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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-01-05 - Orange Coast Pilotl I !He Defends Fund-raising ·; .. 1 II Lt;tnget Watches Man Murders Intently; JuI-y Wife, Marries Piek Continues Again in Hours DAILY PILOT ife * * * 10< * * * WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 5, 1977 VOL 10, NO S, t SECTIONS,•• P-'GES Diedrich Wedding Day Scudder 1Facing Probe? By GARV GRANVILLE Ol U.. 0~11y P•lo4 SIMI Man Murders Mate, Weds Promises Alleged A Grand Jury probe into al- legations that Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich il- legally s olicited campaign funds for o ther political figures r eportedly got under way today. The allegations center on m ethods used by Diedrich to .alicit campaign funds for office ~leers he baeked in la.st Novem- ber's election. including As· Mmblyman Dennis Mangers ( D· HunUngton Beach ). Sources close to lhe inquiry said there is no indication that ~ers or others who might tieve benefitted from the aJleged ' illegal fund r a ising had · lalowledge of the techniques used to raise money on their behalf. .Assemblyman Mangers was "l1Gt Immediately available for !comment. f 'Ibe jury'$ Inquiry is not. an m· 4catlon that illegal activities oc- c:utred. l ll ls an indicatioo., however. that the aJJegaUom have been checked out by inve-stigators and lthat they concluded there is I enough substance to lake \hem belore the Gr-and Jury. Earlier this week, Diedrich de· nied any improprieties on his part. ''How could there be?" he asked ... J gained n othing personally from helping what I knew to be good candid.ates gel elected to office." Diedrich hinted at the problem is now facinc when he bowed ut Tuesday as Board of ~rvisors chairman when he d. "There have been in- • -(8" DIEDRICH, P•1e A!) • ... Oalty Pllo4 StMt Pllol• SUBJECT OF PAOBE? Supervisor Diedrich No Oil Spill Reported as Tanker Stalls SM.EM. N.J . CAP> -An 824- foot Llberian-regist.ered tanker. carrying 21 million gallons of light crude oil. Wf'llt aground Tuesday night in the Delaware River , the Coast Guard said. Ensign Mary Paul said no sprnage had been reported. Sbe said the tanker, Universe Leader, carrying about 500,000 barrel,a of Nigerian crude, went aground about one mile SGUtheast of the entrance to the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal. The site is between Delaware and New Jersey. Ensign Paul said the tanker was en route to the Gulf Oil Co. refinery at Hog Island when the accident occurred. A barge was brought alongside the tanker at 10: 40 p.m. to unload ii.cargo. GLOVERSVILLE, N.Y. CAP ) -Only three hours after he clubbed his wife to death with a hammer. 62-year-old Donald Langlois was attending his second wedding in this Mohawk ' Valley city. police said. And authorities say that after attending a small wedding recep- tion while the first wife's body lay in a car trunk, the new couple went to Florida the next day. Langlois was being held today in Hollywood, Fla .. awaiting ex- tradition on seconp-degree murder charges in the death of his wife, Arlene, 55. Hollywood Det. Mil{e\ Jadwin 1said Langlois confessoo to killing his wife after having an argu- ment with her Friday in which he asked for a divorce . "She said s he wouldn't," Jadwin said. "At the end of the discussion, he picked up a ham- mer and struck her six times over the head." . Jadwln said there were no charges against the second wife, Christine .Floy d , 59, of Gloversville. N.Y .• whom he described as "an inrtocent victim of circumstances." Mrs. Floyd was a widow before marrying Langlois. the detective said , and had been told by Langlois that his divorce became flnal Dec. 31, the day of the kill- ing. Ford Bacb Off WASHJNCTON CAP> -Presi- dent Ford, facing growing con· gressional opposition, has backed away, at least temporarily, from his plan to decontrol gasoline prices . 2 Mesa Siores Robbed . 'T,vo p&ira of bandftl robbed 1 t~ liquor stores in Calta Mesa 'l'Wday night, police said today. J,!Jte firat pair, btmdled up for -. eotd and to mask their lden- UMlt, entered the Vendome LI· 'CRa' Store at 2320 Harbor Blvd. Uast 8:20 p.m., esc:aplng with. bltween $1'1$ and $200, police ~ •la the second helat. two men~ E with knives entered I.be Charles Liquor-store at 2981 St., at 11 p .m., neeing tatthmo .A female cleK at Vmdome s aid two Latin males, one wearing an oversiied coat and the other a sweat.shirt with the hood pulled tightly over hls face, approached the checkout stand with a bottle of liquor. When the clerk asked the two men ii they had \denlificatlon to purchase the liquor, one of the auspecU d!Jplayed a blue steel Luger-type pl1tol and said, "No, bu{J have a gun." One 1u1pect was.described as about five feet. seven inches tall, wolcbJna 120 pounds a nd the other was about five feet five in· cnes tall, welahine 130 pounds. Both were said to be ln their ear- ly 20s. In the second robbery, two male blacks entered the Bristol Street store and forced the clerk to hand over receipts from the till. _,,. The suspects in that heist were described as between 35 and 40 years old. One was abouUive feet eight Inches tall, weigblna 175 poundJ and the second sutpect wa., five reel 10 inches tall, also welghln1 about 175 pounds. The couple were married Fri- day afternoon in a Methodist church after lhef produced what seemed to be a valid marriage license. The manager of the hotel where the small reception took place said reservations had been made "a couple of weeks ago." He said lhe wedding couple "stayed till midnight." They headed to Florida on Saturday, and when they arrived Tuesday· at the home of the new Mrs. Langlois' relatives, they weremetbyNewYorkpolice. The body of the first Mrs. Langlois had been found in the car t runk at her home Sunday morn- ing, after her son-in-law reported her missing. Mrs. Floyd's son by a previous marriage, Franklin Cadoret of Broadalbin, N.Y.,saidhis mother was "pretty shook up" after the arrest. He said she had "no idea" of the kUling and was "glad to be alive." Cadoret said he w as one of the un- suspecting guests at the wedding reception. Teton Dam Report LOS ANGELES (AP> -An in· vestigation into Idaho's Teton Dam disaster has led to changes in the way the federal govem- men t builds, inspects and operates dams and reservoirs, the Los Angeles Times says. A 400-page report on causes of the Teton Dam disaster wm be re· leased Thursday. Part of the dam crumbled June 5, sending water over 300 square miles and forcing 30,000 person$ to nee- their homes. Six persons died. SMOUI11 S4IL FOR PILOT AD "We sold the boat the first night the ad ran In the paper." That's the advertislna success related by a Newport Beach man wbo placed this clas&ned ad: Sabol Schock 4000 se,ries, racing rigged, new Ulman aall. $2:50 lUUMtxxx If you have a boat 100'd like t.o convert to caah, call 642"56'7t. lt takes only a few wordl ln the rtlht place to attract a buyer, and the rl.aht place is t.b• Dally I P)Jot. • -'P Wlrt1111ol0 TRIAL READIED Claudine Longet Jury Clwice Continues in Longet Trial ASPEN, Colo. <AP>-Claudine Longet watched intently today as another 50 people were sworn in as potential jurors in her triaJ for manslaughter. Mi ss Longet faces trial in the March 21 shooting death of Vladi1'lir "Spider" Sabich, her lover. Miss Longet, wearing a short, flowered dress. was accompanied to court by her two defense at- torneys. A 12-member jury has b"een I.en· tatively seated, but lawyers ex- pect to take another three days to choose a final panel. Three hun· dred persons have been sum- moned to the 87-year-old Pitkin County Courthouse for possible jury duty. Jury selection is difficult in Che case because or the close rela· tionsbips among Aspen-area resi· dents . On Tuesday, one potential juror s&id he once was a golf caddy for singer Andy William s. Miu Longet'a former hus~and, who has been called to testify for the }>rosecuUo"n. ' An X-ray technician also was given prelimlr\ary approval after saying she examined X-rays of Sablcb the day after the shooting. Mi.as Longet, wbo appeared cheerful when the trial opened Monday , said s h e was "heartbroken" Tuesday after hearinJ potenUal jurors reveal glimpseaoftheUfe1heandSabich led 1bortly before he wu shot to death. Several potontlal juron weTe excuaed T~ay for saytng they believe llw Lor,1et ls guilty. l&ee &.ONGET, P1.1e A2) By TOM BARLEY OltN O.llJ ,. ... sc.tf ' Kidnap s uspect William Rudy 1 Wesson's wife told an Orange County Superior Court jury late Tuesday that alleged kidnap vie· tim John H. "Jack" Scudder pro· mised to provide for her and her two children after her husband and half brother were charged with theJcidnaping . Mrs. Joyce Wesson said the pro· mise was made by Scudder, 64, when she visited the Balboa Island home of the heir lo the Scudder food fortwaesbortly after Wesson, 45, and Ricki Dale Sellers, 20, were lodged in the county jail. Mrs. Wesson testified lhat Scudder assured her in their hour. tong conversation that she and her children would not suffe r whatever happened to Wesson. She said Scudder kissed her and called her a "sweet little girl" but insisted on searching her purse when she entered his home with the explanation that she might. have brought a gun withbm-. Mrs. Wesson tofd defense at- torney Michael Quigley that Scudder bas not helped her or her family In any way since her (See HEIR, Page AZ) Coast Weather Chance of showers and thundershowers th.rough Thursday with hig~ of 54 to 62, lows in mid 40s. INSIDE TODAY Some cit~ of .a small tot.on in Okldhoma /ind H tough to live with u,.. vmne Uft'them bi/. a CWU War Mr'O, bW. n«trl11. all aau B~ it o fiM place to live Page 88. "' ., . .. •• 4'4 Aft Cl.a .,., "' .., AU .... A4 M --------------------.,...1 .. \ AZ DAIL y PILOT s Wedneeday. January 5. 1977 Tax Plans Awaited 'J Congres~ Works on Carter Progranu WASHINGTON (AP) - Democratic leaders of lhe 95th Conira• are starting WOTk on President-elect Carter's jobs pro- gram without waitine tor ms !n· auguration. At the same lime, Congress is expected to shelve President Ford's new tax-cut proposals and instead await Carter's tax plans, due to be disclosed later this week. Alter the new, heavily Democratic Congress convened Tuesday. the first component of Carter's economic proposals, a U-billlon expansion of an existing public worlu program. was in· troduced. Democrats say the pro- gram could produce as many as 600,000 jobs. Rep. Robert A. Roe <D-N.J.). chairman of the House subcom· mittee handling the bill, had 175 'Lot to Share' Girl,, 15, Named to Board REDWOOD CITY (AP) -A 15-year-old girl has been named by the ~ity Council as a parks and recreation commissioner, the youngest such appoint· ment in the city's history. Lisa Hayes. a student at Notre Dame High School in Belmont, was named in a move toward giving the young a voice in recreation policies. "We need the strength and enthusiasm of the young, and Lisa has a lot to' share." said cO'm· missioner Diane Pound. The new appointee will serve on the seven- member board's recreational programming and com· munity relations committee. Miss Hayes' parents, George and Robin Hayes. are active in Redwood City affairs, and her grandfather, William C. Malone, recently retired from the San Francisco Library Commission. Ortega Death Van May Provide Clues to Slaying Police in Santa Fe, New Mex- ico, have recovered a van iden- tified as the property of a woman whose body was found near the Ortega Highway in the San Juan Capistrano area Dec. 20. Orange County Sheriff's criminalists dispatched to the New Mexico community said they are checking the vehicle thoroughly for clues that might lead them to the killer of Maria Padilla, 22, of Santa Ana. Sheriff's omcers stressed to- day, however. that no charges have been filed by them at this time against the arrested occu· pant of the van, Gilbert Lovato, 18.ofSanta Fe. Lovato is held in the Santa Fe jail today awaiting court action oo charges that include bis al- Wife Slayer Pleads Guilty BAKERSFIELD (AP ) Timothy Bennett of Merced', who led authorities to the spot where be buried bis wife four years ago, ha.a pleaded guilty to second· degree murder in Superior Court here. Bennett, 28, had faced first- degree murder charges in con· nectlon with tbe disappearance or his wife. Mary Jo. in 1:¥72 But Merced County Dist. Atty Patrick Hallford allowed Bennett to plead guilty to the lesser charges In exchange for leading officers to his wife's gravesite aloopide a desolate road near Tracy Chilean Cheered MOSCOW <AP> -More than 2.000 Russians gave Chilean Communist leader Luis Corvalan a chanting ovation at a rally Tuesday In a Moscqw concert hall. Corvalan. jailed in Chile after the 1973 mllitary coup, was freed Dec. 18 in exchange for the release of Soviet dissident Vladimir Bukovsky, who was in a Russian prison. Both men were initially nown to Switzerland. O"AHOE COAST DAILY PILOT ~~==-~:.::::r.::.=::::&:. '°"'' """''"''"O~ ,. ........... ,_ ... ~~~..=.~~~~'=•=~!c°'rv~~· tel" VtH•Y ""'"•· S..Hl•O.C' veu"• """ ~=~~e-~e:=--~·i:. :::.~e::"~':"t..~::...:.::JtJ)O -.. ""' "-"-Pn\Mlllftt ..... -- ...... "'".:.-:i-.t:..t::r .. - ~ ........ ""''"' ~t..~ ca..-." .._ -~ Mttl 11 .......... Mo ........ l:dl~ onio.. GMMIMtW ,. ..... -..-~ .. Kii 119'0'-f't\l-I "t:.t,Z~~~ .. :11:::.t!".e::'O::" •. ,...o_,,_, T~e('71•)~1 C:...lllfled Adv1tt111ne 142-5&71 '--•Vo11e,,._.,Ofl'<• 111~10 '-~(­...... "--"'°'-~'C-Wti.> MQ..1220 leged escape from a local institu· lion. Sheriff's Capt. Robert Griffeth said it is known that Lovato was in Orange County at the time Mrs. Padilla was kidnaped and killed. Griffeth said Lovato is wanted for questioning by Newport Beach police in connection with a robbery in that city. A warrant for his detention on that charge has been transmitted to Santa Fe police. Griffeth said his office hopes to bring Lovato to Orange County via the extradition process. "By that time we'll know more about bis occupancy or the van and his movements on the weekend that Mrs. Padilla was murdered," he said. The woman's body, s hot through the head, was found on the top or a hill In the San Juan area aft.er a 12-year-old girl rid· ing her horse through brush cov· ered country spotted the victim's 2-year-old son. LitUe David Padilla, sobbing and crying "Mama. Mama" pointed out to sheriff's officers the area where his mother bad been left by her abductor. Mrs. Padilla's husband, David, 25, told o(ficers be last saw bis wile Dec. 17 when she left their home in the van to visit a nearby bank and go Christmas shopping. Her body was round three days later f'ro.P~geAJ HEIR •.. husband and Sellers were arrest- ed last Aug. 19. It is alleged that Wesson and Sellers grabbed Scudder as he lef\ his dentist's office in Huntington Beach and confined bim to a motor home that toured the coastline while a telephoned de· mand for $250,000 in ransom was transmitted to the victim's wife. Scudder testified that he lolled his kidnapers by faking a heart at· tack when one of the two men left the van. HebrokefreeinFounlain Valley and ran for help while bis panic stricken abductor drove off. Scudder later identified Sellers asoneofthetwomen. Hewasuna· ble to idenitify W essoo as Sellers· companion. Mrs. Wessonwasoneoffivewit· nesses called by the defense Tues- day to support the argument that Scudder was Involved in the plan- ning of what Quigley described aa a· 'phony kidnap.'• Sheriff's Deputy Robert Brautigam and bis flancff, Sad· dleback Hospital nurse Ann Press. testified that they were as- sured by a former business as· aoclateof Scudder that the Balboa man planned biJ own kidnap. Brau~am said the cooversa· lion wi~pro.pecUve defense wit· oesa Ken Hunter occurred outside the Saddleback hospital when the sbtrllf's deputy wu going there tor treatment. Brautlaam and Miss Preas testified that Hunter told them Scudder usured him the kidnap was a hoax and that be (Hunter> probably had the whole thing on tape. Quigley 11ld Hunter wUJ be aaked \0 produce that ta.Pe ln court. "Hunwr told me be tapes ever· ytbln1 Scudder Hys to him because ht belleves Scudder la crazy," Brauuaam told the jury. sponsors ror the measure when It was Introduced. He predicted there would be more than enough sponsors ln the next rew days to provide at least a House majority -218. House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill of Massachusetts said the first priority of Democrats, wbo control both the legislative and executive branches after eight years or divided government, "must be to put Americans back to work." House leaders are to gather Fri· day in Plains. Ga., to disc~ the rest or Carter's economic package with the President-elect. That package is expected to con- sist of some $15 billion in economic stimulus. combining programs intended to create jobs, tax cuts to boost individual buying power and tax incentives for in· dustry to expand plant and employment. There were indications that, so far at least. Democratic con- gressional leaders are satisfied with Carter's performance on bis pledge to confer with them as he develops his legislative pro· posals. The jobs bill was a con- gressional creation and Carter adopted it as part of bis program. $en. Howard Baker of Ten- nessee, the newly elected Senate Republican leader. said today he believes his party colleagues Will support some form of federal jobs program and that he personally would favor doubling what the Democrats are proposing if it were the right sort of program. Whether to back a jobs and public works program of the in- coming Democratic Carter ad· ministration really depends on how much time it will take the program to produce results, Baker said on the ABC television "Good Morning America" pro- gram. Cost estimates on the pro- gram have ranged from S2 billion to$4billion. fi'ro.. Pqe A I DIEDRICH .• vestigalions and there will be more investigations.·· The allegations investigated so far purportedly allege the Fullerton supervisor with threatening prospective donors who balked at contributing to bis designated candidates. Those threats allegedly car· ried with them an inference that a failure to donate might result in hardship In doing business with the county. Key witness in the probe ls Don Brown, a Sacramento-based lob- byist for Hughes Airwest, an airline operating out of Orange County Airport. Brown was in Santa Ana this morning with bis attorneys, re- portedly to put in an appearance before the Grand Jury. His testimony is expected to center on a Mangers fund-raiser at Club 33 in Disneyland. Manters bas not yet ftled bis final campaign contribution statement. But it is believed that Brown balked at Diedrich 's request that he support the fund-raiser. 1n early November. bis client sought approval of an agreement that, in effect. would extend Airwest service out of Orange County Airport from Salt Lake City to Denver. Later, County Counsel Adrian Kuyper ruled that the service ex- tension was more properly of concern to Federal Aviation Ad· ministration than the Orange County Board of Supervisors. In earlier interviews, Diedrich said he regretted the cloud now overhanging bis political ac· tivities and that Mangers and others might somehow become tainted. At the same time, he admanUy and repeatedly denied any im- proprieties on bis part and vowed to "fight every Inch of the way should anyone try to blow this tblng out of proportion." "I have served this county well and honestly. 1 know that and those who know me know it. And I don't think the public is going to tumble for my political activities being labeled as criminal ac· Uvities," he added. Grave Robbers Get Sentence RED BLUFF (AP) -Six men acquitted ot robbing lndlan graves have been given the altf"m&Uvea of paytng ~ flnea, worklnt the fines ofl or apendlna 2.Sdays in Jail tor trespassing. Tehama County Superior Court Judge Noel Watkins lmpo&ed the sentences on Richard Burke, 32; Frank Dybal~ 32; Mike Michael . 31; Charles :spencer, 30; Ersel .Myers, 35, and JayThomu,31, all of Medford, Ore. · Tht jury which acquitted them ofremovln1 human remains trom an lncllan burtal alte near Puk~· ta fO\md th m 1ullly ot ll'elpa.sa· '"'· O.lly Piiot Si.ff - Your ~ast Claanre ••• If you missed out on bicentennial memorabilia during 1976, here's your chance to pick some up at bargain basement prices. Phyllis Wilson, a public information receptionist at Huntington Beach City Hall, displays the tokens, ranging from 10 cents to $3 From Page AJ LONGET ••• One jury protpect said Sablch. an lnteroatlonal ski st.ar. refused in early March to attAlnd a party where girls were paid to "let up and take their cloth ott." "He said he'd have to get a divorce to come to the party." skl patrolman John Erspamer said. "l a.aked blm to brtnl his lady <Miss Longet). and he said. 'No. that wouldn't be run.· or he wouldn'thave any fun.or words to tbateff~t." Miss Longet and Sabicb, 31. lived together for two years before b1s March 21 death. She says he was shot acddeoLally while teaching her to use a .22· caliber pistol In bis mountaina1de $2!i0,000home. About two weeks before b1s de· ath. the couple attended a cocktail party for French skiers. saJd another prospective juror. Carla Stroh. "There wasn't a great deal of communication between them," MrJ. Stroh said . "Th e circumstances were such they really weren't together." Jury selection Is expected to end lhis week. Attorneys for both sides can dismiss at least 20 more persons without saying why. Attitudes toward firearms emerged a& a key issue in ques- tioning or possible jurors by both defense and prosecution. Worker Killed 'T d I .k o· ' In Anaheim reate,1 e 1rt, Ditch c . KKK Marine Says By Tbe Associated Press The Marine Corps is "treating us like dirt," complains one or the young white Camp Pendleton leathernecks identified as Ku KJux Klansmen PFC Dennis Campbell Jr., act· ing as spokesman for three Klan members. said they went on un- authorized absence for a day because or harassment. The trio turned up Tuesday after calling a news-confttenee in nearby Oceanside, and then military police took them In custody at the gate. Their units will apply dis- cipline, a base spokesman said. Today they were scheduled to resume testimony for which they were subpoenaed by attorneys for black Marines charged with conspiracy and assaulting whites. "I 'm coming back here for the sole purpose of getting this lhing over with," Campbell said. He said he and his two buddies. PFC Ronnie Harper and PFC Charles V. Smith, spent Sunday night and Snyder Bows Out LOS ANGELES <API -City Councilman Arthur Snyder has bowed out of the mayor's race, saying a private poll indicated that "nobody's going to beat Tom Bradley this year." Snyder's move left Bradley with only one major opponent -state Sen. Alan Robbins <D-VanNuys), Monday ln San Dlego because Marine guards refused to let a friend drive them up to their bar· racks. At the gate. Campbell said be beard one of the guards say. "It's those Klansmen. "•Shirts which the trio wore at the news con- ference carried the words. "White Power Ku Klux Klan." Their names were on a list of 14 members of the Klan found near a barracks room invaded Nov. 13 by blacks claiming they were striking back al the KJan. Hindus Flock To Ganges ALLAHABAD, India (AP) - Nearly a million Hindu pilgrims seeking salvation bathed today in the holy w alers of the Ganges River. opening a 43-day religious festival held once every 12 years. The festival, called the Kumbh Mela, is believed to be the largest gathering in the world. More than 10 million bathers are expected on Jan. 19. considered the most auspicious bathing day. "It will be like everyone in New York City going to swim oo the same beach on the same day." one Indian journalist said. OUR ENTIRE INVENTORY ave-m· A 23-year-old construction worker was kllled and a co- 1P1otlter injured Tuesday aft.er they were buried In a ditch cave-in in Anabelm. police re- ported today. Ruben Vasquez Lopez. of Garden Grove was pronounced dead on arrival at Canyon General Hospital after the 5:40 p.m. accident, pollcesaid. The co-worker, James Luis Childs. 34, of Escondido, was taken to the same hospital for treatmeot. or back injuries. police said. Officers r eported the men were laying large concrete pipe sections in a partially construct· ed storm drain at Royal Oak Road and Honeywood Lane when a side caved in. Lopez was completely buried, police said. and Childs was partially buried. Both were un- covered by co-workers, officers said. Sonic Booms Hit SD Area SAN DIEGO (AP> -Several sonic booms have hit the San Diego area. The cause was not determined. but the noise was widely notJced, authorities said Tuesday. A spokesman at Caltech saJd the ground in the San Diego area actually moved. It wasn't an earthquake, though, be said. PANTSUITS• BLOUSES KNIT TOPS • NIGHTWEAR • SCARVES • JEWELRY ---------•TYPICAL EXAMPLES_P:m ______ _ JACKETS~ 59" PANIS ~'i s599 OfEH DAILY 10-5 ·FRIDAY 10-7 A,.tr Hew,_ .,_ C011•1t1Mltt fotW. H-c ...... Acc.- MA GNOL!A CENTER ttl71 ~~a Sfrttot. Wh 7 tt•tttywt 1eec11 '6M6SS FREEi DON1 MISS IT INFORMAL MODlllNG SHO~ SPONSORED BY F~HION HOUSE AT THE BRADFORD PLACE 19 171 ~la StrNt H11Mho9*•1Hch ,....t61·06t0 I I i \I \ Orange Coast EDITION .. ' Today'ls Closh1g \ .Y. tocks ! VOL. 70, NO. S, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 5, 1977 C TEN CENT .. I I ' • 7 ' !Another Charges j l '.Witness Denied by ,Hits· Plot Ex-chief · By TOM BARLEY I Oftl\f D•llY Pllol ~fl I El Toro ser v ice s t ation C>Perator Ken Hunter testified to- day in Orange County Superior Court that potato chip heir John 1 }I. "J ack" Scudder told him over the telephone that he "set up" a kjdnap plot for which two men i aie on trial. • , Hunter told defense attorney ;Michael Quigley that Scudder as· i sured him in the same con versa· tibn that he intended to take care lof defendant William Rudy Wesson and Wesson's family if' ; the verdict in the current trial goes against him. , "He was drinking at the time," !Hunter added. "But he told me lthat he set up tbe kidnap and that 'he intended to write the whole I story for Reader 's Digest." I Hunter testified that he taped a second telephone conversation 1 later that evening with Scudder. 164, who was calling the "1tnes:, i from his Balboa Is land home I Hunter has not yet been asked lif that tape is available. lie was ~stiU on the witness !>land today. I Hunte r 's testimeny today made him the fifth witness to testify that S<.'udaer helped to . p lan the k idn ap for which Wesson, 45, c.f Tusfot, and his brothe r-in-law , Ricki Da le Sellers. 20. of He rmosa Beach, ueon trial. 1 •Jt is alleged that Wesson and l ~Sellers grabbed Scudder last g. 19 as he le ft b is dentist's of· ' 1ce in Hunth1gton Beach and COflfined him to a motor home ,that toured the coastline whale a !telephone demand for $250,000 in ransom was transmitted to the 'victim's wife. ' &udder testified that he foiled · kidnapers by falo ng a heart ttack when one of the two men <See HEIR, Page AZ ) esa Rejects . . xpens1ve !School Buys ! Costa Mesa councilmen, taking iUle advice of their city manager, Eve decided to reJect an offer lo d on two parcels in the city onging to the Newport-Mesa nlfied School rnstrict. "You 'imt can't a fford them," City !ii•nager Fred Sorsabal told k:Ouncilmen this week , ~The two 10-acre parcels were ered to the city. which has the rst right of refusaJ on surplus school d1str1ct property. The fi rst pa rcel, called the Smalley site. 1s located on Sunflowe r Avenue. bet ween Jl"airv1ew Road and San Leand ro Road. The second property, called the Wa ke ha m Site, 1s located south of Sunflower between San Leandro Road and F\ichsi a St. The bidding will now be open lo private concerns, according to Sorsabal. \l'eather Chance of showers and thunders howers through "nlursday with hJghs of .54 to 62 , lows in mid 405. INSIDE TODA~ ~cu~ of .a "'1tJll \ .. fOJDft in Oklahoma /ind It r . ~ to live 1Dfth the uame 'I.ft them bJl.o Civil Weir lwro, but nearly all 1oy Bowl.egs fa ,o/wplace toli"'· P.ogeBI. •• " ., .. •• •• .,. CH .,., ., ll+J AU ..... ·~ Al Robfrie and Friend President-elect Jimmy Ca rter gets a hug from March of Dimes poster child Robbie Zastavny. 6, of Moorestown, N.J . The boy, born with an open spine and paralyzed from the waist down. was a guest of Carter in Plains, GH. By GARY GRANVILLE Of Ille D•1ly Pilot Sl•lf A Gra nd J ury probe into a l· legations that Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich ii· legally solicited campaign funds for other political figures reportedly got under way toda~ The a llegations center on methods used by Diedrich to solicit campaign funds for office seekers he backed in last Novem· ber's election, including As· semblyman Dennis Mangers (0. Huntington Beach ). Sources close to the inquiry said there is no indication that Mangers or others who ntight have benefitted from the alleged DIEDRICH FLA VS DISTRICT ATTORNEY, A3 &l\egal fun d ra1sang had kllowledge of the techniques used to raise money on their behalf. AssembJyman Mangers was not imme<liat ely available for comment. The jury's inquiry is.not an in· dication that illegal activities oc - curred . It is an indication, however, that the allegations have been checked out by investigators and that they concluded t~ere is enough aub8tHee tb tak• tiem before the Grand J ury. District Attorney Cecil Hicks was w1available for comment lo· day Earlier this week. Diedrich de- nied any 1mpropneties on has part. ··How could there be?" he a sked . "I gained noth in g personally from helping what I kllew to be good candidates get elected to offi ce.·' Diedrich hinted at the problem he is now facing when he bowed out Tues d ay a s Boa r d of Supervisors chairman when he said. "There have been in- vestigations and there will be more investigations." The allegations inve$ligat('() so ra r purportedly allege the <Sec DIEDRICH, Page A2> Holdout Battles Mesa .· Mrs. Strope, 81, Wants to Keep Her House By STEVE MITCHELL Of 1M Dally ll'lklt SUlf Ruth Swope is fighting mad. The 81-year-old Costa Mesa wom an says the city is forcing her to sell a three-bedroom house she owns in the downtown section of the city. Mrs. Swope is one or three holdouts who do not want to sell their properties to the city for its so-called Super Block communi· ty project. Seventeen other parcels in the block have been acquired by the city to date. Mrs. Swope, who says she has lived fn Costa Mesa for 61 years. • claims the rent she collects on the modest home al 574 Center St. pays for her groceries. utillUes. ··and spending money for my u.year -old niece ... The ri esty oldster said her tenants on Center Street race a Saturday deadline to move out. "They'll never get my proper- ty as Jong d I 'm able to fight them." she said as she worked in the small garden at her own home, less than a block fro~ the 'Treated Like Dirt,' • KKK Marine S8ys By The Associated Press The Marine Corps is ''treating us like dirt," complains one oC the young white Camp Pendleton le athernecks idenWied as Kµ· Klux KJansma. PFC Dermis Campbell Jr .• act-inc as sp0kesman lor three Klan members, said they went. on un- authorized absence for a day because of harassment. The trio turned up Tueaday after c'alling a news conference in nearby Oceanside, and then military pollc~ took them in custody at the gate. Their units will apply dls· clpline, a base spokesman said. Today they were sohedWed to resume testimony for which lbey wen subpoenaed by attorneys for black Marines charted With conapirat:y and assaulllna whit.es. "I'm comln1 back here for the IOle purpose of ge= th1a thtna over with," Cam laid. H• said he and his two buddies, PFC Ronnie Harper and PFC Charles V. SmJth, apent Sunday night and Monet~ in San Diego because Marine 1uards refused to let a friend drlve them up to their bar- rack&. At the gate, Campbell aald he heai:d one of the guards say, "lPs thoc"e Klansmen." Shirts which the trio wore at the news con- ference carried the words, "WbJte Power Ku Klux Klan." Their names were on a list of 14 members of the Klan found near a barracks room hlvaded Nov. 13 tw blacks clalmlna they were striking back at tho Klan. Quake Hits Iran · TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -A atrooc earthquake Nllsta1nl.$.2 on \M Richter scale rocked Ban· dar ,\b..,, Iran.tan~ I Center Street property. Her attorney. Richard B Lynn of Newport Beach, sa1d he is at tempting to get a court order to prevent the city from removing Mrs. Swope 's tenants Saturday The city 1s offering Mrs. Swope S36.000 for the 6. J.20.squarc-foot parcel, which includes t he 600- square·foot three-bedroom struc· ture. Costa Mesa ·s assistant city manager , William L1 Dunn, who also heads the cit.y's community development program, said the $36,000 offer is what the property is worth. "We offered her $28,500 at first, but we bad the property reap· praised and raised our offer to $36.000." he said. Dunn said sta te law requires the city to offer the appraised value of the land "It used to be that the city could hold its c•rds close to its chest and oUet less than the ap· praised value, but that's no longer the case," Dunnsald. "Mrs. Swope knows what the appraised value is, and she knows that sbe won't have to pay .a real estate commission or escrow cost.a," he s aJd. "All she has to pay Is the taxes up to the date the city takes poss~slon." And that day Is last ap· proaching. Dunn said the city held pre- condemnation hearings In Sep·. tember on a half dozen remain· ing parcels in the Super Block area. "That hearing was required by a new state law, and as a result, we settled with several of the pro- perty owners," he said. "The ell)' has a riaht to nle eminent domaln to acquire pro- J)ttty," be added. uwe•re talklnt about a project worth rnore than f $2 milllon." ·~1 ~""'"· , Dtilv p;i... Su tt """• SHE FIGHTS OITY HALL ) Costa MeH 'a Swope And what aboul Mrs. SWope's tenants? "They're entitled to a reloca- tion fee or up to $4,500, ~Dunn said. ~ He said the tenants have been notified, and the city has a court order lf they do not leave by Saturda~. ,. "IC they don't move out then. we'll just bave to take legal re- course," he said. "That woman's very ill." said Mrs. Swope about her tenant. "They'd better not move her out of there." "This whole thing's unfair," she aald. Mrs. Swope said that ii she 15 fOl'eed to sell the bome, she'll be out the in~ome from lb~ reftt.als. "t'rn •upportlng my 1reat, great niece with that money," (8ee JIOLDOVT, Pqe A!) I Dolly p;i.c Sl•ll "-• SUBJECT OF PROBE? Supervisor Diedrich Testimony By Longet Promised AS PEN. Colo. CAP) - Claudine Long et 's lawyer, faced with prospective jurors hostile to the singer and one who insisted only God can judge her, said to- day his client will take the wit~ ness s tand to d efend herself , against manslauflhter charges. • "We assure you lb.at we intend to put on evidence," attorney Charles Weedman told one pro· spective Juror. "Claudine Longer" intends to testlfy. She intends to Lell you and other members of the jury what ha ppened." The tiny da rk-haired Miss Longet , ex-wife of s inger Andy Williams. is accused of "reckless manslaughter '' in the March 21 shooting death of her ski cha mp lover', Vladimir "Spide r " Sabich. She claims the gun went off accidentally. . In the third day of jury selec- tion, many possible jurors d is· qualified the mselves, condemn- ing the JS.year -old Miss Longet as guilty. And one young resident of this frigi d ski village insisted "This is a <.'ase that comes from God's law . . . 1 can't judge that." As ked to elaborate. blond, bespectacled Carl Duchine said. "The way I feel is if there was a murder committed or whatever, it says In the Bible, 'Thou shalt not kill,' and I can 't judge that. "I 'm not capable of making a decision on that," he said. "Only God has a right to judge that. God has to make that decision." Defense and prosecution al· tor neys agreed t o excuse Ductune from the panel. He was the 15th or 34 prospective queS· taoned who was excused for pre· Judice. The dark-haired ~1iss Longet "ai d ea rli e r s h e was "heartbroken" at being pre· judged by her neighbors. She wore a n oral minidress and Swiss style black velvet vest t as she sat at the counsel table directly across from the jury t box. Again and again, Dist. Ju1 ~" George Lohr asked prospective jurors. "Before you came into this court room. dJd you have an opinion on, how this case should come out?'' "Yes." was us ually th e answer. "Can you give Miss Longet the presumption of innocence?" asked prosecutor Ashley An· derson. CSee LONGET, Page A2) SMO<Trll S41LING . FOR PILOT AD "We sold the boat the first night the ad ran In the paper." That's the advertising success related by a Newport Beach man who placed this classified ad: Sabot Schock 4000 series, raring rigged, new Ulman sail. S2.'lO XXX•XXX.I( I' II you have a boat yo.f'd like to convert to cash, call M.2-5878. lt. takes only a few WOC'dl In the ri&ht place to attract •buyer, and the riJbt place ii the Dally Pilot. ' ,J I •• i\2 OAILV PILOT c Wednesday, January 5, 1977 Water Spout Off Co ast A SOO-foot water spout was sighted about three miles off tbe Huntingtoo Beach coast at 10:20 a.m. tooay. The spout, described by one observer as a small wmado, picked up water like a fun nel into the clouds. No damage was re- ported. Huntington Beach Fire Department Capt. Roger Hosmer said he observed the spout from the Civic Center as it paralleled the southern coast of the city. Hosmer said the spout l asted about 10 minutes. I . ~ :f . !~t\ HEADS FUND DRIVE Theater Backer Witmer CdM.Woman Heads Drive For Theater Harrielte F . Witmer of Corona del Mar been named chairman of the South Coast Repertory Theater building campaign and will be responsible for raising $2.5 million toward construction , of the theater near South Coast Plaza. Mrs. Witmer, president of Deepwater Chemical Co., Ltd. of , Costa Mesa, said the campaign is I off to a good !!tart with l nitial con- 1 tributions totaling $867,000. She said several major con· ' tributions will be announced soon. pushing the total over $1 million. The 500-seat theater is scheduled to open in late fall or this year. according to SCR of· ficials. Mrs . Witmer was the firs t woman elected to membership in the Drug, Chemical and Allied Trades Association in 1972. She currently serves as western re· gional vice president of the or· ganization. f'ro111 Pag.-.4 l LONGET ..• , "No," said man:-of lhe pro- spects. Not a single person questioned of~ered the opinion Miss Longet 1s innocent. One woman said she was pre- 1udiced by the exclusion of Mi ss Longet's intimate di ary and other evidence in the case. . "You have to spend a lot of time wondering what were those facts and would they make a dif· rei:ence." said Ellen Grencoe. a middle-aged resident. "That bothers me terribly." The. prosecutor explained that the evidence was illegally seized. But Mrs. Grencoe said, "( think 1l would cause anybody who read about It to wonder ... (l certain- ly m ade me wonder what was that important." A young woman clerk at a local pharmacy said she had made up her mind long ago. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT llebortN.WMd Prol.,.•I • .,., PUl)ll- , .. , II. CU<ltY V~tt Prttlotnl """° c.,..;w.r.-1 MAn.tq"r ThOMt\tCHVU EOlt&f TMIMIA.M•.,.i.l .. M•l'\-'Qll'\Q £1Jtl~ CNrlt•M.L"' ,11,.....,P.Nan Anl>I•"' llN•oQl"9 Edllon Telephone (71 4)142~1 Claullltd Adver11alne 6'2>.fffl c Riley l'lew County Growth Trend Backed Thomas Rilty, new chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervisors, to ld f e llow supervisors Tuesday the coun- ty's growth trends will continue. In a speech prepared for his ac· ceptance of the board gavel for im, Riley said the climate and la~r J>(?Ol make Orange County ~ mvitmg place for housing and industry. . He called for effective plan- 1ung, careful monjtoring to make certain development does not ex- ceed the c~pacity of needed serv~c.es ~nd_ increased public part1c1pation m the planning pro- cess. Riley pledged to continue ef- forts to hold down the costs or county government while ex- panding ser vices to keep pace with growth. He noted, for example, there already have been dollars saved by the formation of the county Environmenta l Management Agency and General Services Agency which consolidated several former departmenL<;. . I~ . addition, a hiring freeze, limiting the number of positions th?t can be filled, saved the coun- ty more than $11 million last year, Riley said. '.'It is through efforts such as ~s that Orange County main- tains the lowest ratio of employes to population of any county in the state," he continued. Riley also said the county supervisors are committed "to tenaciously pursue" property tax reform to ease the burden on county homeowners. Jn addition, he said, the county must commit itself to solving the Front Page A I DIEDRICH. • Fullerton su p ervisor with threatening prospec4ve donors wh~ balked at contributing to his designated candidates. . Thos_e threats allegedly ear- ned. with them an inference that a failure to donate might result in hardship in doing business with the county. Key witness in the probe is Don Br?wn, a Sacrament<rbased lob- by1st for Hughes Airwest an airline operating out of Or~ge County Airport. Br~wn w~s in Santa Ana this mommg with his attorneys, re· portedly to put in an appearance before the Grand Jury. His testimony is expected to center on a Mangers fund-raiser at Club 33 in Disneyland. . Mangers has not yet filed his rma l c ampaign contribution statement. But it is believed that Brown balked at Diedrich's request that he support the fund-raiser. In early November, his client sought approval of an agreement t~at, in e ffect , would extend Airwest service out of Orange County Airport from Salt Lake City to Denver. In earlier interviews. Diedrich said he regretted the cloud now overhanging his political ac· tivHies and that Mangers and others might somehow become tainted. Al the same time, he adamantly and repeatedly denied any im· proprieties on his part and vowed to "fight every inch of the way should anyone try to blow this thing out of proportion.'' "l have served this county well and honestly. I know that and those who know me know it. And J don't think the public is going to tumble for my political activities being labeled as criminal ac· tivities, •·he added. Later. County Counsel Adrian Kuyper ruled that the service ex- tension was more properly of c~c;em to FederaJ Aviation Ad· ministration than the Orange ~unty Board of Supervisors. Suspect Faces County Trial In Inn Holdup A man Costa Mesa police claim is one of two men who took $370 at gunpoint from the Rodeway Inn. 1400 S. Bristol St., last Sept. 8 has been ordered to face trial Feb. 7 in Orange County Superior Court. Judge James H. Walsworth set the trial date and a pretrial ap· pearance Jan. 31 for Richard James Cavanaugh, 24, of SOS California St., Huntington Beach. Cavanaugh, held in lieu of $25,000 bail, is charged with armed rob· bt'ry and assault with a deadly weapon. Lt Is alleged that Cavanaugh Is one of two men who robbed the , motel clerk at the point of a shotgun. They isald one of the two men fired a weapon at a couple who pursued them from the motel inthetrcar. Police are atlll seeking the second man. problem of housing costs. Riley explaiI1ed market pre- ssures have driven housing costs up to the point wbere moderate· income families cannot afford homes. "This bas had a particularly sev~re ef~~ct on younger people, semor citizens and on others ~antin~ to buy a house fortbe first time, wi th no equity to transfer .. Riley said. • The 1977 board chairman also said the county must inlensi.fy its e~fort to obtain slate and feder al highway funds and pledged to s~k appointment of a county re· s!dent ~o ~e California Highway Comm1ss1on. Riley s~d the supervisors will be tackling the redrawing of s~pervis?rial districts this year. ~11 co!'tmue to improve juvenile d1vers1on programs and seek mo~e st~te and federal grants to assist with county projects In addition, he expressed hope that several Southern California counties working together would ~able t_o solve the need for addi- tio~al airport services for local residents. · Man Kills Wife, Weds In Hours GLOVERSVILLE, N.Y. <AP) -Only three hours after he clubbed his wife to death with a hamme_r , 62-year-old Donald Langlois w_as _attending his second wedding m this Mohawk ValJey city, police said. And _authorities say that after ~ttendu~g a s mal.l wedding recep· lion. while £be first wife's body lay ma car trunk, the new couple went to Florida the next day ... . Langlois was being held today m H<~llrwood, Fla., awaiting ex- tradition on s econd-degree murder charges in the death of bis wife, Arlene, 55. Hollywood Det. Mike Jadwin 1said L_anglois confessed to killing his w1f~ after having an argu- ment with her Friday in which he asked for a divorce. ''She said she wouldn't " J~dwin. said. "At the end of the discussion, he picked up a ham- mer and struck her six times over the head.'' Jadwin said there were no charges against the second wife Christin e Floyd 59 of Glov~rsville, N.Y., ~ho~ he des~ribed as .. an innocent victim of circumstances." Mrs. F loyd was a widow before m~rrying Langlois, the detective said, ~nd ha~ been told by Langl01s that his divorce became ~nal Dec. 31, the day of the kill· mg. The couple were married Fri· day afternoon in a Methodist church after they produced what s_eemed to be a valid marriage license. Mr~. Floyd's son. by a previous marriage, Frankhn Cadoret of Broadalbin, N. Y .. said his mother was "pretty shook up" after the arrest. F r o• Page A J HOLDOUT. • she said. "What am I supposed lo do? I'm toodamnoldtowork." Her attorney agrees. "Even if ~he took that $36,000 and put it into a savings account she couldn't get the same retu~n she gets now from the rental." "We:re all creatures of habit, and this has been her life for 35 years, walking over to her te- nant's house to collect the rent " Lynn s aid. ' "I honestly believe her sole motivation is not the money," the attorney added. "l just don't want to sell the place, even if they offered me ~100,000 ," Mrs. Swope said. Why. my next door neighbor of- fered me $60,000 for the place a couple of years ago and I turned him do~n . Why should I take $36!000.JUSt because the city's of- .fermg 1t? "My husband prut!ed away jn 1951 and we had that house eight or '10 ye~rs before that, paying taxes on it. "I've never been delinquent in TilY taxes, and I've never been on welfare, even when my husband was sick,'' ~he said. ··And this Is the thanks I get f~m t~e cit y. They come along with this domain crap and leave me out to dry." the angry woman said, stabbing at her potted plants wlth her finger. So Mrs. Swope said she'll wait for a court decti;lon which pro- b ably won't com~ for nine months to a year. "Meanawbile, JnY tenants have ~!ready paid their rent for January, 10 I don't aee bow the clty can kick them out.'' DOG APPARENTLY DIDN'T o.11y ""•' s•••• ""°'• KNOW WHAT HE WAS CHAINED TO: THAT'S THE PROBLEM Parking Neer Fire Plugs That Don't Look Tradhlonal ltn't Illegal Identity C~is Looms Squatty Hydrants Worry Munkipal Court By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Ofth• D•llr POotSIAlf S?~th Orange Counl.y Mumc1pal Court judges aren't overly concerned about the fact t!tat about 500 of Mission Viejo's fire plugs don't fit the traditional conceotion of fire plu~s. . What does worry the judges 1s the squatty, buff-colored hydrants in older sections of the commun~ty aren't marked in any way to give out-of-area residents a .cl~ar indication tbat parking within 15 feet of them is illegal. About three weeks ago, Judge J?hn Griffin of the Laguna Niguel Court started dismissing tickets issued to people who parked too close to Mission Viejo fire plugs. ' He says he threw out "about six citations" so far and has enlist~ the full support of his fellow Judges in continuing to do so until something is done to cor- :ect the situatioQ.h which has ex· is~ed for more t an five years WJthout prior incident. In the wake of the judge's de- e is ion , California Highway Patrol and Sheriff's officers patrolling the community have ~en informally ordered to stop issuing such citations until the matter is resolved. ''It doesn't look good for us to have these thrown out, even if a violation is present," said a CHP spokesman. "To me. there's a lot more at stake than a little piece of pa~r when somebody parks in front of a hydrant." Griffin conceded in an in· terview that the entire issue c~me to light because of "fluky circumstances." He said a Leisure World man ~ven a ticket for illegally park· mg next to a hydrant came to court armed with a Polaroid photo and some legal knowhow. "I was a little surprised," Grif- fin said. "It was the first time I ever heard of anybody pleading not guilty to parking in front of a hydrant." But the judge s aid he began to see the wisdom of the man ·s ar~umenl. "He claimed that the bym:ant.s ~e out of the ordinary and are 1 mproperly noticed,.. Griffin said. "l had to agree with him because there is a big bole in that part of the California Vehicle Code." The judge said· the code describes every kind of vehicle, roadway and street sign in detail but makes oftly one mention of fireplugs. "It says. in effect, thQU shalt not park in front of one," be said. "We all grew up with a stan- dard idea of what a fireplug looks like," Griffin said. "When I was a kid, I even sat on one to sell newspapers." F rorrt Page A J HEIR ..• left the van. He broke free in Fountain Valley and ran for help wt\ile bis panicstricken abductor drove off. Scudder lat.er identified Sellers as one of the two men. He was un- able to identify Wesson as his companion. Wesson's wife spent most or Tuesday on the witness stand and told the jury that Scudder pro- mised to provide ror her and her two children after W~ and her half brother were charged with the kidnaping. M~. J~¥ce W"800 said t he promise was made by Scudder when she visited his Balboa I s land home s hortly after Wesson and Sellers were lodged in the county jail. Mrs. Wesson, 35, testified that Scudder assured her in their hour-long conversation that she and her children would not suffer whatever happened to her husband. She s aid he kissed her and call~ ~er a "sweet little girl" but insisted on searching her p~rse when she ente.red bis home with the explanation that she might have brought a gun with her. OUR EMTI RE IMVEMTORY But be said the Mission Viejo plugs are unusually shaped. set back from the curb by as mueh as 10 feet and sometimes sur-· rounded by vegetation. "I agree that they are much nicer looking but they should at least put the word •Fire' on them or. Pa}.nt ~e curbing red," he said. _As it stands, they are im· properly noticed and anybody could successfully argue their way out of a $15 ticket." Unfortunately. past violators w~o have already tacitly pleaded guilty by paying their fmes can't co~e back for another chance the Judge said. ' Orange County Fire Depart- ment officials are in a quandary over the situation because they've apparently been trying for months to ha ve county gov· ernment paint the curbs red. Because of the cost involved they haven't gotten very far. ' _A department spokesman said ~e offending plugs, known as Greenbergs" after their San f'.rancisco manufacturers, are highly favored by firemen in the field, who find them much easier to use than conventional models. "In fact, Mission Viejo bad to switch to an?ther type of hydrant last year rn newer sect ions beca_use these (the Greenbergs) are m such demand nationwide that the manufacturer can't keep them in stock.•• the spokesman ·said. TONIGR'I' COAST CO M MUNITY COLLEGE. BOARD -Regular meeting, 1370 Adams, 8 p.m. THURSDAY, JAN. 6 LIBRARY STORY HOUR - Costa Mesa Library, 10:~ a.m. PANTSUITS• BLOUSES KNIT TOPS • NIGHTWEAR • SCARVES • JEWELRY TYPICAL EXAMPLES ________ _ JACKETS ~:~" 59'' PANTS :1~ 55" OPEN DAILY I 0-S -FRIDAY I 0.7 Apply Mow'-Y-COfl"flll...t Ft.Moe H•M C,_.,. Acc-t MAGMOLIA CENTER 191 7 1 ~oStrfft,W .. 7 H.+ltwjtw• ...._,63·9655 FREEi DON1 MISS IT INFDRMAL MODELING SHOW SPONSORED BY FASHION HOUSE AT THE BRADFORD PLACE 19 17 1 Mogitolfo Stru t HuntincJt°" •och Photte 948-061 O I •1t':J • ~!y. January 5. 19n DAILY PILOT .43 ~Civil By STEVE MITOIEIL place for chit service employes," be said. '/ft,".. . r . ,w, 'W rOllg .. for · adult social development pro· gram at Fairview, slq herself in the bead aUer a dlspuilt with her boyfriend at her Costa Mesa hoine, just blocks from the Fairview' Ol-D•llr .. llMIUtlf ~ Fairview State Hospital '1 ad ,"Jninislrat.or pya lbe firine ol two mployes two weelc.s ago for al· .. eged drug and alcohol abuse at Ute hospital points ul) the o~ to • temow the state civil service Jystem from the state hospital -system. '# Dr. Michael Levine said that in the four months since be took over operations at FalrView, "there have been occasions when people l have fkod have been re- instated by the State Personnel Board. "This (Fairview> 1s not the "H\lm&a services should be re- moved from cfvtl service. n's okay for buUding freeways or testing milk, but wbeb you're de- aling with people with mental disorders.the civil service does not belong." Levine said the firings came after he ordered an investigation into an alleged drug and alcohol party last Halloween eve at the hospital. which ended in the suicide of a psychialric Lechni· cian. On that night, Mrs. Deborah Guz.iejka. 28. who worked in the hospital. The hospital invesli4ation al- leeedly showed that pnor to the sUicJde, Mrs. Guziejka and two other ps)'chiatric technicians - one or them an act~ superinten- dent -met in a building at the hospital and consumed wine and Vaflum, a tranqulUier, for several hours. Mrs. Gutiejka then left the hospital, returned home, and. ac- cording to her boyfriend, shot ~elf in the right temple after an argument over car keys. ··ne poUce were Interested in the criminal aspect or the shoot- ing," Dr. Levine said. ''And so were we. Buf we were most in- terested in the drug and alcohol abuse on hospital grounds prior to the shooUng." Levine said the drup, "pro- babl)' came from the hospital," adding that he bu initiated a system to halt furtber use of drugs by hospital employea. He said as a Fesult of a depart· ment of health investigation, the two technicians were fired two weeks ago. But Levine ta not certain tbe two men will not return lo Fairview, espeeiaJly 11 the)' ap- peal the firings to tbe Slate Personnel Board. "It's nearly impossJble to dis- mias employes under the cJvU service system." be said. Fairview's 1,700 employes. ranging from hospital aldes to pbystcians, are in the civil service system. Levine thinks there's a better way. "Wbat would be ideal would be a blue ribbon panel or experta to ..... screen suvervisors and pro. fesstonals,:, Levine said. "Tbey would be required to work on a contract basis, and to take brusb· up courses in developmental db· abllltles." "But the way it stands now," Levine saJd, "it's dlfflcult to get rid of incompetent or Inex- perienced employes." The admlnistratoc said publici- ty of lhe Halloween Eve suicide incident, '·might even be grounds for lhe personnel board to re- instate the two lffhniclaos." He said he wouldn't want to bet on that possibility. Diedrich Reheats Feud With DA \ ! .. Old Custom Renell'ed J a panese school children today repeated the ancient new year 's ceremony of the Kakizome, or new year callig raphy 1n Tokyo a nd throughout Japan. The ceremony's nam e means literall y the first writing of the year N'early 3.600 children and adults participated in this Tok~ o '('rs1on of the event Board 'Undecided' fOn Paramedic Rule • Thl' po:.s1b1hty or allowing other than firemen-paramedics ho5prtab and collt'ges to offer wtth area colleges. 1 para m e d1 c t raining to all Such programs could provide • quallfied students whether or not tralntng for emergeMy room . they have Job guarantees w~ left nurses and those who would help open Tuesday by Orange County transport critically W patients, •supervisors ror example, and Riley said he And whale Supervisor Ph.II An wouldsupportthalidea. thony contended the board should But he said it was wrong for the )lot restnct quahf1ed institutions county to open paramedic train- ' from orrering such training ing programs to more students ~ Board Chairman Tom Riley said than can later be hired forcOWtty \ after the meeting he believes and city firedepartmeotw\lts. -\training should be hmJted Since 1972 the county has paid ~ ·'It appears to me that we keep the training costs for paramedics " on tryine to open this thing back working ror city and COW1ty fire ; up again," Rtley said. · 1'he pro-departments whHe the city or : gram we bave been supporting in county pays lhe trainees' salaries ; the county t s a rt re men· duringtheirmedicaJcourses. ~ paramedic program." And for the past year. both UCI ~ The board, al Anthony's sug-Medlcal Center and Santa Ana· ~ gestion agreedtoconslderonFeb. Tustin Community Hospital ~ 1 a policy eliminatinl( require-<SATCH> have bad county con· ~ ments that paramedic trainees tractstoconducttbattraining. • have jobs bcf'ore they are trained. But two weeks ago supervisors ~ b . awarded a new one--year conLract ~ At l e same lime, supervu;ors to UCl Cor training after earlier ,, asked count)'. Health Officer J . R. agreeing that only one ratbel'than 3EI~n to d!s~uss possible new twobospltalaarenowneeded. ? medtcal trammg programs fur SATCH. however, still bas six ~ monlh.S temalfting on an existing ~ county contract. ~ I;' S .L.. Wayne Schroeder, SATCB ex· ' .. ree tamp,,, ecut.lve dlrecto~ bas offered to work wlU. saai. Ana CoUeae to In the Air ==·~udenta to '*°'1le lie said Lboff atudient.s could later be employed at b.ls hospital « blred b)' other~. BATON ROUGE, La. <AP> -Motorists hopped from their cars on busy In- terstate 10 to grab food sl.amps waftlng about in the breeze. A box wlth $W,000 worth of the $tamps fell from a Wells Far10 truck Tues· day, apparently because the doors 'f_ere not securtet company Ofllctals said. ' The company ul~ motorcycle o-fftcer1 manaaed to pick OlJ •.@O 1t'Orth of tbc stamps. TIM rest went lo motorilta will-in« to brav~ QllCOmlnC traf • nctod1as thrpa'pet But both Riley and a commlttee stud)'in1 paramediet have been fearful Ulat.. allowtn1 open paramedic Ctalnlat enrollment would rlase falae bop.. or ·enrollees and JiAv• them un· employed. &lpen said the county will hjve all the paramedics lt needs b)' Aupt, then only Villi need to train replacemenll. But Anthony cbast.1$ed Elpert ror what l\e called. lib .. 1uper big brother attitude'' saytn1 tbe health officer should be eon· cerned with the quality of traJn. lnc. leavlq worries about. job pro1pects and costa up to other qeocles. Press Called Negative Ralph Diedrich, outgoing Orange County Board of Supervisors chairman, paused Tuesday lo 'take a last minute swipe at the press and to rekin- dle his feud with the District Al· tomey'sOffice. As Diedrich slid from the chairman's seat to be~ just another county supervisor, he jabbed the press for what be termed its "bad news is good news motto." "In their (the press> eager- ness to keep the bad news forward , even when there is no bad news . e lected officials might become so abused that only those who rear to rock the boat will survive ," s aid Diedrich. The Fullerton supervisor began sparring with District At- torney Cecil !licks again for what he Insists is an illegal slush fund "created in the Dis- trict Attorney's Office." The fund Diedrich spoke of is a $20,000 treasury collected ln court from narcotic offenders and controlled by the Orange County Narcotics Tuk Force. Last year. state auditors round the money bad been used as prescribed in drug buy-bust operations and was properly ac. counLed for. And. the auditors made clear, the special fund is under the task force's control. not the dis· trict attorney's, as alleged by Diedrich . Nonetheless. Diedrich com- plained In his parting remarks as board chairman there has been no legal clarification on "what I construed to be an ll· legal fund ... As he ended two years as board chairman, the 52-year-old county supervisor's state of the county report characterized the county's condition as "mostly good news." To back that contention, Diedrich cited a county tax rate he said Is the state's lowest, dl!clining unemployment and an economy that "shows great strength." Diedrioh praised county gov- ernment for its role in creating "a sound economic environ- ment" through creation of an economic development council and other measu~ a.imed at strengtheninR the county's economic condition. "The worst news in this re- port,·· the outgoing board chairman s aid, "is the lack of low cost housing ... He urged that efforts be made to take advantage of local. state and federal houslng programs aimed al relieving the short.age. Another major problem Diedrich cited in his 23·page st.ate or the county report is lhe overhaul of the county's juvenile Justice system. "I aee this as a major pro- blem that needs Immediate solutiooa and continued hard work during the coming year," the supervisor said. Cycle Mishap Fatal to Youth An W.year-old AMbeim )'OUth wu killed Tuesday Dlabt when be Iott cont.rot of hl9 ~ycle and .,..., thrown Into a COllCMe U,ht standard, pollce reported toda.y. Otfic•n sald Andrew Brian Claypool was dead at the scene of the 11:40 p .m. cr11b on Kattlla Avenue Jn trwat of the Al:l.abelm Coovenuoo c.nt.er. Poltco said Cla)'pool and a rrtend were riding side by awe on their cycles, wheo Cla.ypool's vehicle struck the curb or a. center divider, then threw him lnto lhe llCbt standard. ... 1 -....... ... ...... ; ,. .....---_ -... ~ • , • • --# ~ ----- j Titne for Coif ee Brake A New York shopper passes a sign with a message from s.to~e pr~sident Martin Rosengarten advising sh9ppers to limit their coffee consumption and find a substitute as a protest to escalating prices on coffee. <Related story Page 84.) Republicans Laud Brown School Plan SACRAMENTO (AP> -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's $3.J.billioo five-year school finance plan is getting rave reviews from Republicans, but Democrats are cautious in their comments. The Democratic governor UD· veiled the proposal, which be says can be financed from sur- pluses and natural growth of ex- isting state revenues. at a closed· door briefing Tuesday with &Late schools chief Wilson Riles and 16 leaders of the Legislature. Key elements of lhe Brown plan would grant almost all new state school funds over the next five years to low-wealth dislricts and repeal restrictions on funds for handicapped, gifted and slow· learning children. The plan would continue to grant those special program funds -currently about $200 million a year -to the same school districts. but without re- quiring that they be spent separately from other school money. The $3.3 billion in new state support for schools would be phased in over live years: $294 million in the 1977-78 scbooJ year and aplounts of $347 million. ~ million, $858 million and $1 .17 billion in the following years. Currently. local property twces raise $4 billion ror schools, and the state puts up about $2.8 billion. Brown unveiled the plan a week after the California Supreme Court ruled that the state's system of school support is un· constituUonal beca~ it provides better educational opportunity · for children from wealthy dis- tricts. Assemblyman Paul Priolo, the Republican floor leader of the lower house, quickly endorsed the plan and pledged GOP support. Warning Cites Pool Dangers The drowning of a 9-year-0ld Villa Park boy last summer in a backyard health pool has pro- mp t e d Orange County supervisors to endorse tougher regulations (or new pool drain covers. ' George Osborne. director of the County Environmental Management Agency <EMA>. said in a report to supervisors Tuesday the youngster had become caught by suction against the drain cover and was unable to free hi ms elf. Later investigation showed the drain cover was plastic and had been broken before or during the accident. increasing the suction danger. he said. At the suggestion of EMA of· ficlals, supervisors agreed that larger grates and metai grates that cannot be broken easily should be required on all new pools. The new regulation would app· ly to pools and spas built in the county's unincorporated area and the cities of San Juan Capislrano and Villa Park where the county handles building in· sepect1on. Murray Storm, assistant EMA director. told supervisors most private pools now use small plastic drain covers which only cost about $10 but which are easi· ly broken and c o uld be hazardous. A metal drain cover is availa- ble. he said, which ls larger, re- quires tools for removal and cos· ts about SlOO. At the s uggestion of Supervisor Ralph Diedrich the board also asked EMA and county health or- riclals to study possible addi- tional regulations which could apply to already constructed pools. Thief Hits Airport For 82,226 Cash A thief who used a screwdriver to force open a sliding door car- ried off money bags containing $2.226.SO in cash from an Orange County Airport office, sheriff's of- ficers said. Deputies said the theft was re- ported by officiaJs of the Parking Company of America. They said the employe on duty was out checking toll gates in the parking lot al the time of the theft. Gem Talk THINK OF HER with Rings of. ANGOLA'S DIAMONDS Who g1t1 tlwJn? The civil war in Angola seems to be over. But, the coofuslon left in the ashes of war lncludes a deepening mystery about what will happen to that emerging nation's r1cb diamond fields. Before civil war repped the former Portuguese colony apart, only South Africa and Russia were producing more diamonds than Angola. As recently aa 19'14, miners working lhe 20,000-square·mlle diamond fields along lhe Zaire border dUI out 1.6 million carata of rough germ. When the Portuguese mlning experts left, production dwindled. Now, thin could return to normal. "Dla " the Aneolan diamond comp ny. moved Its headquarters from L n to the Angolan capjtol of Luand~. The stockholders, who huilude Portu1uese, Belgians, Brttona, South Africans and Americans, btvt uked the Cominunlst·backed An1olan 1overnment to allow mlot.nf to rt1ume, full scale, wtth proll\I btl.na shared by stockholders and the An&olan Government Pansies and Pearls ... or PERKY ~PANSIES --~ l'opul•r penay ri09S In natural OOlon of French enamel on 141( yellow gold, each centered with • fine cultured pearl. Pttlte, ~ Pansies and Diamonds , In the 1ansu•se of the flowers. • panay represents thoughtful· nesa. A lovely way to uy you c1re Is with this diamond, en· ameled rJnl In 14K aold, J. C. JJumpJi,"16 Jew11£r6 t823 N~T BLVO COSTA MESA , CONVENIENT TERMS 9ankA1J:19r1card-Ma51er C~ 30 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION PHONE ~·3401 .. ' . .. ' . . A4 DAILY PILQT Wednelday. J1nu17 5. 1977 Jost • Chinese Quake Toll: 655,237 . t ~ \ \ r: ' '\:··~ with · Tom ~phhae THE RECOUNTING: RalJ>b Diedrich, the outgoing chairman or our Orange County Board of Supervisors, tried to take a look at the brighter side yesterday as he handed over the gavel to Fifth District Supervisor Tom Riley. Diedrich also took a couple of swipes at bis favorite targels , during bis swan-song "State of • the County" address. I First, however, the good news as seen by the supervisor from .Fullerton. He said the county tax rate is the lowest in the state. He said the jobless rolls are down. He said the county economy shows great strength. On the other side or the coin, Diedrich took the opportunity to rap District Attorney Cecil Hicks for keeping what Diedrich al· leges is an illegal "slush fund." HE MEANT A $20,000 fund col- lected by courts from narcotics offenders and controlled by the Orange County Narcotics Task Force. Anyway, this was just sort of a reprise or a long-standing fued between Diedrich and the DA. The outgoing chairman. however, directed his other jab at the press for what he charac- terized as its "bad news is good news motto.·• Diedrich c;uggested that the press has an eagerness to keep the bad news forward even when there is no bad news. This is a most interesting thesis on the part. of Mr. Diedrich. HONG KONG <AP) -A top. secret Chinese document says that the earthquake last July in northeast China killed SSS,237 persons, the second largest quake toll in recorded history a leading Hong Kong newspai)er reported today. . The South China Morning Post sai4 the document reported 779,000 persons were injured. 79,000 of lhem seriously. TIIEPAPER DIDNOTsayhow it obtained lnformation on the re. port. It said lt was released at an emergency conference on earth- quakereliefwork inAugusL Book Ban Prompts NY Suit NEW YORK (AP)-Kurt Von- negut Jr. has joined the fight against a book-banning Long Island school board even though, he says, the ban probably will mean more book sales for him. Vonnegut's ''Slaughterhouse Five" is one or nine books the Island Trees school board has or- dered off school library shelves. Oth ers inc lude Bernard Malamud's ''The Fixer," and "The Naked Ape" by Desmond Morris. APPEARING AT A NEWS . conference to announce a class- action suit against the book ban- ning, Vonnegut said such actions often generate sales of the banned books. But he added: "As an American, I am dis- tressed that this sort or thing can happen in my country.'' The quake on July 28 virtually destroyed Tangshan, an in· dustrial city of 1.6 million popula- tion 105 miles southeast of Pek· Ing. ll did considerable damage ~ Tien~ln. China's thlrd largest city, wbicb had a population of -4.3mUlion. THE CHIN ESE government admitted that there were many casualties and serious damage but it bu never announced any figures. Cuban and Yugoslav news dispatches reported tens of thousands.killed. But the Chinese gov«;rnment declinld all offers of for~gn aid, and siA no foreign relief personnel were admitted lo the devastated area, there were no estimates from such trained obiservers available to rorelan newsmeJl. The greatest recorded loss of lite from an earthquake occurred 1n China more than 400 years ago, on Jan. 23, 1556. An estimat- ed 830,000 persons were killed then in Shensl province, in cen- tral China. THE SECOND IDGJIEST de- ath toll, accordJng to h.istorical records, was 300,000 ln Calcutta, lndia, on Oct. 11, 1737. The July quake measured 8.2 .. ,.w,,.,... .. The facts are that over the past few years, the press hasn't needed to look very hard to find bad news in county government and politics. You hardly had to be hit over the head by a two-hy-four m order for IL to get your atten- tion. THE SHOCK WAVES began back there in 1973 when former Westminster mayor Derek Mc Whinney and his buddy, former city planner Tad Fujita, were convictC'd on charges of conspiracy to commit grand theft. The lawsuit has been fi.Jed by ~everal students and their parents with the backing of the New York Civil Ljberties Union against the Is land Trees Board or Education. whose district covers the Long Island towns of Levit· town, Bethpage, Seaford and Plainedge. IRA GLASSER, executive director of the New York branch of the civil liberties group. said the book·banning came after several Island Trees board mem· bers attended a conference of Parents of New York United at Watkins Glen. N.Y., in Sep. tember 1975. LIQUID BALLAST -The Pres1dent·elect 's brother, Bi Uy' Carter, fuels up on one can from a case of beer he brought along as ballast for a hot air baloon ride Tues- day. 'Hold on tig ht and don't fall out.· wife Sybil called as Billy and two pals lifted off. Carter Plans Trust The c harges centered on a shakedown to extract campaign funds from a Fountain Valley farmer named George Murai. He said those attending the conference were given a list oC books d escri bed as "anti- American, anti-Christian, anti- Semihc and just plain fUthy ." To 'Hold' Business This proved to be small potatoes in thc bad news dcpart- mt>nt for our county poltt1cal operations. PLAIN~. Ga <A P) Whil~ Presidenl·elect Carter is making an ef- fort to build a wall bet\\ecn himself and his peanut warehousing busi- ness, brother Billy Carter says he expects to remajn the managing partner of the family enterprise. ln August of 1975, then-county assessor Jack VaUerga was con- vtcted of mis use of pubhc funds. embezzlement and grand theft. I le was removed from office. The board members went home, s urveyed their school librarjes, found 11 books listed by Parents of New York United, and ordered them off the shelves. Under a plan announced Tuesday, Jimmy Carter will tum over his 62 percent interest an the Congress man Andrew J . llmsbaw wa:. found guilty on bribery charges wh.ile he was as- :-.essor and sentenced to one to 14 :.cars m prison, now pending on appeals THEN APRIL, MAY and June or our Just-gone 1976 were ni ce. In April, Vallerga was again in <·ourt and pleaded no contest to <'harges of using his county staff 11legally in Jhnshaw's 1972 con· ).!ressional campaign In May, then-First District :.upervisor Robert Rattin was convicted of misus e of his public llrflce m a state campaign and was removed as supervisor And in June. county politicaJ kingpin Or. Lou Cella was con· \dCted on 22 felony counts related ti') Medicare fra ud and income tax evasion Clearly. you didn't have to search too hard for the ba r! JIOlitical news or l97fi. Ad Seeks Bass Burro DETROIT <AP> One live burro is needed for a walk-on pa r t in the Mich.igan Opera Theatre's production of "Naughty Marietta.'' "We hope to find a tenor, but a baritone, bass. soprano or mezzo will do fine ," sa id David DiChiera. 6teneral director of the opera. "Stage experience would be helpful but is not necessary ·· The opera group has been advertising for a burro to appear in costume during the opening scene. warehouse to a trust with instruc· lions to sell the business outright or lease it for the next four years. Jimmy Carter's interest was valued at $330.062 a year ago. Brother Billy a nd moth er Lillian own the rest. IF IT IS LE ASED, Carter will receive a flat sum annuaJly that will be independent of the ups and downs or the peanut business that could be affected by the agricultural policies of bis ad- ministration. If the trus tee sells the warehouse. the Plains institution that Carter helped build with his own hands might pass to other OW!lers. although , neither Billy Carter nor his mother would be barred from buying or leasing the business from the trustee. And Billy Carter later said he might buy it. In any case, he told television news men on Tuesday that he expects lo remain the managing partner, no matter what happens. He has managed the business since tus brother became politically active. Snow Blankets Midwest Stonn Reaches From Dakotas to Kansas "''~ Low .&lh<lftY •0 " Ptp. &l~'ftUf' " ,.. AmArlllO \l 7t A'W'hor~')'!' •• 41 01 t\tlAnl.t •I tO 0• Ut\m•rc• • "' nJ 8'1IV' 10 I• Ot iw-1 .... . .. n Ol 8(0Wft'"'""' ... I' """•"' ,, 1 C"•CAQO ,, 1• CtM •MAtt " ,.. .tO Cl••tl"'IO ,,.. It 0.nvtr )0 ,. ~>Molnt'' /(I J t) 0.lrnll 1' " °"""" IO • ::a.. >S ··-1\1 "' Ill Mou\ Ion "' ... lndlaMDOlo~ 71 ,,, IC•MU Cnv in " .. 7 NtWOrlNM i1 ... 04 ,A New'!'-1' U l U V<tQ.t\ u 11 l llll•ltCKll •n » M htmf ~· Olo.1....,,,,• City » tt OJ PflmS!>t'lnci• '1 • " Mii*••'~ 01 ""tl-IOlllt J> fl I• 111 Ml,,,,.ADOh\•SI. P•ul I) 1 r Dellyf'lletD••wy ''°" ........ M·l'WI~ r'""'" II you 00 oat htw .... ., N(tiflr n, 'lO o ~ rllf/IA. br•01• r ""' •1'14 Y<h!' cooy "'"' bo _,..a. '"h•dlY •"'1 llundl• If .,..., t!O "'11 tf'rfh\M _,,,,,, toov tw _. 1,.., <tt' tw-f0t-1t tO 1"' ant1 yuut r~ #ill be ~11t•ed "'-'ti• 1' .. , I 1 "'"'°"'Ill' ~· 14 ,,_,,l...cl. Mii, JO I ot 'I Pol'llAftd, On. lit .,. R<IOIO Cit~ U t , 12 "'-J1 111 5.Kr-10 U • $4 Loo/IJ tt '1 SalluhClly >• •1 San "r•11<~• n ·~ OJ S..11111 n 'I ~.... » • 10 -• lllt, .,,d Sl!OW rn<lled port• of lt•nluc•y, MISsourl, K•iuo, N•~H••, 11\f O••otn •nd Mon· 1 ..... The llHVIUt lllOWlall w•• In '°"'""''' H•e\lte, -·· -10 •ltfll lllCllti -• reporffd S0\1111 -IOU\"'1••1 of l ln<oln, Lln<olll 11 .. 11 INld 11 .. lnclles. 11" to""I of Mtwt<o '" norlMHI Ml•M>u•I "'Cllwd ,. ) "'<Ml. Otller reDOrll Ir-Ml•...,.. In <I....., " .. l'l<Ml ., k•-C•I•. '-' -' c.1"""'11. •11111 111,... •I $1 Louil CaUfornCa ff•oMIOr"'< lrf Oft !heir w•y bo<l 10 ITIO'I Of SO..t,,..rn C•lllornl•, aNt ....,..e \MW •llould !><' l1111nq tn llW """'" tel"'· I~ Nattandl Wtettwt ~rv•<• WY\ Fortc•stier~ -sA•d 110111te-d ,r.o...,." and t,._und•ntorms •'• ~"'~ct*<t ,,.om I"" COf<I lhrOUQ" '"" ~ F*'""""° ~"" Gabriel •"d ~•n B•rf\•rdH'° VllltY\ ,...111 Tllur~1. "'"" d,oyto""' l-o1urt\ "'"""'"II the u-50< '" I.,.. """"'"'"'· , ... -'*""' -.id drOP lo 3,000 1 ... 1, W9ll bool- t9'1t o \C)r• •~"'e•. bV Tftu"O"V lrm ~rtlurn \hould rucll lllllh> tn I.,.. JO\ •All IOW\ tr om 11 101• Scattered ri1in \hOw,rs. w.re or• dl<ltd for llle dt1••I, "'"" i.m .. , .. .,,.. nMClllno ,.,. mid to_, 40I lft 1119 hit" oewrn """ '"' !O< "' l"9 tow dt~\ Low• \f\Ovlfl M In,,,,. klwlO\al hlq"'1rtltvAllon• •nd....,r 00 lnlowerartH. Coa.tal lfeatlter S.-Wtrl•lll• (lo..dlrM\\ "'1t "'Ml ly l•lr Thur\Cj3~ l lQ"I ••tt•blr wind• nlolll •"O mornl!IQ hoyr1. H IOlll 111 1"'1 klw to 1111060'• CM•l•I ltlll.,.••lurat ,.111 rt"O" IHllween 41 •"cl 61 lftl•ftO I•"' ~AIW.t "'111 fl~ belWMM\ 4f -•1 f,.water l.,.,Pf,t!llrt wtll botl CARTER'S PEANUT Farm, separate from the warehouse operation, has been in the famiJy for several generations. ll is be- ing treated diCferenlly by the President·elect. His interest m the farm, valued at $348,444 a year-ago, will be transferred to a trustee who will lease and tum the proceeds over to Carter. Carter would regain the property after he leaves office. While announcing his own financial plans, Cart.er also dis- closed steps to stiffen rules against potential conflicts of in- terest of high government of. ficials. HE SAID HE WIU ask top of- ficials of his administration to sign contracts agreeing lo make a complete and public disclosure of their financial interesls and lo sell or place in a blind trust any assets that may pose a conflict with official duties. In addition, they must pledge to stay in government for their full terms and not accept any private job for two years after leaving government if the job re- quires them to deal with their former departments on business that concerned them as govern- ment officials. The President-elect had no an- nounced appointments for today. on the Richter scale, the highest since the 1964 Alaska quake and slightly less than lbe estimated magnitude of the San Fl"anciaco earthquake of 1906. Hsinhua, the official Chinese news agency. reported in Oc tober that more than 70 percent of Tangshan's mines and fac- tories were back in full or partial operation. That report said roads and highways in the area had re- opened in September. and Tangshan bad been largely re· built. AS QUOTED BY THE South Ollna Morning Post, the secret. Morning Sweep August report saJd the C:hme&e army was on guard ''day and night" In the devastated un.::i after the quake. "ready to doal serious blows to a handful or class enemies who dared to sabotage the rescue operatlons. '' TIIERE WAS NO identificalion or these "class enemies." After the arrest In October of Chiang Ching, Mao Tse-tung's widow, and three other radical members or the Communist Party Polit- buro, broadcasts from provincial Chinese stations accused their supporters of trying to hamper rescue operations. Soviets Raid Rights Group MOSCOW (AP) -Soviet security police completed a search or the apartments of four fighters for human rights early today and sum- moned two of them for questioning, members of the human rights movement reported. Tass, the official Soviet news agency, claimed evidence was found in the searches linking three of the four to an anti·Soviet or- ganization o( emigrants in Paris. Two of them denied the charge, and the third could not be re- ached for comment. PLAINCLOTH ES policemen and officials of the Moscow prosecutor's office com- pleted sear ching Alexander Ginzburg's apartment at 7 a.m. the sources said. They also searched the homes or Yuri Elephanl ~s Ending Sad PISA. Italy (AP) -San- dra. a piano-playing circus elephant, who refused to eat after her trainer qujt, has starved to death, circus officials said today. The 2S·year-old Indian star of Circo do Brasil began refusing food last month after Helmuth Krone, her trainer. left the circus for personal re· asons. Sandra and Krone, 35, bad been logether for 15 years. circus officials said. The circus owner, Raoul Faggioni, tried to trace Krone and get him back, but Sandra died Tuesday. She was the leader or the elephant show -she played piano and other in- struments -and the two other elephants in the act were unable to perform without her to guide them. Orlov, Ludmila Alexeyeva and Lidiya Voronina. The sources said Orlov and Ginzburg were called to the pro- secutor's office for interrogation later today. Orlov planned t<> defy the summons, they said. Orlov, Ginzburg and Miss Alexeyeva are m embers of a group formed last year to monitor the Soviet Union's com-P~~ce with human rights pro- visions of the Helsinki agree- ments. Mi ss Voronina has cooperated with the group. THE POLICE SEIZED docu· ments or the Helsinki committee, Western periodicals and typewriters during the searches, the sources said . Tass said evidence was found linking Ginzburg , Alexeyeva and Orlov to the People's Labor Al- liance. an anti-Soviet organiza- tion of emigrants based in Paris. Orlov and Miss AJexeyeva, in talks with Western correspon dents. d enied the charges. Ginzburg could not be reached. The wife of exiled Soviet author Alexander Solzhenitsyn issued a statement in New York charging the raid on Ginzburg's apartment was an attempt to 'b1oek money her husband sends to families of Russian political prisoners. She said Ginzburg is the chief representative in the Soviet Union of a foundation her husband set up lo help the prisoners' families. Andrei Sakharov, the winner of the 1975 Nobel Peace Prize · for his fight for human rights in the Soviet Union. waited outside Ginzburg's apartment while the police searched 1t. Race Attack Victilll Sues FBI Agents • GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. CAP> -A former Freedom Rider. crippled in a beating on an Alabama bus in 1961, has filed a $1 million lawsuit against FBl director Clarence Kelley and tw<> other FBI officials, claiming they could have prevented the in- cident. The suit was filed Tuesday by Walter Bergman, 77, and his 73-year-old wife, Frances, of Grand Rapids. Kelley was an FBI field agent in the South at the time oflhe beating. The suit claims that Gary Thomas Rowe. an FBI informer who infiltrated the Ku Klux Klan, gave agents three weeks' ad- vance warning that Klan mem- bers would attack civil rights de- monstrators in Anniston, Ala. But the FBI did nothing to stop the attack. A"WI,..,.... ( BRIEFS J llontb BLa•t• Tou"a BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP> -A time bomb went off in the Chris· tian town of Jbeil during the night, caus ing considerable damage to buildings and cars. the Christian Phalange party's radio station reported today. The broadcast report said no one was hurt by the explosion in the coastal town 17 miles north or Beirut. It was the third attack in a Christian area this 1 week. Hospital sources s aid the death toll from the explosion Monday night outside a Phalangist militia barracks in Beirut has risen to40. PerJu'11 A U~ged WASHINGTON <AP) -Per- jury and obstruction of Justice may have occurred dunng an in· vestigallon that concluded Federal Election Commission Chairman Verno n Thomson violated federal law, an FEC stalf report says The report did not specify who might have committed the acts. but It detailed discrepancies between sworn testimony by Thomson and by former Defense Secretary Melvin Laird involv- ing a pending FEC probe Involv- ing a Tennessee Senate race. Black. Returning ~, ....... Moot Ou1~ Countlr II••• U .. UI ~t ttunh,...tMAf-ar"- Tt"'IM 11 ,. W•tN "9tOll u t1 II.II. S __ a,,, Ill llllllOll , ~ll"l"9ti.1-. Otc1lur """ QulMy •AC.II r•e11.,.e1 ,. .. ln-tftK, flllt«le lll'M. ..,.,. 