Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-02-11 - Orange Coast PilotI r .. • • • • Students Held in ... Holdups 'Exeeution-style' Mafia Leader i ' • Shot 4 ThneS ' ~AN DIEGO (AP} -Frank mpensiero, a reputed Mafia eeder, has been shot to death in gangland-style execution on the idewalk outside his beach apart· ent. Bompensiero. 71, was re· rded as a contender for the est Coast gang leadership ngBeach .l Sp ill leaned Up B111M Associated PrflS Clean"'p crewa were working •1 \o soak up more than 500 aUom ol oil spilled into Long eatb Harbor alter an un- ater pipeline burst, officials aid. The aplll was one of two ln tewaten. Officials aaid the pipeline, hlch nms WMler the Cerritos ,...,.llUU~ in a wedge-shaped in- altrbd section of west Long Beach. •• shut down after it lnlre open-.~ afler t p.m. ~.,. Champlin Oil, own of the a pilled oil, ls respohiible for- ol the cleanp ~. borolftciall~d. ean~ oil spilled from a e,docked coa&alner ship spread Eal miles from the point re it entend tbe water, the Guard said today in San cisco. Sllcb bad beell ~ up to S.t miles offmore, a spokesman ~. Helicopters and boats~ ..-uaec1 \o keep track of tbeall which bas been ~ a power stntf· gle since Jack Licata died in 197.C, authorities said. Bompensiero Wa!I sbot four times with a .22 ·callbe r automatic pistol, which police said may have been used with a silencer since neighbors in the Pacific Beach a rea said they heard no shots. Bompensiero was believed alive when found in a pool of blood when police arrived, but wu pl'ODOWlced dead on arrival at Mission Bay General Hospital. His wallet was found intacL The crime record of Bom- pensiero went back to 1928 with a bootleg,mg conviction. In 19U, he was charged with murder but that was dropped when only the bloodstamed cab' of bia acquain· ta.nee Victor Carlino could be found. Bompensiero, wbo ~warty took evening walks, wu shot as he passed an alley beside his apartment buildin1. police said. bftelllgence officers said be • was a known uaociate of J<>1epb .. Joe Bananas" Bonanno, de· posed New York and New Jersey Mafta dHeftain; JAJDft '' Jinuay the Weasel'' Fratianno, described by a Los Ao1ele1 polt,ce oftlc:ial as the "WeJt Co¥t exeet1tiooedor tbe 11an.0 ~one time, and the late Mlcte1 COMD. 1D 1915', a jlll')' convlct'4 lom- penalero of, briblnt public of· ftcials in a state Uquc>r llMnae acandal. Be epent five years in prison. BompenslerQ; aod FraUIADO were chargef iil an Imperial Valley trucldDC scandal ht U.. but tbe charaes a1ainat Jllrn. <See EDDtVl'E, Pqe ,U) Sehool Out; Suri ~p I Lunch Money Taken Wet-suited surfers wait for w~ves at Newport &acb surfing spot. ThSs photo was taken at 8:45 this monalng. School was out today because of Lincoln~s birth· day, and local surfers were quick to take , o.llt ...... "-'• ey ltlclle.-....... advantage of the free tfme and warm weat her along the Orange Coast. Lifeguards listed water temperatures in low 60s and air temperatures aloni the shoreline in the 70s. Seven students from Lincoln Middle School in Corona del Mar · were arrested Thursday by Newport Beach police on charges ranging from assault and battery to extortion and armed robbery. Police said the seven boys range in age from 11 to 14 and come from Balboa Island and Harbor View Hills. The. arrests culminated an in· vestigation sought by school Prin- cipal Georgiana McLeod, who calledofficerstathecampusafter a group of students told her they were being victimized by the group. The victims told police they were forced to turn over their lunch money when threatened by the other students. Sgt. Mike Blitch, bead of the police department's juvenile sec- tion, said he and other officers in· terviewed seven victims of the al- leged shakedown operation, but he said today there probably are others who are afraid to come forward. He said that, of the seven ar- rested, one student was involved in one incident only -an incident isolated from the others. . According to Blitch the remain- ing six worked together in vary- ing combinations, with two in particular using a knife to extort money from other stud en ta. Police brought all seven stu. dentsintothepolicestationwhere they were held until they were re. leasedtotbeirparents. Hughes Firm Sued' LOS ANGELES (AP> - Hughes Aircraft Co. of Culver Cl .. tJ bas been aued by a small cp~ puter terminal firm, Harvll Corp., for $100 mill1on Wea t h er . Sunny· ancl warm throuah 5atunll.)'. Hllbs lD , 10s. Lowa'5to51. t INSIDE TODAY 1 ·p,__ .o1Mad for ..,.,.. tofHadt1' A colettdal' of ntnta ac,...... trorl& . "°'° .tu """"" ... "' ~ Callfonfla. darts ota l>agc CJ ol ,.., ... ..,..,. . i--.x OAILYflLOT s Ftiday. February 11, t.971 Bost.age 'Fine' Little ·Sign Seen of £Ong Or~al • INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - • '4aJl,1bio1, l.alkinj and eali.n1 With bl.a Wife In a hospital room, "1r1bere there was little outward '1i&n or the 63-hour ordeal that had just ended tor Richard o. Pall. <Related story. pholol, A4). ••yes, I am fine, thank you." hall said Thursday night, mo- IJlents after Anthony G. "Tony" .Jtiritsis, 44, removed a sawed-oft ,iiotgun that he bad wired to his }leek and freed him. : Dr. Charles W1lllams, a 'Wishard Hospital surgeon, said UaU, 42, was in "excellent condi· tlon and in good spirits" despite 'the trauma of being held captive ainee Tuesday. Re was treated for two-inch 'neck and wrist lacerations, Williama said , caused by handcuffs and the wire used to hold the muzzle of the shotgun to his neck. His wife, Ibby, an unidentified chaplain, and Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Pinney, business as· sociates, were whisked into the hospital, 10 minutes after Hall 'arrived at the hospital, wheeled through a police-lined corridor into the emergency room. Less th{Ul an hour after enter- ing the hospital, Hall was al· lowed to return home to his four children. "Thank God he's safe," said Indianapolis Mayor William H. Hudnut moments after visitini Hall briefly in the emergency room. "He's come through a grave ordeal, under great pre- ... w,....,,..-. 'FlNE, THANK YOU' · Freed Hostage Hall ssure and he's in good spirits." Authorities said Hall spent his entire time as a hostaJe in handcuffs in his abductor's west side apartment. Just three hours earlier Hall had appeared on Jive television, the shotgun wired to his neck to prevent his escape if the gun was fired, and Klritsis' finger wired to the trigger. KirHsis repeated his state- ments th~t he abducted Hall beea he •u ffnvincld that Hall's MtridJan Mort1a1e Co. tried to cheat him on a $130,0QO land development loan. Aa Klritais reeled off th• char1ea for the television cameras, Hall looked steadily ahead. He never spoke. His hands shook, and be grimaced each time Klritsls moved the gun, tightening the wire around hi.a neck. It wu the first time Hall bad been seen since the abduction. The Rev. Cauthon T. Boyd, a Protestant chaplain with the police department, arra°'ed a teleplMIM dtt hetween Hall and his wife Tuesday. Kiritsis re- ported J y acted as an in- termediary, relaying messages between the couple when Mrs. Hall telephoned. "That was a good boost for her." Mr. Boyd said. "'Tony went back to when be was 7 years old, describing his life for Mrs. Hall. He said he was sorry for causing her any heartache. and added that if everyone left them alone it would be all right." Hall's four children, ran.ging in age from 5 to 11, tr{ed to lead normal lives throughout the crisis, Mr. Boyd said. ·'The children really don't un- d e rs fa nd the immensity or seriousness of this," Mr: Boyd said. He said the children were only kept home from school Wednes- day. School Pools Get Heat . 'Responsible Rea.sons' to Be Considered , SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -The "California ban on natural gas lteating for all except therapeutic swimming pools has been unof· •Jicially eased for public and ;~ducational swimming facilities. :. President Robert Batinovich or :•the State Public Utilities Com- !mission sent a letter to utilities .. and mayors or each California ci· :!ty notifying them of the change. :: Referring to the pool healing ;:t->an. his Feb. 4 letter stales in ~art: :: ··we appreciate there may be a :;number of other responsible re- ~sons for such heating. The city '=may have a number of municipal :and private pools, both indoor :and outdoor. : ··u is reasonable to a rrange :pool heating so as to reduce the :Overall consumption of natural :gas. such as closing outdoor ~ls, reducing the warmth of .:the pool, or other arrangements, " :Youth Hurt ~ter Fights; ~Two Charged A night of fisticuHs between .-completing suilors ended Thurs- • day night in Santa AnJ with ooe :suitor wounded and his l wo rivals ·in jail, police said. It was Edmond Valdez. 18, of 5103 W. 16th St .. Santa Ana. who ended up in UCI Medical Center after beJne wounded in the neck, police said. They reported Valdez was shot ~in front of the house at 5009 W. :ieth St., shortly after 11 p.m. ~ His woundmg, according to 'police, came at the end or a fis- "'lfi1bt WJth one romantic com- • pet i tor that had followed an earli er fight with another rival. Both rivals were arrested a s hort distance from the scene and booked into County Jail on ,charges of assault with intent to kom mil murder. \ Police identified the suspects ,as Jose Antonoio Flores, 23, of 718 .N . Raitt St., Santa Ana, and Joe Louis Flores, 27, of 2425 W. : Borchard St., Santa Ana. 0AANGICOA81' s DAILY PILOT and we look to your leadership at the local level to make these hard decisions that can satisfy your local absolute needs and still as- sist ua in our COlllmon goal of saving every possible amount of natural gas." Batinovich pointed out Thurs- day that to put the voluntary gas conservation program into operation. it had to legally be in- corporated in utility tariffs-rate filings with the PUC. · "We are not a Gestapo." he said in acknowtedglng tbat en- forcement is difficult. "We are not going to go around cutting off gas. We're certainly not going to do it now. But ii we run out, lt\ere will benoneedtodoit." "We are asking the coopera- tion of everyone. and I've told each mayor to resolve the pro- blem as far as public and private institutional pools for their city. "We want mayors to take the lead in establishing absolute local needs considering our goals and then put those needs ahead of goals." • Batinovich said the only pro· blem in the gas conservation pro- gram has involved pool heating, adding he anticipates moditica· lions in the next two weeks or so with a view to an ongoing, not just emergency, program. In other developments: -A legislative leader pro· posed mandatory water ration· ing for California to guard against the possibility of widespread business failures. un- employment a nd price hikes generated by the two-year-old drought. "I perceive this to be a crisis of extraordinary magnitude," As - sembly Speaker Leo McCarthy said Thunday. . ·" . -Reserve supplies in Southern California were being siphoned lo the northern half of the state, which is suffering the most. To alleviate the problem in Marin County, just north of San Francisco. a contract was draft- ed Thursday under which water intended for Southern California will be diverted through a tern· porary 18-inch pipeline. -Los Angeles' Metropolitan Water District. which serves 11 million people -half the state's population -said Thursday it will surrender more than 130 billion gallons of water for agricultural and residential use in the north. The district expects to be paid $20 million in return. -The Public Utilities Com· mission adopted an emergency conservation program for im· mediate use by the 400 water utilities under its jurisdiction which serve more than a million customers. -In Oakland, water officials were harried by 8,000 complaints from customers objecting hotly to rationing that called for the same amount to be parceled to a family of six as a household or one. . The East Bay Municipal Utility District officials said they would look for a fairer way to reduce water consumption. Accused Slayer Bunted A man who 111UU being hunted by police ._i bla 16--year-otd al· leced eompU.lon. ln an Anahtlm market kltlln1 were indicted Thursday by the Orange Count,y Grand Jury. Victor Antonio Ledesma, is, of Westminster, is scheduled for arraiglillleat later today In Superior Court. The hunted man named with him in the indid· ment I.a Joseph Emanuel Cabral, 20, or Cypress. Authorities said the two are ac· cused or involvement with two «her men ln the murder last Oct. 7 of Jack Warren Mason, 20, who died from a shotgun blast in the stomach while four men robbed the Albertson's Market wbere he worked. Police said George Louis Ledesma of Westminster, Victor Ledesma's 19-year-old brother, fired the weapon. He and co- def endant Richard Frank An· dreason, 29, a transient, have been ordered to face trial Feb. 22 in Superior Court on charges of murder and robbery. The younger Ledesma and Cabral face the same charges. The indictment further accuses Cabral of armed robbery stem- ming from a holdup at Ralphs Market. 2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa, last Oct. 5. The younger Ledefma was held as a juvenile and ptpsecuted in that court following his arrest. The indictment means that he will be trice$ as an adult. An indictment is a formal charge made against a person by a grand jury. It does not establish guilt or innocence. Front Page Al ACID •.• Santa Ana Municipal Court on related murder charges. • _ •. CQ·~~endant Gary Essex. 24, Compton, faces senlencTng Wed- nesday in Judge S mith's courtroom after being found guilty or second degree murder. Co-defendant Jerome Dedrick Toles. 19, Compton, faces sentencing next Friday after pleading guilty lo charges or conspiracy and being an ac· cessory to murder. Co-defendant Billy Wayne HoJlins, 22, Santa Ana, faces sentencing at a later dale after pleading guilty to charges or be· ing an accessory to murder. Woman Hurt In Attack; Ex-mate Held An Orange housewife was re- ported in extremely critical con· di lion today after allegedly being stabbed and beaten by her former husband. Orange police said the purport- ed attack came when the vie· Um 'sex-husband returned one or their children after a visit with him. Identified as the critically in· jured victim was Margaret Held, 36, o( 2166 Diamond St., Orange. Arrested and charged with as- sault with intent to commit murder was William John Monahan, 39, of Burbank. Police said the alleged assault occurred Wednesday evening m the victim's home. 55MPH • WASHINGTON (AP) -MOlfl Aft\eritan m~istl favor con- tlnuat.fon o( tb• M mtte-per.houf 'lpeed Umll. aceo~inl to t\lne ta- d•pendent surveys analyzed tW the National ,.HJghw!)' Tratr.c Salitj~lnlltr•tl~ TWo <lf tbt 1uney1 were n•· tlonal ln aope and the otheJ"' In. ~.plved lndlvidual states-: Oallfornla, Geortla. Ma171ud. Nevada, New Hampsblre, New M exlco and New York. 11.fl,Wl..,...1.e MAFIA LEADER SLAIN Frank Bompen1lero E'ra. Page AJ EXECUTE. • pensiero were dismissed for lack of evidence, as in the apparent killing of Carlino, whose body was never found. Bompensiero once was a floorman at San Di~go's Rain- bow Gardens owned by Tony Mirable, reputedly the local Mafia le'ader before he was shot to death in 1958. Bompensiero's widow Maria Rose survives. A gruff and often hearty man, he always smoked or chewed cigars. A chewed-down cigar was found on the sidewalk near Born· pensiero along with four spent .22-caliber cartridge cases. Parking Lot Slayer Gets Life Sentence A man who ended a fracas over a parking lot collision by plung- ing a bayonet into a motorist who argued with him was sentenced Thursday to life in stale prison. Orange County Superior Court Judge Kenneth Williams ordered the maxiumum term for Robert David Esparza, 42, of Anaheim, who earlier was found guilty or first degree murder in the killing of David Ray Goodman, 19, of Santa Ana. Police who investigated the killing in a Stanton parking, lot last Aug. 1 said Esparza became enraged when Goodman's car in· m~ted damage on the defen- dant's brand new auto. They said Esparza pursued Goodman through the parking lot and repeatedly plunged the bayonet Into him before bystan· ders came to the stricken man's aid. Police Free Kidnap Victim MADRID (AP) -Police freed kidnaped Lt. Gen. Emilio . Vil1aescusa unharmed today, the 1overnment announced, but a second high official kidnaped two months ago was whisked away by his abductors at the last minute, a Spanish news agency said. Several arrests were made, the government Information Ministry said. But the govern- ment announcement made no mention of Antonio Marl~ de Oriol, an adviser to King Juan Carlos k:idnaped Dec. 11. The polls were conducted separately by local, state and na- tional organizations, includJnC oewapapers, state highway patrols. biJhway safety depart· ments and national tndependent researcbflnns. Resulta of the two national pc>Us were almost identical, the aalety admhllatratlon reported toclQ. A Gallup Poll showed 73 percent ih favor of the M mph limit and 21 percent opposed. Safety ad· ministration Advertising Council poll registered 72 percent for and 20 percent opposed. A state survey conducted by the New Hampshire Highway Safety Agency showed 87 percent in favor and only 10 percent against. A New York Dally News poll cave an 83 lo 1' percent edge to the speed limit in that state. Even the least favorable sur· vey, taken by the Nevada Office of Trame Safety, showed 58 percent favored the law, with 34 percent opposed. Before Congress im- posed the speed limit in 1973 to conserve fuel, Nevada had no speed limit except in incorporat- ed a reas. Other state results, all in favor of the speed limit: California <San Francisco Examiner) 63 to 37 per- cent; Georgia (highway patrol> 75 to 15; Maryland (stale police> 80 to 20, and New Mexico <Traffic Safely Commission) 71 to28. The safety administration said analysis of the surveys s howed support for the speed limit was widespread among all age groups, sexes, income levels and geographic locations. Wholesale Prices Up ln]amuuy WASHINGTON CAP) - Wholesale prices rose five-tenths of a percent in January but did not fully reflect the impact of the severe winter weather on food and fuel costs, the government said today. The Labor Department said the increase, largely the result of higher prices for farm products, tex- tiles and machinery. was based on prices in effect Jan. 11, before the cold weather damaged citrus and vegetable crops in Florida and sent natural gas and heating oil prices rising. January's wholesale price increase was moderate, and about in ' line with increases each month since October. But the government indicated the effects or the cold wave will cause February's prices to spurt higher. RUNNING ALL AROUND. YOUR ONE-STOP DEC ORA TING CENTER SHOULD BE ALDEM'S AT ONE STORE YQU CAN IUY CARPETING, VINYL. WOOD FLOORS, AMDiCUSTOM DRAPIRIES. WE .SELL THE ~ IEST BRANDS AT COM!ETITIVE P.RICES, AMD PROVIDE THE BEST l~STALL.ATIOM IM ORANGE COUM'tf. Tod•Y'• Clo liq& J N.Y. Stoeks 1 I ostage · 'fi'ine' After Len9th11 Ordeal INDIANAPOLIS (AP> - a111bin1, talking and eatin& ilb bia. wife in a hospital room, here there was UtUe outward iCft cl the 83-..bour ordeal that ~ just ended for Richard 0. all. (Related story, photos, A4). "Yes, I am fine, thank you," all said Thursday ni1bt, mo- eats after Anthony G. ''Tony" · is, "· removed a sawed-off >ltotgun tbpt be had wired to bis neck and freed him. Dr. Charles Willlams, a Wishard Hospital surgeon, said Hall, 42, was in "excellent condi- tion and in good spirits" despite the trauma of being held capUve since Tuesday. He was treated for twe>-i.nch neck and wrist lacerations, Williams said, caused by handcuffs and the wire used lo bold the muule of the shotgwi to his neck. His wile, Ibby, an unidentified chaplain, and Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Pinney. business as· sociates, were whisked into the hospital, 10 minutes after Hall arrived at the hospital, wheeled through a police·lined corridor into the emeraency room. Less than an hour after enter· ing the hcspital, Hall was al· lowed to return home to his four children. ''Thank God he's safe," said Indianapolis Mayor William H. Hudnut moments after visltJng · Kall briefly in the emergency room. "He's come through a grave ordeal. under great pre· ssure aod he's in good spirits." Authorities said Hall spent his entire time as a hostage in handcuffs in bis abductor's west side apartment. Juat three hours earlief Hail had appeared on llve television, the shotgun wired to his neck to prevent bis escape if the gun was fired, and K.iritsis' finger wired to the trigger. Kiritsis repeated his state· ments that he abducted Hall because he was convinced that Hall's Meridian Morteage Co. tried lo cheat him on a $130,000 land development loan. As Kiritsis reeled off the charges for t.he television cameras, Hall looked steadily ahead. He never spoke. His hands shook, and h e grimaced each time Kirilsis moved the gun. tightening the wire around his neck. It was the first time Hall bad been seen since the abduction. The Rev. Cauthon T. Boyd, a <See HOSTAGE, Pa,;eA2) Co. Poll Prefers Mobil SD Mafia Leculer Murdered SAN DIEGO (AP> -Frank Bompensiero, a reputed Mafia .eader, has been shot to death in i gapgland-style execution on the >idewalk outside his beach apart- ment. Bompensiero. 71, was re-~arded as a contender for the West Coast gang leadership Nhich has been in a power strug· ~le since Jack Licata died in L971, authorities said . Pompens1ero was shot four t imes with a .22 ·ca l ibcr automatic pistol. which police ;aid may have been used with a • ;ilencer since neighbors in the Pacific Beach area said they 1 1eard no shots Thursday night. Bompensiere was believed alive when found in a pool of 3lood when police arrived, but .ns pronounced dead on arrival ilt'.lltssioo 8a1 Genel'-1 Hospital. 1 "!Qowallet was found on the body >qt "a quantity of money was in 1is pockets," an investigator ;aid. The crime record of Bom- >ehsiero went back to 1928 with a >00Uegging conviction. In 1941, te was charged with murder but hat. was dropped when only the >loodstained car or his acquain- ance Victor Carlino could be 'ound. .Bompensiero, who regularly qPt evening walks. was shot as 1e passed an alley beside his •P,artment building, police said. Intelligence officers said be tas a lmowh a~sociafe orJ0seph •)oe Bananas .. Bonanno, de· >OSed New Yorlf and New Jersey ~afia chieftain; James "Jimmy be Weasel " Fralianno, lescribed by a Los Angeles >01ice official as the "West Coast !UCutionerforthe Mafia" atone i~e, and the late Mickey Cohen. 1n 1954, a jury convicted Bom- wmiero o( bribing public or- lClall in' a stale liquor license <aftdal. He spent five years in >{lion. ompensiero and Fralianno ftre cbar1ed in an Imperial 1alley trucking scandal in 1966, >Gt the charges a1alnst Bom· M1a1iero were diam.in~ (or lack 1revidence, as in the apparent :tWng of Carlino, whose body was never found. Bompensiero once was a lo0rman at San Diego's Rain->~ Gardens owned by 'rony ~\a:_able, reputedly the local itilia leader belote be wu shot ode a th in 1958. widow Maria Rider Stunned Costa Mesa paramedic aids Gary Edward Fields, 22. moments after the mo-ped rider was struck by a car driven by an Anaheim woman. Police said Fields. 267 E. 16th Str eet. Costa Mesa. was hit about 5 p.m. Thursday at the intersection of Monte Vista and Elden A venues. Fields was listed in stable condition today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. Mesa Cyclist Hit; SA Driver Held Costa Mesa police today were holding a Santa Ana motorist they said struck a young bicyclist with his car Thursday night, Shou Given Free in Mesa A free immunization clinic will be held Monday at Whittier School in Costa Mesa, sponsored by the Orange County Health Department. Inoculation s against diphtheria, whooping cough, tetanus, polio, measles, rubella and mumps will be admioiatered from 3 to 8 p.m. in the multi- purpose room of the school at 1800 N. Whittier Ave. Parents are advised to bring immunization records. Booster shots are also available for older childreo and adults. hurling the boy about 70 feet down West 19th Street. Steven John Zeoli, 14, of 525 Fairfax Drive, Costa Mesa, was reported in stable condition to· day at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital following early morning surgery. Police said Zeoli was riding east on 19th Street about 9:30 p.m. when he was struck by a car driven by Juan Francisco Paniagua, whom witnesses said drove orr foltowing the accident. Paniagua, 38, was later halted! by an unidentified citizen and is in police custody today, charged with felony drunk driving and hit and run, police said. Police said Zeoli was on his way to a nearby fast rood outlet and was struck while riding in a crosswalk. The impact tossed him about 70 Ceet. into i street curb, resulting in a possible broken pelvis, a fractured right leg and numerous cuts and abrasions, pol ice £aid. School Pools Get ·Heat • 'Rl'ispomible ReaMJm' to Be Considered do it now. But lf we run out, there will be no need to do it.'• .. W• are asking the coopera- tion ol everyone, and I 've told each mayor to resolve the pro- blem as far u publlc and private insUtuUonal poola tor their city. "We want miu-ors to take the lead tn. atabllablng absolute Jocal need.I c:onaiderlric our 1oals a.Del that l"4 thoso needs ahead o( ~ ... Battnovtcb said the only pro- blem bl tbe aas c:omervation pro-eram baa involved PoOl heatina, addliihe ••d~ates modi.fie:•· tiou mthi ntinwo weeks or IO With • Tiew to an onco1.n1. not ut emerpncy, proiram. Jn otberdev~menll: . -A leSWIU.e leader ~ CS.