wner wt beach, s ides to Newport . SPACIOUS CONSULTANTS help finance. 979·38a9 Beach. Xlnt. apprecia· By owner, Deerfield, 2· MOBILE HOME _________ , tion factor. 4·BR, 3·ba, sty. 3 Br, 2'h ba, fam-rm. 2 BR. 2 Ba, Frplc. on the all the xtras oC an exec 1800 sq. ft. Com m pool. EASTSIDE 4 Bedroom home. comparably lo~ Un.ique patio/sundck. ~~Bayside Village. pnced. 9684456 Prine. only. $61,950. Just painted inside & out. Boat access. Ji''ull price $46.900. PA.MORA.MA. _552_·40_27_. ----- FULLER REAL TY 546·0814 ~....,_F_,O_DrO_,.L-11 1 The dr~ ~ wn -I r I I . '"b"•hed tO .... the ,.., • -O'Nftet of yovr ~r could ~ I T O E L A C , - - -onoe In • whlt.. Ml I I I r r .0 ~:::-.... ~·.:: \.. __ __.._ ............ __ __. ........ "°" ...... '-... Hat..' Mils. VN~-A~tl! fOt ANS WU SCIA.M-UTS >..wen lft Ca..tlflcotloe 1010 552-7500 red hill ,.aalt:y PERFECT Sf ARTER HOME Mus\ sell this lovely 3 Br, bom lo popular Green· tree development, close to lbopplne & 1chb. To Me i.a to buy. Only $4'7,9SO ~ EM£~RIALfY ~ 846-3301 l _ BEAUTIFUL LIDO Family home w /4 bdrms. & Cam. rm., 2 mas ter suites. Completely remodeled & redecorated. 40' Lot & attractive. lg. South patio. First tim e offered. $159 .soo 644-1766 '1• NEWPORT SHORES Dramatic 3 BR A-frame in move·in cond. 8~'7o Financing. Only $62,850 CA. YWOOD REALTY * 548-1290 * $45.000 :· Panoramic view of ocean. Small trallet p ar t B e a u t I f u I 3 b d ~ert liot Spt'iap. 10 townhome. Forced lo spaces + 3 tralttr1 + 5ell. Call owner. 498·2906. owner's apt + 2 ...,.m. S-..._ ming pools. Sab trtal c.,h.,._. I071 ~ Bala.,,ee 8~. . ....................... ------~...;..~ J"tve t;edroom luxury home. Spiral atairc~AC .. _ 0 11.. p ·t.... _ lea.dins to ocean vlew !'VW • v '"" '-•US· parentt' rct.reat. •.soo. 1ficd ads diApfaJ r m~~a1cs with lt~lity AMCHOUGI aJ:\d impact? Our .a., • IMYISTMINTS are proud to a.ay, tu.lty 1714l 4ta.;.771 I ~~:.•ulla. i llono 1 ,. .. o;_:::.---.....;.;.;;..;.._...;.;;..;;..._ ______ w;.;.eo=n;.;;!!d!y=::.&..:.;· J;.;an--.;;Ul!Y-.,,...;;29.~1..;;we.;.;. Oftda"""lums .,,.., .. .,., ......_ .,,_ laoih u..,.. -. I ·~ -• • '· ' "\... -_( .._ . • '-Uwtfunialshed l 4 25 •• ........... ••• •• •••••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • •• • .. • ' . 2JOO Heele11 s Uwf .... thll Hwt.aU....._.IMd ....................... liliiiNt_. Jll6 ce.19Mete SIJ4 Af t; a l1,.,..1Mct. l ... ~.ll.1.a..4ltOO •.,• •• ~.~.'t... •• -~.~~~.~o. ~ ••••••• • ••••• • •• ••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• ••• • • •• ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ••••••••••••• ••• • •• ••• -. .......... .-4 JtOO' •.,.....,,.. • .. - Ree. LOt lri hililt• y~ J ZJ4 lnlM 124• ~~i:n ~·J\s~d 8 ~1 &ch.--. ar. pr. V~IM 1 ar, M*•lftiltlt,,...i " t•• , •••••••• ~ ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oar•C• for ml· •· "'~ acb, Cyn . ••••••••• .. ••••• .. ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ho a 't i2:0 .o . &N'tt.$380+ ~.Jone9 or,~IDlt!.WaWuaa pl•Ave.~•· • l,w. $29,500. 4 Bt I&, tncd bit Jd, very 8~AUT. San Joaqutn ~., • . PlO . a.alty.m.a.10. I IL ~PtQ Qfti . awm1c1nu BEACH'S RNEST ._mo_. ____ __,_.--.....,....,..._..;__ tlfta. Ql ldren " pea. Twnhme Larg 2 Br, 2"11 .._.,,11 1.._ '807 l~. Sat; 104; 1711.U. llVftll P" ...... 4400 OWNEI\ c oun\tred a\ ox. $3'7$.~1·4153 Ba . 2 !Sly Vu1w Of jOlf 'l ....................... CM. or call &vtl ' ·~ COUMftY ISTATI u~ m..-tub. LJsttd al 2 Story, 4br, 3ba, l'R, ~~~ & lake. 050. ·~ 3525 Luxu ~pt Ob BllbOI ~-• • a 1tc r e1' ol b eautiful -par""k-ll k • 1101 WHtclff Dr. St«.llll Reduce-d to f'l)lc, wet bar, a.oo 1q ft . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bay.1Br,1 Bl, widen, I · I~ • Sunken pool. Sparkllnf _Newpe>rt Financial Ctr 1 $79,lm: JW Acr es. C·l SSTS mo tncl rri&. Univ P~Terrace2 Bra Sec COnUBrl~Sa ten· frplca, all bltn tull1 Spanl1h fountains. Spacious rooms. ~Offtc Spec . 1 -~ PP!,!'IJ ''0t4:nftler &anJet1er. 6'8-!280. Ba Twnh:se. frplc, '3e0. nb dnt facil. no chlld equipt kit, laundry, IOO Qaa,,.• .. ale dJnlng 'area. Walk-in c!losets.. Call oo Site 11:na1er e A@lhnn•lo .. ott ce SS2·78'6&S86-89S5 'l • · E. 8.a1boa. boll aoace ....,lf"'A li it h b' t 1· ~ 1 In We!itmaostcr. A•-.._.,.t.•leec llt 1240 --unoer 1G 8/lO 8 ma t avail. Call for viewlnt. t Home -k e k C en & ca me. a. (114)84i.3lliexUtt 1 ~dw~~ M v SU9.000 ........................ Turtlerock 3 BR. a B.a. 1 bc:h. rn5. ~2010 sct-2988; evaw-..a Bedroom unfurnished $220. F\lmished J , ~=~·p~J.i.tw~•::ii 3BR h~.~~~lot a·u ~1!'set.oslfo:te $440. me>. "" ...... 1 .. UwfUnt J600 C--.. M ... 3122 'HE Fumls$Z40. 2hedBe$2d7r5oom unfurnished ,$250. J ' h I 3n om • -• ....,..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• DlY . <?!!'!.!!-or 70 c · bllns. newly painte ••••••••••••••••••••••• fRIEN ALL UJlU111S RH nu.ssion. isidc /out. Cov patio, University Pork now 2 bd, UJod 2·bi.tb, white stove Walk to Huntington Center ~ .. c.. _ _ , Matl.,.,D•Hf'f, aKh~. $350F ./ro!u,A_!~1tor 2 ~~· dfrplc. tn1cdt yd1., & rerrta0. Pvl. gar1. N (SJ ..... : PLACE ........ :rs a.AA •m -~~.....,.., ~ 24'00 elthor aye,......,...,,, or crp .. , rps. poo. enn s, pets. c e on v ew . _.,.. nv r ~~ 1 .. ~~ ............. •·'471,!lrkr :1~~~~7~~· e~~: 496-31Tl v~ z~r.t•... ~:~:;r:•w!~~:t:u::~~ LA QUINTA HERMOSA ~~-=--I 0 ,. Socrfflce! HUGE or ss1-1012. ..... fftttnb FYntlahed • qlJlel mountain stttinir. 8'211 ,__.. &.-(7141 147·144 I ~...,..,.. ..... J~c!~!e8inhi•!\4:n r::!~fe ~i~~7 ~~~Univ. Pk. aarden bome. 3 ••0 ••••••••••••••••••• 2 i~R~~~~~~r:tc. AU amenllias tor \be l blk. ~ oC Edinger; 1 bllc W. of Beach I Desert ..... CrpCs, drpe, bathl, UP1raded tbruout. Br. 2~ ba, tennis. pool lalbo• laMMI l 706 Pool, teoms, continental !.~..J!~:-TV •-j bl~..-0. 640-7914 2 Yra o!d. Walk lo ocelln jacla&l. "25. 844-4157 ....................... breakfast. SOme ocean 4r ~·· rOOM. • $ 4 s o I m 0 l n c 1 d s . Comp. refurbished luxury Catalina view._ CIOle to pool tablH• 1ocl•l Apoi t1M•t• .,,...,._ Apm IM•llft ......_ . R_..., F• ms, eardener ~k tor Keith First Ume to rent, super apt. 2 Br. no children/ shoppilJd " fine beach. • • • "t I• S ••day ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• $140 up slore-offaces cpts • GroYes 2700 or Fay~ 960·2501 or nice 4 br, 2 ba, cpl, drpe. pets. Ref's req'd. '3:50 m ,, ........ 11• ..._ __ ..._ •· ~ 2 ,_. le ... 11~0 dr a 1 bath 17301 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 962_ .... 71 Bkt $365. /mo 963 · 4 569 •·rly67J.5099. ,..... ..., ---. • ,._ , .... 1. tMt ""°" ac.. ~ Newport leadt ll&t P a r · ....._. alklfa land will ... . 963-17118. No rental fee . ..! sw• I I pools. 1-,. .............................................. Beactl Bl. H.B. 842-2834 leas~.Of sell, be'1t of Chann1nt 3 Br. high!)' up· VillaaeReal Estate. L1:e 1 Br, light" airy o 2 & 3 Bt Twnh.se Apts. 1ocH1I, 2 ••••••• s,,':;· ~~: B~·,!!;a ~~~ OCIANV.ltW NllRIHT t.erqit a(' consider trade. graded, pnme ~.8. area. ~~t1e1~1~1~0· Avai Encl patio, bltns, frplc. Yollyli .. 119•· OK• 842.03891894.1011 3 Br apacioua duplH ~ Offices as low aa W per ~fuy ,t~ches in area. S3n mo. Avail 2·1-76, LCICJllllCI letaeh 3248 -ar. ~ 673-7183 Q\lallly adult apt.a from · mo. 645-8964 sq n. Mission Viejo & flentr11111.of water. Call 968-9Sl8or962-7788 •••••••••••••••••••••••Small Bach .• ulil pd, ~a $220. Custom decor aled 1 l"in• 1844 La1una Niguel. 200 to 1 an)¢i~ BJcr. 546-5710. Su...,r 4 br, 2 ba, "'p'•, RE .... T •Ls parkng. $1S9 mo. lsl, ts JETl'Y VIEW, a 110 tux· Bdrm. 1 Bdrm & den. 1 ~ •• •••••••• ••• • ••••••••• 2+ Den, 2 Ba' frpk • Wutk 2000 sq ft. 831-1400 ..... '" .. '"'" .,. 615 ~or 675 652'1 urious 2 BR ·1round floor balh. 2 Bdrm. 2 bath. T· ...... -ltoca.. lo beach. Yrly $375 mo.1--....;;.. _____ _ • Redlifclttt drps, R I O. $34S/mo. LAGUMA IEACH . . unil of Duplex w/jetty & Spac1ou. closets & cup 9ntW " • 752-0644 afU. Ff~EE RENT .. ~p~ch at WdMt.ld 2900 963-4569963-1786 Sprawling 4 BDRM. & lalboal'•ninsula 3707 ocean view. SCNCLES boards Furniture & VfstaAph a1rporl. Ut1ht1es. & •••!.!.!~•••••••••••••• . No rental fee FAM . RM. home. Lge. ••••••••••••••••••••••• PREFERRED. $S~O. ma.ld ie.:VtceavaUtble You'll ettjoy a relaxed Huge 2 br. 2 ba. Nwpt janitor incl. Garden Builder wants lots with or V1llage Real Estate s un d eck W I 0 CJ:: AN I "'YFRONT p I mo. Ca 11 Agent, Small pets accepted· lifestyle fa the exelusive Shores.· Sharp! Garage. swtea from $88. 979-tl666. w1lhout p'-1!s. Sngl Cami· FTplc, 3 br, 2 ba, enclosed VIEW. Bwlt·in kitchen, ,. 644·7211 Nitel Office hOurS9\0 8 Vlll~ge of Turlle Rck. $300. 548·3869 or 4'42·0282 •l MO FREE RENT• IYO:t~·W-8614 patio, crpts /drps . ~bii~~M~e·ti~tT~·PUS e~.~h~~r 9~tE~ii5a1~~ 3 BR, old CdM. Prlv. 2300Falrview.C.M. croi~eo~lloS~dr;Jln· WATERFRONT 1-2·3 Rm. offices from j .,, · $345/mo. 963-4569/ RM. home. Bu•lt·in 675.4533 deck, gar, just re-545--2300 ~oWnbo~::.Y$260 tosf~ 2Br/2Ba $135 per mo. Near l R....,_ 963·17~RentalFee k itche n. dbl. garage. modeled.$400.640·8007 Lrgqulft 2brtrtplex. l ~ mo.ThreeRockviewDr., 2B~/den/2Ba airport.Noleasereq. •••••••H•••••••••••••• Village Real Estate Quiet residentia l section. Bal yfr2~"t01 br a~t ?,n Y~~f Costa M .. a 1124 ba . ~r everything . rrvine. 833-<>400 Lovely view & c~armi~g 833·3223 9TU noon Housesf'Urnl1hed $385Mo. Bsker. -..673 ~0~0. inc. u 1 . ••••··~··•••••••••••••• $200/mo. 645 •35541 •---le-h 3848 garden. Boal shpsavaal. •••w ilr••u•u••••u C S r bd In So. Laguna. 1 Bdrm. --· ......,., 9-S (At) -..,---soon. 873·8414 Executfn Sult•• lab:Rlfltand 3106 lean pac2600s. ·•4 • pl Locatedtblk.above c M 372.. CASAVICTORIA · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Full ser v ice s u ites _,. .. _ 2'2ba, FR, LR, DR. a · osta esa ~ I 2&3br DeluxeUnfur bd b h c Oro bbl i t th available In airport area ........................ Closetoshops/schls.$525 Coast Hwy. Walk to shop·....................... • Fu • / t pd · 3 • l a On>4J. rpa, P a f:! e no e ApcwtHMt1bhnli5hed 1 BR houlfe. '12 Blk lo ~ay. m 0 . c 0 n l 8 ct Ri ck ping and beach. All ulil. $37 SO WEEJ( & U, Ag~ts N'· ga~ ~ r ·le d r p 1, baa em en t & Ocean rom your Apt. or Unfwftltlted 3900 <N.B. > Slartinl '20(). Call 1~ $345. p/mo. E·Z parkang. Sullivan 962-5585. pd. by owner. S200 Mo. S · & p 1 · ope 1 c. ~ garage. 595 W. Wilson. Lease. Luxury, secur1ly, •••••••••••••••••••••••i-833 __ ·3640 ______ _ 1 _673-_l200 __ C_l<>-_•_> ____ 1 MISSIOM REALTY •. tud10 l BR Apts . oo , ~ec rryi . e eva . n ~· 831·0$'73. Mature adults. 31755 Csl. THE EXCITING 60• PER~ FT 2 Story fplc 4 BR 2 B,\ L •TV & Maid Serv Avail 525 V1ctona, 642-8910 Hwy 499-2835 M.wporthach 3169 ow. S395/~o. 963.4569 98SS.CstHwy, aguna •PhoneServ,Htdpool 2 bd apt. Refrig. slove, · ·. PALMMISAAPTS. 1817 WESTC FF·NB ••••••••••••••••••••••• 963·1786. No rental fee. -~ 494-013 1 •Children Section LRG 1 Br, pool, nr. shope. carpets & drps, laundry 1 Rm AJ?l. In ruce home. MINUTES TO NPT AG'l'.·541-5032 l'il June 15. 2br. 503 38th Village Real Estate. Im med A\ ail Unfurn 2 •Low monthly rates. ~:J.ts~no ~~· ~~· fac1l. 1 child ok. no pets, <>c;eanv1ew. $119 mo + BCH. MARlMERS MILi St. ~C)ets. $275. Open Br, cl~e to Hi School. ·~OFFweek 's rent onro aa, ~aled at wes t end or util. 494-4293 Bach, 1&2 BR. I ' ! H0¥9 ~29th. Call col· 3 Br. Cam rm. 2 ba, frplc, Secluded $300 497 1970 w/ad Off hateft Path Wilson. $175. 642-3697. Spectacular View. nearly fromS180. SQUARE 1eci:7l3·3TI-4640. bllns, 2 car gar, fn cd yd. · · . 2376 Newport Blvd. CM rt 2 B 2 B Adults. No Pets 2700 W. COAST HWY. j ,. . Kidsok.Nofee.$325.mo. Laguna Charmer 3 Br 1 548·9'755or645·3967 1, 2. & 3 Br. Adults, no •S.Gardent* nfk apa s . r a, 1561MesaDr. Now leasin1-ground l u-...-J.n-..&..-I ... _~ lslPioneer,842·4421 Ba 2h blks to bch. s:iss pets. dshwshrs, shag 1 Br unfurn $180 mo. ~"~ ~bea4~.23S28039 /$2SO. (5 BlksEastofNewport noor comme rdal apace ~vm.-nl"'"' 1-mo SS7 ·1989 or Cl ) 2035FYUerlOft,CM c pts. closed garage, Adults, no pels. 177 E . ....,.. or,.... Blvd.) 1000·~· and upslaira ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beat the rush. Pool home. 688 7· 538 l BR F'Urn, 2 lrg closets. frplc, BBQ. Gas" water 22nd St 642-3645 B Ba d I 546·9860 office space 300'·2800' in Balboa Island 1206 3 br, 2 ba. 11/z miles to · pd. Pool. · 2 r 2 e uxe. ~H·i----------1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bch.$425.962·4471 n..eanfronl retreat Lse queens ize bed, priv. LAMAHCHAAPTS NEWBREED APTS vlew •. N.End.Nopets.l the beauliful new bulld-. M l 2 I ft \,A.: • • dressing rm. xlra lge B h $180 ii pd p 1 blk Divers Cove. 494-4060 ing rising from the ashes Quaint w/l s r, o 4 BR ZDA 1 / 1 S9'7SM0.(w11lfurn.)Lge. r oo m s, encl. gar. 7'18Scoll Place,CM ac · .ut · oo , E RESORT oflheold. Weofler lhe Brs.-?bas: FR, Patio & *m ain't w~f::° tow ~. 2 BR. 2 Ba ... 40 ft .~. rm. w storage. Adults only, 642·5073 jacunl, gar. 645--Mll ves. best exposure, traflic r~ Qw:l s~e:i5 ~ Avail.· now. s35o. Call & 2 charm1.ng studios. In no pets. C ""S"" HIRMOS"" 48r Condo & Unit. $32S 2 Br, 2 Ba, frplc, dbl gar, circulation and parkinf bUQ Xr:. 1 549 • • Ralph at847·6010. a park setting, wal.led by STUDIO A A --mo. Pool avail. Daya laundry, deck , $310. on WCH. Read)' for oc-& Own/Arnt. bnck to secure pnvacy. 141 W. Wl~ CM G'7·2260,eves@4.9819 S40-Sl00or673·7100 cu pancy J uly 4.Ca ll • BR houmo. E·Z park· Super 3 BR. 2 BA. Cpts, Agt 494"7551 WEEICL Y RA TES ••tlftlll _S44 __ ·2_1l_l ___ _ drps R /O s295/m o Ji\all Kitchen&TV Stunning 1 Br,· Garden tWwportleocll 3169 LI VIN G mg.se. h 81k t.o 673·1 • . H T Lane ... •-Utila'Ues To~..___ __ er ~ EXEl"UTIVE SUITE <10-4) 963·4569 963·1786. Noren· W y REN 7. • ... w ,,.......,,..... apt. Pool. rec area. $185, '•••••••••• •••••••••u 5""' tal fee, Village Real CLOSETOOCEAN JustComplete 710 W.18thSt .CM UTIUTllSPAID The ultimate In ex - Coroftca del Mar 3222 Estate Sl200. down could buy E•ecuti•e Suites Ace-A ChNd & Pet BLOCK TO OCEAN e c u t i v e s u i l e . ••••••••••••••••••••••• lovely 2 +den or 3 br 2080NewportBlvd •AHAMeftitles EASTSIDE2YRSOLD DeluxePrivate28r,2ba. Prestigious Newport ~br. 2ba; stovbe,hre$39frigs, "1g~rlobet &a utlrylr' gcautle·d.~·rsp~~.· hn?.omneRooand.B494lu~Ob7169rd Ca-Costa Mesa 2Br38a,bllns,dsl\wshr, Lge walk-in closets, From $170 Center Location, with dshW$hr. Nr c " " 642·2611 2BR $335 cpts, gar. Adulls/no pet.a. bltns garage cable TV Ocean View. Reserved · 67 · · cpts, drps. $375. 962·0678 -2BR w/frplc $345 1 blk to Ralphs Merkel. Adults/nope~. $300 mo: underground parking. -138Befenia. 5·7927. -NEW 3 Br 3 Ba Ocean-BR •-s $300 557-6462 ft4PM Oakwood offers the Nice 3 Br,1"'2 Ba. H. Cont view. 2 car gar, rncd yd, El '1Mrto Mesa 3 .-mo. a till Ju.ne 15. $37S mo. on Full quality services. 3 BR, 2 ba. dplx. Olde Condo. $270. Brad. ~·so mo lmmed. Occup. 1 IEDIOOM Inquire next door: BACH Apt. bltns, laundry yearly lease. See to ap. fineslm resort living at a Call644·7180 ch1~n: no pets. $375 .,.. Hacienda De Mesa i te c 11 r t price you can afford. r\gd~7000 (nofeel ~3147or549·9511 Possible lease option. Nochildren,nopets. l60W.Wilson,Apl#l facll. Nr. OC Colle1e. preca • a or app 260-1150 sq. Ct. Deluxe No. -.=.--------1 WALK lo beach bach col· 497·1051or993.2334 Pool & Recreation Costa Mesa $1.SS mo. 7Sl·SS61aft6PM 551.roti after 6 PM. i:ust 9-room home.2''2 yrs tage, util pd. StSs. ..Wwport hach 3269 1959 Maple An, CM I MO FIEI llMT o ... Poiftt 1126 PAU NEWPORT nld.411tfi«tas. l lf.a blocks There's $1 million in Costa Mes a . Garden, I recreation facih l>es. Prof. bldg. 540-2200 NIGHT LIGHTED TEN· bch.. 675-l9s7. 2BR condo. frplc $220. ••••••••••••••••••• •••• $210. F'Um. 2 Br. Garages, ••••••••••••••••••••••• APAITMEHTS 3BR condo, Cn cd yd , Harbor View Homes. 2br, areen lawns, purified ~icNe;rrne:03 :=t.2 bE, Ocean View 2 Bt 2 Ba, lge Bachelor lor2 CostG)IMsa 3224 Crplc. $250. 2ba, corvert den. crnr water. Adults, no pets. • a Sos · · dlx. Bhns. S239.SO Bedrooms and ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BR condo, gar, bltns, lot, immac, prof lndscpd. 2020 Fullerton Ave. 1 C.M. 64.2·l 496-9387 Townhouses Beautiful 3·BR, 2·ba Con· ster1eo10• S27MESF. INDERS $475/mo. 673-8761 days, block E. or Newport Ave 2 Br t lh Ba. brand new VERY 1 2_8 R 2.b' Fr. $239.50 do. Alt xtrs, pool, club· 644-$6 eves. For appl. & 1 block So. of Bay. Twnhse style Frplc Lee /t r g t , a Open 9-6 Daily NIS COURTS. A full lime 188 East 17th St, Cos~ 1 activities director who Mesa, auite of 4 orca, waU plans parties, BBQ's, divide. Incl utU. A/C, trips & more! Free Sun-xlnt parklnt. Ned T!J day brunch. Securily Pacific Nil I Bank. 642-4210 I bse.S325/mo. 645-377'1 642·9900 642·8690 V\ · · sa7s '2447 w errace, ups r • oo Spa-Pools· Tennis r . 1 36' Dock l br condo P patio, aar, · pets. $225. 67S·520S Across from Fashion Plus beauti ul sing es, Xlnt Costa Mesa location 5harp;newdecor.3BR,2 4 bdrm .. 2 bth .• immed. 2~ba Double gar $675 E.Sidcpvt,neat\Br.pool Elden979·1658 675-~ 'llland al J am boree on 1&2. bedroom ~pts. Approl('100sq.fl.All ulil, Ba, Pool. No pets. $395. occupancy, kids & pets, 545·7Msafter5. • · priv.&cls toshops. Util$22S, 2 Br, drps, crpts, . San . .le>*quin HillaRoad. furnJshed&unfurrusbed. A /C. inexp e n siv e ~·Jaal & cleaning nr. Lake & Park $390. lnc.$190.64~7 frplc pvt patio adj FTe.shlypamt.ed2br,2ba, (7141644-1900 Rentsfrom$1'10. 645-0822or642-3623. dep.$48.6797 ~l. 4 Br 3 Ba Condo, Fam. H--.1.·~ •-h 3740 shopping. 213·S92·SW ' ~1ln1 .. ~l. u,t.IL 498-7934 or 0 Rm pool tennis many "'"'"'!!!'°" _.ac _,.. -LIVE Nea The Be ch , Models open l O to 7. Share Law ore lull or p/t. LuX.~hc 3 Br 2\.'z Ba, Din Super 2 bedrm. ~W. R /O, xtr~s $47S 631·07S7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEW 2 BR. l lf• ba, palio, . r 8 • Sorry no pet.a or children. Accnt or lawyer. Rent RJD k pvt yd dbl cpts, drps, patio. $285. · · BEAUTIFUL 1 br furn garden adlts no pets Umque apt/office suite Cosa.,Sol Roomm a t e aervlce terms nego. Newpor t ,ar; .6l7-709laft6 mo. 963-4569 ~J.1786 N 4BR.3ba,F/R,frplc,t('n apls$170 &$180.Spanish $235.643.1903 ' · deluxe fe~tutta, ocean Beautiful AdultApts available. Month to Beach.833-85 l5. r~ntal ree, Village Real nis. pool, gardener. $400. style bldg, pvt encl gar, vu, adlts $340. 675-5805 Ft-om S 190 month occupancy. STORE·OFFIC"'·SHOP Mes• Verde Pool House Estate. 640-0008 pool sauna lndry adlts MESA VERDE VILLAS ,_..Valley 3934 21661 !Jrookhurst.. HB ~ rbaor'!~orlease •. 3bdl ,2"71 Lf.\e quiet 3Br 2ba Bluff c d . I n:toi Keelson Ln: 1 blk Larae 1&2 bdrm a pts, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 962-6653 Oakwood Newport&BaByCed ncter •r~· mo., me poo • s on os, eases w.otBeacboCCSlater . beauL interiors open to APULT C Gard.on ~Newport lv · .M. mamt.,640-4737. Uuplex. W/D, frplc, from$390toSS95 842·7848 lush water landscapine. lmmac2 Brl on· YRLY 3 br , 2 ba, by '-646-1252 6"·2228 bltns. cpt/drps. fncd yd. Agenl644·1133 Every conceivable xtra. do.aarcona,pool,nucpts beach.Nearnew,.,ltna& A~ .. tments 'B.R, 3ba, F/R, frpk, ten-Nr. Ocean. $300/$325. • STUDIO Must see to apprec. SZ7S &dr119,S225,968-7437 garage.$390.S48-4063 ...--Dana Pt·unusual offlce nis,.pool, &ardeoer, $400. S.16·2651 •BLUFFS. 4 Br 2.,.., Ba, $49 Wm!lltULY to $465 l.S5S Mesa Verde ...,~ le ... 3840 ... _,_.le.cit suite, deluxe featuru, ~ Fam. Rm. P vt pa tao. CSR · • E ._..,...,.... OC• 3 Br 2 Ba yrly 2 blks to 880 Irvine ocean vu,PI(). 67~ ------·----l block beach. 3 br. 2 ba. $415. 644·1480/ 830-5050 X Fu II Kit he "TV D r a v e a • t . ••••••••••••-••••••••• beach $350 mo 3' BR n.nhae. Pool. Encl. den. frplc. patio. Comp I. 22. Linens ~ U~litiu (714)540-8871. Just W • oC Walk to bch $180 •up. No &u-SlSs Irvine at 16th lusifteH R_... 4450 d.br gar. $325. mo med. 9442 Tiki Circle MILETOOCEAN Mesa Verde Ctr. ore Summerincreues. Pool, 64~550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 549·3&or 540-1722 S-125 mo. <213)SJ0.3109 Harbor View 3·BR. 2·ba Enc.tf.e Suites Harbor • Blvd, adj. to rec rm, drpe, crpt. Aellts, s BR, 2 ba, ear, patio, 600 SQ FT store or office n.•..D.o.• Cond 4 B 3 4 B ho f II l $5.50. mo. No lease req'd 727Y.--1.&o-n11 .. d. C.M. Goll &C. Club. no pets. 220 12lb St. block lo beach. No pets. R-4000 front. $155. 646-2130 or ~ .-.,, o, r • r me u Y crp S 1 t Prop e l i es vnn ... .. h S W N 642 --679-3709 Ba,..new cpts. drps, xlnt location. Bltns, n ~~ r · BeachBlvdatYorklown Quiet2br.1Vz bastudlo. 536·8505• 219 i 5t t , Yrly. · wpt ·l603 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -~-------palat..~mo. S4S·2241 schools. 963·5985 Sl'-0411 Dog ok. Patio. Cpls only. 535·703l. 2BRor3BI\ Patti)' furn. Rooms 525 wk u P · ~6UHA llACH . 2-Sty. A-frame. 3 BR. 2 ba $200. 6lOJoann S48·9573 EX lge. 2 br. 2 ba, dlx l House toOcean w/.kitchen. Apts $37.50 ~ Mesa.Verde 3Br. lge FR. lnme 3244 DJb. gar. Pools tennis. SMAUBEACHHOTEL . poQlside apt nr. bch. ea n673•7180 wk up. 548·9155 or ~or (ncd'&ack yd, S3SO mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• $425.Agt.548·1290 Rooma$23.50week. Ea.sts1de~br,newcpt.s& Adlt, no pets. $195. 645-3967 Jn Surf&SandSbopplQg 7~1 * REHT ALS * NEWPORT HbIGHTS Apt.a $110. mo. 536·7058 d.rps, patio & garage. Nr. 538-8362 2 Br duplex, newly dee .. N ti d St I Village. Ample parking, ;•BR UNIVERSITY PARK c. Sl\opa . Adults , no trplc, maanificent view ow ren n.. na es, popular hotel o n the Nice • 2 BA, C06la 4 BR,2•n ba,rurn .•• $500 Lg 2 Br, 1 Ba, yd, gar, ...._wport .. aeh 1769 child/pets.$225.642·6035 NewDeluxeTrlplex.24'3 ol h arbor . boats, kitchenettes. Pools, TV. beach. 175 rooms & 2 Mesa home. Quiet st. 3 8 R f 2 b "'"'""' $310.an.6.646·1514 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bra Nice. quJet Nr S· Mariner's Mlle $39S mo Dally, wkly, monthly. r estaurants provide Clo~~ t'O Schools. Call • am rm. a ··_,., 2 Br 1 Ba bltns squeeky · ' · • · · · Adult• o nly no pet1 p de1lnan traffic: No A1dine,546-5880 THE TERRACE 3 BR, 2 Ba . lge airy l or 2 Br, adults, no pets. clean, n~w faint, cpts, Point Shopplhl Cntr . 645-6392 days a sk for • e • 3 BB, 'family rm, pool, eact. 11rage, frpls. $375. Afle6, 8'6-S911 3 BR. 2 Ba ...... $420/435 kitchen, frplc in Harbor $170/$190. 2421E.16th St. N $250 &c $340. 18482 Hunt-Ted,or962·9686 eves 53fJ.tl70 common area expense. TURTLE ROCK TERR. v I e w a r e a . I nc I . N. Hts. 646-1801 ~~. Ap't.8:. Sho~limoa.!b~ lngton St. 557·4608 & S l 3 b d 2 b 2 Room for re nt in very l1e Anntactu .• alHle.aawes. aCvraoUn.rCoatnh-4 BR 4 Ba P I I t & 530-5715 pac ous r, en, a, h . · · . oo man gardener & comm. pool S<tO WK UP 1&2 Bdr Ph. 675·0896or 642-8907 s/decks, frplc, gar. $365 &sunny all new ouse, an (714)49'"'5'14 ~ardenerpaad racil. $500. Call Sam Bach. Color TV. maid . IUCITOIEACH yrly.Adlts646-1972 C~~· kitch & balb --------- I>elQe t.dplex. 3 Br. 2 ba, ••• • · ·· · · .. · · .. · · • $1000 751-4952. no ans. 759-0666 serv, pool. THE MESA. Walk to 17th St. 1hoppmg 12 3 Bedroom A ts pnv 11 college student IDEAL SHOPS frp~, bltns . dshwhr. DEERFIELD 415 N Newport Bl N area from lbese neWl)' i.ioNS EST AT~ YRLY. 2 Br, IY. ba, frplc, prel'd. Nd Ref't. 640-8875 avail in the mall at the patio, ..No pets. M9-08l2 2BR,21~ Ba •••••••• $350 LEA.SE OPTION· 5 BR. 4 648-968t • refurbished 2 Br apts. 535-2579 592·SOlO 1 blk to bch. $300 Call Factor y, Can n ery 3 BR. 2 Ba .•••.•••.. $42S Ba, home on Golf Course S22S mo. 548·4971 645-7054 Village. N.B. 871·"°6; _a_ft_er_s_63_1_-20_1s ____ , WALNUT SQUARE in Santa Ana Hts. ~75. Oceanlroot 2 story luxu.ry Lar 3 b 2 b 1 2 8~ Gar Child OK. · ROotll& lowd 4050 6'73-9l93 B SIDE 2 br. w ooded 2 DR. 2 Ba .......•... $325 p I m 0. By 0 w n e r . 1 br apt. $550. yrly lae, an le::i. N!• pet:.· :::11 Bolg~ Chic'atHeU area. • ...................... _.;,.... ______ _ calbW'lth fenced yard. GREENTREE 640-4082 cl.util.875·3823 2 11176 Call after 6 S21.S. Days, 2l3-43l·2SZ7 STIPSTOllACH Free room&boardinex· ................. 4100 .$111. in.. 548..fl680 2 BR. 1 Ba ········"· $340 4 BR, lam. rm. & den or 644-4847 or 640-ll980 Mr. T homas, 840· 1'38 2 BR, 2 ba, yt ly, furn. chanae tor care ol elder· ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• ~if.WlpdS185 2'-" chtplx. tncd y d , trp1c, rarage, $235. 2.Blh'9ftdo. yd, car $295 3Slty.S.dilldren ak $27S 3111trfllcd )'d, frplc, pool sm. HOMEFJNDER~ -~-9900 3S.2el'"Fam. Rm. frplc, .~'cir.pa, bltns, dbl 1ar. fnad d, $345-mo. lnclds Rancho San Joaqwo Sth BR. 1 Yr. lease . OCIAMFRONT Eves. "75 ly wom an. No cooklnc. 2 BR,2 Ba ........... $SSO w t 1ur $650 Mod2Br.Wlnter~. 2 BR unfurn, Westside. 3BR,2ba.Wot.r.$3SO CaJlbefore 9am/eft.8pm AllPOlT 2BR.2CbQa,UdEenTS460CLU/SOOB ~~A"' ~est.r Yrly.$4$0.Call $200. IJA\UR~lu'-38R,1~ba house$375 499.3235 33QOSquuePeet RA e•· . 645-2016 or 675·'533 Agent. 875-8800 """,..., ~ • ".., SIA WIND l'L.......Jl .... ___ l9W Per Sq. Fl. 3BR.2Ba ........... $450 3Br, 2Ba, bltu, 1arage. ! . MeadowlatkOotrCoune Condo· 2 Bil a Ba Un -.wn...-4150 2 .0.1 ~ ... ,,_.... ~ NEWPORT BEACH Newport Shores. •azs Costa Mesa 3724 C..te Med 3724 DILUXI rum. yearly . $.oo . . ....................... am€€P?ti;~ vuaca, 3 BR. 2 Ba ........... $375 mo. &45-1078 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......... -.. •••••••••• 0 n 8 , \ * 0 , t b re e Lovtni car. tor elder ly tt.bar lllfttt. C:.. 4 BR, 21f.a Ba •••••••.. $500 bedrooms a"'allaa..• -" malt or fem. Bal. diets, s.ca....te 3Z76 We've Opened TL.-Doors have bu~. ;;eat: bome.v.patio.&44..3833 ••••• 67M40o 552-7500 red hill ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'lfl9 h L d hwH era. ocate iq Rffthlltto..._. 4300 2000 Sq. f t. o U. & Quality 3 br, 2 ba. 2 On A New Concept l)l'ftUltloua uu. a BR, ••••••••••••••••••••••• warehouse IPIC. diNCl· Frplc'a, xlnl bch loc. $400 tpllcc. : 2't11 ba $3'15 2 Bl\ f o mo. 7141492.-8475 eves. In •d • • 1 Rmrnate t.o a hare 110 dpllc. I Y a c r ou ro m C end yatd, $290. 1 Bl\l .-. 2 DA 2 Ba Pvt In CdM 1 child OK Airport. 549-1480. ResloeNT~AL MOTEl ptiv balcof\)' talO. WU ,.,_,.""' ~ · ;, n"" · 'r «JOaider ehUdren. S.. at kh 11 .,.er. '550. y rly. 656-3lOO,o75---.wevea. New bldg JSOO aq. ft .• M·l L'UfNG lntenectlon Or~m & r?t-tta•~o Male /Fem , furn exctpl w/fl. otc. Lge rear dt. 11c water&grdnr. 546·4141 realt y s.. ...... .• ~:if!:~ ••••• ?~?.~ Med'Wlll'de 4br, 2ba, 2 ~ .car•pr; pat.&o. $490 mo. ~ Dana Blulft Pl\Alh a Br MMf'M• 2~ ba Townhoua . Fan'. 3 8 l Ba din UNIV Pk Ten. 2 Br, FR, ·lutic Wh itewater h~e yd ~ frplc, patios, pool, •ub-Marina View. "50. (W) 14 • · lease 5 mos. $350. Ph: an-0608 552-3016 ---------· ... ,.., ' Heil,11.8 . rot JeU.. Terrace apt. foryr rm.$13S·lll/ltt.No aq.Ct. Daya S40·~'ll0 ; AMBASSADOR K..tA911r1lfflty eo• bay vte-.. 2nc1 ftoor. 1 m oke , &a l Penlh . eves.6'6-06&1 l~~....,~~l.~848~·~13~00~ 4bl\ 4 be, 30' ll• rm , din 615-7584 Otrice/lndua,nal apace. 1;: rm, brktil. rm, atr. Call WANTTOAVOJOTIIE LagNiauel ar.a400/3000 INN ... LG& Vecanl 2 w. · f'7S.7030 RIP.oFF ARTIST S. F. Nr Frwy 131·1082 ba, DtW. R•o, cpl~ .. WI .... 1-00 Ydi. iO CAU,, .. OUSE-MATES drpt. All ut I •d~ be-ch. 3 81\ ~ 2 BR. andfiAchom.-owbois FOR lease 186S Plactnlia BtOc*Jmnl • Jb.mtltoo. '3'0. Yearly. n plcs.. D dabl Ave. C.M. MOO aq ft fnS FROM Aft, No fH ..... w t ; bltns,1ara,...MM102 •Wft e MS-U6' "6-4938 TOSblre Houtin• Wllh -------- ll:Z-4.1.U A.alt tor Jlm + I ' ' . . ' ~~~!.~~!~ .. !~.~~ ~!.!'!~ ... ~!.~~ Lost. Fo.d 5300 W.ted, 7075 Help Wanted 71 00 tWp W•ted 7100 Help Wanted 7100 H.tp w t d 7100 Help w ... .d • 1.io· · 1 ' 1200 Sq. Ft. M-1 space 100°' RETUDN ;;~~~·:··;;;v·:;·;;;;:;,; ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~~·~;~~~~~~-~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••• a.~: ..... o···E·L··,·v··E··R··v···········.·~_ .-·: .. w/front office. lge rear /0 " Beads. Vic: NB Tenrus exper nr So. Const Plaza BOYS AND GIRLS door. $189.50 mo. 629 URGENT! Partner Club.675-3589 SelectiveHousehold, 557-3986 Terminal Way. 540-5710 needed with $10,000. for Lo 1 d' D' d Nuning&FamilyCare iir.•uno--·TOR If you are 12to16 years old and would ROUTE •.~ .... · · 1 days,646-068leves. prime R. E. lnvestinent. st a ies .tamon. / Personnel 5A '"'""A like to earn $20 to $S0 and more per ---------• 6 Months pay of r . Emera.Id ring "! 1 c Employer Pays Fee Leading CdM salon. Jim, Secured! Principals on· Wes t cltrr S~opping 4500CampusDnveN.B. 644-7321,552·0943 week. with a chance to win a trip to Motor Route delivery route for Dairy . Reftfals Want.ct 4600 ly. 968-0888or968--0337 Center .. sentamental CallS46-l505 Philadelphia, Cape Kennedy or Pilot in Newport Beach, afternooas4:SO · • ••••••••••••••••••••••• value, liberal reward IEAUTY OPR Washington. D.C. and cash awards, ~d · Reliable, employed mar-, Trust 642-0062 Chauffer • Companion . F /time. No following b'k to 5: 30 and Saturday and Sun ay ried couple looking for Deidi 5035 light cook. Bonded. ntt. Comm/guarantee. 1 es and other prizes, I have a job for mornings. For details phone 642....t..~1 2BR. unfurnished hse. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost .male blk Co~ker Helen. 548-7197 645-1050 you. IC you are willing to work hard, ask for Mr. Salatti. 11 :<»to12:00 :r:,:ep · • J Fnc:d yrd gar pets Spaniel vie Placenua & learn responsibility and the value of .Equal Opportunity • . I OK. ·$200."or ~~der . LOANS up to 80% Wilson Reward. 645-1834 Combination driver. BkkprSecy to$10,l92 money. call Mr. Scott, 549-8956. .Employer • !<.•'lo 646-5373 an . 5 please I st TO Loam-8~4o;. Lo ST: Black M a I e ~e ~ri· lbody 1guca~ & .Y ARIETY ~ERE! Transportation will be furnished. This 0 c k · H bo & ~ • wa rave • m•S· EnJOY the excitement of Male 29, wants to share 2nd TD Lomts V?Cct e~ • mcixM. Rar rrd tian man 45. ref.963-4707. this growing firm that is not a paper route. ' rent with M I F J Fai lT · · 1949 1 ona, · ewa · ks b · h · · E l 0 rt •t E l , a e, ema e · res ermssince 646•9234. Housecleaning, cleanups, see. n~ t 10d1v. for qua ppo urn y mp oyer , ~':f!': Hi ar~~-a9f9~~i Sattler Mtg. Co. trans. Reliable. 5 yrs . vaned dul1es. Call J_ean an 4PM. 642-2171 545·0611 Pet"SOllClls 5350 Ref. 645-3750 Eddy, ~2700. Dennis & ---------·---------••••••••••••••••••••••• Den.n1s Per.sonnet HelpW•ted 7100 HelpWant~d 7100 ~tMlfth/ Drinkjng problem? ~rvtce or Irvine, 2082 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pft'IOM!ls/ Michelson Dr. . L t&FoUnd CallAlcoholHelpline HtlpW..tecl 7 100 Deliverymen over 21. OS 24 hrs a day 835-3830 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CHEMICAL i:?erm. p /l. Early morn •••••••••••••••• ••••••• •••••••••••• ••••••• •••• l.A T' d 1· l C l\1 • lusiMll L.ost&FoMH 5300 SPIRITUAL READER AccountantClerk BOYS & Girls hom~~e$25~1 vriio~ Cali OpportuRlty 5005 •••••••••••••••••••••• OpenlOAM-lOPM Get lllCasllAow lOtol.fyearsolage. Dai· SALES 548·1740. 10To15 Years Old JUNIOR SALESMAN -.. •••••••••••••••••,••••• LOST Black & tan female Advice on all matters, Responsible indiv. to ly Pilot delivery routes ---------• 1ffr & Wine Ta .. m Bloodhound. Ans to Cleo. 312 N. El Camino Real, handle top notch AIP. may be available in your We have a territnrv •DEMONSTR.ATORS• Earn $20-$40 per week working after .... ~ 52500 M--..u.. Call Lindy 645.7758• San Clemente. For appt. A/R position w Hast area. Earn profit for de-~' P /l Will train. car. school & Saturdays. Huntington Be.ach ~ . "'"" • 492.9034 492·9136 paced . firm. Call Chris liveries & cash, trips or opett for a salesperson 847-8727, 543.3504 1 Le Owner r""'iring an•r 13 F d Stewart ... 0 1288 Dennis -'-'""'--to t & Fountain ValJey areas on y. av.e . .,. . "' . oun : Male Shellie. Tri • .._. · merchandise for selling --·-. e .... up o yrs. in business. This color. w/rabies tag. Vic: Los~ you; cool ~ith Y?"r & Dennis Personnel new subscriptions. For their full potefttial. We DEN}A~ASSISTANT name, address & phone number OD tape long est. tavern has been Trubuco/ Marg uerite. children. Help LS availa· Service or Huntineton information please call 4 0 .td Ch a 1rs 1 de . ex per recorder. Call 536-4298. awinnerforyears.Good MV.830-7987. ble24bn.549-8939 Beac:b,16168BeachBlvd, 642.4321. From San '!!.!... .... a yr. necessary.N.B.644·9211. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1 game action. Lots of in-Suitel21. Clemente-San Juan _.-achr er of pro-: .. dust. & local trade. Agt. FOUND : 1/26/76 Sml FOXY GIRLS C . II 'f • n 1 p eci 0 I t DENTA:L ASSI.STANT, 531-4460 black & white M. Dog. OUTCAILMASSAGE Accounts Receivable Clk 4=::: Ji~~fo'n ~Te. chemicals fot" sale to Chalrs1d~ f/t1me. Al Hftp W•ted 7 100 Hefp W..ted . ~J OO ~ Halecrest, CM.. 546-2974 M.ODELlNG must have general office j<>-£l Toro area, call Industrial lnstitutioeal least 6 mos exper. Some ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••~••• Distributorship Home-Office·Sludio. Skills. $450 mo to start 581 .... o • Sat. HB. 846-3540. H IRDRESSER RESPONSIBLE FOUND: Sml yog tan S42-3Ul9 Will train. Airport area. -.1 · & commerci al ac · A 1A1 D S for Small PERSON maledog.Meoadellllar. Ca11Frank833·0123 EqualOppor.Employer cou..ts We ho .. a DENTAL With somelollowing,for EXCLUSlVE Motel. Wanted to own and 546-5839. PREGNANT? _...· t b ._ Enthusiastic person will· new salon, lop pcrcen· Hours can be arran&ed. operate candy and c:on-Caring confidential c0t.,...... e s ep Y s.? ing to undertake front & tage, Hair al 250 Design 494-8521 fectlon route. Costa FOUN~: Siam~se cat, counseling & referral. IOAT IUILDERS tr•Mnc) prOCJ"Oll' that bck ofc duties for enjoya· Plaza 640·7870. 1--------- Mesa and surrounding lge .. vie. ~oolwich Ave., Abortion, adoption & Sailboat manuf. has the enables a mmt to eWft ble dental prac. 552·7800 area. Plea.sanl business. Laguna Hills. 581-&6 keeping. following immed. vacan· 1.-di--£ _ ___.._ to Irvine. HOSTESS APCARE u7 ......... cies for exper. person· "' ~· r -~ ··-· ---------· M ... N ... GEME .... T TR .... E Hi,gb profit items. CanyouND large black .,.. . ........, nel: effort.YoucClftbtlilda DRIVERS WANTED "'A ~ "' start part time. Age or Shepherd Young male. M•ss•l'!.E Apprenlice·Gen'l Shop & •loncler/Detailer Ni1lt 'I that suret Menor Women For prestigious N.B. expenence. not_ impor-After 6 pm, G42·2S39. A AW we 1 ding . APP 1 Y at °' uri as restaurant. Management tant. Reqwtes c:ar and Fl&URE MODl!!•s •loot <:carpenters future MC ty. Must be2.5 or over or rest. exper. helpful. $1500. cash lnvestmenL Found Male Beagle puppy ..., Marine Fabricators, 909 Each position req's min 1 Apply In Person but not req'd. Over 25. Fordetaibwrlte: nr 20th & Tustin C.M. ESCORTS W.l5thSt.N. B. yr related boat exper. For ct.tolls concentilM) YeHowCab Good salary & benefits. ••CANDY ROUTE#23". 646-7589 Outcall·Appt.only ATIEHTION! Applicantmusthaveown our program call 11251SlaterAvenuc _6_7_3·_939_3. ______ 1 P .O. Boxl4. Rosemead, Home-Oflice-Studio 3•6 Mo'iW-..L. tools & transp Top COLLE,..T , Mr . Fountain Valley Manag.r TrM a...-1 Aggress ive cateer minded indiv. to break in as r etai l manager w/estab'I Orange Co. firm. Call Bob Wd t 848·1288. Dennis Ir Der>- nas Personnel Service o( Huntington Beach. 16168 Beach Blvd. Suite 121.. Calif. 91770 Include FOUNVl?;rHedDoberman, 631·3111 ~ wages & xlnt co . ~ HOUSEKEEPER phoQenumber. 1c. unt. Bcb. 18 & Over benefits. Apply to Guard Olenick ot C2 1 l I DRIVERS F/lime . Conv. Hospital. 530-3170 MASSAcjE at Westsail Corp .. 275 283-792 1. After 5 CCross-COWlfryl Park Lido Conv. Center, Management Coffee Shop ltMht LOST vie of Seaward Rd. HOTEL-OFFICE-HOME We will train you in our McCormick Ave. C.M. p . m . c a II , ( 7 I 4 I No special Lie req'd. !~ .!_?!gsh1p Rd, N .B. PEOPLE PER.SON NetsSl600,lllortlwl. CdM. lovable gray B\"APPOlNTMENT business. No strikes or 493-5995. MacGregorYacht Corp .,..,......,....., Exec looking for 1M1rl- Cloaed ~ d•y Sat., all neutered male cat wear· 6:00 PM to 4:00 AM layoffs, plenty or work. Jr Boat Manufacturing 1631 Placentia. C.M. ti me ass o'C i • t.e in daySwf. Ultw11n't for i·ngfleacollar.Hassmall 540-GIRL you're ambitious & IE H d Ii S K wholesalesupplies.l'\rll" ·-·'d like a t>Acit' 'on out *,..-L~ •-sin+'-DRJYER.r •• ....... TS .. Y rau cs 18 ., owners ill health shop scar on nose Ans to wvw ,,..., 1 ~--,_ ~ Church Baby Nursery Al· _._....__.... Sec h M u t capitalized. 673-2223. wouldn't be for sale. Re· Herman . 673.7511 or TheG ....... To-=h Of the or.tinary Call •Ml.... tend. Sun AM & PM. Wed Drivers wanted with 0rif:r be,,~g 0= cenl heart attack forces 673.2836 Fortbehllleext.ras bctwn9:30-4l3p.m. •l..ter.CarpeRt~s Eves. Rev. Martin, knowledge of indoor ·Recepl/Type toS600 Mmtageor/Res'-'.e owner to sell. Agt. UBI. · in out-call musage, Experienced 556-7787. houseplanlS for sales & Secretary/sh $675 Must have exper. in food, 531-4460,308N. Harbor,LOSTGermanSbortHair call835-4519 539 .. 1111 •Tr•Hs &Scmden delivery in 0 .C. area. P/tGen'IOf'c S2.75hr &beverage&banquets. SA Pomler wearing red col· Mus t own r e liable I · p I Oceanfront hotel in lar. Childs compa nion. WHAT SIGN ARE YOU? AUTO MACHINIST Apply In Person CLERICAL vehicle-van or station ~n~. 1~~oc=t:~:~~y Laguna Beach. R~ to Siver& T~ Needs MEDICATION Work shop forming. 645·11.23 ERICSON YACHTS Newport Center firm . wagon. E~m Sl50+ wk· Suile224 f).(2.1470 Classified ad no. 633' c:/o $45,000 Yrly "-t IMM.ED I ATE Ly! Available l? 12 peopl_e. 1 1931 Deere Ave, 5 yrs. A/P & AIR & in-ly. Apply in person. The _,.,,-.------... Daily Pilot, PO Box'. 1S60. Hand craft.ed &sold from Please c:all 645-2754 aft ff?m ea~h signor Zod1~~· Santa Ana venlory ex pr. Project Plant Pusher, 524 W. 19th ~~---Costa Mesa, Ca 92626 this well · located shop. 5:30. DIScuss1ons. on c~eat1v1· AYON reaPonsibility & office St. C.M. llllo..ITERVIEWERS OwnerofZy-aolnainto ly, relat1onsh1ps & Bkk As · t F/Ch machine skills. 640-4630, "' Mcrine MKJJanjc. Mfg .• needs~;p'ital.·Anx-LOST: blk rem C~t. personal e n e r gy. ~kttotnLi~! 8lo5wkdys. ••EHTRY LEYB.•• AT HOME Immediate employmeot A ious Uto 8 s 1 eu. $15,000 dwn. ~~~~P~~f ~h~~.Y~~: &44-22.23. START SAVING Growing co. seeks talent· "Eager Beginner I'' •Ha ve run offering rpo;nyrig::n!fi~~s~:'; gt. · 531-4460. 308 N. den, H.B. Ans. to "Fiat" *Grand Opening• AGAIN ed person to' handle ac· CLERICAL COME IN NOW! Learn Charge Ac counts work. Expr. onlv need Karbor,SA. 898-5124 A·PARK MASSAGE counts. U>ts or public Typing, 10 key adder by all the ropes of this busl-•Work only 4 hrs /day apply. Apply ia '._...,,... $5.00offmassagew/ad Sellqualityproductslna contact. Call Cecilia tou c h , & phones . ness. Typing helpful! •Make$3·S4/hr/comm. Anchor Marine ~-if7': LOST: l /2S/76, Siamese Mon-Sat Uam·7pm nearby Territory. No ex· Will, 848-1288. Dennis & Te 1e pr0 mp t e r 0 f Call Control Career ACCOUNT ~ IALIOAISLAND Cat, male, longer hair, 1885·B Park Ave, Costa per. necess. Xlnl earn· D enni s Pers~nnel NewportBeach.642-3260 Employment Agency, DEVELOPMENT BackBayl>T,NB.Ca'lif:· W ell ,es ta~li s h ed Vic. Golden West & Ed· Mesa. iogs. p /time. Call Service of Huntington SS6-8505. SERVICES 213/945·3961 Masseuse-Up to $10 per womens specialty shop Inger HB. 841·3986 Eves. 646-9944 540-7041 or Zenith 1·1359. Beach, 16168 Beach Blvd, CLERK TYPIST. part EXEC s r.,..RETARY . . hour. We train. rorsale. Xlnt location ! REWARD! & Suite 121. time employment. Large . • KO'-udy who nds $500 & up a CallS56-6711S SOMERS REALTY l ,..:,....... & Co Ith l t be r·t & MaJor ~rp. locat.ed near mo. Sales oriented. ph: •675.4000 • FOUND: Irish Seller, ... ,,.~ BABYSITTER, wanted Book~~per •. P/T,payroll wo~~ng ~o':,d. ;::ks20 O.C.~rport.~tcom-Marilyn968..s378 MATURE WOM.AN., Fem.6-Smosold.Adams ••••••••••••••••••••••• my boAftme,pboy 2, 8·S wk, & bllling, lite accurate hrs wk lOAM -2PM Mon-pensal1on benefits. Top p/time l o ,.,.,. •• '9 & Mafnolla HB. 968-0917 Sdlooll & CM. · 6 M SS7-6148 typist, l year ex per. Fri. Hi school grad. re· typing & sh req'd. Call Laundry worker wanted newcomers & colftac:r AIRLINE, sc~eduled air Found. Female Al ban IMtnlcffoft 7005 byailter, your bome, Mornings Only 20-25 ~~ quired. 45+ WPM. able Cecilia Lawson, 540·7311. CdM Area, over lit only, merchants. FlttiMe.hn: ta.xi. S. Call!. Present belae· with red c!nar'. ••••••••••••••••••••••• CdMscbooldiat.6Yrold perweek.979·7660Glona to han.dle heavy phone. FAC:TORYHEl.Jt e~per prer. Hrs. 7:30 lo Need car, Ute' typing. operator .105!ng money Santa Ana Hts area. boy noon to 5:30 Mon-Business man looking for Apply 1~ person s:30-9:30 Wanted·Costa Mesa ~·:.S:~~i, $2.SO hr, -54-7-·:.>95 __ . __ __,, __ _ but potential IS outatand· 545-MO'? llA Thun. C.11 Barbara or part time associate Mon·Fr1 Safeco Ins. Co. Gage Manuf. concern Mechanic:, lite du". ClMs ln1. Xlnt terms. Aat. TRAVEL AGENT Mr. Morse. 833-0570. Eam $5000. yr. 645-llB2 · 17~70 Brookhurst, FV needs machine opr. No Legal Secy Trainee A Req'd. AppJy~ ~:S 837~ FOUND small ~rown pup-BYSlTl'ER my home --L--E.O. E. exper. nee. Call for de· A Low Careef' Shell, 990 E. (;out JilllfJ. IMDIAM.llWILIY PY · Near K llybrook own transp. f;,.. 5 yr old Ccsfeteri•W~ c~ IROlLH tails 545·0401. Awaits enthusiastic: in· NwptB<:b. AYR ·· School Call alt 6 , ~SESSTAJlT d 5bndaily,MonthruFrl. ~-ft· ' div.inthlsexcitiogplush 1 _ _..;;.._. _____ _ · NETSMS,000 • 557-0659. MONTHLY c:hll · 833-0893 Starting pay$3.05hr. Call Exper d Only. '4 Hr ~k. Female live·in companion ofc! Very influential at· Mec:haruc, full or.,..,....e, Xlnt area. Heavy ln M lb Frid .. 93 '7"'""' Benefits. Oood ata.rtang needed for elderly lady Exper necess .......,.,_.,, bletnten nlal alon•s. Found: Black female cat. Eam comm\sslon ABYSITTER, female, oo ru ay.. • _, sal. N.8. Call for appl, In gd. health (3-.. w"•). torney ! Call Barbara • . • -·-' l &c ill ll Be h whUeyou learo my home 8 AM-4 PM, ... -Mac 833-2700. Dennis & Fringe beneliLI...~. Owneraruc ous w se Vic. Warner & ac • CdM. Own trani/ret•. CAR WASH 67J...&393. Kind reliable, own trans, Denni 8 per s 0 n n e 1 Sh~ll Station. '171a • for only $15.000 down. H.B. 848.()731. PACIFIC 675-~06 eves, 833•1380 HIH.P WAKTID Cook needed for ocw Pre• refs. 644-7724, 8·10am Service of Irvine, 2082 ,_lr_v_w_e_, N_._B_. ----- Agt. 837-4200 Found: Gr ay Male Pao-Tl.A.Ya SCHOOL da.ys. Vlnc:entA389 F /timeonly. 20+ school ln lrvine C:all only. Michelson Dr. MODELOPPOJlT'UlllTY. DIMer Hse/Cktt1 die. Kern Co. lie. ~t 610 E t'7uiSt, S. Ana ~nklng MITRO CAR WASH 552•7331 GEHIRAL OFC . LEGAL SECR.ETA RY Glr~s. be a C!DledDW _m GROSSS30.000MO. or831-2640. Mlss. Vtejo. 543-6615 TELLER/ 2950HarborBl,C.M. CO()t(..P/f E P/time. Exper. pref'd. Exper .. gd skills req. maJormagaz1ne.-...p. ~Bar. •--ree slnd bldg. r o u n d : Y o u n g Accredited by NATTS NEW ACCOUNTS CASHlER Hunt. Bch IM Typing 60, tiling. phone Salary comme nsurale nee., Top ~ay. F!t ll)· 150 car pkg. Seats 'I.SO. doa,medlum 1lie male. Ellablished1963 ElcperSavlnlJl&Loan leUpFrowtl . 536-30l2 work. Call 714/540-l!Wl w/exp.496-0411 terview ~nte ~ tMe, Owners health forces Black &c belle. NeedJ FlnaoclalAldPro1rams banking employee for Forpoisedreadytowork COOK-Raleigh Hills askforMarge. IKL. lnc, Dally Palot P.O. 9;)x ~~~ood t.enna. Al\. home. 675-2533. bead t eller, new ac-lndiv. Potential unllmlt· Hosp., 1501 E. 16th St, '360Campus Dr, N.B. M.ACHJNIST 1560. Costa M .. <Ja • ....:;;:..:.....:;;:.:.:;.. ______ FOUN~ 1/21 Cat, atrlped ,,. W-.4. 7075 counts position, w/Sav· ed for career w/eatab'l Newport Beach. &45-5707. General Dentist looking 938218 6 0 GAaDENlNNG R~UTC~M feQtale, 2 c:oJora. Vic. "••••••••••••••••••••• !!'_.PJ" Loan. F\.111 llXJme. co. Call Mar.>' Lewis. Counter 1lrl. Quality for a.\st who also enjoys TURRET LATH£ MOD£LS.MAMmms for ••le pt. • "' O..Va/0.S.•ere. H .B. BACHELORS! ..,.n uan Cap area. n M ·l288. Oenma " Den· quick food restaurant. desk duties. t;xper with Setup operator. own Ftcure M~ SlcGt1.I att•.M5-3331 teO-USS Eaic:leot, lnteUlgeot, at· ~"!::~~~it.a, cal nil Personnel Service ol Experpref'd.540-3077. Insurance & collediont tooll.Mlo4yrsHper. needtd. Top~. NlSOC1AT£·Let meabO'# • tuctlve youne woman llRENTWOOD Huntington Beach, 16188 helpful. X ·Ray cert. Studio. &31-•u-- 1C*1'owtotan S..tops~ LOST MUI tat. All,..., dellr 1 weekly or bl · SAVlNGSatLOAN BeacbBJvd,Suitel21. CftEDlT·Ntw Accounts, necessary.846-G638 TOOL & NUJ"M-Chargo. a rutl t:nc. $200 Inv. For ln w/wtlt.feet. ~. VJctori• •eeldf houaekeeplna An Equal Oppty Eatploy CASHIER prefer•bly ~Rec-SJ Gm•:.,.or~~· DIE M••(I ... time, 1·11, H-.~· teniew. Mr. Daniel• lrl9lbSt. Bo10rie•t.n1. job.SaU.factlon1uaran· BARu "•D ....... •-l--'tt/bldtPI' Stuard'• ... ":· ~ • ' GetaOfc=Sec M Coav.Hoap.MT •mi MZ-49Mor6*8498eva. teed . References . ~ , ... er """""' on· E 8'7$4CISIS. Reu.t. Allnct. •'11 Cal Met Card SK xper. on procreulve Nunes Aides ~ ..,. DR.1:181...,.aalt. Top Lost: Fem Queen1land MU$44. Dorothy. ~YCOOIS a lftrYe hePald di A..,.1., 1,. ft--per. Count,,. Qttt~•· C.ll. iocaUon. j)•ul, littler. Blk/trey, Tan Mature, experlenttd UTICl.a..-CASHIB DAYIUSIOYS U1tlelndetsA1ency • ...:.~""·o··~;.-Ol·P HocM,~ -,• Gl·HOO • 845-'°°° apt points. Sml, •bolt hair. woman driver. wlll take II.A -Exper'd. Mon. Tues a. 4020 Blrcb St, Ste 10' ~... " ,. r~ 2lJ San Juan Cap area. CnywherelnSo.Cll. Mfo:w/ffortop ~.N Thurs 12.9• Sat ii Sun NewreBeac:h 833.iteo l300E Normandy PISA N1trsln1 AUdS., t. On ~b UND .. ~OM!T81 d ~~):r~ez:31.1on " M2·SSS6 s.ons.54().1512,644>oeet •.:»e.~oeoH._. afC:~!n~r3~m c.1 rorappt/Eatab '&s u~~~ow~':o~::c1~· ~:~•:aaf<!·,::.!~ • u1y Plllrn • • Lad)' will m1na11 small Beautician. some ctien .,. _..,. .,.w.,.. COCO'S ~-'" d th. th Equal Oppor. Employtl" 11\Urln Ave, CllUlllAJ 111 OrolMI over $.1,000 per unil·•pt.a In exch for 2 br lele ror new u lon ac1ja 21888 HITbor 81. CM .. --.wn., any ma w1 a t~~~~~~~~~~l mo. oYiw' reUriD,_ call Clatslfled Adi tell bil uafurn apt. Oood loc:. cent w Gile 12, LalW> · La .. 11 H I • Daily Pilot Cla.saified Ad i· OPTICAL CL ~11 ll•m•, 1m1U Retns or Modern. t:xpet 'd . Hill• Ltlaur• wo~ld .SillthlnprastwiU\Dally l&OOlAv.deLaC.rJota t a •impae maller ••• Ftnd wt'll )'OU want ta TRAIN&E-lii~9itm! 11Mty Re1Jty~11n a.njlten1~Ma..arra. set.S7U. 830-o&tO PU04.Wa~Ada. • ~11,pPpor. &mptoyer Justcall642·5618. Dally PilotClaasllled!. UGO Ptact. NB .... 1 • • ~.........-....~ONE MILLION DOLLARS WORTH OF • OJ Pontiac's Economy Champ. Lots of equipment including tinted gtass. wsw tires, optional 140 engine. 5 yr.·60,000 mile engine warranty. Immediate Delivery . IJ2C11B6U521604 s3195 MONTE CARLO 15175 Monte Carlo. V-8, auto. trans., fadory air conditioning, power steering, power disc brakes, tinted glass, $ Landau lop. AM /FM 4795 stereo radio and 8 !rack tape player. Less than 10,1)()() miles. (785MMP) HONDA CVCC 1975 HONDA Civic. 4 cy1 .. 4 speed. low mileage, xtra sharp. (764MOX) s2995 1974 Capri. v..a. auto. trw..., tadory atr conclitlonlng, AM/FM 1::J~PB~ow mllesoe. $ 339 5 • . " NEW'76 GRAND PRIX Loaded with eQuipment including factory air conditioning , rallye wheels. and much more. Immediate Delivery. 12J57P6P199457 MONZA 2+2 1975 Chervolet Monza. 4 cyl., 4 speed, factory air condilloning , AM /FM <ad;o, •allye wheels. $3695 Less than 10,000 miles. (607LWC) 1971 Pontiac Grand Prix. V-8, auto. trans .• factory air conditioning, full power. '8dlo. heale,, Landsu s2395 top . Nice , Ni c e . 1408GDMI .. . NEW '76 SUN BIRD Southern Calffornia'a· largest selection of new Fireblrda . Immediate Delivery of 8 cyla .• Esprits, Formulas and Trans Am. Pontiac's hot new s~ car. Lot. or equipment. Immediate Delivery. 1Dt2M27Bt!C104272 $AYE CAMPER VAN ConYersion 1999 TrllVCeO Van CoY8t'Sion, Dodge ch1stla. V-8, auto. trans .. raised top Ser 11987078395 ~1995 ·75 Ford Ranchero. v..e. auto. trans .. factory air conditioning, lull POWer. radio, heater, LowmHe~e (1649BUI $ 439 5 11i174 Mercury Comet. V-8, auto. trans .. factory ak" conditioning, AM/FM l stereo radio, Lat"ldau s top. Sharp. (400KRLJ • s3495 '• -. ,, •• .. ' MO,N H Fii CINC A'i : BLI . ' ·~.-"' ·: ' J ' I ~. I .WE EXPERTLY l>O k G.M.A.C.· & Bank -Finant lng Available.· Trade-in~ Accepted. PONTIAC WARRA~TY WORK ;~. REGARDLESS OF WJ:i.ERE..Y-0-U -;: ·ORIGINAl-L'f'PURCHASED YOUR CAR. 1 .;. ·1• ~. l.:, . WE LEASE ALL MAKES AND MODELS;: '~~~ • •• \ SALES OPEN DAILY 9 ... M-1 OPM. 1 ',.: •• .. • SERVICE 7:30 AM.Q PM MON., TUEi. THRU l'AI. 7:90 AM-8 PM .• . ' ·' •• t;t J .• .. •• These are some of the finest used car values available. Loaded with equipment Including POWer steering, power brakes and factory air conditioning. As low as $3495. Lie 1915LPO USED 53495 A QrMt value with Big cer Inside - small car outside features. Good economy too . Loaded with eqojpment including fectory air. M low es '3395. Lie. 1913CPO USED 5 3395 GRAND PRIX SJ ING BLE ON APPROVED CREDIT 71 Pontiac Grand Prix SJ. V-81 auto. trans.. factory air conditioning, power atfff'lng. pawer (disc) $ 2995 brake&. power windows. AM/FM stereo. Landau tap. wow. LUV PICK-UP TRUCK lWS Chevrolet LUV Pick-.up. 4 cyt .. 4 speed. mag wheels. Nice. (92905R) Several of these beautiful Ventura available equipped with economical e cyt. engine, automatic transmission and power steering. These low mileage beauties start as low as 12995. Lie. #818LPG USED 1973 Pontiac Catalina. V.S, auto trans factory air conditioning. power steering. r9dio, Landau tap. Nice. (924HFC) FIREBIRD ESPRIT 1972 Pontiac Flrebird Elprit V-8 auto trans full pawer Landau top Sharp (2T87M2N523907) 53195 VENTURA SJ 197& Pontiac Ventura Demonstrator. e cYl. auto. trans .• factory air condltiorring, power steering. powtr dlac brakn, ~er windows. AM/FM atereo radio. heater. whitewall tlr". tinted gla••· 2Y17JSL103284 Wednetday. January 28, 1179 * DAIL y PILOT I!\ ': Just the right aize for the family looking for apace and economy. Fully equipped including factory air conditioning. Aa low a $3495. Lie. 1853MCB USED . 53495 SAFARI W AGOM 1973 Pontiac 9 pass safari Wagon. v..e. auto. trans .• factory air conditioning, power • steering power disc brakes power windows. power seats. AM/FM radio heater. whitewall tires. tinted glass. Sharp. (963GMU) 53495 .. 13600 BEACH BLVD. WESTMINSTER Cle~h llYcL At •ar'Clen Gro•• Fwy.J CALL · . 892-6651 OR ' - .. 636-2500 , . ..... -" DAILY PILOT Wednuday, January 28, 1918 l A.pplectt IO IO fwNtwe 1050 , . • --.. •· .....,.w-.1.-..11 7100,....._ W _.... 7&00 ...._ W--'--... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• n...,. -.. ....., ......... .._,.....,,. -7100 ..... W..e.4 7100 Mbc.tla•-IOIO ... aal -•• •••••••••••••••••••-•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••-••••••-•• RCA WbrJpJ, washer, 2 Mec:bt. otn n1 Rm. T1bl4t. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SALES MMD TRAINING ":lll'Wl11oW11paper promotion company has e>penlngs ror ~ople with vans or station wagons. Ear nings $150 lo $300 'or more per week . Good c hance for advancement. Must be able to work With teenagers. This is not a paper route. Call Mr. Scott at 549-8956 for appointment. Equal Opportunity EmplQyer c)'cles, xlnl condition. w/lvs It 1 thair1. $800. W .._..,..ED SlZS 67S.21llO. G me rf•ble w /4 r!ln. "'"1 Rerric. 2dr sat. Gull• S200. 5.Sl..Q47 TOP CASH DOLLAR 0 b -. PAID fOR YOUR $37. ttoman c r. _.. Movtui musl sell hOuH J £WE1.R\', WAreH&s. TELEPHOtl SALES WOMEN MEN Ova 20 6'.S-211196 full of ru.m, matrbtns dbl ART OBJECTS. GOLD d , ft bed, n Jsht at1 nd Cc SILVER SERVJC0 Have ruo selllng -Oraoge County's R,fna 2 r 12cr ~. -te druser. 3 unit combo ~. I d mod. 20d FF Xlnl cond bookshelves & cablnets. l"lNE FURN • AN· ea ing newspaper along with an U7S. Can deliver . dlo tbt & chrs, l•rops _T_t....:.QU_ES_._M_$-_2200 ___ _ important chatitydrive. _7_»'44 __ 1 ______ , ref'liger•tor, l1tc:. S4fH774 Firewood Orr. Euc. S80 DCELUMT IARMIMGS Cht9t,...._.. $St cord, del. Oak. Co&1t Two three hour hilts. 