11\C:,,., 1111 al La"'°"'· low~. -I• ffl<f\ff •I l11dltN1PfHs Md Cln(IMetl A·d1'enturer to Wed JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP> -Groups of grade- scbool pupils returned to class«$ today as schools reopened ln South Alrlca"s two most volaUle black communities, Soweto aDd the black. townships surrounding Cape Town • Officials in Soweto. the blatk lo~p south of Johannesburi, said mo.\t pupils In bi~r gradi:s Appeared to be contJnulng a six- month-old school boycott. liftO ""''' ..... "•t•f ..... ., •• &.-. ('-..,,•ftlt. c.,.,,.,...., '''"'cit ~:~.~?tC:~7' 8')0"-1 ' t .tllvtl• '411111•• • .. • • 0-lf ·~ ~ " wlnttf' ,,.,,.., dvm"d "4••1 """"" Oft IM MICIW.'I ov1ml9'11, .. • IGW DrHJ\Wt C•llltr tflll <OICI llWll lr~klCI 11\lward lll•ouql\ 1"'1 "'ldd"' MIUIHlll!ll V•lll'f' &II 8' 11111194'1. 1"1111"" ..., Oii .. T1ewl eC11l-1K ... ,. 110 ltr 10 tN'r If! ,.rl, of lltf QlllO H I..., - mlcldll MIHIUIClllf vllll y fl ... ~rt, '•Ill aftcl drlut. tell fNWn \OUll•lfll KtlllUOY lftlO MllAll C.fOllft• .... M•I"•'" (ieortl• Author-adventurer Lowell Thomas, 84. and Marianna MUM, 49, planned to be married today on the Hawaiian Island of Maul. The two are both native~ ot Darke Coun- ty, Ohio, near Dayton. Family Slaying Motive Sought STOCKTON (AP) -Matthew Opdahl, a !~year-old whose ac- quaintances deacrtbe tum as pleasant and bright, is behind bars in connection with the murder of his father and two alaters. "Matt is well-lilted. He was never boisterous.'' said Leroy Camey, principal of Tokay High School where Matthew was a stu- denL "The teachers said he was a good student ... one or those kids you can't identUy as very quiet or very loud.'• THE YOUTH was booked into San Joaquin County Juvenile llall Tuesday. His father, Dr. M. Darrill Opdahl, and mother, Patricia, were found shot in the back downstairs In the family's t~story home at Mirada early Tuesday. The 42-year-old orthodontist died later at a boepital: his wife was listed in stable condition after surgery. Tbe boy's two sltiters -Susan, 19, and Carol, 18 -were fo1md In their upstairs bedroom. Susan. engaged to be married, had beiln shot three Um es. Both girls were dead at lhe scene. ....... "WE ARE a complete blank as to any motive." said SherUrs Commander Arch Scheffel. He said urine and blood samples bad been taken from the young Opdahl, presumably to determine whether be had been drinking or taldng drugs. Tim Wallace. 48, ~tor of Department of Food and Agriculture in the Brown administr a tion, resigned Tuesday for "personal reasons." He was appointed by Brown on Feb. 3, 1975. Scheffel said Opdahl telephoned Stockton police shortly before midnight Monday to request an ambuJance and report a sboot!ng. He obeyed police instructions to come out of the house unarmed with his bands over his head. Court Sets Gay Ruling SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -Homosexuals have no legal protection against job discrimination. the California Court of AP· peals bas ruled. "There ls simply no coo- s it u ti on a I right for homosexuals to work for an unwilling employer," said the opinion delivered Tuesday. "The legislature bas not determined that employ- ment discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation is contrary to the public policy of the State of California," the decision aaid. "We see no reasoo to establish such a rule by judicial decison '· Aircraft Firm Sued By Victims' Heirs LOS ANGELES (AP) -A federal judge bas cleared the way for heirs of those killed in the crash of a DC· 10 jetliner near Paris to sue the airplane's builders for millions of dollars in punitive damages. U.S. District Court Judge Manuel L. Real ruled Tuesday that the failure of California courts to permit collection of punitive damages in wrongful death suits is an unconstitutional application oflhelaw. THE HEIRS or 48 of the 344 persons killed in tbe crasb -lhe worst in aviation history -are seeking damages from McDonnell Douglas Corp. and General Dynamics Corp. Heirs or 240 of those killed have waived their right to seek punitive damages and have settled out or court for nearly $48 million. WHETHER THE lawsuJt trial wouJd s tart today, as scheduled, was unclear pending a decision by Real on whether to allow the aircraft makers to immediately appeal bis ruling to the 9th ti.s. Cl!cuit Court of Appeals. If he allows such an appeal, the start of the trial could be delayed for a year or 18 months, officials indicated. . Sources said that if the damage suits against the aircraft builders succeed, total damages could amount to $75 milllon in the 1974 crash. all. Earning money 1~ one thing. Holding on to 1t and making 1t grow is ano1her Perpetual Savmgc; has vam'u' wayc; ,,f making your money make monc). At Your Service, Service- And They're Free t Some -.crv1cc' n.'qu1n: qualifying balance'-1 Even 1hnugh Perpetual Savmg" 1' J !-ILabh: hnancial in't11u1 ion, you'll k el comfortable with u~. Our employee~ arc friendly. ~nowlcdgcablc and take care of )Our tran-..11.:t1 on' 4u1d..I) /\nd we offer Jll cnonnou~ r.mge nt :-ervicc,. So when people refer to uc; :1' a tm,cr n l ... rrcngth. 11\ more than JU't a ca1chy phra"t: Come in .111J 'cc u' 'oon. Whe n.: you put your money dex'.' mal..c J d1ffcrent.·c. Highest Allowable Interest Annual Rate Annual Yield · ltrms 5%% .. 5.92% :.~==~ 61h%·· 6. 72% ~~··000 6%o/o•• 6.98% ;f~f~nt 71/2% .. 7. 79% :::,r:;'1•000 7%%•• 8.06% :;:,r;;''·* Safe Deposit Box Notary Service Checking Account Savings Bond Traveler.-Chccb Rcdemplion"i Money Order' Save-By-Ma il Copy Service ln1cr-Branch Privileges Trust Deed Telephone Thinsfer Collecllon~ ldentikey Retirement Plans Tux-deferred Keogh Plan A self-employed individual may deposit 151l of h1~ or her annual income rS7500 ma>.1mum) in a Keogh plan. Both money contributed for yourself and for employee\ 1~ tax-deductible, as is the inten.:M 1t cam!>. After retirement you're 1axed al a much lower rate as you use the money. Perpetual pays the Tru~ree fees. Individual Retirement Account Start your own Individual Retirement Account if you're not already in one. Contribute up to 15% of your annual income ($1500 maximum) in one paymenr or regular imtnllmcnl:,. The money contributed and the intcrc~t it cams arc tax deductible until you use the money Perpetual p:iyi. the lh.istcc fee'. A n:M'ER OF STRENGTH PERPETUAL SAVINGS BEVERLY lot.ts <M11 in Otli1.·c1. 9720 Wibh\I'\.' Bl\1\.1., <21ll 274·6066 0 WESTWOOD VlLLAGE, 10866 Wil,hire Blvd .. (113 ) 474.)~0l 0 LARCHMONT, Larchmont Bhd. u1 R(v(rly Blvd .. (21Jl 462-6-16' 0 CANOGA PARK, Vietm·y BlvJ lll Pl1111Av.: .. 121.') '48·4141 [Sl- 0 NORllfRJOCE. 18.$40 OC'von,hin: St.. (213) '60·2326 O• FULLERTON. n .14 Ytirhn ' fSUC Lindo Blvd .. (71J ) 993-llOO O• NF.WPORT BEACH, 16.14 San Mittucl Bhd , <formerly • -·· • • New M1cAnhur Blvd.). (714) 640·1634 O •Opc:n Su1urd11y' from 10 /\ ~ tll 2 PM. ··' ·--·- .. ~!X· January 5, 1W7 DAILV Pll.OT Af Tragedy in SieITa Girl Hiker Rescued; Frwnd Freezes BISHOP CAP> -A young biker bu told rescuers a cbilllne tale of panic in the oowbound blgb country, recounting be.r stnaaale for survlnl in the hours after her boyfriend fr'oze to death by her aide. Jeri Ano Grusmueck. 22, walked on froren feet Tuesday to a helicopter that dropped into the rugged, heavily timbered Sierra Nevada moun-taiDB to bring her to safety. THE BODY of Miss Grassmueck's dead boyfriend. Steve Sheppard. 20, was temporarily left behind as the rescuers new the t.-ostbltteo sur- vivor to Northern Inyo County Hospital bere for treatment. She was reported in aatlafactory condition. suf- fering from frostbite oo 'be.r feet and banda that doctors said miabt require akin grafting. BOSS GltASSMUECK would not speak with re- port.en but the chief of the rescue operation said, ''She was very confused mentally.'' The rescue leader, Bob McCoy, gave this ac- count of the woman's ordeal: The young biters, both o1 wbom bad some bik· ing experience, left oo a JO.mile bike acros& the ruaed mountains the day after Christmas. The sides were clear when they left and they were well equipped with cold-weather survival gear. ABOUT HALFWAY in their journey. just before New Year's Day, a heavy snowstorm bit the area 250 miles northeast. or Los Angeles and prompted Sheppard and Miss Grassmueck to bead for their car about lS miles away. AT LONG JOHN SllYER'S® AND GET A Equipped with snowshoes and heavy clot.blq, the pair m~de slow but. st.ea.dy prorress toward their starting point. They pitched camp lo blizzard condltionl Sua- da.y night, and awoke in a panic t.be next morning when heavy snow drifts collapsed their tent. Tbe two felt they were suffocating, and In a froien panic, ran. "They abandoned their tent and auppliea," McCoy said. "And left behind their moet hnpor- tant survival gear. There waa no reason for them to abandon it. I think it was the panic." THE TWO ~fought the treeUng wind and tried to mat;?lb;ck to the car. only a few miles away. After walldng nearly a mile, MJas Grassmueck noticed that Sheppard'• bands were extremely cold and the pair stopped. "She said she tried to get bim to put b1a banda in bis jacket." said McCoy. "He refused." A short while later, McCoy said, Sheppard~ parently was dead. MISS GRASSMUECK, a secretary for a Pasadena church wbo was descrlbed by rescuers as a very religious person, struggled about a mile and a half further down the trail before she wu spotted. Rescuers were notified of the biker•· whereabouts by the girl's mother, who bad been given a detailed Itinerary and notified officials when weather worsened. "When I spotted her," McCoy said, "sbe was very confused. I asked if she bad a companion. and she said,· Yes. hediedlastnlghl'." FREE. Free Pirdte Doubloon With Any Meal This \\eek! That's right. Every time you buy any meal at Long John Silver's between January 3 and January 9. you get a Pirate Doubloon absolutely free. Collect the entire set of 8! And also this week, be sure to enter the Doubloon Gl.lessing Contest. THE BEST SEAFOOD ON DRY LAND,M l lc>lre'• 0 j " a ,"""1\lte o I Guess how many Doubloons are in the chest and win a $25 gift certificate from Long John Silver's. A $10 Long John Silver1s gift c~rtificate goes to the runner-up. Enter each visit, between January 3 and January 9: Flah & Frye. Dinner ..•...... 11.69 d~lightfully cn$p ']olden filk-1$ Peg Leg• and Frye• Dinner ... $1.59 miniature chick4!n drumsltcks TreHure Cheat Dinner ...... SJ . 99 fish & peg legs. !ryes & sldw Chicken Plankl Dinner .... $1 .79 'trip~ of bonek-~s brea~l lilll'h I"! lrws Fried Clam Dinner .......... 12.29 clam~ & fryes ·· w1lh \law Tender Oyster Dinner ....... $2.49 oysrers & lry~!> w11h slaw Goldu Fried Shrimp Dinner. 12.79 shrimp & fryl''> wuh slow Big Catch .................. $5.65 11,h, chicktm vr combu w11h lrw~ "nd slaw feeds four or morl! PtecaofEt9h1 ...........•. M .99 X golden fish 11111'1) enough for the \'nttre crew Special kid'• Menu From 99• Coco Colo •Coo" Bt>'1r • lngwllOOk Wine CWngGjohn8i}ver~ ®~ SEAFOOD SHOPPES 3095 Harbor Blvd. in Costa Mesa Just South of the San Diego Freeway. Across from Fedco . ... ,.,6 DAIL,. PILOT EDITORI I" p ,,GE Land Sale Benefits A r~enl decision by the Newport-Me~a School District to sell about 32 acres o! undeveloped land at a minimum bid of $100,000 per acre <or $3.2 million) ~hould be n efit taxpayers, and at no expl!nse to the educationa l prog ram. The acreage, almost equally divided among three parcels (two in Costa Mesa and one partially in Newport nench and partially in county territory ), was originally purchused with stale aid by the old Costa Mesa Union School District at a lime when stu - dcn~owth potential a ppeared unlimited. Now 1t h u:-. become obvious that, \\1th d istrn:t enrollment declinmg, the three empty sites will not be ryeeded. By p ulling the excess school s ites up for sale the dis trict will erase its Sl.2 million outstanding state de bt and stands to gain at least S2 million for i mprove- m ents and cons truction within the distr ict. This decision has still one more benefit: 1t will put the dormant land back on the tax rolls. Unwelcome Burden A new regulation from the Vctt.?rans Adminislra· tdon which r equires the Coast Community College Dis- 'tpcl to re port the number of veteran s tudents in each c1aSl> is :m unnecessary burden on the district. T he Vcteruns Education a nd Employment As· slstance Act of 1976 stipulates that all colleges and schools in the United States establish a r eporting SJ~tem lh3t ccrt1f1cs not more than 85 percent of ~tu­ ~nts enrolled in a course a1·e veterans. f( the ratio 1s mor e than 85 percent, those ~tudents w<1uld not receive funding for those cla~ses. dable enough. The VA is attempting to catch schools wh.ich arc 5N up to rake m 1.·et.eranGl Bill monies. And it is true there are such institution s which are more d cdicnted to pulling in !ederal funds than educating veterans. But the Coast district has a olean record and obvious ly does not !all tnto that category. Comply ing wilh the regulation would impose un. necessary work by forcing the district to assess each of the hundre ds of classes offered. T he Veterans Administration should rechannel its regulation Lo questionable schools and not burden establis he d institutions like Coast Community College District Fire Protection Jn the aftermath of a fire which claimed the life or a 16-year-old boy in Costa Mesa last month, the cit y council is s tudy ing the feasibility of an ordinance to require eve ntual installation or s moke d etector de· vices in all city residences. Mayor Dominic Raciti called for the study this week. saying he would like to see the alarms in· stalled as a requirement for all new a partment de- velopments and all new residences in Costa Mesa. J le said the devices could be in5talled in older dwellings when they are sold. "thereby insuring a s moke det ector in most of the h om es in Costa Mesa Wlthin s ix o r seven year s." Raciti said recent fire deaths in the cily might have been averted if the d evices had been m stalled. The council should give serious consideration t o s uch an ordinance at its study session next week. • The reasoning behind t he regulation is understan· Fire~. often breaking out during the night, claimed the li\'eS of several Harbor Area residents in the last few months of 1976 c ''I SEE THE KIN6 HAS ~EfN TO THE HA~WARE SlORE A<iAIN~ aA Fears Pipeline Sabotage .1 (JACK ANDERSON J . WASlllNGTON ·The Central lntelligc•nc•e Agcnl·~. apparently c oncernccl about :.abotage by foreign J?Overnments or ler- {Orists. hJs quietly heen;;cnding 'llgcnts north to 1nl:.pe~t the Alai.kan pipeline The CIA 1s .ilso wornt'd. !..iy •11r source!>, about the possibility that the Sov k>t Union, or othcr nations. ma y h ave J> I a n t e ti J gents amont tllC' pipcllnt' v.ork<-rs Intern.i i 4 ot•u m e nt s .from the In t<'nor Depart plent say lhat a CIA team wOJs J>art1cularly inter('~tcd in the a:1ant Prudhoe llll field. the key p1pt>hne tl•rminal at V:.ilde1. and lhe buslling Cook Inlet produc- tion f3 c1hty Coincidrnt all). invelll.igators for lht' Senatl' Internal Secunt) $ubcomm11tee are preparing a re port that w1 II s how hugr gaps ex· \."ting in pn•sent fedt'ral and state plans tosofeguard lhep1peline Squahhllni:; a mon~ var1ou:. p, ti\ er n m c n t a ~enc 1 es <1 n d -Ah eska . the firm developtng the multi bi II 1on-doll a r oil prOJtlCl, bas creatc-d severe S<'cunty pro blt'ms. the rom m lttce ha!-. di!. covered TIGHTER secunty IS badly needed ill s uch crttlcal PQ1nl.s us pumping stations north or the Yukon. which. 1( destroyed, could •hut off the \'ital flow or 011 for as long as ;1 >ear. the sulx:omm1ttee found The Sen~1te investigators also have r eviewed possible scenarios for a maJor war. limited warfare Or sabotage over the pipeline 'The s ubcommittee's final report wdl recommend methods of h<indllng s uch crises without a total halt of oil ~hipments to the Dear Gloo1ny Gus Nol only was the Estancia marching band lovely to hear and see. but it slowed d o wn the traffic on Monro\'1a, which 1s more than the police have been abll' to do SB J Gloomy Gui tOtTtmtn1\ Ar-e \Vl>""1tltO Ot h 'Mh r\ 4nd do no1 ftt'<t•uo111lv rtftK' lh~ ...... , of Uu•1 ~W\IMPM SNtd yovr pe-t twt•• lo G1oomy Gu\, D••l'f Pilot rest of the United States. Ttfere is no easy way, the com m1(tee has tentatively concluded. to effectively protect the long pi peline'. which runs through some of the world"s most rugged, frozen terrain. In fact, one con- gressional expert told us , "the p1pelme 1s indefensible .. COLONELS' COUP : The F't'deral Ene rgy Admirustration has become so infiltrated with ex-mihtury brass that it looks hke a retired officers' club A clique or colonC'ls It'd out to pasture by the Pentagon is meticulously laking care or the military ·s 011 n<'eds al t he ex· pense of industry. other federal agencies and the consumer Al least 70 former brass hats are in high· level JObs. and the overall percC'nt agC' of ex· military officer~ at FEA 1s more than twice that ot the average rroeral agency DRUG RF.PORT: In lht> next few ~eks, the llouse Narcotics Committee. h eaded by Rep. Lester Wolff CO.-N. Y ) expects to issue a maJor report lambasting foreign government offi cials for failing to s upport their own narcotics police In the Netherlands. for cxum pie. Wolff d is~ovcrt.'<l the son of a t.t>p cabinet member broodcasL mg the wet~kly m arket pnrcs Qf drugs Dut ch police a re so frustra ted by the roddhng of narcotics figures that they 1n· form neighboring foreign police when Dutch drug traffickers are leaving Holland. so they c~tn be Eled outside the country. stet-dam. meanwhile. has me the busiest narcotics clearinghoul!e tn Europe ! Written Milestones THE WRITTEN WORD F.N· [ Ol1RES. By the Staff ot the Na-u on a I Arc h ives. National Archives & Records ~rvice. 112 pages. $12.50 THE BOOKMAN J Twenty-three documents which were milestones in the formation or the American re· public have been reproduced in a handsome volume which its l>ublieher describes as "the first comprehensive i!Justrated his· tory of the nation told exclusively >through archivnl materials." There are the document, veryone would expect: the ~larnllon of lndependtnce, the Supreme Court's Marbury vs. Madison decl!1lo'h. the Emancipa- ijon Proclamatlol\, the TFeaty of Versailles, the Japantse s ur- render, nnd the M1rshaJI Plan. BUT THERE are olhtrs which, While not thought cl as historic pa~nr1. were equally influcntl31 l I I in the molding of the nation: the patents for tbe cotton gin and the lncaodescent lamp. the woman's su!frage amendmeut, the lmmi· tralibn Act of 1924. There are lmp0rtant treaties. legislative acts, amendments to the Constitution, presidential pro- nouncements, Supreme Court de- cisions. maps ond charts, photo- graphs a nd cartoons, posters and pa.lntlngs. Aa archivist James 8 . Rhoads says In a foreword, most of the documents will rekindle a spark o( recognltlon ln m<>l!tAmericens, but a careful reading with lhe ex· planatory text "may lead toa new er>redationofthel'lchntH olthe n~\ion) documentary hc-r1tage." OONAl.O SANDERS (APl I The ACLV and the KKK .. .. • .. • '* .. Free Speech: No Exceptions .. . To the Editor No one ever has. or should ever dare. s uggest a relationship with. an admiration for, an iota of anything but d1sgu~t by our or· ganization <AC LU l for the Grand Exalte d Cycl ops a nd his path e ti c gan g at C amp Pendleton. fo'ew of us can, after any soul searching, sec any justifiable reason for the e~­ istence of the Ku Klux Klan and the depraved minds supporting It The basic tenet~ or the pr· ganization remind us of Ber,0en Belsen. Auschwitz-Birkcnau. Babii Var and Wounded Kn ee We would simply be a far finer socwty "ere we rid or them. Then ~ hy in the hell defend them? It has been our unfortunate his- tory to be the refuge or last resort for all those in our society who legitimately enjoy the protection or the Constitution from the deprived unfortunates of m1nori· ly races and creeds to the depriv 1ng miserables of such as the Ku Klux Kla n and the American Nazi Party. I say unfortunate history because despite the legitimacy of those constitutional ~unrantees. it never {ails lo steep us in divisive controversy. Why do we insis t on defending the rights of both ends of lhe spec· trum? Free speech for all Ill the law, not the exception! Our or~an ization's strength. indt>ed our country's strength, is bused on n concept of no excep· t1ons lo the laws e mbodied in the lllll of Rights. Any exceptions to that rule will lead ua down the broad path to more Bergen- Belsens. Auscbwitz·Sirkenaus, Babii Yars and Wound~ Knees. or to paraphrase George San· tnynna ·s proverbial statement. those of us who refuse lo learn from history :ire surely doomed tn repeat 1l. MICHAELJ. JIJCKS C For ExecutiveCommittee) Orange County ACLU Appre~lation To the Editor: As a resident of Newport Beach. I wish to express my gratitude to the city co'uneil of Costa Mesa and to Costa Mesa's b1cenlt'nni3l committee for their outstanding contrihutions to our nation's bicentennial Their sponsorship of the July 4th celebration at Orange Coast C'<1llege as well as their prcsenta· lion o( awards of recognition to the gr aduates of the same school 's Ameri canltation class for future c1l1zens ere example~ of good citizenship in action. Finally. their parting salute lo the IJicentennial \htough the his· lorical films shown lhJs week at the South Coast Plaza Mall was a r.tdng finale lo ' our notion's cclebrellon. l, ror one, would Uke lo thank ' all of those responsible for their much appreciated de~lcotlon and for a Job well done. PHILLIP F.. SPERRY MwlaldhlB ;. To the Edltor: lt Is a shame lhut you printed the inaccurate article titled "Insurance Study Due" In lhe Pilot or 12/29/76. To quQle Ollll-statomCI\\. re; ~ Straight Life -"but the pre· mlumA remain lht s ome lhroushout your lire." This, of ( MAILBOX J Letters from readers are welcomP The nght 10 condense letters tn /1t space or ehmmate libel 13 reserved Letters o/ 300 words or less wtll be given preference All letters must m· elude signature and m01/mg addre:u but names may be withheld °" rP· quest 1/ su/ /lc1mt rewon 18 apparent Poetry will nor be publ~htrl. course. applies lo non·d1vulend paying policies only. WHY DffiN'T your article state that 9 out of the 10 lari.:est life insurance companies "rite divide nd·p ayi n g policies . Dividends can be used lo reduce lhe outlay, year a Cler year Fo r ex ample. a premium notice of a $1 ,000 policy on my life shows the dividend to be in ex- cess of the prem ium. 1f I had bought term insurance and renewed it <'very year to my present age, my premium this year would be $41.55 per thousand and there would be no cash build up. This type of article, which con· tams part truths. should not ap- pear since it serves to mislead lhe uninformed. ROBERTC. FYKE Fallen Lion To the Editor: The recent a rti cle about yachtsman Ralph Larrabee and his yacht, the Goodwill, was very interesting As <writer) Lindsley Parsons pointed out. Ralph en- joyed slicking pins into the IRS. Certainly a man who argues with that group can 'l be aJI bad! It is a well-known, albeit un· fortunate. truth that most or us feel obligated to pass juds ment on the character and moral lurpilude of "public rigures." I guess we reel that lhcse august personages are like our gods Cor parents l and must be above reproach else they threaten our own existence. We are generally more charitable in our self assessment IT WAS s ad to observe the m any guests who accepted Ralph's lavish hospitality for days on end and then rushed ashore to proclaim their com- mentaries on his "vulgarities." One of these guests saw fit lo ex· ...... •011ddyl Dadd'(} Wh.tt did you bring m•l' cuse his own boyish exuberanc·c in stealing \'aluable furniture from a Mexican holcl and slow· ing it away aboard the Goodwill As I remember, he was mo:.t particular to point out h1!. host's la<•k of refinement I had the grl'at pleasure to know Ralph for neurly 10 years, both soc1allv and in busint•i.s. lk was most gcnerou!. in inviting mt• and my family on various <·ru1se~ aboard the Goodwill. Needless to say, these cruises were the gran· dest sailing experiences in my lire. E ven in her latter years. !>ht• was a magnificent example of the classic yacht and I will always be grateful for thost: memories. In business. Ralph was one of the very few men I have met who operated on principles. come hell or high water. It is not stretching the truth to say th::it he personal- ly saved my little business when 1t was weathering a storm. and from stories that come up from time to time. I gather that others beneritted from his humanity. TO ~IE, Ra lph l'p1tom1ted all that was manly. virile and viable in the rac<· Ill' had char ac· teristics that have heen criticized by the armchair quarterbacks. but in the little history I have read lhese characteristics w~re shared by many of the world's really significant men I keep getting a mental picture of a fallen lion being devoured by the ants of the jungle. I know that there a re enough ants in th<' world to devour even the largest or the giants. but it sure is a darned shame! J OIJN L. COSTELLO TraUer Sale• To the Editor· 1 would like lo take this op· portunity to remind all mobile home owners and trailer owners or the law that went into effect Jan. l. They now are allowed to put a "For Sale" sign in their window, or on their trailer, if they so wish Up until now they have been dented this r ight, by park owners. so the park owners could discriminate against anyone they didn't want in lhe court. It seem ed to be a coalition between deale rs and court owners and /or man agers. !f a mobile home owner wished to sell. he either had to put an ex pensive ad tn the papers, or sell it through a dealer. or a manager. Ile told the manager it was for sale, and "if anyone called and as ked" if \here was a mobile home for sale in the court, lhc manager could al his own dlscre· tlon, tell them yea or no. MANY 11MES the seller had to sell lo a dealer or a manager at a btl Joea, a"d the1 ln tum sold it for a big profit. By the same token, anyone wiahin1 to buy n mobile home, or a travel trailer, lJ\Stelld of being able to drive around looklnl tor one with a ''For S1Je" sign on it, es you would when tooklJ\g ror a house ror sale, either had to "o through o dealer and pay several thousand ... yes I said thousand (and can prove ill) dollars more for It than the owner himself would ask. or .ro U\rouah the mana1er, at the some riak. This unfair practice wu final· ly brou1ht lo tbe oUenlJon ol the powers that be, and now trailer.: owners and mobile home owners can display ::i "For Sale" &i~ just like other people wbo w.ant to sell something, whether it be C\ car. boat, unwanted chair or. garage sale, or whatever. ·• Thjs new law will go a long way in bringing mobile home price~ back down to the "supply and de., mand" level rather than the "big: monopoly" racket it has been u~ to now' Thank you for helping t ~ spread the news. A. FERGUSEfl(, . . .. llnf air to PoH~e :( To the Editor: Reference the article in the Daily Pilot. Monday, Dec. 21; ··Dad Blas t:. U nwarra nted S hots,'' r egar din g the Westminster offi cer shooting at· Rock Fetzer : Since the father is obvious ly, unaware oC the conversatiort between the officer and lhe bar-' ricaded individual in the garage; I fail to see that the father can· j ustifiably s tate that lhe officel'I. fired without provocation. In view of the fact that the iniliaf. call for help to the police depart( ment indicated that the subject · had lost control of hlmselC and: was smashing windows and al~ tacking neighbors, that officer. was placing himself in jeopardy even approaching an obviously, violent situation. I . , IF THE father fell that it waj' such an easily solvable situauon;i why didn't he take control or hi$1 own son? The people who call tht: police to assist them in matte~ not totally comprchcndable tct themselves. and most certalnlf unable to ha ndle the matter without a ssistance from someon+; who is trained in s uch matters, should have the confidence i~ these officers to substantiat6 their actions. • llnlU the internal affairs de2 partmenl ascertajns wMt trulf occurred between the officer and the alleged victim, I lhink it trul.f, unfair of Mr. Wilber Fetzer t.t cast accusations. When peoplf need the help or the police. the~ are there to render it lo the beu or their training and ability. Ho\I can you expect the police to slan; in front of you. If you won't ~tan behind lhe police'! , .JUANITA PERRYMAl' ORAfl'GE COAST DAILY PILOT llohrrt N Wt'ed Puhluhrr Ttwmoa Kcruzl, Edlt<ir flarboro Kre11!1c/1, 1-;auonal Paqe E:dllvr The editorial p:ige of th<.' Dally Pilot seeks to inform and ·Stimulate readers by prcsenllna on this p:ii:e diverse ('Ommentary on topics of intcrc>st by syndlcat· ('() rolumnl11ts and cart(IC)llisls; by prnv1c1mg n forum for readtrs' vtl'ws and by pre:1cnting lhia n('wi;papcr's opinions and Ideas on cu1 rent to111rs Thr editori•I opinions of the Dully Pilot appear only 1n lhc cdltor,al column t1l the tcip or lh<' pu.:1• 0f)inions ex- 11re sl'd b> the <'olumn"ts end r11rtooni!lb and lcmcr wrlten Art their own and no endorsement ot lhtlr ''•e111 s by !.)lq tlM&b"" Ptlol should ti<! lnferrt'd. W e<lncsday, Jan 5, 1977 W(Kfnesday. Janua~ 5 19n DAIL V PILOT A 7 1976 IN REVIEW 19 76 was a very special year for Newport Equity F unds and we'd like to tell you about it in a very sp ecial way throu gh the a dvertisements we used during the year. Al the beginning o f the year we were sllll ut.lng our original "logo ud" In color In New Worlds muguzlnc und blown up to un enormous 4 7" by 60" for Fashion Island's Mall Ciruphlc:. dbpluy posters. As you can sec. we sow ourselves us u ~cwport Beuch firm cxduhlvcly serving Xcwport l)cuch cllcntb. Thut view would not Ju i.;t much longer, as the wheels had uJ. ready been set In motion for the opening o f the firm 's fir st branch office. We continued during January und February to tell KOC~t radio listener& about the high returns available on trust deed Investments . Jn Fe bruary we came up with a plan which we thought might help our adver- tising appeal to the tw.o kJQds of clteots we M:rvc -borrowers unc1 lender~. Up until then we had rcuchcd Investors with: "Inve8t.mcot Tnu1t Deeds for Professional Juvest- on," and borrowers with uc1s about loans and photographs o f our pro- <l11ct1vc und personable loan officers! \\'c'rc still nol sure just why "Eithtt a norrowcr or a Le nder Be" failed to do the job. A few nice people re- sponded to our appeal to com e to :'\cwport Equity Funds t f they needed monc~·. or If they wanted to lnvc&l for u high retum. But the ad clearly did not accom- plish our objective of ullowln~ u.., to combine our uo\·ert tsln~ dollors und rcuch lmth kinds of clients slmultuncoui.ly. E itht:r a Dorr o "·c r ora Le nde r 8 1: . - 'Newport Equih1 1=1mds.Inc. @ .\t uboul Uh.· same Umc. :'\cwport Equity f'uncJq opencc1 II'-flr!-t brunch office - In San Dlq{o -ttncl our senior loun o fflcl'r In Xcwport, \111 Wolfe. left tn ta.kc o\·cr that office. The rntd In :'\cwport wu!" quickly filled by Linda Blue who, alontot with her collcnguc Dou~ Bullcy .... oon bccum~ widely known U'-.. The Team." 1n a sepurutc serteA of ads, Doug Bulley was Introduced with "New Teammate. Bulleyl Bulleyl" and this the me of Team- work came to be hallmark of the Newport Equity F undR loan department. (All the loan ofOccrs In ~cwport Bench do, in fact, ' act as a team, servicing e ach other's clients when nee ded and cooperating with each other to sec thut the loans ilre processed expedltlou:.ly.) Teamwork j '"''' &,r •"141 C..1t11 M .. '• ,. ·~ "1 ~ ~ '''' •''~"0!'11 ,,,1 $'<.A'l'lnl.i wi i.o..• ' 1rw•••11 ""~'• ,,."t', 1 .. ""Wif ,,, '"•' j)1 '11t ' • br ... .... "" . ~. ,,~ .. • tO"' """ . .. 11 'Newport Equity 1 'Funds, Inc. tJ 11 _· J While we we re getting bqred with ''The Team,'' "Teamwork," and "Bu~ley! Bulleyl" the public wasn't.. The ads continued to be used thrl)ughout the year with consistent success In attracting borrowers -and, even more Importantly. tn obtaining rcfern.J s to new borrowers. We seemed to b e cornmunleuung directly with real estate brokers and sales people as well as with account.ants and attorneys, who regula rly re fcrrcd t h eir clients to us. We were, of course, delighted. Nevertheless . we embarked on a minor campaJgn to draw attention to the "prime property" aspect o f loans secured by Orange Coast real estate -and we called the ads "the Gcographl- cals." W c used h eadlines like: "Big C ao yon" and "Corona del Mar" and Imme- diately realized we were deriving new borrowers from the areas mentioned. Corona del Mar IMnt ltHIU. C-~l Sl\OffCltHs -,. "' llfJ9f'CIOl'PIOoOs OI OUUl~ul Cot~ oet 111¥ -ano I~ ¥1 M-Of P'-,_.., a<-1tn PrOO«toei -~ secure mMIV ol Ille e<l"'IV Ir.al -IOtM ;ittMICllO Oy Nl"*pat1 llllll!Y F...Os II \'OU ow• 11'00t<1Y ~llett ll«OQ me Ot~ 1:41'1 ....a Ml on 1111 llll•ktl )Of "' IQ111ly lrull oeeo ICM• ~ LlllCU lllUt or ~ S..W.y ol ""' Ntw00t1 lau•ly Funos le11n !lepMlmenl I lley " DI N11PY 10 OIYI )'OU onlO<tNllOn -I 'o.i• CM< lilt pllOnt lht nvmoe< K 60 U2~ CIA' THERE'S MORE TO .A As the demand for ·loans Increased, our hard-working investment d epartment (Leon Levinson and Bob G rtffln) added a new man -tennis player and bon vlvant Dick Ehre nfeld. Since he was new to the area we decided to h elp him get started with ads In local tennis club monthlys headed : "When be'• not on the courts, Dick Ehrenfeld ls coun&elliig trust deed lnve1tors." Loter on we Introduced him to readers or the n ew publication The Eiecuttve with the headline: "Newport Equity Fund& arranged over $1,000,000 In bomeowne1' loans last month. Dick Ehreofeld's lnvestor-dleot& &uppUed a sizeable portion of tho8e funds." Ir TAkEs MoNEy ••• To MAb MoNEy! ~· ti'• If' OOOOf'l\11\ll'f r0t ~ bufilf'lol'H Of I NW ·~·t~I ~ (Quit)' FuAOt m.ey f"'' 0•"9 Y°" t~ 0000f1vntty 10 1-...e lllhllfttage of ., w. llC)eC ... .,. '" MOO"OMY , .. , .,, ••• t'tftM'IClnt tOt ~· •fto .,...,., own pume re1ident111 P'QPef1Y •nd P\ew-e • l>eii., '" ...... ~ MCOlnil it you Q"-*'tv. ••• "' ~,., "°"' .,,~ • ~ tor • '"°''""'&! CM!' eenu10• ot yOUf ~ • aoc>t•1Md .,...._ -•' •Wee•••• '"•• '°' Oitlalt1 • ..-10 l•I• 10 • toll'! ofh(•t •• etty ot °"' OfhCH fhe )' •Ol1' l\efO I0"91P 'I°" get IM_.,~°"""°' )\{ewport Equity 'Fun~~.:lrJE 8 WI ftl C4.0M. '0 YOU .............. ..._.,.... .,,. ...... c;-... (1> ... ~Jll~ ., ....... ,. ---.. c_... ... -~~, •• ,... '•rt'''llO ~""=--:-.,~..,_~...,.... .. ,,,. •Jrf\.'«I We wrote: "It Takes Money to Make Money" as an Initial marke ting e ffort for the fledgllng San Diego o ffice, and subh eaded It: •• Aek Doug o r Linda." "Ask Linda," and "The Newport Equity Funde Staff Knows" for \•artous Orange County publications. Doug Bulley, Linda Blue, and the whole Newport Equity Funds staff have appeared In Its many ventlons, and Its most recent appearance Is In the pages of the new. enlarged "Directory" of the Newport Harbor Chamber of Comm-crce. We opened the company's third office in October. After watching the demand for loans rise In one of Southern Callfomta's fastest growtng communities, and reali- zing · we couldn't continue to serve that area well from Newport Beach, we s elected a Laguna Hills location just ac ross the San Dlego Freeway from Mission Vtejo, staffed tt wtth a manager. a loan officer and a secretary, held an ope n house ln December. and put together: "We'~e Alway• Been Clo~ to MiHion Viejo. But Nner Ooaer Than Now." for the ~~ddlebaclc Valley advertising media. SECOND TRUST DEED INVESTMENT THAN 10 '%> INTEREST. . . ' WE'RE CLOSE TO YOU ewporf Equi We've always been close to Mission Viejo ... but never closer than now! 1--.. ··-f\..:°; ...:. • ... ..... .:-""' . :-~-""~'-· ·. It ' ' IJ .Jr',,· ' • • •• -" .1 ., a •4: ·~· .... .... •• f · .. -I... . .. ..... ~ . ··~;·~ ,. . ---. .... .,, . -: .. '~« I>• ........ , ... ' •. ..., t..; ....... ,, '"' ......... -............. . 'Newport Equity • 'Funds, Inc. · ...,...,.°', ... I '" 4 0 ., ( "'''• Ci• • • ~·,It ._, 4tlo" tf Ito .,r 'fl\4illlt +1'4 W4M..7• •• ,.....,v .. ,.,l,.._.,.,..., •. _.,,.,~-.J o;h .,., t.11•-..av 'CJ.. After being slluutcd for six ycnn. In Lhc A\'co Financial Tower In Xcwport \enter as a small, progrc,a!ilve mortgaf(e loan broker, Newport Equity Funds, with three offices, remains n smnll, p rogressh·c mortgage 101rn broker. In 19 75. we arranged jui.t over $3.000,000 In loans. In 1976 we were able to urrangc nearly $7 ,000,000 In loum •• l.lD lncreuse o f 210 pe rcent. We believe that 1977 und the future sctt-1 no llmll~ o n the economic grut\·th und success In Southcn1 C"ullforn lu. BUT WHAT DOES NEWPORT EQUITY Fl';"l;OS DO? Newpo rt E qalty Funds Arranges Loans To Homeowners. ~ow that we're serving the Saddle- back Valley from our new office tn Laguna Hills we're finding out that we're not as well known as w e thought we were. People keep asking us what we do! Well, here's what we do. We arrange loans to homeowners! And that word arrange Is the key. l t means we're brokers. We bring lender and borrower togethe r. The le nder Is looking for a good re turn on his Investment dollars. The borrower pledges the equity In his home to back the loan, so he doeAn't have to have an A-1 rating In D & B. ]U!~t an above-average Income und good credit. So. when we say In our~lher ads ' "If you're In the marke t for a second trust deed loan ... " It means you can come to Newport Equity Funds and we'll help you get the money you need. lluough the fadlitles of Tel-Tape Systems, Newport Equity Funds s ponsors a portion of the Property Owner's Reference Library, a collection of tape recordings whtch may be heard on the telephone. To hear a tape, call 751-7348 day or night an°d request tapes by number. • ~ -General Information • 66 -Collateral Loan8 8 67 -Equity Loans LAGUNA HILLS NEWP@RT BEACH SAN DIEGO -' For OID" llrttt ofterbag la 1977, pie ... t .... tile PAiiie• ~ A• DAIL~ PILOT * W9dnelday, January 5. 1m · Streisand Statement? Only 'Star's' PR Men Know for Sore ~ pie like me. And u Jong as they come. I'm fine. ? c ln Los Angeles, everyone was urged to wear ' white to the post-premiere party for "A Star Is • Born." so Barbra Stretaud, naturally, showed up in black. "I worked really bard on lhls movie: yes. I did tbe editing. Sure ll was hard work, but I learned a lot. It was a great experienc. for me.•· Perhaps the best scenes in lhe movie f'rom a rock fan's point of view are the ones where you see tbe backatqe ambience ol a bqe rock concert. Tbe helicopters. Umoustnes and the rushing, as well u a road manager (played effectively and realiaUcally by Gary Buy for the few minutes be was allowed in lhe film) were on target. They couldn't get away wtth t.bal in New York. but lhe party at the Tavern oo the Green following lhe preview /premiere of the film was a black-tie spectacle nonetheless. HUNDREDS OF INVITED GUESTS jammed the place <w hich bad been decorated into a Christmas winter wonderland), crowded to get to the massive food tables, and ogled Streisand <who wore a tuxedo and black tie . while ~Tops 1.n Popsr, .• , boyfriend/producer Joo Peters wore the tux. but -------~"-' no Ue. Were they making some kind of state· ment?). Not surprisingly, no rock stars were on hand. The closest to one· was Kris K.rlstofferson, in black tux with cowboy boots, who sucked on a silver pacifier. Despite her super-superstar status. as well as the crush surrounding her all night, Streisand seemed vulnerable. yet ever lhe survivor. She told me she felt the movie wasn't really a "rock" film and was slightly defensive about lhe reviews. THE CRITICS? -'EM," SHE said. "They seem intent on writing about this film as if it was about my relationship with Jon, instead of looking al lhe work. But the people are behind me, lhe peo- SENIOR CITIZENS m 10~ Off All lU Parch•••• SAV( ON All PURUlASES BV lllCOMING A MlMllR Of OUR SENIOR ClflllN~ )AVINGS PLAN AT NO COSl 10 YOU. RENTALS & All Pre·P1ld IX Program• Honortd '" __ ....,_, ·-S ALSO, IT IS OBVlOUS lhat Kristofferson knows how to snori cocaine; lhat, or he's a very good actor. <But. as I watched Carly Slmoe watch t.be rum. I couldn't b.elp b11t think bow different lhe movie might have turned out bad she and husband James Taylor starred in It, as was the original intention of screenwriters Jou Didloll and John Gregory Dwute.) ••• About lhe rumors tbal Jolm Leluloa ia putting a band together: Yoko Ono LelUaoa phoned to say that lhey have no tour plans for lhe near future. "I don't know where these things start," abe sald. "We're not doing anything yet, nothing is hap- pening. I mean things are happening, but people thln1t if you 're not doing a record or an album. nothing is happening." Ali for lhe Allen Klein/Beatles lawsuit lbat bas been dragging on since 1972, Yoko confirmed that an out-of-court settlement has almost been reached to end lhe last of their legal ha.sales. but It wouldn't be official until sometime in January. ••• LESTER PERSKY, wbo'will produce lhe mov· ic version or "Hair " at long last, says he's looking for three unknowns to star (two boys and a girl) . . . Peter Townshend is working on lhe next Who LP ln London . . . Ian Hunter will go into the studio with Roy Thomas Baker producing ... Is James Taylor moving over to C~ Records? THE ELECTRIC UGm' ORCHESTRA begln their 10-week U S. tour Jan. 17 in Phoenix and end March 29 in Columbus, Ohio. Multiple concerts are planned for many cities. and large venues Include Madison Square Garden CFeb. 11 >. L.A. Forum (Jan. 27 and 31) and the Philadelphia Spectrum I Feb. 12 and 13). ELO promises that lbeir show this time will feature a more elaborate laser show lhan anything they've done before. &~ ........... LEAD SEX PISTOL Johnny Rotten Steu:an's Group in Law Woes GLASGOW, Scotland CAP> -Scottish singing star Rod Stewart's troupe ran into trouble ln Glasgow after police ralded their hotel. One of Stewart's guitarists and 10 tecfmi. cians in hls road gang were charged Tuesday wilh drug offenses. His girl secretary was charged with obstructing police. Stewart himself was not directly in· volved. Stewart, 31. shares a permanent home in Lo5 Angelos with hi s girlfriend, actress Britt Ekland. He is in Glasgow as part of a European concert tour that began two months ago in Norway. SAYE THE WHOLESALE WAY Couple Guard Park SEATl'LE CAP> -A Seattle couple will soon be moving into a city park to live as part of an experi- ment aimed at reducing vandalism in parks. TIEIS • SHRUIS • HOUSI PLANTS BROW WHOLESAU PlltCES ON THE FOUOW.: Black Pine Tams Junipers N3nd1na Abel•.i. Oleander Moreas Iris and many m0<e ··~ $'300 MINIMUM -,_,_, S.D. Wholesale Growers 11 622 WAlbBAYE. FOUMTAIM VAWY PHOME 546-342' Mr. and Mrs. Francis Hill will move into a 70· foot mobile home as particlpants in a Vandal Watch program initiated by the Seattle City Council. Rent and utilities are free, but the Hills must open the park's restroom every day and remain in lhe area during the evenings to watch for vandals. Shirley Ouster Due? PLAINS. Ga. <AP> -President-elect Carter bas no plans to keep Shirley Temple Black as the nation's chief of protocol, well-placed sources said. The onetime child movie star was named to the ambassador-rank po6t last June by President Ford. She bad been ambassador to Ghana. FREE Original Watercolor Print FROM MARINERS SAVINGS Limited Offer we hove comm:ssioned artist Mork Leysen to depict a wate!tront scene along the SOU them Coltfomia coast. His expressive watercolor, titled ''Newport Connery Docks" ls available tor a limited time. Yours Free (Ofter expires Jan. 10, '77) You ore invited to come to Mariners Savings and receive one of these ex. elusive 16" x 20" full-color prints to enjoy in your home or office. We hove a limited number. so visit us soon. Mariners is Part of Your Community We ore aware of the Importance of being a part of each community we serve. That's why we offer you some. thing of real value to Introduce you to Mariners Sovlngs. Not on!y do we pay more interest on your savings than any bank. but we also provide you with many more tree services for your convenience. Earn 8.06°k · on a Slx·Year 7.75% Certificate of DeposH. A. Mariners 8aviR.QS ... and Loan ~latk)n NEWPORT HACH <M~tnOttlCI) 1515Wtsltllf10r (8''f11de Ctnltf) 1024 flayskl• Or 1714) ~2·4000 FSfJC --- - Rockers Shockers At Plane LONDON <AP ) - Four·letter words new at London's Heathrow Airport as Brit.aln'a l'.DOlt notariQU& rock eroup, t.be Sex Pistols, left ror Amsterdam. Airllne staff said lhe group shocked onlookers Tuesday by vomiting and spitting in the GOOD LUCK! MINNESOTA VIKINGS 1912 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa, Cl (714) 642-3177 terminal building and US· ------------------ing obscene language. THE SEX Pistols -in· eluding lead sln&er Johnny Rotten -caused a rumpus last month when they used explicit four-letter words on a live oatlooa! televtsion pro1ram. Tbelr subse- quent nationwide tour was a nop as nine cities and towns reacted by cancelling their ap· pearances. "Tbe group are the m06t revolting people I have seen in my life," aald a check-in desk girl at the KLM Airlines count.er. "ONE OF THE group was sick in the corridor leading lo the aircrall. He was sick again in a rubbiah bin while others were spitting on lhe floor and at each other," she told reporters. "The group called us filthy names and insult· ed everyone in sight." ONE FELLOW passenger, Freida van Roiden of Rotterdam, witnessed the incidents. ''I've never heard of 0 1 llwfn ~ [?!]~ but bought my new cer ln ~~~from JOHMSON &SONn ":.\1 Johnson & X>n ';OIJ re rrcored hke a member of the family lheir salesman. H 0 Pr1ce was h19hly recommended. and he took good core of me. Johnson & X>n hos a good reputation. and me1r serv1ce deportment 1s outstanding. Thofs why I recommend you drive to Johnson & Son. G111e em o try" CJIAHOE CWHTY S 11MSl LHXl.~Y CUl£R.SHI' fl6 YEARS 1:1 Fl!lNCl.Y FAMU SEJIVUI If& A* I . I& ohnson&son 2e2e HARBOR BLVD COSTA MESA MO.b630 the Sex Pistols before, --------------------. but I certainly won't forget them lo a hurry. They were the most de- generate bunch of small- minded chlldren I have evers«n." .~~\\~.f. ~ .. ~\f~f(,~ ~~~~\\·~\: \\ •. ~#·~·· \\ .. ~~ ~~f(, ... ~ \\•)~ ~ A" .... ~t(}. ~.. 6 This handy device -. ~ ~ :...~ calculates the probable ~\, ~ ~ ~-current market value of " •• -~~ your home based on when you F ~~ bought it and what you paid for it. f/)~ OJ-Turn it over and it allows you to compute for yourself the amount of cash you may ..---.-,.---. be able to borrow through a g~1111'11 Newport Equity Funds· \• ,, \Hto.• 1 '"'' arranged equity loan. '\ "" I \It I I ,\It Ill Whether you're looking for a loan or not, if you'd like to have a Home Market ' Value Calculator, ask , a Newport Equity Funds Loan Officer for one. Or mail the coupon. We'll send you one. No obligation. , Newport Equity 'Funds, Inc. Licensed Broker WE 'RE CLOSE TO YOU! 620 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach (92660) (714) 644 -8824 25283 Cabot Road, Laguna Hills (92653) (714) 830·5700 ................................................. Mill To«lay NAME ••• NEWPORT EQUITY FUNDS, INC. 620 Newport Center Drive Newport Beach (92660) STAEET _________ -T------~ CITY _____________ ZIP ___ _ C Send me your calculator . . C Have a Loan Officer call me, too PHONE• ___ _ _ .. GooSER.:S BABYrooD Thyroid May Be Culprit By DR. STEINCROHN Dear Dr. Stelnc:robn: Many people don't adrrul it but I do: I am probably the laziest man ever created. l simply have an aJ. lergy to work -physical or mental. I was born hopelessly lazy. Have always hated to work. BELIEVE IT or not, l have bad 31 jobs the past seveo years. I quit work- ing hours b e for e checkout lime. I 'IL quit working right in the mid· dle of something impor. tant. I don't mind leav- ing people in the lurch. Therefore, you can un- derstand why I have been fired so often. I am 42, am over- weight and always tired. Although I sleep a Jot I feel as i( I ha ve never had enough rest. I do not s moke or drink, but l do overeat. I HAVE NO real re- ason for telling you my troubles except that you , DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE might be able to find someone like m yself in your office files. Perhaps you were able to diagnose the reason for laziness. I went to our family doctor about ri ve years ago. He found nothing wrong. All he s aid was, "It's in your head . You're j ust lazy and y ou 'll have t o t a lk yourself out of it.'• ISN'T IT possible there may be another re- ason? Frankly. 1 am beginning to get tired or looking for a new job every f e w m o nths . Luckily, I haven't any family lo s upport. l have been through three mar- riages . F ortuna te ly, there are no st arving children to support. -- Mr. G. ..... ~1 ENT I'll tell you abourotte-pataenl who was a mirror image of yourself. Just as lll2y and s hirtless. Il e fe lt there was no hope for rum. He was '"pushed" into an examinat ion by his wife. L1kr you, he was overweight and ph)sical- ly and mentally bred all the time. I had a hunch 1t might be due to Hn underactlvP thyroid. Tests proved that h e did ha\£' hypothyroidism Aflpr a few months on thyro1<f extract he changed into 11 vigorous , wide-awake man with a purpose 1n hfe. This may not he your trouble. But why notfind out 7 MEDICALETTF.S Dear Dr. Stelncrohn: My husband died or a coronary attack at the age of 45. I have ao only son aged 11. He has been complaining or chest pains on and off He was close to his father and I wonder 1f these are "sympathetic" pains. I le used to see ru!I father durin~ angina at ., taclts. Is it possible for an 11-year-old lo have angina? -Mrs. U. COMMENT : H 's a cUcbe to say everything is possible. For example, we know that · atherosclerosis (trouble jn the inner coals or arteries ) may even begin in infancy. There have even been rare ex- ami>les or patients whose coronary arteries were narrowed in the very young. But my guess is thaL the cheat pains your son is having are not due to angina. Yet they deserve 'investigation, for your peace of mind and his. Kave his pediatrician or family doctor look him over. PACK Of 100 MR. COFFEE COFFEE f IL TERS They fit 111 Mr. Coffee bftwtrs. l'1,.59~. OCEAN I ~~ J~t<( SPRA y )· ~ JUICES ~ <n11grapt or Cra· RAM£N SUPREME IKOt. 32 OllllCtS. ORIENTAL NOODLES O.ldocts Oldt11, letf or Poct. 3 oi. 23.5 OllCf.S Hol'fu. 24 oz. 3 FLAVORS 59! GRANOLA CEREAL l l111ofMll, leisitl or 1 Grlitls. 16 01. KAL KAN MPS CHUNIY DOC FOOD .... ,, ..... .,..,... ..... C99 .. ........ BOX Of 12 TIUS 444 LUXURY DECOR MIRROR TILES Colors & pattem1. Usuolly sold , fOf' 3 times"'°"' tlwl this. 12".r· ....-n~~~~!!!l!L:S: 12" •Mres, "SJ to inst.U. _ ,.,.,. 11-• • .. • • • "' L8 Tope not included. REGAL & VISTA FRESH COOKIES Cllokt of Chtcolltt ICtf I Ow• plt1 *""~ er ... , Mtr· ::.a.,..., ._.n• niftt Coffff & ot....i (IO• ld11. litditft.tr.tll ........,, STUART HALL FASHION TABLETS & ENVELOPES REG. 79C EA. !79c Ihle ,_., Uttlt W..1,s, tM Merli o.nltfl clttigmt loud envelopes to ll01ch .-rettl •Costa Mesa lll E. 17th St. •s..taAno 3325 aristol • MocA,.,_. Santa Ana •Costa Mesa HOO twW' .. 'Wilion I 406 'W. fdlecJtr' a1htol Fountain Valley 1614 t Har4aor .. Edfft9tt- MATCHING HAHDTOWlLS 99c :s 22 x 44 IN. BATH SIZE FANTASTIC lOW PRICE 6~! If pttftc1 I."· MATCMlllG SPECIAL BUY! CANNON ROSE PRINT TOWELS WASH CLOTHS 49c If ,Meet Ht Sligllt .,.,.tctlons do 110t Impair cl....wllty. Pitili. 11111 II' GoW lost print on llont beck· fr041M. l•nriovs, ~ & blo.tifol. hy w.I REG I 2.t11A.4ta 2FOR CAPTAIN>S CHAIR CORDUROY PADS GtW '"*'., o...,.. Seper. El Toro fl Toro ot lodfltld w estminster Wtttmiftsftc ot G~ Wot • HufttincJfon Beach 9 U I Acbits ot lroc*hwat OUR lOWEST PRlCE EVER ON NATUUl VITAMIN E IOmf Of 100 ~--- . NATURAL VITAMIN E •• ~,,a ... , .......... , VICKS NYQUll FOR COLDS Niifitrille ceU ~::::::=:---..-.. .•• z. 109 FORMULA 44-D COUGH MIXTURE Decnautwt for. ....loi.tite. rwicE AS FAST Al ''OI aonuOFlOO BUFFERIN TABLm Woe't .,.,, st-.dl, relines pllilt. 6Jc COLGATE DENTAL CREAM •IHGUlAI •UNSCUCTtO •l'OWOI• 99c ROSE MILK SKIN CARE CREAM I e1. S.f1111J l '"'"" .. ii. ( Vi OUNCt ·~----l 1~~ . ·.::....~ s ... '~~-l V~~~E ·~~ ............. 2" Al• DAIL y PILOT Wednelday, Janiwy 5. 1m ~ OC 'Shut Your Tap' ~ ~Program Under ·Way , The 1t1un1c1pat Wldtr l>iatrrct of Orance Cq,unty bas launcl>ed a "Shut Your Tasf' waler conservation pro- 8fam aimed at lowering domestic coaaumption by one-tblrd. According to district manager Den· Dia MacLain, the progl'am wjll con· serve energy as well as lower water bUla. Mac Lain noted lhat most people fail to realize that electricity is needed to pump water. baun, .. -be said. MacLalD added that additional pumplJll tbrou1b a clty't water system coaaumea even mol'eebergy. MacLaln•a home energy-savlDg blnta include: -checking for leaka. Even small leaks add up to many wasted galloo.a and kilowatts. -Run dishwashers and clothes washers with run loads only. A disbwuher uses about 25 gallons per load while a clolbes washer uses 35 to 70 gallons each time. Energy ls needed to beat the water used. ORANGE COUNTY Campus Toor Set at CSLB "To deliver one acre-foot (326,000 gallons: the amount a family or five would use in one year) from Northern California requires the energy : equivalent of five barrels ol oil," said : llacLain. • "This equals 3,300 k:Qowatt-bours of l electrical power, enough to run a ' clothes washer more than 6,500 l -Flush toilets only when necessary since the average UltJet uses five to seveo gallons per flush. -Avoid unnecessarily long showers to cut down on energy needed for water beaten. New students entering Cal Stale Long Beach are invited to a four-hour orientation program ~ tour Saturday at 9 a .m. at the university. For more information, 498-4972. . CHOC's Chairman Named Entry Due UJuntians F et.ed Dr . Arnold 0 . Beckman of Corona del Mar, chairman of the board o f Beckman Instruments, Inc .• bas been named honorary chairm an of th e Childrens Hospital of Orange County <CHOC) Priority Program, a $3.5 Applications for lbe Dbneyland 1976 Com· munity Service, and Bicentennial Awards mmt be postmarked or delivered directly to Disneyland no later than midnight. Jan. 10, according to Mary B. J ones, Disneyland com· munity affairs manager. This year the total award amount has been increased to $75,000. There are SO category awards of $1.000 each, two Special Judges' Awards of $5000 each, and one Outst.aodlng Award ol $10,000. I million capital funds campaign, Charles W. Hester. ca mpaign chairman announced re- cently. Members of orgaalzations interested in more information em contact the recording secretary of the Community Services Awards Program a~S33-44.58. ext. 538. CHOC is a non-profit, , voluntary, acute care pediatric hospital which serves as a referral center for all of Orange County. Since opening in 1964, CHOC has treated over 275,000 young ~ pie. Moms Aided A video education system for new mothers will be purchased by the UCI Medical Center with a $1,950 grant from lbe Orange County Chapter, National Foundation· March of Dimes. Red Cross Asks for Donors During extended boll· • p Deaths Elsewhere ( day hours, The Orange County Chapter of the American Red Cross col· lected a total of 382 pints .LOS ANGELES IAP) -Award-winning film- maker Tom Gries, 54, best known for directing "QB Vil" and "Helter Skelter.·· died of an ap- parent h eart attac k while playing tennis at a club in Pacific Palisades. of blood, but according to Dr. Frank Kendrick, "the need for blood COD· tioues." MATHENY a..-i wflll ottk i.nt CJIU<k Smilll of H RAY MATHENY. P.t\...O -n Tiw C.lv•ry O..pol C.O.i. MHA, Ca JMljary •. 1'11 H• Wa\ • ·-· ol Prim• "''-' to be •I El TO<D Colla-... C•lllomo& \<>•••'~ -C:-.,., SMITH TUTHILL l.AM8 O'O SMITH TUTHILL l.AM8 -IChlf WttlcliftO..potdcrKt°" -- The Red Cross Blood Center, 601 N. Golden Circle Drive, Santa Ana, is open Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. and Saturdays from lOa.m. to2:30p.m. 0..0.1 __,... KING MAY NIE HARRY f ICING. fOf"-N1ldem of Call 83S-S381 for an ap- pointment. KEITH al!E"T HAYNIE ._, Co\I• Mew, C•llforn1• '"-'" al Or-C•l•lorn14 P••'A!d -•• YU<el.,., C•lllornle P••se<I .. ,., ........ ,., 1 ••11 H~ I\ \UNI-by.... J~ •• 1•11 S~·Wd by .... wit" Wlf•Kel1•H1yn1• twown•CN"-"M ~•1114 ICl"Q of Uw -·OM'°" ICranU Rocnard A Cl•rnrnGn\. £dw1n!IC1110of All'\ka. I-~ dltllQfller C..t11y H1Yn•• Of Or-_..,. SliKtt of (osi. WU. C. ~ Vk kl Jo Elltn l(r..ill S..•••<•• wtll"" 8...-.d of F.-.sno. C.. •• ,.,,... \r~..-S i.ld fhur\dly J1nU<1tY ••t 10 OOAMel PN<I S.-of El~. C. .. Myrtle $MITH TUTHILL LAMB W~\lchll ~rl>V ot S1nra Ana. Ca Allee 0..001 "'"" Pnt'>' R11on v~"'' ot EHiman of Co•l• Mew C• ten UCll ftt'IQ lnf~rm•M H•rbO,. Rf\1 orolf\dc:f\lt(lf'ttft Servlcei pendt"fCI ., 11Mrnor111 PMk SMITH TUTHILL 8tll-IYMo'1..ar• LAMB W .. ICHll (111.,.1 cllfKIO" ~AGGAllO -BASIL A JAOGAllO. ,...,_ tJlt llAY ~·· -C..l1foml• p .. --JOMH 10•<11,.,110 RAV ,....,..,, of JIW'll .. ,., l . ••11 Sllrv•-by""""' .. 0.... ~ C.tilor"'• PH..0 -.y Joan Je901td ol Ill• llorne. - _,, 1. 1'11 11 IN •91 of u '"° d<NQM.,. Lind' Seet>ero of Autium. $unrl....S by Ill\ wllo Jt<Ql>lll,_ Ray Of C:. 111,... il\len EOM Po'1t!r. "'-Y ... -· Cfllldr9n R-r -5"9rry H•ll•We ll JOYC• Tllurbon all of llay of Wl\Nflt\Ofl S1'•• -~rry EnolanO . I wo 9rendc lllldr•n fl•• oi ~·· An• M•~~ -IC-Motmorlal •ervlcH 11 e.11 er-lwe• MlwOtn Of El Toro a•w w"''""° t>y _,.,.,, on Tllu...,.y J..,_.., •It •l•D·<l .. IOron o ... Oulro C..ndv I 00 PM will! R••· EdWnd HICl<S al· Dvtro. 1C.ev1n .J•ftW1n t<r" J~"""'•llOf fk:l•t"'O •nd pr1v1te tntemwnt oar.. Co••• M••• broth .. 8• II Ill y Of 110 ... -· ,,. ,,,_ to Bethel 84plill Or-•'""Mr And M f\ ( F x ..... 11 Oourcll, tOI !toulll EU<lld, Senta ..... ot Tr.>vwno O..k• 1.,.0 Q••-11•-. C..lllornl•. '1104 Bell 8ro1dw1y -••rww MMC-.n ~ Et T Oro Jwf-rev Mof"h•f'Y dtrKtOr"-.... QI~·· Ana S.r•1<t\ _..,.,, OYOall _,, S al 10 00 AM •t SMITH ROY JACK GYGER. ••"Cllftt of TUTHILL LAMll WH ICll" 0-1 wttll O>U• Mew, C.lofON111 PUMG -•Y .. Of F W.•nlO'I lk•-• ol "'° c;..,. .i-..ry • 1•71 S..N1"9<I IW llK ..... lrll B•ot• Cllurtn olloCll ll"O Int" llern•c• G•9t' of ,.,. ,,_: - -Hatl>O• A•\I Mt,_i.t ,__ ~' Jacki• Sy\¥1\ of ..._, SMITH TUTHILL LAMB W..\cllll -'I. C.. P-11¥ 5<:-df c.i. aw..10.roo<,Of"\ -·-....... C.. '4•MY H•l•U of ('.MU HACH~Z -· (.e two -n Floyd Gnil!r; ELUI llVTH HACHEZ ,__Of ~lll0-1111U•olArt1-;e-"-°' C.0.IAI ~ CAlllO<n•• "•-_,,., OltM of Arlrot1•. Odell Sfftllll of DK-1' "" S..rvl..., !)or .,,.. ""'-· •IQhl Oteft<kllll"' ... ; two -· R_., Hee.,.1 of C.-~. .,...i-9'_111_. F-r• -c... ~ J•.,.... Hee.,., al C.O.C• .,. Frldey J-ry ' •I 1.00 Pllll 11141 -.. C. . OleM He<,,.t oi Geo1.t .,_, CMIWI wltll Ille ,..., .- -Ge ; 11-~ TllrMt ,_ C-. l.Jnd'Hll olfkl .. 11\0 lftl~,.,,.... .. Ooed -· c. . Ev• LMv _,, o1 SoMr9, ~ GefMt••v ,.., _ _., Ulll C. -brOll\er\ HttOIO H llwMt al el 811" 8'-•Y Mo<t ... ry ,.....,_., ..._,.,nq1..,. !M.Yll Cl • S..-CI H ...,,.,, ~ to a .JO PM Ii.II ~ ,.,.,_et A".,. .. ' Se<•k n wtll 1111 Mor1_,,dl..cton. llelcl -10•Y Jan.,.ry S ~, 00 PM MAMU. TOii 111 $MITH TUTHILL LAM8 -ltll" LILLIE MAY HAMILTON,•- ----------· of Hwntlnoton •••ell. Ceutorftl• PU\ICI .... , Janu••Y '· '"' IALTl-IRGOOH PUHtlAl HOMI Corona del Mar 6 73-!Mt)O Costa Mesa 646-2424 au.110ADWAY MOITUAU 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·91 50 McCOllMICJl NOITUAlllS Laguna Beach 494-9•15 Laguna Hills 76&-0Q33 San Juan Capistrano '495·1776 -·•I MNICI••• • 00 PMOfl'!tatl;t" dity ~ I el IClll9d0m Hall o4 .Jot_.,, WllM"*'· Huntl"910ft ile«", c..i 1m..ment Peclllc View ~I Pertt PACll'IC VIEW MORTUAAY cllrtc~ Mot 7700 LOVIC• HERMAN LOVICE. (Hld..nt Of ..__, Beacll. Celllornle PesMd ewey .i-v •, ttn. Survived tw "'' ""'* Htll• Lovlce. S.ntlces wtll oe- et • 00 PM T"urlday J•_., 6 at Pa<lllC View Cl\apol Ollkllll"O A- MII S0111trmitft Of Temple Bal Yllltm, ,..__. lleecll, C.. "-'Cll'IC VIEW MORTUARY .... WD0'1 8HCll dl-t. ""' .... voo. DOll0,.1110 THOMAS OOffOFRIO. ~ of ~I• Ml ... C.lllornl• P-_, OK~ 16. 1'16 He Is '"""* -~#IM J.-1e Donofrio of 1111 -· .,.,."'' Cetlltrlne lftd Anl"°"Y OoftOfrlo ol HunllllQIOft •••'"· Cellf-e 5-~VkH will be -Slilw-dl• J-ry a. •t 12 NOOft .. 1111 _,_ rHldltnce, ••Y» 11111 Slrw4. 0>sw1Mw.c.. Parenting Forum Set Tbe Or ange County Chapter of lbe March of Dimes will host a con- ference on .. The Fine Art ol Parenting," J an.12, at 8:45 a.m., at Saddleback High School, 2802 S: Flower St. 1 Santa Ana. The all-day conference in the school's forum wtll feature numerous ex· perts in education for parenthood. Interested persons may make re· servattons by sending a check ~or $2.00 payable UJTbe~ational Founda· lion !larch of Dimes, Orange County Cbapter, ill W. Dyer Road, Suite 10-G, Sauta Ana. For more information, 979-2270. Heart Shirts Aid Re8earch The Orange County Chapter of the American Heart Association ls of- fering white T -shirts emblazoned wlth the of· flclal Heart AasoclaUon emblem, a red heart with yellow torch, with the slogan, "We're fight· log for your life," stamped in blue letter· Ing. The shirt.a cost.s $3.SO plus tax and are avalla· ble at the Heart Aasoda· tion office, 1043 Clv1c Center Drive West, San· ta Ana. 'ACIAC YllW MIMOatALrAH Cemetery Mortuary Chapel )500 Pacific View Onve 'ieWPOrt ~lifofnla 644-2700 GOOD LUCK! OAKLAND RAIDERS ,_PAWILY COM>MIAL FUHUAI. HOMI 1801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893-3525 wmtt' MOUUAIY 821 Mein St. Huolington Beach 538-e53G MTN fUTMM..L lAMI Out Wlll'QM~ .... OC Cons11D1ers Offered Help Consumers with comptllota can 1et advice ~ belp 'from consumer affairs repreaentaUvea tbrou&h a service ottered by the Oranse County Of. ftce of Consumer Affalra. RepresentaUvee are available at the followilll locations: -Fountain Valley Community Servtc• Pro- ject, 10200 Slater Ave., Tuelday ooly, Rand:r 8'1aoo, representative, telephone983-8321, ext. 241. -HUNTINGTON BEACH City Hall, 2000 Main St .. Monday through Friday, 10 a .m . to 2 p.m .,. Ruth Wilsoo, repl'fJSentative, telephone S36-5.265 or 536-5266. -Laguna Beach City Hall, S05 Forest Ave .. Thursday only, 12:00 to 2 p.m., Kerry Keeler, representative, telepbooe4tt-l.13', ext. 221. -SOVTB ORANGE OOUNTY ReiJonaJ Civic Center, 30143 Crown Valley Parkway, Laiuna Niguel, Wednesday oaly, GtnaJ Brady, represen· tative, telephone 495-1650. Salt•F-• Robert Guggenheim of Newport Beach has been named chairman of the Ad· vance Gifts Commit· t ee of the C HOC Priority Program. Taxidermy On Display Orange Co unt y oaturalllt and educ.tar Jamea Orth; will de- monstrate taxidermy methods for preservtns ! · blrda, mammals, rep- tiles and l.naecta Jan. 12, at 7:30 p.m . in the Orance County HJatory Museum. 'Ibe museum ls located at Bay View SchooJ, 2.531 Orchard Street, Santa Ana Heights. The pn> gram la free. Neotune Society Otl!MATIOH 8 Ult1Al AT $P 646-7431 Y-111<IM111<otr1t"fMatlt ....... -.--c-.....~ c.tlller .... _.... tlln. Qa/9r. M!t.IBEA F 0 IC • Wells farFp's Guaranteed GroWth Certificate. .... Now you can be assured of reaching your savings goal om:, fiv e, ten or even twenty years from today. Wells Fargo's Guaranteed Growth Certificates let you make the down payment on your savings goal now-and earn the balance with your interest Plus-the interest rate is guaranteed. Right now, with most Guaranteed Growth Certificates maturing in 6 years or more. you11 earn 7.5% which, with daily compounding. yields 7.79% annually. Your interest rate can't go down. And just look how the money adds up: Wthls Invest this amount now .•• II your 20-Year 15-Year 10·Y• e-Yur •Hur ump pl ... Certitlcata Certificate Certlflclte c.tftclte Cer11ftcate $20.000 $4.463.29 $6.493.80 $9.448.06 $12.753.15 $14,965.70 $15 000 $3,347.4 7 $4.870.35 $7,086.04 s 9.564.86 $11,224.28 $10,000 $2,231.65 $3.246.90 $4.724.03 $ 6.376.58 s 7.482.85 s 8,000 $1,785.32 $2.!197.52 $3,779.22 s 5,101.26 $ 5.986.28 s 4,000 $1.298.76 St.889.61 s 2.550.63 s 2.993.14 interest 7.5% 7.5% 7.5% 7.5% 7.25% Rate 7.79% 7.79<Vo 7.79% 7.79% 7.52% hof1 ftw A-•re mert'\i '-'..t'fla'K ru1.~., ... 1,... I""'. lf"C'uf'M~ ,,, I ')(K)to S.X>CXX)lill'ld ..,,.,, othet "'lfllf4Jt'\ tl lt.11 ?() '9'' . .t'f d\l•1.1D4t rt-'7tfJI iJW ti i .. rt It t:' ltw'ff•t1.1f rA lflft"f ~lh~ t( l"'ttt.( ..,, '2 lllf fiOVC:llQft rJ lht! mlttt'il r.Jlt to 111~1 ol •C<ul.11 p.t\loOO()lo w..n~"I °"•"I' '"""s w•ll•O•J~n ~"<>' 10 'Nl"'4J All in alt, there are over a hundred different investment possibilities with Wells Fargo Guaranteed Growth Certificates. The people at your nearest Wells Fargo Bank will be happy to tell you about any of them. Proven That's Wells Fargo Bank. ~--~ 427 e 17th SI CO.I• M a 1112 ... N, Clsta ... Cl (714) 642-3177 p>sta Meaa Oll•ce ~50 E.st 11 St 9 7 Foun1e1n ~alley OllK:e t 6025 Bro&l(1'1urst St 92108. Newpon Beach Othc~ 680 Newpon Center Or 92e60 c Diversified ~DITOR'S NOTE: Thu crflcw, JOit .bl o #PW• obotd Uw ~rial~ lMCrii., UQ#ldlw Uw peopl.9 Giid J)OUtkl mvolwd m tJw 4Upit•. ByaoDANGOVE SACRAMENTO <AP> -Laetrtllat.a describe themselves as patriots assaultinc tbe butioaa of "ofttclaldom and medical orthodoxy." Inside the bastions. health officials say they are protecUng the public agaiMt quackery and fraud. THE TWO SIDES AGREE that Laetrile, Vitamin Bl 7 and amygdalin are subsla.DUally llmilar -an extract ol apricot kemds. But while LaelriJe proponents recommend it u a treatment and preventive for cancer, the other side says it's illegal, d unproven effectiveness. and poulbly dangerous. They say users are ool only wasting money. but probably also foregoing proven treatment. lo between are the cancer victims, frightened and desperate. DR. EMIL J. FREIREICll OF the University d Texas System Cancer Center writes that buman.s commonly use the psychological technique of de· Dial or medical problems. delaying consultaUon with physicians. "The proponents of unproven or quack re medies definitely contribute to this process or de laying treatment. They offer such things as prayer, vitamins, and other relatively harmless medica lions, which the propo ( 1 ) nents claim can cure, or MEDICINE greatly palliate. thtt cancer patient. "Therefore, if in dividuals subject themselves to these treatments, they may relieve their anxieties. but their cancers, as is so regularly the case. will continue to progress." LAETRILISTS CITE THOUSANDS or testimonials of persons who say Laetrile was beneficial -giving them a feeling or wellbeing, ap- petite, less pain. and in some cases complete re- mission of cancer. Their promotional efforts have snowballed In recent years. Laetrile's unusual rise in prominence can be traced to a 1956 meeting of the blocbemlst who patented it, Ernest T. Krebs Jr., 63, of San Fran· claco, and entrepreneur Andrew R.L McNaugbton, 60. AN ARMS MERCHANT WHO freely admits providing arms to both Israel and Cuba, McNaughton said in a recent interview that be sought projects "on the outer limits of scientific knowledge." He said he listened to Krebs for 2~ boors in a Mlami Beach drugstore and "found Laetrile to be an entrancing problem. "We didn't have wide availability of Laetrile," he said. "It was too easy to suppress, so we bad to make it." McNAUGHTON SAID HE SET UP factories in Mexico, West Germany, Italy, Switzerland and Monte Carlo. Tb en came Laetrile clinics. At one point, McNaughton supplied a person who led authorities to believe that organized crime figures were interested. McNaughton explained that in Montreal bis foundation f•rnished Laelrilelotbe late Dr. Job A. Morrone of New Jersey, wbo treated the slater of Joseph "Bayonne Joe" Zicarelll. MCNAUGHTON SAID BE LATER met Zicarelll, wbo "was effusjvein his thanks" and said he would do something "to help the work." He saJd bjs nonprofit foundation received a $100.000 check from an unknown person in Miami, foUowed by two more totaling $30,000. ''We Just deduced they were from Zicarelll, •·he said. Later rePorts said Zlcarelll in 1964 became a silent shareholder tn McNaugbtoo's Blosymes In· temationaJ, Ltd .. which made Laetrile in Canada. But McNaughton s aid by then be had taken out his shares and left the firm to others. "NOBODY CONTROLS ME," McNaughton says indignantly. "1be Mafia oever attempted to control Laetrile Ir they had, Laetrile would have become legal years ago." Another prominent figure in the Laetrile story is George Kell, an attorney from Modestowbotold a legislative committee last year: "I've been able to defend client.a successf'Ully, except one, by contend· ing they are treating patients instead of cancer." Kell has represented one of the oldest and most active pro-Laetrile organitatioas, the National HeaJth Foundation, founded in 1955. TIIE LARGEST PKO.LAETRILE group is the Committee for Freedom of Choice in Cancer Therapy. Inc., of Los Altos, founded in 1972. 1t was in 1972 that Laetrile became a political issue. says Michael L. Culbert, edltorofthe group's monthly, "The Choice ... The occasion, Culbert said, was the first Laetrile court case of Or. John A. Richardson of Albany, Callf .. a memberoft.heJoho Birch Society. Culbert, a Birch Soclet,y member the put few months. said despite the involvement of some socie· ty members in Laetrile, "it's not a Birch project." BOMBINGS DWINDLE SAN FRANC ISCO (AP> -There were 16 terrorist bombings in the San Francisco Bay area in 1976, about half the number in the previous year. the FBI reports. Charles Bales. special agent in charge here, uld the New World Llberallon Front, a Manlat-Leninis\ revolu· tloaary group, claJJned rHponsibility for the m*rity of the bomb-1.nCS ln both years -10 ln 1'76 and 18 In 1975. AO,..rt•\emeftl 'Just A nothe r Dish' Valued at $1750.00. NORTHBROOK. 111.-A major art exchange here report~ that a man who found several· "dishes" in his attic was amazed to learn that one was valued at S 1750.00. The cxcllll11ge sa)"t that, while this price is \lnu&U• ally high, ex~ptional col· lcctor's plates have been appreciating quickly on the market. To aid lnvc$tOl'I, the ex· change offers a f'ree report ---------........ on what to look ror, whtt1 ,, PWMl!t40 Hl.AflH6 All COMO. """'-·--· ~e If\ YoYt A .. a-<Atf MllllON VllJ() '"21 c.-~ ... llO .. ~,.,..., ...... " .. , 4tM401 C08TAMfi;r-' l~INI ,._, l••cl .,_ ~ 642·' 75 .,,,.~, to buy, what to pay and much more, includlna op- portunities in promi1in1 plates 1till at low prices. To gtt JOUf frte ,.,.n with no obligation, Jutt •send rour name, address, and'tlp code to the Brad- ford Exchanae,19701 Brad· ford Place, Northbrook. Jlllnoi• 60062. A p<>ttcard will do. To be &ure of re-~iving your free copy, please mail your request before Jllluary IS, 1m. I -----. -~ --~ ---, .. .. Groups Back Laetri'le FR£EDOM·OF-CllOICE P&f:SIDENT Robert W. Bradford, 4S, claims there are almost :iOO chap- ters nationwide and about 28,000 members, includ· Ing 1.200 medical professionals. of whom 800 are medical doctors. Bradford, also a Birch Society member, said last year's committee budiel was just under $100,000, with the mmey coming from contributions and dues. Culbert said that one reason such a large number of Birch Society members are involved with Laetrile is that the flnt people who began Richardson's defense fund were fellow members of the society. He said they have remained interested in the Issue because ills an example of aovemment interference ln their lives. • ANOTHER ORGANIZA110N IS THE Interna· tional Association of Cancer Victims and Friends <LACVFJ . founded in l963 by the late Cecile Hoff· man, to whom McNaughton said he gave Laetrile in Canada. He said she couldn't P81 but wanted to do something in return. McNaughton urged her to go out and ''establish a foundation and spread the gospel" about Laetrile. Health officials aren't sure what to do about such organized and vigorous promoUoo. "grasp at the balt dangled before him." At Sloan·Ketter1ng Institute in New York. spokesman Jerry Delaney reported an lncreue in inqlliries about Laetrile. ''SOME SA V THE LAETRILE people are harassing them. Some say they're being told things li.l<e, 'Your child will diet.fhe doesn't 1et Laetrile.'" Delaney aaJd. The battle ls shlftln& to the courts and legislatures as aupporters push for legalization of Laetrile. also known as amygdalln. Vitamin 817. Aprikern and other names. They contend Laetrile is being suppmsed by a compiracy of medical. pharmaceutical and govern· meotinteresta. But Paul Sage of the Food and Drug Ad· ministration says, .. U they win politically what they've lost scientifically, it wlU be very un- fortunate. bee a use a lot of people are going to die.·· JN SOME J URISDICl'IONS, Colorado and Alaska, LaetrlJ.ist.11 are claiming victory. A federal appeals court in Denver ordered the FDA .. to develop a record" supporting the agency's ban on Laetrile. That order followed a decision of U.S. District Court Judge Luther Bohanon in Okiahoma City permitting a Laetrile user to import supplies re· gardless or the federal ban. Similar suits are being filed in other states. SllaredBe ... n U.S. voters who re- ject~ all candidates listed on their Nov- ember ballots voted instead for a wide variety of others in· eluding Richard Nix- on, Linda Lovelace. Snoopy and Mickey Mouse. Topping all write-ins was In· dependent Eugene McCarthy, a survey shows. All 833-0555 FDA SPOKESMAN WAYNE PINES said the agency "bas done all it can to label Laetrile as a fraud and a hoax. We intend to do more ... " But editorial writer F.J . lngleflnger of the New England Journal of Medicine suggests denounce· ments of Laetrile by the medical establishment may ooly reinforce a cancer victim's inclination to Robert W. Bradford. head of the na· tion's largest pro-Laetrile group, •aid the Denver decision "will be a tremendous boost" to what be e&Ued "very active legislative programs in 20 states ... " ThOllDJUq n....a. Please ask for .. RAY" s:::;. .. We offer to buy your old vthide. HOWARD ch.vroa.t S YEAR LIGHT BULBS • ci.-trom a . eo. eo. n Of 100 •« bulbl. • Don't ... '*''"' 1 .. .,,. 49ttt. wn11e au.iinttltK IHt • $CHtY. no tt''"'"'<""-NOt •II 1l•m1 "ai -''°''.._ .. o.116'> 21 PieceSoc11e1s.t sA£ _ .................... n No.I I HM 21 Atct Socket Set Metric .................... !\'!'. "'°·•01 22 Piece Socket Set ............................... l!lf P. No.~J~1 22 PilCI Socket Set ............................... l!lf P. .. .-.060 40 Piece Socket Set ............................... !IPP. ""'o~l 26 Piece Socket Set SAE .................... J 4! No.OJ~ 35 Piece Oxwall Socket Set .............. J41 62 Piece Socket Set SAE & Metric...... 4 ,A . -· .,. ......... . _ ........... ..... • R......i .... 1er lock•"ll bu1111n ...-...... , ....... .-... OUR REG. 11.89 nllll EA. No.111i. "C" or "D" BAllERIS w"ti. ownut,.t '•ti -SOU""• 1'0 rAlftC.t\ih.kt • One roll coven • 100 14 ft. area. • Ouelity made. .. m1...,f~. • Choic;e of wll11t, un or green. • EMy to d<>1t· yourielfl OUR REG. 7.99 1/2" THICK SHEETROCK • F11114 ft.•I It. .-, .. . , ........ ...--. .......... .,...., ..... • Dl>-•t·vouf'Mll - $A VE •I A"9llL 27" VINYl CARPET RUNNERS PENNZOI MOTOR 01 .......... 4111ly, . .., ......... ""''"' -.·· ............... -.,.., .,_.,..,..., 011> •" RUY-ON CAULKING • u.. °" --_ .. ... ,fide ... . ...... _ ....... 411\ct ~ SAVE 60% OUft RH. 7tc !!I~ GALLON TUSH IAGS • .. t .. '°""" .. ..... ,,oof . • Oii ...... _,..,.,., !I~ 3/4" THICK PARTIClEBOARD • F•m-hty-IL • Full 4 !t.•I ft. -t&. • 1-1 f0< Mulne up frat" Of toad ,_. •ta. • .. yn-•&AVEI SAVE $2.021 f ' .. r ... { WedMllday. JenU!!X S. 1977 Skiers Jam Ironwood ,...ou_E_EN_1e ___ ____.By;._P_h1_1 •n_t•_r1a_nd ..... 1 IRONWOOD, Mlcb. <AP> -They may have prayed for anow in the Rockies, but here in lhe western Upper PeninsulaofMlctueanlhey'veaouoo inches, and lhe word bas spread. Drawn by excellent skiing conditions on the slopes in t.bis Michigan-Wisconsin border region near Lake Superior. more than 12,000 skiers jammed lhe areaNewYear'awee1teo4. M<n'ELS WERE PACKED FOR 40 miles in every direction. according t.o a chamber of commerce spokesman. and many restaurants reportedly ran outoffoqd. "They bad to open the supermarkets on Sunday, and people were eating out of cans," the spokesman said. "We've never seen it like this before. We're even seeing Colorado license plates.•' Ironwood police said skiers were begging to sleep in the department's parking lot. "WE DON'T WANT THEM to sleep in cars and we try to find them some place. in homes or even in jails ii there's room." a police spokesman said. A mile down the road, in Hurley, Wis .. where the old Iron County Jail was recently sold and converted into a hostel. they were even sleeping on the floors, according to co-ownef' Marge Tezak. "We've been bulging at the seams." said Mrs. Tezak, who bought the old pokey on a lark for $2,lSO with an old college friend last month. BOX HOME BEllER THAN STREETS Pollo Victim Calta It Temporary THE DOUD A Y INN AT HURLEY let skiers sleep rrhis Man Lives in a Box ORLANDO, Fla. <AP> -John McDonald, a 44-year-o1d polio victim, has been living for two weeks in an abandoned Goodwill collection box. But he says things could be worse. "I could be sleeping on the streets." McDONALD. WRO USES a autcb to get around. said be ar- rived in the area about two months ago to look for work. He said be obtained a job al Goodwill Industries rebuilding soft drink bottle cases and a com- pany official gave him permission to live in lbe box, which is in the yard~ the com- pany's headquarters. · alarm clock, two blankets, a mattress and some beer cans. McDonald sald tbe box is warm and comfortable. but be doesn't plan to set up·permaneot abode there. "I'm just here unW I can get enough mooey for an apartment or a room," be said. around the indoor swimming pool. "lt'a lbe darnedest thing I've seen in 2S or 30 years," aald Elmer Tryon, publisbe.rofthe Ironwood Dally Globe. "That was the time they bad a trout festival in Pembine, Wi!J .. which drew so many'J)eO- ple they cleaned all the restaurants and food st.ores out of food. They haven't bad the trout festival ~ce." Louie Gbeller, general manager or Blg Powderhom akl area. sald snow conditions are bet- terthanhe ever bas seen them. "WHEN YOV DAVE eood snow. rumor travels fast,"hesaid. ''They're sleeping anyplace they can find a roof overhead," Gbeller said. "I've seen them &rilling bot dogs out.side ln zero weather." Paul Karow. general manager of lndianhead ski area, said the crowds were tbebigeest be has seen in the region. "We're 20 percent ahead of any previous year," IC.arftt said. THE CROWDEDOONDITIONSdon'tseem to be dampening the sphitsoftheslders. In fact. many ap- pear to accept lhe situaUoo as a challenge. 1·S "Well. you know a lot of alders are a little crazy anyway," one veteran observer said. "I've seen everything from tent.9 t.ocampers and I've seen them dozing in all-nigbtcafes. Heck, they lovell. ·• "No. as far as I know, they're not'shootJna a movie around here " H 9ives yau the willtd1awal benefits of a regular savings account--plus higher interest. Now: We've combined the convenience of regular passbook saving with the high 5¥..% interest of a 90-day certificate. If ~ou're a regular passbook saver. heres your chance to move up to higher interest. Here's how It works: Deposi~ ·$1000 or more. Leave your money for at least 90 days. Then we'll pay you 51/.i % plus a Y'.2% bonus. And you earn at a 5¥4 % annual rate. No need to stort all over. lt used to be that you had to close out a ninety-day 5¥1% account when it came due-or freeze your funds for another 90-day period. No longer. Now your California Plus Account continues to earn at a 5¥.i % annual rate but you can withdraw funds at anytime after 90 days with no interest penalty. Leave your money and interest a year. and you actually earn 5.92%~ You get It both ways. California Plus gives you all the advan- tages of ready access to your funds. If you need them at any time after the first 90 days. take them out: you pay no penalty. And by waiting 90 days. you earn a full 'I.!% more than any passbook for as long as you choose to hold the account open. Get o Plus-today. Come into California Federal and put your money in a California Plus account. And in 90 days we'll give you a bonus for being patient. l1>u'rp better off in c~~~.~ • Actiu:al htl""'" paid IMJI di/fu 1/lghtfy: s.~ gi,ld /t(J.f IW'" '"""d'd ,,, ''"' ICl'Orl'l l """"Nldtle 11/ mu Pft"(:ntl. F1dnol rft1tikil10M pmft1b11 po11mt 11I OJ ntll'rt'lt ''" 11•i1hdrau·of4 madr u 11111" th,; /int I/fl da111. California Federal Savings and Loan Association · CAPISTRANO BEACH: 34000 Dohenl'.' Park Rd.1714149:1·3812 ·COSTA MESA 12 OFFICES•: 2700 Harbor Boul11v11rd 171<11 646-2300/:l!l.'l;J Bristol St .. South Coast Plua. Lower level next ta Seara 17141 640-4066 · EL TORO: Lake Forest. 24301 Muirlands Blvd. 17141 5'IB·0900 · llUNTINGTON BEACH: 15866 Gothard St. near Edlnier. In Huntington Plaza 1714t 1:!97·36M>. FROM Fashion Island Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF JHE HARBOR ., ... 1V Highlights NBC C9 8:00 -Violence in America. A special three-hour report on an issue of growing importance anchored by NBC News reporters FAwin Newman, Linda Ellerbee a nd Carl Stokes. CBS 8 9:00 -"The Deserter." A cavalry officer turns Apache hunter after his wife is murdered by Indians in this • 1!111 westC!'n movie with John Huston, Richard Cr enna, Chuck Connors, Ricardo Montalban and Bekim Fehmiu in the leading role. KHJ fJ 12:00 -"Twelve Angry Men." Reginald Rose's 1957 jury room drama with Henry Fonda, Lee J . Cobb, Ed Begley, Martin Balsam, Jack Warden and E .G. Marsh all among the jurors. TV DAILY LOG IWEDNESD~ I EVENING I 6 :00 t'J D (J) 1oi (117) f~J) Nein o QlJ n11 1 tti fe 1 m News 0 ~J ukm Bubtball l•k"~ al Pt11t1delph1~ re; Gomer l'yle O GunS111oke m Putrldce hm1l1 CDAdam-12 m Eledric Company ft) Dnlllllli< StMS l)tl Dinlh! m Ultle RAsub -6:30- 0 Htrl Hd Noll (UW, Cnffltll (I OJ ,.,.. Gnffia $Mw m rni11rA11111 ( • 7Hll) GullSIMl• mz- 7:00 O lb1k! Gunh 1ntlude O• ~ Vielle$, Vmcenl Pric:e. le~ (,q "'· Shana Aluander. John Rooby & Supei Band o o IUl oo m m News (I My ThrH Sons a 1 Told tht Truth O Con«nl11hOC1 m I Lowt Lucy CD TM FBI m llort1n Or11N fD MKNtll/lehrer Report ( ttl (J') Bon.nil m Mc:Hale's Nny -7:30- D m "'-Tlllt Tune m TM <Md Couplt D flbtdl Cil111t It) Sltt,000 QtitStlOfl O The...,'sWtld c 10) hlte " li&llt m llMy hid ( 17) CJ)) "' C:..S Ille Counlry ii> 'J) ce.ity SW..,,tales ED ClllWI 2& TOllfCllt •ltl us.GOO PyT ... (D "f" T..., 8:00 0 (17\ ) Cil Cd r-11 lh•••S lit S lol/nd t ••1 OU\ OI 11\t [htllo by 11111J&••& Tyron• fylti- lhr Atom>< Comrc, • but 1~1n,\ r 1oiodt wfttil hti h•illCllf bU•H\ turn out to bt loan \11.ll~S •ho •HI 11io11 _, no-Of tlse 0 llJ (I) f1 OJ til) M«iii) VIO ltnca 111 ._nu <llirlfA~ NI.IC Sot<••' Rtport tll(hQl•d bl lcllo•n N••mtn. l•ndt [llerbu 1n.t wrt St~l•s ,.,11 be O•v1ded '"'~ lour ~·imtnh P1<t t woll t11m1n• I~• c.