~••Ml Personnel Support Takeover By TOM BARLEY OI UM D•Hy Piiot Staff Ir a vote could be taken today · among the Irvine Company's lop management personnel the Mobil Oil Company would get the n'od over its competitor in the current takeover battle, Orange County Superior Court testimony revealed Thursday. Company board Chairman John V. Newman told Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith's lawyer that management person· nel. including company Presi· dent Raymond Watson, much prefer a Mobil takeover. Newman, who is also a director of the James Irvine f'oun· dation. made it clear that he and senior Irvine Company staff m embers are convinced that Mobil will retain the company's top brass if its $281.9 million bid is accepted . The stat ement followed testimony that a consortium headed by Detroit developer Alfred Taubman and Wall Street financier Charles Allen would ··weed out the deadwood" at the Irvine company if 1l took over operations. The Allen·Taubman bid of $282.7 million has the support of Mrs . Smith who brought the takeover issue to court when she took legal action that halted the S200 million sale to Mobil of the foundation's 54.5 percent hold· in gs in the Irvine Company. Provisions of the Federal Tax Reform Act or 1969 compel the foundation board to dispose of its company shares by 1983. Mrs. Smith, who named the foundation as defendants in her lawsuit, holds 22.4 percent or the Irvine Company's issued shares. Newman confirmed for at· torney Howard Friedman Thurs- day that Watson was the man who negotiated the terms of the merger with Mobil. And he identified the late J. S. "Sv" F1uor as the man who first introduced Mobil to the Irvine Company when the foundation board of which Fluor was a member first raced the stock dis- posal issue. Newman told Friedman that the Fluor Corporation at that time had an active business rela-<See MOBIL, Page AZ) Wlwlesa/,e Price& Up In January Dusting Off Abe National Park Service worker Archie Gatling uses a broom to remove dust and cobwebs from the statue of Abraham Lincoln at Washington's Lincoln Menforial. A ceremony is planned Saturday for Lincoln's 168th birth· day. · Seven CdM Students Held in Robberies Seven students from Lincoln Middle School in Corona del Mar were arrested Thursday by Newport Beach police on charges ranging from assault and battery to extortion and armed robbery. Police said the seven boys range in age from 11 to 14 and come from Balboa Island and Harbor View Hills. The 8fl'ests culminated an in- vestiaation sought by school Prin- cipal Georgiana McLeod. who calledofficerstotbecampusafter a group ol students told her they were bemg victimized by the group. The victims told police they were forced to tum over their lunch money when threatened by the other students . Sit. Mike Blitch, head of the police de~t's juvenile sec- tion. aaidhe and other officers il'l· terviewed seven victims of the aJ. • leaed shakedown operaUon, but be ea.kl today there probably are ~ts WbO are afraRI. to come forward. He said that, of the seven ar· rested, one student was involved In one incident only -an incident isolated from the others. According to Blitch the remain- ing six worked together in vary. ing combinations, with two in particular using a knife to extort money from other students. Police brought all seven stu· dents into the police station where they were held until they were re- leased totheirparents. Coast Weather Sunny and warm through Saturday. Bl&bs in '10s. Lows'5to53. INSWETOD~Y Planning .oMad /tr fttf'r\O' tafnment1 A ~al4'ftdar ol nmt• xllftfaled froM ,.,. tmlfl mitf,JllM in ~ Caltjornla .tan. on ~CJ ol toclaJl•a Weekncler. .. tlex M\'...,s.Mm A1t ._......_ 81 leetl.._ U _..... CM a.;.M....,. At .......... A• c.t.._..•' AS ....... ..._ M O-llllM °"" .... '1·1 ~lft U IYMI,..... AH c......... '* ........ .......................... ..._ .. ._. A6 T......._ C. ......... Ill CM Tiii.... CM ,.._. .,..,, ....._ .... .... ,... M WwN.,.... M .......... Q •11111••• ~ A 2 DAIL y PILOT c ~ A.ccwed Slayer ::4Hunted .•, . ~. A man who u still being hWlled ., by police and his Ul·year-old al· lesed companion In an Anaheim .... market killing were indtcted (Thursday by the Orange County Grand Jury. " Viet.or Antonio Ledesma, 16, of •; ... Westminster, Is scheduled for .• arraignment later today in ., Superior Court. The hunted man •,named with him in the Indict· ment is Joseph Emanuef Cabral, .. 20, of Cypress. Aulborities said the two are ac· cused of involvement with two other men In the murder last Oct. 7 of Jack Warren Mason, 20, who :.•died from a shotgun blast ln the • stomach while four men robbed .• the Albert.son's Markel where he •• worked. Police s aid George Louis , Ledesma of Westminster, Victor .,.· Ledesma's 19-year-old brother, • fired the weapon. He and co· -, defendant Richard Frank An· , dreason. 29, a transient. have , been ordered to face trial Feb. 22 in Superior Court on charges of .. , murder and robbery. ,, The younger Ledesma and '•'Cabral face the same charges. .. The indict ment further accuses ... ~Cabral of armed robbery stem· ming from a holdup at Ralphs ~·.Market, 2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa, last Oct. 5. T he younger Ledesma was held as a juvenile and prosecuted in that court following his arrest. T he indictment means that he will be tried as an adult. An indictment Is a formal charge made against a person by .;. a grand jury. It does not establish . ···guilt or innocence. ·, . . .. ., Marines Hurt ·~ !~By Explosion ,· -.At Pendleton f Seven Marines were Injured two seriously when an unex· : ploded shell detonated in their l midst as they cleared a practice ; firing range not far from where , Rep. Robert Badham ( R· ·· . Newport Beach> was visilin~ on ·: a VIP tour of Camp Pendleton ~ Thursday. :: One of the military helicopters i in the congressman's party was ) diverted to participate in I ! medical/rescue operations in the ancident. Badham aide Nancy Bettcher. said today. ~ The congressman did not. see ~ or hear anything connected with ~ the explosion. but was aware of • the incident due to radio transmissions. the aide said. Most seriously injured was Sgt. Gary Conen, 25. of Oceanside. Sgt. Conen underwent sur1ery al ) Naval Regional Medical Center :: for multiple serious fraementa· tlon wounds received in the inci· • dent. • He was reported today in satisfactory condition by a base 1 spokesman. Sgt James L. Connors, 23, of Derby. Ky.. was reported in satisfactory condition after sus· ta1nlng m1oor·fragmentation wounds. The rivl' other marines • were released after e mergency aid The incident O<'curred in the Las PuJgas area of the 196-square mile marine base. The range is about nve miles tnland from the : San Diego Freeway. The Marines were all part or a special ordnance disposal unit and were clearing dud ammuni· taon from the target area when the Incident occurred. The shell was thought lo be a 40 mm round. One or the Badham aides, • Howard Seelye, did go over to see : the injured, but aside from that, : the Badbam party had no con· : tact. : The clearina of the practice • field was a routine Marine pro- cedure and had nothing to do with the Congressman's visit, Aide , Bettcher said . • # • # • • # • l I· ORANOECOAIT c DAILY PILOT ·-... ---·-~ , .... c..,..., Vlol'r~l .... 0.-M~ n.l. ... ...... --··1 .. 0 .. ~ ... _,...... MIWllll11tl•.., • ~~fl\t,...:C;:'i:t .... CMt• ... ••OllM ,,.,,,." ..... ..... WlllfllAlllNMt P.0.1h1tlM,~ ... w ... ,.,. .. 'RNE, THANK YOU' Freed Hostage Hall FrOJR Page A l HOSTAGE. • • Protestant chaplain with the police department, arranged a telephone call between Hall and his wile Tuesday. Kiritsis re· portedly acted a s a n in · termediary, relaying messages between the couple when Mrs. Hall telephoned. "That was a good boost for her," Mr. Boyd said. "Tony went back to when he was 7 years old, describing his life for Mrs. Hall. He said he was sorry for causing her any heartache, and added that if everyone left them alone it would be a II right." Sentencing Postporwment Ortkred A two-week delay has been or· dered in the Orange County Superior Court sentencing or t WO men who face possible life terms in stale prison for the kidnapingof potalo chip heir John H. "Jack" Scudder of Newport Beach Judge Richard J . Beacom set Feb. 24 as the new ~entencing date for William Rudy Wesson, 45, of Tustin and Ricki Dale Sellers, 21, of Hermosa Beach, after their lawyer asked for more time to prepare his motion for a new trial. A jury found the pair guilty Jan. 20 after it was alleged that they abducted Scudder, 64 , as the son of potato chip pioneer Laura Scudder left his dentist's office in Huntington Beach. Scudder escaped by faking a heart attack. fighting. and elud· ing Sellers as the kidnapers' van drove through Fountain Valley His wife received a telephoned demand for $250.000 in ransom shortly after her husband was seized. MOBIL ••• Uonshlp wtlb Mobil and prov\ded equipmentfortlteollcompany. He testlfled th,.l Fluot and f cllow foundation directors Morris Do1le and Edward Carter beaded the flr'll attempt.a to in· terest Mobil in the Irvine Com· pany . Mra. Smith condemaed the $24 a share figure represented by the S200 million deal as much too low. The current Mobil offer represents a per share figure of SS3.50. Newman told Friedman that foundation director Carter served on the board of American Telephone and Telefraph with a hi&h ranking Mobi official in· volved in the negotiations . But he rejected Friedman's suegest.lon that this might con· stltute conflict of interest. Friedman has made those charges against foundation director Doyle, whose law firm worked for Mobil on other legal matters at the lime and found&· lion attorney Howard Privett, whose Los Angeles law firm handles litigation for the oil com· pany . Newman said one of the foun· dalion's main concerns at this point or the negotiations is lo pre- serve the identity of the Irvine Company and protect what he describes as "well qualified and talented personnel." Judge James F. Judge ordered a three-day weekend break in the trial late Thursday. It will re- sume at 9:45 a.m . Monday. * * * Just Peanuts No Laughing Malter Now? Irvine Company Board Chairman John V. Newman brought a touch or levity to a tense Orange County Superior Court trial Thursday when he clarified comments he made in a pretrial deposition. He confirmed for attorney Howard Friedman that he had referred to minor incremenLs of five cents a share during recent frenzied bidding as being "just peanuts." "I now regret that kind re· mark," he told Judge James F. Judge. "I think it was flippant. "However," he added with a grin while Judge Judge and a l>attery or lawyers laughed out loud. "I didn't realize in those pre-elf'ction days what kind of value peanuts would have to- day ." Student Kille d FALLBROOK CAP) -A l~ year·old freshman at Fallbrook lhgh School was found beaten to death in an avocado grove across the street from school. In· vestigators went to Anaheim to question a 17-year-old Fallbrook lhgh student jailed there. ~hool'sOut Wet-suited s urfers wait for waves at Newport Beach surfing spot. This photo was taken at 8:45 this morning. School was out today because of Lincoln's birth· day, and local surfers were quick to take advantage of the free time and warm weather along the Orange Coast. Lifeguards listed water temperatures in low 60s and air temperatures along the shoreline in the 70s . Teen Boys Firing Stolen Guns Held From Page Al POOLS •.• posed mandatory water ration· in~ for California lo guard aga ins t the possibility of widespread business failures, un· employment and price hikes ~enerated by the two-year-old drought. A former Royal Air Force flyer who drove past the Lake Mission Viejo area Thursday told Orange County sheriff's officers that what he heard reminded him of the flack be flew through over Dusseldorf. And a nearby woman resident who heard the racket as she washed dishes in her kitchen sink told deputies she thought the Mafia were carrying out execu· tions in the area behind her home. Alarmed deputies who rushed tothescenesaidtheyfound · -Twenty handguns. rifles. and shotguns that were later iden· tified as weapons stolen from Reuben's Sporting Goods Store, at 28892 Marguerite Parkway, M isslon Viejo. -More than 3,000 rounds of am· munition for all the weapons. It had also been taken from the burgled store. -A van containing two male juveniles, 15 and 16, who were sur- rounded by spent shells but who were busy loading their weapons for a further round of target prac tice on nearby trees and the adJa· cent lake. Deputies booked both boys into juvenile hall on charges of burglary and attempted burglary. They said the boys told them they had discussed shooting it out with officers but decided to surrende r as patrol cars sur· rounded them. Deputies said one or the boys Burglars Hit Mesa Garage, E scape Burglars apparently used a boll cutter to remove a padlock from a Costa Mesa gara~e Thursday and escaped with $880 worth of patio chairs. bar stools and a barbecue grill. police said. The burglary was reported by Claudia Lee Bush. 2615 Orange Avenue, Costa Mesa. Police said the burglars closed the garage door and took the padlock after removing valuablei.. blamed his father for their de- cision lo steal guns and am mum· ti on valued at more than SS.000 The boy reportedly told an of· fleer that his father refused to buy him a .22-caliber rifle from the nearby K-Mart store. He and his companion later tried to break in · to the store, were thwarted by a maintenance man and then broke in lo the Reuben· s store. 17 Approved For School Panel Posts All 17 applicants seeking posi· lions on two Newport-Mesa school district advisory commit· tees were approved by tru.st~s Tuesday night. The community volunteers will simultaneously serve as an ad- visory body to the board of education on financial matters and future disposal of surplus school sites. The members include: From Balboa: Mrs. Dorothy Beek. From Corona del Mar: Mrs. Robert C. Baird. From Costa Mesa: William Bandaruk, James Jocelyn , Alvin L. Pinkley, Ruth M. Purcell, Nathan O'Brien. Janel M. PeHchowski, Howard P. Shelton and Christopher M . Steel. From Newport Beach : Evelyn R. Hart, Aileen R. Schrader, Mrs. Virginia F . Dunn, John Bernard Dunzer, Mrs. D. V. Skilling and Joan S. Windburn. From Santa Ana Heights: Ann F . Beaupre. Amputee Wounded LOS ANGELES (AP> -An amputee was shot and wounded when a sheriff's deputy mistook the metal hook on the end of his a rtificial arm for a gun, a uthorilies say. "I perceive this to be a crisis o( extraordinary magnitude," As· sem bly Speaker Leo McCarthy said Thursday . -R eserve suppl ies in Southern California were being siphoned to the northern half of the state, which is suffering the most. To alleviate the problem in Marin County, just north or San Francisco. a contract was draft· r d Thursday under which water intended for Southern California will be diverted through a tem· porary 18-inch pipeline. Los Angeles' Metropolitan Water District, which serves 11 million people -half the state's population -s aid Thursday it will surrender more than 130 b i llion gallons of waler for agricultural and residential use in the north. The district expects lo be paid S20 million in return. -The Public Utilities Com· mission adopted a n emergency conser\'allun program for im· medial<.' use by the 400 water utilities under its jurisdiction which scr\'e more than a million customers. In Oakland. water officials were harried by 8.000 complaints from customers objecting holly to rationin~ that called for the same amount to be parceled to a family of six as a household oC one. The East Bay Municipal Utility District officials said they would look for a fairer way to reduce water consumption. Mother S uspect CORONA DO (AP) -The mother of a 3·year·old girl who died Wednesday or "beating and evidence of sexual molestation" has been booked for investigation of murder and child abuse, authorities said Thursday. The woman, Marilyn L. Mc Kenna, 23, was arrested a few hours after the girl. Danielle, died. RUMMING ALL AROUND. YOUR ONE-STOP DECORATING CENTER SHOULD BE ALDEN'S AT ONE STORE YOU CAM BUY CARPETING, VINYL. WOOD FLOORS, AND CUSTOM DRAPERIES. WE SELL THE BEST BRANDS AT COMPE1 ITIVE PRICES, AND PROVIDE THE IEST INSTALLA110M IM ORANGE COUNTY. DEN'S : ·;nsiailstiaii: ·custom draperies linoleum • woOd floor 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MJSA, CALIF'. 92627 • SACRAMENTO (AP) -Six- teen montba before elecU°':,j~e nc.far the Republican no •· tloa for governor ieta under WIU' this weekend with tbe first con- frontation of the three major con- teridera. Saa Diego Mayor Pete WUsorr. Att. Gen Evelle Younger and Los AnJeles Police Chief Ed Davis - the three actlve, unofficial can· dida\ea -will all be courting potential supporters at the an· nual Republican state convention here. They and other potential con- tenders for eovernor. lieutenant governor. attorney general and other offices plan a series of oa111 P11enu1tPMte WEARS MANY HATS Monte LaBonte . Arts Director Delights in His 'New Toy' When Monte LaBonte, Sad· dleback College's fine arts division director, is strolling around the unfinished, $3.2 million complex that will house his muses of art, music and drama. he's like a kid with a new toy. 1 He deHgbts in showing people around the facility. using bis im- agination to "finish" the rough walls, lmcarpeted slabs and bare framin~. In fact, LaBonte has gotten so involved in the prOJcct that the facility's designer. Newport Beach architect William Blurock. and college administrator Ed Hart decided the former band .director needed his own hard hat. "I was making all kinds o!sug- gestions -you know, hke 'what . about this over here." or 'wouldn't this be better that way,' " LaBontesaid . When LaBonle finally got his personal hard hat, it was a sight to behold -t.b e customized product of the inventive and creative minds in Blurock'soffice. The basic helmet is blue, with a series oC five horizontal yellow s tripes running around the crown like the music staff. Black musical notes have been painted on the staff, and, on one side or the herdhatlsabig, black "M". The crowrung glory is a light · bulb. on which has ~en written "ldea." There are also coils of wire, tags. labels, dials and a long cord designed to "plug into com- puter terminal.'' Finishing t ouchu on the elegant chapeau include gold , braid and an attached pair or :;. yellow goggles bearing the hand· ; Wl'itten inscription "See No Evil" ~ acrossthelenses. .. ~·Officials Confer ;-. :, WASIBNGTON (AP> -Presi- ;,.: dent Carter 1igned an executive ;.. order today establlshln' a nine· r member committee to search for r the • 'best qualified .. applicants to : replace Clarence M. Kelley as : director of the FBI. Kelley : himself, will be a member of th~ ~ committee. ,, Happy New Year, Snake HONG KONG (AP> - The Chinese Year of the Snake is only a week away, and the Hong Kong post of. flee has received a living reminder. A mail clerk sorting tet- ten found an unadd~ed enve1Qpe "with holes ln It and with something alive lnslde," a government spokesman said today. The Pet Control Advisory Unit was called. and one of tls agents found a live foot· lontt snake In the envelope. The expert uld the aaatse's bHe wa s • '•enomoua l>ut not normally d•n1•roua to. bamam." speeches, re«ptiona and public and private meettno. Pledges of party unity are ecbolnl from all factions as the GOP &ta.rta the im>cess ol re-buildlng after the most divisive elecUon ID ·a dozen years ln tut Juno's presidential primary between President Ford and former Gov. Ronald Reaean. But the preliminary parries and thrusts of the 1978 race pro- mise to dominate the two-day convention, opening Saturday. The gubernatorial race la sbap- in g up as another struggle between the moderate and con- servative wings of the party in the same style as the rancorous presidential primary last June. Wilson. a favorite of moderate Republicans, angered Reagan . supporters when be attacked Reagan's record as governor in speeches lo the New Hampshire presidential primary. 'VICTIMS' OF COUNTY LANDSCAPING PLAN NEAR LAKE FOREST DRIVE ...... Matt ....... Homeowners In Al•• lr•t•. but County S.ya Tree Cutting All Legal Most Reagan backers have forgiven Younger for serving as Ford's Califorrua cochairman because Younger only cam· paigned for Ford and refused to criticize Reagan. 'free Removal Sftid OK Lake Forest Resitknts Protes' Move But Wilson's · attacks on Reagan, in the view or some con- servatives, went beyond accepta· blebounds. Younger has a voided the wrath of Reagan loyalists and bas made inroads with con- servatives, wbo'in past year <lis· ~lusted him because of his vigorous prosecution or environ- mentalist and consumer suits. But as the centralist candidate in what is shaping up as a three- way race, Younger still is looking for a constituency in the party. However, Younger is a two- time winner in statewide races, and the only Republican besides U.S. Sen. S.I. Hayakawa now holding statewide office. He is building a campaign oo his strong name identification and the proposition that be can win. Davis, a 37-year veteran of the Los Angeles police department and a newcomer to politics, is the early favorite among con- servatives. "We're saying, here's a guy who can win," said state Sen. H.L . Richardson, one of the legislature's most conservative members and Davis' Jea<ling supporter. Youth Charged By LAURIE KASPER Ol IM Dally Piiot S\Mf An estimated 2,000 to· 4,000 eucalyptus trees are being cut down in an area off Lake Forest Drive, between Jeronimo Road and Toledo Way. .. The community is sick," said Mary Phillips, Lake Forest's representative to \he Saddleback Area Coordinating Council. She said she and other community leaders have been swamped with telephone calls from area resi- dents the last several days. But the tree removal is legal, according to county .officials. The work is being done in accordance with a landscaping plan ap- proved by the county Planning Commission last spring. Additionally, George Putnam, vice president of S & S Construc- tion Company, which is develop- ing the land. said be bas a letter of approval from former officials of the Lake Forest 11 Homeowners Association. Putnam also said his firm is "really not trying to denude the countryside." Some of the trees are being preserved. And, ac- cording to his landscaping con- sultant, 650 to '150 eucalyptus trees will be planled on the land later. "In a couple of years, it's going to look like tbe thing is in the In Fatal Toss GI Affected ~~:~~~e~!~!e By Nerve Gm old boy has been an'ested and ac. D U G W A Y P R 0 V I N G cusedofthrowingal9-poundcob-GROUND, Utah (AP> -A blestone which smashed through soldier exposed to the nerve the windshield of a car on the agent B·Z says he imagined see- E as t River Drive in Lower ing rats and flying saucers and Manhattan, fatally injuring a was told be grabbed a nurse. woman passenger. while under the influence of the The boy, whose identity was fumes. withheld because of his age, was Spec. S Ronald Mutchko, who picked up by detectives Thurs-made Uie comments in an in- day night and charged with terview broadcast Thursday homicide under juvenile delin· night on KUTV-TV, is being quency laws. transferred to Denver for further The cobblestone. dropped tests, an Army spokeswoman Tuesday evening from a foot-said. forest," Putnam said. He said homes could not be built among existing trees, as they have ID other areas of the community, because of the grade di!ferential _of th~ land. He pro- mised grading will be done in a natural contour. Earlier this week, the homeowners' association at- tempted to stop the project. The county did issue a stop work or- der, marked trees which are to be preserved and allowed the tree removal to continue, accord-ing to Irwin Schatzman, a county planner. He said 10 trees which should have been saved were cut down and will be replaced by the builder. Schatzman said planners knew a Jot of trees would be removed. But be added, "The actu~ im· pact of seeing the trees go was more than we thought.•• Bill Stewart, who began as general manager of the Lake Forest II Homeowners Associa- tion after the plan was approved, said he bas no record of the as- sociation's approval of the plan. However, the plan apparently was approved, leaving the as- sociation no· way to save the trees. Putnam believes the com· munity's concern about the pro- ject can be blamed oo Jack of a flow of information in the homeowners' group. Noting that developers put out a lot of paper work and environ- mental inipact reports on pro- jects, he said, residents should inform themselves. GIFT COLO Mansion Modems are easy to plant and are a beautiful Investment DAILY PILOT .43 Man Dies From iluriis Ford Barrett, tho 80-year-old man critically burned in an un- auccepful attempt to reseue bis dos ftom b1I bunLlAI bouae in Silverldo Canyon two weO:a ego. bas died ln UCJ Medical Center. There are no funeral aerv!oes planned fOI' Mr. Barrett. who dled Tuesday. Flr4men aald Mr. Banett was outside bis house at 29562 SUverado Canyon Road on Jan. 27 when be saw the flames. Tbey said be went inside to Ci.Pd the dog. Firemen later foWid the doig's remains behind a couch ID tbe burned-out 11 vi.ng room. "The doi absolutely loved Mr. Barrett," said James Holder, a friend and Silverado neighbor who bad been belplnl Mr. Bar· rett handle h1s pension and social security benefits for several years. Holder said tbe dog appareqtly bad been deserted in the canyon and "found" Mr. Barrett. •-nus little dog for some reason or other just absolutely took to Mr. Barrett," be said. He was the cm- ly person the dog was close to. Mr. Barrett lived in Silverado for about 15 years. His wife died in 1971. He was an aviator in World War I and had worked as a machinist inspector for about 45 years, Holder said. "He was just an awful nice old fella," Holder said. Bias Charge Hits Caltech • LOS ANGELES CAP) -The federal Equal Employment Op. portunity Commission bas ac· cused Caltech of employment bias against women and blaclc1. The commission charges that only a small percentage of those hired by the college are w0ap1 that their salaries are less tk~ those of men, and that there are almost no blacks on the faculty. bridge spanning the highway, struck Betsy Balkind, 24, in the abdomen. The woman, an employe at South Beach Psychiatric Center in Staten Island, died four hours later al Bellevue Hospital. Detectives who made the ar- rest said the boy picked up the stone in the park, threw it aim- lessly over the bridge and was unaware of the consequences "until he beard the crash." They said he left a group of olher boys before throwing the stone and af • terward rejoined friends who bad no knowledge of Uie incident. 