548.3086 atllpm please. Gwoge Sale IQSS Fl r e wood Suppl~. I 0:30.1:l0 5:3G-l:JO •••••• ••• • • • •• • • • • • •• •• _58_1·_11_22_. ______ 1 FULL 01 PAIT TIMI Mod.Un R~gerator Power Mowe,r, McLane l(Jng size bed, new, xtn Come in pref erred, or Mcall Mike 541.1774, ... Ed Ce r • C he' t 0 f firm $195 locl del. Usual· UHCLAIMED PHSOMAL PW•n SALE SAT. 'SHIU WID. ~LLSPACE • ... ••STOIA .. WAmfOUSISt 1164 HAMii.TOM ST. CCorrUir H•milton & Newland) W.DAYS 1-1 wmmes "' HtfpW~ 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Johnson. 250 E. 17th Street. Suite o. •--------• ~~~~ab?e1~'b~.~~ 1! ...;1Y:...h_o_m_e_8SS....;....·22_ze:_s_. __ 646_.100, Costa Mesa. Ca. 0. . IO•O moro od<ls & eoda. flB eu~lled Contract. 2000 •••••••••••••••••••••• =~~=============~== ........ ~............. Redlancb >.ve. Nwpt Hts yds carpeting, below OMC:e ,..,.. ••• a S,ut .. Gooch 1094 REAL ESTATE SALES •PITWOILD• Sale s tarts Friday. cost. 547-8729 ~~ IOll ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7100 PAINTER'S HELPER needed with some paint· tnJt exper. Call L . Viejo Pamtmg Co. 581·3228 J HetpW..W 7100Helf W.tecl 7100 Plt Bulla,"Pekes , Everything must go! Fender Mua\cmatter ....................... Girls 26" Olt~e 10.Jpd oin # 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cbibuabua P oodles Bass Gul'lar Excellent Elec typ.ewrltera. Sey $"10. 200cm Krueud akls. Tarbell, Rfflltors Rfftauraftt Coshl..-cretary-Mus t have Sbih·hu, Maltese, c '. HonH \ 1060 condition. Make offer. chra S8/Up, exc av~ cbrs Marker bindings, 10~ -----For coffee shop. Must be brokerage exper. Prefe r Shepherd, Porns. 100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• c~•1 c..o~ .,..,. .. after 6 pm•· $1.5/35, scy dalls. Pierce. boot, Lange $70. 675-8859 ,, ... Df{TI E •Free 15 day training "' ..._........... -...... w ...... c'U ~c1•11 -M course over 21 & exper'd in rest. some cashier or wire mixed puppies. Stud isvs Rea. TBh 17 h, Bay, 10 yrs. weekend!. -· · """'• --..-.,. · New aki equip 1 yr old Gathenng signatures for •CadiUac car program cashierinc. Apply in rooln m edsxpeCor. Xlnt HwO!d~· mostbretcla. 2525 W ;,l7:1> TrnPr 'd . un~!mp. $3600. USED UTIL. TRLRS. IBM TVPEWRJTER. 20• Nordica F1ow· Boots, s~ November ballot. $5.00to •Hawaii, Acapulco tnps persoo, to Mrs. Baltaur, icon . nlart e1 1, at Fairview. SA . .,,.,..,n pty.i4S..-oo CAR RI AGE . L I KE l0-l2,reas.642-5842 ss.ooperhr. 551 4407 • l-s t pl ace ·s ales in Hotel Laguna, 425 S. 640-1460 eves.531·5027. AU sites; good cond. NE w . $2 9 5 . 16 7 9 __ ;__ _____ _ Part-Time eves &-S-at_A_M_. Orange County ~:aac~~ JI w Y Laguna Secretary /Ktteptionist Tnining by John Mari.in J ew.-ry 807 0 893'2428 or 531'1426 PLACENTIA. 548·3414. TV, ladlo. Perfect for :.tudents. •1st place·hstings taken General office wol'l. at Cb1'mplon Kennels, ••••·~··••••••••••••••• Illness forces saJe. Compl Exec u l ive d .. 1 k •. HIFi, Stereo 9ot9 Inside work. Guaranteed in Orange County RETAIL Duties in~lude, typing. 82$-0211 WANTED 8 rooms of furn1ture & . "' • "••••••••••••••••••••• wage. Call J\I , aft 4pm. •1st place-Listings sold in OPENINGS FOR: filing, etc. Appointments misc itemL Example: s· credent&, sohd walnut AM/FM Stereo. Perfectly~ SA. 5429013 or G. G. OlsratngleCoundty . . . ASST.MAMAGERS Mon thru Fri, 8·5 . Bpi!;,~ & GWhile pSuhps, i~~DC~~RD~LOL~: Herculon sofa & lov· $*>0.Call968-4405 ~~~!".~'. • .,0~~7W87a14nut 530-8460. Calif~r~~=-a verttsmg m W1th.expand10g Nat'l Jr. 89'1-7623 H.B. "':"'6r~ errnan ort JEWEJ,.RY WATCHES eseat. $325. Juat pd $12oo. Complete Stenorette Em· -uv.a~ -.... _,. . s It Shop Ad HaJr Pomter X. 7 wks, 1.st. ART OBJECTS. GOLD'. Set En~yclopedlaa, dls· bassy & Fi Cord 303 Die· l>\oneer SX 039 receiver. 2 perf~d •1st pla ce-advertising in pecia Y • . ".•n· Secntwy/Recept. shots. male & female .;ILV"'R S£RVICE. hes, H1d.e-a-bed. Occ \atlng/Transcribing A tbitus ... speakers. ' the U.S.A. cement oppo~tu.n1t1es, R.E. ore. Im med open· $20.ea. 833-6754 dys, or FINE'"' FU RN & AN . chrs, antiques, Kns sz System, 8 yrs. old, gd Pioneer 8-track tape WorldftCJ •1st place w~~n~er RELO ~~~~~~.t;f;;!~~E~~f!~ lng. Good typist. die· 751.2204 eves. IQUES. 645_2200 BR set, _cs yn made cond .. $450. Olivetti Ad· player. $4SO!irm.S48·4798 Houn Home.Buyer s Contest Westminster Ma 11, taphone skills, lite bk· Yorkie. Female, 4mos ve t vet It ~lng room ding Machine. 5 yrs. old, aft 6. Astrfor Henry. 9om-2:l Opm or I~ unhc~nsed, .let us as· Westm. kpng. O.C. Airport area. very small. Man's ring, sz 10. Eye of a ensemble, 6 cocktail ta· gd cond .• $50. Call --------=--- s1st you 10 obtamrng your 833·9093. 962.8717 MalachiteStone,custom 1 ble, 2 end commodes. 644·9104. Magnavox color TV, 3:30-9pm Real Estate license. Call R.N. with surgery & R.R. -·---rnade, driftwood, casUng 551·3732. radio, pbono .. comb. Eam S4 hr putting your LEECOLLIMS exp. Mon-Fri days only. Service Sta. Attendant. 8monthlrish Setter valued at $299.50 as!<ing FJDEWOOD Pets 8087 beaut. cab. mk/ofr personality to work. All 962-5566 P/time. 842-1426. f u II or p I t i me . Sa 1 · $65. $200, 6'5.'8088 .n. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 49'l·6422 work done from our new +comm 673 3320 CdM 640.1725 Euc. $78. Oak, $89. Cord. PARROT --------- trvine ore. you must Sail maker Looking for · · · · · Machinery 8078 Del. 830-9740. Orange wing Amazon. Teac A 7030, 10" reel tore· possess a pleasant clear handworker. Exper'd on· Shipping Room help Siberian Husky, ••••••••••••••••••••••• TAME.540-6646/631:3214 el Pror. Deck. Must sell. voice & a confident man· ly. Call548·3464. needed. Call 540-8878 For male4 mo's. AKC Shops mith Vari-s peed $425 o r b est offer. ner. Perfect for s tudents appointment. 968-7722 lathe, drill, saw, corpb Color TV S69.95 guar IRISH SETTER, 8 mo, lo !181·5829 & housewives. No actual1---------1 SALES/CANVAS ~· . retract ca sters xtras B/WTV S29.95 guar gd home only!! Partia1 --------.--selhng involved. Fori----------:>ilk screen _Pnn~er ~o ALA SKAN Malamute S350.S34·35S6 • V~cuums $19.95guar shots,SS0.6al-2562. CB Radio Transceiver, moremfo.833-8098 belwn REALESTATE Hou_ily wage against print product1~n s1gns 10 Pups. AKC champion . • . KirbyVac $69.95guar Regency CR-186 never 9am·5pm. OPPORTUNITY comrn. Selling quality own shop. Piece work stock. M/Fem. Ph : Claus mgEngmeLathe,13 JAKE'S -645-6421, "-os&OrgaM 1090 used.$100.494-9504 Product w/good reputa· basis. Plenty or work. 751·0956 x 36, BridgefVlrt Mill, 42" 460 N Newport 81, N.B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Phone Order Desk. Gen office skills, gd typist. l girl office. No smokers. 3121 Redhill. CM. Apply afternoon only. Well located RE office. .:--EVESCALL642 ~ y · h St A 70 Onorung for 2 licensed t Ion . L 1 n k 1 e t t er 548-8300 anytime. GOOD NEWS table. Ul98·3007 •"7V<IQ Spinet, Upright pianos is er ereo mp, s~speople. Your own Firebrand Foods from $350, some pianos Watts. RMF. Sherwood 640-8710 • SOLDIERS A diet scient1f1 cally WATERBEDS reftn, nu hammers, Oak, ~rA~tuner, both $110. desk and phone. 18 Years ---------NO EXPERIENCE balanced for your dog Misc.u..eou. 8080 Mabogany.C93-686l .............,,, in same location. Broker SALESCLERK No s upplemenls. Jess ••••••••••••••••••••••• CompleteS129.95delived --------- advertises your listings For photo store in C.M. NECESSARY waste.Freedelivery. New Portable frplc com· NEVER UNDERSOLD HAM 10ND ORGAN25" ZENITH $188 2Yr. PRESSMAN &paysforyouradvertis· Ideal for homemaker. ArmyOpportunitles ScienceDietProducts plete w/roor package AquaHeaven $30·7062 model L·lOO Top cond Warr, Free d e l. TV E • d AB D · k ' mg Good walk m· s Call Huntington Sch 962·8822 536 1140 · PM<> ( • • JOHNS · 6454276 xper . i c . . . Workwhile the kidsare CostaMesa 645·1163 . . Ch1mney.Cosl$475.Wll Armstrong, no w ax ....... oro rer.556·7~---------.helpful. Local pnnt co for interview. W.E . fl I I ( $300 D 1· · L h R in school. P /t1me. exi· Santa Ana cA2 4130 se or · ays, rnoleum approximately w i·t s · t p · Garrard SSB Turntable Write Classified ad no. ac enmyer, ealtor, ..... . frfftoYou 8045 642 6183 ArL 6 • ur I zer pine iano ti32 C'o Daily Pilot, PO 1860 Newp ort Blvd., ble hrs. 646-2364. --------' . . pm. 3sq. yds. S20. 963-8738 Antique white $550 Xlnt. w/magnetic cartridge. STATISTICALTYPIST ••••••••••••••••••••••• 968·851 l . IMC 675-7Af><> Box 1560, Costa Mesa Ca Costa Mesa, 646·3928 : SALES-MAMAGER RECEPTIONIST Alaskan Malamute mix · King size Bdrm furn. soltd cond 979·9051 1-~-· __ ..,,,., ____ _ 92626 eves.573·4577. Wanted for women 's F or busy Newport toa goodhomc. TREES Wl\N~ED ! oak. Gun cabinet Sl50., ANTIQUE piano ap.loah&Marine leading figure salon. Will Center CPA firm. Attrac· 673·0216. 8.Y Pvt. Pl,)'" Willing l Lam P3 • t urn t ab I e · praised at $800 ·ii II ~ptMftt PRINTER Expr. Itek/ ABDick. A/C Real Estate Career train. Well groomed. t i v e girl w I go o d dig up. Free •. or re as speakers. 2 Soni TV's, K' for $600. Call 962-~ s:Ct ••••••••••••••••••••••• Must have trim figure. t elephone manner & Good hom e, Lab / please.842·3998 Skis.Lange Boots, Chan· 4pm G1111ral 9010 facil. Lag Hills. 830·0890 ATTENTION Mature women pref'd. good typing skills, will S~epherd. All shots. Obe· oxyge n reg u 1 at 0 r de Ii e r & gas logs . .' . ••••••••••••••••••••••• For appt call 642·3630. t rain good typist on d!ence school. Loves w/humidirier. new cond. 751·0956. Moy mg ~ust sacrtrice 12 foot fiber glass boat. PRODUCTION/ GEN. OFC CLERK Sailboat manuf. h as vacancy for sharp ag· gressive person who en- joys working w/people & figures. Position will in· elude maintaining pro· duel.Ion records, comp1I · i.ng daily & wkly reports Accounting expcr. de· sired. Typing not req 'd F /t1m e , grea t co. benefits, friendly at· LIC'O·UNLIC'O statistical. Call 644·8244 k1ds.554-0560aft3pm Paid SSS. Sell, $70 . Iwillbuyyourjuke boxo Spmet Piano $600. xlnt licensed •. includ17soars" Classes Start Im med. Sales Rep Food to $10,400 for interview. 2 )'T. old male 645·6146 pin ball machine. Work· cond. 640·0238 seats. with trailer and Complete Course/2 wks Sal + comm + '"'XP TELEPHONE SALES Beagle Mix. . ing or not. 839-1946 or Conn Organ theater syle '3HP motor S3SO Phone .. RUG 10' z x 9. Lime green .,.... • • 548·1.395 •Special, personal & Well estab'l firm seeks HEED 20 6454S87 eves. bound with pad. $39. Call ....,.,.2162. 2 yro old, full rhythm., ________ _ individualized help. product oriented indiv. Student:; 16 & over. Mon To gd hme. Long haired 581·9709. Girl's Schwinn 2-spd bike, $2150. 846..J792 Bo at in g .sa f ety & •Onthe;~~l~~~ing w/previous institute thru Fri, 5:30·9pm & Sat housecat.Spayed&very . . $25. Walnut cof tabl PIANO LESSONS. begin· Sea~ansh1p. Classes. •Management Op· sales background. Call AM . Hrly wage +bonus. beautiful. S yrs. old . U.S. Mags aGd tares, ft w/formica wood grai ners $15. mo. Aide in slatt;mg Tue. Feb. 3, at portumlies Bob West, 848·1288, Den· Help on proje~ for.non 846-1254. Dodge. Call reg after top, no-mar . $25. Small hy mn playing. Call Tustin HS. Rm 332, 7PM. rus & Dennis Personnel profit organital1on. PM a t 548·4987. Maple cof table $10 64S-269l eves 838·2499 ·~~~~~~~~~1;:~~ Service of Huntington Work in our ores. Apply. 3 Mos Old Fe~ Pu~py, JACUZZI gd cond. s79.50. Metal ~case sio. gd · i--------- • mosphere. Apply to Lyn Baird, Westsa1I Corp, 275 McCormick Ave. Costa Mesa. •To80'( commission Bearh,16168BeachBlvd, 10·4pm, 12065 Garden part Shep/.S 1ber1an Slerhng 40 pieces $200 cond. 1 Twm hdboard "'-I Have something lo sell? l .. License preparation Suite 121. Grove Blvd, G.G. or call Husky. Beaut1rul, shots. Fur stol~.$195. 675.5603. c at 1 a r \ e r 6 p ""' 1642·5678 Classified ads do it well. . Day or night classes. Sales Rep to $12 000 aft 4Pm S92·22S8. 751-8800 · weekdays, 645·7857 · ' . . MOBILE CB rig, 23 chnl. •Free lOdaytraining Connunicatiofts Tooling Carpenter. Mill To a lovmg home.1 Yr old all SSB brand new guar Custom lampshades: · 1 •Top officelocations Co,cr +bomas Men. Boal carpent~rs, bla c k mal e Lab./ $400.Eves.SS2·lss2 .. need to replace lba - Nol..icensenecess. Sharp aggressive indiv. Hardware Insta llatton Sheph~rd. 65 l bs, lfmp&hade!CaU~ to apply. w/leadership abilities & m.e n . Exper. only. bousetram~. ~d guard Qi'894.a2G6afler5P.M. Public Rel a hons For details, please high career goals will Will ard Boat Co. 11200 dog. . a fr e ct 1 on ale. SCRAM-LETS P bl• Call Linda SSIViSSS achieve success in this Condor, Fntn Valley shots/he. 494·2382 eves. Mother seeks plumat Co toddler daughter. ages l 'h\o 2 \.\. 962·8097. ISSUE CLERK Rich Lanzer• 833·2'100. Insure your futwe' Very cute. All males. R I t• Dennis & Dennis Person· · • 642 5842 P f W I h 4• h $40 M Bo ea ions Hole! exper . desired. nelServiceoflrvine,2062 Thisexceplionallocal co. · · ep IC-e S -COUC . ODO ga A CONVENIENT SHOPPING -~,,_ SEWINC CUIOE FOR THE QAl OH THE CO. I u IC RECEIVING ra.mous int'I firm. Call Tme Assist. Bookkeeper Setler Shep. puppies ANSWERS Leading N .B. hotel. Michelson Dr. is s eek~°J1 bright & F1~os~c:,:e -~;!':r5~-.~~:rrS20. . . Head 580E.O .. E. Call 644-1700 ext SALl:"C! ta lented an IV. Great OP· r...-!&...--8050 T h d . . b k 'ndispensables•. .,..., por.(ornon smoker.Call ~ e ri ve-in an . STUDEMTS W .a. ... T.,.•. Pattie Preston, 848-1288. ••••••••••••••••• •••••• wasestabltshed so that Sm o k-e •fire• burg la C 'if i • t t Rece t toSSSO .. ,, ~"" 1131 De · •· D · p Sho & s & ed the real owner of your ala,nns 15/20% discoun Jumbo-Knit! • or• a s ar9•s P . P /time inside work. nrus °' enms erson· P ave. new us car could get TO SEE IT oft-m fg. !:Isl price Law school s eekinCJ JUSTFORYOU! Eves&Sat..2H'i hrsper nelServtceofHuntington furn, gifts, misc. 496-5625 .-lifted MMA•ldual to Poise ~ good phone wk. $2 per hr. Apply in Beach, 16168 Beacll Blvd, Wilson's Bargain Nool( • once m a white. ----------i • ~personahty can lead to 1027 N Co t Suite l21. 545 W. 19th St. C.M. St•remornp. Mara nte Fireplace, fre-e standing ffl po.sitioft as Head of S'"'cess In this lovely ore person. o. as "' "" Hwy Ste G Lag Bcb .._IST r ec.l s krs. Garr a rd 30". black me tal $7 f'ubllc Relations . m super location. Call • · • · · • ,.... I BUY -._ ..... L.-• _ ... M . M 833 3-7pm. And General ()(fice * * * * ~urnt le S300: West· 494·2417 arter5pm ~ -expen...cC"'U anon ann, ·2700. 548·2888 Good Used Furniture & m ghouse refn g $275. 223 Gloria Mars ha l itl P eparillCJ press re-Dennis~ Dennis .Pe rson· SALES Appliances-OR I will !IBl-4297 Treatments for 1,~ pnc I & L...-A.-_ ... it nel Service of lrvme, 2082 ~ .. un.Ts, cu • Michelson Dr. Unique Security System. Sell for You. JUMIOR at WeslcliH Salon i ng publi cations-Home,Apt..Bus .• Skill& *UTOTEM* MASTERSAUCTIOH GIRL SCOUT _644_-0444 __ • ------' ~~ RP~~~ti~~t~ .fu~ i ~~: r ~ ~r::=~ ~~~~~~~~~· ~j EMnOYMEHT 646-1686 & 833·9625 UNIFORM Antique Steamer Trunlc Hews Dattds Ouellette Salons 200 aft 6pm OPPORTU ... ITIES Aft 6--Call 842· 1542 Includes complete set for $40 ea. pvt pty Mati0ttol Adn rtisin9 Newport. Center' Dr. · FullorPart·Time only$20.00/offer.846-85 642·4238 , I & Se t T · 50 h Early American Divan & rogr alft. p ans NpBch. ere ary· ypmg • s No Exper. Necessary Chair. like nu, $200, aft6 PM. Misc---~·-cooufinates new sh.t-00. F/time. 11 Mo's year. Age21·65 Eligible 642·3280 -~ · ati RECEPTIONIST Apply Laguna Beach GoToTheNearest --------Firewood-StockUp W..ted 8081 . _.. °""" on pro-Wanl well organized School District Person· TICTOCMARKET Glass/wrght iron w /4 $75Cord/Del642·2S?A ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4J"GM, lia isons w ith sharp person for busy net0ffice,494-s546. For Applications&Info chr s, $160. C hinese Xlnt cond. metal detecto W~NTED : Plumbers AhnRnl A ssocia tion, position. Admitting/ dls· s.cnt $725 OR CALL (714) 642·7702 Modrn tbl & chrs, $165. w/head:rl'ihones $lOO Pipe machb\e and dies supenisH q r aduate charging exper. he lpful, F t °? 1 . TicTocSyst•ms!Jnc. Chst of drwrs $25. 2 nite CallS4S· I? • · lf.l"thru2".Call534·368:f. I ce1nent s taff. but not neces~. Garfield ank as .. ~c d rvind ct~; stnds$10ea.Oakorcchr .,,.. • Conv Hosp ital 7781 see 5 n epen en $65.0akbuHet,$125,ma· Row Boat trailer needs WANTED : Poller 5 ht•olnl'IMtftf in Garfi.eld Ave H 8 highly s killed office Waitress. exper. f/tin\e. pie bkcse $25. Wood desk sanding & paint • $50 or Wheel, good cond., & re· Comn•dty r elations. 847.9671 • • · person for responsible Sid's Blue Beet, 107 21st &chr$4S. best ofr. Also crlb. tire asonable. Call after s Xliwt beM>flts & flexible · position. Call Control Pl, NB ar~r 4pm. Call S48·?800 rims, snow tires. 557-844 pm, 1-737-6449. -""''-hours. Start· RECEPTIONIST Career Employ ment ;---.... $66 Needed for Newport Bch Agency, 556-8505. Wl'LL PAY YOU Desks, rhrs. corree tbls, aft 5· SSCASHSSFOR •IHJ ra11g• 5 to based company. Typing TO LEAIH end tbls, lamps, pictures, Pool Table, Brunswick Good used furn/ref rigs SIOO per"'°· Send ,.._ & 10 key pre ferable. SECRET ARY A SKILL credenias, misc, 979"'373 Heritage, 4.x8'. used 1"'2 frzrs/stoves 546·0768 -to J . L Colc....s, 646-5076. Ask for Sterling Army Opportunities· ~s $7"'0 L·gi::l.t $50 -"" ADMINISTRATIVE Costa Meaa 64S·U Dining Table, 6 HI back ~ · · J • 1 " • • Mutical We • t • r • St a t e Ball b ln 1 675-2753 752·0990 I -~~ 8013 Ex per i e n c e d s a 1 es Huntington Bcb 962· chairs, lueareen v >' . · •~ ~vffllty, P.O. lox RECEPT /GIRL FRIDAY secret.My needed to .as· Santa Ana 542· $4.5, 642-8828 JB" Black & White TV. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4310. F•llerto11. Type50WPM,applyin sistdistrict manager in very good cond. $20.~TLE accordian 120· 91634. No -a.-calls person. . administration & sales Youn~ lady ba~ber t 6 cu. f\. Wutingbouse Spanish Anliq\)e Hl·back base w/case. Xlnt end. ,.--CUSTOMWEAVE coordination or active work w /aame 10 pro reJrige~tor 'Sl2S. Oval cbair,S2S.96'l·G720 Switches.$75.83CJ.3689. pleclM. CARPETS sales office. Require· gresslve'ahop in Laguna pecan dinJnt lbl, 8 ch.rs. . E.O.E. 18480PacificSt. menta: 3 to 5 years re· Bar. lie. req'd. Pam $100.~ Wanted-Juke Box or Pin· Drum. Set, 10 pc, all Fount.ainValley,Ca. ceol busin ess. ex · 49&·7075 ForSale-Dbl bed$30,crib baU Mach. Working or LudwigHar~ware.must l.E. S •• ir.s pe.rience. Xlol t.ypmg & $30. dresaer SU. Call not. alao serv. 638·2162, see \o believe, SUO, llEAL ESTATE SALES ~ ahorlband. College "-dlH ?.030 839•1946 • 54(Ml98S RESOLVE STARTTHE raduUe p referred.••••••••••••••••••••••• 54&· · AK"-1 r---------• To rnake "78 YOW' most successrul yc.r. A1k·U1 to help you plan it and br· Ing it to exciting realltyt Call Dave Cooper, $«)..9922 ... EW Yi£.. ftthnical back•rouod Alltt.... 8005 It~ u--..11 £.._ ~o s AatiOft 80 II ... ~ ~ ..,.,.... ........... •············•••······· ...................... . extremely ~elpl\al. For •••••••••••••••••••••• • This Week's Specials: RIGl;fT! •PPlicaUon, please call, Anllqut oak dreaser, Oak Pedtsltl Tbl $35(), WHO•H Raychem CorporalJon. bevele d mirro r . 4 OakCblna,'425. L...,lr¥"t••I• ('114)833-313(). Ant Equal drfwet/perf. o(led. $17 6French 0akCbra$8Sea Ear1t Mon Oppo"'ut'll6U' f!mptoyer;'. Sll"83S .. 1635 Superior Unit 4 CO&la Mesa 548·7951 Our residentl•I d1vision SICllf AIY AMTICiMll SALE Open Mon thru Sal U.t.s and sell.a more in· Acc1.trate 60 wpm + l)'P. THI WHT aeD vestmentprope,.,iesthan ing, some bookkeepin(l, ATTENTION· Do you meet investment offices. phoRe filinc. No ahtbd. W!,'!:N~~IjO~. bave qu alU)' u aed Penoaal Training, Vi* Ml.lit enjoy nannln1 d · ~A.LLMf.J0S. CW'Dtll.ll"J you ~Id Ukt Tralnln!· Prestlce ()(. nee " Qlltndlnl lo dt· WHOL-·u £ PRJCF.S toM61, butdoD't.wanltbe fie.1, full Fadlltlu. tails. ~nH of humor ~ botbilnoi;ve jlMoe ~alls Prope"')'PurchuePlan., n1c. Legal expet. to th~ P ublic. OAK or t raUlc tbru your REAL ESTATE SAL~ F rl n g e Ben et It a htlp(l.l\. Salary ()pen. Gd Wd tlt.ands, Sideboardt, l*ne? Le\ u1 aell ll tor ATfENTlON Superior Commtnlon, benefl11. Resume to : U1'1H, chairs. w• JVUOO consignment. Call LICENSED, Dynamic Organization, Amerlcu Tralrlc Hutth steoda. m.Mn "more for Information. 5'8·'1151 UNLICENSED, Ltamin1 EnvirOQftlent, •oundaUon. p .O.Box OMlcn wtf6>me. GETTIIE RED f'\JU time lic:en.eeea wbo .. , Otll, Oa.12l8Z5 Two Velvet chaln.11'1•• CARPt:r wn1 work ror earnlftP ln -+a 'Ill IOIO cocktail table, al like TREATMtNT.f e1ctu of $21,000. per MOW IS THI TIMI •• ~, ... ~~ ............ oew. Oall~31._ • We tr:r't~h !:'!c!:,;:~! year are encoura&ed . '° for job eeekers to cbt<k It E F R t G g. ft A T 0 R 7' Sota. 5 drawer Bu.Aau. ei1 mutN tbt starts fm· !:'11':v:,ar:i~~,W~ the Dally Pilot Help NEEDED! oA.'; ONLY. maple dinin& Jet• de k, ....tl.atdy. U 10U are ln· Reaideotial Oivlslou Wanted clau.lrlcallOI\. H 5'47·3ll2 hutch. color TV, t\c, W'aUd 1n rniD bi 1• the Job you w nt Is not 67S.m2.. • ea t I Call Don 8'rman, Pres • there )'OU mllht conalde:r Hotpolnt Elec: Orye'l" ~----------1 _.. lnd1 ,'!J,.mual~ .. st.artrr~ dPeRnOt.PQEURATllLESPLJANCC£ otferin1 your strvlcu O.E. elec dryer szs. J{en· 4 pc KlnlSlz. Bdrm i"tiiaia1 ;."'tbe ,;'tn ~; ?52-Hl20 wrtJI an ad In the Job ~ored 1w_,~.a .!'..!.' us. set. Sl75. olmany&opof'fices lout-W•nlt!d cateaory. Phone uuar/ e _.._,. 67~9577 al lhruout Oranice Coun· Have tomethinlC you wtnl '42-9171 Good maple furniture. liv. (1, caU for rurtM:r th· Lo tent CJ flH ad• do Cl111INed ads 1en bJa room" bd.tm. w .. tMtr fl • t•lJs. Arlene, (710 ll welt -Call NOW, Sm.L idle item• with a ~. smlll It.,.. or 1m1 dryer. ru11 •· atlH • .....,'2 ..u.w . Dally Pilot ClaUlOed Ad It.em. I• tall &U-1f71. MS.- ( ,, 1 Breezy dlys are on ttie ny! t(nlt CIPt-Wwl in a jiffy. JUMBO.«NITI Use 2 straods l}nthttic yam of worsted weilllf Md big n"dltt tor collattd cape.$hiwl. Not• buu- tlf ul, b~ cables. Pat. 716li simple directions. St.M for Hdl llettlrn. Add 3511 lldl pattem for nrst-ctm al111110 *Id lll4ldllnc, Set• "' .......... Mt••• ... ,.,.. , .. .., .... .. 161.0WC.... ... · .... , .... MY , .. , I. '9W ...... ~zr,;~ ......... MOR( tllM ... , blfortl 20G ~lllS..,!!US 8 frff priflttd a.. -~" 1976 NELDUCAAFT CATAl..001 Has m~ 151.! Crt*t Wfttl S.-.. 1,.i Cfleht 1 ..,.,. t.• ::~.~ lllfts -,. ... + '="-............... ,. .......... -.::: """' c...w... . ,. ....... Cl"Mlt W -1·· lllClmt CltctletW ~-===-.:--1• ~ lltt ... -::: =·=t:·· , .. llM .t II ,,.,} 2 -llt1 ....... Wit ,, -Slt1 ta ... ~'llel 12 -IOtl ..... ,. 1!._11-Ill• ..... _., 1 1 I l I t J 1: . .. • ' - I • I "' • • _ ,. 0~. Imported I .____._.. AutoJ. imported W~11cs<!.1/, J..1nu.uy ~ l. 1 JI" L • _ y ,_(., Auto• .... f"'" .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• I . ...-M-'•t ~ 1o...a.. ~ & ••• • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• •• • • • • • • • •••• •••• •• • 4 "'-A-I ........._. "'·-' o:t.>~ -.. -'"•ce .... ._ ....-• T~i W 9712 MGI 974 ~. J11pornru -01, UHd Auto1, Used •••.• Serwfce 20 al I 9010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fled 9725 ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••tax ••••••••••••••••••••••• p .. ••u••••-••••••u••••• 0 :0 •0 •••0 •••••••••• 'Go OMC 'I.Ake Bed, V6 ............... ........ MOB GT radlo. htr .• Vollswagt'ft 9770 81•ral ffO l .... ,.. "'MO I Boal Pal•tl•I ·~ Ottee'lb, Blrltei.1 Jet, ......... -. ~.I~ ovwdrl•• wlre wa.eeta ·-.... •••••••••• .... • ............. ._ ....... -··•••••·-·--•••• Reftnl•~ •I Pa•t11a1. nllOm ~.a, UN Ml-mi r ·-· u.ooo mi. et. off. 4 Xlfo'is~, :.~· ~~~ •ia=r.::1 =~ "74 OM.-PU. All/Fii IC14DlJ. BUG ~ estimatea.C'fWlfS MsGsda,)oa,SQ ••aft te,., CUt lat., Cust a.tcw.yioubuy...... • ll08, xbll coad. aU 'wj~f * U SELL* --------•v.a. ......_.__,mu.•• LEASIPLAMS alru lo ml.*""· ~-s • Boat ••Udera, C•t• aeL.S-IDl. F1nlble lease plans W 9kln Vl9IO i»iiiialUPll 71 ,_, ... .# ., . :.. .. I -• ~!.r."w"::~;:r:':1' v-tl70 .....Uable hoe 24 to '8 """°''• Jlard lo find model, £iberelua. MS-aclt l ••••••u••••••••••••••• ••••••••-·•-•••··-· ....uis. priced rtibt.. ~. 646-~ -.i.tr.Sttpvaa, .. ,...,. llSTCOLOI SAVE o. •a.S./ eyl., xlnt. CiM!d., a.. SELICT10M 94 '72 VWhra Boal caqmtrr.KJl.fl 'l"''d. .-, ti tires, low miles. wi8dows THE $ftlll9UA •MD Low mile•. reef with Deck ~. lt n1a, .....,. .. ,._............. &floorperfed. ,.,...... """'~ 7 surface llldlL IJ2..4eU hd.0'1 Dlnct Ca• lJ -1 for 1\0ra.ae, ~ t 47 black leather. 2'4GOQ. eves. -. up SbeJls $1 vert to um per. take SAl)DA •ACa IWW $ 1888 Sleei T • w 1l6lil carpet with you for In· loots, Ma lw 642 ~rs. ai.sa •• terior rinisbiq'. u•. U I ·Jt40 4tMt4t "SI YW c..,.. Equl...... 9010 · 71 • Call 645-3269. Rebuilt engine aeeds ................. ...-•• 6& Dodge Vall Camper, aa....-1 COUNTY'S lransl!lission. Good bod.)' EVINRQDg SPG1lTS· mi,goodcond.. '67CHEVYVAN108VI. OLDEST 9750 •dnterior.8lsLGA. WlN 9~ UP. Coclaptetely 557-1_. $695. Call a.fl 1:30 & -••••••••••••••••••••• $788 overha.._ .bns cood, , 675-!IJ:Z lt10 Poraeat• tll T. new p...,.. otti abaft.. '73, 8' Wildwood umpe $aoo . ,64 Ford Ecoooline 1 ~tk, IUI, S$,.2IOO. 75 VW Scirocco Includes tank. Ph: shell •2ss. Excellen eyl, stick, ruu lood. Sales&rvlee-Luslng 74 F&.t 121 Wec)Oft -.an PoneM S1nsse Metallic silver, 4 5peed, 549·132:1 CODd.MS-lln COCJidtins lot!C....,., lmc. AM /Fii radio. 12.000 Ast(orSlaa. AM /FM stereo, tape -n-at-nuw · 1 l k deck, under factory WU· 3> H . Jobnloo':o>..Xlat run· 'a 8' Cabover America SSJ·ml _,.... yce -m1 es, u1gage rac · '1•. tlC, U 11tn. 5·spd ranty.4.l•MCP. ning cond,, Kus\sdl. Sportsman, s 1 ps 234 E.17lbSt. 520WCC. AM /FM 1tereo. Xlnt 54488 640-!ZI. w/duette & boot. $1S4IO. AlllloLlwh= tSIO Oo&ta Mesa 546 6H'1 $2488 cond. 17M ml. ~.495 . M.2·4596. -. 497·2274. •61 YW a 1oab. ,...,. '°~ ....................... HAL GREENE ug •••••••••••••••••••..,.• 8'Cabover. Very clean.. Mew 1976 Volvo "11914. Blk/blk. App Grp .• 4 Speed, immaculate Chris curt clualc.. Jew SUDO. Z-D Sed BMW llags, s apds. 35,000 mi. e.ocioe & transmiss1.0D. I engs refitted Xlnt fbnd Pb: ~91911..0ft & i.ms. 581-7812. mo or 6,000 mile warr S a C., M a k e , t r . ~ 1m Volvo, Z door r.edan, Uunl Bch. 142-4435 ty. WWSl 73. . ' . ::C-J incl. AJl/F ... r-'"-, f\.iel '57 Speedster $I 388 714/642-1551, 213/--!858 -......, H d 9727 G t d t in j e c t i o n , 4 s p d , °" a rea coo 1 100 18' South Coast Bay Boat.•••••••••••••••••••••• syncbromesh trans. ~~&=::: ••••••••••••••••••••••• $6.000 7~2517 '70 VW Fmte.odl xlnt cood, nn coven, JBSUZUJU 120"CAT"' Re¥ window detouer. 4 New '7S Honda Civic .72 914 blk w/blk, 53•000 UBAKN $2400, 540·34•0 daya, 197ZSUZUXJllS wbidcli$cbrakeslt steti Mewnto.aler!'1 ~wgn.6 mosold,7,000 mi. xlnl cond. $4,500. $1388 Char lea Thonua BOTH LOW JULE.AG belted white waU radials, 7'1''7 Firestone Blvd. ma.. $3,900. 833·2580 or 581 7162 · -f-AND EXCELLEN rttllniaa bucket seats, Downey (213)9Z'7 675·9710. . 70YW Bug ''-• Let us teach you how to sell your car. truck, cycle, bo ~· camper or trailer or bow to b¢i one direct from the owner. Yett eliminate the middle man and save $$$. _._ 1 .. I 1 .. I ... .. ~, If you want to sell your car gi•et ·· us a call. If you would like ~. · J buy one direct from the ownei:. j there will be S acres to ch~ • I ~m. • 11. -. " ...... Weekdays -Phone 635-4107 "' • Open Sat. & Sun. (only) 7 am-6 pm': $10 a day -$15 a wknd Buyers Admitted Free tltM.~St .. Allahei1R.C.. S. W. COf'llW s-t• AM Fwy. & lro +hwst .. " " , I I l $14, · CONDmON. fully urpeted, tinted 3 Miles Wn t or 605 .,. "'vie 171800 ma·. brown '14 914/2. Mao•, AM /FM., Sl.tnrool', eompletely re-32' Chrta aft Connie CALLSISf>.8'JtiODAYS ~·he•ter. •'-'• A G 2J 000 coad.iticllllec907ADY. Twn v-8' •bait tan.led, 642-$718 EVBNINGS.• 36 llo. open eod lease. '12 3.o CS. xlnt eond. wf•~~~!,rior $2$00 or of. ~·tan,r&ao. Call aft~: $ 6 Chevrol.t 9920 Mustang tt&i VHF ra o, aoun er, First mo. rent plus rvn. $10,100.544-9631 ~ .. ""~'"" n,,,,_., I 88 /F '7S K ~-~ ~ .. l --.....,~, '71 VW lug ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••,.,-. a ... --.. -· • ey rate of partial mo. • IS Honda CVCC.Many 1 '66 289 convrt. Miot c:Jln(I. Alt r,fuUcovers. Like new, low llllilu&e license fee. Cap. Am\. xt.ras$2150. AskforSleve 1961 tl.Z, yellow fr black Pan gtriped, custom CONNELL Rbt eng. Nu top. DU ... l. Co~ainted, tuned. Must sell. Take over~ $6'135. Lease end residual Poncbe xlnt cood llus wheel co~. tow miles. And 'a 646·9000 ments. 645-743t $3594 . 25. Add it ion al S.0.9lOO ext 55· Bet &at.S. lt>ll. $4,ti5. 673-!7.ti 36SDllL 675.5659 eve. -•· S2 ~ Suzuki 125, Dirt blte "12. c bar ge r or e • r I Y & '72 H..-C:.. $ 17 88 CHEVROLET '61! hpd. Mags, beadfrs. ~ ~'RostfopCtuiser &<l,cond..,$ZIS. terminat ion . Serial •ST• •~Y 4 Speed, radio, beat.er, Aalsl.-,ce 9756 $1800. Call 8 tr4c". I Orys.ecyl, balttank, 842-418&. VCM24SE065Ui8. SAMIA A .. A low miles, hke new. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SALES"SE.RVICE 5S2-80$3or551·1992 nu pain~, ena. tuned. .13 GT 550 SUmki. Xln LEASE Ml FOi 835•3 I 7 I U6GWX •t IQLER IN U.S.A. 2821 Harbor Bl•d. •75 ~1ustang Ghia: e°teey Anderson• 646-9000 co.d.SLbi.ke.Faring& $13854 TMaULTIMATIORMMOMACMM $1288 ROY COSTAMESA xtra. Sunroof, air,·nr 36' Bayllner Victoria. sissy bar, $695. See a • '72 BMW Bavaria. Auto. IR{ CAllYER Hunl. Bch. 142·~ 546-1200 :.tereo tape, 4 s pd. Cl~sy Twin Volvoe, dual con· 2860 Harbor. Mike ~o air., stereo, leatb mW ROU.S-IGYCl '68VW9PassBus. car• Mustsell.53l.a388 trols, lrlm tabe.full F.B .• 540-0170, 540-704G. -• terior, $6750. 644·~-ljffii 1 • 1 t!l•a1Ifvq.' llAl.\ltUt. A&kingll.700. '74 Chevy JmpaJa 4dr., '65 Must.ang v.a 4 ~ bimini ca•per back~ <d t•.n:a 9715 1ft'1 lie Cb"'I ~ CO$TAMUA 6'11..Sultf«Carl. xJJ:il cond., full pwr. lo new pamt. Mu~t see t~ full co~er. trailu, ex.tn nda <1360. 1975. lo · . flll UllUJ HWIL Bch. 84l""'3S S46-.....,. m1 •• new tires. Day, apprec $12.50 S4S..2.45S t_anks. VHP. deptb ~6 rPccmdll. ,$850,SS1·48l [I-~· O..OStOWNOATI '67 VW. Rebll e nc , 830·0890.Eve.644-2877. · · f1t1der f-11:1 equipped to -~ ~ "14 Capri V6, auto trans, JagllCll" 9730 transaxle needs work. '67 Must. Fst.bclc. PS, fwr Pvt~ -..a ·, · VOLVO AC, s unroof. AM/FM,••••••••••••••••••••••• lo...-t757 Asking $(00. Call '73 lmpala •. 9 pass wgn, Disc brks, am/fm 8tr~. go. • '10 Yamaha B. $325. I ery clean. SJ6. ·11. Low mi .. beauty,••••••••••••••••••••••• 640-4918. PS, PB. air, xlnt cood, xlntcood.,962-7930. • 1.965 Ow-Cabin cndstt, mil. gd.. cond.. aft.$ p.m. 1!66 Aot-bor C"' t.46 9303 1pty.63 1·2136 f'ly equip'd iocl sunrf., '59TC2,000 , S247s, 962·9811 ----.----....~ 25 n. Nllast aeU or trade 8IM8ll.. As tier da ·493 ·6305 Good condition 65 vw Bug. Runs good. I OlcklftObtl• ft.SS for auto Cir S..U boat. ''l2Yamaba 250 tlX. t590 Datsun 9720 E . s' t Suy t98-098 • $1100 4N·3'17S $575. or offer. 73 Impala WagC?n· Full •••••••••••••••••n•••• Fully caavrassed, bail conditioD. $3SO. Cal ••••-••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ves, a · n. · 673-5883. power. 40•000 ma., Xlnt. Sales and Service tank, &wim atep. Fii CJ7S..cnil:.' •"WAMTTOSB.L WILLBUYYOUR 'OO XKER.oadster. Toyota 9765 cond.Hlgbbook.552-7852 OLDSMOIJL.E• stqeo a~.~ 62 ~ YOU.CAR?-DATSUN.TOYOTA, Sharp.$4500.orbst. ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'IO~~re~!~eq, PM. GMCTRUCl(S radio. callD-1*. Only Hws. Let us sell it for y-ou, OR VOLKSWAGEN 6.17·97SSor75M323. 'SJ Corooa 2 dr, must see f>ri pt m..ak HONDA CA~ ~. S../lftd 9160 ~H! We take in trade PAID FOR K GL.'-9735 to apprec! 20-24 MPG, · y. C...t 9927 1.__1 -l&v -------·-• .. ••• .. ••••-·•-•• a DY m a k e or ORNOT. camcam -$950/bstofr673-4715 '73 VW Super Beetle •••• _.................. ""'• .... -•., 0.. IB' Antl~last)'le .. y Rent 25• 1975 Open Road TOP DOLLAR ••••••••••••••••••••••• · 1J>' '73 Comet XI t d 28SO H bo Bl~ l aunc~ of aod.ern fully --'~ .... -•~~'-._.· model ... cars, trucks, CALL '60 Karmann Ghia, en1 71Corolla2<!THTnutires, ~...!11::: ... ~~!· x. t AU&o.a/c,p/s.:m1~~~1 · CoslaMesS: r ~o fibergJaaa.h!atea.k.. Diesel Wi'--•,.,::-;:-~tes.-.;~-vans, recreational SAL BERNADENE run.'> good. body eood. en&· replc d. Ex. cond . .,...,._..an_ mi.SZ.B.511·1983. eng., C'11.1CSS;. C'Oftr, ~ n.a -· -vebicles imports & S40-0t42 new brks, $450. 64.2·3761. 11625/ofr. 961-0aO vw Bug, looks first class '73Della88, unbebei1able daa.sic Bmn'-Tilao21'SlpsS. =~~=ac':! . enit reblt 2 mos ago. 83 '13ComdGT.Aut.otrans, Goodcond.Mustsell! lines . $~.SOI . Ed mas. By clQ or week. Private Party Mada 9731 ~CELlCA. Gd ~i&ea&e. MM 29MPG 1·898·3007 new tires, xt.ras. Really 963-7367aft.5 Richar'*-YadllSales. 64S-D'Oaftl.. Califoro.ia utety code '74DATSUNB210 ••••••••••••••••••••••• aircond,automat1c,vny1 • ' sharp! $2115 firm . - 675-007?.. ~.Auto Sales Hatchback, auto. trans .. '73 RX2 Rotary Eng. Air roof, Bstofr. 586·0386 '68 Fastback nds/wk 7$1·9549. P'anto 9957 HALL~ a10 Deal« stereo ~pe. radial tires. cond, r~d10 , ext~as. i1 Toyota Station Wagon. $700bsL ofr. ···············-······ CAM YOUAAORD Watedt.o~ll3-133f 14,~nnles.Call644-8107 31,000 ma. Nds a little New ndiaJ ti~. R/H, 645·4594 Ce Jk ,.... tfJO '72 Pinto. 2dr gm se<tan. TOIUY AMIW WEPA.YTOPDOLLAR Sacnfice. body work. $1SOO/bst ofr. xlnlcood. S139S 675-8038 •••-•••-•••••-••-• 2000cc . eng., n-:w .e.n~. IOATn 19'1:5=~<>...,...fo ·~ f'ORTOPUSEDCARS '72 Da tsun 240Z ~1-6042 T""""-" . 9767. •'70PopTopC8mper. Be utiful'NLfnColn newpamt,cleaouitenor. , ~-ptn .uume. r uuo, FOREIGN DOMESTIC · , ,_..,,..... Virtually brand new. Con~ 1 ~ 150 &tolr. Call646·372'1 f 30 ~ 1917, , ... ; n.c-m-sm. all ci.Assics Desperate. New car ar· '73 Mazda RX2, 4 spd, xlnt •••••••••••••••••• ••. •• $3.500. 6'6--0680 pm. tment.a . .... FtB,#mall,000. IPllPP U ~ isexlnlelean rived, must sell fast! cond,$1300cash 1969 TR6 675-8465 '71 Pinto. Low ml. a11to. l 27' ScoCU Chfl 1!8.. TIS JOUf fu:_ $4,000. 552.5222 549·8730 '72 Bug. Yellow w/blk 1971 ...... ctllate !~!~or best offer. IS29~-. For Sale: lliAi )I see': ... -IUICI S2000f&rm 581-G317 iDt.erlor.am/fm. ___.. 27• BlQ'liDa' im. T/S a-.4Star,Zl'. --'11 Datsun SlO, 4 dr. xlnt '71 Mazda RX2, new sz.ooo. 962·1'89. thruout. l ·Owner Con··--------- 1'S31$11,D. m 9 ;. 14S"• wbl base. 2925Ra.rbor Blvd. cond, 68.000 ml, $1600/bst clutch & exhaust, runs '62 TR-4, very good cond. tinental sedan, loaded. it 2 dr, 2000cc, 32M.-1Alx 30• c"'*'N• 19M. TIS Lo m&·~ approx. 17~ Oo&talleaa 979-2500 olr646-605.Sdaya, 548·2878 s uper, $700. firm . New brakes & clutch. '73 VW Conv. S...per Bee-Lo mi's, non-smoker. decor grp. Frt disc. Xlnt IS33$S._ Good ccnd. $l5iOO. ca al\6PM. 962·4152. Bestaffer. 5Cl·7Z94 tle. AM/Fii. A IC. new Goklen w/brown leather. cond. Pvt ply. $1495; 41' Canoe Cafe 1973. Diil 979-3571· ' ~ TOP DOLLAR '74 Datsun 260Z 2 + 2. Mtn:edff Bein 9740 74 Tri .... Spitffl e =· $2700. ~ aft 6'13-63'17 anytime. 5S2-&m. t ~5:Tb~g 19C7, TIS, railers, Travel 9170 PAID Silver/blue, 4spd., air, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ila~. deluxe steering, C _..... 9932 MUST SB.I. j SIG *~-_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMMEDl•TB.Y tape, $S800 /or bst.X • --1.-wheels. IUIC•ee rack. Volvo 9772 Of'YCTie '71 Gold Pinto. Xln ".,._......,. ..... A --;of 548..s449PM ~ ..a .... ••• •• • •• • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • d Ca 30· 'Jeffriu Sptsfs hr, ·73 Cardinal, Ice boa, FOR ALL '-VPU· s New. Used 05ILKG ••••••••••••••••••••••• •TOP CASH! con .• U496-7657. . : #S35$1l.ODD. sto.e A ono, port-a· FOREIGN CARS '71 Datsun 240Z, perf. OYER I 00 $3688 ORAHGE COUNTY For Corvettes and other '73 Pinto. 21,-080 mi, 4 sp<l. 46' Al~SM.ODO. pottf. Jmmac. cond. CAU.oa COME IM cu.stom body & paint. VOLVO used cars & truc ks! Xlnt cond. Orig OWPet'. 48'Graadllanb.Offers. 761H22'7 o~EE s Mechanics dream. Bil MERCEDES EXCLUSIVELYVOLVO HOWARD Chevr olet , $2000.963-4801. DAVIDLPAJl.KE& T ~ U for s how. Apptonly, con· ON DISPLAY Dove & Quail Sts. Near e YACHrSALES )o~~~a~te Fe tact Chris an Spm $5500. H of lrnDOl'h Largest Volvo Dealer Jamboree, Bris tol, & '72 Pinto Wago~. r;r. 131-llll -..-sor-.nl98ws. orbslofr.6Sl·Z27S. oerse to · -HuaL 8cb. 842·'435 in8~n&e~~! MacArlbur. Newport A/C, 16,000 ml. )U~t Boats, W 9160 6 74 260Z, AM/FM, air, ME:~~~~ER V ... w.... 9770 of~ECT Beach. l33-0655 cond. $l800. 751·7331• •• ;;;~~·.;;·;:::;;;.-~ :;t.:: ..... !~ ?.fi· ~~ir~•f7s~o ~!~:ct';~· ....................... IUJt-•IJi,""1 ·~~~: i;,~ba~io.A~;~ ~·--~~ design. •aufadanr's . ~.or$45-3786eves. 523-7250 ,73 VW l_TJ.._. j ~ J.... • .J pearl wht paml, mags An.AS , ...... displaf bod. Brand_..! U0.S.d)(ieapCana 1 di 5ti4r3es. ll• W.CNst hy. ltl. On the Santa Aaa Fwy. Sac. must sell 645-4212 • lncl's z 1a.ib. wincbes. 0 • Rat 9725 2025 S. Manchester · · lifelines_plky,head,atl after6Pll.Greg. , 642·9405 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73, 4SOSE, U ,IOO ml. CAMPER . "El'\ 201l Cougar 9933 ~""'mtlftt- .. · t SI S $10,900. Bur1undy c---A .-..:-""'--•-Al\aheinl ,~-••••••-••••••••••••••• Open -•1-._ "-·n. -4 0 le~· lD • eeps • Marqoette Dina Vision 4 ~· r ........ -..~. ----------1 ~a..,.._ ur.1. uaalerable. Laree dia-Electronie Entio SELUNGYOURCAI? w/uddie bra int. 1owmlles.(SS7JLW>. Alltoa.,Uted '69 Co\l&ar XR7. Good PM , •• cowit. P'KifllC Dolplaia., .. 0ft1-.-r. _, __ , 1........ -PaJCIS PAID 64tMiOO>, dA)'S. '75-8876, $4495 cuxl.., pwr, auto, leather 2929Harbor BlvA ·•. -'"""'"" ----'""""" ··················,·::5• seats.$1395.536-6614. -Inc. 911-Utl day5 or Sell or trade for Pick "II For Imports eves. AMC YV Costa Mesa ~~. 499-2685 EWL ISOClQll. Paid roe or Not '7 3 MBZ Jim Slemons ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ford 9940 546-19 34 . BAY RESIDENTS! '74 Anti.-•/ DecmLewlslnwom I rt '61 Rambler Wgn dtpnd •••••••••••••••••••••••, · - Hobie 1&. $111. In wtr at Classics 9520 1986Harbor.<!.M. ~or,;w6iiil 220 D ~5 bit 6-cyl. 3-&pd. O /D, '75 Elite. While on white, ~~=~cis~=: Balboa •• 55t·HOt or·-•••••••••••••••••••• 6"-9303 .. ~ ~.. ~ost!t;Te!lvd $300.495-5442/831.JU2 ~~a~~· $4850 P .P . tran&. S.23 P06itr-jon 640-47911.. '" Alfa Romeo HO TOP Diesel 6~ I I 27 6 '67 Rambler, good oond. rear end. S450 or ~ ~r-J.r&ites.ilbo.t oripaa). Sell u ls Automatic transmission, "' • air, cond. $600. 962·8519 '75 "'ord LTD wagon, low fer. 548-4798 aft 6, •~Jtr 2SaULM14 parts.Bestoffer.tmN. '70Fiatl50Spider air condilioning, radio, ''ll Squareback. Aulo., eves. miles. a ll power , Henry. • -~ 0.s&Hwy J.all1Dllkb. $ heater. Great .economy! AM/FM t Sb ' $500 •·--• 4 Speed, radio, heater. 06476), clean, nu sky blue painl, Buick 991 o ~o: (~~;~ ...... ;:· '65 Baracuda, 6 cyl, ~, 12'KoreDe•~.m. ._,.,111•11111 Paid 7S4BQD. $7695 rlldiah.$1650.(99..4456 ••••••••••••••••••••••• xlnttrans.,$37S.673:~n. & wb& Jlain/jib. $45(). YtNdn 9530 $1799 '71 vw Bug. Gd cond. ·75 Buick Convert. Under 61 Rancbero, 71 Maverick NB --·~ , P .P .4D-551Daftt. ••••••-................ FOR •12F1 .. ISO~ Jim Sletftons Very lo ml. $1,850/bstot-warr. A/cond. Full pwr. ED1. A1C, &ood cond. '68 Satellite wJop . SaDdrail Corvair UsedYW'S Radio. heatei."°";;aa fer.131-2115. Am/Pm ~tereo _rad $800.67S·6266 Loaded. a goo~r. <..1ipper 3t. xlnl ccmd. O/B powered• 811 Ne a 1 wh e e 11, r o II bar. latDOrfS w It.ape. While, red ml.er. ;5 Elite White on while $'900/ofr. 646-0933 ~· · w/elec. at & remole, Product&, w•s satow f.wforwHot 197 Hlrbo 81 d lt'1SLeGrandeVW.4mo. Many otber extru. · . •---------RDF Miik~ equiP. bol· modd. cJeu I& ¥l13l0 7ffl-FWY. 0 r v · old, loaded. Casb + K8·0317. 991-61'6 aft loaded. $4,800. Pnvate '67 2 Dr. Satellite, ·X~l tom peill&. Sip~' •l s.Q. or best ofr 1• lll55da15, $2599 Costa Mesa T.O.P. 631·3719 belore 5 &prn. Party. m -6631 top, fully air, PS/fl''-~9 $8995.'IWIMl-lW.. ,...,.aftlPM. "73Piatl50Spidw 631·1276 pm Codi.ti ttlS i 4. 2 Dr. Brgm. PS/PB. eng, 72.000 orig ~:"' l CAM YOU AFFORD DUNE Buggy, everything 4 speed, radio, healtt. '68 2:50 SE Sedan. New '71 VW Bus. lmmac cood. ••••••~••••••••••••••• Till s tr whl! AM /FM owner. $800/bsL 63lGT8 TO •YA NEW new. M uJ~t Sell I $800. 14.2-405 '700HZK . eog, Macbellns. shocks, See to believe. RbJt enc. stereo. Lux mt. $367$, "72 Salelllle Sebrin{~~. -"'m 111.-.. aa. Uuat..Bcb. $2699 alr,elc.10wner,cmplle 011tlres.675-7729. "CADILLAC" 554-1412 P IS, P /B, P /W, A/T , -records. $4900 FIRM. FORD V cd A/C S2200 552 9361 46' Erl~ 19'1l... .......... ' TQPIUYB '74Fltrt 124 Spider 642·2917. "71 VWSuperBtetle42, Quality 0 Pn'ce JJ83 I -8. 3 spe . . . . now~ -----··•--,._ SM• llnt, • luU Top S d t d' lni, x.lnt cood, $1~. J oe • runs great. $300 FlRM. ..tiec: "45 F_... n-.e -·-..t.-1' -Y4f i •• S pee • a e495reo ra ao, ....... .._... •--·-at ..... "".50 -11•·12 Call 75151'13. 216' ,,: -.. -·· -'1S FOrd at. still oa lact. -ar_.... or mpor... mag wheels, LQB. ,_..';;,.~mo. r~in· eves-. ... Owr 70 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~1~''Ait.us P/0 tMI ;;.~·-ml~a. O.U CD°!'TASMESU~ $4799 J:. or buy car, Signal ":a~c°:nat·ltf:o~l!f:: For~~ l ... '66Falco~;:.yJ.stic:k. ~~~~cp~~~~~~~ $26681. A n '6' M• MJckMt Red Mercedes 450 SL, "'57 ,. ......-.._ __ ·•-a. ..a.. CallW~afl4l ... m conll'ol. AM/FM-. ·.aato 30•' WlUud lltnallor "'J4TwotoL•f~ml•• ~Harbor Blvd. •Speed, "dlo, Tteater, m&...U.IZM l'IJ.IUl evea '* ... =-~;;-:.:.--..... traftll.""'4147aft&. ,,. #512--. New tires, pln ~ Olllla Mesa ~10 . ...i-... __ ,. tl230 ..._... DQa, Ken. -• t9CI - 34' Laportb. 1961 #SU lown\ltes.~LP&. wu e •~-• "102J90SL. Vef')'rare,vvww '11VWVan.NueftliDe. llABEIS CAllll.lAC ....................... '72 Firebir:d· Silver/~1k. $23,sot. ' $4288 QMMGICOUMTY'S $1799 t~!!.~ ~!:4_ !!! MO•t _,._. _ _...__Blvd •74 Ltoec.ln con_ tinental Fulb'. eqw_p99 .. xi.t-·epod. 216' Cohambia mv 1518 llBHEST •7zM•llchtr ~ -· e:n-nn COSfA~A S40.llto Town Car. Like new, SS,J00.5'2l 1· :~~·~nncr l9'Tt FIG 4 SPMd1 rad.lo, heat.er. OPENSUNDAY pluah interior. {'I}' w Ventura. 2 f~l9 -CP>. $ 3Z'7~JN TAR GAZEKfl.. equlp'd, full power, A\ltO. air. PB, 34, Oalmlbia 1.sr14 #SZ2 4t]299 'TO Sedan de Ville. steno tape deck, beaut roof ~.new $3l 50e. Hunt. lkh. BUY£1 .,~. T-'..-.Jt llyCL\Y a. k Equipped. Orig oYraer. blue uterior • mt.erior. oood. .._ 45 .'c•atom NUaailotT .. _ , n ... ,.... ·~ !':.~':':'= y Gd co nd $1,ISO $1,000 under lo• or~adi. #52'1 Oftln, rue-9 ~ IMPORTS Spitfire To ~ ,..., .... .., ~. 5:1M472/67WSl1. wbo*ale b!ue beak at 27' Calalna im. #S21 .................. -~ 4 s=-radlo. be.at.er. reod~oor,......,. .. _.... "n Caq>e de vme.:::_ $t,JOO. cau az,.,. or "11 U:m~ coo~. ~·~.-........... --,,_, XO o•yw.Zod«<birtt."""° ..1.. •t--~ Uur.-l &kilt. Re ~ -~ .._......_ ---I,_ )I"' "'" eQ.'-¥. VerJ .__ must..U.m.-.a. DAVJDl.-PA•ltD Qt.. da:~ ee.11 •• '-' $ 1499 I~ ~~t:.~ :!=-. Orij.owner.at·U11 "n 11.ai\ IV, x.ba1 cmd,•--------YAarl'SAl.BS ti--. luw "'1*. ''•0 !' _,. ., _ ae.tMr' mi&. all JClna, will '6' Pwll1ee t.el'•• New GI.mt Anoor.-e«.Pnivi •74fiotl t/t ~~ ,:~ .. ~-Clnn.... HJO U1aoce PP $UU, pdl&.Dl&caa4. ~ UH4 fW s-.ge. ca. 4Speed. alr condiUonlng, ~:=•• ~~...:.:-~r.t,.._ 5SJ..aal t:a..80031 lotrh.~/ ¥trt to ta•,.r\.. ull radio, heater. 10,000 .:~ -::-t:" • Impala MID. A.u&o. Doda etrpet ~J.: sw ln nillea.DllT. 11r....,. •16-1 ,.,._ PSIP&. Pwr wilridDw. alr .... 11'1:1.., lerior ftnb . $1000 ........ 1,rrW $4799 nr :lr.::-n::::-aapll~---a.n~. M••••••• •••••• .. ••••• "74m-'11/J 14~ .. _ t•T-C.' I I ~ t•'· ·--r• ... ~ "·~~--""' ........ t101 ..slot ....... .tt=:' :tt: et •·"'-" •-• ·-"••••--•••••••••••••• • Speed. r •v"' , ''" 411&.. ,,..._ .. , ,._ ~.h.. rnaa .....i.. 614AAA •• ,__., •-,.~ Mmt..UMZ--,. .. °"''. _.., 1':MltC!, • 1r= 1'"""~-ti~!t. teel·llaJed , dual over-tJ999 t;_.. --.. is=" toll Mort a..I Med t~ •apd. \nna., 1°ACT01lY " \JC.""" ' • .,..... 5'& ... ~ t ·WbHl dlac braha, AlTl'HORJZt:D ~ t~_. C:::,--.., ...;;;..;.;.:,.;;..;.;;;_..;,. ____ ..., b ....... pie aidplnc PlrelU ""'' luU•lt ._ •lentc.t Jtt:: !'l:.. .,::--_ wate•••~ •••l .... raek. T'oaaea-. COYel'. ,....:..L. I~~ .... i.• a .... c..,.. .Wl. WW tw Belt otr., over $1700. .n. ·--,. ""-" ~• ._ ...... -•cat• \Hit L '6 t6DC-a(t• &. Ql-7MO l20W1."arncral aln '°°"'"l .or• "?,;""' ,.,o;f.tmM0;1Sl.•SJU 1tw.tl (J ), SanlaAna SS'f,1 a... ®"~ ..._. . ,..: ,- ' ' .... ... AND INTRODUCING THEALL NEW FOi 1976 AT TYPICAL ATLAS SAYIMGS. Alu. SID COMFOIT IM A MIW SMAU CAI. IN YOUI CHOICE OF THI PUMIEI COUPE. PllMIEI WA&QM. PUMJB FOUi DOOi sa>AM. Wint TMI ISOLATED TRAMSVllSI~ SUSPENSION SYSTIM. FOi RIATEI co-,_Me ~. TOP QUAllTY NEW CAR TRADE-INS ' ALL REMAINING ·1s•s AT SUPER SAVINGS '73 175 PLYMOUTH '73 FORD 174 DODGE INTE~~ ~NAL loldedl Econ':~ 6 cyt., auto. ~ Ton Cust~~~·v~ trans., air v.a. auto. :::..S:"conc:titionlng; _.. . condifonl trans .• air conditioning, power conditioning, power steering, power power steering, l)C)Wer brakes, radio, V-8, ..,,o. trans., air 1 ng, steering. radio. heater, whitewall brakes. radio. heater. ("9583) heater. whitewall tires, vinyt roof, powlf' steenng. power brakes. radio. ar-. (989LMM) custom interior & exterior. •i595 •3295 •3395 •2195 171 DATSUN lllCOUPI Economieal 4 cyl.. radio. beater. wM_.,I tlres. (788CCM) 173 FORD COURIER 173 MERCURY . W /CAMl'll Slal.. COU6AI D-7 4 cyt., auto. trans.. air conditioning, V-8, auto. trans.. alr conditioning power steering. radio. heater, ;,a.er tteering, p-wr. brakes. POMK whlt...n tires, auxlll.,y gea tank. wlndOwl. power seata. FM stereo (e8t97W) radio, vinyt roof. tilt wheel. (906GHZ) 173 MERCURY MOMTl60NI V-8. auto. trans.. power steering, power brakes, whitewall tires, vlnyt roof, AM/FM stereo radio. (626MWZ) •1595 •2195 •3195 •2095 ' ·~ N£W 176 INtSlNA tlONAL lER~PlCKUP COMPLETE "HEAVY DUTY" SERVICE AVAii.AiLi FOR YOUI R.V. ONE OF THE FIMIST SEIVICE FACJLITIES IM ORANGE COUNl'YI · OPEN SATURDAYS 8:00 A.M. TO l:OO P.M. MONDAY THRU FllDAY: 7:30 A.M. · TO 5:30 P .M. . . . . ....... ~ -· ... Today's Clo bag N.Y.Stoeu :val. 69, NO. 28, s SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1976 TEN CENTS . Doctors / LAibor ~eatkr to Testify ' rifo Pay , OC Jury Resu1nes Cella InvestigatiOn·· Preinium? f It was still unclear today just how many Orange County doc- tors would pay their malpractice insurance premiums prior to the midnight tonight deadline. "_Everyone here is making up their own minds and we can't see a real consensus," explained John Rette, execptive secretary of the Orange County Medical Association. Rette said the doctors' de- cisions will probably be known by Thursday or Friday. Doctors who ignore tonight's deadline run the risk of letting their coverage lapse. However, doctors who send premiums in to either Travelers' Insurance or the na<V'a"octor-run Southern Californla Physicians Insurance Exchange will have coverage retroactive to Jan. 1. · Doctors are protesting the soaring insurance rates by stag- ing a slowdown in many Southern California hospitals. Many Orange County doctors joined in last week, following their Los Angeles County colleagues. As of today. only one-third or the 9,500 Southern California physicians had renewed policies with Travelers. "All we can see in Orange County is that it appears there'll be a significant number of doc- tors who choos~ neither company and let their insurance lapse in protest,'• }\ette said. According to Rette, the current activity of Orange County doc- tors varies greatly throughout the county. However, be said its apparent that many are restrict- ing the scope of their practice, being selective about new pa- tients and are not accepting Medi-Cal patients. He added that in the wake of the crtais, the ones who will feel it most are the Medi·Cal patients. "Doctors are not striking out at people, but they're so frustrated and disgusted with the governor that they'h Just not partfcipate ln the Medi·Cal program," Rette commented. Hospitals in the county are still feeling the s lowdown effects, although som e doctors have already agreed to go back to work. Nixon Sends Contribution To Boys Cl,µ, Despite persistent rumors, former president Richard Nixon didn't appear at a breakfast staged today to kick off a fund drive for construction of a gym- nasium at the Boys Club of the South Coast area. Instead, San Clemente's best known resident sent a $500 con· tribution wJth bis chief aide, Col. · Jack Brennan, a Boys Club direc· tor. The San Clemente-based club Ss attempting to raise $50,000 toward the construction costs of °'egym. · It had been widely rumored that Nixon, who once served as honorary chairman of the Boys Club of American, would appear at the breakfast at the El Adobe restaurant in San Juan Capistrano. He occasionally dined at the restaurant during his years as president. toast Weather Fair through Thursday with continued sunny and warm days. Chance of some tog near the coast Thursday morning. Highs 70 to 80 degrees. Lows tonight in the 40s. INSIDE TODAY Stat• plan• to 11tCOUT'OO' long-rang• bfcvcUng CIPPfGJ' to bl falllng to l>Mdga'• .oz. But vr011»ct• for m~ b4U traUI of •honer dutancn look J"'Of"iling. 87 .. ' The Orange County Grand Jury resumed its investigation into the financial and political de· alings of Dr. Louis Cella today,. WaUing to testify as the jury entered phase two of its probe were Pete Remmel, executive secretary Orange County Central Labor Council ~AFL-CIO) and former Garden Grove mayor John Dean. Both Remmel and Dean have been close to Ce la in his political activities. Dean is a former chairman of the Orange County Democratic Party Central Committee. * * * When called to testify before the jury earlier in its investiga- tion, Dean reportedly cited at- torney-client pri vUege and re- fused to answer questions asked of him. Later, a Superior Court judge ruled that Dean's professional re· lationship with Cella was not an issue and ordered him to testify. It is expected that the former Garden Grove mayor will answer questions related to $25,000 in legal fees he received from two hospitals formerly con- trolled by Cella. New managers at the hospitals * * * say they have no knowledge o! legal services performed. So far, the grand jury has in- dicted Cella· and three business associates on 127 charges related to the purported theft of $2 million from Mission Community Hospital, Mission Viejo, and Mercy General Hospital, Santa Ana. The so-called second phase or the grand jury's probe is expect· ed to incl4de an inquiry irito money received from Cella by persons who performed no services for the hospitals. * * * Cella Firm Voted Out Mercy Directors Seek End to 'Influence' UPITti....-. 'Falcon' Flap Tom Alderm'an of Chicago asked for a replica of the Maltese Falcon used in the famous Humphrey Bogart movie ' -by mistake Columbia Pictures sent him the original. Since Alderman received the falcon last week, he has been "threatened" in telephone calls and notes from movie buff friends who also want to possess the bird. Alderman is Gov. Daniel Walker's director of com- mlmications. Elude Capture By GARY GRANVILLE OUM D•llY l'lltUlalf Directors of Mercy Hospital in Santa Ana voted unanimously Tuesday night to oust the Dr. Louis Cella·founded Orange County Health Testing Institute from the hospital. A hospital spokesman called the board's action, "Part of the continuing attempt to rid the hospital of whatever is left of Cella's influence." The te9ting institute last July was awarded a controversial $280,000 annual county contract covering pr e-employment physical examinations of pro- spective county employees. Cella, backed by his attorney, insisted that he had divested himseli of any financial interest in the health testing firm six months before it was awarded the county contract. Despite Celia's disclaimer, county Health Department of· ficials in sisted the then· politically influential doctor ac- tively participated in contract specification negotiations. IA Fire Mortuary Sued By- OC Widow Young Thugs Roh Contained _Laguna Beach Pair By Breaks A widow who learned last Dec. 17 that portions of her husband's body and his coffin had been found on Orange County's Coyote Canyon dump sued Westminster Memorial Park today for $200,000 in damages. Genevieve Harman of Westminster claims in her Superior Court action that negligence by the mortuary operators le<l to the dumping of Hugh E. Harman's remains at the trash site between Irvine and Newport Beach. . Mrs. Harman states that she made arrangements with the de· !endants on J an. 23, 1975, for the cremaUon of her husband's re- mains and the scatterlrtg of his ashes at sea. Mr .