~•· ''' .,~l•ncr ~•!h •mp~d' '' 111 d m• • 1 tnd •ti. 11 •·~ltnt' onL i.d in( I• I~ lbu-• ., ''-b•1UnC, 'nd 1 tO• I .. 111 w111 r• irr.1ne thr h1>lo11 I"'• ut11 ulfu" ' 11 thr• '""'' wl'Hch .• • ., 1 t ~rPAd1nl ln•ouchouJ 1~• c uni r I 1·1 Ill •111 t 11rr ,., J.11(• '" lh• n1td•a ~nJ th• Ail' f,.l,._1\tt)I\ m V•f\ 1rt~.tft,-it1d (IH '"' M~I )ONh th• ( n lud1nf l"i' to" "'" bf ., "' ~1· ~" ti •\ltu~t·n l)tO(,'l\"41\ t• • " 1~11 l•i•1•nn1nr 011.,,....1 ptoll~•m , 6' Mowot ~)"fare Don klow" ra~•I ,, -R111 HtJW'ltl~ Rob.,! fol·tr~·,,., 0 ( 29 t ) Jt l lH lt WMI~ · l!old I< 1111~ .. llt • I~ I~·""• Ylll"'ffl P"' •1" • ,,.,,, •~ "'"''' ,,, In• ••• tnl N•1n,J t c ""'" mu ..i:t 1a .-~ ~ 4 A "' .-1r1 0 I li•AI e ..... ,. e (2hr) ''lalttt Hy111R" ld•1 • -~·· 1, lil~rt~l ..... o.r , .• ,,,. m Wild WDrld ., A111Ma1, m~tu• fl) kOIUR Y111tty Klwf JC Coul J11111t fD SEASON l'UMIUE Nou Hotltr s Secret We•oon A h1s101 t•l 1ccou"t of the dt;rlopm•nl ol the Cerman V 2-lh• rodtt thal lfnO• 1.rtd loridon du11nR lhe l•st months ol Wo1kl W1r II r r;tu11nc an u clu sl'le tnlel'ftew with m1\stlt mrnf!sl Wetnhe1 won Buun, lormtt V l tech meal dlleclor al lht top ucrel Ptenemundt roc~•t b.lSt ED Clla111pionsll1p WrutUna m )lllJtlltSt un1111ae l'roeramJ -8:30-0 (U1l J) <U The Jelfm~iu loUtSe ta'" a cou1ir to 1morow h•r n•emoiy, rJOIUICt ll~I) A COU•V 1n tudo. and betwettl Jht 1#0 ol lh•m lllty tll!Mllt ••Pt GtO• .. out e Mefie: (C'l (to) "We'rt Nol Mlrritd" (com) ~2-M111lyn Monroe. G111«itf Rot"' m Ct•·Wits 9 :00 9 (~ (J)) C1) CBS W_.lletd•y ~: CC) (2111) "Thi Dutrltr" (wes) '11-John Huston. Rrchallf Ciun•. Beki111 Fe~•"'· ClltKk Connors. RicardO M011t1lb1•, $11m Pl(ltnl lud111~ a uvalry pallnl. Clpt Victor K.lltb c.omu atro" a devastated wn1te settlement, wllere ht hnds the body of hts wolt, killed duro~& an Apache 111d Enraged bt the a11oc1ty and cootemptuous ot the Atmy's ullous allrtudt toward Jht murder, KJteb deserts and emba1l.s on a private, meic1lus vendtll4 ~aJmst the Apacllu .. D ((2jl CU) ~t) Bareth When Barella thinks an unde1com f edeial n~rcotrcs agenr rs t1~1nc advantaae of de~perale 1un~rrs by push1ng hrroin on the side. he turns ro his bad&e to "grl hom" m Mm Griffin Sllow m Virc1ntan a6 Amtnu m Dance In Amtncal "Mttee Cunntn&h4m -9:30-m u Cmdl 8it1 Cl114' 10:00 0 0 Nns f f) loNnu u c Zf• CJ)) 3 C111~·s A111t1~ lhe All&els art 1S11cned 10 protect a lo1mer U S 8'my 111tell11ence officer "llO bfhrves ht rt 10 bt the Md vltt•m ol a myslwous 1nlern1tian~I US1S$1n f rrn1ndo li mn cuests. •ae 6-mc*e ED Tht Shthrs Oocumtnhry It ices lhr erowth ind dedrne o4 thts 200 yur old 1el1aoous sect throufh the memo11es and songs of tl!e 12 w1•m1ng ShOer "$•Sten" on "'" fo;.t~nd €D Oram1hc Series -10:30-m mm lkin m Woman 11:00 OD GllB"-&ClltUICU ~lltws 0 (fli) (fl ) i1'1 lon Amtricat Sty It ft J SU llvnl Oltlt~rd m l!Ury Kartm~ Mary Hartman m ~raunt l!llU (, •1> <.L) S-. tlie Stirs -11:30- 0 <m 'X) CIS Utt Mo'lle D Q3 ei 1111 rnJatmy C.... 0 (i2tJ a ) 19l Tht ll~tts/ ~try of tllt w"' m Nt1I\ Q)ltooe~n H Tiit 700 Clllb (!) "'"' lrlcMt 12:00 0 8es1 tf Glwdlo O Mowlt: '1wt1Ye Antrr Men" M•1I ~, llt~iy f0t1dt ler J Cobb ld !!•(try, t G Mi11$111ll, John Wat den Martin !lltsam m ,._:"Coed Sim" (com) ·as- ( l'; Covpr1. Ann Shr11din. Ray Collins ID Movrt "Wlttt1 Tomorrow Comes'' (di\) !~ (l!Mlt•, ll<Jyoo t·•oo Ournr fD~tl -12:30-0 All lhcht ShOll: "Tht 8rld1t P111h." "A S.ld•er Named Joe," C.ou £.umo!UllOll" m llfoont: ''TIM l'lundtf"' .. (1dv) 1• l•fl Ch~ndltr lohn Sno11, Dol ••· lhrl Mirslla 11u~I. J1y C. fhp , ... 1:00 0 ,, •·T-1 .. 2:00 O MO'l1e· C' "hu1rt" 111o•s hS I •r Yourtt 01n Du<f•I. 0Md C.n•O rr O ...., .. O..W.le1111re-~r1mrly Hotlty,....n." "Sonc of ~ttad•" -2:30- m All "'"'' Shoir: ~r.tllf•r •"•<~,'' '"Shad Out.,. 101" -3:45-u Mo.tt: ct' "A Midsummer lltahl'I Dru•" Ccoml J5-lamu t.aaney, Ot1v11 df Hnilla~d. DAmME MOVIES JAllUAl'f 5 Below, fw ,.., tGllYellittlu, 11'1 "" diy's-its. IMO 8 "lllt Ot11ion" (dra) '59- Clrol lynlty Brandon de Woldr "Our Ytr1 Ow•" (dra) 50- ~1t1l1e Wood Ann 8ly1h ,. ~ "'Shoot lM. l.oudtd Doft't Ultdenlwl" (coml 6~­ lrtarcello 1rt1111011nn1, Raqurl Wtkh 11:00 0 "Tiit ,, .. , ..... (drJ) '51-lost r'"" 0'1n Jauer 12:00 GI "lh1ts ia the llltM" (mys) '41-Pncllla lint. 1:00 ~ "lbs llf "'l'Yesldtllt" (com) '64-frtd MKMunay 2:00. (C) ~II c:-t11• {ft$) ')9-llobtrt Mlldlom.. l :OO 9 ~"TM Item hM'' (com) '51-Gene Kelly l:JO D (C) "Tiit Suri Abo ._. P111 I (dra) '51-Tyrone Powu. KOCE Television (50) ,,. 'llelf..raldafl' Ralph Ginzburg, New York publish e r of Moneysworth, plans a monthly "h ell- rais in g " tabloid caned Extra. 'Tm going to tell it like it is," he said. .. S43 Million Utility Tax Rap Backed By THOMAS D. EUAS When a Los Angeles official last year accused the state's major utilities or overcharging California consumers hundreds or millions or dollars by claiming to have paid taxes they never paid, the big companies laughed it off as political rhetoric. Now comes a report rrom a Washington·based consumer group that shows this state's big electric companies overcharged customers by a total of about $0 million in "phantom taxes.·· FROM A NA110NAL PERSPECTI VE, that would make California's utilities among the most tightly policed, slnce the total overcharge for taxes never paid was $2.2 billion nationally. The report comes from lbe National Consumer Information Center, which took the data from state· ments filed by electric utilities with the Federal Power Commission. Those reports showed that customers or Pacific Gas & Electric Co. were overcharged more than other Californians and that PG&E paid less federal taxes than the other major privately.owned power ----------companies, Southern California Edison Co. and San Health Courses Slated Orange Coast College is ocrering a "llome Health Aide" program for the rirst time. The program includes four five.week courses that may all be taken in one semester. Spring semester classes begin Feb. 7. JOYCE Evanskj , pro- gram direct or. said. "The need is critical and there are many jobs waiting." The home health aide is employed by health or social service agencies to provide health care for homebound or dis· abled individuals and their ramilies . Aides may provide personal care. care for children, or do household jobs that will help create a healthier environment. TWO CLASSES begin the week or Feb. 14 and the other two begin the week of March 28. Spring registration runs Jan. 4 through Feb. 1 by appointment. Open registration. on a drop-in basis. will be held Feb. 2·10. Registration ap· point m en ts m ay be secured in OCC's Ad· missions and Records Office. For registration information . phone 556-5772. Square Dance Class Offered A beginning s11u arc dance class sponsored by The Triple Eight's Squar e Da nce Club begins Tuesday. Jan. 11 , Diego Gas & Electric Co. EDISON ACTUALLY REPORTED PAYJNG the most laxes or any or the three, sendjng $37.9 million to Was hington. But Edison customers paid rates as if the company had made a tax payment of $S8 million. For PG&E. the figures are more complex. That firm's rates wqre based on federal taxes or $2.25 million. but it reported to the FPC a net tax credit or $18.8 million. SDG&E's figures followed the same pattern, but were much smaller. That company's rates were based on a tax credit or $1.3 million, but it actuall~ got credits totaling $3.2 million, for an overcharge OtrrHERN CALIFORNIA FOCUS to customers of $1.9 million. The tax c redits claimed by these two firms can be taken as re- funds of back taxes or used against figure taxes. ALMOST ALL THE "PHANTOM taxes" on which part of the electric companies· rates are based come through the 18-month-old federal in- vestment tax credit. which allows utilities to write off lbe cost of virtually all new equjpment but does not require companies to pass the savings to customers. The stale Public Utilities Commission has been unable to allow for these corporate benefits in the rates it sets. PG&E is the only major California company passing this credit through to customers. Its tax overcharges would have been much larger had it not voluntarily adopted that policy in mid·l975. As large as the overcharges collected by power companies may be, they are dwarfed by those of the state's telephone companies. THAT'S BECAUSE TELEPHONE RATES are based on a bookkeeping process called "accelerat- ed depreciation," allowing new equipment to be written off over rive years rather than the usual 20 or more. The companies don't pass savings to con· sumers. a practice that continues although it has been ruled illegal twice by the California Supreme Court. "The telephone companies are clearly the worst problem,•• says Leonard Sna ider, the deputy Los Angeles city attorney whose complaints aroused utility company derision last year. Power and gas companies have never been permitted to use the same bookkeeping procedures as the telephone firms, partly because of the opposi· lion spurred when the PUC allowed phone com· panies the privilege. One unfortunate aspect of the "phantom tax" problem is that there is almost nothing individual citizens can do about it. MUCH OF THE PAYMENT IS due to federal tax laws. which can only be changed by Congress. About all that consum~ can do is monitor the PUC closely to make sure it doesn't permit utilities to use one set or numbers when figuring the taxes it will actually pay and another much higher set of figures when applying ror rate increases. at 7 p. m . at Warner .---------------------t Junior H ig h , 1417 1 New l and St Westminster The rirsl meeting or the three-week class 1s free. For more lnforma· lion, 893·:>471 A guide to co""'"'nlfJ c1'urcftea •nd their-la ii a.tu....,. tntM t • lflQj(,}j 1Koce-TSQ Orange County Television ) DAIL V PILOT A J.S '76Law Institute Slated New 1976 laws from school administration to c riminal co des, firearms. juvenile court. plea procedures. and bicycle registration will be reviewed In an In- stitute at Golden West College on Saturday. ')alle'llanl8 The Bl'·'·B. of AMllBRST on 'I'h e institute, sponsored by the college administration of justice program, will be held in the community theater from 8:15 a.m. to 4:30 p.m . COST OF the institute 1s $5 and includes a digest of all legislative changes in the criminal law area . Wa lter D. Posey, Anaheim attorney and college instructor, will be lecturer. EMPHASIS WILL be placed on laws passed by the 1976 Legislature ap- plicable to law enforce- m e n t. Th e digest , 9118 however, includes a summary or legislation applicable to the enurc justice system. For forther informa· ,.---------------------, lion. contact Derald D. Hunt, d ir ector, Ad - ministration of J usticc, Golden West College, Huntington Beach, 92647. Phone 714/892-7711, Ext. 468. don't fill out an income tax form this year! Let one of our specialists do it for you No charge. Join the thousands of Los Angeles Federal Slivers who have their personal Federal and California tH x returns ,# prepared without charge All you need to do 1s deposit $5 000 1n a Los Angeles Federal Savings Passbook or $10.000 in a higher rate Investment Cert if 1cate. If your savings are now in a commercial bank or another 1nst1tution, Los Angeles Federal Savings will make your tax appointment now and handle the details of transfer. Make your appointm ent early The sooner you file, the faster your refund can be mailed Plus: higher interest than paid by any commercial bank. Plus interest day in to day out. Plus the security of savings insured by a Federal Agency. Plus extra hours. Plus free services with a minimum deposit: safe deposit box, checking account at a commercial bank, docu- ment duplication. Travelers Checks and more. It takes only one minu te and one signature to start your savings account All Interest Compounded Daily Annual Yield Annual Rate 8.06% $1000 for 6 to 10 years 73/4% 6.72% $1000 for 1 to 2 years 5.39% Paid day-in to day-out 51/4% ~-----------,1 "Qvl ' -4 • ••• ,,....I r1ttv wil"i•1'1* '' ' rn 11 rm ..,r 1 ,. t , .. 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Buehler, Che 6-2, 270.pound starting oHenfilva euard {or the Raiders, remembers the '64 showdown well. It matched Whittier and Loyola high schools in the Coliseum. ''The town <WhitUcr> really went wild over that game, especially when we won. High school foot,,all was a lot of fun, and j>robably more exciting than the Super Bowl, but of course smaller in scale," he says. .. Winning the CIF cha m- pionship. I think, was as thrill· ing as this (the Super Bowl) could be," says Buehler. T h e f o rm e r Stanford University standout. now in his eighth year with the Raiders, says be really hasn't felt the impact of Sunday's game with Minnesota's Vikings in the R0se Bowl. "I've always had trouble with intensity." says the soft. spoken Raiders giant. "We're comlog off a big win over Pit- tsburgh and we've been mov- ing around a lot lately," said Buehler from the Raiders' UC Irvine training camp Tuesday. "And this Is a new setting for us, so we really haven't got down to the business of football -and we probably won't until Thursday. "But I'm really not the type to get up for a game. Some weeks football is the last thing I want to do and other times it's real exciting. Ultimately. it's bow you feel the day or the game that counts," says Buehler. Sunday's game will be Buebler's lOlst in a row for the Raiders. He was drafted by Oakland on the second round in 1969, but played little as a rookie. Female Athlete of the Year Romania's Nadia Comaneci. who s wept through the 1976 Montreal Olympics with seven perfect scores and three gold medals in women's gymnastics, was s elect ed Female Athlete of the Year today by the Associated Press. Figure skater Dorothy Hamill was runnerup. ·followed by tennis player Chris E vert. Close Game Predicted High Scoring Match Expected by Vikes Boss Minnesota Vikings coach Bud Grant predicted Tuesday that Super Bowl XI will be the best of them all, a real high.scoring af. fair. "I think It ·s going to be one or t he g reatest games ever played,'' Grant said of Sunday's duel betweeo the Vikings and the Oakland Raiders. "The teams with the two best records in the National Football Leagye are here and 1 think Ken Stabler and Fran Tarkenton are the two best quarterbacks in't.he game today.·· Although Minnesota has never scored more tha n seven points in any of its three previous Super 'Qowl appearances. Grant is look-q,g for offensive fireworks from 1'oth teams. "There'll be some scores. no question." he said. "Both of· fen.ses are just too powerful. .. ~abler expressed similar fecl- fgs. "We've both been frustrated teams." s a id the Raider quarterback. "We've both been so close so often. At least one of ~ won't have to answer a ny 4ue5tions after this ~ame." Although both clubs appeared tx t r e m e I y I o o s e d u r i n g ·fUesday's ph?lo sessions, Grant ~1d the tension would heighten notably later in the week. I "It's here and there's nothing any of us can do about it," he 9aid. "This is the bigges t specta· cle in sports a nd that's enough in· centive for anyone. Hopefully, It will all peak Sunday afternoon." Oakland is rated the 4~·point Oavorite to continue American football Conference dominance ; the game. AFC teams have on-fou,r straight Super Bowls d seven of the last eight. The day was n't without incl· dent for the Vikings. Many Min· 1*ota players were disturbed about a California newspaper story referring to them as "Super l.bsers." . "It's something ~·ve had to l Santa Fe Five At UC Irvine live with -losing three Super Bowls." said Minnesota tight end Stu Voight. "We see that stuff in the paper s and most of it you can understand. But this was a little harder tha n most." The story called Minnesota the Harold Stassen of football and suggested Oakland spot the Vik·· ings two touchdowns. "That's the kind of stuff that might end up on a bulletin boatld Sunday," sug- gested Vikings general manager Mike Lynn. No Rose Bowl Tilt On New Year's Day OF TRIVIA-Will there be a Rose Bowl football game January 1, 1978? No. But don't worry. There will be a Rose Bowl game that year. On- ly in this case it will be played January 2. That's because Jan. 1 falls on a Sunday and traditional· comes on a Sunday and tradi· tiooally the Tournament of Roses grid classic is held any day of the Ct.Et4 .. WHITE WHITE WASH week that Jan. I happenstofallon -except Sunday. Six previous Tournament or Roses football games have been held on a Monday, January2. The first was in 1922, which also happened to be the last time the game was held at old Tourna- ment Park, across the street Crom Caltech in Pasadena. Washin gton and J efferson played Cal to a 0-0 tie in that mud·spatlered clash. The first January 2 game ac- tually played in the Rose Bowl was inJ933 when USC ran rougbsh over Pitt, 35-0. Other Rose Bowl Wts played.on a January 2 include the classics of 1939, 1950, 1961, 1967. Future January 2 outings will be in 1978. 1989, 1995. OF BARGAINS-Folks under 18 years of age will be admitted free to LA Aztecs matches held at the Coliseum this season in North American Soccer League battle. There is a catch, however . Eacb youth must be accom- pallled by a ticket.purchasing adult. OF TRAGEDY-Two mem- bers of the 1973 Edison <Hunt- ington Beach) tf igh football team have been kilied in auto acci- dents-t heir deaths coming within two weeks of each other. Bob Johnson was killed last week. Former te ammate' Joe Demetrakos lost his life earlier in the month. OF BOWL GAMES-The Fish JSowl nag football game ls going to be played Thursday afternoon at 3. It matches fishing boat crews from Davey's Locker and Art's Land ing, both ol Newport Beach. The game Is to be held at tbe park near Balboa Pavllloa and the losing team wW be bay· int a couple of cases of beer for tbe victors. OF BIG 1GAMES-Check off March 1 on your calendar of key events. That's the day undefeat- ed University of San Francisco invades Notre Dame for a basketball game. WHEl\E THEY ARE-Ron Weber of Corona del Mar Is try- ing out for swim ming at Stanford Unlverslty. He'll vie In the bre as t str~ke . R o d Snook (E.tl1011, Huntington Beach) ls a senior buketball player for Whittler College. But he's been a fixture at guard the past seven seasons with his chief duty blocking for , quarterback Ken Stabler in Oakland's pass-oriented of- fense. And be feels he's played well this season -especially in the last few games. "I 'm happy with the way I've P.layed this season. I really didn t have a lot of intensity before the Cincinnati game (last regular season game), but we showed people we were a team with prmciple and inte- grity," says Buehler. "Attinst Cincinnati and Pit· tsburgb <AFC title game) peo- ple thought we were going to tet down, so we had something to prove. and we did." And what about Minnesota? ''We've played them three times and never won. so we have something to prove. l 'm ver y impressed with them, they have a strong defensive group." lJuebler comes from a TamUy that is involved in the medical profession. His father, a doc· tor. recently stepped down as president of tbe Los Angeles County Medical Association while two of his three brothers -Charles and John - are also doctors. And one of his sisters is a medical technician. GEORGE BUEH1.ER Corona del Mar's Tuz Finds Way to Stardom By ED BURGART Of the O•lly Pilot Statt In 2'h years, Jack Tuz has grown from 5-10 to 6-6 and has become one of the hottest, most- talked about high school basket· ball players in Orange County. The rangy forward for Corona del Mar High's Sea Kings is averaging 18.8 points per game, has been in double figures in re- ·bounds numerous times and owns the distinction of having been selected to the all- tournament team at the pre- stigious San Dimas Tournament of Champions. Tandy Gillis . Orange Coast College basketball coach who was head mentor at Corona del Mar from 1970-76, says, "Tuz is the best fron t -line forward player, as Car as a pro5pect for a major college, that I've ever seen at Corona. He's a well- rounded playe r. Offensively, he shoots well from outside. He also jumps well and can go to the baskeL" Current Sea Kings coach Jack Errion says, ·'his role is to be a scorer but he 's also a very good passer and has good vision. He'll also give up the ball because somebody else has the good shot. "Al this point, l would rate h im a major college prospect. He has good shooting range and is a good ball handler . He could be a wingman or backcourt man in college." And before Corona del Mar downed E l Toro 44-38 Tuesday night, El Toro coach Wendell Witt was saying, "Tuz is super. We haven't seen anyone like hlm all year." (Tuz had 17 points and 16 rebounds in that game.> All the sudden publicity -Tuz only averaged 9.8 points as a junior -hasn 't given the All-CIF 3·A prospect a big ego. "There are a lot er areas I still need to improve on," says Tuz, who is a 3.0 s tudent. "For a guy my size I'm fairly quick and I need to itnf>rove on my sUding. That is, when a guy drives, I need to slide with him instead of run· ning." Still , Tuz seems to be a com- plete player. Offensively, he can drive and dunk. or he can shoot 17-footers. Defensively, he jumps like a Marques Johnson <UCLA forward ), soaring to the rim to grab rebounds. His ability to shoot from out· side hasn't surprised Tuz, who says, "I started shooting when I was five. All my brothers were athletic and they helped me a lot." (Tuz is the youngest in a family that consists of four brothers and four sisters.) But tuz admits the sudden rise to prominence has somewhat taken him by surprise. As a junior he earned first-team All· Ce ntury League laurels but didn't play full games because the Sea Kings used 10 players ex- tensively. Also, he was coming off a sum- mer when he broke his arm. Yet, Gillis is not amazed al Tuz: success. ·'The sum mer before his junior year you could really see him im· proving. He started every game as a sophomor(iwhen he was 6· l or 6·2. He had long arms. long legs and jumped well." Tuz recalls, "at the end of my Tonight on TV 6:05 p.m .. e -NBA BASKET· BALL -The Lakers meet. the 76ers in a game taped earlier, at the Spectrum ln Philadelphia. freshman year, I was S.10 and at the beginning of my sophomore year, I was 6-1 'h." As expected, college recruiters are already sending Tuz letters of interest. "I'm really not sure where I'll go, but it's down to about five or six schools," he says. "I'd like ~o s t ay in the West Coast area ... but if T get some fan- tastic offer from someplace like an Indiana, v. ... (. • .'' In the meantime, Tuz says, "I have no goals other than to win league and go to CIF." O•llY f'llot Slllff l'llol• CdM'S JACK TUZ (35) GRABS A REBOUND. Kings Stopped, 4-3 Jets Tab Michaels WJ Coach ST. LOUIS -Claude Larose scored an unassisted goal with 5:33 remaining to give the St. Louis Blues a 4·3 victory over the Los Angeles Kings in a National Hockey League game Tuesday night. Larose's goal. his 14th of the season , broke a 3·3 tie created when Mike Murphy of Los Angeles. a former Blues player. scored his second goal or the game seven minutes earlier. Los Angeles. while beginning a string or seven games away from home, had overcome a 2-0 first period deficit. Tanaer Rallie• MELBOURNE, Australia American Roscoe Tanner, the No. 2 seed , beat Australia's Tony Roche 4-~1 6-1, '6r2, 6-1 in the third round of me Australian Open ten- 'nis championships today. Guillermo Vilas led a march ol the top four seeds into \he thirc round of the Australian Tenn.if Championships Tuesday with s 6-1, 6-4, 6-4 victory over Nick Sa· viano. Advancing with Vilas were Tanner, who beat Peter Fleming 7·6, 6-2, 6-1; No. 3 Arthur Ashe who eliminated Dick Bohmstedt 7·6, 7·5, 6·4 in an all·U.S. du~. and fourth-seeded Ken Rosewall of Australia, who defeated Ion Tiriac of Romania 6-4, 7·6, 6-4. Two seeded p layers were eliminated -No. 10 Tom Gorman and No. 6 Ray Ruff els of Australia. Richard Lewis ~t Gorman 6·4. 6-3, 6-1 and CoUn Dibley beat Ruff els 4-6, 2-6, 6•3,. 7-6, 6·1. ~liO.O.eta "\JC lrvlne•a basketball team hopes to haJl a thrte-game los· tre streak tonight (8) when tt hosts Sante Fe College of New Mexico. Santa Fe has a 3-10 record while UCJ's Anteaters are now 4·6 after ·losses to Cal State (Fullerton). Botse State and Sacramento State. Deaf Boys Find Way in Football HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. -Walt Mich•els, a New York Jets assis- tant coach for 11 seasons, was hired as head coach oC the Na· Uonal Football League club. The 46-year-old Michaels, twtce~assed over by the Jets for the to coaching spot, succeeds Lou oltt who resigned with one game left in the past season and four years to go on his contract. UCI coach 'Tim Tift wm start Seolt Jenkins, Steve Rodgers and Frank Chandler in the front court and Tim Tlvenan and X:,OUia Sttphcns at t.he guards. Tift Is also br inging up three hshmen from the JV team - N cu•rd Brad Carson, 6-6 forward Leo Gonzalez and M forward St.Awe Nolson. ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. CAP) - Football coach Mike Sl ater's players weren't saU.sfied with a 10-0 season against other high school teams. They wanted more, and got it -the national champlonship of the Amtr'lc:an Athletic Association for the Deal. When they learned Monday that they had been named -na· ttonal champions, several ot Slater'• boya at Florida School for the Deaf and Blind made the fi1t-t.o-the·cbe1t motion. To the dealt.bat means pride. "These kids have got more de-sire and determination than most other kid s,•· S later s ald. "Tbey"ve'got me hooked. "A lot of teams come into a game feeling sorry for us," Slater said. ·'They st.art to get the real message witb lbe kickotf. ·' Florida Deaf, 18-2 the last two years, would have cont.ended for a state championship in small school competition but passed up some district schools to play other deaf schools from Alabama, South Carolina and 'Georgia. "They meant a lot to us,'' Slater said, "because we wanted a shot at the national deal cham- plonahlp. That me ant more to us than the slate championship." A game between two deaf schools isn't quite like football elsewbere. "The quarterback used to goose the 'center every time ht wanted the ball snapped,'' Slater said. "Our linemen would fire off when they saw our quarterback's forearm move. ..That worked .•• until the <le- fens e started watching hls forearm too .•. so we had to change. Now the center just hikes lhe ball whco ho's ready.'' There's a nother difference besides the absence of referees• whistles. "We don't have many motlon · penaltiea.'' Slater said, "but wo do h•ve some late hits.'' ltflWtallflla Seleeied CQLUMBUS, Ohio -Tim Murtaugh, 33, son or the late Pl~ t.sburgh Pirates manger, official· ly was selected Tuesdlf ~ field manager of lbe new Columbus Clippers b.seball team bl the Ill· teroational League. ' 81 DAILY PILOT Wedn!!d!y. January 5. 19n Sea Kings Turn Back El Toro, 44-38 By ED BU&GAaT team All.CIF 4-A pick and aa~r layup with Jack Tuz . a 6·6 Olh 0.llY Pl ... .._.. wbo was suspended for 27 seconds rer:nairung forward, scored 17 points The player Jack Er· disciplinary reasons gave Akin five of bis 17 and grabbed 16 re-no.. calls the w a1king earlier in the day, the points and helped Corona bounds, aiding Akin and bolpltal came up with a vi.siting Sea Kings saw a del Mar open a 42-36 hl.s teammates in turning remedy that carried t.be UM lead evaporate to lead. back a stubborn El Toro Alex Black-less Corona 37-38 with 3:35 left in tbe "If be ever becomes team that bad no st.art.er deJ Mar High Sea Kings game. healthy, be will really be taller than 6-2. to a 44-38 victory over El That's when the 6-2 tough," aays Errlon Starting out in a 2-3 Toro's Chargers in open-Paul Akin went to work, about a guard who bas zone, the Chargers fell ·ing round basketball ac-scoring five straight pl1ed with a bad back behind 19-4 early in the tion of the South Coast points for Errion 's Sea an injured hip most of second quarter. Akin bit League Tuesday nlgbt. Kings. A driving layup the seaaon. <He also lost three lo'!fojumpers and Playing without the 6--6 with 1 :41 left, a free a tooth in a recent Mark R s added two Black. a 1976 second throw 31 seconds later 1ame.) before El Toro switched to a man defenae. The new atrategy, combined with a three minute period when Attn was on the bench after being shaken up, belped El Toro cut the deficit t.o 23-20 at the half. From then on. It was fairly tight. although El Toro never took the lead, despite forcing Corona det Mar into 10 second half turnovers by apply- ing a full-court press. c.r-.. • -· 1441 •• " ,,. • T~I I J • II ~-lto I 0 j 1 1(1111 .. 0 0 • 0 .... ,~ • I • II A•IM J 1 • • ICoeNer 0 0 , 0 TOl•I• " • ,, .. .. ,_,,., •• " ,,. • Mllttl Hiii • l • JO Ho!-0 0 I 0 Mike Hiii 3 I s 1 51._ , 0 0 ' 8. OWiri.\ 1 l J • Ptltr•ll• 1 , • a,Qwirl .. 3 0 1 ,_, u 10 1\ • sc-11yQooo,,.,. C:.0.-cltl Ma• '' • • ,,...... El T0<0 4 " I II- Cagers Bes um~ Warfare Fountain Valley High 's Barons put their U-0 non-league basket- ball record on the line tonight against the in· vading Downey VUdngs. It begins at 7, as do two ether non-league tiffs in· volving Orange Coast area quintets a.ad a Ceo· ·tury League opener between Foothill of San- ta Ana and the host Estancia (Costa Mesa) High Eagles. Ed1aoo of Hunt.ingtoo Beach is at La Palma's Kennedy and Huntington Beacb, recent wt.oner of a 16-team San Diego tournament, ls at Loog Beach Jordan. Fountain Valley, which baa gleaned three tournament titles in tbe process of rolling over 11 foes, bas won crowns at San Clemente, Arroyo Grande and Santiago. Pacing the Barons of FV coach Dave Brown is guard George Bar- rios with a 16.7 average. o.;1y"li.cl'IW!oo11ya~1C-while 6-3 Scott Ford LAGUNA'S JOHNBROTifERTONTRIESTOPASSTOBENBACON ASBOBSTUPIN,DANABROWNAPPLYTHEPRESSURE. <lS.8), Roger Holmes (14.3) and Bret ~MfJ:.!'f!J Dolphins Stagger I agunans, 65-53 Wilkinson (13 .1) round out the offensive punch. Century League favorite Estancia of coach l>ave Carlisle features guard Ray Orgill and forwards Pete Neumann and Jim Price. By ROGER CARLSON OUN Dally ~I ... Slaff With four players scor- ing in double figures and a man-to-man defense that helped create 21 Laguna Beach turnovers, the Dana Hills High Dolphins came up with the upset ~ of the night in the ftrst round of South Coast League basketball action Tuesday night. The Dolphins. picked for last in the league and 19-poinl losers to Laguna Beach in tournament play, blasted a very average appearing Laguna Beach quintet, 65-53. Each of the Dolphins starters came in fort.beir share of the glory Tues- day as Bob Stupin scored 15 and was a big asset in the first half as the Dolphins stayed with the host Artists . Stu Hein held Laguna Beach ace ~n Bacon to 14 points and was effec- """i••~ tive oo the boards. Steve 'l!! Crapo was tough al both ends or the court and scored a do~en counters. And David Reeve came up with five clutch free throws in the final quarter to stymie Laguna's bid to rally. And Newbury Park High transfer Scott Cook. who scored 13 points, seemed to be the ace in the bole for coach Bua., GW Vie Art Jenkins' Dolphins, Orgill has been in dou· coming up with the steal, ble figures every time the assist, or the key out. averaging 17 .2 bucket every time things points per game with a appeared a bit sticky (or best effort of 26 in the the belghtless Dolpb.im. season-opening victory With the score tied at over Newport Harbor. 29 early in the third Coach Elmer Combs' period after the score Huntington Be a ch was tied or changed quintet, winner of four hands 15 times in the straight after a 3·5 start, first half. it was Crapo ~ operates behind the scor· with a lay-up, then Chris ing or Cary Burt. Clark Goller inside, thanks to Sims and Gary Con- an assist from Cook. treras. Burt has beet in after Cook stole the ball. the 20s three times. Moments later the Ed Bell <6·5>. Bob Dolphins extended their Herson (f>.3"'-i > and 6-0 margin to 41 ·33 when junior Mike Mccourt Goller hit. then Cook have shared most of the grabbed one of the load for Edison during Artists' turnovers and December action as the converted It into two Chargers of coach Don points and Hein hit from Leavey have accumulat- the corner with 2: 30 left ed a 4-7 record-the most in the third quarter. notable victory a 67-53 Laguna pared the triumph over Corona del margin to 50-45 with Mar. Bacon, Terry Haught Minutemen and John Brotherton scoring, but then Reeve went to work at the free Win_ 65-5 7 throw line. Cook picked ......, up a crucial three-point play. Hein rebounded and picked up a steal and Crapo drove the baseline to give Dana Hills a ss-45 advantage with 3: 14 left. * * * O•MHllhlUI •• " ,,. ~ Hein • , 3 10 -0 s l s Cracio • 0 3 11 Stuol" • 3 1 ,, Cook • ' • I) ~ l 0 ' 4 Goll« 3 0 , • To4•h 11 ll 18 •S ............ a<ll!SJI Senior center Jeff Dreyer scored six points in the second overtime period . giving hos t Uberty Christian High's (Huntington Beach > Minutemen a SS-57 Chris· Uan League basketball win over American Christian (Pomona> Tuesday night at the Salvation Army gym in Santa Ana. LB'S81LLGOMPF(12)0AIVESBYBOBSTUPIN. Orange Coast aod Golden West colleges. two basketball teams tbal figure to be aJso. rans ln their conferences this season. tangle tonight al GWC C8> in a non-conference game. ,, " ,,. .. 8acon I 0 IU Smlll't ' ' ) ) Forward Dan Willard led Liberty scorers with 28 points wblle Greg Goodnight and Dreyer eacb accouled for 16. UMrly awt1t1 ... IUI Basketball Results Pro Scores ....-. ............ __ Golcllft~t 170. HV Knl<kt 110 Atlanlo llJ, 09n.,., 109 Oll<aoo•. NV Heh to ..,,_ .... IJ9, P!>oen•• Ill Ponl-1?1, eo,tonM ........ "9cll•yl..e .... Ot1roll, W•tlllnQ1"" l fll•I \lwic-r J, PIH\l>vro!I, ni.1 St l.O<ll\ •. LAK Anvei.• > .. Heu\1111 3 6 J 11 ~ ' , ) 10 Gompf l0 S 4 ~ l 0 J • MCMaf'N\ 0 l I J o.w.td ' 0 0 1 TOl•I\ 11 II ft SJ SC... lty QM"9n 0... Miii\ " 11 It »-4S ~8'tKll u u ' .. -u .. n 2!'-nc·._CO Sensational r11 u .. Budweiser Sports&~~ BoatShOW Jan 7·18 • Cow Palace Backpacking Hall A.4tMIMloft 2.50 CtllWretl i.00 WHkday1 2 pm to 11 pm Saturdays 10 •m to \\ pm Sund1ys 10 •m to 7 pm .. ,,,,_~ twlftl See tent town Free trout fishing /or children Motor hOmes galore! ,, " ,. .. Wiii-1• • • lll Or..,_r I , • I& o-11119'11 1 1 • ,. '-I 0 I 1 ltM0'#1-I I I ~ 1 Tol•h n • II i.s SC-llyo.tm" -0i<t1llen 101011111 ~' uo. 0i<11uan "s "u 1 e-.s BILL GOMPF CORKY CALVERT .. DAVE MOWCA AL.LEN STREET!R Area Quartet Earns All-CIF ... Four Orange Coast area football players have · ·; been bonpred with selection to the All.CIF 2-A : teams as picked by the Citizens Savtnas Athletic · : Foundation board. · First team honors go t.o Laguna Beach Hip's Blll Gompf and San Clemente Higb's Corky Calvert. Seeond team berths were garnered by Costa Mesa Higb's Dave Mollica and San Clemente's Allen Streeter. Players of the year laurels in 2-A cittles are . shared by Bill Hilliker of champion Ant.elope Valley and Agoura Hlgh's Darren Rogers. Gompf, quarterback and linebacker, led Laguna Beach to its best year since 1968 as the .,. Artists chalked up a 7-2 record (which melted to :·: 1-8 due t.o an ineligible player>. • A 6-2. 186-pound junior, Gompf bas been Laguna Beach's most valuable player twice. He . led Laguna Beach with 48 tackles. 56 asaists, two -~ interceptions and recovered four fumbles, return- ing one for a touchdown. Calvert, a 6-3. 24G-pound two-way lineman for San Clemente, was the primary reason for the Trltons' success with their ground·orlented wishbone and tough defense. which shut out four opponents and allowed three others no more than seven points. First Team Off ease TE-Steve Chambers, Neff 6-4 T -Russ Kruczynsld, Norte Vista 6· 1 G ~rky Calvert. San Oemea&e 1·3 C -Bill Harrison, Antelope Valley 6-2 G -SOnny La Fargue. San Dimas 6-l T -Ray Mero. Salesian 6-2 SE-John Magee, Aviation 5-11 SE-Jeff Keller. Baldwin Park 6-0 B -Bill Hilliker. Antelope Valley S-11 B -Darren Rogers. Agoura 5-9 B -Don Morrow, Aviation S-11 B -Kevin Morgan, Walnut 6--0 B -Larry Jones. Kennedy <Bar.> 6-2 K -Francisco Valencia, Coachella S-10 K -Tom Connors, Quartz HUI 6-0 First Team Defeue DL-Junior Pomele, Channel Islands S-11 DL-Ray Jackson, Norte Vista 6-1 DL-Marty Pedroza. St. Genevieve 6-2 DL-Dan Stewart, La Habra 6-2 LB-BW Gompf, Laguna Beach l ·Z LB-Dave Lobaugh, Esperanza 6-3 LB-Dan Clary, A vJatlon 6-3 LB-Joe Maher, An\.elope Valley 6-2 B -Anthony Smith, Lennox 6·2 B -Chris Lee. St. Bernard 6-1 B -Rick Diffine. Mayfair 6-4 B -Mau Seto. Coachella Valley S-9 215 210 i4I 195 235 245 180 16S 182 195 170 184 190 180 185 195 210 210 210 181 197 220 205 175 184 19S 155 Second Team Offeue TE-Tony Goolsby. Cajon T -Jeff Benjamin, Bellflower G -Brad Odegard. Agoura C -Mark Maloney. Bonita G -Brad Foreman. La Habra T -Mike Cherney, Aviation SE-Jim Teahan. Esperanza SE-Jose LuJs Gerrardo. Calexico B -Bill Moseley. Verbum Dei 6-2 180 6-2 21S 6-S 220 6-0 21S 6-0 .20() 6-2 225 6-0 180 5-7 154 B -Dave Mollica, Costa Mesa B -Craig Breland, CbanneJ Islands B -Craig Gerber. Cajon B -Bob Pleasant, San Dimas Sec:olld Team Defn.se S-10 170 6-1 175 6-2 195 6-0 173 S-9 16S Sr.·: Sr .. j 81' •. ~· Sr .•• : Sr .• ,. Sr. Sr .•• Sr. Sr. Sr .. i' Sr. Sr. Sr Sr .... Sr.".·~ Sr. ' Sr.· Sr ... Jr .. ·. Jr. Sr.·· Sr.·· Sr.· Sr ... Sr. ,1 Sr ... · Sr._._ Sr.(~ Sr .. -: Sr.:. Sr.'·p Sr. Sr.~ Sr.' Sr. Sr.~ Sr. ~. Sr. Sr ... Sr. DL-Steve Lockhart. Ant.elope Valley 6-0 192 Jr .• Dlr-AllenS&reet.er,SanClemeate •-1 Zlt Sr. DL--Jerry Escobedo, C'chella Vly S-11 210 Sr.:- DL-S\eve Morgan, Palo Verde 6-0 190 Sr .•. LB-Leonard Tavera, Cathedral 6-0 200 Sr .. LB-Albert Lemos, Rio Mesa 6--0 195 Sr. LB-Tom Hall. Cajon 6-2 185 Sr.'· LB-Joe Myers, Royal Oak 6-2 245 Sr.:. DB-Stu Smith, La Habra S-11 190 Sr. • • DB-Allan Tomlinson, Ant. Valley S-11 165 Sr . DB-<iary McCredle. Bellflower S-11 185 Sr1• DB-Paul Gonzales. La Sierra 6-1 170 Sr.} ---86-48Win San Clemente t Topples Uni HANDY ltaft UUJ~•uam sparked the San Clemente High School '!OnS to a 66-46 opening South Coast League bas t}aU victory over visiting University High 's Troj fuesday night. The victory was e fourth straight for the Tritons of coach Stan Maggio lo bring the season mark to8-3. Hettinga was th 'gb scorer for the Tritons with 22, giving him 54 rthe last two games. But it was then play of Dunham and a scor- ing spree in the & quarter that broke a close game open a nd gav Clemente breathing room. With the score 28-27 in favor of the Tritons, nwmam .scored,on follow shot wlth 1:49Jefl, lben._ after a series oft vers by both teams including a.pair or steals by am. he scored again. After Mark S rry hit one with 27 seconds left, Dunham hit an 18 oot jumper at the buzzer to give San Clemente th al eight points or the half and a 36-27 lead at inte ission. : University, spite a nine-point performance by Mark Green · the third period, could nevef •et closer than nine r the balance of the game. Roger Poir' was the catalyst in the first tulf. scoring all 16 o is points in the first two period> to keep the Troja within range. University mployed a full-court pressing de- fense in the rly going while the Tritons relied mainly on a m ·to-man defense in the backcocrt. Until the ritons took command on Dunham's s purt at con sion of the half. the ·lead was aever more than fo points for either team. San Cle nte bad the hot hand, hitting 28 of 50 attempts fr the floor for a 56 percentage figure. University uld connect on only 19 of 56 attempts for 33.9 per nl. The average was brought dONn in the final pc od when the Trojans Mt only thret of 14 attempts. U"twtrtlh •••• pf !JI •• fl "' ·-Slef>~n' ' l 1 C:,.ttn ~ ' I 1J OUM•"' I l II Potr1tr I 0 J 16 C..rson 0 l • EykP>oll I ~ \ ) Neely 0 • ' H•UOtd ' I I I ... 111_ • 1 n 8~1ey , ' J s McOofl•ld I ' I ' Hoo• 0 : 1 0 Jontt I 0 0 , Tot•I~ t• t• "' She try 1 0 3 • score by Oturltr! Fr•fik 1 0 ' ' Unl .. r>Hr u tl tl ,_ lOlel\ M 10 " 60 SM-CltMtnle 1? l• I t•- N ort Suffers 6l-55 Cage Loss I ByGLENN WHITE Pt IM O•lly Piiot St•ft N ewport Harbor lligh's vars ity basket· ball team played a solid first quartt!r, then suf- fered through some ghastly lapses after that and went on to take a 61·55 non-league loss from Katella (Anaheim) High's Knights Tuesday night at Newport. ll was two different games ... Newport having little trouble with Kate Ila's press in the first haH, shooting 54.5 percent from the field for those two quarters and holding a 27 ·22 halftime edge after leading by eight at one time. Katella was having trouble hitting, canning only 34.4 percent of its shots from the field in the first two periods. However, the roles were reversed in the last two quarters . Katella connected on 55.5 per- cent of its field goal tries while Newport was malt- ing good on only 28.S per- cent. The third quarter was Newport's waterloo as the Tars missed their first 11 shots from the field and wound up only Prep Soccer VlllUITY Mlft'-Yleje 111111 c .. 1.1- MV \<Ori"• C•\ltl•n CM S ~~, ·-cl• 1•1 Ill •• , ..... £1,.al"l<I• \<.Orlttt 5'0dr•qw1 1 ~ ... r.Merln l1Ttr'9UllOC• ET \CMl"O' Hon•vor l z,,_ e.r,,l•.,1.CAIM C..tl0w•1'l .a.11'"· UOll...nltv UI ltl S.• C-t Uni t<MI"'' Wlldtr, PellM SC C. on1z.a,.,.,,.." JUNIO. VAUITY Ml»lell V .. I• IS> Ill Cal.I_ MY tcorln4' 8ro,e. C•rt~r. TltOmcKOfl 1. I. YI It. 11111MMI 121 121 Wtsttm £,i.ncl• KO•lno WMm3~ 1. atT .... 111 !ti C•M ET KMl"'I · Cooper. ""'""'"' 111 111 ~c•­U"I \torlftO l'r•nlt. Wt Ill> ' $tllr-r 1 SC Montano canning two of 14 from the field in that sta$a. Meanwhile, K :i ella got into its shootin orm and made five of i. first six second half s to takea32-29edge. Newport was never able to regain e lead and eventually lagged 54-43 with 2: 26 go in the game as t~ · ghts were apparent rattling the hosts with t press. Newport b w three easy shots in the finaJ four minute¥nd strug. gled lhrou a four· miinute f l Id goal drough t i the las t quarter The Tars !fade a belat· ed bid at Of~rtakinq the victors in~\he last 63 seconds as itch Massey and Rob Gf1ey combined for eight points in that span to ke il closer at the fi · Ga~ Sailors scor- ing with 1 points. Nev ort had 2 1 turnov s in falling to a U r rd for the cam- JJailD ,. I , 0 0 0 )0 II Sc•••., O...rttrt 18 • • ll ' ,, VA•SITY Ulll...nlty 111111 UM I I ; • 7 0 7 1~ t• 71 IP I lJ l 71 • 8 7 H \\ 61 ~I WO!" Ofl .. Mtr•ltOft t1,.,,. Urlt F"9 Wll-.. COM l(tr--V .. fe (JI !ti S." C--Oft ~netr•lion ,,,.. MV llQ: Joli"'°"· C.tt SC Cllll9'" """'· .. Hll (11111 TVJ~lll HI scorlnca1 V•l•cltr J U .. 1011 V"'OITY Ulllftnlfy Ill 111 UM Ur11Korl"4: Slcerd, Hlr.-CdM: """''·. Ml.,.._Vltl• (I I (21 S.11~ SC Kori"': Pl'tlllltH, HIOQ. """' ... , .. m c•1 ,..,.... Hlscorl,,.: J<ttk\On, AMl11n Gauchos omp, 96-76 Dennis Smith, s~ more than 30 points th~ third stra ight g , sparked Saddl eb ek College's Gauchos an easy 96· 76 basketball ~­ tory over visiting ' ~ San Antonio Coll '.{W!sday night.' . The Gauchos (9·7) turn to play toni&bt, lail UC Irvine JV o'clock. Smith, hltUng perimeter a nd in c~ 1$ sh<M f1 'f d and flnJ1htd ~Haske " ,.19"MAN .,.,.,,, .. 1 OI ff 71 ~ c; 1111 0 •111 0 :trff\t lllHI .~ ..... .. 111v--. ..... , ... ,"!Ml CM.1 .. 11. weoneeday. January 5. im DAILY PILOT •3 Wr~~!µng El T0<0 llJ) IH I 'aclOlt ... 0 ~I -P•lto••on IE I Olnntd Mo.~y s 11 Mesa Holds Off MV, 40-39 10$-0onolloo IE t llod C•rrlll06 • '1•-Tey1or <E> p1nntdM•rrf1t1 J 11 1!2-Le.on Cl , ptnnea Pr1rtuJ 41 119--C.-ISi 0.C Tlldur HJ IU_y.,., ISi Ott Pi(~OI 11 • 140-MctCo ISi 01nntd w .... , l ~ l•I Tuln 151 de< So•n.t l t l» ~ ISi .... ~tocl I~) 1V-.<>.l>rlQht IEI ponnoo CA•Ot<W• ) 11 1'1 S...<lltt 1\1 won ll'r .,..,..,,. Hwt-<.auow., IEI P•nne<I (M"'- l 43 JUNIOll VAll$1TY £1 h,.. IO I IJI S.cl<llol1•0 '1 V•fu\O 4£• plnnea How•r<l 1 "' 101--M•no IE I won by lort••I m -Ftournoy !El won b'r ton.it 11'-Gurlt'r IE I dee Muno I S I IJS-Sltoem•ker IE I Cle( Md•l•""I 1:·1 110-l(t'r IE I won by tor101t W7~tebl•\. f E, oec f:1,f..hro• '0 ·-'-" IE I Cle( M•ll•r ~ ~ '41-Alltn ISi dt( 010. • J 01-M•rlln • E > Otnntd DrtekOfn ' se By CRAIG SHEFF O! •lie O•llr ~tltl llatt Gary Wills hit a pair or free throws with 11 Stt<>nds to go, insuring Costa Mesa High a 40-39 victory over host Mission Viejo Tuesday night in the South Coast League. basketball opener. Wills had given the Mustangs a 38·37 advan- tage with 1: 14 to go on a long jumper. Then, after a Mi ssion Viejo turnover. he hit the two free throw& for the vic- tory. The Diablos' Pete DeCasas canned a shot at the buzzer. cutting lhe fJ.naJ margin to one. It was an uphill battle for Costa Mesa. which trailed through m06t of the close contest. The Mesans trailed by a 32·28 count entering the final period, but Mission Viejo elected to go to its passing game. The result was disastrous as the Diablos turned it over three straight times after Mesa had rut the opening baske t or the final quarter. wms hit from way out to knot the score at 32, Stan Miller added a pair or free throws a minute later and Steve Parrino scored on an eight.root baseline jumper and Mesa had a 36·32 lead. But the Diablos fought back. Roger Huffman canned three free throws in a 9()-second span and Mike Boster fired in a turnaround jumper with 1:34 left-giving Mission Viejo a 37-36 lead. That set the stage for W'tlls' heroics. COSTA MESA FULLERTON 2946 BRISTOL ST. 1530 S. HARBOR BLVD. Mi:ssion Viejo played well for three quarters, electing to take only the percentage shots and controling the tempo of the game with its slow down passing attack. And the Diablos s hot well •through the first three periods (57.7 per- cent>, but they onl y got off three attempts in the last eight minutes thanks mainly to those turnovers. Decasas led al l scorer:s with 14 points SANTA ANA SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY. PHONE: 870·0700 120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS PHONE: 547-7477 PHONE: 549-1533 wlule Wills had 13. Wtlll Gts~MtM (4tJ •• ft "' •• ) ' t •.I PMr1no 1 J l • Mlltt< • 1 10 Snow l) • t>vwrt 1 o > ""-""° 0 0 1 0 Mulll<I"" 0 0 1 0 Tot•h 0 10 U .0 Mlnl•11Vl•I• 11'1 •• ft pl tp Bo\lor ) 0 • 10 l(rueier l O O 1 FtlQ~t I I 0 1 EQet1\0n l 1 0 I p o.c.... ) 0 1 .. H•w"n\ 0 0 C) &r• .. ler o O o l1utt1N1n 0 ) I J TOl•I• ll ~ 10 :It S<ffe•yO...rt•n C0\1» Mtw l I 10 7 17-'0 ~UIM V••lo ll I 11 I 3' WESTMINSTER 15221 BEACH BLVD. PHONE: 893·854' SPECIAL VALUES FOR =TODAY THRU SUNDAY OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 8 A.M.·9 P.M./SAT. 8 A.M.·6 P.M./SUN. 9 A.M.·5 P.M. CORNELL "300' DOUBLE BELTED FIBERGLASS POL YE STER WHITEWALL TIRES ~-== 99 $ F ~ I. 878.13 C78 14 ua l4 F78 14 I $22 49 !I t $23.79 .,.,,,.. S2S 29 S26.49 ". $27.59 .. ~--\ S27_ .. 99 ~. u RAISED WHITE LETTERS llG WIDE-TUBELESS 4-PLY NYLON 30 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY*. $ £78·1~ plu1 $2.2.5 f E.T. • 2 11motass ams om 4 rurs or romsm coao1 • A TOUGH, oumu Tiil YOU CAN COUNT ON fOR ••• TIACTION I MllEAGEI COMIOUI 30 MONTH LIMITID WAHANTY• lltSTOCI llCGVLAA ' llAOlll.!:i. TYl'C INNERTUalS roa PAUOtGU CAU ~ UllCC NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED- MANDY fOR HOMI OR SMO, 9 11oz.9 C CAN DIXRON or FORD, YOUR CHOICE o\. 44c CAN M0tt·••opoto•••• 1ype: w.th chrtm•<ol tnh.btt0t. A n.vu tor D'f coonO.tiOMd OHl GAUOH ,.ona YOUI 3 COOLING SYSTIM 19 WllTIR OR SUMMfR FOR ROADSIDE EMERGENCIES ROAD FLARES JACTOIY lfMAIMArn.tll IACTOIY WUIUACTlltfl GENERATORS ALTERNATORS Sor qoodbr9 to ll'M'°'"' 1'~ ""'h 1«'"'Y ms MOST AMl11CAlf CARS '""'°""'oc""ect p«l-• •••ted•~­-·ploc• 1ho1 loulty ahttt10t0< with 11111 pt<. 101-• 1111..I r.ploulfttnl, 0-ol Moro" Prodt.t<I• ( btcJ)I vtilh bvHI ·Jn .allo91 r~lor) 1288 -·· O•IJ•n i<>do<oh>• bor w1I~ b4o<k col1b4'o••on• ond bv~• .. n dell.c1or top. KHP 149 ONE IN YOUR CAR ALEMITE CD-2 ~ .. . -- . : .. -· , . .. J W9dnMd~y. January 5, 1on Leas~s Reach 60-day High Koll Center NewJIC)C't 12&-acre corporate business park. announced a record number or new leases durtni a recent ~ay period. Leues totaling more than 1.25,000 square feet ot office space durinl th1s period included McGaw Laboratories, a divialon of American Hospital Sup- ply Corporation. which leased the new Lakeview Plua South building at U40 Von Karman Avenue. NINE nRMS HAVE LEASED space in the Lakeview Plaza North building at 4350 Von Karman Avenue, and Der Wienerscbnltul International, Inc. will move its entire corporate structure into the adjoining Sycamore building at 440 Von Karman ----------Avenue in April. Growth Told Comprehensive Care Corp., Newport Beach has announced net earn- ings from continuing operations of $362,000, or 29 cents a share, r°' the aix months ended Nov. ao, com pare d with $184,000, or 13 centa a lbare, for the like period in 1975. PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS •useNIESS NAMI STAHMINT n.o IOll""'l"ll perton 1, cJOlllQ bv\I -· .. JO ANN'S, 10110 Aderm $1""1, -lnQIOfl Beach. CA ttW Jo,t,M MH Col•. 1110 Santa I-•· "ountal" Valley, CA ttlot Thh b<l1l,,.H II COflcl\ICltO.,., ... 11\o Cllvl~•I JoAnnMHCole Tiii\ •lalt ...... 1 •t i lilt<I with the C:O..nly Cler-01 OranQ" Covnty"" O.C. ' "16 ,,_ Publl""'<! °'""9' Co••• Oally Piiot, OK 11. n. 2'. "1und Jen S. ttn S7]1 ,. PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS IUSINIU NAMI! STATl!MIENT ll>o lallOWlnQ Der >Onl art CloinQ bull _, .. Ill YEl..1..0W 8111CI( "0&0 'HOWS 111 ll El..l\llEllCISE. CJI ARTISTS COMMUNITY ACCESS •i.t Win•-Drive. HUl\llf\910fl ee ..... CA ._., access lMl\9 Arh In Actloft tnc • • Ct llfornla CO•PO•ttlon ti.1 WIMlow Drlvr Hul\t1n91on 8u c11. CA .,.., T"'• Dutlntt\ " conOw<ltd OY. (Of• --'""' ACCESS l1•1"9 ArU trtActlOt"t. tnc Tf\11 \t•t•ment W.4\ fll9d w1t" tt'ilt County Cltt-OI O•t-County°" O.C 10, 1916 ,. .. rn ""°'""'" Ore•~ C<Mlll [Mlly PllOI OK IS, n. H 10• •no Jan I 1'11 $11116 PUBLIC NOTICE .. ICTITIOUS IU5fljfSS NAME \TATIMllNT t l'lt IOt1a..lnQ otr'IOnl t rt OOlf\9 Ml ""' ., (.tC ASSOCIATES. 1600 Noni\ 8roaowev. Ste, 101. Stnt• Ant. Celllornlt '1106 Wlltlt m E ~'""'llltr. Jr. 1101 tE l'atrNIY•n 11 ltJ ~nt• Ana C..tlfornl• '7101 '•mutt J C•"1•r•l• '''1 l't lrw tttllt• lld Stnlt Ana c.tl!o<nlo tlTOS Jolvl 1om••ndlkt IU.1 St lltqlt ~ec• S.nt• Al'\•, Celllof'n••.,I07 JoM Mo"91\ll 11\\1 1Wac"""'"1 SI 5.wll• 4'n• C•ll'Of'"'' .,701 Atchafd L McDerrnolt 711'' L .. UOl>f' Cor°"• .,.1 Mfr (.atltornla .,.,, Tiii\ ov~.,,.,, 1' condu< ttd by • CJll'W'•' ~tf'lttVUO 111<,..,d l Mc O<trmot1 T~\ \tit•mf"l ••" lltf'CI wftrt ro. (Ollnly Cl••• ol OrAn99 '"""'' °" ~., .... ,. J4'0Ct0tl • "I 0 0 l It ... _...,ca" o. tll!ttr» _,.., •o c11. CA,, ... P\IOI•-0.-CO<l\t 0.1h Pllol .i... , ,, ,, , •••• ,, • '7 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITICXIS eullNIU NIIMI! UllT&Ml"T T"9 fOllOWlr>Q ,..,"°"' t rt dolnq !lutl ""3M TA8llE AOC~ GlNalt4'l )TOltlE >HO! CM•I l>ll!~h• .. Y 5oulll ~. (Allf()lfllt'1•11 IO&T C AN YON INC IA (allforftla C-orpora,.on1 •l1 Mort" Cu\! "''"••• l ~ovn• Bu ell c.itt-·~tl Tlut O<AI""' I• ·-~•HOY t •0--•IO" IOAT CANYON IN( • • .._'Y ( (.arpentt• S.c ,,...",,.' nw, \tateim.nt •• , f ll41f1 •i'" ,,.. ~'f C1tn OI 0.•"91COVnt•0.. 10 10• ....,, llvol-°'""" Coa>t °""• ~'°' o.c u n 1' '"•-J•"' 1m U»-•• PUBUC N011CE MOTICI 0, INTIMTIO.. TO HI.I.. IHAL ,.0,lltTY NOTICE IS HEltl!IY OtVIEN t"-1 "" O.C•-t~ .. ,. , ... &>¥0 ... fOvc•ttoft ot '"• Htwport ~t• Ul\llltO S<"°°I 01\tfltt of 0<- c-.IY. C..lllMl\lt , -od I ,....,..., (IO'I ol lf\l,ntlOn tO M ii f N~tl qi •Ml IH'Operty 01 eoorot lmal•ly to '°' K Nt o·~· IOU!td '" I"" City OI tooi. Ma ... co"'"'-'' --.. u. "W•ll•lltm k~I Sii•" • ..., '-' -1klllerly Clo.Crl-In HIO R...o!v· llO<I TM "-"''Oft lluo 111t ,.,...,i-•cupt•llt• bid ti Ont H11ndrtd Th!NMno I \100,000 00 I 004 l•rv.cr.. pe.,.ble lfl ca•ll. Afi'll ., ttn. ti ' o'ttou D"' MJ °"" llatO •• 1111 11111<1 of • P<*I< -1 ... wfll(ll Wiii Ill ... td lft ~ 1111.i ._.., Oifl<t ti 11'1 'ta<entle A-. :O.tt Mew. ~lllornle, lo< 1.,. ,... ~. _,,.. -Ot<ttrtt!On ....... .. .... -I• Ortl """'° .. ,, wlll .. .. .. l"t(.tl..0 ti ,,.., lllM COpte• of 11\t lh.otllltoft M UlllQ IW1ll '"' ""'" -'-"'-,,, ~ le!• tre •••11•1119 e t Ille •u~MH OI llct ot th• \"1001 Olttrl<I. IOI "•Ctlllfe Awt llut , CHI• NIH• (.el l'of'fll • CATE Otct-14 ltl• Jolln W N l<ol I $t<-.ttryOllM kMOOI &duUlloft NtWllOrt•.M9W Ulllll4ol S<llOOI OIW tcl ,.,.,,,,.. °'" ..... c-Diiiy Jiii ... , ... _., t, ,, 1• '"' tl·11 Burlington Northern Air Freight, Inc .. will re· locate ita corporate headquarters into 33,eas square feet of space in Lakeview Plaza North rrom its cur- rent location in Inglewood. Hobworth & Scboellerman, a law firm. bas moved into 2,400 square reet or space in Lakeview Ptua North. Fol.lr Phase, a computer manuracturer, will re- locate and expand ita rqiooal otnce from Irvine to Lakeview Plaza North. THE REAL ESTATE investment rlrm of Howard. Howard & Barnard, lnc. bas moved its headquarters from the Coldwell Banker Building at J(oll Center Newport to 1,985 square reet or ex- panded space in Lakeview Plaza North. John O'Donnell & Partners, a real estate develop· ment firm, bas moved into larger quarters in the building rrom its 500 Newport Center Drive loca- tion. Prasadam Distrlbut.ing International, a dis- tributor of Hawaiian honey nectar and operator of health rood restauranta, has leaaed a new head- quarters omce in Lakeview Plaza North. Attorney Richard Frazee, already located in Koll Center Newport, has leased 800 square reet Of space in Lakeview Plaza North. C-ertified public accountants John Buller and Patrick Charney will relocate from Irvine to Lakeview Plaza North. Ahmanson Trust Company of Loe Angeles will open a branch location in Lakeview Plaza North. Smalt.bJUiness Course Slated The "desired incomt" approach will be the springboard for studenta to establish, finances and operate their own simulated small busin~es in a class at Orange Coast College this spring. Spring semester courses begin Feb. 7. Tbe three-unit class, titled "Business Ownership and Management," meets Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from 8-9 a.m. Course in- structor Eugene W. Overholt will allow studenta to select their own business classifications . "The class, which requires no pre-requisite, ls designed for those wbo plan to start a business in the future or for small businessmen wbo already own and operate an establishment," Overholt said. Spring registration is under way through Feb. l by appointment. Open reglstratlon, on a drop-in basis, will be beld Feb. 2-10. Registration appoint· meots may be securred in OCC's admissions and re- cords omce. For registration information, phone 556-m2. OCC courses are toition-rree to persons wbo have lived in California for at least one year. Stu- dents pay a $5 health services fee at the time or re· gist.ration. Three Honored Tbree Orange Count~teak and Ale restaurants have earned Sou m Calllornla Gas Company rood industry concern wards for energy cooaervation. Winners are the Jolly Ox nstaurants ln Laguna lillla and Anaheim and Granny's Attlc in HunUngton Beach. They were given the awards for reducln& their combined natural gaa use nearly l.S mllllon cubic reet annually. The savings lowered each restaurant's average au bi.11 more than St.500. The restaurants achieved these savings by lldoptiTJg a strict energy management program that included extlDgu.ilbing decorative ftreplaces, ln· stalllng t.tme clocks on ps equipment and reducing thermostat settings to 68 deCrees for beaUng and 78 for coollnt. Ranch Tells Woe LOS ANGELES CAP>-TheTejon RaochCom- par.y of Los Angeles faces a "substantlal wrtte- down" due to the financial troubles of a Umlted partnerattlp with Tejon Agricultural Partners, the company says. At the same time, Tejon Ranch bas aMounced that John Hancock Mutual Ufe Insurance Company haa advanced the partnership $1.8 million and that Tejon Ranch advanced another $300,000. John Ran· cock Is the partnership's prtncipal secunid lender. HOWEVER, THE PARTNEllSIDP'S financial situation •·remains critical," according to a Tejon Ranch spokesman . Tejon Agricultural Propertlea wu formed in 1'72 as a limited partnership to engaae in variout acriculturai activities, including producing wine grapes, almonds. walnuts and other crops. Tejon Ranth manages the partnership. A spokesman for TeJon Ranch uld the partnerahlp'a financial diff\culUes were due lo a <tecllnd ln the price paid for wtne arapes and because of costly auempts by the partnership to process and produce ita own bottled wtne . Lease Volvo! FirmGaim , I '77 VOLVO 24? OD Plllly CQJLtp~d 4 tJ>'lrd II' .llllfPOOf. /l"IC'd QlaJ3, & ID f W Ii,..,, JG mo OJ)t!l·tnd k'<l'" Cup t:1>at-f1'000. Rlsiduol PJol.~. IM II 11\.ft 11'0!ttlll J>0¥"lt'"I It llcnu Ill odOO!)Cf, °" Oppr'O\.~ rrrdil. flOJ087 I Wt llCUC!all "'°"'' ":~1 1'~1 "'" MARClUIS • ~ f>lru '"' Volvo / 1 oyot:t "~01 M1riwri1• 1''-W) .. ~tl•'Mun Vlitio C 71-41 lkl I ·l ... L Mtcrodata, trvtM, bu reported flnt quarter re- venues of '8 m .000 and net income Ol '88'1 ,000, or 31 cents a share on 2,245,000 ave-ra1e numMr of share. out· standin1 for the first quarter ended Nov. 30. im. ln the prior year'• ftnt quarter. revenu• were St,802,000 with net Income of StH,000 or 2S ceni. a share on 1,en,000 avera1e number of lbaNI outnud.1n1. 1, 26 Pounds of Credit Walter Cavanagh, Santa Clara pharmacist. is listed in Guinness Book of Records as having the world's largest collection of credit cards. His 802 bits of plastic weigh 26 pounds. A department st-0re recent- ly declined to add the ~rd card because of his out- s tanding credit potential. Coffee Prices Freeze Reported By 'Ole AUoelated Preas Chicago's major retail food stores have agreed not to raise the price or coffee ror 45 days, even if wholesale prices, currently rampaging upward. force the stores to lose money. The agreement, announced Tuesday by Chicago Mayor Michael A. Bilandic, differs rrom the coffee boycott that consumer officiala and supermarket chains ln some other areaa have been supporting. BILA.NDIC PRAISED CITY CONSUMER Sales Com- missioner Jane Byrne for persuading tbe food stores to agree to the freeze, and she sald the boycQtt is not the answer to skyrocketing coffee prices because corree- d.rinking is too deep a habit with Americans. She said she thought the price rreue would dissuade shoppers from hoarding, which could raise prices even higher. But Frank Camberos or Treasure Island s tores, one or Chicago's major chains, said, ·•we have to go further than a price freeze." OCCSets Skill Class Orange Coast College will offer a new rune. week course in basic of- fice skills this spring. The four-unit class meets Monday through Friday from 10 a.m.-nooo. Spring classes begin Feb. 7. Students who finish the nine-week course will receive certificates of comple- tion. Registration for spring claases will be conducted Jan. 4 through Feb. 1 by appointment. Registra- tion runs from 8:30 a.m.-7:30 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays, and 8:30 a.m.-2 p.m . Fridays. Appointments may be secured in OCC's ad- missions and records or. flee. For registration in- r or ma tl on, phone 556-5772. Open registration. on a drop-In basis. will be held Feb. 2-10. Two Form New Firm Reserve Landfill Development Services bu been formed as a joint venture by Reserve Syntbetlc Fuels, Inc .. Newport Beach, a sul>- sldiary of Reserve Oil and Gu Company, and Lockman & Associates, Monterey Park, to pro- vide engineering and management consulting services to the solid wute lndu.atry. The new firm will con· •ult on landrm design, operation and manage- ment, with emphasis oo dellan and lnatallation ot leachate and gas mill'•· Uon control aystema, ac- cording to Robert ff. Collini, III, president. Reserve Synthetic Fuels. Bookkeeping Cla88 Slated Orange Coast College la offering a new full. charce bookkHping pro- aram for the ftttt time th1a tprlnJ. The eigbt- wdt procra m meets two hours a day ror 18 fteks. Spring classes begin Feb. 'I Tbe clUHS meet Mon- d.-y tb.routh Frtday rtom l~ p.m. Jle,tatration will be conducted Jan • .t tbrousb Feb. t by ap-pol n t men t Chu 1cbedulea have been malled to bomtt in tbc Coast Community CoU•c• Dlltrtct and &l'f> available tree ln the OCC Boobt.ore. Fol' retiltrA· don lnlormaUoa pbaDe -.rm. 1700 A1'erage Service Jtojects Five-year Growth By JOllN.._ ....... .l.p Al' IW~.~~ .. "f One of the most encouraging stock mar~\outlOOka, one that if cor. reel would mean a Dow Jones industrial tvtraie of 1100 wttbln nve yean, bu been issued by the conservaUve Wrtht Investors Servtct Claiming ''the basic economic forces which iave depressed both the American economy and security prices have n1w decisively revened their long-term trends." John Wri&bt auggesu that "realistic optimism" is now Justified. WRIGHT, WHOSE organiza- tion supplies the basic research for hundreds of millions of dollars In trust and pension runds. made the evaluation in his annual message to the New York Society of Security Analysts. ln it be stated that a high of 1150 polnt5 or better might be re- alized before the e~ ot 1977, and that following a relrtively minor bear market reactioa in 1978, the general upward thrwt will be re- s umed. Durtng this time, be said, a well-diversified portf<Uo or hJgh quality equities held e>.rougbout minor cyclical ups ~ downs will "unquestionably ~perform the market average ant any so- called index funds. , WRIGHT, WHO B~ES his forecasts on fundatnental economic and market rt.search, ls highly regarded by 4t-her in- vestment advisers. ~any of whom base their own ~mates in part on his org~ation's studies. The past 10 yeart have witnessed the evolution. iand the past five years tbe end of an era, Wright said, during whlctUorma- tion and distribution of invest- ment capital was "eroded, dis· slpated and exported." The result, he continu-1. was "to bring down around us the structure of security vallations and distribution." This "sorry and destructive era" now is behind us, and a new proaressive period is ahead, he said. Over The Counter NASO UstiftC)1\ ( NEWiANALYSIS J CIDEF AM&NG 111E reasons in bis opinion ls that the decUo~ of capital rctmation through personal aavtca has been re- verted as & r esult or an "enormous b~up'' or t\.tnded tu-deferred tmploye benefit plans. Rising at a 1 percent com- pound annual ru. these fund.'l now total more t1an $400 bllllon Wright noted, anfilnust by law b8 invested In boo1 fide capital ltem1, mainly coporate equity and debt. He Uated as a~g the other reasons for hi.a bulntmess: -"The outnow ( corporate capital to industrialappUcaUons abroad bu been fe\i.ned aa the uplrattona of roreit'I workers and the lnnaUon of bretgn pro- duction coat.a rose to 4Dd beyond the point or competl\ve parity wtth the U.S." -THE DECLINE OF the dollar and the fll&ht If invest- ment capital have been -eplaced by renewed world COffidence, malting the dollar "on<! again the principal intematioral 'cur-rency or reruge .... -The very long-term trend toward higher interest ra~ baa been reversed. Future >rime rates should be much clos., to 6 percent than to either t.ht ex· cesalve highs or the past 10 !ears o r the lows o r tbe g1eal depression of tbe 1930s. g:Pc'its:f 81: 1 .o Oii .1 Oii .s Ott '·' °" '·' Oii .. S?!! u ~ u Off 1.0 Oii 11 Oii 1.1 Oii 11 ()ff 1' OH 11 S!!l a ~ ., °" ... ()JI •.S Oif u ()ff u MUTUAL FUNDS I I I , Wednesday's Closing Prices NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS WIM:lnttS<Jay January 5 111n l/N DAILY PILOT aG Fast Food Foe A&P Identifies /ta Enemy By MJ1,TON MOSKO WITZ Grant C Gentry. pn·Mdent CJ( the reorl{umzcd and re- furbished A&P grocery chw.n, bws ouw c::lc•arly ldentitled the new enemy ti( rooct e1tores. and lt turns out to be your old fnend: McDonald's. A&P doesn't ~spet"llllly need new on•mau. After fallln& lnto a deep s leep, the nation ·s oldest rood chain awoke to flnd at.self sLrang hng 1 t had more stores than anyone else but they were small outmoded markets mired ln neighborhoods that had seen the• r best days A typical A&P store was a geriatric stronghold. As a consequence, A&P lost its leadershlp position t o Safeway Stores. And the n it Money Tree almost lost the whole • ball game as 1t wheezed Lo a record deficit ot $157 million ln 1974. GENTRY IS PART OF THE RESCUE team that wu recruited to save the company He came from Chicago's Jewel stores. which was a good place to come from since J ewel had whipped A&P soundly m lhe Chu:ago area. knocking 1t out of f1 rst place The rescue teapl. headed by Chrurman Jonathan Scott. who cam e from Albertson's m Idaho, has nol been timid. It rould not afford to ~ ll has closed 40 pe rcent of A&P's old stores and has done what other chatns dad years ago -rely on huge supermarkets and stay open longer hours, all day and mghl 1r possible. The result 1s more bucks per square foot. Now down to about 2,100 units. the Great AUantJc & PacLf1c Tea Company is at least making mont~Y again. HOWEVER, THE THREAT MR. GENTRY perceivn is more fundamental. He noted, m a talk delivered recenUy to food brokers. that American families are eating more or their meals outside the home. What good will It do A&P it tt spruces up its operations to meet the com petition only to discover that the aisles are empty because people are next door reeding their races at McDonald's or Jack-in-the-Box or Kentucky Fried Chicken? The A&P president warned that the food chains must meet this challenge "if we are lo survive." Tbe figures show that Mr Gentry has somt:t.bing to be concerned about The amount of money spent on eating out has tripled during the past 15 years and 1s stall moving up .s harply, year after year, through good times and recession lames. THE ESTIMATE IS THAT ONE OUT or every lhree meals eaten 10 this country is consumed away from home. And the pred 1ct1on 1s that by lhe m1d-l980s half the meals will be eaten outside the home There are many reasons for this trend. Two cited by lhe New York advertising agency, William Esty, are more working women and a tremendous growth Jn lhe singles market. In 1975, 30 percent of the adult population m the United States was unmarned. Thal compares with 16 per- cent in 1970 So what we have is th1s interesting relallonshlp. U.S. food s tores now ta.kc in about $150 billion a year. But Americans are spendmg more than $45 billion eatmg oul. In short, the grocery stores are missing out on one out of every four doll ars spent on food. Whal to do"t A&P's Grant Gentry suggests that one solu- tion would be for the food industry to develop more palata· ble frozen and packaged foods that could be prepared quick- ly in conventional and microwave ovens. Thal, he hopes, might deter people from rushing out to Mc Donald's. ln other words, lhe Amencan family can create a Little •fast-food "restaurant" in the home. A McDonald's for every kitchen All to save the supermarkets. We just hope Mom - or whoever 1s warming up the food in the kitchen -ge~ paid more than lhc kids at McDonald's. Market Again Slwws Its Disappointment NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices suffered another set· back today amid pers isting disappointment over the market's weak showmg at lhe start of the new year. Trad- ing was active The Dow Jones average of 30 points industrial stocks. down 16.78 in the first two sessions this week, was off another 9.81to978.06 . • 4itoek,, 111 The .'tpof light Amerfran Leader• What Stoelu Did NEW YORK t&PI Mv•nt•\ 09(.H,.\ lln<"h•"'lod 10MI lt\llC!\ N•w '"' 71 h!Qh\ New 1'1~ 17 IOw\ Pr•v Jrs4'• ~ '°"' '141) l'll llll> 1'1'.17 ''J' I 11 1 I ' W HAT AM[l( 010 NEW V'ORI( IAPI Pr•v Mv•l\r•\ 0Kll"9\ Un<ll~no-d T~&f l\\ut~ ~w 1'1& 11 hlOh• ...... 1'7t ,, '°"'' z!~Y tt;J JA1 11• :11" ,.., tn '6S ]6 ., 1 ........ .. DowJoeae•A .,erage• ,~f;tl:'"IAPI l'h1e1 Dow Jonn•vt•~ OIM-11 HIQll Low CloM Cho lO l!>d ... ., "°.. '" 01 m.o.-'11 10 Trt1 2U 1t U6 ot tn 1' 2J3l!-t.1S U Utl lllll Ol lot ll 10... 107 " 0 t4 0 St.. l>1 11 )U i> 117 40 )tt IJ 2 ti 1nttu, 1,•o 100 TM'I ic-l 'OI> U'tll\ ~--·~ s1.. Us.l,toll "SIX wmt 4 SMH.F' ..,,. ••~.u scour a C.AntOUSI •'MAIA'IHOH MAM" llJ ""OMI FllW 0¥Ell 1HE CUCKOO'S NEST"" .. CA.UIE'" (I) "THEA TBt OF 11.00D" (RJ 11KING KONG" IPGt '"THE I.Ate) TIME FOll~r' -"ONE HUNDRED PERCENT -ENTERTAINMENT ... a case of an ingenious novel being turned ~into a terrific movie. A lean back and : love it lark that is a practically ; incomparable family film ... a garland of ~ • cheers." c ...... S• . .;I•• THF NBC TODAY Sr/OW THE SEVEN-PER-CENT SOLUTION Al .\'I "H"" \ "'""\Rf IJ(,RA\I R06£RT rx \<\I l .,,,, '\I( 0 1 \\JI 11/\M">ON '" 1111 "l \l'\l1tRO'r~ll'lJO'\ l \I RI 'U UI 1\11 R • JOU (,RI Y "''1"THI\ t G(,l\H Clt<\RI l 'iC:RAY r,1 OHi.Ji\ RRO\\' RI C..1:-0l ,,fld 11 Rf'1Y hi '1P '\I "4J ~ .. • ,'t ,,, • \'1.\-It . . ... . 'Figaro' Due in County Opera hasn 'l exactly berome a household word in Orange County despite the valiant efforb or our local Lyric Opera Association to sustain an art form that bas always found a champion in this column. But opera takes center st.age early in what we hope will be a happy new year for all connected with the art with the visit to the Santa Ana High School auditorium of the West.em Opera Theater. The group is. of course, the touring ann of the San Francisco Opera and they have delighted Orange Colinty audiences on their previous visits to our area. And th1s writer immediately senses another triumph in the offing with the group's de- cision to offer "The Marriage of Figaro" in their next outing. MOZART'S MUSICAL SET'11NG for the revels of Figaro, the roust.about barber who was Im· mortaUzed by Rossini in an earlier opera. is an ideal choice for a product.ion that will be co- sponsored by the Musical Theater Guild of Newport Beach and Las Campanas. METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER 0SORRY, presents N PASSES (A) FAYE DUNAWAY WILLIA/Ill HOLDEN PEIERFl#CH ROBERT DUVALL in ''#ETWORKn WEEKDAYS: 7:15-9:30 SAT-SUN: 1:30-3:50-6:15-8:30-10:40 edwards BRISTOL CINEMA BRISTOL AT MACARTHUR 540-7444 . VOYAGE OFTHE .! ·'·:, DAMNED <j.,·: .(' • "' .t. "•,. . ~ .,... . (PG) -~~,. ED~ARDS ARBORc~':A HARBOR BLVD. AT WILSON ST. COSTA MESA 646·0573 ._ ROl!(RT f loc.NI SUSAN MMAffl[ SHAW-... JO.lvt JO l«S .. tlAM lNlSl:ll ....._. .. ,.,.,t).4l,..,....•SJtW lblfl.l ,._,,.,..._. ... lilt*)$U a•oc lllltN JIQIMl lfUlW'ltiS II( 11.U~ c.. .. c 11 •anCll96& --·· walMONU ·-·· .... Hit.I> OYIRJ lr'lll H WISI --·-... .. ,M&.ftut.I ... An added attraction will be the appearance as Dr. Bartolo of Ralph Bassett, the fine bass-baritone oC many a "Messiah" offering and a bard working Huntington Beach resident who manages to find time to serve as the artistic director or Orange County Opera. And it's arand to know that all profits from the performance at 8 p.m .. Jan. 12, will to lo finance a full scale opera production by Orange County Opera and expand the programs they provide for school children in th\s county. · FROM WHAT TIDS COLUMN has been ad- vised on ticket prices, it's going to be bargain base- mentnigbt Jan.12. Regular admission tickets are $3 with student tickets available at $2. Group rates are in effect for parties of 30 or more who will gel the $2 per Uckel rate. Call any one of these ladies for tickets: Hazel Bassett, 543-1404 ; Sharon York. 558-0489; Jackie Terrill, 774-5183 or Mrs. Jordan. 673-4305. ANhetm • n2-89()2 "INE HElL OF A GOOD 11ME." ,,~......,......__. . .. TOM BARLEY i i Music Box · ~ ~ CBO&DS AT RANDOM -Letters from two~ aders during the holiday seuoo ask me lt J am$ aware of the feud between L<>s Angeles PhilarmoniS: Orchestra spokesman Ernest Fleischman and~ Angeles Times critic Martin Bernbelmer wblcb~ seems to be conducted in the pages of the Times. :: Yes. I'm aware ol it and no. I have no comment~ on the matter. Not for the column, al least . • ~ THEATRES-~ COUNTY MAIM'S $0. COAST PWA c.11 .... ,...,. Mt-1111 MANN'S SO. COASl PWA CHI.I- )llt ltll!M Mt-1111 MAH'S SO. COAST PWA ... -Woml MAJll'S CIMDWJllO MltS..-...... ,.,,.,.. MAMM'S ClllEMAlJllD WMS•- lNlrot•• II\. IMI MAllll'S CIMEMILAllD MW S.. ll!Mt , ...... ' Ut.llfl "MARATHON MAtft. 1tH tATJtjM t-11 '1 tAYS If 1ll Clm'° .,,. .. ,,,,.._..,......., .... ,.__. U-T,,.e.T .,_...,....,. Jiil- ... ocn-.__.n-,.-"'" __ .... -... _ ,, .. '10N• IOHG• CPGJ .,_...,. UT~I~ ......... ,,.. ... --~ smMOaJ(T-SUTS' ,_ SAT/Wl'-1~ ........... -,.._ "'MARATHON MAM" ,,,.,.. Uf/Wl'-f_t_ "3 tAYS Of 11lt ~ .,.. .... ,,___,... CUHf aftWOC» THI INFOKHCll ... H1GH VILOCITY ... .\ CAR~IE ........ .. ....... ~.....,..~'Oo GENE WILDER Jill ClAYBURGH RICHARD ~YOR IF TH!'t' (R) ONUl(NEW SH! HAO THl~WO "MARATHON MAN" . ., ... ....,._...,,. .. "SILVER STREAK".-..-~ :C0~...:•"10N-.a-PATRICK MaGOOHAN ---......,......._.....,.,....~ ,,.,.,..,.... ..,,... ~ .. ttOMI, .....,....,......,.,..,.. 0--.~~ ......... au.f'tOQl!le ._ • ......-~ caJJl'POf\1,11119 . . . ' ....... ._ .... IHOUf AT ,!11' OIYll'";_ IOM'YlOCll1t•~ Wldn-4ay. Jinuary 5. tm ~ll Y PILOT •1 (PG) 11m1u111111S Fonz and Friends Bold Top Ratings 2 MILES SOllTH Of SAN DIEGO FWY. ·WEEKDAYS 7:15-9:45 SAT-SUN 1:00-3:30-8:00 8:30-11:00 LOS ANGELES CAP> -The ABC duo of "Hap-"Smile," 24.3. CBS. "Stanky and Hutch." 23.9, ABC. py Days" and "Laverne and Shirley" continued. 10. "Welcome Back, Kotter." 23.9, ABC. lta dominance of the television ratings. separated 11. "One Day at a Time," 23.6. CBS; "Barney only by a Burt Re)nolds moV1e. • Miller, 23.6. ABC. Ue 13. "Wondc:rful World of Dts- ''H•P.PY Days'' came in first Cor lhe week ended ney," 23.4. NBC. 14. "What's Happenln'," 22.6, ABC. Jan. z. 'W.W. and tbe Qlx.ie Dance Kings" was ,----------------------------,-, second and "Laverne and Shirley" was third. 15. "Charlie's Angels." 22.Z, ABC. te. "The Ton!i RandaUSbow/' 21.a. ABC 17. "Ba.retta." 21 7. ABOt 18. Orange Bowl , Zl.3, NBC. 19. "The Mary Tyler- Moore Show." 21.Z. CBS. a>. "Tbe WaJtons," 2LO, CBS. ~ A CBS S PECIAL. "Tbe Secret Life of John Chapman," was fourth, and the CBS Movie "Smile" wu eighth. The movies and special ap- pareoUy were aided by lhe abundance of reruns on during the holiday week. CBS won the raUnM week wtlh rating of 20.7. ABC was second with 20.4 and NBC was third with U . 7. ABC continued to lead the season to date. NBC did not place a show in the top 10 and only two in lhe top 20, "The Wonderful World of Disney" ill 13th place and the Orange Bowl game In 19th place. Don't drop the ball! Get a job wilb a low·cost DalJy Pilot Classifie d Ad . f'hone642,S678. TIIDAYNJOM .. a r David Bowle .. The man who fell to Earth "WILK : - AIDDr".ll' BE&E ARE THE TOP 20 in lhe Nielsen rat--========================================;i .ings : ,. l. "Happy Days." 28. 7, ABC. 2. ABC Sunday Movie. "W. W. and the Dixie Dance Kings," 28.3. ABC. 3. "Laverne and Shirley," 28.Z. ABC. 4. "The Secret W e of J obnCbapman,"27.5, "TbeSlx Million Dollar Man." 26.6. ABC. 6. "M-A·S-H," ZS. 1, CBS. 7. "Maude," 24.7, C~. 8. CBS Wf!dnesday Movie. 91,• People. 33 Elit &ates ••• One sm,,,, ... ''OLDTIMIS• bv ..... PWw ~----.-........... Ofllrlollftd -~ ... ·-~--°""' .... -~-°""'"' 20ltl ..,......,, _ •• ~,......,... ~&OWCOlt ..... IWO ·-W8>, & THUIS. -JAM. I a 6 -Sl.10 · -.~ TW!-MllUTE W • ~\Llff•f,3 MARTIN BALSAM • BEAU BRIDGES • MARILYN HASSffi • DAVID JANSSEN • JACK KLU6IAll WALTER PIDGEll • 6ENARDWLANOS .mirrnas·w1om·MTM01n w1s-JOE wr A FILMWAYS PRODUCTION/A LARRY PEERCE ·EDWARD S FELDMAN FILM Screenplay by EDWARD HUME ·Baseclon lhenovelbyGEDRGE LafOUNTAINE Music by CHARLES FOX. Olllded by LARRY PEERCE. PrexllJald by EDWARDS FELDMAN . A UNIVERSAL PICTURE lRl11Snm:1m-;a TECHNfCOLOA'"• PANAVISIOW _ • • _ ·-" _,. I lllnl 1D Jllll ltworlcl .•. (R) "3 DAYS OF THE CONDOR" ROBERT REDFORD FAYE DUNAWAY STARRING ~ARKIN VANESSA REDGRAVE ROflERT DUVALL NICOL WIWAMSON "'-~ (PG) MfffD ll"IOOXX'S TATUM O'NEAL ............ ,.. !!It, ... -._ ..... • .. DAILY PILOT Wedne9dey. J1noary 5. 11J77 , The Bla•ed :l~ame :: . TV Violence Special Rated Too Violent By MALCOLMN.CARTEK NEW YORK (AP) -NBC pulls no punches on its 3\-'l-hour speclat, .. Violence in .America." It should have. The program, which st.arts at 8 o'clock tonight on Channel 4, uses violence. in the very way it deplores it. Instead of insight, the viewer gets a bloody potpourri of cadavers, pulpy hospital pa- tients, wounds, sbooUngs, knifin&S, beatings and wrenching grief. NBC fails to exercise any restraint on itself while blaming violence on everything from motherhood to the Wild West. from the silver screen to television itself. PERHAPS MORE REGRE'ITABLY, NBC fails to give much iJJumination to the subject. despite· three hours or prime-time plus a half-hour panel dis- cussion starting al 11:30p.m. "It was our intention [ ] 'to show the television au· TV REVIEW 'dience the clear distinc-tion between make- believe violence and authentic violence -the difference between real blood and ketchup," Ex- ecutive Producer Stuart Scbulberg said when the . project was announced in June. "The program does that and it ain't pretty." The program -with anchorman Edwin Newman and correspondents Carl Stokes, Floyd Kalber and Linda Ellerbee -opens wlth a justified warning that some members of the family, "especially children." might be disturbed about the gore lo come. Then it alternates scenes of serenity and savagery set to the music of "Live and Let Die." IT BEGINS SENSATIONALLY and stays sensational, but needlessly so, for the pictures on the tube do little to reinforce the points in the script. And the script does too little in so much time to ex- plain violence or suggest ways lo mitigate it. What is the value, for example, of showing the bloody holes in a man's skuJJ during brain surgery? Or the gaping wound of a man stabbed in the back? Or a corpse on the autopsy table? Because it exposes us to the agony of rapist and victim alike, perhaps the best sequence involves an albeit stagy. confrontation between four rapists and four victims of other rapists. It may once and for all dispel the notion that victims "ask for it" and lbus deserve.it. ANOTHER REVEAUNG SEGMENT, this 9ne on mass murderers, helps explain what drives an Edmund Kemper to slay 10 people, including his mother. "People are things to him," Kalber says. Jn an interview, Kemper tells how he used to have fan. tasies of winning over any woman be wanted and bow be used to express anger by destroying in· animate objects, then dogs and cats, then people. What is unusual about the show are interviews by the presidents or aJI three networks on a network that is calUng attention to violence on television. Although TV takes its lumps. "Violence in America" does excuse TV violence by saying it's what the public, after all, demands. "PAJN ANO BRUTALITY," Newman said, "are box office.'· · In the end. the problem with "Violence in America" is that it does not answer the questions it poses: what is the origin of violence, why bas 1t tn· creased here and how can it be controlled? They are q uestiom that need answering. · SAN FRANCISCO ... ~lrVI (AP) -Defense at- torneys cannot be forced to reveal the names of proepectl ve witnesses in criminal cases before they come to trial, the California Supreme Court bu r\lled. Cup Contender Enterprise, the new contender for the 1977 America's Cup, skims past a 14-foot boat in San Diego Bay. The 67-foot aluminum yacht will be skippered by Lowell North of San Diego in the cup trials next fall. R~ycled Regatta Set for Newport A yacht race for vessels made or recycled materials will highlight a day of boating competi· tion sponsored by the 1JC Irvine Alumni Association at the Newport Harbor Yacht Club Sunday, Jan. 23. The Recycled Regatta, open to entries from the public, Is a new feature of the annual Alumni Af- terguard Regatta which pits UCJ sailors against teams Crom other schools in Shields and Lido·l4 boats. Alumni director Bob Ban.ks said the ~cycled Regatta, presented ln a splrit of fun, is intended to challenge sailors to make use of recycled materials in producing a vessel that is not a copy of a common boat. AWARDS WILL BE PRESENTED to the first boat to finish In the race and to the boat most un- usual in design, function and use of recycled materials. Entry fee is $1.41 in "recycled money." The Afterguard Regatta will spotlight a three- person alumni team in Shields competition. The Lido-14 race is open to UCI alumni, stu- dents. faculty and staff. All boats will be provided by UCI and assigned on the morning of the race. On- ly a limited number of boats is available and early registration is recommended. Entry fee, including lunch, is $15. THE DAY WILL BEGIN AT9 a.m. with a s kip- pers meeUng followed by Shields and Lido·14 prac- tice races. Lunch is set for 11 :30 a.m. The Recycled Regatt.a will be h eld at l p.m. with the other races following at 2 o'clock. Space is available on the alumni spectator boats without charge. Those interested in reserving a place on the boats or in registering in the races may call the UCI Alumni Association at 883·6247. Registration is due Jan. 14. WRAN Operation Delayed Till June Full operation of the Coast Guard's new West Coast Long Range Navigation (LORAN C> system has been delayed until June, Coast Guard officials announced. LORAN C is a type or electronic navigation wbicb allows mariners with LORAN receivers lo determine their position at sea with a high degree of accuracy. The LORAN C system was scheduled lo begin Jan. 1 but construction difficulties, cootracUng de- lays and labor problems made ll impossible to meet the pubU.bed schedule for operational certification of the new West Cout and Alaska service by that date, the Coast Guard said. Eight new stations on the West Coast and in Aluka are nearln1 completion and some are tranamitting signals now. All are expected to be on tbe air for test purposes at an early date. Boating Facility I • • # '• . Some Revel in Being From Bowlegs · By JULES LOH BOWLEGS, Okla. (AP) Cheer up. You could live here and have to go throuth yet another year tellin.