20 People Held Host~e YUBA CITY (AP) -A Yuba City man armed with a pistol held 20 people hostage at a re- ligious meeting here before sur- rendering without incident to Sutter County sheriff's deputies, authorities said. There were no injuries reported. See our complete .• ChrysantheDIUID collection of Mansion Modem's. Each rose oomes " In a plantlble box with '°" V • Rh d d dr :::!~~· J~!s.'9J~~z:~~ 9 o o en on can make Your home even • D ff di} more valuable and • a 0 enJoyable without all the () wor1< and risk of damage to /'\. • H • h tt1e plant. Just prepare the w yacIDt box In the ground per . Lt. John Yuknes, who led the ·investigation, said the 13·year· old appears to be a ''nice kid" Leonard Cummings, 39, was booked for investigation of kid· naping and was being held at Sut· ter County General Hospital, of. ricers said after the Thursday night incident. hole. drop the plantable ~ Instructions. cover and • c I I water. In a •ew weeks you'll ye &Dlen • be able to enJoy these who lives in the area. ~-oolof'fut roses and discover~ ...~~~c:.=~:,~4: •Azalea Stop the Racket· r:l;!{~'='.-:;1 r:1 • Tulip ' fwlwmgV••tlM 0 · ~~~~~!~~an't Write ~ES-s399~ So~i:~elles s1~!- topics covered in Sunday's Daily SUNDAY'S BEST JAPANESE writing skills will be among the [ ] Pilot.. _ • ' ARALIA DOWN WITH DJN -What can An •w~ 1N'de.o you do about barking dogs, loud the face of government admoni· fuont.e ~th lwcurtou.s • construction noises and other lions to cut tbe waste of gas rou.,.. EKtra 1arp A: sounda that disturb your llf e? tbroup swimming pool beatlnl. · IQlh 1pldmem. Kathy Clancy of the Daily Pilot a Corona del Mar couple bu ,.,.,... $149 S• ff i-i..-· t t ord4-found what they think h1 t-he sol• ,~a """"' tn o coas «lances 1 -. , and how to-make them work for lion. It's a specially made cover ..... UM you in stories scheduled to lead orr that cut$ beat loss, saves gas and theYOUSecUon. halved !their gas bill. Marcia ...,_ ___ .._....,;...,_, SMAIL TOWN TV -People in small communities don't always share the tastes of Jarge·clty viewers, and local prottramDllnliC renects the dlfference. To rtod out what's popular with whom, the Associated Presa talked wlth pro- rrammera at a vartet1 of ata· Uoo.s. POOLING RESOtJaCES -Io. Forsberg of the Daily Pilot Staff talked witll them recently. JORN'NY CAN'T WRl'tE - StatJstl~ show that wr1Un1 sldll4 amon, collego sWdent.s are \n • severe slump. An Aaaodated Press atory explores a aroup of Bay atta teach rs who are poot. lnC tb.elr talm.ts in order to cor- rect thladefld.e:atey. ·MOTHER FERN CYCLAMEN A 1reat elft for that someone special -or treat yourseU! Excellent full bloom oo every plant. ~=-s1" 1..,.u.n .. Met ..... J.lf-11 ,...._~ ...... ..... 0,.. 7 0.,. A W..r. 7:11A.M. .. aHP.M. ......... 7111 2113 HIWPOIT ILVD .. COSTA t1UA ••wt '4Wt21 • ........ MJ.4lll d ~ I I < .. " " • • • • ' , • . < ' " I . I f • t • . • • ~ • , . .. , , , -i , j , ~ , . ~ , • f , # ~ , • # -• ' • " • " # • 4 A " " • .. ,. ... , I • " -• • • .. • ,. • • " , " , .. , , " , , I A f DAIL v PILOT New Tax Credit Proposed WASHINGTON CAP) -Presi· dent Carter uye he will uk Con1reu to 1ubsUtute a *240.per· person tax credit tor the existing $750 exemption, a chance wblch would favor poor taxpayers and ralae tbe taxes of tboae with hitherlncomes. Stalemate Ukelg Rift Threatens . . . .. Deaths Probe ·!· WASHINGTON CAP) -Tho House asaasslnations commttt.e.'1 pr&.0 carious bold on Uf e may be further threatened by a rtft Miween the panel'• chairman. Rep. Hory Gonzalea, and chief c:OUD.Sol JUcbard A. Sprap. Gonzalea called Spra1ue a "prim a doMa" Tburaday and trttd toflre him for alle1ed1Y ttyin1 to "un· de.rmin6mychalrmanshl_p." Conaroversy over tho commit· Carter revealed the plan ln a talk to employes of the Depart- ment of Housing and Urban Development Thursday. Sources in tbe Treasury Department said the shift in the tax burden might be offset by other portions of the Cartel' tu package that have not yet been disclosed. . . '" ........ 3 DAYS OF CAPTIVITY TRADED FOR PURPORTED 4 'YEAflS OF MORTQAGe WOES BUTSPRAGUE ARMBDwith tee'a budeet request and ln·~ a letter of support 'trom the com· veaUaative technique• led &tt mittee's 11 other members said House to delay rovlvln& the panel.: he woUld stay on the Job b~ause when th• new Con1r ... convwect~ Gonzalez lacked the power to oust laat montb. Laa' week tbe Houff~ him. He Ignored an order from voted torevlvedleeommlUMoa .... Gonzalea to vacate bia office•• and a temporary buls until Ma.rob 31 clear the building" by s p.m. on a bud.get of $84,000 •.month. Thursday Gonzales bopea to convmee the The situation may remain at HousetoextendlhopanelforaMI that stage for a while. The House twoyeanaftertbetrialperiod. The President plans to submit his tax reform package to Congress in the fall. The flat dollar amount also would replace an existing credit of $3~ per person . The present $750 personal ex· emption means a $1.~ tax sav· ing for a family of lour with enoueh income to be taxed et the rate of 50 percent. But a family of four in the 14 percent bracket savesonly$420. Court ln ... lted? CINCINNATI CAP) -At· torneys for Hustler magazine publisher Larry Flynt say they hope the court ls not insulted that he rejected an overture that could have led to his release on bail. ( JNSHORT J RJch•rd H•lt, Left, StlU In Sheckt••· end Anthony Klrttel1 Confront "'-••· Polle• Enraged Suspect Jailed Clairm Immunity Denial 'a C~ap Slwt' INDIANAPOLIS CAP) -An· thony G. Kirltsis, the revenge- minded gunman who thought he· could walk away free by releas- ing unharmed a hostage be held for 63 hours, instead faces kid· naping charges after police grabbed him in what he caJled "a cheap shot." Despite a promise of immunity from prosecution, Klritsls, 44, was seized Thursday night alter he freed mortgage company ex· ecutlve Richard 0 . Hall from a third·story apartment he had fooled police into thinking was rigged with dynamite. cameras on! 1 want people to see this man." Kiritsis listed seven wrongs be said the company perpetrated against blm, including blocking commercial development on the land where he wanted to build a small shopping center. and de· manded $S million he said the project would have earned him. After finally releasing Hall back inside the building, Kiritsis walked to an op~n sliding glass door and fired his sawed-off shotgun into the sky. "SEE. I TOLD YOU this was loaded," be said, as a terrified Hall bolted from the room. the immunity aareement was given \Dlder duress and therefore was not legal, the Indianapolis Star reported today. "It is no more legal than a contract ob· tained by holding a gun to someone's head," the Star quot· ed bim as saying. Proeecutor James F. Kelley, reached in Los Angeles where he is attending a juvenile crime con- ference, refused comment on the Star's report. But be did say "I believe we are on a sound basis." During his final moments of freedom before television cameras, Kiritsis boasted: "l'm a god~ed national hero and don't you fora et it.'· ia on a week's recess, with most GONZALEZ ISSUED A pNl8 members out of town, and the as. release 18,Yina the trouble •tarted aaninations panel is not T.ueaday when be and Spraiue scheduled to meet unW next Wed-met to review the committee's nesday. budaet. (i(IUales aald that when Gonialei a Democrat left Sprague uked lt be 1Ull bad the Tbunday tOretum to hla San An-cbatrman'a confidence, be tonio, Tex .. diltrict unW Sunday rep,lledtbatSi>raiuedldnot. • evenm,. 'He left my office obviously displeased by my reaponae." THE DONNYBROOK was Gonzalez said, "and since tbat touched off earlier this week when time be bu been ma1rtn1 a comla- Gonzalez called for a temporary tent attempt to undermine my cutback in th~ special commit-chairmanship and mallp me tee's 73-memberstaff. personally with the members of Sprague, who aroused opposi· tbecommltteeataff." lion ln Congress lastfall by asking On a local televtaion show for a $6.Smillion annual budget to Gonulez called Sprague ~ invesUgatetheslayingsof John F. "primadonna" and said thecom- Kennedy and Martin Luther King mittee must choose between pre- Jr ., reportedly opposed the move. serving him or preserving Itself. Pot Cache Linked To Fatal El Crash CHICAGO <AP> ~ Marijuana was found in four band·rolled cigarettes allegedly found in the bag of a motorman whose elevated train crashed last week and killed 11 people, police say. Flynt, imprisoned on obscenity and organized crime convictions, said Thursday he would not stop distributing his magazine in Hamilton County even if the court makes that a condition for his re· lease pending appeal. The 1st Ohio District Court of Appeals had raised the possibility of such a deal Wednesday KIRITSJS, ENRAGED because he felt Hall's company swindled him in a property deal, was held on $250,000 bond await· ing arraignment on state kidnap· ing charges. Then. as Kirttsis laughed to police that "I really pulled one over on you" with the dynamite bluff. officen grabbed him and took him away in a patrol car. "Tony, you lied to us," Police Chief Eugene Gallagher told Kiritsis. "You didn't let him go as you said .... You blew it." AT ONE POINT, when Kiritsis interrupted his Urade to ask for a glass of water, Martz growled to reporters, "That rotten son of a bitch! If we had known this, we would have poisoned the son of a bitch! We would have poisoned that water." First Deputy Police Supt. Michael Spiotta said Thursday that laboratory tests proved the I Young fJnwel~onte NEW ORLEANS <AP>-Anin- lernaUonal trade club in United Nations Ambassador Andrew Young's hometown voted against inviting him to speak. Two mem- bers said the reason was that Young is black. But George Healy Jr., who sug- gested the invitation, said race was not a factor in the vote by directors of International House. He said some members felt the in· vltation might be viewed as an en· dorsemcnt of foreign policy they oppose .Annirersary Noted DETROIT CAP)-Top General Motors execulives will sit down with United Auto Workers leaders at a banquet in a posh hotel tonight to commemorate the 40th anniversary of one of the bitterest chapters in Amencan labor his- tory. On Feb. 11, 1937, GM and the fledgling UAW signed their first collective bargaanln1 pact follow . ing a violent sit·down alnke that s aw workers barricade themselves inside two Fi&her Bodyplantsm FlJnt. Mich C'a.p AUaelcH BEIRUT. Lebanon CAP> - Syrian tanks today pounded the Sabra Paleslln1an refugee camp &hat MrVa u the btadquarters for 1uerrl11a chieftain Yaslr Ara( at. witnesses said. Arafat. leader of the PalaUne Liberation Organbation. is on a visit to Pekinc. The shelling markedthesecondatrai1btdayof fighting around the Lebanese capital He was ordered arraigned this afternoon in Municipal Court on charges of kidnaping, inflicting injury in commission of a relony, armed robbery, obtaining a signature by threat, commission of a felony while armed, commit· ting a crime of violence while armed and disorderly conduct. . Hall, 42·year-old father of four, was taken out by stretcher, checked briefly at a hospital and returned to his famil y. Authorities said bis only physical scars from the three·day, two· ni g ht ordeal were minor abrasions on bis neck and wrist.s. POUCE, WHO HAD waited frustrated outside the building since the siege began Tuesday, entered Kiritsis' apartment to discover that what he bad claimed was 100 pounds of dynamite wired to explode was nothing more than a maze of string. wetcbted to break two 1lass wine Jugs -possibly filled with gasoline -placed near a single burning candle. Prosecutors said the immunity offer was invalid because KlritsiJI failed lo keep his fart o( an agreement to let Hal come out of the building alone. Instead. Klritsis 1hocked police by marching Hall out wtth the 1hot1un he uaed to abduct him still wired to his victim's neck. suaaOUNDED BY POUCE 1harp1bootert, Klrllsis then s ta1ed a 30-mlnute confrontation on Uve television. alternately cunlng, 1houUng and Jokinl with reporters and onlooken u Hall stood frozen in fear. He repeated hh statement that be abducted Hall because be wu convinced the mortgage company bad tried to cheat him on a S130,000 land loan. Anarily turnlnc to the cameras, be shouted, "Get those .. TIUS 18 A CHEAP shot, a cheap shot." a disbelieving Kiritsis shouted, before slumping down in the seat in silence. Marlon County Deputy Prosecutor George Martz said Kiritsis, who described himself as a "stable man," would un- dergo psychial;ric testina. The immunity that had been pro- mised blm earlier in the day apeclfled be would not be mugeed, ftqerprinted, booked or subject to mental tests. Klritia baa been described as an outgoine man, but one with a "time bomb penonality," quick to like people but just as quick to turn on anyone he felt bad· crossed him . "YOU CAN BET that if so- meone ran him off the road, he'd get punched out," his brother Jamessaid. · .. Klritsis closed his speech with thanks for his friends. "I want to thank the people who supported me. I'm sorry about my language," he said. Martz said the prosecutor's of· flee waa "really not concerned about" whether authorities had broken their end of the immunity baraain. "WE'LL LET THE courts deal with that," be said. "I can tell you thl!: the man will be liven psychiatric treat- ment, evaluation, whatever you want to call it.'' Klrltsla' brother, who had been a ne1otiator, said of the arreat after a promise of im· mun!ty: "I really don't think they bad any other course of ac· tlOD,doyou?" AN UNNAMED spokesman in tho proaecutor'a office said Flood Watch in Effect More Heavy Rains Forecast in Texas Ml~ ..... ""'· "'t;:.. ... 1J ., Wt u ,. •...o.r ... » u Atltllla " ,, Sol,,. •• u Bo ..... a,.., .. .,,.u. 11 .. ·" Bl.Ifie to ,. n Cfllt ... " ... CllllllW\Oh .. )l c._,..,. d )1 Oetlf .. .., Wt!111 n " .. ~"ff ,. ,. O.trolt ., • Ht'-"o 44 J1 OJ HevtlOft SI " IU JC•-CJtr ~ ,. lr:-Y~ .. 4l LI •lttctr ,, •2 MlllMI " " ,OJ Mllll•llMI •> i. M ...... ~ ., .. ...,,a..... •T ., .... v"" 4) ,. "•'"'"""" " 41 Otiltflof'llO City " 41 .oa '""""''""' .. " lli'flotllll ,, • ...... ......., ltltl~ '' M ~1111141,J,W. • n ........... Pot11•1141· o... ., • ~·l'flOtY " ~ 00 llOI ""'9 ·~"° .. !: Wiii -by 1'30' l't Oil hfoto 1 "1K, •l'IMlll• " "in 11111 "°"'..,, wMI be-........ II. Ltlllt " 4 --y 91\f .,""ji' '91 '° ""' St.f't~T'~ 1J ., ....... . ..... ~ lelt YI!• Cl.., 4) • .,...,, •• ~ c::l' ....... .... ,,_,_ .. ... .......... SHUit ,. • 'rllo,_, • " ca ........ ,...,._. w11111n91.., 41 • ~"'-MMDI ,.. ..... ::it= ............. ... .c.,;.,,.,....., =-~~: ..... ' cigarettes contained marijuana. case taken from the debris of the but added it would be "very wreck in which some 200 people tricky" to prove in court that the were injured last Friday. cigarettes belonged to the motorman because police lost track ofthem temporarily. During the negotiations , Kiritsi.s also had asked for im- munity from federal prosecution, and Martz had assured him that was forthcoming. However, James B. Young, U.S. attorney for southern In· diana. sald Justice Department officials told him they would not bargain wtth Kiritsis and would consider prosecutive action only after he gave up and released Hall. He aatd Klritals would be treated fairly and asked the gun- man to "trust his government." SPiarJ'O SAID THE depart· ment had no plans lo charge the motorman. Stephen Martin, with possession of marijuana. Earlier, tests showed that a re· sidue found in the bag was mari- juana. MARTIN WAS BLAMED by transit orticlals for the rear-end collision that sent cars and passengers spllllng lnto a downtown street. Federal in· vestigators said be evidently lg· nored a fiashing warning signal. He remained hospitalized and UD· availableforcomment. -· The residue was tested after the ci1arettes were reported missing Monday. They were found Thurs· day, and police said they bad been placed mistakenly in an attache Authorities aaid the cigarettes were discovered by two Chicaeo Crime Commlaslon invesuaators in a shoulder bag that also con- tained Martin's CT A ldenUfica· tioocard. MORAL CHOICES 11 co1t..,.r1rr aocllty f COUB5€S BY NE:WSPAPE:Bf Beginning Saturday, Feb. 12, th• Profe11or of Soclology at the unlvertltlHthroughoutthecountry. Dally Piiot wlll publllh e 1~eak Unlvenlty of Pennaylvanle, The program I• funded by Ut9 Ne· Hrle• of newapaper "lecturH'' by coordinated the courH which H · tlonel Endowment for the Human!Ues eleven dlstlngulehed echolart. amlnea tM perennial problem• of and offered by the Dally Piiot .. a Thie 1h1th Courae by New1p1per how we are to live. pub I I c Mrvlce. CourH credit mey be examlnH the often controverelal Originated and developed by clelmed by enrolling at Coaetllne moral dlllema• aurroundlng IHUH Unlver91ty Extenelon, Unlveralty of Community ColJege. our society facH Including abortion, CalHomla, San Diego, CouraH by aexual conduct, crime end punish· Newes-per devetopa mat•rl•I• for AHldenta of the Saddlaback Com- ment, buelnHI and political ethics, college level courua. They are munlty Cotl99e dletrtct must obtain a science, technology, work and race. Pf•Hnted through the newapeper• permit fOM'I S.cjdleback College fNfor Phlllp Rieff, B•nl•mln Franklin and participating college• and toreglatertngforthlecourae. For convenience, UH the mall reglwauon bl•nk below, or cell H3-0l24 ~---~~------------------~------------------------~ 1.1.0. Number I I I I I I [] c; ... ,,.,," 2. Date ot .Aopllcahon ---.m::irr-_../_...,,_ _ _.../ __ ...,._ M6nth Div Yiif I "'"' I Middle '· I I Mi1dinN1me I vHr Xi' 8. Blrtllplace Cilv Stiti N•me I ,,,, I I I en, I I ZlP I I PA!lllOUS ADDR!SS U.6. CITIZEN? 0 YES 0 NO WHICH IS NOW IN THE ACTIVE MILITARY I certify tllat 111 lntorm1t1on 11 correct F1111110111on of tnlorm11lon M lallure to report changes In <ealdency may reault In dl1mlM1I • IF NOT. WHAT TYPE VISA (1 SELF 0 SPOUSE 9. 1 0 Male 2 D Female 10. Are you now or will you be a lllgn eohool gr1d111te at tllt time of regl1trallon? 1 o Yee 2 O No 11. 19 -Year Of high ecltool or1du1tlon or tut dlle.allended high 1chool or elementery ac:hool 12. Are YO\I worklnQ ror a Coneoe Degr"? 1 0 A11ocl1t1 In Ar11 (Junior College Degreel 3 0 Boll\ A110Cl1te and B1cllelor'1 2 O lachetor·a Oegrff ' C No 13.Traneler Plll'll' 1 0 Non· Tran1l1r 4 0 Priv1t1 College or Un1ver111y. California 2 O State Collage. Ca111orn1a 5 O <Nt ol Sllle College or Unlver11ty 3 D Still Unlverelly, C1111ornta 1'. Have you ever 1t1tnd1d an01hlf co11eg1? 1 D VH 2 O No 15. II v•• on 1•. check ttatut upon lt1v1nQ 1 O Goocs Standtng 2 D Prob1t1on 3 0 Scl'tol11t1c 011m1 ... .1 18. College Unltt 11rned prior to 1111• regfalratlon 1 o O to 29'~ 3 0 80 or more. no aegrM 2 O 30 to 51'_. 4 0 JunlOr COlteoe or lour.y"r 11. 11 you wlll be 1tttndlf10 high tehOOl 11 tllt Mme time you attend Coutllne Community COiiege a, High Scl\OOl atttndtn9 -------------~----=-:'.'"---=-".'"'."""----~~ b. High lcnool grade ~wrlno t1me111r 0( attencs1noe at Coutltne Community Colleo• c 11th C t21h 18. Litt 11ch colleoa or un~ty attended ~ 7 l ' ,_ ........ -..... C:.U1'11"1*-·"<-•tNe. 110 Appficanta Signature Mall to: CoH111ne Community College 10231 811ter Ave. .,ountaln Valley, CA l210I 11 • SPARED JAIL TERM M. Norvel Yo ung &b Hope 'People's Clwice' LOS ANGELES (AP l-Come· dian Bob Hope wu named the favorite male entertainer of the "People's Choice" award and former President Gerald Ford new in from bla new home in Palm Springs to present the award on the nationally televised show. Ford. who returned to Palm Springs from a trip to the East Wednesday, is currently playing in Hope's golf tournament in the desert resort. SEX SLAYING VICTIM Jose Lula Ramirez, 6 F11day. February I 1. 1971 OAILYPILOT A5 Judge'• Ruling THE FAMILY CJRcus • By BU Keane Laetrile OK'd 'For Patient SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A Pacific Grove man has been given permission to purchase the con- trovenial drug laetrile in Mexico to treat his wife, who is terminally ill with cancer. U.S. District Court Judge Samuel Conti aranted a temporary restralnin1 order Thursday exempting Connie and Walt Matteson Crom federal regulations prohibiting importation of the substance made from apricot pits. MRS. MATTESON, 32 and a mother of two children, has been ill for seven years and has un· dergone surgery and radiation therapy but has not had chemotherapy because of her weakened condi· ti on, her husband said. Conti set Feb. 22 for a bearing before Judge Robert Schnacke on whether to grant a prelimina.J'Y. injunction against the government's anti-laetrile law. "If you don't pvt enough stomps on it the moil-· man will only toke it port way." Judge Lifts l Jail T e rin The third annual awards, aired as a two-hour special Thursday night by CBS, also named Carol Burnett as the favorite female entertainer. Tax Freeze Rappe d • service owner, said outside court that his wife has not • r 4th Child MATTESON, a service station and towing ~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii" \ LOS ANGELES (AP) Remember those frozen property tax assessments on existing homes? The county Board or Supervisors wants to thaw them out. been taking laetrile. He said he plans to contact a u111ii..11olli..I 76 Mexican doctor, get a three-month supply of the 1'11111111 " Victiin of ~~~~~~:r~ng it back to the United Slates under the an n 0 u n ce s a new Attorney Ronald McG regor of Pacific Grove, For Young SANTA MONICA (AP) -Pep· perdine University Chancellor M. Norvel Young was spared a year in jail Crom hi s manslaughter sentence Thurs· day by a judge who said a sur- vivor of the chancellor 's traffic accid ent, which kille d two The board ordered the county counsel Thursday to see if he can Mrs. Matteson's lawyer, said his client claims the d ea I er ., n your Sex Slayer restriction on laetrile deprives her of her rights un- der the Fifth and 14th amendments to the U.S. Constitution, including the "right to life... area. ( __ s_ta_te __ J SAN DI EGO <AP l · -Police ~--::;::;;;:;===========::::---­said 25 oCficers are scouring ' women in 1975, had spoken up on 1Young's behalf Young remains on probation ''for a n oth er l h rec ye a rs , '•however He s aid in an interview 1 he plans to continue lecturing ·two or thn•t• ltmcc; a week on thP dangers of alcohol abuse and 'stress among motorists ~ "l 'M VERY grateful," Young 1said of the ruling by Superior , Court Judge Pearce Young. ''J'm · ,particularly gldd 1 can keep p\lshing thes e lecture pro- ;grams." On Sept. 18, 1975, the chan- ; ce\.lor's car rear-ended one .'driven by Alice Fritsch , 55, of .~C laremont, sparking the ex· 1 plosion of her gasoline tank. Two find a way to legally challenge Assessor Philip Watson 's sur· prise moratorium on residential property tax reassessments. Supervisor Chairman Edmund Edelman said the two-year m o r a t o rium a pp eared "arbitrary, capricious and without legal foundation." ·Board Slow• Plan LOS ANGELES (AP) The Los Angeles city school board wants to slow its teacher integra- tion plan. The vote came Thursday dur· ing an often-stormy session-at which Board of Education member Howard Miller accused his colleagues of discussing serious budget deficiencies at al- legedly illegal closed session llnion Mmt Settle SAN FRANCISCO CAP> The Golden Hill Park for clues into the fourth sex slaying of a child in the San Diego area in recent months. Meanwhile. reward offers in the four murders grew to nearly the $35,000 mar k Thurs day. Television station KFMB is put- ting up $20,000. $5,000 in each case, for information received before May 1 that would lead to the arrest and conviction of the in· d1 vidual or pe-0ple responsible for the deaths. · The latest victim 1s Jose Luis Ramirez. 6, whose nude body was round in the park near his home on Wednesday. He had been missing smce Sunday morning. Gay Outbreak. Of Syphilis In San Diego SAN DIEGO <AP>--San Diego Find what_you WEREN'T lool4'ing for. ---.: If you re shopping for something spec1f1c, cha nces ore preccy good choc Fashion Island hos •t Our the true fun of shopping 1s browsing. Discovering something special. Something you weren't really lool~1ng for. That's the exC1Cemenc of shopping at Fashion Island. Over 60 f 1ne stores off er a l~oleidoscope of choices. So you never con tell what you m19hc find. If you JU.St lool~ 1n the nghc place . 31?J FA SH~NJI S LAND 1 7 6 BALL RADIO FREE With Tires or Battery Purchase • FREE HOT DOGS & PEPSI • FREE BALLOONS & GIFTS During Grand Opening Fridcly. s..tw clay. S...., o.ly hb. I I • 12, 11 of her passengers, Beulah He1r , rison. 78. of Claremont, and ,.Christine Dahlquist, 81 , of Lin- 1 cdln. Neb .. were burnt'd to death .a n d M r s . F r i t s c h w a s thospitalized for several weeh •wrth burns and other injuries Teamsters union has been or dered to pay $688,518 in damages to Frito-Lay, Inc. in an action stemming from a 1974 strike. U .S . District Court Judge Charles B. Renfrew earlier had ruled that 15 Teams ters locals and two Joint Teamsters Coun cils engaged in unfair labor prac tices against the firm. County officials are considering --- launching an advertis ing cam- NEWPORT@ OENTER 18011 CULVER DR •• IRVIHE ~U PHONE: 552-7616 . 