• Harman died May 6, 1958, and hJs body was in- terred at West~inster Memorial Park. Two armed teen-aged thugs robbed a couple of $19 Tuesday in Laguna Beach. The young bandits eluded a massive search launched by the Laguna Beach Police Department within minutes of the robbery. The trenchcoat-clothed rob- bers accosted David E. Fisher, 36, of Anaheim and Mary K. Ohmer, 29, of Dana Poi\lt at 10 p.m . outside the Rib Cage Restaurant, 858 S. Coast Jilghway as the couple walked to the parking lot. One bandit believed to be 17 to 18 years old poked the muzzle of a revolver from bis trencbcoat and demanded the wallets of his victims. The wallets together con- tained $19, police reported. The thugs also to.Jk a camera car- ried by one of the victims. ~ . While the holdup was in pro~ gress, the gunman told the cou- ple he had them covered with a .22 caliber magnum. His youthful accomplice, aged 17 to 19, did not display a weapon. After collecting the victims'. property, the bandits told them to turn around and walk away. The couple went to their car and drove to the police station. Within two minutes of the re- ~rt, police cars converged on the area, )?ut the thieves were gone. LOS ANGELES <AP> -Fire breaks helped to hold a blaze in a tinder-dry canyon on the city's northern outskirts to m acres early today, but strong winds predicted during the day kept fire officials braced for the worst. "It's at a holding stage now but we'll have to see what happens," said U .S. Forest Service in· formation officer Ed Medina. "If we can hold the flames down in the canyon, we'll be in great shape." Medina said the blaze, possibly started by an arsonist, broke out shortly before midnight in a roll- ing brush area in the Angeles Na- tional Forest. a few miles northwest of the Magic Mountain recreation area. Sheriff's officers who in- vestigated the incident decided not to take action ·against the mortuary after determininJ( that "human error" led to the dis- posal of the remains. Investigators· said mortuary workers apparently overlooked a number of bones in the metal casket while they were transfer· ring r emains from the coffin to the cremation container. Council Expected To Discuss .Blaze The names spread rapidly in a southeasterly· direction toward the suburbs of Saugus, Newhall and Valencia, fire officials said. But 200-foot-wide fire breaks, constructed under a fire preven- tion program. helped firefighters halt the advance, Medina said. "Things do look pretty good out there right now. The situation is hopeful," he added. Westminster Memorial Park officials today ref used to com- ment on the lawsuiL They earlier refused to comment on the dis- covery of Mr. Harman's remains at the county dump. Though it is not an agenda item, the San Clemente fire will be discussed in depth at a meet· ing of the San Clemente City Council at 7:30 p .m. Thursday night at City Hall. Mayor Anthony DiGiovanni said today that the council will discuss a .preliminary report * * * Clemente Fire Toll OVer $1.5 Million An accounUng shows that the San Clemente flre cauud $1,566,350 in damaae to 83 San Clemente homes. The three·page damagt list was released Tuesday by Don Stereo, Jewelry Taken in Lagana · Lqana Beach Pollcetod~ are lnveatliating the theft of stereo equipment and Jewelry valued at $3,130 in a burglary at tbe re· tldence of Andrew M. Hoff, 940~ OltfDrl•e. The bur1lar1 occurred between 9:40 a.m . andnoonlifon- d~. Entry wu via a front door forceably open.ed. Pollcohave no IUlpecla, Hodgton, city fire-marshal. who said, "at best, tl)e figure is a aues1timate." Of tbe 83 homes, 14 were dettrored. wblle 69 others su:s· tam.cs dama-ae from as lltUe as 1100 lo at hlth •• $4.5,000. The accO\&DtlDg la baaed on a door·to-door survey ol the fire area by tin selence studenta. Hod1ton 1t ... Ned the lilted dama1e fifUJ'el were estlntates onlY and that \he true loam~ U.cre-..e aa property owqen re· celve more exact esUmata from contractors. 11>• aceountJn1 shows t.hat San Dleso Gas and Electric =•Bf. eqmpmmt In the i.-. ftN tart• sustained $55,0001'1 i Pacific Telephone. 185.000, and San Clemente Cablevlaion. $2,000. ' from the Marine Corps which concluded that the fire which destroyed or dam aged 83 homes was started by Marines using electrical welding apparatus at an abandoned pistol range the morning of Jan. 21. The mayor said it was likely City Attorney F. MacKenzie Brown would be asked to pursue legal options available to the city against the Marine Corps, pre- sumably to recover its cost of fighting the fire. QiGlovanni also said he will ask support from fellow coun- cilmen !or building code changes that would ban use of flammable roofing materials. The mayor, who doused three small roof fires that erupted on the wood shingle roof of a neighbor, said wood shingles should only be permitted tr they are of a fire1>roofed variety. None of the shingles used on homes tn the fire area had been fireproofed, DlGlovanni aald. Jt It expected that many ot the fin YleUm1 will be present at the ~cu meetln1 to addrtss both topics. (See MAGIC, Page A2) Fire Victims Eying Loans Victims o( the San Clemente fire have been invited to attend a meeting at 10 a.m . Friday at San Clemente City Hall at which federal reconstruction loans will be discussed. City Manager KeMeth Carr said representatives of the state Office of Emergency Services and the federal Small Business Administration will be present to answer questions. The federal agency offers 30- year term reconstru_ction loan.'> at an annual Interest rate of 6.S percent. School A roet Wfll ble beld at S -'-w,... ft6aum~~ 7:30 tonl;tlt the Lacuna Beach Ab• .:.1G .,.. r High Sebool auditorium by the GENEVA. S•itt 18.lld <UPJ> music group Rain. -The Umted Stat l9d So~tt Tickets tO tbe concert are $2.50 Union today re-~ Ule1t and arc available at the door. ~ Atma U ,._lks Raln •Ppearcd during a 1cbool with '1ay as the t tdllh4i 111e~bly today. The sroup forrtachln1anewaireementon 1pec1alhes in Beatles' tm- rest.rictlna nuclear weapons. . ~ pcrsonaUons. And former assistant county health officer Thomas Hamilton char ged that the Board of Supervisors ignored staff advice when it awarded the contract to the testing institute. Since then, the institute's performance has drawn harsh criticism from County Health Of. ficer John Philp. In the meantime, Cella and three business associates have been charged in county and federal grand jury indictments with 144 felony crimes. The indictments allege that the four men participated in a grand theft scheme that together cost Mercy and Mission Community Hospital, Mission Viejo, $2 million. Last fall as the alleged ir- regularities were revealed, Celia's virtual one-man control over the two hospitals' fmances was ended by direclo!S' actions. Ex-DA Office Agent Cites Battin Probe A former undercover infor- mant testified Tuesday that he was once hired by the Orange Cownty District Attorney's Office to seek out confidential financial information on three county supervisors and an ex-candidate for district attorney. Gene Conrad, an admitted con- victed felon with a lleged or- ganized crime connections, said he wasn't told why he was given the assignment of researching financial dealings of Supervisors Robert Battin, Ralph Clark and the late Ron.aid Caspers of Newport Beach. Nor could Conrad say why he was told to investigate the finances of Anaheim attorney .I Dexter Penman, a 1970 candidate I for district attorney. But, the burly former infor- mant testified, the best his prob- ing could produce was $600,000 worth of interest bearing loans.• Caspers owed two banks. · I Conrad's testimony came dur· Ing Battin's pre·trial bearing befor"e Superior Court Judge Kenneth Lae. ,. • At issue in the hearing is Bat· . tin's contention that an indict- ment charging him with seven felony crimes related to alleged. ly campaigning at taxpayers ex- pense is the result of selective prosecution. In an attempt to help prove I that point, defense Lawyer Mat· thew KuriUch called Conrad io the witness stand la,J.e Tuesday <See BA 'ITIN, Page A2) AD RESPONSE DOGGONE GOOD "We bad good response to tbe ad and sold all the puppies." That's the sales success story told by tbe Fountain Valley woman who placed th.ls cl~si!l~ ad ln the Dally PUot: • • Collie Puppies, 6 wks, t xlnt w/thUdnn ~.xu-xxxx If you have pets you want to s~ll. call 642-5678. It only talces a few words in the right plac. lo find a buyer. Alons the Orange Coast, lhe riRht place l!i the Daily Pilot. , J ..................... _ _., .. , ... ,.""'''""~ .. . ... f ........ ,_ . . ., .. l ( I DAIL y PILOT LISC t ,.... .... .4.1 BA'l"l'IN ••• afternoon. Connd 1ald be did under«>ver work for the dlstrtd attomey's intelllgente dlvhlion from 1971 through 197'. Although blred and paid by the district attorney, Conrad said funds cover1ns bis s~rviceri came from the now·defunct Orange County IntelUgence Unit. According lo the ex·lnformant. he was given the code name Glen Edwards in 1973 when assigned the task or finding "any type bank or loan record'5" on Battin, Clark, Caspers and Penman. Jn response to Conrad's allega- tions of political snooping, Depu- t y District Attorney Jack Ryan characterized hts testimony as a fabrication calculated to embar- rass the district attorney's staff. It was Ryan who drew an ad- mission from the witness that he was convicted in 1975 of ''depriv- 10g an owner of his vehicle" and an accompany10g worthless check charge. .. Isn't it true you fell you were. given a raw deal by the di strict attorney?" Ryan asked. "I think that would be un- derstandable," Conrad replied as Ryan questioned the motives behind his testimony. As part of that effort, Ryan asked Conrad who he had dis- cussions with regarding the financial probe. The ex-inform ant said he had' met with Supervisor Laurence Schmit's former aides Loran Norton and C. D. Hanson at the Magic Pan Restaurant in South Coast Plaza .. How about Sheri(( Brad .Gates? Was he present?'' R.}an asked. .. Yes," Conrad replied. Ryan also drew an admission from Conrad that his value as an undercover agent was related to his knowledge of organized crime and that he had done Joan placement work for vanous or- ganizations. The prosecutor indicated he will call Con rad's intelligence chief. former district attorney in- vestigator Frank Oxadobourne to testify today. According to the former un· dercover agent, it was Ox · adobourne who assigned him the financial research Weight Curb Oass Slated At LB School A class "for people who feel they can't di et and for those who feel they are always dieting" wilJ be offered by the Laguna Beach l'nified School Di strict Adult Education beginning at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the high school. Approaches to Weight Control 1s taught by Lagunan Anne Johnson and includes fundamen· tats of nutrition, physical fitness, behavior modification, sugges- tions for low-fat, low calorie cooking and meal planning. . The class itself involves no ex- ercise. however, the instructor will discuss exerc'ises useful in losing weight. Registration is at the first class session. The class meets for two hours in room 23 each Thursday. Fee is $5 . LB Candidate Forum Slated A public forum of candidates for the Laguna Beach City Coun- cil will be held at 2:30 p.m. Mon- day at the Senior Citizens Center, 570 Glenney r e St., Laguna Beach. The forum is SPonsored by the· Laguna Beach Council on Aging and the Senior Citizens Club of Laguna Beach. Four questions of special in- terest have been submitted to the candidates and are to be ad· dressed during the discussion session. ORANGE COAST l/K DAILY PILOT fMO.-Co .. 10.llJ Piloli WtWIWN<l>l~<­ l>tftl>d l .... H••• Pf•H, llpUl>t -l>ylN0r1n9" CN\I Publl,,.,t"l!C.0...P•ny. S.-•i.ecltliOM•r" ll"l>!l,1¥(! MO"°•Y IMOVOh rrlcMy IOt Co\11 MllW ........ _, IHIKh. Hvnll .......... ,,,,F_ t•lft \l•lley, lr•ln•. $AlldlelM(l \l•lley •nd l~ lktKh~th CN\f A ..... re91oMledl· loon '' "'*'•Mii ~ef\ird•Y' -~ .... The Vll'C•HI ~lshlno !>llftl ,, .. J:>O WHI S.v ~lrt11t. ,.,.,. Mii•• c 111tornl•,,.,. Robert N. Weed PrU IOenl •ncl P\11111~ Jack R. Curtev VI,. Pr•,~nt •!Id GeMf•I M."-Ot< Thomas Keevll lldtlO• Thomas A. Murphine Mot-•no ldtW Charle-sH. Loos Rld\af'd P. Nall ""'"•"' Motll9fno Cdl"'" uauna a .. ch Offk• --,., .. () .. -, •• Mreet Nltlll .... ._ten P.O ._...,flloSJ Offk.es (Ml8Mew JltW.J19wS1_, -.......... u. t111i11 ... ....._. ~le4loeclVetley UJOlLa ... 1,._ ., .... o....,_., ... '• IJon't Call, ~lwnsB1111y MONTCLAIR. N.J, fAP) -'A .. Yt&N>ld hatiltyllsl hd won the lar•eat pri"• ever offered in any state lottery -$1,776 a week tor life. Eric C. Leek or North Arlington was selected Tuesday at the final draw- ing of the "1776 Instant Lottery." If he U ves to be 76, be will collect more than $4.S .thiUion. If he does n 't. his heirs a r e guaranteed Sl,847,040. "Praise the Lord that this is all possible. and I hope I can help a lot of peo- ple with this money," Leek exclaimed. Homicide Suspect In Mexico ByDOUGLASFRJTZSCHE Ofttle D•lly pt ... SUtf Irvine police officers were 10 court in Guadalajara, Mexico, to· day attempting to get an extradi· tion order to return to the U.S. with Raul R. Figueroa, tbe man they believe com milted an ex- ecution-style murder in an Irvine orange grove Jan. 18. Police Lt. James Carrington said today the Orange County District Attorney's office has is· sued a complaint of f1rst·degree murder against Figueroa and police have obtained a no-bail ar· rest warrant. Figueroa was sought in con- nection with the slaying of Eulogio Ramos Valenzuela of Santa Fe Springs. whose body was found by a woman jogging through an orange grove near CUiver Drive and the Santa Ana Freeway the morning of Jan. 19. Valenzuela had been shot several times in the back with a small caliber gun, according to investigators. Irvine Detective Steve Nash and Spanish·speaking Costa Mesa Detective Chano Camarillo, who jointly conducted an inquiry into the slaying in Los Angeles County barrios, flew to Guadalajara Tuesday to bring Figueroa back. Figueroa had been arrested by Mexican police following calls from the Jrvine department, Car- rington said. Carrington said that within 72 hours of the discovery of the body, officers had concentrated their investigation on Figueroa. After questioning friends and relatives of the accused man. of· fl cers later determined he had left the country for Guadalajara Jan.18. Police contend the motive for the slaying was the purported in- volvement of Valenzuela and Figueroa's wife Valenzuela's car, which police believe was used to transport the man and bis killer to Irvine and back to Los Angeles County. was found abandoned and burning in the City of Commerce Jan. 18. police said. Viking Problems PASADENA (U PI > -The two Viking spacecraft headed for Mars may not be able to conduct all the scheduled tests for life there because of a problem with ovens aboard their landers. The ovens are designed to heat soil scooped from the Martian sur- face, so sensors can examine the gasses given off for elements in- dicatin g the prese nce or micro-organisms ----- I LB Real EstBte Not Kidding, Brown, Treata Peen Alike .. .. .Generally Good MADISON, Wis. (AP)-Callfornia Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. apparently is not kidding about austeri- ty ln government, extendiDg it even to his relaUon.s with other gover.nors. . After requesting a copy of Brown's state budget messa!1i aldes to Wisconsin Gov. Patrick J . Lucey were dly surprised when they received tt more than two weeks later among some other fourth-class mail. A picture or generally healthy real estate sales marred only by the income property returns was painted Tuesday by Joe Horn, president of the Laguna Beach Board of Realtors. Horn spoke before about a dozen people attending the Laguna Beach Chamber of Com- merce boa rd or director s luncheon meeting at the Hotel Laguna. Horn said real estate sales dur- ing 1975 were "excellen\" and were continuing lo be excellent during the first month of this year. However, he noted that prices for housing were "outstripping" what buyers could afford. Horn said that when he came to Laguna Beach in 1960, "you could buy an~thing on Anita Street for $17,000 to $18,000. Now they're $60,000 and with the ex- ception of a new co~t of paint and carpeting, it's the same house.·• "Property has jumped more in Briggs Named To 2nd Tenn At Hospital Arthur Briggs of Laguna Niguel has been re-elected presi· dent of the South Coast Com- munity Hospital board of direc- tors. It is his second term. Briggs' selection and the selec- tion of other oHicers came fo llowing the hospital's annual membership meeting Thursday. Other offices are William White III, first vice president; Thomas Thornton, second vice president; Ellison Hazard, third vice president; Marguerite De Loach . fourth vice president; John Downer, secretary and Bert Kampert. treasurer. Nine members of the board of directors were elected or r e- elected to the board. Incumbents were William A. Beck, Jody Billings and Harold Hahl beck. New directors are Vincent Car- roll. surgeon and former presi- dent of the medical staff; Larry Hunt, auto repair shop owner and past president of the Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce: John Rayment. manager and vice president of the Bank of America, Laguna Beach branch; James Schmitz. owner of Beach Construction Co. and pre· sident of the Festival of Arts; Walter Sibbert, r etired real estate developer and certified public accountant; and Louis Zit· nick . vice president of Wagenseller and Durst, stock brokerage In reports to the membership board officers hailed completion of the hospital's expansion pro gram and a return to fiscal well being ··we came out reasonably well The cash flow has improved and we broke even," Kampert, hospital treasurer, said. In the hospital auxiliary's re- port to the board, President Evelin Alleman said that more than 71,000 hours of volunteer aid had been donated to the hospital this year by auxiliary members. The auxiliary has contributed nearly $455,000 to the hospital since its opening. The board also hailed the "statesmanship" of hospital physicians in refusing to join a slowdown in protest of malpr<1c· lice rates. the Jut three years than In the previous. seven," Horn said, ad- d.ln1, "I don't see any stopplnfl it. .. lnllaUon and lncrused tax as-seementa are cau1tna dUficulties with.In tho lncome-productns pro- perties, Horn told the Chamber directors. "Taxes ue lncreuing and t.n- come property ls not producing income. It's harder than ever to sell income property," he sald. He blamed much ot the Pl'O- blem on additional services un- dertaken by government and singled out increasing pressures for government to provide benefits to senior citizens. Horn was crttlcal ot the city of Laguna Beach for not Including in its sign ordinance permit costs for out-of -town brokers who place for sale signs on properties in the clty. He said that if a Laguna Beach broker takes a Newport Beach property, He has to pay a $50 sign fee. There is no such requirement in Laguna Beach, he said. Horn said the average home s ales price now is' between $60,000 and $70,000 in Laguna Beach. Most of the sales are of used homes as new housing is lag- ging, he said. Mr. LaVigne Service Set For Thursday Funeral ser vice for Maurice "Moe" LaVlgne will be held at graveside at 10 a .m . Thursday in Pacific View Memorial Park, Newport Be ach. Mr. LaVigne died Monday at his Laguna Niguel home. He was 50. A Jong time Laguna Beach city employe, Mr. LaVigne was well- known in the Art Colony. He was involved in Little League ac- tivities, a member of the San Clemente Elks and the Long Beach Veterans of Foreign Wars. He is survived by his wife ot two days, Janet, son, Donald LaVigne of San Diego; mother, Melvina LaVigne aod sister, Velma Therrien, both of Spr- ingfield, Mass. Mr. LaVigne's body was found in a swimming pool he recently built to enable him to exercise following a heart attack three months ago Funeral arrangements are un-. der direction of Pacific View Memorial Park. The .Callf ornia budget message was sent to ,Wisconsin with a mere 13 cents postage. It was maile~ ·Jan. 9 and reached Madison Jan. 27. .. ..· Tiny Patty Hearst Dwarfed by Trial . J ' • By JACK V. FOX SAN FRANCISCO (U PI) Patrici'-Hearst seemed dwarfed by her s\lrroundings. Dressed In blue, the tiny ac- cused bank robber was the center or attention in the basketball court-sized courtroom. But a casual observer who did not know or her case -if there is such a person -would hardly have picked her as the likely de- fendant who took part in a bank holdup in which two persons were shot. Or as the girl who shocked the world with her revolutionary rhetoric and rejection of her family and past life. Thin and pale, with dark circles below her eyes, she sat quietly at her defense table with a demeanor that could best be described as meek. Her pantsuit appeared slightly too large for her frame. Her hair, changed from a flam ... · ing red at the time or her capture to a light brown with a slightly reddish hue, fell to her shoulders. She was brought into San Fran- Fro•PageAJ MAGIC ••• Medina said no injuries had been reported and no structures were threatened by the flames, which were fanned along through most or the night by winds gust- ing at 15 to 45 miles an hour. Firemen on the lines, including crews . from the Los Angeles County Fire Department and the U.S. Forest Service, were assist- ed by bulldozers and a night.- vision helicopter, Medina said. At least five more bellcoplers • and air tanke rs began water- . dropping missions at daybreak. he added. The blaze was the latest to hit the Southern California area this fire season, which officials said has .been made more than usual· ly hazardous because of a con- tinuing drought. . cisco's Federal Building, where S the federal courts are located, • from her jail cell in handcuffs .. r · But they were taken off before ·~ she entered the courtroom. ·~ , Miss Hearst glanced through ' the list of prospective jurors, : then listened intently as each ;· was questiQned by U.S. District. ; Judge Oliver J . Carter. She paid:!: full attention as the jurors spoke:: into a microphone. Occasionally.:! she whispered to one or her de-• • fense lawyers, Albert Johnson, : who sat next to her. : . During court breaks, however, ·~ she appeared more relaxed. She gave her mother a broad smile as ·she entered the courtroom for the t morning session, and exchanged ·chitchat with her two younger teen-age sisters, who sat about 10 feetaway.. ·· . Carter read Crom the indict-• ment: "P atricia Campbell · Hearst and others did by force and violence rob the Hibernia Bank branch of $10,690 on April ~ 15, 1974 ." Woman's Arm: Amp~tated Surgeons at Orange County ' Medical Center amputated part ' of a woman's r ight arm Tuesday • after she caught it in the blades 1 of a meat grinder while prepar-·• ing hamburger at a Santa ~na :. delicatessen. • • The victim¢ the unusual acci .. ' dent was identified as Michelle • Holman, 25, ~f Anaheim. ' A police spokesman said the ·, victim was·pashing meat into the · grinder when the machinery ·· caught her fingers and started : pulling the arm in. Paramedics • freed the mangled limb from the · grinder and rushed the woman tu Medical Center. ~ Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919 BICYCLE PARTS-TIRES-ACCESSORIES SALE Smith· Autograph Frames 19.95. Deaths Not Lam.eated Billie ·Jean King frames 19.95 Sub l•ct to Stock on Hand . John, Bob Kennedy Called 'Dangerous' DALLAS (A P > -John and Robert Kennedy were two of the most dangerous men America ever produced and 'Tm not en- tirely upset" by their assassina- tion, says lawyer William M. KusuUer. my feelings that . . . maybe we're better off without the Ken- nedys than with \hem. Deranged people are going to operate whether William M. Kunstler says one thing or another." Tennis Dresses 20% to 50% off 200 Pairs Shoes 'At Cost or Below Random Sizes "Although I couldn't pull the tri&eer myself, I don't d.lugree with murde r someti m es; especially politic al asaassina- Uom which have been a part or Kunatler, here to address a political seminar at Southern Met.bod.lat University, was tho 1-------------------t def ense counsel ror the Chicago Seven group charged with dis· rupting the 19'8 OemocraUc Con- vention. He also ts chief counsel for Symblooese Liberation Army members BW and Emll.Y Harris. · political llf e since tbe beginning ol recol'ded history,'' Kunstler told a news con!erence Tuesday. . ••rm not enUrely upset by the Kennedy assauinatioo. In many ways two of the mCIA clanre.roua men in the coutey were eliminated," be 1aid. ••a la hard to tell what the ..__. ot Ken· nedy could have .... Kennedy excited adulaUoo. And Molatioo i1 the first atep toward dlc-tatonbip." Kunstler aa.ld he turned down · offen t.o handle tbe defense ot Patricia Hearst who wmt on trial Tuesday in San Francisco on bank robbery chargea. .. I would never work ror the Meant.a under any circwnatance because I won't work for plp." .. Used 12000 19.95 & 24.95 All Kawasaki Rackets At Cost Extra Duty Yellow tennis BaJls-Can .of 3/1.99 Warm up Pants Close-out -4.95 Basketballs 4.95 & 5.95 .. Asked by a reporter whether be felt hll Nmarka mlaht CIUH ·oth•ra to attempt klllin11, Kunatler replied: .. No. deraqed people aren't ma~ J)OUlble by be sald. .. , only won for people I Racquetballs -1.25 each respect and anyone In the rul.ln1 clan 1 don't reapect. Patty 1-------~~----------,~.----..... -------...._.-.... _-..-...;11..:, ~:m.-~ubeb:!:o~::aJ-~ Open 9· ta & Closed. Sundm 538 Center &46-1919 abewtnt to Jail, not before." ._ _ _..._._._. ____ ~------..._ _ _. _____ .._ ______ _...._ __ ........ • . . > ~f A8· DAILY PILOT EDITORI/lL PAGE I Joh With Challenge .. , ! .':)' ,. lfJ II I , ,,, • f .. J,., 1• It .. ••it• .1 •• h I ' ' ' .. 1; • .... . ,, ' .. I ' tr •. ,, ... , . ..... , I• '· . ' I Arizonan Jon Sparks will become Laguna Beach's fifth police chief in nine years when he takes over March 8. Sparks brings to Laguna impressive credentials in ~xperience and in education. His philosophy of law enf orc~mcnt is modem and is one of response to citizen needs .• One of the neQ..chief's earliest problems will be to listen to La&una's myriad voices and sort out those needs. , One wag has suggested that it takes a new police chief about two years to find out what Laguna Beach is aJI about. When they do, they leave. Two and a half years ago when retiring chief Frank Schopen was sworn in as chief, we noted that it isn't easy to be a police chief anywhere nowadays, and In Laguna Beach it's even harder. The observa· tion still holds. In any event, a welcome and a wish of good luck is due the man from Arizona. The city is in need of dynamic leadership and stability in the police depart. ment . Road Unity Essential Roads, and the cars that use them are a constant headache for Orange Coast residents. Either there are too few roads -and too many cars -or there is a road such as the proposed Pacific Coast Freeway. that residents don't want and they do a ll they can lo stop its construction. 11' In an attempt to alleviate both kinds of problems, the county recently completed a study or future transportation needs for the south county area. Local agencies were invited to look at four ·· alternate proposals for an arterial highway system which would be built in what is largely undeveloped and unincorporated territory. ol' I I ' .. The cities of Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and Irvine didn't like what they saw, so the three cities have been meeting in an effort to provide a com- promise plan for their combined areas. Each city has its own particular problem to solve. The two beach cities, for instance need a better way to move people to the beaches par~icularly from the San Diego freeway and the whole area needs another ma- jor north-south highway . In preparing a plan, the cities must accept trade- offs. Some of their local interests are going to have to be subordinated to the needs of the region as a whole. They are only going to succeed in getting the county to accept a compromise plan if it comes as a unitedef-' fort supported by all three cities. Salary Juggling By appearances, there's been some horsetrading between the San Clemente City Council and City Manager Kenneth Carr, who recently asked to step down to become the city's finance director. Carr. who earns $32,000 yearly as city manager . would ha\'e taken an $8,000 per year pay cut. The council changed that. Late one night, it sw1ll- ly voted to raise the finance ·director's salary to $28,000 per year -an action that will benefit Carr sub- stantially. Mayor Anthony DiGiovanni conceded that the pay matter has been under discussion between the council and Carr since he asked to step down in !\ov- cmber. Those discussions. or course, were earned out in pri\'ate executive sessions. Publicly, one councilman said Carr deserved the increased pay because of the expertise he was bring- ing to the job. This may be valid, but the way m which the entire matter was handled was at best question~­ble. L/SC .. DOUBLE HOOK Difference Can Create Dear Gloomy Gus Why Lean on the Co1crts? Harmony Responsibility for Juveniles (SYDNEY HARRIS) A new book came across my desk the other d ay, all about the need to s peak up, to assert yourself, and to say "No" when you relt like it, instead of saying ''Yes" when you didn't. I th.ink this is fine advice for about half the people; for the other half, I'd s uggest the opposite book: about the nee.d to shut up, to go along, and to say ''Yes" even wJl en you feel like saying "No." Sometimes the world seems divided between the people who won't speak up and those who speak up more than they should. Most or us are on one side or the other or this line; very few personalities are able to keep a delicate balance between self-assertiveness and complaisance. MY OWN besetting sin bas been the former; it has taken me decades to learn that saying less can be more effective than say· ing more; and I still Speak up before there is any occasion to. But at least I am able to ven· tilate my feelings, abruive as the process m ay sometimes be, to bthers and .efentually to myself. I think the non-assertive people sulfer more than we do; after all, we speaker-uppers im· pose the suffering on others. But, of course, there are compensa- tions the other way: the non- With everything going up, why, oh why does n 't someone do something to freeze the rent of the senior citizen? F II B Glewll., Gtn Cemme11h ue Suflnli111td .,., ....-ws ......... , ... , .... ,11, reflect die ...... , "'-.... ~,.,. Se"" -pet .......... GIMmy G1o11, D•llY Piiot. assertives are far better-liked than we are. WE LIKE the people who go along, who don't complain or ob- ject, who give in to us because it's less trouble that way; con· versely, we resent the people who speak their own minds blunt- ly, even if we are lhe sort who do the sam e. Non-asserters ap- preciate each other far more than asserters do. The tact of the matter is that some personalities need to be pulled out, and others need to be pushed in. And it is no accident that they usually marry each other, with a more or Jess un- -conscious desire on both parts to achieve this mutual effect. This is why it is said thflt "opposites at,tract." THEY A1TRACT because the non-asserter is looking for so- meone to do bis (or her) dirty work for him (or her). Someone who finds it hard to express com- plaints or resentments can ob- tain gratificat.\on trom a mate who plays this rote; and con- trariwise, the bold speaker-outer equally feels a secret need for a companion to soften the impact of bis egQ. Eve"'two friends who are quite different can fulfill these urges for each other ; in fact, persons of the same type rarely get along well t ogether . To the Editor: 1 n your Jan. 7, editorial on juvenile alternatives you slate, "The real burden for juvenile diversion programs is on county government through the proba· lion department." This position implies that once a child commits an aberrant act -one that brings him or her to the attention of school officials, police, or some other authority - that child is no longer of our com· munity, but suddenly becomes the county's responsibility -not the family's, the school's, the neighborhood's or the city's. In other words. that child is no longer one or our kids. In my opinion, the attitude ex- pressed in referring children an trouble to the county as a county problem is cons istent with the public apathy toward our responsibilities in the develop- ment of our youth. IN THE interest of perpetual· ing our schools and communities in serviee or adults rather than children. we continually leave the development of them into responsible citizens to chance. When chance fails we shunt the product -that misbehaving youngster -off to the justice system and label that child a failure rather than ourselves. I submit the real burden for juvenile programs lies in the community· and is th e responsibility or each adult: parent, neighbor, teacher, school administrator and the police that serve us. Each must make every feasible effort to help each child develop irtto a responsible adult with a useful and rewarding place in society. We must stop forwarding our mistakes and the products of our own apathy to the courts with the hope that the pro· blem we have created will be hid· den from our view . . NORA LEHMAN Bingo, Booze and Religion A recent action in Milwaukee may well portend some .op- position from an unexpected source to the constitutional amendment which would legalize church bingo parties. The measure is ACA 3, slated for balloting next June. Ap- proved by the Legislature after man'Y tries, it is a recognition that biJlgo has illicl tJy become a part 0 f t h c actl~ltles ln m a n Y cbUttbes. But t)\e th.-e~t to lu J~ation comes in the form of " • ~est lod1ed by an attorney • ad1il tot" U•• Wilconsba Tavem Ownen Auoclatlon to UM serv· mi ' iJ1S of alcoholic bevera1es in Ute' , ., churchn . If it wat not intended as a grandstand play for pubUdty it can only be cateaortaed as • crass ~lthlb1Uon ol unmlUCated sreed on the part of the 1ak>On 'k~n. THE PACT that the tne1dent oearrtd la Wisconsin makes it of .., l•• lnteTat In calltomja. Foir tb 1truielet of the con· ( EARL WATERS ) gregations to bring in the sheaves can be no different there than her e. And there can be little doubt that the falling away or the flock from the routlnes of chu'rch at- tendanc" has been a major con- tributing factor to society's pro· blems of today. While there have been many thfOl'tes advanced as to the lack ot lntereet in the churches on the part of th e post WW II generations, certainly one has l>eftt tbe failure of the churches to ac\lust to the ti met. 1f souls can be saved by pro- grams which wm bring the pro- di.Jals back to the fold, more po"Mer to the churches. If the ....vina ol spirited beveraau at· tracts people to tbe wholesome at.motpbere of the cbUrcb. brtnC onthewloe. BUT THE BU ownen not on· ty protested that Catholic c.bureht!s were se-rvln8 llquor wtJUe having only licenses ror bffr, they complained that too many betr licenses were aranted churches wlth no llmltallons as to the numbers. That it wasn't a Christian con· cern for the welfare of the parishioners which prompted the innkeepers gripes but simply pet· ty greed over the presumed Joss or rustomers, seems clear in the statement that "many tavern owners are finding it difficult to survive under the competition from the churches." Ain't that a shame. If one wonders how anyone could object to people gathering to hoist a few within the confines or a place of worship instead of swilling suds in a smoke filled bar inhabited by sots and worse. read Sinclair Lewis' novel Bab· bitt. WHILE Callfornia's liquor lawt would not seem to atract · church socials here, since ~~-( m, ta only required where annICS'. are sold, the avariclou.1 rears of\ the Wisconsin barkeepen mlsht wcll extend here to defeat the bingo measure. · For they didn't limit their ob- Jection1 of the churches to the is· sue or Uqoor but dragged in olt\er actiY'ities and 1pecific11lly r e- ferred to binao parties. Judsing frqm that they would also oppose church choirs and Sunday school. Jesu.-s would have less chance with s~h persons than he bad with the Romans. ,. ( MAILBOX ) Letten from readers are welcome. The right to condense letters to /tt space or eliminate libel is reserved. Letters of 300 word.s or less will be given prt/erence. All letters mu.st in· elude lignature and mmlmg address but namti may be withheld on re- quest if ru/ficient reaaon is apparent. Pottry will not be pubhshed. • Parking f'iRes To the Editor: The Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce is desirous of clarify. ing it ·s position on the proposed increase of fines for overtime parking violations. When the subject was raised at its Oc tober board meeting, the Chamber felt that the imposition of s uch i n creases at th e Christmas season would be poor. Iv timed and create resentment and ill will. Accordingly. the board voted to present a r esolution to the city strongly urging that parking fines not be raised until after the first of the year. This resolution was so worded that it could be in· terpreted as tacit approval of the increase in fines and a request of postponement only but such was not the intent. The resolution did take specific note of, and ap- prove, the suggested increase of fines for parking in a red zone. THE ACTION al the time was hasty in view of the fact that the subject was to come before the city council on the evening of the da_y following the Chamber board meeting. As the Chamber board customarily does not meet in December, no further action was take n on the subject until January, 1976. When it was learned that the matter was again to come before the city council on J an. 21, the board of the Chamber was polled as to their position. Eighty-one per- cent voted as opposed to increas· ing overtime parking fines from three to five dollars and so establishes the Chamber's at- titude. It is felt that s uch an increase will do little or nothing to ease the parking problem in Laguna Beach aod will only further in- flame an already very sensitive issue. Hthe aim is to merely increase the city's revenue, we suggest that forgetful shoppers are a poor choice to bear the burden. C.J .NUGENT P resident. Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce Not Mbtr~tftl To the Editor: Your editorial of Jan. 14, refer- ring to a "Buruucratic Trap'' regarding Ralph Marsden's at- tempt to develop his Dana Point vlew lot ls misleadine. This 11 not an undeveloped piece of property. There are two houses on the property. one a dupl~x. lhe other a single re· a!dence, plus various outbuild· in.-s. Since Mr. Ma.rsden doe$ not live on the property but rents the hous , there Is more than ample lncome to take care or hi taxes. Mr. Marsden hos not been maUgnfd or mislie•led by coun· ty offlcials. It 11 a simple fact that Mr. Marsden has always asked far too much in his de· velopment pl ans for his property. Even before clearing title to the property. he put in for a change of zone to R-3, a zoning that would have permitted a 60·foot height limit. This zoning was de· nied. He then r equested R·2 zon- ing. The numbe r of con · dominiums was astronomical. The densitv was lowered from 1,200 square feet per unit to 2,000 square feet per unit by the plan· ning department. Mr. Marsden didn't feel the new density level was economically feasible to de· velop his property on this basis. IN THE interim the County adopted the Capis trano Valley Plan. Marsden's property fell in an area designated Touris t, Recreation, Commercial <T. R. C.) -a new concept of land usage. Admittedly the planning department was at a loss as to ex· actly what T.R.C. meant and was slow in issuing guidelines. Cer· tainly restaurants fell within this category. therefore, Mr. Marsden put in for a change of zoning to C-1 Ccommerciall. The plan for this restaurant which was rejected by the plan- ning commission (and subse- quently appealed to the Board of Supervisors> was far too massive for the site. There was inadequate parking even to meet county planning code. Personally, I believe a proper- ty owner has an inherent right to develop his property but with this right comes a responsibility to his neighbors, the community and to the general public. F.L. PERSIDES Four-letter Word To the Editor: Everybody m Orange County who reads their newspaper knows that those in power in Laguna Beach consider growth a long four-letter word. So it was no wonder they shot down the South East Orange County Circulation Study -for fear it m ay, somehow, increase Laguna's population. In fact, during the study, anti· growth groups suggested that all building be stopped rather than enlarge the road networks. Some groups want to downzone the pre· sent land uses so that a lesser network could serve the transportation needs. <OTHERS attempted to point to the continued county growth and the fact that one· half of our coun- ty's 1.6 million are below the age of 26~~ years as justification to plan and build a system to match our predictable needs. The no-growthers themselves will try to get the popuJaLion forecasts changed, reduce the size atid number o( roads and generally delay action in the· shomiahted hope that somehow, if we don't plan for them, our children wUI go away. As it is, the present and planned county road network On· eluding all forms or tr nsporta· lion> south and east ctr the- Newport Freeway is already nearly insu!flclent to handle the current population. So while the "leaders•• of Laguna arc busy demanding no- I growth, the traffic and environ· ment will get steadily worse. GILBERT W. FERGUSON Orange County Cooncil on Environment, Employment. Economy, Development Sounding Breu• To the Editor: Current bumper-stickers in· dtcate that God may have found time in th e mids t of hi i, monumental effort to keep Henry Kjssinger out of Angola to attend lo his local duties. too, behind the effort to keep Arnold Hano <snd Sally Bellerue off of the Laguni.I .Beach City Council. Authenticated statements from God himself on the matter have been difficult to come by, however. What we get are im- pressions. He dismissed politi- cians of a bygone day as "sound- ing brass and tinkling cymbals.'' giving us a formula to fit both the heavyweight s and the lightweights who oppose Hano and Bellerue, if we choose to make that use of it. But where does God really stand in it all? DAVIDA.MUNRO Outstanding To the Editor: We would like to offer our con- gratulations to the South Coast Repertory Company on their out. standing performance of "Tbe National Health." Every detail was correct and the different accents were perfect. It was very sad in parts. but very true to how this system works. MRS .. MARY POPE Ask the Court To the Editor: Malpractice is an emergency to us all. It mus t be resolved for all people as soon as possible. The best and quickest way? Ask the Supreme Court of the United States to decide and declare the right of all involved; at once. Ask this court to decide if 8.Q.Y doctor can be s ued at all. Ask thls court to declare that hospitals are not liable. As k the court t.o-de- c!de who can sue and for what. Set the amount ol dama1es. Ask the court to explain and de· fme the world .. malpractice.'' Ask the court to decide what in· surance is needed. • CARL WHITSON ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wud, PuWlalwr Thnmo1 Ke~il. Ectltor Barbara Krtibfcll, Ed1lonol Page Edttor The edi\orial page or U.. Oalf1 Pilot seeks lo ,inform and . Umulate readers by PreMntiJIC on th is page diverse cornmea_tarj on top1ts of interest by IY'ftdic•t· ed columnists and ca~ bJJ provldine a forum IM J'tadeni• views and by presenUn1 tblj newspaper's oplnlons and Ideal on current topi~. The C!dftorial oPinioru ot the Dally PUot ~­only an the edltori Al cohunn at the top of the P•ft. Op niooa U• prused b1 lhe cohJmnblt 11ft1t cartoon1'1s and letter wntera ... tht1r own and no eridOIWMlnl Of lhtlr vle1'3 by ll\e Dail.)' Plki& should be inferred. Wednesday, Jan. 28, mt ( • s·af eway Hit . By P~pe Bomb . SANTA CLARA (UPI> -A pipebombexploded in a power transformer at the rear of a Safeway • store l ate Tuesday night, causing moderate dama9e, police said. No one was injured in the blast. The dollar figure of damages was not immediately known. ' Police received no warning of the explosion and no group claimed responsibility for it. Several bay area stores of the food chain have been bombed in recent months by terrorist groups objecting to Safeway pricing policies. Pair Pletut l•~fttt SACRAMENTO (AP> -Sandra Good says s he told .. the mean truth" but broke no law in warning business and government leaders they'd be killed if they didn't stop polluting. Miss Good and Susan ( J Murphy. former room· State mat es of Lynette ---------' Fromme. who was con-victed of trying to kill . President Ford, pleaded mnocent Tuesday to charges of conspiring to mail 171 threatening letters. 1t'efteer l'ollo1Dfn9 Order•"! LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Deputy Mayor Maurice Weiner, on triaJ for allegedly fondling a policeman in a sex movie theater, argues that he was in the theater to carry out an inspection on or- den from Mayor Tom Bradley. "The mayor will testify that he personally asked Mr. Weiner to look into the problem" of com- plaints of police harassment of patrons of sex shops in Hollywood, Weiner's lawyer told the jury Tues- day. "Mr. Weiner went out to see for himself what kind of places these were, and what kind of people went there, and wh at kind of problems arose in or- der to advise the mayor on what position to take.·· Jtf-Beld ~n Train Wrttk EUREKA (APl -A Fortuna man was ar- raigned Tuesday on a charge of causing a freight train wreck by parking his estranged wife's car on the trClcks at a ruraJ crossing. "Dale Alvin Barnes. 47, pleaded innocent before Municipal Judge Harold Neville Jr .. who sel bond at $75,000 and ordered Barnes to appear at a pre- liminary hearing in Humboldt County Superior Court Feb. 4. ftrea,... Felon11 B~ked SACRAMENTO (AP> -The state Senate ap- proved legislation Tuesday that would make it a felony in all cases for a convicted felon to carry a concealable firearm. The blU by Sen. Alan Robbins, CD-Van Nuys), was sent to the Assembly on a 33-0 vote. Robbins said his bill was designed to strengthen provisions against ex-convicts carrying pistols and other con- cealable firearms. llFO Repert• DU~ted TRUCKEE (AP) -Reports of an unidentified ·flying object were discounted today by two highway ·patrolmen who scanned the skies with binoculars fromasummitintheSierras. :· .. - Uf'IT ........ Won't Run Barry Goldwater Jr., with wife Susan at . his side, said Tuesdav he will not be a candidate for the u.s". Senate this year. Susan is the daughter of Dr. E. Mortimer Gherman of Newport Beach. Goldwater said he thought he could win a race with Sen. John Tunney but gave the desire to spend more time with his family as his re- ason for not running. Senate Rejects Brown Farm Bill SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. showed no appetite today for relenting lo farmer demands for an immediate overhaul of the Agricultural Labor Relations Board, even though the Senate soundly turned back his emergency $3.8 million bill to keep the would convince Brown to board alive. accept grower demands Brown's measure to for immediate altera- finance the board's lions in the five-month· landmark secret-ballot old farm board law as union elections for farm the price for its survival. workers beyond Feb. 6 Brown showed no such was rejected Tuesday on inclination publicly. a 20-15 vote, seven votes He previously said shor:t ~f the two-thirds changes can be con- ma1ority needed for sidered in "due course," P~~sage. . but not as part of the l h~pe th_e Senate will emergency appropria- recons1der its vote and tion. approve the appropria· Senate Democratic lion," Brown said in a Floor Leader David A. bri.ef ~t~te.ment. "I Roberti of Los Angeles, beUe-.:e it 1s JD the long-sponsor of the appropria- term interests of not only tion bill, said the gov- the growers and the ernor remained stead· farm workers but of aJl Cast against any im- t he people of mediate overhaul Calilorni~." Roberti was granted Repubhca~-led oppo-permission to seek nents nourished hope another vote on the bill their .show of strength probably on Thursday. • J ump in. The Ion~ leggy jumpsuic's che look of the momenr. Tailored. Tucked. T opstitched to perfection by Luba. In a sand-colored poplin of polyester/ cotton. In sizes 8 to ·12, $84 Fashion Gallery Coats, Suits . · ·I • ~Uock'a ~urh Co:a.t Plaza. San Dic39 Freeway at BrmoJ. Costa Mesa, 5'6-061 1 I~ -~ ,l.S Miiiion Beads· . 2 Gunmen Rab LA JJ'irm LOS ANGELES CAP) -"It bad to be a weU- p1anned Operation," said PoUc:e Sgt. Alan Varner after two men ln business suits robbed a securities firm and fied with nearly $1.5 million in negotiable bonds. . . An FBI spokesman in Washington said the rob- bery was one of the largest ot lts kind. Varner sald the men entered the Century City offices of the MuniciCorp. of California Tuesday and said they were waiting to speak with someone about buying some bonds. But a short time later they accosted an un- armed messenger bringing two bags of securitles to the firm from a nearby bank, the policeman said. He Hid they apparently were aware of the messenger's schedule. ''The total time was about 10 or 15 minutes," said Varner. "The messenger was coming back, on foot, and they were waiting for him. As soon as he returned, it was over. They pushed him into a room and came out with the bags." MuniciCorp's president, Kenneth Rogers, said both men were armed with handguns. "The men told the secretaries to shut up, then took the deliveryman into my office, told him to sit down, then took his bags from him," Rogers said. "They had their guns in his ribs all the time.". Varner said the two then made their getaway with the aid of an accomplice waiting nearby in a 1962-model van with out-Of ·state plates. · He said police were investigating the possibility that th~ two men were known to employes of the firm. MuniciCorp deals in municipal bonds, debt ob- ligations issued by cities and other governmental agencies. Such securities are frequently issued in "bearer" form, meaning that whoever bas physical possession can cash them. Most of the bonds taken were munlclpal, with· the interest paid by c:.llppina coupons, officials said. But they (the coupons) have the same. serial num- bers as the bonds, maklng it a simple step to trace anyone trying to casb them. Striking Doctors Face Liabilities· LOS ANGELES <UPI) Angeles County had not -Striking doctors today paid higher malpractice faced warnings from premiums by this mom- authorilies. of legal lng. T h e Travelers li"ability -and the Insurance Co. has possibility of going to jail warned that those who -if abandoned patients do not pay the first die and from an in-quarterly installment by surance company that midnight will lose their they will Jose their coverage retroactive to malpractice coverage at Ja,n. 1. midnight. The 28-day-old strike. Public hospitals in Los which bas spread to Angeles, jammed by pa-thousands of physicians tients who cannot find in a six county area with medical help elsewhere, 11 million residents. is in Tuesday for the first protest against the com-· time exceede d the pany's 327 percent in· theoretical maximum of •crease in malpractice patients· for which the policy premiums, with a hospitals can adequately provision obligating care. them to pay a possible About 60 percent of the retroactiave increase to 9,500 physicians in Los 487 percent1ater . Welcome spring with a lovely rose garden! 