& people where you're from. Or not telllog them. That's what Shirley Stafford does. She was born here, went to school here (and rooted for the Bowlegs Bi.sons) and now works here at Vandever's Store, the only store in a town of 300. ..WHENEVER l'M OUT of state and somebody asks me where I'm from," Shirley Staf- ford said, "I tell them I'm from five miles south of Seminole." Nol that there isn't a great deal to be proud of about bailing from Bowlegs. Ever heard of a town where the waler tower burned down? Jt ( AMERICA J happened in Bowlegs. ln 1967. Now they have a tower made of steel. EVER BEARD OF a town with an outdoor jail? Bowlegs had one. According to Glenn Taylor, who· runs Bowlegs' only filling station, the local constabulary at one time simply manacled mis- creants to a rail under an open shed. "They wailed until they bad enough for a truckload," Taylor said, "then they'd haul them all over to Wewoka, that's 10 miles east of here, where they have a regular jailhouse." In Oklahoma, where the American cowboy remains a folk hero -celebrated with a Hall or. Fame, no less -and his every al· tribute is revered, one is obliged to consider every J>C)5Sibility or how Bowlegs got its name. NO, NOT FROM the cowboy did the name derive. but from the Indian. And it was, right from the start, a name born of ridicule. It happened that when the Seminoles were persuaded, after resisting the invitation for seven bloody years, to leave Florida and move to Oklahoma. one band of the recalcitrant tribe held out, .U(lconvinced that the move was for its own good. · The band was led by one Bolek. Finally, after 15 years, an In· dian superintendent named Elias Rector, by his own account. journeyed to F lorida and with lhe assistance of great quantities of booze and boxes of Havanas at length lured Bolek and hls stub- born followers out of the Everglades . That was in 1857. ON ARRIVING IN Oklahoma. authorities gave the proud Bolek a new name, as was their custom. They called him Billy Bowle~s. In the end, irony outdid ig- nominy. Billy Bowlegs joined the Union Army in the Civil War, dis- . . , ........ : CLOCK SURVIVES DAYS OF BOWLEGS' BOOM Mlrrot Reflects Glenn Taylor, Left, end John SmHh ·: . . . tlnguiShed himself, was promot· ed to captain, fell in battle and now rests in peace at Ft. Gibson National Cemetery in Muskogee. Nor could anyone know then that the com munlty that swallowed bard and adopted his name in patriotic gratitude later would get put on the map as an oil boomtown. "NO TELLING ·HOW many people lived here then, thousands," said Glenn Taylor. "lt was a tent city. There were cafes and a dance haJl. Right where this filling station is there was a store run by a man named Wheeler. Wood sidewalls and a canvas top. That clock came out of the store." Still ticking away on Taylor's filling station waU, with the glar- ing Incongruity of its advertfse- m en t for Calumet Baking Powder, the clock is about all that remains of the town's hour of sin and glory. ~hat and its name. '\ . ·Not everyone finds Bowlegs an : embarassment. : • . "I HAVE FUN w,ith the : name," said John Smith, a con-: tractor and proprietor of the A .-· furbished water works whi~lt.•' now serves a mere 70 customeN · (al the flat rate of $4. 75 a month). . "I did some work for a coril-· pany with headquarters irt . CalilornJa and the man who sent me my checks finally J>honecS and ~ said, 'ls there really a Bowlegii, Okla.?• I said, 'Good Lord, man, haven't you ever landed a't . Bowlegs International Airport?' "BUT THE MOST fun I had was when my wife and l checked :· into a motel in Nebraska. As we·: were walking away from the · counte.' 1 turned and saw one ~ clerk elbowing the other In ~ ribs. They wer.e looking at t.ije registration and giggling. . "John Smith from Bowlegs, Okla. I guess it is hard to swallow." Somo Talks Continue.:- LONG BEACH (AP) -Opponents of a large Standard OU of Ohio facility here for Alaskan oil say it would create more problems than Jc could solve. The foes, along with supporters of the pro· (,.--------J posal. appeared before a Sta le public bearing Tuesday night held by the Depart-______ ___, ment of the Interior on a draft environmental impact statement. The hearings resumed today in Los Angeles. Berkelelf f'I"" Bo•hd BERKELEY CAP) -A Berkeley firm that ex- ports irrigation equipment to the Middle .East was ripped by a pipe bomb concealed in a conference room desk, causing damage esUmat.ed al up to .$50,000. police s•id. may receive 20 cents on the dollar for their losses, it, wasrep0rted today. , , The Los Angeles Times said In today's edillo• that more than $57 millJon may be paid to persons· who held debentures and stocks in Equity Funding, ma.king it one of the largest cash payment.a ever. made in a civil suit. •• at11 Square Rald4!d SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Police made ellh~ arrests Tuesday night on prostitution solicitation charges in the Union Square area in a show of force a day after Police Chie.f Charles Gain appointed a- new head of the vice division. About seven marked and unmarked cars coa·' verged on the area. They were followed up f>y foot patrolmen. j Guides Available --· Although 25 employes were at work Tuesday at Jobnaon Gear, a division of Arrow Gear Company, there were no Injuries when the bomb went off at 7: 45 a.m., officers 11aid. Tanlu!r \fletl• ldetttllled LOS ANGELES CAP) -The remains of a flllh Italian crewman killed in the Dec. 17 exploc6on ol. the oil tanker Sansinema have been ldenutled aa thoseoftbe sbip:s ra~ooperat.or. A new series of guide ~indicating the loca· tioo of Calilomla 's boat· lng faclllties la now available trorn the Department of Naviga- UOD and Ocean Develop. ment CDNOD), the ~·· boattn1 aceney. The pamphlets ieo- f rapb ic ally pinpoint au n c-h In g r a mp s • marinas, fuel docks and The beavlett demlnd I« eJC.b.lbllor space ln tbe · 21·year hie\ory of the Southern California Boat Show la reported by tltalrman John Cordelot tbe 1,POnlOrlftl Southern California Marine A•· aoclaUo.i. Tbe unual exPOtlUon wW be held Feb. •-13 at tlM L09 An••lee Coowa.-Uoo Cent.er. marine supplies along a.,u Sult Papettt• Daae the coast as well as the LOS ANGELES (AP> -Investors caught in the many rivers, lakes and coJlapse of the Equity Funding Corp. of America re9et'Voirs in the state. . In addition, each booklet includes a boat· • tn1 aafety section n. THE FAMILY CIRCUS By Bil K enne luatraUng basic safety practlcea and certain boattnt regulations. "These guides provide an excellent reference to the th o u1an d1 o f tlaunchlng sitea, marina and resort areas in Callfornta," said Marty Mercado. director of DNOD. "They are de· slped for 'Use by all boat1n1 people froaa the otfabore cruialng sailor to lake (ls berm en. , One 1uide coven the 1 northern part or tbe· state, one the central' section, and the other the southern area. Free ' copl" ar-e available by • wrtUn1 to the Depart· m8't of NavtcaUon and Ocean Dev•lopment, JUf Ninth St., Room 1331, Sacramento, CA. ri·· . "Shall I get PJ'a note for you, Mommy?" . . , The coroner's office said ldenUftcaUon of 25'.-• year-old Felice Tridente wu made Tuesday from dental charts sent from Italy. St ..... •g t'fetf ... Na..-... IUVERSIDE (AP> -Two young women whole ·.; nude bodies were found in a canyon neal' Jndlo bavt : ~ idenWied as a pair who have been miulnJ ~ •lnce Dec. JO. .·:~ The Riverside County COl'CJQer's office narD.;j::: the two Tuesday u An1ebca MaroJln, 17, o( .: Coachella and Patricia Anne McCart.MJ, 15, o( In-: dio. The ~ls, wbo d.!ed from mulUple atab wo~ _ ~ were found In a •hallow grave S@day by •': mocorc.vcll4ts. Tbey ~re Identified by use of denW . ;~ cbar\a. . 1 .. ' WEST COVINA (AP) -Virtually lhe entJr;..4'; West Covina police department at.yed off th• Job • •· after belna told that \ho city' bad re~ to meet: • ' ~ Hlary demands. • · City otnclat. aald 19 ot the 22 omeen 1cbedu1.i-·~ for WO~ Tuesdaf bad called In atek. ,.he dfPUt7 chief, a captain and two lieutenant.a tOOk ovor patrol ·': : dutlt1 and were reb'tftl on the 1btrill'1 depanma _ • for backup aasl1tyc.. . by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson llOOMER ~.llow WOuLO 'Q) ~TL'(/ ~%Rise 'fl!Ai IS . I M~AN, Wf?LL.~ ~NOW Mt? INSIDE WOODY ALLEN FUNKY WIMkERBEAH NANCY C>O YOU REALLY ·I NTEND TO OF COURSE -·· I'll P ROVE IT :--MARRY ME • WHE N WE GROW UP? TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE UNITED Feature Syndicate Tu••~r·• P..ii .. Solved ACROSS 1 Cotrlda atar S Surprise at· Jacks lO~IYI*· • • t0n l4 "The Good Elrth" llefoine t 58oredom t8K•pourol 1•10hl 17 Tot>ICCO UM I 2 words It Came down 20 N19",.h10 Informal 2 words 21 Of tlleurth 23 Patt'f • IOfUdS 2$ Airline tor N1plU ~Nary 28Went quickly 34P1t· ··· 35 Shortly 3l Heatti genus 38 Continuing eacOl)tlony 311 Commenced 4 t Of IW behind 42.Brltlsh lire- • place H O!fice worller Abbt 45E~unge 46<luleten I Q.Ion 48 Metric units SOF1mous Wood 51 W110 lancy 53Cerl.ll•n cigars 57 Butterfly 61 Pus over 62 Split lngre· dlenl' 2 WOfdl 64 S1tple food es-Not·····• 6& Food recep· 11cle 67 C111u1 di nl\S 68V~rblor"' 69 Ci ml>00111 moneu11y unrll s .! l .! • 0 O II~ s~§:~ :t N NA L ( N N 'ii O YI[. c 0 H T II A s f 0 'A °P 'F 0 S T I" T E I~ DO II H .I It S IC ' 5 It AP F I • 1! S A LE s .l S T ~ It II R 10-0 AN f S• f It E u .. l If u 0 ~· s ~ .. ( H (I l VIit I o-~L 0 p ~ I NI A ,. N [l'fj ~ J A R S A -RIA T f [ 1 S T A N T T A N O EH 1~~~ ' Ar SI flf It f I H E 'l P1u,.l• 0 lo! I T .l. '.9:9..!! S Ufl"'IS 'R Pf 'T'S ---- t 2 God ol Meuse .... sdom •O Coord1n1ted I 3 • noire cosfu'Tle Bugbear • 3 Oll1c11t 18 01 •Eur n•-em1ssilrH1s t•:>n • S Doves nut~ DOWN ~ 2 GtaOed .., No•n s Ob· 1 He:irew or um 2 M1•ture J Enc11ant11d 4Ace 24 • .• out 1ec11vc F•1itd 49 MuroerJy e1tctric11ty bark 20 Low•,, 52 Feets dizzy p01n1 53 Ethnic 27 Say dance S FurlhHI 28 Sll.tro 54 Surrounded IWIY prongs by 6 El1d on····· 30 BelOfe 55 Depravity of harmony Comb /orm 56 Pl•ce ol an 7 Wri11n9 lluid 31 Saltpeter event 8 Music:al 32 Fr. Stu· 58 Unneardol grouo donts· 59 -···even 9 Signaling milieu ~eel device 33 u S. 111ce-60 T.111n rid1a~ I 0 Gambler prelldenr hon lines who cl'lealt 36 T ooaceo 63 Shallow 11 Eoyotian mruig kiln container rlVl!f J9 Town on tne by Joe Marthen by Tom Batiuk by Jeff Miller & Bill Hinds_ eur wve AU?.'WJY GOT lf.l~t;i~.~~ l'~~Yt:/Jf 1fi6~. by Ernie Bushmiller I'LL GO RIGHT JN HERE AND A CHARGE ACCOUNT PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH ,a J la .o ~RIBOU. ~1110"'°( o:Kl<leel(. 'IGR11110<.f. .. THE VIRTUE OF VERA VALIANT DOOLEY'S WORLD DR. SMOCK . ! . GORDO c:>oes "THIS H OSPfrAL-HAV e A R~oveRY ROO"".', NUR~e ? MOOM MULLINS ® IT1S DRASTIC, BLJT SHOCI' TREATMENT • MAY BE 11-H: ANSWER", • . LORP Pius~&OTTOM. by Charles M. Schull ~------....., SH~ WAS so sus~· 5 'c6:-~ ME \1AA.11 Tn . .\T 5'1E FOR60T TO RE,.\D AN'fTH11";;; HERSELF! TURN AROVN.:: .\IARCIE .. I CAN T AF~~RC' lO A550Cl~iE LllliH SOME~E WOO DOESN'T DO HER HOi\IE\.lJORi..' by Harold Le Doux [ ..... -. Wtdnesday. Ja.nuary 5, 19'n OAJLY pjLOT at · by LH and Springtr by George Lemont -rHe Ques-r10N N OW IS, PO~· S C R e;A M , CR Y O R SPL.-IT'.'".' by Gus Arriola I THE GIRLS DENNIS THE MENACE . ' ·. ·-, --: . . • .~: I ' I , : ·-:· -... · ~· . ·-.... ' . L /ti. Bopd Grant · Never · Turned Back A little known ract about Ulysses S. Grant is that be had a phobia which prevented him from ev~r turning back. That Is, If he walked out of a house, he would not turn around to go back into it, even though he might sud- denly have realized he'd left something behind he wanted to lake with him. If he started across a road only to remember he didn't want lo take that direction after all, be went on anyhow. And if h'e lit a cigar or lifted a glass, neither could he put down untouched by his Ups : that would have been unthinkable. This latter matter is not a whimsical allusion to his smoking and drink..ing habits, but merely another example or lhe press·on compulsion. A real estate expert who's made a study of the matter says the average couple in search of a place to live look ai eight houses before buying. The toymalcers expect the typical family to spend $85 per year per child for playthings. PERSONAL ACCOUNT Q. "Which one of our presidents was it who jotted down In a vest-pocket memo book what he s pent every single personal penny ·for?" A. That's said to have been one of the wise procedures of old Calvin Coolidge. Have you . ever tried that trick? I did once. At the end of lhe first day, the notations read: "Beef jerky, 30 cents. Gasoline, $6.50. Ballpoint pen, 29 cents. Miscellaneous, $92." Q. "Where are my 'applause muscles'?" A. On your inner upper arms. H you clap your hands in a rapid manner, you can feel those muscles shake. AddrHs moil to L.M. Boyd, P.O. Boz 1560, Casto Mesa 92626 Got a problem? The11 write to Pat Dunn Pat will (:ut red tape. gettwg the answers and action you need to solue mequ1t1es in 9ouernment and busi· lll!SS. Mail your questions to Pat Dunn At Your Service. Oran9e Coast Dmly Pilot. P 0 Box 1560. 'Costa M esa. CA 9262fi Include your telephone number. The column appears daily except Saturdays ~·ft9 IJp Agaln•t a Wall! DEAR PAT: Do you know of any plJblication ~t might prove useful to a person considering the pqrchase of a condominium ? I 've heard that there ~ a lot of pitfalls Involved in bu,yiog this type of housing, and l 'd like to be informed before I buy. K .S., Newport Beach The U.S. Department of Houlag ud Urbu Development publlsbes a detailed and useful Woklet entl&Jed, "QUestiolls About Coeclomlnlums -Whal to Ask Bel°" YOG 8'1y." lleqoest by writ· btf to RUD, Wasblag\Ga, DC ztUO. Momng Ezperiettee Co•I• DEAR PAT: I am leasing a house for $400 a month. Our family would like to move, but the lease will not expiTe for five rnore months. I told tbe landlord that I would prefer to move and be in- formed me that I would still be obligated to pay hlm $499 a month unW lhe lease runs out. Can he do this? G. L. Mission Viejo • H you break your lease by movlag, tbe ladlord CH collect Giily for Ills actual moaetary ..... U be re·reau the liloue for leu Uau S4ot a .-tb, you are liable ..ay ror tbe balance required lo nacll ..-e per • ..._ Yoa a1ao cao be reqlllred tO cover &DJ los1 durtal CM period after you move odt and before Ute .w tenant moves 111. The luellord does laave a legal obllgaUon to take re· ..-able step1 to re-reDt Ute boase and keep bis a.aea to a mlalmam. ffttaaee• •• Garde•er ·: DEAR PAT: I've made up my mind that in lfn I'm golne to try to cut down on unnecessary ~nding in every way possible. I've heard that fphlds can be controlled by spraying plants with a detergent and water solution. This would be a lot cheaper than chemical sprays. Is this garden hint true, and what amounts of detergent and water 1hould be used? W.P. Costa Mesa Doa't aae de&er1at and water. Your plu&a ._,t Uke tbe dderceat and lbe aphids •on'& be dlkouaged. Tlae apldd ~rol spray YoU mentloe cdt fw a mlxtare of Uaree tabletpooutaJ 91 Ivory E• tllloroa&lllY clluolved la a gallcla of water. tM ohMHll*led IOAP ftakea .UJ work ror &ardea moee1·1Her. DEAR PAT: LutAPrillordered a blouse from VU1 far $21.llO. l received •blouse (rocn the com-;.:.y ln tbe wron& abe. Si.nee it dldn'l fit, I l'eturned a by re&llt.ered mall and request.eel a refund. I've ~ noWna since. : ~ J .B., Newport Beach • Tiie c.temer leniee Depart...t of Ulla dAlaa daa& 11&11eep I& ..... neeN ti IM bloue ... ~,, .. _, ....... nr.cled. wllle lalft tel .... • ttmplalM wt&la a .... erder ft.,., ... rH I U-laaW.1 Men re- .tter • dap..,.. ...... ,_ .. wrtce &o tJte OrW AeU. U..,... Wlb tl'J .. .-&le u.e ....... .,. ................... Mnitt .. Dine& Mall/MafteUlll AIMdaU., Jee., c. .. ..-ael1U.. ~ t Eut U... St., Y.n,NYt .. 17. NftD Chair Gov. Reubin D. Askew of Florida will be new head of the National Gov· ernor's Con - ference, replac- ing Gov. Cecil B. Andrus who has joined th e Carter Ad - ministration. 5.AVtMQS COllPARlSOH t P aasbooll. Savin"• A Multi·81111ort Doi•-.,_,. ceo..nta ,., -v•no• ln~tllutloola ti AMlnlCAN SAVINGS • • • •• ' t Bus Lines Offer Cheap Fare NEW YORK (AP) -A yen for travel and a maximum of $S0 will get you from anywhere in the cootlnentaJ United States to any other place in the country you want to 10. This travel rate was part of a schedule or cheap fares, otrered by Continental Trailways Inc. an d Greyhound Bus Lines, which took effect t.hiB week. AT THE SAME 11ME, both companies instituted a S99 pass that allows unlimited travel dur- ing any nine-day period. And both comparues say they · will permit the first child under 12 years of age in a family to travel rree while any others under 12 pay hall fare. Greyhound also has a three- day round-trip excursion ticket for $33. The companies said the new fares expi re Mar c h 31. Greyhound operates ln all 48 continental United States and Trailways in all but Vermont and Rhode Island. A SPOKESWOMAN AT Grey~ouod said a one·way ticket from New York to San Fran- cisco normally costs $148.25, nearly three times the amount a SAVINGS COMPARISON U Minimum a.lane:• and Charge5 . '',,..~ ~·& .... ,u A1M'f c.; ... ~ •' ~· -- O!:'-t/QflC 4.fP it~Pj; , .. ..,,,.1( ~.,r i;~. ,.~ ;1.f"°" ,'~l vfMtf ; . ~II ,4/4 !JO t ~~I /,/,ttlf ~ • ~//t _,>~"t it~ ;10,( ~ ~ ...... ' ~ -1--.... ~l ~ ~'~llf ; .. ---.!'! ' ' -•1 .... "' N• A ~ ~ -: • .. rider would pay under the new plan. Schedules have been written to det~rmlne the trips that are reaslble under Greyhound's three-day, $33 excursion ticket, she sald. As examples or sav- ings, s he cited the current round-trip fare of $43 from New York City to Stowe, Vt.. and $40.70 from San Francisco to Los Angeles Trailw~ys does not have the new three-day fare. "We've been very busy on the phones,'' a Greyhound spokeswoman said ot public re- action to the fares. _,.._ lh .v, ' .... ... . .. ..... ... , . ... ~ .. ~ un . ... .... .... I .. •h Lots of banks and Savings and Loans claim to be the best place for your savings. Finally, an impartial consumer group's survey gives you the facts. Among all multi-billion dollar savings institutions surveyed, we see American Savings ranked Number One ... for dollar return, policies, and servic~s on regular savings ac~ounts.* COMPARE SERVICES American savers gel many valuable free services for added return on their savings Compare our Saver Services with your bank or Savings and Loan. • FREE CHECKING ACCOUNTS • FREE SOCIAL SECURITY with a commercial bank. DIRECT DEPOSIT $1.000 ballince • FREE OVER 62 • FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX CHECKING ACCOUNTS $1.000 balance with a statewide bank. • FREE TRAVELERS CHECKS • FREE MONEY ORDERS • FREE NOTARY SERVICES • FREE TRUST DEED AND NOTE COLLECTION $5.000 balance • FREE TELEPHONE TRANSFER 1-1.000 balance •FREE SAVE-BY-MAIL SERVlCE • AUTOMATI SAVING/ LOAN PA NTS • S ;r SAVINGS • STATEWIDE OFFICES • EXTENDED HOURS • OPEN SATURDAYS COMPARE EARNINGS American's customers earn the highest savings and 10'1n Interest allowed by law on Insured savings. Daily com~unding of Interest and monthly grace periods on· dep<)slts can help your savings grow faster. ANNUAL Vl[LD •• 8.06'J. 7.79'1. 6.98" 6.72" 5.92" 5.39" ANNtJAL 73Ja" 7~,.. 6%" 6~" 5%"" 5~.,. AAIE ..... ., ... , •-0-lliOlll. ••14MOfll~ ,.. .. u .. ~~ •~..r= tft~ DA•"'-OAY0Uf ~ llOOOOll~ ltNOOlll..,.. • • 1n1erea1 ciompounded daily earns Indicated annual yield wf\en rn1lnta1ned Note· Federal regula11onsrequ11e a subslanlial interesl penalty lor .. rly wllhdl'l!wal lrom cenrl1ca1aaccoun11 COMPARE WITH YOUR BANK Amertcan's policies on regular savlngnccounts make a big difference. Check these items against your commerclaJ bank: • No charges for withdrawals • Higher Annual Percentage Yield 5.39"' to 8.06!. APv·· • .No charges for dosing account • lnterw compounded daUy • Higher Annual Percentage Rate 5.251. to 7.753 A.P.R. • Deposits by JOth of month eun lnterw from the 1st when held to quarter's end. • 12 Saver Services FREE Move up to AMERICAN SAVINGS FSfic ·-""'-• -·· -- -~--...... -._ ..... _..,,.._. . Assets over $6 Billion strong Convenient offices serving Southem and Northern C.ltfornla, Including: Costa Mesa 825 Sunflower Ave. at South Coast Plaza 979-9800 Buena Park '8231 La Palma Ave. at Buena Park Center 522-2801 . Garden Grove 12141 Garden Grove Blvd. at Harbor Blvd. 534-8690 Huntington Beach 7830 Edinger Ave. at Huntington Center 848-2222 ALHAMBRA •ARCADIA •AZUSA • BEVERLY HILLS •BUENA PARI( •CANOGA PARK •COSTA MESA • GARDEN GROVE •GLENDALE • HAWTHOONE • HEMET • HOLLvWooO HUN! ING fON BEACH • LAKEWOOD• LANCASTER • LA PUENTE • LONG BEACH • LOS ANGELES • MALIBU • MANHATIAN 8EACH • MONTCLAIR • NORTHRIDGE • NORwALK • 1¥.LMOALE PALOS VERDES ESTATES• PASADENA • AEOONOO BEACH •SANTA MONICA •SEAL BEACH •SHERMAN OAKS • TARZAN.II • TEMPLE CITY• THOUSAND OAKS • TOAAANOE • WHltrlER ~ .. I . • Cholesterol+20 Years-Heart Disease By BA&8AL\ GIUS-BOWEN Dally ............ American youn1 people have yet to sbake their penchant for twnbu.r1en and malt.edS, despite a prollferaUon ol propqan- da attempUn1 to re.route dietary philosophies toward more "natural" foods. While many have taken up the sprout-and-graln banner for good old Mother Earth, there is a majority that believe in bffl and milk as the means to Strong Bodles. regardless ol the fried and fatty forms they may take. Regular indutgence in such foods u burgers, ice cream, trench fries -even auch lnnocents as eggs, says the American Heart Aasn .• will only lead to trouble wben the teenager grows up. "We are learnlna in our research that not only are children not immune to beut.cllsease, but that the dietary habits foetered during the early years greatly affect whether or not a person will be a ~b heart disease risk," Annamarie Shaw, dietlcfan for the AHA told the Los Angelea California Home Economics Aaso. Cholesterol ls the primary dietary culprit, she said, and it ls found mainly in animal foods. Cits richest sources, bowever, are not all-American drtve-in fare: egg yolks, liver, kidneys, brains, sbrimp and so•eotbershellfiab. > ADD it YEARS and a lifestyle 20 times more taxing, and the tA:lena&er wt19 subsists on a bigh-(bolesterol diet will become a ·'primary target" for heart attacks, arteriosclerosis and ~lroke, Ms.Shaw said. Heart attacks or strokes, sbe explained, occur when fatty placques form on the interior walls of the arteries and cause a closing-off of the blood supply lo the heart or brain. ''Tbere is a definite relatioosbip between a person's intake or dietary cholesterol (saturated fats) and the cholesterol found ln tbebloodltream, '' sbesald. Wblle a certain amount ol cbolerterol ls essential for the main- tenance of healthy nervou.s and endocrine systems, much cholesterol is manufactured by the body it.self: 90 percent by the liver and 10 percent by the intestines, Ms. Shaw said. The average American diet is said to cont41n between 600 and 900 mp. of cholesterol a day. According to lbe Heart Assn .• a diet fora"bappybeart"wouldlimitcbolesterolto300mgs.aday. Ms. Shaw adds that although saturated (insoluble) fats are the bad guys, polyunsaturated fats are beneficial, since they have the potenttal for absorbing and brealcing down the saturated acids, thereby lowertng cholesterol levels. PIUMAaY SOUJlCES of polyunsaturated fats are vegetable oils such as safflower. soybean, sesame nd cottons~. Excep- tioa:t are coconut and palm oils, which are high in saturated fats and used greaUy as stabilizers ln procased foods such as some "imitation" dairy products. (Thus, wblle you may think you're doing yourself a favor by staying clear of real dairy fats, you may in fact be doing yourself tD<ll'e harm by ingesting such saturated concentrates.> Teenagers, Ms. Shaw stressed, are by no means the only group guUty of over-ingesting fats. "The American diet is '5 per-cent fat." she said. which is partly wby the AHA bas termed heart disease "the 20th-century epidemic." No longer can heart disease be isolated as an elderly afflic- tion. Jn fact, while one-quarter of the deaths are of persons under 65, 28 percent of these are of persons between the ages of 35 and 44; 40 percent between 45 and 54 ; and 48 percent between 50 and 64. '- BEA AJC>ERaON, Editor BARBARA Glus.aowEN, Food Editor \._11d11w:J11Y • .i.nuery S.. 1977 Ct Greens Lean To Yogurt ,. Salada are a mucb eoughl·after menu item no matter wbat time of tl'le year. More rnped ls given to ensalada in this state than perhaps in any other (or ln any put ol Europe, for that matter), wbicb stems partly from the fact that this state produces nearly ever· ytbinR that can fit in a salad bowl. Moreover, it la lndlcalive of a California conscience <or vanity. if you prefer> whlcb allows us to indulge ourselves in "rabbllfood" as a means ol being good to our bodles. Face It, lettuce fans, this is Eden. It's so easy to turn a pile oC greens lntoaomething interesting. Along With myriad veggies one can throw ln, dn!Ulngs are an important interest.element too. Not only do they lldcl navor and subltance; dreuino can also add a lar1e portJon fll the calories, cfteo making the pfeuurable esperleoc• of a salad not so IUilt-free. You Just can't 1« away for lea tban 100 calortea per ..-viq wben you UH IDa)'Ol!Dllile. sour cream. or aalad oll to dress JOW' salad. Addltionall1, in many of the commercial Thousand Island, llusalan, French and Blaa types, suaar and sodium are used sub- stantially as Oavortna -aeo&s. Mayonnaise is usually more costly than any otber d.reutng base bttauae of its high oil content. It is also more costly ln terms ol cbolestel'Ol since ea yolks are added as emuls!fien. · Cholesterol watchers are better off using vinaigrettes made wtth fat-soluble oils aucb as sesame, aa!f\ower, sunflower and eoy. Or you can aubatltute low -fat 101urt wherever a dreulQI calls for mayonnaite, but· termilk, sour cream or wbipptq eream and you11 get perked-up fiaVc.!J about 1/loth ct the calories, a lot mOl'e trieJldly nutrients. . ·ne followina are ideas for salads dret1ecl Southern Califond•tt1le. · 8VNGOODB888ALAD ...._ 2 avocados, oeeled and quartered ,.... ~ ~p plain )ow.fat Joewt ~cup cotta,e cbeeM , 1 tablespoon lemon Julee l clove 1arllc, minced \I•·~ teupoondilll powder . DubWotc~sauco 2 tablelpoou c.bopped PllSJey ot cllanti'o 1 tablNpoon fre.b chopped dalves Salttotute Combine 111 lnaredlmta and blend unW amootb. Cblll. Arnllle a mbtln ~ ~ llictd ftlelablel oa a bed ~ '1lredded sreem Md PoUJ' dr9l1nl over. Tou and Hl'Vt lm· ~ with tr .. b tolit.tC'l'Olllonl or crunchy com cbips. "WB.llT, ME WOBBY?" "It ls because it most often strikes men al>d women in their most productive years that we lb1nk heart disease mwst have a 20 to 30-year incubation period," said Ms. Shaw. Middle-aged men have loag been considered the disease's primary target. But since many women have assumed similar responsibllitles and social p~-ad bad habita-tbey can no longer afford lo be "smug" about heart dlseue, sbe said. DEATHS DUE to heart disease have tripled among women over the last two decades, which means that about three ln every 12 deaths are of women. ·'Unfortunately. most of us consider ourselves immune -or just plain lucky -when 11 comes to heart disease," Ms. Shaw con- tinued. And, surely the farthest thought from the teenager ordering a "fat" lunch Is that he/sbeis priming-up for a coronary. Ms. Sbaw said, "What young people need along wtth education about sex and hygiene is lbe knowledge lbat they can protect themselves from heart disease by learning toeatlow-fatfooda. "While a person bas litUe influence over bis family 's medical history, be is the only ooe with control over bow he eats, bow be handles stresa and bow he exercises,•· she said. 'Tragically, this all becomes very clear lo the teenager whole father bas been taken by a heart attack." Jn a dJetary experiment eonducted by the AHA with UQLA among some 70 teenagers, eat1ng habits were altered to include low-fat and high-fiber foods. At lbe end of a ~monlb period, Ms. Shaw said the group bad experienced an overall drop in blood cholesterol of lS pettellt. "It's simply a matter of dietary precaution -food sense, ac- tuallY," ahe said. "Disease will not tear down a beallby be art, and now&: the time to build cne. •' f;.lpeclally for teens: Sweet snacking ideas from the American Heart Assn.: OLJ>.FASWONED SVGAJt COOKIES ~cup soft margarine 1 cup sugar 2eggwhites 3cupeflour 14 teaspoon ult 3 teaspoons baking powder If.I cup non-fat milk If.a teaspoon v anllla extract TllOPICAL nurr suaPKISE 2 ripe papayas Juice of 1 lime 1 cup fresh or canned pineapple chunks, drained 1 medium banana. allced 1 large oran~_e1 peeled, sectioned and s~ed ~cup cboppea, pitted dales 1 teaspoon grated lime peel l tablespoon flnely minced candied ginger 2 tabletpooos honey 1 cup plain low-fat yogurt Halve and seed papaJas; driule with JUiee of '1\ lime and set Slide. In a small bowl m1x tocetber chopped fruit; drlule with juice of other ~ lime. Ht ulde. lllx tocetber )'dlUrt. honey, lime peel and candJed atnaer. Fold ball of lbts mixture into fruit and ftll ca'1Ues of papaya halves. Top salad with remainJDI clreslln1 and gamlab with touted almODda or cocoout. Senea four 1eneniualy (for deu«t. tool): CWJIO&NIA SALAD l lar1e bead Bibb lettuce l rt.,.nocado, peeled and sliced ~ pound cleaned baby abrtmp •ounces Swiss cheese, cut ln •trips 2 tableapoona chopped freab paraley 1·2 treen oni0111, cbopped nne Julee of"' lemcia ~ cup plain ltiw'·fat 10QW"l l tablespoon bone)' "'teupoon *1 ...-..S ~tealPOOQW~Nuee \4 teaspoon dill weed, cnaabed \4 teapoondrtedm!atie. ... mabed ,... .l ~earch claims by the American Heart Assn. show that teenagers subsisting on high-fat foods will become primary targets for heart disease, given an 'incubation period' of about 20 years. Few drops yellow food coloring if desil'ed Colored sugar crystals for decor·auoo (optional> Cream margarine and sugar; add eu wl\itn and be1t 1"11. Add sift«! dry ingredients alternately with DOD·fat milk, food coloring <optional> and vanilla; mix t.boroulhlY. Roll dough "9·incb thick on lightly noUred surface. oat wtt.b floured cookie cutter; l\)l'inkle with suaar crywtala lf dellred. BMe OD greased coc:tie sheet in moderate over (ISO decrw F.) UDtil edies are 11CbUy browned, about 15 minutes llabl s doliea eooties. BJAO( DBWIL'S FOODCA&B 2cups0our l~ cupe sugar ~cupcocoa ~teupoonsalt 1 tablespoon baking soda ~cupoll 1 cup buttennllk 1 cup strong coffee (instant coffee may be UMd> Preheat oven toSISO~ F. Sift together the fiour, sugar. cocoa, salt and bakinc soda. Add the oU and buttennllk. stir uoW well blended. Bri.a, tbe eof. fee to a boll and stir It genUy into the batter. Mixture wt1l be eoupy. Bake in a greased and floured t x 13-tncb pan, for JS to40 minutes. Decorate with Minute Fudge Frosttnc. llllllle hdge .........,: 3 tablespoons cocoa I cup sugar If.I cup evaporated skim milk 14 cup margarine 14 teaspoon salt 1 teaapoon vanilla extract Mix all ingredients except vanilla. Bring to a boil and liJD.. mer one minute. Remove from the beat, add vanilla and belt uoW lbick enough toapnad. FEENEEKYA <Greeta.e,~> 2cupsoU Y.a cup sugar 2 teaspoons cinnamoo 14 teaspoon nutmeg Y.a cup orange Julee S~cupsfiour 2 cups pecans s,....: 118-ounce jar boaey lcupwater 2cupssugar 3lemoosllces Prebeatoven toBdegrees F . Blend oil. sugar and sptoes ln a lar1e mixing bowl If you UM an electric mixer. set it at medium speed. Add lbe Juice. With mixer on low, blend OOW' into liquid ingredients until a smooth dougb ls fonQed. Mix in the outs by Und. Shape into small squares (1.Xl inch> or"otber small abapes. Place oo a greased cootie sheet, abd bake 3S minutes or unW light brown. To make the. syrup, boil water 1 and sugar wilb the lemcm slices. Add hcmey and simmers mtnutet. Lower tbe hot cooties into lbe simmering a)'l'UP for about 2 to 3 minutes, WrDbal them to coat on all aides. Drain oa a wire rack let over wax paper. Decoratewithflnelycbopped oui... Yield: g.1odoan. Salt lo taste Combine first six ingredients in salad bowl, layertna aweedo slices on top of tom, washed lettuce, and garniablnl with shrimp, cheese, parsley and ~ onion. Drtule all with Julee ot ~ lemon. In blender whip together yogurt with honey, dry mustard, Worcestershire sauce and herbs. Add more lemon Juice and aalt to taste. Pour over salad Jwst before serving and tola. Malt• 2 whole-meal aalads. I GAi.DEN a.uB 8ALAD 1 pound broccoll er uparaiua ~ pound fresh mushrooms ~ pound bacon, cut·up and cooked, drained ~ cup plain low·fat yogurt ~ eupcottaaecbeeH S tableapoou green pepper, chopped f1De Datb carnc salt 2 ireen onions. chopped fine 1 tablespoon drted panley ~teaspoon WorcbMtenbiresa\lce i tablapoooa ketchup . l tuapc)OD prepared Freocb·lt)'le m111lard l teupoon white vtneaar M ltmon Julee Steam broccoli or aaparaps unW near-tender, but not Q\llte done. Drain and chill uaW ruc1J to serve. Clean and 1Uce m•hrooml; set uld~. In eleetrtc bla>der, mis tocetber yocurt, ecuqe cbeest, Wor~ aaue., Utcbup, muttard and Ylnelar <or lemon) Md 1ar1Jc ult. St.tr la pan1.ey and sreen pepper. In .iua bowl, lQW broceoU toMUt1 or ..,_ ... .,... and mushrooms: pow ovw ~ and top wtt.b mamb&ed bac«l and sreen on!on. &rv• 4. I ,, (2 DAILY PfLOT w.ctneeday. January 5. 1977 ~End Needed for Final Chapter r D Z A R A N N declared de..t alter bis coaldn't apeak or eat foe &ba I. nau yaa. ha t.er was IO badly mangled loc hLs thougbttul call - LANDERS: Our San An· c rube d p 1 an e was 48 hours. belaaJf of all '&MM ,... by the poet office tt was and J am pleued to pass t.oo.io Press rrint.ed the found. I &rieved aa if .my laa.ea.elped. Weclble. The return Id· ootbelDformaUoo. Jetter critica ol you for 1 refuaed to believe it. husband _bad Jun died. dtels wu tom off and suaestlng coumellnl to Mawldlb Enoch AJ'des) Even f>o::d. as I write DEAR READERS: abe wu lurioua. Jn the DEAR ANN : I can't a 11·year-old girl w~ ,.... ltema about lost ~throat t1·.tt!an 1 feel I ' m .. so l n c to .. ~ o envelope wu a ronn let· = P-=:~. S:l -~ fused to attend her .,_" flyers wbo were found allze 1 utt 6.;d :U lhre-IOmetblnl today J IMIYe t.er of apoloCY from the tbouaaocb of others _ friend 's funeral. You alive ln unexpected •be er at never done before -~department. replied "A f\U)eral pro. agony cause J bad print a report of a , J'm tum.J.ng to you. It's videa proof that the de-pieces tept my hopes never witnessed the flnaJ telephone call rather Boller •ucceated that about a strl I met a ff!W ceased is gone. It helps :~ t~1:,~! J.e w~ farewell I should have than a letter. It came II other readers have a mootb.s ago. She b pret. the bereaved to over· ilklll d 1 ueeted requested that mr from Wllllam "· Bolcer. s1mllar experience, they ty, brlaht, willy, kind· c o m e d e n I a I e an req huaband'a remains be Dep uty Postmaster lbould send the enve&ooe hearted and bas a ter· mechanisms ." that my husband be aent home and had a General. Washington, to Nell }lemon, Cbfel r1J'k sense of humor. l You are dead right. ~:S~':n!rance. A nag hmeral. D.C. Postal Inspector, Uolted like ber a lot. So what's Ann. Don't Jet anyone · So pleue keep telling Mr. Bolger was dis· States Postal Service wrong? Her neck Is always dirty. I 've seen ber dab perfume behind her ean when what a.be real· l)' needs ls a bar ol aoep and a w asb cloth. Is there some way I can drop a hint? The girl needs to be told. - TONGUE TIED IN MEXICO CITY DBAa M.C.: U•Ue JOU &oape aad tell Mr. u &lie llri la u brqk .. ,... aa1 m'U cleaa IP Mradud~let.-e ·- .... ft1ly wta by a aeek. Dlacover bow to be dat.e bait wit.bout fa.l.llng boot, llne and sinker. Ann Landers·s booklet, "Datln1 Do 'a and Doo'ta." will help you be more polMd and sure of youneJ.f an datea. Send 50 cents In coin = wllh a 1001. atam . self·addreaaed env with )'OW' request to Ann Landers, P.O. B<'x 1400, El&ln. m. eouo. change your m Ind. I Almoet 20 years law I it like it ls, Ann. People treaed about the woman H e a d q u a r t e r a ., learned the lesson from took rpy son to France to need to bear it. -K.N.F. ln Santa Roea who re-Wubiqton, D.C. m:a. ;;::=====;;;;;;:;;;;-:=================-bitter experience. My visit hia fatber'1 grave. eelved a letter from her ']'bey will analyze It lD HEARING PIOll!Mt husband was declared When the kindly custo-DEAR k .N.F.: I ap-aon. She bad not beard the lab and perhapa the missing in action over dlan asked us whose predate your le&&er from him tn several return address can be France on June 10. UM4. grave we bad come to more U.aa I caa aay. Yoa moatbs. obtalned. In January or '45 he was eee my throat closed. I m• *k p01Dt far beUet' Unfortunately. the let-.I want to thank Boller Albert Loudermllk. 61, one of about 140 older prisoners living in Elm Hall at the Cali!omia Institution for Men, Cbilk>, plans to do some farming aft.er his release. All Elm Hall residents are elderly and many have health problems . Peering Around CELEBRATING their golden wedding aD· niversary were Mr. and Mr s . Richard A. Haworth, new realdenta ol Leisure World, Seal Beach. The party was liven by thet.r dausbter and soo·ln·law, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hunter of Balboa. On hand to honor their grandpa.rents were the H1.1Dt.ers' sons, Timothy ol Estes Park and Christopher of Big Fork, Mont. FOua SENIOR Hlgh School tlrla in the Mesa· Harbor School Dlatrict have been selected aa Zonta Girls for December. They are Amy Ross. Corona del Mar Hl&b School ; Jennifer Hinshaw , Newport Harbor; Robin Bolton, Costa Mesa, aod Kathy Focbath, Estancia. Their parenta are tbe Messrs. and Mmes. Sheldon Ron, Ted Hinshaw, C. V. Boitoo and Frank P. Forbath. ~-k:J .~ ,,' l,, '.. ,. ,_,, j It '·,'.I , .. , .. ,,,(,,,... \,~ . ~ ,. ;,"' ,. -.... ' . , ,.. ... . ' . ,, .·~ MOM -Start a collection for your child with a 5x7 natural color portrait ~Ont=:., 37e =~ chirp for ad\ added~1n 4 Day Offer lfOIA ... This pboqn~ oft'cr <W:wa~)Qltotryus) ::i:: ot~ OFFER ENM ~olrer. SAT.,JAN.8 ......,.....,., a...~ IN; let. IN: h•. IJ.I MJIAllll&A I Sears! lllllNA PAllk INGLSWOOD NOllTRIJOOI OL\NGI ----. PW.DENA llO. Q)~~ lAfA . t For Elderly Convicts It's Home CHINO (AP> -They spend lbelr days Ulte most other old persoos -dreaming about the past wlaen things were better, trying to keep busy, and trying to fight off the loneliness that comes from abandonment and old age. ~ut Elm Hall is different Altho'tlgh it looks like most othe" homes for old persons, It houses murderers, rapists and robbers. Elm Hall, near this small town southeast of Los Angeles, is part of a state prison and la California's only home for elderly Jawbreakers. "There's nothing for them out.side," said one of the inmates recently, talking as be worked a jigsaw puzzle. "They don't have any family or any friends. Nobody ever comes to , aee them. They'd just as soon die here as out· side." Elderly pri5oner's have problems similar to other old persons, but different from the younger inmates, say the state officials responsible for the 140 men at Elm Hall. "Older convicts spend their whole day de- vising little ways to stay out of everybody's way," aaid Dr. Joseph Ham, an expert on the problems or older prisoners. "Their primary objective is to do their time and not get ln trouble. They take their meals early, they avoid the younger prisoners in the yard and they suffer a total loss of iden· uty. "You have to understand that most prisons are run by the young black Inmates," he said. "The young guys hate prison authority and they fight the system. They do things the older people lhinlt are crazy. So the old guys Just try to stay out or their way.'' Meny of the older prisoners fear release, Ham said, because they have no place to go. "I had one guy who bad done 30 years for murder," he said. "He was 16 when be got out , and he didn't have any place to go. He de- liberately committed a crime so be could get back in and he picked child molesting." One unidentified prisoner said thlngs aren't too bad. "I was in San Quentin for a year before they put me here. I didn't mind being in with the younger guys, because they don't mesa with you if you mind your own bu.alneas. "But this Is better. We have an bccasionaJ filht and some of the guys are ~cby. But we don't have stabbinp or anything like that. You're under more stress when you're around the young guys. They give way to their emo- tions and you've got to worry whether they're going to start a riot." (handbags, too. at great savings!) • orig. 15.99to18.99 8.98 orig. 19.99 to 22.99 (eome were higher) 10.98 Buy more! Save mo;]! Additional $1 off y two clearance items· at 3.98 or more! Savlf199 are euperf Selected groupe ol wanted Moa, but not In aJI •lne. J se your &nkAmtrlcatd, Muttf CIMra• soum COASl' PLAZA 'OOSTA MESA ISPICIAUU .. ... VI DIAINISS CASIS MAJOI MA...ufACTUnlS UPllSIMYID TIMYUllSIM COllOMADaMAl HAlAEBISOB HEARING AIDS 1409 LC... Hwy. C.... .. M.r-'7'-llU SIMl-AHMUAL HALF· PRICE SALE 11111 CUii llCl9U ,,._ ... UttlA Ill HI "'"""' ..... MISSIOHVIEJO ..... _., ..... , 28892 Marguente Pkwy ---.,,_ ... 495-5902 -........ w ALL LA·z.eolS AU .... 10011 TO CHOOSE ROM J149 ....... ,. ... , DIUYBY WHITE'S Sllewcase STAl'TS FllDAT, JANUARY 1 644-0838 WIN ATRIPTO SWITZERLAND • ff iclco1r1 far m$. · OF OHIO WIN A FREE 9-DAYTRIP FORTWOTO 'SWITZERLAND Fiii out an en!YV bl.nil M>cl 11\Mf or bfl119 " 10 1"9 lfote lltltld below. On~ 11,Mwlll dtawf1 .. loc:e1w..-, who """ , .... • "Soll!* Sw+u Holay Siied! Kl'°'. TtleM -Wiii be Mnt 10 ow Ntlonal ~Wt..._. ...._, _._,will be dta1lllft for TWO lrlpa· -lof·lloO. ..... IMPORTID FROM SWITDRLAND • CliAf 90N.WM!El SWISS CHEESI ~OfPllG. ~LI.NICI ···-... ·-·~-..-. ... Weddings .~ and Engagements Wsmlng Weigh .Fact To avoid disappointment. prospe<'t ive brides are reminded to have their wedding ator les with black and white glossy photographs to the Daily Pilot People Department one "'eek before the wedding. SACRAMENTO (CNS) -A state Health Department nut~ aa,s a dru& belna of- fered for wel&bt loeaJ.brOUlh private pbyalc1ans and clinics ls basically W'Ol'Wesa. Pi<"lures r~h·ed after thot t ime ~·ill not be used. Susan Foentel" ol the department claims human cborionie gooadotropin or HCG does not help an lndJvtdual achieve weight toes. For engagement announc-emenls it is Imperative that the story. also a<"com· panled by a bla<'k and white glossy pie· ture. be submitted six weeks or more before the wedding date: otherwise It will not be published. "HCG i4 basically a rip.off," she says. "An individual pays $300 for a series of dally ln.iee- tions which are suppoeed to ward off fat and in- cidentally also goes on asoo calorie diet." · "Although HCG itself ls probably not huardous -what is baurdous is the combina- tion of a very low calorie diet and the fact that there is very tittle supervision so that an in- dividual withhealtb l)('Oblems may not be ieWnc enough calories,·· abe says. To help fill requirements on b-lth wed· ding and engag. e ment stones. form~ are avaUable in all D~ Pilot offl<'es. Fur· ther questions will be answered by People Departm"1t staH members at 642-4321. .(study at San Franci5co'a Letterman Army Hospital, described in the September lsaue of the American Journal ol Clinical Nutrition. con. eludes the HCG does not enhance wel&ht lou, the distribution of weight. lass around hips or waist, or decrease hunger. A First Kathy Crumbley, who became Ohio's first fem ale sheriff last Sunday. slaJ¥ls 6·foot, weigb,s 275 pounds and packs a .357 Magnum re- volver. She say~ her main duty will be U> "keep the peace." Leo Cycle High THURSDAY, J ANUARY I BJ SYDNEY OMAIUl ARIES CMarcb 21· April 19): Accent on im- · u the drug is basically ineffectlYe why does it continue to sell? "Women pay approximately $300 for a six week series of injectioos. Knowing you spent $300 bas to increase the motivation to lose weigbt." says Ms. Foerster. The Letterman Hospital study notes that women who go in for daily injections are highly motivated to Jose wetpJt. And whether they re- ceived an HCG i.njeCtioo or the placebo the women knQ' they would be weighed on a regular basis. The power of suggestioo may also aid lD the drug's success, since physicians normally as- sure women the drug will decrease hun&er. The Food and Drug Adminlatratioa reports that HCG bas not been demonstrated to be an ef- fectlve adjunctive therapy in wel&ht reduction programs. The chemical is extracted from the urine of pregnant women. p~MPE.R YOURSELF JANUARY SPECIAL Relax with a luxurious facial massage as You learn to care for your skin the Scandinavian way •1500 (orig. $25) Coll rm1 for appointment printing style. creativi------------------ ty. change, children, personal magnetism. You get Involved, you ex- press feelings. TAURUS <April 20- May 20): Your place o£ residence ls big.blighted -the way you relate to family ia more impor· tant than d!1n1al. • GBlllHI ()fay %1-June 20>: Emphasis oa map declaions, humor. rela- Uon1 bl p1 with close nelgbbors. You bear many rumors. CANCEa (J une 21- July 22): Accent on finances. asaeta, ability to make moat bl matslal at b•ct Ket is organiza. tioD, brinting priorities into focus. Know your OWD &tttngt.b. L£0 <July 23-Aug. 22>: Llaar cycle high -take laltiatlve, be. a self. starter. Emphasize in- dependepce of thought, actJon. VDGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: You gain some "rare Insight&." You get For 1 Sale sweaters Tops Jackets Pants Dresses Blklnis · All sales are finall The Seeond G lance 116 N MAIN ST 21nw OCEAN FRONT HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWl'ORT BEACH Both Sro,... Nu< n.. ,_ beblnd scenes glimpeea. -----------------A closed-door meeU.nc could benefit you. LIB&A <Sepl. 23-0ct 2Z): A friend offers to teacb -be wllllng without giving up right to make your own fmal de- cisions. SCOllPIO <Oct. 23· Nov. 21): P?"eatige may be on &be line. Be flex.I· ble. MalnLa.in balance. humor . Expand horiions. MGl'n'AaJllS <Nov. 21-Dec. 21): Good Mooo upect coincides now wtth loq-diltance calls, educatlonal projects. Journeys. CAPalCORN <Dec. 22·J an. 11>: Delve deep for i nfo rm ation , knowled &e, insights . Empbuia on values. AQllAalC8 (J an . »Feb. 18): Personal en- vironment.~ of love, desire to be needed - UteM are fll&bllght.ed. PISCE S <Feb. 19- llarch 31)) : A vtld direct eoafrontaUoos. Take low l'Olld. 20 0/o OFF SALE on custom decorating· ii'~.·,' lJJA'Ml Draperies Bedspreads Headboards Boudoir Chairs Come In Of Cati For Decorator Aaal1t1nce 23 Fnhton llllnd, NewPorf Bffch • 844 8880 Pants WlfW $3.99 to $1.99 DAit y Pl\.OT A 20% to 50% OFF IYER 40 SHOPS A•D RESIAUUllS UNDER ONE ROOF JOIN TO BRING YOU THE BEST BUYS EVER JAllUARY 5 to 16 OPEN EVERY DAY ~ ~ ~ LOTS OF FREE PARKING VILLAGE FAIRE 1100 S. COAST HWY. Tops w ..... f2.99 to Sl.99 I 881o489 LAGUNA BEACH ..... , •• ,_r...y .... Misses' Machine Washable Nylon Ski Jackets 12.99 Styled with zip or snop fronts. Mochl11e wothoWe nylon with womt Polyeat~r fiberfill. In navy, iff, blue and yellow. Small, medium ond large 111e1. T~I• Ad Effective Through So111rdcry, JanVCHY 8th • ~Mt pontt"' ~ ....... ttytea. • Rower.cl ond dork print ehitta !ft a YOritty of .~.If~. 3333 Bmtof St. PhoM: ~0-33)3 > I 1 SO lo Palmo A'le, Phone: 821-4400 Oranl(t• 1100 N. Tuttin Avt. Phone: 637-2100 • Cf DAILY PILOT Med.ium 'Crumby' .- •1 aoorrootua ._.,... ,,... .... KENT, Wutl. CAP) -Wb.a it COlllU to sculpture, Roland Wlpbecltlef taltet tbe cake .. He also takes butter cream and cbocolate troaUD1. Wlnbeckler. J0, 11 amoas tho world's leadlnt cake sculptor1. H1I ltatUI wu certified lut moo.th when ho picked up two coJd medals at the' World Culinary Olympics in Frankfurt, Weat Germany. "It's really rare for tbe judtes to award more than one gold medal, 0 Wlnbeckler said. ••1 think they especially liked the pound-cue crab and the chocolate palnUnta." Winbeckler. who never tbouabt about sculpture in any medlwn unW be took a bakery job five years ago, hp ~ bwdredl of cakes for groups and penonalJUea around the country. When the Ringllnl Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus ordered a cake for thelr lion tamer's birthday, it featured a llle·size Bengal tiger jumpin1 from the center. Winbeckler uJd he's aJao been as~ll,d about doing birthday cakes lot entertalneca Lucllle Ball and Sammyl>avi.s Jr. But in 1911, Wtnbeckler was juat an un. employed baker who was oUored a Job at The Fantastic Cake Box bakery here decoratin1 cakes. Customers soon notJced bis imaginative work. and he began to think about a career. He'll turn out a specialized sheet cake for $1S and a pound-cake bust portrait for $50. New. Look At Potatoes Let ua not take lbe homely, common potato for granted. for It la really a thln·sklnned 1old mine of nutrition. stortn1 goodly supplies of nitro1en, Iron, maanealum, vitaminl Band C. Sidestep common ways ol eat1n1 potatoes. ii you like. by dresalnl them with cheese and herbs, or comblnlna them with cround meat in a "ple." Serve the pie In plzia·style, In cenerous wec:iJes. All ypu need to flnish the meal is a toaed sreen salad. MEAT ANDPOl'ATOPIE % pound Jean p'OUDd beef ~cup chopped rr.J\Clftlon ~cup chopped_sreen ~pper 2 tablespooaaCllOpped fretbparale1 l amall tomato, peeled and eltopped \ii teHpoob bot pepper sauce l v. leaapoou •alt. divided \14 teatl*>ft ~ 4 medium p0taloel J cup (4 ouncea> wedded SwtJ1 or ched· dar cheese Mix around bfff, onJon, 1reen pepper, parsley, toQiato, bot pepper sauce, 1 leupoon salt and pepper ln m1a1na ~l ; pat h~t of meat mixture on bottom ot 9-lnctl ple plate. Pate potatoes and cut In 'At-inch 11ices. Arrange half of potato slices over meat mix· ture. overlapping edges. Sprinkle with ~ teu· poon salt and half the cheese. Repeat with r• maJning meat, potatoes, salt and cheese. Bake ln 3SO degree F . oven 50 minutes. Jf necettary, COY· er loosely with foll the last lS minutes to pre•ent cheese from browning too much. Maka 4 to 5 servings . POTATOES CHEF.SE ANNA 5 medium potatoes 111. teaspoons salt 1il teupoon pepper 8 ounces sliced cheese (Swiss, American or Muenster> 14 cup chopped fresh panley Pare potatoes, cut into 'At-inch slices. Ar· range a layer with etlges overlapping ln a ~loch ple plate. Sprinkle with ~ teaspoon salt and a dash of pepper, top wit.fl one third of the cheese. l\epeat l11er1, endlnl wttb cbeeee. Bake ln 37$ , degrees P'. OVOf'I 45 to 50 minutes or unUl potatoes ••tender. Sprinkle wit!i parsley. Makes a serv· lags. Li-ght Dessert Perfection Fruit can be the perfect delHl't aft.er Iar1e. rich meals, especially when the fruit la dressed lrit.h a spirited citrus sauce such u Orange Rum Syrup, I What's Just as appealina la that fresh fruit desaerta are so easy to make. Use yoar Jargeat plets, parfait 1la11e1. or 1coope4-o\lt citrus lbeJJI and mouncf them wttb cut•upa ot tart ap. plea, grapefruit, «Ml~ 1ecUona, ~neapple cbunkt, pitted d1te1. or troe·rip_e , table grapes. bananas -eYtn walaut balvee At aerv. int time, pour over 1Vartn: OIANG&aUllSY&UP 1 ~ c:upe 1l111pl• IYNP 'It teUpooQ lfated oranc• rind ~ cup frtl!i oranae 1uice 2 tablnpoona Ume JWc• l tableepoon rwn Mix loJ.th•r tncreclJenll and chill. Warm In· &redientl ewer atove tor about 10 minutes before serving. <Rum can be 1ub1Ututed with Cointreau or TrtJ>l• Sff 1 Cream Sben'y or Brandy.) 1 For hl• sculptures, Wlnbec:kltr starts with - 1cale dealp . Then be bullet. • 1upporUng struc· ture. With tho cake on ltl foundaUOP, Winbeckler doet h1I carving, then ute. brushes to apply de· slant and plcture1 with various colors of frosting. Tbe moat expensive cake be ever made -a 54,000 job for the cll'CUI with Ute.size statues ol two mldgets who married -was two-thirds pound cake •nd ont·thlrd plywood and s~oain. Other recent Wlnbeckltr creations Include a statue ot Uncle Sam, a replica of a Seattle skyscraper and a cue depicting the flag-raising atlwoJlma. • Last month Wlnbeckler appeared on the telev1slon show "What'• My Line." Nobody 1uea1ed. /' BOYS LOVE GIRLS I Cake sculptor Roland Winbeckler puts final shave on Colonel Sanders rep/lea presented to chicken king on his 86th birthday. Eff£CTM THUas .. JAM. 6111 tlwu WED., JAN. 12th tm SOHY, NO SAlES TO DEALERS TOP SllLOll ·s 199 IOIELESS ~.~1J? 1 09· IOllLISS ~6~~ $369 T. BONE POITllHOUSE STEAKS :~J:E~~-LI. SWISS STEAIS_4) LI. Fil ET M IGIOI_ u. STEAKS STEAKS_. IOIELISS em $.1J9 STEWllG ~.iE~~ss $149 f°i!iii " POl~O~lops 179 BEEF s i aa IOU•D STEAK _ u. • •• ,. LI. CH•C•••s CENTH CUT ~~~~ $ LOIN '7 SIRLOIN TIP . $179 BOllLISS IEEF$139 45c $159 LI. · LI. STEAKS :~~E~~t5,.,o_ LI. CHUCK IOAST _ LI. LI. ll. }4JllMY ()(AM I ?~·~ 12''•90" l~ POlVESlER BLANKETS. ===~s499 ·-.-EA. MEN'S HI IUUC PRINT ACRYLIC ANO FLANNEL KNEEHI PAJAMAS SOCKS ·~-""--·--·~~ • ::w--• : :;::-,Tc. ... ...... , .... " ' __ ___, IEH :~,., . . .. $, 09 IEW YORl :~r,et~s J29 Nil SHSAU IA~ snu RUMP 101si~ ~ "· STRIP STEAi _~ t1. ~~~~re. 89~ ~:~~53?! COMllN;.TION FOLIAGE ' PLANT 1.ADIES SHINY NY\OH. lONG SlEEVf PRINT T • SHUlT$ , ·--s100 .__._,... 77 • ... ".' EA. FARM 'J'fU~ PRODUCE iCIBIRG LE TIU CE ORLANDO T ANGERlllES fANCY , 9c SWEET LARGE LI. PECAN TWIRLS SO GOOD HIAT!D EA. RED or GOLDEN DELKIOUS APPLES EXTRA ~AHCY 2tc WASHINOfON LI. FROZEN FOODS 59' .. Wedneeday. January 5, 1977 DAILY PILOT C!S Home News and Views Packers Report Red Meat Gain Winter Citrus PlourJshes By DOROTHY WENCK Or ..... C-ly H-•~IM< areaa on the peel at the nutrient.I in foods are af. Nutrient Joss alter the WASHING TON (AP> -Total red meat pro· stem end, water-soaked reeled by such factcn as food la Uq~fied would be duction by the nation's packing plants continues Good news for the areas, loss or bright col· Ueht, temperature, and to run above levels of a year ago, according to citrus fruit lovers-both or. and soft. tender peel oxygen. with dilCttent considerably greater the Agriculture Department. oranee and grapefruit as these are symptoms nutrients beln& affected than any loss durl~ the Last week, officials said Tuesday, meat out'· oC decay to varying desrees. In blending process ltaeU. put totaled about 709 million pounds. That was crop!l are C¥pected to Q. 1 received a blender the blending process. ox· The breaJdna or theceUs· down 8 percent from t.be previous w~k but stlll establish new production for Christmas. l 've ygen wou Id be in· • was 10 percent more than produced In the com· records this year. This never used one and am troduced into the food walls in foods by blend· parable period of lut year. should mean bargain d . h th d tibl in• allows m ore ex· Co d ith ll .. A t t t prices for consumers. won ermg w e er you 1tn oxygen-suscep e .. mpare w a year ear er • .,..,e ou pu The size of th e don't lose food ulue nutri en ts (su ch as posureof1hecelltoout· was up 6 percent to 444.7 million pounds last California crop of mAYel when-you Uquify foods ln vitamin C> would be af. side lntluences. So it's week, while calf and veal production was about a blender. fected. How Ions the food best to use blended foods the aame al 11 m lllloo pounds. oranges is not expecled A. The loss of nutrients is blended and the tem· as aooo aa possible .,.. Pork production rose 18 percent from a year to be much different tllrough blendina is ex· puature of th~ !OOd befot'e ~)' slgn!flc.ant a10 to 246.S milJion pounds. buttamb and mutton from last year. But a re-tremely small. However, would also be factors. nutrient loss can occur> at8.6 million pounds weredown 4 percent. cord output of sever~---------------------------------------------~--~--...;;....--------------------------..;--------------------=~----------..:......---------- varlet.ies d oranges is expected from Florida and Arizona-. Production from these two states accounts for about 80 percent °'" the orange crop. Most of the frozen orange juice eon· centrate is made from Florida valencia oranges. So this product should continue semng at Jow prices. This year's grapefruit crop Is expected to be up 13 percent from last season's record with · Florida's crop exceeding last year's record by 18 percent. Both the whlte and pink seedless varieties will be plen· Uful. Californi a 's winter oranges -the navels are considered best for out·of-b and eating since they a\>e seedless and easy to peel and separate into segments The early arrivals in the market in December tend to be on the sour side, but during the course of the season, which ends about May. the oranges get pro- gressively sweeter. The navel oranges are readily identified by the folds or skin on one end . which r esemble a navel. They have a natur~ nch orange skin color. The skin tends to be thick and more textured than that of other varieties. When choosing navel or anges. select those with the s moothest skin that feel heavy for their size. Often the smaller sizes have thinner skins and give you more fruit in proportion to skio Smaller sizes usually sell for a lower price per pound ruso Because the skin color of the Florida oranges 1s not an attractive orange. coloring is us ually added. California law re quires that oranges wlth added skin coloring be so labeled When you SC(' "color added" stamped on the orange. you k:nov. it's not a Californian by birth smce color is not added to our oranges. Actually. skin color 1s not always a reliable in· dex to quality even when il's natural. Often full y matured oranges take on a greenish hue late in the marketmg season. This is known as regreening, nod may be seen on ripe. delicious fruit Russeting -a tan. brown or blackish moW- ing or specking on lhe skin often found on Flori da and Texas oranges It docs not al feet eating quaUly and onen occurs on oranges with thin s kin a nd superior flavor. Selecting good grapefruit is similar to selecting good oranges Look for irapefruit that Is firm. well shaped, and heav)' for its size. Also JootE for smooth skin as coa r se s kinned i rapefrult 1s likely to have a dry, pulpy lex· ture. ll°"gh ridged or wrinkled akin is another indlcaUocs of pulpiness or lack of Julee. Usually skin defects such as discoloration, scars, and scratches do not affect ealine quality. But ilvotd grapefruit wlth sort. discolored Classes Slated Morning cluses will start Feb. l io Suosel Beach 1,_ the art of 1ourmet cooking . Instructor Is Claire Slwp, wbo wm be.,Svina • prtcount demonstra- tion Saturday at 1 p.m. in tbt Marina Pacifica aopr." Ceuter, Lona Btae • FM for the seven-week eourte u '90 and covers COit ol tnd rood prepared ud eaten at eacb class. &vttdn1 cluses are alao anllable .t a ce»t of $10. 1test1tratlon inform•· UOft can be obtained by c1lllne Ma Sharp at . (2U) 582·5172. • from Fresh Beef Brisket Harvest Day . ~.~ars .. 16-f)Z~N 33° Lady Lee F1111t c~~!AN 350 Harvest Day ~~~~s~33° ( Harvest Day Apricot Halves 350 .................... ~ 16·0Z.CAN IONOIOllElP 7-Bone Chuck Roast l8 111 .. sec Boneless Stewing Beef ·• e:oai ,, llo-.01.0l[(I 1'' ~· 1ea .• 78• .. 1" Lower prices overall are the order or the day at Lucky. But you save even more on your total food blll when you plan your shopping llst around these fine brands which are carried excluslvely in our stores across the nation. You'll enjoy top quality at an economical price. so you shouldn't wait to join the mllllons of Lucky customers who have become enthusiastic tans of these two brands. Harvest Day and Lady Lee ... two more reasons why its Lucky ... for you. Harvest Day Peas 17·0;:,.N 21 c .. Harvest Day ~~!~ES ........ 16·0:::N 25c Jimmy Dl~n.Pork SIUSl~~oi "'~age Beef Nack Bones LI 2ac ~!l!~a Chicken Legs Sliced Beef Liver S~""l.f.SS • Of.Vl!NtO Ground Beef Patties ·~~4TTtQ • Turbot Fillet >-<•~0 231 .~88c l• 79c l 6 98~ ,. 1" ~'l!"D Chicken_ Breasts .. 99c Small End Rib Rout -1151 •• Porterhouse St11k ·1 .... v 98~ Lady lee Sliced Bacon -overall-Thars . Lucky for~- Deli Foods Packaged & Connea Household & Pet Produce Golden ~an~~~.~ ............. Le.16C RussefPotatoes us NO 1 10c:r~0 59° Crisp Cucumbers Pippin Apples Whitt Gr1p1frult "' Wf •4 ir'A~lf• ~fo ... (..51' large Papayas Health & Beaut~ Aids SChf~k ~per ~-I Bl1das 1"0 0, •• 211 Schick Injector Blades ... 0 Of , 1°' Schick II Adjustable Blldl,! 0 ,,, • 990 Listerine Moutbwash ,, 01 ••• 114 Aw ... rtltt , flf._\). Efferdent Tablets 'tUIHA ,,\fllC llr,~.1011 2.:J9 ZO ''"P· toll J.99 flO W. 1.A '41.MA A~MUI •COITA Mii,\ Kraft American ~~~~~! ...... 12·0Z~G.1°9 ~ft Monterey Jack~'!~ ~0 81c ~~trl1n Alps Swiss C!!.~~ l'KG 990 ~~~!t~N~t~rv~!ffS8 ·~~o 8 7c ~l~!~ol~~~.f!!~~ Eohease L• 179 ~~Y. ~~.!},Ice~ Bologna ll·OL ""0 85 c !-!~t~!' Sliced Sllami l.Ql ~0 590 ~~l!!!uE~.nks ·~z "° 63° Frozen & Dair~ ~!f.~~ '~ .. c~m ·-~C:TN.89° Lady l~ Cottage. C~nse ~~~ 111 ~!!!!t!!llllblu_ . 1::._0 590 !!!!!~nt Onnge Juice .,.;4CN<49c c...,.... "''I! llllt-"'"" ... - _ .. _____ _ , ..... _ .. _ ..... 11' 10. ITATI COLUQI I L.VO. 'Vl.1.lllTON IHI l• ,AU.A AVIMUI HUNTINOTON HACH l"tM HA"90ft II.YO. -UOUlllA MU JN-.O, IVCUD Ava. Sunshine Krispy Cracke~~oz :;:49c '\ !~,t!OP Appl~ J~i~ . ..O~L 105 ~~~ Diet Bevenge ,,~ 14 c !!~l~~~~~r Pancake !~~79c swt_. Min Instant ~acoan.o:: 1•• !!.•esweet_~~pefrult Jul~ ~530 Seneca Grape Juice ~ Mott's Pruna Juice lady l• &rape Jelly •MC:-:M63C Coffee·Ml~~ .. CoffH Cr!!~ .. !L""96c E1rlv Calif. Ollves ~'""°'~[po""' " ............ . Vlnlc OHi Plckles ~OIMlll ""'" -· .. -• Green BllCk1y1 Pas O\Sow ..... ,U>o • Minute Rici Mixes •V/olltCl!Ot Corned Belt Haa~ 120 NO. llAYOMONO •odOIH OltOVI Ul11 MAOMOLIA i\V U::A.&a~ .~:::H29c ..... !: .. &7c ,toSO lllOOllHU ... T ITllHT 1U?a CAIOT llOAD AT LA .-u 'OllANQI tt.lO I , CHA,MAN AVINUC 'l ... TA ANA • aatt to. lllllTOI. ITlllfT LA MlllAOA LA MlltAOA IHOl'lt!NQ CINTllt ITO .. HOPIN DAILY t A.M. ·wHTMINITI'- .... WHTMINlfllt AV.NU~ !'l!!0 Det~r.~ent !~~l!o!!!.!OWllS ,1~50 I ~ll 54 c PuriAI Tuna Cit Food .1 ._:'CAl'38~ P1rin1 Dog Chow Lquor ~!~!~l1n L.T.D. Whisky .,M, .. 4" lucky Vodka 'IO~ ll• ... 3•• Lucky Gin .. _ a• ell 444 Chrome ilu11e !~~~OH lo(ANOLESARS. 2•• SOUNDS LARGE BLAST ............ . Six Foot C1bl1 Coll And lock 411 3" 1" 0 DAILY PILOT Wednesday. January 5. 1177 1 f Learning to Lean on -Lamb St~~ Avo.Cad~s Behind '75 Crop lJyBAllBARA • GIBBONS Can you name a red ,meat that's always tender. and tasty ... even the leanest and least fal· tening cuts? The answer, ~eao meat lovers , ls Jamb. ~ Differing from beef and veal,.-where tough· ~ess or relative bland· •ess l s the price sometimes paid for lean- Dess -even the Jeanesl ~uts of lamb are avorful. And what is e leanest cut? A leg of mb, at only 590 calories r pound (of lean .bone- ess meat.) In texture and cooking teCbnique. lamb is more Jkin to veal than it is to beef. Like veal . lamb Is a ~oung animal with no fatty marbling running through the meat. Lamb h as neve r achieved the popularity ln the United States that lt enjoys in other coun- l r i es. Ho we ve r, a s Americans become more Interested in "ethnic" cuisines, perhaps those who never ha ve cooked it will be more inclined to i:ive it a try. Unfortunate· Jy, la mbis sometimesdif· flcult to find outside or rnetropolitan areas. often r equiring "special or· " purchas ing. We k it's well worth the rt. • And here's how to cook it, a leg of lamb, the leanest and least fallen· ingway: Lamb Couocil- Recommended Method: Defrost if frozen. Season with sail, pepper, other seasonings. Place fat· side up on.a ra~.~ in an open roating pan. Insert meat thermometer in mea.ties t part •. away from bone. Do not cover or add any liquid . Place the pan in a pre· healed 325-degree oven and roast until desired doneness is reached: 170 for medium rare. mare registers at 165 degrees on th e m e at tbermomenter , medium at 175, well done at l!ll.) Remove from oven and let stand for 10 minutes before carving. · Slow-Roast Method - follow preceding direc- tions, but use an oven temper a tu re of 27 5 degrees. I Hi -Low fft'ezer·To- Oven Method Put frozen lamb on a rack in an open roasting pan, without seasoning or Ii· quid. Do not cover. Turn oven lo high set- ting, about 475 degrees, Junk Probed "The Gr<>at Amen can Waist," a pro~ram that w i ll ex amin e the avera ge Am e rican 's diet. will be hosted by Ma rio Mach ado on "Med1 x," airing at 2 pm Saturday over KNXT. Channel 2 The proJtram. present· rd bv Davc Bell As ;;oc1 ates tn cooperation with the l,os Angeles County Medical Assn . w i ll t a k e vie we r s through the junk food jungle. 11lui>trallng by physiolog1cal a nalysis what getting hooked on potato chips and piua can do to a person. Featured in this pro- gram will be Dr. Susan Sharaga, Janice Liies, R.D. and Judy Bean, R.D .. who will escort Machado through a supermarket to show viewers how they can stretch their nutrition dollar. Gobblers Tallied The number of turkeys raised in C•llfornJa dur· lng lbe 1976 aeaaon ii esUmated at 17,980,000 birds, according to the California Crop and Livestock Rcporlln1 Service. The tot.at crop wUl bo t• percent above thepro- :lucli on last )'ear, CaUtornla conUm.tes to account for over l3 ptr· cent ot the nat.lon '•total. A reco-rd ta7 .9 G\llllon llirkeys are expedtect to be raised In 1916 na· llonw1de. This is 11 per· cent above tho 1975 ·number. and set a timer fot' 45 minutes. At the end ~ 45 minutes the fat will ,be searecl and melted, lhe the desired doneness. Remove from oven 10 minutes before carvin1. outside crisp and well· G RE E K LE M 0 N browned. the juices 1.AMB -Crusborcrum· sealed in. Draln fat from ble fresh or dried mini pan. Set oven tem-leaves, mix with lemon perature at 250. After juice, garlic or garlic about an hour, insert a powder, salt and pepper, meal thermometer in the Sprinkle liberally over roast. Season the out-·iamb. side. Continue to roast ROAST LAMB TAR· until th e meal RAGON -Sprinkle thermometer registers roast liberally with lemon Juice, dried tar· ragoo, garlic o.r onion aalt, pepps'. ROAST LAMB OREGANATO -Crush dried oregano or ~eel Italian seasonings and rnlx wilb dry red wine, garlic salt and pepper. Sprinkle over lamb. aOAST LAMB MARJORAM -Coat a leg of lamb liberally with dried marjoram-. Season wltb ult and freshly crow>d pepper, 1ullc THE SLIM GOURMET powder. . • -..&mi:n Cooked Ve1e&able1: •1111111ijmillu111111. sliced zucchini aauleed in a teaspoon ot olive oil, seasoned with onion or garlic and Italian herbs. Or, parsleyed tresh car- rots simmered in a little white wine. Or cooked green beans aressed with diet mirgarlne and a sprinkle of toasted slivered almonds. • California's 1975-76 avocado crop bas been reported lo weigh US,892,267 pounds, ac- cording to the Callfomia Avociado Advisory Board. This year's harvest fiwe falls short of last year's crop, reportect V 208,'121, 797 l)Ound~. A spokesman for the board explained lbe difference as a natural fluctuation in harvests. I EaUmatea by a shJp. pln1 committee 'hows • next year'• crop r e· achln g 26S m llllon pounds. more tbao twice the site of the 1975-7& crop. Major 1hlpplnt vuieU.es in tbo l9'1~76 crop were Fuerte and Haas. New Crop ship--, mtnts are expected to atea4ily increase • through winter and spr- ing months. o• oua Ai1.-•1w STAT•• ••os. MKT., 11 ss CAilMISA ., YD., CAilMISA . ... STAn•••os. MONIY BACll GUAaANUl ON QUALITY MIAT5 flfl•• •llct Qf Ml Alt\ """co ... 01nQH1t.u • C.V••Aw•t1 D 10 •lta\f •OU 01 'f'(Klf MOwtt WIU ,, (r1U•lvu' •fH>• .. O•o ~ deli. · c _ - ., ttl:.. '9.f' I , Jll•c.•1 f 8ff • • PA'\tAAtiltl •MAM• JAlAPlN() I +RMObltf.-•[IAR' f\fft•f </ 39c LEO'S SLICED MEATS ?~~ l•. U',f':'A~ltfA'fflt•)VAH •'>t.H..lh BOLOGNA :~~. \lo\HA .. O'S •#lfa.Ui-tn'I BEEF FRANkS ~:i_l. W1\~()~ ~ BEEF FRANKS !.~1 S.tAlllll .. OS ••VAR·~, .. l{j LUNCH MEATS ;~:;' OSI .,,_ ... ._.,la• J vAA-· "' • 1111 BOLOGNA ~~~z .. . . .. .__ SCU llfllO SLICED BACON ~~::'. . I AR M • 9U\" SLICED BACON . . . IA 67• .... 69• , .. 69C I & 79c v.97! '" $109 '" $129 u . $149 '"(SH lll()l(N WHITING ..... nu..n•OUN TURBOT f Ill ET .• YAl$H IAOZUI • IC[L&NOI<. PERCH FILLET J""lSHlllOU N HALIBUT fllltT ,, 39c ,..LR s 109 .•. s 139 18. $2 29 SPARE CHUCK ROAST BEEF BLADE.CUT •~s•~ BEEF LIVER FRESH SLICED SLAB BACON HORMEL ANY SIZE PIECE USDA OllADI A c ~ F LB. 69c99c- CUT·UP FRYIRS ..... $ ....... 2 ..... 9 45 LB. LB. atrr . w•ll cNO 11 H l• I •18 ROAST ~:~cc . 11 TtPROAST~ II s 1 •• SHOU~LHR5snAK u $I 59 ~0R'iiliirous1 a(lf • -fLU~ II 4HI $13A lllf • 104H • $t(n RUMP.ROAST " $139 ROUND STIAK :~~ .. T·•ONI oiiouND •••• ll 59c CU••• STIAK. Ul • 1 •• •iiiswiaiC':::.'·• HCJ • C>lllC• •POI 9 5 C IU ' • k Al>l,-CUT F'll£5H•E•'~u,.... ,, $129 AllM ROAST. ..... CHUCK STIAK GROUND •llF m •·c1<m 99 au,•1o1H•10HUUS•s11•• •w •ao .. mss $159 7·•0NI ROAST . ia c TOlt SIRLOIN STIW MIAT " lltU•llOl/HO•llOllCltSS IAA ... $MOl<EO . CE .. f[R.CU I • PON~ $1 59 ttcr. CHU(K ''°"Elf SS s 1 •• Tl-STIAK LOIN CHOH .. le SHOULDIR ••si 11 ..- BANANAS l.AllOE • CENTRAL AMERICAN OOLOENAIP£ , ••• "$205 18 $1 •• s1••. 19 ,, 79c 99c MalCINE s1s3 VICKS• NYOUIL a.oz. I r11ca u11c. 7fUllDAYS · JAN. 6 • JAN. 12, 1977 32.0Z. lo-cl. POlllRI YICKS I SINEX SJOI ~-oz. . . ;-. _.,.-'. .. ... ---...... I ... .. y I ' Whatever the ae850ll, ekeo is popular. "This clous recJpe, Chicken able ta especially come durtni the busy inter months, when e are so many other aces to be besides the kitchen! Like on the aJopes! Th.ls chicken bake pro- ducea tender "1d moiSt meat within a c~. touted almond coating and savory mustard~ honey glue. . -........ _.,, __ Use a dry white table wine and red currant or cranberrY tellv. to flaV.Or this dish. BLUSHING CHICKEN 2 whol6 chicken breasts, halved ~ cup chopped oniqn 'i4 cup ·butter or margarine \12 cup dry white wine ' ~ cup red currant or cranberry jelly 'ti cup sour cream Salt and pepper to taste . \ -Wedn!!dg. January 5, 1971' OAILYPILOT , Cooks' Test Due One of the oldest cooking com· pet.it.Iona, daUni back to-l.IM9, ls upon us again. The .National Chicken Cooking COntest, co- sponsored 'by the National Broil.el' Council and product manufacturers, Q!fen $10,000 as first.prize DlOney. · lnlredlenls must be exact and nationally available, instructions complete. Total preparation must not exceed 3 hours. There'• a minimum of preparation t'me and cleanup: you mtx tbe1n· gredlenta ri&bt in the bating dish, coat the chicken pieces, and bake. CIDCKEN DIABLE Jo a s killet over -medium heat, melt but· ter and saute onion unW trans p are nt . Add chicken and turn to brown all sides. Add wine, cover and simmer for 20 minutes. Stir In current or cran· berry jelly and continue to simmer, uncovered, turning and bas ting chicken, for another lS minutes, or until chicken ls tender when pricked Make a Winter Hit No entry blank ts required, on- ly a copy of your favorite chicken recipe, clearly: marted with your name, address and .telephone number. 1be top S or so recipes from each etate and W-ashington, DC. will be Judged in state cook-offs. The 51 state and DC winDera will Ulen compete in a national cook- olf in Jackson, Mississippi, on July rr, 1977. State transporta· tion costs and all national cook- off expenses will be paid by con- t est sponsors. Sponsors • employes, directors, repreaen· tatives and their immediate families, along with previous first place national winners, are not eligible. 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 'h cup chopped toast· edalmonds ~ cupboney 2 tablespoons French-style mustard 1 tablespoon lemon jµice ~ teaspoon salt 11. t easpoon curry powder 1 frying chicken (3 lb.), cutup Melt butter in 9 x 1J x a.inch bak1ng dish in 375 degree-ov,n. Add all in- gredients except chicken, and mix well. Roll chicken pieces in I.be mixture, and turn skln side up. 4Bake 45 minutes, or uhtil chicken is tender, ~Ung once with liquid dish. Remove chicken ces to serving platter. m off and discard any ezcess fat from surface -;,! remining liquid. Spoon r'maining liquid over chicken. Makes 4 serv· u)gs. with a fork . . Remove cbic"ken to warm platter . ·Stir in sour cream into sauce, heat through, and pour mixture over each serv· ing . Garnish w ith parsley. (This colorful recipe makes pretty holi- day fare). Clucker Cooked A 3·pound broiler-fryer chicken yields 2'.h cups cut-up cooked chicken and.2 to 2\12 cups broth when the chicken js sim· mered with a couple of cups of water, a small onion (sliced) and several celery tops. This is an elegant di.sh for wintry evenings, com· bining apples ln a bread stuffing for chicken breasts. This reeipe serves four. You can serve two persons with me breast (perhaps ooe you ataabed in the freezer from your last fryer). APPLE STUFFED CIDCKEN BB EASTS 2 lwbole chicken breasu,balved 1 teaspoon fiavor enhancer ~cup apple Juice 2 tablesp o ons margarine ~ teaspoon gmmd cinnamon 1 IA cups dry bread cubes lf.t cup unpeeled chopped apple OPPORTUNITY knocks onen when you use resull·gelling Daily Pilot Class1f1ed Ads lo reach the Orange Coast market. Phone 642-5678 25C0FF /PLUS 1-t'R f~E BOX! -.. . 'r'Jcupmilk ~ cup fine dry bread crumbs lquartoil cut a pocket in each chicken breast half. Sprinkle with flavor enhancer . In s mall saucepan beat apple juice, margarine and cin- namon 'until margarine melts. Remove from l),eat; stir In bread cubes and apple. Using about 3 tables. poona fillini for each chicken breast, fill each pocket . S ecure with wooden picks. Dip chicken in milk, then roll .in bread crumbs. Pour com oil in heavy deep flat bottomed saucepan or fryer filling no more than Y.t full. Heat over medium heat to 375 degrees F. Add chicken and fry, turning once, 12 minutes on each side or until browned. Drain on paper towe l ; remove picks. Makes 4 servings. Entrie5 must be postmarked no later than March 1, 1977 and addressed to Chicken Ccmtest, Box 28158 Central Station, Washington, D.C. 21:XX)5. There are a few special re- quirements for National Chicken Cooking Contest enbie5. Among them: The recipe aboula make approximately 4 serving$, con· taln a broiler-feyer (2-3~ lb. chicken, whole or any part or parts), at least 1 teaspoon Ac'· cent flavor enhancer and at least 114 cup Mazola corn oil. SAVE .a.c For further contest infcmna- tion and some of the chicken re- cipes that have carried off first prizes ln the past, send a self· addressed: stamped envelope to "Six $10,000 Chicken Recipes," at the Washington address above. A nww Idea ftom fhe-rnaMn Of · Nncaff-TM Coupon-of·the·Monfh Ckib. · ,__. 'r To Introduce you to today's rich N~scof~• Instant Coffee, we'll give 'you 40¢ off for the month of Jonuory. Then, as Nescof~ l~eeps on sotls~ing, you keep on saving-for eoch month, o new coupon. Nescof~. P.egulor or Decoffelnoted-lts the, lorgest·selling brand of instant coffees In the world. With our ne:w .. monthly sovlngs;· Isn't this o good tlm~ to join the club? I 1. f J ) I t •' i • . - Va riety Department i ENVELQ~ES r.='&7: 2as100 MOTOR OIL Raylulll ..-Wt. ... ouart 4~s100 Cans R ORANGES Swllt and Juicy F1nay Navels c Tangelos Minneola Var1e1y ~eN~1?~or~~~n~ .... 3 &~0 39c ~~~~~rs ..... tlCh 15c Po~.i~,!~~~pfl~~ ' ~ 29' . ~!~l~~h~W. ~!.~g'119 .............. ,.,.,... ......... Ma.4:ellf ...... ""911 ........ •111~4'111--~- I t USOACllok:e ... Qu:t To Pat 11111 BEEF TIP· STEAK HORMEL SLAB .. BACON , Smoked (By the Piece) gc Stew Beef F1a;:u1 s 49 ........ ~ ................ "'*' ... 1 Fresh Brisket : s1 z9 ......... Cllt ..................... 111. Wllaon Meat Products / / !,t:i~!hJ!L ..... ?.~ .. IL $121 Sliced Bologna s101 Slfew1y ... , or lllt ..................... lb. Corn Dogs utt1e '°' lkle 111. ggc Butterfish Fillets .!::C. 111. age Flshsticks Clptaift'• C11o1ce 1~-:-sac c.iitatn·· Cllotcl 12-oz. Fish Portions 11tter Fried .._,. 111 Beef Tacos ....,...,.. 111. s1 u Canned-Food Buys.' • Cling Peadlel ...... .................... c. • S111oned Green Belns ....... 1kl. •Whale Gnlen Bans ....... ,kl. • Hlgltwar Com ,_,_cl ........ 11 .... •Green Peas llflliwlf..._ ...... lkl. • Green leans llft"-e ...... ~.~ • Cre1m Style Com l_ .... _14...ei.Cll •AppleSl&a 1 .................... 'h_ .... HUNK LIGHT TUNA fiAR·KIST For Satlcll or Slnclw-. I . ~ 6't:z· 45c ,,....--------I ' . .... c-....... c..... ....... ·----" • ... .... • '"" Clibtr •• It .... '""' ~ l - I _.., ----. ..... ---... .... '+ ... -.. ..-·-· ,. ~. J11tu175. 1m ONLY P'tLOT (! Look at what you can ltuy for under a clol• lo.,.,. your new yHf IHHlget off "9ht The Consumer line by Julie Grayson As your representative at Ralphs. I'm happy to see that the State of California hae announced sus- pension of retail minimum price controls on mlllc, effective Thursday, January 6, 1977. These 11tatt regulations established a minimum price at which a retailer like Ralphs could sell milk. Under the old law, retailers could offer mllk for more than the minimum price, but they could not offer It tor less. Ralphs has openly opposed · retail price controls since they have been In effect. Now that the state has suspended retail minimum price controls, you can be sure Ralphs Is determined to continue to never knowingly be undersold on mllk In th• Los Anplet-Or1ngt county 1rea. This offer applies to the everyday regular non-restricted price of these competitors: Albertsons. Alpha Bets, Fazlo's, Lucky, Market Basket, Safeway or Vont. Applies to Extra Rich. Homogenized • Vitamin 0, Lowtat and Nonfat fresh milk. (Not adyertlsed or In-store speclala). •It you have any questions or com· ments @out the suspension of retail minimum price controls on milk, or any other questions. com- ment or price inquiry, call me at 1·800-282·1600. I'm here to help you In any way I can. CaU Julie Grayson · 1-800-262-1600 Pork Shoulder Pork Steak Lake to Lake Jeok or longhorn Cheese Golden Premium Aleem • USDA Choice BHi/. · ~. · . ~ . PMifry Fiiiers Freah PrOduce D LHnCubel per 1 59 0 PorkL~n ·per 1 OI ~ K~-lktdorH.... 22901. 99 0 1 Wa•h!n~tonGolden-31b.CelloBag 59 Stewing Beef lb. • ~ Sirloin Chops . lb. I ~ .,berta Peaches can•. ~ DellCIOUS Apples bag • D USDAChok:elteflottoa;?or per 1 69 D PorkShoufd•rBonel"• per 1 09. ~ llurMount1ln·~"°"edV1r1eti..515 oz. G9 ~ Frffh,Crl•p / 2 · 29 Top RCUld Steak ) · lb. • Pork Roast lb. 1 ~ Dog;F~ . canuiit ~ Cucumbers tor • D oulck To File 1 SB oi TYounp !:'!l.rWJunmaticksgs or. • per 49 ... o lh*rip or C~•n•2l-l or. PkO. 2 99 ·o Juicy, Thin Skin 2 1J9 Cube Stelk ~~ • ~ W'K .... 1 '1 lb. • r£J Cup 0 Noodles '°' • Lemons tor , 1 o luper Frtlh Ptc* a lb. Pkg. per 1 'I g D Sll'loln or Aound per 2, 49 , ~ w...._ Kirnef~ C!Nim S~ 4 Bi.4 oa: 99 1 ' Orou1d Ct.Jck lb. 1 '11 Ve81 Cutlets lb. • ~Del Monti com c1n .. ~ N;cv:ksi:i<'" ~~ 2.59 · ~c~·ciJ.ters ~ 1-:11 ~~i=~1 ·~ i 2J:~n:;BJ1 f . Q Qeblfirdt°"'tt· or ttot·WJ~t~ 11 oa. 39 H.,.lth & Beauty Alda · ~ Al~ Seltzer Plus 20 ct. 99 I •• • l 17'h IT., COSTA MBA .. "' ~.C!lll Con Came:i '" c•n ~ II!'. ~-~ ~ for Cooking or•• '. 31 oz. 1 42 ~Cold Tablets pkg •• ~s:=•tlon 3b~:.· .99 r.,..,, rUUUD ~ Wesson Oii btt. • Vi gal. 93 ~ Aalphl·Concentrett 3 9 gg U lhriJ Croc1'tr Ml• 59 ctn. • ~Hawaiian PunCh c:n~ • ~.H~ Helpers pfcg. • ~ Cold Medication 99 ~ Coricidin Tablets bu •• 11b. 79 ~g. I 1801.1 79 pkg, I 1lb. 159 can 1 ::..38 ::: .89 D $1u11g1, Cheete or Pejptronl 9.8 ~ Tut N "-" gt. llze 57 JenQ's PiZza 1~~ 1Y:J Paper T~ roll• I Baker.y D Old Ftthlontd hllf 8I ~ AU PUfpoee " L~ .&5 D White or Whtat RalP Ice Cream . a• • ~ Gold Medal Flour .... All Star Bread Howfihold V•lu• . . ~ P:k & a..n. 1:.0: .27 ~ erisji~"l.1•.;ueh :~\ .35 · D !_nltlft'•~Th•UnderPanty . size• . l9 ·o Pltlnotlodlnd , l& ~ Rerphe.t>ellctou• 59 PantyhOee 4 • B only I • Allahs Salt . . ~. . lY:J Clmamon Rolls ~:;: • ~ Punlrw·P1ck'Otofl9 2 II Q Qo~Whoitf<trntl 1201• ZB D A1lpht·Dtllclous •89 r£J Colee Flltlfl .... . ~lbletl Ca,n can • Autumn Tea Cak• tach I ..... ,~flt>•••., r••r4'M•••., 18oz. 29 loaf 1 .. Wt rt1erve th• right to lllTlll or rtfuN ..... to commerclal dt1ler• tf •hotn•ltra. I .. ''".so + .. '3 Ta ..., I I ''" .11 wtdl Coupon t1t1 I I L;iiJ 't.t" .99 11 C'Oiie 'l... ,99 I I M~ ~'"'coupon I I Creamer with Coupon I I ~==r::i:11.1m 11 ~===~-=:11.un I L RIGHT PRICE COUPON J la~ RlGHT PRICE COUPON .I ~------~-------- ~161 PASEO Df VALENCIA, LAGUNA HU.LS I 1501 S. ~. WRTMINSla STOIE HCUIS: 9 .. 10 Dair, 9.f Su-, ~ ) CJO DAILY PILOT W!dM!cSW· Januwy 5. 1977 Fill a Pot-au-Feu To avoid bavLnc a Jarse pot simmerine day and otiht. you can serve an easy American version of French "pot-au-fe\&. •• ODCKEN aOTEUE80VP 2cbickeJt breasta,aplit. v. cup < lf.t stick) marcartne 1 cup chopped onion 1 cup sliced celery 2 tablespoons chopped parsley l teaapoon salt 'h teaspoon thyme 2baylcaves 4 envelopes instant chicken broth 8cups water 2 cups rotelle macaroni v.i pound zucchini, sliced 'h pound mushrooms, sliced Remove skin and excess fat Crom chicken. Jn Dutch oven, brown chicken 1>leces on both s idea in margarine. Romove from pan. Saute onion, celery, and carrots in remaining margarine until onion is tender. Add parsley, salt. thyme, bay leaf. chicken broth, 4 cups water and chicken. Bring to a boll. Cover and sim· mer about 1 hour or until chicken GROUND BEEF LEANEST •••••••••• aacu.. STUKS T-IOHI ................ ' ·~ rotnaHOUSI .......... ' I r: ,,. ~ SfflLOIH •• , .•••• , • • • u.. ls tender. Chill several hours Of ovemilht. Slim off hardened fat from surface. Reniove chicken from aoup. cut Lnto cubes, discard.lna bones. Add chicken and remain- ing 4 cups water. Bring to a botJ. Add rotelle, zuccbloi, and mushrooms. Cook until rotelle Is done, about 'r'J hour. Makes 12 .servings. CHIVE Bl8CV11'8 1 ~ cups wul,tted flour • teaspoons baking powder lf.t teaspoon salt \4 cup (lf.t stick) margarine 3 tablespoons snipped fresh or frozen chives % cup' skim milk Combine flour, baking powder and salt. Cut lp marcaripe with pastry blender or two knives un- til mixture resembles coarse meal. Toss in chives and milk with tork just uatil mixture 11 moistened. Turn out onto floured board. Knead 6 to 8 times. Roll to 1h-inch thickness.· Using a 2-inch cookie cutler, cul out biscuits. Place on ungreased baking sheet. Bake at 450 degrees F. for 12 minutes or until done. Serve bot. RANK ST£AK ••••.•.• s I ~ Best Idea Since Shopping Carts ~ow you can do a week's shopping a &~ without forgetting a single item! Use pre-printed Send Today To Become A Super c;hopper r.··--------...... ooupott, '••--*1.aoto: I Piiot Prtntlft9 "'~Utt I • : P.O. Box 1MO i.. I 330 W. lay 8t. I : ~· MHe, Calif. '2t2t : INAMl-------------.:.t f I ,.,,.~------------~1 la'T1.. ... -------111'1'----..I shopping lists prepared for you by PILOT PRINTING. 140 eeperm printed It•"'•· pl\19 eddltloNf epec" y04I cen tlll In yourHlf. 34 St.,,tH 21 Ye~lablee 14 Fruit• I Bakeryh•m• 5 BeverqH 19 M9.t •nd ""' •ntrf•• 11 Delry leeme 20 -.c.llaMOUS Healthfu~ Snack ... , . . -....... '· Bran Carrot Cake allows sweet snacking at no nutritional loss, unlike less fibrous convenience foods. Cheering Out-of-Hand Bran T-akes to -Cake Treat sports fans to hearty sandwiches to sus- tain their spirit all day long. They will eJtjoy the different flavor combina- tions "away from the maddening crQwd." CAESAR SALAD mustard, garlic powdef and pepper. Add lettuce, chicken and egg; toss to coaL Slice loaf bC>l'Uo8- tally. Fill with salad mli· ture. Makes 6 to a serv- ings. • SAUCY CBICKE Perhaps you've beeD natural flavor or bran in wondering bow men and breakfast food s and · women in earlier times breads, and in thls Bran lived so lonr without con· Carrot Cake, a not-too- venience foods, "miracle sweet dessert for snack- druga," and th&tdviceOf ing. nutritionists? . 