1 ' LOOKING BACK on that day. Young said he can't recall what was going through his mind as he sped south on the Pacific Coast 'Highway • "In my case J think 1t was ' ~stress," he said, "and of course 1 ·the alcohol abuse .. He said his s..ifcl) lectures have emphasized that m many traffic accidents "stress 1s the 1 gl)n and alcohol is sometimes the 'b~llet." ~E SAID THERE ar e 107.000 .arrests yearly tn the county for d~unk driving. . ;But he believes education can .h.lp solve the problem. Ile added he's had more than 2,000 letters ,aOd cards s ince the accident • ... nd only four of them were negative ... . ~He said he personully h as n•ver heard from Mrs. Fritsch. bi t Judge Youn~ said her m· .uirvenUon on the chancellor's .bf half had innuenced the court's lejiiency. . . . 8ro1C'11 Hits Red Tope LOS ANGELES (AP> Gov Edmund G. Brown Jr says he wants to see legislation that would "cul the red tape" and give one s t ate agency full authority to choose the site of a It quefied natural gas terminaJ. Brown told a meeting of gov- ernment, business and conserva- tion leaders Thursday that he wants the site chosen by the end of the year , and instead of having severaJ state agencies try to de termine where the plant s hould be, one agency should make that determination. However, there was much dis agreement over which agency that should be by those attending a meeting called by the governor to setUe the controversial issue. paign in gay magazines in an ef- fort to reduce the area's incidence of syphilis. "The purpose would be lo urge gays to come in for treatment for syphilis if they have any suspicion they might have the disease." !i a1d Dr. John Philp, county direc- tor of public health Philp said he was authorized to c hec k into placing ads in magazines catering to homosex- uals by the Board of Supervisors after presenting a report Thurs- day indicating syphilis cases among homosexuals are rapidly increasing. Bandit Slain SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An off-duty police homicide inspec- tor shot and kiJied an armed rob- ber during an exchange of gun- fire outside an Ingleside market, authorities said. HUNTINGTON BEACH City Of Hunting ton Beach *ATTENTION RESIDENTS OF HUNTINGTON BEACH I TH E CITY OF HUNTINGTON BEACH IS NOW PREPARING A FEDERAL GRANT APPLICATION FOR $1. 245 Million TH E RESIDENTS OF THE CITY AR~ ENTITLED TO THESE FUNDS UNDE R THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOP· ;.1ENT ACT OF 1974. THcSC FUNDS ARE INTENDED TO BENEFIT LOW AND MODERATE INCOME FAMILIES BY IMPROVING HOUSING CONDITIONS, COMMUNITY SERVICES, OR ECONOMIC OPPOR· TUN I TY. THE CITY COUNCIL WILL HOLD A PUBLIC HEARING REGARD·. ING THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT APPLICA· TION ON February 14, 1977 AT 7:00P.M. IN THE COUNCIL CHAMBE RS OF THE CIVIC CENTER YOU ARE URGED TO ATTEND J FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL 636·527 1 (Coundl ......... OONld.r a..-..1 ....... "'-'"' "°"'"' ~ ................ .,......., LIMITED TIME VALUE! 100 SOllSUll PHILCO 19" COLOR TV $328 •Model 291 IHWA. "lllou .. • Auto-lock chonnel hH><ng • A.uto-hnt. 5" Speokw, etc. CALORIC GAS OVENS wmt PILOTLESS IGNITIGNI ::.,~-:..~c..'% c::::· ..,.....,.... .... ,~ ..... -..-:-=-....~-: - 10 Cu. ft. Combination Refrigerator/Freezer "The Space Saver" $199 ~ Ollll S.,. .. .,.., COMBINATION WARMING AND CunlNG $70 byp~:ng H •• ; O+f'••Htf ,,..•Mf•t ................ t-.a..I ..... ,... "4 •........ ...... , .,,.., .......... _ .... ........,.. ,... ..... ........... ~ERSS6aT TOSHIBA lllCIOWAYI· OY• •111 o....,...i W!llo .._., M iNnd lln T~ _..., poO• loft ol ........... 0 <""'flOC'I ...... A 20- --.-..., ~bell o•d O.S7 *'°'~- MAGNAVOX ODYSSEY TV GAMES · MODEl 300 MODEL AOO 1 I • • • I lame .. ~ ............. aNtf. i : .................................................... ~-/ ' :: •,;A . •• ., .. DITOBIAL PAGE Policy Bac~fires: In too words of one county official, Orange County aovernment "has beeo more lenient than usual" in Its dealing with Escape Country. · By that be meant operators of the 800- acre private recreation park in the Trabuco Oaks area have be~.n allowed sometimes either to ignore regulations or to stretch them tosuit their own purposes. Latest mcident at Escape Country has been the practice of calling rock concerts "parties" rather than the unauthorized rock concerts they are. As a result, Sundays in the canyon have become traffic congested and alcohol-drug infested nightmares for local residents and a hefty Jaw enforcement headache. - The canyon country disruption and despoiling has come under the guise of use permits issued to Escape Country operators by the county. Now that the Sunday fiascos have got- ten entirely out of hand. supervisors have decided to call a public bearing to de- termine if those use permits should be lifted. Escape Country provides many needed legitimate recreation facilities. So, it will be unfortunate if the recreation park is closed. If it is, however, the underlying reason could well be the admitted county policy of being "more lenient than usual," a policy that rarely pays dividends. No Favor I Surveys and student comments are pos- ing some 6i84ificant questions about high school grad.i.Og procedures. A survey of 1976 college freshmen re- vealed that one in fi ve (19.7 percent) had earned an A average in high school, com· pared with a mere 6.2 percent in 1969. And in the same period, the number with C averages, supposedly a median grade, declined from 32.5 percent to 19.5 percent. While most of the students themselves (57. 7 percent) agreed that high school graduating has become too easy, they ap· parently are convinced that college grading follows the same comfortable pattern. Forty peJ"cent of the freshmen surveyed were conCJdent they'd get at least a B average in college and an optimistic 11 per- cent said they expected to graduate wilh llonors. Since it has been established tbat almost half the high school graduates .enter- ing college are deficient in reading and writing skills, one is impelled to wonder ju.st how these fine grades are being earned. Or are they just ''gifts" from kindly teachers who don't like to give bad grades, either for fear of off ending their students or detracting from their own teaching records? Whatever the reason, banding out high grades that have not been earned is doing no favor to students who may later be con- fronted with the task of trying to live up to their impressive records. Intangible ln case you haven't heard, there's a new kind of income. It may not put any more groceries on the table, but Gov. Brown seems to think it should be taken into con- sideration in determining wage scales. The governor calls it "psychic income." He came up with the term in holding fast to his recommendation for only a 2.2 percent pay increase for the 11,700 teachers in the state university and college system, though other state employes probably will receive 5 percent. Brown said that faculty members in comparable institutions nationwide are not getting more than 2.2 percent. Besides, he explained, the teachers are compensated with "psychic income." The governor didn't explain psy<..11.ic in- com e, but we pres ume it must refer to some kind of emotional rewa_rd teachers are sup- posed to receive. And maybe they do. But it's awfully hard to pay bills with. Unless of course, you are, like the governor, a single person with a salary of $49,100 plus other s tate.provided goodies. Foundations Troubled Even Henry Ford Has ]Qined Detractors WASHINGTON -Henry Ford II has quit the eleemosynary foundation bearing his family's • name and joined the large army ~ I ot Its detractors. His main com- ... plaint seems to be that the Coun· ( VON HOFFMAN J Fords may, but Ford is entitled to gripe that McGeorge Bundy, the Foundation president, and the rest or the hired help haven't been putting out, or at least ha· ven 'l been very effective when tbey were trying to put out. shifted and it was no longer fashionable to give money to black self-help programs, In general, though, wbeo the Foun· dalion bas put up the dough for something worthwhile , it's because it got out-faked. ~ dation bas failed to serve ~ American capitalism as well as it .; abould. ln bis letter of resigna- " Uon from the board of trustees. • Henry writes in part: .. r "A significant portion or the abundance c reated by U.S. business enables the foundation and Ute in· stitutions to carry on their work. Jn ef- fect, the foun- dation is a creature of capltaU.m . . . It is bard to dJs· cern recoenition of this fact in anythin& the foundation d~s. ll la even more difficult to find an understanding ol thls ln many ol the lnstitutJom, parUcularly the unlveraitle1, tb1t are the beneficiari• ~ th• foundation's ,rant proaram.s . . . 'Tm just s uaesUng lo the trustees and tbe It.all that the system that makes the lounda- Uon possible nry probably is worth preservin&. Perhaps it is time for the trustees and staff to examine the question of our ob- UCatlon to our e~onomtc system and to cons1der 9ow Lbe founda· tlon, .. ooe or the system's most prominent oflapring, might act moat wisely to strenithen and improve its pro1enitor." EVEll SINCE tycoons began starting foundaUoos they have been accused of aettln1 them up a1 tax.,.._ vehicles to p~mote and def end the establiabed order. ! The tyeooos bave insisted that • • heavens qo, they weft "clving" n \heir money In the di.stnterested 'furtherance of art, health, even civilization Itself. Tbua ~ores of mean-minded, squa11d men like John D. Rodceteller, the first and founder, have been bailed as patroDJ, benefactors and sym- boll of ieneroaib'. Henry Ford Il'a letter says, in effect, you didn't really believe all that auff about us ~coons. be:· lllll tbe uaere 1tewardl of •ealth. 414 J«MA? We MV&r tuUy &a-ve a"ay atJ1 JDODe1; we made an ln- v e1 t m ent. and l'in antrY beeluH U.. investment eallecl • 1'°"9 FouUttca went sour. 'A porfedtly uadtrtt.udable frame of m.iDcl fl'Oli one ¥0 ~ l •ar41~eFoundatlccqwtlrl&hl· b •• "• creatuNaf eapttallam." ~be l'or4 letter 1u1tu\1 th1$ lb• .,,,.edttioG bM lhlfted "our obtilaUaill to ow economic 1ytt.m. 0 lt II unbeeoailAJ to a m• ber ol the Ford fal:Q1Jy to auueat tlMlt tbe nit Of a, ..en fOWlCl&tkm .. ., ........ tbe Nme quu.i-nlttJoaa dutte-to a.he economlc 11item •• the i-...-.... , .... ...,. " The reasons for that may not be a want of devotion to Mr. Ford's kind of capitalism as much as it is to something else tbat Henry II complains of in his letter of resignation, something which he calls "a fortress men· tality." You can lmagine what the situation must be in the out- rageously expensive Foundation building in Manhattan when the tycoon, the essence of stand· patism . scores the Foundation for turning "more and more in· ward in its th.inking processes" and of "gradually. . .roreclos· ing itself from outside in· nuences." The cronyism. the timidity an4 unimaginative conservaUsm for which the Ford Foundation Is justly famous may have more to do with its tailing to live up \0 its obligations to capitalism than a lack of desire. Henry ll's motor car company can be obtuse, stub- born and closed·minded, but the market for automobiles does place some limits on how much outside air can be excluded from the oreanization. A FOUNDATION doesn't enjoy the di&cipline of \be mal'ket or anything else. Jt is aeldorr criUclied because the people most likely to criticize a founda- tion are the ones who are most likely to apply for money. From time to time, Ir the cronylam and lnside favoritism ii too ~reat, as when the Ford Foundation took care of all those wounded w arba...U fh>m tho Jobnson ad· ministration -tbe same crowd that's now back ln power-them .was a ·certain public stink, but not too terribly a big one. The Foundation also 1oi into a titUe trouble when tt wasn't nimble enough to see that the Ucht.s Oft the stage of social ~ry bad For a long time, Ford Founda- tion people have had the reputa· lion or being dull, smug and de· liberately impolite. But who would have guessed they would be so short·sigbted and fooliah to behave so that even the Fords no longer want to be associated with them? It the y are cutting themselves olf Crom these ele- ments in American capitalism, they are more isolated than even Henry 11 suggests. BUT CAN an Institution like the Ford Foundation be expected "lo strengthen and improve" capitalism? How could the Foun· dation do more than it has done? It financed counUess television endeavors which present the news and public affairs in ways calculated to tamp down serious questioning and to reinforce the values Mr. Ford bolds with such tenacity. AB far as the colleges and universities go, Ford money has generally ~ sale money used to promote academicians with sound ideas. Granted, most of the money was "wasted" in the sense that nothing came or the projects for which it was spent, but as long as it was given to people who were sufficiently docile it can be regarded as patronage dispensed in return for obedience. Beyond that, we might ask, if the system of tax·exempt institu- tion& doesn't work for Henry Ford II, then does it work for anybody? In essence, a tax- exempl foundation ls a ••Y around the le&islative process, a way for veey rich pe~ons to k.ep their money from the tax CC>llec· tor and use it for activities that no Jeg,slature of elected repnsentaUves wOu1d vote tor. U the beneficent donors confess they are unable to spepd the money to their own polltical ad~ vantaae or anyone el&e's, perbap• It's tim• to clote this purposeless, dysfunctional, tax loophole. I I \. .. Bookies Still Flourish in Nete 'York . Legal Gambling Fails WASHING TON -Just as pro- hibition was supposed to end bootlegging, legalized gambling has now been offered as the best way to suppress illegal bookmak-ing. . Of course, the rum runners of the 1920s were merely succeeded by a dapper. new breed of gangster, who brought polish and ef- ficiency to or- ganized crime. Areas of in· fluence were carved out, with specific territories going to those strong enough lo hold them. Slush funds were cr eated to overcome political obstacles, and promis- ing young racketeers were sent to college to give the mob some class. These slick mobsters have now taken over the rackets, including unlawful wagering. States that have adopted legalized gambl· ing, unfortunately, have not put the underworld lords out or busi· ness. The truth is that legalized gambling has helped their busi- ness. Dear GI001ny Gus One way to solve Orange County's over·population problem would be to ship off to Siberia all those in· considerate boobs who de· tight in making un · necessary and extreme noise at the crack of dawn on weekend mornings. TJRED 0 1 .. m1 Glli commtfth ••• tullmitttO\Tr rHffn 1n• oo not ntcuurlly rtllKI IM Wit ... el IM ... ..,,.,..,. S."4 ............ ..... 10 Gl...,.y Gu•, 01lly f'jf.C. (JACK ANDERSON J To get the story. we sent our re- porter Rick Sokolow to New York, which was the first state this side of Nevada to establish Off-Track Betting parlors. At the street level, the mobsters still wear flashy clothes, squire gaudy girls and bang out at bars, bistros and race tracks. But the crime bosses are more likely to be found in suits or conservative cut and color. They could pass, say, for Madison Avenue advertising executives. UNDER THEIR direction, or garuzed crime bas become the nation's biggest business. and one of its most profitable opera· tions is illega1 gambling. The un· derworld ty'coons have thei r hands in the till of most friendly neighborhood bookies. In New York, Sokolow found that business has been booming for the bookies since the state opened Off·Track Betting parlors, which accept lawful.bets on the horses. But the legal wagering, apparently. attracts new gamblers. Many of them wind up placing bets with the neighborhood bookies. who offer other sporting wagers, tax-free payoffs and easy credit. Sokolow visited a legaJ betting parlor and a bookie joint two blocks apart in one of New York City's old ethnic neighborhoods. THE STATE·RUN parlor had no chairs, no lood, no beverages. A stark light exposed a dirty floor littered with discarde d newspapers and tickets. The bet- ters stood in line before bank· style windows and placed their bets with faceless tellers. In contrast, the local bookie operates out of a neighborhood bar under an elevated train. The atmosphere is cozy and con· genial; dim lighting softens the harsh realities; the bookie is a likeable, i! larcenoua fellow who presides over a corner table. HE AGREED to talk to us if W< would call him "Frankie Num bers," which is not bis name Bookmaking is the only trade hl has ever known. he said. He go1 his start al age 13 as an appren Uce to his father, who was also i bookie. Frankie has a cordial rappor1 with bis customers. He bugged 1 middle-ag~ .woman who bandec him a piece of paper wrappec around a roll of money. Ht 1 s lipped the money to tht bartender for a round of drin1u for the people at the bar. A "busi ness expense,'' Frankie called it. He cocked bis head toward th< bar. "People here know me m) · whole life." be sajd. "There's no· a person there who wouldn't hel\ I me iflhe police came inhere... 1 Of course, there is a seam) side to the book'!} aking business Frankie has s'erved time ii prison for gambling. Heoperat~ on the fringes of the underworld whose ruthless leaders aren" pleasant people to work for. fl · bookie can get bu rt. if he makes 2 misstep. THEIR CUSTOMERS. too, cat get hurt. For many, gamblint becomes an addiction, and the) find themselves deep In bock tc I the friendly bookie. U he doesn · collect, some unfriendly charac • ters may do It for him. Sokolow talked to othe} bookies, to their customers an< to sources on both sides of the 1 law. There·s no doubt about it legalized gambling has stimulat ed illegal gambling as well. This has been confirmed, ir fact. by a national study or gambling. Jt was conducted b3 the University of Micbigar Survey Research Center. Then is a corresponding rise in un lawful gambling, the survel found , in states that legalize bet ling. Footnote: A spokesman for the OU-Track Betting of(lc( acknowledged that the state h8.lA been unable to compete with tht bookmakers. The state Js press in4 for legislative changes, ht said, that would permit the lega parlon to compete belt.er wiU the bookie joints. Author Views Lincoln Mytlu Rather than t he beloved. homespun emancipator that his· tory bas recorded, Abraham Lin- coln was disliked by many voters, both North and South, became a prosperous man while in politics, hated to be called .. Abe," had a high pitched voice, and declared the Emancipation Proclamation as much for political as for humanitarian reasons. These are the flndings or Stephen Oates wboae bloirapby, "With Malice Toward None," ('15.95) ls the first Cull·acale life of Lincoln to appear in 17 yea.rs. Based on seven years of re- sea rcb, it was published on. Feb. 9, three days before the 187th blrtbdar of "the Great Emancipator.' The real Lincoln was honest and compassionate, but he was hardly the flawless immortal that legend claims. as Mr. Oat.es shows in his book. Complex, paradoxical and richly hum-. Lincoln was morbidly f ucinated wlth death and dreams. was a melancholy person, obsessed with death. AMONG THE myths 1b1tt.ed by thla nnr bloirapby of Lincoln are these: -Lincoln •u not proud ot bll 10 I· C ab in 0rif10 •, I Dd aomellmea, when •ehll la· tenlewed, refused CD dilcuas hls e&tlY Ute. -He loathed belnl ulled "Abo." becaUH he t.boulht lt \IDo becomtni a hl&bl1·amblUoua. Mlf·mad• man. • -87 tbl Ume he bad reached bil tortiel, LlrMla euDed Moat. ( T~ BOOKMAN J ss!!:o ..a year. a substantial salary for those days, and held sizable investanents in fin ance and real est.ate. -Although be disliked slavery frorn bis youth, he kept his views to himself for years so as not to be burl politically. -The Emancipation Proclamation was issued not just. aa a humanitarian gesture but also to win black recruits for the undermanned Union Army. -Although Lincoln pro- claimed "malice toward none" for the defeated Confederacy. he viewed military occupation of the South as a likely aftermath or the war. -As a President be was wretchedly unpopular with the vut maJOdty of whites ln both the North and South. But his u - •asatnat!on shocked tbe nation, radically altered public opinion, and ultlmatety created the naw· leu le«eacl that llnfers today. INHi.s ,..arch for the book Mr. Oat. examinf!d scores Of publt•bed 1ources and un· publiabe4 manuscript collec· Uou, aa well as ttlldj'lnl other Mholarsbi.D on Llncoln '• complex relattonshlp1 with Nearoes, abolltionJstt. and radical Rep~buc.,. OlU.eC••U Waren. R~Dl ttudlee ol )ltary Todd LlJto coln hell*I blm dta• a mOdere portrait at the Llncoln marna,e, and blotrapbj• and mOQOll"'t.Pba ·of Ltacola'1 u1oeiate1 lawyers, politicians, ad versaries, Cabinet members 8Jl( Civil War generals -helped hin depict the President's rela _tlonshlps with these people ii greater depth than perhaps wa: I possible in previous biographiea~ ' Mr. Oates is a professor of hi•' tory at the University y Massachusetts at Amherst and the author of elgbt prevlou. books, among I.hem, the highl) praised ''The Fires of Jubilee Nat Turner's Fierce Rebellion' and "To Purge Thi.I Land wi~ Blood: A Biography of Jo Brown.'' O"AHO~ GOAST DAILY PILOT Ro~rt N W•fd. Pvbl!IMr ThomcJJ Kttval. £dltor 8drbota Krftb~. Bdlttf'fal Pog• Sdltor The editorial pa1e ot tM Daily Pilot auks to •ntorm and :.timulate ttaders by presentlna on this page dlvtrH commentary on topks of int~Ttst by ayndlcat- ed columnlats and nrtoontsu. by providing a forum lnr readttt' vltw1 and by Pf't••rftinl this MWSJ)aPf'r's opinions Md let.as on C'IM'ttl\ topl•a. Tbt fodltortal opinions ol lM Dally Pilot appur only ln lhe tdftorial cobimn at the top or the pa1c. Optnkin• ea· Prtfilfd by the co4umallta and cartoonll1l11nd telttr wnta-. are their own and not~ ol thtir vlews by the ~ PUoc.. ahould be il'\f urect. Friday, Feb. 11; 1'" 1..-tJ I Y}( )'): ,. ; ,(. " I • ; .. .,~ I·" 1ol'. ~,, '•11• •'I ·' " . 1• •• • EXPERT SERVICE ANO ADVICE ....... . BY OUALIFtEO PROFes5tONAL SALESCLERKS •THE COMPARABLE RETAIL PRICE INDICATES THE PRICE FOR COMPARABLE QUALITY.--. • •AMPL~ FR~E PARKING ADJACENT TO ALL STORES •• •9000PAINT ANO DECORATING ITEMS •EVERYTHING ALWAYS SOLD WITH AN UNCONDITIONAL MONEY B~CK GUARA~TEE COVERING •I CLOSE-OUT Amtico0 SU'1BYMt~ SELF-ADHESIVE NO-WAX FLOOR TILE •OURAVINYL•NO.WAX FINISH STAYS GLOSSY WITHOUT WAXING•S COLORS OUR PRICE •12 x 12 IN. TILES •EXTRA THICK, EXTRA TOUGH GAFST.~~TM Prime® CUSHION VINYL FLOOR COVERING •LONG LASTING SHINE •6 MODERN COLORS •12 FT. WIDTHS •2ATTRACTIVE PATTERNS OUR tow · PRICE "MINUET" PATTERN c EA. EA. 49 SQ.YD. ETING OZITE~ FASHIONTONES~ PRINTED PATTERN · ~ i CARPETING "N~A~TT~~~No~~~TS" 69 "•"' • : •USE THROUGHOUT THE HOUSE './',;. ..... I •FOAM BACKED COMPAllAIU .• r. 1 ,, •12 FT. WIDTHS ~ETAll.595 •I\ \~•LONG WEARING PJllC£ :_ / 1,1-100% CONTINUOUS .. OUR ._ \.' ' FILAMENT NYLON PILE PRICE SQ.YD. OTHER PATTERNS AVAILABLE AT 4.89SQ. YO. TIP TOE®Hl·LOW CARPETING •TWO TONED COLORS •USE THROUGHOUT SPECIAL THE HOUSE ORDER ~ •LONG WEARI NG • ·'t •12 FT. WIDTHS ::;;-~BACKED :·_E~:,~Ull ~ PlllCE 399 99 •OUR LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICE ON EVERY ITEM ••• EVERY DAVf •SERVING THE PUBLIC SINCE 1939 SPRAY ENAMEL .. 1~ Oz. .Aer~ol, Cbn ECONOMY & CONVENIENCE IN ONE CAN OUR PRICE c EA. •EASY APPLICATION, SELF-SPRAY CANS •EXTREMELY TOUGH & DURABLE •HIGH.GLOSS FINISH •FAST DRYING •SPARKLING WHITE & COLORS GAL . AlSO AVAILABLE: "A·\" ACRY~IC LATEX INTERIOR GUARANTEED 1.COAT WHITE a A COMPLETE SELECTION OF POPULAR COLORS OUR PRICE 5.98 GAL. nrajor EXTERIOR-INTERIOR VINYL ACRYLIC PAINT COll'ARAllE AN EXCEPTIONAL PAINT THAT LASTS AT LEAST 8 YEARS llHAll945 PlllCE 98 ~ OUR PRICE GAL. •A TOP QUALITY STUCCO-MASONRY & WOOD PAINT • 30 MIN. DRY •CLEAN-UP WITH SOAP & WATER •SCRUBBABLE ALSO AVAILABLE IN QUARTS ~- .INTERIOR LATEX FLAT · WALL PAINT COINIAILE :311 OUR LOW PRICE •GOOD QUALITY •BRUSH OR ROLL •EASY TO CLEAN-UP WITH SOAP& WATER •l·HOUR DRYING •WASHABLE GAL. WHITE ONLY . INTERIOR LATEX. SEMl-GLOss -·ENA·MEL 98 COIPARAllf RETAll.695 PRICE OUR PRICE GAL. •USE FOR WALLS & WOODWORK •AN EXCELLENT PAINT AT A LOW PRICE •DURABLE •SOFT GLOW FINISH . • SCRUBBABLE WHITE, OFF-WHITE & COLORS ALSO AVAILABLE IN QUARTS ROOF COATINGS : . Rlr.u!k Asp~ •5 GALLON SIZE •WON'T CRACK OR RUN P~~:E 7~~ ---AVAILA8lE IN GALLONS---- Fibe.red Asb~~ :~g~~~~~~1~~E 84 I . •FINEST GRADE •BLACK ONLY OUR PRICE ~Al COAST TO COAST® WET SURFACE PLASTIC ROOF CEMENT 100% NY N Pl LE OUR PRICE SQ.YD. PURE WHITE, OFF-WHITE & 41 MOST WANTED COLORS •CAN BE APPLIED l?URING RAIN ~ COMPARABLE RETAIL PRICE 3.39 OUR PRICE GAL. WALL COVERING CLO.SE-OUT BIRGE@CANVAS BACKED VINYL Wl·LLCOVERING SOLD ELSEWHERE R FOR 7.95 TO 11.45 •ELEGANT PRINTS •STAIN RESISTANT •SCRUBBABLE •STRIPPABLE •PRE· TRIMMED •V IN. WIDE OUR LOW PRICE 95 PER SGL. ROLL PRE-TRIMMED WALLPAPER •GOOD SELECTION OF STYLES •ADOS BEAUTY TO ANY ROOM OUR PRICE c 7 x 20 IN ...... \.89 EA. 10 • 32 IN ...... 3.89 EA., 7 • 29 IN ...... 2.85 EA. \2 • 28 IN., .... 3.19 IA. 8 • 2"1 IN.-... 2.55 EA. 12 11 AIO IN ...... 5.91 EA. S • 36 IN ...... 3.65 EA.-.... \2 • S. IN ...... 8.99.EA. 9 • 20 IN .. -. .2.39 EA. 15 • 2"1 IN., .... Al.99 EA. 9 • 3S IN ...... 3.79 EA. 15 w "'8 IN ...... 1.99 EA. \0 x 20 IN ...... 2.59 EA. 15 a 5"1 IN ... 10.91 EA. •HANOSANDED· •AllAI LAllLE IN I I c e READY TO PAINT Al 1 SIZES UP TO DA STAIN 15 X 5"1 INCHE~ •MOVABLE EA. e ~AIZONTAL LOUVER • • • 6% X 13 IN. ART&HOBBY a WE CARRY FAMOUS BRANDS SUCH AS SHIVA, GRUMBACHER, LIOUITEX & ROBERT SIMMONS . P1croR®ARTISTS' :::~HILE c SA Save 48 e12 COLORS e60cc TUBE •IDEAL FOR TABLE .._.llU OUR PRICE CLOTHS, SHELF IElM.198 COVERING, rSf UPHOLSTERY, ETC. OUR •43 & 54 INCH WIDTHS PRICE •EASY TO CUT SEW OR T ACl<0 BRUSHES •SABELINE No. 1 COMP. R ET Al L 69c . OUR PRICE •RED SABLE BRIGHTS COMP. OUR RETAIL PRICE No. 2. ... ~ ..... 