1976 AARS winners Choose from: America Cathedral Seashell Yankee Doodle each 595 #1 grade patent roses Choice of: each Song of Paris Tropicana Duet 399 Standard roses Choice of: each Bleze Chrysler Imperial Ml randy China Doll 199 Standard fruit trees 349 Grow a variety of fresh fruit, right in your own back yard I Choose apricot, nectarine, cherry, peach, pear or plum. Great for eating or preserves. Start your own orchard this thrifty w;iy! 899 Genetic dwarf bing cherry. Big and dark fruit with a delicious flavor. Grow your own I • 1t7t .IC~ Co., tne • . 249 forpackof2 Have• grape arbor In your yard •• Choose Concord or Thompson seedless grapes . A lovely tralllng vine that bears fruit. DOWNIY MONTCLAIR NIWPOWT l!ACH NORTHIHDO! IAN l!RNARDl,.0 WHl'nWOOD -· 11 .. RfV!RllDI! --- ..!.!.'! ~u · 1wl) • w.. .... s.-. ._, ~ ..,. ~ ..,... '*t ._, --~:t= llf1ctt.., et. Pll'*>O. 0. P.fll*IO--~ f'C lhdl!O. O!Q. • "f~O. ~ P-l.OOIO-:;. 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NW1t n 1.75 J 1'7 J7~ '\4o Saxon Indus I 1S2 4"4-"' usu-.21 7 ~ t~ Vt e.ll~ .4'15 US 4t . • • . j1f .~ •• 11\0 O\.'l .. , GTE pf 2'1> . . t 3' -"' K"'9tr 1.3' 6 122 18lll-'4 Hwst Ind wt.. 30 171111-~ SCA Senllc. •• 41 2"'+ "'° U 5 RHlty .. S ~ • · · Beldwln ·'° 6 a<I 9"'-\\ t. 6 I 10 .. • G TI,. 1. IOQ 7 23S tt . . . Ky-In .20 • • ' 6~-Nwst 111 pt J .. 12 112 -4W. 5c11Mfer ~ .. 21 4 -V. VS 9-.tS 10 106 ~ 14 L/SC OAJl. V PILOT Ole kPantry :rroper Stprage Saves You Money· By SYLVIA PO&TER f IA.st m c Se.its J , A year ago Christmas. we received a farge box ol shelled nuts as a gilt. About half of the nuts were consumed during holiday gatherings at our country home. After that, I put the box on the pan . try shell, near opened · boxes of crackers and similar dry foods -and then l forgot the nuts en· Urely. Ju s t before ' Money's Worth Christmas this year our . '-..-w.11... ____ _, housekeeper thoroughly cleaned the pantry and threw away not only the nuts, but also all the opened boxes of crackers. cereals and a s ubstantial load of other perishable foods. I would pref er not to recall or disclose the precise details about the condition of the pantry that prompted the herculean cleanup. , MORAL: PROPER storage or nuts is important. UMhelled nuts can be held at room temperature up to six months. But other nuts should be s tored in ·air·light con- tainers in the freezerorrefrigerator . A:' Tu~sday's column stressed, storing your food~pro­ perly 1s as important as shopping properly. You must kn~w the rules to save money when buying food; and you must know the rules to save money on storing the food in your kitchen and guarding your family's health. To proceed with key guides: . . · -When checking your pantry. reread the labels on the foods stored. Perhaps some should have been refrigerated. Not all boxed o~ canned goods can be held at room tem- perature. Canned cheeses such as Brie and Camembert for instance, s hould be kept under refrigeration even before operung. -Under no circumstances, taste food that you fear has gone bad. You don't have to swallow food to be poisoned by the toxins that certain types of bacteria produce -and taste is not necessarily an indicator of safety, ~nyway. -DOUBLE·CHECK the directions on your container of gra~ed P_armesan ch.eese. Some containers require refngerataon after opening; other containers don't . -Protect your syrups from mold by keeping them in the re frigerator. If crystals form in refrigerated honey or syrup, place the containers in hot water before use. -Keep peanut butter in the refrigerator after opening·. Let it stand at room temperature for a w bile before use: -Get clear in your mind that refrigeration and freez· ing do not kill bacteria in food; they simply stop the bacteria from spreading. When food is thawed, the bacteria become active and resume spreading. Thus, foods should be pre pared as soon as possible after thawing. -MANY FOODS THAT are stored in the refrigerator deteriorate rapidly and should be prepared for the table within a day or two of home storage. For instance: broths gravies, stuffings, chicken salad, potato salad, poultry• fish' liver, kidneys, brains and giblets. ' -Wrap fresh meat for freezing loosely enough to allow aJr to circulate but not loose enough to let the product dry out. But leftovers should be tightly wrapped and covered. -Alwa ys arrange food in the freezer sotbat the oldest package is used first . -Don't stack foods. Refrigerator shelves should not be ~overed since this impedes _air circulation. Produce belongs tn lower compartments. This prevents crystalization. . -Immerse leftover egg yolks in cold water and cover them in the refrigerator. In sum, draw up your kitchen checklist; follow throu.gh on your inspection, for it's most improbable that you'll get 100 percent on your food storage test, even if you pass. And if you flunk, learn how to store your foods properly. You will save money and protect your family's health, too! Return Enveloi)es From IRS 'Wrong' SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The Internal Reve·nue Service s ays it has inadvertently included the wrong return envelope with tax forms mailed to thousands of Southern Californians. The wrong envelopes are addressed to r egional process- ing centers in Philadelphia or Andover, M ass .. said Frank Busalacchi, IRS public affairs officer. The enve!opes should be addressed to the Fresno center. However, added Busalacchi , taxpayers who a lready · j have mailed their returns should not be concerned. Returns can be processed easily al any one of the seven national cen· ters and should not delay a tax refund, he said. Those taxpayers who haven't yet mailed their returns can scratch off the wrong address and use the correct Fresno address found inside the instruction booklet. a.itt'•t:.~-~ ~ ~ 2312,,. --~ •·pJ~tll ".l 1i.st .!l'1_· ~ OIMlcO 111< • • Ill •v.-14 ~ t.-·~ Nwstlpf4 20 •• " 1314-)Vi sc11er11111 . 2:2 ,,. SJ~+ t~ VS5Ceei uo 1 12n 80 + -. -V4V •v ... ... ... .. .. .. • ...-.... Genster 1.10 6 ' 21 -'" ~Gu 1 60 7 17 1~-.. Nwstlno!CS .• I 111~ ~ti, ... ,, 166 n...,_, us TOb .tO 11 147 1'11'1 .•. ' 2.ol t .. 24""-v. 2 • • I '3V.. '"" Genulll, .64 24 2'0 "° + ..... LemsnSn 19 • 1l U'-+ .... Nw Mtl .2Sd 13 40 10¥9 . . . """° .ID 22 Sst ,..,.,_,,. UlcSTech!\I 2 1 31' S2'41-te B~Cll t.341S 10 14\lo-v. Ulb 11 113 ~· "' 0. p~JIDO 20 1101 4V.C.-~ UM8ry .n • 7 "'" •.. 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Glet1IPC .80 10 1S 10\11 • .. lAlll ptC .eo I 27 ti\.\-14 ---<> 0-Scott" I . 10 lt 14 IVI+ "' VnlvLT 1.12 1 " 21111-Iii &.nkTrust l 6 372 J3~ + YI GornG 1.12• 30 220 SJ,.._ ¥o Glbr Finl Sii S S2 11"---V• LAtfl V•I Ind.. 46 1"9 ... Clell Ind .4C>12 It l'!'t + V. 5cov111Mfg 1 )I '4 1J'41 •.• VOP lncorp ti '1 11 .... + V. lkT pf A 2YI •• S2 27Yt . .• ~,. M~.. u 1'141 . . . GiddL.w .«lb 4 179 7 -~ I.All Vel pf • • 2 12 + V. Oellll•Pr .97 I IS 12Yt • . . S<ovll Of %VI.. 6 32:W.-"'1 E ... 21 229 U'h-V. a.rtlOlll.60 .• 31 21'--~ 1tS C . 6 1 7,.._ I.lo Giff Hiii .S2 1 14 1111\-"" ....,,_, .72b .. n4 12~-Vt eldn"-1 I S 49S I~ V. ScudderD V •• 17 SV.-Vt IFE _,, 6 tU \2111--. a.rd CR .22 IS 14• ,..,.._ .... " 9rd q " • .,.. + ~ Gillett• 1.SO 13 •s. a• -~ u-r Cp . • u 6V.-~ ldPt Of 4 •• " St-... Scud "'.77t>.. " I'll! • . . UlllfeFd ... ,, .40 fOt'o+ "' Firm May Bring Car· Tun.eups to ·the Home S.slcln<.60 6 ti 8~+ Ye ·. 'j11-"1 UI 47~ ... Glnoi 1~or1J 211 u llo-141 uno111n .n12 s 23Yo-14 cPtOf)..O •• 12 ~--SbOCLnl.40 I 2A2 2•--'-~1.20 6 %7 27:W.-\14 1141sln pf 2V. .. 1110 2.8VI-Vt o--20 M 62 + 111. GlffSOft Wk . . '2 l~'t + \'1 l..Hlr.Fy .40 10 39 • -V. cPt pt2.50.. 72 22.._.. e = .lO • 27 17Yt-'-USM pf l\ot .. 112'0 21~ V. e.tetMf ..... tJ U*-Vt ~-ZllJ It l"9 '!! GIOt»I fNr 1 "' •v.+ -i..ewrve Fd .• ,, 1'4-\'1 ~ptpft.16 .• 2 21111+1 rUI ... , ""'-"' USMlff2.tO •• 1J 32¥t-1'1l a.use11L. .60 12 403 :MYJ+ 'II. 1." 1 SOt u • ,,. GIOl>e un t• 1 St 21 ••• Ltv l11t .7Se .. " nv.-.,. a1 P.t wt •• 112 ~ ..,. .IO IS 10 ~-\a UIAlh Intl I• II ns ~ ••• l 1 N ~-rvi ... ,., L. .2u1 us ""'-~ oc.u •.. t a 111-"" Gold'w\1 Fc1 t 10s 11-. • • • ~YI stn .80 • "°° 46\4t + ~ crp 1 , " ,._,_ Iii SNck•vt 11 21 ' • • • UtMPL uo 10 s. 2Mtl+ v. . Cap to ews ~ tt ( IN HIGH GEAR ) ~ I.II 1 al 1'V.-YI · .Ill 9 2A 12"'-'-' GIOWofA .7t . . It 1S'l4-lie Ylta Fwn .. 70I SVI • •• Ed 1.6610 144 111111-~ S..fPow .I0 10 11 IT--\Q Ut P~ 2.to .. 1J ~ " • a.yutico .20• 1 ~v. ••• .eo t u 22--." Gooctrlc 1.1211 * ~ ... FE ~ 1 :.. J\lo-v. E pf...,, •• 210 s1"-+l~ s.enoo .n ~n. u -v. uv ,,.._ 111 4 " m.-• : SACRAMENTO -What 8"ri1101A10 ' 22~ •• . Cor1I • 224 1w. • ~ ~ i.10i1 "° ,.__ ~ L o uo to ,,, 2w1 + -Oii& pf 10.7' •• l70 1on-+ "" !!!t"r • ..!.~'" .• 'S! '!~-o. ·~ V•'-1n~ v-::-,...... .... may prove to be one of the 8 .. t Fib .7' 14 516 24~-\It t 1.IO 14 tat 41\.'t--. Gor'd6nJ .32 I 2S Ut't ••• LOf' of 4V. •• 4 62V.-IV. OllE pf lo.Al -.. wm.. -,.,. .. ..., - • -•-... flKllmn .s.11 n ·~-1v. CTS=.·'° 13 " 1.-+ -0ou1d1n 1.:.. 9 JS& 21f't+ ~ u5Mc:N1 • J 71'11-" •• l2'll '°'""+' seoco " • m 2av.-.. v41r1.,. 20" m "'*-'Ao m t sen ·bl f h" ·dea BKlonO .50 2J 4S ,,"_ ~ CUllkM .4010 2J t~ •• • Gouldpt us • • .. UV.+ 1 LI Cp .40 7 ll 12-Vi-... OllPw pf14/I. •• 040 IJO\.; .. • StrviceC: 12 s 16 ' • .. VIMdltt 1°..ao • I 1.-• . . 05 SI e ranc 1se 1 s '"'""' .1so 1 11D ,,., • • o.Mi ,. 1s n n111-1 GreceW 1.~o s '" 11 -"" u11e v Lon • • ;,o 2\1. ... °"'""" pflM •. 1330 121 ... Settt0mn ... • 13s u + v. YeMo eo .. 21 4"'• ,,.. s·n the past decade an engL·ne laker In .21 3 '" !S'AI-4' CuMDrv .25 IO 1 ~ + 'Ao Gr•lf'IVff ,30 22 lU ,, .. _ 14 Uber1y L Of • • I •"'--" OKC co .ID s '" 10111 • . Slleknp .28 20 ,. 1V. + .... Ylmlaln .20 IS n 6Yt •• • d • e.1c0Pt .60ll' " ,,.,... "' ~In r.Olb 11 9 ttv.+ v. Gr•lllf u .8012 10 ,.,.__ ~ L•ire My 2..,., 8 10 n-..-..., OkleGE 1.4412 ut n v.-v. ~·" .10 t 22 uv.+ ~ 119ster 1.01b ..... ta~ ••• 1tune-up one at your home or El• 1.20 to to 11 + ~ '" ..-' HO 12YI+ "" Gnnvll• ·'° , '" u1111 + ~ L1tye111.20,, n1 >Av.-111. °" oeoL IO .• i190 '°'..., ... '°T'1'.•,·~ ~ "22 J04ttt,= ~ v"-'F~-Off11"'10 ,', ss1'J ~1•·+• ~ office, is now..heing developed ldg ... 30glJ 11 I\.;-· tlHWA!. 1 ~-v. Gr•YDro.so 1 14 16'•-'4 L!ncNtf1.6012 S1 2,v.-1 l•NOl.80 1 12 2~ ··: -• .. •• _... • ,. ~ ·v 11 -..wt .lj • 2s1 It ••. euutrH uo l i1 aov.-~ 0r .. 1 A&P .. ,, .... _ v. uncNu p1 J •• J »~-'!4 '" ~ 1.12 1 '" »"• ... 1tto ·56 s , .. " -v. V141COm nt" t:i iov. ·; · 'by a maJ· or corporation ac· I& Go 19 ' u """ .. v. Cyckip$Cp 1 • ' 1•-• • • GIUIOQ 1.20 .. ,. ttl.'t-'Mt LlrtNF 1 7111>.. 3 17""-"' lnltr•n 1 ' 2'4 21-..-t rpf 1.U •• 2 " -It. VICir-Comot . . 15 ·~ 14 • ' ••CrP2k ts"_..,., Cyprvs 1.40 6 '° H*-¥1 GtNlr1.2Sbl6 1 ts\!!-~ uene1 0orv •• 21 ,...._"' krn.60 s 21 10¥. .•• wGllf> •. a .. .__,,,.. V•E1.c1.l1 6 •n wv.-,.... cordingtothecurrentissueof 111 ti. r 11 -1'61 --o o-G1NHt1t uo , "s .ss _ 111 u non 2""11 , m 1~ 14 L ,,, ' s 10"-v. S11erwi1 i.20 u " ""' • 14 V•l!"Pf 2.'°.. l4 ,,,_.. v. M M . Cp •. ; Z,7 ~-\4' o."'°"c .10 .. 1~ ,__ .... OHNDft ...... 2614-1 UtlnCYllU·· .J ~ ... IUMI. u u .... +I 9'rWOfUO •• tlOO ""'--IYI V•EllJf"-IO •• PO $1 +... otor agazme. :"'!i" • 5' -~ OenAtv .o7d . ~ ,... ""oews,..1,. ... ,0 U9 u•.!.-~ Uttnc.,flf2 •• • 11~\61 ~ee .11 10 4' 1111'1-W. Slerr•)lc.tt • 40 1~ •·· vaei.c~s .. zno SCYl-I In the system now being SC-., 10 214 • • · eQ> 1 ... i 'ff 41 -"'1 U 2.ta 3 21 U +I~ Uttonln pt,A ,. 1 ~ ~ <1111.tl I 28 14-+ "--MQNIC "" 7 47 17 -14 Vfl!.,cJ .72 .. t.260 7'1YI + 1 C811• ~ts !~.·;;_ l~·al.1 2 M. -'t tpfl .••. 1 II~ •. L.Mlln-tr •• 19 I ••• sEI 2.20 1 17 38~-\'ll ~ .. 1 u-.--..,.,.nt0o lnc1'7 91, I~~ Worked OUt the motorist ., PtlO •-" ,.., ,... aff GI• 1 .• 11 70 I~+ " UKllhNlf l 213 t -\Ii OutbdM 1.20 1' 466 JOll'o--~~ 2 10 • , 2 J9\lo • • VII CDrii ... •......--• • • '' ~-11o 1• r-r Ji it!-1.cw t1 261 1s.... + "" L.atwCD 1.20 1 "' ~+ -. ouutteo .1s • 22 1"" + 11. ~ 1 w us ~-" WcnM '·'° 1 11 J.s9-+ " would call an and give the ~~ ,.. Jl\lo+ "' vc.c tM s ~ I ••• wt .. •s 2'11-"' l..Oi'NtJl'I AOm so -,\lo+ v. ()vrSllp .20o • 3' u --Sl!'llf>rc" .12 • S7 '"'-~ --w w-I k od 1 d t ,.,...i " "~• "' "'°"H .14 M -4' '"' .. u ,~. "' LotnMCI -* , , .. 1sv.+ "" O<oltrTl'fl .eo 11 u llfll-"' Slimse ... 1s S49 "'"'• ~ W11t1tpU'h .. '"o 4' -1 Ima e, m e , year an ype uu m 21._-"' y.,.Lt 1" , .-• 14 uv. •.. ~ .10d 11 11 is •.. ~ncF ·•" 102 SJ -1 SlmpPet.40 JG ,,. ••fll-" w.oi ep ·76 • 21 n -YI of eng1·ne in ht's car and • ..,,, up .II '° 1 -" Pt. DI '-J a 74 + ·~ !' .1' 12 ,. 14"'_ ~ ~ Ind 1 , ,,. ~ • • • o.nrn t.n t1 196 se~-1 si,..-eo .. "° tJ -1 ~ 2.20 . • 1 47vt + ~ ~ ~Lii,. ' ,. '""u:· w ... n"'-Ii ~ •. 1$ t + .... Lontl Lt 1~. 12' o~ .... ="'~ .. I "111-1\o't Sl;r,llQffro ~~ii ,c ':;'==: = ~ io ji 1!~-·v; .a s~ific appointment. A van "111 11 "' 11 + \1·t0~-1 " · ' a •~ ... LtL~NU .• dlOlll _, tn.6'' 62 n~+i 1.20. • j ,.,._111 •1~1.-11 't' 3'2 ,L +.,.. carryan" all the n...,.essa""' . I DI •I~ L 0JO' I t + ,.._ •• 11 '" ... LIL.~Jl.12 •• dO et +Ill ---#' ,._ Welll 60l0 1 .. YI It ~'" 'J 11.t ,ft '*-·1.. ~11,_~. •.• i = ~'!' ?•0tt1., l4t't ... LIL;itEus •• 110 4'~+tv. "'-<A•u.20 .. " 11---v. ~viingi:~: 21 ,n;_·\4 Wiii~~-• ., 14~~ equipment would be dis· . •' JJ·P. l,t .. __ ; t:C111tiiii4 ™u 'm+ 1t "';T.e' -~ •4 1: ... :, ... ~l~i1 Ji: ff~" =:t:t::: 'il n~-.~ $Mltllli.0.60l4 " mi... ... WllMfrl .0121 rn 13..._"" patched to the motorist and ' -1tone C» 1 J +~Git t s 21 • , I.Mil c.or~ 7 m f -lie E.c\.4l(l\1>r111 s1 "v.-1 $M11111nt 3'to 1as U~+ tit WlnaLb.IOU tt 14-.-v • • 1A 1 U\\-1 1ten-1 ·i 14--\IO 1:2 ·; m w ... -~ uL.A11C11. ,. s" 21\\-Yt ecPetr1,11011 "11"9-v. Sm11111r11n:.214 146 •1141-v. Wrif'd•s1u u • ··the driver would do the .. In 1 1-.-tll'"" I t ltt,11 -&W..AOI S 167l taMt-"" u~lf(. 1t M 1-")-.... ecf>.w 1.10 t SS9 20\6-V. $MllllS T .50 9 2 I~ -" Wer1141C0.80 •· 7S IOVt+ .... u . tt uw-1"' u .,11__::._ ''i1wt .. M> s~ ... LAuGM1.t11 ui." ... ~T•T1.20• t1u11o+"'SfN(f.ff'.to•"1114-.,..w~.so1mtt~:i. neededwork. t. .. at ~ + 1 r () 14 *"' • 4' M'ti • • 16 to-..-2v. ~In .tO .. 23 IJ.1111-V. P9INW .20d 4 152 I . . • Soll ' •• .10 6 0 lt.\4-" W 4\41 • • I 71--IV. ..... . •• m~-'6 14 't.-.-.._ ~--'°' tt"-" LTV <»r ',,. 12~~ P•lllttlfUO •. 2, 14 •.. ~·lnll 2 ,. , ....... w fl\6 .. 1 40 -I AN INDEPENDENT for a large trucking ftrm that a lways dispatched him to do s uch on the scene work with broken down tractor trailer n gs. Such a servi ce, o n a widespread basis would be ~ boon to the consumer. · • With more and more ol us t:iking the auto option of the vtnyl landau roof. it is impol'· tant to take proper care of ll in order to avold the heavy ex· I pense of replaclng the cover· ing after a relatively short tJrne. -"'c:: 't m;~ '\:. i6 t .::=:: '~"?!-'~-"' ~ .:·. ,t !!.,._1 iw. =i:~~,\ ''-t~!~ s;;·~,·=4J ~ ;:~ ::: W¥Un\:~1? ~ nl-·~ mechanic ln San Dl~go has ~·,:: l 1ti i1 ... =: == \._: ' ~ tt•+ -~ jumped ahead of the big cor· NEVER USE A metal 01" J:(,J,! .. .., .._, -" .,, '] iv.+ ~ ""'~ 1 1 1 -~ ., .q ' -Ind 1.i. ; J ""-\\ WlllllHu .111 7 2 '2_,._ '-poraUon and performed that any other stiff-brisUed bruth 1 tt''il~".·~ r=ill :: .~~·"l:l'lr.t'U~=:: 1~1.~ff~ .. =::o;~I fi =~ ~,,,.'f .;!§;11 ... ·.~£-if,~~·i l:=.~ prec:iseierv1cerormorethan to scnabyourvtnylroot.Tbe It. : ~·~t ~ ~_..J'M Jm:.~ Aii U :~l: ~:~~ ... Jt..T'-·" ;=~1:.ll: ft .. ~!.'~ • 1 • ~ :::.r.& J Ji ~"' slx months with sreat 1uc· mattrial la ~ed. bu• ll is :=J ,, +I ~~ l E"" ,. nu"-t --u=::-,...,,_"'11 t·i;:--11mlt1.,_·.~-.... o.-\ct':J!!'~ ces.s.Hehadbeenamecha.d.tc 11tJJlcomparat$vel,ylbin. q gf -·4' · .• , ,.,__,-·:i~ 'l f=i. ~-:iJ l,. ~4~ 1.:::( tlJ'l ,j •+i: =:,•,i ·1 ",: Cl • sf :m!o·~ :..G ii;"' =1·:~ ': tU J"'=t e 111:IJ ~·tt =~.,1..:l: ~ j '!.! I U4 tt 1 :=~ 511C.1t J + r: • •Pol= a. ; Pf= 0. ~ • ~= Qiie t '·'· l tflEi ~'~.· ,nt;-.-§ -~·,, .: '" J.,;·~~.u t: ms·:.~· r·-~ '"''" .. .,.~ !~ "'=; • ~~ ~l 4 ~.·~ WeltMll~:#'' ': ~·:: ,. ---·-. --·-__. ........... .. ~;a ... .... I -.. .. it: .. ;: i ~ . .. 1. ' f .__ ~ Wiii• pt ... ' 1ri 0 + .. 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SChub ' TODAY'S CBOSSIDBD PUZZLE ACROSS t Strongbo•es 6 ·· Bede" Eloo1 novel 10 Knigtlts wile 14 Accu1toni 15 •••• Wlltr 16 Black Poet 17 8Nvtlf Siate capital 18 Bad loser: 2wo1d1 20 Not tleatlhy 21 Elbe tnbutarv 23 Less delifable 24 Attended a meeting:2 wo1ds 26 Precantoi 28More delicate JO Bnng dishonor vpOn J I Race tTKks 32 Singe< J6 State Abt><. V Come into btor'll J8 lrterMY cohcUon 39 Even odds· 3wo1d1 •2 Be fTugal 44 Allywrtha group: Var. 45 Zodiac 191 14 17 20 '6 Final 2' houri 2 words 49 ••··• H1rt>or SO Growing OUIWlfd 51 Raised and ltd 52 M111 Lupino 56 Actor Rudolph 58 Audacious PtlfSOn. Slang 60 Besetiau·s ···Slaughter 61 Symbol ArcMIC 37 Operatic 62 frame or 11 Cut short highlight Allen 12 Wireltu 40 Moat por11y 63 Violent code 41 Of 1 long ac>eeeh inventOI time ago 64 TV progtem 13 Become a 42 Oillipate ~ Siluated member 43 Roofing behind· 19 Hindu material Prefix religious *.; Calender DOWN teacher abbr. I Spenish 12 Tiiie of "°"°' 46 lifting device 1ffinn11Jve 25 Be unwell '1 Pineapple 2 wordl 26 Opted 48 Large room 2 Analogy 'l1 Hound's 49 Unskilled Abt>< Quarry laborers J Complete 28 Nuts 51 P~ 4 S<>onef than 29 81th 's riv8' knowledge 5 Arlbs. e.g. JO Excel 53 Oleiilhed 6 Ski cenltf J2 Close friend 54 Pill's river 7 ~s of tlllt 33 Auto 5& Metal 8 Busy tctrvllY · acceseorv contain« 9 lmp.tff 34 Feminine 57 Rink turfece 10 GtvM suffix 59 Retld«lt of: tutmonv· 35 Rodents Suffill MISS PEACH D ~CJ I !o ! -DICK TRACY ,.--------. Tl 1&: Auc.l&:O 15'T011&:'.I Ollr ·~~ •l\vi; r v MA1AM?OM,N/J,MA'A>A,~E'S DOWN ·we: ~UCK t WAArs NOT 6M mE 15 TRVE ! M DOUt1 N6 ME. lHf AHsweiS ... 'lRVE: CHUO(. OR t'LL ~ SPEAK TO IOJ A6A1N ! ' ~CtN6, M.Mef.. M NOT 6MN6! by Mil .. Well, as 1 undersland t• we're supposed to tolerate Russia and China to help keep peace-you know, like with husbands." DENNIS THE MENACE : ~ ' I • i ·' .. J ' • . : ~ ' l . -Saddlebaek EDITION '~ * + VOL. 69, NO. 28, s SECTIONS, 52 PAGES Today' N.'Y. TEN cetlrs Doctors Facing lns11rance Dead1ine ll wu still ',mclear today Just how many Orange County doc- tors would pay their malpractice insurance premiums prior to the midnight tonight deadline. .. Everyone here is making up their own mlnds and we can't see a real cons ensus." explained John Rette, executive secretary of the Orange County Medical AasociaUon. (Related story Page A5.> Rette said the doctors' de· clsions will probably be known by Thursday or Fl'iday. Doctors who ignore tonight's deadline run the risk of letting their coverage lapse. However, doctors w\io send premiums in to either Travelers' Insurance or the new doctor-run Southern California Physlclana Insurance Exchange will have coverage retroactive to Jan. 1. Doctors are , protesting the soaring lnaurance rates by stag· lng a slowdown in many Southern California hospitaJs. Many Orange County d~ joined in last week, follo"'._~their Los Angeles County colleagues. As of today. only one-third of lhe 9,500 Southern California physicians had renewed policies with Travelers. "All we can see in Orange County la that it appears there'll be a significant number of doc· tors who choose neither company and let their insurance lapse in protest," Rette said. According to Rette, the current activity of Orange County doc· Cella Probe Resumes LabOr Aide, Ex-mayor to Testify The Orange County Grand Jury resumed its investigation into the financial and political de· alings of Dr. Louis Cella today, Waiting to testify as the jury entered phase two of its probe were Pete Remmel, executive secretary Orange County Central Labor Council (AFI.rCIO > and former Garden Grove mayor John Dean. Both Remmel and Dean have * * * Hospital ~ting Cella Unit By GARV GRANVILLE Of tlle Oall, Pll .. Slaff Directors of Mercy Hospital in Santa Ana voted unanimously TUesday night to oust the Dr. Lollis Cella-founded Orange County Health Testing Institute from the hospital. A hospital spokesman called the board's action, "Part of the cbntinuing attempt to rid the hospital of whatever is ten of Celia's influence." Tbe testing institute last July 1ns awarded a controversial $280,000 annual county contract covering pre-employment physical examinations of pro- specti~e county employees. Cella, backed by his attorney, insisted that he had divested himself of any financial interest in the health testing firm six months berore it was awarded the county contract. Despite Celia's disclaimer, county Health Department of· ficials insisted the then· politically influential doctor ac- tively· participated in contract specification negotiations. And former assistant county health officer Thomas Hamilton charged that the Boa rd of Supervisors ignored staff advice when it awarded the contract to tl}e testing institute. Since then, the institute's performance has drawn· har$h criticism from County Health Of. ricer John Philp. In the meantime, Cella and three business associates have· t>een charged in county and federal grand jury indictments with 144 felony crimes. The indictments allege that the four men participated in a grand theft scheme that together cost Mercy and Mission Community Hospital, Mission Viejo, $2 million. Last fall as the alleged ir· regularities were revealed, Cella's virtual one-man control over the two hospitals' finances was ended by directo!S' actions. Amtrak Derailed BRIDGE CITY. Tex. (UPI ) - ~ gravel truck knocked a New Orleans bound Amtr a k passenger train off the tracks Tuesday, but the train stayed up- ri1ht, preventing serious in· juries. Eighteen of the 51 train passengers and the truck driver were taken to Orange Memorial Hospital. AJJ RESPONSE . DOGGONE GOOD "We had good response to the ad and sold all the puppies." That's the sales success story told by the Fountain Valley woman who placed this classitled ad in the Daily Pilot: Collie Puppies, 6 wks, Jdnt w/chlldrcn $25, XXX·XXXX If you have pets you want to scU. call 642-5678. It only tak~ a few words In the right place to ltnd a buyer. Alona the Orange Coast, the ri&ht pfacc ls tho Daily Pilot. r been close to Cella in his political activities. Dean is a former chairman of the Orange County Democratic Party Central Committee. When called to testify before the jury earlier in its investiga· tion, Dean r eportedly cited at· torney-client privilege and re- fused to answer questions a,sked of him. Later. a Superior Court judge ruled that Dean's professional re· lationship with Cella was not an issue and ordered him to testily. It is expected that the former Garden Grove mayor will answer questions related to $25,000 in legal fees he received from two hospitals formerly con- trolled by Cella. New managers at the hospitals say they have no knowledge of legal services performed. So far, the grand jury has in- dicted Cella and three business Not Kidding Brown Treats Peers Alike MADISON, Wis. CAP) -California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. apparently is not kidding about austeri· ty in government, extending it even to bis relations with other governors. After requesting a copy of Brown's state budget message, aides to Wisconsin Gov. Patrick J. Lucey were mildly surprised when they received it more than two weeks later among some other fourth-class mail. The California budget message was sent to Wisconsin with a mere 13 cents postage. It was mailed ·Jan. 9 and reached Madison Jan. 27. Moulton Parkw~y Plaza Work Sta:rted Ground has been broken for a $6.3 million shopping center to be built by the Rossmoor Corpora· · tion just oµtside the gates of Laguna lfiµs Leisure World. The center, called .. Moulton Parkway Plaza," will be located on Moulton Parkway between Santa Maria A venue and Ridge Route Drive. Primary tenants will include Lelsureworld Savings and Loan, Security Pacific National Bank, a Colony Kitchen restaurant, a major food market, and a 40-lane bowling alley. Twenty·four patio shops will complement the de· velopment. R~bert Mitchell, Rossmoor's .commercial development manager, said the 126,000 square~foot center is approx· imatety 75 percent leased but that 16 patio shops are still available-. Occupan~y of the MoUlton Parkway Plaia is planned fbr August-September. The architecture of the sbop- plng center wlll carry an °early California" theme, accented by heavy wood timbers. Project architect is George T. Kilpatrick. Los Angeles, and the prime contractor Ralph Evans ConstructJon Co., Santa Fe Spr· ings. Petition for Toro MAC Formation Set Petitions calling for the forma· tio.1 of an El Toro municipal ad· visory council (MAC> are now complete and will be presented to Supervisor Thomas F. Riley on Friday , according to homeowners ass ociation secretary Sharron Bedard. "Our weekend drive was very successful. We now have 575 signatures, which is 23 more than we need to have .for the re· Oass Slated In Welding At Saddleback Instruction in the use or the lathe, milling machine, oxy· acetylene welder and sheet metal equipment will be offered in a class titled Metals and Weld- ing for Men and Women under Saddlebackback Valley Unified School District'• adult education program. The clan wlU be held on Thursdays, beginnln1 lh1s week, from 7tol0 p.m . in Room Z1 at La Paz lntermedlate School. There is no tuition fee . Howev•r. a f eo to pay for materials and projects wlll be collected. f\lrther inlorm•Uon may be oblaln9d by contacllna th• Adult Ed\icatlon Offlce at83'7.Q10. quired 10 percent or the re· glstered voters," she said. Although members of the El Toro Homeowners Association say they have verified the validi· ty of the signatures on a list of re· gistered voters, the petition will be reviewed once more by the Orange County Registrar of Voters. The petition then will be re- turned to the Board of Supervisors for a vote, and if the outcome is successful, placed on the June primary ballot. . El Toro homeowners have been pushing for a municipal ad· visory council, 1hnilar to the one in nearby Mission Viejo, as a means of improving communica· tlons w ltb tile board of supervisors. Altbouah municipal advisory councils have no decision· maldng power. they make re· commendation• on proposed commercial u4 residential de· veloJ>ment., roads and tratnc, parka and recreauon. and other matten of local Importance. Agents Revealed· MILAN. Italy (AP> -A Mllan weekly ma1ulne printed a list toda1 of •cents ol the Soviet setret urvtce -KGB -alle1ed· .11 operatmJ ln ltalJ .. A few 4a)'S •10. a ~ome oiJ1e1lne, L'&lllhslo. Jubllsbed a Utt of at· lejtd U.S. Central tnteWgenee Aaency opvaUves ln Italy. · associates on 127 charges related to the purported theft of $2 million rrom Mission Community Hospital, Mission Viejo, and Mercy General Hospital, Santa Ana. The so-called second phase of the grand jury's probe is expect· ed to include an inquiry into money received from Cella by persons who performed no services for the hospitals. UFire Contained By Breaks LOS ANGELES (AP) -Fire breaks helped to hold a blaze in a. tinder·dry canyon on the city's northern outskirts to ~ acres early today, but strong winds predicted during the day kept fire officials braced for the worst. "It's at a t\Olding stage now but we'll 1'av•io H• wblt hap-pens,'' said U.S. 'Forest Service in· formation officer Ed Medina ... If we can bold the flames down in the canyon, we'll be in great shape." · Medina said the blaze, possibly started by an arsonist, broke out shortly before midnight in" a roll· ing brush area in the Angeles .Na· tional Forest, a few miles northwest of the Magic Mountain recreation area. '.J'he flames spread rapidly in a southeasterly direction toward the suburbs of Saugus, Newhall and Valencia, fire officials said. But 200-foot-wlde fire breaks, constructed under a fire preven· lion program, helped firefighters halt the advance, Medina said. "Things do look pretty good out there ri~ht now. The situation is hopeful, ".he added. Medina s aid no injuries had been reported and no structures were threatened by the flames, which were fanned along through most of the night by winds gust· ing at 15to45 miles an hour. Firemen on the lines, including crews from the Los An geles County Fire Department and the U.S. Forest Service, were assist- ed by bulldozers and a ni ght· vision helicopter, Medina said. At least five more helicopters and air tankers began water· ·dropping missions at daybreak, he added. The blaze was the latest to hit the Southern California area this fire season, which officials said has been made more than usual- ly hazardous because of a con· tinuing drought. Powder Puff Footballers V-ie in Viejo If the 1uys playingt!ootball Thursday n11ht at mission Stadium look like sissies. it's ·most likely because they're girls. The "queen" of the event will have wide shoulders, as boys and glrls trade traditional roles for El Toro HlJb School's annual powder putf nae f ootballgame. CompleUri• the switch, boys will don 1bort 1kirt.s to lead cheers and 1lrls will squire the "queen" and hls cO\lrt. said Sheri ROu, aifll' athletfc director at El Toro. Junior Cirls will be p\Ued •8alnsl senior girls for the po~c•ampiOPShip. 11 :.m• will a tart at 8 p.11a. at • tftct atadlum, IOc:atecl °" I(~ Viejo ~ij.ll t~ool cro~·c~ Chrlsanta ton varies greatly throughout the county. Howe ver, he said its app~t that many are restrict · ing ~ scope of their practice, beina, selective about new pa· tients and are not accepting Medi-Cal patients. He added that in the wake of the cris is, the ones who will reel it most are the Medi-Cal pat.rents. 'Fakon' Flap "Doctors are not striking out at people, but they're so frustrated and disgusted with the governor that they'll just not participate in the Medi-Cal program," Rette commented . Hospitals in the county are still feeling the slowdown effects, although som e doctors have :already agreed to go back to work Tom Alderman of Chicago asked for a replica of the Maltese Falcon used in the famous Humphrey Bogart movie -by mistake Columbia Pictures sent him the original. Since Alderman received the falcon last week, he has been "threatened" in telephone calls and notes from movie buff fri ends who also want to possess the bird. Alderman is Gov. Dani el. Walker 's director of com· mnnications . · Coffin Transplant Prompts Lawsuit A widow who learned last Dec. 17 that portions of her husband's body and his coffin had been found on Orange County's Coyote Canyon dump sued Westmins ter Memorial Park today for $200,000 in damages. Genevie ve Harman o f Wes tminst e r c laims in her Superior Court a ction tha t negligence by the mortuary operators led to the dumping of Hugh E . Harman's r emains at the trash site between Irvine and Newport Beach. · Mrs. Harm an states that she made arrangements with the de- fendants on Jan. 23, 1975, for the cremation of her husband's re- mains and the scatterirtg of his ashes at sea. Mr .. Harman died May 6, 1958. and his bo<ty was in· terred at Westminster Memorial Park. Sheriff's officers who in· vestigated the incident decided not to take action ·against the mortuary after determining that "human error" led to the dis~ posal oftbe rem;lins. Investigators said mortuary workers apparently overlooked a Woman's Ar:rll ~p~tated Surgeons at Orange County Medical Center amputated part of a woman's right arm Tuesday after she caught it in the blades of a meat grinder while prepar- ing hamburger at a Santa Ana delicatessen. The victim ot the wusual accl· dent wu identified as Michelle Holman. 25~ of Anaheim.· A police spokesman said the vlctlm was'l>uahlng meat into the grlnder when the machinery abt her flnsera and started ng the arm in. Paramedics 'eed the manlled Umb from the uindtr and rushed the woman to fiecUcal Center, . . number of bones in the metal casket while they were tr ansfer· ring remains from the coffin to the cremation container. Westminster Memorial Park officials today refused to com· ment on the lawsuit. They earlier refused to comment on the dis· covery of Mr. Harman's r emains at the county dump. Drug Bust Made LOS ANGELES (UPI ) Federal agents arrested a 35- year-old man Tuesday during a raid on an illegal amphetamine factory capable of producing $40,000 worth or drugs a month. Coast Weather Fair through Thursday with continued sunny and warm days. Chance or some fog near the coast Thursday morning. Highs 70 to 80 degrees. Lows tonight in the 40s. INSIDE TODAY Stole plans to ~ . long-range biqfclino apptOJ' to ~ falling to budgef't .az. , But prwpect• for more·bflr. • traila of flumn di.sta1tca look promiling. 87. A.2 DAILY PILOT SB EXtraditi~n S.oaght ~ DA 'Wat~hed' l 3 Supervisors ·~ , Irvine Police ·Want Mexican Suapect· • MON'n:L:AIR. N.J. CAP> -~ 11~11~r-old hairstyliat baa w°" U.t \arsest prise eveT' offered n ony slate lottery -$1,'77S a week for Jlre. By DOUGLAS t'RITZSOIE ot•• Dellr '11ttSIMI Irvine police omcers were in court in Guadalajara. Mwco, to- day auemptln& to aet an extradt- twn order to return to the U.S. with Raul R. Figueroa. tbe man they believe committed an ex ecullon-style murder in an Irvine orange grove J an.18. Police Lt. James Carrin&ton s1ud today the Oranee County District Attorney'a otclce has is· ::.ued a complaint of first-degree murde r l:lgainst Figueroa and police have obtained a no-bail ar- rest warr ant. FiKUerou w us 1ought in con- nect 1 o n with the slaying or Eulogio Ramos Valenzuela of Santa Fe Springs, whose body was round by· • worn.,-, Jo1J\Da throu1h an orange grove near Culver Drive artd the Santa Ana Freeway the morning of"1 an. 19. Va)en1uela had been s hot several Umea ln the back with a 1maU caliber aun, according lo . lnveatlgators. Irvine Detective Steve Nash and Spanish-speakin& Costa Mesa Detective Chano Camarillo, who joinUy conducted an inquiry into the slaying in Los Angeles County barrios, flew to Guadalajara Tuesday to bring Figueroa back. Figu~roa had been arrested by Mexican police lollowing calls from the Irvine department, Car· rinet.on said. Carrington sald that within 72 hours of the discovery or the body, officert had c:oftcentr•led their investigation on Ftgueroa. Arter questioning friends and relatives of the accused man, of- h cers later determined he bad left the country for Ouadalajara Jan.18. Police contend the motive for the slaying was the PWl>Orted in- volvement of Valenzuela an~ Figueroa's wife. ' Valenzuela's car, which police belJeve was used to transport the man and his killer to Irvine and back to Los Anaeles County, was found abandoned and burnins In the City of Commerce Jan. 18, policesald. Eric C. Leek of North ArUngton was ul cted Tuesday at Ute flnal draw. int of the "1176 lnatant Lottery." It he U ves to be 76, he will collect more than '4.5 mllllon. U he doesn 't, hla h elra are guaranteed •t,847 ,040. "Pr alee the Lord that this ls all poaslble, and l hope I can help a lot o! peo- ple wlth thl1 money," Leek exclaimed. Deaths Not Lamented A former unde rcover lnfor- mant tesUfled Tuesday that he wu once htred by the Oran10 County Distrlct Attorney'• Office to seek out confidential financial information on three county 1upervl1or1 and an ex-candidate tor district attorney. Gene Conrad, an admitted con· vlcled felon with alleged or· ganized crl me connections, said ho wasn't told why he was elven the assignment of researching financial dealln11 or Supervlsors Robert Battln, Ralph Clark and the late Ron.aid Caspers of NewPort Beach. thtou1h 1974, I Althouah hired and pllld b1 the dlltrict attorney, Co~rad H id lund! covering his services came from the now-defunct Orange County lntelllgence Unit. According to the ex·lnformant, he was given the code name Glen Edwarda In 1973 when u1!1ned' the task of finding ••any type bank or 101.n records'' on Battlnr Clark, Caspers and Penman. In response to Conrad's allega· lions of ~llttcal snooplni. Depu- ty Dlstnct Attorney Jack Rxan characterized his testtmony as a fabrication calculated to embatt· rass the dis trict attorney's staff. · Tiny Patty Hearst Dwarfed by Trial Jo""' Bob Kennedy Called 'Dangerous' Nor could Conrad say why he was told to in vesti&ate the finances of Anaheim attorney Dexter Penman , a 1970 candidate for district attorney. But, the burly former infor- mant lestlfted, the best his prob- ing couJd produce was $600,000 worth of interest bearing loans Caspers owed two banks. Conrad's testimony came dur- ing Battin 's pre-trial hearing before Superior Court Judge Kenneth Lae. It was Ryan who drew an ad-1 mission from the witness that.he: was convicted in 1975 of "depriv·• ing an owner of hi1 vehicle" and; a.n accompanying worthless check charge. : "Isn't it true you felt you were . gi ven a raw deal by the district· attorney?" Ryan asked. "I think that would be un-, der standable," Conrad replied: as Ryan questioned the motive&· behind his testimony. By JACK V. FOX SAN FRANCISCO <UPI> Patricia Hearst seemed dwarfed by her surroundings. Dressed in blue, the tiny ac- cused bank robber was the center of attention in the basketball court-sized courtroom. But a c a sual observer who did not know of her case -if there is such a per son would hardly have picked her e s the likely de- fendant who took part in a bank holdup in which two persons were shot. Or as the girl who shocked the world with her revolutionary rhetoric and rejection of her family and past life. Thin a nd pale, with dark circles below her eyes, she sat quietly at her defense table with a demeanor that could best be described as meek. Her pantsuit appeared slightly too large for her fram e. Her hair, c hanged from a flam- ing red at the time of her capture to a light brown with a s lightly reddis h hue, fell to her shoulders. She was brought into San Fran· cisco's Federal Building, where the federal courts are located, from her jail cell in handcuffs. But they were taken off before she entered the coumroom. Miss Hearst glanced through · t he lis t oC prospective jurors, then listened intently as each was questioned by U.S. District Judge Oliver J . Carter . She paid full attention as the jurors spoke rnto a microphone. Oc casionalJy. she whispered to one of her de· fense lawyers, Albert Johnson. who sat next to her. Antique Sho.w Slate d at Mall An antique show featuring the collections of about 40 exhibitors will be displayed at the Laguna Hills Mall Thursday through Sun- d ay. The s how will run concurrently with r egular m all hours which are from 10 a. m . to 9 p. m. Thurs- day and Friday, from 10 a .m. to 6 p m. Saturday, and from noon lO 5p.m . Sunday. Among the d is play items are furniture, glassware, porcelain a nd stove s from Bavaria, France, Italy, England and early America. Bro wn Accused SACRAMENTO <AP> A coalit ion of groups claiming to represent the handicapped and mentally retarded is accusing Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. of im - poundine $6.4 milllon in aid .. · . ORANGE COAST .l .. •1111111! , ... ,1111,1111!'1 ... Q~I 1·, .. ~·1 ~6 =:t:.~~·.~.~"~.~·.::::::.::::c~ ~~== ( .. \l Publ t\l'l+,,q (Ol'flt>•fllY ~ •tt-edlltM\\ •*' f" ~1\t\•c:t M O'Wllt'f lhrovon FrtddY f('if (O\t.~ ~w. N.-woort tl~acn. Huntington 0. Mn rovtt t••,, VeHtv. '"""•· Saddtebi<tl "•""' d,'6 ~uAA s ... <h1Sov111 C..,.\I. A•i""'"'~"""''"'' uon " wt"'""" !>.\lvrcln• -S.....U•• f,... p1n<•~· JIUDllU\lnig PIA"1 ••• , DO ~ ... f\.<,y Slrffl, c o\I• M•"· C.ahlo•l\la tt~ Robert N. Weed f.'r .. 1oen1 a11<1 P~1- Jack R. Curley '"" p,.,.,.,.,,, .,.. GeMrlll M.tN9"' Thomas Keevll &clll•r Thomas A. Murphi,,. H •rwolnt IOllilf (harle.s H. Loos RJcha,.d P. Niill A•"•'•"' Manae"'9 £411ef• SadcUebad1 Y•lley OffiU ~t la 1'•1 R-•I a.., O..,.fr- Offket' C.e-le Me .. : )JOWetl ...,)lt .. I t1unll"91"" n.,_.,11• 17•1S .. 1'C11 fleV .. v~ 1..e11WW .. e<lll 1Ml60"'-}W•il-1 TeleplMtw (714) Ml-4!21 CJasslfiH Advertising MM 671 ! .. OoJl~D•O V•ll~'f Nt-w>Ollk• , -511-6.110 J rOI'\ '"Cit'--··w.• During court breaks, however, she appeared more relaxed. She gave her mother a broad smile as she entered the courtroom for the morning session, and exchanged chitchat with her two younger teen-age sisters, who sat about 10 feet away. Carter read from the indict- ment: "Patric ia Campbell Hearst and others did by force and viol ence r ob the Hibernia Bank branch of $10,690 on April l[>, 1974." Mis s Hearst sat with her Cull attention to the judge. Carter asked the jury panel if any of them knew Miss Hearst. then asked he r to rise. She stood up momentarily and gazed even- ly out over the packed courtroom as every eye was turned to her. Then she sat down, without ex- pression. But she did smile neetingly, a l o ng with o thers in the courtroom, al some of the answers from prospective jurors to Carter's questions. DALLAS (AP ) -John and Robert Kennedy were two of the most dangerous men America ever produced and "I'm not en· tirely upset" by their assassin a· lion, s ays lawyer Wllliarn M. Kunstle r. "Although I couldn't pull the trigger myself, I don't disagree ·with murd e r sometimes , especially political assassina- tions which have been a part of political Hfe since the beginning or recorded history," Kunstler told a news conference Tues day. "I'm not entirely upset by the Kennedy assassination. In many ways two of the most dangerous men in the country were eliminated,'' he s aid. ''It is hard to tell what the glamor of Ken- nedy could have done. Kennedy excited adulation. And adulation is the firs t s tep toward dic- tatorship." Asked by a reporter whether he felt his rema rks might cause others to atte mpt killings, Kunstler replied: "No, deranged people aren't made possible by Cella Transcripts Sealed for Month By TOM BARLEY Ot tlle Oallr P'llot M4ff Transcripts of Orange County Grand Jury proceedings that led to the indictment or Dr. Louis J . Cella and three business as- sociates today were ordered sealed for the next month by Superior Court Judge KeMelh Willia ms. Judge Jerrold S. Oliver will take the bench F eb. 27 for a special hearing in which he will be as ked by lawyers for two or the defendants , lo permanently seal the bulky transcripts. Th e s evera l volumes of transcripts. described today as the largest such records in 0range County history, would normally have become available to the public next Monday. The motion for sealing was filed by lawyers for defendants Stephen R. Evans, 31, of Mission Viejo and Geoftge L. Ollendorf, 44, of Laguna Beach. Cella, 51, and co-defendant Theodore Schiffman, 53, of San· ta Ana dld'not join in the motion. All four indictees will be back in Judge WtlJiams' courtroom Feb. 5 lo enter pleas in respon!e to the 127-count indictment. Bail for Evans, Schiffman and Ollendorf will be finally de· termined Feb. 5, Judge Williams ruled today. They are presenUy free on $25,000 bond with Celia's bail set at $75,~. All four defendants faee trial on multiple charges of grand theft, conspiracy, forgery, em- bezzlement and willful attempts to defraud state government. Those charges were Ciled arter ·a long grand jury probe into the operation of and Celia's involve- ment with Mission Community Hospital, Mission Viejo and Mercy General Hospital, Santa Ana. It Is alleged the profits ob- tained by Cella from hospital operations were used to further his poiilical ambitions and finance the campaigns of political candidates who qualified !or backing by Cella. All four men .have been or· dered to face trial May 4 in Los Angeles Federal Courton similar charges returned in a federal gr and jury indictment. Ex-IRS Tax Collector Gets 5 Years Da vld G . Robins on, who perked up the Oran1e Coast economy last summer and fall with a spending spree flnanced by the largest fraudulent tax re· Cund in Internal Revenue Service history, was sentenced to fl ve years in federal prtaonTuesday. Rob!nson, a former IRS \ax collector , also was sentenced to three years probation. my feelings that . . . maybe we're better off without the Ken- nedys than with them. DeranJled people are goin g to operate whether Wllliam M. Kunsller says one thing or another.•• Kuns tier , here to address a political seminar at Southern Methodist University, was the defense counsel for the Chicago Seven group charged with dis· rupting the 1968 Democratic Con- vention. He also is chief counsel for Symbionese Liberation Army members Bill and Emily Harris. KunstJer said he turned down offers to handle the defense of Patricia Hearst who went on trial Tuesday in San Francisco on bank robbery charges. At issue in the hearing is Bat- tin 'a contention that an indict· ment charging him with seven felony crimes r elated to alleged- ly campaigning at ta.xpayers ex- pense ts the result of selective prosecution. In an attempt to help prove that point, defense Lawyer Mat· thew Kurilich called Conrad to the witness stand late Tuesday afternoon. Conrad said he did undercover work for the district attorney's intelUgence di vision from 1971 Driving Class Scheduled in As part of that effort, Ryan· asked Conrad who he had dis~: c usslons with regarding the : financial probe. : The eX'·inform ant said he had : met with Supervisor Laurence · Schmit's form er aides Loran Norton and C. D. Hanson at the Magic Pan Restaurant in South' Coast Plaza . "How a b out Sheriff Brad Gates? Was he present?" Ryan asked. ''Yes," Conrad replied. Ryan also drew an admission from Conrad that his value as an undercover agent was related to his knowledge or organized crime and that he had done loan placement work for various or- ganizations. "1 would never work for the Hearsts under any circumstance because I won't work for pigs," he said. "I only work !or people I respect and anyone in the rulinl'! ~lass I don't respect." Garden Club Talk Planned Leisure World Good Mileage Pete Bergstrom of Roger's Gardens nursery will address the Mission Viejo Botanicos garden club tonight on spring vegetable gardening, according to Letty Skeen, president. The Green Survival program announced earlier fo.r to· d 8 y 's m e e u~' h as been postponed, Mrs. Slreensaicl. .Botanicos will meet at 7: 30 p.m. at the Mission Viejo Swim and Racquet Club, Tierra Circle and Mosque~o Dr. Additional Information is available by calling Sandy Allen, Botanicos president, 830-6138. Retirees can brush up on their driving skllls and changes in tlie motor vehicle laws by attending a defensive driving seminar at Laguna Hills Leisure World. The two-hour sessions are scheduled at 9 a. m. Feb. 11, 18, and 25 in Clubhouse 3 of the re- tirement community, reacbed by taking Gate 3 ott Moultoft Parkway. • Safety experta · f roQ\ \he Automobile Club of Southern· California will be on hand to dis· cuss driving techniques for older motorists. Reservations for the class can be made through Skip Stone, 837 ·3550, Ext. 271. LawPmhed SACRAMENTO (UPI) ...... Legislation introduced in the As· sembly would require that all cars sold in California after 1978 get 20 miles per gallon of gasoline or better. Authored by Assemblyman Ter~y Goggin, (D-San . Bernardino). the measure pro· vides that cars, starting with 19'19 models. which fail to meet the io m.p.g. standard for both city and highw~y driving could not b'8 sold, rented or leased in the state. "In California," Goggin said, "one-third of aJI energy is con· sumed by the automobiles -ap• proximately 7.5 billion gallons of gasoline a year.'' Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919 BICYCLE PARTS-TIRES-ACCESSORIES SALE Subfect to Stock on Hand Tennis Dresses 20% to 50%. off Smith Autograph Frames ·19.95 . Billie Jean King frames 19.95 Used T2000 19.95 & 24.95 Aliso PTA Panel Slated The Aliso Elementary School Parent-Teacher Association wUl select a nominating committee tonight for next year's PTA board, according to Gall Willson, Still another part of the sen· 1---------------------. tence was Robinson's coopera· All Kawasaki Rackets At Cost president. . Future fund raising events also will be discussed, she s aid. Tonight's 111eeting will begin at 7:30 in the school's multi-media center. The school is located at 22882 Loum ant Or in El Toro Countian Facing ~er Charges Assault cher1cs •lain.st o San- ta Ana man were ehan1ed to first defree murder Tuesday in con~ nection with the f ataJ 1hoot1n11C of the1uapect'1 commonlawwl.ft, a poUc. spokesman 1aJd toda,y. Roy Stafford, '4, waa ureated SUnday on a char,. <4 uuult with Intent to commit murder aft.er police found 38-year-old ·. Je>yc:e Toby IYinl on the floor of the couple'• home with foqr buUet wounda. S.be died late Mon: daJ. tion in tellina IRS agents how be managed to get $565,000 in Uleaal tax refunds from the federal gov- ernment. · The IRS has avoided releulnc details of Robinson's scheme, other than to say it was dis· covered when an investi&ator wondered why one indJvldual 1ot 200 Pairs Shoes At Cost or Below Random Sizes such a tarae return. 1--------------------t Authorities also said Robinson used a fake name, home addres1 and W·2 forms to carry out his scheme. Robinson u1~d the money from J&aly to Dec. 19, when IRS aienta arn1tcd him. He biased an expensive trail amon1 Oranae Cout mtrebantl, renUn• a Balboa Jaland apart- ment offices ln lrnnef hll1n1 a mtt of a do1en emp oyct and buytn1 alrplanea, an $15,000 house Jn Pa1adena and an H· pensive car for every day of tht week. Wilson & Penn T enilis Shorts . 4.95 & 8.95 · Wilson & Penn Tennis Shirts 5.95 &' 6.95 - • Extra .Duty Yellow tennis Balls-Can ·Of 3/1.99 Warm up Pants Close-out -4.95 Ba,ketballs 4.95 & 5.95 Recalled by Oranie Coast ac· 11 _______ _.. __ _...._ _____ ...__ ......... 1jte9...;...._-.......... --. .... ~~----t qu1lntance1 u a small ebulllent .. . - ~Jr ~~!~~~h1!'~:.1~h.:.~~ Open 9 to & Clpsed Sundays hllJM.U"~ha1nwt~~aab.. a.....;;._...;;...; __ ....;..:;.;;...-..-..-. ___ ....,.__ __ ..,...._.