1 BRAN CAB BOT CAKE One reason, nutri· 1 eup margarine or tionista today point out, butter is that much of their food l1h cups brown was unrefined -that is, sugar unprocessed -ao that 3 eggs much of the natural 2'h cups unsifted all· vitamins, minerals and purpose flour fiber remained. • 2 teaspoons baking Today, persons can soda take a div~rsion from 1 teaspoon baking over-proceased foods by powder enjoying fibrous prp· Wteaspoon salt ducts such as oatur'al 2 teaspoons cio· wheat bran. A dally dose namoo or fiber, most physicians lf.t teaspoon cloves say,willwardoffrisksof llh cups mashed colonic cancer a n d cooked pared carrots, (1 diverticuJitiea. J>OWld carrots) You can enjoy the 1 cup whe at bran cereal 1 cup raisins In large bowl cream margarine and s ugar. Beat in eggs, one at a Ume. Mix notlr\ baking soda, baking powder, salt, cinnamon and cloves; blend Into c r ea m e d mixture alternately with carrot. Stir in wheat bran cereal and raisins. Turn into greased 10- inch tube cake pan. Balce in 3SO degree F . oven 60 to 6S minutes, or until cake tester inserted l.o cake comes out clean. Cool 10 minutes, remove from pan and cool com· pletely. To serve, sift confectione r s' sugar over top of cake. Yield : 18 ~ervings. SANDWICH ~cup mayonnaise 2 tablespoons lemon juice 2 tablespoons e rated Parmesan cheese 4 teaspoons finely chopped anchovy fillets 1 te as p oon Worcestershire sauce •h teaspoon dry mustard •;.. teaspoon garlic powder 14 teaspoon pepper 4 cups shredded ro- maine lettuce 2 cups thinly sliced cooked chicken 1 hard cooked egg, finely chopped l loaf Italian bread In a large bowl stir togethe r real m ayon· naise, lemon Juice, cheese, anchovy fillets. Worcesters hire sauce, LOOK FOR THE RED-X & SAVE! SANDWICH "2 cup mayonnaise 1 • cup finely chopped celery \4 cup finely chopped almonds, toasted '.4 teaspoon s alt 8slices bread l lf.t cups (8 0%) sliced cooked chicken 1 apple, thinly sliced : 4 o unces S wls1 cheese, cut ln smal cubes Lettuce leaves r In small bowl stil' together real mayoq· nalse, celery, nutt. orange rind and s alt until thoroughly mixed~ Spread 3 tablespoonsreal mayonnaise mixture on each of the• bread slice*. Top with chicken, apple, lettuce leaves and re- maining bread slice1. Makes4 sandwiches. L. • • • • • • • • • • • • "'------------~~~~---' 1 .. ·- -•• ,. • .. • • I ........ # ..... , ........ ,,, ••••• ~., •••• ,., Grocery Values! =~SSON 39c Fries almo.t grease free! 24 oz Rice-a-Roni ., ••• &9c With Brown or w1lh White~ 51, 01. Margarine. . • • . . 59c Imperial -so close to butter' 1 lb. Cocktail cumtY • • &9c Ocean Spray-naturally good! quart Grapefruit JUICE 'l'reesweet-deliciously pink' 46 oz Salad Dressing. 49e Bernstein Vinaigrette, Italian! 8 oz . Zee Napkins • • • 39c Luau prints in package of 100 Rice-a-Roni. . . • • .39c 'Choose Chicken or Beef . . 8 01 . . Toilet 69c TISSUE t oronel ... four roll pack :!~!~!!!, .. ~.~.~~. ggc acial Tissue ". 45c rprin.lfield-white or colors-200 cl ~offeemate • . . . 39c ' ametion'a coffee creamer! l 1 oz 'Premium 3 9c BREAD Springfield White, Wheat! 24 oz ·Sweetheart RI.. 59c imes 11cented detergent! 32 oz ~at Food ml • • • 55c Purina Tender \.lltles l ~ o.c pk1-: Pancake Mix • . • 59c k ruateu-Jt1.1t add water' 2 lb pkg eaches ctmn• . • 39c )talvtt1 or 1llcu-Elbertaa-~r1 '\O'.l • Tomato 49c JUICE Glorietta-rich ind pure! 46 oz ·. PLAN A MEAL AROUND OUR FRESH GRADE "A,.' FRYER PARTS! Get the ,.. tff tt .. ltlrt bf ,....... ,.. ........... 0 ... -..i.., ... ., out. fer ...ittY. wnty, , .... ..,., ,., find that JOU can't de ~ LEGS & THl.GHS Hand cut from Fresh 7 9 " King Sized Crade "A" ~ fryen.! Love the value .. !~1!f rro~}!lj~re~e·.~ .. t~! Chicken Livers • ggc .. Fret.hness makes the difference! I~ n .~ • • • • • • "'fl' iPyt/P dPBBillill .... "1f. ....... il~ • King i::ize -to afford more value ... more sweet tender white meat! Hand cut -Fresh fryers -and so tender! (with rib cage) Ham Loaf ovouuov. s1 2~ Sliced Bacon ••• s1 o~ Meat Loaf OVOl UY • 99t Ham. Pork, fresh eggs and crumbs! El Rancho's thicker ranch-style! Our own blend, with fresh e¥8! liJp Sirloin St11kJ~~4 .. '2.4l Start the year right -offer satisfaction and tenderne;,,,! They'll lo\'e the juiry goodness, the hearty Oavor! Loin cut. Top Sirloin Fmr an s21~ Loin cut of U.S.D.A. Choice beef Gr_eund Beef ••• s1 1~ Extra lean -choose bulk or pattlea Chili Grind • • • • • 99t Coarsely ground beef ... hearty! ~~::: 7·9!. . :o~E:ib 69!. fol~ s 1 ~? Center cut! U.S.O.A. Choi~ beef 1 " '. Mealy! Choice! Bake or b arbecue Rolled shoulder clod_ chuck cut _______ ...,~' , ' . , I <; ~l'nlradl~~ 'ra-' · u.s.o.a. CHOICE 110 I Uj r1 riU-.~ rili I ......... ~-~~~~£! .......... ii B 1. Yy • f . Compare the quality-you'll choose Ellta1cho,'to st~the year ~ght! Leen and tasty! Whole or point half 7 Bone Roast. • 89i 0 Bone Roast. • 99t Beef Cubes FGu .. s24~ C'huck cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef -. BEEF LIVER 69! Fresh and young and tender! Italian 39c SQUASH •. Garden fresh and all green! • Chuck cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef WE FEATURE GENUINE MILK-FED VEAL · ~.-..,two ... Lean! Tender! Loin cut U.S.D.A. Choice Boneless Pork S 1 29 · ROAST •. .. Ea1tern po.rk -Boston butt -rolled I Sup er Fresh Produce! Ptneapple .. !~~~.21! Sweet nncl Juil:y .•. \dth lus¢oua goodness that can only come from Hawaii's fertile' fie~ Cucumbe·rs •••••••• l9t Red Yams ....•.••. 2sc~ Lon~ and erem tor "' i'r> cool slices! U.S. No. J quolltr ... excellent for baking Navel 6~$ 1 Oranges s LARGE COLDEN :;;._ES 2 9!. }';>.Ira l:>nry from Washingteo State Cnlifornin's finest ... so juicy! FRESH fWTS! SiAPPERS 2°~ For the akillet or the broiler! Halibut Steak •• s35~ Center cut from Northern fish Turbot Fillets • • s 1 2~ Product ot Greenland'• waters Crab Legs ............ s39! Meaty! from Ala'skan crabs Silver Salmon •• s 19? 1-·reah frozen whole or half • 2 to 4 lb. OCEAN s219 PERCH . ·•· Frffh fillets for more value! Liquor Dep 't. SAVE $1.00 ON scom 5899 Bottled for El Ra11cho! Half-gallon Vodka CIOWlllUSSl ••• sg99 The half-gallon reduced 80c Gilbey' s Gin ..... s999 Thia weelr. !'8ve $1.00-half.gallon Ancient Age •••• s499 St.raight whiskey reduced 60¢! fifth Whiskev ...... s499 El Rancho's laieJ, -86 proof! Quart SAVE 70C Off EL RANCHO'S RUM Puerto Rican -light or dark! fifth Homemaker Values! PANTY 69C HOSE ,,. Happy Legs in aMorted shades Alka Seltzer • • • 79e . Package of 26 plop·plop11! 1 Suave Shampoo ggc Choose Balaam or Lemon •.. 16 oi Trac II Blades • s 101 Cilette'a sensation! Pkg of 5 G. E. LIGHT BULBS PKG. $ 149 Of 4 1Ch008e 60, 75 or 100 wall. Soft White Frozen Food Price& in tf{rct Thur. Jon. 6 through Wed. Jon. 12 Delicatessen Orange Juice • Opan daily 9 to 9 Sun.flay JO to 7 No salrs to dealers Oal Fame ... bright 01vor to starl tl,e d11y! 12 oz can-concentrate a11 de Kamp'a-Bfff. Chee11e! 19 ot an de K1mp'1 family aiu 20 oi pkg Creen Giant PEAS \yith Onions, with W11ter Chestnuta, r C11rrot1 and Celery! 10 oz PkJ ~!~~~~~t. ~/i~1s~ 01 ~!c Cheese Cake ••• $1 29 Sara Lee, with Cruin Cbeeae! 17 oz Dinner . 59c FRIES . Ore Ida-potato people! 24 oi pkf; TOI.ET TISSll ••••••••••••.••• 190 L.a ....... , .. ,,. ~. , . ~. -.... 45C Cbermln whltt or colortl • roll pack ' Mlm.ite Maid ftoun •• , l~ ovnct con • FABRIC sonr.m ........... si.u CIN01 JR. PIZZAS ............ $1J9 Final Touch-64 os (ll\11. 25t oCC labeU Pappvon\, uu10 or Chu.el pka or a Buddig's Meals 39e Your choice of 7 varieties-3 oz pkg. ·(F•Y IWI • IUF ..• 5 OZ •• ~ IS') Austrian Swiss. 39c Velveeta • • • • • • • 99c Alps-full flavored! 6 oz-sliced Kraft's processed cheete food! 16 oz · Cream Cheese • 59c American smo •• SJ OI ' Famous "Philadelphia" .•• 8 ot pkg From Krafl-uch 11ice wrapped! 12 oz llSTAllT 1U ................. $1.59 ii;·~. Lipton lovtrl ~ ount'9 lat · mn MAI> m ... : ....... 210 atEEZ .rrs ..................... 110 Pinoapplt or Pln.appl•·Orana.t 8 oa Gnat eftlcb from SunahJnol 16 oa pq. ~ ••• t . .. • ···-··· ......... . 1977 FIREllRD ESPRIT . . . .. . .. . . . 1977 GRAND PRIX LJ 1977 GRAND PRIX ... . " . . .. .. ,. . .· DAILY PILOT 1977 GRAND PRIX SJ '76 SUNBIRD '76 SU·NBIRD . '76 SUNBIRD 4 cyl engine, tinted glass 3 speed 1ransrn1ss1on. w s w llres. 5 year-60.000 mile engine guarantee, body side mldgs. Ser ll2M2786C104846 4 cvl, engine steel belted radial tires. rronl and rear bumper guards. body side mldgs., 3 speed transm1ss1on. 5 year-60,000 mile engine guarantee Ser 1!2M2786C107494. 4 cylinder engine. 3 speed transm1S1fon. radial tuned suspension. body side moutd1ngs. 5 year-60.000 mile engine guarantee. Ser. !12M27B60106590 + TAX&LIC. s2995 +TAX &LIC s2995 +TAX&LIC. AS LOW AS ONLY s77 .76PERMO. Total Selling Price including Tax & License S3255. 70. Total Down Payment $395. and 48 monthly payments of $77.66. Deferred paymen\ pnce $4122.68. APR 13.640/o on approved credit. '395 TOTAL DOWN PAYMENT TAKE YOUR PICK QUALITY USED CARS v..a. auto. trans . factory air conditioning. lull pawer. Landau top. AM-FM stereo (067HNXI '2791 1975 MERCURY MONARCH GHIA v..a. auto. trans.. factory air COf'\dllloning. power steering. POwer windowS. Landau t01), AM/FM ste<eo. power door l<>dla. (417138) '4395 1975 CHRYSLER CORDOIA Full power Landau toP. AM/FM radio (305MCG). '4995 1974 DODGE SUIFH VAM v..a. auto trans . PoWer steering, AM/FM stereo tape. custom paint port holes, rallye wheels. (S4024W). 94691 197 4 IUICK UMrTED V-8. auto trans factory alr conditioning. full pawer. Landau top. AM/FM slereo. all lhe xtras. (173KEE). 9 3391 <4 speed. factory air. conditioning. power steering. 455 engine. AM/FM stereo tape (279RJK) HURRY 1975 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO V-8. auto. trans.. factory air conditioning. pawer steering. AM radio. Landau top. (090L Y J). s3995 .. 1973 FORD MA VERICIC V-8. auto. trans.. factory air conditioning. power steering. Landau top. AM/FM stereo tape. (266J0Ul '2191 197 4 SUIARU GL <4 speed, AM/FM stereo tape. mag wheels. (855USI). '2191 1974 PONTIAC CATALINA V-8. auto. trans.. factory air oondltlon1ng. p0wer steering. AM radio. Landau to0. (355PDS). '1791 1975 PONTIAC LEMANS COUPE v..a. auto trans .. factory air conditioning. AM radio. Landau top. rallye wheels. hit steenng. (370MCA). '2995 1974 CHEVROLET CAPRICE CLASSIC V-8. factory air conditioning, power steering. AM/FM racho, Landau top. (970LIK). s3195 1972 FORD GRAM TORINO V-6. auto. trans . factory air conditioning, p0wer steering, AM radio. (427FUH). '1995 1975 VOLKSWAGEN IUS .C speed, AM radio. (809MOSJ. '4395 J 973 POMTIAC VENTURA 6 cyl . auto trans.. AM radio. ( 111006). 9 1495 1976 PONTIAC GIAND PRIX V-8. auto. trans.. factory air conditioning, Landau top, rallye wheels. till steering. (176PQY). ~1395 1975 PONTIAC ASTRE 4 cyl., au1o. trans .. AM radio. (585NAC) s1995 1973 FORD THUNDERllRD · Factory air conditioning, full power, Landau top, AM/FM stereo tape. (107025). '3191 1975 CADILLAC a DORADO Factory air conditioning, full l)OWer. all the xtras - low miles. Super sharp. (684MCBJ. 98395 1973 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX v..a. auto. trans., fac:tory air conditioning. POWer. steenng. power windows, Landau tap, rallye wheels. (608FFR). t3395 OPEM DAILY - 9 A.M. TO I 0 P.M. WI IXPan. Y DO PONTIAC WAUAMTY WOU llGAIDLISS OF WMlll YOU OIHMMAU. Y PUICHASIO YOUI CAI WE LUSE ALL MAKES AND MODELS • AIC... .... T•IUc... ~c.. ........ ,..., .... Prices T1I J-. '0.11 . J I ........ 5, 1977 ,.· ames Boys in Lockup ·Frank and Jesse Arrested in New Jersey From AP Dlllpaklla 'Pt-aak and Jeue Jame. ~ ln the lockup in own.ship. N.J e pair are f"'rank. 23, or Milford, Del .. aDd Jesse,26, ofUncoln, Del. e brothers were arrested after Police ques- tioned them ln coMection with a report that aomeone waa tearing antennas from cars parked ata foeabbopplng center. .-~Both were charged with bel.ng drunk aod dis· ~~and interfering with police. Frank also was &afied with posaesslng marijuana. • Svdlaaa Pe&en, daughter of the late Sovlel dic- tator Jotepb StallD, ls quoted u sa.yi.ng sbc earned $1 million for her boob ''Twenl.Y Letters to a Frtend" and "Over One Year." Mrs. Peters. wbo now calls herself Lana Peters, was also quoted in the London Dally Tele· graph as saying abe used up about 80 percent of the money from the books. They were published unde r the name Svetlana Allilu.yeva. ber ~er's maiden name. _ :'Jbe article also said Mrs. Mm. 50. claimed she lost D'l()6t of ber money on a fanning ven- ture in Wisconsin during ber mG't'iage to American architect WQllam Peters. She also blamed he.( own "wastefulness ... .)(rs. Peters, who defected lo 1967, lives in Sotltbem California with berdaugbler, Olga, 6. • ' A federal judge in New York delayed until Fri- da.Y a bearing on whether be will grant a pre- lin:ll:nary injunction to bar Australian publisher ._rt Murdocb from acquiring controlling Ln- t.el't!tt in the company that publishes New York mQB.rlne. •The development folJowed a six-hour meeting of the directors of the New York Magulne Co., which also publishes the weekly I Village Voice in New York and New West m agazlne In ( California. Following that meeting. a S..Wement was Jss ued by iirtiiaocb and New York editor a., Felker, who is seeking the lh.1boctlon to stop the sale of lbe 8QP.pany's stock. Tbest.atement said lbe meeting eoded in d.is- !f,g~ment. but that all partJes Mu•0004 ijieed to further meetings in hopes o( stopping a protracted court fight. . . "', '. Mayor Pete WUaon or San Diego fired what so'me observers regarded as his opening shot at the Re.Publican nomination for governor, criticizing Gdv. Edmund Brown Jr. sharply in bis 1977 "state of the city" address. Although the Democratic governor was never mentioned by name, Wilson slapped at Brown's Pllatt'ions from lax relief to attracting industry. "It makes no sense for you to be overtaxed as a ~e,xpayer in order to produce a state surplus," sam 'wllson. 1• At the same time, you are denied relief which ~1.~.you to be overtaxed aa a property taxpayer ,.. PlJBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE riCTITtOUS eUSIMH.S MAMI $TATt:Mt:NT n.. toflowl"9 otrSOM .,. dOlllQ "'111- rw" ft l,lMIN410S. ~m T/~u• ON:I•. Ml\~Vl•IO CA~1S ""'"' L. Jll'l•kll. l•l3t T•ffl'• Or-< ... Ml•'-Vl•to. CA '1•1S .>o 8 J1.1rl>'cll, ~Tie<•• ON: ... Ml">IOllVl•lo c AmH Thi\ _,,,.., '"' <Oftd11<te<I by ....... di"'-' ,..,.,. L Jvrl\•<"' Thi\ 't•t..rnent w•' ti~ W.th the '°"""' c~ ot °' ._ '°"""'.,.. Dec. lO ••• ,., -trws P\14111~ Ol'"'98 c.ot\I 0.-•v Piiot, 0--Co<l\I o .. 1v PllOI, o.t U, J) 1', .. 16 _ J_ S. i.11 11 ,. l'I• •nd J<tn ) 1•n S~ '' )11~1' PUBUC N&l'ICE l'lCTITIOU' eUSIMU.S MAM• tTATeMl!NT Tht followl"9 .,.,_ I\ dolnO lMI nit"\.t•' C ENTA 4 L 8USIHESS SEllVICl!S THE TAX AOVISORS, S..lle 8 ·S I~ S-rlor 4w , Olllt -U.9'•1' ,__I A. 8Utltn. -V"" 8unef\ Or _,..,..yPerll,CAtll).I "-1• 111.1\lNU I\ C-1.0 Dv 6f'l In ·-· llooart/o 0111tt•\ Former world chess cbampioo Bobby Flldter lolt his chance to regain the liUe because be tailed to register ror a aeries of elirnlnaUon m atches. the Jn· ternatlonal Cbeaa FederaUon <PU>E> UDC>Wlced. F'IDE's secretary general. IMke Baller, said that the American bad not met the Jan. l deadline for e nterlng the matchet. designed to produce a challenger to world champion Aaa&oly Karpov of the Soviet Union. •ttatllt Flscber was stripped of the cbamplon.sblp ln March lt75 wben be rejected FIDE game arrange- ment.a to meet Karpov. and Karpov won the liUe by default. • Former U.S. Sen. Jalm ....._Y wlU take al lea.at one more month before picking a new job. pro- bably in Los Angeles, a top aide to the '2-year-old Democrat says. Tunney aide Hadley .-------- ..,, said in a telephone ( PEO'nr E" J interview from ra.£. Washington that Tunney ..__ _____ __,. i.s "pretty definite" about retaining his home in L-Os Angeles, but that be sWJ b.u.n'l picked a new career. Roff aald Tunney ia considering joining one of a numbet' of Los Angeles-based law firms; possibly for a ll.mlted law practice, or gotn& into business in foreign trade or investments . • Treasury Secretary William E. Slmoa said be has no plans to seek the governorship of New Jersey or the chairmanship of the Republican National Committee. "I'm going to run for cover after I take a vaca- tion," Simon said jokingly when asked of his future plans. Simon plans to return to his home in New Jersey after the new administration is sworn in Jan.20. • President Ford will deliver his final State of the Union address to Congress at 9 p.m. on Jan. 1.2 be notified congressional leaders. • Ford's address wUJ be delivered eight days before he leaves omce and i.s succeeded by Jlmllt.)' Carter. • Buckingham Palace denied a report by a Lon· doo newspaper columnist that Qaeea Ellubedl U plans to grant the liUe Prince Consort to her husband. Prtnee Pllllip, on the occasion of her silver jubilee this year. ''There ls no foundatioo to it -the maUer bas not even been discussed," a spokesman for the palace sald of the report by col- umnist Nl1el Demi*er of the Daily Mail. Tbe only Prince Consort in British history was Albert, ,. .. ,L,,. husband of Qaeen VkCGrta. The tiUe bas no con- stitutional meaning and merely recognizes the bearer as husband ol a reigning monarch. PVBUC NOTICE lllCTITIOUS eUSIMIU NAMe 5TATEMIMT Tlw fOllOwltlQ __ , ••• CIOlllQ bu\1 _ .... WILLIAM HAllOlO JrWl.LERS, .,,. ~ ,., .. ,, ..... _., 8HCll, CA m6J Wllllem Herokl. JIU Senhor'•. ..._, 8aecl>, CA 9?64.J Ros• He•otd. J7 IJ Sea•"°•• __,he<'\. C<ll .,,..l Thi\ llonlMs' I\ <-I.cl by Wllll&mH•t'Okl AOMHerOkl Thi• st.ol-Wt\ lllfO w•lll IN Coumy Cl..-. Of °"~ County Ofl o.c. IO ... ,._ PUBUCNODCE l'ICTITIOUt eUllMIU NAM& STATeMIN1 The IOl-lftQ pet\Oll\ are dOlno ""'-1· _e\, JEAOHIMO PLArA. tlll S.. Joe- qul1t Hiii\ Roe<I, N••POM &e«h, CA '*° F1ttci.r .IOll-. 17560 f. Wnllller 81vll . Wlllltter, CA '!0602 Wlllltm J Murotly. lOMf Sallla -u.81...S ,Lo\4-lo.CAtllln~ n.•s ws1,..n '' <Oftdi;cttcl .,, • QIO!lerel f)a'1Mnfllp F~~~ riCTITIOUS 8USINHS NAMR STATaMIHT T"-lotl0w1"9 Ptnon 1> dOlnQ buM· ""'•'· Ill M.J. CllAWFORO AHO 4S- 10CIATUt: Ill CA4WFOllO & AS. SOCIATES, )112 O..mln 0. Fer, O>ll• Me-w. C1Ultl' Macy JHn Crawto<'f. 11n a.min o. ,.., . Go\1• Mtta CA nu• "'" DuMMU ,, conclll<ltd"" ... 111-dlvllluel Mtlry Jten Crewtont Tiii\ \latemen1 •&• llltd Wiii\ 11111 °"""a.rt. Of Ofange c-ly Ofl o.c. ... 1'7'- "ICTITIOUS eUSIHISS MAMW STATIM•MT Tlw IOllo#l"9 Pff°IOl'l ••• dOlng bust· M\\e\' MISSION VIEJO YOUNll'ORM CENTER.'"°' Mulrlltltd\ 81...S .• ¥1 .. ~Vltjo,CA~61, Peul•lt• O Luo•y. Jt'/07 Via Fio..tef. MIHlon Vltfo, CA '161S 8ur lo1t L l.111,1\Y. 2•~2 VI• .. ,.,,. .... Mlstloll Vltfo. CA mis Thi\ l>llllM\\ I\ conducted bY a Otftffel 11<1,,Mncnlp Paui.11ao . Lul\lly Till\ \leW,,..111 •9' 111.0 wtll\ Ille °"'"1Y Cl••'-of Or•"9' '-'ly Oft ,,,,, \l•t-.... 111.0 ••111 , .... _, CoumY Clerk Of 0.•-'°""'Y"" Dec. OI<-• II t•1t P\IOllV\ajf °'-Coe<• o..ttv PllO(, 11.1~6. .._ Tlll1 ata-.m wet lllH ""'II Ille OOunty C~rtc of Ora~ CounlyOfl OM, n.1., .. ,..,,. l~MMOH llU"OHSlltlVTY le• " ller.Oy Q1"9" 11\41 ~ .,... -11-Mr._.....,ter dlltelf-, O' ,,.,.,.,.Ci•' <Oftff«fH OT otMr th•" fftVWH Oft Of MM lie!• 1111\ fllll o. y Of O.c ~-· "" JIAtfYltnCIH -~*.,. b-.cv .... wo lrvl,.. CA"J11\ IM!ed 0.-C~\I Otilv PllO! 1'. •. "h•ltll Jan ). I'll u..> 1' PUBLIC N011CE 0.C-r U ,., "" •"" J-ry S, ......,.,_ O<e"Ot Coe•I O.Uy Pilot, 11 m r ~1• Ok b.2'. 1•r.-Je11s.1r.1•n PUBIJC NOTICE l'ICTITtOVl eUSllllU HAM•tTAT•MENT n. •-•no_.,..., er• llOlno Ml· _ .. THE GllEAT AME!lt(AN PtllM TINO CO • 3..0 C J Al•Mrl U. Or COot.o-.CAm>t Mavrl<• G Woti. 7900I AldQllClll.llt 0 ,l'-V••-CA~ll4 Lvi. T llOM,6'001E ~Ill..,, IN>O&a«'I CAllOIO) Tiii\ bu•lrwH I\ (Ot\dull.cl by a .....,at l)trt,,.r\lllp "'-IOG wtlte 1,yleT "-n11\ ..... ,,,..., _, 11te11 '"'"' ,,,. CDu11h (l.,ti Of 0.e1199 CollMy Oft 0.C Ull 1• PUBLIC NOTICE ... i------------111 ''"· ,_, PWllNd Or~ '°"'' o.itr Piiot. --· 1 ., OK U , 1', lWUf\dJ•11. S, IJ, 1911 Jill,.,. Pllbll\htd 0r"11Qe CN\I Dally PllOI, OM ,., ttl•-Jan S, I?, It, Ttll SJ7'-1• PVBIJC NonCE ~' """''-O.•noe Coa'1 belly PllOI. Otc. ,., ,.,. •"" Jen. s. 12. It, 1977 ~,. PUBIJC NOTICE ·. PUBUC NOTICE ,.C'TITIOUt euttM•U MAM• STAT•M•MT ,,,. fallowlftQ --· ••• 09lftO Ml -· AUIUIC• l"IVU1'01tj, 1.00 NlrUI .,_ay, \!•. IOI, ...... ._, Qil_ • .,_ WI"'-'" f. °',.,,.."..,. J,., "°' a. ~-• ltJ. \Mii• A1t•. c.w~· to1Dl , ........ J c ..... ,.1 •• ,.., "•1••••11••• ltll • , ..... A1t•, o.i,_.~ lll<ll••f I. M<0.•..-.11. '11\'\ 1.trl!-. c.,.Ma •1 -·· CMlltmW ~ Thi\ bu\l,..n h (Oftf\ll~ 11¥ • 9tflltf•• ,.n-¥10 ltklWorll L.. MtO.rmQOll ™' ~I w•• flltCI -'"' "" Cltuftly Clff1I ot °'•f>Oe C-• .., ~"·""' JAOCION&KIOOllt :':"'9'1 (.eftttr ~. *-111ttdo,CAttWO Pullllshld Or-°"''' Ofjly Pf IOI J .... s. tt. "·a. ,,11 .,..,, PUBIJCNOTICE \U ... ltlOtt COU•TOI' n.E $TATE Ott CALll'OllNIA l'Oll TMe OOUHTY 01' O•.utOe HO.A"""'5 NOTICE 0" Hl.AltlMG 011 NTITIOM tr()lt "llotlATE Ott WILL AMO f'Olt L.aTTelt' Tl$~""1IEHT411'1'. Ea.I• of EMMETT CLf.VELAHO 1(£51.IHG, e ke E MME TT C ICE\LIHG, OK~f~ NOTICE l'it HEREBV GIVl!H hi EMMETT F l(ESl.ING llH Ill.CS llHtllt e 119411 ..... for ProlWltt Of 'Niii - tori\..,.,,.. of LAll•n Tut-..Vto tlll' ""111'-• rete....ce to wflk.~ I\ ,,,_ lor tunllat 041r11c1Han. -11\ti tlll' time...., ol.c• ot lie•• •non. ...,,,. Ila\ -Ml lor J •1tuery II. li71, al IO'OO • m • '" ,,,. (O\lr1'oom of ~· "*" No. J of seld court •I Im Ovlc ~ Orlw W.•1, '" Iha City of Senlt ,.,.., c..111....i. 0.lell Oeu-H ttl• WIL.L.IAM E. SIJ()t4M, Co<llllY Clar~ -'°""A. OUMCAM ....,..., •• u. •1t-..,1Cl-Orl.,.wltttlilll ""-' 9M<JI, "811tonole.,... T .. l 17Nl ... Ult PWfl-Of•-Cont Dally PllOC, Dtc. 2'. 30. 197'•nd Jan. ), ttn P\JBUC NOftCE ll~C'TITIOU• •u11M1a M4M• STATIMIMT ,.,,. '°'-'"' --I\ ~ ..... -·-1(2 I.AHO, ~ u -Or , ~Vtlley,CA"110I Wt..., ,. Ol(1rtar, IOt» ~ ,_ ~le.-el1tV•llff CA- 1'111• Ml-• ,, C'.<lndv<l.cl ""' ... i... 4llvlMI SNn.•P Oll~1..- No ,,...._ .... "'" Wltll "" Olufttv Cl«\ Of 0. •"9' ONllY t11 0.C-to.1'1' ~I"°" OrMOI C:O.•I Oellv: OK. tl, tt. It. lt1't9ft11J .... J, "" PVBUC NOTICE ,...., MOTICI TI>CltlOITO.S Nt a.-.-1 SUl'UUOll COUltf OttTMI UATe 0"CAL.9'0•MtAl'Olt nfl ~"'TY 01' OltANCMI l1t Ille Mllllar ot IM l\l•t• of Fltll.N- CIS \.. Pl!VO<f.. ·-· l'AAHCIS U)AIS PIVCl(I, Ot<...i. Nolle. I• _,.. ''""" to c..01'°" IWYl"O cl•lr•I\ -IMI the Uid dK-.. Otl'tl 10 ti ...... <••lfl'I\ 111 Ille Olli<• Of 1119 cltt' of Ille .. _ .. kl C""'1 or to -• -lo the llNMr\IQned et"" Offl<t Of f.Lf.AHOA 4, Pf.YCltE. IM &.llYI-Pl.ca 111 IM Clly of ~ 8"<11. '" °'-'-'Y· wlllcll I.alt .. oH'<:t ,, , ... Dlkt Of -lllft\ of Ille""" ~ In •II -11.n !lff1Mlllno lo Wkl t .. ltl• S\Kll (lel"'\ with lfle ,..__., ~,,.,, ""'~'.,. llltd or -Wf\19<1 n ato..,,w lll wllllln IOIK ~..,., "-''"' Pllblk.tloftt/111111\ llOll« O.lfd OK lO I~' ltlftlll_ ............. E &Kul•h of Ow Wiii of .. ld--n1 11.t:ANO!tA l'f:'l'(l(t'. Aft-...ot·U• ,.....,,,...."'-· ~~CA. ,,.,....,..,. l'llOlllhed 0.-Goe\I o.lly Piiat, .Hn. l. It. It ... "11 IHJ PVBUCNonCE S.-.01 SUl"attlOltCOUltTOl'TME UATIOllCALlllOllNIA'°" THeCOUNTYOl'OltAHOE H•.A·9'0M l'fOTtCe OJI HIAltlNG 0" .. ~ITIOlll "011 01101.11 OIRICT!llG t.•&CUTltl~ TO COMV &V l'lll$0MAL. PltO,.IRTY UNO•lt PllDeATICOOt:HCTIOH• EUate ol KENNETH A. CON • Sll't•1' Hf.I.Vt, 0.Cae wo NOTICE tS HEAEBY GIVEN IN1 Ot'LPHIA A CONNEL.LA ..... Ille<! PUBIJC NOTICE .,.....,. • pot111on tor°""' D1rec11"' --------------1 EM<ut•l •IO Con .. y F19,._, ,.,_,,, tndtt PrOb<lte CoOe ~ llOll tlO ,... S.»61t "'-• 10 wn1c~ " m-tor 111'1,..... SUPlltlOltCOUltTOPTWI "'"'11<utar\ .ondtllell~ll--Ol«t STATIOllCAl.ll'OltlllA..ott of lla••lftO lllt ... ,,,. t•n 11Hft Mt io. THE COUNTY 0,. OllAMO€ _., 11, tt71, " t oo •. ,,, . m 11\f Me. A.-U ""'"'°""' Of 0.0.'1,.,.,ent No l of~ lfOTlaE 011 MEARING 01' P'«TlllOM °"'" .i 100 CtY•< Center Otl,_. WHC, JIOlt l>ttoeATt'. 01' "ILL ANO l'O• l1tllltChyofSflll•oll,,.,C..lllomlt. LETT'l•S TISTAM•MTARY Ofltf Oec 1t. 1'1• ~\l~!_.Ol 4NNE TERf.SAGRZVW"-WlllUIAM E ltJOffN, .,... .. _ C-IYCt•r• NOTICE IS Hf.Af.8V GIVEN INI HAMM&HAMM M.folflC ANOREW GAZVWA lie< llled »llntc.Mr•llvt Slllle .. i.r-111 e petition tor "'-1• of Wiii .,.-,......,,., CA •11t1 .• tor hwe1teeo4 L•ltt•~ Tutamt<ltary to ,._,. ..,.. ,...11,.,.., ~ oelll'-r ref~ to -II I\ P\IOll"'-4 Or~ '°"'' D.tlly Pllol. -tor lurtllar 041rll<lll••l.-._ _,......,..,. s 11 lt1' ).II ""' time • ..., pie<~ ol 11tarlf>O ttw...,.. llM llffll Mt tor J•.....,rv 11 ... ,,. •' IO·OO • m "'Ille~...,,, ........ ol Otc>e'1 ,,_ NO ) of WllCI lOurt, •I 1DO QYI< (Ml!@< ()riYt We•l .... Ille City Ol 54111• """· C.111"'"'" Dato<! °*< 1l "'" Wll.L.IAMl.SUOMM, Covnt1Cltn: WILLIAMO.MAMONIY MtS. ... tdlll ..... L.eMlltf'•,CA._,1 A.....,....,., Plttll'-r Pll.b41tlle<I Ounoe Cont OeltY PllOI. Dec "· 30, m• and Jan.), 1tr1 PUBIJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ,Ul'lltlOlt COUllTOl'TMa $TAfeOllCALll'OllHIA flOlt TH•COUMTYOl'OllAMGe N•.A·tt1SI llOTICI 01' SALE 0" l'UtlOfllAL flltWt!llTY Af PlllVAT&SAUI '" 111e Man~• of !tit t'st•te OI MACK 0U" ""'ATIN, ALSOKNOWNASM 0 MAltTIN. alto kllOWll •• "Gii." ""'llTIH o.t .. HCI NOllCE t~ H8 11EOY Ql'l('lll!l-'IOlt J-l'Y 14 1911 Al 10·00 O'(IOCk ol\,M., or llle•t•llt• ••tnln ,,,. 11 .... .,......,""' law, '"" IHIC!eMI~, JOHANNA 8 t-------------1 OAS6AllR4. E,t<llW• of the 'Niii Of IN -,,.,.,,.., CM<.-1, will Wll 411 P'IYl'tt N it Wbtacl to (of\fl"""'IOn 11\1 IN -tlllltlell !t~flot '°""· , ... toOOWlllO ot•'On•I o•optrty t»loflOlno MINKl•lf Ol \<110De<~O.M.10 wit 0.Mul On Sele LlqllOf I.-Ho•~ 8 111\ or OfM,... mv\I ~ Ill Wflll"' - .... y N-10' ,.Id l)rl>pe>flY 111~ -Ml1"9rell 10 !flt ofll(• 01 -•I· 1-n, YOUNG & ClE4RY',)IJ'#lr\I Thirll Sltffl. S.nta Alla c.tllw111• • .,. ....., De lllell '" I"" olllu Of Ille Clertt al ~~tor c:-t •I'"',,,.,,.,,,_ IM 11"1 ,,....llUllon 01 1111\ NOlke -tllfllr9 lllt mt-lllQOl 1 ....... l'tmUC N011C£ PUBIJC NOTICE •tCTITIOUS aUSINWS.S MAMEUAT•M&MT ,.,,. f'ol~nQ --... dolnv bo$. -ut· PUBLIC NOTICE PVBIJC NOTICE ..,,,,. MOTICW 10C•IDITOeS H.,.\,..)U tU,t'.IUOlt COUltTOfrTII• STAT9 011 CAL.lllOltNIAf'IOtl TM•COU•TYOl'OttA .... 111 IM M4111tr ot IM f.•l•te Clll LULA KIL'-'M$, OK•ewd Wf.$T COAST INSTA~UTIONS. .. Ilk-lay Or .• Mllllll""°" IMOI. CA ...... .-0 8.A. M11n<l1tl, .,. l!llt-""' Or , Hunt.lnolllft 8N<ll, CA~ f'•eNI ~1111, IUI Hadlwft St., L°"9 8Mtll, CA..,_ 111<11ar11 ~. m,. .._,....,, CtmtO\. u. "''°' NclllC• If IWrtO'I OI-i. ~ .... ... flt <1MM\ 41<1aln\I IM Mlf ~ -lo Ill• .. Id tl•lm• l1t Illa offt<• <JI "" cltr• ot ,.,. atortteld <¥ lit '° .,.._, I ...... 10 Ille u<l(jen ......... olfltt o1 WAI. TEA W H51l.. .,..,,..,, ttuw.e1•~ f u\11nSt .. lft_C.. .. Tiiis l:>U\ffteH 11 COftdl/Cled ~ • _.,_,,,.,\Ill~ ,,_8.A.M-l1tl Tiit> ,,.,._. we• Iii.it wllll W. °"""" Claf1l Oil Or~ c-. ... o.. Off'\Ot, '" o.-. c-ty, -'"'· ler otflc.• ''Ille ptec• Of ~~ fll"" ......,.;oMd 111 all -I~.,. ... IO Wid .. r.t• Suell cteM. -.._ ,_._.,~Mn M\lll M ..... OI' 3,1~ PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE , .. .,.. ,.... su11•1tto1t tocllfT<W Tlll: \°TATI 01' CAL.ll'OltMIA fllDll TM• COUMTY 011 O•.utCMJ .... 111•• SUMMON I GEAALO JAFFE, Pltlt\1111, "'· J4C09Y' J4Ff'E. SOPHIE ANOEASOH, WILLIAM 1£. 8AKIR, L4WltE:NCE EAHEST OILM!R, ELE4NOll ll!LLER, REV GORl>Of4 E JAFFE, OOES I 1nrOU911 XI(, !ft. CIU\IVlt, etld •II O(~ --111'11-Cl .. mlno •nr •'Oflt, 1111•. rstet•. ltenor -~ "' ''-.... 1 -ly dl>tcrt11ed In 1M Cof'IU>4al11t. Mlwtw lo PlfjflllH'\ _,,,.o or any cloud uOOft PlelnlH!'\ tlt,......-..o, o.i..,_" n.e PEOPLE OF THE nATE Of' CALIFORNIA. JAC08Y' JAFFE, SOPHIE ANOE~H. WIU.14M f. l!Al(t'A, LAWRENCE e A NEST GIL.Melt. ELEAHOR ZELLER, A!V. COAOOH E J4FFE, ooes I ti\ ...... xx, .... c.Ww. -au ot-Dff---t1111"""9 any rlOfll ltlle Hi.ta, I .... OI' "'"'"1 Ill11-rett 0'-1Y ~ '"Ille Coft\Olalnt 6dftrw 10 Pli111t!HI'• ~ ....... t....,_Pl-tll'• 11t1e .,,.,...o, Oei-.11u. GRf.ETINOS. V01.1 .,..llaftOYnotllledlO-aM ..,,_ ,,,. Q>mplalrll ol GERAL.0 JAHE, Plelnt.111, Ill.cl wllll tl'a a.no of Ille_.,. 1t11lllltc1 Covrt at'll County. Wlllllll Wrly t~I d•Y• •li.r 11•1\"""' moM I\ \ffWCI Oft '°"· aftO NI '°"" -1 lnlar9sl Or llet\, 11 ... y you ...... tit or _, !NII ur1a11t , .. , _,., or .,.y part IM....of, \11 ... 19<1 Ill lht C-y oi O.•noe. 5181• ot c ,,111orltl•, ""° more partlt1.1l•rt1 dHlrlMO o IOllGWi.: Loi• •1 ~ ol8 In Tr t< t No 106. In llll' Clly al Huntl"11I01t Bt.ocll, c.oumv ol ~.,.. St91• o< Calllo•nle. "~ -Meo let~ lf'I 800fl 1•, Pa~ 71 Of Ml'" <1•11-• ~. lft tn,. Oftlca Of !Pie Coullty Ae<a.-r ol Mkl COUllly And ¥911 •,.. llt,.bY llOlllMHI t!Wtl, ..,_ It\\ YOU to a11P91" aM -· Ille Pltcflllff wm •P94• 10 '"" Col#1 IOr ""' ,.,lef __. ,,. the ,.,...,..,,,,, "' Wit. Tl\tl 11 llol elliud09d IMI tllt Pl11111> "" I\ IN ..... , .. ~lo oroo.rtY "' ... '""l>M """°""·· !""! ft!\ lllM to WIO ~· W Kleotlsllff efld ""'4ell, ,,.., Ille °""' et<Mtfll ...cl del4"l'tllnt "'' "'*· ,._,.,, 11110, 1111.,«llt .... llelfM Ill -IO MIO ~ ...... ._,. 1141rl tlleffol, -·-IM - -·-· ... tclllll""· pre)ff>I OI' .......... ... ,_, Oif COrlflflttrll, •rid """"" lllt -C*"illt of """1Q<t0ff.,. MM I/II --rl1MIOlt. NI Pl•lllllfl -Mt tO!Jh ...,.,n, aNI ...,,_. WCIO MllW -flwllltr •••it••• mev tie -tn Ille ..,....i'" Yw may _. tne ec1v10 o1 ..,. et· ........,,"' .. ··~ .. If _._ -,_,,. "'"' 11'1111"' DUlll~af .... Nlllc• 0.ltf o.c JO. "'• 81LLlt' AL.VIM 1tlU.uitl$ t' H (ulOI' of Ille Wiii OIMkl~t WAL.Tt:•W. MllL. *"" l'•U..11. Or ..... CAtHU .,..,tMcl °'-~ C)elly - --. s.11, "· •· ttn ~" PUBUC NOl'ICE ""1lty Ill My-lff l-lHwlttl ... ter'tlfftlt'll ., lllh ·--~ ~ "" _,, \11611 be lOtlWlttd ~ly • t_t_c_llO<l\Oi W .. :C-111 ~ -y o4 11\41 u .. ,.., ,._ ,, ~k• r.111»«~1 llO'\.lto«~ -""Oii ... -INlen<e to tie~ "'(tfll lffl\MIOrl ...... .., .. Id "-'1« °*'1 The •IQlll h ,.,.,Vfll Ill l'tit<t any lllf 4141 lllO\ Tiit ,,..,,,.,et tkafttt 1• .....,... It• l'lllf OOOtf IUO 001 Trelttltt ,. .. , ........ lfla)llCOMl~·-·<llift 1••1 0.M•lm•lll ol IM 1ttt• Of Oii~ llillttlllMlll 10 .... "*-~"" _, •t1Mdr-...-..mt1111'1e ll,.,,. '""lrW 1Pt M -'#ITNl$Siny1w1C1•ndl1--4olltlt a.If'!, OAflO. o.t ..... rtt. l'1t ---• 0<11116•"·· ~llltli el IN Wiii ti wld Ool'f•MO 't'OUM6&Q.Uln ~~ .. w" :t:=~t~. . ,,.e; ... ~·· ... C.l ......... fntl ""°".' ,..,......,. ~·.,..., Ort1* eo.tt °*"' ....... ~4J..\l,ltn ..,, ~O:Nyn,1t1• We SIJOHN, C••n1 ty l!UOl!NE J PE rltt\, °"""' _., .... ,Mitt 14m9llMll••..._ ..,.....ttift,C.. ttta 1Jl41•Wl ...... Yt..,flliMflllfl l'l*lltM Ot•-Coul O.ilt Pl~ ~l.tl.lt,1-,lf?I "11 Rec:ii btott •.••.... IQ00..2999 Rental& •••••••••• 3000""699 8uaJM11, ln~strnent & Financial .......... 5000-SCM9 Annout'Kement&, ~ •• lo$t & found ••..•• 505().s.99 SIAke& & Repoin 6000-6099 SERVICES s.r~~ t>trt't1t'Wf• £MP1.0YMEHT i PREPUATION w.dn!!day. January !I. 1977 The Bluest Marketplace on the Ormp COUt DAILY Pl•.OT CLASSIFIED ADS * '(~ DAILY P,LOT ,, ~ .. En.,aoytnent& PrtcMwotlon •••..• 1000-7199 M«chandlM .•.... 8000-8099 You Can S~ll It, Find It, ( 642 •5678 ) One Call Service Boat• & Ma1ne fquiptMnt •••••••• 9000-9099 AutOlftOblel ' ottw ; Trade It With a Want Ad Fast Credit Approval Tronsportotlon •.•• 9100.99t9. ~ ~ Walker & lee Reel fstafe For • Ad ht W-./1 W.td ID O.UA.DaA .......... bas joined the staff of Select Prope1lies. Ed's been a c tive in general real estate ror six years in Orange County and draws on an extensive background in the finan ce and cons truction industries. For truly prof esslonal servicing of all your real estate needs, call Ed Guarnera at 751-3191. c;::: SELECT I PROPERTIES G1Mrai I OOZ G1•rCll 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• NJHHC T~ .. Too often in this busy life. our thinking is done in the bath tub or at the wheel of a car. Why not establish thinking as a worthwhile part of your day ... or week? And when it comes to buying or selling reaJ estate in '77, take ad vantage of our "think tank .. at Harbor Realty. 673-4400 DfyfsloRof ................ Co. IOOZ~ 1002 DOVER SHORES ELEGANCE! Beautifully designed 4 bdrm., 4 bath home +formal dining rm. Spectacular view of Fashion Island. Room for pool -in fact, it is one of the largest lots ln DOVER SHORES. All rooms are spacl~ -3800 sq. ft. ot living space. 3 Car garage w/elec. door opener - all of this PLUS a separate maid's room with bath. Price only $325,000. 460 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE 7S9·0811 I 1002 Ga .. ral IOOZ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 Bdrms., 41h baths. family rm. & formal dining. Large tile patio & waterfront deck. $275,000. BI l LG R UN DY, RE ALT 0 R 341 Bny\ort .. Drov•· N B b7S 6161 ............... IB!! ... lm!!!!!!!I! 1002~ 1002 ' .. ,_ . . -~ ,,. ' • •' ·I 1111 VICTOllAM MAMSIOH .~ A batorically significant home on ~ acre in Tustin. carefully restored ~ its ortg1naJ beauty and charm; gleam-. . ing hardwood flOOl"S, 3 fireplaces. •· sunny sitting room filled with wicker . turniture, 4 upstairs bedrooms as bit » as bed.rooms you'll ever see, formal 1 dining under an incredible antique chandelier. and a manicured yard· .. dotted with fruit trees and lawn furniture and interrupted by ~ circular driveway that peaks at th~ wide steps leading to the expansi~4:r porch. Tell friends a bout this Unique.. , Home. Presented exclusively at $350,000, shown by a ppointment to qualified buyers only. lJ,_.l()lJI: 1-f()Ml:i REAL TORS': 675-6000 2443 Eau Coast Highway, Corona del Mar also in Mesa Verde, at 546 5990 •.. , .. 1002 e ..... •• .............................................. VIEWIN THEILUFfS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• This 3 bd. ·'Dolores•· MesaDr.R·Z ·~· Home with rental uqi( op large R·2 lot. Fruit~ ln back yard, 2 ra~. and a re/ng. incld .• New wiring in rear unit. LIMON HEIGKTS model bas a bt11 park for OCEAHFllOMT $244,500 a back yd as well as ex· DUrl.EX Se:nsaUonal home with ~nslve VIEW of the 3 Bdrms .• 2 baths up. 2 Pool. V\ew ond All ck ~y. Tast.efully UP· bdrms .. 2 baths down . Amenities. Nothing is grad~m neu~~I to1n~s. both w/frplc./conversa-needed but the right Loca...., on qwe cu · e· tion area. Only ~ yrs. family who wants a sac.646-7711. young. Good rental re· "Showplace Home" high -cord. Pnced at $275,000 oo a hill with a view of · .. 673-3663 833-0523 the world below. 4 ,· Bdrms. large family : : • · r oom . g l a m o rous--------kitchen. formal dining $73.900 . ,,_ PETE BARRE'f1° -REALTY- 64Z.SZOO PEACOCK HIU. rm, beautiful pool & Spacious executive home patio area. Shown by associated BRO KER S -P E A l TO PS EMnYDESK! MESA DEL MAi · POOLHOMI ' Fantastic la the wordl Uus lovely 3 bd. 2 be., lJ:'. ~ 801t.,,, t . 1 f", in prestigious North 1--------•1 appt. ~HERITAGE balh, wi th view from WA HOMES balcony, on large estate· lncomn9 rablel.I. REAL ESTATE •• , REALTORS Tustin. 3 Bedroom, 3 -:J'E:RfRONT sized lot. near schools r. 631-1400 .--------I and ridin g stable. Is the only way toi---------$102,000.SEETODAY' describe this unbelieva-1--------• bome. Great H&F on lge comer lot, w /p en- ty of rm for trailet or boat. SteP6 to park & tea-rus iii quiet established neighborhood . Only $89.600. 545-9491. 5'-"'-1...uwt-Jot> Vt aw-d • lldpll..,,..., M ~r C4 SH 64Z..5'71. bt. l30 VACANT! CALL NOW Immediate possession. 752 ·JllS ble 4 Bedrm home, locat- ed in DOVER SHORES. The family room, w/wel bar. lovely lg. Master s uite and kitc h en w/breakfast nook. have a truly magnificent view of the Upper Bay and I.be surrounding mountains. We have an opening for a real estate salesperson. Must be willing to work full time. We rurnish pleasant o ff i c e racUlilies, training for new licensees & an ex· cellant xlnt step-up com- mission schedule. Con· tact Dee F r ancis. Dolphin R.E., Laguna Bcb 494-3581. ~ Walker & lei! MERCHANDISE ,....~ ApP'.._.N'n AUC'tton tb': M•lttl•l• ( ...... , .... tqU4PofMt'lf 1. .. . I'°"' IT•w ~a. fwrM.,.. r,., ... Sa-u ..... -c-·""·ri~ I.I-• ·--) llkwoll.--NMft4~•·"'r>d lilW':Mt'al lMtfV"""M Clfhtt .............. .. """' c::~'!~: '4>ol't"'CGto<ld• ~ILRnc.t<.l•"I &er ~r.d~H1tl N-"""'t tOAfS & MAIJNE lQUIPMDH Think Spring! Tricks With Terry Sgt. story 4 br. 2 ba in "Model Home" cond. I •ll!D!llOl[INL!A~LD~M,... ~8~1 R~D~ One of lhe best locations Auoclot••· R.01t .... lo Fount. Valley. Hard to -------- believe a 20x40' pool in· I•-------• cluded for only $19.950. Call: 54.S-8424 ASSOCIATED SO. COAST BKRS. HURRYll This fantasUc home is • • built around an atrium 3 BR, 2 BA. Cream puff and oval pool with a uni- with pool, new carpets & que fount.aln, cove.red by paint. Ready for new a clean. retractable CALL US FOR Town.house owner. with dome + heated and C-:SCiwnhses many extras. 12-~PM filtered jacuzzi s pa. $54.990. steam bath and garden In T /Irvine 645-3474 area. The amenities to From $36.000 "° sm.ooo Bl describe this one or a EXCELLENTTERMS I kind home are t oo THE HOMESELLERS ;'\'; num_erable to list. An ex· 752-5353 --=:::::=:::::::: :. cepuonal buy $320,000. ~~~~~~~ Oon'tdroplheball! Get a I ~UPERBI $59,500 Job Wlth a low cost Daily SELL Idle items wrth a H QMES Immaculate 3 Br, 2 Ba Pilot Classified Ad. Oally PllotClassifiedAd numuss; home. All Bltns. Phone642-5678 642-.5678. . 1555W.8eker,C.M. fireplace, hoge Camlly Nut 10 M•rlc•l llesilet rm and manicured yard. G1•r• I 002 GeMn11 .. I 002 549 • 8655 Call· 54.S-8424 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••!••••••••·~·1--------•I ASSOClATED FRONT ROW IRVIHE TBRACE One of a kind, estate-sized grounds. Nearly ,,, acre. Rambl- ing 4 bedroom famUy home, view, pool, huge family & garden room. 3~ baths. Hurry. $295,000. A CCLDWal. IANKll CO. 644-1766 SO. COAST BKRS. II tlungs fast with Daily -------- Pilot Want AWi. Want Ad Reau.Ila &f.2·S6'78 ~ 1002 GaMrtil 1002 .............................................. ~ll macnab/ lrvtne ?-realty OOYB Dllft llAUrfl Remodeled older home w/beavy shake roof, new electric kitchen, plush carpeting, wet bar, dining room, den -t 2 bedrooms & baths. $124 ,500 incl. land . Catb1 Schweickert 642-823S. (X29 ) so PATIO-OM u· Lor Udo Isle f am Uy home -living room & lg. family room each w/flreplace. Eating a rea in kitchen. Room to enlarge if needed. $1S6,500. Mary Lou Marion 64U235. (X30) A SOUl'HPOIT MAMUOM So warm & cbannlng w/lg. decks & gazebo to enJoy ocean, hills & cl· ty lights. Tbfa beautiful family home features 8BR.s, oak-paneled rami\y fOOl{l W/Used-brlck flrepla~. separate dlalng room, Uvtng room w/marble fireplace, spacious oak-paneled g~ room w/eustom built·lm PLUS gcqeoua yard, pool & jacum + playt)ouae. Marjorie Mahon 6'4-tt!OO. (X31 > Real Estate MESA VERDE BEAUTY Immaculate 3 bedroom, 2 bath · home. Fantastic 1Sx20 added fami-. .. l.y room with beamed ceilings and . loads of paneling. Located on a quiet street convenient to schools and shopping. Won't last long, $73,500. Call 640-6161 BIG CANYON CUSTOM'. Spectacular 4840 sq. ft. 4 Bedroom'· home in fmal con.ru-uction. Family · room and library overlooking gorgeous pool a rea a nd golf-· course. 2 story living room wttti• massive fireplace and view loft, .- $385,000. Call~ SO SECLUDED! . Adult occupied family home, "' nestled in a quiet North Cotta Mesa neighborhood. 3 Bedroom, great entertainment patio area. • See this at $66,950. Call 546-41"1 GAME ROOM Just all a growing family needs. - Great North Costa Mesa location. We'll show you at $59,950. Call U1 I S46-4141 WESTSIDE BEAUTY This custom remodeled home W8' gutted and rebuilt as new. Has ex• q'uJsite country kitchen, maulve med brick comer fireplace in llv· i n1 roo •. 2 New baths , 2 Bedrooms & den. (Huge muter w/2nd fireplace). EXCLUSIVE · NEW LISTING AT BARGAIN PRICE OF $69,500. Call now to see ~. DRAMA TIC, UNUSUAL · All our s taff says th l 1 OCEANWOOD home is a RARE , JEWEL. 2 Bedrm. including muter, downstairs with 2 blg bednm. upstairs. Large formal', dining room with ?J vaulted HU,!·; ing overlooks ATRIUM. FamllJ room with fireplace, $!11 ,500. W " WI t.odayt Call: 862-4W .. A •AMIL Y DIUGHT $55,500. A HunUngton Beach 4 br, 1~ bath home with family room. Swedish wood· . burning fireplace, new tile paint, PV stone patio with bltn brick BBQ. MIW COSTA MISA USTit«J ••uc• TO Sit.too Lovely 3 bdrm., 2 ba, new carpet. Xlnt location. Near all schools ; frwys & shopping. Lots of charm. Large lot. Quiet street. ---r .. IEAThR.ATIOH $28,900. 2 Br l ~ Ba end unit condo. Good location. new paint, security gate. pool, w /greenbelt picnic BBQ, pJay area. All bltns, lndscpd patio . • 1' • OPPOITUNITY CAiia MIGHT • Come as you are and get the details on your future in the lucrative real estate profession . Speak directly with our Fountain Valley Manager. Available Tues. evening 6 to 9 p. m . or call for 11ppt. Pl.AH TODAY Foa YOUR TOMOUOW ,... Mew !!! Fast escrow wanted on new liathlg. H1Aie lot on Cul-de-Sac/. 2300 sq. n .. charlJling 4 Bedroom. family room home. 1 year new! County taxes. Badt Bay aru. Seller moving. ".'or appt. , •. 1~55 Magnoli~~funtain Valley 400llr'ftJ FOR All !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!00!!2 I C.M4. · .. -• -h lU fi1i.crol I 002 Ge111ral • •· -.............................................. Pele Barrell f<eaftg WATERFRONT DOYER SHORES Elegant, spacious home. Featuring free-form swimming pool in entry court. 5 Bedrooms, 4~ baths, den and view of lovely open Bay. Boat dock for several sm all or one large boat. Ad- joins private beach. Call for appoint- ment. . We have a serious need for a waterfront home on Linda or Lido Isle. Please call if you are considering sell-ing. JASMIHE CIB ONMTOIYI P erfection thruout! Many impn>ve- meots in this beautiful 2 BR & den. Expe~ive wall coverinp, eptng & drapes. Wonderful jacuzzi outside ~ ste. Security gated area. $154,000 J111s-h u' ....... MIWPOIT cana. M..I. ·~•o . .. . IASTSIDIR·2 Rare bWkhable R·2 lot. Olatmlllg okler home re· tently crptd. drpd & peMfed. Huge Uv rm, 'f///rorner stone frptc. Sep bobby rm, H•rbor H1. Build a uni\ for •lra In· ~me. Our exclusive Jt6-T7llor~. ~ Walk.:rC ler. Real h1lale 4 IORM. $61,500 Bes\ prtced home in all Mesa del Mar. J1.111t re- model ed w 1lh new carpels. drapes and paint. Qwet st.root. c.loae to scbools and parks. Va· t ant and owner anx lous--tK>meone's going-ta get a 1ood buy! Call ~5880 #'.,.&~ HERITAGE Lachenmyer f1e.11tor 3 Br Home, den w /pvt en- trance. 2 car gar. frplc, a1r cood, newly decorat- ed. pool sz lot oCf st.reel --------t exit, quiet cul-de-sac. HAIBOR Lm'ff cloae to everylhlng, prin fftD only. S46·0403 eves . .•. REALTORS Charmin& 3 bedroom f7UOO ·~-~~~~~iiiiiiiiil ~~~~~~~~~j with bardwood noors. on --------• MDMI & IMCOMI • btg lot. Full price M_.. Verde I • d 3 -------• 159,500. Spruce up and v.-.. ~ r d t o n .---..-HTS. save! CALL 751·3191 4 + IU:DROOJd HOME . .,..,.........,"' tar&• dining room. all A delight lo show! C:SELECT flUallty bulll wtth lalh & SpadouaaeJt,3ba .. pool T'PROPERTIES Family Room eluter + LARGE 2 home; 2 frplcs .. sundeck ~--'-..;;....----1 Excellent area, shows BEDROOM Home and over garage with ocean like a model. Pool·sll.ed dQuble garage for reoul view! S\39.500 (Or wUI yard, parquet entry and iltc;ome. Hurry on this lease a\$650 mo .• yearly) $34118 Best '" dining room, 3 full baths. CIM 1 f15,500. C.JI 540-USl ..... hy Prop. 3 ~s. good startet P V atone he a r th . ....._.. ho m•! Bright and separate game r<>om . ·~ .. HERITAGE . . · REALTORS •'7&-7060• cheery. ?!f7ly20$89,500. Call l~~~~~~I twdc_,... """" ~~~~~~I 11101 M.....elaat l~ Setung anytbin11 with A TalMrt, f4w Vlty '1'9e• fastest draw In the .o.Jly Pilot Classified Ad 962-449"5 , ·•st ... a Dally Piiot It u simple mauer .• ·~~~~~~~~ .ctalll!.fied Ad. 6C2-S678. just caJJ 642·~78. 1---------1 --------------~---.!!'1--.-P ____ __ •• ~.. 1002 8t•HI 1002 C.~'O .i\1'. i /)-C Q.• ..................... ....................... \:'\!=:a ~ ~'-.... <4:1 J.J .::> TJ.of Intriguing Word Go1T1• witlt o Ch11d/e -----~ .,aAT L ~----- 01~ ...... "'Ille ·-•llM'l>lod _,,, be-low 'O '°"" low 11• -dl ' I' I I J ) I I 0 Y A ~ wt-• ll'ltn rldlcuit. • I ' I' I I I WOl'Mn fot •hoppl"ll •11 d.y. . • • • • end ~ nolhlng, yo\i etn ,.--~-..--be -· .,. •• -•• 'I l'E•tMOL ) -~ I I I I I I 0 ~= .~.::~·1-; yo., dt4'°9 ''°"' 1NP No. ...lo-!rlw9;;'l<;mf I' r 1· r r F [] Ir ro:C:=l. ltmasJ I I I I I I I I sca.uu.m .......... ~aoeo ... ,. ....... -................. , .. ... .. -~ ,. . ......... A TRIBUTE TO THE ORANGE COAST'S SUCCESSFUL WOMEN BUSINESS PROFESSIONALS ---- Macnab· Irv me On Sunday, January 23, 11n, the Dally Piiot wtll publl1h a 1pecfel tribute to women In bualne•. lnduttry and commerce. The pagea wm underscore th• ! major contributions made by women profeaalonala to the thrtvlng economy of the ): Orange Coa1t. Buaineuwomen Salute notice• will be one column by four lnchea -~­ each, allowfng room fof a photo and detcrtptlve copy. Colt of each notice la only ! '18, wtttt a photo you provide. ._ Our Salute to Bulineu and Profeulo(1al Women It an exceptional opportunity to Introduce a new or longtime eaaoclate to the people of the Orange Coaat, or to honol' awards or achtevementa. Don't ml•• being pert of thl1 apeclaf 1dvert11lng opportun~. Deadfln• for reMr1lng apace la Jan. 18. Call todayt . '-' ...... .,.. . l:2Jllm t 642-5678 ... Houwt For Sak Other Red &tat. HouM1 u..twN~t..d DAil V PILOT • 85 ·•··••·•·•••·······•••· ............................................. . ~sea For Sal~ Hot.Ht Few S.-HouHa For ScM S. J-. fftCOMit Property 2000 ,.~-det M lllZ HenH U•fwlli.a..cl tto... U~ Hou1•1 U11fwlll1e..d:'4 • ••• •• •• •• •••••••••••• • •••••• •• • •• •••••••••••• ••••• •• ••••• ••••••••••• c--istr..o I 078 •••••• ••• ••••••••• •• •• • ~ _. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••• ••••••••••••••••• • •••• •• ••• ••••••••••••• Wednolday. Janua!Y 5. 1977 I ( I 044 1 ---•-h I ~ • ___ ... I 069 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• -.. "" ------oc 041 ·--..-·--••••••••••••••••••••••• HOME & lNCOM~l 2 b BToro 3UJ lr"ft. 3244 1tlonVleto --.7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~Cl on 1 Jot. 3 Dr. & 2 •S. ot Hwy.'""'newer. a '• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••Hw• PRlCEl> TO St;Ll., Ly HlW PalM~ Charming 2700 sq ft Br .• Try $10.000 dwn, ~b~, ~~~c, ~:?s7~~la, ~MO. FREE REN'l' llr, lo'am nm, Vle'w':..,..<'ul owner. ~,000. ln1_11H•d, Wcrtlfrli ont Condo 4!JH. <Jn i:1pprO'X. '. ~ .i{'n! ~soo. full price f'rm "'" ·• · Lease beaut.. 3 br, 2 ba * ~,AlS • de 11ac, nr achoolll# $4~. occupancy.Luxury~UR, 2 Dr. 2 aty t rl·le.,,.ct. formal dm, punl~I r:~m C>l\ly, pis Ktint ttoger1 )) home.Hassep.den,oew· 1BR,den •••• , ••••• $47S 586·5250 ~ library, llancho, Sun J ov formal din·rm. 60' Boal rm w/wot b:.r. I ro( ly filly. 848-8300 Jy paintM inside, nice 2 8R, den .... •••••• $385 269 quln Condo. 1' u lly 11p-6 1 I P . $ 2 0 0 0 o 0 . Jd5cpd groundi. $Hl·l.500. tndllcp'I! auto gpmkl1'11 2 BR ............... $385 wporl leoch pointed, ln t:ld air. Ph·ss.2.70'Jl ' •IONDREALTY• B~C..~~l~!i~P~:/;!f.;;·\! co"' patio '39S-mo Coli 2 BR ............... $425•••••••••••••••••1••••• S.17~7 or ufl. Sprn & . • CALLERY of HOMES fl. lot w/room to bulld Rusty,549:1~ . 2BR.,2\Ulll ....... ~ l An D T 0 F N ~ wl<nd111 ~4-~704 LOCATION HEWPORT IEACH l714t 831 ·94 l 1 unt~ more unit, 10% dwn, r_. 1214 2 BR, 2 Ba •••• " ..... $500 Eai1tblu!f Exec. • >'!'.:. Blulf6 3 Br, 2h baths, Rn.rrALS "-'•V..., 38R,Dl:n .......... $500 4br, 2bo, ftun rro.sol~ FAIRWAY J.'ew !>hort blks to tennis tsri:e family room. t:-fu'il rmfo ~S,OOOR Prm llif"'llf ••••••••••••••••••••••• 38R,2ba ........... ~1S w;iter. New crpta;ll'.lrp!>, TOW.-.HOME courl:i. with 40 un· Plan.Unob~trucu.'<Jview 3Acres+ol.'wJ500<>C)ft.3 ony, p s. ent ogers LG 3 BR, 3 BA, frpt, 38R,FR,2~ba ..... $4~ p&lnt. Walk to s~ool~. t.uke & Night Light developcdacn•sbehinde of Back Duy on large Br,2 huhrll.WlthComm Rlty.S42-8300 JASMIN£ CREEK'S <bhwsr.Manyupgrades. 3BR,2Ba ........... $425 s hops, t ennis cluh. V11."ws. Mo:1l popular 1>nvlltepatio.Ol.'11.&c1ty greenbelt. Like new pool S89,500. Owner. Cl U 1 most popular model. $385. 114·963·069 or 38k ,2 8o .•••••••••• $500 $7~0/mo. l.so. Heh. Hancho San Joaquin 3 br vus. 2 Bdrm)!. Sl27.500 C<>nd. Walk to pools. 1''or 499-2463. ean Em p. Plan 2 with 2 bedrms & 5.'ll·&MS. AK\. No lo'ee. 3 BR. 2 Ba ••••••••••• SS65 G40-6775or64S-2240 ,. plan, uncompromised sale by owner/agent Andyou'vegotawlnner: den. A bargain at $685 , 38R,28u ........... $400 \'lew from every room Sl39 500 644 GS21J ve -· Santa Ana l 080 S separate houses. 1 lge per mlh. on year.ly lease. 3 BDRM. H~ Ba. Prestige 3 BR, Fl\ ........... $1\25 UV Jlms, Carmel 3 Dr $20,000 in custom up· EMPTY DESK! 7Sl·S041 days.· c 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lot HB, near hospital Includes aU amenities ... urea· $400 mo. Agt · 3 BR. 2 811 .• deu •.•• $475 +Flt, nr µark & sohouL 11rades. Wood ceilings. Wel\avc 11110JX•ning for u ow11c r. J fl r ,\du It Owner mUlil sell lo com Clubhouse, pool jacuni, 962-4471.~6·8103 3BR,2 Ba ........... $410 $S50mo. 75:.!·0617 _ security system. <·ustom real estate sules&>crson. Mew Li1HncJ-Vi•w 1'wnb.~e. ur O<.:<.:. Pool. plcte exchange. $133.000. tennis courts. LG. Bonus Rm, 3 BR, 2 3 BR, 2\12 Ba.········ S-530 Bluffs l·level 3 J\R. 2 hn. wood entry. Ullimatc Must be willtn~ to work Newport Ui:ts. home, lmmedinl!: occupuncy <.:rat~ Clark, J\gen l. B frpl d h h 38R,3Ba ........... S600 Lovely t.trcenbell & pool. Ram·ho llome Sl25.000 full time. Wc furnish xtra Jrg lot w1many S39.950Ph646·/;;~ 5411·2l!SS ON l.ARKSPUR .. 2 d~s. Cal~ :bo~'t c~~s~ •5B8RR.32 Ba0 ........... ~~~ SSOOAgt644·113:l Wkdys 752·0.WG, evts-pleasant ol'hcc ruc1ht1cs., p0t>s1bllltics. Lots of C~· bdrm, 2 bath, no pets, Christmas Bonus. $395. ' i,; 1.1 ......... -..... wknds 752-8182. t r u a n ' n i: Co r n u w tras here. C..:AL.L oow South LCICJ""O I 086 -tlir House. 2Br House, one car gar. $375 per 714·963-4569 or S31·9S4S. Q>mlo 2 BR, 2 Ru,· \.l\'w • lttcnsces & an excellent UNITED BROKERS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Duplex. $147.000. Owner. ~th, yearly lease. Very Agt. No Fee. wel-har, frplc, tthrus. stclJ· llP comm 1ss1on John Carey GIU 646·7,IM 2 BR, 2 Ba, newly dee. 180 752·5495 mce. pool $475.645·W1 ~ sd1edule. <.:ont,1cl Ucc ------De~rcc ocean view. COVINGTON BROS in 3Br,den,2Ba,fplc,huge • NEW DEAHEHOME f'rancis. FEED THE DUCKS Put.Ille beach access. h c '., 0 N BIG C 0 R 0 NA patio soft wtr clb Ilse !Nil 2 br & den ot'·3 br. ''"'"000 A<>•>.5700 l'rln" A.na e1m. enlury -:l. BE"'CH BRE AKEns ri ' , • S525 Avl Jan 8th Dolphin Real Estate .. f ro m th e I I{ e . :;;r· · """" '" ~parow tnvestmt. Div. " · '' P v., own.r, $:195 mo. lse. · · • Brand nt)w 2 bdrm Deane "Walden" model home in Univcrsit.) J'ark , ready fur Im mediate oc•cupanc:y. One - of the most popular modt!ls in the Deane de• ,·ctopment, with 2 larl((' hdrl"{ls., e:.llmg area 111 k1tcht:n, fully insulated. plus front lun1lscapin~ ;ind rencmg; your cho1c1: LaC)'W'O leach waterfroot deck; 2-sly .. 5 Y · 963·7866 DRIVE .. Fabulous Vi_ew. 1168-2352 NEWER 3 BR, 2 BA, cpts, MH81J7 c.,,.es. 494.8581 BR. & playrm.; 3 ha. "125,000. Oen \'iew, by 1 bdr..m & converli~le MncmN-.1 •---h 1240 drps frpl ds hwshr BIG CANYON Viti or Xlnt d Walk I " den. Fabulous view. $650 ,.._.._,. • .._ . • • • .. con · to poo s, ownr, (714) 499· 1169, mth.. Ye r'" lease ••••••••••••••••••••••• patio. $37S. 114·963·4S69 Golf course & lake. bt 2 WATER tennis & ocellll. S00.500 eves. 31552 Toto Loma Distress Property! per a A-J • or 531·9545. Agt. No f'ee ba, upgraded. ~ mo. WATER CAYWOOD REALTY 1.n. (Ldt off West Sl.l l cunfinditforyou. ONlST.AVENUE,inold FOR LEASE: 3bedrm,2 JRV1NE ~teps to 1'enn. cr~1pool, * 548·1290 * ~!Hr, Jl:la, frplc, Jiv rm. Ueachareaspeciallst. Corona del Mar-·Z bdrm b b doew 17005q ft R .. .,., Jacur.za,sec.644·54 l EVERYWHERE ---den, kllch, tile rool. Wild Probates, foreclosurtis, a, ran • · · 2 B , l Ba ........... ...,,5 - T lfl\T'S TJn; TllEMt;: SPYGLASS HILL Cyn, a blks to bch, 10 yr~ Bankruptcies, D1vorc.e. unit w/garage, laundry Land.log bome w/3 car 2 8R, l Ba .......... s;iso HEWPORT H~TS. for this ~IJaC'lous ;i • old,lotsz.2iox8S.Shown lnvcstmentpropert1es. (ncililies & refrlg. $400 gar. $525/mo. incldg 2BR,2Ba ....... $325-375 3 Bdrm,2 bath,dinhn.i HDR:\1 . lfOM E. Loc'atcd Brund New 4 br. 3 ba. by appt l:Jelow market price. per mt.h. Yearly lease. gardener. No pets. 2 BR, 2 B~ ....... $375-525 ear gar. $600 month I}, in the I kights overlook· ram. rm, poss. lsc/opt. Ken Johrm>n. lrolter FOR LEASE: 3 bed rm, 2 3 BR, 2 Ba ....... S425·800 Outside pets onl)C. Agt. of color of ca1·pcts and Ille. llcst huy m ?rvine for only S!!ll,500 red hill~:.:. 552-7500 in~ t 11 t' .. LITTLE By ~er. 7S2·~t Call (714)673-4545 COLE OF NEWPORT bu. brand new 1900 sq.ft. 3 BR, 2~ ba ..... $400·62S 645.99~ 642.4603 • Vl~.LAGE. BEi.OW". ..., .. ,L ... H Othet-ReolEstot• REALTORS Landing homew/formal 48R,21h ba,£urn .. $59S1----·------ Un1quc. spilt-level entry "' "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2515 E. CstHwy, CdM. din. rm., fam rm, wet 4 BR, 2•,<.t Ba ...•. $795·800 *MOW A VAIL;* Comp. redccor.; on cul Mobil• Ho-s B"' ... CH U ... ITS ,i.7"'5511 4BR 3 R """" t•orriclor has floors or re<l .. ..... IOA " v -bar.$575./mo. incldg • a .......... """" THE BLUFFS, .,,..,,,. t·• de sac. Jst Time offered r...._ S-'... 1100 BIG CANYON ...,.,., v brick. Spacious, rustic rvl' um~ 5 Units, blk. to the ocean gardeoer. No pets. $795 per month .:, I I. h for salc.3 BR. 3 ba .. ram. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 111 llunt1'n"to11 Beach. R R......._ 3 BR '''h Ba $700 C y N ""'S sty e 1v . rm . as d ,.. olMrts __ ,7 ,.. ••••••••• BIG AN O • ,,, O lo v AULT E D O PEN rm. Finished & panelc SELF CONT'D, Sxlli, full $175,000 Costa Mesa 3224 148 1611 $?.IS per month BEAM CEILINGS & gura..:e.Sl34.750 bulh just rcfmishctl in • ·" ••••••••••••••••••••••• • HASTIHG$&CO. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!T I MBERS . BLACK CORBIN ASSOC. s1dc.'&-tup with awnmg $2SOE/Side2br.dec .. cpt,l•-----... -- METJ\L FlllF.PLl\CE Realtors 759-0226 SJ.900. S48·6l7J \l\~.M. drp5,gar,fncd. yd, patio. CLEAN 3 BR. 2 BA, frpl, Realtors 640·5fl00 Newport Shores 3 BTL 2 BA. near belt & nJdilli., beams, Crplc, in falTl'l"ln, S450 mo. Unique H6'twi., 675-6000 TURTLE ROCK :mR. family rm. Plan T. great vu. Lots or xtras. By owner S!Jl ,500, 6-14 ·464fi. FR A M R 0 W I U S l': 0 -------••I!.... Mat. adlts. 646· 1078 d.tShwshr, 2 car gar. $34S. BRICK Th W Bt>auliful 10:<'12' t:1r~1• -~ · e entire csrl CANNERY VILLAGE bedrrn, ba .. liv rm. l\dult -~ Mesa Verde area 4 br, 2 7l4-963-4S69 or 531:9545· ~~~s i~ ~~~~~~~t~H 2 Bdrm house m C'-11.one. pk. No pets. Hcnlal sp s.58 ~:p:.A.yr~ ba, crpts, dprs, bltns, lge _Agt __ • N_o_F_ee ____ _ vrnw OF TllE OC~~AN. 565.000 ino. Furn. Cash ~500 206 R1ven1de.N.1_ comer lot. encl. back yd. J Br, den or ? bouse avail. ---------1 FR0:\1 PALOS VERDES • UDO ISLE 1~sServ673-~22_ 646-4463 Driveby3202 Minnesota. 2baths,cpts,drps.Bltns. TO SAN CLEMENTE 2 Bdrm.+ den: frpl« 2 NEWPOHT TEl<R,\CI·:. 548·4471 $350.962·3533 't5Z3CAMPU5Dt~fR"ltfE B1gCa11yon2 flr~phs.-. Is It Immaculate? Thts home would make <i nythini; 11\ "B~llt'r llomes" louk like the Sanlanu Winds just blew throul'(h ~ The de«or of lhis "DN1m• Horne" is 11otlti11~ but Isl <:lass and all :i 11\!llrooms arc hig .ind l>dght~ The walk from lhe family kitch<:n 1ntu the yard and the 1·ustom Ga tellO won't let you l\•ave w1tllout want· ing 1t ! Try it-you 'II sec Call · ll1·d <'.1qwt Ht!,1ltur 1133.:i;l!W ISLJ\)llJ. Dining sN•tion patios; beamed t'cil hv· Sk 1 0 111 · 11 !I Ml!'<! Warehouse. New. 1 '-F1mtast1c view, \lilt d<·· has lowered ceiling & mg rm. Sl>IS,ooo. lik~· 1~~.!.x's1•0~lllx:: i!A~~· tiJ. location. 671i units ro1 Condo, 2br, 1 ba, pat 0 2Br 2 Ba, adlt condo, Cab OPEN DAIL V coratc to suit. l'vt comn1. o""ns 10 l11lt-in kilC'hen Sl.333,000. Bkr. 963·7866 garage_ No pets. $293. Rec area. 1h mi bch., 8A.M. T06 P.M. $795. mo. 642·0:WG. •·1~ r.• OBI (j..lij .. IJl:IO ----mo.751-l>S43 gar.S300.Ph:640·5048. . w th Hi\ NG r~ • • i.ots for Sale 2200 View. Turtlerock Terr. 3 Harbor View Hmes'. 2600 OV,.;N, DISUWSfflt & •••••••••••••••••••••••MESA_ VERDE 3 br + LARGE2sty.3br,21hba, Br•-Fam Rm, beaut. b b N01'0NE Cl::N1't:rt. Jnc:ome·P~rty 2000 r I 2 b dbl "' sq.rt. 4 r, 3~ a. :! Thl·s home has b~•n le· . -r-Lots "osta M-o am1hy. i a, • gard., !am. rm, Crpl, dshwshr, S!MlOmo. 752-0617 Cam. r ms• n r p oo I, ~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• , -..... f rcs pant. Al con · ds.tobch.Catl aboutour 1 h • $750 nanl oc:cupicd & COULD~~~~~~~~~~J·--~~~:'.:~--1 2 vacant, 1 ~/older $425.548·7729Realtor Christmas Bonus. $495. New Patio Home: 2 b_r, 2 ~~g~· s op g.· • liSE SOMF. SPRUCfNGI-8 UNITS house, nxl. door IS newer 714-9634569 or 531•9545. ba + xtras. Swammmg, -------..-- UP. Offered for 45th ST. Exclu~ve Santa AM. Five 2 bdrm. consl. Can be bought as a ME.5A VERDE-4 Br, 2 Ba, Agt. No Fee. tennis, jacuzzi. Adul~s. 3 Br, 2ba w/fenced patios. S94,500 Full Price Duplex, owner occupied. & 3 l·bdrm. Prime pro· P,ackage or ~eparate cpts, drps, fan:i rm, Lse $400. mo. $50. dis· nest localion. $50\)/mo. T II A T · s T 11 E 3 & 2 BR. 1, Blk. to perty. SI 25,000 . J .;'.~ Call for more tnfor. Agt kitchen bllns, hv rm Very nice 2Br., l lhBa. ('OUJltfor Jan.1-524·9634 631-1400 Agt. "\Vi\TERED DOWN" ocean. Bit-ins, dbl. Rar. d 673-7601 frplc, fncd yd, ref. $425 Condo. Fireplace, laun·•----------1---------- PHl<.:1': Recently redecor. L~t'. own . ma. 536-5014 dry service area, main· 2 Br, 2 Ba townhouse. ESP ECJALLY LA'RG I·: MISSION REALTY brick patio. 11 Yrs. old. llLL GRUNDY MobTJleph_!~/ llOO 3 B 2 B C d E I tenance free. $275mo. Poo~. clubhouse. $3115. 4 Br ... Den. FronL Vtl'W You own the lune!• REALTOR 675·6161 nr nu r a on o. nc 963-8738 Avail. now. 551-1429 of water, hoats k o'lps(' \o !lli5 S. Cst Hwy, L:l!':una GIB WALKER ••••••••••••••••••••••• patio. gar, adults onl~. cverythini; ! $5751 mo. Phont' 494-0731 R"' ... LTY 675•5200 -----MOBILE PARK No pets. 581·5851, ev!!. 2 BR Condo, super clean, WOOD Bill DG E /\gt 6:!1-1400 PAYS TO OWH - -----llOA RESORT PROP. 100 Spaces, i:ood foca 556-7627 crpts, drps, pool & club ESTATES ----- llrt·ak out of the· .1pt .1 1~~VE .. 1,~ ~~:\ tlh LIDO ISLE. :J HR, i! UA. 2 32 t:NITS on <I a errs m tio11, near Redlands. All 4 Br 2 ba l":i m rm frml house. S260. 979-7888 ~e Hc;0g1 Washi~.~lo~ HOUSE ""l'llt•1 11111111 & •"'" 1111~ · :1, ~ • a ' l)rs frm baY. Tt-n 't~ will downtown BIG IJEAH :J leased. $900,000. Submit Di~ rm,' lovely ~rea , 2 Br . ....,c:. Yard. Kids & · Jg y upgr · WITH A 801 hom1•: 1>c•rfl•1•t l11r I h1• lll't·pl,it'<' :ind I.:. dhl -1· o · ·..,"'""JO blks. from hike. lncoml' ·II offers i, h 7 o """°" Br, 3 ba, Cam rm, den, Lovely 4 bdrm.,·· bu. "al'a"C. Can,·on pri\lacy, ~ •1Y· "'nr.1><v"" · a . ·. view. nr. c · S S · pets OK, Nr schls/park. wet bar. $98,SOO or ..,,n.,les or <"<•u 1>lt•' ,. ,... ~ is SS0.000. yrly. Sale~ Pnnc1.....asonly 1 <'>< '""" .,.,.,3533 "'""-032l " home with 0 rea•' oor ,. "cct•n vat'W S126.5UO r-' ..,,,,,,.'""'° .,..... or...... $600/mo.833·9031 (:.-5)or ,., ~ f'ri \'al'v·n<> t;rll 1t11u"l'-' ,_3 . , Newporl Helqhts price is 5240.000./ $60.()(J() BEVERLY CREEDON . drive by 188 West. Yale plan. Xlnt for enl 111· '1de or -bat·k. l'•>Vcrl.'d !11-i\J.:enl. ~:H.. Ideal location. 2 BR .. li.:c. down. Seller will carry REA.I.TOR 645•2411 EastS1de·3 Br,2Ba, huge 2bdrm townhous.e. ing. Paneled bon~ . & t'are pal10, ~ur1111.c door Tlcaut1ful lol complete hvin11. rm. w/frplc. Huge balance a t ~n~r. Owner Cam /game rm, lg yd , Washer, dryer, d ts· Loop. extra bdrm. sell., ait. l'lpc n er. up grad c d w 1 PI 1111 s . s u r v c y , corner lot Only $75,000 Jcsperate, needs cash or Mountain, Desft't, w/!ncd encl PoQI, freshly hwash e r. fri g , dbl TUrUerocltGlen. New 3 Br from main house: oi1:1? neutral rarpctlng & ~t'olog1:st report & trade. RHOrt 2400 p ainte d, $395 mo . garage. Walk to bch & on best street $725/mo Weslcliff area. Y~rly t1rapes: 2 l>drm . fan11I\' enl!mt.•cranit. s.ss.ooo Rustic charm. 2 AR. + CALL 64S·6646 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 833-3821, 644·7003 s hopping. $260 mo. be. Agt 631·1400 lease at S525 per mq. ii rm ; community pool & HOW A RU .I OllNSON playrm. Frplc. Hoom foi· SNOW is coming & the air 3 BR, 2 ba, fam. rm, frpt, 536-1389 BAY & BEACR' Park. Sli2,51~1 R"'Al l 'v RV. $87,000 ~ ~R€'TIG€ r·s smog.free! B1"g Bear, Comp I dscpd fncd Groves Secured comm. REALTY 7":.C\,M J I c. ' ' PAUL MARTIN -1 • n ·• · Beaut. new 3 Br 2 Ba, New, cnr. lot. 2 br, 2 ba, '-"'Y' 4!f7. J7H REAL ESTATE 644-7383 HOM€S leased laundr~mat, of. yd, 2 car gar., cul de sac. W/bonus rm, bltns, close cpt,drp, elec. gar. dr. 3 Br, 2 Ba, big yar~9ttns, 552·7000 LOCJUna Hills I OSO fice, 2 apts. $59,500 $400. 645-2978, 831·9081, 8 to bch. 898·2989 (714) opener. Steps to pvt. tenn fplc, steps to bea~ S525 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BE LUCKY!! 18 UNITS IGJ r • . lo5pm 3 B 2 Ba F R C 1 court. Pool & jacuzzi. yrly. 673-2493 ;: f IH: · ·· ....... -•I Int house ror "alt' by Sle<JI at S5(),950. in l!!'?*lU:!I $16:5.1 Br duplex~ ulil. ds~wshr: 1:d~ ::;, ~~j 552 1 .. 30·5!f77PMwwkkdndsys.' or aft. WestcliffbeauL3~.12uu, . \'fLLi'\GE. .· · vwnt'r '.! BA. family Newport Beach. Luxur~ ALL 2 BEOROOM .. ..i}~lji ,,,_ Srng les. F ee $15. gar. new cpts. nr fwy, nr . shops, Ma~ers I, J· .. \ L 1-(.)R..... room w wot bar & frplc . :? rm ... 2 ba. condo an prt:· tl'l2Ul>~RYSFJ,6/\.5RO:s0· OPL'PR· ~ Beachcomber, 631-2011 schls & shops. $395 mo. Woodbridge Estates. Up· Sehl., park. S<l50. 64t-238!) ' ~ i·rpt.~. rtrps, Jarj!e ft.'nl'l'd st\glous Wcstl'liff arru ,. "· r. f aim Desert. Det'p Cnyn 842·7549 grd'd 48r 3 ba fam rm1---------- y:1t<l cr11 11:1'1 .io:1 1 Im' BEVERLY CREEDON UNIT. Tennis club. 3 Br. 2 bu. KIDSJPETS OK Duplex. P vt rw ytird. Executive Newport Crest. appt ___ REALTOR 645·241 I O"nr/1<10·9010 2br. E·S1de, gar. yard, 3 Br2Ba,nrbeach,shops. Avail 1120177. S600 mo, sul><;r ocean view, ~c 3 , . IQ .1 ~ $295. mo. 675·82S8 or schools, patio & cpts. Jse/opl avail. 754.3694 or br .. ;i ha, f.r~I~: All, rec:. LOC}'lfto leoch I 048 L · I I 052 BLUFFS CON HO UDI Rentals 646-4&13 $37S. 492-6973 SSl ""°l Cacti. $.595. 673-233~ • ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCJll"0 Hique Lowest priced 3 Or. farn. Place -vuo •••• •• • •• •• •• • • •• • • •• •• • •••••••••••••••••••••• M v d 3b 2b 3b 2b pt d p "235 2 b 1' ff D I COMMERCIAL r m. "X" Plan 1n the Prapertiea Hou Fu • h d esa er e r. a, r , a , c s, r s, Greentree· 3 Br 2 ba .. . r .. t ·OO . LOTS SELLER Bluffs. Owner anxious. . 7s2•1920 ses nits e clean & pretty. $415. 3100 dshwshr, bltns, fenced. fam rm 'erpl 2 Car gar' Singles ok. Ft•e. . 1.1...,. ••••••• .. •••••••••••• •• Samoa. 644·1836. $375. 847-2760. · ·• · . · Main Rentals. 541l-~s10 l'11ml· l't11it11· <u11-.1 MOTIVATED Sll0.000. <:cnlury 21. t•ooooA1lSfNlw,011 1lACM BolbooPeninsulo 3107 Nr .school.$450.552·7490 ________ _ II"'' lm·uuon l'"'o <' t REDUCED TO ~tarlcn Hc;il E~tate •••••••••••••••••••••••EXECUTIVE Home 4 br , Sharp 3Br. 2ba, frpl. de· eves San Juan · .. :1 __ T1t101t~•l&pi1t~hk~~:l,: ~.'.;.J:i1_~'!.1,~ SI 21,SOO. 1>10·!>357 Costa Mesa Spacious 4 Br. 2 Ba ocean· 2pablnat, nSeewclucdpedts,adrpsrea nr& sbicr bh'l$n35gohb/irnhdc, gwrldkntro 1h MO. FREE RENT Capl1trano W B M u,.. ·"' ·~.. front home. Frplc, wshr, · · · Lease 3 Br, 2 ba home, •••••••••••••••••.-....••• HORIHS REALTY "0"'1>' 1 hrlrm home fQURPLEX dryer. dshwshr, 2 car So. Coast Plaza. lmmed. 847·1231. Jge country kitch cov , ... CH ... RMI ........... heall'tl pool !:\1lui1lt•d In :1 . Occp'y Eve· 531-9563 • " "' .._ " * 494-8057 * twaul1ful privah· un·a :1 Redroom, 2 hath and 2 gi!r. S750 mo. A\•1111 ~an · · 2Br. +lg. fam rm, frplc, pati?. Nr. schools & OLD SAN JU&R· Tcnn1'. JQZ. rc1• c·rote1 , J~·droom. J hath un11s. lt>-~ uly I. N ° 1Jcts · E-Side C.M. 3br, Cam.rm , Huntlngton Creek Condo. shop g. S365. mo. Call This ch a rm t,' , 2 LAGUNA 1-\t!urh fluv th111 i.u1Jel' Wall c•onsitlcr ,•xchangc. _&_1-1·951i2~.rt7 PM. was her/dryer . $385. s:no. Rusty,549·1862 bedroom, 2 bath :,~n HIOEA WA y honw & rnJO) th1• 1:01l<l l>ri vatc pal ios. extra Newport Beach l 1.69 S.18·S568or645·9341 31_lr, + p?OI & tennis, Suns hiney Sharp End home has plush C..lil~t· • Ett·dro11m & tltu 111 hfr h1r~t'unlb Gn· .. t1nvc::.l· •••••••••••••••••••••••CONDO· 2 BR, 2 Ba, V1ll~Pac1hcCoodo.$375. Condo. 2Br. all bltns. ing,fireplace.buil~;'!l§& CJn)c><i "' wl'luclt'<I r. .. 11 c::_ CURTIS l!f'IADlE'I' HARBOR VIEW mc•nt polcntwl. lfoy~hores: year lease. clean, bltns. r e frig. ;~~·s 2~kh~us~~g;::· encl. gar. Comm. pool 2 car garage. Won·4:->11st ,,,nl 1•.111" ti•ria•··· & -co.REAt.rOflS MO..,..EGO t BR . & bunkroom; patio, pools, nr o.c.c. S:W-sin · · CIOBe to frwys. No lse long! Cal1646·21~4n6s : u·.z,• hnuM· lJn•· mill' 1,1 •3 499- 4584 ""' l.'-"Quail ~ comp.rurn.S425Month S350 mo.646-8811Rltr. $325.552-420l 4!l3·0SR8 evenvi115a,1& lrmn.'.tlw.1e•IJ {ilthi~firr1---------•1-IBR. 2BA. wet bar. liiiil Rcallor548·S527 3 Br, 2 ba. Oceanview weekends. :·~•l vnh Sf,1 ~111 ' .r11 nu" t.1 IUCH £STATE Sho"s hke ;1 m1l<ll'I Pm Platci • Split 4 BR. bltns, cov. sechool. $380 mo. 586-4761, ' --.. och 3248 Immaculate 2 Br; .Z~a. 't't:1;.1!1 1i1~111 Once'"" hlue moon do f'Jy l1hrr1l \ lr·:w . Prap•r ea HousHUnfumished J:!aLio.S410.Refs.839San ves846-4288 _....-f b k d " "fL'.W. \11"'.W. 7S2 1920 ti· go Rd 545-7359 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• am rm, ac Y · vt11I )1111 find n '1rw homl' nn • ·~ ,,._ -•••••••• •• •• ••••••••••• a · J 1 $290 492 5771 .~Ml 'II ~l'" 1:><1rt. 'I II TRADE/SELL ~:~tr,c ~p:ic1<111'> l bei.Jrrn home. mint l'Ond , lr,11 f1•m•NI > :ird, "rclur1r<I Cloi.c·tn. S..'>1.500 ''2" Realty 494-861 I EMUALDIAY By Ownt'r (f.ir. Hkr l L•1.iu11a·'l1Cl';in11idew1th 673-7601 _14~u1mst.NlwPOJfUACH General 3202 ouplex2Br,ba,cpts,sml s.~~3NBa,2st,yLandmark~ce(:emJJ~hom~only~ an mo. : 11.mund1; th1:1 lar~c· Love II ave cash buyer for 200 ••. ••••• •• •• •• •• •• ..... !ncd yd, gar. $250+dep. -.N• o pets. ew s ps rom rescen Custm Exec cl BR,' Ba J Iv 0~11 lic11m ~ jlfai.s 3 Harbor VlewHllls +upt cumpl~/· O.C. f rt-level condo, 3 Br. &45-SlM 968-8342 Bay Beach. 3 DR., 211.i car gar. PanoraOik v'u. l.Mlrnom. 2' • b11th rnnrh 4Rr. f:im rm. 2 frplcs, din Minimum II ~ s Good Great location. Irvine 3 BR, Hft BA, frpl, fam. b~~Jii0AsSOC. Gardnr. No pels.~·ill:JK_ homt· Rustic :;t·cluthPn rin. wet bur-Like nt•w. loc:. Batoos1ni;h Realty. i\vr , w /on uni .... Or. to •Honeymoon Cottage• 1 room. Im mac home in Realtors 494.1177 Santo Ano ... "!no inn p1ct11rcsqur, pr1vutr Ttnnis & s w1m'g. ~1\•.:111. S<lt ·5.1:ll. Wood.stream Condos, un· Br, small den, breakfas xlnt. area. Nr. schls. ••••••••••••••••~Q;l... he•., r h co mmon i 1 y l'rlrt•d to sell. !>l•llc•r it N-4. $400./ per mo. nook, way off street. $425. 963-7866 2 Bdrm house, frplc, deck, NO FEE Nr Sh®l).i~' $1.;(),I)()() m Ol 1 v :it r cl I\ ... k: "c 7 & 18 New Un1'ts Hurry! Freshly painted, wtr pd. $350. Close ln. view. w & B : I:~ R .• S l<to .ono l'AC I ~I · United l rolcers !",o I>ogs. $250 m o. 4 Br home across from 494.2639 flP arncr n~lo : , .. Rf':A1. f':STATE. <:t'11c Orange Count~ John Carey 646·7414 900·3989 park & Jake. Fenced yd, ba.S39smo.S41J·B!,l-,!f.,.,;__ _ Htll. 642·0:.!0n __ . . 3 Br. fenced back yard. dbl garage. cpls, dprs. BLUE LAGOO~ Vil.Li\ CHILDREH.Olt.• 496-7222 831·0836 SanClen.nte 1076 Sl11ltlm~tochoo.secoors Bc6oalsland 3206 $37S.mo.Water pald.N LseS.195.536-2375 2BR 2'~BA, wshr. dryr. Lovely 3 Rr '2'irtt, 1•--------·1 ·•••••••••••••••••••••• ;mcl options. l::xcellent ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets 648.3490 Beach charmer SZ7S. 2 br, refrig, ~rtts2 drpsl, s~eps breakfast, dJni11U;'Jf1til. Hewporileach 1069 areas. WillexchnnKI' HOUSEWANTEDonyrly . ' kids/pets/sngls. Fee. ~l~cu~liy. ·x:.~·no~!\ cedar closets, hlJ!'~l ••• ••• •• •• ••••••••••••• Income Units + + 1 Lhasa Apso & me ~. 3 br I gar. Kids, pets, Main Rentals. 540.537(} ssoo. 1st & IDBt + SIOO. noors. central hcab,"f411r. llGCAN N N th 0 ._... · MalnRenlals,540·5370 3Br,2ba,gar,bllrul,clsto securi y. wnr "g nbrhd, tncd. S4 . , White·wnlerocc-on llll'W VlEW. i 2 t 5,000 r. e cean Place 2 Br house + guest r()()m. . achl & bch. $350. Aft 5, 4!19-427l or 2131966•1766· 644 2646 7 91\M Yo I 1Qua1·1 ~ also ....,.,c mo 673·5916 snlgsok. Fee 'l o I A t tree llned street.s t o~n·beam ceihn~11 View Jtewport Bay to Prapertlea · bath. Adults. E-side $220. 2 br, garage, 536-1339. or642·1715. ask for BOB. Uy ~ppt'. · ' ~ · ,..rrd Tlr1ggf' Al,\ l>es ('.utlllinn ! Iron gate en· 6 UN I T S ON T II E 7S2·1920 1175.2126 3 to6 pm kids ~k. Fee. 1Jes1jlnccl try. Mnmmoth living BLUFF -Winter & Sum· l400 0UAn sr.N1w,01llfACH -----------1 MamRentals,54()i..SJ70 L..-.Hlls 3250 W•itmfnder ] 8 Dinin~ room, !>en room with Vlt:W! Mar· mer rentals. Good in lalboa Pettinsulo 3207 b ho 1 rt 1 ~-••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••n·-s~t· 2 egc1~~mrmtot•;1!~!~s hie fl replnce. Paneled vestment p r opert y . 16tO160 UNITS •••:••••••••1•••••b•••2•b•• 2r:fur~:h~~~uNo~~rs: ~ 32A2 3 Br house. Immaculate. z STORY 4 br. 2 h&r~w > , .formal dmlni;t room. Wet $245,000. Peninsula Pont 2 r. a S280 543-6173 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Close to s hops. Good cpt & drps, frpl. C<>N~bl. I RICF. $\S!l.5()0. bar. Spacious kitchen " f1'xer UP.~ers w/frplc. 2 car 1rnr~ge, . 3 Br. 3 ba townhouse. neighhorhood. $350/lsc Boa.t gal\I. Call n~~I{ Uil~~--494 s37t pantry. t:'ltr:i l:ir,ge 2 UNITS-NEW. ncnr slv&d~hwhr.Oayst115,5pacious 3 Br, 2ba In Sp&rkllng new cond. •94·0J22 Chnslmus Bonuic. . Mo ... "'RCH I .a.y mnstcr wins;. Glnsscd ocean :i 0 R . 2 0 1\ OK. Nic:kerso 1 am;' Mix 675-6703: eves673·2545 Greenl>rook. nr s. est $470. ca 11 .. Li I a .. , 714·96J·451i9 or !>3.J ""' "' view patio. Loads of owner's unit. 2 llR. 1 '~ -or match 16. ZO. 32. 40, 4R, Plaza. 2 yrs old. Elcc 846·1371or846·5456 eves. 'Ai MO. FREE RENT Agt. No t'ee By OWMr :<>l0rn1te. 3 Cnr gDniRe. BA rental unit. ~02.800 (iO, 64. 80 unit11. /\rtunlly New dplK lower, 2Br, 2ba, country kltch, ~hag cpts, Leusc :I I.Ir, 2 ha, newly --·- Lovely 4 Dr 21. ba, mm Cull now for personal JAV W. VF.ATS we hove two80 unll com-lnclry, ~ar, avail Jan A/C. huge cvrd p11tio. $700. mo. ll untlnaton painted inside, sepnrntc Condorni!'hlftH rm, lurge llvin•• room & prc-vlew 752·1700 REAl.TOrtS 499·2237 pll'xes. onehnsfour20's; 15th. 520W. Balboa. $4/iO. Lease. 934 Azalea. Bkr. Harhour, 3 br, 2 b;a, t'am·rm, cenlral air Unf1w1u1hed " ~ , 10 1• U1eo•hcrflve16·i;.Qwncr (213l&!H ·6849 <213 > Mat '1Jvn I>·•n g•r. jacuzii. By ow n er. cond. SJ75. mo. "115tv •••••••••••••••••••• • st-pur11tt• danmJI r1l0m w / '"'"' ''1""'111 ' 1' 1"1' Golfers delight. Unique ' 862·1633. Mr . .Hammon· " u -" " heam~ cellin~s. Heated re 11~111 tli custom Cl'dar home will sell' or exchange IO• ~10-1720.673·1494 846.3409 549·11162 Dunn Light Concl~ 1 · . · : • dividually or In comblna· tree ---2 b a , t e r~ ~~ r>:c:l~ll·~t 0::~1~1~~-,.7 1 ~r~~~ r~;r;i;:/h~~~~~ ~oyn.aEPPoxcr.~~;n~l'\~0~~ Corona dtl Mar 3222 \1~s.~~b!~·r.~~P~.:: lniM 3244 LagMnaNlguel 3ZS2 ~~5111~~.1 .. ~.~·Ane Guarded prl "'''lC com: l nnxlOU". "'sklna.StA",000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pd .. .. •-=-" " " ,. "" oHice only. PS: Wf' hove $460 mo. wlr . (213) ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••1------ munlty. $lG 4•5oo. Ph1·--------1 Makeortcr. 11mallerunitstoo• 2 Bedrooms, large open 691·3tS8aft6/wlmds LEAS£SAVAJLABLE OCEAN VIEW, adult New Tustin JHllio h 400.27te JUST LISTED be.mt'rl Jiving roorn. Live In Irvine Village. community s pac 2 Br, 3br, 2ba, atrium, yd, GR.(CIOUS HOM! NEWPORT SHORH tl AHCHOHGI I I 1 large family or dlnJng 20C5 TU$TlN, 3 Br 2 Ba, We have homes avail. for den, 2 Ba, lse. $475 mo. Mierow. ave, tenni!I crt. ln choice area, on quirt A bOme to remember! 2 IMVISTM........,.. Quail ~ room dishwasher fple, dbl gar, cpt, bltns. leaselr1.. 496-4482 mo-re. Adults, no pets. street; space anlore! Bedrmandden,l~bath. IA"I•~ Place bulll:lns. rtrepl a~e. Avall.Ph:648,.380 WalnutSQuare TOWNHOUS E 2 Br 532·4543. '~: Incl. 5 bdtm1'., 3 haths, Completely carpeted.1"==='7=1=4=)=4='="'='=7=1~1 Praperti•• Was he r " dryer in· N. Mesa Verde, newer 3 Ranch Cal.Homes awec In ocean view' 2Br2 Bain lrvine ~P delli:;htful f!'mJly rm., Atrlum view from•· 1.s2-1•20 eluded. Good locnUon. Br2 Ba,FamRm.dlnlng Deerfield UnivPk $450&11 f28.$J89. · drps, park vle;.,•c ~{ g&rdcn kllchcl\ cornblno· bedroom & living rrn. OCEAN HILLS. Vnc. 281'. 1•00 OVAlliT. Ntw~11' HACH $500. month. 640-8358 Rm, beam collgs, new Cul\'e~e a~:1·Park gar, central <air,~ r tlOf'l. i''orl"i\l\ldlninS(rm. F.njoy the wormtb of 2ba, nil hltns. View. MOTF. 0 1 k Larl(e 2Br +fam rm cpta. 1'703 New .._._ ho' Dollhouae. 4Br, 2ba, mo. Coll Mad'>"''• & extra latitc. beaullful· wood anit rharm or mir· Cpi./drps, dbl tiar, goll ,r. n •11 c. Just rt• d t r ts Jl amp 1 h Ire. $4 50. 2 uunn, rour c ice or view, newly decorated SS6·0421 l1·9Pl\t I I d d d ""bl I • ._.. I H'>~ 1 t&l I dUl'l'{i. owe nt 11'1 2f W / ecora 0 app • '"5.()()49 from$340to$400. s ·2s1mo •9• •'"'3 ' • Y an i.c:;JpC' y;ir . rurg, ., c Hnr w Dti.o m ... poos ........... s aii Unal11 + 3 nr. home Frplc, gnr & yard. Xlnl.,. , 3bdrm,yourcholceof14 .,:1-""00"kr ... ,,. v., • To...-.a.~·--'"' l~~y8te.!~ Won•tta~t Opt.ncr.Ownernteds rnst + $100 Cl c-unup Pool.Bkr.00.'1 7!!00 quact strect .• $500/mO.Ph ,.. __ ,_,..& lZZ' tromS335·,•o...,75 ""•.• u · U ... ~t-L-d lS r .,., ... """"""" sulet,Cnll540·U~l Ownr/.AJtt. 499·4271 or 6.11 l400/\~ -"'"' ~.. ,.,_TI_ ~ 2t3J066·1'G6, u11k rnr · · ....................... 4 bdrm ~or choice or 2Br,2bDWcst NlncCondo. •••••••••••••••••-• m~b!P& 808. Clu!l11iflcrt nclic ~oil bl1t Super 2 Br, playrm. Tennis. Swlm'a. pvt (rom~to$SSO Ava il lmmed. Submit Woodbrld e 3bf'2 item~. 11mull Item)> ur homo. Prtv. pntfo. Ocen11 comm. 2 8r 2 Bo condo. No Feet child/pet. '3'75. 8ca1.tl mo~nL v ~Iltl~ SELL lttle Items with a any itoot. Ju:1t rnll view! $G50 Mo. Agt, D/W wabr/dryr '3.!S RANCH REALTY f.t.UST.t. VITALI Upgriided $450 &l1t...&~0• o•·ieoo , ________ , oany PilotClas1lfted Ad. 642-5678. 640-7000 a1.1&7s ' 111 .. zooo .....,. 49'tt124 I 64646n · · ::::: • • ............... --~tt··-· , ..... -.. . 88 DAIL 'r PILOI Wednesday. January 5, t9n AfNM ...... u..fwta. Apa ....... Uftfwn. Offlcel...t .. 4400 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• A rt.. h u.fw1.. •••••••••••••••••••••••~ts Loil & Fowld SJOO xhoob & Tou.:t;:::hed 1 515 ~.~:'.t:.~ ...... ~:'. ............. ~!:~ ........ ?!.~~ ~~~~ ... ?!.~! Opporlwtfty 5005 ....................... liuln.cffoft 7005 • ....._ __ '-'n-· .. a 3107 Costa Mna JIZ4 Sunny p ... w .... IW ...... .,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lo&t. f1•m Oob('rman. ••••••••••••••••••••••. •M•••••••••••••••••••• _... ..., -1pa.tklloJ cle!an l -" '""'"' blk/'·111, J11n 1. " •tart,.._ ________ _ •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ............... u ~ w p BRAND NEW 3 Ur 21 ~ n a, • ••• •••••••••••••••• • &!rm. bllns, g11r, oce11n Ar-• ... .,.....• S " COffll SHOP CM. Da>s 18 o 675-8000/ fplc.~\mlfmrnt>ohunc:y 2Br lHQ,&tovt,rc:r,yrly EASTSIDERUSTIC.llkt view. adlt ~/no pelt lorZ8cdroomsa.nd ~=-....,._, NE'TS"""""'.MO. Eve.631217_1 ____ _ St Reh & l>11na Wh1111 No fK'b Mulure ~dll~ on new l Or. •dull• no $215 mo 493 7231 TownhouseK ./'t1eo-..,.,.,., $450 per n10 1131 82114!, I) sn:1 I~ I O'J'J7 ~1s: $200. 646-0505 ' Mv--H-h h 3140 •'tom $24IUO ~""' ---· Perfect Mom & rop lora· LOST: M11le lrl1h $eller. 8-5PM 5'2-1 IOll! F nwn• • ..,.on ac OpcnM l)aily v - -uon t'rC\111t:.nd1ng bwld wht. on chtat., 2 )~ .• •n!I. ' . ,, ~ ~Ur 11' 11.t. :.tuu1~ff"~ 2 rl-ple\ 2 Br, i:\4 h11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spn-Pools·Tennls w" 6oct-. -, in.: 14•1th plenty ut purk to .. Brllll<ly ... Vic La11 2 Br. Laicuna Ntl!Ul•I, Ht I 11 .. u11pc·r, r t'am rm w/frplc Ct U. HewLakePark Al·ross from fo•thhion ./-~"" ing. ~kU\)' foot lrafhc Bch , 1:?/30. ltoward L.nui rm, '1c•". ;idulb. I.>. ~111 l~ m11 No µds OW, no pets, $335 Ph l>t'luxe J br. ;t•, h.1, ;,ill Isl;,ind a l Jamboree on loc Shon hour,. Good Dys: 213·~ 8701, eve6. d~I gar , l' a t1I1 r I 11 I !17tt lill18. ti73·bl!l!O ll:ll 1}196 dbl gar , pauo, frplr 1713 Sun J oaqwn llills Road. terms. Agt ~-4200 __ lGS-0026 V1ll~g~. $383. &10 lt>-11 & Nl•ar \\,Jll'r s175. Uul Alabuma , 536 34115 or l714l 64.-.1900 Auto w kl ---------548·2813 "alll Stv rcfri" 1''c•• ZlJk.c·11t,drps.t-:1dsOK. ~1718 •1.MOFREERENT• rec flCJ 5 children lo.st 2 y r old ... " :-.:o pets. S:!OO mo. ------•DB.UXE• 1-2-3 Rm. o!CiCC$ from $1600. MO NET Golden Retriever, mule, WO<.>l>!:ffKEl\M J hr + _MuinHl•nl.il .~IO S:l70 5'18·04l:l3 :i br. H-: hu, trpl<', pJllo, $1 25 per mo . /\dJ Orun11c & L.A. Counties wdrini;t cllok~ c hain. bonus,:! ba. I >r 111111ndl. Corona del Mar 3822 • --encl g,1r A\'ail Jan 1 F.a$lbluH 3 br, 2 ba Airporter llotel. No lease ICX'litlOl\8, 1-'ully licensed. Ne wport f'(•nin. c11ll k111·k Bo). t:11ti., ctq,<., ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Ult <-.irdcn :apt Frplc. $365 34i;.4990 Lease. loC'l.spac. master req.83.1·3223'r1lnoon Agt.83'1·4200 67S.373l ur 213-:!73 7373 bltn1> ~1l:!S li-1 5 t1!,l3. llsh°"shr, pool, p\I. patio, ...;.._----1 i.ultu, d in rm & dbl ----------1 Cullcct. ti4tlllli4 nr. ln1n~ Incl. J\rcu. Nr llam1llon/Urookhurst ~aru gc . Auto door 6Q<PHS9FT Rowen&rlanta ~7 iaS-l l 2br. 2ba, i:ar, patio. Srnl opener avail. Pool & 1s11 wESTCL1F'1'".NB Nets$3,500.mo. LOST: Reward f e m . ---chldok. $285.1162·0778 recreation area. Aclulls AGT.541·5032 Son Fruncisco style. 1 Siamcst' <.:hoco Pt. HA TRAVEL AGENT Mornlng·Al'\cri111011 J::vcnlnl( CL.ASSESST1\ll I MONTlll.' r/i.ClftC TRAVIL SCHOOL 610t;l7lhSt,S \11,1 541°6655 AcrrNht1•cl by N.\ I I'.., Established 196:1 Financial Aid Pro11rJ111' .\dull E-S1de \&~ lJr avt11 only. No pets. From $360. Person operation. Husy Dcclawed & SllllYt'd in S. Et1cl ~ar. 1>ut10, pool New deluxe bt>ach opt. 1 & 86S Amigos Way 150 I Weitcllff Dr. Mall loc. Only $31.000. est Plaza area. 551Vi(l49. Perfect guitar lesson~ 1111· L1kt· new, n u 1•e t s J Jjf(,qwcturl.'u. Managed by f 11 I · h f · d l'I Newport Financial Ctr u pr C'C, wit lt.rms. . 1 you or rien . l'•'"1' Apartments Fumlshed ••••••...••...••....... c·o1toNA llEL :it All 61·1·08711 960·1934 ____ , __ o_ran __ a_d_a_M...::g:..m_t_c_o_._ L~sl.,. Office Spoc• Agt. 9837•4200 LOST pet Cocka.lle ~gray phone497·3127 ·~··••••••••••••••••••• :! Hr Townho.usl', frl•IC' ""iS. ,.1,,y I l'r ."tn"l"s 1 ne l •· 2 Br, 2 ba. Adull6 , ... _________ , ··~ w/yel\ow head ID VIC No. -- Y I 2b f S3·•t .... "' ~ • ,, "~ u,; "' .,,. C-:111 on Sile Monllger CO,.wT•ILS Lido Isle & B:iv. Shores. Jobs Wcmhd. 707 S ear Y. r, urn <;J. l'ool. tennis. Some occun <> . K . L•.. .. • 1 5 • only, no pet s. Pool, t•YFRO .... T HOME -"' ·' lalboo tslond 1706 N h I.. r ~ • " ,.. "" 1711) 642-31llext 246 N-unnrt Beach Reward. 613-9109. •••••••••••••••••••• • • • mo. o c 1 vrt•n or Pt'I~. & <.:tttallna v1cwi. Closl' Hcurht•omb<·r . ti31 2011 JllC'UZ71. From $220 mo 4 BR. 4 ba . $2000 Mo yrly .... ""' ."'_3_·~--toshoppm&&f1nebeuch -J9132 M•<>nolia,•~i2·1800 HYouNcedA Staffed& Plu s h seats 100 LOST rr ht h d Experienced, rcli.ihl" 2 B ~··30 N .. ,, STErSTOIEACH Parln~rs feudin«: ~,. 0. w ... s, 3rr~t:r. loogst' CUl.IPIC to ll\81\ll&<' .qit:., lal»oa Peninsula 3 707 644·2611 r " gar ..... cw -Furnished Office, cull T Agt 837 • .....,. o m~-.. s11c. " u in ~crercnc•s. ,,.7 "'"'c 1 ... ---------rerpt.lgefnl'd'd" p.1110.Newlux:!br.lt>J.bllM. 3 RR.2 ba.,unf.$42S "'ffL' EXECUTIV " erms ..... "" E •· '.,.. ""'"" .·,·····.················.·1·_-_ --.:--Water11d.2n1 "l>"s.!75mo.3br,;!lm.S37~ ;J HR,2ba .. unf.$100 Ir, r . . . onNewYears ve, ---0 ., ... I 1 I ,. -----~ ~lilTE. Rent includeri ,.~i.L......t-al-? Har.bor View Hil~ area. NEED ~ .,r,' oa, rnc. 11 1 ,r -~--Placcnl.JJ, l·ill lwl\\111 S c h Id I sm p c l 0 K f l h & ~ uorn .. ~ ... beach S325 111.1 \\ ll,11 CUTE 636.4t20 l-826-6916 tl me recept., p one Over SOO Active local &14 5859 BABYSITTING 11 E l.I' Hl vd !lti2 osos W111lt•r ------mail i.t>f\'1<.•e , util & ON YOUR SKI Tittl' C,11, 1 .,11 ,J•in 1,n. ti··t h .,. f 1 1 jal\ltonttl. ~ .. ·s •-ofr bus. llstings. Please t all LOS'f: Long haired cahro "'-nnnsa'b'A co"lc"" ,111 r\•nl 1 I\ ~· 1 ~ I Br S2l0. SI\ & n·lni; '" Nr.W I hr, rp c. lt':lm 1 ""' t b f f · r ' """'""' L'-"' ,., ) llln •ii " 1111 11f equip avail. Newport or 5 op Y or ree inio. cat. answers lo "Moki ' dent will babys1'l \•1111· :-Jear Ol'C:1n ;)I Ill I tll • paid. Ft•l· :\lain llcnlal~ :1111 ;,,,,,, •11 •1 c 1 ' 11 1 i:h1IUrl'n nr pl'l,. ;:11 \\' ,·c1l. hlln,, 1)11111 \ 11lll'~ All t •· l K. Rd ~ ,., 9 h •It\\ \ t l• l 1 I 11 h Ccnlt>r. &10-5470 ca egones "' ypes mgs ·area . .....,-864 children ev'"n1n"b .11111 i,.; J 1' · " " · tllth, \pl l' Iii ;1 ii Iii h.tll. i:ar S!JS 114:! 1;!1.l I W te t I " " .111tl ,h11p~ ~:.!111 11,·1 ----------1 eguaran e Ol)eascLosl : We imarn n u belpwilhhouseworl. '" ni11111h \ I.. 1111 \11 .... 1 :--. .... r"nh'" \pt F1pk. 1 Br S215 & /. llr S:!t,., Pnme location in Hunt· you. fem a I e . 9 mo s . e xcha nge for r oom r-:-, ;!;ill pwl. '·•l'U11.1 21>1 I' ~11.1 l'11I p1l 2 htk,, h1·h t'Jll LI UO I SL E WAT F. R 1 n it l 0 n 8 ea e h 0 n 751-3741 McArthur I For cl Rd . board and access to '"' Corona ct.I Mor 3722 ~----11.1t111 & h.11\'1111 1 i;.tr 5J6 3611 fRONT 3 Br. S6SO rno ~~':°~~~~!', ~:~~aypere l:NNITVEES~l>!US1NTSESS Uarkgray.640-2677 slopes during duys l'.ill ••••••• ••••••••• ••••• • • " "J,,h,·r. u1 > c1 h1H1l.11p • Lt•asc. 673-8886 " " l ·i MEN Connie, 837·9670. SMALL Bal'h :1111 1111i. t THE BASIL LEAF i\lluhs ~17 .. Ill.mi i,11111. I Br, pets 01\ S2 1V mo. :J --------~lore or offi ce. Good ex 1525 1\tesa Verde Or E Lost: Young All Whlte1-------- Non s mkr, \fl\ ~1: 1 1111 I ''"I\ 1, •I• , . .,t .11,·11 ~ l..W·2UlU hlks heh :J21i 13th St :!. flit, W/W crpts, drps, posure, uss1gned park· (across from Kona Lns) Female Cat. Declawed. LEARN PJANOTUNJNti ulll. 675·5205 hi; 111:·1 i.111111 1 1,,, ,1111 1'11111 1 7 l I ) !I 6 O <I K :i :.! • l>ltn!'. & refrig. Close to IO~. CJll Mr. Plummer Suite 106, Costa Mesa Lake 1''oresl Woodside Limited openin~s. 1:111 '' ,,, 111 1 h \dulh :o.:.i1111 I llfl lll'W 1 rt:. ti. 1h JI' r21:1 1<13l·S018 h1·h & Mrkt. S295 mo. 963-6iti7 UBI Open 7 days Ovpmt. Reward. 768·1623 sessions nt low rates. r---- CostoMHa 3724 •••••··••••·•·········· S40.00 WEEK & UP •Studio & 1 Bil '\pts •TV & Ma"J SN\' 1\\'all •Phom' Scrv. llld pu11I i;J71i Newport Blvcl, 1·:v1 548·:175!l 1Jr 1;45 :r.1m mi1 ~1 1111 'l'IH \ • .i .. 11 1·1.i L• t:r!31, 38lh St. (lOam-DELUXE OFFICES . . PIANOCARE 541·0\lll 83 >IU·hiJo.i or .;u.51:1i lll'l'Lr.X :! Ur I 'll,i lpm1or673·3011S aft.3pm MEXICAHREST. LOST: Ladies he1rloom1--:.....;;~~--.;.._;_ 646-08 ~ti. g.ir '->'.'!;;,mo Comml & ind.sll !illtlCt'S, Beuch Joe. E·Z $3200. mo. r ing, tn Robinson's, .... W..ted 7100 ........ ~ 1,1 I I I I I 1•·11·ai:1• \ol11I :O.:IKfl 1dO I" 111 I 'I"''""'' I HJI ... , 8 3 1·0554 '\1.W u .. uul apl" 1 ,1, :.! >.1>1 02115 L'PPF.R DUPI.~X 3 Br. 2 200 to 2000 sq. ft. As low net. llelp run. Partners Fashion Isl. Reward.••••••••••••••••••••••• l!lt .\pplil".1l11m~ 1 ... 1nµ H:.i. :! hlks lo lwach , yrly a~ 35" sq. n. Lag !'iguel & split. Try $10,000. down. 496-1667 Evs. Collect. AAAAAAA/\AA/\/\ 1.11.1·11 t!lllll \n.111<•1111 '.1 ',':i~ .!1_.~~1'. i.:.ir. Pool, kid~ $:!80 mo. tl42 318g. Missdion v1 5 ejo uFreas. Agt. FOUND: Cockapoo, white S&CY /GEM OFC ~·1.,'!1;:2;:urn l ~im 11 11' \l 1111Ht•111.1l!. :,111.53711 0t·1•anfronllge 1 Blt,lux ~!aal~:tbl~~00 ·0· rwy UBI 751•3741 female.v\c Edinger/Spr· Accountlng tRecep.l urv upl SG2S ; rh . 1ncld -inRdale, H.B. 846·3095, E~ployers Pay All t' ""' ,1.1, 1' •.• ,,h uh• .: !Sit 1 1 lir. l h.t, lilln>-h <1ko11y. utit 675.3823 · Balboa lnn. S2SO. mo. Incl. PRIMTIMG PL/it.HT S94-l540 Lu~ Reinders Age111·~ SUS CASIT AS .' fir 1 ll.i !.:·" ,,tuH" ria . rrpl 1,,·n rt;.,. .u.u .J """' i.:.11, 1"71;! S11ns. -----ulll. 105 Main SI. Balboa. Large full service Caci II· 4020 Birch St, Ste WI Minutes to Nls I Hie 1. ·i·u \ ,1 1 1111111 ll1hr.Sl95.ti-l5·75b'!I. W..itcrfrunt condo. :1 UR. •)7c.11740 ty. 3 Wuy partner s plit. FOUND : Young brn Newport Beach 833-8 1'•• lllrn '\llull', 1111 111•1., li•llll! Cl<! d nldr l'n ttl' •lfim l>·" . f.: I ·'~"' Il l I':\\ 21 b ·•1 • ., Id Ir ( I Chlh h L C811f A t/"'·t b ' .• ON 'iii 1 .,1 1,.,1, \\ 111 :nou mo 552·ilf00: nt~ht.