39c EA. No. 4..... .. ... 49c EA. No. 6 ... 1. .. .... 59c EA. No. 8 ... 1.4 ..... 69c EA. •GOLDEN NYLON El. COMP. OUR COMP. OUR RETAIL PRICE RETAIL PRICE ) , Y." ..... ~ ..... 29c EA. No. 2 ..... lt ..... 29c EA. \ W'..... . .... 39c EA. No. 4..... .. ... 39c EA. \' 3/4" ..... 49c EA. No. 6 ..... 9 ..... 49c EA. \, BRISTLE & WATER COLOR BRUSHES ALSO AVAILABLE R ~gJ~~INER OUR c P'.INr·INYOUR 5 1 THINNER .~i:E GAL MASKING TAPE ·~e~N~re~ OPEN 7 DAYS a 5 NIGHTS · MONDAY THRJJ ffUOAY, I A.M. TO 11 P.M.· SATURDAYS, f A.M. TO t :30 P.M. ·SUNDAY!, t A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. 'Sa~M~na co~~mSfY ,Qf.9.!'9• ,, 1 BLK. SO.Of WARN6A IDElHO 1 llK. EAST OF 8ROOKHURST (BETWEEN TAFT• KATILLA, TELlil'HONE 17141 ....... , TIUl't10Ht 17'41 W.111<17 TILE'l'tfOHI 111.41 ~t • •• I , Vll1T OU" COMl'\.&T& CARPET OEPAATMENT AT THS O"AHea STO"t WHUIC MANV 01' THa ll'ICIA\. O"OUI IT&MI A,.._A"l"G IN TH" AO A"l AVAii.Ait..& l'Ott IMM&OIATa l'tCIC.• u~. c IT TlllMI AV~,'LAIL• o"' .~ i!!.9;cftl""~l.o'tr311 ~ " C •"'TA :tl'T1°" VA 1. t • u~ SONG SOMETHING OF A POP ANTHEM M•ry M•gregor Finds Big Bucks In Shock TREATYOURLOVEO ONE TO AN OR IGINAL PAINTING FOR Valentine's Day · ! ~QUJML f>figi1t.ttl~ I . -~atf leiy . • "' " LIDO VILLAGE-NEWPORT BEACH On the Bo•rdw•lk 673-7207 . '2 ~f!Vers~ Ba~W,d Huge • ·s·ong in Stark Contrast .~o ·siqg~r's V81ues LOS ANGEL!!S (AP) -Mary M11n1o.r'1 enormously 1uccesaful song of a woman's love for · two meb, "Torn Between Two Lovers," bu become aomet.bina of a pop anthem. A sweet-voiced younc womanaingine of her need for two lovers is unusual 1tuff, and the ballad became an overnight bit. But the record.Loa newcomer says the song stands In 1tark contrast to her own value system. ad Iler ldentiftcatlon with the IOGl'I theme -an extramarital affair -bu ber tom between lwt- 14 ary Jlla8regors. TBEllE-S THE MARY MAGREOOll who says she "wu si.ngipg it in tea.rs, this song·was really bard for me to do." This is the sweet Mary Magregor of the publicity sheets, a "qUiet mountain lady•" happily married and content with her 40 acres and blood of dog1. Then there's tbe more sophisticated Mary Magregor, a with-it lady who says the sona was merely "telling people to be honest with each other." 11lis Mary Magregor is the oqe who bas come to relish her newfound success and baa dis.' covered that novelty ballads-especially those that shock -mean big bucks in the pop music business. The source of M r.s. Magregor's conflict is a sim- ple, catchy love song written by Peter Yarrow (formerly of Peter, Paul and Mary). WHAT MAKES THE SONG novel is that it is not an apologetic "I Done My Man Wrong" song, but a young woman's unabashed admission that she bas found satisfaction from two lovers, and wants Utings to stay that way. "There's been another man that I've needed and I've loved,•• the song's heroine confesses to her husband, "there's this empty place inside of me that only he can fill.'• ''What the person in --------the song is actually say· -· · p ~ ing is, 'I'm sleeping with : Tops m ops~@ , another man, but I want -------~ to have both of you; " Mary says, a bit nervous in her first interview. She gives her theory of the song's success: "I TIIINK WHAT ~EOPLE like about it is that a lot of people would like that sort of situation to be able to be. I'm sure a lot of people have found themselves in the situation that they're attracted to or have fallen in love with someone else-while they're very happily married.•• . Ab, a touching bit of honesty in popular .music, rewarded with lots of airplay and brisk sales. But a few moments of conversation with Mary Magregor Public To Call Carter WASfUNGTON (AP> -President Carter will ·spend two hours fielding questions from the American people in a live radio broadcast on Saturday, March 5, the White House announced. HVhll t.Mn 19 •t leut u much iron1 and aim· ft)lcry u U... ts boD•ty behind "Torn Between Two Lovera ... Tbls i.oti.mate look into a woman's llberaUng sexual bonelt)' with benelf and with her man was written by a man -Yarrow -and reluctantly .re- corded by a young s:'lger wbo reeoils at the very thought of in.fidelity. <"I tb1nk it would destroy sny buaband"). Yarrow. convinced that the time was ripe for such a song, and knowing be couldn't atni lt, kept pushing until he 1ot Mn. Macregor ..-whom he had brought along on a tour a few years earlier -into the studio. "PETEil SAID. 'MAKE YOURSELF feel it, we really think tbi5 song is going lo go somewbere, • .. Mary recalls. ''He felt that it was a really good song- for a woman to do and that it would do exactly what it's doing on the charts. "He was right,•• she adds, .. it's a grabber. '"Peter doesn't want me to talk about this;' Mrs. Magregor continues, sounding Jess and.leri liberated, "but I ended up almost leaving Muscle Shoals. Al a , where we recorded the song. without <See RECORD, Pace 85) '"At Johnson & Soo you·re rreoted . like o member of tt-ie family. In my opink>n. Johnson 6 5on Is one of the most rep\IOble deo~rs In . rhe area. Thor's why I recommend you drtve to Johnson 6 Son. Their GOiden Touch SeMce ls the ONLY woy to bUy. Give ·em a· try" 262& HARBOR BLVD COSTA MESA S40·5830 Memoi rs Contract Signed J_CPehney N~WPORT. CENTER NEW YORK (AJ!> Former Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger has signed a contract with Little, Brown and Co. for publication of his memoirs in the United States and Canada, the firm announced. Arthur H . Thornhill Jr .• chairman and presi· dent of the publis hing house. refused Thursday to discuss financial ar- rangements. THERE HAS b een s peculation that Kiss- ing er might gross around $2 million for his memoirs. "I expect the book to be completed in time for publication in the fall of 1979," Thornhill said in a telephone interview at his Boston, Mass., orfice. "THE AUTHOR in· tends lo treat his role m government from 1968 to 1976 in depth, and I believe his personal evaluation and depiction of some of the most momentous events m United States history will make Dr. Kiss- inger's book fascinating and extremely valua- ble," he said. FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY NEW GARDEN SHOP HOURS! Sat. 8:30 to 9 p.m. -Sun. I 0 1o· 6 p.m. A Choice Valentine Day Reci. $15.99. HGYe 5HsoMI ColorWHh AZALEAS sa.99 GIFT 8" HANGING POT BOSTON FERN NOW 59.99 'I'. ~V \l.i II 1 l'lll ff~.11 .PIT• l•tl< I llfltltA .. IJfillllfl •< Press secretary Jody Powell said Thursday the 2 to 4 p.m. broadcast, from the Oval Office, will be one in a series of efforts by Carter to keep in touch with voters and their concerns. Thornhill said h e would co\laboratc in the selection of foreign publishing firms with Kissinger's represen- tative, Marvin Josephson, president or International Creative Management. 11 varieties to choose from WE ALSO HAVE A FINE SELECTION OF ADDITIONAL VALENTINE'S DAY GIFT . JA'.'t K itft','I t , ... ,,1 lfftr.:\f!l:fl t>IA'/. ~1 BRAND NAMES l\,a sdt a lot. of. CORVETTES f DELSEY 4 IOLL,ACIC A THllOOM TISSUE ~C>"Y C>' ~~ ~ ' 1 Cl1 IZENS will be able to call a toll-free number, to be announced later. Powell said the caners who get through to Carter will be selected al random. The CBS radio network will broadcast the pro· ceedings, which it will call "Ask President Carter," and later will OPPORTUNITY knocks often when you use result-gelling Daily PiJot Classified Ads to reach the Orange Coast market. Phone 642-5678 PLANTS! * Quantities limited on ad merchandise make available film and --- sound recordings of the broadcast to other networks.· WALTER Cronkite, anchorman for the "CBS Evening News," will be with Carter "to help with the broadcast," Powell said. Before defining Cronkite's role as that of moderator, the press secretary jokingly re- ported, "Our assumption is that there will be peo- ple in this country who would be disrespectful to the President but that no one would be dis· respectful to Mr . Cronkite." Powell said the Satur- day afternoon timing of the broadcast was Ideal from Carter•s viewpoint because be wanted to make bl.maelf available at a time when working people would likely be at home and bavf! a chance tocaUbim. HUNTINGTON BEACH Ciudad ·De Huntington Beach * ATENCION RESIDENTES DE HUNTINGTON BEACH ' LA CIUDAD DE HUNTINGTON BEACH ESTA PREPARANDO AHOAA UNA APLICACION DE AYUDA FCDERAL POR $1,245,000 Do1ares LOS RESIDENTES DE LA CIUDAO TIENEN DERECHO A ESTA ..._.,, AYUDA BAJO EL ACTA OE DESARROLLO DE VIVIENDA Y 111:o COMUNIDAD DE 1974. ESTOS FONDOS SON DESTINADOS A BENEFICIAR LAS FAMILIAS DE BAJO 0 MODERADAS ENTRADAS MEJORANDO LAS CONOICIONE.S DE VIVIE.NOA, LOS SERVICIOS DE LA COMUNIDAO 0 LAS OPORTUNIDAOES ECONOMICAS. EL CONSEJO DE LA CIUOAD CONOUCIAA UNA AUOIENC~ PUBLICA EN REFERENCIA A LA APLICACION PARA e~ DESARROLLO OE VIVIENOA Y COMUNIDAO ELIDIA: 14 De Febrero De 1977 A l.AS.7.00 P.M. EN LA CAMARA DEL CONSEJO DE EL CENTRO CIVICO PARA MAS INFORMACf9N LLAME AL TEL. 636-5211 CEI ~ d• le ClwW .....,.., ~· M 9ll10 d.C ._,, del PfotnlM 9IM'lf "'Rewtnoe lfwlne• y ti """'"'*'° enuet.• • I •, l . L.M.Bot1d Build Homes , Underground Do you want to make a fortune, yount f •llow? All right, 10 into the HlllJlde Under- ground Home Bulldlnf Buaineaa. Rent a blc dis·· gtng machine Uh tbe swlmmlna pool contrac- tors UH to bite out buse chunks of earth. Mate a deal wlth a carpen~•r: plumber, electtidan, ''"' man and concme pourer. No don't just c~• baae· m ents. Build UttJe boroes entirely undergr°"nd witb about four feet of earth on top of tberq. Make sure the entrances are dug rtrst down a.Qd then up the doorways, thua to employ t.be Eskimo igloo principle or warm-air capture. Win- dows? How about closed-circuit television cameras mounted overhead above ground level? In such homes, residents could insulate their possessions from crime, eliminate much of their insurance payments, and pare down to almost nothing their heating and alr - conditioning bills. And the garden next to the garage above could be as big as t.be house, tt not bigger. l 'd go Into this business mytelf lf I weren't all tied up with Investments in hillsides. APE PAINTING Q. "Can you confirm the claim that a painting by an ape once won first place in an art show intended for human painters?" A. Can indeed. In Topeka, Kan., half a dozen years ago. An orangutan named Djakarta Jim in the zoo there was five years old then. One of his original water colors was entered in a regional art contest under a phony name and it got the lop prize. Q. "Il's widely known through song and story that you can see England's white cliffs or Dover from the French coast. So what color are the French cliffs you see from the English coast?" A. White, too. Same rock formation. Addre11 TtUJ1l to L. M . Boyd, P. 0. Bo.z 1560 Co1ta Mel<l 92626. ' DeatluJ Elsewhere WASlllNGTON IA P> -Retired Rear Adm. George Durek. th<> f1r!'it American to reach thl· South Po l l'. d11:d of cancer Thur~dJy. hi s 74th birthday, al the Bethesda Naval Medical Cenler. Dufek made his first trip to the polar re· gio n s in 1939 as navigator for Adm. Richard Byrd aboard the sailing sh.Ip Bear. HALLANDALE. Fla. CAP l -AnKelin e Campbell Ta)lor, 79, m other of Junl' Taylor Lerner of l hl' June Taylor D.1ncer-; a nd Marilyn Taylor Gleason. wife o r lelev1s1on pe r son ali t y Jackie Gleason, dtcd Thur~day . S AVANNA H , Ga. (AP) -funeral services were held Thursday for William Frederick Pen· alman, Jr., 64, a former State Departmc-nt orticer and oil indus lry ex· ecutlve who o,:gollated several key conccl-tslons Jn the Persian Gulf for American companie!>. He dl~ ln New York Sunday. NEW DELlll. India <AP> Pr eside nt Paldandclln All Ahmed, 71 . India's figurehead chief ot state, died or a heart attack today. He waa a veteran of the In· dlan fight for indepen· dence EL CAJON <AP> Portia Goode, 73, voted the nation's outstanding trustee by the Associa· lion of Community College Trustees in 1973, died in a hospital Wed· nesday night. She was a director or the National Council of Community College Boards. DELANO CAP > - Larry ltlloog, 63, whose table grape strike in 1965 helped tngger the Cesar Chavez farm labor move· m ent. died Tuesday. Filipino farm workers led by ltliong struck growers here during the September, 1965 harvest. CINCINNATI CAP) -· Actress Vlrllllla Payne, who for 27 years wu the voice of "Ma Perkln.s" in the daily radio show which ended ln 1980, died Wednesday, still keeping her age a secret. She was believed in her 70s. Dr adt ,'\'odce • WIUGttT WILLIAAOI W"IOHT',Jlt.,<9tlcl9ftl of Co•I• Mew C..llloml .. P•~•••'f Fttiruo,..,, t 1'71. SuNl.,.d W lllt wl .. JOW!,,._,,,. Wrltl'I • "'"' J-Wrl9'1f Of CO\U ~.CA : My""' W'19'1' ol Mi\· \!Oft Yleio, C. . O.U9111trt Mellf>d• FtMH of ~ 01-00. c.: P•trl<I• llerrf of $.oft Olel)O, C•.; tltte" .._,.,. 0..lftft of S... O~, Ce ; Nencv Li,..,,, of "•'OCllM. CA · t-9r_c,,llclr.., wvln •ftCI _,..,. ''"'"· Sorvlces wlll oe .,.,., "" -.,,.., ~., u. •l II 00 AM .i P«Jflc YI-C!M~I I ..Ctr· ""•"' "•••>< lllew ~ ..... ,.., •• 'lewporl 8••<11. Peclllc y,..., Mot111•ry .,.,..,_ MCC\.tLLANO Tl!"ltY WAYNE M<ClELL.ANO, ... ,.,'"' ol 14ul\tlntlol\ 11••<1\, C•lllo"'I• ""'-ew•'f Ft""-¥ a, "" !>u•vl-Ill' llh 14111\tr c;.or99 A, McCl•ll•nd: mottler Ver11• H. 'IH FAMILY COlOM14L 'UMIUL HO Ml 7801 Borsa A ve Weslm1nater 893·3525 PACIJIC YllW MINOllAL 'AH Cemetery Mortua!V 'I M<Cl•ll•nd ••so 5urvlved llY "'' deu11111er 9rldO•ll C. McCltll•nd: qr_.,,_..., LU<lllt llredfon:t; ""• b•otll•r• ltutwll, Scott e11d JOl\f'I M<Cltll-. lwo ,1,ttrs LvnMlt ind JOV • llltlt•llclll .... '''"' Follnlary It, lrQ"I • 00 Ul\lll t :OO ,.M et Smllll't Morl118r'f StrvlCH will be lltld on S..lurdtV l'ebnaary It at t;OO PM ~ Sn!IU1'• Mortuer1 Offklent Aw. J_.• F Owlllll'!'I. '"'•'-' wlll follow et Wt•tml111ter Mef'norlel Pe1'11, Smltll'• Mor1 ... rydi1"Klon. Chapel . Mc1Caava1t "'"ANKLIN R. M<KllVli., retl• dtnl Of L•9""' Mllll, Gelllt•n••· l"•uec1 •••f l"ellrutr'f t , 1'17. Survlnd Illy llh wife ltrlllct MclC-; -LArry Mcl(-J .i11- DAILY PILOT 10,100 Mlle In IO Moatlas SENIOR CITIZENS Pial.rPi.edalAr dUS U lO% ~!!c1.•! ••• Oun -SAY( OH 4'-l l'VaCH4SU IY tcCOMll'fG A • • -;\_l,m'~,,..,oo'cin,~~Jl,• CITlltld SAYING~ By JOANNE gEYNOLDS Ot ... o.lly ........... winged at him rrom a passing car in Pen - nsylvania. And, he says, he's look· RE,.TALS' All P11·P•ld I I Pr•1,.•• HH "' inl forward to Im •••l ,.,. bicycle trip. although it wiJl bave to wait a while. "I'm pretty broke ri1bt now, .. he lau&hed. : =,'"'°"' Because lt78 wa the naUon's bicentennial •nd an Olympic year, BUl Scott, resident rnana1er of the Newport Buch Marriott Hotel. decided t~ take some Ume oft work to do a little travel- HlJS favorite area was lhe north coas t of CaUfomla, but Scott says he doesn't plan to move thue sin~~~h~ed --~~~~~~~~~====~~:====~~~~~=~~~~ on the hotel bualnesa and ~ there are few hotel• a long the s parsley la1. Ten months . 101100 mUea, 10 tires ana 30 n ata later. he pedaled , back lnto Newport Beach . from a bicycle tour of America with one brier side trtp to Europe. Scott said he decided ' to take the trip with a friend because they are "'~~"""1"'·•V! both young, both are sillgle and 1976 seemed like a good year to do il. They le ft Newport Beach March 30 and traveled on a clockwise route that took them through San Francisco, Seattle, Va ncouver. Banff, Winnipeg, Chicago, Montreal . Bos ton, New York, Williamsburg, Atlanta, New Orleans, El Paso and Phoenix. The trip cost Scott and his companion a total of $4,500, or about $15 a day. Scott, who has worked for the Marriott chain for five years. was joined by another Marriott emplaye, Hunter Hansen from the Los Angeles Airport hotel. Scott. said they got the inspiration for their trip in a weelc·long vacation t.bey took in 1975. °"'' ...... IUft ....... PEDAL POWER 8111 Scott weather and found them selves struggling up the hills of B;g Sur that had seemed so easy to handle when they'd had good weather and the wind at their backs. That day in Big Sur was probably the longest. of the trip. Scott said. The plan they worked out was to ride so to 75 miles a day for five days and then rest for two. populated coast. Scott flnisbed the last third of the trip by himself. When he and Hansen got to Willlamsb11rg, Va., they decided to take a break in their bicycling and aoto Europe. They had ori1inally planned lo include Europe on lhe theory that t.b1s was a once-in·&· lifetime trip and they might as well take ad· vantage or their youth and freedom to see as much as possible. But the month they spent touring Europe via Eurall passes depleted Hansen's financial t e· serves so be dropped off the tour to return to work and Scott continued on alone. Traveling alone wasn't too bad, said Scott. because he could eo at his own speed and do as little or as much siihtseeing as he wanted. With friends scattered along his route, the most. time he ever spent alone was four days. ICE CLASSIC S PERFORMANCES QN REAL ICE loatll Coast ?lua j "We bad heard that a fun thing to do was to ride a train to San Fran· cisco and bicycle back. Sowedid. Scott said neither he nor Hansen were bicycle enthusiasts before they s tarted, but Scott · is a jogger and an occasional marathoner so it wasn't r======:=:::;:::=:;~n::;;;a;-·I difficult to adjust to life f'1I, ri RAB ''But it was one of those weeks in October with absolutely perfect weather and we weren't aware that we had the wind behind us. •'It was just like taking a Sunday bicycle ride, only dolng it for a week." Scott said he and Hansen really wanted to see America up close and so they rejected traveling by car or motorcycle in favor or the bikes, e s pecially sin ce they'd just had such a good trip. That glow rubbed off right away. Heading north along the coast. they ran into bad on the road. ,· . ·' '': AUTo-ttOMIOftHS on the whole. ~e said. ftT INSURANCE r It was an ~asy trip. They ,,.,_,., ,.14 H.,.,., le•le-" t?Ok the lt"!le to ~ee the . :~. COITA MIU . l sights -1.ncludmg as . "=-'" 548-5554 · , many Marriott Hotels as , !. ' possible -and did their _··~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=:::=: best t.o get to know peo-" pie. Scott says be couldn't find any prevailing mood in the country. but he did find his fellow coun- t r y men friendly and always helpful. In fact, the worst things he could re call were the ticket he got in Morro Bay -it cost him SS -and the wad of chewing gum a teenager THE EARL'S PLUM II MG HEATING All COMO. S•rv.c., '"' Yoo• A,.~.,-c.a~• 'AIS'S•O'I V•f JO :'&9" 1 c,,,,,,f\,, C1r ''tt"O 495-040 I ·o· ,., ... c.., .. I I. 6 N•..wl)l 111 0 "'J '· 642-'753 . •lll•~'· Give A Gift Of Love From Kirk's Yellow GOid Men'• Sl9n•t Ring with s letten. from 140°° Diamond ,, HHrt Pendant. from 17500 to '500°° J'llU\ S201 Fed El Tew G7S.141"8·1~ TvBELESS WHITEWALL $~5 p1u112 5&/S? !>2 Fed. h . Tu H7 .. 1S TUBELESS WHITEWALL s4195 SIZE A78·13 tvtt.'e 1 \ftil'!1tf'-.1U. p'ut $1 lJ ,.,.dit,.,,, l 1 '" The General Jumbo 780. our lamous origl· nal eQu1pment tire! Featuring two glass bells. a polyester cord body, and a wide scvrn rib lrf'nd. ri•uq <~:ii­ ft-1 E~T•• ~·'ll ll TUBELES w111Tf.1\'Atl. s399s r•u~S7 BO f ed Ei Tu J78-IS TUBELESS WHITEWALL s429s f 78 141E78·tS TUBELESS W111TEWAL L s359s plu, S2 4?1S2 36 r1•d Ee 1a• 1","8 15 ltJIJELE~f> ~\'HITE1'/All S3895 plu~ \285 reo E• ru l18·1~ TUBELESS WHITEWALL s4495 • • • • . • • . . . • • • • • • . • • • • . . . . • . . • • . > ~lu• $2 86 plus \3 OJ 1'1.,. '3 '2 i .... e.11.ck·W·•ll.~."e.:.: .... ~.~.~.'."··~ ........ f.ed .. E·K·Ta·'1111 ............ f~.d.E.•.lU .......... i ALIGNMENT SPECIAL EXPERT BRAKE i 3500 Pac1hc View Drive N•wport Cal1lorn1a 844·2700 ltr lA"'e MCIC-, PnveCe tffYlc" ' WI S.l"'dtY P't-ry 11, ft tO:OO ANI 14K V•llow Oold Diamond ROM hftcfant. Plain O!' Antique Fll'l.ti. --....... . ; W.COIMICI NOITUAlllS Laguna Beach •9•·9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Cao11lr1no •95-1778 IALn-Ht•HOM ""41UL HOMI Coron• del Mar 873·9'60 Cotta Meta e4&·2424 l&L llOADWAY NOHVAIY ~ 110 Broadway Cotti MHa 8•2·91&0 - 1 SMmt 1Vnftu. U MI Wl1TCLW CHAN&. "27 E 17th St. Co1111 Mae • 648-4888 Senti Ana Chepel 618 N Broldway S1rit1Ana • 647,..131 et Poclllc View Ola .. I. 111Wftn!t"4 Poclllc ...... ~1 Ptr11, ..,._,, IH<ll Pecllk. vi.w Mor1uery 4"•9C· lo•• TllltO OONN4 MA"tf TlllO. ""'*"'of Co11e JIMW, C.11\tornl-. Pt»ed ewoy l"tlllrue•'t 10. lt17, Sur.,,lvt cl •Y ,_ll<lllte" ~!<ti• 8flCI l lu Tlllleo: ........ ,IC..,O'~:Mlftf'l(•tMr111eA. C-.-04 C.i. M9M, C..; ~ I. M<G'"'1Y" 9ottOll, MIU.: lllNtllers .Hl\t1 I ..WJ•mHO')ffltleflMlllAlle, Ce: ~~l .. ~tr_..C:..... .. Cnte ~Gt. lirllllfNf'lel ~~·•Ill 11111 l'leUI on SMUP'Ut ~ tt IC 11 i• AM II D4•y .....,.... Clllo.t, 17'11 fHCll ........ Hurltl ...... IMCll. Ce. Mt•Tnl,Pflwtttl~ PVBLIC NOTICE •4g.eo 141< Y1llow °'White Gold. Bot""'"'' '32500 All Item• Subject To Prior Sal• s Only Extra chuge for f arger or air condltJOned cars, setting torsion bars ... ana..on If ,.Otd. lntermed1att Standard l uxuiy $37.95 $40.95 $43.85 l11e111c1 .. • New Otlco 8•••• l tftl"O• Oii tll IOUt Wfl .. 11 llllt df\1!11 Ind wh... CylfllHf l...,,t0t1C111 Ad1Vll llt•k .. and •11tot1 btOI ftuld ••• ACl.\D TUT ~OVA CAA• hlrl th~ lot dltc l>f•ltt ot .~. dillel\M IAlll II !l'!tlltll, COAST GENERAL ...um.,..., TIRE 2855 Harbor ltvd. Plianl 540-5710 Co,ta Mtsa 6t6·503J ~ l ' ' l Al•DAll.VPll.DT .....,,.~"· ''" Per-eBll · Qilling: Cheaper? 'Bureaucrat' • BANTA MONICA CP) -lloa telephone ou1tomer1 would baeflt more fn>m blW.O, l« eacb local call than from a nat Rand Corp.· Report. Sa-ys Yes t-!l-~~ rate. ac~ to ta.. ,~c.orp. 11• .. Jle1eareber1 at the Suta Jlanica-bued ''thJU t.uk" reo- •• DQl'ted ~ tb.at • two-put bWln1 pradice ot cbar&tnl f~ ,,,.each local call aJon1 w.Uh • reo- bodies In several stat.es are stu· dylo• telepbooe company pro- poeall l:Dccri-oraUn1 rate plans baed OD uaaie. Such plans in varlo'U&.~omblnatlons are a1read1 in use· In Los Angeles, New Yc:rt, ~and Chicaco ( TAKING STOCK J egating penoanel responalbWly and accounUna. J. dvced moatb)y nat rate wotttd be ,Jn_o re efflclent and make telephone service available to people~ caimot now afford lt. ~ tndlcate that 70 pe.-. cent ~ telephone customers -those wbo mike 120 local callll or leu a month -would beneflt from a usage rate. Regbtratioo is $15. For further informalian, telephone SusanAJ). deraoo at 831M328. · a.11.,..s11ee99 .. ; -The cooclusions are ID a 68- / paie report, "Optimal pricing of Local Telephone Service,•• ., published after an lt·montb 1 •lady beaded by Band's senior ,..ecooomiat, Bridger M. Jrlitcllell. " The Federal Communications l•fllealloteD ..... LOS ANGELES (AP> -The historic career of the San Diego & Arisona Eastern Railway. one of the world's most treacherous and disaster-ridden railroads, is coming to an end, a victim of last year's Tropical Storm Kathleen. Commission and regulatory Al'WlrellMCo SACRAMENTO (AP> California's unemployment rolls increased by 40,300 persons in January, but the unemployment rate declined four-tenths or one perceot, the stale Employment Development Department said. There were 145,500 fewer Californians employed in January than during December, but since the decline in jobs was less than normally occurs at lbat time of year, the "seasonally ad- justed" rate declined from 8.9 percent to 8.S percent, the report said. The "seasonally adjusted" rate in January 1976was10.0 per· cent. The national unemploy- ment rate dropped from 7.8 per· cent in December to 7 .3 percent lastmonlb. The actual unemployment rate increased from 8.4 percent to 8.9 percent between December and January. B..n.osatSea? The twisting corkscrew rail line that dipped south of San Diego and then east toward Arizona -but actually never got into Ariz.ooa -took years of ad- versity to build. Through its 5.9 years it bas been ravaged by floods and rockslides between the Imperial Valley and the Pacific Ocean. Its parent company, Southern Padfic Transportation Com- pany, baa decided that it is finan. cially impractical to rebuild the line from El Centro to San Diego because it would cost $1.27 million toJ repair damage from Tropical Storm Kathleen last Sept.10. Rate Sp/stem Def etlded SACRAMENTO (AP) -State insurance officials have joined insurance companies in defend· ing the system or different rat.es for different areas. ';• Clafef Publbllft- The University of Southern California Sea Grant Marine Ad· visory Program, in cooperation with the Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce's marine division. will host a boating in· dustry management seminar Feb. 24 at lbe Newport Yacht Club. Los Angeles County Supervisor Kenneth Hahn and a Los Angeles delegation argued for a single statewide rate during a hearing of the Senate Committee on Insurance and Financial Institutions. 1 .. John P . Purcell will become ~, president of CBS Inc.'s . , publishing group March 1. •· He has resigned as chief financial officer of Gannett Company, Inc. The seminar will run from 8:30 a.m. to S:30p.m. and will provide participants with tips on financ· ing, capital acquisition, marine insurance, legal relations, marketing and advertising, del- "U you eliminated territorial rates, it would cause problems," said Mark Gerlach, a state in· surance rate analyst. 