__.._ __ ... ._i-.. ________ ............... ..._...._. -.... ·-- \ I 1 .. e d e e -. • _,, .48 I . . • 't •! it !. ..... II . , ... , ) . II . ' 11J I ., . ..... '• '· 1.h . .. , DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Growth and Finance On the surface, Irvine appears to be a barely de· veloped half hundred square miles with plenty of building room. And j udging from the rate of zoning re· quests, development permit applications and home sales, both builders and buyers are ready to fill it. nut below the surface, as the fiscal prospects ofthe City of Irvine and the Irvine school district art! com- pared to the possible rate of growth, there is the hint of crisis. Particularly in the school district, which {'ontains less industrial land than the city, there is the prospect of an increasing demand for service while income per student declines. Despite the call for "balanced development" by ci· ty officials-m eaning a favorable t ax·base rela· tionship of industrial to residential development-the question of whether cities can restrict growth still 1s rattling around in the courts. Irvine city attorneys have drafted a plan they believe can be used to legally hold growth to the rate the natµral development of revenues can s upport. Looking at the potentially dismal fiscal prospects in the future, the proposals seem worth pursuing. • Road Unity Essential Roads, and the cars that use them are a constant headac he for Orange Coast residents. Either there are too fe w roads -and too many cars -or there is a road such as the proposed Pacific Coast Freeway. that residents don't want and they do all they can to stop its cons truction. ln an attempt to alleviate both kinds of problems. the county recently completed a study of fu ture trans portation needs for the south count~· area. The cities of Newport Beach. Laguna Beach and Irvine didn't like what they saw, so the three cities have been m eeting in an effort to provide u com· promise plan for their combined areas . Each city has its own particular problem to solve The two beach cities. for instance need a better way to move people to the beaches particularly from the San Diego freeway aQd the whole area needs another m a jor norlh·south highway. In preparing a plan, the cities must accept trade· offs. Some of the ir local interests are going to have to be subordin.ated to the needs of the region as a whole They are only going to sucteed in getting the county to accept a compromise plan if it comes as a united ef · fort supported by all three cities. A Proper D e cision Orange County Supervisors last week avoided an emotional storm in voting to permit construction of a mortuary outside one of the gates to Leisure World. Their decision was proper. despite the vocal op- position to that project, stemming primarily from the debatable taste of installing a facility literally at the gates of a retirement community. But questions of taste aside, supervisors would have been stepping beyond the limits of fair play had they done as Supervisor Thomas Riley requested that is, s pot downzoning a commercial lot to prevent a s pecific type of legitimate business. The mortuary purchased the land in good faith . knowing it was zoned properly for suc:h a facility and made a considerable investment in planning a struc- ture that conformed to the surrounding community . Riley apparently did not-realize that a t•ons1dera- ble group of Leis ure World residents appr<H'Cd of the project, but were not as vocal as the opponents. Local agencies were invited to look at fou r alternate proposals for an arterial highway system which would be bwll in what is largely undeveloped und unincorporated territory. It was a political decision on Riley 's part to OP· pose the mortuary but it was not warranll'd bv the politics or the legalities SB DOUBLE HOOK Why Lea11 011 the Co11rts? Difference Can Create Dear Gloomy Gus Responsibility for Juveniles Harmony ( SYDNEY HARRIS) A new book came across my desk the other day, all about the need to s peak up, to assert yourself, and to say "No" when you felt like it, instead of saying ··Yes" when you didn't. I think this is fine advice for about half the people; for the other half, I 'd s uggest the opposite book : about the need to shut up, to go afong, and to say "Yes" even when you reel like saying "No." Sometimes the world seems divided between • the people who won't speak up and those who speak up more than they should. Most of us are on one side or the other or this line; very few personalities are able to keep a delicate balance between self-assertiveness and complaisance. · MY OWN besetting sin has been the former; it has taken me decades to learn that saying less can be more effective than say· ing more; and I still speak up before there is any occasion to. But at least I am able to ven· tilate my feelings. abrasive as the process may sometimes be, to others and eventually to myself. I think the non-assertive people suffer more than we do; after all, we speaker-uppers im· pose the suffering on others. But, of course, there are compensa- tions the other way: the non· In ans wer to Curious. Irvi ne Tomorrow holds re gular board and mem- bers hip meetint?s but "comes out·· more visiblv at election lim<' as thconl)· organization to uffer lhl' candidates a forum where all may be heard. M.J V oi.tfty Gus <-•Ml ue ,....,..,_Irr re*n .... • M\ llectHarlly rtflec1 Ille views ............. , ...... .,_ .... ,..,.. .. GleMly Ow, Dally ~Mt. assertives are far better-liked than we are. WE LIKE the people who go along, who don't complain or ob· ject. who give in to us because it's less trouble that way; con- versely, we resent the people who speak their own minds blunt· Jy, even if we are the sort who do the same. Non-asserters ap· preciate each other far more than asserters do. The fact of the matter is that some personalities need to be pulled out, and others need to be pushed in. And it is no accident that they usually marry each other, with a more or less un· conscious desire on both parts to achieve this mutual effect. This is why it is said that "opposites attract." THEY ATTRACT because the non·asserter is looking for so- meone to do his (or her ) dirty • work for him (or her}. Someone who finds it hard to express com- plaints or resentments can ob- tain gratification from a mate who plays this role; and con- trariwise, the bold speaker-outer equally reeJs a secret need for a companion to soften the impact of bis ego. Even two friends who are quite differ ent can fulfill these urges for each other; in fact, persons of the same type rarely get along well together . To the Editor: In your Jan. 7, editorial on juvenile al tern ati ves you state, "The real burden for juvenile diversion programs is on county government through the proba· lion department." This position implies that one<' a child commits an aberrant act one that brings him or her to the attention of school officials, police. or some other authority that child is no longer of our com munity. but suddenly becomes the county's responsibility -not the family"s. the school's. the neighborhood's or the city's. In other words. that child is no longer one of our kids. In my opinion. the attitude ex- pressed in referring child ren in trouble to the county as a county problem is consistent with the public apathy toward our responsibilities in the develoµ· ment of our youth. IN TH E interest of perpetuat- ing our schools and communities in service of adults rather than children, we continually leave the development of them into responsible citizens to chance. When chance fails we shunt the pro~ -::-that mis behaving youngster -off to the justice svstem and label that child a failur·e rather than ourselves. I submit the real burden for juvenile programs lies in thr com mun ity and is th e responsibility of each adult parent. neighbor. teacher. school administrator and the police that serve us. Each must make every feasible effort to help each child develop into a responsible adult with a useful and rewarding place in society. We must ·stop forwarding our mistakes and the products of our own apathy to the courts with the hope that the pro· bl em we have created will be hid· den from our view NORA LEHMAN Bingo, Booze and Religion A recent action in Milwaukee may well portend some op· position from an unexpected source to the constitutional amendment which would legalize church bingo parties. The measure is ACA 3. slated ror balloting next June. Ap· proved by the Legis lature art er many tries. it is a recogn\tion that bingo has il l icitly become a part o f t h e cttvlties in ro a n y cbuTches. But the threat to its lqatiiation comes ln the form or a protest lodaed by an attorney acting for the Wisconsin Tavern Owners Association to the serv- in1 of alcohollc ~vcrages in tbe churches. If it was not intended as a grandltand ploy foT publlclty tt t'ln only be categoriled H a crus txblbitton or wunmeated «reed on the part or the 11loon keepers. nlE FAtT that the Incident ()('curTed in Wl1consln makes it of no le 1 lntve1t In Calitomia. f°or the stn111les of t he con· ( EARL WATERS ) gregations to bring in the sheaves can be no different there than here. And there can be little doubt that the falling away of the flock from the routines or church at· tendance has been a major con- tributing factor to society's ,:lro- blems of today. While there have been many theories advanced as to the lack or interest in the churches on the part of the post WW II generations, certainly one has been the failure or the churches to adjust to the times. tf souls can be saved by pro- grams which will bring the pro- digals back to the fold, more power to the churches. H the ,erving or spirited beverag~ at· tracts people to the wholesome atm01pbere or the church. bring ontbewtne. BUT TJIE BAR owners not on· ly protested that . Cat~ollc churches we.._ eervmg hquor while havlns only llttn for bee, they complained tbat too many t>Mr Ucenses were 1rantcd churches with no llmitatlona as to the numbers. That it wasn't a Christian con cern for the welfare of the parishioners which prompted the innkeepers gripes but simply pet· tY grt>ed over the presumed loss of customers. seems clear in the statement that ··many tavern owners are finding it difficult lo survive under the competition from the <'hurches." Ain't that a shame. If one wonder s how anyone rould object to people gathering to hoist a rew wit hin the confines or a place or worship instead or swilling suds in a smoke filled bar inhabited by sots and worse, read Sinclair l.ewis' novel Bab- bitt. WHU.E California·s liquor laws would not seem to afl~ct church tocials here: 1ince licens- ing Is only required where drmks are sold, the avarict00-1 rears of the Wisconsin barkee~r.1 mieht well extend here to def eat fh bingo measure. For they didn't Umit their ob jectiont of the churches to the 1s· sue of liquor but dra(Zged in other activities and specifically re· (erred to bingo parties. Jud~lng from that they would also oppose churth choiM! :md Sunday •chool. J esus would have l~s chance with such persons than he had with the Romo,ns. ( MAILBOX ) Letters from readers are welcome The nght to condense letters to fit $JXU:e or eliminate libel is reserved. LetteTs of 300 words or less Will be given preference All letters mt1St in· elude !ignature and mcnlmg address bul names may be withheld on re- quest a/ suff 1c1ent reason is apparent. P~try unll not be publl$hed. Bas irs -Plwr To the Editor: Last week. the first in a series of meetings on •·fundamental education" wa s held at Culverdale School in Irvine The approximate ly 60 people who at· tended the m eeting were among over 500 who res ponded favorably lo an Irvine Unified School District survey question relative to a "fundamental education " school. At the m eeting. this committee of 60 made inputs on their in· dividual beliefs about what a fun· damental school should be. It was clear from the statements from the group that these people are not Clike the Lone Ranger> desirous of returning to those "thrilling days of yesteryear". What these people do want is a return to emphasis on basics in the m odern s etting of "lr\'ine To- day " I BELIEVE that these people. and more. might agree with the follow mg quote from the descrip- tion of the Academics-Plus Pro- ~ram ·· of the Cupertino School Distri ct in Northern California: "The Acade mics-Plus Pro· gram is postulated on the belief that the major role of the school is to provide children with the basic acadl'm1c tools they will need t o become productive. responsible citizens in a free and competitive society. The pro- gram recognizes the importance of other aspects of a child's de- velopment but asserts tha l limitations of time prevent the school from achieving satisfac- tory results in so many areas. It places greater responsibility on the parents to develop indi vidual per so nal growt h and respons ibility m their chjldren and r equests of the school em phasis on seeking proficiency in academic skills." The Irvine Unified School Dis- trict has m et the needs of those who want year -round school. alternative high school <SELF>. instant neighborhood schools, etc . Now the district appears to be headed toward meeting the n eeds of those w ho want a "Basics-Plus" school 1 urge all who a r c interested in thi s pot en tial project to participate in future meetings. FRANK HURD north part of Ir vine. Wh en asked where I ltve, however. I respond "'in Irvine" because l feel part of an area larger and more impor- tant than m y own s mall part of the city. lJnfortunatt'ly . some of our fnends and neighbors south of the San Diego Freeway ap- parently do ~not feel the same way . I r efe r t o Isador e Schneider's letter to you on Jan. 21. The di sc u ss io n of the Michelson Bridge was heated, but was inflamed mostly by a few residents of University Park. University Park happens to be the only area of the city which is fully developed. It is also the oldest area or I r\'ine. Its resi· dents seem to feel this is "their city" and theirs alone. I resent this. They want an inadequate facility so they won't be inconve· nienced. Now. when it is ex- panded· -and it will have to be someday -· we w ill pay for it through higher taxes. UNIVERSITY PARK, already fully developed, contains the core of s upport for su~idi zed housing which would have to be bu.ill elsewhere. Three of our four previous mayors ar e from University P ark. University Park has the only two incum· bents on the next city council. University Park residents are plaintiffs in the s uit against the city. Mr. Schneider's letter en- dorses one or the candidates from University Park who is running. Election of him would give one village effective control over all of Irvine. Four of his fi ve en- dorsees are from south of the San Diego Freeway. Since c ity council members ap- point planning, transportatwn and community services com- missioners it is no wonder the com missioners arc heavily stacked from the south also. I hope people are intelligent enough to r ecognize the dif· ference between true "citizen participation" and the loud and vocal .. s pecial interests" of one \•illage. trs about lime the rest of the city is represented in Irvine gov- ernment EDMcCOLLUM Bridge R'ldflt To the Editor: Reference is made to a read· er's comments in the J a n. 21 letters column on the Michelson Bridge. While it was realized by me that the ques tion about the Michelson Road brid~e was com· plex, 1t-was m y analysis that once the bridge was authoriied, the question of two or four lanes is academic. The problem rel at cl< to whether the bridge should be built or whether the condition of f1uor 10<.'ation in lrvine should have been conditioned on the bridge. To th~ Editor : By restricting the width of the My home is in California , br~dge, one must _hnvc on h.ls con· Homes a tract of homes in the sc1ous ttie potential of accidents. ' injury. or possi blc accidental de· Quotes "I love my mother. but there's notblna that's coing to change my earlier position." -Sen. E dward K e nne d1, on his mother's comments that he might be pressured into running lor the presidency. ath. Vindictiveness should not be aHowed to enter into the .,Cecision making process in the growth of ln•me. JOHN ADAMS Fo•r-letfn-Wertf Tolhe Editor : Everybody in Oronge County who reads their newspaper knows that those in power in Laguna Beach consider growth il long four -letter word. So it was no wonder they shot down the South East Orange County Circul ation Study -for fear it mav. somehow, increase Laguna's p.opulation. In fact , during the study, anti growth groups suggested that all building be stopped rather than enlarge the road networks . Some groups want to downzone the pre- sent land uses so that a lesser network co uld serve the transportation needs. OTHERS attempted to point to the continued county growth and the fact that one-half of our coun- ty·s 1.6 million a re below the age of 26 \12 years as justification to plan and build a system to match our predictable needs . The no-growther s themselves will try to get the population forecasts c hanged. reduce the size and number of roads :ind gene rally delay action in the shortsighted hope that somehow, if we don't plan for them, our children will go away. As 1t is, the present a nd planned county road network (in· eluding a ll forms of transporta· lion> south a nd east of the Newport Freeway is already nearly insufficient to handle the current population. So while the "leaders" of Laguna are busy de manding no· growth. the traffic and environ- ment will get steadily worse. GILBERT W. FERGUSON Orange County Council on Environment, Employment, Economy, Development A sk the Court To the Editor: Malpractice is a n emergency I to us all. It must be resolved for all people as soon as possible. The best and quickest way? Ask the Supreme Court or the I United States to decide and declare the right of all involved: at once. Ask this court to decide i! any doctor can be sued at all. Ask this court to declare that hospitals are not liable. Ask the court lo de· c!de who can sue and for what. Set the amount or damages. Ask the court to explain and de· fine the world "malpractice .•• 1 Ask the court to decide what in· surance is needed. · CARLWlllTSON ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed. Pubtiahn Thomas Ktn11I. £dttor Barbaro Krnbich, Editonol Page Editor The editorial page of the DallJ Pilot set'ks lo inform •n4 stimulate readers by pmenUn1 on this page diverse comment.,., on topics or Interest by l)'Odic~ ed columnists-and cartoonists. bf providing a forum for readtrfl views and by prt1entin1 _UQ newspaper's opinion! and ~ on current topics. Th edltotiii& oplnions of the DaUy Pilot •s.»• only io the editorial column al u.. top ot the paae. Oplalons a. PttSMd by the cohunnlsU Utl ta1'1oonists and letter writers •M their own and no ~ndorse~ et their vie by the D&ily roet should be anr•rr~ • Prien'? Safeway Hit By P~pe Bomb SANTA CLARA (UPI> -A pipebomb exploded in a power transformer at the re ar of a Safeway store late Tuesday night, causing moderate damage, police said. No one was injured ln the blast. The dollar figure of damages was not immediately known. Police received no warning or the explosion and no group claimed responsibility for it. Several bay area stores of the food chain have been bombed in recent months by terrorist groups objecting to · Safeway pricing policies. r•rPte.dl11~eat SACRAMENTO <AP> -Sandra Good says she told "the mean truth" but broke no law in warning business and eovernment leaders they'd be killed if they didn't stop polluting. I Miss Good and Susan [ ) Murphy, former room-~~;~ t S ta te mates or Lynette ---'------Fromme, who was COD· Won't Run victed or trying to kill President Ford, pleaded Barry Goldwater Jr., with wife Sus an at innocent Tuesday to charges of con$piring to mail his side, s aid Tuesday he will not be a 171lhreatening letters. candidate for the U.S. Senate this year. Wfttler Fellotef119 Order•1 LOS ANGELES (UPI> -Deputy Mayor Maurice Weiner, on trial for allegedly fondling a policeman in a sex movie theater, argues that be was in the theater lo carry out an inspection on or- ders from Mayor Tom Bradley. "The mayor will testify that he personally asked Mr. Weiner to look into the problem" of com- plaints of police harassment of patrons or sex shops in Hollywood, Weiner's lawyer told the jury Tues- day. "Mr. Weiner went out to see for himself what kind or places these were, and what kind of people went there, and what kind or problems arose in or- der to advise the mayor on what position to take.'' Ma11 Held ~n Traba R'rec!k EUREKA (AP) -A Fortuna man was ar- raigned Tuesday on a charge of causing a freight train wreck by parking his estranged wife's car on the tr~ks at a rural crossing. · 'Dale Alvin Barnes, 47. pleaded innocent before Municipal J udge Harold ·Neville Jr .. who set bond at $75,000 and ordered Barnes to appear at a pre- liminary hearing in Humboldt County Superior Court Feb. 4. Ffrea,... Felortt1 B~ked SACRAMENTO (AP> -The state Senate ap- proved legislation Tuesday that would make it a felony in all cases for a convicted felon to carry a concealable firearm. The bill by Sen. Alan Robbins, (D-Van Nuys ), was sent to the Assembly on a 33-0 vote. Robbins said his bill was designed to strengthen provisions against ex-convicts carrying pistols and other con- cealable firearms. IJftJ Report• Dbeo-t~ TRUCKEE (AP) -Reports of an unidentified flying object were discounted today by two highway 'patrolmen who scanned the skies with binoculars from a summit in the Sierras. Susan is the daughter of Dr. E . Mortimer Gherman of Newpprt Beach. Goldwater said he thought he could win a race with Sen. John Tunney but gave the desire to spend more time with his family a s his re- ason for not running. Senate Rejects Brown Farm Bill SACRAMENTO <UPI} -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. showed no appetite today for relenting to farmer demands for a n immediate overhaul or the Agricultural Labor Relations Board, even though the Senate soundly turned back his emergency $3.8 million bill to keep the would convince Brown to board alive. accept grower demands Brown's measure to for immediate altera- finance the board's tions in the five-month- landmark secret-ballot old farm board law as union elections for farm the price for its survival. workers beyond Feb. 6 Brown showed no such was rejected Tuesday on inclination p ublicly. a 20-15 vote, seven votes He previously said shoi:t ~f the two-thirds changes can be con- ma1ori ty needed for sidered in "due course," P~~sage. . but not as part of the I h~pe th_e Senate will emergency appropria- recons1der its vote and tion. approve the appropria-Senate Democratic tion," Brown said in a F1oor Leader David A. bri.ef ~t~te.ment. "I Roberti of Los Angeles, belie"'.e 1t ts m the long-sponsor of the appropria- term interests of not only tion bill, said the gov- the growers and the ernor remained stead- farm workers but of all fast against any im- t be p e o Pl e of mediate overhaul. Callforni~." Roberti was granted Repubbca.n -led oppo· permission to seek nents nounshed hope another vote on the bill their .show of strength probably on Thursday. ' J ump in. The long leggy jumpsuit's the look of the moment. Tailored. Tucked. T opstitched co perf ecrion by Luba. In a sand-colored poplin of polyester I corton. In sizes 8 to ·12, $84 Fashion Gallery Coats, Suits Bullock'• ~th Coast Plua, San Di~go Pittway at Bri~tol. Costa Mua, SS6-06J l .;.;W~ICt;;;,;need.;;:=•;o1.X.i.;1 J-•-n-um-....-2•~·-197_....e _____ __..D,.Al_L_Y PILOT "!J SI.5 Mlllloa ..... LOS ANGELES <AP> -"ll bad to be a well· planned Qperallon," said Police Sgt. Alan Varner after two 'men in business suits robbed a securities rtrm and fled wtth nearly Sl.S milllon in negotiable bonds. . . An FBI spokesman in Washington said the rob· bery was one or the largest of its kind. Varner said the men entered the Century City offices of the MuniclCorp. of California Tuesday and said they were waltlng to speak with someone about buying some bonds. But a short time later they accosted an un- armed messenger bringing two bags of securities to the firm from a nearby bank, the policeman said. He said they apparently were aware of the messenger's schedule. "The total time was about 10 or 15 minutes." said Varner. "The messenger was coming back, on root, and they were waiting for bim. As soon as be returned, it was ovet. They pushed him into a room and came out with the bags." MuniciCorp's president, Kenneth Rogers, said both men were ar'rned with handguns. "The men told the secretaries to shut up, then took the deliveryman into my office, told him to sit down, then took his bags from him," Rogers said. "They had their guns in his ribs all the time." . Varner said the two then made their getaway with the aid of an accomplice waiting nearby in a 1962-model van with out-Of-state plates. ~ He said police were investigating t he possibility that the: two men were known to employes of the firm. MuniciCorp deals in m unicipal bonds, debt ob- ligations issued by cities and other governmental agencies. Such securities are frequently issued in "bearer" form, meaning that whoever bas physical possession can cash them. , Most of the bends taken were municipal, with· tho lntettst paid by clipping coupons, officlab said. But they (the coupons) have tho same serial num· bers as the bonda, makins lt a simple stel) to lrace anyone trylna to cash them. Striking Doctors Face Liabilities· LOS ANGELES (UPI) Angeles County had not -Striking doctors today pald higher malpractice faced warnings from premiums by this mom- autborities, of legal ing. The Travelers li'abillty -and the I nsurance Co. has possibility of going to jail warned that those who -if abandoned patients do not pay the first die and from an in-quarterly installment by surance company that midnight will lose their they will lose their coverage retroactive to . malpractice coverage at Jan. 1. midnight. T he 28-day-old strike, Public hospitals in Los which has spread to Angeles, jammed by pa-thousands of physicians tients who cannot find in a six county area with medlCal help elsewhere, 11 Jnillion residents, is in Tuesday for the first protest against the com-· time exceeded the pany's 327 percent in- theoretical maximum of •cr ease in malpr actice patients for which the policy premiums, with a hospitals can adequately provision o b ligating care. them to pay a possible About 60 percent or the retroect.iave increase to 9,500 physicians in Los 487 percent later. Welcome spring with a lovely rose garden! 1976 AARS winners Choose from: America Cathedral Seashell Yankee Doodle each 5es #1 grade patent roses Choice of: each Song of Paris Troplcana Duet 399 Standard roses Choice of: each Blaze Chrysler Imperial Mirandy China Doll 199 Standard fruit trees 349 Grow a variety of fre1h fruit, right in your own back yard! Choose apricot, nectarine, cherry, peach, pear or plum. Great for eating or preserves. Start your own orchard this thrifty w~y! 899 Genetic dwarf bing cherry. Big and dark fruit with a deliclous •iavor. Grow your ownt 249 for pack of 2 Have a grape arbor In your yard. Choose Concord or Thompson seedless grapes. A lovely traillng vine that bears fruit. f DOWN!Y MONTCLAIR NEWPORT lfACH NORTHIUDGI! IAN ll!RNARDINO WHfTTWOOD RIVER SIDI! ,, EDITION Tod ay's Clo .. , N.Y.Stoeks VOL. 69, NO. 28, 5 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN IA WEDNESDAY, J ANUARY 28, 1976 , TEN CENTS .. J1·vine· MUrder SUspect Held in Mexico . . . ByDOUGLASFRrnscRE ot .. Deltyflt ....... lrvlnc police omcers were in court in Guadalajara. Mexico, to- •day attempting to cet an extradi- tion order to return to the U.S. with Raul R. Figueroa, tbe man they believe committed an ex· ecutlon-style murder in an Irvine orange grove Jan. 18. Doctors To Pay .Increase? lt was still unclear today just how many Orange County doc- tors would pay their malpractice insurance premiums prior to the midnight tonight deadline. "Everyone here is making up their own minds and we can't see a real consensus," explained John Rette, executive secretary of the .Oran~e County Medical Association. (Related story Page AS.) Rette said the doctors' de· cisions will probably be known by Thursday or Friday. Doctors who ignore tonight's deadline run the risk or letting their coverage lapse. However. doctors who send premiums in to either Travelers' Insurance or the new doctor-run Southern California Physicians Insurance Exchange will have coverage retroacti'le to Jan. 1. Doctors are protesting the soaring insurance rates by stag. ing a slowdown in many Southern Cali rornia hospitals. Many Orange County doctors joined in last week, following their Los Angeles C<>unty colleagues As or today. only one-third of the 9,500 Southern California physicians had renewed Policies with Travelers. "All we can see in Orange County ls that it appears there'll be a significant number of doc· tors who choose nelUler conrpany and let. their insurance lapse in protest,'' Rette said. According to Rette, the-current hctivity of Orange County doc· tors varies greaUy throughout' the county. However, he said its apparent that many are restrict- \ng the scope of their practice, being selective about new pa- tients and are not accepting Medi-Cal patients. He added that in the wake or the crisis, the ones who will feel it most are the M edi,.Cal patients. <See INSURE, P age AZ) Woman's Arm Amp~tated Surgeons at Orange County Medical Center amputated part of a woman's right arm Tuesday after she caught it in the blades of a meat grinder while prepar- ing hamburger at a Santa Ana delicatessen. The victim of the unusual acci- dent was identified as Michelle Holman, 25, of Anaheim. A police spokesman said the victim was'pushing meat into the grinder when the machinery caught her ringers and started pulling the arm in. Paramedics freed the mangled limb from the grinder and rushed the woman ta Medical Center. Coast We ather Fair through Thursday with continued sunny and warm days. Chance of some fog nea~.., the coast Thursday morning. Highs 70 to 80 degrees. Lows tonight in the 40s. I INSIDE TODAY Stat~ ploM to .ncour• kmg-rong1 tnc11cHng ~ to bl falling to bvd~'• .oz. But proipect• for mor1 ~ tra.UI o/ •hort~r diatoncta look pt()'fnfftng. B7. ••• x A.a ...... •• IM ........ hlltt M At...._. .... M DMe =c.tt'Y Atl-U A• Ct .. M ..,.....,._ •as .... ..,. .,., :d =.-:c.: .:.~ g-...:-.:: ,.,..... .. aMw.M..._. AA . Police Lt. James Carrington said today the Orange County District Attorney's office bu is· sued a complaint of first-decree murder against Figueroa and police have obtained a no-bail ar- rest ~arrant. Figueroa was sought in con· nection with the slaying of Eulogio Ramos Valenzuela of Santa Fe Springs, whose body was found by a woman Jo1ging throuch an orange grove near CUiver Drive and the Santa Ana Freeway the morning of Jan. 19:- Valeniuela bad 'been shot several times ln the back with a small caliber gun, according to invesU1ators. Irvine Detective Steve Nash and Spanish-speakh1g Costa Mesa Detective Cbano Camarillo, who jointly conducted an inquiry into the slaying in Los Angeles County barrios, flew to Guadalajara Tuesday to bring Figueroa back~ Figueroa had been arrested by Mexican police following calls from the Irvine department, Car· rington said. Carrington said that within 72 hours of the discovery of the body, officers bad concentrated their investigation on Figueroa. After questioning friends and relatives of the accused man, or· ficers later determined be bad left the country for Guadalajara Jan.18. Police contend the motive for the slaying was the purported in- volvement of Valenzuela and Figueroa's wife. Valenzuela's car, which Police believe was used to transPort the man and his killer to Irvine and back to Los Angeles County, was found abandoned and burning in the City of Commerce Jan. 18. ·LabOr Leaikr to Testify OC Jury ResUIDes Cella Investigation From the air, Irvine's adult-oriented Rancho San Joa- quin area has the look of an abstract mosaic. From the ground, it's filling in fast with new homes. In the photo, University Drive is at left and Culver Drive at bottom. In the area shown, 309 townhomes are finished or under construction, with work in the area expected to be done by September. Irvine Coast Plan Slated; for Hearing The fint complete presenta- tion of · the Irvine C~mp y's ) plans for the Irvine Co area . ~ be given Tbursjla night at an Orange Count)'-Planning Commission public bearing. The hearing, al 7: 30 p.m. in the forum at Orange Coast College, will also be an opportunity for the public to-commentqn the plan. At issue is the 10,000-acre coastal site between Newport Beach and Laguna Beach. The Irvine Company is planning re- Trip tq_Capital - sidential, commercial and resort developments on JO percent of the land, with the remaining 70 percent proPQSed for public open space. · The Friends of the Irvine· Coast, a group that opposes de· velopment of the area, plans to make its own presentation Thurs. day offering commissioners ·alternative uses for the land. Thursday's hearing marks the start of a six-month process of public hearing. · The Orange County Grand Jury resumed its investigation into the financial and political de· alings of Dr. Louis Cella today. Waiting to testify as the jury entered phase two or its probe were Pete Remmel, executive secretary Orange County Central Labor Council (AFL-CIO) and former Garden Grove mayor John Dean. Both Remmel and Dean have been close to Cella in his political activities. Dean is a former chairman of the Orange County Democratic Party Central Committee. * * * Hospital ~ting Cella Unit By GARY GllANVJLLE --~ ....... Directors of Mercy Hospital in Santa Ana voted unanimously Tuesday night to oust the Dr. Louis Cella-founded Orange County Health Te1ting lnstitute from the hospital. A hospital spokesman called the board's action, "Part or the continuing attempt to rid the hospital of whatever is left of Cella's influence." The testing institute last July was awarded a controversial $280,000 annual county contract covering p re·e mployment physical examinations or pro-· spective county employees. Cella, backed by his attorney, insisted that he had divested himself or aoy financial interest in the health testing firm six months before it was awarded the county contract. Despite Celia's disclaimer, county Health Department of· ficials in sisted the Lhen- Politically influential doctor ac- tively participated in contract specification negotiations. And former assistant county health officer Thomas Hamilton charged that the Board of Supervisors ignored staff advice when it awarded the contract to the testing institute. Since then, the institute's performance has drawn harsh criticism Crom County Health Of- ficer John Philp. In the meantime, Cella and three business associates have been charged in county and federal grand jury indictments with 144 felony crimes. The indictments allege that the Irvine Prot~sting Bilingual Ballots In an attempt to avoid an ex~ pensive lawsuit, Irvine coun- cilmen ordered the city attorney and city manager Tuesday to go to Washington, D.C., to try to change a federal regulation re· quiring bilingual ballot materials to be printed for the March 2 city council election. rules changed th at require cities like Irvine to print bilingual ballot materials. · four men participated in a grand -theft scheme that together cost Mercy and Mission Community Hospital , M issioo Viejo, $2 million. The council previously decided to go to court and sue for changes and damages aner the federal Depar tment or Justice threatened criminal and civil ac- tion If Irvine candidates' state· ments ·of qualifications are not printed in both English and Spanlah. The council will follow federal regulation.a for tbe VoUni Rights Act of ms, rather th BJ\ face the Potential Jelling of City Clerk Carol Flynn or a civil suit that could overturn the election. But protesUnt that ... trip to Wuhiniton would be much less ex~nsive than a suit." Cib' At· torney J ames Erickson Tuesday penuadtd the councll to send cl· ty repraentaUves to meet with federal offlclals. . The object of th~ trip ls to get The guidelines require bil· ingual materials for any election held in a county with more than live percent Spanish-speaking pcpulation. City offici,_ls have protested that the election affects only Irvine and Irvine has a tiny Last fall as the alleged ir- regul artties were revealed, Celia's virtual one·man control over the two hospitals' finances was ended by directo_!'s ' actions. population pf exclusively ·AD RESPONSE Spanlsh-apeaklng residents. But · becaUJe Orange County's pcpula-TM'-.r r n NE r~n lion ls 14 percent Spanish· ~ ~.., -surnamed, the clty election · materials will be printed in Spanish as well as English. A recent chec~ of voter re· alstratton rolls from the last. lrvlne election indicated that of U ,900 voten, 291 had Spanish surnames. Erickson painted out that the names did not mean the vot.ra are not nuent io Eo&llsh. "We had good resPonse to the ad and sold oil the puppies." That's the sales success story told by the Fountain Valley woman who placed this classified ad in the t>atly Pilot: "Nobody on the West Coast has the aulborily to cban&e or NCOm· mend chances to ~e federal ro- •ul1tfon1," Erickson told tbe couocJl. Hesal<l a lrip to Washington to <See BALLOT. Page t\l) When called to testify before the jury earlier in its investiga- tion, Dean reportedly cited at· torney -client privilege and re· fused to answer questions asked of him. / Later, a Superior Court judge ruled that Dean's professional re- lationship with Cella was not an issue and ordered him to testify. It is expected that the former Garden Grove mayor will answer questions related Lo $25,000 in legal fees he received from two hospitals formerly con· trolled by Cella. New managers at the hospitals say they have no knowledge of legal services performed. So far, the grand jury has in· dieted Cella and three business associates on 127 charges related to the purported theft of $2 million from Mission Community Hospital, Mission Viejo, and M~rcy General Hospital. Santa Ana. . The so-called second phase of the grand jury's probe is expect- ed lo include an inquiry into money received Crom Cella by persons who performed no services for the hospitals. OC Widow Sues Claims Mortuary 'Negligence' A widow who learned last Dec. 17 that portions or her husband's body and his coffin had been . found on Orange County's Coyote Cuyon dump sued Westminatu Memorial Park today for $200,000 in damages. Genevieve Harman of Westminster claims in her Super ior Court aclfon that negligence by the mortuary operators led to the dumping of Hugh E. Harm an 's remains at the trash site between Irvine and Newport Beach. · Mrs. Harman states that she made arrangements with the de· fendants on Jan. 23, 1975, for the cremation or her husband's re- mains and the scattetirtg or his ashes at sea. Mr .. Harman died • May 6, 1958, and his body was in· terred at Westminster Memorial Park. Sheriff's officers who in- vestigated the incident decided not to take action ·against the mortuary after determining that "human error" led to the dis· posal of the remains. Investigators· said mortuary workers apparently overlooked a number of bones in the metal casket while they were transfer- ring remains from the coffin to the cremation container. Westminster Memorial Park officials today refused to com- ment on the lawsuit. They earlier refused to comment on the dis· covery or Mr. Harman's remains at the county dump. Ex-Balboa Island Man Gets 5 Years David G. Robinson, who perked up the Orange Coast economy last summer and fall with a spending spree financed by the largest fraudulent tax re- fund in Internal Revenue Service history. was sentenced to five years in federal prison Tuesday. Robinson, a for mer IRS tax collector, also was sentenced to three years probation. Still another part of the sen· ~~nc~ w~~-Robinson's coopera· Witness 'Walks' DETROIT (UPJ) -A reluc- tant New Jersey Teamster wit- ness appeared for a third time lo· day before a federal grand jury probing the James R. Hoffa dis- appearance and again began ducking in and out of the jury room after every question. Dur- ing his first 15 minutes in the grand jury room, Stephen A. An- dretta ducked out 11 times to con· fer with his attorney. In two pre· vious days before the grand jury. Andretta left. the jury room 27 and68times. tion in telling IRS agents how he managed to get $565,000 in illegal tc>x refunds from the federal gov· emment. The IRS has avoided releasing details of Robinson's scheme, other than to say it was dis- covered when an investigator wondered· why one individual got such a large return. Authorities also said Robinson used a Cake name, home address and W ·2 forms to carry out his scheme. Robinson used the money from July to Dec. 19, when IRS agents arrested him, · He blazed an expensive trail among Orange Coast merchants, renting a Balboa Island apart· ment offices in Irvine, hiring a staff of a dozen employes and buying airplanes, an $85,000 house in Pasadena and an ex- pensive car for every day of the week. Recalled by Orange Coast ac- quaintances as a small ebullient man with thinning blond hair and thick glasses, he paid for most or his purchases with cash. Not Kidding Brown Treats Peen Alike MADISON, Wis. (AP) -California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. apparently is not kidding about austeri· ty in government, extending it even to his relations with other governor.;. . After requesting a copy of Brown's state budget message, aldes to Wisconsin Gov. Patrick J . Lucey were mildly surprised when they received it more than two weeks later among some other fourth·dass m~. . ·Tb& California budg,t mes age was sent to Wi!ct>rtsin with a 'm~rc 13 ~nts postage. It was malled ·Jan·.~ ana r ched Maaison Jan. 27. • • • • I .. ( ... ; 0..,LYPILOT Stadium Sites Studied Seven potential athletic stadium sites are being eyed by a committee ol representatives or the City ol Irvine. Irvine schools and UC Irvine. The group 's lindings on stadium locations will be pre· sented to the city rouncil and school board l''eb. 10 and 11 respectively. The crucial factors on which site will be selected include whether the counciJ and school board want the stadium ready for play next fall and whether fin,a n. • cial support can be garnered from outside the public agencies. The stadium is expected to cost $350,000. Under a p r oposed agreement betY.•een the city and school district, the city would pay 40 percent and the district 60 percer.t . . .\ccording to a "memorandum of understanding" drafted by the committee. the s tadium could be built at Irvine lligh School , Uni versity Hi gh School or UC Irvine if time is a significant fac -tor. But in the long run, th e n1ost desirable site examined by the com mittee is between Alton Avenue and Barranca Road ~'est of Culver Drive That site re- ceived the highest e\'aluation in terms of con\'enicncc to nearby residents, availability or parking facilities. location. street access and acceptabil1ty to the Irvine Company. The proposed s tadium at UC l scored second in the evaJuation or the long·term aspects or the sites while Irvine Hi gh and Uni versity High scored fifth and seventh respectively. Other sites considered "'ere adjacent to the F'luor Corp s itC', Woodbridge Co mmunity Park and a site north of the Santa Ana F'reey,•ay and Yale Avenue. Council Forum Set for Irvine On Thursday Irvine's 16 City Council can- didates will discuss "How do you get them to li sten down at city hall?" at an Irvine TomorrO\\'· sponsored candidates night Thurs'day. The forum is public and will be held at Vern ado Midd.1 e School, 4 Deerfield Road. at 7:30p.m. Thursday's forum will be the se cond candidates night sponsored by the citizens group. Al l 16 candidates attended the two-lier government discussion Jan.13 . Several or the candidates con - sider "citizen participation" in government a key issue, main- taining that too frequently the beHers or residents have taken .second place to decisions made by city planners and consultants. Hearse Thief Facing Tests LOS ANGELES (AP) -tl.1:en - tal treatment has been ordered for a man who admitted he stole .a hearse -complete with body -from a g raveyard and sped along a dese rt highway with of- ficers pursuing at 125 miles per hour. Samuel L. M inatta, 25, or Colorado was also given five year s' probation in sentencing Tuesday b y Superior Court Judge Vernon G. Foster. · Minatta, who pleaded guilty Dec. 9 lo laking a vehicle without · permission, will be sent to the Fort Logan }lealth Center in Denver, Colo. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT r ... o--. Coesl o.n, PotOI. '"""'-i•<.,,,... ""'"' 1"" Hews·PT•H. I• PYl>l•lohf<I l>f ""' 0.8'191 Colo>! P"'4>1•w.i"9 Comp•nf. !otf>I• .r~ec1,1..,,,. ~•e P•.CU•U.U Mon<I•• 1""'"11" '"~~lo< Co"• -.... HOWl>Crt llf•<ll ... ""11flll'lan tli'll<l\/f Olo'\• t••n Y•lle,, lt•l'l'l, ~<ldl•b.><~ Y~•l•I and ~•II..,.. &o•cll/~111 Co.>1. #<. .,noilo<<'Q-lo<I• 1-" _,,......, ~tu•<I••' --n.. r...,. l>'l""'"1 p.,.DO!>ll•n11 pl•nl h "' lJO -~I B.11 ~lro•I. Cm•• M•W. C•hlo<no•on.lto. Thomas Keevil fd"O' Thomes A. M urphirw ...__ . .,.coiw ,,. Charle!> H. Loos Richard P. Nall ....... 1 __ .,..1,..,-., Paramedics to Arrive - J .. I I I 3 Supervisors .~ 1 A former undercover infor- mant testified Tuesday that he wu on.ce hired by the Orange County District Attorney's Office to seek out confidential financial information on three county supervisor6 and an ex-candidate for district attorney. Gene Conrad, an admitted con- victed felon with alleged or- ganized crime connections, said he wasn't told why he was given the assignment or researching financial dealings of Supervisors Robert Battin. R alph Clark and the late Ron.aid Caspers of Newport Beach. Nor could Conrad say why he was told t o investigate the. finances of Anaheim attorney Dexter Penman, a 1970 candidate for district attorney. . I felony crimes related to alleg~·1 ty ca1nr,a11nlng at t.axfayers ft."" penae 1 the result o selecll\la prosecution. -. I In an attempt to helP prove that point, defense Lawyer Mat ... , thew Kurillch called Coru'ad l<> the witness stand late Tuesd&Y". afternoon. · l Conrad said he di4 undercovfr work tor the district attorneY:'s intelligence division from 19l1j through 1974 . -. Although hired and pald by tfte ct attorney, Conrad sa'1 covering his s~rvices cam'.e the now·defunct Orange County Intelligence Unit. V'ince Bonacker (left ) and Capt. Greg f>etersen . pa.ran1cdics. are making pre- liminary eq uipment checks, readying the service to g'o into operotion in Irvine at 10 a.m . Saturday . The 24 -hour e mergency life savin g service \\'ill be s taffed \vith seven county fire department paramedic~. A de dication ceremony will be held at the University Park Fire Station at 10 a.m. Saturday, inaugurating the county's 16th paramedic unit. But, the burly form~r infor- mant testified, the beslhls prob- ing could produce was $600,000 worth of Interest bearing loans Caspers owed two banks. Conrad's testimony came dur- ing Battin 's pre·trial hearing before Superior Court Judge Kenneth Lae. According to the ex·informant, he was given the code name Glen Edwards In 1973 when assigned the task of finding "any LyPo bank or loan rec"ords" on Battin, Clark, Caspers and Penman. . · In res ponse to Conrad's allega· lions of political snooping, DepU· ty District Attorney Jack Ryan characterized his testimony as• fabrication calculated to emba"r .. rass the district attorney's staff. BALLOT ... try to S\\'ay elC'cted officials and bureaucrats has a "reasonable chance or success · · Cella Transcripts Sealed for Month At issue in the hearing is Bal- tin's contention that an indict· ment charging him with seven Tot Tumbles 20 Stories, Not Injured It was Ryan who drev• an ad· mission frof\l the witness that he ·was convicted in 1975 or "depriv:- ing an O't'ner of his vehicle" and an accompanying worthles.s check charge. "Isn't it true yo u felt you were. given a raw deal by the district I attorney?" Ryan asked. Erickson said th e intent of the \aw-ensuring that non-English- s peaking vott'rs understand ballot items -is good. But he said it is "'rongly applied in Irvine. h1ean"•hile. he .c;aid . a poll of other cities in similar positions resulted in "a Jot of sympathy and little s upport" for the pro- posed lawsuit. A primary objection to the bil- in gual requirement is th e translation and printing cost. whi ch mus t bC' paid by can· didates. The requirement raises the cost of Irvine candidates' statements from $90.90 to more than $200. However. the council has decided to pi ck up the extra costs in this election only Two-language Ballots Said 'Demeaning' Federal requirements (or bi!· ingual ballot enclosures are "de- meaning" to ,,·omen, Irvine Councilwoman Gabrielle Pryor charged Tuesday. She was incensed over the federal practice o( determining ethnic origin by s urnames to de· cide whether ballot enclosures must be printed in Spanish as "'ell as English. "Counting people on the basis or their surnames and deducing from that their ethnic back- ground is demeaning to women who have taken the names or t,eir husbands.'' she said. ··1 resent it on behalf of many people in Orange Co unty.'' Front Page Al INSURE .•• "'Doctors are not striking out al people, but they're so frustrated and disgusted with the governor that they'll just not participate in the Medi-Cal program," Rettc commented. Hospitals in the county are slill feeling the slowdown effects, a lthough some doctors have already agreed to go back to work. By TOM BARLEY Ol l~t Dilly ~lcJI S..ff Transcripts or Orange County Grand Jury proceedings that led to the indictment of Dr. Louis J . Cella and three business as- sociates today were ordered sealed for the next month by Superior Court Judge Kenneth Williams. Judge Jerrold S. Oliver will take the bench Feb. 27 for a special hearing in which he will be asked by lawyers for two of the defendants. to permanently seal the bulky transcripts. The se veral volumes of transcripts, described today as the larges t s uch records in Orange County history, would normally have become available to the public next Monday. The motion for sealin..: was fil ed by lawyers for defendants Stephen R. Evans, 31, or Mission Viejo and George L. Ollendorf. 