<i 7l!'>::!·Ofl(>i •' • • · , a., ~ 4 car ~ar., -ea or ei..p. operator. ema e ua ua. os or PP .:.... a '"' 211 l.'\\J>Olt \1 ( . · _.; -'\I'\\ 1., & :l B l auto. opener. 411-'t. l10at CdM390to1050sqfl.Cpts. So. Orange Co. IOC'. Ask-Alamitos area. 968·9329 ACCOUNTING . ,, KJJ11!1.!1.t>t111111o.1 ___ 2urw•i::urS215.'\u 1ph " .~ 1 1 r. aps !>hp SOSO Month. May drps. /\I C, Janit or . ing$89,900.w1lhlerms. eves. Sll.•CCOU ... Tl ... G / STUNNIN<. I.~ I h r Lmi•hr inr Illa l>uplP...: "ater pd J!i7!\ · 1· · \.tt10U:-.ll J ocatiuns. lease /option. Da ys park'g.Mnsters673-4120 Alrt. "' "" "" J!orden u111 1'1101, n.. Cd:\t s. th f 11 ' ~70 Orange Ph bt" n I ·' l\uh OK llenl!> S225 to 897·3546· eves ~6·1937 UBI 751-3741 FOUND kitten 6-9 wks. rAYROLL CLERK urea.s.!15 illlW IKlhSt · .. 111 u \\), 6J6-4l20 ~~<)() l\(•nt Hogers Rily. ' . OFFlCf: SP/\CE. N .U. gr/wht Tabby, Irv. Ctr. GoodacctngbaekgrouiHI m11 l)IUll!l!l!it>\C"i ------1u;iij3()(1 San Juan _ 1649 WeslclUr Dr. Air , ~c.~och Dr.552-t!M.2 . including payables & Sl50 B;ll·helor 1w :trlv ----Dix. 2br-Vu. 5225. --. . C-Istrafto l871l pvt. toilet, etc: Two u111ts Onl--·1 --rd-St.a " II 'd XI l ne"', all ut1ht1t'' p.m1 Costa Mesa 3824 + mamt. help. i\dlt·no 2 BR Pulto Apt. 1 Ma. to •••• :?:•••••••••••••••• 400 sn. rt. ea. $200/mo-no Y $8200. own. 16 · FOUND: Basset Hound, PuYro req · n C'O Adult!l,nnµds5111l lJ'Jll •••••••••••••••••••••••pell>. Cpl pref. 673-0512 b<-h.Lovelyparklblk.3 B d i s f d/ xtras"'Oneunit1300 sq lions. Many more to male.FuUerton&20lh benefits . Sal corn · -.---llc-11ullful brand new l br. S225 No pets 546·86-IO r con o, a, p, w, f 2· 11 1 · choose.Agt. CM.548·0473 mensurate w/expc1 . $Iii() BJ rhl'lur 1, util t-l rt'C ~land"J: frplc . eve · · dJsposal,g:ar.a\'ailnnw. l. to ets. a !J s , Ull 751·3741 E.O.E.Willbelntervie\\ p no I I•'<•<' ' I > 1J!>h"'hr. many wmdnws. BAY l\1F:AOOWS 833-0983 s4oo I m o· p AC IF IC FOUND: Approx 6 wk·3 ing J an 11. 18 & 19. Call lle..it•h<·omh1:r h.ll ..!Ol I Jlilllls. 110 Pt'h. 5235 Sµac. cheery & cozy I & 2 •OLIVE PARK* ~nh Fumishflf n..~~~2-~~/\TE, Gene rlOHEat CHIC KEM mos old. Doberman / for appt. 64(}-4580. l>l.5 Mi!.)IL 97!1 3371; 11r a pis. encl nar. dose to .t.py H,..MES -U-L-lsL-~ 3900 Orani:e County's best Shep mix. Pac ir1c & Admlnisl.rat1v~ ~..!!> ,\llr.11·l1\1• I ,\ 11\•n. ----" "' y .... rnw-n ~ Wr.Jso C~1 &tZ 1986 ft patio. i::ir. •iuit•l ull ll. 110 !\l'\\l?r 2 llr \pl w P\'l l>c&ch & collc~c. Many Nu 2 & 3 lldrm .. bit-ins. ••••••••••••••••••••••• APPROX 800 ~'l fl. C 2 at loc.1t1on. E·Z oper allon. n · · · a µcl ... i!~I Rut>:•'r' lli p;itio &~ar S!i5 fac1l avail. No kids or cpt..s. clrps. cncl. i:ar., all '<J'HE'EXCLTING 130 E. 17th Sl, Suttc: T S2tiOC) mo. net. Help run. _6_:_30 _______ _ t;3l-3900/\1:t pets. fo'r. S220 <H6·0073 ' nu 17141 8'17-7566. 10am· PALM MES• .. rTS. ~ DoyleS<l8~9 ~.1.000. down h;indles. LOST: Sml brwn M doit. ,.. -,\)..'\ . oc C \S\\ICTOltl\--3Br:!lia apt,hltns ,cpts. Spm.7d ys. MIN UTF.STOJl:PT Ground Floor &/or and UBI 751-3741 "Brownie' lags.8ch ' · ' pal10, lpll'. ~:JOO. 2515 BCH. noor. Nexl to Sec. l'at' CdM. Dys 541·7792; Ev3 S:\1.\1.L 1u:,\t:ll 1ln rt:L 1'~2 Bit. unf or furn. i:ai. Or~nge. t:M. 673·0053 " h i•-" BR N t'I B k I Ids \ I 830-1919 Rooms ~'" k & "tr pd l\dlli.. no pets u :'-Ir. llamillon/llrookhuts l oac · ""' · a an · nc u 1 · PlllA-$8000. Gr ----------from Sl9S. Ami!le prkng. 188 E. 17th I F G 1\111ss1:1<11rno :l'.lli ill:lli Pool. rt•c rm. M~c gate 2br. cpts. clrps , blln!i, 3br, J ba, gar,. putio. Sml Adults.No Pets St, Costa Mesa. Ph F'ranch1sc lYP'' 1-tore. LOST: Sm em erman Huttinqton Beach 37 40 ••.......••.••......... Secret3ry Business of<'. 12 rno's, K hr da), S893 to SIOllS mo +fnn.:e benefits. Sh I IH wpm. typing 60 wpm. Ap ply dJ.Slrlct olc, Lagun.1 Beach Unified School Oislnct before 1 /13177 3748 525 Victoria. 642,8970 adult, no pets. s:tOO mo child ok. $38.'l. 9tl2·07711 ISGl Mesa Dr. 642.4210. 3600 Sq. ll. Scats 160. Shep. Blk & tan. Mlle Sq. ''"5 3417 .,.6 aoio5 . (; row th ;i r e a Tr)' Park, FV, 554·2356 I•---------""· •""' ·oou 3 br, 2•<i ho, 2 car gar. <SBlksEastofNewport -------------------1 ADVERTISING Bl d ) .. E ·· S •t SlS,000. down. 1\gl. V, LCIKJllna Beach .••.................... ~. Furn lX':Jul. I fir apt, nr bch Rr~p. •·mpl 'd adlls. Util pd. 49 1· ll!Oo Beautiful brand new 2 br, dshwshr, frplc, $385. :!lh v . • xec UI es Ull 751·3741 REWARD! Lost IC. J ba. Bea.med ceilings, blks to bch. 979·6279 546·9860 , \Ypuld you like a Isl class Dana Pt. Male Black Fluor Engfne•rs & free stan~ g frplc, bllns, 2 bdrm fireplace "· mile 2 apts in Laguna. steps ore l.O properly present Money to Loan 5025 do11. approx 3S lbs, ans to Constructors Is lfl- Sun & swim SI'.!~ Ul1I. paid. Fee Ma nv windows, S295. , . • f , b h W lk b 'm " . I ••••••••••••••••••••••• name Shado w , Call 645 .,.;56 979 .... 376 from be ach. t year old . ~om eac · a Jo your us 1 a,..c in Peas -498·2292 ternatfonal and r•· ""' .. · "' 960 4603 v1llaRe. 1 Br: $295 unf, ing surroundings w /CHI· 1st, 2nd & 3rd T.D.'s Mes:a Verde ZBr, 2ba up· . $325 fum. 2 Br: SJ60 unf. clenl s ec'!. services? LOANS AVAILABLE LOST Jan 4, s m all hlk cogniud os a leader ht stairs w /gar Newly IBrapt,stove,cpts,clrps, $395 furn . c .all Ideal Fwy ncce,<;s, xlnl Creditnotimportanl fe m Cocker mix pup the CS.sign and con·' Studin, ut1h1wc; µI.I. Slll.5 decrt 'd . 'S:!SO/mo . ~l~~~y, pool $165. Jl4·623·l827 aft4:30. ~~nr 0 .C. Airport. 673-4883Broker w1wht chest or So. stnac:tiOft of refineriu )fom Rentals. SI() 5370 mo. Ref'c;, nu Ill'" l...----------.t 546-7415 or see 15-15 Cor· Rooms 4000 MorlCJCHJH. Trust Pacific & Edinger. S.A. for the petrolurn/· l!n lll.'lll 1Wo olOrongeCov01y·s nander. Sl7S. 2 br. pool Garage.••••••••••••••••••••••• UpstairsOk,w1ll have re· DH-ch 5035 Reward . Afl 4pm. petrochemical in· H•wporthach 3769 mostbeOunfuloportmenl 2 U-2 Ba ag S250 Kids_ok Fet' ROOMS $25 wk up with rcplionisl !>\'(' 1i63 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 545·9839 dilstry.Growthandex- communltles A relOxilg m:.· 1635 'c~~ranJer St. :\lam Rentals, 5-10-5370 kitchen. S37 .so wk up ~~=nge. C M. 540-711116 LOANS S% Ptt"SOftClls 53SO pamlon ho•• cre•d ..••••••..•............ serllng Wlltl sft'eams, 75H6S2 Mgr. Near hea('h t I.Ir $160. apts. 548-9755 --·--------••••••••••••••••••••••• the following posi· ...... Ch Id k F ...._ ari I ..... _ 2nd TD Locms Drinking problem! ti woter1olls, and moie"'"' E Side sm . duplexes. 2 B I o Cle Pri vale entry & bath. Lite .....-M ftff'I M le ,,.......,. Ca II Alcohol Helpline ons: BESTIUY rrees FeolUnng pools, 183. p\t patio. gara11:e. Mam Rentals. 540-5370 ck~ 'g for Quiel ernpl rem. NEWPORT BEACH Fairest Terms s ince 1949 24 hrs a day 335.3330 Jocuw. souno. t>llhords. no <lo11:s. ref. S225 to $250 I lunt I lrbr area. mn lux Refs. $130. 646-8502 Stores & Office Suites Satff.r Mtg. Co. onde:rclllngclUbhouse 55283-t3or979-4132 aptw/bltns incldi.hwshr. ROOM·Quie t person f'romSJOO 2610AvonSl. 642·2171 • 545-0611 PREGNANT? Wllt'lsociolevems Tennis, ') 1 Lovely pool w /btfl'y Cooking. pvt cntr. near 642-119441675·6106 SAVE SS C:iring confide ntia l d ""'~I I ~ .~r. Cpts/drps. B tns lnclscpd crtyard. i\dlts. bus. 497-2014. LagunQ •·~'--ss R-...... ol '"450 counseling & referral gym.on v.,...,,v ... a Kids OK. no dogs. $225. (7141846.1755 Bch .__ '"" "' Ftivateparty willbuy Abortion. adoption & Tne Village More of ~-2978 · __________ 1••••••••••••••••• •• •••• your 2nd T. 0 . &t2·3S73 keeping. GRAPHIC ARTIST ~me people :.av ,,,u i:cl "hat ~nu P·•' l11r ' \\,, 11( fer moi r> .\1111 l h!' pn r1• I• h'S5 ;\frmlwr,h1µ tn ,1 He:•llh l'h1h \ h·11n1' rlull t-•ri•c l1>nn1' lt'''"n' 111111.irct:-~"' 1m111 ing ,;olf ll1 i-111~ It .1n ~· ~J11n.1 , ~ i;rt•.A\ a1 l.ll'tllt'' !W111f.I\' 1111'~' 1•.1r11 .. , \\Ith 1111• h.inib every1t\lf10 yotfre IOOklng Huntf-Oft N I I NEWPORT BCH STORE APCARE 547-2563 ~EW Spacious 3Br, 2ba H_;__"!'.,._ 3842 ice ge room. ile 2630 Avon Sl.·$2!'0 l\lo. ---------1 R•-.i,..s 2 y1ran ex· IN Fumnure Is ovollobte. t r I & di f t es ___.. k1lch priv. Female. ..-~.!'1:3900rp c x t!a ur .. •······················ $90 mo. 546·2573 Jerry Wynn 1213)477·7701 I st & 2nd TD Loans * SHARo .... ·s * perlence in 4-color fl'\'t' :-,untlJ) l.ru111 h I Oni•ond 'twoBedroom -""---------1$330 Nr. Harbour, 3BR aa..•o 640-8292 OUTCALLM~AGE separation and pro- Adl t LMng Cute t Br. :avail now. 2BA Triplex Def Sam or Room for rent, SlOO mo. + 700 Sq. Ft. ofc. avl. Pac. lrvme Pacific Financial 499·1224 ...t.-u .... f---1 ... ··-a· \ mir n•nl ll•lll.1r' ,.;111·\ i•n Oftl<.o open 9 00 lo 600 G II d C 6 2 S9 k1tch priv, female. lint..: Cst. Hwy, Newport llch. -n-,. "",,_ '""' t11r1h1·r• .. \ tn11f11 Now rennng.. . . n~~:~'cs.ms~"oocf~v::latl pm; 13/ 2·266638'"'" Bcb.nearbcach.536·.(089 fi~075~o. Call: Robbie 2HDWAMTED .. THEEXPERfENCE" tionlftortandcreativ~ rn.u11lt'ntt11t'l' r1 l'W. p1u 11...-.....1.---"-----'I 673-1023, 1175-1094 -"M "'"' ''""' S12.SOO. 10~ interest. Lrg Adult motel. Closed tdent In graphic arts "'""1011 ,11 mu11.1~l'mt·nl ------1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lil. Modern, quiet rm & B lb I I d t IJ circuit TV. For Reserva· desl ... bltHI tllal ~·.111''· und Cleanlgelowcr,2 Br in ti WOODBRIDGE bath. nr bch. pvt entry a oa s an : re a . equity, University r ark. tions.645·3967 .,.- ""·n1lh n<'1 1:hllori. PIAx , ""IS, drps, gar . PINESAPTS $lSOmo.644·61::!6 commerc . or office Princonly.559·5233. "' '.. ----------1 space. Off.street park, -----'-------~h111t>1,. 1,111•0 111111~ Ill 7 adults, no peb $220 . ..,I, 2 & 3 bdrm units . HOTEL. $2S wk. Hnt" in". Approx. soo sq. ft.: AmcMlltcenwnts/ :-.<1rn n11 on1• unclt•r ~1 & '''" 7485 O i d I' k I .. " •~--..a / ...,.,. es gne 1 e ear Y Bch. Ocean l block. Call priv. rest room. Rllr. r-..--5 110 fil'l' 111,unHn11ll California bungalows. 960-2626 or 645·097J h '.C 644·2343 Mon lo f'ri.95 Lost&FoUnd "l:r \1ct• J\,11lahll• Mun 2 Hr ."111 ba . Pt•tlo. L'rom $270 11 5 r • sg ••••••••••••••••••••••• th 111 n11mth11e111p1111t \ 11arni:e, util pd. Adults. Pinel\lone Ofc hrs 3·5.30 m · Annowtcemtnb 5100 C~hr?.1fo1 ~18·~5~~0 . 3 4' wkdays, 9 S.30 wknds Vocation R•ntols 4250 s~ . , . 45SO ••••••••••••••••••••••• 81:111lrv11w 1,11 ltilh I 171 lllHS u;~1 1700 It.th ~t 1 at llo\1'1 1 • 71 11"42 11170 MORI Lt; 110 \tt-; H1•n1 01 Rc-nt.11 pur<'ha,<' J\rlult nopet~ ~1 i'iJll ,1ft 7P\I CX::t:AN1''RONT APT lh1 wintl'r rrnt.il to Ii '.JO ~225 m o Utll Ill< I ~IR lff30 or673·71l41 l°Jllll tic• llermo-.a 21ir <1pt w f1rrphirr, \ • · h.1th r11n1tl'. 11Vl'n, rh~ hwa,hrr. $3'.!(I ,\bo :l br I WJI hl(lj.!) $.170 lliOW Wil"lllO -----1 552·1>400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Artists & C rafts men VILLA COROOV A LOCJUIMI S.och 3848 2A~l~:i:.,~~~~.8:. or Storage Gor•s neroed for wknd Craft I IR from S2 I 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wkend. "'OY'·"'" · 12x24 • New ~· Spaces Sa le, major s hoJl'~g "" f VI '" ...,,,., 1 bl 214 N rt center. SS p/day. 540-0940 Mo to Mo v-:can ront, near clor --j\va1 a e. ewpa •SpeC'ial C'ahinelspace llugo's. Two 2· BR a pl., Rentals to~ 4300 Blvd. C.M. Qill 541!-7477 FREE uicl uUI. $395/450 Mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• or548·S3Zl• •1.ocked.;oir "'l!l l>lor TURNER ASSOC. -----IOATIHG •OW.displ,lnclry rm Realtors 4941177 HHdaRoommate? lutiMSs/lnnst/ CUSSES .oGas cookmg. ht/wlr pcl FiftOftCe I ST MOMTH FREE •Adults. no ...,ts. 1--Hf-...i 3952 h.u"E·CVAru iJm.v.uTW .Starting Jan I0, 1!177 ... ~ .,,..... ~ ••••••••••••••• •• •• •• •• Sponsored lly The Et <ydTowfthouses 2323 Elden i\\e, C. :\I. ••••••••••••••••••••••• A Professn'I Roomm:ate •·-I "' ..,. ftffS BALBOA l hr. 11, h.1 lrnm $29S 1\1r 646-0032 1 & 2 BR, 20041 Aloma. off Referral Company can Opporfuftity SOOS POWER SQUA DRON rnnd."'l>vl pol10<; Adult~ I BR I • & t"fr'n Crown Valley. I child IIELP YOU FINDTH/\T ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"leach you the proper & ~ M"r 1920 Mrycr. off w :;,ove " i,. RIGHTROOMMATE "" I"'". Wk<l"Yl' 11 5, wkncls Enclosed garage. N ,.OK. 831·0857 ' · CIGARETTESUrPl.V safe handling of all t ypes '"" " A"ild ts M25 + 832'4134 Sinre 1971 1>1STRIBUTORSillP or boOt!I. For details call. 10 4, 642 028'.! '-"' ren or pe · -· Newport leach 3169 *KAREM•s * OUTCALL MASSAGE 6PM-2AM 838·1780 /i.IORTIOM Counsellng & Referral Preg. lest-avail. wknds 21 Hr Helpline 547 -9'195 •SPIRITUAi, READER f~lly Licensed 18155 El Camino Real San Clemente. 1-·or appl. 492.9034 492·7296 MASSAGE FfGURE MODELS ESCORTS OUTCALL OHL Y 631·3811 ~. lBr, stp~ lo h1ty /h<'h, dep. 204 K 18th St. Cal ••••••••••••••••••••••• Woman over 65 w/car to PartorFulfTime 673-5717 $2Mmo.11dlb.nu l)t'lS.LsicJhr,2ha townhouse 548·328laft.5PM 38R,lBnCondo.2 Cat s h are C dM hom e Immediate: net'd in RELAXINGMASSAGE 673.-0C172 mqwet rnmplex. GaraRe w/same. Rm. board & Orange County and/or Lost & Fouttd 5100 BobJames·Lic. Masseur -----& t' A J Ill 0 1 No E-SI• MW deluxe 11ar, frplc. tennis, view. nominal salary to right surrounding towns for •••••••••••••••••••••• • Oulcnlls 9-9, 494·SI 11 9-ttl L-a 3786 r>a "'· 1 u ~ n y. townhouses. Frplc, encl. 5475. lse. 675·3823 di lb /\II t 11 ........ ;;:;;: ••••••••••• pets S:J25. 645 3:l8J or person. Night or clay ph. str utora. re a LOST, Sm. brown Poodle. ') BR. 2 •·u on the "'"""n K3'7·!l517 fgroarm ~ .. ~I. D~23· 160hr3. 2 lJa. 2 Or yearly' w /or without 673-4725 outlrlS are secured by name "Coco". Reward. •PALM REA DElt * -t u "'"''" ...,,,., .,., d S300 company. therefore no Hunt'g Harb. 840·1419 S2o reading for SIO Fum. $700 .• unfurn SGOO. 21\r. n1ri• & clean. clos~ to ------boat ock. · Woman, 62. wants same to product selling. Dccome Past. present & future Tolal !ll'CUrlty. t-lrvotnrs. shoppin11,. Adu I ls only 3 Br, 2 ha, luxury lwnhsc 673·2493 share my home. Pref re· distributor for such na· LOST: Old Eng Sheepdog, Lie 1213) 6'94·13rit> t'fc. foclhl1t-~. 499 2835 Nn pets. 645 89:1!1 New sha~ &. kit appl. Luxury adult upt In tht> llree for companionship. lio n a JI y ad vc rt.Is ed male. collar no tags. Lag ---- - -----Huge mslr. Npl Ills loc. Blul(s 1400 1111 rt' 2 Br 2 540·0150.119<1·2082 cigorelles 115 Wlnllton. Sch . Call 494-7618. P~operty /\nalysls ror ~wt• Lllrjll' 2 br. I hi1 roltn,l!e CJ.all 833·705Uor 545-4931 Ba fplc pool + 2 pvt Camels. Marlboro. Pull Rewud divorce or hnn~ruplcy. UftfwftlsMd Em·I ..:11raf.?e, t;afit c M. lt s3&s E~ 640 2855 Roommate Necdt>d. M/F. Mall Satems Kool" --No co~l or ouh1o1utlon. ••••••••••••••••••••••• \null~ nnly. no pets Ull>opl, lge yard, 1\.<ii Br. pa 05· · • 5 · • Share rentSl37.50. N1ce2 Kent.' etc. Toq~:ilify you F~nd . 2 Puppies. 6 t.o II Real t:;s lote Network. GtMrd ~102 $300. MS SJOO $175 mo. i\vall 1 9, OCEAN vu yrly 2 Br 1 fir. CM. 645-4093 Charhe . must hQve 8 car 2.8 Hl-! "ks old, I blk. 1 brow~ on Call 897·1375. ••••••••••••••••••••••• . ~75·6737 Ba dplx. patio ·& yard. perweck 1ctaysor eves> Av1emore Terr. CM. 211WATHFROHT "'~J~1L~.~Pe~~~3o~;~· ft--p-• t 312 , S3So mo. 644·6780 or F,:',w.,!n~r:~~:h'.g~~1~~ S3200 Owner please call EXOTIC GIRLS 8. ulltlns, crpu. drps, B-~ 4757 orMS.3798 -'IJ"ln 642-3639 MS-4604/793·1378 CA.1:\11 INVFA~TMENT 00-9674 aft tl pm. Massage & Modelln1t B-Q hUS1e drck $!arnge -••••••••••••••••••••••• RJ::QUIRED Found: Male Cnlhe. Tri. Outcall Only 542'3180 VARITYPER Must ha•• a mlfthnum 2 years Hperlence in rulin«J. layout, past...., ond tM ability to type SO+ wpm min«J th~ •aritypef' ..d / M com- poser machine$. Ruor employees enjoy top salaries and a corn- prth.ns I•• benefits packocie htcludl119 2 profit ...... ,.... Clftd frH b91idftCJ HrYlct. Quollfled appllcOfth are iHlttd to coll Helf• ledford 17141 975-2114 to e1tabll1h o connnl...+ iftteniew appointment. '~fFLUOA liNOtNEl!AS AND CON5TRUC'fORS. INC. 3333 MlchetlOft Dr. lr•me Co 9 271 5 t:<iual opportunity employer M ff $435° ' 1\dult 2 bedroom beam l 1lr w1fi.replaC'e. $225. All 3 Br. 2 Ba, carpet&. drps. Male roommate wanted ln For more Information Adult. Aliso Villas. Mis· Is-=~"' & ..1801 FINLEY /\VE, N.O. t'r•hn11: no pets S200 568 utilities paid. ~~~o J:[..J ocean. shr 2 Br, 2 bJt lwnhse. write lo "CIGARETTF. slon VieJO. 586·1869. "'-otloe APPRAISIR I J/i.COIS REALTY w. Wiison inq a ptC: 496-7379 • · Ref's req. Alt&, 548 4514. D I V JS I ON'' 1123W' 586·1929 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Good spot w/flnanch,1 in 675-'670 Costa .... ~-3114 Cott.MMe ll24 Westcllffa new 2Br, 2Ba, Employed rolleire llludent P.0 .Box 14, Rosemead Sdlools & st.ltullon for Keal &late ----..._... frplc, refrig, Ice maker. h 38 ,.._ . Ca. 91710. Include YOlll FOUND: Male, blk curly .._._._ ... ~ 7005 Appral~<-r f1m1U11r with: i\rrowheod Nrw Olx •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• whr/dryr, pool, adlll to s are r -p1strano phonenumbcr hair Poodle/Terrier milt, "'"'~"""' FllLMC Forms. Com· Lakefront, clock. 3 br, 3 peta.S38Smo.675·G999 hmc $120. 496·7349• af\, med 5 ~ Dana Pt.••••••••••••••••••••••• pany c11r provided, call ba, bltn•. $600 mo SMftSHIM(j/ 7Pm StHf Fe6W'feotlo• '93-6883. MEN WOMJ::N Rlversldo 6"·6060 Ext 2Ul!Wl.fll96. Surf"aand.2br$340.Utll Roommatewantedto shr Nt\112100.Mo. FOUND·G to Tll.AIMfOlt 188 An Equal Opply pd. Kld1/1nals. Fee. lrg h m faclna aolf Misc.11teel. Wotkln190% I . '1 rea ane, l/i.ATBilOIMG EmployM/P'. ~!~•••••••••• A winning combination Mal.n R ni.ls 540-mo course. S\00. &48 6419. with conCtec:tor3. Help H1!/ko ~/Coast TWO WEEK CLASS '---'~:...;.....;_ ____ _ run. Require. no CX · ' • ' NATlON·WIDEJOB A/RIC CLHI< i:!tR, carp, bit 1M, prtv. ~eclt . <hragc. V0nr hiaaeonly. 127~ Month Dkr. 044 23439 to S r .M. .... , ....... -1101 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $210 mo. N1rr 1 Dr rtc-sp t:tmanent 11dlu, n ta. 100 Dia>• ""'• Ibo• Ptnln. ol OdUll oportmenl l'lomtS 2 Or. l~ ba townhouse COmpl furn, avail lmmed, perlence. Owner wlll FOUND: Approx 2 wks. PLACEMENT Eicper'd typlna & post· wlttlluxuryoppolnlmtntsond ~e~~l.I, no peta. nice TUJlln toe. Brtba, train. Good lllrrna. Aal M. mix terrier, Med. 111. ASStSTANCE Ing. Small co. Good $upert>reoreotlonotopromlum · S195+\.'iutil.632·l68ll 837-4200 tan. Bristol. Santa Ano. COODJOB benef\u . Newport 1ocolloo. Teonl~ •gym • ttleropy 3 br, 2 bo, apacioWJ uprr· G for lteftt 4350 DILl/a..,-.WI... m -9179 lateevs. OPPORTUNITIES Marine F.nglnccrln11. 897 spo •swlmmlng•bllllards hu«e ma1terbr,dee & ....,., Corned 8 .. ,,,,Pa•troml 'o•t, t>•c. ao, llll"r"d J;.MUIC/i.N W.l6lhSt.N.8 .64S·363l? i. -irar, nr ocean. tc25. d17 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"' 0 ., " " " ,, Ono&TWoBedrooms.OneBatn ~~ lllverRd.6734701 Quiet work'i fem wentcd Sandwiches. xlnt llhap'• male l:leaalC!, c hoke I Al TIM DIR S ~"?Ji~o. P;uwk ~V""8 "14 to •"-re 3 br hme. ln· center 10<'. 1'remondouw chain. Vic CdM boc:hes. SCHOOL Don't gwe u.p lbe ship• G>"'4r•• .,-.. 3Br2Ba.cpt.A,drpa,lblk dlvldual llfc atyle . potentl411 r or Ans's to "Elli!lt"" t104&.m .11 Sl.,SA "List" ittn clauU1c-d. l'QPaularlnoAve .. CoatoMuo 751-tllS bch, S38S mo. 1 yr In. Kitch/Laundry prlv . owner/o pcntor. Ail. Rew3rd ror rolu rn IS4·ll4kl Ship to shore reaul\11 1 -·-"" 5_!.~!!_tPtune. "4·~ ll6S. M0-2930afl 11. am 11374200 114/8'T3·23S2 SchooltCoHt TC)tf>Ht 1_tl42_·5G'l_ll_. ----- ., . . ~ W-.dneeday January 5 1m * DAILY PILOT 81 I JAdd it...Build it ... Diaper it .. Hammer' it... Cclrpet IL.Cement it ... Wire it ... Hoe it. .. Clean 1t...Move Jt...Press it ... Paintit...Nall it ... Plaster 1t .. Fuc it .. SERVICE DIRECTORY Plumb it...P at cn 1t .•• Plpe 1t ... Re mooe1 It .. ,.,, Roof It... Landscape it ... Tile it ... Trim it •.. Sew lt ... 1 Haul it... Add it... Plant it... Alter it ... Learn It .. -..c:a""9 c.,. ... r . ewe.. Gar.... ......... ~ -, ..... JP~ ........ 9 ............................................................................................................................................................................................................... Bookk~pingServicc FINISH. Rt:MODt:l. & Uc'd t>oy C11re for Infant,; Wl';IW lNO·CLEANUPS YOU HAVE IT READY KJNOSCarpct & Cle•nln~ Mo v t n It Hau 11 n I f>a~r·Pa!nt. 20 yrs exp. PLUMBER· Repair. re. ScmllB1&1lo.esaAccounla l\pr. Small jobs OK &toddlers Lovl11gc•r~ •W1."«:klyMainten1tn<'e • l"l.LllAULlTAWAY Co. "WE DO 11' ALL' Anythlna Anywbt!r e, 20% Obt. Jan. Save$. pipe, lnilallal1011 R4!M rates 848-0928 fteH. 979·o:rt9 M:i1m0Ua & Adami\, 118 Free Est. 642·9901 TIM $48~ 8.\W561 1.1ncl 2T truck. Fut expr, &it. Guar. No wait. Free services. G GldltiJ. Aee.1-eR--'r r-tc:-lce AV:illJanunh 962·32?7 ·~-I ver y r e a s . Winton Eat. 960·3906. eve. 8'2·9315. -~....--•r--.-_..., Experienced Gardenin~ HoeMdt .. UCJ -• A9 $4630C8 673-4714 ~ •---------••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••Child care my hom1• Service&Cleanups.QuaJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • HOME SAVERS PLUM· APPLIANCE REPAIR C.rvet Man wlll luy your~ wk<hays Lou of loving work Mikes.48-2049 Want 8 REALLY CLEAN Expr'd Landscapon. MOVJNG! X·Allied man. PfTllS P.AIMTIMG BlNG&HEATlNC. Fr"" $1<1-ServiceC1111 or mine Hepa1rs & earl! Gd Ref. Reas W.......Gt$er.I HOUSE7 Call Gingham Sprinklers lnst~l & re· Jnsrd statewide/local. Exper·d. Reaa Ratea. ~3l. llO Hr. Honut fl (714) S49·2422 c:le1uung too' Guur work IW-2!>71 ••••••o••••••~~•••••• Girl. Free ests. 645·5123 pair. Concrett' &t brick l'"reeest. Dave 493'3105 free Est. Call Gene R.illable Serv. BofA • ... _..................... at hh:ger ~avlngs fo"r est ,................__...or HANDYMAN H • wo rk 60·1978 art 5. Fri ndl M . Co Err· 5S2"°'58 M11trchg. 847·0383 6 ~.-~ ~· · om es "' Want a REALLY CLEAN Malooe , e Y ovmg · . l· 751·3150 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Apts. Co n~<.'ienlloua HOUSE? Call Gingham cienl. friendly service Palntlng-paperhangln&, --------- Architectural & Struc· We Cal'f'C.~rpetClcuners l.EE M JAHVIS Cr<t!tsm11n. Ph·645-0302 Girl Freeests.64.S·Sl.2:3 Masonry Lowest p oss ralea cabinet rello'g. Lic'd, l.ooflRg tural Plans Rmdl & or Steam Clean or Shampoo Add1t101111 & Remodt>lmg 6'-ading •••••••••••••• • ••••••• 847-o902 free est. Joe 892-7994 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IWW"OOl\atruction Reiud-AlllOUpbolstl'ry All work !!2:s:,1:J _ L11':tl7HSll ....................... ~~~~.BJt~~:Cs. Free Esl: Blodcwalls, PClllfttMgfP•riltcJ ...__111....... R 8 epalu It Compoalt:ioa /Com 'l /lndu·s lr1ul guar.Refs/MC.t-'re1•c·i;t G Pl •-So $lumpstone. brick.••••••••••••••••••••••• t "'-r-hinglea. lnapectlon1, ~1020 Reu Rates. &15 3716 • • C.'Orge 1 mer°'• ns Skiploader. dump truck, Alter S PM. 493-0680 Res Id /Comm' I. Rea1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lnsrd/llcd. Low prices, fr Adds, Rmdl ll'..11ot1 Plan:; hauling. tree work. grad· Lie 328586. Bob 750-~. Painting. Int/Ext. Reaa. VERY NEAT PATCH eat830-5020or 541.$93() Architectural Designer. Steam Cleaning. liv·rm. Srnljobs·Llc'd~7 6932 lng.demo.ett'7S1·3930 HBOUSEUCLb1EAN1N1G -39$3 Cadepe,ndable. Free est. JOBS&TEXTURE ......... •-•--1t-..a.. Expr. I n C u s tom din-rm & hall,.1vi.i rms yre a ecoupe 11Jay646--'MS ~Esl. 893·14311'-•---r- Residential Remodels & $30. Free Deodor ant. ~ .. al Hauling Refs 963·5813 Fireplaces·Planters , ••••••••••••••••••••••• Additions. 645·5869 Crpt_ repair, dcflt'a ~ de =.::1: .••.. •• •• •• •• ••. •••• •••••• •• •• •••••• •• • De ndabl 1 d Brick Concrete Pallo Don l be born&woggled. PATCH PLASTERING CANOPY TV SVC CO. ---------1odonze.JSVrseKp Good 11.auhnA:.movmg.cleanup pe e a Y w/expt. BlockWaUs BBQPit.s FDf'Onequal.painting& uALLTYPF.S•• lst RateServlce labyslttiftg refs. S3J.Ol0l ELECTRICJ\l. SER VICI': $7 /up. Treework. wants hous.ecleanlng on Ref & 646-0464 fair prices loo. call ~est. ---at Fair Prices 960-l'33 ••••••••••••••••••••••••-------CA LLS Sl5 /h r Cd 11 Reas. fast. free est regularbas1s 847·363'7 s. ts. Richard. I hi-pressure Expr. mother will baby~it STEAM CA !tl'ET IW2·8233 • !W2·4S9'7 llol.lliecleaning wkly Own C\istom Designed patios. clean first, do they'! Homes·AddiUooa. Restuc :TrM Stnk:e · cit give TL<;. My home T~~~~f.1~~11'857 FenclncJ trans portation.· xlnt planters. waJks. lef!ces Uc/lns836-55SS co over blk walls. Free••••••••••••••••••••••• CM.Days64S·85l2 ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• GetridofW1Sightty work gdrers ~ also ceramic floor tiles. Orig~?-Hcs eet.lowrates586-4892 Re m<?vals. tnmmin~, ---------,.__ C trash & c»brit. · · Many local refs. 645-8.512 ..,.... prwung. Cree est. Uc d ll•s•u Service ,__tft/ oncre~ All typca wootl & block Collt'ge stud·t. $12 load. •HOMECLEANING• Custom ura 836-5555 Yoo don't need a gun t.o F\Jlly lnsured. 842-21624 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• f'ree est Arca refs s.18"6428 By L)'lln &:Jean Don't give up the ship! . . . ..draw fast'" when you1---'C..------- Typing ul home. any kmd. Conerele Dri".eways. ~7-228Sor645·7839 Goodreferences536-7711 "List .. It In classified. S~ idle 1lems with a place an ad in the Daily Try a Dally Pilot Reas. rates. w1H pi~kup walkways & patio.-,. Free --SELL idle items with a Ship to shore r esults! Dady PdotClassified Ad. l>Uot Want Ads! Call now Classified Ad to buy, sell & deJ. S4S·M41. est. Area refs 557 ·2285._. SeU idlt' items 642·5678 Daily Pilot <.:lassiried Ad. Want Ad Help! 642·5678 642·5678. 642-5678. -642·5678. or rnt something. HelpW9hd 7100 HelpWaated 7100 HetpW..ted 7100 HetpW•ted 7100 HelpWmhd 7100 tWpWmted 7100 HetpW.e.ct 7100 HelpW-"td 7100 HllpWGllhd 7100 ••••••••••••........•...•.........•...••........•...••••••...••...... ·····················•· .................................................................................................................. . BABYCARE. Afternoon, BANK COUPLE on Soc. Sec. to.Electronic Supply Store GeneralOfrice Laundromat Attendant. MECHANIC ~SEMBLERS 20 hrs wk. References TB.LERS 8r 80YS AMD GIRLS move into our home & re-needs e"per'd counter AdYerffsillg Dept. NB. P/l'ime. 673-1600 6 working or not. check F 1 h · 1 please_ 644·5891aft 5 pm. PROOF OPERATOR for Daily Pilot routes In cleve board, rm & sal. salesperson. 646-4892. Req's accurate typmg. 67~. lbh1 xlnt opportunity. or e ectro mec amca E Arch Beach area or for taJting care of couple :so bl t h di A t.o--.. "-Cl A Ii devices. E x per. in Babysitter my home. 16 xpenencelh.'Qulr~ lo the·1r ao·s c•7 Tu•tin B.lCTRONIC d +ailWJ)m. ak e do an e I ... YOUTP ... "'TEUP u IUUUI...... ass c. _,.,,ban'" I bl l Id w t •l'l( C11i1.ens Bank of 1-'li::una Beach. Must be · "" .... et s, wor un er mm. --r eq "d $400+ per wk ..... " i,a assem Y 0 mo. 0 · es c 1 area. ,. at least 10 years old /we, NB. Ph: MS-41.98 ASSEMILER · · o t' 1 ARTIST ·bl· f ood small parts preferred. Tu(.>s approx 10am-4pm. ~-o!Sla Mesa , . . superv1S1on. u 1es n· . pos111 e or g man. STACOSWITCHIHC Orras other days 17141979·-1200 b~one ~2·4321, ask for COURT DIRECTOR ex· ElectronicsMrg.has im· dude typing ad r opy. Full·Ume. ~mg man· Ftaot end align exper., 1139 Baker Costa Mcsu • 645-l870 ,\i;k for Gloria. 9am lpm _ irrulutton per·d for new Tennis mined openings for elec· mer:nos. correspondence, datory. P /t me pro-tuneups, elec. exper etc. 5411.3041 . only 1-;qual 011vor Club. 536.8832 ask for tronic a ssemblers . vanous reports. p~one ofreader. Good spelling CallS8HJ764. t:"A 10 ~ 1 Bahys1ller. Mon & Tut•s. Employrr 10BOl0YS15AHyeDaGrsl.RLESa rn Sandy or Tony or842.7747 Soldering, stuffing. P /C rollowup. Apply National necess .. A pp ly 1660 MB> .,v..-/SECY ~ua ppor mp oyer my home, good puy. ~·" board req. Xlnt bene in· Syste ms Corp .• 4361 Placentia Ave. Costa ~ ~~~~~~~~~~!per So. Csl. Plaza area. Harm111d wanted. nn 1·x· Chnstmas money · S20 to DATA PROCESSING erg med/dental insr. In· Birch St, N.B. <Near Mesa. '1')1>ing & insurance ex. ASSEMBLERS 5.56-2918or540·71Jl per nc('c1111. Goe~ pny $3 s.io per week sclhng sub· KEYPUNCH~ te rview Tues/Wed/· O.C.AJrport). perience required. Call -hr Lil Agi,:u· s flar. i-triptwns to thl! Daily ...,..~ .......... LO R Thurs9am toJ pm. Disc Legal Secretary. malUre. 496-1060. 9 am to noon We. will train lst & 2nd Bllby.&1tter in my home. 2 1\.17 :>.Ill Pilot Transporta lion •UUOM"A JnstrumenL'i. 102 Baker GIMERAL OFftCE To st.art after the New wkdf$. sh 1 fl · APP I Y 7 am • sc·hool age children ltrs -------provided No deliveries Mus~ have min. 6 mo's on St. Costa Mesa. Ph : For Trade Association. Vear. 64+S730. •--"------- MacGregor Yacht Corp .• 2·ti. M·F &73 "4:1.l 'BEAUTY STYLIST or rollecting. Phone the Job expe:r. Prefer In· 979-5300E.O.E. 60 wpm, good spelling, , A aJ Sect' . Men. perm. p/Umeror LA t631Placentii./\vc.C M. Mus t be ~ood with SJG.9712 d1v.w/k:OOwledgeoflBM grammar. Expr pre-"""g Y part time TimesbomedeUveryin . -Bab Y sit t c r I If s k P r natural stylin" Follow-3774 Uml Hrs 8·30 s·JO -.. PLOYM--l rred d 9 w/at least S yrs exper "'~ .. & Costa Mesa. Cl t C M led ""'' ing not nee Take over "'" Good ()ppor ror advao.ce· COUHS&OR mo. Ph ror interview ~ Asststao!CookTrnt• 7·.30am-4r>m M·f'. '-v-... BOYS "' ... DGIRLS . . -. . ..,... '""'" e . s ays, ·S. SSSO w/dentalpractlce.Hn\Cl ,M....,us"'t...,. h~ave def:ndablo eancu · arecr in< ing, depend. Own transp. clientele. R37 4250 & Mission VieJo • El Toro ment. Xlnt co benefits ....... _ 557•7970 be ~ed for mutual car & be reliab e. s:ns t.o Energetic :><18·7948 831·1548. ll37-8779Lakef'orest area. Earn your own Salcommensuratew/ex· .,..,promise orastrong converuence.768-TI71. S3SOrno.541M740. /\&SOCiate Rep ea bys il t er . m 8 lure un•uty '!'>'l~_Y selling subscrip· per. E.O.E. Wlll be In· ~~an.extg ~:ush GEN'LOFFICEGIRL Legal Secretary trainee M · 180ROVER •oman to supe r vise""" lionsafter sehoo!. For If)· lerviewing J an 17 18 & w ucm un· Salary open permanent gmt Trne, perm. Earn .... 0 "'--"'8 ... EC .12.5 .. 30• m~t aftemooris. MAKEUP ARTIST formation. caU830-0913 19.Callforappt6404S80. employment rate prompt position 888-3o.w or up to 1 yr exper. SI75·$200 wk. Fuller " K:Ar~n • v~ ----------1----~----1 "-'toaddtoourstarf. We · Strong typing man· Brush5ales.554·785L z children ages K & <1 & Cosmetic-Salesgirl. Breakfast cook part time. DELIVERYMAN for ear· will appear on National GEM. MAIMTIHA.NCE dalory. S.A. Attorney.1--------- lf you·re new to Oranl{e Must have own tr;insp ~~,.pref. 642·6164 Nwpt u o o p e r hr . The ly morning LA Times TV starting Jan. 9th. It HaPlll _558-__ 9-132_______ MODEL Co., temporarily dlsron· 845-1253 Be arhcomber Co Hee home del route. 2 Hr. per you have good sales RA!q's Carpentry & Veb.i· LET ME introduce you lo Fem for spa &: pool ad· Hnuing your education. BABYSITTER atu 'Beauty ShoP.642•847~ d a Y · Mu 5 t have ability & like people. we cle malnt. skill&. Call Beeline Fashions the run vertising. gd pay. Call recently d1sch11rged · ~ n HAJR<TYLIST eeonornical car. Adults wlll train you In our pro-SM-l"2l p/time job. Must like .,.c .. ""'" from the service or for w ~man . my . om,e. ~. CARPENTER only. No soliciting. no ression . For a ppt.call ---·------• .....,........,, res 642·3297 or any reason seekm~ tem. p ti~~ evs .Rer s re<1 d with 1-'olJowtng. Nt.•w l.1m1te<I term position collectioM. Wstmnster/ Jack Bame 54.().5001 GenOfc Fee Paid clothes & people. have 54fH!836. Jl()raryorcarecrcmploy· !1158~:lor7~505R Sal<_>n Newport Bth. lmax6mosl$517 hr Ap· H.B.area.638·0126 Make .this golden OP· RECEPTIOMIST ~:Ji~~t!'..:S~~~npe':'::.'2nd·--M-oth--er_W_a_n-~--for-6 ment. considC'r-this UOI· Bachelor Father n~cds 6-12 tiJS<I ply ln person. i-·ountaln porturuty be yours for a p . . r· ff ·• Id g· I 2 ""7 """' y -Valley School District o--.a.L bright 1977. We are the res1~1ge 1rm o ers lng$20-$35pereve.Grea. yr o lr · :...,. =-.-m QUI! oppor. ou can curn l'1time babysitter for 3 llLLIHG CLERK I ff' "'""1 "" world•s laroest employ. plush of~ & V~P ~Uentele for homemakers. Call for wkdys. Vic. Univ. Park. SI 96 PER WEE:I< y r old duughll•r 11 l-1 · lh personne 0 ice. cor OFRCEMGR. .. tovtvac10usUld1v seek pers onal i nlervw Irvine. Must have Enrolled in 1,,e :school. oag osp1l:i as a cur Newl and & Talbert st·s ment service. Snelling & . . . · · l 9 569 but would like her lo stay rent opening for u 81llinR t,y s PM Jan 7 E.O.F.. Experience necessary. SoelUng. •Fneeg eJxocbs1t1.ngCapoll sM. aAln·osoo 963.-7470. Oransp68. 55 . 9 eves. & Collet'tion Clk to work Busy practice. Short -------------------t..:=-a:.:yg:....:....:7..:...:....·.:..363:.:..:.1:..... ___ _ Based on your produc · home a day or 2 per wk. in our rredit ofc ll~p CA.SHIERS work week. Benefits. EXEC. SECRET.ARY Mann. 833-2700. Dennis & tivil y . Co m m + Wouldlikesomeonewith e>.per. pref'd. !-'/time Wanted ror self service Huntingto n Beach. Toa.sst.exec.V.P .&assl Den.nls Per.sonnel Library incenllH'S & e:itlra profit <'ar lo sit in my boml! io days. Contact Personn11I, gus stat.Jons. Part-time & 847~6 V.P . in Nwpt Ctr ore. SerVlce of JrV1ne. 2062 . sharing bonus. On the JC>b N w p l . C a I I J 1 m ,A~8600 N 8 L• ••• f 11 1 · Michelson Dr We need energetic. training. Tremendous Raymond 642·78'10 dys. !....,.. ' .. c..Uc. u ·l me openings In o-.a.L•.r.c:1ST"' ... T Xlnlsh&typingskllJs & . ti I t I NURSES AIDES •u" .,.,.5 Costia Mesa. Here is a '""'"' --An pleasant personality re. a r cu a e Pe o P e pol e n t I a I t o r«' a c h .,...,...,....., evs. BOOKKEEPER perfect opportunity for Olairside. run time: X· q'd, Must be able to han· GUARDS w/dynamic personalitiea !'lupervisory & managc·1·--------•I F I Ch a r g e bk k Pr. you housewives, middle ray certllicate. nee .• die a wide range or resp. Coda Mesa t.bat we can train to in· Immediate openings ror mature aides on all shirts. Training pro· vlded. Good benefits. pleasant atmosphere. Please apply in person: ment pusitions Most be BANKJNG matur\!. ~pr'd, 1 iclrl of agers or semi retired to salary open. 642·6880 & w 0 r k w / m i n P"rmanenl. Full •-Part· troduce our product to ""'rsonable & a mbltioUi>. ( 3 d k t "" ca c"•tom".... In C•llf •· "" 1<:1•, ayw , l>t>rma· supp emenl your in· supervision. Prefer in-Ume.Pbone&transpre· '""' ..... "' .. ·"' For appointment only LOAN l Ph 1' 'l'h o-... L Arimna Work 6 hrs a call nen ues or urs come. For more in· ~·~ dividuals w/3-5 yrs ex-q'd. Retired welcome. · 9·3.NB645 J:t73 formation call Part. Dental Sec/Rece p t. per .• bulwillconsiderex· Call546-0274,orchrsl0·2. d~.perm.inouroffice 539-1183 PROCESSORS 'N me, Inc. 2131925-0431. trainee PtUme. Possible tremely bright recent Closed Wednesday. near O. C. Airport In BOOKKEEPER fftlme later. $2.50 per hr. grad w/xlnl skills. All' ______ ..;;... __ ideal friendly ofc a t· _A_trr_O_M_(_Yf_l_V_E_. ---· A men ca ·s lead 1ng de vdopcr of planned rom EXPERIENCED murut1es is eximnding its C/\REF:R OPPTV CLEAHIHG LADY 644-06\1 applicants wilJ bet.es~. llAlRSTYLJST mosphere. Creative op· F\Jll charge, to $925 mo. 5 Niles a wk . 6 PM. Good co. benefits. E.O.E. Lg. busy beauty salon El por. for men & women to IEYERL Y MAMOR 24452 Via Estrada Laguna Hills Equal Oppor Employer ~ultiplc ll'dRcr cxpcr. 2:30AM . Bondable. N.R. Drug Store Clerk. 40 hrs, Callforappt.640-4580. Toro.566-2216 make as much money as thru finan('iul i..latement ore bid!'. 40 Hrs. Steady <ind. wkndsl Prefer ex· ----"------•----------• you desire while retain·•--------- PARTSMAH mortgagt• hankin g J\ttounhng mu th or mini work. 644·0606 per in candy. tobacco, DEC. SECRET ARY ing an xlnt base satary. NURSES A.IDES l"Oml)uter expcr desira· photo. Please call Mr. TO PRESIDENT Fash HEAD IUS IOY Perm. positions avNJa· Exper. prefd. Will train Rolls Royce & BMW On op1:rat1011 This hall ly dealer 1•x1>eriencec1 created immediate open need upply. Apply lo angs for loan procellsor~ person ot 1540 J;irnllorc~ with at least I yeur of Rol.td. Newport lkuch loan pnx·ess1n~ or rdat -ed expenencl' Worklnl( ble Call for nppL (714 ) <.: 1, ERK in H . H . Peteraon, 962·5847 Isl Financial Serv. firm. SET-UP MAN ble. Advancement to u nee. Park Superior 833-0657.lrv. drugstore, p1l1me. E:<· Goodcaree.roppor.Very managerial &oaition conv. Hosp . s4 4 :i per not neees11. 847·2563. Electronics challenging. Xlnt skills NEeeded for banquet dept. available. WOf' eves or Superior Ave. N. B. IOOkKEEPER CLEftKTYPIST recfd. 75wpm typing, 100 xpr nee. Must speak mornings. For personal•-------- Asststsnt Must bt.-ll.ood tl';'ll\ wpm sh. »San Miguel English & Spanish. App· interview contact: Ma. NURSES AIDES l\utomot1' c New Detail Shop needs help Top "'-:Jl:'es paid. fo:nl(lne Stcamtrs. eng pinnter.>. bufr~rs & poh:1hcr:1. up· holst~ry :1hampoocri. check out, p1ck 011p & de lh-ery Apply nt ~Harbor Bl. CM 645-lOJO AUTO SERVICE J.C. PIMNIY CO 24FesNottla.l..d Kt•porl leocll Huanopelling ror . A..to.otl•• Stn'Ju Penon knowledl(e ()f FNMA F11LMC & ronvcnt1on.1I loans fleC'l?"IS!ITY ~·~:~ ''::r,~~\~rh~~~~e ~a;e~ge~\e~ror ':'&~'. JOIN US Dr.N.B.Sutte200. ~n~e':~~:! the sale• =~: rQ':!1~~~ :~r! &~ .~:i:~t i>ome clcncul functions. Proricency w /rig. 10 Key Airporter Inn Hotel •por-•. E-m•p•lo•y•e•r---• 2055 Thurin Ave. c.M. exl-ell<.>nt worklnl! c:ondi add by touch. Formal IN '77 ECPEOITIMG 18700 McArthur. Irvine 642.3505. Pleasant ix-rsonality e,, lions Ex"cricn"c u ofc. C.M. Call Beverly 113 SECRET"'JlY 0 ---------b 1 " ' ft4 64~ 5800 "" LIQU R clerk, exper. NURSES.AIDES ~r{~~Yrel'hcfi7~~ ~n~hcr must lrvme area Send ~..:.,_ i!.:.:______ Westaall Corp. has an HELP Wanled-<A>olta & Laguna Beach. Prer 7am--m & Upm-?am. u > 1 11 is salary history to I' 0 __ --_ ~ Dtceon Electronics is a immed. vacancy. for ex· Counter person. Over 18. mature person. Call Mr. ..., bu!!y t!nvironmcnl We• Hox l!J553, I rv111t, Cn Collections to $1000 &rowi.11$ d)'llamic com· pedlting secretary to Apply in person. Keo· Sheppard al499·2581. Exper. pref•d, will train nHer hberal ::.lort•n#? O'l7L3 Sales Reps $'700 pany in the Printed workinbusystockroom. tucky Fried Chicken. ---------1 malure person w/ap· 5lllarice!I & outlltandini: Jr Accountant $750 Circuit Board industry. Must have al least 1 year Laguna Beach. LOAM SECRETARY titude for position. Mesa compuny benchh. Thi" ROOK." G Ok1Recept to $6SCJ Our outstanding com· ol exper in purchasing R. Estate/Escrow/TIU• Verde Conv. Hosp, 661 13 ""excellent OPPortuni Studenh Irv me Personnel M:cncy pany benefits include or stock room work . ---------•I exper. helpful. Prevloua _Ce_n_te_r_S_t_, c_._M_. ___ _ ly for a .well rmindi•rl HouMwl•.s& 481!E t7lhCosta Mesa dental insuran~e. cash Should b e familiar HOSTESSES banking exp. pref'd ..... URSIS ... IDES c nreer 1 n m nrtga "I! Mooriftqttt,.n Soite224 642>-1470 incentive profit' shanng w/marine parts. 1f poss1· Good tyl)ing skills. Call "& ORDER,..UES banking l'lcascrontuct Million oorinr cMP -~ ---program. Qualified can· ble. Please call Ms . Dcryt&M~ for appt. 832·5200. Saa ~.....t-m-•-Tinn nf dldatcs are encoura0 ed McDonald, 549-9711 ror PART-TI g tlago Bank, Tustin. ALLSHJFTS P~ Dept '"""""' ~ .. "" wm ' c 11 ' 11 s · I " "'"' r'd Will I · &ny &Ile who cnjuy 0 ei;1i or ·· · gir · toapplyinperson. more inlormat.ion. E.O.E. ., .. per. pre · lran Ml SSI ON !$peak in lo( w /tithers & who mo l he r s he I Pe r . Apply tn Penon -----------1 interested individuals. Me oon'<I w /the DVcrage Pleasant home . Mon. •IMSPECTORS 3PM·5PM Thurs. OnJ1 L VN J.11 ~lo Udo Convalescent Ctr VIEJOCO. runo!themtll)obi< Tues & Wed . aflu 1al&2ndsbH\Js.ReqUires FACTORY ChargeNurse&Medica l5SSSuperiorAve school. ~75 mo+. Must 6 months previous ex· Work in an a /cond & tion. F /tlme, Apply : NewportBeach 646.7754 N I II have lransp. No smok· peri "CB carpeted area w/FM Tl.a Reuben p k s I 14 •• A•• u ·•<'tua '<~ in,:: in· '"Ii B11t Canyon area. enceoni· . mualc. Must have pa. Ill ar uper or. .. .. OFFICE·PARTTIME I 24100 Chrl1.+o vnlv(.'<I & no 1wtt1111o: ap· uA•).c~''"'. £. Superior Ave. N .B . 3.4 Hrs. afternoons. Nr. Ml1sloft Yl•lo Jl')intmenLS Work w /one -""-~-------•DRIWMG t.lence to work w /micro U8 _64 __ 2·_Z4_t_o ______ , Beach & Edlo~er. Typ. Expenence r~~1u1red Calf. 9267~. nr the m06l popult1r & COMPANION/DRIVER M ... CHl ..... E miniature part.ot under a t I C tt. log ... ..,.. neat andwrtl Ou•·t~ndln•• ~ 1 "'-n"r11 r 1 ~.• "" " ml-......... Wiii train. 5 L oe11t y LVIJ'S, P/TIMI ....,....,, · ~.. .. ·' '"' ... ,, ,, ... , 8374050 •rncccss u pr .. uu('b oo ror lightly handkapped OP84TOR u.. "'"°~VP""M y" log. S3 Hr. Call between XlntworklnR conditions the market today /\n in wnman tn Cd.M . 20 hr wk. nls 3:45 t.o 12:1.SAM. Mewporf t.odl 7-3:~ & 3-U:30. Medlca· noon&J P.M. 842.2a37 Apply ln pcr!'lon Equal Opp0rtunity expensive pro<lti<'l who':1 arr.unged to mutual con· 1st shift. PrevtoU& ex· ToP pay + co benefits. tloos. Treatments. Hunt· • IOllmT04pmMon-Fri Employer name 1s a hous«:hold venle nc e . s50 wk . perience operating Gaiser Tool Co .• 1701 E. EqualOpporEmployer logton Beach Conv. Part time phone work & •Eq::;u;al:i;o~pp~u~m~p~lo~y;i:e;;.r_;;m~1~r~~~~~~~~~~~I word thruout the world. 64-0·!>145 automatic drill machine Carnegie Ave, S.A. Hosp., 18811 Florida St, delivery.~hr. Work in a youthful.---------• required. ~. HB.847·3515. 83S-02ll,exl163Y ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~-----I rricndJy atmosphere & COOK DINNER Part •----------t Housekeeper wanted • _ _ AVON BANKING have run while you earn u me, country club. Top •SIU< SCREB4ER f1oral Designer, ~/time. live.lo. Room, board &!'-..__..._. .... .,,,_...__..._ .... , ________ _ TllU.EJt top pay. You rt-t't!1ve a wages 409,2271 ask for 3rd shift. Minimum 6 Exper. nee. App y, 2957 small salary. S~anlah LVN PAYROLL CLEO r itimt.> Fri & s at for our guaranteed salltry + ex· Chier. months e1tperience. Harbor Bl.CM. 549-9857 speaking OK. 2 chi drenll 1be Jolly Roger, Inc. ts s C()ast Pluaomce Ex· tremely liberal com -.Know SoJder masks and GAL FRIDAY P/tlme for & 8. Call eves. 970-0t7s. WCX"knd.a 7·3. Xlnt worlr· looking for a run-time s.eoci..s T•AIYowSS? 841 a n AVON REPRESENTATIVE Meet ~pk!, payorr boll · day bills & start 11aving apln. Let4 l11lk •bout It . per pref'd Cnll Mlsi1 mi.s1:1lon & bonu!le!$. Con· coo11 characters. publl~ acct. ore. Must be (Yorba Unda, Anaheim lngcoodlUona&benefits. Payroll Clerk. Exper. K~F..rol ~~/' ~~~~~n~·:r::ii;~~i PART-.::M! •HYDRO OPERATOR :::rU.~!t!o wk~~8~dd~~'. -.:.-·-ta_11_k:--;~-g-&-child--c-a-re ~~.;:, =~:/::l~e~~::~~~~!~ *"'-'~ Pl)flSibilttie~lorbothmen DktlC'-rch's lat sbltl. Prefer ex· mach. & typewriter forhcboolagechUdr~n. 40tOV ...... ld. payroll,quart.:irlylaxre· , Jfn &women. Reit--' perience operating w/skill Call: 642·0506 Llve·ln. Muat apeak Lon Sch tl.U"l\8 &other ~yroll re· ~~~Pn~::~1~~~1r No exper. n1•". You re-28>8Ne.wportBl.C.M. Hydro & electroverl anytime. English & have rera. No I -__?13~42&-0.194 lated duulUes. bla J>Ojli• "'I ~ machines. •---------.. s moking. Oood sal. Uon req re11 the •bilil1 celv(' full t>llY while being Cooks. full & p/t.lme. Over GARDENER ASSIST. 640-00$5. MAIO Wanted. Seaclltr to deAI efrectlvely w/all trained. You con work 18. 1 Yr cortee shop ex •RISTOM For apt. complex. N.8 . Motel. 1661 so. Coast levels or manageme'lt, ~f;~~~~~~~~W~-a~n=t_A~d~s~·==~-C~a~IJ~61~2:·~56~_78_, mo.rnlog or eve. hrs. On· per. Refs req'd. Charlie's TECHNICIAN Reliable. Steady work. Housekeeper , morning• Hwy, Lag. Bch. 494-45112 Must be &vallable \o CaU 540-7041 or Zenith ---------7·1359. ly 10 min. by ~ wy. from ChiU. 549.0351. Gt4-0806. only. Call 646--8304 after work overtime when te· . (~IJJY • STAR GA'ZE"ID~ ... ""\ tall surroundmt: com•---------2nd shift. Knowledge of•--~------1 fiPM. Near Wilson & MAN. Expr"dtodellver& q 'd . Sal1&ry com· ""-~AN/fl\ A'-_,.1 munltles. You owe it to COOKS dry mm proce11alna ror GAnGUARDSCZI Newport Install major appliances. mer1S11rate w /exper. u 1u llJCLATllf'Ol.LA ,,..,. yourself tout least In· Male or Female over 18 PCBrcqulred. Dependoble. neat ap· · Full time. Mutt be Please apply In person. "1::t·:: .\!-!':.,'-~-:-,::t: J:J. :;·:;m vusligate this unusual loworknight&.Applyio pearaoce. R e tired HOUSEKEEPER . atrong. dependable & 17042 OUiette, Irvine ,.._,. ••o.i To ~~ tor Thu"'4oy. •wt ... ~ oppor. Contact Renee J)enlOl'I: •Fl.IX CllCUIT welcoroo. Apply NewJ)Ort P /lime. Apply. Men wont Saturday1. Fringe 8am·Spm Mon thru Fri. •;.;, .... _ '*ldwOrd9~1ng10""""*' ~~\ol Rossl.833..s098. OtfTaco TICHNICl.AH t.>uniet.644-0610 Verde Conv. Hoap, 661 beoeflta. ~TAwus °''"'11.odl«Kbkttuior-ltlt-' I 720 Su~ CM lst abln. Requlrea ablllty Center St, Costa Mesa. Dunlap Appliancft ~A" H ~= tt>l L ~!~ ccr. I~~ R 0 R E D H 0 M E . r==: . to build nex clrcuH• Ge111r• Offlc• J8l01ewpon Blvd. CM -.. ~1~'1.~ ,._ lo~ Qo.;.,_ ... "°"·'' MA KEKS? Unlimited Counter He lp full & rrom ata.rt to Cini.ah with R Day wk, p/"me, after· ............ 548-1"1'811 • 1.t,\.iT" .,_ .. ~ ..!· J-ljo.21 Oppor for J>C!rsonal & .., "' IM-~CljSdy :~.... i'~ ::~~ ,~ fin 1· 1 rd. 1 ho P/tlme night shift & very liltJuupervi.llon. 00003. ~ng recfd, SH ..,. __ •-c 1 .h Man 11 wife _.....,ed for .._,,.. 1 .,. ~ 61~ ~·••ut enc a rewe w t ut aravtyt1rd flhlfls. Appl" ~ ... '-al a~ de-nd• r "" • uua ty ~ency • .....,., Cl@""' 1' • • I 11o< 11 .1.,. u c r If I cl n ll r a m 11 Y Jack ln The Bo" , ...t. .,.,....,., · .... 0 PertOllaJ LilWa complete ure ol home & ~<"j~'f!. ~ 1'1=--, o 1 " ot<_.11 11!]. retpe>Mlbilitie!I. F~ll or BakerSl Cost.a M;u """" DICEOM °"i ~~lath, muat.._lte wxor1k· Roberteon Insurance plaota, 2 or more da.ya 11 "'~~ •. 11 ~ ~ , '°"" r--_ ... _t....ii~• p/tlmc ulc11 po51tlon11 · · 1!1--.1..-.-ics beng '"ri' nNum"""c· nt eoroa.. Del Mar wetk. tr you enJoy dotna CA04Cll ,.._.. 45 ••" open t.o men or women. OOUNTER WOMAN ~ITVO ne ta. wpt onter m.aao nc.llent work pleaae (it.).w .. ,,. l'E:-·· :;..;:• ~~ o~"t~ For inwrvw c•ll Mr11, UAMto 2PM.Moolhru 185'22VonKarman loo . Contact Rlla l~~~~~~~~~!'l writethis bUMy couple, ~1m .i I' t..:' :.~. ~t""-... J,.ii """\ fl ob k Irk . 5!> 7 · 1041. Sal. A ppty a t St ax rrvine, Calif mu 2~•.«!!!0!'"o' £ror • ppl. lnc:ludina rclerences at. .,._ -:.: .. ~. 1::---:t =-~~~ 1 L-250 > Burgers. 1199 W. 19th St. <Neu O.C. Airport I .,......_.,, ""' · fN5' /SHIPPING 0.-T C1attilied Ad '777, Dally ~~ .. ,. 1 =.,111:... i'f•':,.Aflt'_ i.~"..qu,,.u1N, •--------·•CM. M~·~aa.~ppltolcaanptap'~"'.e NOTICE We have openlnp In ~n Pilot PO Box 1500, Cotta nu • ,..,,. ~ .... ~.,... ., how Oally Pilot Cla11· •ll atrl dept. S.lt1ry o~n Me$a, Ca. tl2826 ,.i.+,11 eo.-.!..._. ~ H•·., ForCIH11irle<I Ad 11141 raalC'St dr"w In the /F f ... _ d'· 1 w1some exper .• but wU1 n..~ ,_,.,,. ~,_ ..... -=:,-1 •• AC'flON West. , .a D11Uy Pilot~~~~~~~~~ l led a ... i~l~ya:ir r train. Xlnt company MA1"UR E WOMAN ~:.: b. :;~ ~ •«1J C.1111 Classified Ad. Pbonet;Claaalned ads aell big me!Aait11 wt eg ty bendita p /l1me & weleomt 7 / .. ,,..i, o..-i•~'"° ~ ... '"".>tt.1 Dally Piiot &U~B. ltenu, 1Mall llem• or :~ ~~ctt: ~:,~~a~; o.ttt1= ~ ::C~:S Fl~ldb~!~: lltY~"" 11 o-. .,.,_, °'rft'"" !>'M ~ .. 1~ AD·VISOR any llem. Ju1t ull ••t re •ull1. Phoot '2f . • C.M.. Nttd c•r. Ille typing, l'\!t~ • ...@°* ®.u-I)~.... ,. .~ .. 1 642-5678 19.!~led AdS M2...w78 8'2·58'78. &U-!$78. 5*00 -54T·l(Ml6, PEOPLE PERSON Exec: needs p /tlme aa· IOC:. In while 11o1pp\)". P\al· ly capitalbed. 67W221 • PHONE SALES Phone Salo people. male or remate, 18 to ~ yeal"ll of &(le. Guaranteed w•get or commlaalons. 250 ~aet 11th Strc~t. Suite O. Costa Meo, between S:OO & 8:30 p.m. ~. Equal ()pJ)Ortunl~y Employer .. ---.--.~----. ........ "'~ ..... -"-...... -.. -.,,. ....... . ' ... --__,,--· -....... . -. N DAILY PILOT Wednesday. January 5. 1917 I ~~!'.~ .••.. ?~.~~,~~:':!·~-~ ..... !!.~~ ~'!!!'.~ ..... ?!.~~~~t:.~ ..... ?!~~ ll MANAGEJ9'EHT: Vice President opening exists for ag. gress1ve Apartment Management pro· fessional. Must have managed over 2000 units, be ready to move up to PresidP.ncy o( company quickly and have a following. Salary plus profit sharing. Our staff. knows of this ad. Submit reRume to; Ad #812. Daily Pilot, P.O. Dox 1560, C.M .• Ca. 92626 tt.tp Wa.ited 7100 H•lp Want•d 7 100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• REAL ESTATE CONDO CONVERSION SPECIALIST JC you have substantial experience in all phases o( condo conversion and are prepared to become Vice President of a dynamic. expanding company with spectacular growth tn the Investment field (Salary & profit sharing), Write Don Berman, President. QUAIL PLACE PROPERTIES. 1400 Quail Street, Newport Beach. ,...,.,._.. a o so FunWtur-. •oso · " ....................... ·········· ............. .____. . ~~~ .......... !?.~~ ~::.~!~!':': ..... !~.·.~ ~.c:t:;.~~~ ........ !~.~~ WHY RENT FURNITURE 1 WA~TED CUSTOM lloblr lti, lrlr. rww h tan!> & 1""111 mor•· $1 ,425 tl41i II~ or IUY 3 co~ ROOMS of ALL MEW fUIMITUll FULL PIJCI OHL Y $JYY •Mo cnclt ......_. *'-1 T"'-' FREE DBJVHY I s" at cums.._ FwNt..-• . lrWcckn TOP CASH DOLLAR WOVEN WOODS Siil 7505 J'All> fo'O R YOV R S0'1 T080<"'.0ft'l" JLWELHY. WATCUl':S, Ovcr40in !\tock pullerm. AR1' ODJI-;crs. GOLD. AlsoMlNl-lmnds S il. V trn ~ERV IC E . &IS-~ 1133 9170 n NE f''URN & AN TJQUES ~-~ Uvntoclc 8075 IUILD YOUR OWM IEAUT. W£STSA.IL WORLD CRUISH 18'5 S. H.tN>r 11. CM llunrlrl'tl3 of prouJ RADIO Control Elcctrw 0 w n l' r It J r I' h 1111 II Model P1' Soot, ovc:r 3 fl. hrushin.: their WclJ\~111111 long, siren, wuter run· 1n thei r icpar,• tHTH'. ••••••••••••• ••••••• ••• non. 2 !t~'tls. t!lC. v~ry The• ~·s nu reui.oo ) uu 64M 151 Reg. Morgan m are, broke f0Phi3licutt.'<l toy. Ovt"r ('lln't do 11 too Tuitt• ,10 to ride & drlve, blk $1800 replncemQnl. Hllllaitcotw11Ucr1'lrciil • parade Morgan gelding, Sacrifice $500 Includes ly ~imnit dcllvtirll• 011 Eni;. Westtirn (7U) everything. 67S-3662 or llPl'cially priced lillnli -. 331HOI I &l.S-2200 HttpW•t•d 7100 lkyct.s , 8020 -------f1n1:1hl'd :!14' thru 4J' •••• ••• •• •••••••• •••••• ••••••••• •• ••••••••• ••• MochiMry 8078 Gourmet uul<'hl"r block WC1'ts ull PJ<'kllitcii Crum TYPIST Lndles1i\Jry hlcycle, like ••••••: •• • •• ••••••• •• •• table, never used, $0095. ror hull AN I> dock ' "' · h ncw while 3 spd Rosatorkl.rftS2JS0,3whl 8Jl·lti12 Attend our liuilllc~~· PHONE lECU'TIONIST _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ r ~lime m your ome. 642.3066 • · pneumatic llri'tc, llfls. --:-, forums Mon. & Wu1l. SOLICITORS !-'ash Isl Vinanciul Scrv. ~~~~ ~1th rass~t~e. transcr1p· 5000 lbs. \4' v~rtinil, Just RADIO Control Moclt'I .'-eve' lo f1ml 11ul lltic>lll Ea:sy pleasant evening firm. Hccc•pl1Sery. I ront U-1 w.-a__. lion capabihhe~. Nced I New Schwinn l'llde 12" overhauled :1 Cylinder meter s.ailboat. 6 l'l (im~hln~ pnrkui:c·:s &. (;u· work 4.9 Mon-Fri. Need desk. F.xpcr. Hd~ rcQ d. rwop .... ...., 7100 He4p WOftt•d 7100 days 11erv1.ce. Will. supply girls bike. Xlnt cond. $30. fork lilt hurd rubber Joni:. sails beuut1fully tory &Ul)l)Ol I Wcsl:.1111 lS Pt.'Oplt! immcd. Call Type tiO wpm. 3t~ San ••••••••••••••••••• •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• transcnpt1on equip. Call 76!1-1J76, tires 10 r~ont s7so. single Make offer or lrnrle for? Cru1srn~ Ccnll;r: l~rclu aft 2pm. Mon-Thur.;, or Miguel Dr, N H Suite SALESGIRL SECRETARY. hle bkpng, 842·9977 aft 5pm. lire in rear. LlFTS 3500 675·3662or645:_~ -V1ll11gc Ct•nter. !oiu1te :w1. c714 l S4() 5464 200 · rccepl. Needed for i grrl lbs 12' ti 1 !174 w 3'132 Vw <>1.orto, N1:wpQrt _· __ . __ . ----1 lmmt.>d. f'1Timc opening (lffice. Ground floor op. TY Pl ST· GENER AL Cameras & l"':. c•svePrb;~". L~• . Houseful or 1-'\Jrn. Wai.h(•r lwuch ll2Gtl3. 6755100 P/lime """S. Cal ofc/ for qual1f1ed salesgirl OFC, Pffime PQs1tlon in m:-..l-nt 8030 _ ...... •• · .,..,,..i .... t & Drye. r, n.11st• h.~hlcl -· ----.-""~ R . ~lolherhood Maternrly portun1ty 1n growing b ... h ....,...,.. .. _ od r HOllE c .. T 3 5 M ...... lnd'I care. Xlnt pay, no 8P,31rmen t'Ompany manu!actunni; very usy Nwpt Be ••••••••••••••••••••••• MJs,c:eltarMOUs 8080 rtems. 73 N1mr l'lll "' • e ... r pressure. Lag B c h ~~!:7,1:i;una Hills Mall product ror hotels. Call Arc.hitect's ofc. HeaV) Contlnexsem1·aulomat1c. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Trlr,slps8.2020 Wa!lace, < 11"'2 H. smulh•r vcrsrnn 499-3846 J exp r & 1 tr;11nee _________ , JimRaymond,640-7840 typmg&phones.Neelied Zeiss tessar, r 2.8u.v. WA ..... TED apt.B.C.M.54114900 of llobw Hi & lll J..ilw ----------• net.'Clcd by cornmt>rcral & Tues. Thurs, Fri. 9-5PM rrller. Leather case 1""111 Dog House. New ci.tm nc·"· tolorc<1 !iarls amJ P /l Sales. S40·S70 wk uv re::.1dcn11nl style reparr & SALESPERSON Se\.1 'y Rccept ror small 63C a1_t17l 00b t w n 9 • 11 AM Shull er neC'ds cle;inlng TO p CAS 11 DOLLAR made for med 10 lge doJl. cxlrnlt. Grl'at for bo,·~ Men, lad res, l>ludcnb nu.11nt co rn Newport. To \\',\NTl!:I> N 8 . Law Jo'1rm. Good SSO. Dent. 494.~. p J\ I D FOR y OUR Solid frame s hingle ext flrsl cc1t V<'ry fa.;t. $600. 1-:ves /Sal. 554-71151. qualify }OU mu!.l be am ~0·2705 ~kills. minimum 2 yr~ --Jt::WELRY. WATCHES. G7~JOSS · • biS:lti62or645-2200 839·7696. brtloo!>. conH1cnt1oui.. xenentl ofc e."<per. Com UTOTEM Doc:p 8040 ART OBJ EC1"S, GOLD ----. ,. . ., , VI 1. "'"llJ:roomcd &h:l\c a v c n sa t1on Com · RETAll.,CLERKS •••••••••••••••••••••••S ILVER SERVICE. 4x.8POOLTAULF: 7-t ,.qu1inus .. t . l • Purchasrng&A1PU)t1IJlc h1 ghdcgrceor mech'lap SALES men!>uratew/skllls&cx· Wanted. Opportun1t1es AKC Golden Retriever }''JN!:'.: 1-'URN & AN-Good condition Balls & Genoa.Nll&hp Loa.1.k1l . exper. Previous bank ins.: ud L' f'd R d f lh p I ~52 cc?.. for advancement avail TIQUES 2200 · · Xlnt l'Olld. ~ llW01bbl S t1l I.' ... xpcr prl' in ea y or some ing per. auu,1 ·~. . . Pups.xlnthuntcrs.fumi· .645· rachrnc_t $200.fl73-n _9s 751·"""".'"'''"''~"' ex per. helpful. h rcq '<I clcl'tncal & plumb1n.i re· new'! E>.c1ting ground Openings in Cos la Mei.a. ly pet,~ tr dog. 493·6861 .. """ ""J .,....., +good typing skills. Call P .i 1 r,,. Lit· c• n 5 <' e 5 noor opportumty 111 wrdc Ser\ rce Station Allen· Anaht!rm, Garden Grovf · LUGGAGE TAGS Mlscefl~~ Cul 2.21, full racl':-;.skrn~ for appl. 832·5200. San w cleomcd. Wi:: pa~ openfreld.Joinourlcam dant. c..:per'd. Doy & &Westmr.nster. Lhasa Apso Pups. /\KC rromyoorbu!.>inesscard. Want~ 8081 SS.!ISO or trad~'up . t1ago Bank. Tustin. milcai:e ~ou furnish now! Call 640-0432 or F.lvesS.hFullllS& p/limle7.tAh'!: 642-7702 Ch. sin• & dumc Cold Send one card for each ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~16-0246 ' ~ E.O.E. trans & tools Com""nsa· 5'18·19Sl Py, e talion, "' show males. 831·9097 I \" ----.--Irvine. NB. Van Driver. mus t be -----lai: Pus one spare. "c SSS CASH FOR QUALITY CONTROLLER For a hig h qual ity sa ilboat munuf. co. Knowledge & ci.pcr 1n electncal & mcchan1r ul i.ystems nt'ress. as well as a knowlcclxc & JUUi?· menl 1n carpentry f1n1shing. Ab1l1ly to perform w /m1n1mal superv1s1on & rers rc:<a'd <.:all Rob Gates. al Wcslsarl Corp >19·9711. REAL IEST A. TE SELL HOMES LEARN Investment Sales Openings exist rn Orange ;md Ne ... port Dcar h for E x p e r 1 (' n , c •• d Salc!.>perl!On!'. mlcre:.lccl 111 1mcslment:. Wt· ·'l'll .ind list S.'J to &"> m1l1tl)11 dollars Pl'r month. ~ales quadrupled l;1st yeur. Prcst1~1ou~ of 1 tn·~. HO to iO to 100 '. t•c11nm1!'o!>1on ~phi. '1dl·O an<I p('rsonal traimng. Write to Don Berm an. Pres 1<!Pnt, Quarl Place l'ropcrl1C's, 1400 Quail St .. Suite l3S. Newport Dca1·h, Cuhr Realtor to h e:i d Rl'D I F..-;tutc 01v1son. :\loi.t be able to orgJn1 t c & i.upern~c ~alt·~ fonc Xlnt renumeration & a:. \ISl. 641).7117 RECEPTIONIST \ltr:icu' ,. o'er Ill. for llt:,\LTll SI'\ \\\• "'111 1r;i111 rri:h1 pt•r"1n lnr rJ''' run Joh ~t • 1; ''l' 12lhr, I i.;:! !JSbl RlCEPTIOHIST GAL FRIDAY Jnr ll n 1tt•.1llnr :llu~t hl• .• 1trac11\I· "' Jll l"J ,,1nt phone \ouc Lile I) 1110.: ..,,ilary nptll ,\v11lv 111 1~r,on Wl·•I & Thur ~ on I\. Ja11 5 & Ii •• r11·r 12 '"' noun :!:!:11 l llr<M1khur''. llon11n.it1t11 CkJ1•h I\ t·:Y llf:ALTOH~ ---- RECEnlONIST (Hr ,.irfb<1.1l rn If \nu h.1\l• lh1· .1h1lth lo h.111clk '' hu'' "" 1trhhonrcl 1'.10 1ln hh· I) phllt h,1' •• ,1 "h''''''Olllt• lr11nt 0(1 .JJI 1w.11 ,Jn('e °"ork "'''II 1rn cll•r "''"!'ollr<' Ill\•' public· 111ntal1 & Jrt' l''lrt•mc·h· punctu.il call \nn Srn11h. 11on c•omm c n s urate return pArman"nllY LIDO 14, & trlr. Ullman . quallfiable for Class II German Shepherds . 7 mos " " Good used furn/refr11(s W/C)(per. Our employee:. Service Station Allen-license SJ hr 30 hr per female, (31 3 mOl>·2m, If. scaled attractive tu~ & frus & stoves 546·0768 sails. Uall No. 2611, ru•·•· knowofth1:.ad. SALES dant, .exper 'd. t'ull or wk.b36·53S2. • &16·0142,64S·2ij()I Mrop. meetin~ nirline rrg~cd, cover, a11k111i.: H 11uahf1cd rush n Imel P:l(t limc. Apply Arco I 0. requircml'nls. Pre· Musical $1,495. Nuplos S:\bol, rcsumeto Ad !l/121. Daily SPECIALIST Station, 17th & Irvine. W1\ITRESS . exper'd hr~ D 0 G 0 BED IE NC 1': vent loss & theft! For a lnstrunwrrts 8083 ydlow, standnrd rig1:t•tl, l-'1lol, PO Box 1560, <.:.M . CM. 7 : 30 t 0 3 ; 30. Good CLASS to start Wed. J an personalized tug enclose ••••••••••u•• ••••••••• .i.lnl rond. Asking SW5, 92626. personality. Plt'ase :ip. 19, 7:30 pm. Nwpt/I rvinc• WDllp:iper, fabric vr Conn Min·O·Mutic C'lec !163 29<>_2_ __ _ J.C . PENNEY CO Service SIJtron He lp. ply· urea.S-16-4928 "Day Glo" pa1>er & we organ. excellent condi· L<Jser 1113541. Lite 'him·. 24 fashion Island or,\~C1rm. e3.13E1'11l1~rrbo'd r 1;,vodr. Ice c.rca_m J\~o) SCOTTISH Te rr. AKC. ~ \~111. bat•k &. tr'.m .~our lion, $600, P p 532·1259 xlnl rond. S725. 631 IWJ H~wport Beach u ., 76-10 Edinger/\\ c llB 1.1gs Or try ll\O c.irds -------• ··ll"r .. Costa Mesa · · -yrs. mall'. show qua I. back lo bac:k Fender Telccaslcr Gurlar u ' " Are you ambitious'! • . • ----Waitress. Apply in person ~~007__ PRICE~ & i.uper Hcvcrh J\mp. Trnclt• wun11•cl. 11 11\ c If you arc we have an SE WIN G MAC H INE Stavro's, 5930 W. Coasl "---t y 80 .. S S2eaor3 SS $650.673·2586bdlipm llob1c1~.want Lascr ope nlnR 1n major ap OPEHATORS. lmmed. Hwv N A rTCT o OU "' Pl ran cc s. s cw 1 n g openrnxs nr O.C Airport. · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• I/S tai::. Sl.tiOl':i. ,;.----8 0 87 u75-2s.t3 -mach1nns ~.home elec '.l c L'IB"I •"' S .;\ILS."' · 'ood c; k ·1 "'---sWas .. -r tl!ltaKsSL.50l'u s -...-L "' ...... I>.. .-actress F I oc tar ~ ~-nc tOormorcSl.-IOea ••••••••••••••••••••••• 26'Endeovor R.E. Sales lrorut·s dept. 1-.:xper. J)rc S40·3684 Apply aft lpm, Sid's Blul Runs. 963·5373 Sales Tax Included So West Pel Center, w Moonng 675 0085 JOIH OUR GROUP f'd. Xlnl co. benefits. Beet. 107 2lst Pl. N. U NO CA RD? W or I d • s I o r I:<: s l . -- We have an opening ror A • .P10Pn~Fr'1· nl01~'~ r .~po .. ~ SHIPPING OFFICE W "ITRESSES o~dr':atr/fr~~~s··~it~r Draw your own or send Bristol / McArthur S A CLIPPER 26. 73. t'u 11 a 11 <: ' P e r i c n c c d ., , ... ,._.. "' Clerical help wanted .,. «7 11:11 name. address, phone & 556-1994 galley. hC'ad. 7.5 Suzuki. i.alcspcrson Ou1sl and Equal opp employer m/f Typing & fi lrng in Cooks & Dishwasllen ----""---we'll make one card per p• & 0 8090 lmmnc. xtras. $5,!ISO. tni: workrni:: conditions ----------< purchasing-shtppin g Exper prer'd. App,ly Mix Terrier. I :rear w/ tait Add 25<each. •Cll'IOS l"CJaft~ 213·5925793 an_, e•cell'·nl l'O m dept. Assisting purchas 2-5 pm Denny s do" h o u se. "OOd Se d ch 'ko r ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------" ' ' SALES agent. 2031 S. E. Marn St R t t 529 A d " ... denr lei·. e<: r money 0 · Baldwin Acrosonic piano Boats, Slips/ mr!>sions pht. We need a ~elf-starter lrvine.546·2901. p~~S~~~iemenl~~m a :'.!~:d3~g, lo,cs chldrn PILOTPRl .... TIMG Very fine cond. Mul>I Docks 9070 CALL rOR 1male or fem I to ~el up """ "" . sell. Reas. ofr 551·2083 ••••••••••••••••••••••• INTl':HVll::W ownsales forcewithour SR.SECRETARY Wrutressesfull.&plime ;:;l,a10 1 shcp.fcm <1 'i P.O.BoxtSOO Slrp Space fo r 2:L•'I~' 673-7601 hclp. Trl'menrl ous Mature. l'Xpcr nrc Laguna Jon1t1on. O\e1 m~ old. Shol!I. Playful Cosla l\lesn,C~9W26_ Lewis r 1anoservltf', ha~ fibcr~la!'o' s arl ho ~L. ANYTIME f u 1 u n • Call NOW 1 l'rof r cenc: y w /f 1 g r n 18. I '\ r coffee s hop l'" !J6:!.J53.I l:le , d :lft , h Id.., 1 K , , sev.eral recond1t 1oncd Ne" port lk-;H'h li7!l.i:!l'I &IOO..t32or:H8 HISl form al ofc C' ~t. Call per Refsrcq'd.Charlae:. -------H r. er. 0 · ' ~I> upni:ht piano ... Aml'l'l{'a -v R.E.SALES ----&>11erly r;1, ufl 101\~t Chrlr.51!1·03.'il. "TheFonz".adorJIJll·k1l · ~~3~~~; ct:o ,:?t:\\~tlO. & f;urope:111.·~·het·k m) Ous1 nc!'os m.111 .tc'll'('' Full or 11 tim•· rur :1 ---------• t>~5580o. len. male. 1 mo to ~oorl · '' • '· prices Lllf(unu -1!1·114440 Nc"i>ctrl :-ilq1 l11r ::7' S,11\ i.:rowmi: ofr Xlnl !'oJlt•, & SECRETARIES -'-WAREHOUSE homc.s.57·64~ Hua I l!i'.I :1t1>17 uv1•:. 1•omm opµort 11n1l1t•., Stock/Mail Clerk WORKER • i\Jllrquc mirrort·d \unrl~ Sllneway(irand 5't. · 5461102111'\I :1i111l.1\-. t:n1que opportun1t1cs Fash. l:sl Financial Sorv E".'per helpful h 1 1101 furniture 8050 3.1opd hil'yclc• R:>.J :\1;1ill,i Eliony. xlnt l'On1t s..: llD I-' \'.ill··~ ;irt•.i -·' · u ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wlilnul c·rrh l::n):lish 536()() 1;;n 0:1:w Boats, Stora9~ yu90 ijiti. 13:!2 avaclable for . firm. Mu&t ha,•c ex per. ncC'ess. 2031 S. E. ~IJ111 jumpin~ ~addle Colfce --.----••••••••••••••••••••••• Research Asst. mature' woman. part lime. Call 494·4·130, 8/\M-1 lA~ Typists Se-c~taries Generol Office WECA...._ llELP YOU~ Restaurant Help Now accepting appr.ra t1ons for days. Hrs based on expencncc Mu~t app IAI IJJ... lympersonbl~n 2 1 pm IYll• Asl< for Vin 1'4l'o Bell . .,_\..,ll\O\\,\-,'>()(lt\IL'I ti~S So C'oa ~t llwv l.agunJ 8carh · Penonnel Ag&ncy Rl>:.taur<1nt I~ \DOR i-:·s 1i. acrt'plrn~ J11plrrat1nn~ l•1r floor lll'r\011111'1 \pph 3 1'.\I i l'\I ''·"" ... (' I- ru:r \It, :0-1\1.K.., 111 '1" ... I .. n \'I ,. JI) IS.. " :1 n rll•nll'nll' ,\pprox :!O hr;. 111.·r ~l't'I.. :-.;., '''I"'' nee ~IU!>l IJ.• J\,111 h~l"-t'Cn JllAM i i'\! 1\pply a l 1"010 MJt Corp. rnK·-!171 or 1!12 :t)!lll 3i23 Birch Sl. N.B. 557·0045 ioor, Employer Relaincd SECRETARY ORDB ENTRY Sharp, phone person:th· ty. l)Pinl? 50 wpm. Com- vuter order processml'(. Shipping coordination. Letter ty11in1?. & frhng. Apply in person, CPO In dus1nes. 2100 E . Wils hire RH RELIEF Ave. Santa Ana. Refs req 'ti . 369 San St.Irvine. 546·2ikll **I BUY** !bl w, matching encl thls. Spon1nq Goods . 8094 001, T STOR t\ (; r. s:1t1 Miguel Or, N.ll. Suite WOMAN 35·50, hours. 5 lo Good used 1-'urmlure & Ofc drsk & ~·l.rr. M1:.c in-••••••••••••••••••••••• monthly, fl't'l' la11n1•h. 200. 8 P~1. Tidy up house, J\pplranccs OH I will fantrurn.&lti·2.'>93 __ Rlfle-ShotCJUn Sa 1l /l'wr Ncw p1~11 rook dinner for bachelor. sell or SELi. for You. ., Cas lawnmowers com pl i 7 Jap Hunlllll? ll1Jlt• DunC'~ f'4·1·0SIO STOCK RM CLERK must be pleas ant. salary MASTERS AUCTION 'ovc~haulcd. $.1S. ~a Call S60. llnlran maclc t i - Westsai l Corp. has a open. Plcasecallti-10·1667 646-8686 & 833-9625 ~18·8322 goagc srngl~ ~~O~S!Ul'l Transportation vacancy for a pers on wtvenl. rrb ~-!162-6591. ••••••••••••••••'•••••• • with Dt least I yr cxper. Woman over 65 W1l'Ur lo SAV~· JAN. SALt:. Nt:w TV Radi C~s SllA•/ rn s tockroom work s hare CdM hom e & used furn, appl's , IA.IYIT'S Hifi,St~no 8098 Rent , 9120 Manne stockroom ex w i>a me. Rm, board & rru&c. Wrlson'i. Bargain COLD OUTSIDE ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• per preferred, but will nominal .salary to n~ht l\ook 2 Store!> 5-15 & 1114 pro f m :i d c 3 Io " consider sailing buffs person. Nrght or day ph w !!Ith, c ~I 642 7930 & ,.. Teac 2050, reel to red t:ipr Oat,,un CamP<'r Toll with a real l<nowhow AP· 673-4i25 548·3262 Hearthstone gas lol! :.et. deck. $.100/bel>t olll.'r .\ I <.:ond1t1on . rompletc w1grale, must 645-6297 S400 !162 1i:111 ~ly ID the recept1onrst al WO:'tl E~ occde1I for WATERBED Complt•tc ~ sc-en lo he a pprcc 'd I --- - 27S McCormrt'k Ave. hoosccleaning:.enrte . h Q , 11 m l:ml 23" W. I ll l:nit loats&Mcrine Motorccycles/ Cosla Mesa. R_...... R & ~ tr. n MIA . I mo~ o { I" ....... '-' Orrg r.,..;-nt Scoot.-rs -•es OCJ Mop s.i~o l'Jlue. !>ell SJtlO u " prrce. 11::'T""',. •• -" 548·0757 1213H3-1 3H6(J -193·8268 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • ,_ _________ <nMrol 90 I 0 ·; 1 lloncla :uiO. Cll ti.IMM1m1 9150 \" 1~ ... l h k h h :\Ian h \ o.fel chair ••••••••••••••••••••••• J ""'--1,'."t & run'" lt~u. n1•\\ STUDENTS ,~an''" wo u:-Y •R ' • 32.000 BTliH natural gal> '"'"' v " school boy.'s htil p, r;no~e ~ ~-r cerlmg heater w/rcmotc RADIO Control electrrr SWO 1!12-0167 Re¥ul11r or Reoccurring sen!or. c111ien 812 201' 540-2219 arte 5 p m -rontrol. SSO. 96-175!1. Model ~ 8oat. O\'er 3 ft ~ccd cash '7ti Yam:rh.1 pll1me work. Hrs :!AM· 963·2963 6 Pc Liv Rm sel. contem· long. s iren. waler can mott•rscootrr 8:!7~ 111 m llAM or 5PM·l2 .l\t1d .__~! po butcher hlk arms, Trffanys private Ursco non._2 ~pceds. etc. Very Call LockC'4!H;·Ji!ll rught & weekends. M.rc:..__se must sell. 499 .• 1430 members hrµ & S250 sophisticated .toy. Over ------ Csll lmmcdiatcly ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------~.l!13ti8 536·6751 Sl800 rcplaccmonl . Full Urcss •74 li'f 7~>0 557-0061 Antiques 8005 Inner Space klug i.rze Sacrifice s.500. Include~ Su1.11k1 &ur:ht rww J:i11 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• water bed heater & Moving Mall/bx s prg everything. 675·3ti62 or '7ti, xlnl t•oncl, nl'W 111. W d I d vibrator. S17S 67S·3772 S'iS. l! Cof "lbl/mat end 64~·2200 new tuneup. °""" t1r1·' On er Qft Ibis. ma rltlc lop!>. lamps. S1200. 642·91!7!1. G:IO fl2fJ:! Of Antiques! ~:~~~"/0~~~~ ~~c~ ... t~~~s~ g~i1:~~1~or:i + mr~c furn ,;:~~MG 72 Yamaha 17!'1. Ctu0<l tlcrl H UGE wareho u se pncc~.must scll.63112ij!lp . CLASSES hike. $250/lt :.t o/t;..1 surrcnrsor :i 11 f.\';\' ----.-·~Q~ office • 7 :I, full or p time :'th·"i Secretary Rtic~pt1on1sl \\•rd" Cmw lfosp. GUI ;.nd Dental Assii.t;inl for 0 OVe r l O a cl (.' • t • St C M 518 5')/i5 New p O r l Be LI C h t 11 er• · ' ... · Orthodontr:>l. 642-4611 Interview Hrs 9·3: :10 crammed with over 500 ---. -lnball :\1ach111cs for sale, SSA-J6IO. music boxes. nickelo"I Pl' \\alnut Bdrm !tel all l'n1 n opcr;.ticfl . Startinl(Jan.t0,ID77 -· ----- deon piunos. cirrns or Heaul1lu~ l'Ond1trun · FIR EB,\l,L", c·la~S ll Sponsored by the Jlodaka 00, 1!0<)(ll·ond RN'S SECRETARY 3723 Blrl·hSl. N.B Charg& Po 1itlon F.ffiC'1~nt and ;1('('Urate \\'t·rk1l.11 : • .\ W1•1•l.1·n1h 1;s WPJ\I. It ~horthJnd. l'halh·n~inl! VC>'<1t11111 f•ir ~·are c r or re n l c d t".1!).1ble 1ncll\ uliual\ "cw port Fin a n t• 1.1 I ~Int twnrl11~. msvr.inn: L't•nler 644 6451 for appl Porte Superior t-1 l:i ~urw·nor \ H' '\t'"-Jll)rt lkh trl:! ;!110 gans. Wl•ll c lci nk<. ___ 5-U!7115 money makC'r. i"l'c<ls R/\LBO/\ Sl25.7Yri.ohl Telcphonl' Salesi:1rl, & • ' ' 1 ht ~.,, · f'OWFR SQli'ADR0:-4 Outside Sale~ Rep for gra.ndf_a ther_ c locl:t.. Dining Hm UJblc 8 cha1r<., ~~gr . r~~a~rL 'v";.'1 1~Io~ to teach.yo'u1hc 1Jrope'r& Call 493 li07:! l(ourmet foods. F Lim{'. rascinatmg antiques. whd Walnut anllquc 2 HOCK EV·· xlnt ('C)nd . safe handlmg or ull Lype:-. '711 Yamohr11011 Must ~ .,ale!> oriented Ove: Sl.OOO.OOO Worth wash c ~ & rt r y 4' /-;. S.'iOO. ,\n<t fal'IOry new of boats For details call 4100 m1 U1rt •Str~l'I Call 751·1893. Amencan lnlerna~ional hkenew Lampq. er'ld la · " 673 5717 Call 54A-~22· ----~allei:Jcs; 180~-T Kctler· hie. cJr, 615 :!955 C(lnd. "SP1\Ct:TDI E I • Tfle......_e Sales. rng St.. lrvrne. Tel. ---P I a Yer · S:; .'i 0 ---------MotorHon1 ·.• .~.·.~.9.• '·'------\ \ II, rm \ T n I (i (, f. R Wo o d"or l..10 1!. SECRETARY Ex~r·d. purl tlml•. 5 hr.; per day. 'l R 1\n·h1tct•t bwtli('r. 640·0t;.M ____ , n 1-: Lir;;;; Work from 754-1777 Open Wed thru :\lurre\' Pool T bl • cust. i "SEEBURC. .. Jukebox. ~e~~~ CS~~\~0013~~°'/;elFlt2 Sale/Reni ' 9 J 60 Sal 9A•.Jto4 P.•J ."1s1t ' Sof~. G1b•on R"fr1". •· poorcond. S250orofrcr. ' }Our home M.!ltlng .ippls. " " " u ~ ' r> ex J long, sails beaul1(ully •••••••••••••••••••:'=·~ ror our s a les o;tarf Sep. f>'tr Much rnore crry.55il·04Zl. II 91''1 Make orrer or trade for 26'GMC MOTORll!T-.ft-: RlCEPTIOHIST I TYPIST i\rc·uratr t)p1'l, m.it11n• ~rsonahtr & fronl 0U1Cl' ;rp!X':iranc 1· ,\hit• tn deal ple&.l\nntly "' 'mtor tra( r1c & heJvy trl••phonl•I> R'l'cenl exl)('r prerd STACOSWITCH. IHC. 1139 Baker. <.:~ta Ml•sa 549-3041 Equal Oppor t::mployrr f1hl'r,l!IJ" t•h·1 tr1t·;il \I ,1 r I I) •' I ' ,1 l' h l S • 67:'.> IJ!U ~,\Ll-:"i \N 0 1110 tlll, CO oifn, l't,1-:"n' OF ~fONfo:Y plu~ l'J~h honui,,, ... rnni::I' hcnl'flb to mu1urc m· d1~1ctual m bc;1ch ;1rcu. Rc~nrdles s of e~· prrrcncl', wrrll• I( F'. Hl·1HI. Pn•s .. American Luhncnnt..s Co .. Box 696, n o yton. Ohio 454JH. SECRET ARY P /T \Jr) 1nl( e\ c·nrnjl & "'kncl h~ <.:a ll S5fl 1121 Stclary. Comm1ss1on & •UNLOADING• fi.l-Hl".127,1).11·16.!I 2 drapei;, lined. grtyl'll. ?'>fl7S.3662or645 22110 Slpsti Wntrr;1Lt'.~ l'.'l Bonus+ llO!>pltahzat1on 1\men cun Oak & rmc. 2' ... . .. tll\/ ltl.1 26\t Th J 6lh !l Slmmonsslecp"rSor:i t • -o. 6. s10. 96 . lo ...... Man'ne . '· henef1l• for the right nrs an · · tlm " c..,.,, -· 64" 1""7 N t ~ 1700S G d S \ S45. 645-0045 -,,....,•&12 9000 e~':_5_· --~~-nt 903 0 --.... "" ' wp -pc:rson 121:1 l8i2 14-'2 Wh 1 ·1 ranh · · ·' 1 .. "P"',.··-G 1 1 " SE.l"Rt'f' .. ny ---oe11ueto1 ctrac1• Tnmmerlawnmower ••••••••••••••••••••••• .:i c ,,11r ·1:1,)(lnl .ron ~ E •A" TELLERPfTIME ----9drawcr clrcsscr w m1r 1 · Siii :i 1 J''3X. Fash bl Financial Sef\ AnlQ Moho11anv rnml v. r o r S6;, l> b I he cl S2tJO ~· r ol<llng !\tuhogany boat :.. I>~ I), • u,c .'> ... firm. Typrn~ 70 wpm . .,h Rranrh ofc seek1> bonda ~st otrer Cail fl.16·56i3 w/fr~mc. $50. Poker lbl fi75 62J7 fodder. $50. several ui.ed P11farl~. :\ B 1133 t6•, .• - 90·100. 369 San M11tucl ble Tcll,<'r ll• w o ~k on<1pm $:IO Student clchk $15. "'-d ..,~ • OO_W_h_ old sails.$10.21'Uaham.i '76 Southwmcl i!l' .•• ~Y Dr N R Su 200 p llme f.xµcr. pref d ---. °" rm ·~·l .. 1 · as er boat cover ~. 67S·•lll02 ~l' , . . rt<' . Conine! l11ldu icrranove Appllancu 80 I 0 !161Hl62 SIOO. dinette sel S50 . cqpd, xlnl rond. •l&l)r SECRETARY /RECEPT. (714 > 644·7255. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Water cooler ~o. t.:1mps 00 Johnson 20 Jl.r . out NpBch. 64.'i 004$. ;-;~ Construction expcr. Sta· Western Federal Savin~5 . REFRIGERATORS GcrGCJt Sale 8055 & m1sr. 847-0572 board elct'tnc sturt $275. rui:NT '77 OVER~I> ble. O.C. Airport orea. 2744E.Coastllwy,CdM W/\SHl•:llS·DRYERS •••••••••••••••••••••••Beautiful 50 Jtal Barrell ~nftr~~·JO P.M ._ 29' i"ULLY i-;q'l'.il . R es. 1Hi8·746.S . Bus I::qualOppor f:mployer Recondltions·Repros & Hlde·a ·heri , divan. Aquonum for home or 1oafJ Power 9040 rn:ASONAllLP../ t'l'. 54().2842. TEL . Part Ume. No sell-Frgt Damage. Guar/Oel. hotplates. lam!)ll. copier. restaurant. Sc1111oned for ..... ;••••••••••••••••• rio-1-1227 SALESCUAK SECRETAHY Ing. no appt's. Survey to 29 v0rsUin~LanAgepC~S· ~tt~5~r:.l~:J:,~g;tM~any ~e~h~d trotcal hrish. 1~4 Boston Whaler, l J'.'J". s.J c. J-{l-7 1_A_m_er_,~ .... n-T¢1-. Recept. Fee Paid F :1 bric exp r . n t• 1-. SH & typing. gen'I ore Business owners. 8 Hr 1""111 ~ • oa cus re-75 IS h.p. Johnson motor 2'1x6<r. 5 Stat /\dull, I~. Glamour Spot! An11helm & Cost.a l\fesa. work. Small electronics week. SS p /hr. Mr. 1815Ncwport Bl. CM surER SALE g1sler, misc. 640-8585 11n with only 10 hours. S1'100. l.o rrntnl. $25,00(,t. ·~h Call Mary 646·4040 <.'O needs eHiclent girl. Howard. 54lM8t9 CALL 548.77!!0 .,.. h' 5. firm. Replacement value 492·0&11 493·2514 cv"~ Exclusive firm Is seek-1----------1 .,veryt 1ng must go• S2100 Call642-4482 _ ...:_ ____ ._7 . '1ng enthus1aslic person Call for 1.1ppt. 545·7108• Typin!J, riling, general Kenmore wn ~hcr and Oak bed & dresser, elec FIR f. W 0 0 D P I n e -· -----Trailer• Trani 9 I 70 for their o(c variety pos SALES ofc: rull or part time. dryer . electric. Both typewriter, household & $95/chord stackecl, dcl USED BOAT WANTED .••••••• .' ••••••••••••• ~. AlsoFecJol>s Coll Bon· INSIDIESALIES SECRETARY 1880 Whltth:r Ave"" $J00.6.'ll·20l3after6pm decorator.items.,plants. S40-7!Yl3 646·1413 l8·2Z' l /O hbC'rJ?lass. 3llxSSpartanTrlrttm~ r'lic Bell. 8.13-~00. Dennrs P /Time. 10.4pm. Mo n _C;;M;.ii4ii·5;:;30-p;miii._iiiiiiiiiiiiiil , . Misc fumJtre. 1-ree cor Old flat top trunk 42 .. de-(1sh/sk1. w/trlrSS2 0282 $2,ooo h~lofr : t.rei~~n~~ 1~\~l~~~n;~~ c~:~t::::n~°:~~n lhru Fri. General orrlce • '"~°!~h"ctr ~~t~~ti~o~d~· ~r.gh& J... Ltl~~~~" D~~'. ep, 32'' across. sso Lrg 22· TrOJ1tn Sen ~m·ic. _ f'or lnro<'all Sl7 omr.; M1chelsonDl' with the world's largest ~kills required. 83.1-l8S2, TYPISTS/SEC~$ lton sso Call548·39<1f> Sat/Sun 9to5 bureau w 6 d"'rs $30 bnlt tonk. Vlffo . ju1<L • & m06l rapidly growing _!l_t_o_s _______ 1 Meke ·your NEW 77 a -· · --------493-6072 hauled. palntt•d & l'ni; Autos for Safe l ltlCEl'TIOMIST monufacturer of quality SECRET.a.RY good yeur for you! We LGE Mayl:ig Washing 2ND HANDER 120 1-~ CARPET NEW 70 ·ds tuned. CGJ\ lr.hJ)<'<'llOn ••••••••••••••••••···~· for small ullhoat co. in kit bo11ts (as well as com· "' can help you ('lennup Machine, 18 mo old S!O 23RD C. M. Tues.Sat. red nylon plush. 52 )~ds. S3SOO. S.S9-<1390 ~1/ • S. E. Sanla Ana. Dkkpn11 plelel. Minimum 2 yr!'i PURCHASING your bills. 11lvc you en ~ to 5 Behind Feed Bari\ gold. Sacrifice. must 5ell '76-25' SKI PJACK 11 hr Cknslcs 9510 & secretariul 11kllls re· exp er . bu 1 Id I ng Responslblo per1on oppor. U> grow thru ex· 6'5-5006 s ••••••••••••••••••••• .. q'd. ~lo S650 mo. Send fibergtsss boat Isl with needed !or purchasln11 PClfiUre to various types Washer & elec d,rycr Sl2S 'The GClr'Clp Sale" Twin \'Olvos, loaded. Cull 192l <.:hcv Truck Rc-"\or). resumer/o Ms. Mazzeo. wood 1nterinr (~). positlon.Goodflaureap· ofwork&specl1lo111lgn· both. Or will sell Cloftlnl CJo .... 1!W~t1nghouseSldebyslde 495-u75 blc. all parts a\'orlable. 1810 E . Borchard, Sonla Knowledge of plumbing, tilude and at least menl" In different r<>m· S('parately.008 J4G2 •NOTHrNGOVERSS• re(rlg, $400: Kenmore loah.ltetwt/ Motor runs . Askiru; Ana.Ca 92705 electrical, engines & .60wi>m typlna req. Must ~ry,es. Wet worlcd for & lkyct.s IOlO 17180r1ngc. Corner Wuhcrl l2 lb. $7$, 2 bar Q1iartw 9050 SU!SO. 874 W.19lh St. C~ carpentry. A well or-be able to work lndepcn· wt 1 YB!, ~wrr 11Your ••••••••••••••••••••••• Orange & 17th Open stools. S'lS pr. Astij)rt. od· .. ••••••••••••••••••••• 645-1691 ~ Recepffoftlit 1anlted,pcrsonable•elf-denlly. Should be ~~lln\ ctt11~.! 'y:: USE D. REBU I LT &c e 1 0-4very Wed/Thurs/Fri d5ps·.'!·ends. 848·431\ aft DOMTIUY • 5 D .ova A W'"ek for !ll.tl't.er Who e"'Ti """· Syslemsorienled (Or fin(' • 1,. Un, ... •"m"th'inn tn ... fl ? •1 "" •v ..... t t h I a""' .. 'na. Guar•nteed. All tu"""•, .a. 10 .a.y ""'" "" " " ,, ""' ,. h i l I I M t pie, detnll work paper \m1ng o pure 91 n1 ,..,,111 .. ,..,a "' _.. Cl lfl d d d t II h!v~' .ti!r'I~ ~~bile'~!. work. who ts an ex· dept. For lm mcd con• Call Today, make us J>8118, repairs. Trad~·lns Hor9" 80'0 SCRAM l£l't' "~" ~ 01..:!'.!_L lations. Sales & Ughl llC· pertencf'(t iiailor will find sldera"on, please coll your flrsl new friend in accepted 631-2101 ............ ••••••••••• "'L ..J JOIN • counllng. Apply in a r~wordin& future. Call Carolyn $511 -190~. '77, •NEW·USEDBIKES• For Sale: 2ponles &show ANSWERS t\ltnew. exctualvc JON/\ .- peraon nnly aft lpm. Bolf GatH ul Wc!!l.31il Mc: d I c ti 1 0 e v It' c • Buy-Sell· TrAde quarterhori1e. YACHT & SA If. I NG OPPORTUNITY Regis Hail'8tyles. South Corp. <7l4)54!Ml711. Laboratorlca. 3 1DB·M, ~O~ off i c e • Pnrt.s&Repolrs CallS.7·109l. t...caocy -llublt CLUB. Cull I lluw ull knock11 often whrn y Coast Plau,Colllll Muo.1---------·1 _"_1_rpo_r_l_L_oo_p_o_r._c_M_.I 0 ove r load Skolebo&rd!I. l\nl\O Om('lct C lubhOU!i l', l'n rt y. USC l'l'llUlt-11cllln.i lli>ilY E.O.E. Cycle &.Co. 2488 Newport R ... Offft'fnCJ B•\C:Jlt:LOR Cruiael' Pilol t:h111111fk d AtlC~ SALESLADY• Exper'd. Blvd.C. M. G42·19l0 RcR nuckio~in Qunr\cr Wtwn n mnn rrdlcul(IS u NO RENTAL 1''1-;KS rem·h th. oranire ~ Have ~mcthlnf( you wont Mature. r1tlme. Apply In SKRfTARY /LecJel 557.0061 ---------·• fl o 1 lj" show c '< \\uOlllll for •h11ppin11 1111 FREE Salllnai l1::c11onJ1. mnrket :~· to 5<'11 Cluallled lldli do penion, 8uus lnlema· Gd •kllls. Salary com· Lntervlew llra 9·3:30 Clrla Schwinn blkr. nr\'l'lr 1>Cril'nCl'll t>rdl•r rld1•r du) llOd bu) lna.r nothlna. Limited number charter l'hon(' 642 :is1S::::!, It well -c .. 11 NOW• tlonal Girt Shop 2043 mensuralc w /ell pr. Ph S?23 Bll"Ch St, N.B. used. 3 spd. S1tl Call w nblllly 642 5465 or )Ou can be ~un• hu'"' :i membenhlps iavallobla. -•• • 642·.5678. We3tcllfr Dr. N.D ' 496--04111.aguna Nlguel --------• 1133-:w.9. 642-3411 BACHELOR CALL NOW (714 1496-6681 -•• l ,,.~--.,: ~ -=_:_~ .... _7 ;e -- ·-~~~--.. -.... --~ -. ' ! I I I ; I ' I I I I 11 •' ~I I 1: I ·~ ' 0: I I l I 1. ' 11 t! Truck& ...................... Wit} trude '74 Honda 25 ftl(jl()l"Cycle In l\lnt c:ond for used truck. 642-1738. "14·C·l0. Chev PU. 3SO V Ens. Auto, 8' bed w/cnp .Rvt pty. s:isoo I' 'lf):9818 ··~Chevy 6 tyl tru(•k cmpr. Nds work S600 o bstofr 631-1291aft5 'Ii ToYOTA SR 5_P_k_u-p.-1 $pd. rud10. buck. scats 4 lf~· 493 llS!lO ~l Chev a 1 lon P.U. Auto. Wednesday January S t9n DAILY PILOT DtJ AMtos. Imported Allfo•, lmpori9-d A..tos. Import~ -----....................... ······················· ...................... . ~~.~ .... !~.~~,~ ... ~~ ....... ~ ........... !?.~~ ~~-~ .......... !?!.~ !~:!r.!' ....... !?!.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• TOP Datsun 9720 '00 J&K XKE. 49,000 ml '611 Po r 11 t h.e 9 111 •• ·m VW HUJC. StronK run DOLLAR ••••••••••••••••••••••• Red Roa:dsttt. Xlnt cond. ~o~~· mint cond. run~. new brks, coib '76 ... ~~c GR.,MLI.... '74 Ctarnoro, p /b, pi s. air '68 JIT u .... t un .. V8, AC, ...•....••••....•••..• •··••••················ ..•..................•. "' 7 Ford '90SC.,.ro H40 , "'ID DRIVE .a. Call 495·ll7S ................... 3462/$31).()il'Jl ,\!!king $1150._Ph 494-4624 "''"' .:; " ........ .. "" "' Xlnt cond. $3095. Call Origownr. $1,000 FOR Cl.1-:AN LITTLE Mcndo 973t 1975 TARGA '68 ,vw Bu~. Red. 14,0()0 6 Cylinder: .aulomulH S4.9·2S39. Mike. fWO !\157 IMflORTCARS ••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Chorola~e Drown, rm $600 cash /firm . lrllnsmiuion, rndio.----------------SAVE A LOT loaded, clean. lo m1. 4941947 J oan ~~~~·. ':i~~~!~iu~~~: Chnr<Mt •9920 olft t9U ALL MODELS Sll<>P •. Cl)"-• uA in: musl tic II. Cull wkdyg .7, 0 h -0-W--roof rack. •••••••••••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "' .,,,. Lou979-233.1 ~ as er 4 r. gn. '74 I I ,. '75 L•ucoLu BARWICK DATSUN AM /FM. 111r. lo m1, xlnt A6A46SE186.150 mpa 14 "oupl'. 1" " ~ 188JS BEACH Bl VO HUNTINGTON BEACH 1142 1781 -5-10-0442 NEWPORT DATSUN I h P ~.,686 AMll-'M. a.l~reo. crulllt! TO--.. COUPE ~an Juan Coph,lrano '62 llrdlp Ca 1nolcl "Int ti ape h 673-57Ui ~ I II hi I rr '"" ·• 11 t 700 •-· --contro, l l w • • r, A • ""·II power 1n"lud1n,. 8ll-JJ75 493·ll75 •110 H__,,_ __ .._cl l'OOu 11ruou ~ r .\'C!I . vw B Ol"l.. own•r SJ"SO .... ... .. , -•• ,.. t»tl 6837 6S us. sem1-c:amper, " ~ • .. vinyl top. llll wheel. Coma Mna 645·5700 -$7 511 or l>t·' l o(( c r . 673-3388 cruise control, AM/FM -•'68 Por:.cht" !112 .\lust 0028080 '71).9 pasi. Chev Stn Wgn. tape, 111r t·ond. look" 14 lltaida RX3 Cou1>e, 4 sell. Reduced lo $56115. tit.> vw <.:ampl'r, very AT. PS, PB. fae AC. 4 nu &ood! (! .. 1c.oirmt:Cl new pa1nl. radio, gd ---d tires, gd cond. 5219S. Ph Autos, lmporte SPECIALS 62111 .i Uoor. 4 !>peed 173571~ I spd, under wrnty, very Call l_l_l64_2·_554_1 ____ 1 l' I ea n. mu:. t s e 1 J tires. $1,000/o(r. Aslc:'g $6416. clt'an 837·3202 '76 Por 912 E. 8900 mL Air. $1300/hest offer 646-1957 Buick 991 o 962-3938 GUSTAFSON -8780 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......._...._~~-~~-Gener~ 9701 HOW$2895 ll88 oov1-:sT1n:1·:T l'l•ar Mat•i\rthur Mercect.s S.1t1 9740 snrf. Merco tape. As· ·oovw A SJ 000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '60 Corva1r. 2dr , auto, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1iume lse. Ownr 645-0045 675~77u9;· ev'es.. '7i Buick Opel l:tuzu. Red New llrr1>. xlnl body, LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Bea c h Blvd Hu ntingto n Beach "15 Dodge i,; T PU. Sll:p •••• •••••• • • • • • • • • •• • •• '72 Porsche 914 1. 7 AM/Fl\T, ulr. 4 sp. 120 mi runs xlnl. $525. 962·0362 side, c11tm Ptunt & whls RARE '62 . $15bo.5~ 5099afts__ MASERATI 1958 MIZ I 90SL Xlnteondlllon Vol•o 9772 S3.900flrm.646·7631. '70 Monte Carlo, new 842-8844 S.1900 673-6230 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1966 El Camino, $650 3500 GT COUPE & J:imboree lluad,., 833-1300 COUPE ROADSTER llardlop & KOfl top. Onginal leather w radio Aclassic! llTX775) '7l 911 T, Targa, silver. blk int Excel. $7500. 499-2632 '77 VOLVO 40.000 m1 ong ownr m1. ·~ tires, auto, AC, Ownr «fck 9947 Skylark. Needs new seal musl sac. SHOO. ~e lo •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• cover. otherwise 1s1 apprecS49-0657 '70°Maverick. Forest grn. dass cond. ?7S. 673-440< '72 Chevy Caprice Fully 6cyl, newly rbll eng, new 495-4090 5 Spd"< °''"' ltr<'i. lio1 TOPIUYER -----roni \I 1rl' "hn•I, fm•I 111 74Chevrol~t LUV Mikado, Jt'Cllon .• 1lummum l1olh air, wide rims. campr Xlnl 1·11ml \ 1·1' 1,1•1' shdl. rear bumper, :.1de 23,000 !\Ii I 110 hot 1111 111\ pipes. 39.000 m1. good "' if<' T 1 ,1 111· 1 11 r ·allape, TOP, 675·9504 :.omcthini: 1.11111•1 l'Jn !'><'I· u~ t1r..t .l 1.1 ... 1 • Top clul!:al" IJald fur lnll)()l l~ COSTA MESA DATSUN SADDLEIACK VALLEY IMPORTS 831-2040 49S-4949 --- Rolls Royu 9 7 5 6 ........•.............. #1 DEALER IN U.S.A HERE NOW .is k for lhll Ring 01 .d .._. 1 es bat battery R/11 runs xlnt. i;.w 259" eqwp ... cw 1r . . • • -·-lery. xlotcond. 646 9482. $9()()/o(r. 673-8519 __ Cadillac 9915 --9 50 '7" Chc,·y Slallon wagon 3 Mef'Cury ' lC'ra, l.otu~. t-:11· ur 9570 p,t Pl~ i,7;, J6H:! 111 ::!S-15 llarbor Bl \II 1"11,l.J Ml'!>.I J IO 1;.110 Lease Hew-Used OVER 100 JR ROY R CAR\lER •HEW COLORS •HEW MODELS ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ats. auto. air, $18s0. •••••••••••••••l••••••• Call 559·0737 '76 MONARCH -----c 0 mes w I I h v II • ........................ t)..&.5 .. 2200 '75 DATSUN 2802 J(l.mj • ·I :-.pd . ,\C '. 1\ \l F:.L Str. Lt·a~l' lluv S.,.n,..1hlc I" mt!> r ROLLS·ROYC( Chrysler 9925 automatic. rad io f, 1975GMC SURFERVAM Automatic, air 1·ond ,.unroof, portholes, de 1uxe l nm, chrome wire wh~ls & 8 track stereo <0749). SADDLEIACK V Al.LEY IMPORTS 831-2040 495.4949 '86 Ford. Rcbll cnjl .. mags, nl·w tires, full~ custom interior. Super clean. Sl2!lS. 673·5925 '10 ford Vun. 60.000 mi. :J spd. cpl",::. 6 cyl. Sl755 Ph 1146-21:?5 anyllme ~ 1970 f'ORD 1-; 100 Van. xlnt cond $1595 536·2 12'J ----'72 Tr:H·clall, A C, radio, t owing <'quipped . S2600tofr. 55G 31 19, art 6 pm. 72 Ford EIOO Van, 3 spd. runs gre<1l, nrNls minor trans wk. Sn75 firm . 5411-33911 ht wn !J I 2P:\1 N' 62 Ood~<' Step \'an. convt 'd II\ ing, 4 mil + in a:.11lng :? mil Ill I 74Gl Autos Wanted 9590 •••••...••.••....•..... CASH FOR CARS! Top S L>ollar s p;11d ror elean usccl cars. trucks & Corvettes. Ask for P aul O'Neill. · )1QW ARD Chevrolet •• · J)ove & Quail St:-.. NEWPORT Df:ACll WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP IJSEO C,\ RS f'OREIGN. DOMESTIC or CLASSICS If your car 1s e'Ctra dean &e6US flr,l IAUER IUICK 2925 11.irbor' Bhd Cosla :\fto.,.J !li'I 2500 WE BUY CLEAN CARS & TRUCKS CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 ll;irbor Bl\CI C~IA :\I F:::-1\ 540-1200 TtlP DOLi..