1.Firms Advance . ~· OC Employes A. WUUam Pierpoint bas been named sales • engineer in Orange and San Diego counties for Metropoltu.D ClrcuJts, loc., Costa Mesa. He as- sumes the positi?n formerly held by J ett Hardy, who has been assigned to the firm's manufacturing group. .. Among new officers appointed by the board of directors of Sytro and Company, loc:., is David Brown, Newport Beach, vice president. * WWlam J. Williams. Laguna Niguel, has been elected to Ule board of dJrectors of Sunklst Growers, lnc:. • Bull G. Witt, Balboa Island, has joined Bat~man Eichler, Rill Blcbarcla, lac., as vice presi- dent and manager or the firm's position trading de· partmenl. He is in charge of all trading in over-the· counter stocks for wbicb the firm serves as a market maker. Witt bas 16 years' experience in securities trading and is former vice president and '' a direclor of another regional securities firm based in Los Angeles and manager of its trading depart- ~ ment. • Geza E. Gorgenyi, :mss1on Viejo. has been named vice president. operations for Educational Data Systems, Inc .. Inmc. He 1s former vice presi- dent, operations at Kcronix, Inc., Santa Monica. * Victoria Station Int'., has named Bob Arnett general manager of the Newport Beach restaurant. He is former general manager at Plantation Gardens realaurant in Haw au. * Edward H. Chf'mlss, Newport Beach, vice pre- sident-international of Beckman Instruments. loc., bas been elected a director of the Foreign Trade As - sociation of .Sou_thern California. The largest world trade orgaruiation in the Western United States its eurpose is to encourage, promote and foster c~m­ merce between the United States and trading coun- tnes throughout the world. * . · Sherry Britt. Dana Point, has been named sav· 'nga manager or Great Western Savblgs and Loan AHoclaUoo's Newport Beach office. She joined Great Western in August, 1976 as a management tralnee and most recently served as savings managel'ofthecompany's Diamond Bar office. • Jamet C. RarrlSy Fountain Valley, has been ~a med assis~ant r;nanager of Orange County opera- tions. for Cahfom1a .Land Title Company. Active in the bUe insurance field since 1971, he l.s former title officer for the fitin at 1t.s Universal City bead- • quarters office. ' In his new post. Jtarris will be based at the com· pany's Orange County headquarters office in Santa Alla. - Got a problem? Then wnte to Pat Dunn . Pat will cut red tape, getting the answers and action you need lo solve inequities m government and busi· ness. MaiL your questions to Pat Dunn At Your Sennce. Orange Coast Daily Pilot. P 0. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Include your telephone number. The column appear.'> daily ercept Saturdays. Solid Fact• D~ on l.abeb DEAR PAT: What has happened to the Food and Drug Administration's proposal that food canneri adopt drained weight labeling? I am interested because it seems that more and more canned food products I regularly use contain more liquid than food. .. ... A.N., Newport Beach Starting with the 1977 pack of canned fnalts and vegetables, many canners will begin listing solid content u •ell as net weight on labels. This volun- tary labeling program announced by the National Canners ibsodation is th~ canners' answer to the proposed FDA regulation to require cl.rained weJgbt labeling. The solid content measurement method is less costly to canners and, hopefully, a savings for consamus. The dollar cost of the drained weight I a bf'ltng program is estim att'd about $104 million per year-aboutJOtlmes the annual costoftbesolldcon· tent measurement program. D~reptfon Can ae Slaocldttfl DEAR PAT: How can a person tell if a car real· ly needs new shock absorbers? My car only bas 18,000 miles on 1t, and a service station mechanic told me that I should get new ones. O.R .. Huntington Beach Shock akorbers usually last 10,000-ZS,eet miles or loncer. accordlag to the State Bureaa of Automotive Repair. The best lndicaUon that a replacement ls needed ls H you have notJced tbat yoar cu coatlauet to bonnce a few times after 100 bl& a bamp OI' clJp, or If tt has a ''following bowlce, or If yoa feel that ;,ou don't have full control of steering at moderately high speecb. Only rarely will a shock absorber fall suddenly, and almost nenr wUl all foar fall at the same time. Deceptive mec:banlca bave been known to 1qalrt oO oa tbock ab.orben as evtdenee of failure and tbm claim that din comeqaentes will occur anlea1 u lmmedla&e replacement ls made. Wa~b a mecbulc: wbea be check• tile sboclt abaorben oa your car. Tbere are four. oH near eHb wbed. They are m"able eoo.necUou benreen the body or lbe car ud &be fCMtr wbttl1. La..,.. Tra~tor'• Repaired DEAR PAT: I bought a Sears garden and lawn tractor in June 1975. Ever since then, I have bad trouble starting it. Repairmen have been to my house many times and always claim to have it fixed when they leave. But it stm doesn't run properly. If it can't be fixed, I thlnk Sears should give me a new tractor. · E.K.,SantaA.na After your complalat wu refer.red to Ute CUttomer lt.elatiou Department of Sean, Roebtlck and Co. bl Odcafo, yOQ i-eport )'ow tractor bas been aatlafadOrUJ repalttd. A_,..r A••9, lid ..... S.. DEAR PAT: Last June I ordered a staraie shed and anebor ~ rrom Alden•. t maU-order house in Chicago. Since the anchor kit wu neveroaed, l wrote to Alden.s for permission to~ tt Mdbe Issued a refund. Aldcn.s advised me to aend the kit back. I cUd 10 via Vnited Parcel in •rt.Y September. I was ad· vised lo October that my rdUDd would arrive within uborUlme. Jtbasn't,sol'm ~tlri;~· K.A.,Ca t?uoBQCh Milmlli•e.tlfate4~r COii Jt "'9 _.. ..........,illdat.urt:t11Mr•*udlwttthl ....... • •..U..NJOL ''lla.QY comp.oles would DOt provide insurance in hi&h·rilk areas." A.I.. .. Otdw• ~iery SACRAMENTO (AP) - Callforo:la'• Aaricultural Labor Relations Bba.rd la claiming a major vlct.ory as a re1ult of an appellate court'• refusal to re- view an ALRB-1upervl1ed juriscllct1onaJ election. ALRB chlef attorney Harry Dellzonna said t.be board will be saved "conaiderable lime and money in litigation" because lbe Court ol Appeal in San Francisco refused to review a Dixon tomato grower's appeal of a Sept. lS, 1975 election. Ceaar Chavez• United Farm Workers won the Nishikawa Farms election, one of the first conducted until the 1975 act creating the board. by 113 UFW vote.a to 47 for no union. n ... 11epere. ,.,...,t• Newport Equity Funds, Inc., Newport Beach, closed out its 1971 calendar year with a growth rat~ exceeding 100 percent, ac- cord t n g to Lawrence A. Levinson, president. During 1916 the firm arranged 435 new mortgage loans totalling $6,846,200, more than double the 1975 ·volume. The average prin- cipal amount of the loans, primarily secured by second trust deeds, was $15,738 in 1976, and up 39 percent from the average of $11,279 in 19'15. Prlee IAlllO COtlCf•ues SACRAMENTO <AP) -The supermarket lobby bas said "yes .. to a two-year extension or a state law mandating stores that install automatic checkout systems to continue marking the price on each item. The Senate Business and Professiom Committee sent the measure to the Senate noor after it was agreed the bill would self· destructJan.1.1980. The decision was a modified victory for consumer and labor union groups, who sought in· deCinite extension or tbe law. 30.year T_rek Pays Off NEW YORK (AP) -Lyman C. Hamilton, heir· apparent to hard-drivin.I Harold s. Oaeen as bead of rn', •IYI be started Ida ear"1' ao yean qo worttni for the aov- enuneul at a yearly salarv of SI.MO and "my m1Dd tnt.t on bebl1 agood bureaucrat.·l Now, at 50, tbe ooetlme U.S. Bureau of the Budcet employe bu been n.amed No. 2 man and chief ot operations at l.Dt.erutioaal Telephone le Teleeraph Corp .• the world'• laraesi manutaceunr of telecommwalcaUon.s equlpmeot. I TBE COMPANY SAID TOE move puts ~too in line to succeed Geneeo, the me . .-a-yeU' c.blef executive wbo bu domin.ated TM' for years. Hamilton'spromotion from vice pres- ident to president and chief operating' officer is ef!ec:tlve March 1. On Dec. 31, he ls expected to succeed Geneen, 67. u chief exeeutive. the company said. Hamilton was groomed for the top ranks witb a succession of posts In rrr·s HAMILTON treuury department, Including that of treasurer. And t.be training In international finance be1an before he joined rrr in 1962. He was briefly an analyst for the ln- ternatiooal Bank for Reconstruction and Development, also lcDown as the World Bank, and an Investment officer with the relaied International Finance Corp. Ford Experiments With Auto Computer DEARBORN, Mich. (AP) -Ford Motor Company has joined lt.s Big Three competitors in the automobile computer age, as tbe automakers look for new ways to meet federal mileage and emlaalOG standards. Ford plan& to introduce about 30,000 can ln the fall wit!\ a com· puterized electronic engine con· · · trol device to regulate spark tlm· ing and lbe antipollution exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) system. FORD OFFICIALS say com· puterized control of EGR, which reduces emissions of nitrogen ox- ides, is an industry first. economy and minimize exhaust pollutants. "We expect to gain benefits in fuel economy, emission control and performance," said Robert B. Alexander, Ford's car product development vice presidenL Within the put year, Chrysler Corp. and General Motors Corp. have offered a limited number or cars wilb computerized systems that monitor and regulate engine spark timing to maximize fuel THE HEART OF the system • to be installed on cars with V ·8 302-cubic·incb engines. is a solid- state module using a digital microprocessor and other inte- grated circuits. Over The Counter HASD Ustlnqs ""'• ""' S'"t 6'1• 26'" 2t ~ sv. IJp• and DolmU ~~ 3''14 NEW VORIC (~P) -Tiie followlno llst 181 ,.,, showl Ille owr • IM • Covntw S3.,; SS.,; tOOl •nd werr•llh thet NVe gone UP is 11 lie mo\t -down tht mcKI b<t$0d on lo'' 11, rcenl ol c~ r11c;i.trdleu of ¥Olume , • • or TtMJndtiy. 1!;., ,;"-No s~ur•tle\ tr.Olno below S2 ere Ind· • , d Net ...o P4!"c.«nfege c.han~ •rt tho 3! .• 3~.... illertl\C• bel-lht or•YIO .. \ C'°""S ,., : 17.. p<"lc.e -IOCIAV'S last bl Cl prtc.e. 11•, n·~ u" II) 11 Nlmt lest ?'9,, u:'Ln.a + ~. Up 21 J + .. Up 12.7 + 1 Up 20.0 11•111 Cenl Lilb 1 I•~ II'• (•P l'•lm 3\'J I~ • IC'J 9 Arrur or l~ i"l. • 1, Proc.l\m 1''• 10• .. 10'.. s 11 p•. " T" \ ~' ; ~8~': 1~ • '~ 1 " Supra M ~ • .. • 9 S .. nl'Y M ,..1111 ,,. 1 1n C•mr In~ 'l • 1i 1' WnMilr E 4' 1 i \'• 11 f'..,.,,, t-fF ft 1 8 t l] F•nllnd t > 1'~ l4 Hoverm '"' 7"• n w~m o 1 .,., 16 Flynn En 1~. , ... 11 Ptp\1 Bw 14 419v, 11 Pace BICI 71'• 'I'" 1' El Niii! • , •'• 20 EIK Nucl 14 , 21•11 ~j Pollu Ind n g~:'!i:" '' Pref Rhk 1S Caplll Air 1h H•ml D"il 21 Nobilly ti Namo Bit O.t Wei Ji Id StLou Sii Prnel El Tulnl A 01\e>oiF M 1UO ~ Alldor Co ~=::::::i Fund SV\ C ldon Ind MCI C.,,., F11>Qrtle H•lmP ":,':.~~ EA\AI WI KPne1 Ori Aom4"""' API Tn t Ko!Nckr Sl .... M Ml lntd Hf't•t ::.r~t"v:' u ll • + ll. Up flll> + 11,) Up n 1S.2 1SO M.3 "l ll 3 119 118 12.S n.s u.s 11 s 111 12.1 • + ~ Up S • "' Up •'• • "1 Up ll + 1't. Up ll' • + ''" Up i '1 + \.1 Up .... + \t lJp 71• • t. .. Up •' > • \.') Up ''• + 1 Up 18''> + 1 Up 11~ + 1'~ Up 3'-+ ~ Up S + \t Up 1'1i + ·~ Up S + v, UP 31\ + =10t Up 13 + 1'"' Up 2'4 + 11, Up "·" 11.s 11. I 11,I II.I 10.1 10.6 10.0 10.0 10.0 1"'4 + v. lip 7¥. + V. Up DOWNS L.a~I .?'t 4'1i -I ..... l• ,.,. ..., . .,, .. . . ., 11. "'• 11 j •;. l'• "'* '"-'" w. "' l 1. , •• -l-1' It'll. • ., p,, •• 6~ ., , .,., l'41 "'· l'\il ''"' 3V. t. . ~. 1' -I • •.i. .. . "' 6'• ~ .. , ... -"'-- Pel. Off 20 0 Oft 11.1 Of! IS.0 011 12.S Off IU Oft II I 011 10.0 011 9.1 Oii ... Off 8, 011 • 7 Off 7.] Off 7.7 Off ... Off •·• Off •.• Oii •. , ()fl • 1 Off u Off 63 Off u g1J n Off S.7 Off S7 Off S1 MUTUAL FUNDS NEW YORK (4PI lonchl~ 4111> S 31 EOM>n 9" NL ISi GrOUP. lnoep I IS 7 II Pi19 I'd 111 I I MonM 1 00 NL. -TM !Oll-1119 quo &on Fein 9 SS 10 .u E?i••I F 10.66 II.St Grwlh • loO S.03 Mau 10 bl 11 ~1 Ma<1 C 3 u 3 U Mu111 10 '1 11. 1' ~::~~~~t~ ~~i~1~:!u111~!11::: !:'~~d:u 'in io~.s~ mn~ 1rn.~~-~ "'~ft""rfo I~~ ~:~~(~J1~ ·~~ ~uuu~p fn ai I~~~ Oeal~rt. Inc , .,. Candn 760 811 Hderat.O Fund•· Imp CAP 817 1.17 MIO I.SS IH• Fund 1383 u .11 Tech" '~·~I~~ th~prl(t\al wtllct> OIYid 300 3l7 Am Ldr 1'1119.17 imp Git> 711 1,as MFO 11113111\ II IS0116.<IO S8Eqty t .13 NL lhHe -urllle Monti> U U 16 7J Empjr 19.11.... lndu,trv J 10 , MCO 1711 ll 8'1 Pltn Inv ti 131711 SB l&Or n U NL coutd twlve w NalW S 10011oqs "°"'€\I.lo! .... II\\ 1nv\t HS II• MF8 tS5' liillO Plh11rlh 10'711"'SOO.n ln to''M 1146 Wld (Net aSMI NV V11 II II 11 U Txl',.. lt.'9 NL Inv GlllCI I 6' NL Matherf 13 Oii NL PlltrnCI 7 IS I •7 S¥1 lnvf 1°82 l.'S velllt'I ~ bcuglll CG Fund t.6• 10 0 l'ldellty GtlluD: Inv lllCllC 1.56 NL ML C•P " .... 1111'4 Price Fund\' 5wln Gt •.93 s.n !value plUi Mitt ( CG lncm a SS • ,. B-a.•1 • . lllV llOS 10.10 11 00 ML Ady I 00 NL Grw1h 10 04 NL ver In 11 ... 13.10 arv-l Th~y C~ Pr•• I 00 NL CHll 11' '06 Inv Counwl Mid AM '21 S 10 IMom t •I NL sr:clra I' 4 61 tH. Sell 8uy Cent7 Sh 1061 II SO Conlld 107S '4L Capm UNVoll Mon Mkl I 00 NL N Ere IO• NL 5 ate Bond~· AGE Fnd S 31 S •• C"ll Inv 10 U II II Dally I 1 00 NL Ca DI I S unevalf MONV' f' '13 9.. N Horii b •1 NL Com F 4 71 4 61 Ac~n 14 41 N CMrl Fd I• 17 U at Dttny '0 . . tnv•\IO<t Gf'OUll MSB Fd 1• 56 NL T•F•e 10 11 NL Div Fd 4 •7 5 ~ Aav lllv ... NL. Cn•w Gr Bo\' Eo Inc 1Slt' NL 105 8d Stl 61' Mui 8.., It& t1'1 Pro F~nCI ~U Nl Pl'09 F l11 4.ll 4tlne F 1'1 I 1 Fund t ZS 6.IO M1991 11 9' ... IDS Grt S.31 ... MIF FCI UO t JO Prov Gii\ 7 .. I 3' Frm Gt 5 '7 NL 4tllle !>h 12 .. U I Frtll C • ff Jen Mull IM 10 44 NL IOS ndl 4 61 S.01 Ml F Git> l 79 a 10 Pru SIP • 116 10.Slo Frm Be t 41 NL Alul\lre F ' 14 N Sl\rM 1 41 t 10 Flcltl 16 Ol 11 S? Mull 9 12 t '1 Mu1uelol ()m.oh• Putn•m Fund.: Stet• SI •VS AUO AllAm Fd ..... vall SP«I s. s. Pur1111 II O& 11.l>' Proq 3 01 3 80 Amer II .. II., Conv II., U.H ttedm.t11 Fund, AllUate I• t I ChHPMS II SI NL Sol~m a fl S.26 Stock If 90 20.AS Grwlh 4 °' • t7 Equll t 61 IO SO Am Ind 119 !4L AIPM lt.•S N C"•ll'll<I 7,., 7 '7 Thrill 10. NL S.1.c:I 'S1 10,. lncom .... 10 Hi Gtctro IJ II IS O'I Ano F , 10 ML 4m lllrth t 7' 10 (11tAM91mt FIH Trtncl 11.H l) 21 Var Py • • 6 '3 Mu\ Stt"I 1CI If NI. C.rwth 10 111111l lnwst I 41) NL 4m Eqlly S 10 SS t.lby ltd 4 SO• '1 l'lnan<lal Pl'OQ lllv Reill S.06 S Sl N&A Miii I I) NI. •n<om "01 8 IS O<Hn 6 If NI. Amerlc ... F-s Men Fd 2 SI , 77 Dyll• 4.7' Nl 111141 19 IS ",. Nell Ind 10... NL lnvnl I )I • OS l•ln "°" FCI\ Am 8•1 • OI Ill S<l\U" 7 4J a " l'Mlust • ,,, i'tL IYV 6 ,, NL N•1 S«ur ~· V•\f~ '80 10 11 11•1 .. n ,, .. NL Amcp s SI • O'I Colonlal. lrteom 7 M NL JP (;rtll 10 Sii 11 •I 8al•n ... 1011 Voyaq 11118 1111 C.•P 0 t )J NL A M"ll • 7t 10 Cllvrl '06 ··~ fll lnvHIOn Jenus F 17 SI NL Bond 4 S• • 0 lleonl>w 1 00 Nl Slo<ll. 11 lS NL 80llCI ll 24 1• Fufld t IS 10 l3 OIKb S '4 6 4t Jolin ~encoct. OtV•d • ll 4 4S Rt•t•v• I 00 NL ,_,.. F a 67 t .. Cep Fd 6 lS 6 '6 Grwli> 4 7t S 73 GrWlh 6 S7 7 ll B•I.., at\ • 7> Grwlh j SI lo <11 Aevt•• S '7 J tlJ tmO GI 11 IA 13,. Grwth 4 61 , °' lncom a .. '.. 111<0"' • " • J6 Bona 19 0 ,. ,. Pl Siii ) .. I .OJ ~IK Eotl • " • Ml ernp Inv I 00 NL. lncom 1'.'217M Colu Gtt> U01 i'tl. Stock l!D '10 Grwtlt HI • 17 l"com SSJ ,.,_ ~IK Clh IW ... rns C•P 7·19 1tt ICA 14.01 IS 31 E'"' AB "' 1.07 1'11Mlt A I JI NL JOl>llm 1'.n NL Stoclt t 1' I.,. Scudder l'unCI• rl\S Ill'" , )I 1o 11 N P•" 1S'O 11 with c 1 • 160 FIMllOI 1000 ,. ... K•n'-Fund\' i'tELlle Fund 1,.11 FCI not HL .... Eq ... 108' WH M , Q) I... p lld • " ... f'or!y Fr 16 S3 HI. Apollo 3 ts •.:1:7 Eciull 1' lS "31 MMll 10 Jl NI. udr ltd 1J IS NL. ArNr Ge.-et: omP#d ) U I 13 l'lld Giii 3'12 UI Cu\ 91 11• IU1 Grwlh ... 9 70 St>t<I 1l 1' NL wnC Ot 4 It NL C.p 8d • 01 e.IJ conco 12 44 NL F~rs ~: Cu1 B2 lt.'6 7117 '"'°"' 11.'4 ts IS 8elan u U Nt. wnC Inc s 67 NL C.P °" 4.10. ~· t v \01210'° Grwll\ 44) 4M CUI M l.•S •u Sloe ,, .. 14\I Com St tll NI. SAJ. GI 1'.M NI. ~~nll\O~ 1t ~ I~ g onr"4~ : ~ :t ~~~... I:: Im ~~: ~; rn ~ ~ N'('~ l~m Nl s.'tu'1'ity 11 F::.:: NL ~"to!"' ~17~1 f;; €4 rt 4 Sii 7 20 lry C.p 11 60 12 SS 5"<~ I 67 tA Citi $1 11 '1 IU. Ou•rd t7 '2 NL Eouty H• .4.31 lllf Mut i.1t t.1.. f'd m 6 SS 7.Tlt Vite Fd 7 44 NL l'f•n-l n Crow: (us S2 9.it IO . .iO Partnr U6 NI. ln,..\t 1 tO I°' nlf""lt UNvell l>rev lff 4 ~9911 30'9 N ONT Ui 1.11 Cui SS 7 S6 8..U No\IW l"d "H NL unre 10°' 11.0J 111~ S¥c ~· All'I Orlfl J to 6. ltw•"' 0toup Grwlh S JI UO Cus Sol 3 70 • 05 !off• Wld 10 NL S.11tlntl Gro.;p: llroact 11 ~·t111 ~m ,,.,1 .. UJ ,.;o at t2 u IHt Utt11 4.70 J01 Pol• J.tt us NfWtQll\ II NL Ao.. ) ff ,., Nat 111 ~n ,,, All'I lnv1 S.40 & Oelew II 2' 1l lA lllCO"' I 7S I~ YllCI Gtfl 1 OJ 1 ... Ne"t Inv t ti NI. llelan 7.. .... U Op v 101' !i'O Alnvl~ u a> O•l~h • * t1.M ut (f" 01 11 l.Al~lftliton Gfo: NIC!\it t ,.,,., NL com s 1ue 'lo union u·n 1i.11 Aml'I Olh ... , J. 10.lle ... ·~ Gtpl t" . (p \.di' 14. u 11 n NOll'lllrl UI to.u Senl Olh 8.0'I 79 flltld """"°'' M<llw Omull: ~C~ •·a 4,., IQlll ,a S4 ~" ~ 8 a U1 Nor .. ,I '5-03 NL Sentry F ti 9t 11 't A ,,fl ·11 O.lly t.00 HL II tl aH~,.111~1 ~ .. .11$ •ti 111 10.•1 11.61 Nuwtn t '6 10 01 Slle,..hol*'' ()p; 8~~ 1;' t Orw!ll • ... 'I If!, lt.U .. . .... ..._ .. NL ~ " t•.tl ")0 OrT1t9• 10 t• 10 Jlt cmm. '-'> • ,, Con Or • '· ffi• H• • ,..,-~·" I. rllf!Clpll e, UO ti fJ!S .... 1.63 WM 1J '1 NI. Enlro S '9 S11 Con r~ U tO.a Ir in 4 Ill I l 1 -l'urof 1111: ~· iOl" filttl; ·~-r Fd l'ltl. Fd \ U S ai Ill-\o.• 1111t "" ' ,.. ftf .• tJCu C6f'l'lllt ,, ts I ,.,.. ) °' NI. Oppe11 6,tt • to Htrbr ~ '.. S<ltn $41 s.tt . '" '°·· . ctill\ .~,:,. lit~t; ~lmpjlC j •. , I JOI IUO NL lncllot .. , .... 1. ... t • '·" Vtn• s" UJ .. lfd.. ,,,. • I .... .. tt " !Id Tr ' ' • ~'· '-~'"-MO!I& 1,00 NL ••<• to. 11.*1 "" !vu I;,: NI. ...,.:<;""'~ ·n ~~.r~ '; ~~ E1t' t n,····.-~s ,.i" I.~ =t $,l:~, .. ~~·'°·lit ~Wt" ~,IJ·~,. ~: 8 .. t ... '°' Ill< "" 4 . ., ' ... ,,, ,, .. l " -c. • fl m.. Urc1:••111 '"" 1 IJ 7,. ln(Pm I •1 j6 lfl<~ 1• \ l' Site~-"i L .:a·~ 11, ',o~·'· ",,•llCI U.at H Atflltd .. ,., u• c Set 11 .. u 01 111 ... \1 I Ot t4 I.•!' ,,,, • ·~ l.C "' '° l!~M &~ '° l!lft..,'°'!: • n 8M ., 11 JI u... """' M "'' •• ~rr•O • n L »' t 4 u •. ,. /IC I L. ~ ........-v f' "'DA • IMOll' ).)4 U1 f'llll ""' 6 !» 6 Jt r"' D 1a.. HI. GNUO· "" •.i;i I. 811 lit • G""ll t.. llil•'-"' ..... ~ lq Ot NI. •"'-fdJ Ill M 3 n ~.=~ Ct = : "~ .. ~Hi~ .. l 14·-! "·': I•,_ t'° ,~ ~~ i\~1l:l ·:~111~: .t.1a •J• ~ •~ •• M«i Lw 1 ' tCL ,.-; Jt-l~ ea, )i; alt T•u\t an tu ttl on , ' '~ "" HI ~ t;: ti ~-,,, ~ ,... ••c:.ii:Ji 11r1:L:~' 1u• ":tr~""*""•"·'' :=:" i~ ~· toJO ... c;.,. UI COi ,. IUD ~ .... ' .... Ut l"!I ... "·" flA ltMt f .. ,, .... (HI• "-It> I. . • • ' ~ . • ' • . \ \ ' $ . Fl"iday'a Closing Prices NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS •• Friday. Febfuaty 11 . 1911 l/N DAILY PILOT A I~ ~retlit ShoP Booklet Lists Co1ts By SYl.VIA POBTEJl About tile months ago, when hl11 wlfe•s car collaps~. John Quinn, the 32-year-old head ot MaJne's Bureau ot Consumer Protection, knew be would have to lake out a l¥A to buy a replacement. · Detore Jooldn& for anotber car, be decided to estiqaate what his loan m,llht cost. With lbe befp ol his staff, he figured out the inonlb!Y payments and total finance charges at various lnteftat rates on tbe $4,00Q be needed. A couple or percentase po~ts on a three-year auto loan addedqptotlOO-pluuavedorlost. HE DECIDED TO PROVIDE CONSUMERS with this information, so they would know precisely bow mutb a loan would cost. • Thus, Maine's Bureau of Consumer Protection's pocket-size credit guide was born. The paperback booklet consists of t.btee sets of easy-to-read tables, Jivinl tbe monthly p;1yments and finance costs of loans at various in- terest rate1 for various periods of time. The tables cover a u to, furniture, home im· provement, appliance, mobile home and inortgage loans. The prospective Money's Worth homebuyer can, tor instance, learn ate. glance that a 80- year, $50,000 mortgage at 8percent would cost $387 a ~th for a total finance charge of $82,080. The same mortga(e at 8~ percent would cost you $384 a month for a total finaAce charge of $88,406. lf the length of the mortgage i.8 cut to 2S years, the total finance charge would fall to $72,2165, but t,he monthly payments would rise to $408. IN ADDmON TO THE LOAN COST TABLES. ~e "Down Easter's Pocket Credit Gulde" also contains SOlne credit shopping tips. Among them: -"Put some pressure on the lender. Many lendE trunk that consumers are only interested in how mucb e monthly payments are, ... Your first question should • 'What's the annual percentage rate?' Those wbo nevet ask usually end up paying the long dollar." -''Mobile home and car dealers usually get a ce.rtaln percentage of the finance charge on contracts they arrange. This 'commiSsion' ... can result in higher interest rates. Lower rates can usually be found by going dlrec:Uy to a bank or credit union." -"111E BIGGEST SINGLE PROBLEM IN the cl'ed\t market," says Quinn, is that people don't shop for the t>est buy. "Even those people who search lbe newspapers for grocery store specials and cut-rate sales ot clothing and ap- pliances don't think about shopping around for the beat in· terest rate. And one reason for their failure to bargain bunt for credit is the lack of any single resource to which they can turn.·· Quinn's office has been flooded with requests for the guide and reprint rights. Maine's largest credit union has bought 10.000 copies. A United Auto Worker's consumea af. fairs spokeswoman says the union's central and regional headquarter s are considering reprinting the guide. Massachusetts 1s work mg on a version. New Hampshire publisher William Loeb wants to distribute the bookiet among his readers. Federal Truth in Lending law went on the books years ago to require lenders to disclose full costs of loans and to help consumers learn the rules of the credit marketplace. But Quinn considers this law a "well-intended failure" because the disclosures (even when given) come too late for advance planning. Copies of the guide cost 50 cents. Send a stamped self· addressed envelope to the Bureau of Consumer Protection, State House. Augusta. Mc. 04330. Special rates are given to groups. Up One D~y, Stocks Go Down the Next NEW YORK <API -The stock market turned downward today wiping out gains 1l scored. in Thursda,y's rally. The Dow .Jone!> average of 30 industrial stocks, up 4.08 Thursday, was down 6.40 to 931.52. Losers held a 3·2 advantage over gainers among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. Stock.sin The Spoillghi 'I America• wader• What Stocks Did . ' New YORI( (AP) WHAT AMaX 010 Nl!.W YORK (AP) DoaDJone•ADera~a "•w Yorlt!APl '""' Oow-Jonei ..,.,IO" ITOC:lt$ Ollillft MIGll ~ Cl~ '0. to 11141 t)t;!I) M .fl tU.~ tt1,S2 • 6.4' '° Tf!I mA H7,f4 ttV• 124.fi~.7 n Ult 101.or 101.S> !OS» 10.0l-'t Iii $111 lCUI JOU2 -. '1 '°6.tO-2 IM!lt ••.. •••. ... • •• • • • • • • • . • • • l i Tren .......... ,.................... 11 Utlls ........................ 0 u ""' ............................. . Friday. Februwy 11. 1971 J'rem AP Dilfa&dael • Aft.er four years lo what be calla the Hollywood .Om.irl • author J...,. Wa•ba•P. creative coosul-aut tor televisi .. a ••Police StorJ:• M1• be'• qwttlq abow -bu!Dea. .. Henceforth, I will be Just plain Joseph Wambaugb. author," the former police .. -.raeaot nld ... I mt1ht add. I'm aleePtna better and not coutant· ly lookinl over my shoulder to .. -auard against some of the -netarloua plots and decelta that • are batched in the name of show • business." • WAMUUM President Spencer W. Kimball. leader of the ; Church of Jesu• Christ of Latter·d~ Saints : (Mormon), leaves today on a ; month-long tour of Latin :: American countries. ~ Kimball, 81, will preside at ... 39 conference sessions in Mexico • City, Mexico; Guatemala City, :· Guatemala; San Jose. Costa • Rica; Uma, Peru; Santiago, .: Chile; LaPaz, Bolivia, and Bogdta, Colombia . • • KtMULL The lormer master or : ceremonies of "The Liar's Club" television game • show filed suit against the show's producers, claim- M Ing they violated his contract by replacing him in • the host spot. • BW Armstrong said in the $1. 7 million suit filed ; in Los Angeles that last May the Ralph Andrews -: Productions promised him a five-year contract, but · ! instead cancelled it Jan. 7. • • .; Yes, Telly Savalas, there really is a Kojak. And he really i,s a policeman. · '• Indiana's answer to the television detective abow character is Harold Marti.a, chief of police in Mooresville, wbo had bis named chanJed to Harold Wayne Kojak Martm. Martin acquired the nickname a couple of years ago when Savalas and bis shaven bead became a fixture on network television. Like Savalas, Martin keeps bis bead clean of hair. · • SAVALAI ~ S&eve Ford, 20-year-old son of former President Gerald Ford, may star next season in a television series about a rodeo performer. Quinn Martin Productions announced it signed Ford to an exclusive acting contract for television. Martin said Ford would ap- . pear as a guest star in several of his other series, such as ''Streets or San Francisco," "Barnaby Jones," "Most Wanted" and •'Tales of the Unexpected." • YOU SAY YOU LOVE HER ••• •. SHOW IT WITH FLOWERS VALENTINFS SPRING BOUQUET •...•••..•••••• 2.99 BEAUTIFUL FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS •.• 12.49 Special dry or fresh flower arrang&- ments, made for that perfect gift, or to accent your decor. Cuatom design• bY. Roger. NATIONAL KOi SHOW Competltlon show of the exotic Japanese Carp, with Individual fish valued at $10,000. Held In the nuraery, thla Saturday 10 am ~ pm, Sunday 9 am -3 pro. IKEBANAANO BONSAI DISPLAYS. Ala Baley. author of the best-selling book "Roots .. , expects to resume a a peaking tour Feb. 17 in Modesto, a spokesman lor the W writer said. Haley was reported ill with exhaustion aod a mild cae ot poWmonla and undtr doctor•• orders _.-..· -------.. to cancel appe~~ces. ( PEOPLE ) "He bas a Ugbt touch ...., ______ _ of wallc:i.N pneumonia but is feellnJ fine and took a , walk yesterday, .. said UH Drew. an editor with "Roots'' publiabers Doubleday & Co. "He's getting rest at home and has not been hospitalized." .. Aucti.on Schedided Tbe San -Olemente Jaycees will bold an art auction at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 26 at the Ole Hanson room of the community center, corner of A venida Del Mar and Calle Seville. More than 240 ori1inal oil palntinp and prints will be auctioned. Funds raised will benellt the Jaycees' Handicapped Olympics and other Jaycees' programs in the community, said Rick Smith, club presi- dent . Buy a Toyota now while we celebrate. It's our way of thanking you for making Toyota the number 1 selling import. Choose from 27 great new '77 Toyotas. Cars and trucks designed and engineered for quality and .. 