44. of Laguna Beach. Cella, Sl, and CO·detendant Theodore Schiffman, 53, of San- ta Ana did not join in the motion. All four indictees "'ill be back in Judge Williams' cour1room Feb. 5 to enter pleas in response to th e 127 -count indictment. Bail for Evans. Schiffman and Ollendorf will b,e finally de· termined Feb. 5, Judge Williams ruled today. They are presently free on $25,000 bond with Celia's bail set at $75 ,000. All four defendants face trial on multiple charges or grand theft, conspiracy, forgery. em· bezzlement and willful attempts to defraud state government. Those c harges were filed after a long grand jury probe into the operation of and Celia's involve· ment with f\.li ssion Community Hospital, Miss ion Viejo and f\;fercy General Hospital, Santa Ana. It is alleged the profits ob· tained by Cella from hospital Boycott Fail.8 DETROIT <UP l> -A "yellow flu" boycott that kept one in three students home on the first day of court·ordered busing fell apart and Detroit's full de- segregation plan went Into effect Tuesday. School attendance averaged 83 percent, with only half the number of absentees re· corded M onday when the two- step plan went into effect. Council Action - In capsule form, here are the key actions taken Tuesday by the Irvine City Council. SCHOOLS: forwarded to the Irvine school board a 35- page city attorney's review of possible ways to match re- sidential growth In the city to school financial resources. If present trends continue, the report says, "'the now 'rich' Irvine Unified School District will approach the flnanclng capability, in terms of operating expenses, now sutrered by the poorest school districts in the slate." HOUSING: Al least in the Village of Northwood, the 10 percent moderate income housing zoning requirement can be met ln a alng1e development. Councilmen approved a 5.14-unit mobile home park they said will fill the bill in that area. SENIOR OLYMPICS: Withdrew its direct su~Port (rom a marathon run and bicycle race, scheduled as part or the Senior Olympics to be held in Irvine this summer. The coan- cil Jert ll to citizen groups to co-sponsor the events. City services for the eVents were estimated lo cost $985, and "over the pail three years. very few lrvlne resident.a have participated in or attended the events," Community Services Director PauJ ~rady 1aid. CBE•iY 'l'RE£8: Accfip ted SO cherr)' trees ajven u a bicentennial present to Irvine Jaycees by J11icee1 in M atuse, Japan. The treea, half of a 11n. ol 100, wi be planted lo the new Herltage Park. The balance are to be liven to.UC lrvlne. • ---· . I operations were used to further· his political ambitions and finance the ca mpaign s of political ca ndidates who qualified for backing by Cella. All four men have been or· dered to face trial May 4 1n Los Angeles Federal Court on similar charges returned in a federal grand jury indictment. Good Mileage LawPwhed SACRAMENTO (UPI) Legislation introduced in the As · sembly would require that all cars sold in California after 1978 get 20 miles per gallon of gasoline or better. Authored by Assemblyman Ter r y Goggin, <D·San Bernardino), the measure pro· vides that cars, starting with 1979 models. which fali to meet the 20 m.p.g. standard l or both city and highway driving couJd not be sold, N!nted or leased in the state. "'In California," Goggin said, "one·third of all energy is con- sumed by the a utomobiles -ap- proximately 7 .5 billion gallons of gasoline a year." SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPI) - A lO ·month-old child fell 20 stories from an apartment build- ing and has only scratches to show for it, hospital authorities said today. Hospital spoke.r;men said high tension electrical wires broke the fall of the little girl, Ana Paula de Oliveira. One of the power lines snapped, neighbors said. According to the neighbors, Ana was playing with several children in a 20th floor apart· ment in the Sao Vito building in a residential section or Sao Paule. One of the children's dolls fell out the window and Ana rushed to see, neighbors said, and she also fell o ut the window , the neighbors said. A truck driver, Clebe Queiroz, was chatting \\'ilh friends on the corner when he saw what looked like ··a blonde doll" falling. "'Later I saw it wasn't a doll v.•hen I saw the body moving. "I stayed with her and sent another truck driver lo call the polici?," he said. . The police took Ana to a hospital where X-rays showed no fractures. ''I think that would be un-.. derslandable," Conrad re plied as Ryan questioned the motives behind his testimony. As part of that effo.rt. Ryan asked Conrad who he had dis- cussions with regarding th~ financial probe:· The ex·informant said he t)ad' met with Supervisor Laurence Schmit's former aides Loran Norton and C. D. Hanson at the Magic Pan Restaurant in South. Coast Plaza. "'How about Sheriff ·Brad · Gates? Was he present?" Ryan asked. "Yes," Conrad replied. Ryan also drew an admission from Conrad that his value as an undercover agent was related to his knowledge of organized crime and that he hac! done loan. placement work for various or- ganizations. 1V Taken in Meea A burglar made ofl with" 8 $91) televl'sion set from a motel ilp'art1- ment in Costa Mesa Tuesday even though the apartment was occupied. Robert McGuffin, 56., gardener at the Sunny Acres Motel at 120 E. Wilson St. told police he was asleep when the theftoccurred. Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919 BICYCLE PARTS-TIRES-ACCESSORIES SALE Smith Autograph Frames 19.95 Billie Jean King frames 19.95 Subjed lo Stock on HCBld Tennis Dresses Used 12000 19.95 & 24.95 20% to 50% off All Kawasaki Rackets 200 Pairs Shoes At Cost At Cost or Below Extra Duty Yellow tennis Random Sizes Balls-Can .of 3/1.99 Wilson & Penn Warm up Pants Tennis Shorts Close-eut -:--4.95 4.95 & 8.95 --Wilson & Penn Basketballs 4.95 & 5.95 Tennis 'Shi~s ' 5.95 & 6.95 • Racquetballs -1.25 each • Open 9 to 6 Closed Sundays 538 Center 646-1919 · . . • J I YOL. 69, NO. 28, S SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA "fternooa N.Y.Stoeks TEN CENTS . t ' . ·· ·~cean · View Students Go to. HB Ca1npus l .. By KATHY CLANCY Of _ _.,, .......... 1 HunUn«ton Beach Union High School District trusteet ten- tatively agreed Tuesday nlcht to put the 1,400 Ocean View High School students at Huntington Beach High next fall while their new campus ia being completed. Tbe board learned from the project. architect that the new ca~pus at Golden W~t Street 'Faleon' Flap and Warner Avenue probably won't be ready to open until the second semester next/ear. But trustees put of adopting a final placement for the student body until administrators have time to seek other suggestions from the communities affected. "There will be some discom· forts I know but it is only going to be for four months at the most.'' said Trustee Helen Ditte. Uf'ITe..,._. Tom Alderman of Chicago asked for a replica of the Maltese Falcon used in the famous Humphrey Bogart movie -by mistake Columbia Pictures sent him the original. Since Alderman received the falcon last week, he has been "threatened" in telephone calls and notes from movie buff friends who also want to possess the bird Alderman is Gov, Daniel Walker's director of com-. . . munications. . BB Trustees Snuff . Smoking in Sch~ol An effort to cre'ate an ex· perimental smoking area on one campus bl the Huntington Beach Union Hl1h School District failed to win ·support from district tn.Lltees Tuesday night despite complaints from students and some teachers. Trustees Bob Knox and Don MacAllister were the only "yes" votes on the issue with Knox sug- gesting smoking be permitted on one campus as a pilot program. But Board President Ralph Bauer and Trustees Helen Ditte • and Ron Shenkman repeated the same stand they announced two weeks ago and voted in opposi· tion to permitting smoking. At the same time, trustees un- animously directed school of· ficlals to develop on educational p1"9gram to discourage smoking and to find more effective ways of enforcing the no.smoking ban. 'Bauer said parents In the .dis- trict seem to be opposed to smok- ing on campus, while teachers were opposed .. not quite as dram atic ally" and s tudents favored it, primarily toeUminate the "yellow haze" from rest roc>ms. AD RESPONSE DOG<;ONE GOOD uwe bad good response to the ad and sold all the puppies." Superintendent Frank J . Ab· bolt, who recommended against allowing smoking, admitted there is no "panacea" to solve the problem but agreed to work ,on it. "The smoking is there and no amount o( enforcement is going to change that." Knox argued, <See SMOKING, PageA2) Police Chief Back on Job Mter Crash Huntington Beach Police Chier Earle Robitaille is back on duty this week after suffering Lnjurtes in a Santa Ana traffic accident a week ago. Chief Robitaille, 44, whose leg was bruised when bis city sedan was rammed broadside, re- turned to work Monday. Inveatlgators said his vehicle was hit in a Santa Ana intersec- tion by a car driven by Mrs. May Hamad, 23, Garden Grove. She and her children, Iman, 2, · and Imin, 1, were shaken up, but not seriously Injured, according to Santa Ana police. Investigators said Tuesday no cltatlons wlll be issued due to Mrs. Hamad's •hock-induced amnesia regarding moments just before and after the crash and con.meting or unclear statements by witnesses. That's the sales success story told by the Fountatn Valley woman who placed this ~uslfted jd In lbe D•lly l>Uot: ' • Collie Puppies,' wks, watch, R:..-.... Gone xlntw/chUar d ·~~ sas. axx.xux A bur&lar has 1toJen a watch If "OU have nata you want to and rtn11 valued at more than ' • .. -$600 from the downtown Hunt· ::· :~:2~b89·~~P~~:'t: tneton Beach Late Park district tlnd 1 ba)>er home of Jr{rs. Mlldred Soule. She ~ tb,f oraq1_• Coe t tM told police the Intruder apparent· Ji~tplacelstheDallYPllot.' ly ent.er.d through an unlocked , ;:.... , I •14' window. • • . .. f' ~ Under the plan, the 3,500 Hunt· ington Beach High School stu· dents would start classes at 7:15 a.m. The Ocean View students, all freshmen and sophomores, would start athletics and physical education at their new Ocean View campus about 9 or 11 a.m. Then they would be bused to Huntington Beach for lunch and academic subjects. Assistant Superintendent Glen Dysinger said the Ocean View students actually would begin classes at Huntington Beach at about noon , when the Huntington Beach students would be just about finished with their academic day. There would be two periods from about noon to 2 p.m. when some Huntington Beach students would still be on campus with Ocean View students. however, than the 7 :15 a .m . starting Ume. so Dysinger said the proposal He said that early hour might lsn'tastrictdoublesession. , work a hardship on those However, Trustee R on youngsters who travel by bus to Shenkman called it a "glorified school. double session" and said it might · The Ocean View cameus prove to be a worthwhile experi-earlier was expected to open in ment. September but because of Dysinger said some arrange-material delivery delays, apossl· ments could be worked out for ble strike and possible rain, tho Seal Beach area students so they ·date bas been shifted. could arrive on campus later (See SCHOOL: Page A2) Fire Victims Saved $45,000.Blaze in Huntington Beach By ARTH UR R. VINSEL Of ... Dlllly ...... SC.aft Raging names from a small fire smoldering in an easy chair finally exploded in a west Hunt- ington Beach apartment com- plex Tuesday, trapping two peo- ple and causing $45,000 damage. Firemen rescued the two vic- tims. The blaze in the 286·unit Warner West Apartments, 6401 Grand Jury Resllllles . Cella Quiz The Orange County Grand Jury resumed its investigation into the financial and political de- alings of Dr. Louis Cella today, Waiting to testify as the jury entered pbue tyo of its probe were Pete Remmel. aecuttve secretary Orange County Central Labor Council (AFL-CIO) and former Garden Grove mayOr JobDDean. Both Remmel and Dean have been close to Cella in his political activities. Dean is a former chairman of the Orange County Democratic Party Central Committee. When called to testify before the jury ear lier in its investiga. lion, Dean reportedly cited at- torney-client privilege and re- fused to answer questions asked of him. Later, a Superior Court judge ruled that Dean ·s· professional re- lationship with Cella was not ~ issue and ordered him to testify . It is expected that the former Garden Grove mayor will an&wer questions related to $25,000 in legal fees he received from two hospitals formerly con- trolled by Cella. New managers at the hospitals say they have no knowledge of legal services performed. So far. the grand jury bas in- dicted Cella and three business associates on 127 charges related to the purported theft of $2 million from Mission Community Hospital, Mission Viejo, and Mercy General Hospital, Santa Ana. The so-called second phase of the grand jury's probe is expect· ed to include an inquiry irito money received from Cella by persons who performed no services for the hospitals. * * * Warner Ave., also claimed the life of a cat who might have been saved bad county animal control officers not refused to respond. Fire Department officials said the noon·hour blaze could easily have been far worse in terms of lives lost and property damage. Battalion Chief Jim Vincent, responding to cries for help and reports that someone was trapped on the second floor or the ... three-story complex, found and calmed:the victims. "They were trapped by dense smoke so thick it was impossible to see," Fire Capt. Roger Hosmer said today. Battalion Chief Vincent, wear· ing goggles and a breathing ap· paratus, made his way down the smoke-blanketed corridor and kept the two persons in an apart- ment . OC Widow Sues ClairnJJ Mortuary 'Negligence' A widow who learned last Dec. 17 that portions of her husband's body and bis coffin had been found on Orange County's Coyote Canyon dump sued Westminster Memorial Park today for $200,000 in damages. Genevieve Harman of Westmiqster claims in her Superlof Coµrt action that QfeCllgeQce by the mortuary operators led to the dumping of Bugh E. Harma.n's remains at tke1ra.sb site between Irvine and Newport.Be•cb. Mrs. l:larman states that she made arTangement.s with the de- fendants on Jan. 23, 1975, for the cremation of her husband's re- mains and the scatteririg of bis ashes at sea. Mr .. Hannan died May 6, 1958. and his body was in- terred at Westminster Memorial Park. Sheriff's officers who in- vestigated the incident decided not to take action ·against the mortuary after ·determining that "human error" led to the dis· po5al of the remf.ins. ln•utl1•tors said mortuary workers apparently overlooked a number of bones in the metal casket while they were transfer- ring remains from the coffin to the cremation container. Westminster Memorial Park officials today refused to com· ment on the lawsuit. They earlier refused to comment on the dis- covery of Mr. Harman's remains at the county dump. In Battin Qearing Informant Claims He Probed Solons A former undercover infor- mant testified Tuesday that he was once hired by the Orange County District Attorney's Office to seek out confidential financial inf~mation on three county su visors and an ex-candidate for di rict attorney. Gene Conrad, an admitted con- victed felon with alleged or- ganized crime connections. said be wasn't told why he was given the assignment of researching financial dealings of Supervisors Robert Battin, Ralph Clark and the late Ron.aid Caspers of Newilort Beach. Nor could Conrad say why he was told to investigate the finances of Anaheim attorney Dexter Penman, a 1970 candidate for district attorney. . But, the burly former infor- mant testified. the best his prob- ing could produce was $600,000 worth of interest bearing loans Caspers owed two banks. Conrad's testimony came dur- ing Battin's pre-trial hearing before Superior Court Judge Kenneth Lae. At issue in the hearing is Bat· tin's contention that an indict· ment charging him with seven felony crimes related to alleged· ly campaigning at taxpayers ex· pense is the result of selective prosecution. Cella Unit Ouster In an attempt to help prove that point, defense Lawyer Mat- thew Kurilicb called Conrad to the witness stand late Tuesday afternoon. Voted at Hospital By GARY GR ANVILLE Of tM DllllY l"lltl 5"" Directors ol Mercy Hospital in Santa Ana voted unanimously Tuesday night to oust the Dr. Louis Cella-founded Orange County Health Testing Institute from the hospital. A hospital spokesman called the board's actlon, "Part of the contln~ng attem pt to rid the hoSpital of whatevef' is left of Cella's lnfi'1ence." T'ne testing institute last July wu awarded a controversial $280,000 annual count.y contract covering pre-emplo,yinent pbytical exal!\tn•tlons or pro- spective collnt:Y empJCJYffS. ~ Cella, backed by bis attorney, insisted that he had divested himself or any .Onanclal interest ln the health tesUna firm six months before it wu &W1\rded the county contract. Despite Oella '1 dl&clllmer, county· Health Department ot- flclala ln&htecl the then· pollUcally lnfluentlal doctv ac- Uvely participated in contract specification negotiations. And for mer assistant county health officer Thomas Hamilton charged that the Board of Supervisors tanored staff advice when It awarded the contract to the teatina institute. Since then, the lnstltute's performance has drawn harsh criticism from County Health Of. ncer John Philp. In the meantime, Cella and three buslneaa associates have· been ebn1ed in county and federal 1rand jury lnclictments with 144 felony crtmes. The indletments alleee that the foUJ' men par)Jclpat«l ln • lfaod theft sdleme that toatthtr cost Mercy IDd Ml11lon CommunJty Ho.~J>•tal !rtlulon Viejo, $2 ~on. ._. ... ~~~:ctisll u tbt alle&ed lr-- 1•f11 Ues "ere revealed, Cella'• virtual one.man control over the two hoapttals' finances was ended b~ directors' fclions. , ... u u h.•UtM ' !Ut••&-.1 ••' '"' Conrad said he did undercover work for thP. district attorney's intelligence division from 1971 through 1974. Although bired and paid by the district attorney, Conrad said funds covering his services came from the now·defunct Orange County Intelligence Un.it. AccordinR to the ex~infonnant, (See BATTIN, Paget\%) Woman's Arm Amputated Surgeons at Orange Oounty Medical Center amputated part of a woman's right arm Tuesday after she caught it in the blades of a meat 'frlnder while prepar· ini hamburger at a Santa Ana delicatessen. Th~ victim of the unusual occi- dent was Identified as Michelle Holman, 25, of Anaheim A pollee spokesmaa aald the victJm •as)>ushinl meat lnto the 1r1nder when th~ macblnery caught btt nna.,.. and started pulling the •rm lri. Paramcdtca tr~ the man1led limb fn)m the grinder and rushed the woman to Medical.~nte.r. · The two persons finally led to safety were not identified. They were escorted out after firemen batUing the blaze finally controlled it within 15 minutes of arrival and cleared the smoke· filled hallway for safe evacua- tion. Capt. Hos mer said the blaze re- quired police to control traffic at the intersection of Warner <See FIRE, Page A2) • FV Co11ncil At l111Pass~ On Fireinen The Fountain Valley City Council agreed Tuesday night to try and "clarify" issues in the current firemen contract dis· pute. But the councilmen, after a 90-minute executive session, agreed they still are at an "im· passe•· in bargaining. Mayor Bernie Svalstad said to- day the ~ity would like to go to mediation to solve the dispute but does not want to do that until both sides understand the issues. Paul Barrett, the Teamsters Union representative for the firemen, s aid. Tuesday the city still has not clarified its position on time and a half pay, fire in· spection jobs and payroll deduc- tions for dues and insurance. "We are not sure what they need clarified," Svalstad con- tinued, saying the city un· derstands the issues. "I think we both have to un· derstand each other before we go any further,'' Svalstad noted. The city council Tuesday night also extended indefinitely an educational incentive pay pro- gram which gave firemen pay boosts or 2.5 to 10' percent for completing college units. But Svalstad said today the ci- ty still wants to drop that pro- gram and replace it with a lump s um payment of $500 to $5,200. The city's resolution says th~ whatever was paid in educa· tional bonuses between Nov. 29 I and whenever the cQntract is set- tled should be deducted from that final lump payment. However, Larry Drake, presi· dent of the firemen's association. said Tuesday, firemen will not sign a contract that does not in· elude an educational pay pro- gram. The city's "last and final" of- fer. would give firemen a four percent pay hike this year and six percent next year. Firemen <See IMPASSE, Page A%) Coas t Weathe r Fair through Thursday with continued sunny and warm days. Chance of some fog near the coas~ Thursday morning. Highs 70 to 80 degrees. Lows tonight in the 40S. I NSIDE TODAY State plonl to ~ long-range bfeyclbtg appear to be falling to budget'•·=· But prwpect• /or more~ troUI"' lhor1ft' dilto.nca look promi.ring. 87. ..... l ( 2 DAIL V PILOT H/F W~ay.January28, 1979 Cella Transcripts Sealed ]udge_Aske4 1 to Ex te nd One-monthAct~n By TOM BARLEY Of .. .,. .. , ...... s.... Transcripts of Orange County Grand Jury proceedings that led lo the b1dictment or Dr. LouiJJ J. Cella and three businesa as- s ociates today were ordered sealed for the next month by Superior Court Judge Kenneth Williams. 2Schools' Fate E yed By T rustee s The future of at least two elementary ca mpuses in the Westminster School District is expected to be determined Thurs· day night by district trustees. The board will meet at 7:SO p.m. at Stacey-Clegg School , 6311 Larchwood Ori ve. Huntington Beach. A district-parent committee has recommended the closing of Finley School, 13521 Edwards St., Westminster. next fall, along with the partial clo.5i ng of Gill School, 15252 Victoria Lane, Hun- tington Beach. The committee recommended le aving kinder garten through third grades at Gill, district of· f1cials said. In addition, the group suggest- ed closing Cook School , 14401 Willow Lane, Westminster , the following year. . But th e d is tri c t 's ad - ministrative staff has r ecom - mended the complete closing of Gill and Cook Schools next fall. The staff also suggested clos- ing Finley, Schmitt, Sequoia or Golden West Schools in Sep- tember 1977. Trustees also will consider a recommendation that they re- d ew the a ttendance area east of Beach Boule vard in the southern ;>a rt of the district. If enrollment dips below 1,900 :;tudents, e ither Midway City or Meairs Schools could be shut down. Officia ls noted that district enrollment has dropped to 10.300 this year and is expected to go to l0.000 next year. The peak enroll· ment was 13,500 in 1970, and stu- dent population is expected to faJI to 9,190 by 1983. Juctae Jerrold S. Oliver will take the bench Feb. Z7 for a special bearing in which he will be asked by lawyers for two of the defendants , to permanently· seal the bulky transcripts. The sever'al volumes of transcripts, described today as the larges t s uch records in Orange County history, would normally have become available to the public next Mondar . The motion for sealing was rHed by lawyers for defendants Stephen R. Evans, 31, of Mission Viejo and George L. Ollendorl, .44, of Laguna Beach. Cella, 51 , and co-defendant Theodore Schiffman, 53, of San- ta Ana did not join in the ipotion. \ All four tndlcteea wlll be back Jn Judge Williams' courtroom Fob. 5 to enter pleas in response to the 1Z7·count indictment. Bail for Evans, Schutman and Ollendorf will be finally de- termined Feb. 5, Judge Williams ruled today. They are presently free-on $25,000 bond with Celia's bail set at $75,000. Not Kidding All four dt;f endants face ti;ial on multiple charges of grailtt theft, conspiracy, forgery, em- bezzlement and willful attempts to defraud state government. Those charges were filed after • a long grand jury probe into the operation of and Cella's involve- ment with Mission Community Hospital. Mission Viejo and Mercy General Hospital, Santa Ana. Brown Treats Peers Alike MADISON, Wis. (AP) -California Gov~ Edmund G. Brown Jr. apparently is not kidding about austeri· ty in government, extending jt even to his relations with other governors . It is alleged the profits ob· tained by Cella from hospital operations were used to further his political ambitions and finance the campaigns of political candidates who qualified for backing by Cella. After r equesting a copy·or Brown's state budget message, aides to Wisconsin Gov. Pat~ck J: Lucey were mildly surprised when they received it more than two weeks later among some other fourth-class mail. All four men have been or· dered to face trial May 4 in Los Angeles Feder al Court on similar charges returned in a federal grand jury indictment. The California budget message was sent to Wisconsin with a mere 13 cents postage. It was mailed Jan. 9 and reached Madison Jan. 27. Recy~ling Robbers Use Cattle Prod lnHB Holdup A trio of bandits armed with a revolver a nd a n electric cattle prod cornered a southeast Hunt- ington Beach m arket clerk e arly today in a $190 armed robbery and escaped into the darkness. The 12:30 a .m. holdup took· place at the 7-Eleven market at Newland Street and Indianapolis Avenue. Clerk J im Conn called poli ce a fter he felt it was safe lo emerge from a r ear room where the rob· hers marched him and ordered him to stay until they made their getaway. He said two suspects confront- ed him, but it was apparent a third was involved in rifling the cash r egister, according to Sgt. Michael Sorg. · The two weapon-wielders were described as in their mid-20s and appearing dirty a nd unkempt. E'ro.. Page Al E'rom Page Al BATTIN ••. F ro. Page A l SCHOOL ••. The upper forward fuselage of Space Shuttle Orbiter 101, nation's first reusable spacecraft, has been mated over pressurized crew compartment at the Palmdale facility of Rockwell International. Rollout is expected this fall, with initial landing tests slated for mid-1977. he was given the code name Glen District officials said the cam· Edwards in 1973 when assigned pus would open with 1,200 to 1,400 the task of finding ''any type students at first but would have bank or loan records" on Battin, a bout 2,000 to 2,200 freshmen, Clark, Caspers and Penman. sophomores and juniors by Sep- In response to Conrad's allega. tember of 1977 tions of political s nooping, Depu- ty District Attorney Jack Ryan They s aid Huntington Bt!ach Court Order Stops McFadden Barrier characterized his testimony as a ttigh was chosen as temporary A court order has blocked the fabrication calculated to embar-housing because more than half city of Huntington Beach from rass the district attorney's staff. of the Ocean View students now going ahead with plans to con- It was Ryan who drew an ad-attend there, it is the least struct a controversial cement mission from the witness that he crowded campus and has the barrier across McFadden was convicted in 1975 of "depriv-most space for large group ac-A venue between Graham Street ing an owner of his vehicle" and tivities. and Bolsa Chica Street. a n accompany ing worthless The action was issued after a check charge Officials also said they wanted lawsuit was filed by Don Lace "Isn't it true you felt you were· the Ocean View student body and Elmer Applebee on behalf of given a raw deal by the district kept together -rather than split 500 members of the Robinwood attorney?" Ryan asked. between various campuses -to Homeowners Assocation. for a variety of reasons. He said the street closure will seal off the area, will send com- muters out of their way, will pre~ vent access of emergency vehicles and will affect property values. Lace said his arguments won dramatic support Tuesday after- noon when a woman in the area suffered a heart attack. "I think tha t would be un-. let them develop a feeling of iden-City Council members bad or- derstandable," Conrad replied tityforthelrnewcampus. dered the street closed because Countian Facing as Ryan questioned the motives they felt and were told by some behind his testimony. residents that heavy truck t.ratnc Murder c~n--es As par\. of that effort. Ryan S-1..-i~T .... S t in the adjacent Lusk lnddltrial a.uu ~ asked Conrad who he had dis· ~ e9"' e Zone posed safety ha.u.r61 to re-Assault charges against a San. c uss ions with regarding the sidents, many who are -school ta Ana Ola.n were changed to first financial probe. At HB Grade Schoo] -ctiildren. • degr~e murder Tuesday in COil· The ex-informant said be had The action brought a ltorm ~ necti'dn with the fatal shooting of ·1 The district closed Seventee- nth Street School two years ago, but held oH additional closings until the pa rent committee studied the matter. FIRE ..• met with Supervisor Laurence Tests to discover possible protestattheJan.19Qtyf-ouncil thesu.spect'scommoolawwife,a Schmit 's former aides Loran cases of scoliosis will be conduct-meeting from residems who police spokesman said today. Norton and C. D. Hanson at the ed almorrg fourth and fifth grade claim they were not properly Roy Stafford, 64, was arrested . Magic Pan Restaurant in South students at Spring View School at notified of the closure. Sunday on a charge or assault Trustees earlier this month en-A venue and Edwards Street, dorsed the concept of school clos-which was j ammed in the noon- Coast Plaza. 16662 Trudy Lane in Huntington When the City Council decided with intent to commit murder ''How a bout Sheriff Brad Beach Thursday mornin~. not to rescind the decision by a 3 after ~olice found 36-year-old Gates? Was he present?" Ryan The school nurse says-the ·c~-to 2 vote, the homeowners de. Joyce oby lying on the noor of ings as a cost·saving factor dur-· ... hour rush. ing a period of declining enroll-Magnitude of the two-alarm asked. dition is manifested by curvatu:~ cided to sue. the couple's home with four ''Yes," Conrad replied. • Lace said he and Applebee and bullet wounds. She died late Mon-ment but put off a decision as to blaze which sent a column of which schools . smoke boiling ove r the densely. of the spine and can result d Ryan also drew an admission _ _:s~e!ri~o~u~s_!!il~ln~e~s~s'._!l_!a~te~r~in~li!~e::·...:.·.:.:.· ·..:..;· -~=--~th~e:_:h:_::o~m::::e:::::o.:_::wn:.::e::r:..:sloo=.k:.:l::e~g=al:..:a:..:ct:::.:ion:.::..._..:.._a:_y_. -----------from Conrad that his value as an Fro.a Page Al IMPASSE ••• want a 25 percent increase in salary and benefits, city offi cials noted. Drake h as said that fire men in fountain Valley will not strike 1nd would prefer to settle their :ontract privat ely . But he charged the pay offer is less than other city employe ~roups . ·He also said fire calls have about doubled since the city roined a cooperative agreement with Seal Be a ch, Huntington Beach and Westminster. Drake said that agreeroent has :;aved the c ity money and firemen should r eap some of the benefits. Cit y officials said the pay offer given fi rem en was lower than 0ther employes beca use firemen ranked higher than the others countywide. ORANGE COAST H F DAILY PILOT n.t Or-Co.t.i O•llt PllOI. wltll -II I\ coml>O...., ,,,.. ,. ... , Pru\. I\ -'"""' .,., II><' ()r-(O.\t P11bto..,,ln9 (-y 5-Pot•41• .Oitlorll .,. ""bl1\ll•d -·• '"'""°" f rt&>y for c~-. ~ ... N••PO•I llH <ll. H<lnltnqton &.K h ~o....,t••n ll•llo. lr~•M. ~-t•b•<k V•ll .. , .,.., U9utl• &.Kll~ll CN\t A .,nqi. ,.,._, t <l•tlon '' °"l>li>/IMI ~t.,.dily> -S.... ... , .. lht P'i"C:lp.tl j)Ubll\hlflV pl-I\ oM lJO Wo\t e., """''· C.O•t• Me ... """-• '2•16 Ro~rt N. Weed Pruklenl •"" PYl>tl- J4Ck R. C.Urtev llkt ~n1c1e111 e"" Gc-•t IMNl9fr Thomes Ke-evil Editor Thomas A. Murf)hlne ~M91neao11tar Q\artes H. Loos RlcNrd P. Nall .... .,., .... Me~ l.-..n Robert B•rur wt\I 0r.,... c-, e.MW " ............ act.OHie• ---119-" IHC11 ......._.. NIMllfll AW,...... P.O. ... "' ... Offk.a • i....-.. ~. ···~11""4 (et\tA ... nt WU I 8n Sl- ~O V•llO U"1 IA~"""" •tS...O .... ,,__,, • \ popula ted area required six trucks from two fire companies in addition to paramedics. The paramedics treated a cat trapped in an apartment upstairs from the one occupied by John C. Smith and his roommate for critical smoke inhalation, but their work was futile in the end. "We gave it first aid, but it s uc- cumbed," said Capt. Hosmer. Or ange County Animal Control officer s were contacted for as - sistance and medical equipment es pecially for pets but they declined to respond to the blaze. Smith, the renter whose apart-. ment was gutted, had gone to the beach about 10 a .m ., according to Capt. Hosmer, while his room- mate was a pparently away at work. The loss involved $25,000 to the structure itself and $20,000 to con-tents. E'roaPage Al undercover agent was related to his knowledge of organized crime and that he had done loan placement work for various or- ganizations. The prosecutor indicated be will call Conrad's intelligence chief, former district attorney in· vestigator Frank Oxadobourne to testify today. According to the former un- dercover agent, it was Ox- adobourne who assigned him the financial research. No Burglars -]mt Dogs The neighborhood around Velardo Lane must really be go- ing to the dogs, Huntington Beach police observed today following the Tuesday night re- port of a pos sible vehicle burglary in-process. SMOKING. A pack of dogs was barking, howling and baying beside a parked step·van vehicle used in commercial sales route work and therefore equipped with a • burglar alarm which had also . been triggered. enm esses 20% to 50% off wh~e he .and ~facAUister s~1d Officer Paulette Grant setting aside an outdoor smoking psponded and quickly roported L----------...;.---------i area might decrease tardiness. /back that the dogs bad simply class cutting and the rest room c.hased and cornered a cat now problem. hiding under the truck and the But Shenkman said be didn't ruckus apparen tly set off the believe the smoklng area would • alarm . solve the problem and it also might appear trustees were 118 c1•1y Festival ··sanctioning" smokifli. One woman in the audience said she didn't see bow trustees could establish smoking areas when it is illegal for teenagers to purchase cigarettes anyway . Another woman suieested in- . stalling ventilation systems in rest rooms to help eliminate the st:ne*e, while a Fountain Valley lfi1b School student recom- mended installlna smoke detec-tors. Oren Ziv, an Ed.11011 Hl•h 'School student, also uked tho board to let 1tudenu know before startiof a rigid no--smoklni en· forcement poUcy. · While tru1lee1 admltttd at times they now .. turn t heir backs" OD 1motln1, tM)' a&reed · tolet1tudent.1 know thatamoklq will not be permttt.._ Planning Begins Dr. Frank J . Abbott, superin· tendent of the Huntington Beach Union Hlab School District, is the chairman of this year's Hunt- inlton Beach City Festhal. the event, designed to provide entertainment as well as in- formation re1udlna act.lvltles and service clubs available in the dty, wUI be held May ~. The location will be announced later. I • 200 Pairs Shoes At Cost or Below Random Sizes Wilson & Penn Tennis Shorts 4.95 & 8.95 Wilson & Penn Tennis Shirts 5J5 & 6.95 Smith Autograph Frames 19.95 Billie Jean King frames 19.95 Used .12000 19.95 & 24.95 • All Kawasaki Rackets At Cost . . Extra Duty Yellow tennis Balls-Can -of 3/1.99 Warm up Pants Close-out ~ 4.95 Basketballs 4.95 & 5.95 • ·. ... ' • . .· Today's Closlag N.Y.Stoeks VOL. 69, NO. 29, 6 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, .CALIFORNIA 0 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 28, ~76 N TEN CENTS . ·~Bat.Ian Ustedes E~panol in Newport? t.AJUtouab few Newport Beach nsidents are unable to read English, ballots and.C>tber elec-tiOli materials in the April 13 election will be printed in both Enclisb and Spanish. Councilmen learned at Mmt· cjay•a study session that unless they comply wJth the Voting Rights Act of 1975, that requires the double printing, the election could be invalldated or 'post~ned. Also, City Clerk Laura Lagios could be subject to a $10,000 fine five yean in jail, or both. . ' The council had asked City At- torney· Dennis O 'Neill to in- vestigate what would happen if they failed to comply. When they heard his report. they decided to abide by the rules. . However, the coiancil asked Mrs. Lagios to keep track of the extra expenses involved in · following the voting rights act· in cuse they decide later to take the matter to court. · O'Neill told the council that it could rue a .lawsuit against the federal government, such as the City of Irvine is· doing, on the grounds that the interpretation of the act Is wrong. According to the voting rights act, ballots and all other election materials must be printed in two languages if five percent or more of the population spe,.ks a second language. Because Newport Beach ls located in Orange County, where more than five percent of the voters are Spanish-speaking, the U.S. Department of Justice ruled that Newport Beach must also print its election materials in Spanisfl, even though few Newport residents are Spaol:lh speaking. I • According to O'Neill, the cost to the city or printing the materials in both languages amounts to only an additional .f,UIO. However. the total campaicn cost to individual canclida~. who must i>rint their quallfica· Uon.s in both languages, amounts to $300 to $600, or nearly double the regular cost, O'Neill said. He added that the candidates might consider filing a claa ac- tion suit against the gov~ Labor Leader w Testify OC Jury ResuDles Cella Investigation The Orange County Grand Jury resumed its .investigation into the financial and political de- alings of Or. Louis Cella today. Waiting to testily as the jury entered phase two of its probe were Pete Remmel, executive secretary Orange County Central Labor Council (AFL-CIO) and former Garden Grove mayor • D~lly Pl ... Staff 1'11•te CITY PAYS $280 A MONTH FOR THIS PARKING LOT THAT NOBODY USES . J ohn Dean. Both Remmel and Dean have been close to Cella in his political activities. Newport Beach Supports White Elephant Just Off Coaat Highway Near Arches Parking Lot 6't Widow Sues Dean is a former chairman of the Orange County Democratic Party Central Committee. When called to testify before NB'White Elephant' When the NeWPOrt Beach City CooncU dedded lo lease a Coast Highway parkinf lot from the state in August o 197i lt seemed Jike a great Idea. But now, a year and a ball Jater, the lot on Coast Higbwa,y, just west of the Arches Bridge, is a white elephant used mosUy by seagulls. It costs the city $'l80 a month. Prior to the takeover by the ci- ty, the lot was used forparking by Hoag Memorial Hospital. When the hospital's new parking . structure was completed, the lot was no longer needed. This week, the council asked City Manager Bob Wynn to draw up specifications for subl~g the empty lot1as a recreaU0&1al vehicle storag area. Tbe action was prompted by. proposals S\lbmitted by four separate· N~wport Beach bus\· nessmen. Councilmen said Monday they were aenerally in favor of using the lot for that purpose, bllt a.aid U-u could not choose betw~ the four separate proposals because there were na city specifications. · Cit)' officiali wlll return in two weeks with the specifications and,. then they will go out for bid. Coun· c:ilmen Hld tl)e bids will be open to everyone, not just the four men · who have already offered pro- posals. The four include Thomas C. !togers, Thomas L. Stevens, Carl Arthofer and Charles H. Painter. According to Wynn, the sub- leasee will not have exclusive rights to the lot. Instead, he will have to work out an arrangement with the city if citizens purchase parking permits for the lot. Claims Mortuary 'Negligence' • '> • the jury earlier in its investiga- tion, Dean reportedly cited at- torney-client privilege and re- fused to answer questions asked of him. A widow who learned last Dec. 17 that portions of her husband's body and his coffin had been found on Orange County's Coyote Canyon clump 1ued Weatlllblster Memorial Park today for $200,000 ill damages. Genevieve Harm•n of Westminster claims in her Superior Court action that negligence by the mortuary operators led to the dumping of Hugh E. Harman's remains at the trash site between Irvine and Newport Beach. · Mrs. Harman states that she made arrangements with the de- fendants on Jan. 23, 1975, for the cremation or her husband's re- mains and the scattenr1g of his ashes at sea. Mr .. Harman died T~fi'r.aud · May 6, 1958, and bis body was in· terred at Westminster Memorial Park. " Sheriff•s officer-& who in· vestlaated tbe tadtlmt decided not to take action ·apinst lbe mortuary altu~ng that "human error" led to the dis· J>C*l of the remfln,s. lnve1ti1ators said mortuary workers apparently overlooked a number or bones in the metal casket while they were transfer- ring remains from the coffin to the cremation container. Westminster Memorial Park officjals today refused to com- ment on the lawsuit. They earlier refused to comment on the dis- covery of Mr. Harman's remains at the county dump. Ex-Balboa Island Man Gets 5 Years David G. Robinson, ytbo perked up the Orange Coast economy last 1ummer and fall with a spending spree financed by the largest fraudulent tax re· fund in Internal Revenue Service history, was sentenced to five years in federal prison Tuesday. Robinson, a former IRS tax collector, also was sentenced to three years probation. Still another part of the sen- tence was Robinson's coopera- tion in telling I RS agents how he managed to get "65,000 in illegal lox refunds from the federal gov- ernment. The IRS has avoided releasing details of Robinson's scheme, other than to say it was dis- covered when an investigator wondered why one individual got such a large return. Authorities also said Robinson used a fake name, home address and W ·2 for ms to carry out bis scheme. . • Robinson used the money from July to Dec. 19, when IRS agents arrested him. He blazed an expensive trail among Orange Coast merchants, renting a Balboa Island apart- ment offices in Irvine, hiring a staff of a dozen employes and buying airplanes, an $85,000 house in Pasadena and an ex- pensive car.for every day of the week. Recalled by Orange Coast ac· quaintances as a small ebullient man with thinning blond hair and thick glasses, he paid for most of his purchases with cash. Later, a Superior Court judge ruled that Dean's professional re- lationship with Cella was not an J.11Ue al\4 ordered bi!Q to testily. It ls expected that the former Garden Grove mayor will a nswer questions related to $26,000 in leaal fees he received from two hospitals formerly con· trolled by Cella. New managers at the hospitals * * * Hospital Ousts Cella Institute By GARY GRANVlll.E Of tM Dilly Pl ... SIMI Direl!tors of Mercy Hospital in Santa Ana voted unanimously Tuesday ni~ht to oust the Dr. Louis Cella-founded Orange County Health Testing Institute from the hospital. A hospital spokesman called the board's action,,"Part of the continuing attempt to rid the hospital of whatever is left of Celia's influence." The testing institute last July was awarded a controversial $280,000 annual county contract coverf ng pre-employment physical examinations of pro-· spective county employees. Cella, backed by his attorney, insisted that he had divested himself of any financial interest in the health testing firm six months before it was awarded the county contract. Despit e Celia's disclaimer, county Health Department of- ficials insisted the then- politically influential doctor ac· lively participated in contract specification negotiations. And former assistant county health officer Thomas Hamilton cbaued that the Bosartf of <See MERCY, PageA2) Wbile the lot has appeared to be a mistake so far, Wynn said there is stlll the posslbllity that it ~d be used for persons shoping at the Lido Shops on the Udo Peninsula and the Mariners Mlle complex under construction. . "Both areas are talkinC about putting ln a tram from the lot lo their shops," Wynn said. -(See PARKING. P11CeA2) . Jtlag A1'ert DropOtlts . DOW INDEX OFF 6 POINTS NEW YORK CUPJ) -The stock market cloaed lower for the 1econd conaecull ve day today tn actlve tradin1 on the New York Stock Exchan1e u investors lost to prolll takers. • The Dow Jones llMluatrial av~ra1e. ahead jhtly 1n ttie early afternoon, was off 6.46 ~ints to 951.35. lt lost 3.70 points • l\Jad1y after a 109-point runtAP the firlt 17 aessiona of tbe year. Decllnts led advancca by about a two-to~ne mar1in. (T•bles, 85). Prtces were lower ln active tr9dlnc on tho A mcrtcan Stock Ex.Cban1e. .• ' Night School Plan OK'd Newport-Mesa 1cbood trusttts have ordered the lnsUtuUon of maht classes f <lf' hl&h school stu- dents who mteht otherwise drop out ot school. The classes wlll start in two weeks at McNalty Continuation High Scllool ln Coeta Mesa. They will be conducted from s p.m. to 9 p.m. llonday throu,h Thursday. ~ offici ala saJd the pro-sram wlll c0tt about $23,000 to run for the remainder or the 197S-71 acbool year. Jt wut serve about 1.2S students, many of whom work during the d&y. accordinc to otnclab of the Newport-Heu Unified School OiiVlct. Slmllar ntsbt proerams aro now in operaU~ ln Munt.lniton Beach and Anaheim. Trustees · w1tre tO)d that both of those pro- rnms have waiting lists. Accordin1 to Deputy School Supt. Norman Loats, there are Boycott Fails DETROIT <UPI) -A "yelJow Ou'' boycott tbat kept one In "'1'ff ltudents home on the first day of court-ordered bus!ni fell apart ancf Detroit's full d e· sttreiatidra plan went lnto effect Tueaday. School attendance •veraaed 83 percent, .-jth only ball the number ol at.mteea r• .cor4ed Monday when the two-iliP plan wc~t into effect. currently between 75 and 100 stu· ·dents who have said they would enroll in a night program if given the chance. An additional 25 students are on tho waitin& list at McNalli and could be placed at that school, if _.some of the McNally students 1wltch to t.be night pro· cram, Loats satd. Loats said fundlne for the night school would be the same as the regular day school, with students recelvin1 the same basic aid O(Ure from Ute at•te. Students now attending re· "'6ar hilh 1choot. ln the district may be ellalble to attend the nt.iht scbool If there ls space. But X,oats aatd tbey would be screened caretulb'. '• say they have no knowledge or legal services performed. So far, the grand jury has in· dieted Cella and three business associates on 127 charges related to the pur.ported theft of $2 million from Mission Community Hospita!. Mis_si~n Viejo, and Mercy General Hospital, Santa Ana. . The so-called second phase of the grand jury's probe is expect- ed to include an inquiry irito money received from CelJa by persons who performed no services for the hospitals. In Battin Hearing Informant Claims He PrObed Solons. A former undercover info ....... ' ·'Conrad's testimony came dur- mant testified Tuesday that he lng Batti.n 's pre-trial bearing was once hired by the Orange before Superior Court Judge County District Attorney's Office Kenneth Lae. to seek out confidential financial At issue in tbe bearing is Bat. l.nformation on three county Un's contention that an indict- supervisors and an ex-candidate ment charging him with seven for district attorney. -felony crimes related to alleged. Gene Conrad, an admitted con· ly campaigning at taxpayers ex- victed felon with alleged or-pense ls the result of selective ganized crime connections, said prosecution. he wasn't told why he was given In an · attempt to help prove the assig.nment of researchJng that point, defense La~ Mat- financial dealings of Supervisors thew Kurilich called Conrad to Robert Battin, Ralph Clark and the witness stand late Tuesday the late Ron.aid Caspers of afternoon. Newport Beach. Conrad said be did undercover Nor could Conrad say why he work for the district attorney's was told to inves tigate the intelligence division from 1971 finances of Anaheim attorney through 1974. Dexter Penman, a 1970 candidate Although hired and paid by the for district attorney. district attorney, Conrad said But, the burly former infor-funds covering his services came mant testified, the best hjs prob-from the now-defunct Orange ing could produce was $600,000 County Intelligence Unit. worth of interest bearing loans Accordin.1? to the ex-informant, C~spers owed two banks. (See BATTIN, Page A%) Deaths Not Lamented Jo"'"' Bob Kennedy Called 'Dangerous' DALLAS (AP) -John and Robert Kennedy were two of the most dangerous men America ever produced and ''I'm not en- tirely upset" by their assassina- tion, says lawyer William M. Kunstler. .. Although I couldn't pull the trigger myself, 1 don't disagree with murder sometimes, especially political assassina- tions which have been a part of political life since the beginning of recorded history," Kunstler told a news conf ere nee Tuesday. "I'm not entirely upset by the Kennedy assassination. In many ways two of the most dangerous men in the country were eliminated," he said. "It is hard to tell what the glamor of Ken- nedy could have done. Kennedy excited adulation. And adulation is the first step toward die· tatorship." Asked by a reporter whether be felt bis remarks might cause others to attempt killings, Kunstler replied: "No. deranged people aren't made possible by my feelings that ; . . maybe we're better orr without the Ken· nedys than with them. Deranted people are going to operate whether William M. Kunstler says one thlnl or another ... KunsUcr, here to addreu a · Political seminar at Southern Methodist University, was, the defense cOllnsel tor the Chlcaao Seven arotAp charged wlth dis- nq>ting the 1968 Democratic Con· ventloo. Ho also ls chleC COU1\4el for Symb1oneso L\beraUon Army members Bill and Em.Uy Harris. Kunsller said he turned down offers to handle I.he detense ot I l'atnc1a Hearst who went on trial Tuesday in San Francisco on bank robbery charges. "I would never work for the Hea.rsts under any circumstance because 1 won 't work for pigs," he said. "I only work,..f9r people 1i respect and anyone m the ruling • class I don't r 'espect. Patty Hearst will be tbe ultimate vic- tim. She was brainwashed after she went to jail, not before." Coast Weather Fair through Thursday with continued sunny and warm days. Chance of some fog near the coast Thursday morning. Inglis 70 to 80 degrees. Lows tonight in the 40s. INSIDE.TODAY Stell plans to ~ long•rangc biCJ1cUng appcor to bl folUng to budget'•.~. But proapeda for men ~ traU.t of lhorter c:Uatancts look promUing. 81. . ' ... ·A.I DAILY PILOT Patience, Folks The Department of Motor Vehicles staff knows what it's like to stand in line, too. New $285,000 building at 650 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa, was supposed to be ready for occupancy Nov. 15. but that was last year's story. The latest target date for move from 720 W. 19th St. is March 1. Then public will be served from 38 win- dows instead of present 17 and there'll be parking for 142 cars instead of 24 . Patty Hearst Gag ·order Judge Bars Press From Jury.Selection SAN FRANCISCO <UPI > -A federal Judge today barred the press from his questioning of potential jurors in the Patricia Hearst trial on what they have read and heard about the newspaper heiress ca~c. The judge, who said he hoped to complete jury selection by the end of the court day so opening argu- ment s could begin Thursday , questioned ea ch member of a panel of 36 potential jurors in- dividuall in a separate courtroom from where the press and publi c were seated. Reporters were not allowed inside. Before starting the individual questioning. U.S. District Judge Oliver J . Carter, asked: "Are there any of you who leads such an isolated life ,that you have not heard or read about this case?" When no one r esponded, Carter said: '"There probably are a few people in remote places who have· not heard of it, but that is most un- usual." Miss Hearst. wearing a brown pantsuit and loafers on the second day of her trial. listened intently to the judge's questioning but did not respond. She smiled at her parents when they entered the courtroom. Irvine Coast Plan Slated for Hearing The first complete presenta· tion of the I rvme Company's plans for the Irvine Coast area will be given Thursday night at an Orange County Planning Commission public hearing. The hearing, at 7:30 p.m. in the forurn at Orange Coast College, will also be an opportunity for the public to comment on the plan. At issue is the 10,000·acre coastal site between Newport Beach and Laguna Beach. The Irvine Company is planning re- sidential. commercial and resort developments on 30 percent of the land, with the remaining 70 percent proposed for public open space. The Friends of the Irvine Coast. a group that opposes de- velopment of the area, plans to make its own presentation Thurs· Fr.-PllfleAl PARKING. • • However, the Lido shops people were talking about a tram in August of 1974 and still haven't established one. Wynn said the problem with the lot is that people are reluc- tant to park there and then walk several blocks to reach their destinations. ORANGE COAST H Thi> °''""~ c ... ,, 0.tl'f PtlOI. W!lf\ wf\o<h '' <ombfnf'O t,,_. >•r-•t Ptt\\~ '' Ptlbt•SIW:<J Oy thfo Or-CAM\! Publl.,,llljl '°""""'• ~~••IP ed1lt<1•1\ ••• e>ubll\IWd "'°"°"" lhrouvf> frkl•v IM C.O.t• .... H ......... , -II. HUflllnqlon • &e~'"'"""l•ln 11.lll•v. lrvl,,., S-l•b.iO ll•l"'V •nd UOllNI leath/~h C:.0..1 A \tn<,JIP •e9~1 •dlllon •• publl....O $Murci.vs """!