\ R l'All> l~L\l EDJ,\TEI. Y f'"OltALL FOREIGN C,\RS CALI. OR COM 1-: I" TOSF.E L'S HIWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W l"i-t II"',. ;\II 642-94os \\ t: UL'\' •l sfo:OCAH.S ,~ THtCKS• Com1• m or <'all NH Apprai1ol Grotfl Che•,.olet ,• 1821 I l~.1ch Bl\11 , • llun1inRton Be,lch 11.-7-6017 • 549-333 I ;\H)Vll'IG M LST SELi. ·1;.t \\•lll'. m 1 nl c<>nd, 'it \11•r<.:l'dl'' :!~II. ii :\Jail.la lt:\'.·1 \:-;Y OFFEll l .01\SI IJl':ltt-.D l'I' 5-ltl 7 I 'Ill BRITISH CAR CO. 213/990-2525 714/694-2854 MERCEDES ON DISPLAY HCMIH of bnDorb AUTllOIHZto MERCEDJo:s u~.\t.1-:n 6802 l\tanche:.lcr. Buena Park BMW 9712 L>:ltsun .. ;~ i1;oz. :! + :!, ••••••••••••••••••••••• air. auto, m;1g,, Al\t f":\t, < h 5~3-725~ • metallic brontC' Sh::irp. _ >n t e Santa Ana 1-'2' SADDLEBACK P11 Pl,'~~1995 l'l:I !>-IW _ 1952 :\IBZ JOOS <:IJSSic 1!17SUA1'Sl"~ B:!IO C.>Upc·Oneofunl) 8Hpro is.io J~mbore• Mowj>Ot1 8'o1cll ,._ __ __,.,.....,. ClOSlD SUNDAYS ELEGANT 196-t Rolh Rovce . Fullv L'l'llOLZTE!lf:D w l'JllNCHlLLA . J!'\ (" I< 1-; D l IJ I. Y H~:.\L Tll'TL. l'rll'l' l>R,\STIC .\Ll.Y f'l' ch1t'l•d I.Et\ Vl:'\t; .1 t\N i ;;,9 uor; BMW 9765 Like n1•\1 .. 1 pprrn :.? 1.111111 duced lhal \'Car' J\l 11~1 m1. S!Wli :1 111 ~,u:! src to apprcdate: l'n Toyota pty. 581·7"46. • •••••••••••••••••••••• '11 BMWs HERE NOW BMW RESALES '70 2800C"S· I p C235CFSI ·12200~ A 153.~RKK > '73 3 uCS -1 ~p. (9671-\1.:\1 ) • 7 3 Bu v d r 1 .1 I 'p ltiXOl'P:\11. '7 4 fl ii \ ii fl .I tJ.UJLl'''.\I I '75 2002 I\ ttrJ I I I 'i55311{\.,\ 19116~1\ (;) SADDLEBACK VALLEY IMPORTS 831-2040 495-4949 lill D;dsu11 l<o;1d,l<•r L1·:n int: :-it.111-11111,1 wll lhl 1111· t.11..1·" l:J;j liliU\1 alter 5 P:\l. :!.JOZ ·Hrd :1om mt ;\:\I F:ll !>h'rro t.1JK'. new maj!~. rar111j.! .,hocl.,., ,,port pl.i;: I 011111 !)-18011 91i8 {~l!Jli Rot 9725 ...••..••........•..... ·;5 Fial XI 9. >-lnl con cl. 1·0111·crlibll', ;\ :11 i'''.\I ra~settc. I ~pt.I $.l<!OO l!J:l·J2:!7 '75FIATX19 :\1:1~ Whecli. ,\;\I F\t I\ lr,ic·k. Seni.ihh• I>' mh l'h,•rf\. l .Jn l.t."'' .Jiu:\IYO BRITISH CAR CO. 213/990-2525 Clossic: Mercedu l!l70 280SE Cll\ l Xlnl cond Sl7,500. 552·i01.)I '00 Mercedes 220li, rcbll engine. 10.000 m1, s1.ioo !llii).2810 rves. '75 MIZ 3000 \cry Clean. <1-'SLW IO HOUSE OF IMPORTS 2131921-8588 714/523-7250 '75 MBZ240D Clean. Buy Lease Sen'! blc pyml:> 1&;o:-.;1n1 i. '11 TOYDTAs HERE HOW •HEW COLORS •HEW MODELS llugl• Savmgs on ALL re mn1n1ng new 76s & Demo~. Tlw Beller B:.1ri:a1n MAR9UIS TOY OT A :\llSSION VIEJO 831-2880 495-1210 ·;o Corona -t dr delu"c ,\ T. '1nyl roof. 3!1.f'HHI oni:. OIA nt·r mil~ Sl251l 6i3·3388 Triumph ••...••................ llugc :.avings .on all re· m;i1n1ng new 76s & Demos in slo<'k. MAR9UIS VOLVO MISSION VIEJO 831-2880495-1210 ORANGE COUNTY VOLVO EXCLUSIVELY \'OJ.\ 0 L:.irJi!<'. t \'oho r>calt•r in Orang•· ('r1unt~ • UUYorl.1'.:ASE DIHECT l'M'l~, 2025 S. Manchester Anaheim 750-2011 •SALES •SERVICE •LEASING 0Yerseas Delivery !"l1·n 11·c .t p;1rb n111' np. 11 1111 :-.,11 ,. II l•l I lur ~our 1·11n' 1·mcncc Nabers Cadillac Qu;ili1y and Price GuJrJnreed l t-.1'111~ ~~)\I 1.111 h 1'1, f, "'"l KJt1·~ I ·"i\'''l ~clcc.t.• •n .. 1 N,·w & u~u.I ( '"'" ''' Ill l>t.111~c <.11l1111y Orw n SunJ •• y C.Hlillac t.thl<.'1 Ot-Jll'I 26{)0 lf,1/ ho >I U I .J C.rr\IJ Mc\a 5 ~U-~ I UO Nabers Cadillac ••••••• •• • •••• • • • •••• • • heater. power steering & XLNT BUY brakes. air l'Ond. Look at '68 4dr Chry!i Newport. this price! Yours for 1m· Pwr . A(;. Xlnl cond mediate delivery. (Lit·. thruoul. $975 673·0193 854NJA). eom.t 9927 $4486. ;~·;;,;,;;;·;.'.;;;,;:.·;;;,'.11·1•· •. auto, pwr b~ks & steer. __:_:_•.•-:-.·~ AIC. AM /FM stereo. , , :· Ukenew! $3000675-7060. ; . ; ; . , Continent~ 9930 . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • to4&tstClftCj 9 9 5 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·74 4 Dr ~du,n. Loo~s & •67 Eccon 6 cyl. 3spd. 20 runs hkc n~w .• Loaded mpg, radt0. Rlldial:., w 'extras. Ori 1; owner l'lean $900 559-507S s.5895. Aft 12. 640·8705 ---· _. Corvette 9932 IS Mustang II. hardtop, •• •• •••• •• •• •• • •• ••. ••. only 8.000 m1. $3,400. In '74 Che• Vett~ 4 spd AC Loaded• Cherry. Lease/Buy . Sensible pymts BRITISH CAR CO. 2131990-2525 714/694-2854 'i4Cor\'ellc. Loaded. 1' lop, 56000. m&nt cond. Pvt pl>. ~-9582 a ft 7 PM ·ss Mustang, R&JI, p f,, p/b. 6 cyl . mag!., new tires. S19S or make orr . 495-0632 aft 6pm 1971 CADILLAC __ W3 I S92·2983 Mustang 70 8eyl. P /Str .;- brks. air, R&ll. WSW, vinyl lop . lo m1, Pr /ownr . Sl9!15. 1714 >494-4163 ;ill ti pm SEO.AN DEVILLE Cougar 9933 ·l'l.OOO llrri:m;il mllc:-. In ••••••••••••••••••••••• !>u p1·rh cond1l11111' '76COUGARXR7 llTl-l PI{ D l Com<'s 1A1th V·8. '66 Mu si Conver t. SADDLEIACK .iulll mat 1c r ,1 d io & Completely rc,torcd. t'<>I VALLEY IMPORTS heater. po'>' rr !-leering & tect.ors item Tran & eni: 831-2040 495.4949 brak<'i., ,·inyl top. air overhauled. New paml& <:ond . look 1ni: good! top. Ownr mu:-.t ~ell Bst '71 Mustang 59.000 m1. Good cond OranGe 52.000 675·6927 &I ST & UOADWAY __ 7_14/694·2854 So/IA ""'" "i·I Fial 12.J Wgn. 1\1110. 835·3171 air. 21 .uoo m1 ~:!!150. lHE UUIMA T! 0~1\/ING MACHINE !J63-40:!Q HOUSE OF IMPORTS 2131921 -8588 714/523-7250 1974 240 D. xlnt cond. fulb loaded. S8950. IJvt ply. 400.0461. 1 ·&34-041 I 1974 Cadllloc Yours for 1mmediale de· ofr. 962·5374 '73 Triumph Spitfire s Con\'l. Lo mi. ma)(:.. Brougham. !\lctalhc Ii v er Y . ( er· Oldsmobile radials. $2995. eves VOL VO blue, vinyl top. blue 6A93H543713l. 9955 841H_990_______ ~~~~~01 ~1~~~1111~~~~~~: $5486. 7;;·;~~··~~~:~n;:~~=:: •USED BMW's* ·73 Ba\'ilrl.J IOOlil, \'Y > 75 2002 t 833:-.; .1:\1 I ·1191600 tZXX8'itil Clo5ed On 54lnday5 ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST ----·w F'wt !ISO Cr>t'. Lo mi's Run:-. i;:rl'al 30 .. 111 mµ~ 5895 f>·l 1 511;u; ·;2. MBZ iso, 6 cyl, •I dr Vollcsw-n 9770 1966 Harbor C.M. 646·9303 Low mile.ige • S8.000. Supreme. 48,000 mi. :Ill 56,000 mi. Xlnt cund. -'7-o E AC b d ~":'-""•". ,92.o_.32 aft S .. 30 •. •••••••••••••••••••••• 1 ::iys. 630 171U ~'-es. pwr + . super con . ~~-~-...,_-_ -71 VW Co"'·ert t\:\1 FM ·is Vo ,.o 2'12 29.000 mi. 633 9'lf3.I I ownr. Michelin l1r&... t\M F;\l :.terco. air. ----$3900 4934ti:r7 450 SL 1973. Xlnt <'Ond lapc $.T/95. S5500. 832-3831 8·5. 1971 Cadillac Brnui:ham ---· -· · 7:! 1-·1:.it 1:!8 Sport Cpi: 1.o Blue w/ivory int. C:ill l'hone!>-19--0351 anyt1mr 5-11 55R6afl s metalhc blur. ,myl top. Pinto 9957 mi $1300 h'torr li14l645·3323. -- - -blue t·ru,hl·d vehet in· 1\-A-9935 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-0609 __ MGI "68 VW Panel. Van Pand 67 It blue 4 dr wagon. ~ 9744 ini;:. radial tires. runs !old Straq;ht body. need:. tcrior. LOADED · FULL •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• ONE OWNER 1972 Pinto ·71; F1al·X1 9. bc,1ut1r111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1600.675-7112 -someengwork.S700/bst POWER . L~w, miles. '68 Dodge Coronel, good ~unabout.ln g<><?dcon~1 rl'd. loaded. lo m1. lJl.t• ·67 :\!GB GT. Xlnl cond. ofr 556 3610 S8000. Day'I. li30·l7lO, trans portation. $450. tio~ green exl<'rior & Ill· leaseprbu~ 11461\:JIO low mi . wires. radiali.. '73 VW Su1ler Bui;: _ -----E,·es:63.'J-9"2G4 4934500 tenor. Will sell SHOO or & · AM F:\t 8 track. Ill'"' ·~· ' I "'<12 DL L ----besl offer. Low mileai;r. 74 L' • I.._. I new cpl paml. SIS()() hrk•. lid cd1·11on mcll. Sc~ ,,, "o vo ~ . ow '76 El Dorado Convert. . . Af kd r iat 1.!· .~11.n l'f'. i·111w ofr ~91-3965. ~ -, m1IC' . ractory air. stereo. Xlnl (134N I Kl Ask&ng 6J Dodge Oort Station ter 5 wee ays & SJll't\ Sen H"l' I.casing AM, F:\t Mcn•11 C;d 1·nnd ------10 appreciate. 52500/hl>t 1.iki· new, in:.ide & out S 17 _-000 . C 811 ( 7 14 ) Wagon. runs good, $295. anytime w ecke nd:. Roy Carver.Inc. SJ.500 1w .. 11Jfr ·IHH l!llhi. '69 MGB-GT. ofr. 962·051ti__ M:JOO. ~95·5S34 .5..SH2"lSorS-19·16SC. 638·9155 ---545-8157. Holl~ ft°''''' B:\I\\ Chrome wires. nu -tin·~ ·m VW Camper Van Nl'W Autos Used • ---.--'71 Coronel Wa~. 6 P"ass. Plymouth 9960 l~OJdmhon·c-Honda 9727 A:\1-f!\f. Very lopymts. everything. S:.!5011 ll~L ••••• .'................. 66Cou.,.DeV1ll~ ;i /cond. P /S. auto. ••••••••••0 •••••••0 "• '\c"'µnrt lk'.H h i,.io s..111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 418CKY. ofr 962 051ti __ Gefterol 9'0 I llaclc on G~ld 673·2800. &1.t·4M4 eves.. ATLAS c-i 9 715 Brand New •7 6 BRITISH CAR CO. 'i3 WI Bui'( l\ew paint. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tilt. AM/FM Stereo. 6 Ford 9940 -r· 213/990-2525 wayst'11l. i\IC. Pwr Win-••••••••••••••••••••••• HONDA Cars :-.lt'w clutch, Rear dowi..Vinyllop,autodr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 CAPRI OVe.R 100 7 14/694-2854 radials. Xlnt condrt1on lock~. Twi·litr, auto An-·75 Granada Ghia, 4 dr. Chryslt'r /Plymouth Open Daily & Sun 'lll JO P'.\l .i C)hndcr. l!'l'•'' Ra• "' •70MG8-GT Sl899. or best offer. tenna.63111!111 air.pwr.30.000M1 .. Xlnt mrle.1i;e. re::idv tu i;o To Choo~ From! 763·23l9 cond. S3950 South Coast 2929 Harbor lilvd Costa l\le!.a Ser. G \E\SI\ 21; .. 12 u~1VERSITY W1rrs. Sharp. EnJOY lo ·73 f:I Dorado Car Lca~1n, 300 Wrst $3886 n 11ymL ... 397BTN. 7~\WBug ,forsale.lom1, Allpwr,ncwllre~ Cllas t llwy . N .B . Oldsmobile BRITISH CAR CO. ~~~~! :.terco. s2ioo. SS300 49t>-763S &i5-2182. r1(t :rn7:1-R269 546-1934 GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd Huntington Beach 842-8844 iii L .qm l\l,11 I. t .1\ I lh lt1.J1l1-1J 11 111111 1111 ' ~n.•;41 II.II •1;•1 • Honda Con • GMC 2131990-2525 'i:! El Dorado Convert 71Ford Ranc·hl•rn GT. Pontioc 9965 Tn.cks 714/694·2854 'OO VW Sqrbck. New eng 66Chcvy-SYS572·S499 f'ire Blur Ml:-.t ,hJue intr. R/11. uir. pwr. w/sh<'ll. •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• :!tlSO Harbor t$1vcl JOOOduul carbl new brks. GI, T B1rd-FWJu88 Xlnt cond. All extras. Whl letter t1·rcs. 43.000 ·65 LeMans. 7:1.000 mi. · \I 9 o n-1 9746 new l'lutl'h . S550 . f' <o~ta (•,,1 :ilU Ill :.':: ••••••••••••••••••• t>lS-OMO :~\~1~1~~K.,'~.1°~i~:i9 ~ Ph6735716 mi.S229S Ph8·160982 _ ~~G7~~~1~cdnl5Po;_ner.· 1 I l'l\il' auto nr•w llrPs ·59 GT. real sharri! Sl·~· to 6!4Sqrb«k \"en l!ood Lo tillVW llug .J7-l:\IXl ·S8!l9 ·;l Scd De \'11le. 1mma<' ·72 Ford LTD 2dr. PS. --- \\! F \I c .1 " tirt..1•' apprecial<' ~1650 1\ll ti mi. Rbll. llUJOO mi >.Int 70Toyot.i·bli:ll'DI .$999 1·nnd Fully loaded ~1!150 PB. AC. fl<;t ofr '7'1 Grand Prix i..l nl cond. ~j(Jli nfr l.\ni.: 1ntn or"knd!'.4fl675'15 trun-. S7:lJli:! niCullSO!'l20RSWSJt99 Firm u~1-" i13:l 206o. 6i3-321!! lo mileage, must sell. 1"''·1 f;.L' •1->7 71 \'W l'optop Campc·r e\l''-&10 I Ii:! PP. 673·3S~ i:lGT rad1.1I lirel>. "h11c .,., ':"\V llu~ .. r"bll i•n" •. L-1 1 " 1 C '&t Falcon ~lu:.l sell gd ---ii ll1mda fjl~I Hc'blt rni:. • spd •I 1f -''""IO "" " ~ "' "' r u ' l' ., 11 P cnna,.o 9917 lire·.·. "·-·•y, runs well v-9974 • t r·an' ~·i'. t pc; ro"'I .. · g. "0" """' transmission. S60C bl'~l """"OfW83 ~!IS ·' """ --'7-~ ,. .. .,.,,,,. 8.13·8M6 offer. 960·2569 ''''c" •'LL 642 0795 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S4201hstofr. 645·699S ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71 l".tpn .?1w11... hJJrl S1ll'<'r lilu hll.. int 51.Qilllmi 1;11 1111111 .. 11 (,11tti-11 llh!t p h 97 _ ___ --• ·1ncam;iro ;-70-T--A-M L'" "i5 &Lale Waj.!on. A 1C: . .,;., 11:1.., _ JOCf)Or 97 JO .?::~ .. ~•••••••••••••5•~ '68 \'W Su~r Bectk AMC 9905 Original Ownc•r ori n ° · " I .-1" AM !FM. R R. nu rad1::il I 700CC En1?1nC' 327 Auto, $1~Kl IJ.IO·ll55S stereo, ll lrk, nu tires. tires. tl400 552 3092 oft s Colt i I t'.111n •t.flMI IJ1•1·11r ,ll r p ••• • •••• •• • • •• • • • •• • • • • '66 Porschi• 9l I. 11 !II I SlOOO . Ca II G tti·R lll'l ••••• • •• • • • • •• • • • • • • • •• must sell Si25. ~l ·6033 ---- 1\C St11·k. Xlnt nm.I i:; "J I:.! I dr. white Eng, rcblt tr:.rns & rc.ir ---'till AML J;l\'Plm. ·I Spd. 'iG Cr1m.1ro 3;,n .1u10 --.---, -~ -"72 Vel(aWgn Ncwstlbell S'.!~tO 1711 1'13 1:!111 "'hlu1' Jl•alhl•r rnt . full rncl Kon I ·s. 83700. ·72 VW Bus 7 pass wht & mar,,, hC.Jtlcr~ Sharp' AM/Fl\!. I'S. PB. ;nr. ONE OWNER 1972 I into radials. /\M I FM stereo!'" 9717 ""r & air ICJ,000 Mtlrc; $16·6906 ~old. AC. A:\I radio. >.lnl Sli75 H73·5W5 nu l1rl'~. lo m1 ~fin( Runabout. In ~oml condi· low ml on new l'nj.! A~k l>erf. coml nnl! owner -------i·ond.11:15.3377 S.1995 40:1 3:Jll.r; lion gree~ exterior & m ing S12SO 4fli.4t:21 -MECllA~IC rAYS C..: \.<;\II ••••••••••••••••••••••• Contact llarold Stanc11sh. Jla\c ~omcthm,1! .'011 \\',till 'i·I Gn,mhn. J!ood <'Ond tenor. Will !>ell Sl400. nr - - Clean <'ilr ... lhat nl·l'll .1 l><Kt~r t'nll ~t.1 WJi: \u~tom Wt'.&H carpel!-, to ~ell .. Ch1,.-.1111•1J ail~ do W r C' ck<' u · 6;, \' W nc"' t 1n·-.. ,, . ..,,. Iha 1961! t";1m:1r11 Corl\ l'fl best offor. Low mileage ·11 Vega. 3 i.pd lllchbl< wor k Pr,fer for1·1i:n Xlnl l.(1 tTll' F:.cl air hll~n 11 .. m :1 :JOpm Mon· it well c .. 11 :'\OW, squareback. :\lake off"r :io.0011. i\sk1n1t S:!tOO Good tin·~. ni•w 'horl.>-, After 5 "'eek days & any 70,000 m1. i:d cond. nds _67_;J..346.;_:___ _ J>'tril> 1+11,71•11 Fri OO:?KR-11 &t2·S6iR Coll645-11S3. 518·1:140 _____ elulch $1!i00 tH5-29i15 Umewe<>kcnds.S4S81S7 l>dywkSIOOO RJl,2'.!35 --------t800 ~o•. Hew 9800 9800 Allfos, Mew 9800 Autos, Hew 9800 Autos, Hew 9800 Auto•, Hew 9100 PRICES R·E·E·EAL Y GIVEN OVER THE PHONE -847-6087 e PHONE e 549-3331-DISCOUNT PRICll LIAll IPICIA llCIMlll 1977 Chevrolet V1 Ton Picicup .. ~ r l ' • ,, , ,.,. ,.. \ I ~ ONL y • 10,.. ,.. MO. l -W" •"'2 e ( 41 I • \'j•H I ' •.... • • I !lo, \ \1• 1•<<t•a'l•6 ... 1977 MONTE CARLO f • ~" ~,,,,. ONLY 1 127",. MO. "-' -It .. '•• l·.... .... \ l •• ~ t ' )' .... f h • ... ' . ~.. . ~ ..... 1977 C.lM.lRO IMMEDIATE DELIVERY f:::J~ ~-03 ,,,.. THf ALL NEW '77 IMPALA BRAND NEW 1977 CHEVROLET CAMARO • ~ .7; .. ~· :, ).s4557 $i,!9 $1,~304 ' • • .,, 'ICtAl Al.l • Cf PAYMrN MONTH BRAND NEW 19 , . • ;• tf,.. fA~' )~f \•" ~· -l"IQ ~ , • ...,. ... .., I": • ' ""'""'"' .. "''° hflo~ .. ~.., t ~ .. b,._. ,.._.~\ ""'" '00 'l.. .,_ .. ,.,_ ~ 1i1 Pt.8 s3595 1976 PLYMOUTH SPORT fUIY COUl'f Y~ tu•o t••"" ta• • ., "' ~·'f"" .. .., Clo'"'.,.,.. ...,._....., .. O't~· ~tit-. AY •lttot'\ NJ11:•1W • ~ •" .,,.,., too .. "' • .,'"-. ~ •4'6 "•Yl s3995 I 972 OLDSMOllLE cun.us court v..e .. ,o t•j;"t\ 00*9' ~lfff'ff'\'J ~bra-• ,.,,,., ,_.,., WS•t•tft'I v-nvttoo ...,,, •~I 1974 DODGE DAlTCOUN r !\ hi 3 '~ r.a-o toieater wtw ttrM Vt~ 100 Uc. • ., 0~1 0 $1895 1976 PLYMOUTH ,un SALOH SIDAH V fl • ,, 0 A"'• f1t'Of'V I•' C,,_,0,,1fV'•"O OOW9'r •• ,.... .. ., O'M•' b'I"*"\ A\A. f't't-0 ,,.,..,.,.,.. MW t•rea. ,..,.,._ , ... " .,.,. ,,, '1•"'0' l•c•~ '°~? l 't P(C $3795 1974 DATSUN 1-llOWAGOM 4 ~ 4"'"" ICf""' ••• COl>CM-A'-l~Y nldoo & C'l"\Ole ....... WSW lit• --· U.:.-No 24&l AI 91895 Hl2t-078·251 IM BRAND NEW 1977 ARROWS HERE NOW! If~ ""'" ,,.,,. -,,_"9 """° Ilea•.. -"'"· vi•vl t<>e> l~se No 567 GOS '$1895 1973 BUICK EU<:TlA SEDAN V..S •V"o ''•"" tac.tOty air concN~"9 OOW'@ll" SIM'1ftQ ~ Otl .. H DOwet .-rndowil pOrilw9t Wlt'J A ... l'FM S1.,l'O ,.td 0 M.11•. WSW fwa °"'ttyt I')() . --Ol.b"~-L-No a:lllHllC 1974 FORD GUHD TOllHO SIDAN v.e "''° ,,."t •ac•o-v al• -llOr>"O -&tMn"O OOWftt bratc." rad~ ,,_.., MW tlf'a. l.oc:eftM NO 1!2 KlH '2295 Outstanding values on every lrand Mew 1977 Chrysler and Pfynlouth In Aftas•s Huge Inventory! SM Atlas now for Jcnecry CIHrance SavlftCJI! BRAND NEW 977 VOLARE 2 DOOR SEDAN IRAMDMEW 1977 VOYAGERS . OM DISPLA y I READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 1974 FORD rlHTOWAGOH s1795 1969 CHRYSLER "JOO" COUPE V ... MO IU,,. , lec10ty .. , eol>dftloftlftQ. - ''eennig CIOW'9' bt•"' .. ,~ hNI•. ~ •·•• """"' IOI> lx>ome YZY ee6 '1295 1973 AMC HOlHtT SB>AH • .,... -.. _. , ... «)' ., _ _..,., - ~ ""'"'"' .,.,.., -,_ ... -!> .... bucll ...... , lil"Yt 100 lie.,,.. No. 211 ./FT '1695 \l..S a~•o tra"s ,.,,,,'V "'' CO"ld•ttf'>"'"1 ~,.,., Jt-ef1"\9 01')"11ter «,,.., AM FM , •• .o '>1'0 ' ~4 llU!e< "'"'' lt>O Loe•-No '8:1 >tl'llf $1395 1972 CHRYSLER LI UlOM SIEDAH v ... .uto Irani. factOt')' •" coftd1t1or11n9. ,,.,_., l'_.,,"'9 ~ l)r\ .. M ftit!l•e-r _..~ ~ 'i.f\~\ -.M~M ,,..,,..., 'Ad.0 •·tir\ t•oo ~~-W""* '''"'" er.--""" .... ltll -l-Ho 1911 El'lol. 1976 DODGE TlADISMAH I 00 HOUSICAl v.e auto ''""" t1clO'Y at• concf-1""""11 -\1--lit.... AM/Faol •-.\ 8 t•V" ....... ,,,. •"4:~ re., OIMMM ..,.,. I~...,._ CllOI-........ !Mql ltlt'lll\ll'V -too Ml• • 18602 t9395 · Do~tington Beach Fountain Valley EDITION * Aftcr110011 N.)'. Stoeks \ .... • VOL. 70, NO. 5, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA W EDNESDAY, JANUARY 5, 1977 TEN CENT! s ·uspect's Wife Claims Scudder Vo J " By TOM BARLEY f Ol llw D•oly l'olol S1411 Kidnap suspect William Rudy Wesson's wife told an OrangP County Superior Court jury late . Tuesday that alleged kidnap v1c· tim Jolm H. "Jack" Scudder pro· mised to provide for her and her two children after her husband and half brother were charge.'<! withthekidnaping. Mrs. J oyce Wesson said the pro· nuse was made by Scudder, 64, when she visited the Balboa Island home of the heir to the Scudder food fortune s hortly after• • Wesson, 45, and Ricki Dale Sellers. 20, were lodged in the county jail. Mrs. Wesson testified that Scudder assured her in their hour- long conversation that she and her chHdren would not suffer whatever happened to Wesson. She sajd Scudder kissed her and called her a "sweet little girl" but insisted on searching her purse wbeq she entered his home with the explanation that she might have brought a gun with her. Mrs. Wesson told defense at· torney Michael Quigley that Scudder bas not helped her or her family in any way since her husband and Sellers were arrest· edlastAug.19. It is alleged that Wesson and Sellet's grabbed Scudder as he left his dentist's office in Huntington Beach and confined him to a motor home that toured the coastline wblle a telephoned de- mand tor $250,000 in ransom was transmitted to the victim's wife. Scudder testified that he foiled his kidnapers by faking a heart at· tack when one of the two men left the van. He broke free in Fountain Valley and ran for help while his panic stricken abductordroveoff. Scudder later identified Sellers asoneofthetwo m en. Hewasuna· ble to iden1Ufy Wesson as Sellers' companion. Mrs. Wesson wasoneoffivewit· nesses called by thedefenseTues- day to support the argument that Scudder was involved in the plan· ning of what Quigley described as a "phony kidnap." She riff's Depu ty Robert Brautigam and his fiancee, Sad~ dleback Hos_pita l nurse Am\ Press, tesWied that they were~ sured by a former business as· sociate of Scudder that the Balboa man planned his own kidnap. Brautigam sajd the conversa· lion with prospective defense wit· ness Ken Hunter occurred outside the Saddleback hospital when thB <See HEIR, Page A.%) Diedrich Political Funds Probed Water Spout Off Coast A 500-foot water spout was sighted about three miles off the Huntington Beach coast at 10.20 a.m. today. The spout , descnbcd by one observer as a small tornado, ?ICkcd up water li ke a funne l into the rlouds. No damage was re- ported. Huntington Beach Fire Department Capt. Roger Hosmer said he observed the spout from the Civie Center as 1t paralleled the southern coast of the city. Hosmer said the spout lasted about 10 minutes. FV Council Okays Fees ~or Bingo 1 The F ountain Valley City Council has approved a $50 fee for charitable organizations seeking to hold an unlimited number of bingo games during the calendar year Organizations v. ill be required I to pay a $25 annual fee if they sponsor not more than four games in the city. A fee of $10 will be charged to l groups who want to hold only one bingo game. officials satd Slate law restricts bingo game ' s ponsors to those involved in "re· I Ji gious. c haritable. scientific, testing for public safety and pre· I ven\1on or cruelty to l·hrldun or animals·· The law abo requires these 1ames to be held on propNty ' owned or leasl'd b) th<' rharita ble organization. I City officialc; said many groups a.re not elig1ble because they do not meet these' stat{' \landard. .. HB Man Gets I IJail in Heist I David Alvin Parks of Hunt· lngton Beach has been sent<'nccd to nine months 1n Orange County i J ail after admitting in court that be took $115 from a waitress at what she believed to be gunpoint I Superior Court Judge James H. Walsworth ordered the jail t erm and three years probation for Parks, 19, of 17371 Koledo Lane. after he pleaded guilty to charges of second degree armed robbery. Parks confirmed in court that be took the money from a waltress al the Westminster Lanes bowling alley last July 13 alter simulating pos.'lessfoo of a weapon. He was arrested by police a short distance away after being pursued from the pre· mises by bowling alley patrons. SMOO'I7l S4JU NG FOR PILOT AD "We sold the boat the first 1 night the ad ran in the paper." That's the advertising success I rel•led by a Newport Beach man I who placed this classified ad: I SfibOl Schock 4000 srrlc~. r3ClnJ! r11l1trd. Ol'\\ \ 1mQn sail. S?50 )()OMtltXK lf you hav~ a boat You'd Uke to convert to cash, call 642·S678. It ~ea only a few words ln th• tltht place to attract a buyer. and the rtaht place Is the Dally P.11()1(. Long et Jurors Sworn ASPEN. Colo. (AP)-Claudine Longet watched intently today as another SO people were sworn in as potential jurors in her trial for manslaughter . , Miss Longet faces trial in the March 21 s hooting death of Vladimir "Spider'' Sabich, her lover . Miss Longet, wearing a short, flowered dress, was accompanied to court by her two defense at- torneys. A 12-member jury has been ten- tatively seated, but lawyers ex· pect to take a nother three days to choose a final panel. Three hun- dred persons have been sum- moned to the 87-year-old PiUrin County Courthouse for possible jury duty. Jury selection is difficult in the case because of the close rela- tionships aroong Aspen-area resi- dents. On Tuesday. one potential juror <See LONG ET, Page A.%) . v al,ley Drug Programs Gramed Nod Plans for an alcohol and drug prevention program in Fountain Valley's Colonia Juarez, along with a counseling program in the city schools were approved Tues. da y by O r a ng e County supervisors. The board agreed to hire Teen Help, the organization currently oper ating Fountain Valley's juvenile divers ion program, to offer the new services at a cost of $8.252 annually. County mental health officials srud Teen Help would provide counselintz 1n communicati~n skills at Fountain Valley High School and a l city elementary schools. In addition, the organization will oHer discussion groups, education ,sessions and recrea· tion activities aimed at drug and alcohol prevention in the Mex- rcan·American Colonia Juarez community. The county's share of the con- lract will be $852 with the state to pay the remainder . Bolsa Chica Group MeettJ The Amigos de BolsaChica, a group favoring the preservation o( the Bolsa Chica, will select a slate of officers for 1977 Thurs- day night. Those nominated for office are Dr. Ken Martyn and wife Rhoda, co-presidents; WaUy Moon, vice presidents ; Lois Tolles, secretary and Nancy J ones, treasurer. The meeting-wtll be held at 8 p.m. at 6172 Sydney Drive, Hunl· ingt.on Beach. Open House Slated I Huntington High Huntington Beach High School will hold open houst Monday from 7:30to 9p.m. Student work will be exhibited \broughout the campus, 1905 Main St. The open house will ln· elude demonstratlona. Teacbe~ ahd 1taff will be on hand to meet wilh parents a nd comtnunlty m mbe.rs. Robbie and Friend President-elect Jimmy Carter gets a hug from Mar ch of Dimes poster child Robbie Zastavny, 6, of Moorestown, N.J. The boy, born with an open spine and paralyzed from the waist down, was a guest of Carter in Plains, Ga. 4-1 Trash Fee Vote .Won't Hit Pockets By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR. DI IM Dally l'llol \1111 Fountain Valley councilmen voted Tuesday 4 to 1 to pay a private tras h collection firm hired by the city $172.864 more than initially agreed upon for services in a five Year contract signed in 1974. But residents will not have to pay more in their monthly trash collection service bills, coun- cilmen said. Residents now pay $2 per month for trash collection. Phil Hohnstein, president of Rainbow Disposal, a Huntington Beach firm, told the council his company was los ing a bout $800,000 per month in Fountain Valley collection service due to increased labor and fuel costs. Jn 1974 the council agreed to pay Rainbow Disposal a total of $1,207,527 over a fi ve-year period for trash collection. This would come from the $2 per month resi· dent fee. About 13,000 Fountain Valley residents pay for trash collec- tion, city officials said. The council's action Tuesday means the city will have to pay $18, 138 from its g_eneral fund to cover the cost of tbe trash collec· tion contract, a~cording to Howard Stephe ns, city com- ptroller. The a mended five-year con- tract now says Rainbow Disposal wilJ receive a total of $1,380,392 for service, Stephens said. Mayor Pro Tem Roger Stant.on voted against am ending the trash contract. "We are under no legal obliga- tion" to amend the contract, said Stant.on. "If your employes have a contract, you are not likely to change it until the contract runs oui," Stant.on told Hohnstein. (See PICKUP, Page A%> Mouse Roan Huntington Diners ~al, A mouse roared through Doo J01Se'1 Restaurant ln HWltington Beach Tuesday afternoon. An emi>loye of lhe restaurant 1•t 9039 Adam• Ave. called for .J>Olice help au; 45. He reported that he was bold· lnt -Juvenile who Ulrew the mouse Into lbe restaurant. eaus-inl a areal deal o! alum and dis- comfort to diners. runaway rodent but the a1ency didn't respond. 11\e mouse ·throwcr apparently broke loose from the employe Just before police anived and he and the mouse made their escape at a~t the aame Umc A police report 1aJd that when the patrol cat rolled to the seene, it fell a crunch and round that it had run over the ~. ll wu dead on arriv1l, the police report ~. . . -• The e mploye said he flrat called Oun1e County AnlmaJ Control for help tn c:rrallng the) -----· Charges Denied by Ex-chief By GARV GRANVILLE OtlM O•llY l'llot S\Mf A Grand Jury probe into aJ. legations that Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich il- legally solicited campaign funds for other political .figures reportedly got under way today . The aJJegations center on methods used by Diedrich to solicit campaign funds for office seekers he backed in last Novem· ber 's election, including As· semblyman Dennis Mangers <D· Huntington Beach). Sources close to the inquiry said there is no indication that Mangers or others who mlght have benefitted from the alleged illegal fund r aising had knowledge of the techniques used to raise money on their behalf. Assemblyman Mangers was not immediately avaiJable for comment. The jury's inquiry is not an in- dication that illegal activities oc- curred. It is an indication, however, that the allegations have been DIEDRICH FLAYS DISTRICT ATTORNEY, A3 checked out by investigators and that they concluded there is enough substance to t ake them before the Grand Jury. District Attorney Cecil Hicks was unavailable for comment to· day. Earlier this week, Diedrich de- nied any improprieties on his part. "How could there be?" he asked. "I gained nothing personally from helping what I knew to be good candidates get elected to office.'' Diedrich hinted at the problem he is now facing when he bowed out Tuesday as Board o f Supervisors chairman when he said, "Ther e have been in· vestigations and there will be more investigations." The allegations investigated so rar purportedly allege the Fullerton s upervisor with threatening prospective donors who balked at contributing to his designated candidates. CSee DIEDRICH. Page A2> HB Boy, 6 , Loses Life In Car Crash A 6-year-old Huntington Beach boy died Tuesday from injuries sUffered in a Monday night traf· fie collis ion i n Huntingto n Beach. The child, Allan Mountheath. was thrown from his mother's auto by th~ impact of the col- lision at 6:20 p.m . Mon~y. He died 10 hours later at t1'ciric:l Hospital. l The mother, Mrs. Beverly Jean Mountbeath, 35, of 2122 Amberwick Lane, also was ln· jured. She was listed in stable condition today by a hospital spokesman. InvesUgators aaid the accident occurre~ when Mrs. Moun- t.heath's auto attempted to make a left tum ln front ot another vehicle at the lntenecUon of AU an ta A venue and Magnolia Street. Her car was destroyed. 11\e driver of tho othel' vehicle waa listed aa Kurt Wllllam Damon. 20, of Newport Beach. A traffic apokesman said be was not at fault. DAiiy l'llOI S ... 11 P!IOlt SUBJECT OF PROBE? Supervisor Diedrich --- Seal Beach Councilmaii Set to Quit Calling his fellow councilmen "a bunch of weak-kneed political cowards,'' Seal Beach City Coun- cilman Harold Holden said Tuesday he plans to qui\, the council next week even ·thougtt' his colleagues have balked at let- ting him name his replacement. t Holden, 82, a nnounced Dec. 27 that he would resign on the condi· tion that Lester Marshall, a Leisure World resident, be ap.1 pointed as his replacement. But other councilmen tabled the matter until this coming Monday. Holden said m a telephone in· terview Tuesday that tQe council "probab ly w on't " appoint Marshall as his replacement. ·Tve been looking for someone to take my place for some time,•• Holden added. Tbe councilman said his resignation is due to his 111 bealth. His term of office runs until 1978. I Holden . a six-year council veteran. said Marshall is the only person qualified lo take the post. Holden told city officials he would rather save the cost of a special election by having his replacement appointed by the council. A special election would cost about S4.000. officials said. Coa st ! Weathe r Cha nce of s howers and thundershower s through Thursday with highs or 54 to 62, lows in m.id 40s. INSIDE TODA Y Some clUuna oj .a !mall town in Oklahoma find it tough to live unth the. na~ u/t t1~m by.a Civil War ~o. ) but uarl11. oll toy B~ b a}ineplocetolfoe. P.ogdJ3. Index " • .. • ,.. Atf Cl..J .,_, "' .... Jl Al> .... M A4 I --------··-· ..... ' ----- " A2 DAILY PILOT H /F Injuries Claim Woman A Westminster woman died Tuesday afternoon from u\juries suffered in a traffic accident more than a year ago, in- vestigators said today. Mary Mayberry, 23, of 14092 Ash St., was injured when the motorcycle she was ridlng col- lided with an automobile in HWlt· ington Beach Dec. 22.1975. She was treated at Huntington Intercommunity HospitaJ before being transferred to the Port Mesa Convalescent Hospital in · Costa Mesa where she died. • A coroner spokesman said :in autopsy will be performed to de- termine the exact cause or death. lnvestigators said the victim was riding on the back of a motorcycle driven by Edward Seamon of Westminster. Both she a nd the dnver were thrown off the motorcycle when at was struck and burst into flames while at the intersection of Spr· ingdale Street and McFadden Avenue, according to police re- ports. F rom Page A I PICKUP ... Councilman Bernie Svalslad said the only reason he would consider changing the agree- ment with Rainbow Disposal was because or what he called "out- standing, tremendous service" by the firm during the past 2~2 years. "We've had no problems with trash collection in Fountain Valley since that time." Svalstad said "If it weren't for that one fat, I'd be opposed to the change." Councilman George Scott agreed with Svalstad and noted, "Our residents' rates are among the lowest in Orange County." Mayor Al Hollinden said many other cities in Orange County have had to make s imilar amendments to their trash col- lection contracts due to spirall- ing labor and fu el costs. Tijuana Day Being Planned By Huntington Huntington Beach and the City of Ti1uana arc gelling together in June for a Huntington Beach day in Baja California. according to Mayor Harnett Wieder. "'El Dia de Huntinton Beach" 1s sched uled June 25. It will feature bus trips lo Mexico and tours of the city and the Agua Caliente Racetrack. A Mexican oHacal said the special day 1s planned by the Ta Juana mayor as part of a pro· gram to show off recent civic achievem ents. Escorted tours are planned for as many residents as possible at reduced fares, a city spokesman said. Snow, Rain Omer North By The Associated Press io'rosty air pouring out of thc- north polar region, combined Wlth upper level unstable condi- uons. will give most of Northern Cahfornia a chance of showers and snow over the halls. The s now level as expected to get down to the 1.500 foot Jevel m the north stale and the 2,000 foot level through the midsection, l>ays the Weather Serv1ce. Temperatures will be m the JOs and low 40s In the Central Valley, the mid-40s in the Bay Area, and single figures in the Sierra. OflANG£ COAST " • DAILY PILOT f .... Or~Co.tUO.llP,..Hot .-..tft---...c"t't"""• O.,_d lftf> Ht•\ Prt,,.•\OUbll""-'dh"'-Of~ (n..t,I P\lbU'"'"' Comp•ttt 1'f'N1o1U.-fflf~ ,..,"' O!Jblhf\t.d MoNI•~ tfll•CN4 .. ,:rlcMf f<w t-n'• "'""hll ,..,,..,,.,, llf'.w:ft """'*'~ """<" ~~ ,.,,.. Y4I .. ¥. ltvl"I• 5•dO!•~\ V•H•v ,.,_'1 l•~8'.-" $iW1J\CN O At'.~t...,1 ltO'\ •\ pwOh\ ..... \9tti1rd•¥' #Ill ~'W' ,.._ c;:;~~'::"'~~!1.~11f!.~~~~IO w,,t ~o l!-11NW... Pr•"dt"l•f'dl'vllll""" J•c-111 cw .. , v~ rornkltru~Qt-. .. lMit"..,.-' Tlt.,..uKHlf1t Ea110' ,,......,,,. .. ....,... ... ~".''""''"'* ~·"~ l!k ..... ,!Ult AW<l ... IMo-£•,_ "__, .. _ wttlO.-'-•ltlllor Htlmtnatoll ••ad! omc. ll'11T .. at~-o Mo1u,..-.... , .. o ... ,....,... omc.. '---11. 119'G_.,...",_. Co.t•AM•• UoWhla..y"-s.ctdt•a..c• V•ttew l\101 '-A P' ... r lto.td •tS~D, ... ~,.,,.•V TeltpllH• (7t4)~1 ClaHlllM .t.dwertll1lft9 ~7' ''--°'·-c-.c-.... , ... MO·t~~ l 0.lly Piiot Sl1tt ~· Your Last Claanee ••• If you missed out on bicentennial memor abilia during 1976. her e's your chance to pick some up at bargain basement prices. Phyllis Wilson. a public information receptionist at Huntington Beach City Hall, displays the tokens, ranging from 10 cents to $3. Parents E ye Early Entry To Schools Fountain Valley (elementary) School District officials will meet with parents Monday al 7:30 p.m. in district offices, to discuss ear- ly enrollment in kindergarten classes. Youngsters who beca me five years old after Dec. 1, 1976, and prior to April 1, 1977 are eligible for early enrollment, said Ed Moon, assistant superintendent. A kindergarten class will be started when pre-enrollment re· aches 30 pupils. The first class is slated to open an early February. Moon said. Classes w i II be located in schools where space is available. Those students with the earHest birthdates will be allowed to enroll first, Moon added. Parents will be required to transport their own children to the kindergarten classes. Parents should bring proof of their children's birthdate and health records to the Monday meeting, Moon said. Enrollment materials will be available at local schools Jan. 12, the district offac1al said. Suspe ct Faces County Trial In Inn Holdup A man Costa Mesa police claim is one of two men who took $370 at gWlpoint from the Rodeway lnn, 1400 S. Bristol St., last Sept. 6 has been ordered lC'I facP trial Feb. 7 in Orange Cou nty Superior Court Judge James H . Walsworth set the trial date and a pretrial ap pearance Jan. 31 for Ri chard .James Cavanaugh, 24. of 505 California St . Huntington Beach. Cavanaugh, held in Heu of $25,000 ball, is char~ed with armed rob· bery and assault with a deadly weapon. Lt is alleged that Cavanaugh is one of two men who robbed th<: motel clerk at the point of a shotgun. They said one of the tw() men fired a weapon at n couple who pursued them from the motel an their car . Poli ce are stall Sl'ekmg the second man. Huntington Man's Body Found in Home The body of :i Huntington Beach man was found at bis re· s idence at 617 Acacia Ave. Tues- day morning, according to Police. The dead man was identified as Harold Lu.nt. Officers said he was apparently living alone and they believe him t.o be in his 60s. Officen said the cause of the death appeared lo be Crom natural cauaea and that no tout play is suspected. The body was discovered by a friend who hadn't. seen Mr. Lunt for several days and became worrltd about him. He was believed to be dead for two days, pollceaaid. A coroner's spokesman said an auto~y performed ~llY was lncooclualvc. Further lox· lcolorlcal tests arc t.o be con· ducUd. F rontPage A J DIEDRICH •• Those threats allegedly car· ried with them an inference that a failure lo donate might result in hardship in doing business with the county. Key witness in the probe is Don Brown, a Sacramento-based lob- byist for Hughes Airwest, an airline operating out of Orange County Airport. Brown was in Santa Ana this • morning with his attorneys, re- portedly to put in an appearance before the Grand Jury. His testimony is expected to center on a Mangers fund-raiser at Club 33 in Disneyland. Mangers has not yet filed his final campaign contribution statement. But it is believed that Brown balked at Diedrich 's request that he support the fund-raiser. In early November, his client sought approval of an agreement that, in effect, would extend Airwest service out of Orange County Airport from Salt Lake City to Denver. Later, County Counsel Adrian Kuyper ruled that the service ex- tension was more properly of concern to Federal Aviation Ad - ministration than the Orange County Board of Supervisors In earlier interviews, Diednch said he regretted the cloud now overhanging his political ac· tivilies and that Mangers and others might somehow become tainted. At the same lime, he admantly and repea tedly denied any im· proprieties on his part and vowed to "fight ever1 inch of the way should anyone try to blow this thing out of proportion." ·•1 have served this county well and honestly. I know that and those who know m e know it. And I don't think the public 1s going to tumble for m y political activities being labeled as criminal ac- tivities," he added. Service Held ForHBYouth, Crash Victim Funeral services were con· ducted today in Long Beach for 21-year-old Robert G. Johnson of Huntington De:ich. The Edi son High School graduate w:is killed in a traffic accident Saturday night on Pacific Coast Highway in Newport Beach. He apparently darted in front or a car driven by a 17-year-old Newport youth, police said. The young driver was not held. Johnson was dead on arrival at Hoag Memorial Hospital. He played varsity football at Edison High School in Hunt· ington Beach. He graduated in 1973. T wo Positions Open in BB The City of Huntington Bench Employment and Training Ad· ministration is recruiting appll· cant.'9 for two jobs. They are for police clerk with a monthly salary or $878 snd for custodian with o $148salary. Both jobs aro funded by the Comprehenslve Employment Training Act (CETA> and re· quire HunlUlglon Beach reslden cy and 30 days of prior uncrnploy- ment. AppUc:atlons will bo ac c:epted at the Employment and Tralnlnlf Center, $S8 Main St. HBNix es Club at Airport An appeal to build a racquet- ball dub and office facilities near the runway of Meadowlark Airport has been denied by the Huntington Beach City Council. Mayor Pro Tem Ron Pattinson and Ron Shenkman cited poten- tial risks the structure could pose to airport operations near its proposed location at Warner Avenue and Bolsa Chica Street. Mayor Harriett Wieder and Richard Siebert also voted to de- ny the appeal. Al Coen contended that the city shouldn't deny the appeal because the facility was an ac- ceptable use for the area. Applicant Frank J. Mola had reques ted a condit ional use permit to build the facility con- sisting of four racquetball courts, an exercise room, locker and spa area. The 26-root high structure would have been located within 230 feet of an airport runway. Airport operator Art Nerio told the council Monday night that the building could be an obstruction to aircraft. while taking off and landing. The planning commission de- nied the request Dec. 7. The Federal Aviation Agency and the Orange County Land Use Commission recommended approval of the project having found no safety haprd wouJd be created, according to Edward Selich, acting city planning director. However, S~llch said, the state Division of Aer6nautics and the. Orange County Airport Com- mission both recommended de-nial because of the potential hazard to air navigation. Truck, Bus Driver Speed Cited by CHP SACRAMENTO (AP) -The California Highway Patrol's chief said today he would hold a day-long meeting with truck and bus groups about complaints that their drivers speed too much. Glen Craig said in a statement that be bu asked six commercial vehicles operators to meet about the problem and added he con- 11iders that indust.ry "a potential highway pace setter." Craig said that many letters were "critical of truck and bus drivers for exceeding the SS mile per hour speed Ii m it and creating hazardous conditions on the highways." Six groups and companies in· vited to attend the meeting are the California Trucking Associa- tion , Greyhound Lines . Amalgamated Transit Union, Continental Trailways, Indepen· dent Truck Owner s and Operators Association, and Western Conference or Teamsters. Al'wt...,....o TRIAL READIED Claudine Longet F r o• Page Al LONGET .•. said he once was a golf caddy for singer Andy Williams, Miss Longet's former husband, who has been called to testify for the prosecution. An X-ray technician aJso was given preliminary approval after saying she examined X-rays or Sabich lbeday arterlhcshooting. Miss Longet, who appeared cheerful when the trial opened Monda y , sa id s he wa s "heartbroken" Tuesday after hearing potential jurors reveal glimpsesofthelifeshc andSabich led shortly before he was shot to death. Several potential jurors were excused Tuesday for saying they believe Miss Long et is guilty. One jury prospect said Sabich. an international ski star, refused in early March to attend a party where girls were paid to "get up andtaketheirclothesoff." "He said he'd have to get a divorce to come to the party," ski patrolman John Erspamer said. "I asked him to bring his lady (Miss Longet), and he said, 'No, that wouldn't be fun,' or he wouldn't have any Cun, or words to' that effect." Miss Longet and Sabich, 31, lived together for two years before his March 21 death. She says he was shot accidentally •while teaching her to use a .22· caliber pistol in his m0Wltains1de $250,000 home. About two weeks before his de- ath, the couple attended a cocktail party for French skiers, said another prospective juror, Carla Stroh. "Tbere wasn't a great deal of communication between them," Mrs. Stroh said. "Th e circumstances were such they realiy wereo 't together." Resta urant Loote d A burglar who may h3ve had a spare key to the premis es took $1 ,600 m cash from theorrice of a Sunset Beach restaurant, Orange County sheriff's officers said. Deputies said the theft was reported by operators of lfussong's, 16595 Pacific Coast Highway. They said there was no evidence of forced entry at the closed restaurant. OUR ENTIRE IMVEMTORY Slayer R~hes To Altar GLOVERSVILLE, N.Y. CAPI -Only three hours after he clubbed his wife to death with u hammer, 62-year-oJd Donald Langlois was attending b is second wedding in this Mohawk Valley city, police said. And authorities say that after attending a s mall wedding recep· tton while the first wile's body Jay in a car trunk, the new couple went to Florida the next day .. Langlois was being held today in Hollywood, Fla., awaiting ex- tradition on s econd-degree murder charges in the death of his wife, Arlene. 55. Hollywood Det. Mike Jadwin •s aid Langlois confessed to killing his wife after having an argu ment with her Friday in which hl' asked for a divorce. "She said s he wouldn't," Jadwin said. "At the end of Uic discussion, he picked up a ham. mer and struck her six times over the head." Jadwin said there were no charges against the second wire, Ch ri stine Floyd, 59, <H Gloversville. N.Y .. whom be described as "an innocent viclirn of circumstances." Mrs. Floyd was a widowbefo1=e , marrying Langlois, the detective said, and h ad been told by Langlois that his divorce became final Dec. 31, the day of the kill· ing. The couple were married Fri- day afternoon in a Methodist church after they produced what seemed to be a valid marriage license. The man ager or the hotel where the small r eception took place sajd reservations had been made ''a couple of weeks ago." He said the wedding couple "stayed till midnight.'· They headed to Florida on Saturday, and when they arrived Tuesday at the home of the new Mrs. Langlois' relatives, they were met by New York police. The body of the first Mrs. Langlois had been found in the car trunk at her home Sunday morn - ing, after her son-in-law reported her missing. Mrs. Floyd 's son by a previous marriage. Franklin Cadoret of Broadalbin. N Y .. said his mother was •·pretty shook up" after the arrest. Front Page A l HEIR .•• sheriff's deputy was going there for treatment. Brautigam and Miss Press testifled that Hunter told them Scudder assured him the kidnap was a hoax and that he <Hunter) . probably had the whole thing on tape. Quigley said Hunter will be asked to produce that t.ape in court. "Hunter told me he tapes ever- ything Scudder says to him because he believes Scudder is crazy.'' Brautigam told the jury. PANTSUITS• BLOUSES KNIT TOPS • NIGHTWEAR • SCARVES • JEWELRY ----------TYPICAL EXAMPLES _________ _ JACKETS lei S14.99 59'' PANTS lei 17.!9 s5" OPEN DAILY I 0..5 -FRIDAY I 0.7 A,,ly How,_ y_. c ... .....i...t '9"'1• H-.. Ch_.,. A«-• MAGNOLIA CENTER I t 171 Mopole Streff, s.ih 7 H.thlgtoft hoc..._.U -9655 . ' FREE! DON1 MISS IT INFORMAL MODELING SHOW SPONSORED BY FMHION HOUSE A.T THE BRADFORD PLACE I 917 l Mognollo Sh'H t t4wstinC)t0tt a.och Phone 9 61-0610 ----- .... ·Irvine EDITION OL. 70, NO. S, .C SECTIONS, 46 PAGES T oday's C los ing N.~. Sto cks W E DNESDAY , JANUARY S, 1977 TEN CENTS Witness Tells Scu.dder 'Setup' By TOM BARLEY 04 IN D•lly Piiot si.tt El Toro service station operator Keo Hunter testilied to- day in Orange County Superior Court that potato chip heir John H. ''Jack" Scudder told hJm over the telephone that he "set up" a kidnap plot for which two men are on trial. I Hunter told defense attorney 'Michael Quigley that Scudder as· ~~ )t . • sured him in the same conversa-second telephone conversation tion that he intended to take care later that evening with Scudder, of defendant William Rudy 64, who was calling the witness Wesson and Wesson's family if ••from his Balboa Island home. the verdict In the• current trial Hunter has not yet been asked goes against him. if that tape is available. He was "He was drinking at the time," still on the witness stand today. Hunter added. "But he told me Hunter's testimony today that be set up the kidnap and that made him the fifth witness to he intended to write the whole testily that Scudder helped to story for Reader's Digest." plan the kidnap for which Hunter testified that he taped a Wesson, 45, of Tustin, and his broth.er-In-law, Ricki Dale Sellers, 20, of .Hermosa Beach, are on trial. It ls alleged that Wesson and Sellers grabbed Scudder last ' Aug. 19 as be left his dentist's of- fice in Huntington Beach and confined him t-0 a motor home that toured the coastline while a telephone demand for $250,000 in ransom was transmitted to the victim's wil~ • Charges Denied by Ex-chief By GARY GRANVILLE 01 Ille O~ily Pllot S\.ttt A Grand Jury probe into al· legations that Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich iJ. legally solicited campaign funds for other political figures reportedly got under way today. The allegations center on methods used by Diedrich to solicit campaign funds for office seekers he backed in last Novem- ber's election, including As· semblyman Dennis Mangers CD· Huntington Beach>. Sow'ces close to ~ inquiry saJd there-1.~ no indication that Mange,t;J or others who might have blnefitted from the alleged 1A L•ttle Too· Popular The new skateboard course in University complaining lo the city. Tonight the Com· munity Services Commission will hear a recommendation by a special skateboard committee suggest.ing that the skateboard track be moved to a new site in Rancho San J oaquin. The City Council may make a final determination Jan. 11. DIEDRICH Fl.AYS DISTRICT ATTORNEY, A3 ' Community Park in Irvine has proved to be one of the most popular facilities in town . More and more teens and youngsters arc using the concrete course ever y day. And, more and more residents who Ii ve directly behind the course are illega l f und raising had knowledge of the techniques used to raise money on their behalf. Assemblyman Mangers was not Immediately available for comment. The jury's inquiry is not an in· dication that illegal activities oc· curred. Tentative Jury Seated It is an indication, however, that the allegations have been checked out by investigators and that they concluded there is enough s ubstance to take them before the Grand Jury. Wnget Lawyers Zero In on Final Panel District Attorney Cecil Hicks was unavailable for comment to- day. 1'SPEN, Colo. lAP>-Claudine Longet watched intently today as ~her 50 people were sworn 1n las potential jurors in her trial for 1 manslaughter. I Miss Longet faces trial In the ¥arch 21 shooting death or Vladimir .. Spider" Sabich, her Jovt>r • Miss Longet. wearing a short. ,l}owe~d dress. was accompanied tD court by her two defense at· 'a.nteys A 12·member JUf"Y has been ten- tatively seatt>d, but lawyers ex- pect to lake another three days to choose a final panel. Three hun· dred persons have been sum· JnOned to the 87-year-old Pitkin !County Courthouse for possible 1juryduty. Jury aelectton is difficult in the use because of the close rela- tionships among Aspen-area resi· We ather Chan<?e of showers and thundershowers through Thursday with higb.1 of S4 to 62, lows in mid 405. t I NSIDE TODAY Som~ citi.zena of .a 8f7lOll town in Oklahoma find it ! tough to ll" with trw. aoma 1-ft Chem f>ll.o Civil Warlwro. but ~'JI/. oll IO'JI 80'llMg1 14 o/iMploct to11V«. lfoge8' •• .. .... ... •• ... Ct.J .,., •• .. ' . ,, .... A4 M dents. On Tuesday. one potential juror said be once was a golf caddy for singer Andy Williams. Miss Longet's former husband. who has been c alled to testify for the prosecution. An X-ray technician also was given preliminary approval after saying she examined X-rays or Sabich the day after the shooting. Miss Longet, who appeared cheerful when tlie trial opened Monday , said s he was ··heartbroleen " Tuesday after bearing potential jurors reveal glimpses oflhe life she and Sabich led shortly before he was shot to death. Irvine Man ' I Arrested on Pot Charges. Irvine police are trytn1 to find out iC fired Cormer employes broke four pllfte glass windows. valued at $9()0, at the \Xerox Corporation building in Irvine. The vandalism occurred sotneUme between Sunday night and Tuesday m orning while the bullding at 18681 J amboree Blvd., wu closed for vacation. Accordin1 to police, there are five boles in the four windows. On Tuesday, lnvestJ1ators found teveral m arbles at the scene Lhat appeared to have been used in ~e vandalb m. 1be brokeil windows were re- ported bY employe Alastalr Har. iilob of El Toro, wbo told police be aau n<:ently experieoeec) beth tbreatenlne phone calla and broken windows at his home. Police said the nature of the vandallsm, plus Harrison's troubles at bis home, lead them to believe the culprit or cwpriu may be former employ• who are upset. abOut bell\f fired • Police are now looklnt into several·Jeads provided by 'Xerox otnclala. ,---, . ., Several potential jurors were excused Tuesday for saying they believe Miss Longet is guilty. One jury prospect said Sabich. an international ski star, refused in early March to attend a party where girls were paid to "get up and take their clothes off.'• "He said he'd have to get a • divorce to come to theparty," ski patrolman John Erspamer said. "l asked him to bring his lady (Miss Longet), and he said. 'No, that wouldn't be run,' or he wouldn'thave any run.or words to' thatetrect.'' Miss Longet and Sabicb, 31, lived together for two years before his March 21 death. She says he was shot accidentally ·while teaching her to use a .22· caliber pistol In his mountainside $250,000home. About two weeks before his death, the couple attended a cocktail party for French skiers, said another prospective juror, Carla Stroh. "There wasn't a great deal of <SeeLONGET, Page AZ> Earlier lhls week, Diedrich de- nied any improprieties on his part. . - "How could there be?'' he asked. • ·1 gained nothing personally from helping what I knew to. be good cabdidates get elected to office." · Diedrich hinted at the problem he is now facing when he bowed out Tuesday as Board or Supervisors chairman when be said. "There have been in· vestigations and there wiU be more investigations." The allegations investigated so far purportedly allege the Fullerton s u pervisor with threatening prospective donors wbo balked at contributing to his designated candidates. Those threats allegedly car· ried with them an inference that a failure to donate might result in hardship in doing business with the county. Key witness in the probe is Don Brown, a Sacramento-based lof>.. <See DIEDRICH, Page Az) .... 'Lot to Share' Girl,, 15, Named to Boar.d , l\EDWOOD CITY (AP) -A JS.year-old glrl has been named by the City Council as a parks and recreation commissioner, the youngest such apJl>int· ment in tine city's history. Lisa Hayes. a student at Notre Dame High School in Belmont, was named in a move toward giving the young a voi~e in recreation policies. "We need the strength and enthusiasm of the young, and ~a has a lot to share," said corn· missioner Diane POWld . The new appolntee will serve on the seven·· .mem~r board's recreational pr<Cramming and com· munity relaUons committee. Miss Hayes' parenta, George and Robin Hayes, are active in Redwood Ctty affair1, and her grandfather, Willtam • Malone. recently ret.J,red Crom the San Ff &nc.laco briry Commission. Scudder testified that he foiled his kidnapers by faJcing a heart attack when one of the two men left the van. He broke free ln Fountain Valley and ran for help while his panicstricken abductor drove off. Scudder later identified Sellers as one of the two men. He was un- able to identify Wesson as his companion. ' Wesson's wife spent most or o.iry Pli.t Slaff Photo SUBJECT OF PROBE? Supervlaor Diedrich Man Kills Wife, Weds In Hours GLOVERSVILLE, N.Y. (AP> -Only three hours after he clubbed his wife to death with a hammer, 62-year-old Donald Langlois was attending his second wedding in this Mohawk Valley city, police said. And authorities say that after attending a small wedding recep- tion while the first wife's body lay in a car trunk. the new couple wentto Florida the next day. Langlois was being held today in Hollywood, Fla., awaiting ex- tradition pn second-degree murder charg~s in the death of bis wife. Arlene. SS. Hollywood Det. Mike Jadwin •said Langlois confessed to killing his wife after haying an argu- ment with her Friday in whjcb he asked for a divorce. "She said she wouldn't,'' Jadwin said. "At the end of the discussion, he picked up a ham- mer and struck her six times over the bead.'· Jadwin said there were no charges against the second wife, Christine Floyd, 59, or Gloversville, N . Y .. whom he described as "an innocent victim of circumstances." Mrs. Floyd was a widcw before marrying Langlois, the detective <See WIVES, Page AZ> Mason Park Expansion Plan Okayed Plans for a $1.7 million ex- pansion project at William R. Mason Regional Park in Irvine won the endorsement Tuesday of Orange County superviso,a The boa.rd asked eowlft) staff members to solicit bids for the Tuesday on the witness stand and told the jury that Scudder' pro- mised to provide for her and her two children after Wesson and her half brother were charged with the kidnaping. Mrs. Joyce Wesson said the l promise was made by Scudder when s he visited his Balboa Island home s hortly after 1 Wesson and .Seller:§ were lodged (See HEIR, Page A2) Accident Claims Girl, 13 ., A 13-year-old girl who was in- jured Dec. 27 in a trur)c accident in Irvine died Tuesday and police say the y may press manslaughter charges against the 16-year·old boy who was driv- ing the truck. Kate Kales. of 18022 Mann St .• Irvine. died at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital after being kept alive since the accident on a life-sustaining breathing machine. She underwent surgery im· mediately following the accident for massive head anc)Jntemal in· juries. but did not recover enough to breathe on her own, ac- cording to hospital officials. - The accident occurred shortly before midnight Dec. Z1 near UC Irvine. The truck in which s he was riding hit a center divider in the road and flipped over. Four other teenage passengers were thrown out of the truck, but they sustained only minor in- juries, according to poli~~ re· ports. . ti . The driver of the truck, a)~~ year-old Irvine boy, was booked at Juvenile Hall on suspicion of• felony drunken driving. Irvi ne Police Sgt. Robett Kredel said today investigators may seek manslaughter chargesl against the youth. They de~lined to identify the boy because of his age. Irvine Police Che ck Leads In Vandalism An Irvine man was arrested Tuesday on charges of possession of marijuana for sale and cultivation after Irvine Police al· legedly found 10 pounds of pot in his house and 13 planL<; growing in his backyard. Karoly Koppany, 53, of 460:? Walnut Ave., was arrested at his home Tuesday afternoon and booked at the Newport Beach Jail. Police said they were tipped off about Koppany, an Wlemptoyed photographer, and went to his home, where they found 10 pounds of marijuana scattered in several locations. The pot was valued at about$500, police said. Officers claimed they also found 13 marijuana plants grow· ing in the backyard, plus another plant growing in the kitchen. SMOOTH SAJU N<: project, whfcb will include a E-Qft Pf LlYI' ..41) 9.4·acre lake with a fountain, r ' seven picnic structures and three "We sold the boa'l the firs sand volleyball courts. night the ad ran in the paper." County oflicials said plans call That's the advertising succ for tbe planUng of abovt 1,000 related by a Newport Beach t1\ trees, alon.11 wllb other landscap· wbo placed this classified ad: lng and lrrlgallon. A 17-statlon physical iie..ness Sabot S<lhock 4obo series • tourse also it to be included. raring rlgg<'d, new alond with play areas and !:&je air Ulman sail. I $ZSO e XXIMlXXX ' work on aome existing p ng lots. If you have a boat you'd like Tbe expansion wm bring the convert to cash, call 642--S678. IL park to 100 acres. accordln1 to a takes only a few words ln the nport. to aupervleora. 'lbe park ls~ l'tabt place-to attract a buyer, IDC!ated 1t Culver and tJnt...U., and the right place ls ~Daily Drive&., . ~--··••dPU~o~t~.~~----------~..,...,~ ' ,.. . ---,... = O.hy 1'1 .. 1 '''" l'llOlo DOG APPARENTLY DIDN'T KNOW WHAT HE WAS CHAINED TO; THAT'S THE PROBLEM Parl(lng Near Are Plugs That Don't Look Tradttlona1·11n't Illegal Identity Crisis Looms Squatty Hydrams Worry Municipal Court By WILLIAM SCHREIBER 01 IM Dilly P ilot $\lff S ou t h Or a nge Co un ty Municipal Court judge's aren't overly concerned about the fort that about 500 or Mission V1cjo's fire plugs don't fit the trad1t ionul conceotion or fir<.' uluJ?S Whal does worry the Judges 1s the squatl y . bufr-color cd hydrants in older sections or the commun1tr a rrn't marked many way to g1v·l' out or-urea res1denb u clear in<licallon that parking within 15 reet of them is illegal. About three weeks ago. Judge J ohn Griffin of the Laguna N1i.:uel Court started dJ5m1:.sing tickets issued to people who parked loo close to Mission Viejo fire plugs. without prior incident In the wake of the judge's de· cisio n . Californ ia Hi ghway P atrol and Sheriff's officers patrolling the community have been informa lly ordered to stop issuing such citations until the matter is resolved. "It doesn't look good for us to have these thrown out. even Jf a violation is present," said a CHP spokesman. "To me, there's a lot more at s take than a Little piece of paper when somebody parks In front or a hydrant. .. GriHin conceded 1n an in· terview that the entire is!>ue came to light because of "fluky circumstances.'• He sald a Leisure World man given a ticket for illegally park- ing next to a hydrant came to court armed with a Polaroid photo and some legal knowhow. "Greenbergs" after their San Francisco m anu!acturers, are hJghly favored by firemen in the field, who find them much easier to use than con venlional models. "In fact. Mission Viejo had to switch to another type of hydrant last year in newer s ections because these {the Greenbergs) are in such demand nationwide) that the ma nufacturer can't keep them in stock," the spokesman said. The spokesman said fire de- partment officials plan to discuss the problem with the judges, the Mission Viejo Company and the Moulton-Niguel Water District to decide how best to deal with 1.he sticky situation . Ortega Death lti \'iew CoUnty GroWth · • Trend Backed Tom Riley. new chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervisors. told f e llo w supervisors Tuesday the coun· ty's growth trends will continue. In a speech prepared for his ac· ceptance of the board gavel for 1977, Riley said the clima te and labor pool make Orango CoWllY an inviting place ror housing and industry. He called for effective plan- ning, careful monitoring to make certain development does not ex· ceed the capacity of needed services and increased public participation in tbe planning pro· cess. Riley pledged to cont.lnue ef· forts to hold down the costs or county government while ex· panding services to keep pace with growth. He noted, for example, there already have been dollars saved by the formation of the county Environmental Management Agency and General Services Agency which consolidated several former departments. In addition. a hiring freeze, limiting the number of positions that can be filled , saved the coun- ty more than $11 million las t year, Riley said. "lt Is through eCforts such as this that Orange County main- tains the lowest ratio of employes to population of any COWllY in the state," he continued. Riley also said the county supervisors are committed •'to tenaciously pursue" property tax reform to ease the burden on county homeowners. In addition, he said, the county must commit itself to solving the problem of housing costs. Riiey explained market pre. ssures have driven housing cost:s up to the point where moderate- income families cannot afford homes. . "This has had a part1cularly severe effect on younger people, senior c itizens and on others wanting to buy a house for the firs t time, with no equity to transfer," Riley said. The 1977 board chairman also said the county must intensify Ile; effort to obtain slate and federul highway funds ~nd pledged to seeJc appointment of a county re- sident to the California Highway Commission. Riley said the supervisors wi ll be tackling the redrawing of supervlsorial districts this year. will continue to improve juvenile divers ion programs and seek more state and federal grants to assist with county projects. In addition, he expressed hope that several Southern California counties working together would be able to solve tbe need for addi· tional airport services for local residents. E'ra111 Page A J DIEDRICH. • bylst for Hughes Airwest. an airline operating out oC Orange County Airport. Brown was In Santa Ana this morning with his attorneys, re· portedly to put In an appearance before the Grand Jury. Hla testimony ts expected to center on a Mangers fund-raiser at Club 33 In Disneyland. Mangers has not yet filed his ·finaJ campaign contribution- statement. HEADS FUND DRIVE Theater Backer Wltmet CdMWoman Heads Drive For Theater Harriette F . Witmer or Corona del Mar been namc.'<i chairman «>f the South Coas t ReperloJ"y Theater building campaign and will be responsible for raising S2 5 million toward construction of the theater near South Coast Plaza. Mrs . Witmer, president of Deepwater Chemical Co., L~d. ~f Costa Mesa, said the campaign 1s off to a good start with initial con· tributions totaling $867,000. She said several major con- tributions will be announced soon, pushing the total over $l million. The SOO·seat. theater is scheduled to open in 14te fall or this year, according to SCR of- ficials. Ile says he threw out "ubout six citations" so far and has enlisted the full support of his fellow judges in continwn!( to do so until something is done to cor- rect the situation. which has ex· isled ror more than fi"c years Water Spout Off Coa§t "I was a little surprised." Grl(· fin said. "Jt WllS the first time I ever heard or anybody pleading not guilty to parking in front or a hydrant.·· But the judge s aid he began to see the wisdom or lhe man's argument. "He claimed that the hydrants are ouc of the ordinary and are improperly noticed." Griffin said. ··r hat.I to agree witb him because there is a big hole in that part of the California Vehicle Code " Van May Provide Clues to Slaying But It is believed that Brown balked at Diedricb's request that he support the fund-raiser. In early November, his client sought approval of an agreement that In effect. would extend Ai~est service out of Orange ·County Airport from Salt Lake City to Denver. Later. County CoWlSel Adrian KuYJ>Cr ruled that the service ex- tension was more properly of concern to Federal Aviation Ad· ministration than the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Mrs. Witmer was Ute first woman elected to membership in the Drug, Chemical and Allied Trades Association in 1972. Sbe currently serves as western re· gional vice presideht of the or- ganization. Frotit Page Al HEIR ••. A SOO·foot w uter ~p.'lul was sighted about three miles off the Huntington Beach coast al 10:20 a m today. The spout. describt.-d by one observer as a !>mall tornado, picked up wulcr like a funn t•I into the clouds. No damage wa:. re- ported lluntington neach F'1rc Departme nt Capt. Roger H~mcr said he observed the 5pout from the Civ ic Center dS ll paralleled the southern coast of the cil ) llosmrr aid the 5jX>Ut lasted about 10 minutes. •'rom Page ·l I WIVES ... said. a nd ha d hcen told by Lan~lo1:. that his clivorcc became final On· :11 . the lfu~· of the kill lllJ,! The couple were m arnl"<i Fn - dny afternoon in a Methodist t'hurch a(t1•r thc y produced ~hat .. cemt"d to be a vahd marriage license. The manaJ,?cr of thc hotel whcrf• thc small rcception look place !>a1d reservations had been made ··a couple of weeks ago.·· Jle sa id the wedding couple "stayed till midnight." They headed to f'lorrda on Saturday. and ~hen tficy arrived Tuesday at the home or the new Mrs . LanRlois · relativt"S, they were met by New York police The bod y of the first Mrs Langlois had been round in the car trunk at her home Sunday mom- ini.t. after her son in-law reported her missing. OAAHQ! COAST DAILY PILOT TM o.-.,_.. CN\t O.tu; .,..._. "'"'"""'<"-l\t tl"ft• biflltd tM .... , P'f ft\1. i,, eiv~ftd ~tr. 0t""""" (N~t ~1\~l""t (.omoe !'\f S.~M" _.,~ .... ttu~ \l\tt't M~,.ft•t ""evq" '''lttty fl1f' C.o••• ,.,.HI N••f)f)tf 8f .. (h, M.,_,,flftqtOI' 8fMft ''°'"" '"1" V•"'"~· 1 rv1n~ ... ,ttftl•b.-C:\ VAii"'• •ftlt ~~·!::.~~~~:~~:~·.:=-~I;:. JM''M pA1 OUt'lll\IU"Q Ol•l\I ~ .. J.10 W.. t .... t ~'"'· C~t• ~•• C•flfor..w•.,.'' .... ,, ......... + Pr•;lotn~ •"4 ll''*IWt J.t<•. c ..... Yt<•PU'\ICf'"l'"'n\tC,-._r .. ~·· r , ....... , ...... l.dl!Of n..-·· .......... M4"tli'MJ ldf• Qt,,., M LMt Ill-,. INll A,\l,t•f'• N'tf\etl"O l dftof'\ Offfctt C.•l•--M; UOWO\l .. f \I- ..._ .... It 111to--si-• .. -=-,.~~~ .. ~'w,ri:,~,.~~d 11s.~o .... ,, ... ., Tefeptione (1t 41142"4121 C1etefflecl AdHrtlalftt 142.at?t .._.. ... t,V•llev-Oltl<• Qt•UIO r'o"'t.t"(1•"-"tt •ff.OUO I Th e judge s a id t he code describes every kind or vehicle, roadway and street sign in detail but makes only one menllon of fire plugs. "It says, in effect. thou shalt not park in front of one," he said ··we all grew up with a slan· c!ard idea of wha t a fireplug looks hke." Griffin said. "When I was a kid. I e\'en s at on one to sell newspapers." But he said the Mission Viejo plugs are unusually shaped, set back from the curb by as much as 10 feet and sometimes sur· rounded by vegetation. "I agree that they are much ru cer looking but they s hould at least put the word 'l''lre· on them or paint the curbing red," he said. ··As it st;rnds. they are im- prope rly noticed and a nybody could successfully argue their way out of a $15 ticket." Unfortunately. past violators w~have already tacitly pleaded guilty by paying their fines can't come back for another chance, the judge s aid. Orange County Fire Depart- ment officials are in a quandary over the s itu a tion bec ause they've apparently been trying ro~ months lo have county gov- ernment paint the curbs red. Becaus e of the cost Involved, they haven't gotten very far. A departme nt spokesman said the offending plugs, known as Police in Santa Fe, New Mex· ico, have recovered a van iden- tified as the property of a woman whose body was round nesr the Ortega Highway in the San Juan Capis trano area Dec. 20. Orange County Sheriff's criminallsts dispatched to the New Mexico community said they are checking the vehicle thoroughly for clues that might lead them to the killer of Maria Padilla. 22, of Santa Ana. Sheriff's officers stressed to· day, however, that no charges have been filed by them at this time against the arrested occu- pant of the van, Gilbert Lovato, 18, of Santa Fe. Lovato Is held In the Santa Fe jail today awaiting court action on charges that include his al· leged escape from a local institu- tion. Sheriff's Capt. Robert Griffeth said it is known that Lovato was in Orange County at the time Mrs. Padilla was kidnaped and !tilled. Griffeth said Lovato is wanted for questioning by Newport Beach police in connedion with a robbery in that city. A warrant for his detention on that charge has been transmitted to Santa Fe police Griffeth said his office hopes to Tracks Reopened REDDING (AP) -Tracks blocked by a rockslide which de- railed a freight train were re· opened late Tuesday. 'Treated Like Dirt,' KKK Marine Says. By The AssodaLed Press The Marine Corps is "treating us like dirt." complains one or the young white Camp Pendleton leathernecks identified as Ku Klux Klansmen. PFC Dennis Cemp!>ell Jr .. act- ing as spokesman for three Klan members, said they went on un- authorized absence for a day because of harassment. The trio turned up Tuesday after calling a news confer e nce In nearby Oceanside, and then military police took them in custody at the gate. Their units wUI apply dis· cipllne. a base spokesman said. Today they were 1chedUled to resume testimony for which they wert aubpoenaed by attorneys ror black Marines charged with conspiracy and tusaultlng white.. "I'm coming back here for the sole purpose of gelling thls thini over with." C.rmpbell said. He said he and his two buddies, PFC Ronnie Harper and Ptc Charles V. Smith, spent Sunday nl«ht and Monday 1n San Ot IO because Marine guards retwsed to Jet a friend drive them up to their bar· racks. At the gale, Campbell said he heard one of the guards sa}', "It's those Klansmen." Shirts which the trio wore at the news con- ference carried the words, "White Power Ku KJux'KJan." Their names were on a Ust or 1A members of the Klan found near a barracks room invaded Nov. 13 by blacks claiming they were striking back at the KJan. Fl'OM Page AJ LONGET ••• communication between them," Mra. Stroh aald . "The circumstances were •llCh they real)y weren't together." Jury selection JS' ex,pected to tnd t.hia week. Allomen tor both • aldes can dl&mlss at 1east20 more ,pcraonswithoutaaylngwhy. AttltudH toward flHarms emeried aa a key llsue In qua· Uon1n1 or posatbl• JW'Orl by both defense aod protecuttoo.. -._ -----. _._. ----~~ bring Lovato to Orange cOunty via the extradition process. "By that time we'll know more about his occupancy of the van and his movements on the · weekend that Mrs . Padilla was murdered," he said. The woman 's body , shot through the head, was found on the top of a hill in the San Juan area after a 12-year-0ld girl lid· ing her horse through bru.c;h cov- ered country spotted the victim's 2-year-old son. LitUe David Padilla, sobbing and crying "Mama, Marna" pointed out lo sheriff's officers the area where his mother had been lefl by her abductol". Mrs. Padilla's husband, David, 25. told officers he last saw his wi~ Dec. 17 when she left their home in the van to visit a nearby bank and go Christmas shopping. Her body was found three days later. In earlier Interviews, Diedrich said he regretted the cloud now overhanging his political ac· tivilles and that Mangers and others might somehow become tainted. Chilean Cheered MOSCOW (AP) -More than 2,000 Russians gave Chilean Communist leader Luis Corvalan a chanting ovation at a rally Tuesday in a Moscow concert hall. Corvalan. Jailed in Chile after the 1973 military coup, was freed Dec. 18 in exchange for the release o f Soviet dissident Vl adimir Bukovsky. who was in a Russian prison. Both men were inltlally Oown to Switzerland. OUR ENTIRE INVENTORY in the county jail. Mrs. Wesson. 35, testified that Scudder assured her in their hour-long conversation that she and her children would not suffer whatever happened to her husband. She said he kissed her and called her a "sweet little girl" but insisted on searching her purse when she entered his home with the explanation that she might have brought a gun with her. Blood Tested WASHINGTON (AP) -State Department officials are hoping that a team of Johns Hopkins University scientists can tell them why one-third of the foreign service personnel stationed in Moscow have abnormally high wttite blood cell counts. PANTSUITS •1 BLOUSES KNIT TOPS• NIGHTWEAR ~· SCARVES• JEWELRY l)ACKETS ~~ s9~UAMPANTS m; 55"1 OP1M DAILY 10.5 ·FRIDAY 10.7 •,,ty .... ,.. y-c. ....................... a-,. ... _. MAGNOLIA CENTER It I 71 ....,. of• street. Wte 1 ................... ,,_"" . ' . FREEi OON1 MISS IT INFORMAL MODELING SHOW SPONSORED BY FASHION HOUSE ATTHI BRADFORD PLACE 19171 M1t9"ollo S..._et HllfttlttcJtCNI l•och PhoMtH·061 0 'I : I Laguna/South ~oast ED ITI O N I Al.ter11oon - N.Y. tocks ' OL. 70, NO. 5, 4 SECTIONS, -i6 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA W EDNESDAY, JANUARY 5, 1977 TEN CENTS Uspect's Wife Claims .Scudder Vow By TOM BARLEY Ot lhe O•lly Pilot St.it J(jdnap suspect William Rudy Wesson's wife told an Orange County Superior Court jury late 'l:uesday that alleged kidnap vie· 'tim John H. "Jack" Scudder pro- mised to provide for her and her two children after her husband and hatr brother were charged !.with tbekidnaping. t Mrs.J oyce Wesson said the pro· I mise was made by Scudder, 64, when she visited the Balboa Island home of the heir to the Scudder food fortun~shortly after Wesson, 45., and Ricki Dale Sellers, 20, were lodged in the county jail. Mrs. Wesson testified that Scudder assured her in their hour- long conversation that she and her children would not suffer whatever happened lo Wesson. I 'n Ortega Death She said Scudder kissed her and called her a •·sweet little girl" but •• insisted on searching her purse when she entered his home with the explanation that she might have brought a gun with her. Mrs. Wesson told defense al· torney Michael Quigley that Scudder has not helped her or her family in any way since her husband and Sellers were arrest· edlastAug.19. It is-alleged that Wesson and Sellers grabbed Scudder as he left his dentist ·s office in Huntington Beach and confined him to a motor home that toured the coastline while a telephoned de- mand for $250,000 in ransom was transmitted to the victim's wire. Scudder testified that he foiled his kidnapers by faking a heart at- tack when one of the two men left the van. He broke free in Fountain -Van Clues Sought I Police in Santa Fe, New Mex· ~co, have recovered a van iden· ,tified as the property of a woman Charges Denied by Ex-chief lcwhose body was found near the Ortega Highway in the San Juan Capistrano area Dec. 20. j Orange Coun ty Sheriff's criminalists d1~patched to the New Mexico community said they are checking the vehicle thoroughly for clues that might lead them to the killer of Maria Padilla, 22, of Santa Ana. I Sheriff's officers s tressed to· •day, however, that no charges have been filed by them al this time against the arrested occu· pant of the van, Gilbert Lovato. 18, of Santa F e. Lovato is held in the Santa F'e jail today awaiting court action on charges that include his al· leged escape from a local institu- t1on . Sheriff's Capt. Robert Griffeth said it is known that Lovato was in Orange County at the lime Mrs. Padilla was kidnaped and killed. Griffeth said Lovato is wanted fo r questioning by Newport Beach poli~e in connection with a robbery in that city. A warrant for his detention on that charge has been transmitted to Santa Fe police ~-hour Widower I Man Kil/,s Wife, Remarries GLOVERSVILLE, N.Y. <AP) -Only thre~ hours after he tubbed his wife to death with a ammer, 62-year-old Donald anglois was attending his nd wedding in this Mohawk aUey city, police said. And authorities say that after «.ending a small wedding recep- 'oo while the first wife's body • ayin a car trunk. the new couple enl to Florida the next day Langlois was being held today n Hollywood. Pia .. awaiting ex t'~d1lion on second-degree qrder charges in the death of # .. his wife. Arlene, 55. Hollywood Det. Mike Jadwin •said Langlois confessed to killing his wife after havmg an argu· ment with her Friday in which he asked for a divorce. "She said s he wouldn't,'" Jadwm said. "At the end of the discussion. he picked up a ham- mer and struck her six trmes over the head." Jadwin said there were no charges against the second wife. C hri s tine Floyd, 59. o f Glovers v1ll e. "l Y . whom he (See WIVES, Page A2> .John Osborne, 12, of Laguna Niguel and brother Paul, 9, &bow the autographs the)P collected from the Oakland Raiders during Super Bowl practice at UC Irvine. They ~e Paul's Cav~rite team, possibly because he played tor the Ra.lders in Junior All-American football. Griffeth s aid his office hopes to bring Lovato to Orange County via the extradition process '"By that time we'll know more about his occupancy of the van and his movements on the weekend that Mr s. P a d il la w as murdered," he said. The wom an's body, s hot through the head. was found on the lop of a hill in the San Juan area after a 12-year-old girl rid· ing her horse through brush cov· ered country spotted the victim's 2-year-old son. Little David Padilla, sobbing and crying "Ma ma, Mama" <See CLUES, P a,ge A2) Water Spout Off Coa3t A 500-foot water spout was sighted about three miles off the Huntington Beach coast at 10:20 a .m. today. The spout, described by one observer as a small tornado, picked up' water like a funn e l into the clouds. No damage was re- ported. Huntington Beach Fire Department Capt. Roger Hosmer said he observed the spout from the Civic Center as it paralleled the southern coast of the city. Hosmer said the spout lasted about 10 minutes. By GARY GRANVILLE 01 t~t 0~1ly P1lo4 St•ff A Grand Jury probe into al· legations that Orange County Super visor Ralph Diedrich ii· legally solicit ed campaign fund s for other political figures reportedly got under way today. The allegations center on methods used by Diedrich to solicit campaign funds for office seekers he backed in last Novem· ber's election. including As· $emblyman Dennis Mangers <D· Huntington Beach). Sources Hose to the inquiry said there is no indication that Mangers or others who rilight have benefltted from the alleged DIEDRICH FLAYS DISTRICT ATTORNEY, A3 i llegal f u nd r aising h ad knowledge of the techniques used lo raise money on their behalf. Assemblym an Mangers was not immediately available for comment The jury'i; inquiry is not an in· dication that illegal activities OC· curred. It 1s an indication, however. that the allegat ions have been checked out by invesl1~ators and that they concluded there is enough substance to take them before the Grand Jury. District Attorney Cecil Hicks <See DIEDRICH, Page A2) Water Board Nixes ·South Laguna Site A controversial location for a new South Coast County Water District headquarters in South Laguna was approved Tuesday by the district's board. The board authorized location of the new headquarters at 31592 West St .. where the district has an equipment yard and about two acres of property. The staff was directed to determine the size building needed. Neighbors had opposed the de· velopment of the property for a water district facility. Jn response. the district sought ap· proval from the coastal com· mission to build on a three· quarters acre plot in Laguna Niguel near the Dana-Niguel library now unde r construction. The regional commission de· nied the dlstrict's plans. The dis· trtct appealed to the state com· mission and ii\ December, its ap· peal was denied. Cost could range from $325,000 \o $375,000, Ray Millar, district general m8.t1ager, said. Following the adverse ruling by the coastal commission, Board President Thomas Brooks said the action was "a very severe blow for the water rustrict and the community. "ln voting not to hear our ap· peal. one commissioner urged us to ignore the objections of the re· sidents in the West Street area and go ahead with our original plans to put an oHice building on the reservoir site we already own there. We do have a permit from the regional commission to build there. "But we are very reluctant to flout the strong protests or home owners in that neighborhood. They a re our friends and neighbors and although we feel our presence would not be dis- ruptive, we understand their de· sire to maintain the quiet re· sidential atmosphere they have enjoyed over the years," Brooks said. SMOOTH SAlUNG FOR PILOT·4JJ "We sold the boat the flrst night the ad ran In the paper." 14'-. .. :pment Stolen That's the advertising success &Ajlll related by a Newport Beach man Skiing equipment valued at who placed this classified ad: $555 has been 1tolen rrom a San Jtlan Capistrano home by a Sabol Sthock 4000 series. burglar who cut a bole ln the racing rlgg~. new garage door, reached through to Ulman s3Jl . S2SO unlock the door and then eota'ed. y x xuic Orange County sheriff's otncers If you hove a boat you'd like to said the t.l\ert. was reported by convert Ito CHh, call $42·~. lt aales manager James lllchMI talles only • few words in the Facclut.o, 30, ot :n~t Via Sonwa. riC}lt place t.o attract a buyer. No one waa at home at the time, I and tM right place ls the Dlllly tbeysald. • • -:Pi=J~===::-==-:7""'.":--- 11 ,. Valley and ran for help wlule his panic stricke n abductordroveoff. Scudder later identified Sellers as one of the two men. He was una· ble to idenit1Cy Wesson as Sellers ' companion. Mrs. Wesson wasoneorrive wit· nesses called.by the defense Tues· day to support the argument that Scudder was invol.ved in the plan· ning of what Quigley described as a "phony kidnap." °*''' Pl'-! St•tt -•• SUBJECT OF PROBE? Supervisor Dledrtch Songster's Jury Picks Continue ASPEN, Colo. <AP> -Claudine Longet watched intently today as another 50 people were sworn in as potential Jurors in her trial for manslaughter Miss Longet faces tnal in the March 21 shooting death of Vladimir "Spider" Sabich. her lover. Miss Longet, weanng a short, nowered dress, wa!