1aow WllOUSAI.£ PllCES '* JHE FllLOW1NS: $100 MIMtMUM .. ..._, . S.D. Wholesale Growers 11622 WAlbBAVI. flOUHTAIH VALLEY PHOHll 546-l4lt total economy. And right now your local Toyota Dealer has a big selection of Corollas. Coronas, Celicas and Tough Toyota Trucks. Look over a wagon, sedan. coupe or pick-up. Then .... BUY A TOYOTA ... TOYOTA BUYS YOU A ... &ell Power Tool Set. Variable speed. reversible~" electric ·-::: c1nll. socket set: 7W' circular saw with H'• HP motor. ddiustable np fence TaacoZoom Blnocul8r1. 7-t5 ~ 35rrm zooms to 15 power great for !">p()l'ltng events. or t.Jnlll'lg Rubber fold· 1own eyecups for use with eyeglasses S.meonlte Luggage. Croce ol ladies 26'' CartWheel and Mini-Tote or mens Three-Suiter Cartwheel and Islander Dopp' K11 AU g,fts have a suggested ll?1a~ valoe of $100 or more. \food where prohlbolod by law Toyota buys you a gift. But what a gift! A gift with a retail value of $100 or more. Take your choice from 7 things you've always wanted. It's our way of celebrating being Number 1. And your chance to splurge without splurging. How many times have you looked at a special watch or camera or binoculars or power tool and sai<!i "Boy, Le Jour WatchM. Choice ol la!J'l()l'lab!e mens Chronograph ex Le Jour version ol ladies· classic tank watch, bolh have 17- . ,ewel shocl< ••'111i11ii. resistant Iii movement. Minolta Hl-MMlcG 35mm Camera. CdS e•ectric eye automatically ddiusts shutter speocJ, L281ens would I like to treat my~elf right now!" And now you can. But the treat's on us. Buy any new Toyota car or truck between Jan. 17 Qnd Feb. 28, 1977, at your participating Toyota Dealer. Then select any one of the gifts above. It's yours FREE-we'll send it to you for buying a new Toyota. When we celebrate, we really celebrate! YOU ASKED. FOR IT YOU GOf IT um scmtDRIVl:R SET . ... 'I'' I , 'I BEA ANDERSON, Editor Friday, February 11, 1977 81 Kim Ferguson, Cal .State .!1,;,(\i~ .. Fullerton student, in lf.V:tirp outstanding performance. Pilot Logbook Everyone's A Win.ner By JACKIE HYMAN 01 Ille o.ltr ""' Stlltf The suspense was incredible. Behind me were sitting Mary Hurzeler, soprano; Judy Schmidt, meuo soprano, and Diane Pilcher, contralto, with their friends. Together, they composed 10 percent or the slng~rs who bad auditioned the day before, Saturday, and that day, last Sunday in lbe first Metropolitan Opera aucfi. lions held ln Orange County. The judges had bffn gone almosl45 minutes. District directors Nunzlo Crisci and Florence Schumacher and everyone else I bad talked lo agreed that the competition was unbelievably stiff. "It's like a night out al the Mel," one woman commented. The singers behind m e were trying to keep calm. But with difficulty. "I don't think I could go up there and sing aaain if they asked me," Mary Hurzelerwas saying. I 'd heard her sing before In "Gianni Schicchi," and Judy Schmidt in "Tales of Hoffman,\' both in Lyric Opera As· sociation of Orange County productions. I'd never head Diane Pilcher before but had been impressed by her large, rich voice and by a range reachina from deep contralto to, rumor had it, E above high c. Suddenly the curtain on the Santa Ana High School auditorium stage began to open. We aJl looked up, tense. The judges, the organizers and the accompanist were sit· ting In folding chairs. There were six empty chairs. Six peo- ple would win prir.es. The first place winner would go direct· ly to semi final competition; some of the others might win approval to go on to quarter final competition in Los Aneetes for another try. Nunsio introduced everyone on the stage, which seemed to take an eternity. Then be announced that the encourace· ment award went to ... Cheryl Woods, an 18-year-old soprano. She all but burst into tears of happiress as sbe made her way to the stage. Tbat was one encoura1ed younc sln1er. The more experienced vocalists behind me were ~id wlth tension as flf\h place was anoounced. It went to Catherine Stoltz. mezzo soprano wlio bad been one of the au· dlence f avorltes. And now f ourthplace to ••. Harold CloUint, bass. Tberi wen only three prlaes left. There had beed men than thrffoutatandinf sln&4d'l. In fact. then bad beeQ 30. 1'b1rd place went to ... Mary Huneler! Witb a little cry or dtlilbt, Ibo went up to take b~ace. So far, all tbtpriae- wtnnen exeept young Mils W bad been destcnated t.o 10 on to quarter final compttlUcn.an lndlcatlon of how h11bly the Juqea tboul)lt ol the eompetftioa. Prlse Dumber two went to baritone Jobn Matthtws. Then 'Cam• the ann<MlDcemiDlr ~undo bad torPtten to men~ that oae Stn1•r ~ 11aa4 not won 1a:, prlle u n1veTtheleu approved to 10 ca to t.b• quartertbM}j-te:nor John Nia. Mc Reynold•. Aid nwnbef one••• -Diane Pilcher I M aM dtll•htedly beaded for the~. I WN &'far• of JUdt 8cblfticll 1UU •ittlft• MblDd Ill She waf one OI the 23 ezceu.n&.,_.. w))o blld" DOl bMD•Jalled out tor antaanor.1 But ID mr. book ab• WU .WI a Wloner. They au .... ·Triumph Opera Beckons By JUDITH OLSON Ofll•o.l!r ~Mtl'-lf Diane Pilcher. a young Fullerton resident, is an ex- tremely happy person today because part of her dream to sing on stage has been rea,lized. Miss Pilcher was the top win· ner in the first Metropolitan Opera aDdltions ever to be held in Orange County. She received a $300 Patrons Award and will have aJl expenses paid when she travels to New York for final auditions at the ...... )!et. With the try-outs last weekend at Sant• Ana High School, Orange County haa come of age In the music world, according to Mn. Edward W. Scbumaeber, co-dlrector of the local regi011al auditions. Thirty contestants, ranging in !lie from 18 to 33, sang during the two days. ''The judges said they had never heard this mariy out· standing voices." Mrs. Schumacher said. The other winn,rs, who were John Matthews, Nancy Huneler, Harold Clausing, Catherine Stoltz and John Nix McReynolds, will move to the quarter fmals lnilan- cock Auditorium, Los Angeles; Fe~.22-~. EXPENSES FOR them also will be paid by Uie Orange Coun· ty Auditions Affiliates Commit· tee. · The fact that auditions ~ere held lo Orange County 1s a testimony to the taJent here, Mrs. Schumacher said. Audit.ions have been held in various U.S. cities since 1954 and previously ·the closest were in Los Angeles. But more contes- tants have oeen coming irom Orange County in recent years than Los Angeles, Mrs. Schumacher said. She received a call last spring from Mrs. Paul Werner, western regional co-chairman of the Metropolitan Opera National Council, asking her to organize local auditions. Mrs. Werner had requested that one of the judges last year recommend a possible Orange County chairman and Mrs. Schumacher waa the first person. he named. The judge, she discovered later, was Dr. Maurice Allard, former professor of music at UCI. Mrs. Schumacher said she first told Mrs. Werner no, then re- considered when she learned she would share the job with Nunzio Crisci. a soutlJ County_ resident. An active member and officer of the Orange County Philharmonic Society, Mrs. Schumacher believes there will be a local opera company soon because of all the talent available. SHE AND CRISCI have put together an active 35-member committee to raise funds for the opera council. In preparation for the recent Judges and committee members were entertained I .', at a reception following Saturday aµditions in the · ·· Newport Beach home of Mrs. Edward W. .Schumacher (center). Enjoyin·g the evening with her are Edgar Daniels (left) and · Michele Perri ere, both judges. . -· auditions the committee sent out 4 ,000 initial requests for sponsorships, at $25 each, and had a 10 percent response. In April the committee will sponsor a fund-raising opening night at the new Via Lido Plaza in Newport Beach (formerly the Richard's Market complex) to underwrite fall workshops and a summer opera production. Though committee members are still glowing with excitement from the triumph of the first auditions, there is a realization underneath that there is a long way to go in Orange County before the arts are fully sup- ported. "There were only 100 people a day in the audience at the audi· tions," Mrs Schumacher lamented. "But this is a spoiled county " The weather is a contributing factor to lack of support for cultural activities, Mrs. Schumacher believes. People are more apt to be oa the beach, in the mountains or out sailing than listening to concerts. What do the Cmalists gain from the auditions il there are few places to sing locally and across the nation? They are enrolled in classes and workshops and many win· ners end up singing in Europe. "But it's one way to break in. It's prestigious to win. This would open a door faster," Mrs. Schumacher asserted. MISS PILCHER, who de· scribed her victory as "beautiful," agreed. She also thinks the JQI I cultoral scene is going to · prove soon. "People see think the opportunity Cto sing in New York. But I think Or County is going to come tbroug We've got the talent." Miss Pilcher, who studies wi: Dr. Roger Ardrey at Callfo State ·University, Fullerton. working on her masters de and singing at Marlo's in C del Mar to gain experte meanwhile. She also is imployed at Ge in Fullerton and credits bosses there with p.rt of her cess. "They've let me have i of time off,'' she said. After her victory she di have much tim'e to celebrate, lamented. "I thanked God then I had to go to work.•• Humanistic Care Her Creed By MARCIA FORSBERG 0111• o.lly ~lleC It.fl Janet Parodi still wears her white nurse's cap, but she's more than a giver of care She saw needs emerging In the field of hospitalization during six yeafS as an intensive care nurse at Pacific Hospital in Long Beach. Now she ls adapting concepts of patient needs and quality care into the administration level. "We deal with people, not a commodity," said the 37 -year-old assistant adminstrator of Los Alamitos General Hospital. ".As an intensive care nurse, I could only concentrate my skills in one area, but as an ad· ministrator I can do many thinas to alleviate pain-there are many areas where I can deliver my expertise," she added. Tbe Huntington Beach resident johled the staff at Los Alamitos as dii'ector of nurses,· and was named to her presen-. appoint· ment ln 1973. Her personal philosophy of manacement ia that it is not "cut and dried. ••J BBUEVE in manatlng from a very bwnaniatlc point of view. Humanism is the key between people care and ln~ dustry care "said Mn. Parodi. She not;i that "most prla co into nursing because they want to belp people, and that shouldn't cball~ when you get into ad· m.iniltfation.". Mrs. Parodi deals with "ever-~' that bas to do with cJire(t _paUentc:Me.'1 Amadi her resPonslblliUes are 1Upf:rviaine the edmlnlstratloo Of th)rd party rilmburlem~t, lo- terprettne financial cb.,-ta and coonnn.ttna aoclal aenlcea. 8be a1lo le in char1e of the b0iltal'1 lntervte# prosram for pa Utldactfon. V aateer auxllla.ry memben tiltemew patitnta twice otl Jevfll ot ea.re Wicelved durtnc their hMPUallsatiorl. then Mrs. Pli'Odi euJll1neil the ttsulta of tbe ~­ UOllin• for areas of lmpt'Ove-mmt. She supervises montbly ed ,. •• tional seminars for both the 1 community and pN>fesslo plus she has recenUy taken o_q coordination of servicea will\ departments of maintenance housekeeping at the boapltal.: : HER BUSY DAYS inc ~t overseeing half the hospital st from clerical workers to all lng categorlel. 't Mrs. Parodi recently receit an honor~ry appoint111• as · clinical :~ssoclate for Department of Nursing Callfonlia State University, Angeles. She will serve voluntarily liaison resource person betw clinical agencies, the faculty the atudents within the u iverslty's Department of N ln1. One aspect or the appoin includes the "one-to-ono 1 inl process with a maste"F- didate" from CSULA, she Each qtaarter1 Mrs. P meets weekly Wlth a atu teach what sbe bas· elq>e tntheareaolpaUentcare. BER KNOWLEDGE of field stems from a vast ed tloual and professional b!lc • around. · ~e i. an RN aractu._te of macUlate Heart Colleae, of~· School of Nunlftt. .. r .. • , DAILY PILOT Friday, FebrulfY 11. 1977 Sluggers Get a ·Second Chance 'DEAR ANN: Wb•t do you t!E:htnk· aboUl •Judie wbo lets wif• out OD probaUao. repon.. to ~ wtves, tut.ead '11 dJq them to Jail? laniuifh In Jail at the~· ~~10Qrview1on thil ap-proach to the peiW ayatem7 - LOOKING AHEAD TO BE'ITER DAYS MAYBE? ader1 wbo have-teenaae dauOJterl will see themeelves - as l d1d. -A PROVIDENCE READER . SATVaDAY WITH A TEENAGE DA\JGBTE& ,.., ........ .u ....... to tltlakabellL BLOOMFIELD IULLS' DEAa BAFF.: 1 tlllDll ,_•ve Juat bad '4tt wortlt of H· perteace. Wuc ud see wltat bap- peaa. U )'Oii bear hoaa Mm agala (mo.t allkely), lubt U.at be re- pay SIM .... Uaea cool IL 11m Judce to Indlua clahns moat wives don•t want their b~banda la Jall and don't want a divorce. Tbty JUl't want their ln11ltanda to atop beaUni tbem. T.fle probaUon period• ranee ,.,_ llx moatba to a year. The jud1e telll the vlolenee-prone atu11en that ti they clobber their wives qa1D they'll have to aerve time. ·ozuLOOKJNG: J ll)el&. Tiie nu.. pmal Q'ltem la Amalea •eeda Oftdl ......... Wa ... of rHIM'n.f •akea a peat deal of aenae. Br•t•lltJ' aad 19'· carcendcm,.... make people aa- arler ad mGN 4etenablea &o '"let eftll." WUt II aeedecl II re- ubllltldba. Are you soine to sleep all day? •• Who Hid you could use my balr spray? .. Clean the d.i.s- bea off the table ... Tum down that radio •• ·"•re you made your bed? • . Tha skirt ls too abort ••• Your closet ls a me11 ..• Stand up •fl•laht-• .Somebody bas to go to tbe it.ore. . .Quit chewing .,our pm like tbat. . . Your hair ii too bushy ••. I don't care if everybody elae does have one ••. Turn down tbal radio ••. Han you done JOQr homework? •• Doa't slouch .•• You dtd.D't make YGUT bed .•. Quit banclnt on the piano ... Why don't you iron It youraelf! •. Your fl.D&emalla are too loq. •. iooat it up in tbe dic- tionary. . .sit up 1tralgbt. . .Get off that phoae. • . Why did you ever buy that record? .. Take the dog out .•. You fortot to dust that t.b!e ... You've been in the bat.bn>om long enouih ... Turn off that radio and to to sleep. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I went with· a very cbarmin& man for six months. He treated me like a queen and l waa in heaven. He s~e or marriace. (I was widowed two years ago, be lost his wife about tbe same time). Last week, he borrowed $400 from me to pay for bis mother's defital bill. Yesterday I learned hLs mother died 10 years ego. To- day he informed me that his former girlfriend is in town and be can•t see me for at least a month. What d~ this sound like to you? -BAFFLED IN What are the do's and don't.8 of .. teaching your child about the · birds and the bees? Let Ann Lan- ders 's new booklet, "How, Whal. Thia aame Judie sentences people CCJDvicted of minor ol- lenses to wort at comqiunity pro- ject• in.stead of lettla& them DEAR ANN LANDERS: WW you 'prilit 1ometbin1 that ap- peared in the Rhode Jaland Churchman? It really made me atop and tblnk. Perhaps other re- Capricorn ~augh Now SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 12 By SYDNEY OMA.RR · ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19): Spiritual mat· tera command more-than-usual attention. Ques- Uon of "why am I here .. could surface. You're ulted to justify actions. to bring into focus your ft\81 desires, needs. TAUBUS (April 20-May 20): Mysterious event, happening tends to dominate. Hidden Ulatters, the occult intrigue. If you want ~swers, persist. Gain cooperation or partner, mate. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Be ready for change, dialogue, compliment from member of opposite sex. Accent on contracts, agreements, surprise "nomination". . CANCER (June 21-July 22): Seek peace trithin personal and professional families. Make intelligent concessions without abandoning prin· dples. Domestic change, adjustment is indicat· ed. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Look beyond the im· mediate -realize your potential is alive and ticking. See as is. not through haze or wishful thinking. Love ii ln picture. VIaG0 (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Key now is to stick to facts, to collect data, to get money's worth, to rejed substitutes for quality. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0 ct. 22): Highlight ability to perceive future trends. Get finger on pulse of public. SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov 21) Accent on col- lections, payments, reaching for full financial polenlial. advantage•. Wearing Another day 1one and not once dJd 1 say ... I love you ... Dear Lord, foraive me. - ANONYMOUS DEAllPBOVIDENCE:Tlaank Hearts on Their Heads SAGITJ'ARIUS (Nov. 22·Dcc. 21 l · You sense what is to occur ; you can be ut right place at right time. CAPRICORN (Ot·c 22 Jan 191 You are joyous as result of .. confidential report·•. Em- phasize ability lo laugh, to be flexible. Mark Traynor,. New York beauty expert. has designed something heartwarming for Valentine's Day the heart-shaped hairdo with makeup to match. Left is "Flowering Hearts" (her eyes are closed) and right, "Evening Hearts." AQUARIUS (J an. 20-Fcb. 18) Break with tradition could be in offing. Money wish 1s closer to Culftllment than you might realize. PISCES (Feb. 19-Marc'h 20)· Prestige on upswinJt. Views. feelinizs are vindicated. Maidens FrpmB1 Make Camp To fund a snow camp in Mareb for the· N aUon of White Buffalo Indian Maidens~,. the Huntington Beach YMCA Indian Maidens will sponsor an art auction. The event will take place at 7 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 26, at the Robinwood School. _Ad- mission is $2. Anticipating the fun at camp are Carlynne Juergens (left) and Jill Wilson. Spirits Exorcised NOME. Alaska (AP) -Lin· stay sober lo help each other. It coin a.od Emily Milligrock are in has been the hardest thing we their mid·40s. own a two· haveeverhadlodo, andlhething bedroom home and a late-model we are proudest of." pickup truck, have reasonably Fluent in English, the Milli· good health and take a two-week grock.s speak their Yupik Eskimo annual vacation. lanfuage at home and prefer Statistically, they come close w a r us and seal meat to to being average Americans. beefsteak and bacon. Except that Uiey are Eskimos They married in their teens who beat the botUe after 20 years like most of their ~ntemporaries ofalcobollsm. and find themselves in the They kicked the habit in a town generation caught. between the where more than ·40 percent of their relatives. friends and old village ways of their an· ceston and the new ways of tbe neighbors have serious drinking white men who rounded this problems, where there is no drug h clcl town durt th t or alcoholism treatment center, rams • e ng e um and where drinking forms the of the century gold rush. basis or the only social activity Their children cannot speak outside the churches and the Eskimo and do not know bow to television sets. carve or sail the walrus-bide Along the way they Jost one of skin boats which dominate Lin- tbeir six children to crib death. coin's life. Another son was found dead at . Most of their friends still •the age of 22 floating in founder ln the cross-currents of Falrbants• Cbena River for re-the changing culture which uons which still have not been almost drowned the Mllllgrocks. determined. Because they have been on the A dauehter is mentally re-waeon for seven years, they are larded and lives with foster viewed with contempt by many parentl in Anchorage, and the companions of their youth who Mllligrocks spend their vacation came from the same roots and visiting her. now find themselves strangled During those two Cuny de-by them. · cadea when they lived from one The Mllllgrock home is warm bo~tle to the next they bocked and comfortable in this treeless several households' worth of land trapped seven months a furniture, a piece at a time, to year in Winter•• dark. subzero pay for liquor. Often Emily's arip. A modem couch and color mother kept them alive by spoon-televlalon Ht abare places of feeding them soup as they lay honor with a living room abed too bung-over and sick to workbench stacked wltb prised f~U for themaelvea. Llncol.o tUIU and a lntricate array of ·~t days In Jail~ uoa. earviq tooll. , .. And then I woke up oae day A bandlome handmade table alter • two-week, bout •Wbtn I and the bounty spread atop 11 Ls couJd.n•t Am ember anytblq, testlmoa.J to the I amily's sut>- and I found that nerythlna In the 1ilteoce llfestJle. house was cone -the new Because tb1I LI a 0 d.ry" home, wubinl maclllne. all the tltcben the coffetpOt ii always on tbe appliucas, the lvotJ-earvlq stove. too1-we JMeded to eam a Urine. Tbe JIUU1rocb entertain evUYtbinf we had, .. Kn. llllll· themMlwa with televillon, visit.. aroek remembers. inl their r.andcldldNn, and an 0 1---..... ~~-,t.o~..._ .. t_ _._ _...... w ---m&KI .-::va.ur ocou-iu M.1VY1.e. " e atay as and When to Tell Your Child About Sex," give you the ground rules. For your copy send 50 cents in coin, along with a long, stamped. •elf·addreued " envelope, to Ann Landera, f.O. 8ox MOO. Ellln, Ill. 80120. Club Dates Calendar :: : UNJVEBSITY WOMEN: The Newport-Costa Mesa AAUW will bear Dr. Eileen LothamenJ>eak on Fellowships at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 16. at Great Western Savinas and Loan, Newport Beach. Dr. Lothamer, the 1963-64 AAUW fellowahlp recipient. la a university professor of Eqliah. OFnCEllS WIVES LEAGUE: The Orange County ll'OUP will tour Old Town ln San Diego on Wednesday, Feb, 16. A chartered bus wlll depart from the El Toro Marine Officers' Club at 9 a.m. and will leave the city at3p.m. WOMEN'S ARCHITECTURAL LEAGUE: Members of the Orange County group will meet I 1. . .. at 10 a.m. Thursday, Feb. 17, at the home of Mrs. Harold Pastorious, Laguna Beach, for a gourmet · . cooking demoDBtration and participation class. · . DUSTY WINGS: Former stewardesses will meet at 7;30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 17, at the Marengo lmtitule of Beauty, Irvine. to tour the facWties. More information ls available from presi- dent Karen Kiper, 551·5234. LAGUNA BEACH: The 14th Annual Winter Festival opens a 17-day run on Friday, Feb. 18. Tbe event will feature a Fabulous 50 Faire at the Festival of Arts grounds. Kick-off activities include a Canadians and visitors reception from 2 to 4 p.m . the first day. Exact dates. times and locations or arts and crafts shows. music and sports events and are available from the Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce. 356 Clenneyre, Laguna Beach, 92651, telephone 494-1018. EXECUTIVES' SECRETARIES, INC.: The Orange County chapter will meet at 6:30 p.m. for cocktails and 7: 30 p. m . for dinner on Wednesday. Feb. 16, al Club 33, Disneyland. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Mary Herning, Emsl& Ernst, 547·8371. CIT\' OF HOPE: The Orange County Lupus Chapter will hear Bob Duff of the Orange County Institute for Transactional Analysis speak on stress reduction and family problem solving at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 17, al the SoroplJmist Clubhouse, Santa Ana. · Volunteers arc needed to help o~rate the Lupus Thrift Store in Garden Grove. More in· formation is available from chapter president Mrs. Kenneth Goldenstein. 897·2632.. Peering DEBORAH Usedom and her mother, Mrs. Dorothy Usedorh, df Newport Beach returned from a month tour of South America. Miss Usedom, a graduate of California State University, Long Beach. then left for Guadalajara for a semester of Spanish "studies at the Unlversidad Jaime Balmes de Occidente. ACCEPTING an in· temsbip at Sonoma State Hospital to complete graduation require· ments for her BA degree is Kandis Lynn Kraushaar of Newport Beach. She is a senior recrea- tion administration ma· Around jor at Califorrua Stale University, Chico. Mi ss Kraushaar primarily will be work- ing with adult mentally retarded female resi- dents in the only female ward on Program 9, the behavior adjustment pro- gram. She is the' daupter or Mr. and Mra. Carl Kraushaar of Newport Beach. FINE WALLPAPER ~~ 50°/o OFF BUY DIRECT & SA VF CO'iTA Mf'iA WALLPAPER BAZAAR l>•IS-9297 or l,4~-710 I TAX SALE SAVE 5200-5400 IALDWIM PIAMOS.()l•AMS FACTORY FIMAHC.,_ I \ eoln compuy. That day we far •W7 from ban u we can • . • Humanist I c Ca re' ,_· _•_topped __ -_etber~, an_d_now~--~-•tt.._ .. _ .... _Mn.~llillllfOC.....,__-L--~- . . ~ C:ODlultut, where abe A8 ~ DIVO&CBD wllae t Wiii and wMl 1 aecut.ed tbe .s.ip for motheraftwollttleahil, .,., 4o1a~ TbeJ &r• tbelntenllvecareunlt. abe matnttined ber own awanaf Jam...._ ••1 ••• able to Jn· home a.Del ra.lled ber I am t.odaf: lbe 1114. ~· my t4eu on dauahWl-.bile WOltinl s 'b • ~red l t 1 h • r . pau.nt Deldl Jnto the d• full Ume ud att.endln1 hu1band of ooe year, alp. Jt wu •very ·~tta. eolle&etull Ume. John.~.. m• fYiaf Job.'' ebo ncaUed. ••t ba4r woeaerrut l.O atNmd · la to"-~~:----~~~ She a&o ierved u dine· frtenda "'° belped mt lo yery ve of my toroflllll'MltMre. m1 ~role. lly wort.•• ~.,,.. cletmnlnecl to Gilb' recn4 ta that t aaw «;i~fllllliiiiiiliiiiii;. UPHOLSTllY reach her_ 10,al-a lllJ cblldrWIOlittle dur-:w muta elf public bealtb• lnl that um .. ID •••Ith car• ad· .. la r«Ntpect. th~ mlnbhatlob fro• .... _.. mature and VCLA tUCb ber AID• mor-.Ni .... ~'l'b91 ~::- .btuoe •• on.. eom· _.,.,....llloat!Mi• am~""- ..._. i,, Mr,...... mlon-mum1. 1.~c=: .... S!!l&l:;l.2~"-J. · ~ -••ne, alwa,1 kn•'! \ .. t I r .. GIALS BOUTIQUE MDSs•t. .. -1 .. 1• CLIAIANCI SAU ~i>---..-.owo. w. ... ....... JllM,Off OI~ .... MIWAmY.U •••• .... ~:::::;... .. 'a:l ...... Yates Music Center 61 I 11tf1re liliM-'4MOH 0,.. IN• ......