>un 0.1" T11• l>"lntlHI 1Nbil•hl"O ~M'll t\ •I 3JD .,.., .. , Str .. t. ~i. ,....._ c..!ltonv• n~. Robert N. Weed ,, • ...,,,,,, •nd """''"""· Jack R.Curlw """ ,, ..... ,,, ... 0.Mfel-.,. Thomes KMYll fClllOf day offering commissioners alternative uses for the land. Thursday's hearing marks the start of a six·month process of public hearing. Trustees Nix High School Smoking Plan High school students pleaded with Newport-Mesa school trustees Tuesday for special smoking areas on thei r cam- ~ uses to clear the air in bathrooms for non-smokers. Trustees were sympathetic but said that. instead of allowing smoking in special areas, the schools should crack down on smoking altogether. 'Tm an ex·smoker and I know that's the worse kind. But l 'm more in favor of banning smok- ing entirely and enforcing that ban," said Trustee Donald Smallwood. . The issue arose because of a new state law that allows in· dividual school districts to set aside "desi~na ted s moking areas" if they wish to. Student representatives from the five district high schools asked trustees to create those areas and said that informal stu· dent polls on campus showed stu· dents preferred smoking out in the open rather than in the bathrooms illegally. School officials had planned a survey of parents, students and teachers that would have cost about $3,000 to carry out. Trustees told them to save the money. Instead , the students were asked to return to the board in six weeks with information on the smoking problem on their campuses and proPOf-15 for what should be done about ft -short of creating special smoking areas. Trustees also learned from~stu­ dents tl'lat smoking, thougb un· authorized, alf eady has moved out ot restrooms and into the open on district high school cam- puses. Choice Confirmed WASHING TON (AP) -The Senate today confirmed Presl· dent Ford·s nomination of AMe Armstrone lo be the f\rst woman U.S. amba11aclor to Great Bri- tain. Mrs. Armstron,, formu cOUMeJor to Presldenta Nlxon and Ford for consumu attain, aucceedJ Elliot L : RJchardlob who hu returned to the United States to be aecre\.ary ol com-merce, Before the closed questioning, Carter asked the panel of 36, chosen by lot from the74potential jurors who remained after Tuesday's questioning, if they bad served on a jury before. Eigh- teen said they had, including one woman who replied, "It was in your court, judge.'' Of the 36, about one.quarter were blacks, and most were mid· dle-aged. The panel was chosen from a list which has been in use for some time, thus many had been called to jury duty pre- viously. Those who had served on criminal cases said the cases in· eluded drugs, one bank robbery, assault. drunken driving, draft dodging, attempted murder, theft, safecracking and one woman who said her case "was about some stolen Levi's.'' The initial panel of 36 included 22 women and 14 men. Both de· fense and prosecution wm have a n unlimited number of challenaes for ca us~. and if\.addi- tion the defense taft 'Ask for dis· missal of 10 jurors without cause on peremptory challenges, while t h e pro s ecution has six peremptory challenges. The opening day of the trial Tuesday was highlighted by a dramatic moment when Miss Hearst. looking thin and pale and dwarfed by the huge courtroom, stood at the judge's request to give a first look at the famous de· fendant to the prospecti vejurors. Carter admonished the panel Tuesday that the trial will be one of the n1ost widely publicized in the nation's histo'ry. But when be began questioning the jurors, it was obvious that he was not in- timidated by the historic nature of the trial. Mrs.Nixon Visits Florida And New York KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. CAP) - Pat Nixon has gone to New York City to visit her daughter Tricia after spending less than 24 hours •at her Key Biscayne vacation home. The wife of former President Richard M. Nixon fiew to Mlami from San Clemente Monday and departed late Tuesday. There were reports that she may have been arranging for the sale of the Nixon's retreat. Workmen moved boxes TuH- day from one Nixon house at the compound to another. While here, Mrs . Nixon met with C. G. "Bebe" Rebozo, long.time Nixon friend and confidant who owns a house adjacent to the Nixon pro- perty. · Mts. Nixon could not be re· ached for comment in Aorida or New York. It was not known how long she planned to visit Tricia, Mn. Edward F. Cox. AD RESPONSE DOGGONE· fXJOD • ella Recorm be wu &lvu t.be code name Glen Edwardl tn lt7S wben autped the task of finding .. any type ballk or loan recOl'dl" on BatUn. Clark. Caspers and Penmarl. • ealed a Month la fflPOOte to Conrad'• alle1a-· t1oait of poUUoal 1oooping, Depu· ty District Attorney Jack Ryan · cbara~rlzed his testimony u a · !abrlcaUon calculated to em'bar-rua the dlatrlct attorney's staff. BJ TOM BARLEY ot-.o.11y"O•Mlft Tramcrlpts of Orange County Grand Jury proceedings Ulat !eel to the indictment of Dr. Louts J . Cella and three business as- sociates today were ordered sealed for the next month by SUperior Court Judce Kenneth Williams. Judge Jerrold S. Oliver will take t.be bench Feb. Z7 !or a Honllcide ·Suspect In Mexico ByDOUGLASFRITZSCHE Of .... Otlly ,. ... a.ff Irvine police officers were in court in Guadalajara. Mexico, to- day attempting to ;et an extradi- . lion order to return to the U.S. with Raul R. Figueroa, tbe man they believe committed an ex- ecution-style murder in an Irvine orange grove Jan. 18. Police Lt. James Carrington said today the Orange County District Attorney's office has is- sued a complaint of first-degree murder against Figueroa and police have obtained a no-bail ar- rest warrant. Figueroa WU saugbt in COD• nectlon with the s laying of Eulogio Ramos Valenzuela of Santa Fe Springs, whose ~Y was found by a woman Jogging through an orange grove near Culver Drive and the Santa Ana Freeway the morning of Jan.19:· Valenzuela bad been shot several times in the back with a small caliber gun, according to investigators. · Irvine Detective Steve Nash and Spanish-speaking ·Costa Me sa Detective C bano Camarillo, who jointly conducted an inquiry into the slaying in Los Angeles County barrios, fiew to Guadalajara Tuesday to bring Figueroa back. Figueroa had been arrested by Mexican police following calls (rom the Irvine department, Car- ' rlllgton said. Carrington said that within 72 hours of the discovery oC the body, officers had concentrated their investl1at1on Oft Figueroa. After questionµtg fnetids and relatives of the accused man, of- ficers later determined he had left the country for Guadalajara Jan. 18. · Police contend the motive for the s laying was the purported in- volvement of Valenzuela and Figueroa's wife. special hearing tn which he will be atked ~Y lawye,._ for two of ·the d'tendants, to permanently seal the bulky tran.crlpts. The severel volumes of transcripts, described today as the largest s uch records in Oranie County history, would normally have become available to the publlc next Monday. The motion for sealing wu filed by lawyers tor defendants Stephen R. Evans, 31, oC Mission Viejo and George L. Ollendorf, . 44, of La1Una Beach. Cella, 51, and co-defendant Theodore Schiffman. 53, of San· ta Ana did ®t Join In the motion. All four indictees will be back in Judge Williams' courtroom Feb. 5 to enter pleas in response to the 127 ·count indictment. Bail for Evans, Schiffman and Ollendorf will be finally de- termined Feb. 5, Judge WiWams ruled today. They are presently free on $25,000 bond wftb Cella's bail set at $75,000. Jt was Jlyan who drew·•n ad- miulon from the witness that he was convicted in 1975 ot "depriv- ing an owner ol his vehicle" and an accompanying worthless check charge. "Jsn•t lt true you felt you were. given a raw deal t>y the district attomey!" Ryan as~ed: •·1 think that would be un- derstandable," Conrad replied' u Ryan questioned tbe motives behind bis testimony. · At part of that effort. Ryan asked Conrad who he had dis· reuaaions with regarding the financial probe .. The ex-informant said he had met with Supervisor Laurence Scbmit's former aides Loran Norton and C. D. Hanson at the MaJlc Pan Restaurant in South Cout.Plaza. "How about Sheriff Brad Gates? Was be present?" ~yan asked. uy es " Conr'ad replied. I t ~. All four deCendants face trial on multiple charges ot grand theft, conspiracy, forgery, em-. bezzlernent and wilUul attempts NB l'F./'. ' . fo defraud state government, · w 011W.11, 8 Those charges were filed after l i. a long gran4 jury probe iato the rr. U operation of and Celia's involve-.a tro ll OU8e1J ment with M issibn Community Hospital, Mission Viejo and . n· by. F. Mercy General H~pital, Santa nit ire Ana. It is alleeed the profits ob. tained by Cella from holpltal operations were used to furUler his political ambltlon1 and finance tbe campalan1 of political candidates who qualified Corbacklng by Cella. • All four men have been or- dered to face trial May• m Los . Angeles Federal Court on simtlar charges r eturned in a federal grand jury indictment. * * * F,.._PageAl . MERC·Y ••• Joann Fleming may begin to worty about her luck, now th~t both her former Newport ~ch residence and her present hot;le in Mansfield, Ohio, were bit by· fireonthesameday. ' Mrs. F1eming is the former owner of the home at 1811: Newport Hills Drive East that., was gutted in a $115,000 blaze . Monday afternoon. She sold lhe house six months pgo. · According to Mrs. P1eming's sister, Carol Theessen, al.so a · Harbor View Homes resident, Mrs. F1eming had her own fire , Monday night in Ohio. . The Ohio lire was slight in , comparison to the Harbor View. Supervisors ignored staff advice Hills blaze. But according to when it awarded the contract to • Mrs. Thessen, her sister can't the testing institute. help but reel•• a little eerie." · Since then, tbe institute's performance bas drawn bani., criticism from CountyHeaMh Of. ficer John Philp. In the meantime, Cella · anCI three business associates have been charged in county and federal grand jury indictments with 144 felony crimes. · The indictments allege that the four men participated in a grand theft scheme that together cost Mercy and Mission Community Hos pital, Mission Viejo, $2 million. I Viking Problems ·' I PASADENA CUP!) -The tw~ Viking spacecraft headed fof"i' Mars may not be able to conduct • all the scheduled tests for llf e · there because of a problem with • ovens aboard their landers. The · ovens are designed to heat soil scooped from the Martian sur-. face, &o sensors can examine the· gasses given off for elements In-: dtcatlng the presence of . micro-organisms. . • Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart , SPORTING GOODS $38 CENTER ST. • COST A MESA • 646-1919 BICYCLE PARTS-TIRES-ACCESSORIES SALE Subfed to Stock on Hand Tennis Dresses 20% to 50% off 200 Pairs Shoes At Cost or Below Random Sizes Smith Autograph Frames 19.95 Billie ·Jean King frames 19.95 - Used 12000 19.95 & 24.95 All Kawasaki Rackets At Cost Extra Duty Y allow tennis Balls-:...tan -of 3/1.99 Wann up rants Close-out -4.95 : ' • -... I ; .. ~!.:.. Al • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE * ._ __ Road Unity Essential Roads, and the cars that use them are a constant headache for Orange Coast residents. Either there are too few roads -and too many cars -or there is a road such as the proposed Pacific Coast Freeway that .residents don•t want and they do all they cant~ stop its construct~on. , In an attempt to alleviate both kinds of problems. the county recently completed a study of future transportation needs for the south county area. Local agencies were invited to look at four ulternate proposals for an arterial highway system which would be built in what is largely unde\'eloped and unincorporated territory. The clties of Newport Beach. Laguna Beach and Irvine didn't like what they saw, so the three cities have been meeting in an effort to provide a com- promise plan for their combined areas. Each city has its own particular problem to solve. The two beach cities. for instance need a better way to move people to the beaches particularly from the San Diego freeway and the whole area needs another ma- jor north-south highway. In preparing a plan, the cities must accept trade- offs. Some of their local.interests are going to have to be subordinated to the needs of the re&ion as a whole. They are only going to succeed in getting the countv to accept a compromise plan if it comes as a united ef- fort supported by all three cities. A Sensible Delay When Irvine Company officials saw the negative reaction generated by their Holiday Harbor plans they wisely asked the city of Newport Beach for a four-month delay to reconsider the plans. The site, at Pacific Coast Highway and Jamboree Road, was to have included a 200-room Holiday Inn a health club, two restaurants and a liquor store. ' However, a number of citizens and several plan- ning commissioners opposed the idea of having a con- vention hotel at that corner and also questioned the need. · The property configuration is unique, and the location certainly does offer attractions for a hotel operator. But unique as the property is and consider- ing the 111ountlng, unsolv~d traffic congestion in that area, thellrv\ne Company is well advised lo pull back and have another long, hard look at its best uses. Bayside Hazard The curves on Bayside Drive in Corona del Mar are a known danger spot and have been so for many years. Numerous accidents, including fatalities, have occurred on tbe winding stretch front Carnation Avenue To El PaseoDrive. Recently, the city has begun taking steps to cor- rect the situation, prompted in part by residents who live near the dangerous curves and are anxious to slow down motorists. Admittedly, the street poses serious problems for traffic engine~rs. Because of the topography, it is so narrow and winding in parts that traditional methods of making it safer by widening and straightening are ineffective. However, the city must try every method possible in hope of finding ways to slow traffic to about 20 miles an hour. Already, strips of raised markers have been installed. More warning s igns have been ordered and the ci· ty also s hould consider installing street li ghts to at least illuminate the worst curves. There is no simple answer. Because of the danger involved, however, the city must keep working on the problem. N DOUBLE HOOK Difference Can Create Harmony Dear Gloomy Gus Why Lean on the Courts? ••• Responsibility for Juveniles ( SYDNE~ HARRIS) ' . A new book came ~ my desk the other day, .all about the need to speak up, to assert yourself, and to say .. No" when you felt like it, instead of saying "Yea" when you didn't. 1 think this is fine advice for about half the ·people; for the other half, I'd suggest the opposite book : about the need to shut up, to go along, and to say "Yes" even when you feel like saying "No." Sometimes the world seems.divided between the people who won't speak up and those who speak up more than they s hould. Most of us are on one side or the other of this line; very few personalities are able to kttep a delicate balance between self-assertiveness and complaisance. MY OWN besetting sin bas been the former; it bas taken me decades to learn that saying less can be more effective than say- ing more; and I still speak up before there is any occasion to. But at least I am able to ven- tilate my feelings, abrasive as the process may sometimes be, to others and eventually to myself. I think the non-assertive people suffer more than we do; after all, we speaker-uppers im- pose the suffering on others. But, of course, there are compensa- tions the other way: the non- With everything going up. why , oh why doesn't someone do something to freeze the rent of the senior citizen? F.H .B. assertives are far better-liked than we are. WE LIKE the people who go aioac. who don't cti>mplain or ob- ject, who give tu to us because it's less trouble that way; con- versely, we resent the people who speak their own minds blunt- ly, even if we are the sort who do the same. Non-asserters ap- pre<'iate each other far more than asserters do. The fact of the matter is that some personalities need to be pulled out, and others need to be pushed in. And it is no accident that they usually marry each other, with a more or less un- conscious desire on both parts to achieve this mutual effect. This is why it is said that "opposites attract." TREY ATI'RACT because the non-asserter is looking for so- meone to do his (or her) dirty work for him (or her). Someone who finds it bard to express com- plaints or resentments can ob- tain gratificaUon from a mate who plays this role; and con- trariwise, the bold speaker-outer equally feels a secret oeed for a companion, to soften the impact of biseso. Even two friends who are quite different can fulfill these urges for each other; in fact, persons of the same type rarely get along well together . To the Editor: In your Jan. 7, edit6rial on juvenile alternatives you state, "The real burden for juvenile diversion programs is on county government through the proba- tion department." This position implies that once a child commits an aberrant act -one that brings him or her to the attention of school officials, police, or some other authority - that child is no longer of our com- munity, but suddenly becomes the county 's responsibility -not the family's, the school's. the neighborhood's or the city's. In other words, that child is no longer one of our kids. In my opinion, the attitude ex- pressed in referring children in trouble to the county as a county problem is consistent with the public apathy toward our responsibilities in the develop- ment of our youth. IN THE interest of perpetuat- ing our schools and communities in service of adults rather than children, we continually leave the development of them into responsible citizens to chance. When chance fails we shunt the product -that misbehaving youngster -off to the justice system and label that child a failure rather than ourselves. I submit the real burden for juvenile programs lies in the community and is the responsibility of each adult: parent, neighbor, teacher, school administrator and the police that serve us. Each must make every feasible effort to help each child develop into a responsible adult with a useful and rewarding place in society. We must stop forwarding our mistakes and the products of our own apathy to the courts with the hope that the pro· blem we have created will be hid- den from our view. NORA LEHMAN Bingo, Booze and Religion A recent action in Milwaukee may well portend some op- position from an unexpected source to the constitutional amendment which would legalize church bingo parties. The measure is ACA 3, slated for balloting next June. Ap- proved by th• Legislature after many tries, lt is a recognition that bingo has illicitly become a part o ( t h e activities In m a n y cburcbe.I. But the threat to its lqallutlon comes int.be form or a orotest loqed by an attorney eclin1 (or the WJa~in Tave:rn Owners A.uoclatlon to the sen1-m, of alcoholic beverages In the cburcb~s. • U it was not lntended as a ,tandltand play for publJdty it ca.n only be cateaonzed •• a crass e~bJblUon of unmltlaated ireed cm the part ol the Mloon keepen. 'l'RZ PACI' t.bat ~ incident occurred in Wlteonstft ~It of no Mia interest ln cautomla. For the 1tru,11les of the con· ( EARL WATERS ) gregations to bring in the sheaves can be no different there than here. And there can be litUe doubt that the falling away of the flock rrom the routines ot church at · tendance bas been a major con- tribUttnp factor to society's pro· blems o today. WhUe there havo been many theories advanced u to the lack of lntettat ln the churcbel on tbe part of the post WW II genera: ions, certainly one has t>eeit tl'\e f atlure of the churches to adjust to the ti ma. Jt souls ci.n be saved by pro· er-ms wbJch will bring the pro- dlpla hack to the fold, more power to the churcM5. If tbe auvtn1 or spirited beverae at- tracts people to the wboleeome atmoepbere of tbe cbwch, bring ontbewiu. BUT TUB BAR ownen not on· ly proteated that Catholic churches were aervlna liquor while havtna only Ueenaea for beer, they complained that too m.tnY beer Ueent• ""sranted dnarcbel with oo limltatlom u tot.Mnumben. That it wasn.'t a Christian con- cern for the welfare of the parishioners which prompted the innkeepers gripes but simply pet- ty greed over the presumed loss of customers, seems clear in the statement that "many tavern owners are finding it difficult to survive under the competition from the churches." Ain 't that a shame. If one wonders bow anyone could object to people gathering to hoist a few within the confines of a place of worship instead of swilling suds in a smoke filled bar inhabit@<! by sots and worse. read Sinclair Lewis' novel Bab- bitt. - WHILE California's liquor laws would not seem to affect cburcb socials here, since Ucens-tnc ts only requir~ wberedrin.ks are told. the avaricious fears of the Wlacoosin barkeepers might well extend here to def cat the binto measure. For they didn't limit their ob- ject Lons of the churches to the Ui- sue or liquor but dragged in other ectlvlties and specifically re- ferred to bln10 parties. JudJin1 from that they would also oppose church choirs Md ~ay 1cbool. Jeaus would have I chance with such persons than be had with the Romans. (' MAILBOX J Letters from readers are welcome The right to condense Letttts to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. Lettns of 300 words OT less will be given prefnence. All Letters must in- clude lignature and mailing address but names may be withheld on re- quest if ro/ficient reaion is apparent. Poetry will not be published. Poor Co111parison To the Editor: Within the last week there was news coverage of a Newport Mesa Unified School District Trustee meeting at which the subject of corporal punishment was discussed. In rttommending that teachers be allowed the use of corporal punishment one of the trustees compared the existence of such a rule (allowing corporal punishment> to the death penal- ty. He stated that its existence was a deterre nt, even though it didn't have to be used much. I THINK that there is abundant support for the proposition that most crimes, for which death is a possible penalty, are committed in a stale of mind that precludes this penalty from having any de· terrent eff eel. Further, most thoughtful advocates of the death penalty will admit that the only sustainable support for it is the end of retribution. It certainly is that! What really troubled me about the argument being advanced by the trustee was the comparison. Is the process of education and the environment in which it takes place to be influenced by rules and penalties developed for the criminal element of our society? I submit that if the threat of cor- poral punishment is being used by a teacher to "control" a class today. we are not talking about education. We are talking about detention. JOHN G. HITCHCOCK, JR. f'o11r-letter Word To the Editor: Everybody tn Orange County who reads their newspaper knows that those in power in Laguna Beach consider growth a I Mclu #How c.n they welk on one leg end why do they h•ve 'strike· written on th•lr fac.s1 .. long four-letter word. So it was no wonder they shot down the South East Orange County Circulation Stud y for fear it may, somehow. increase Laguna's population In fact, during the study, anti- growth groups s uggested that all building be stopped rather than enlarge the road networks. Some groups want to downzone the pre- sent land uses so that a lesser netw o rk cou ld serve the transportation needs. OTHERS attempted to point to the continued county growth and the fact that one-half of our coun· ty'.s 1.6 million are below the age of 26 1h years as justification to plan and build a system to match our predictable needs. The no-growthers themselves will try to get the population forecasts changed. reduce the size and number of roads and generally delay action in tlie shortsighted hope that somehow, if we don't plan for them, our children will go away. As it is, the present and planned county road network (in- cluding all forms of transporta- tion) south and east of the Newport Freeway is already nearly insufficient to handle the current population. So while the "leader s" of Laguna are busy demanding no· growth, the trarfic and environ- ment will get steadily worse. GILBERT W. FERGUSON Orange County Council on Environment, Employme nt , Economy, Development Properf !I \I alue To the Editor: An apology to the Costa Mesa City Council is in order on behalf of a few of the residents of College Park. Some were rude at the last city council meeting, and there is never an acceptable ex- cuse for rude behavior. However, please try to un· derstaM our feelings. Most of us in College Park are not wealthy people and our property is often the only major investment we have; we feel , and rightly so, that a used car lot. even Cadillac, in our housing development will reduce our property value EVEN MORE importantly, we are concerned with the quality of our hom e area-the area in which our children are raised. We do not want another Figueroa Blvd. in our back yard. If com- mercialism must encroach on our homes. there should at least be a well thought out master plan to control development. The other residents of Costa Mesa must also feel uncomforta- ble with the council's decision. Many of the other housing de- velopments also border oq com- mercial streets. If thls type or spot "one·lot-at-a-time" rezoning can happen to us. it can happen to them. Not just College Park resi- dents. but all of the people tn Costa Mesa ari! affected. WALLA CED. KLECK CAROLG. KLECK ltlea•e•t TJafef To the Editor. What is a more despicable act than the stcallng of a bike! As a parent who tries to provide a moral code for bis children, I am fast becoming disenchanted with the aeneral honesty of younJ pea.. pie. In the last 20 years, I must have bought six new bikes and countless used ones, primarily for my children but ultimately for someone else's children. ThC' latest theft of a new bike from my fr~nt porch in broad daylight prompted this letter. AS A parent, what do you tell a child when she says that she un- locked her bike from the wall of a garage to clean and shine it on the front porch. She merely went into the kitchen out of view of her bike to get the cleaning materiaJ and help her mother with a small kitchen chore and the thief struck. My children don't steal bikes, but how do you prevail upon them that two wrongs don't make it right. Are my children to go about walking while others ride their stolen bike? I am a parent of limited means and the purchase of a new bike is particularly a sizeabl e part of our savings. Apparently. the moral code ts nonexistent among s ome children and it now is steal-but don't get caught. TOM C. COAKLEY Outstandb1g To the Editor: We would like to offer our con- gratulations to the South Coast Repertory Company on their out- 1 standing performance of "Tbe National Health." Every detail was correct and the different accents were perfect. It was very sad in parts, but very true to how this system works. MRS. MARY POPE Ask the Co11rt To the Editor: Malpractice is an emergency to us all. It must be resolved for all people as soon as possible. The best and quickest way? Ask the Supreme Court of the United States to decide and declare the'l'ight of all involved; at once. Ask this courf to· decide if any doctor can be sued at all. Ask this court to declare that hospiWs are not liable. Ask the court to de· I c!de who can sue and for what. Set the amount of damages. Ask the court lo explain and de- fine the world "malpractice." Ask the court to decide what In- surance is needed. CARL WHITSON ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT R•rt N. W~ed. Publisher Thomcu IC«Vil, Edittw Borbara Krribkh. Edatonal PO(/f! EdUor The editorial page nf tho DaD.t Pilot seeks to inform anCI stimulate readers by Pl"ft«ll.lnl on this page diverse comment&17 on topics of interest by syndic..._ ed columnists and cartoonisu, bf providing a forum for readeft' vie~ and by presenting thla nc-wspaper's opinions and Id u on CUl'l'fllt toPIU. Tht edJtortal opinions ol tht Dally Pilot·~.,. only In tbe fditoriaJ colurnn al I.be loP or the page. Opinions ex- prnsed bf th columnists and· cartoonists and letttr wnters are ~r own and no endorwmcml al their views by the Daily POcJt dloold be iAf errecL Wednesday. Jan. 28.11'78 \ .... Safeway Hit ByP~pe Bomb SANTA CLARA (UPI) -A pipebombcxploded in a power transformer at the rear of a Safeway store late Tuesday night: causing mode rate damage, police said. No one was injured in the blast. The dollar nsure of damages was not immediately known. Police received no warning of lhe explosion and oo group claimed responsibility for it. Several bay ) .-rea stores or the food chain have been bombed in recent months by terrorist groups objecting to · Safeway priclng policies. P•r Ple•fl l11we11t SACRAMENTO (AP> -Sandra Good says she told '"the mean truth" but broke no law in warning business and government leaders they'd be killed if they didn't stop polluting. Miss Good and Susan ~---·~i .. ( J Murphy, former room· State mate s of Lynette _______ __, Fromme, who was con- ncted of trying to kill President Ford, pleaded innocent Tuesday to charges of conspiring to mail 171 lhreatening letter~. Wei..er FeUotring Orders"! LOS ANGELES <UPI> -Deputy Mayor Maurice Weiner, on trial for allegedly fondling a policeman in a sex movie theater . argues that he was ln the theater to carry out an inspection on or- ders from Mayor Tom Bradley. "The mayor will testify that he personally asked Mr. Weiner to look into the problem" of tom- plalnls or police harass ment of patrons of sex shops in Hollywood, Weiner's lawyer told the jury Tues- day. "Mr . Weiner went out to see for himself what kind of places these were, and what kind of people went there, and what kind of problems arose in or- der to advise the mayor on what position to take." Maa Held ~n Train Wreck EUREKA <AP> -A Fortuna man was ar- raigned Tuesday on a charge of causing a freight train wreck by parking his estranged wife's car on the tra\_cks at a rur al crossing. Dale Alvin Barnes, 47, pleaded innocent before Municipal Judge Harold Neville Jr .. who set bond at $75,000 and ordered Barnes to appear at a pre- liminary hearing in Humboldt County Superior Court Feb. 4. Firea,... Feton11 B~lced S ACRAMENTO CAP) -The state Senate ap- proved legislation Tuesday that would make it a felony in all cases for a convicted felon to carry a concealable firearm. The bill by Seo. Alan Robbins, (D-Van Nuys), was sent to the Assembly on a 33-0 vote. Robbins said bis bill was designed to strengthen provisions against ex·convicts carrying pistols and other con- cealable firearms. . VFO llepfwt• m.eo-t~ TRUCKEE <AP> -Reports of an unidentified 'flying object were discounted today by two highway .. patrolmen who scanned the skies wi\h binoculars 'fTomasummitintheSierras. , .. Uf'ITe..,.... Won't Run Barry Goldwater Jr., with wife Susan at his. side, said Tucsdav he will not be a candidate for the u.s-. Senate this year . Susan is the daughter of Dr. E. Mortimer Gherman of Newport Beach. Goldwater said he thought he could win a race with Sen. John Tunney but gave the desire to spend more time with his family as his re- ason for not running. Senate Rejects Brown Fann Bill SACRAMENTO (UPI > -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. showed no appetite today for relenting to farmer demands for an immediate overhaul of the Agricultural Labor Relations Board, even though the Senate soundly turned back his emergency $3.8 million bill to keep lhe would convince Brown to board alive. accept grower demands Brown's measure to for immediate altera- finance the b oard's tions in the five·month- landmark secret-ballot old farm board law as union elections for farm lhe price for its survival. workers beyond Feb. 6 Brown showed no such was rejected Tuesday on inclination publicly. a 20-15 vote, seven votes He previous ly said shoz:t ~f the two-thirds changes can be con- maJority n eeded for sidered in "due course,'' P~~sage. . but not as part of the I b~pe th.e Senate wtll emergency appropria- reconsader its vote and lion. approve the appropria-Senate Democratic lion," Brown said in a F1oor Leader David A. bri.ef ~t~te.ment. "I Roberti of Los Angeles. belie'"'.e at as an the long-sponsor of the appropria- term mterests of not only lion bill, said the gov· the growers a nd the ernor remained stead· farm workers but of all fast against any im- t he p e o Pl e of mediate overhaul. Califomi~.'' Roberti was granted Repubhcan·led oppo-permission to seek nent s nourished hope another vote on the bill, their .show of strength probably on Thursday. J ump in. The long leggy jumpsuic's the look of the moment. Tailored. T ucked. T opscitched co perf ecrion by Luba. In a sand-colored poplin of polyester/ coccon. In sizes 8 to 12, $84 Fashion Gallery Coats, Suits Bullock'• ~th Coast Pia.ta, San Dieso Freeway at Bristol, Co1ta Mes.a, S5C)·06J I • :.:W:.:'ed=:n.day:==z.i.:· J:.:_•n::.:u~arr::i.:r~a.~1:.:m:.;::.. ______ oAJo.;;;.;;;.L v;....P.u.or A 5 SI.S Mlllloa Belills: . 2 Gunmen Rob LA Firm LOS ANGELES (AP> -"It bad to be a w~ll­ planned op~ration," said Police Sgt. Alan Varner after two men in business suits robbed a :securiUea firm and fied with nearly $1.S million in negotiable Most of the bonds taken were municipal, with the interest paid by clipping coupons, orticials sajd. But they (the coupons) have the same serial num- bers u the bonds, making lt a simple step to trace anyone trytne to cash them. • bonds. . . . An FBI s pokesman in Washington said the ro_,. bery was one or the largest or Its kind. Varner said the men entered the Century City omces or the MuniciCorp. or California Tuesday and said they were waiting to speak with someone about buying some bonds. • But a short time later ttiey accosted an u n· armed messenger bringing two bags of securities to the firm from a nearby bank, the policeman said. He said they apparently were aware of the messenger's schedule. "Tbe total time was about 10 or 15 minutes." said Varner. "The messenger was coming back, on foot, and they were waiting for hJm. As soon as be returned, it was over. They pushed him into a room and came out with the bags." MuniclCorp's president, Kenneth Rogers, said both men were armed with handguns. "The men told the secretarlefio shut up, then took the deliveryman into my office, told him to sit down. then took bis bags from him," Rogers said. "They had their guns in his ribs all the time." . Varner said the two then made their getaway with the aid of an accomplice waiting nearby iri a 1962·model van with out·Of-steteplates. · He said police were investigating the possibility that the! two men were known to employes of the firm. MuniciCorp deals in municipal bonds, debt ob· ligations issued by cities and other governmental agencies. Such securities are frequently issued in "bearer" form, meaning that whoever has physical possession can cash them. Striking Doctors Face Liabilities· LOS ANGELES <UPI) Angeles County bad not -Striking doctors today pa.id higher m alpr actice raced warnings from premiums by t bls mom- autborlties, of legal Ing. T he Travelers ll'ab ility -and t he I nsu r a nce Co . has possibility of going to Jail warned tha t those who -lf abandoned paUents do not pay lhe first die and fr om an ln· quarterly installment by surance company that midnight will lose their they will lose their coverage retroactive to malpractice coverage at Jan. l. midnight . The 28-day-old strike, Public hospitals in Los which has spread to Angeles, jammed by pa· thousands of physicians tients who cannot find in a six county area with medical help elsewhere, 11 million residents, is in Tuesday for the first protest against the com-· time ex c eed ed the pany's 327 percent in· theoretical maximum of •crease in malpractice patients for which the policy premiums, with a hospitals can adequately provi sion obligating care. them to ·pay a possible About 60 per cent of the retroactiave increase to 9,500 physicians in Los 487 percent later. Welcome spring with a lovely rose garden! 1976 AARS winners Choose from: America Cathedral Seashell Yankee Doodle each 595 #1 grade patent roses each Choice of: Song of Parts Tropicana Duet 399 Standard roses Choice of: each Blaze Chryaler Imperial Ml randy China Doll 199 Standard fruit trees 349 Grow a verl•ty of fresh fruit, right in your own back yard! Choose apricot, nectarine, cherry. peach, pear or plum. Great for eating or preserves. Start your own orchard this thrifty way! 899 Genetic dw•rt bing cherry. Big and dark fruit with a dellclous flavor. Grow your own I ' 249 tor pack of 2 H1v• • gnipe arbor In ye>Ur y1rd. Choose Concord o r Thompson seedle11 grapes. A lovely tralllng vine that bears fruit. DOWNl!Y MONTCLAIR NIWPOllT 11.ACH NORTHRIDGE SAN l!RNA .. DINO WHITTWOOD - IUVIRllDI! NEW t YORK STOCK EXCHANGE ,:l'ft VOU 't\l)lft ' ~ ._. I ~ ~ l'ltt ,,_. NII ~ Ht1 ~ 1114 (~ ~;\ lr.cf'i~~:' .. ~ C.... Wd ~ ~. 0...Ji:~ '" 11*1 0. (lo9 ' ( !'GI ClOlt 0,. N 0.1 0.. 0'4 ~ (\Idol O.. 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'It 21Yt • , Lt..Sl99 32 • U7 11t.-Vt Nrtn Co 1.70 8 19 :zt • SCOAlnd .70 7 21 12~-'" UnlTel 1.12 10 ... 16\lo ... ~.January 28, 1978 DAIL y PILOT as l Cheek Pantry Proper Storage Saves You Money By SYLVIA P08T£R f l..o.st jn a Sfn'i~•J A yur ago Christmas, we receive d a large box of shelled nuts as a aift. About half of the nuts were c.-onsumed durin1 bolid11.y gatherings at our country home. After that, J put the box on the pan. try shell. 'near opened · boxes of crackers and similar dry roods -and then I forgot the nuts en- tirely. Ju s t before Christmas this year our Money's Worth housekeeper thoroughly cleaned the pantry and threw away not only the nulls, but also all the opened boxes of crackers . cereals and a substantiaJ load or other perishable foods. J would prefer not to recall or disflose the precise details about the condition of lhe pantry that prompted the herculean cleanup. MORAL: PROPER storage of nuts is important Unshelled nuts can be held at room temperature up to six months. But other nuts should be stored in · air-tight con· tainers in the freezer or refrigerator. A~ Tue.sday's column stressed, storing your food. pro- perly is as important as shopping properly . You must knb\\ the rules to save money when buying food ; and you must know the rules to save money on storing the food in your kitchen and guarding your family's health. To proceed with key guides: . -When checking your pantry, reread the labels on the foods stored. Perhaps some should have been refrigerated. Not all boxed or canned goods can be held at room tem- perature. Canned cheeses such as Brie and Camembert for instance, should be kept under refrigeration even l>ef ore opening. -Under no circumstances, taste rood that you fear has gone bad. You don't have to swallow food to be poisoned by the toxins that certain types of bacteria produce -and taste is not necessarily an indicator of safety, anyway. . -DOUBLE-CHECK the directions on your container or grated Parmesan cheese. Some containers r equire refrigeration after opening; other containers don't. -~rotect your syrups from mold by keeping them in the refngerator. If crystals form in refrigerated honey or syrup, place the containers in bot water before use. .-Keep peanut butter in the refrigerator after opening. Let it stand al room temperature for a while before use~ .-Get clear in your mind that refrigeration and freez· lng do not kill bacteria in food ; they simply stop the bacteria from spread_ing. When food is thawed, the bacteria become active and resume spreading. Thus, foods should be pre pared as soon as possible after thawing. -MANY FOODS TitAT are stored in the refrigerator deteriorate rapidly and should be prepared for the table within a <tay or two or home storage. For instance: broths. gravies, stuffings, chicken salad, potato salad, poultry, fish liver, kidneys, brains and giblets. · ' -Wrap fresh meat ror freezing loosely enough to allow .~r to circulate but not loose enough to let the product dry out. But leftovers should be tightly wrapped and covered. -Always arrange food in the freezer so that the oldest package is used first. · .:._Don't stack foods. Refrigerator shelves s hould not be covered since this impedes air circulation. Produce belongs in lower compartments. This prevents crystalization. -Immerse leftovet' egg yolks in cold water and cover them in the refrigerator. 1n sum, draw up your kitchen checklist; follow through on your inspection, for. it's most improbable that you'll get 100 percent on your food s torage test, even if you pass. And ·if you flunk , learn how to store your foods properly. You will save money and protect your !amily's health, too! Return Envelopes Frofil IRS 'Wrong' SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The Internal Revenue Service says it has inadvertently Included the wrong return envelope with tax forms majled to thousands of Southern Californians. The wrong envelopes are addressed to regional process- ing centers in Philadelphia or Andover. Mass .. said Frank Busalacchi, IRS public affairs officer. The en1.elopes should be addressed to the Fresno center. However, added Busalacchi, ta payers who already have mailed their returns s hould not cerned. Returns can be processed easily at any one or these n national cen- ters and should not delay a tax refund, he sa a. Those taxpayers who haven't yet mailed their returns can scratch of( the wrong address and use the correct Fresno address found inside the instruction booklet. Market lnde:re• eaOyM .021:110 n 1211J-~ ;n•.., t 1s1 '52\o't-~ oansi.n.JO • 3 21 -111 LacG.st60 1 11 11~-'Ai Nw1t1npfcs .. 1111•,.._.~ St111111e :.an 1•& w 11-1 us Tot> .to11 ,., ,,..., • Bangor Pn I 46 S"llo-... =fl! llli . S 1S~ ... Gen>t! 1.10 9 S11 2) -Yt i..tarS pf lV•. 9 27'14> · .. NonnSl.SOo 12 2SI 22._,_1\ll Stol t..ad .36 • S2 1 -!It UnlTel 111\s •• SO 1"--\II Blf\OrP llfC •• I IWI • • • rid .60 ti 63 1S -"' GeltyOl.SOd 12 111 ,.. +SYt Lteswy .10o 1 I ' 31'4~ ~ NrlSI pf 1.60 .. 1S SIVt-IVJ Sc041Ft 1.0110 131 21:\li-~ UnllpfA 1\.11 . 24 21\'t + Vt •r. V11ltM Pl'HI h•ttrMtloMI BllflOOl'flt llf • • 2 to • . . 9'119 • • 56 ~ .. • OellYPf uo .. 2 17'4 , ,,. 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IOOMH by WM. F. lrowa c.d Mel Casson r-----"""""-~~..,..--- ' TUMBLEWEEDS FUNKY WINKERBEAN MR. BURCH • GET A LOAD OF BULL BU514KA '& I .Q. 6CORE J RGMENTS JOll NANCY • SAY "A H " iM e ~TIG A MINUS 1l.UEL\JE!? I DOt-.l'f BE.l..IEV~ rr ! CA~DIDA"(eS ~ PR€5t~T. by Tom K. Rym1 byTomlatH* BUT HOOJ (.O(JU) HE HAVE ~EATED~ . ~i ;· i ' by Dale Hale by Ernie Bush11111ler ,--~~~~~~--. BEFORE 1 SAY "AH '' ---HERE'S A CHECK FOR THE MONEY WE OWE YOU , MOON MUWNS • 1-2$ • fal..-.... ..... --...~---....~~~~------~ by Chcwles M. Sclllb _______ __,.;_ PEANUTS TODAY'S CIOSSlllD PUZZLE ACROSS I Strongboxes 6 ··--Bede ... Elt01 novel 10 l(nighfs wife 14 Accustom IS ····water 16 Black· Poet 17 Beavet Sme caprtal 18 Bad loser. 2words 20 Not healthy 21 Elbe 1nbutilry 23 less des1r1ble 24Attended1 meeling: 2 words 26 Precentor 28 More • delicate 30 Bring dishonor upon 31 Race trKks 32 Singe< l6 Staie Abbr. 37 Come1nto being J8 ;z~rv tOOfl 39 Even odds Jworda 42 Be frugtl '4 Ally Wtlll ' group Var 4S Zodiac soon I 2 l 14 17 46 Final24 houn·2 words 49 ···-H1rbof 50 Growing OUtwlfd Sl Railedand fed 52 MIU Lupino 56 Actor Rudolph 58 Audacious petM>n: Slang Ytlterdl{s Puntt Solved: 60 BIMblll'• ····Slaughtlf 81 Symbol Archaic J7 Operatic S2 frome or 11 Cut short highlight Allen 12 Wnlels 40 M«>si poftty 63 iotent code 41 Ofa long irtventor time ago / 64 ~m 13 Become a 42 Dissipate 65 Situated membe( 43 Roofing behind: 19 Hindu materiel Pr.ti• rellglouJ 45 Cllelldlr OOWN 1-Kher lbbf. 1 Spenilh 22 ride of llON>f 46 Uftino devie. affWTNtive: 25 8e u"°'"" •1 Pineapple 2 words 215 Opted 48 Large room 2 Al\ltogy: '11 Hound's 49 UMkilled Abbf. quarry labofers 3 Complete 29 Nuts 51 Possess 4 Sooner ~ 29 8em's river knowledge S Arabs, I g. JO Excel 53 Cheiilhed 6 Skteeni. l2 Close friend 5' P111"s nyer 7 Meen1 of em 33 Auto 56 Metal 8 Buev eewity • ICC8llOIY cont.1#\er 9 lmP1if 3' Feminine 57 Rini! surleu 10 Gives 1Uffi• 59 R~t of: testomonv 35 Rodents Suffia JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH D ~CJ I j C1 1 DICI TRACY THE~ IS'T~E'! PllT MA'AM?OH,NO,MA'AA.~5 DOWN 'TRUE,' CHUCK! WAAr5 ~ ... ,l'. ~ IS TRJIE ! PVT OQVN NOT 1;11''"" No! THE ANSWEfS ... 'TRVe: ~UCK OR I'll NEVER SPEAK TO 'OJ A.6AIN ! · . ' . r l 'M 601~ TO "'1Vf THE OTH!ftS C.~Al.Y .... by Mel .. Well, ~tand it. we·re supposed to tolerate Russia and China to hel)iteep peace-you know, like with husfla.nds ... DENNIS THE MENACE . _,rang~ Coas t EDITION ' Today's Closing N.Y.Stoek8 # , . VOL. 69, NO. 28, 6 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA -WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1976 C TEN CENTS .~ Patielaee, E'_olks The Department of Motor Vehicles staff knows what it's like to stand in line, too. New $285,000 building at 650 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa, was supposed to be ready for occupancy Nov. 15, but that was last year's story. The latest target date for move from 720 W. 19th St. is March 1. Then public will be served from 38 win- dows instead of present 17 and there'll be parking for 142 cars instead of 24. Homicide Suspect In Mexico 8y DOUGLAS FRITl.SCHE °'"'• Dlllly ~ ........ Irvine police officers were in court in Guadalajara, Mexico, to- day attempting to get an extradi- tion order to return to the U.S. with Raul R. Figueroa, tbe man they believe committed an ex- ecution-style murder in an Irvine orange arove J an.11. PoUce Lt. James Ca.rrJ.ngton al.kl today the Oranae County bistrict Attorney's alftce bas 14- sued a ~omplaint M fint.c:t.ecree murder against Figueroa and police have obtained a no-bail ar- rest warrant. Fi~eroa was sought in con- nection with the slaying of Eulogio Ramos Valenzuela of. Santa Fe S~rings, whose body was found by a woman jogging through an orange grove near CUiver DrJ ve and the Santa Ana . Freeway the morning of Jan.19: . Valenzuela bad been shot several times Ln the back with a ,-;mall caliber gun, according to investigators. · Irvine Detective Steve Nash and Spanish-speaking Costa Mesa Detective Cbano Camarillo, who jointly conducted an inquiry into the slaying in Los ·Angeles County barrios, flew to Guadalajara Tuesday to bring Figueroa back. Figueroa bad been an'eSted by Mexic•n police folloWing calls • from the Irvine departmentl Car· rington gald. Carrington said that within 72 hours of the discovery of the body, ofticers had concentrated their investigation on Figueroa. After questioning friends and relatives of the accused inan, of· ficers later detecmined he had l~ the country for Guadalajara Jan.18. . Police contend the motive for the slaying was the purported in· volvement of Valenzuela and Figueroa's wlte. Amtrak D erailed BRIDGE CITY, Tex. (UPI) - A gravel truck knocked a New Orleans bound Amtrak passengec train off the tracks Tuesday. but the train stayed up- ·Deaths Not Lamented Johll, Bob Kennedy . Called 'Dangerous' DALLAS (AP) -John and Robert Kennedy were two of the most dangerous men America ever produced and "I'm not en- tirely upset" by their assassina- tion, says lawyer William M. Kunstler. .. Altboufh I couldn't pull the tri&Pl' myself, I ckln't dlAgree with murder aom~Umes,· especially political assassina- tiooa which have been a part of political life since ~ beginning ol recorded history," Kunstler told a news conference Tuesday. .. I'm not entirely upset by the ·Kennedy assassination. In many ways two of the most dangerous men in the country were eliminated," he said. "It is hard ·to tell what the glamor of Ken- nedy could have done. Kennedy ·excited adulation. And adulation is the first step tQward dic- tatorship." Asked by a reporter whether be felt bis remarks might cause others to attempt killings , Kunstler replied: "No, deranged people aren't made possible by my feelings that . . . maybe we 're better off without the Ken- nedys than with them. Deranged people are going to operate whether William M. Kunstler says one tbjng or another." Kunttler, here to address a political seminar at Southern Methodist U nh'enity. was t.be defense coullfel for the Chicago Seven group charged with dis· rupting the 1968 Democratic Con· venUon. He also is chief counsel for Symbionese Liberation Army members Bill and Emily Harris. ' Kunstler said he turned down offers to handle the defense of l'atrlcia Hearst who went on trial Tuesday in San Francisco on bank robbery charges. "I would never work for the Hearsts under any clreumstance because I won't work for pigs," he said ... I only wort for people I respect and anyone In the ruling class I don't respect." OC Widow SDes • Claims Mortuary 'Negligence,. -A widow who learned last Dec. 17 that portions of her husband's body and his coffui bad been found on Orange County's Coyote Canyon dump sued W~tminster Memorial Park today for $200,000 in damages. Genevieve Harman of Westminster claims in her Superior Court action that negligence by the mortuary operators led to the dumping of Hugh E . Harman's remaitls at the trash site between Irvine and Newport Beach. '. Mrs. Harman states that she made arrangements with the de- fendants on Jan. 23, 1975, for the cremation of her husband's re· mains and the scatterirtg of his ashes at sea. Mr .. Harman died May 6, 1958, and his body was in- terred at Westminster Memorial Park. Sheriff's officers who in· vestigated the incident decided not to take action ·against the mortuary after determining that "human error" Jed to the di s- poul of the remains. Investigators· said mortuary workers apparently overlooked a number or bones in the metal casket while they were transfer- ring remains from the coffin to the cremation container. Westminster Memorial Park officials today refused to com- ment on the lawsuit. They earlier refused to comment on the dis- covery of Mr. Harman's remains at the county dump. Mag Avert Dropouts Teens Ru Mesa Iiicident Cooled F a,st A gang fight Oared brlefly In Costa Mesa Tueeday night after a carload of youths armed with sticks and clubs from Santa Ana rumbled Into the parking-lot of a pool hall and amusement center. Seven patrol cars and the police helicopter responded to a call for a slstance from an employe of the Bag, 1145 Baker St. The police helicopter crew re- ported seeing about 30 youths armed with clubs and sticks fighting in the parking lot. Patrol officers said they dis- persed a crowd of 50 to 60 juveniles who were milling about. Police arrested two adults and five juveniles and confiscat- ed sawed-off baseball bats police night sticks and sling shots. • Patrol Officer Clyde Foreman said some of the bystanders told him they bad seen the suspects carrying band guns and knives earlier in the day. Five 16-year ·old boys from .Santa Ana were arrested on charges including possession of dangerous weapons and possession of drugs and lack of parental control. They were re· leased to their parents. . George Gomez, 20, a painter's helper from Santa Ana, was ar· rested for possession of am: phetamines. Bail was set at $1 ,500. Donald Duffield, 19, also of Santa Ana, was lodged in the city jail for possession or a dangerous weapon, a bag stuffed with sand. The suspects ga,·e no indica- tion that they were affiliated to a particular gang. The call to the police depart- ment was made by employe Un- da Lamb at 7:51 p.m., who said, ·"You better get some officers over here. A carload of youths armed with sticksjustpulled in." She warned that 15 or 20 juveniles in the amusement center would be going out to con· front the youths In the parking Jot. Activities in the Bag were r e- Phase II cently drawn to the attention of the Costa Mes a City Council when an employe at the center com- plained that the police were harassing the recreation spot by I making frequent patrol checks. ' She was instructed to put the complaint in writing. I Reports of Tuesday night's fight were sent to the city manager's oCfice. Grand Jury Probe! Of C·ella Resumed 1 The Grange County Grand Jury resumed its investigation into the financial and political de· alings of Dr. Louis Cella today. Waiting to testify as the jury entered phase two of its probe were Pete Remmel, executive secretary Orange County Central Labor Council (AFL-CIO) and former Garden Grove mayor John Dean. · Both Remmel and Dean have been close to Cella in his political activities. . Dean is a former chairman of the Orange County Democratic Party Central Committee. When called to testify before the jury earlier in its investiga- tion, Dean reportedly cited at- torney-client privilege and re- fused to answer questions asked of him. Later, a Superior Court judge ruled that Dean's· professional re- * * * lationship with Cella was not an issue and ordered him to testify. It is expected that the former Ga rden Grove mayor· will answer questions related to $25,000 in legal fees be received from two hospitals formerly con- trolled by Cella. New managers at the hospitals say they have no knowledge of 1 legal services performed. So far, the grand jury has in4 dieted Cella and three business associates on 127 charges related t o the purported theft of $2 million from Mission Community Hospital. Mission Viejo, and , Mercy General Hospital, Santa I Ana. . . The so-called second phase of the grand jury's probe is expect· j ed to include an inquiry irito I money received from Cella by persons who performed no services for the hospitals. * * * Cella Institute 011sted Mercy Hospital Directon' Vote UnmUmom By GARY GR ANVILLE Ot•Dellyl"lletSUff Directors of Mercy Hospital in Santa Ana voted unanimously Tuesday ni~ht to oust the Dr. Louis Cella-founded Orange County Health Testing Institute from the hospital. A hospital spokesman called the board's action, "Part of the continuing attempt to rid the hospital of whatever is left of Celia's influence." The testing institute last July was awarded a controversial $280,000 annual county contract covering pre·employment physical examinations of pro-· spective county employes. Cella, backed by his attorney. insisted that he had divested himself of any financial interest in the health testing firm six months before it was awarded the county contract. Despite Cella's disclaimer, county Health Department of- ficials ins is ted the then- polltically influential doctor ac- tively participated in contract specification negotiations. And form er assistant county health officer Thomas Hamilton charged that the Board of Supervisors ignored staff advice when it awarded the contract to the testing institute. Since then, the institute's performance bas drawn harsh criticism from Count)l.Health Of- ficer John Philp. hf the meantime, Cella and three business associates have· . been charged in county and federal grand jury indictments with 144 felony crimes. The indictments allege that the four men participated in a grand theft scheme that together cost Mercy and Mission Community Hospital. Mission Viejo, $? million . Last fall as the alleged ir- regularities were revealed. Celia's virtual one-man control over the two hospitals' finances was ended by directors' actions. Informant Claims He Probed Solons A former undercover infor- mant testified Tuesday that he was once hired by the Orange County District Attorney's Office to seek out confidential financial information on three county supervisors and an ex-candidate for district attorney . Gene Conrad, an admitted con- victed felon with alleged or- ganized crime connections, said he wasn't told why he was given the assignment of "researching financial dealings of Supervisors Robert Battin, Ralph Clark and the late Ron.aid Caspers of ·Newport Beach. Nor could Conrad say why he was told to inves tigate the finances of Anaheim attorney Dexter Penman, a 1970 candidate for district attorney. But, the burly former inf or- mant testified, the best his prob- ing could produce was $600,000 worth of interest bearing loans Caspers owed two banks. Conrad's testimony came dur· ing Battin 's pre-trial hearing before Superior Court Judge Kenneth Lae. pense is . the result of selective \ prosecution. I In an attempt to help prove• that point, defense Lawyer Mat-r thew Kurilich called Conrad to the witness stand late Tuesday afternoon. Conrad said he did undercover work for the district attorney's intelligence division from 1971 through 1974. Although hired and paid by the district attorney. Conrad said funds covering his services came from the now-defunct Orange County Intelligence Unit~ According lo the ex·inf ormant. he was given the code name Glen Edwards in 1973 when assigned the task of finding "any type bank or loan records" on Battin, Clark, Caspers and Penman. In resPOnse to Conrad's allega- CSee BATTIN, PageA2) Co ast • right, preventing serious in- juries. Eighteen of the 51 train passengers and the truck driver were taken to Orange Memorial Hospital. Night School Plan .OK'd At issue in the hearing is Bat- tin 's contention that an indict- ment charging him with seven felony crimes related to alleged- ly campaigning at_ taxpay~rs. !?X· Weath e r ,Fair through Thursday . with continued sunny and warm days. Chance of some fog near the coast Thursday morning. mghs ' 70 to 80 degrees. Lows tonight in the 40s. DOW INDEX OFF 6 POINIS 1' Newport-Mesa schood trustees have ordered the imtitution of night classes for. bigb school stu- NEW YORK (UPI ) -The dents who might otherwise drop stock mark et closed lower ror the out of school. · tecond consecutive day today to · The classes wlll start in two active trading on the New York weeks at· McNally Continuation Stock Exchange as Investors.lost High School in Cost.a Mesa. They to profit takers. · wlfl be conducted from S p.m. to 9 The Dow Jones Industrial p.m.MondaytbroughTbursday. avera1e. ahead atJlbtly lh th.e School offlclaJs said the pro- early afternoon, w•s off e.46 eram will cost about $23,000 to points to 951.35. lt l08t 3.'10 points run for the remainder of the 'l'Uesday after a tot.point run up 1975-76 school year. the finl 17 HHiona of the year. · It will serve a bout 125 students, Ottllnet led advances by about. . ma.I\)' of whom work durins the a ·lwo-to-one marlin. (Tables day, accordina to ofticlals ol the, , BS> f Newport-•eaa UnJlied School Prlces were lower ln active . DlatrictA trad1n1 on the American Stock-Similar ntaht programs are Exchanie. . now in operaUoo Jn Huntlnalon ... l Beach and Anaheim. Trustees were told that both of those pro- grams have wailing lists. According to Deputy School Supt. Norman Loats, there are Detroit Schoof. Boycott Fails DETROIT (UPI) -A "yellow nu" boycott that kept one in three students home on the first day of court-ordered busing fell · apart •nd Dttrolt's full de- seareeatlon plan went into effect Tuesday. School attendance avera1ed 83 percent, with only baU the number of absentees re- corded Monday when the two-. attp plan we~t Into effect. currently between 75 and 100 stu· dents whQ have said they would enroll in a night program if given the chance. An additional 25 students are on the walling list at McNally and could be placed at that school, if some of the McNally students switch to the night pro- gram, Loats said. Loats said rundlng for the night school would be the same as the regular day school, with students recelvlna t.b• same baste · aid figure from the state. Students now attendin1 re· gular hllh schools tn the dlstrict may be eJ11lble to aUend the nl8ht school lf tbtre ii space. But Lom sald they would bo screened carefully. • Ford Veto Ovenitkn I WASHINGTON (UPI) Congress handed President Ford a major election·year defeat to- day when the Senate killed his veto of a $45 billion health, wel!are and labor bill. The vote was 70-24. Tbe Senate mustered a lwo- thlrds majority to override the veto after the House Tuesday vol· ed down ~he rejection, 310-113, or 28 more than required. The bill now becomes law. Ford vetoed tbe bill bccaus~ lt was almost $1 billion more than his budget request . \.e I .,, ••• : •• l INSIDE TODAY • sfa.1e plan. to ~ tong.range bieycUng appear to ~ /ailing to budgd'1.or. But pro~ct• for mor~ biM I troiU of lhorler diltancn look . proMbing. 87. I r I DAIL y PILOT c . ' ,....,,_AJ BATTIN ••. Uons or poll Uc al snooping, Depu- ty District Attorney Jack Ryan characterized his testimony as a fabrication cakulated to embar- rass the district attorney's staff. ll was Ryan who drew an ad· mission from the witness that be was convicted in 1975 of "depriv· ing an owner o( his vehicle" and an accompanying worthless check charge. "Isn't it true you felt you were· given a raw deal by the district attorney?" Ryan asked. "1 think that would be un- derstandable." Conrad replied· as Ryan questioned the motives behind his testimony. As part of that effort, Ryan asked Conrad who he had dis- cussions w ith regarding the financial probe. The ex-informant said he had met with Supervisor Laurence Schmil's former aides Loran Norton and C. D. Hanson at the Magic Pan Restaurant in South Coast Plaza. .. How a bout Sheriff 'Brad Gates? Was he present?" Ryan asked. "Yes," Conrad replied. Ryan also drew an admission from Conrad that his value as a n undercover agent was related to his knowledge or organized crime and that he had done loan placemehl work for various or· ganizations. T rust ees Nix High School Smoking Plan. UP'ITt......_ 'Falcon' Flap Tom Alderman of Chicago asked for a replica of the Maltese F alcon used in the famous Humphrey ·Bogart movie -by mistake Columbia Pictures sent him the original. Since Alderman received the falcon last week, he has been "threatened" in telephone calls and notes · from movie buff friends who also want to possess the bird. Alderman is Gov. Daniel Walker's director of com- munications. ~..,, T rcinsekp t · Cella · Records Se'aled a Month·· Co1.s:O~:JlW&1uNITY j By TOM BARLEY °' .. 0.11, P'fllC ..... Ttanscrtpt.a of O.,an1e County Grand Jury proceed.Inga that Jti<i · to the indictment of Dr. Louis J. Cella and three business as- sociates today were ordered sealed for the next month by Superior Court Judse Kenneth Williams. Judge Jerrold S. Oliver will take the bench Feb. 27 for a special hearing in which he will be asked by lawyers for two of \he defendants, to permanently seal the bulky transcripts. The several volumes of transcripta, described today · as the largest such records in Orange County hist.Ory, would normally have become available to the public next Monday. 'Ihe motion for sealing was filed by lawyers for delendants Stephen R. Evans, 31, of Mission Viejo and George L. Ollendorf, 44, of Laguna Beach. . Cella, 51, and co:defendant Theodore Sc'hlffman, 53. of San· ta Ana did not join in the motion. All four tndktees will be back in J udge Williams' courtroom Feb. 5 to enter pleas in response to the 127 -count indictment. Bail for Evans, Schiffman and Ollendorf will be finally de- termined Feb. St Judge Williams Brown Accused SACRAMENTO (AP) -A coalition of groups claiming to represent the handicapped and mentally retarded is accusing Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. of im- pounding $6.4 m~llion in aid. COLLEGE BOARD -Reautar • • ruled today. They are pre3enUy meeUn1. 1370 Adams, 8 p.m. · · free on $25,000 bond with Cella's BASKETBALL -Mt. San An· bail set at $7~.ooo. tonio at occ. 1: 30 p1m. Estancia ~ All four defendants face trial at Cotta Mesa, 7 p.m . ~n at on multiple charges of arand N~~Tl"I rtHNaArTbo10rN. '1ALp~.m.EAL~" theft. conspitttCY. forgery, em-'THE ,,."' bezzlement and wllllul attempta -South Coast epertory . to defraud state gov.mment. . "'fheater. through s~ 8 p.m. . • j • I Those charges were flied after TBURSDAY. JAN.!9 I a long grand jury P~ Into the LIBRARY STORY HOUR - .operat;on of and Cella 1 lnvolver 'ColtaMesaLlbrary,lO:OOa.m. · ~~ ment.with Mission Community .. A STREETCAR NAMED Hospital. MiHion Viejo and. DESIRE .. -UCI Fine Arts Mercy General Hospital, Santa Village Theater Jan. 29 30 and Ana • ' I · . all d th ofi "' 31 and Fe)>. s. 6, 1. 8 p.m. Adm. t IS ege e pr ts ou-$3 -' ; tained by Cella from hospital · operations were used to further his political ambitions and finance the campaigns of political candidates who qualified for backing by Cella. · All four men have been or· dered to face trial May 4 an Los Angeles Federal Court on similar charges returned in a federal grand jury indictment. -.Ex~IRS Tax Collector Gets 5 Years David G. Robinson, who perked up the ,Orange Coast economy last summer and fall with a spending spree financed by the largest fraudulent tax re- fund in Internal Revenue Service history, was sentenced to five years in federal prison Tuesday. GolfCoune Drive ~edian FateE,Jed . ·. .; • . A controversial median on Golt Course Ori ve in Costa Mesa may. bereduced orremo~ • · :· : ... And City Manager Fred ' Sorsabal thinks that either course may p rovoke public reaction when a decision is made at next week's City Council meeting. He gave a preliminary report to the council at a study session Monday night and admitted that· • the "city bas egg on its face" as a result of the median. High school students pleaded with Newport-Mesa school trustees Tuesday for special smoking areas on their cam- puses to clear the air in bathrooms for non-smokers. Trustees were sympathetic but said that, instead or allowing smoking in special areas, the sthools should crack down on smoking altogether. Patty Hearst Gag Order Robinson, a former IRS tax collector, also was sentenced to three years probation. Still another part of the sen- tence was Robinson's coopera- tton in telling IRS agents how he managed to get $565,000 in illegal to..x refunds from the federal gov- ernment. He recalled that the median was sought by the. Mesa Verde· . Homeowners Association to , eliminate traffic coming from a n ew apartment project to a s ingle-ram ily home area. · Sorsabal said it was the first time • a median had been put into a re-"• sidential street. .. But the city manager said'the ,• median was 12 feet wide in parts and it was difficult for fire· .• fighting equipment to get by. . .•. Judge Bars Press From Jury Sel,ection "I'm an ex-smoker and J know that's the worse, kind. But I'm more in favor of banning smok- ing entirely and enforciltg that ban," said Trustee Donald Smallwood. The issue arose beeause of a • new state law that allows in- dividual school districts to set aside .. designated smoking areas" if they wish to: Student representatives from the five district high schools asked trustees to create those areas and s aid that informal stu- dent polls on campus s howed stu· dents preferred smoking out in the open rather than in the SAN FRANCISCO (UPI> -A federal judge today barred the press from his questioning of potential jurors in the Patricia Hearst trial on what they have read and heard about the uewspaper heiress case. He acted at the request or both the defense and prosecution. The secrecy was believed to be without precedent in Uus federal · court district. The judge, who said he hoped to complete jury selection by the end of the court day so opening argu- ments could begin Thursday. questioned each member of a panel of 36 potential jurors in- dividuall in a separate courtroom bathrooms illegalJy. . from where the press and public School omcials had planned a were seated. Reporters were not survey of parents, students and allowedinside. teachers that would have cost Before starting the individual about $3.000 to carry out. questioning, U.S . District Judge Oliver J. Carter, asked: "Are Trustees told them to save the thereanyotyouwholeadssiichan money. Instead , the students isolated life that you have not were asked to return to the board heard or read about this case?'' in six weeks with information on When no one responded. Carter the smoking problem on their ·said: "There probably are a few c~mpuses and pro~als for what people in remote places who have· should be done about it -short or not heard of it, but that is most un creating special smoking areas. usual." Trustees also learned from·stu· Miss Hearst, wearing a brown dents that smoking, though un-pantsuit and loafers on the second authorized," already has moved day of her trial, listened intently, out of restrooms and into the to the judge's questioning but did' open on district high school cam· not respond. She smiled at her puses .. • parents when they entered the courtroom. 1V Taken in Mesa A burglar made off with a $'90 television set from a motel apart- ment in Costa Mesa Tuesday even though the apartment was occupied. Robert McGutfin, 56, gardener at the Sunny Acres Motel at 120 E. Wilson St. told police he was asleep when the theft occurred. . ORANGE COAST c DAILY PILOT 'Tiit 0. ... (O"I O•llt' PHOC, with wltt<h ,, ·--d , ... Ntw' Pft\\, I\ l!Ubl•\IWO by I~ Or-C.0.\1 Pvblt>lllnt c...._., <,,.""'"'" -·-· .,. pVbll"'*" _, llYOUQI\ f '"'"'" tot (O>I~ """"'• Nt•pof't ~/'-~1-l"flOn lle.Ch/f-1•1" V•llcy, lrvl .... '416dleb4>< k Va°'fy •rel Lav.-llea<ll/Sowlll CM•t A wnql,. ft11tONI tdll ~ I• pUOll-W...dey' -5.,.. '*"' The Prit><INI Pllbllllllft9 ,.._ I' •I U0 Wot S.y S1tt11. C.ott.e fMW. GelllOfni• ~ Rober1 N. Weed PY ttldtnl -,. ... ..,_ Jack R. Cur9"' Yt<.a Prelldelll •!Id GtMftl4 ~ Thomas Keevlt I fllot' \ • Thomas A. M~lne M.tNelneE.41w OUlrles H. Loos Richard P. Nall An1.c.,.1 M.tMtlno Cd'-' c...rltfll. l"t Or~ (.MM '°'*hNftQ C-,_,., He •Wl ........ 111...V ........... _ ... "'•''-., ff•t•ll.--ftft ,..,.,,. ..... , .. ""Mll<tf •ll~llC •Hcl.i ,.,,,.,, • ..,. el '-"'.,,._, s--cta" ~, ... .-i. et CMta .._.,., c.1"""'1• ~ri,itlM '1 tat-U H -..... Ii\',...,, .. "-'""'· Mtllt.wyllo\111 ...... SlJS_,,., Before the closed questioning, Carter asked the panel of 36, .chosen by lot from the 74 potential jurors who remained after Tuesday's questioning, if they had served on a jury before. Eigh- teen said they had, including one woman who replied, "It was in your court, judge." Of the 36, about one-quarter were blacks, anct most were mid· die-aged. The panel was chosen from a list which has been in use for some time, thus many had been called to jury duty pre· viously. Those who had served on criminal cases said the cases in· eluded drugs, one bank robbery. assault, _drunken driy\ng. draft dodging, attempted murder. theft, sarecracking and one wo'blan who said her case "was about some stolen Levi's.'' The initial panel of 36 included 22 women and 14 men. Both de· fense and prosecution will have an unlimited number of' challenges for cause, and in addi· tion the defense can ask for dis· missal of 10 jurora without cause· on peremptory challenges. while th e p r o s e c u t ! v;.;i h a s a i x peremp~ory challenges. Keg Sign Stole n From Metta Store An S800 wooden business sign h'as been stolen from a meat 1bop at 2915 Bristol St., Colt.a Mna. James HUI Daupt.ry, 50, told Police Tueaday the thief unbolted the sip, meaaurins four f~t by 11.x f e~t. from a beam and wouJd have had to use a ladder to do to. Tb~ 1i1n diaplayed a larae wooden tea. .. ' The opening day of the trial Tuesday was highlighted by a dramatic moment when Miss Hearst, looking thin and pale and * * * dwarfed by the huge courtroom, stood at the judge's request to give a first look at the famous de· .f endant to the prospective jurors. . * * * The IRS has avoided releasing details of Robinson's scheme. · other than to say it was dis· covered when an investigator TfOndered why one individual got s'uch a large return. Tiny Patty See~ Authorities also said Robinson .. used a fake name, home address and W -2 forms to carry out his . scheme. A stop-work order was ·placed ' on the median several weeks ago ' but Sorsabal said the city 'would · owe the developer, Wally Gaynor. about $8,000 .if the median was scrapped. Sorsabal said an alternative to · · removing the median would be to · reduce it \o six feet wide, a widih • which could sUU be landscaped, ' • Dw.arf ed by Trrial Robinson used the money from. July to Dec. 19, when IRS agents arrested him. He blazed an expemive trail among Oranie Coast merchants, renting a Ba I boa Island apart· ment offices in Irvine, hiring a staff of a dozen employes and buying airplanes, an $85,000 house in Pasadena and an ex· pensive car for every day of the week. Both Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley · • and Couocilwomap-Norma '· Hertwgindicatedthattbeyw01lld • be opposed to a median. ByJ ACKV.FOX SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Patricia Hearst seemed dwarfed by her surroundings. Dressed in blue, the tiny ac-· cused bank robber was the center of attention in the basketball court-sized courtroom. But a casual observer who did not know of her case -if there is such a person -would hardly have picked her as the likely de· fendant who took part in a bank holdup in which two persons were shot. Or as the girl who shocked the world with her revolutionary rhetoric and rejection of her family and past life. Thin and pale, with dark circles below her eyes, she sat quietly at her deiense table with a demeanor that could best be described as meek. Her pantsuit appeared slightly too large for her frame. Her hair, changed from a flam- ing red at the time or her capture to a light brown with a slightly reddish hue, fell to her shoulders. She was brought into San Fran- cisco's Federal Building, where the federal courts are located, from her jail cell in handcuffs. But they were taken off liefore she entered the courtroom. Miss Hearst glanced through the list of prospective jurors, then listened intently as each was questioned by U.S. District Judge Oliver J . Carter. She paid full attentiqn as the jurors spoke into a microphone. Occasionally, s he ~hispered to one of her de- feet away. Carter read from tbe indict· inent: "P atricia Campbell Hearst and others did by force and violence rob the Hibernia Bank branch of $10,690 on April 15, 1974." On another toplc, the coun-1 cilmen said the city should watt. • until legal questions are cleared-· · up before deciding whether to • ' spend ~o.ooo on an environmen-· ' \ tal impact report on extending Fair DrivetoHuntinJtton Beach. :• Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919 BICYCLE PARTS-TIRES-ACCESSOSUES -SALE· Smith Autograph Frames 19.95 ... . Billie. 'Jean ·King fr~mes 19.95 Subi•d to Stock on Hand . . ~ Tennis Dresses Used. T2000 19.95 & 24.95 20% to 50% off . .•· .. ., •• fense lawyers, Albert Johnson, 1---------------------. who sat next to her. All Kawasaki-Rackets ,,,· During court breaks, however, s he appeared more relaxed. She gave her mother a broad gmile as ·she entered the courtroom for the morning session. and exchan~ed chitchat with her two younger teen-age sistera, who aat abou{ 10: AD . RESPONSE DOCGONE . GOlJD . "We had &ood r~ to the ad and sold all the puppl~. •• That'• the sales success story · told by tbe Fountain Valley woman who l>laced OU. eluslfled ad in the OallY Pilot: Collie PaJ>plet, S WU, • x.lnt w/childnn ~,u;ic.xxu \ 200 Pairs Shoes At Cost or Below . ·Random Sizes .· Wilson & Penn Tennis Shorts 4.95 & ·8.95 Wilson & Penn Tennis· Shirts '5.95 & 6.95• At Cost ... . ,,.. Extra~:Duty Yellow tennis Balls--Can··of. 3/1.99 ... Warm up Pants ClosHut ~.4.95 ' , ... I Basketballs 4.95 & 5.95 ' • I• ..J ,. ••• .. ;~ . •) t·1 • i •• ...# •: •.: .,: : ... _'\ ~ :1t . .. If you have peLs you want to ~~u. call 642-5678, ll only takes a '"' word• In the right place to 1--------------_....,_..._.._ __ ._....,..., .... ___ ...., __ ..,.,...~~~--. f\nd • buyer. Alona the Oran1~ Coast, th · rlghtplace ls the Dall)' P1Jot.. •• .._ ______________________________ .... ____ ..... ..,..~ ...... --~------....... ~~' . . Open 9 to & Clo~ed Sundays . --, , 'I t ' .. .. ~. ·' /' l .. . ... •" .. , . ' . . . • I • I ' . . ! .. · ' . \ .. .• [. I, .. . ... . . -. .. t, · .. . ., ~ I •• •. ·~ t • ' I ... i18 DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ~oning Plan N~eded One of the most contested plannlnr ls,sues in Costa Mesa ln recent months has been the bid by the Nabers Cadillac agency to change the land U$e of some lots on Princeton Drive at Harbor Boulevard in Colle1e Park. Homeowners, charging commercial intrusion in- to tbelr neighborhood, successfully campaigned against a plan to change three lots on Princeton to commercial. But Ule issue nas returned to the council as a proposal affecting only one lot, the one on the cor- ner of Harbor Boulevard. The agency wants lb-.display cars .en the land it has owned for several years. But the homeowners have called this spot zoning; and they fear such a use would be a precedent to spot commercial uses of other now residential lots abutting Harbor Boulevard. The council has voted 3·2 for the general plan ch~e. but the issue will come up again when the re· zone JS requested. Some area residents contend that what reanr is required is a comprehensive plan that rezon~ al the property, perhaps up to the depth of a bJock m fre>m Harbor Boulevard, to commercial and redesigns the residential street plan to protect the re· sidential character of the remaining area. .. This seems a much more logical and equitable ap- proach for everyone than nibbling away at a residen- tial area with unplanned, piecemeal spot zoning. ..... Mesa Leads the Way Costa Mesa can be proud that it has been chosen the lead agency in a program involving several cities and communities to help young people who get into trouble with the law. Costa Mesa, plus Laguna Beach, Irvine, San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano and the communities covered by the Saddleback Area Coordinating Coun- cil, have asked for a $306,000.grant from the California Council on Criminal Justice to fund a youth service bureau. The bureau will provide both individual and fami- ly counseling, plus residential care if necessary ror juvenile offenders. There will be offices in each com· munlty for assessment and counseling. The program is part of the effort to keep juvenile offenders from being sent to Juvenile Hall. The other cities apparently chose Costa Mesa to be the lea d agency because of its experience in over· seeing the youth diversion program at UC Irvine. This new commitment is another example of the trend toward providing social services in Costa Mesa . Notable Contribution Many who follow the affairs of government in Costa Mesa must have been disappointed to hear that Arnold F. Hamala, chief of the advance planning division, is leaving the city to become planning direc· tor of Placentia. He was responsible as much as anyone for the adoption of two landmark pieces of legislation in Costa Mesa-the sign ordinance and the ban on billboards . Citizens worked hard for these ordinances too, of course, and the council must be credited with adopting them. but it was Hamala who researched and presented the data, time after time until the benefits of the ordinances were clear . . He was not successful in revising the industrial ordinance to prevent conflicting land uses in several areas. His proposals were scrapped when the time came for implementation on specific properties. But he was always candid a nd purposeful. When his acceptance in Costa Mesa government appeared to expire he decided to move. His talent and dedication will be missed. Costa Mesa's planning still needs lots of attention. I I c DOUBLE HOOK Difference Can Create Harmony Dear Gloomy Gus Why Lean on the Courts? Responsibility for Juveniles ( SY~NEY HARRIS) A new book came across my desk tbe other day. all about the need to speak up, to assert yourself, and to say "No .. when you felt like it, instead of sa,ang "Yes'' when you didn't. I think this is fme advice for about half the people; for the other ball, I'd suggest \be opposite book : about tbe need to sbut up, to go along, and to say ''Yes" even when you feel like saying "No." Sometimes the world seems divided between the people wb9 won't speak up and those who speak up more than they should. Most of us are oo ooe side or the other of this line; very few personalities are able to k:eep a delicate balance between self -assertiveness and complaisance. MY OWN besetting sin bas been the former; it has taken me decades to learn that saying less can be more ef!ective than say· ing more; and I still speak up before there is any occasion to. But at least I am able to ven· tilate my feelings, abrasive as the process may sometimes be, to others and eventually to myself. I think the non-assertive people ~u!fer more than we do; after all, we speaker·uppers im· pose the suff eriog on others. But, ol coune, there are compensa· lions the other way: the non· With everything going up, why, oh w by doesn't someone do something lo freeze the r"ent of the senior citizen? F.H.B. assertives ar,e far better·liked than we are. WE LIKE the people who go along, who don't complain or ob- ject, who give in to us because it's less trouble that way, con- versely, we reseqt the people who.speak their own minds blunt· ly. even if we are the sort who do the same Non·asscrters ap· preciate each other far more than asserters do The fact of the matter is that some personalities need to be pulled out, and others need to be pushed in And it is no accident that they usually marry each other, with a more or less un- cooscious desire on both parts to achieve this mutual effect This is why it is said that "opposites attract." mEY ATTRACT because the noo-asserter is looking for so- meone to do his <or her) dirty work for him (or her). Someone who finds it bard to express com- plaints or resentments can ob- tain gratification from a mate who plays this role; and con· trariwise, the bold speaker-Outer equally feels a secret need foe a companion to soften the impact of bis ego. Even two friends who are quite different can fulfill these urges foe each other; in fact, persons or the same type rarely get along well together . To the Editor: In your Jab. 7, editorial on juvenile alternatives you state, ''The real burden for juvenile diversion programs is on county government through the proba- tion department.'• This posiJ.ion implies that once a child commits an aberrant act -one that brings him or her to the attention qf school officials, police, or some other authority - that child is no longer of our com- munity, but suddenJy becomes the county's responsibility -not the family's, the school's, the neighborhood's or the city's In other words, that child is no longer one of our kids. In my opinion, the attitude ex· pressed in rererring children in trouble to the county as a county problem is coo.sistent with the public apathy toward our responsibilities in the develop. ment of our youth. IN THE interest of perpetual· mg otlr schools and communities in service of adults rather than children, we continually leave the development . of them into responsible citizens to chance. When chance fails we shunt the product -that misbehaving youngster -off to the Justice system and label that child a failure rather than ourselves I submit the real burden for juvenile programs hes m the community and is the respons1 bility of each adult parent, neighbor, teacher, school administrator and the police that serve us. Each must make every feasible erfort to help each child develop into a responsible adult with a useful and rewarding place in society. We must stop forwarding our mistakes and the products or our own apathy to the courts with the hope that the pro- blem we have created will be hid- den from our view. NORA LEHMAN Bingo, Booze and Religion A recent action in Milwaukee may well portend some op· position from an unexpected source to tbe constitutional amendment which would Ie1alize church bingo parties. The measure is ACA 3, slated for b-1loting next June. Ap· proved by the Legislature· after many tries, it is a recognition that bingo bas llllcitly become a part o f t b e actlvlllea ln m a D y churcbel. But the threat to its Jecatlutlon comes In t.beform of •:protat lod1ed bJ an attorney .cun, for tbe Wilcamn Tavern 01men Aaoclatlon to the aerv· In& of alcoholic ~vttaaes tn the dwrcbfl. · If lt wu not intended u a crancbtand play for pubBctty it can Oftly be cateaon-d as a crus exhibition of unmltlpt.ed erftd Oft tbe "" or tbe 1a!ooa keepen. THE PACf that the incident CJC"CWTid tn Wlacons.ln makes Jt ot no lea lntuat In CaUfomla. For tho •lNallet ~ \be coo· • ( EARL WATERS ) gregations to bring in the sheaves can be no different there than here. And there can be little doubt that the falling away of lbe nock from the routines of church at· tendance bas been a major con· tributing factor to society's pro- blems of today. While there have been many theories •dvaneed as to the lock or interest Jn the churches ()ft the part of the post WW II generatiom, certalnly one has been the f aUure of the churches to aclju.st to the Um es. If souls can be saved by .Pf'Oo grams which will b~ the pro- dipls back to the fold, more p0wer to lbe churches. Jt the servtn.c of spirited beverages at- tract• people to the wholesome atmo1pbere of the clJu:rcb, briJlg oat.be wine. B1JT THE BAA owners not 00· ly protested that Calbolk chur~hes were serv1n& liquor 'While bavina only u~ for beer, they complained that too many bee.r licenses tr«e sranted churches wlth no lhnitatlona as tot.be numbers. That it wasn't a Christian con- cern for the welfare or the parishioners which prompted the innkeepers gripes but simply pet· ty greed over the presumed loss of customers, seems clear in the statement that •'many tavern owners are finding it difficult to survive under the competition from the churches." Ain't that a shame. If one wonders how anyone could object to people gathering to hoist a few within the confines of a place of worship instead of swilling suds in a smoke filled bar Inhabited by s.ots and worse, read Sinclair Lewis' novel Bab· bitt. WHILE California's liquor Jan would not seem to affect Church socials here, since llcens- lrig 11 only required wbel'e drinks are told, the avaricious lean of the Wlsronsln barkeepen mJght well extend here t6 def eat the bfn10 measure. For they dldn "t 11 mlt their ob- jection. of the chutthes to the is- sue of Uquor but dragged in other activities and specifically re· ferred to bin o parties. Jud.gtn,g from that they would also oppose church choln and Sunday school. Je5us would have less chance with such persons than be bad wlth the Romans. ( MAILBOX ) Bike Trap To the Editor: This letter is to bring to your attention the professional com· petence shown by members of the Fire and Police Departments of Costa Mesa. This was shown when units of the paramedic squad of the Fire Department and the officers of the Police Department responded to a bicy- cle accident in which my daughter was the victim on January 11. My daughter suf· f ered superficial injuries in ta.k· ing her nasty spill, but the com· petence displayed by the Fire and Police personnel would have minimized the effects of more serious injury THE ACCIDENT occurred because of an unsafe traffic con· dition existing on Golf Drive between Tanager and Mesa Verde I have asked the city council and the city manager to take fast action to solve this de· monstrated hazard before a tragedy occurs The basic pro- blem is that an ill-designed traf· fie median so limits the traffic lanes that cyclists are forced into huggmg the street curb to avoid being sideswiped by wi<ie cars. The sloping gutter by the curb is littered with debris and wet mud from apartment construction. Net result, a hazardous potential spill area. ROBERTC. GEIS.5 Poor Co111parison To the Editor: Within the last week there was news coverage of a Newport Mesa Unified School District Trustee meeting at which the subject of corporal punishment was discussed. In recommending that teachers be allowed the use of corporal punishment one of the trustees compared the existence of such a rule (allowing corporal punishment) to the death penal· ty. He stated that its existence was a deterrent, even though it didn't have to be used much I TffiNK that there is abundant support for the proposition that most crimes, for which death is a possible penalty. are committed in a state of mind that precludes this penalty from having any de- terrent effect. Further, most thoughtful ad voe ates of the death penalty will admit that the only sustainable support for it is the end of.-etribution. It certainly is that! What really troubled me about the argument being advanced by the trustee was the comparison. 15 the process or education and the environment in which it takes placa to be Influenced by rules and penaltiH developed (or the crtmlnal element or our society? J submit that If the threat or cor· poral punishment is being used by a teacher to "control" a class today, we are not talking about educaUon. We ure talking about detention. JOHN G. HITCHCOCK. JR. l'o•r-letter Word To the Editor: Everybody in Orange County who read• their newspaper knows that tboac in power in La&una Beach consider growth a long four-letter word. So it was no wonder they s hot down the South East Orange County ctrculation Study -for· fear it may, somehow, increase Laguna's population. In fact, during the study, anti· growth groups suggested that all building be stopped rather than enlarge the road networks. Some groups want to downzone the pre· sent land uses so that a lesser n~twork co uld serve the transportation ne$. ()'l'llERS attempted to point to the continued county growth and the fact that one·half of our coun- ty's 1.6 million are below the age of 26~ years as justification to plan and build a system to match our predktable needs. The no-growthers themselves will try to get the population forecasts changed, reduce the size and number or roads and generally delay action in the shortsighted hope that somehow, if we don't plan for them, our children will go away. As it is, the present and planned county road network (in - cluding all form s or transporta· tion> south and east or the Newport Freeway is already nearly insufficient to handle the current population. So while the "leaders" or Laguna are busy demanding no- growth, the traffic and environ- ment will get steadily worse. GILBERT W. FERGUSON Orange County Council on Environment. Employment, Economy, Development Proper-I. !I \' alae To the Editor: An apology to the Costa Mesa City Council is in order on behalr or a few of the residents of College Park. Some were rude at the last city council meeting, and there is never an acceptable ex· cuse for rude behavior . However. please try to un· derstand our feelings. Most or us in College Park are not wealthy people and our property is often the only major investment we have; we feel, and rightly so, that a used car lot, even Cadillac, in our housing development will reduce our properly value. EVEN MORE importantly, we are concerned with the quality of our home area-the area in which our children are raised. We do not want another Figueroa Blvd. in our back yard. If com· mercialism must encroach on our homes, there should at least be a well thought out master plan to control development. The other residents of Costa Mesa must also feel uncomforta· ble with the council's dedsion. Many or the other housing de· velopments also border on com· mercial streets. JC this type of spot "one-lot-at·a·time" rezoning can happen to us, it can happen lo them. Not just College Park resi· dents, but all of the people in Costa Mesa er~ affected. WALLA CED. KLECK CAROLG. KLECK 1'fftl•nt T•~I To the Editor: What ls a more despicable act than the stealing of a bike? As a parent who tries to provJd a morcJ code ror his children, I am fut ~ming disenchanted with the aeneral hon sty of youn.g peo- pie. ln the last 20 years. l rnust have bought six new bikes 1&nd countless used ones, primarily for my children but ultimately for someone else's children. The latest theft of a new bike from my front porch in broad daylight ' prompted this letter. AS A parent. what do you tell a child when she says that she un-I locked her bike rrom the wall of a garage to clean and shine it on the front porch. She merely went into the kitchen out of View of her bike to get the cleaning material and help her mother with a small kitchen chore and the thief struck. My children don't steal bikes. but how do you prevail upon them that two wrongs don 't make it right. Are my children to go about walking while others ride their stolen bike? I am a parent of limited means and the purchase of a new bike is particularly a sizeable part of our savings. Apparently, the moral code ls non existent among some children and it now is steal-but don't get caught. TOM C. COAKLEY Outstandl•g To the Editor: We would like to offer our con· gratulations to the South Coast Repertory Company oo their out· standing performance or .. Tbe National Health ... Every detail was correct and the different accents were perfect. It was very sad in parts. but very true to how this system works. MRS. MARY POPE Ask tlae Court To the Editor: Malpractice is an emergency lo us all. It must be resolved for all people as soon as possible . The best and quickest way: Ask the Supreme Court of the j United States to decide and declare the right of all involved; at once. Ask this court to decide i( any doctor can be sued at all. Ask this court to declare that hospitals are not liable. Ask the court to de· c:de who can sue and ror what. Set the amount of damages. Ask the court to explain and de· fine the world .. malpractice." Ask the court to decide what in- surance is needed. CARL WlllTSON ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Room N. W «ed, l'Mbliahtt' Thomai Kt~fl. Editor tlorbora Krtilrich, RdUorlo.l Page Editor The editorial page of the Da.ilY Pilot seeks to inform and stam~late rea~ers by presenUnc on this page diverse commental'J on topics of interest by ayndtcat· ed columnists and urtoan.lsts. bJ prov1dina a forum for ~aden' v1twa and by presenUnt this newspaper'~ opinions and lde.11 on current topics. The fdJtotial op1mons of lhe Daily Pilol oppe.,. only in the editorial column at the top ot tht paRe OplnJons ~· presstd by the columnJslS arid t'artoonists and letter writers att their own and no t'ndorsemftlt ot lhtar views by the Datly PUot sbould be Inferred,. Wednesday. Jan. 2.8.1978 • .. • Safeway Hit By P~pe Bomb SANTA CLARA (UPI> -A plpebomb exploded In a power transformer at the rear of a Safeway st.ore late Tuesday night, causing moderate damage, police said. No one was injured in the blast. The dollar Qgure of damages was not immediately known. Police received no warning or the explosion and oo group claimed responsibility for it. Several bay 41ea stores of the food chain have been bombed in ~ent months by terrorist groups objecting to · ~eway pricing policies. ... r Pleful 1•11.cettt SACRAMENTO (AP) -Sandra Good says she told .. the mean truth" but broke no law in warning business and government leaders they'd be killed if they dido 't stop polluting. Miss Good and Susan ~~i\.I; ( State J Murphy, former room· . mates of Lynette ----------Fromme. who was con· victed of trying to kill President Ford, pleaded innocent Tuesday to charges of conspiring lo mail 171 threatening letters. Wefllft" Follotclng Order•"! LOS ANGELES <UPI> -Deputy Mayor Maurice Weiner, on trial for allegedly fondling a policeman in a sex movie theater, argues that he was in the theater to carry out an inspection on or· ders from Mayor Tom Bradley. .. The mayor will testify that he personally asked Mr. Weiner to look into the problem•• of com. plaints of police harassment or patrons of sex s hops in Hollywood, Weiner's lawyer told the jury Tues· day. "Mr. Weiner went out to see for himself what kind of places these were, and what kind of people went there, and what kind of problems arose in or- der to advise the mayor on what position to take.·• 1'faa Beld ~n Train Wrerlc EUREKA (AP> -A Fortuna man was ar- raigned Tuesday on a charge of causing a freight train wreck by parking hls estranged wife's car on the tr~clcs at a rural crossing. Dale Alvin Barnes. 47. pleaded innocent before Municipal J udge Harold Neville Jr., who set bond at $75,000 and ordered Barnes to appear at a pre- liminary bearing in Humboldt County Superior Court Feb. 4. nrea,... Felont1 B~lced SACRAMENTO (AP> -The state Senate ap· proved legislation Tuesday that would make it a felony in all cases for a convicted felon to carry a concealable firearm. Tbe bill by Sen. Alan Robbins, CD·Van Nuys), was sent to the Assembly on a 33-0 vote. Robbins · sald his bill was designed to strengthen provisions against e x-convicts carrying pistols and other con- cealable firearms. JJFO Bepert• DUeot111tecl TRUCKEE (AP> -Reports of an unidentified Dying object were discounted today by two highway 'patrolmen who scanned the skies with binoculars from a summit in the Sierras. ... Won't Run Barry Goldwater Jr., with wife Su san at his side, said Tuesday he will not be a candidate for the U.S. Senate this year. Susan is the daughter of Dr. E. Mortimer Gherman of Newport Beach. Goldwater said he thought he could win a race with Sen. John Tunney but gave the desire to spend more time with his family as his re- ason for not running. ~ Senate Rejects BrOwn Fann Bill SACRAMENTO (UPI> -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. showed no appetite today for relenting to rarmer demands for an immediate overhaul or the Agricultural Labor Relations Board, even though th~ ~enat~ soundly turned back his emergency $J.8 mllhon ~:nil to keep the would convince Brown to board ali~e. accept grower demands . Brown s measure to for immediate altera· finan ce the board's tions in the five.month· la~dmark .secret·ballot old farm board law as unton elections for farm the price for its survival. worker.s beyond Feb. 6 Brown showed no such was rejected Tuesday on inclination publicly. a 20·15 vote, seven votes He previously said sho.:t ~f the two-thirds changes can be con· ma1ority needed for sidered in "due course." P~~sage. . but not as part of the I h~pe th~ Senate will emergency appropria· reconsider its vote and tion. . approve the appropria· Senate Democratic tio!l," Brown said in .. a Fioor Leader David A. bri.ef s.t~te.ment. I Roberti of Los Angeles. belie~e it is m the long. sponsor of the appropria· term mterests of not only tion bill, said the gov- t he growers and the ernor remained stead· farm workers but of all fast against any im· t h .e ~ e .. o p 1 e of mediate overhaul. Cali!orru~. Roberti was granted Republican.led oppo· permission to seek ne~ts nouris hed hope another vote on the bill. their .show of strength probably on Thursday. Jump in. The Ion~ leggy jumpsuit' s the look of the momenr. Tailored. Tucked. Topstitched to perfection by Luba. In a sand.colored poplin of polyester/ corton. Jn sizes 8 to 12, $84 Fashion Gallery Coats, Suics Plaza. San Di~go freeway at BriuoJ. Costa Mesa. 5S6-06 I I , , • ,::W~ed1*d~~·~r~. J~·~n~u•:,:ry,L:;28:!!.•.:.1W~8 __ _,;;:;__....___..o .. Al;.;;;L_Y PILOT ,4§ 81.5 Million Bonds 2 Gunmen Rob LA Firin LOS ANGELES <AP> -"It had to be a well- planned operation." said Police Sgt. Alan Varner after two men ln business suits robbed a securities firm and fled wtth nearly $1.5 mllllon in negotiable bonds. . . An FBr spokesman in Washington said the rob- bery was one of the largest of its kind. Varner said the men entered the Century City omces of the MuniciCorp. or California Tuesday and said they were waiting to speak with someone about buying some bonds. But a short time later they accosted an un- armed messenger bringing two bacs of securities to the firm from a nearby bank, the policeman said. He said they apparently were aware of the messenger's schedule. "The total time was about 10 or 15 minutes.'' said Varner. "The messenger was coming back, on Coot, and they were waiting for him. As soon as be ret,JArned, It was over. They pushed him into a room and c!ame out with the bags ... MuniciCorp's president. Kenneth Rogers, said both men were armed with handguns. "The men told the secretaries to shut up, then took the deliveryman into my office, told him to sit down, then took his bags from him." Rogers said. "They had their guns in his ribs all the time." . Varner said the two then made their getaway with the aid of an accomplice waiting nearby in a 1962·model van without-Of·stateplates. · He said police were investigating the possibility that th~ two men were known to emptoyes of the firm. MuniclCorp deals in municipal bonds. debt ob· ligations issued by cities and other governmental agencies. Such securities are frequently issued in "bearer" form, meaning that whoever has physical possession can cash them. Most of the bonds taken were municipal. w~th · the interest paid by clipping coupons, officials said. But they (the coUPoOS) have the same serial num- bers as the bonds, maldn1 it a simple step to trace anyone trytne to cash the01. . Striking Doctors Face Liabilities· LOS ANGELES (UPI> Angeles County bad not -Striking doctors today paid higher malpractice faced warnLngs from premiums by this morn· authorities, of legal i ng. The Traveler~ li'ability -and the Insurance Co. ha5 possibility of going to jail warned that those who -i! abandoned patients do not pay the first die and from an in· quarterly installment by surance company that midnight wUl lose their they will lose their coverage retroactive to · malpractice coverage at Jan. l . midnight. The 28-day-otd strike. Public hospitals in Los which has spread to Angeles, jammed by pa-thousands of physjclans tients who cannot find in a six county area with medical help elsewhere, 11 million residents, is in Tuesday for the Cir st protest against the com-· tlme exceeded the pany's 327 percent in- theoretical maximum of 'crease in maJpractice patients for which the policy premiums, with a hospitals can adequately provision obligating care. them to pay a possible About 60 percent of the retroactiave increase to 9,500 physicians in Im 487 percent later . Welcome spring with a lovely rose garden! 1976 AARS winners Choose from: Amert ca Cathedral Seashell Yankee Doodle each 5es #1 grade patent roses each Choice of: Song of Paris Troplcana Duet 399 Standard roses Choice of: each Blaze Chrysler Imperial Ml randy China Doll 199 Standard fruit trees 349 Grow • vulety ot1resh fruit, right in your own back yardl Choose apricot, nectarine, cherry, peach, pear or plum. Great for eating or preserves. Start your own orchard this thrifty Wpy! 899 Genetic dw1rf blno cherry. Big and dark fruit with a dellclous flavor. Grow your own I • \t7t ~.CO, IM, 249 for pack of 2 Have • grape arbor In your yard • Choose Concord orThomp~n seedless grapes. A lovely \ralllng vine that bears fruit. DOWNEY MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTMltlDQI! SAN 8~ANARDl,.O WHlnwooo • ,ltMIUIH .