> accom1>amed to court by her two defense at- torneys. A 12-member jury has been ten· tatively seated: but laWYers ex· peel to take another three days to choose a final panel. Three hun· dred persons have been sum- moned to the 87-year-old Pitkin County Courthouse for possible jury duty. Jury selection is difficult in the case because of the close rela· tionshjps among Aspen-area res1· dents. On Tuesday. one potential juror said he once was a golf caddy for singer Andy Williams, Miss Longet's former husband. who has been called to testify for the prosecution. An X-ray technici an also was given preliminary approval after saying she examined X-rays of Sabich the day aftertheshooling. Miss Longet. who appeared cheerful when the trial opened Mo nda y, said s h e wa s "heartbroken" Tuesday after , hearing potential jurors reveal glimpses of the life she and Sabich led shortly before he was shot to death. Several potential jurors were excused Tuesday for saying they CSttLONGET, Page AZ) Sheriff's Deputy Robe rt' Brautigam and his fiancee, Sad-c dleback Hos pital nurse Ann.;l Press. t estified t'hat they were as-, sured by a former business as·• sociate of Scudder that the Balboa man planned bis own kidnap. Brautigam said the conversa· lion with prospectivedefensewit . ness Ken Hunter occurred outside the Saddleback hospital when the <See HEIR, Page A?> . \ Medic ··Delay by ·" SC Urged . By PffiLIP ROSMARIN Of Uw Oally Phol si.11 San Cle mente should tem porarily withdraw from a county par amedic training program because it h asn't enough firefighters, according to Fire Chief Ron Coleman. ·1 Coleman will recommend to the City Council al a 7:30 meeting tonight that they adopt an Orange County Paramedic Master Plan but delay participa· J tion in it until July, 1978 ~ The city had been schc:dc!ed to enroll six firefighters in a six~ month training prog,.ram begin mng in March. Colefnan, whose recommendations were based on the findings of an ad hoc commU.. tee to study the feasibility ot starting a paramedic program. said the council should cancelJ plans for the earlier enrollment. 1 The councll should instead' commit the city to enter the paramedic program "no later than July, 1978," Coleman said. ' Only Br ea. Stanton, San Clemente and some outlying• county areas are not now covered <See DELAY,Page A2)J .'. * * * ·-·' I County Okay~ i Medic Service~. For Laguna A five-year agreement allow- ing Orange County fire depart· ment paramedics to serve the Ci· ty of Laguna Beach was ap· proved T uesday by county supervisors. ( The agreement calls for the ci· ty to pay $33,206 for the service through June 30, with the fee to be renegotiated each fiscal year. Laguna Beach voters in Nov e mber overwhe lmingly ap · proved a tax override of up to 7 cents per $100 of assessed vaJua· lion to pay for the county pro· gram. The city council approved its agreement with the county last month. The service is to begin Friday and the paramedics will be housed at the South Laguna fire station. Second Street and Virginia Way. Oran~7ConM -·~-Weatlae r Grave Robbers Get Sentenle Chance of showers and thunders howers through Thursday with highs of 54 to 62, lows in mid 40s. INSIDE TODA.'\' Some cit~ of a small town in Oklahoma /ind it tough to live with tM name left them b)/.a Civil War hero. bul neort11 all toy BowU{/s is RED BLUFF Cl\P) -Six men acquitted or robbing Indian graves have been given the altemaUves of paying $500 fines. working the fines off or spending 2Sdaysinjall for trespassing. Tehama County Superior Court Judie Noel Watkins imposed the sentences on Richard 8urlle, 32; Frank Dyball, 32: Mike Michael, 31; Cbarle3 Spencer, 30: Eraal M>"UI, 3.S, ~nd Jay Thoma.t, 31, all of Medford, Or~ . Tbe Jury whieh acquitted them ol removtn1 bum an remains trom an Indian burial site near Puken· ta found them guilty of trespus-m1. . . ' ' v a JiM placa to Uve. P~ 88. lad ex =~ 9'-1 :t· .. , C:t· .... "' ... "" .... M ... • A 2 DAIL V PILOT LISC f'ro.. P age Al .~DELAY ••• oy paramedics, Coleman said. By the summer or 1978 only San Clemente will have no paramedics. But entry now Into the pro- gram, Co!cman said, would create "serious problems" for his fledgling de partment an terms otmanpower Just to beJ:in the proaram. the city would have to hire four more firefighters, Coleman stated in his wr1tten recommendation. The city now has only nine men in the rank of firefighter. With silt ttlen training al UC lrvine Medical Ct'ntcr, the de- partme nt would be left un dermanncd View County Growth Trend Backed Tom Riley, new chairman or the Orange County Board or Superv i s ors, t o ld f ellow supervisors Tuesday the coun· ty's growth trends will contin\le. In a speech prepared for hl$ ac- ceptance of the board gavel ror 1977. Riley said the climate and labor pool make Orange County an inviting place for housing and industry. Riley also said the county supervisors ure committed "lo tenaciously pursue" property tu reform to ease the burden on county homeowners. In addition. he said, the county must commit Itself to solving lhe problem or housing costs. Coleman said that s ince paramedic candidates must be 1 volunteers, San Clemente 1s faced with an additional pro- blem. Cities with larger fire de· partmeots, he said, have 3S to 150 firefighters from which to recruit volunteers . l ~~~~ DOG APPARENnY DIDN'T KNOW WHAT HE WAS CHAINED TO; THAT'S THE PROBLEM He called for ertecUve plan· ning, careful monitoring to make certain development does not ex- ceed the capacity of needed services and increased public participation in the planning pro· cess. Riley expl$1ned market pre- ssures have dtlven housing C05ls up to the point where moderate- income famllies cannot afford homes. "This has had a particularly severe effect on younger people. senior citiiens and on others wanting to buy a bousoforlbefi rst time, with no equity to transrer," .RUeysaid. Even with the hiring of four new men, San Clemente would have only 13 men from which to choose its Silt paramedic can· dJdates. Coleman s aid that with promo- tional opportunities coming up in the young department, "It is doubtful that many of our men will wish to volunteer for a pro- gram wh ich will hurt their chances at advancement." The San Clemente fire depart- ment oper ates an emergency ambulance service that many persons inside and ouU.ide the community have mistaken for a paramedic group. Unlike paramedics, who are able to treal such problems as cardiac-vascular emergencies, San Clemente firemen are able to provide only first-aid help, such as bandagin~ wounds or setting broken bones. F ro• Page A 1 WIVE S ... described as •·an innocent victim of circumstances." Mrs. Floyd was a widow before marry mg Langlois, the dclct'llve s::11d , and had been told by· Langlois that his divorce became final Dec. 31, Lhc day 0£ the kill· ing. The couple were married Fri· day afternoon in a Methodist church after lhey produced what seemed to be a valid marriage license. Capistrano's Council Eyes Builder Plan San Juan Capistrano city coun· eilmen will consider tonight how many homes will be built an the m1ss1on city and wh1ch homes will be bu1lt f1rst The Council 1s schl'<luled to meet <11 7 o'clock at city offices, 32400 Pasco Adelanto. Numerical limiL'i on residen· t ial bu1ld1nli(S and a rating scale to deterrnine the pnority among approved proJeCts are of!shoots of the c1ty"s growth management ordinance adopted Dec. 15. The ordinance requires City ('ouncll to s et limits each Janua ry for the number of re sadential units which can be ap· proved tn each of the succl'edmg three year'! It also calls for councilmen to establish a rating scale for com· pettl1 ve evaluation of rcs1dent1al pmJe<'ts With 841 dwelling units cur· rcnlly under construclJon or with .ipproved tentative maps. Plan· mng Director Thomas Merrell has recommended City Council hm1t bulldmg permits to be is· s ued m 1977, 78 and 79 to 400 units per year and in 1980 to 3SO units The rating scale evaluates pro- jects on density, drain on public resources and other qualiliell, with a bonus ror low or modera\e income housing. ORANGE COAST I. sc ,DAILY PILOT '"""°"•""Co"'' CM1ly .. ltot -.40'1Wf\tf"'''M'I IM'-0 tr-N•W\ Prt~ ... I\ OVbtl~ b'f' t.,. (>~ CM\t P\lb4f\l'Ht")(O,,,OfU'IY S...f'ft\•trd~tlOM••­ ovti.11 ....... ~ Mand•Y "'"°"'" lltiGAiy ,., f"&o>•• ,_..YI H•#Qef1 8••f'Pt H_,,.tl"QtOf\ Br t(.tr\ J"OMf\ I.tin Y•ll•v. ,, .. .,,. '•Hftb.tC'" v., .... .tM l~&..ch'\cwtft(N\I 4 \1"'4Pf>t ... ••lf'\Alr ... llOl'I I\ ov&'t~ ~•lvt•11n tifll(f ~'f\ ttw ~;=~~~~=!1.~,·.~~.::.,."° '"'• "•• .............. ltn\~ftC .,.., J!Vtl'IWt Jockll ewtn Vtce """•\tdMt ·~ 0.M>t .ti~· 1-t•lt-!dllt< ,_•AM_,_... ................. ~"'--_ ..... . ........ -........... ( ..... . Laav1ta latch Offtoa -fl•o-.. s.-1 Miiii.. ........ ,. 0 ....... .,.~ ornc .. ~ ...... ~ JJeW.•1--_,...,..., .. ..,. "'"_ ............ -•-•Vtllt'f 01t1U"-1-tt,.., 0-~,_,,., Tal.,t\OM ('114)142-4321 Clntlffed Adva,,1111'11942-Mtl L9fvn• lelOh AH°"*'"""''; Talt1>1tone4..,._. '-"""~ 4M-Ot30 ~·im =. °:.:%..~'-'··=~"'::"~ ,,..lttt tr tf•trft,."''"h Mr••*' ""''' .. ~:::..~:=~Utttu• U•te••• JHmiU\tft .. t.rr:.ft~~ ... ,::::m .. ::".:1.~!:, ~~ :"~~·:, ;~~ ............ ; ..,, ...... Pandng Near Are Pluga That Don't look Tradhlonal Isn't Illegal Identity Crisis Looms Riley pledged to cootinue ef. forts to hold down the costs or county government while ex- panding services to keep pace with growth. The 1977 board chairman also said the county must Intensify its effort lo obtain state and federal highway funds and pledged lo seek appointment of a county re- sident to the California Highway Commission. Squatty Hydranls Worry Municipal Court He noted, for example, there already have been dollars saved by the formation of the county Environmental Management Agency and General Services Ageney which consolidated several former departments. By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of IM DAiiy Piiot S~f S outh O r ange Co un ty Municipal Court judges a ren"t overly concerned about the fact that about 500 of Mission Viejo's fire plugs don't fit the_tradilional conceotjon or fi.r e plugs. What does worry the judges is the sq uatty, buff-colored hydrants in older sections or the community bren't marked in any way to give out-of-area residents a clear indication that parki.ng within 15 feet of them is illegal. About three weeks ago, Judge 'John Griffin of the Laguna Niguel Court started dismissing tickets issued to people who parked too close to Mission Vlejo fireplugs. He says he threw out "about six citations" so far and has enlisted the full support of hJs fellow judges in continuing to do so until something is done to cor- rect the situation, which has ex- isted for more than five years without prior incident. In the wake of the judge's de- cision , California Highway P at rol and Sheriff's officers patrolling the community have been informally ordered to stop issuing such citations until the matter is resolved. "It doesn't look good for us to have these thrown out, even if a violation is present," said a CHP In Event of Tie spokesman. "To me, there's a lot more at stake than a liUJe piece or paper when somebody parks in front of a hydrant." Grimn conceded in an i n- terview that the entire issue came to light because of "fluky circumstances." He said ·a Leisure World man .~ivcn a ticket ror illegally park- ing next to a hydrant came to court armed with a Polaroid· photo and some legal knowhow. "r was a little surprised," Grif- fin said. "It was the first time I ever heard of anybody pleading not guilty to parking in front of a hydrant." But the judge said he began to see the wi3dom of the man's argument. "He claimed that the hydrants are out of the ordinary and are improperly noticed," GriHin said. "1 had to agree with him because there is a big hole in that part of the California Vehicle Code." The j udge said the code describes every kind of vehicle, roadway and street sign in detail but makes only one mention of fire plugs. "lt says, in effect, thou shalt not park in front of one,•' he said. "We all grew up with a stan· dard idea of what a fireplug looks like," GriCCin said. "When I was a kid, I even s at on one to sell newspapers.•• San Juan Runoff Could he Costly Capistrano Unified School Dis· tricl taxpayer s may find themselves footing a bill in ex- cess of ~s.ooo for a run-orr elec- tion, if the March 8 trustee elec- tion results in a tie vote. Anticipating the possibility of a tie vote is probably appropriate in the Capistrano district. Th(), Nov. 2 election to fill a 5eal vacated by a trustee who had re- signed came close to a tie. William Manahan appeared to have won the election by eight votes, but a hand recount gave the victory to Jan Overton by three votes. The county estimates the cost to the district of the recount at about $1,200. Capistrano trustees voted un- animously this week to develop a policy for a runoff election in case of a tie vote, despite the cost. They rejected the less ex· pensive alternative, a lottery, which would leave sele<:lion of a winner lo chance. Assistant Superintendent Sam Chicas told trustees the cost to the district of the rWloff election would be about 60 cents per re· gistered voter. Front Page Al CLUES •.. pointed out lo sheriff's ofricers the area where his mother had been left by her abductor. Mrs. Padllla's husband, David, 25, told om cers he last saw his wife Dec. 17 when she left their home in the van to visit a nearby bank and go Christmas shopping. Her body was found three days later. 'Treated Like Dirt,' KKK Marine Says By Tbe Associated Press The Marine Corps is "treating us like dirt," complains one of the young white Camp Pendleton leathernecks identified as Ku Klux Klansmen. PFC Dennis Campbell Jr., :tel· ing as !IJ>Okesman for three Klan rnembers, said they went on un- authorized a bsence for a day because of harassment. The trio turned up Tuesday aft.er calling a news conference ln nearb y Oceanside.-and lben military police took them in custody at the gate. Their unltl will apply dls- dpline, a base spokE11Sman said. Today they were scheduled to resume testi mony ror whJch lhey were subpoenaed by attorneys for black Marines charged with cons piracy and assaultln1 whites. "I'm coming back here for the sole purpose of 1etting this Urlng over with," Campbell said. He said he and hla two buddies, PFC RonnJe Harper •nd PFC Charles V. Smith, spent Sunday night and Monday In San OieJO because Marine ~guards refus«l to let a friend drlvc them up to their bar· rack.a. At the gate, Campbell said he heard one of the guards say, "It's those Klans men." Shirts which the trio wore at the news con- ference carried the words, "White Power Ku Klux Klan." Their names were oo a list of 14 members or the Klan found near a barracks room invaded Nov. 13 by blacks claiming they were striking back at the Klan. F,....Page A J HEIR ••• sheriff's deputy was golng there for treatment. Brautigam and Miss Press teallned that Hunter told them Scudder aasur~ him the klct,ap was a hoait and that he (Hunt.er) probably had the whole thing on tape. Quigley said Hlmter will be asked to produc.-"that ~pc Jn court. "Hunt.er told me ho i.pes ever· ytbln1 Scudder uya to him became he belltvet Scudde-la . cruy." Bra.uU,amlaldtheJury. But he said the Mission Viejo plugs are unus ually shaped, set back from the curb by as much as 10 feet and sometimes sur- rounded by vegetation. "l agree that they are much nicer looking but they should al least put the word 'Fire' on them or paint the curbing red," he said. "As il stands, they are im- properly noticed and anybody could successfully argue their way out of a $15 ticket." Unfortunately. past violators who have already t.aciUy pleaded guilty by paying their fines can't come back for another chance the judge said. ' Orange County Fire Depart- ment officials are in a quandary over the situation because they've apparently been trying for months to have county gov- ernment paint the curbs red. Because of the cost involved, they haven't gotten very rar. A department spokesman said . the offending plugs, known as "Greenbergs" after their San Francisco manufacturers, arc highly favored by firemen in the field, who find the m much easier to use than conventional models. "In fact, Mission Viejo had to switch to another type of hydrant Jast year in n ewer sections because these (the Greenbergs > are in such demand nationwide that the manufacturer can't keep them in stock," the spokesman said. The spokesman said tire de· partment officials plan to discuss the problem with the judges, the Mission Viejo Company and the Moult.on-Niguel Water District lo decide how best to deal with the sticky situation. Clemente Home Hit A t el evision, ster eo set. camera and j ewelry valued al $760 was taken by a burglar from 3905 Calle Mayo, San Clemente. while owner Charlotte Pargee was out to lunch Tuesday, police reported. In addition, a hiring freeze. limiting the number of positions that can be filled, saved the coun· ly more than $1 l million last year, Riley said. "It is through efforts such as this that Orange County m ain· tains the lowest ratio of employes to population of any COUDly in ijle state," he continued. F ront Page Al LONGET ••• believe Miss Longetisguilty. One jury prospect said Sabich, an international s ki star, refused in early March lo attend a party where girls were paid to "get up and take their clothes orr. .. "He said he'd have to get a divorce lo come to the party." ski patrolman John Erspamer said. "I asked him to bring his lady (Miss LongetJ, and he said, 'No. that wouldn 't be fun,' or he wouldn't have any fun, or words to· that effect." Miss Longet and Sabich , 31. Jived together for two years before hls March 21 death. She says he was shot accidentally ·while teaching her to use a .22· caliber pistol .in his inountainside $250,000home. About two weeks before his de- ath, the couple attended a cocktail party for French skiers, said another prospective juror, Carla Stroh. "There wasn't a great deal or communication between them," Mrs. Stroh said. "The circumstances were such they reaJJy weren 'l together." Jury selection is expected to end this week. Attorneys for both s ides can dismiss at least 20 more persons withouts aying why. Attitudes toward firearms emerged as a key issue in ques- tioning or possible jurors by both defense and prosecution. OUR ENTIRE IMVEMTORY Riley said the s upervisors will be tacklin_g the redrawing or s upervisorfal districts this year, will continue to improve juvenile divers ion programs and saek more state and federal grants to assist with county projects. In addition, he expressed hope that several Southern California coWlties working together would be able to solve the need for addi- tional airport services for JO<lell residents. F ..._PageAJ DIEDRICH .• was un,avaUable for comment lo· day. Earlier this week, Diedrich de- nied any improprieties on his part. "How could there be?" he asked. "I gained noth ing personaJly from helping what I knew to be good candidates get elected to om ce." Diedrich hinted at the problem he is now facing when he bowed out Tuesd ay as Board of Supervisors chairman when be said, "The re h ave been in· vesUgations and there will be more investigations." • The allegations investigated so far purporte dly allege the Fullerton s upervisor with threatening prospective donors who balked at contributing to his designated candidates. D eath of Cle mente Man Said Suicide San Clemente police have term~ the gunshot death Mon- day of 60-year-old Herbert C. Whitney. or 117 Camino San Clemente, a suicide. Whitney was found at 1 :45 p.m. in his bedroom, lying on the bed his feet propped on a footstool: He was shot through the right. temple. Police said a .38-caJiber pistol was fou nd under tbe f ootstoot. PANTSUITS• BLOUSES KNIT TOPS • NIGHTWEAR • SCARVES • JEWELRY .. --------•TYPICAL EXAMPLES ________ _ JACKETS s~ 5999 PANTS ~'ls $ 599 OPEM DAILY I 0.5 • FllDAY 10-7 A,,ly ..._'-Yow C•""""'' Fftltl• .._ e..,. Acc-t MAGNOLIA CENTER I' 17 f t ..... II Shet, Wt. 1 ........ •ec1t "''""" FREE! DON1 MISS IT INFORMAL MOOD.ING SHOW SPONSORED BY F~HION HOUSE ATTHI • BRADFORD PLACE I 9 171 Mognolla Str.et · Hunffnc)toa hech ''""'-'6M61 o ~ t . ' Orange Coast EDITION Today"s Closing ~ N.Y. Stocks J WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 5, 1977 N TEN CENT Witness Tells Scudder 'Setup' By TOM BARLEY Ol lllt OillJ Pi._. Swtl El T or o ser vice station operator Ken Hunter testified lo· day in Orange County Superior Court that potato chip heir John Jt "Jae~" Scudder told him over the telephone that he "set up" a )iidnap plot for which two men ,are on trial. I Hunter told defense attorney Michael Quigley that Scudder a~- sured him)n the same conversa-second telephone conversation tion that he intended lo lake care later that evening with Scudder, of defendant William Rudy &t. who was calling the witness Wesson and Wesson's family if •• from his Balboa Island home. the vef'dict in the current trial Hunter has not yet been asked goes against him. if that tape is available. He was "He was drinking at the time," still on the witness~tand today. Hunter added. "But he told me Hunter's testimony today that he set up the kidnap and that made him the fifth witness to he intended to write the whole testify that Scudder helped to story fo.r Reader's Digest." plan the kidnap for which Hunter testified that be taped a W':8SO,!l, 45, of Tustin, and his Dally 11'1 ... 5uft l'Mte CHURCH BUIL.DtNG (BACKGROUND) BECOMES AVAILABLE FOR CITY USE Congregation MoYes. But Newport Doesn't Plen to Speed Ensign Park Development • Congregation to Leave Park's Bible Church Group to FolWw Sign First 1t "as tht• sign reading "Pnuse Y c the Lord" that went. No" 1t "111 bt· the congregation U\al .depart~ from the blufftop rrt Baptist Church of Newport Beach In a letter rl'Cl'IH'd by city or- 1Scials today. church members tnrormC'd the '.':cwport 8-0ach Ci· ty Council that lh<'Y will be mov t ing out of the occupied part of the Ensign View Park site. The church members said they will be moving in with the con- gregation of the Central Bible Church. 190 23rd St.. Costa Mesa. The departure of the congrega. tion comes about three years ahead of schedule. but city of- ficials said they are pleased wtth · Mont' Bids Adieu ~ ~o Police 'Fainily' She 1s called "Mom" by the men at the Newport Beach police atation I But Alma Thompson has de· &ed to leave her "family" and Mire after working for the police d epartment for 23 years Mrs . Tho mpson has been secretary to ,the city's police d1d since 1960 and has worked with Chief B. Jame,.'I Glavas since llewas hired in 1961. · "I'll probably miss il," she Sald of her job. "but I'm kind or ·tired and I 'd Uk«!" to have some "are time." • OWclally. she retired as of '"'1. 1, but city regulations allow ~ to work up to 90 days each. the situation. When the city bought the church site and an adjoining piece of property for the Ensign View Park last year, church members asked the city to establish a development plan for the park which would leave the church untouched as long as possible. City orficials complied and cily • councilmen approved a four-year phasing of the park which meant the congregation could have stayed until 1979. Cal Stewart, director of Parks, Beaches and Recreation for the city, said today he doesn'l con- template any changes In tt.at de- velopment schedule, but he said lbe cily will be considering a number or uses for the soon-to-be vacant church buildings. "I don 't think they will want to alter the development schedule, .. be explained, "because it is based on,;budgetary considera- tions. "However, we will make every effort to utilize the facility with recreation programs. There are a lot of clanes that could be con- ducted in the church," Stewart said. The church property consists or the church itself and another small building. Stewart said the smaller buHd· (See CHURCH, Page A2> brott\er-in -law, Ricki Dale Sellers, 20, of Hermosa Beach, are on trial. It is alleged that Wesson and Sellers grabbed Scudder last Aug. 19 as he left his dentist's of· fice in Huntington Beach and confined him to a motor home that toured the coastline while a te.lephone demand for $250,000 in ransom was transmitted to the victim's wile. Ch,arges Denied by Ex-chief By GARV GRANVILLE Of·~· Oalty Pltol Sufi A Grand Jury probe into al- legations that Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich ii· legally solicit ed campaign funds for other political figures reportedly got under way today. The allegations center on methods used by Diedrich to solicit campaign funds for office seekers he backed in last Novem- ber's election, mcluding As· semblyman !fennls Mangers (0 •. Huntington Beach>. Sources close to the inquiry said there is no indication that Mange.rs or other& who ml1hl have benefllted from the alleged DIEDRICH FLAYS DISTRICT ATTORNEY, A3 illegal rund raising had knowledge of the techniques used to raise money on their behalf. Assemblyman Mangers was not immediately available for .. comment. The jury's inquiry is not an in- dication that illegal activities oc· curred. It is an indication_. however, that the allegations "have been checked out by investigators and that they concluded there is enough subs tance to take them before the Grand Jury. District Attorney Cecil Hicks was unavailable for comment to- day. Earller this week, Diedrich de- nied any improprieties on his part. "How could there be?" he asked. "I gained nothing personally from helping what I knew to be good candidates get elected to ofrice. · • Diedrich hinted at the problem he is now fa cing when he bowed out Tuesday as Board or Supervisors chairman when he <See DJ ED RICH, Page A2) SMOOTH SAJUNG FOR PILOT AD "We sold the boat the first night the ad ran in the paper.•· That's the advertising success related by a Newport Beach man who placed this classified ad. Sabot SchO<'k 4000 sene.. racin11 rilrned. ne"' l 1man .. ail S2.'iO ~XX·XXXlC ll you have a boat you'd Uke to convert to cash, call 642-5678. ll takes only a few words in the right place to attract a buyer, and the righl place is the Daily Pilot. • Scudder testffled that be foiled his kidnapers by falUng a heart attack when one of the two men left the van. He broke free in Fountain Valley and ran for help while his panlcstricken abductor drove off. Scudder later jdentified Sellers as one of the two'men. He was un· able to identify Wesson as bis companion. • Wesson's wife spent most of o.i1v 11'1!0( ~ "'°" SU811CT OF PROSE? Superviso r Diedrich Longet Views Continued Jury Choices ASPEN, Colo. CAP>-Claudine Longet watched intently today as another SO people were sworn in as potential jurors in her trial for manslaughter. .. Miss Longet faces trial in the March 21 s hooting death of Vladimir "Spider" Sabich, her lover. Miss Longel, wearing a short, flowered dress, was accompanied to court by her two defense al· lomeys. A 12·member jury has been ten· tatively seated. but lawyers ex· pect to take another three days to choose a final p anel. Three hun- dred persons have been sum· moned to the 87-year-old Pitkin County Courthouse for possible jury duty. Jury selection is difficult in the case because of the close rela· tionships among Aspen.area resi· dents. On Tuesday, one potential juror said he once was a ~olf caddy for singer Andy Williams, Miss Longel's former husband, who has been called to testify for the prosecution. An X-ray technician also was given preli minary approval after saying she examined X-rays of Sabichtheday afterthesboollng. Miss Longet, who appeared cheerful when the trial opened Monday , said s he was "heartbroken.. Tuesd~y after hearing potential jurors reveal glimpses or lhe life she and Sabi ch led shortly before he was shot Lo death. Several potential j urors were excused Tuesday ror saying they believe Miss Long et is guilty. One jury prospect said Sab1ch. an International ski star, refused in early March to attend a pafty where girls were paid to "get up !SffLONGET. PageA2) 5 • so she agreed lo work three a week until ber replace· l can be trained. ·-:Mrs. Thompson said she has n lots of changes since she Open 1 Spa«!e Poliq ·~ ed the police department as a k in uw. ~\;When I first came one clerk the whole department You'd handle the radJo II all of the eUu were out. · "There sure are a lot rraore peo- e In the city and on the depart· ent now,·' she added. One of the additions to the de- ment as of Jan. 14, Will be her • aesuon Jerf,wbolscurreDl' ·in training at the Loe Angel~ ceAcademy. · ,. .She says she's enjoyed th 23 ffr ·~ pul In With the police nt nd talkl W\th pride eq_ who she hu seen "rrow up" in the depArtmentand ~o on to become chiefs of other departments. "I bate to leave before Chier Glavu retires." she sa$d. ''l've re.ally enjoyed worltlna with him. He'• aucb a 1ooctman. ·•But Ira tttllnl too bard to keep bouto and wbrk al tbe same ·Um• .. " r' Ne~ort Peers at Gifts 81 JOANNE REYNOLDS 04..._0.l"f'ltlt._.. Members or the Newport Beach Park•. Buches and llecreaUon Commission want the city to look its gtft horses ovei: before accept1n1 them. Tu••day nigh\ tbe com· mlstlOt>trt approved a aeven- polnt standard they will ask the city councU to adopt •• dty policy for ute In ac~nc open apace. The action wu p~ptew.s In f part by questions raised last month by Councilman Paul R,yckoff over the dedication of part of tbe upper portion ot Blg Canyon to the city by ~ Irvine Compan1. lt. lies In the new Harbor Rfdae development. near Sp111 ... Hill. 'J1M HV.n·polnt atmdard, er.. vised by Commluloner Gary Lovell wa.s 11s>Proved on the H~m• two reco"lmtndatlona lo tbe plann1ni commission Meklna d• dicaUon ot OJ>tln space '1"'° now Irvine Company developmenta. Jn one case. the PB and ft com- mission as(ted the pJannlnl com- mluion to appl'ove the tAmt.ative tract map for the Weatgrove de- velopment because of the plans for dedicating 1.8 acres includinl a stand of eucalypl~ trees and a bicycle trail. WHt(J'ove it p~ ror lhe 10.acre tile ly1n' between tM trees and WntcUff Drtve. lt will come belore the PlannlnC Com· ~oans.•~T..u) Tuesday on the wiln~ stand and· told the jury that Scudder pro-1 mised to provide for her and her two children after Wesson and her half brother were charged with the kidnaplng. Mrs. Joyce Wesson said the promise was made by Scudder when she visited his Balboa Island home shortly after Wesson and Sellers were lodged <See HEIR, Page A2) Slayer Rushes To Altar GLOVERSVILLE. N.Y. <AP> Only three houri\ after he clubbed his wife to death with a hammer. 62-year-old Donald Langlois was attending bis second )Yedding in this Mohawk Valley city, police said. And authorities say that after attending a small wedding recep- tion while the first wife's body lay in a car trunk, the new couple went lo Florida the next day ... Langlois was being held today in Hollywood. Fla., awaiting ex- tr adilion on second-degree murder charges in the death or his wife, Arlene. 55. Hollywood Del. Mike Jadwin •said Langlois confessed to killing his wife after having an ar&l!_:_ ment with her Friday in which fie asked for a divorce. ··she s aid she wouldn't,·• J ad win said. "At the end of the discussion, he picked up a ham- mer and struck her six times over the head.·' Jadwin said there were no charges against the second wife. Christi n e F l oyd, 59, of , Gloversville, N.Y., whom he des9ribed a·s •·an innocent victim or circumstances." Mrs. Floyd was a widow before marrying Langlois, the detective said, and ha d been told by Langlois that his divorce became ' final Dec. 31. lhe day of the kill- ing. The couple were married Fri· day afternoon in a Methodist church after they produced what seemed to be a valid marriage license. Police Seek Grease Thief Newport Beach police are seeking the thieves who grabbed a 55-gallon drum of used cooking grease from the McDonald's· hamburger stand at 700 W. Coast Highway. Police said lhe grease. which was stored in the restaurant's parking lot. was being held for recycling. Restaurant employes reported the theft Tuesday morning. The value of the grease was estimat- ed al aoout $40. Or~~:~l=~-c Weathe r Chance of showers and thundershowers through Thursday with highs of 54 to62, lows in mid40s. INSIDE TODA. Y Some citfunl of .a m>all town in Oklahoma find it tough to liv• with the . oome left them by.a Civil War hero, but Marl11. oll 1a11 Bowlegs is a/ineplace to live. P.• 88. At ., .... .. A4 ·~ Ct-' •i.t ., . ... AU •w .. .. ' A2 DAIL y PILOT N Water Spout Off Coast A SOO foot water spout was sighted about thret! miles off the Huntington Beach coast at 10.20 a.m. today. The spout. dc~cribcd by one observer as a small tornado. picked up water like a funnel Into the clouds. No damage was re- ported. Huntington Beach Fire Department Capt. Roger Hosmer said he observed the spout from the Civic Center as 1t paralleled the southern coast of the city. Hos mer said the spout lasted about 10 minutes. HEADS FUND DRIVE Theater Backer Witmer CdMWoman Heads Drive For Theater Harriette f'. Witmer of Corona del Mar been named chairman of the South Coas t Repertory Theater building campaign and will be responsible for raising S2.5 million toward construction <lf the theate r near South Coast Plaza. Mrs. Wjtme r . president of Deepwater Chemical Co, Ltd. of Costa Mesa, s aid the campaign is off to a good start with initial con- tributions totaling $867,000. She said several major con- tributions will be announced soon. pushing lhc total over $1 m11hon The 500 seat theater 1<; scheduled to open in late fall of this )ear. according to SCR of- ficials .'.1rs \\"1tm<'r was th<' first woman elC'ctt'd to membership in the Drug. Chemical and Allied Trades 1\ssoc1at1on in 1972 She currently sen l'S as western re- .111onal vice prvsadcnt of thl' or- i:an17.allon From Pa9 .. J\ I GIFTS ... mission Jan 20 In the i;ccond cast•. thC' PB and R commission s ug,itested some minor olterataonc; in the open space and rrcreol1onaJ uses pro posed in the 29 acre Sea Island apartments. Tha t proposal will ht> heard by the Plannin,it Com· m1ss1on tom~hl In the case of S<.>a Island. PB and R comm1~!'>1oners said lhcy \\ere less conC'crned with the open space d edication about half of the s ite on Jamboree Road across from the Newporter l1t11 wlll remain in open space than they are with area set aside for recreation. The plans call for a total of I l acres of recreational facilities in- side the complex. PB and R com- missioners asked the planning commission to require another tenth of an acre for recreational uses. ORANGE COAST N DAILY PILOT 1"""0tMO't (04\t 0•11• PHOt. ~ttit~ (J\l• f'f"m• ftorwd INo "4•'#'\ Pr•i' I\ CH1"'41\Nld ttt ,M 0...-"0" c.,,,.,tPv~1"'1~c.,.....n'f' ~ .. ,•I'd••~•'* ~IU'l"t°I Mo~fj•v tl'trNtf'I '"°""• •~ C~t• Ma\a "'"'•00f1 &.•<". """"ti""""' ,...c,, ,_~ '• f'I V•tl•v l•\l'lf\11" \.-ttd••biHll. Vat~. "~ !~·:::.:~~.~c;:~·~·:7'~';~ CW•"CtCNtl OU:b-11\Plil'\IQ Of_,.i h M .Q0 wt\t &¥ ~,.,.,. '°"'Mt'-. C•llfo•.,.• tH.)I, •.-noc-Ptt\tde"1 •f'ld "'-W•.,..., , .. ,. °"""' Ylce PrMldrftt ·~ c..'""',.. Ml'Mt"r ,._.'""11<1 COttor n ..... ,, ... ..- ...... 9'"9'-•• CM_,.tN ~-lllc-P ... " Auot\.f•f't MtMt•Nf l dl""n Telephone (1'•1~-4321 CIHtlllM AdY.,1htlng~-M71 Wednesday January 5 19n Riley View County Growth Trend Backed· Thomas Riley. new chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervisors, told fellow supervisors Tuesday the coun- ty's growth trends will continue. ln a speech prepared for his ac- ceptance of the board gavel for 1977, Riley s aid the climate and labor pool make Orange County an inviting place for housini;; and industry. He called for effective plan· ning, c areful monitoring to make certain development does not ex- ceed the capacity or needed services and increased public participation in the planning pro- cess. Apartment Plan Due For Study Newport Beach planning com- missioners will consider plans Thursday for an S8 million, low- rise. low-density luxury _apart- ment complex to be built off Jamboree Road near the Irvine Coast Country Club. The M cLain Development Company of Newport Beach plans to build and manage the proposed 226-unit comple x, called Sea Island Apartments, on a 29-acre site leased from The 'Irvine Company. The complex would cons ist of two-story wood and stucco struc- tures located opposite The Newporter Inn. The development firm is seek- ing planning commission ap- proval of planned community (PC) zoning for the property. If final approval is granted, the Sea Island complex could be completed by the end of 1979. Plans call for a density of 7.85 un- its per acre and a population of about 400 residents. The plann ing commission meeting begins at 7 p.m. Thurs- day in city council chambers. Riley pledged to continue ef- forts to hold down the costs of county government while ex- panding services to keep pace with growth. He noted, for example. there already have been dollars s aved by the formation of the count¥ Environmental Management Agency and General Services Agency whic b consolidated several former departments. In addition. a hinng freeze, limiting the number of po:;1llons that can be filled, saved the coun- t y more than $11 m111Jon 1.i.st year, Riley said "It is through efforts such as this that Orange County main- tains th~ lowest raho of employes to populbllon of any county in the state," he continued. Riley also s aid the county supervisors are comrrutted "to tenaciously purs ue" property tax reform to ease the burden on county homeowners. In addition. he said, the county must commit itself to solving the problem of hou:.1ng co~ts Riley cxpl;.i ined market prv· ssurcs Im VC' driven housin g costs up to the point where modcrnte income families cannot afford homes. "This has had a particularly severe effect on younger people, senior citi1 cns and on others wanting to buy a house for the first time, with no equity lo transfer," Riley said. The 1977 board chairman also said the county must intensify its effort lo obtain state and federal tughway funds and pledged to seek appointment of a county re- sident to the California lligh"" ay <.:om mission. Riley said the supervisors will be tackling the redrawing or supervisorial districts this year, will continue to improve Juvenile diversion programs and seek more State and federal grants to assist with county projects. In addition. he expressed hope · that several Southern California : counties working together would "be able to solve the need for addi- tional airport services for local residents. ' - ,,,,..... . . ·I/II , • I -•• -... ;-... ' ~" 01llv Piiot Still ~9 POLICE LT. McDANIEL TRIES OUT NEW RANGE Newport Beach Officers Build Own Practice Facility Newport Police Open Pi~~ol Range As of today, Newport Beach police are at home on their own range. It's a pistol range that officers will be using for their monthly target practice. It will be used exclusively by the department's sworn personnel. The range was planned for con- struction when the police station was built about two years ago, but it was d eleted from the budget because of cost considera- tions. Even thougb it was not built immediately. city officials de- cided they would include space for it in the building and so a cor - ner of the basement was set aside for the range. It was completed at a cost of $35,000 because the ofCicers volunteered their time to do the work. Lt. Kelson McDaniel and Sgt. Dick Heinecke did most of the work on the range after city of- ficials nixed the original plan which called ror a private con- tractor to install the range. McDaniel.said the lowest bid they could get for the project in December, 1974 was $78.000. "When they told us 'no' we said give us $45.ooo and with the latents we have here within the department. we'JJ do it ourselves," M cDanlelsald. Work on Ute range began In February, with llelnecke, who ls in cbafle of building main· tenance, aandwichini const.Nc· tion supervision In between his normal 4uUes. In the u mont.bs since work be1an on the ranae, Heinecke bu Jeamed bow lo bUlld and lo· stall the air circulation system, install insulation and put up dry W311. McDaniel and Heinecke said the hardest part of the job came when they found out that Redon- do Beach was closing its police range to make room for com· puterlzed communications equipment. They went to Redondo Beach and cannibalized that range, cut- ting the three-eighths inch thick back board into six pieces in or- der to get It inside the range at their station. While the n ew range cost $33.000 less than the lowest bid submitted two years ago, McDaniel estimates its presence will save the department the Sl8,000 a year it costs to send policemen to other ranges for their monthly pistol qualifica- tion. For several years, the depart· ment contracted with the South Coast Gun Club. When Fountain Valley police opened their 'range four years ago, because it was closer, Newport ,contracted to send its men there. McDanJel explained that each of the department's 132 police of- ficers and H reserve oCficers must shoot a minimum score on· cea montb. "Going up to Fountain Valley usually meant about two hours out ol your ~Y. •• McDanid said. ''It'• not that ll'a unpleasant, it's someUmes just dllfic11t to flnd the lJme in your work schedule." With the range in lhe station basement, he said he believes It will take the average officer about 20 rntnuiea to do his mon· thly •boolJ.nf. t AP Wt ........ to MARINE klANSMEN, KLAN DRAGON TOM METZGER (IN TIE) MEET THE PRESS From Left PFCs Ronnie Harper, Dennis Campbell and Charles Smith f'ront Pa9e A I DIEDRICH. • said, "There have been in vestigations and there will be more investigations." 'Treated Like Dirt,' KKK Marine Says The allegations investigated so far purporte dly allege t he Fullerto n s uperv1:.or with threatening prospective donors who balked at contributing to his designated candidates. Those threats allegedly car- ried with them an inference that a failure to donate might result in· hardship in doing business with the county. Key witness 1n the probe is Don Brown. a Sacramento-based lob· byist for Hughes Airwest, an airline operating out or Orange County Airport. Brown was in Santa Ana this morning with his attorneys, re- portedly to put in an appearance before the Grand Jury. His testimony is expected to center on a Mangers fund-raiser at Club 33 in Disneyland. Mangers has not yet filed his fi nal campaign contribution statement. But it is believed that Drown balked at Diedrich ·s request that be support the fund-raiser. In early November, his client sought approval of an agreement that, in effect, would extend Airwest service out or Orange County Airport from Salt Lake City to Denver. ln earlier interviews, Diedrich said he regretted the cloud now overhanging his political ac- tivities. E'rona Pagl! A J CHURCH .. e ing is likely to be tom down because 1t falls below city bu1ld ing code standards "and it would open the view up even more." The church and the existing first phase of the park, which 1s the city's bicentennial project, are located on CliU Drive at the fool of El Modena Avenue. By The Associated Press The Marine Corps is "treating us like dirt," complains one of the young white Camp Pendleton leathernecks identified as Ku Klux Klansmen. PFC Dennis Campbell Jr., a<!l- ing as spokesman for three Klan members, said they went on un- authorized absence for a day because of harassment. The trio turned up Tuesday after calling a E'ro• Page A.l LONGETe. e and take their clothes off." "He said he'd have to gel a divorce to com e to the party," ski patrolman John Erspamer said. "( asked him to bring his lady (Miss Longet), and he said, 'No, that wouldn't be fun,' or he wouldn 't have any fun, or words to" that effect." Miss Longet and Sabich, 31, lived together for two years before his March 21 death. She says he was shot accidentally •While teaching her to use a .22· caliber pistol in his mountainside mo.ooo home. About two weeks before his death, the couple attended a cocktail party for French skiers, said another prospective juror, Carla Stroh. "There wasn't a great deal of communication between them," Mrs . S troh said. "'The circumstances were such they really weren't together ... Jury selection is expected to end this week. Attorneys for both sides can dismiss at least20 more persons without saying why. Attitudes toward firearms emerged as a key issue in ques- tioning of possible jurors by both defense and prosecution. OUR ENTIRE INVENTORY news confere nce in nearb.> Oceanside, and then military police took them in custody at the gate. Their units will apply dis- cipline, a base spokesman said. Today they were scheduled to resume testimony for which they were subpoenaed by attorneys for black Mar ines charged with conspir acy and a ssaulting whites. "I'm coming back here for the sole purpose of getting this thing over with." Campbell said. He said he and his two buddies, PFC Ronnie Harper and PFC Charles V. Smith, spent Sunday night and Monday in San Diego because Marine guards refused to let a friend drive them up to their bar- racks. At the gate, Campbell said he heard one of the guards say, "H's those Klansmen." Shirts which the trio wore at the news con- fe rence carried the words, "White Power Ku Klux Klan." Their names were on a list of 14 members of the Klan found near a barracks room invaded Nov. 13 by blacks claiming they were striking back at the Klan. E'ro•PageAl HEIR ..• in the county Jail . Mrs. Wesson, 35, leslified that Scudder assured her in their hour-long conversation that she and her children would not suffer whatever happened to her husband . She said he kissed her and called her a "sweet little girl" but insisted on searching her purse when she entered his home with the explanation that she might have brought a gun with her. PANTSUITS• BLOUSES KNIT TOPS • NIGHTWEAR • SCARVES • JEWELRY ---------TYPICAL EXAMPLEs---------.. JACKETS s~ s999 PANTS •ei. s5" Sl.99 OPEN DAIL t I 0-5 • FRIDAY I 0.7 A,ply l'4ew ,_.Yew c ... 10-... ......_ H-Ctlwp Au-t MAGNOLIA ·cENTER '" 71 ....... Street. Wt. 7 H•t .... a IHdt HJ..t6H FREEi OON1 MISS IT INFOIMAL MODELING SHOW SPONSORED BY F ~lt10M HOUSE · AT THE BRADFORD PLACE It~ ! I .~OCJftolfa Str"f HtMftftglOft leoch PhoM 961·06 I 0 Saddlebaek EDITION * * . . VOL. 70, NO. 5, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 5, 1977 A.f tt.•ruoo11 N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENT Toro Witness Tells Scudder 'Setup' 1 By TOM BARLE\' Ol lllt O•oly Pllo4$1<111 El Toro service s tal1on operator Ken Hunter testified to- day in Oran1e County Superior Court that potato chip heir John }f. "Jack" Scudder told rum over the telephone that he "set up" a kidnap plot for which two men are on trial. Hunter told defense attorney 1 Michael Quigley that Scudder as sured him in the same convena· second telephone conversation lion that he intended to take care later that evening with Scudder, or defendant William R'U!y 64, who was calling the witness Wesson and Wesson's family if • • from his Balboa Island home. the verdict in the current lriaJ liunter has not yet been asked goes against him. if that tape is available. He was "He was drinking at the time," still on the witness stand today. Hunter added. "But he told me Hunter's testimony today that he set up the kidnap and that made rum the fifth witness to he intended to write the wtiole testify that Scudder helped to story for Reader's Digest." plan the kidnap for which Hunter testilied that he taped a Wesson, 45, of Tustin, and his D•lly "''°' Sl•lf "hello DOG APPARENTl. Y DIDN'T KNOW WHAT HE WAS CHAINED TO; THAT'S Tt:fE PROBLEM Parking Near Are Plugs That Don't Look TradHlonal Isn't Illegal r 'Identity Crisis Looms 1 Si{uatty Hydrants Worry Municipal Court By WILLIAM SCHREIBER 01 th• D•lly Pilot Sl•fl South Orange Co u nty Municipal Court judges aren't <>verly concerned about the fact that about 500 or Mission Viejo's fU'e plugs don't ht the traditional conception or fire plu~s. Whal does worry the judges is the squall>. buff.colored hydrants In older sections or the community aren't marked in any way to g1\'e out·of.area residents a clear ind1cat1on that parking within IS feet of them is illegal. l About three "'eeks ago, Judge !John 'Gr1H1n or the Laguna Niguel Court started dismissing tickets issued lo people who 1 parked too close to ;\hssion VleJo fire plugs I He say~ h<' threw out "about I.six citations" ~o far and has '1enUsted the Cu II !<>upport of tus fellow judges an continuing to do ing next to a hydrant came to court armed with a Polaroid photo and some legal knowhow. "I was a little surprised." Grif- fin said. "It was the first time I ever heard or anybody pleading not gumy to parking in front or a hydrant " But the judge said he began to see the wisdom of the man's argument. "He claimed that the hydrants are out or the ordinary and arc impro perly noticed," Griffin said. "I had to agree with him because the re is a big hole in that part of the Califor'nia Verucle Code." The judge said the code describes every kind of veb1cle. roadway and street sign m detail but makes only one mention of fi re plugs. Despite Protest ''It says, in effect, thou shalt not park in front of one," he said. "We all grew 1'P with a stan· dard idea of what a fireplug looks like," Griffin said. "Wllen I was a kid. I even sat on one to seU newspapers." But he said the Mission Viejo plugs are unusually shaped, set back from the curb by as much as 10 feet and sometimes sur- rounded by vegetation. "l agree that they are much nicer looking but they should at least put the word 'Fire' on them or paint the curbing red," he said. "As it stands, they are im· properly noticed and anybody could successfully argue their way out or a $15 ticket.·· Unfortunately, past violators who have already tacitly pleaded <See PLUGS, Page A2) brother-in-law, Ricki Dale Sellers, 20, of Hermosa Beach, are on trial. It is alleged that Wesson and Sellers grabbed Scudder last Aug. 19 as be left his dentist's of. fice in Huntington Beach and confined rum to a motor home that toured the coastline while a telephone demand for $250,000 in ransom was transmitted to the victim's wife. Charges Denied by Ex-chief By GARY GRANVILLE Of'"-01lly "'tot St.ttl A Grand Jury probe into aJ. legations that Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich ii· legally solicited campaign funds for othei;,political figures reportedly got under way today. The allegations center on methods used by Diedrich to solicit campaign funds for office seekers he backed in last Novem· ber's election, including As· semblyman Dennis Mangers (I). Huntington Beach). Sources close to the inquiry said there is no i.ndication \!ult Mangers or others who might have benefitted from the alleged DIEDRICH FLAYS DISTRICT ATTORNEY, A3 illegal fund raising had knowledge or the techniques used to raise money on their behalf. Assemblyman Mangers was not immediately available for comment. The jury's inquiry is not an in· dication that illegal activities oC· curred. ~ It is an indication, however, that the allegations have been checked out by investigators and that they concluded there is enough subs tance to take them before the Grand Jury. District Attorney Cecil Hicks was unavailable for oomment to- day. Earlier this week, Diedrich de- nied any improprieties on rus part. "How could there be?" he asked. ·'I gained nothin g personally from helping what I <See DIEDRICH, Page A2) ao until something 1s done to cor · 1rect the situation. which has ex- isted for more than five years "Without pr!ior in<•1dent. Jn the wake of the judge's de- cis ion , Cal1forn1 a Highway P atrol and Sheriff's oHicers patrolhn1i the community have been informally ordered tn stop issuing such citations Wltil the matter 1s resolved. Viejo Teen Home Okay "It doesn't look good for us to have these thrown out. even if a violation is present," said a CHP spokesman. "To me. there's a lot more at stake than a little piece of paper when somebody parks in front of a hydrpnt." Griffin conceded in an in· terview that the entire issue came to light b ecause or "OuJcy circumstances." He said a Leiirnre World man liven a ticket for illegally park- Grave Robbers Get Sentence RED BLUFF (AP> -Six men ,acquitted of robbing Indian 1raves have been given the alternatives of paying $500 fines. working the fines off or spendlng days ln Jail for tr~passing. Tehama County Superior Court ge Noel Watkins imposed the teoces on Richard Burke, 32 ; Frank Dyball, 32: Mike Michael. l; Charles Spencer, 30; Ersal )Jyen. 35, and Jay Thomas, 31, all Medford. Ore. 'l'be jury which acquitted them removing bum an retnainafrorn- lodlan burial sllenea.r Pasken· fo.::1~ t:\:lm aullty ol ~- The lease of a house in Mission V1eJo as a home for counseling troubled teenagers was approved Tuesday by Orange County supervisors. Under terms of the six-month lease, the county Department of Mental Health will pay the First Christian Church of Mission Vie- jo S500 a month to use the home at 27112 Jeronimo Road. • Board Chairman Tory Riley told fellow supervisors he had re· ceived about 75 letters opposing the lease, but be said part of that opposition was based on er· roneous information. In addition, he said, the lease has won the endorsement of the Mission Viejo Municipal Ad· visory Council, Saddleback Valley Unified School District ··trustees, Mission Viejo High School student body counetl, as 'Lot to Share' Gir~ 15, Named to Board REDWOOD CITY (AP) -A 1S-year--0ld girl has been named by the City Council as a parks and recreation commissioner, the youngest such appoint- ment in the city's history. Lisa Hayes, a student at Notre Dame High Schoo1 in Belmont, was named in a move toward al vlns the , young a voice in recreation poUcies. "We need the strength and enlhusiaam of \he young, and Lisa has a lot lo share,'' said com· missioner Diane Pound. I The new appointee will serve on the seven- mcmber board's recreational programming and com· munity relations committee. • Miss Hayes' parents, George and Robln Hayes, are acUve in ltedwood City affairs, and her grandfather, WilUam C. Malone. recently retired lrom the San Franclsto Ubrary Commission. well as civic and church groups. Jerry Hilger, who lives at 27152 Puerta del Oro near; the church· owned home, said he thought it should not be in the middle of a residential community. "I also object lo it from the standpoint that while It is good for the community, airports are also good for the community but you don't build airports in com· munlties like M lsslon Viejo," Hilger continued. "You go to out· lying areas.'• Riley replied, "You know that the youngsters who will be there are from your own neighborhood. They are people who are attend- ing your school right now." William Heard of the county Mental Health Department. said the youngsters wlll have. con· tinuous s upervision and counsel· ing, and their families· also will be counseled. He explained the.~gsters will be those who hlve com· milted offenses like t.ruancy, of. fenses wruch would not be crimes if they were adults. The youngsters will be re- • ferred by school and law enforce· ment officials, Heard said. 'Riley said the home is needed In the area and the church site Is a JOOCI one because lt ls not. Im· mediately adjacent to other re- sidences. Heard aald the proc:r111\ wlll supplement otJ\er tbelttr homes now Ol)traun1 In Coeta Men and I t.aauna Beach Scudder testified that he foiled his kidnapers by faking a heart attack when one of the two men left the van. He broke free in Fountain Valley and ran for help while rus panicstritken abductor drove off. Scudder later identified Sellers as one of the two g_ten. He was un. able to identify Wesson as his companion. • Wesson's wife spent most or Dally P4IOI Mall Plloto SUBJECT OF PROBE? Supervlaor Diedrich Teachers Allnfor Trustees By LAURIE KASPER Of llM Dally PllOI SU.II While continuing attempts to resolve their differences with present trustees, Saddleback Valley Unified School District teachers also have begun action aimed at getting two new trustees elected in March. After discussing their rejection or the district's last employment contract offer with a state mediator Tuesday. teacher s' leaders requested fact-finding - the last step in the collective bargaining process outlined by state law. • Leaders of the Saddleback Valley Educators Association CSVEA) also have begun in· terviewing Board of ~ucation candidates to determine who they will actively support in the March 8 election campaign. Both moves are in line with the directives given during a meet· ing of the teachers before school recessed for the holidays. Although the teachers· protests have quieted since they voted to reject the contract. they say their desires have not been quelled. "The teachers want some ac· lion. They want some kind or set· tlement," said Marc DuBois, SVEA vice president. He said the settlement will come with either an acceptable cont.Tact with the present board or new trustees who reject the present board's decisions . The teachers have said they will accept a contract only if it in· dudes agency shop. This would require all teachers lo either become members or SVEA or pay a fee for the organisation '11 representation in negotiation. Trustees stand s trong l y (See TEACHERS, Page AZ> SMOlTl'H SAlfllVC. FOR PILOT AD "We sold the boat U\e first night the ad ran in the paper." Tbal'a the advert.Ising success rela~ by a Newport Beach man who placed this classified ad: Sabot Schock 4000 •series. r•cin& ri11ed, new Ulman sail. $250 XltX•JCIClOt U you bave a boat you'd like to convert to cuh. call 642-5678. It takes only a few words ln the ript place to attract a bu,yer. and the rt1bt place la the Oally .PtJot. I Tuesday on the witness stand and told the jury that Scudder pro· mised to provide for·her and her two children after Wesson and her half brother were chargecl wtth the kidnaping. Mrs. Joyce Wesson said the promise was made by Scudder when she visited his Balboa Is land home s hortly after Wesson and Sellers were lodged <See HEIR, PageA2) Long et Jury Pick Continues ASPEN, Colo . (AP)-Claudinc Longet watched intently today as another 50 people were sworn in as potential jurors in her trial for manslaughter. Miss Longet faces trial in the March 21 s hooting death or Vladimir "Spider" Sabich, hel" Jover. Miss Longet. wearing a short. nowered dress. was accompanied to court by her two defense at· tomeys. A 12-memberjury hasbeenten· tatively seated, but lawyers ex· pect to take another three days to choose a final panel. Three hun· dred persons have been sum· mooed lo the 87 -ye:tr-old Pitkin County Courthouse for possible jury duty. Jury selection is difficult LO t'l\e case because o( the close rela• tionships among Aspen-area res1.- dents. On Tues day, one potcntiaJ juror said he once was a golf caddy for singer And{ Williams, Miss Longet's former husband, 'Yhn has been called to testify for the prosecution. An X-ray t~chnician also wa:; given preliminary approval after saying she examined X·rays o( Sabich the day after the shooting. Miss Longe\, who appeared cheerful when the trial opened M o n d a y , s a i d s h c w a s• "heartbroken" Tuesday after hearing potential jurors reveal gli mpses of the life she and Sabich led shortly before he was shot tn death. · Several potential jurors were excused Tuesday for saying \hey believe Miss Long et is guilty. One jury prospect said Sabich, an international ski star, refused in early March to attend a party where girls were paid to "~el uµ and take their clothesorr." <See LONGET, Page A2> Ski Theft Reported Two pairs of skis valued by the victim at $350 have been stolen from an El Toro home by a burglar who entered via the garage door. Orange County sheriff's officers said th\? theft was reported by real estate s al es man W il li am John Cartwright, 38, of 25232 Miles Road. He was away from the home at the time. Or:n:J .. :oa~• \\'eat.her Chance of showers and thundershowers through Thursday with highs or 54 to62, lows in mid40s. INSIDE 'tODA V Some citiiena of a smoll town in Oklahoma f md it tough to live IDith the 1JOme Left IMm ~ Chnl War hero. but Marly all 1011 B~ is a~plac!toliue.Pagc83. Index •• 11 • ••• •• •• ,.,. Cf•1 .,., "' '.4tt .... A4 ,. . • A2 DAIL y PILOT' SB Wednll$Clay, January 5. 19n In Ortega Death Water Spout. Off Coast A SOO·root waler spout was sighted about three miles off the Hunt.lngt.on Beach coast <.1t 10:20 a.m. today. Van Clues Sought The spout. described by one observer cts a small tornado. picked up water like a runnel into the clouds. No damage was re· ported. Huntington Beach Fire Department Capt. Roger Hosmer said he observed the spout from the Civic Center as it paralleled the southern coast of the city. Hosmer said the spout lasted about 10 minutes. Police ln Santa Fe, New Mex· ico. have recovered a van Iden· tilled as the property of a woman whose body was found near the Ortega Highway in the San Juan Capistrano area Dec. 20. Orange County Sherif('s criminallsts dispatched lo the New Mexico community said they are checking the vehicle thoroughly for clues that might lead them to the killer of Marla Padilla, 22. of Santa Ana. Sheriff's officers stressed to- day, however, that no charges have been filed by them al this time agalnat the arres~ occu· pant or the van, Gilbert Lovato, 18, ol Santa Fe. Lovato is held ln the Santa Fe jail today awaiting court action on charges that include his al- leged escape from a local institu· Uon. Sheriff's Capt. Robert Griffeth said lt is known that Lovato was in Orange County at the time Mrs. Padilla was kidnaped and killed. Griffeth said Lovato is wanted tor questioning by Newport Beach police ln connection with a 'Growth Will Continue' Ri/,ey Takes Gavel, Cites Coumy Prospect,s Tom Riley, new chairman or the Orange County Board of Supervisors . told fellow supervisors Tuesday the coun- ty's growth trends will continue. In a speech prepared for his a~­ ceptance of the board gavel for 1977, Riley said the climate and labor pool make Orange County an inviting place for housing and industry. He called for effective plan- ning, careful monitoring to make certain development does not ex- ceed the capacity of needed services and increased public participation in the planning pro cess. Riley pledged to continue cf· forts to hold down the costs of county government while ex· panding services to keep pace with growth. He noted, for example. there already bave l;iccn dollars saved by the formation of lhe county Environmental Management Agency and General Services Agency which consolidated several former departments. In addition, a turing freeze, limiting the number of positions lhat can be filled. saved the coun· ty more than Sl 1 million last year, Riley said. "It is through efforts such as this that Orange County main· tains the lowest ratio of cmployes to population or any county in the slate," he continued. Riley also s aid the county supervisors are committed "to tenaciously pursue" property tax reform to ease the burden on county homeowners. In addition. he said, the county must commit itselr to solving the problem of housing costs Riley explained market pre- ssures have driven t\,Qusing costs up to the point "here moderate· Fro• Page .4 I LON GET •.. · He said he'd ha\ c to get a chvorce to come to the party," ski patrolman J ohn Erspamer said. 'I j Sked him to bnng his lady 1 Miss Lon gel 1. and he said, 'No. that l4 0Uld1n be fun: or he wouldn ·i han· any fun, or wnrd!I to that effN·t ·· Miss Lon)!el anct •;uhich, 31. lived to!(ethcr fo1 1 .,., years ~fore h•~ March 21 <kath. She :o.ays he was shot accidentally wh1k teaching her to use a 22 1·ahber pistol in tus mountainside S2S0.000home About lwn w('eks before his de- ,tlh. the couple a ttended a cocktail part v for fo·r('nrh skiers. said .mother pro<;1,rct 1 H ' Juror. Cnrla Stroh "Then· 14 asn t J Rreat deal of commun1callon belwt-f'n them." Mrs Stro h sa id ''The circumstances were <;urh the} really wer<'n 't togcther " Jury selection 1~ expe<"tcd to end this week Attorneys for both s ides can d1sm 1ss at least 20 more persons without saying why Altitudes toward firearms emerged as a key issue in ques- tioning of possible jurors by both defense and prosec ution ORANOIE COAST DAILY PILOT fM 0rt1'0" (Olf)I O•ll'f ••tot wn"..,..''""'~ ~d tfwt,,,.,,,1111\ p,.•\\ l\pi\;IMl\fwlor't.,l .... ()r....,. (M\t P\ibf!\ftlr'IO (~""-•"• S..,..'-4• ~ifl-Oft\ It'• OVbh\Mf Aio\4tt\4f4# ''"*"~ (rlO•p for (~,,. ,...._,.,. ... WDC>tt 9•M ft Hv"ti~ fkff''-,(M;ll'I ••+"' VAH•"· Ir••"'°· \tdlth1fNc9' V•ll•Y •'Wt ~,~· ::~~~,~~~',,'!T~~·;: ~::! .. ~C::':.~~1.~1t:6~~~.;:,. DO WI" l •Y 11.-. •• -"'"•0tnl •AO Pwb11""" J•u• C-• 'Y1cr.,~fdrforit 11""dGt,..., .. ~~f ~.,."..,, ,.,. ... ~t&M~ ~"•QI,,. t•tOf CMrlttM '--11><-• IUll ., •• , •• fl!, ~.,.•ff'itl•~ SMdl•lledl V9!1!r Otllc• ,.,. .............. ,~..,.°"*"""··· OfflcH Cfttt Mo~ UOW.tl lla•\tr- tt ... 1....,.,. .... h '"'"'_.. .......... l._ .... h.11 .. 0,._Mtffl T•i.phon• (T'4) ... :M»1 CIHtlfted ActnltlllfltMt·M'l't ~1--Vtllty-Olll(o 111•U10 ~,..+i...,c1o- 411-4tM ~''t'~ ~~ o;,m:, c~~,.':!'t:,t'i~= ,...r •• , ., ·'~-,,.,.,,..,-., ,,,, .. ,~ ""·• ... ttOfOdt1Ud ...... "' IH<fff Ot""' .. "" ., Uey,~MtPMr. income families cannol afford homes. "This has had a particularly severe effect on younger people, senior citizens and on others wanting to buy a house for the first time. with no equity to transfer," Riley said. The 1977 board chairman also said the county must intensify its effort to obtain state and federal highway funds a nd pledged to seek appointment of a county re- sident to the California Highway Commission. Riley said the supervisors will be tackling the redrawing of supervisoriaJ districts this year, wlll continue. to improve juvenile diversion programs and seek more state and federal grants to assist with county projects. In addition. he expressed hope that several Southern California counties working together would be able to solve the need for addi- tional airport services for local residents. Panel Will Ponder Psychologist Firing A three.member panel is ex- pected to meet this week lo de- cide whether Barbara Hahn should be fired from her job as a psychologist in the Saddleback Fr°"' Page A 1 DIEDRICH. • knew to be good candidates get elected to office." Diedrich hinted at the problem he is now facing when he bowed out Tuesday as Board or Supervisors chairman when he s aid. "There have been in- vestigations and there will be more investigations." The allegations investigated so rar purportedly allege the Fullerton super visor with lhreatening prospective donors who balked at contributing to his designated candidates. Those threats allegedly car- ried with them an inference that a failure to donate might result in hardship in doing business with the county. Key witness in the probe is Don Brown. a Sacramento.based lob· byist for Hughes Airwest, an airline operating out of Orange County Airport. Brown was in Santa Ana this . morning with his attorneys, re - portedly to put in an appearance before the Grand Jury. His testimony is expected to center on a Mangers fund -raiser at Club 33 in Disneyland. Mangers has not yet filed his fin al campaign contribution statement. But it is believed lhat Brown balked at Diedrich 's request that he support the fund·raiser. In early November. tus client sought approval of an agreement that. in effect. ~Quid extend Airwest service out of Orange County Airport from Salt Lake City to Denver. Later. County Counsel Adrian Kuyper ruled that the service ex- tension was more properly or concern to Federal Aviation Ad· ministration than the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Jn earlier interviews, Diedrich said he regretted the cloud now overhanging his political ac· tivities and that Mangers and others might somehow become tainted. Fro91 Page A l TEACHERS against this. Generally, they con- tend this is "for ced unionism" and not needed in a public school system. ln fact.finding, an impartial third party reviews the issues in negotiation and makes a recom- mendation. Although Lbalrecom- mendation is made public. trustees do not have to abide by it. DuBois said teachers are In· tervlewing candidates to de· termine who holds compatible beliefs on working conditions, contract negollallons and educa- Uonal philosophy. He sald the ttachcrs will try to collect campaign contributions and "involve ourselves in a meanlnaful way ln the cam· paiin" for those they lt.1Pport. Valley Unified School District. Testimony and arguments on lhe district's 25 charges against the psychologist concluded Mon· day. The panel's decision, which is not expected lo be made public for more Ulan a week, will be binding on trustees. However , it may be appealed to lhe Superior Court. If the panel rules against the dismissal, the district will have to pay all hearing costs and lhe salary Miss Hahn has lost since her suspension in September. tr the panel rules in favor of the dis- missal, whe will be responsible for paying half of the hearing ex · pense. District orricials have been try- ing to dismiss Miss Hahn since March. Jnitially, they asked that the Orange County Board of Education carry proceedings against her. But district trustees ordered her suspension and the dismissal proceedings against her after county officials said they wouldn't enter the case. The district has accused the psychologist of taking an un- authorized leave of absence in fall 1975 to vacation in the South Seas. They also allege she sub· milted a forged letter stating she had dental surgery during the time period involved. Services Set I Thursday for Mr. Becker Funeral services wiJI be con- ducted at noon Thursday in Newport Beach for Stanton Becker of Laguna I lills, who died Friday m Singapore following a heart attack. Ile was 47. Rabbi Leon Kahane, from Temple Menorrah in Torrance, will preside at the services al the Pacific View chapel. · "He was an adventurer, one of a vanishing breed," said Mr. Becker's brother. Erwin. "He was a flier, a fine athlete. He had traveled all over the world. You could say he had lived his 47 years to the fullest." Mr. Becker, who was working as a construction s uperintendent for the Bechtel Construction Corp. in Burma, was on vacation in Singapore when he died. His brother said that although Mr. Becker had suffered an earlier heart attack when he was 29. he had passed a tough physical ex- amination in August and ap- peared to be in excellent health. A nallve of Michigan, Mr. Becker had II ved three years in Laguna Hills . He had served in the U.S. Marine Corps and was a veteran of the Korean War. He is survived by his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Harris Becker, 2391 Via Mariposa West, Laguna Hills; two sons. Gary and Erle, both of Southfield, Mich.; and a brother, of Torrance. Oock, TV Stolen · A grandfather clock and a portable color televls~ set have been stolen from a Mission Viejo home by bur1lara who pried open a sUdini atasa door. Or~e Ooun· ty 1berllf'1 offlcera said the pro- perty, valued by the vlcUm al $1,~1 WU t aken from the home robbery In that city. A warrant for bis detention on that charge has been transmitted to Santa Fe police. Griffeth said his office hopes to bring Lovato to Orange County via the extradition process. "By that time we'll know more about his occupancy of the van and his movements on the · weekend that Mrs . Padilla wa s murdered." he said. The woman's body, s hot through the head. was found on the top of a hiU in the San Juan area after a 12-year-old girl rid· ing her horse through brush COV· ered country spotted the victim's 2-year-old son. Little David Padilla, sobbing and crying "Mama, Mama" pointed out to sheriff's ()fficers the area where his mother had been left by her abductor. Mrs. Padilla's husband, David, 25, told officers he last saw his wife Dec. 17 when she left their home in the van to visit a nearby bank and go Christmas shopping. Her body was found three days later. Frona Page A l . PLUGS ... guilty by paying their fines can't come back for another chance, the judge said. Orange County Fire Depart- ment officials are in a quandary over the situation because they've apparently been trying for months to have county gov· emment paint the curbs red. Because of the cost involved, they haven't gotten very far. A department spokesman said I.he offending plugs. known as ''Greenbergs" after their San Francisco manufacturers, are highly favored by firemen in the field. who find them much easier to use lban conventional models. "In fact. Mission Viejo had to switch to another type of hydrant last year in newer sections because these <the Greenbergs) are in such demand nationwide that the manufacturer can't keep them in stock, .. the spokesman said. The spokesman said fire de- partment officials plan to discuss the problem with the judges. the Mission Viejo Company and the Moulton-Niguel Water District lo decide how hest to deal with the sticky situation. E'rona Page Al HEIR ... in the county jail. Mrs. Wesson, 35, testified that Scudder assured her in their hour.long conversation that she and her children would not suffer whatever happened to her husband. She said he kissed her and called her a "sweet little girl" but insisted on searching her purse when she entered his home with the explanation that she migJlt have brought a gun with her.' Your Last Chance ••• If you missed out on bicentennial memorabilia during 1976, here's your chance to pick some up at bargain basement prices. Phyllis Wilson, a public information receptionist at Huntington Beach City Hall, displays the tokens. ranging from 10 cents to $3. 3·hour Widower Man Kills Wife, Remarries GLOVERSVILLE, N.Y. CAP) -Only three hours after he clubbed bis wife to death with a hammer, 62-year-old Donald Langlois was attending his second wedding in this Mohawk Valley city. police said. And authorities say that after attending a small wedding recep· lion while the first wife's body Jay in a car trunk. the new couple went to Florida the next day. Langlois was being held today in Hollywood, Fla .. awaiting ex- tradition on second·degree murder charges in the death of his wife, Arlene, SS. Hollywood Del. Mike Jadwin 1said Langlois confessed to killing his wife after having an argu- ment with her Friday in which he asked for a divorce. "She said she wouldn't." Jadwin said. "At the end of lhe discussion, he picked up a ham- mer and struck her six times over the head." Jadwin said" there were no charges against the second wife, Christine Floyd, 59 , o r Gloversv11le, N.Y .• whom he described as "an innocent victim of circumstances." Mrs. Floyd was a widow before marrying Langlois, the detective said, and had been told by Langlois that his divorce became final Der. 31, the day of lhe k11l- lllg. The couple were married Fri- day afternoon in a Methodist church alter they produced what OUR ENTIRE IMVEHTORY seemed to be a valid marriage license. The manager or the hotel where lhe small reception took place said reservations had been made "a couple of weeks ago." He said the wedding couple "stayed lilt midnight '' They headed to Florida on Saturday, and when they arrived Tuesday at the home of the new Mrs. Langlois• relatives. they were met by New York police. The body of the first Mrs. Langlois h<1d been round ii\ the car trunk at her home Sunday morn· ing, after her s on·in·law reported her missing. Viejo to Host Studem Meet Mission Viejo lligh School Stu - dent Council members will host leaders from other high schools Monday for a s eries or "Swapshops." The. students will discuss pro- blems and share ideas from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Montanoso Recreation Center. Ray Cortinez. superintendent of Pasadena schools. Wlll discuss communications between stu- dents and administrators and students' rights and responsibilities during a keynote address. PANTSUITS• BLOUSES KNIT TOPS • NIGHTWEAR • SCARVES • JEWELRY I -J_A_C_K_E_;r_s_· -s~-~ n;9~.EXAMPA-.-,-s-:-119_5_5_"_1 FREEi DON'T MISS IT INFORMAL MOORING SHOW SPONSORED BY FMHION HOUSE AT THE OP!H DAILY I 0.1 • FllDA Y 10-7 BRADFORD PLACE A,,ty Hew Fwy_. c .. .....,.... ~ H-• c:.._. Acc_.t MAGNOLIA CENTER I tf 71 t1 1pal• Sflwt, WM 1 HMtlNtfa....._,6J."H I 9 I 7 I MOCJnOlla Strut HuntlftC)tOft h ac h PhoM 968·06 I 0 "<•.,. lieu "'''?: •••f 01 Clto•• ..... (•t1to,.nl• $'itit'(' etltft '' t•"''' n ii ftMi~01ly tt• ""'It \4 M f'lfftf\ty, mlUH1ff ........ ,_» ....... , ..... Ke Hid teachers declded that lf they are to be lnvolved, their efforts wm be "rleht up front" .. toaebcn in other cUatrtct.a have done. · cl reuree Letter Lacy Oirnlt., M, oUU8 Oliva Drivt. Jkw1ubop-' ptncattheUme. .. ................................................................... ... ( • .. "ednesday'& Af ternooo Pricee NYSE COMPOSffE TRANSACTIONS 't"ledtied1y. January 5, 1917 S DAIL 'f PILOT Jl5 Fast Food Foe A&P ldsntifie• Ii. li:nemy 8y MILTON MOSKOWITZ Grant C. C~t.ry. president ol t.M l'C011A4Jud anct,. turbiabed A&P groceey chain, bu now clearly ldcoUfied lbe new enemy ol food S1orea. and ll turoa out to be you,r old friend: McDonald's . .UCP doesn't eapeclally Deed new enemies. Alter (al.liq into a deep sleep, the natJoo's oJdest food chain awoke to D.nd It.Hit lb' angling. U h-S more storet than ~elee buttbey were amaJJ outmoded matkeb mired Jn neighborhoods that had aeen their best~. A typical A&P •lore WU agerlatricatrooahold. Al. a ~nsequence. Ale P loet its leadership position l o Safeway Stores. And then ll alm0tt lost the wbole Money Tree balJ same as It wheeud to a record d~cit ol S157 r:nlllioa m 1974. GENTRY IS PART Of THE RESC1JE team that was recru,lted to save the company, He came from Chtcaeo's Jewel atores, which was a good place to come fl-om sfuc..e Jewel bad whipped A&P soundly ln the Chicago area. 1tnockin1 It out of nnrt place. The rescue team. headed by Chairman Jonathan Scott. who came from Albert.son's in ldabo, bas not been Umld. It could oot afford to be. It has cloeed 40 percent of A6:P'• old st.ores and has done wbat other chains did yeara aao -rely on huge supermarkets and stay open longer hours, aJJ da.y and ni&ht if possible. 1be result is more bucks per square root. Now down to about 2.100 units, the Great AUanUc & Paciflc Tea Company 15 at least making money again. HOWEVER, THE THREAT MR. GEN'l'JlY perceives is more fundamental. He noted. in a talk delivered rec-ently to food brokers, that American families are eaUq more of their meals outs;de the home. What good will It do AlcP ii It spruces up its operations to meet the competition only to discover that the alsles a.re empty because people are nm door feeding their faces at McDonald's or Jack·ln·the-Box or Kentucky Fried Cbi,cken? The A&P president warned that the food chains must meet this challenge "if we are to survlve." The figures show that Mr. Gentry bas something to be concerned about. The amount of money spent on eating O\lt has tripled during the past 15 years and is sWJ moving up sharply, year after year, through good times and teeeSaion times. TOE ESTIMATE IS THAT ONE OUT or every three meals eaten in tbls country is consumed awa.y from home. And the prediction is that by the mid·l980s ball the meals will be eat.en outside the home. There are many r easons for this trend. Two cited by the New York advertising agency, William Esty, are more working women and a tremendous growth in the singles market. In 1975, 30 percent of the adult population ln the Unlted States was unmarried. That compares with 16 per· cenlin 1970. So what we have is this interesting relationship. U.S. food stores now take in about $150 billion a year. But Americans are spending more than $45 billion eating out. In short, the grocery stores are missing out on one out of every four dollars spent on food. What to do? A&P's Grant Gentry suggests that one solu· tion would be for the food indus~ to develop more palllla· ble rrozen and packaged foods that could be prepared qulck· ly in conventional and microwave ovens. Tbat. 'he hopes. might deter people from rushing out to McDonald's. In other words, the American family can create a Uttle fast·food "restaurant" in the home. A McDonald's foTevery kitchen. All l\> save the supermarkets. We Just hope Mom -• or whoever is warming up the food in t.be kitchen -gets paid more than the kids at McDonald's. Car Production Nears Record DETROIT (AP> -U.S. car production during 1976 was up 26.S percenlfrom the year before. for the seventh-best output year in industry history. the na. tion'sautomakersreport. THE INDUSTRY STATISTICAL ser vice, Ward's Automotive Reports, saysdo:nestic car pro- duction totaled 8,492,84.3 units, compared with 6,713,722 for 1975, thebest performancesince 1973. Only American Motors Corp. s howed a drop in production from 1975. The small-car specialist built 213,606 cars in 1976, a drop of 34 percent from the 323,704of 1975. The biggest increase, 47.7 percent, came at Chrysler Corp. General Motors production was up 33 percent. Ford Motor Company output for the year was up 13.6 percent despite the ~day shutdown by a United Au.to Workersst.rikelaslfall. GM CLAIMED A 51.1 PERCENT chunk of the total 1976 output, up nearly four percentage points rrom the year before. The industry also reported 713,697 cars were tum~ out ln the United States in December, a 27.3 percent increase Crom December. 1975, when 560,746 autos were produced. WASHINGTON (AP> -Government sclentista 197 small wineries can Increase their yearly wlne production by cruabJng grapes after harvest and then freezing them uoUI faclUUes are aval~btefor fermentation. The Agrtcultuta Department saJd ln a report Tuetda,y that "such a pracUce ~:.ald avoid the rusb t.o ferment all ir•~ al harvest" and thus enable wineries to make bf!Uer useofthelrfacwues. Moreover. the department's Agriculture Research Service aaJd ln • monthly maiaz.ine. the process will provide amateur winem akers wtth a supply of grapes through the year, not just during the fall harvest monlhl. "Often these Winemakers must aesort lo 1rape Jwce cooce.ntrates to continue their acllvllles after the fall grape harvest." the repOrt said. "Such wlnea differ from wiDea made from freab grapes and lack premium quality.•· There ts on.c problem, however. Freesin1 "allo permJta cbemicll reactlom leadinl to undeslrablo odor. fiaVOf ud color." the report aaid. 'Ibe reporUa.ld this can be remedlecl. Tracking Pact Renewed I NEEDHAM. Masa. (AP> -GTE Sylvanla, Inc., bu-. nounced receipt o! a l!.2 mllllon contrlct far ccmtimlld operation aud malntme.nce or • mlaale·tndrinl r..- .'Yflem 1n the South Paclfk. The laust award brtno to ics million the tot.i ll'Dt to the nrm for u.e proket. GTE Sylvarua, a sublldlary of OenertJ Teltiplione i El~cs C()rp., dell,tned. built and imtalled UM eq ment lhat tat.hen data on mlAil• launched °"" P9clftc from V andenbur& Air l!'oree base In Callf onda.