_ & M IM { 1 . . IOOMER IMSIDE WOODY ALLEN I FUNKY WINKERIEAN by Wm. F. lrowa mcl Mtl c ... -nte~ wiu. 'bu GIF1-WW' rT Pt.G~? bf Joe Mm llw by TOM lati'* THE VIRTUE OF VERA VALIANT DOOLEY'S WORLD ~ur eyes, yo0r Ii ps. your bod deVine J ff.fed' rne,de.ar, like ~ ,·nrage wine J ' j ( DR.SMOCK . 5'l"C'ING.5 FROM 1\4€ . n I Cf10i'16 = ~E MAsTER 5Pf.;S: THE PARENTS OF A GURU ARE TWICE 8LE5.5ED ... f'OR IHEQ NOf OOW HAVE A ~ILD , Bui n.E~ ALSO MADE A PROPHET Olll 1JE TANK McNAMARA j NANC~ DEAL! by Jeff Miiier & BiD-Hinds MIP U6T~Yctl f\.0-~WW fVUR TIM~S. by &nie BushmiUer SHE LIVES NEAR THE AIRPORT AND GORDO MOON MULLINS ® MERE COMES THAT NEW GIRL I MET AT SCHOOL I WANT HER TO ~E EL AT HOME l.1 TODAY'S CIDSSWDRD PUZZLE UNITED Feature Syndicate r11urway s Puaie So•vt'<:I ACROSS 1 Mlner•ls 6 Most recenl 10Mlnor iiroe>M• Ulnflames 15 Extent of sutlace 1&Tenn1s score 17 "-"'•' btoleti. -·--19Makea mourn fut tollnd 2onw ... o.o- 9" 2tJamtanl Rod 23 Gear ptrta 25 Knllfl(s tit.le 2eP•cetwe 21 Ortrino ar• 29TooCJt P*1 :31 ~tino wt• 33No4ewn 34 Apertment 1111negor: tftCorNI • :JS Tracta for publieuae 40•-ASor19 ln a.ty Heeft"' .C2Wefthet ltMarcr. aeteMill ••Gambling 45~'":owr.. watd •7Sprinllld wlthNaCt 49 Kind ol dog lnl01ma1 500bllll~d S2W•lhtttd Vat ~JRa~eged 54 "8r1vo1-. 1n Me11lco S7Soc 69Sunken miasll• sheller• e1 Military VIPs 64 Realr•1ned 17 Frenc~ ~ ti& $peculahon 70 Welah n1me 11 Rew1er1· wltdCt'f 720t alotus 13 P0t1&1gue .. COin• 7' ()tlhgellan 75~vp DOWN I Diplomacy 2 Atadl9- tance 3Notln eii· c .. sot2 word• ·--ci. chift• 5 Treclt employees ecanedlan pentn,u&a! AbCJr. 7Rlvefof Twkey 8 Dldttt.: c'P'As ms s c R 14 I' II l A A f'4 N E L 0 p r N c l 0IWWE c A 8 0 T AC • 1 0 E E L • R E 0 S "r 14 N EISH 1• A~ I C A TIEllt s-o AH CE~ p .. 0 I SIAll Ls-:. E iA T ~ l .. I' S-P A llS-T 11 "p Ac; A I N 5 T flVIS I I LE I C l l f R-S TJAIT I C f Wf .OR f HO R N I DOC VOT EO 1:1"' • '!. U lit.NU RE Ill" I ED Eocm I llAN ~ l "D f' 'Sf T t~S ----- SuNlll 43 Multi-col 9 Vichmlzs-2 ored labfc wosds 4 6 tnetticient Io Egyptian 48 Chooses entettatner 51 Copied a 11 Secln• drawinQ i 2 Egg-Mlaped 54 lewd 13 8qlillcaoce glance J 8 Start a trip: maker 2 worda 55 Foual!e 22 Envelop 56 Chou·· - 24 Arlrona na-Ch1Mse ti.es VIP 27Draws 58Handc<Wer- behind ing 2&Conect 60 Successlul 30 Monatw: 2 words Med. 82 Ages . 32 Long·talle<t 63 Aloof pet· Oil IOI\ 35 Partt otayed 65 Batflsheba's 37 Put out to husband =again G!Klssbrlelty: 38 unit Informal 39 U119C*illed 69 Kind ol number plane· In· 4 f Meal IOIM'Cle lofmaJ PEANUTS Ci1I (I11IIf111/1111, 1tf 111 l l t1111f 11 lll11 t/I( f I/t i• I ''I f f; t tit /I • 11,t1l111/1ll1 1t11t1f1 ''"'''''''''Q' ,,,,,, 1 If If I ( 1 I I 1 /' t • \1I1 I t ,,, ,,,,,,,,, ,,, ',,,,, ,, . ......:. ·-,,, 1?, {'& ~ --~- JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS MiSSPEACH by Charles M. Schuh ALL Rh;Hl, TH.l.NK l{OJ MR. PILCT TH~T W.},S ~ \f. R< 1:7E<E5nN<, •. ~~. 1 ~'" ~5 ~: f '(• ".~ ~ . - ' 1· ~ ;~ ==~~ ~·: .. :, . Ci • •• c;p I . :~ . ( ( .L~' I .:::---.,. ~-.. ,.,, .__ ______ _, ., by Harold Le Doux IT CE.RTAINL'I' WOOlO! THE DOCTOR J WANT TO GET 'IOtJ MOC AY5 I CAA ON ™E TENNIS COURT eE OUT OF FOR THAT ~URN MATCH! HERE IN A I NEED THE MONEY! COUPLE OF CAY5! by Tom K. Ryan by Mel 11, 1971 So jf ~·11 be my Valentine Just say the word- and I'm >tXJrclin~iti~ "ine DAILY PILOT .., by George Lemont IF Tl-le. ~ TO~ ieuti.J 1£> CL.O.Sf:O, 601~ n4E OIJ~ ,..0 R.AC.Kf ~~2JA. THE GIRLS . ·: . : .; .• •' ·' .. .. ... .. .• •• •• .. ·: ; .. • .. .. . ?•. ' t ' . ... ,• •• "Of course, 1he thing about cats is they a!Wiys maJco you feel . they're puttina up with you.~ .. DENNIS THE MENACE ·~ . ,. ... ~u . .; .. fl' '!. I . ' ( llf DM.Y PtLOT Frld!f. '!bru!ry 11. 1rn Pl.IBUC NOTICB . . PUBUC NOl'ICE PUBLIC ADMINISTRATOR SEMl·ANNUAL REPORT TO THE HONORABLE BWUCE W. SUMN&R, PROBATE JUDGE OF THE SUPERIOR COURT OFTHESTATEOFCALIFORNIA, INANO FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE: JAMES E. HEIM, Publlc Administrator of said County, respectfully makes this return of all estates of dece- • dents which have come Into his hands for the term commencing July 1, 1976, and end I no December 31, 1976. Name of Decedent A-88088Wllllam Edgar Selwyn A-88162 Richard G. Pugh A 88181 Rubin Ort la Medel, aka Ernesto MeQana A-87359 Lucille H. Burbank A-88195Charles R. Long Sr. A-88196 Esther Dagmar Howard A-88197 Mary Josephine Day A-88198 EmestOness A-t8199 Pauline H. Porter A-88245 Helen Florence Alexander aka Helen M. Alexander 7643-019 Robert Braucher Sptbnas A-fl/ll3J11 Herbert Kurt Liebert 7643-020 George Joseph Beck, Jr. 1~ Mvrtre LMJOMS A-88178 Linda Mae La Chapelle .A-8821-iMaudtMarlon Riese, aka Marlon Littlefield Rlese,ekaM.Marlon Llttlefleld A.a8123May Anna MacKenzie ~Della A. Reynosa Franklin Kenneth Morris A-ta501 Agnes M. Blakeman A-18502 Henry Kechter 7643-mlEdWardJ. Young 7643-024 Harley John White 76"3-0'lS Lottie Soulller 7~ Hector Castro 16'GOV Antran Ngoc, aka Ngoc An Tran ~-88388 Erlka Erna Henderson A-38379 Ruby Ernestine Sleuw A-t8SS1 Mary Elizabeth Ringler 7643-029 Rebecca loslf A-88S46FranclsAmoldRlchards A.a8864 Lawrence Stull A.a886 Hattie Gertrude Cote ~-8888S Barbera Ann Boyd 7643-030.Arthur F. Stillwell 7643-028 TIM De Leon A..eM4J7 Albert M. Guthelnz A-871• L.etanc:t Stanford M•rt In A--Ludl'9 L. Schnekler 7MJ.«n Thoma$ G4lorve Pond A-89072 HlldaM. Moulton A-'8890 Annie Sf IOWden A-19179 Ruby E. S1"9UM, eka Ruby AllatStl'auhS A .. 1 .. Mae L. Oof'9 A-19177 Ecbwdo Reyes MaMIO A-19179 AurellO R 1¥era A 11949 Anna F. Van EYera A-89066 Fannie Harbison A-89286 Gladys Manon Parent _A-t9287 Mary Newton, ... Mary I . Newt~ eka • Murtlt Elli.a Newton A-89329<:armen Evans 7643-032 Rot.rt Ross A..e90J~Whlt9 A-19-MO Matlfou Troescher Wltton A-892A6 Leslie Baltey Jr. A-t9538Gerb'ude Ruth Perkins 7643-033 Hel-Gertrude Toti ?M3-034 Oeta .Azalla Jaqwtte A""'5S Larry Frederic Rose A-19519 Richard Hudel Holmes 7643-038 Lydia Datil Vernon A-19139Julla Louise ~rth /4A9'14'0 Magdalene Rotlne wefu ,76'3-03.S Honor K. Henry 7"°'°" a.tty H. OleSley : 76'S-0370eoroe F. Hamrick "'3-o39 earl .,.ystrom ~""83.S Shlrley L. Siok A-8956-4 Eugene earl Flower A-e9610Helen H. 81alr •. A.a7742 Marlon Saka Aoelllnger. aka Berthe Marton . Roetllnger.n• Bert Marian Aoellln91r Adn Harvey E. Kel•Y A-89964 Vee Robinson A-89850 Katherine L. Messengw A.-89963 Geofve C:OS., alee W. E. Cole, ak•~ Earl Cote, aka Georot W.Cote ~.e9965Wllllam Francis FrleKh A-19729 YMtt:Y Paulson STA re OF CALIFORNIA . COUNTY OP ORANGE ) ss: ) Date Letters llS.-d 7-2-76 $ 7. 9-76 • 7-13-76 7-9-76 7-14·76 7-1-i-76 7-1-i-76 7-14-76 7-14-76 7-16-76 7-26-76 7-22-76 7-27-66 7-27-76 8-4-76 8-6-76 8-2·76 8-S-76 8-9-76 8-9-76 8-9-76 8-11-76 1-11-76 1-11-76 8-18-76 8-18-76 8-19-76 8-U-76 9-7-76 9-14-76 9-3-76 9-13-76 9-14-76 9-14-76 9-14-76 9-14-76 9-23-76 t-30-76 ... 76 10. 1-76 10. ... ,. 10. .. 76 10.13-76 10.12-76 10.1S-76 10.13-76 10.14-76 10.22-76 10.ll-76 10.?S-76 10.21-76 10.29-76 11· 1-76 11-8-76 11-15-76 11-15-76 11-22-76 12· 1-76 12• 1-76 12-2·76 12-10.76 12-.. 76 12-.. ,. 12-.. ,. 12· 9-76 12· 9-76 12-13-76 12·1~16 12-10-76 12-10.76 12-15-76 12-20.76 12·29-76 12-15-76 12·21-7' 12-Jl.76 U-2.4-7' 11· 11! .:!! =~ 5,..: Estate ·-3,335.35 $ 3,33S.35 63,000.00 "°" 521 .2-i S21.24 44,651.45 19,3S7.76 910.40 910.40 1,150.00 1, 14'.4S 1,383.48 1,383.48 3,647.29 3,647.29 4,846.00 4,072.07 884.77 884.77 336.SS 336.SS 543.90 543.90 187.00 112.00 146.23 146.23 32,4-42.00 3,215.55 56.467.SS 32,603.66 39,024.18 3S,685.S8 321.0S 301.03 572.83 572.83 3,53.5.22 3,SlS.22 1,293.00 271.06 189.10 6.00 247.00 245.00 153.18 153.18 1.00 1.00 14'.13 149.13 124,307.03 10,816.54 oil,303.00 192.80 4,513.17 4,S13.17 56.78 56.78 78,743.82 78,743.82 764.10 76".10 1,995.48 1,995.48 1,000.00 "°" 214.68 214.68 7.80 7.80 3,926.29 3,926.29 7,974.93 7.97 ... 93 25,000.00 23,881).47 8.89 4.89 733.00 708.32 J.e-"6.06 22,712.84 1,129.7S 914.50 1,S29.75 821.16 "4.12 99C.12 )AIQ.00 475.4' 1'4,321.00 20,1SS.38 40,'17.00 1,086.38 ~$21.12 2,521.12 87'.52 860.52 1,100.00 "°" 186.48 186.41 1,621.0S 1,621.0S 1,129.00 79.37 12,428.00 3,814.36 2,6'9.81 379.16 1n.15 . 171.15 116.70 116.70 15,125.00 101 .20 6,013.00 1,335.78 36.04 36.04 555.79 555.79 1M5.00 + 1.SO uo 1-i9.56 12.56 55.95 55.95 .92 .92 2,CMt.02 672.09 8,677.00 6,189.SS 8,311.25 8,311.25 20,194.00 1,311.00 72-i.OO 276.00 1,971 .1' 1, 16".02 1,161.29 '14.01 1,057.1'9 .U0.23 .... so 102.10 12.,711.11 u~• 1·· r I 'I·-i; _1.!: ~ ~J'gi '!w 11 cslt M I·-il4W'5 ~Cu.i i! :z:E cl ,..c cl~ " ·-c1&1.!c S 2,383.SS $ 951.SO $ 9S1.SO "°" "°" 63,000.00 7.34 513.90 513.90 6,329.85 13,027.91 38,321.60 611.15 299.2S 299.25 900.00 24'.4S 250.00 284.60 1,098.88 1,098.88 804.10 2,843.19 2,843.19 1,oilS.79 2,646.28 3,420.21 lS0.29 73-i.48 734.48 152.62 183.93 183.93 297.oi2 246.48 246.48 2.00 110.00 185.00 "°" 146.23 146.23 137.30 3,078.2S 32,304.70 11,060.13 21,S43.S3 4S,407.oiS 4,647.20 31,038.38 34,376.98 199.59 101.4' 128.46 74.48 498.3S 498.3S 149.13 3,386.09 3,386.09 2.00 269.06 1,291 .00 2.61 3.39 186.oi9 198.0S 46.9S 48.95 "°" 153.18 153.18 4 1.00 1.00 4-149.13 149.13 5,541 .91 S,274.63 118,765.12 189.30 3.50 41 ,113.70 309.11 4,204.06 4,204.06 56.78 4-4 3,948.22 74,795.60 74,795.60 "°" 764.10 764.10 830.47 1, 16S.01 1, 16S.01 -0-4 1,000.00 4 214.68 21-i.68 .73 7.07 7.07 79.00 3,847.29 3,847.29 932.24 7,042.69 7,042.69 104.00 23,776.47 2-i,896.00 .11 4.78 8.78 "°" 708.32 733.00 2, 132.27 20,640 •. 57 32,313.79 813.38 1,016.37 1.016.37 65.00 756.16 849.SO 4 994.12 994.12 4 475.4-4 3.480.00 "67. 19 19,688.19 143,860.81 6.00 1,080.38 40,911.00 972.39 1,548.73 1,548.73 711.70 148.82 167.82 "°" 4 1,100.00 16.89 169.59 169.59 653.92 967.13 967.13 17.00 62.37 1,812.00 3n.43 3,.436.93 12.0S0.57 + 379.86 2,699.81 4 177.15 177.15 "°" 116.70 116.70 36.30 64.90 15,088.70 6$.00 1,270.78 5,948.00 -0-36.04 36.CM + 555.79 SSS.79 -0-4 1,'45.00 + 1.20 1.50 "°" 12.56 14'.56 -0-SS.95 SS.95 -0-.92 .92 -0. 672.09 2,(W2.02 M>.00 6,109.SS 8,SW.00 so.oo 8,261.25 8,261.25 1,a11.oo -0. 11;ea.oo -0. 276.00 72A.OO -0-1, 161.29 1,971.1" -0. 91".02 1.164.01 15.00 .us..23 1,CM2.19 11.00 685.70 m .50 150.90 6,"9.90 12,567.28 PUBLIC Nal'ICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOVS IU"Nl!!U NAMll ITATllMENT T ... totlowi119 pe"°" " dOlr'O bv•I nenu: PLUSH PUPPY PET SHOP, '616 W.>tmln•l•r.G G .. CA~ ChatlH Litt......,.,,,, n1• Park SI .. Westmlntler CA 97683 Jucly Litt!.-. M74 Peril SI , IWHlm '"''•r, CA t?t.83 Tiii\ IMl~INU fl CondUcWd bY 1111 1n ldtv1o..e1 JuclyLltt1.- Tllls JI•~..-! we• filed with ltlt County Cltrll of Oren99 County on Ja 11uary 14, 1'77 PVBUC NOTICE PU.UC NO'l'ICB PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NO'l1CE NOTICI TOCltlOITOH FICTITIOUS•USINESS SU,lltlOlt COUllTOllTHI! NAME STATEMI NT PUBLIC NOTICE STATE Ol'CALlllOltNIA l'Olt ll\t followl1>9 petM)ll ii cloinq busl THI COUNTYOl'OltANOa """"'' ........... JAGUAR IGTI. 1H w llllt SI . l'ICTITIOUSIUSINau Estatt ol LENA a. THOMl"SON. C.O•taMtH.C.t..'162'7 NAMISTATIU1UENT 0.CHMd. Glenn Torre\, 400S''>W Ave 4f, Lot TN fotlowtt>Q cie<san I• dOll\9 bull· NOTICE IS HEllEBV GIVEN to IN A119t1H , CA ~S neu es: credlton of the 6bove namtcl ~I Thi\ bu$1~\ IS CondlK led Or an In-.8 A II 8 AR A'S S 1-l 0 P P I NG 11\al a lt !M•M)llS l\avlno d al-... lfdl dl•tdu•I SE RI/ ICE 30)7 Java R~d. Co•I• -.. Id oec.-.t ar• reQllll"td to tll• GI..,., Tor,., Mew. C.lllornl•921>21> !Mm, with -ntUnary vowchen, In Th" ......... nt WI\ !tied Wlll't ,... B••b••• H. 8er9tr, 3037 J eve '"' effk t of Hit Clwlr of Ille ...... - Count'( Cler' of Or•nQe County on Roed,CoSl.IMHa,C.hfomlat26l6 tlUed c~.orto_,..,.ti.m,wttflllle Jan11ery 24, 1tn . This DUll~s Is condUCted by an ,,.. ftKH&.,y ~tot,,. Yndt"""9d "1"'4 dlvld111I. ' 11 Ille office of MARTI NEAU ANO Publlsl>td 0.•"9f Co.t\I 0.lly Pilot, Bar1»ra H Ber11tr l(NUOSON, Att.rntyJ al ~. 11• Jen, lt. Ft!> •.11. ''· 1911 Thb .1.1 ......... 1 w.-ltllCI wllll t .... Wll1hl .. 8 1.0. I.OS Anoelff, Qlltoml• ?I0-11 Co11111y Cieri< or Oranllf County on to011. wl>lcl> I•"'-Pleet of llutl-ef ------------1 January 31, ltn. ,,,. undersl.-d In all m.lterl Mf1alft. PUBLIC NOTICE . """ lno '° 1M utat•ol "'Id dKt49n\, wtlllln PubllShecl °'-Coa~t O••IY Piiot. fo41r lft0tllh$ •fie< Ille first puOllc.lloft s...ttn Februarv 4, I I, 11, lS, 1977 2IO· Of ll>ls notice P'ICTITIOUS •USINtU Dated J•nuarv "· t.-r7. NAMUTATaMl .. T PUBLIC NOTICE MARJOltlE M.WARN I -' Adml"4dretrh1 ne~:!~ollowlno --s ... do nt t>u.. l'I CTITIOUS •USINISS of"" Estate~ ~I PLAZA ANNIE'S ., Plar• !;Quart, NAMIESTATIMI NT MAftTl::::::;;.~·l(NUOSOtf Oranq•. C•llforn1• 921>1>1> The 101tow1nq perl()f'l 1Sdol1u;i buslnH s All 1 ..._ lllcl(I p.,,.,,.,, 1'119'1 e .. , Gltn. 0 1 OnMYI a S..nt•AM,Calllornla9270\ OLYMPIC CAA PET SERVICE i:::lts~IN 1'"'· GfO•llt Parham, •9111 Brae Glen, 160'9 Aodwood StrM!t, Fou111eln V111ey'. C.llto"::r:~17 Sant•Al\6,C•lllorno••nos c;.at11orn1.,'1'110I T 1• 11UI SJI 2'00 Tiiis bus"'"" Is conouctlld by • LeAov Fr•nk Gu e ll, 16091 A~.;,.,.tnl ... ·....,.rtlttr•h1• lit""'"' ~rlne,.nlp. Aoawood Stru t. Fo..n1el11 \/alley, Publls"-d Oranoe Coa•t Oally Piiot Ille-I Pe""'m C.llforn la9l7CJI ' Tiiis tt•tement .,., llltcl will! ttte T~h buslntu Is cONlucted bv an Ill· January 21, 21,....S Ft bf'lllry '· '1, 1tn County Ct•rk ol Or•nte County on dlvlauat 241·77 Februery4, 1971. Lt lloyFrenli:Garcle · PUBLIC NOTICE ~,.., Tiiis •••••menl WH flied 1111111 the Publlsr.d0!'"""9"COHIO•lly llllot. county Clerk of Orange c.o...-111 on ------------ Ftll, 11, II, 2S. -Marc fl '· 1911 Jenuary 11 1971 s 1'117 • • "7tSCl ------------1 PubllslH!d Or""9f Coast Dally ;{llol PUBLIC NOTICE Je<1uary 21,21,anc11'ebfWry4, 11, 1~~77 $.~l NOTICI TO,.lft~NS INTlftlSTIDtNTNI llTATI O~MAI llA"Nllt,OICIAJIO. No11<t1<11t,..b¥O•"'en 1oall per.onl ~ . DAILY Pn.OT 11$ Calley's 50-foot C"UStom sloop Sol&ttioo wltbGmileato&o. With a lead of 100 to 200 miles over the rest ol the 2'·boal neet; Rattim• is mU!Di it no contest ln the Marlna del" ReJt.o Puerto Vallartarace. M tJl DOOD Tbunday. the es.toot 1Joop wu 1wlnlinC past Cabo S'an Lucu and bead1n1 across the Gulf d. ff fiJQ=~===i*i~==~ Calltomla with 298 miles to 101n tho 1,125-mlle race. Aa yet, Rqthne'a buge elapsed time lead has .iven her oo advantaaeoa \ha bandlca,p scale. Her Dooo poa!Uon Thundt.y placed bot •lxth In Clua A and19tboveralloocorrededtime. THE CORSECl'ED TDIE leader In the International Oftabor• Rule Fleet· was William Crew'• ~-foot. aloor. Cosper despite the fact that abe la aal • tnc wltb a Jury rl& alter beln1damaaed in •trona winds the day before .• UG1DIE'8 SJDPPER Bill WbJte reported winds of 14 knots from the northwest. but the news from farther out in the IUlf was not good. Tbe escort vnael Sonrisa, halfway across, said the wind was five knota from the northeast. Thia would indicate that the race would slow considerably as the yacbtamoveacrosstheguJI. Performance Handlcap Racln1 Fleet leader for tbe third straight day was Butcher Boy II, a 31-foot ya~l skippered by JobnSn.oob. · Tbe closest yacht to Ragtime was ._ ________ o_ ..... ____ .. _-_ ... _-_ • .n_. _________ Jacob Wood's Sorcery with a deficit of T&e y acht Vix en reported a crewman lajured with a separated shoulder but was continuing in the race. Thecrewmaowas notidenUfied. about 100 miles. Third wu John 'Doable Standard' Topless Bar Owner Riled TAMPA. Fla. <AP> -Lounge manager Jae Redner , whose topless go.go dancers are constantly getting arrested, says city officials were operating under a "double standard" when they allowed top· less dancing at a celebration in a city-owned ball. BOATING "These are the people who are prosecuting ua and saying that nude dancing is lowering our com· 111 munity standards. But It is all right when the girls ~0· r the dance for them," Redner said of the civic leaders who attended the annuill Gasparilla fesUval at Curtis Jllxon Hall this week. roELESS DANCERS AT aEDNE•-s Night Record Gallery have been anested hundreds of times alaoe --· Jut fall. · Nl&bt Gallery dancers Sharon Thomas and Kenna Hummon said they were hired to perform at the festival, wblch celebrates the deedl of Joee Gupar, a Robin Hood-like pirate. The eiJ'la, both in their 208, said they came on sta1e in sheer black negligee tops and bikini bot· toms to dance for some~ people dressed in pirate garb, many oI them prominent bualneaamen and oaliti I perso ea. Ml$ HUMMON SAID THE crowd urged them to shed th~ir tops, and the man who hired them told them a local judge in the group assured they wouldn't be arrested if they did. So the tops came off. . Capt. G. Pierce Wood of Ye Mystic Krewe of Gasparllla said in a prepared statement that his or- ganization "acknowledges that such action was cer· tainly la poor taste and hereby apologizes to the clty administration and to the citizens." Acting Mayor Lloyd Copeland said that arresu were unlikely in connection with the performance -although a topless dancer and the manager of the Night Gallery were jailed Tuesday night for the abowthere. · KA111LEEN SWEENY, 21, OF Tampa, was ar- rested Tuesday for the fourth time this month and was charged with nude dancing. Her bond was $2S2. Club manager Thomas G. Secchlarl, 35, was charged for the 37th time since last October for al- lowing the exhibition. His bond was $502. Police officials s aid no officers were in Curtis Hixon Hall when the hired dancers went topless. Cl· ty Atty. Henry Williams said that in his opinion a ci- ty ordinance banning topless dancing was not violated because the ordinance "applies to a com· mercial establishment. 1 ' Front Page AB HIT RECORD ••• doing it. I had such a bard time doing it. I wu sing· inl it i.D tears, this song was really bard for me." WREN ''TORN BETWEEN TWO Lovera" began iu steady climb up the charts, though, it became easier for Mrs. Magregor to reconcJle berseJ! to the song's theme. "I 'm an actress when I sing that song," she says, "I'm interpreting. 11 Mary may have to get used to sl1cb reconcllia· lions, because Ariola Records, noting the success of "Tom," has decided to releaae another Yarrow look Into the bedroom life of a young woman, "This Girl Has Turned Into a Woman. 11 HERE, TOO, JN THIS STORY of a etrl's first sexual experience, Mrs. Magregor was a little re· luctant. Again, she aays, she had to rely on lier act· ing skills because "the first lime I ever had sex it didn'ttummelntoa woman." · Mary bad wanted to release a more upbeat, rock and roll song from her "Tom Between Two Lovers'' album, but the executives knew a food tbina when they saw it. · "Well," she sighs, showinl she baa learned a Jot about the recOl"dlng industry already, "That's what they 're looking for." That? Dow's l)oub'letal,k Puzzles CONCORD, N.Jf. (AP) -After the New Hampehl.re Executive Coancll approved a $12,W contract for tbe 1overnor'1 com· mission on crime aDd dell.nquency, one coun· cUor ulled whether the next such crant "could be J)NHnt.t ln Enclllh. please." · Tbe cover leu.r aceompaoytnf tbe rrant aald that, amon• other thlnp, It would: .. DBV&LOP GROUPS OF evaal1t1on modalel tor ..veral t1J>M C>I procram• to con· 1.lat ol aopb.lltlcat.ed and quaotitaUftb' ortent. eel ruearch dealpa to be used ln evaluation prosrams. . "Jllltabliah mt.nhneJ data req_uire!Dentl u requlnd by tbe evaJuaUon .nodules and ..i tn pJ.a~= tb.rou.lb which a CODtlndal flow ol em cal data wsn be dired4ld toward the com '• evalaaUon 1talf. "lmrANJSR TllaOVGR '1'1111 UH ol com~ ana1yala modul• a bJlblJ em· pirJt&I &nd auantitatlve meaftl f« poUcy makento make declaiou about procr&ml. •• .A.pproyaJ WU ua.an.1moul. . . MISSION COMMUNITY ltOSlllTAL J_.,1,tm Mr, •ncl Mts_ Edward MaUfer, Ml" slon Vl•)o. girl .i_,•."71 Mr. and Mrs_ Byron BtnSOft, Uo11na Hlll1,b0v Mr. a nd Mn. Ronald Foote, Mission VleJo,boy J_,..,,,1w1 Mr. and Mr' Paul O'Aquannl. Mis. slon Vl•lo. bOV Mr. •nd Mn AOQer Ton1n1 MfHk>n lllt jo,glr• Mr a..a Mf\ 8rldlev C• .... Pa, CMI• MtM,bOV J ... ...,,,,. lt'11 Mr. and Mr\. H-••d JacoMon, El Toro,glrl J-ry1,1.-r1 Mr. end Mn . O.otld Ford, Ml\\lon lllejo,bOy Mr. and Mrs. Pttrld1 0 ',.lel, Oa11• Polnt,bOV Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Thompson, MIS• ••on VlelO. bov J.., .. ,..,n .1m Mr. and MrS-RuSYll Miller. Mission Vlt jo,glrl ) ...... ,,, IJ, 1'17 Mr. and Mr\ Jam .. 8 ri9'1am, LOQuna Hiiis. bov Mr. and M" urry C:OCl!run. S.an Juon C.Ol'1•W'O. qlrl Ja11u.,y IS. 1•11 Mr and M" Huqh MMllOCk, Mi>\lon lllejo. bOY Mr afld Mr~ lhoma\ ZOl>ll. Mo"ion \/ttjO, 9lrt Mr •n<I Mr~ GIM G.Jul"'' Mt~.,,iotl lltt(o.boy J••uery •• 1977 Mr, Incl Mr) JOM L•mo M f\\IOll II••· jo, boy Mr. a nd Mr~ Edward Winston, MIS· slon lllt lo. bOl' J•11uery 11.1n1 Mr. and Mr\ T11eooor~ 8orne. M1S· slon Ille lo. 91rl Mr. and Mr\ Edu;irao Jordan, Ml\ slon lllt lo. 91r1 Januery tt, tm Mr. and Mrs 1-llaeo Vamamoto, L•ouna Hiiis, 9lrl Januery Jil, 1'11 Mr. and Mrs Rpbtrl O'C.llllQl>en, MIHlon Viejo. qlrt Mr end Mrs Kennell! Zlllrer, Min IOI'! lllt jo, boy Mr. afld Mrs. Bruce Cook, Min ion llleJo,boy Janun.,21, 1tn Mr. and Mrs. HUQI\ Yan~•v. Mi\slon Viejo, boy J......,yU,"" Mr. end Mrs. Jo fin Kennln9lon, L•tllfla Hiiis, boY Mr. end MrS-~rtld Cremer, Mluloll Vlt jo,911'1 J-"u.1m Mr. and Mr .. Zinn Boudr"u•, Mis· slon Vlt 10. Q1rt ""'"""' tS. "" Mr. al'ld Mrs. Forr"1 Ltllhtll, MIS· slon llltl0, 11ir1 SOUTHCOUT COMMUNITY HOS,.ITAL J_,-,1t,1''7 Mr. a..O Mn. Gary .. le, Utune Nl9uel, 110y J..,_y11,1•n Mr and M,.. Edward Sena. El Toro, boy. J__.,.,,,..,., Mr. e nd Mra. Oent1lt Jemn , L1guna HlllS, boy. J~l7.m7 Mr. end Mr .. ICelly h lrd, Mlulon Viti•, boy. J-rv•.ttn Mr.•"" Mr\, J~k c.ttte, S.11 Ju.n C•Plttrano, bOY l'ellt•ry1,1m Mr. Ind Mn. Aodnay Hint, MIHIOn VleJo,9lrl. Mt . a nd Mrt. JICIC Ewln9, C•Plltreno a.acn. 91 rt 2 Yacht Clubs Join in Race Bahia Corlnthlan Yacht Club and Udo Isle Yacht club will join forces Saturday and Sunday to 5lage their annual V alenti.ne Regatta with all claues sailing on courses inside the bay. The eventis always followed by a colorful party at BCYC. Jn other local yachting activity: South Shore Yacht Club will stage the second race of ita popular Hibachi Serles for Performance Handicap Racing Fleet yachts. NEWPORT HARBOR YACHT Club will host Lehman-12 sailors in their annual quest for the MannTropbySaturday andSunday. Capistrano Bay Yacht Club issues bids to the PHRF r acinc enthusiasts to participate in the ..secondraceoftbeSanJuanSeries. The top event in the Los Angeles Harbor area ls Los Angeles Yacht Club's Opening Day wbic~ featuresseveral races in the afternoon. SOUTRERN CALIFORNIA Yachting Assocla· tion calendar: Los Aogeles·Lonl Beacb . LOS ANGELES YACHT CLUB -Opening Da)' Saturday; races for PHRF andIORclasses. CABRILLO BEACH YACHT CLUB MidwlnterTuneup. all classes, Sunday. • Santa Monica Bay SANTA MONICA YAClIT CLUB -lntraclub Regatta , Saturday. . SOUTHCOAST CORtNTlUANYACHT CLUB~ Les Storrs Series No. 3, PHRF, Sunday. Opening Regatta At U Yacht Club The Los Angeles Yacht Club wilt hold its 16Ui Opening Day regatta and installation of 1977 of? f1cers Friday, Feb. 12 at the clubhouse, 500 Bar· r acudaSt., Terminal Island. LA YC is one of the oldest yacht clubs in Southern California and has a number of members in the Orange County and NewJ>Ort Beach area. New officers to be installed at the 11 a.m. flag. raising ceremonies are .Willl5 C. Blakeslee, San Marino, commodore; William E. Hosken, Palos Verdes, vice commodore; J . William ScoU, reai: commodore. and Willard Bell, Pasadena, fleet ca~ tain. . Starting at 12:30 p.m. there will be races fol' five classes of sailboats, Including ocean racing for the Flagship and Vanderbilt trophies and one: design classes. · A highlight of the affair will be the Hors D'Erbl(' in which families will sail their boats in a race dur, ing which crews will prepare hors d 'oeuvres for the evening cocktail p arty ashore. 2 Cup Contenders~ Under One Owne~ SAN DIEGO (AP ) - The s ame syndicate now owns America's Cup con· tenders Intrepid and En· terprise. The F ort Schuyler Foundation r eportedly paid $102,000 las t weekend for Intrepid, wloner of the 12-meter races of 1961and1970. Intrepid wauold after the 1974 race to an Arizonan, who turned ti- tle over to bis Hawaii· based drydock and marina corporaUon. THOSE holdings went into recelverablp and, twQ weeks ago, a referee approved sale of lntrelld to Hawaii developer Bob Miller. Although the boat then w'as shipped to San oteeo to t>eetrvenovation for A u .. , ::: fourth America's Cop bid, Miller never com- pleted the purchase and the Fort Schuyler Foun- dation stepped ln. F ort Schuyler bad sought Intrepid primari- ly aa a trial hone for its Enterprt.ee but now plaos to campalan Intrepid as well for a try for the America's Cup later tbla year at Newport, R.I. ., THE TWO boata wtn betln test trials againllt each other March 6 but "whether we go on t«> Newport will depend up~ on how we do aaatnst En· terprile and how m\lch mone1 we can raise/' uld Gerry J>rt.econ. her skipper. Driscoll has been put In cbarie of 1ailln1 and preparing Intrepid and will a kipper the boat. Hobie Alter Talk Slated HolM Alter, datm.- Ud Wk' of the lf'obfe Cat catamaran. Will be lbe peiad.pal 1peater at a raetac 1emlnar fCbeduJed 'ru.eaday, 'I p.m. at UMa Win 'N S.a RHtauraJlt ill Dau Poiilt. ,-1a. aemlnar II •~ bY Hobie Cat Fleet 1 ol ii>~ Poblt. Other~ 1't1l Ollf• ft' u.. Mpedl ol radU tU10,l2,J4-4Ui. catamar--. • i 88 DAIL V PILOT Friday. February 11. 19n Leader's Ordeal Wasn't His 66 PALM SPRINGS (AP> -The 66 that staked him to a four.shot lead wasn't the t.ou•b part of \he day. said Rik Massengale. • .. Actually, I'm bitUn1 my irons so good, It was a pretty easy 68. '' The t.oulh part came after the round. He bad to rush from the course to buy a birthday present for Ma wile, Cindy. "It's her birthday and J always put off things to the last minute," Massengale said. "I bate shop- 5 Overtimes later Cal Beats Ducks BERKELEY CAP> -Gene Ransom scored 36 points for Cal, including the tying points at the end of three different overtimes, as the Bears stunned the Oregon Ducks 107-102 in five overtimes in a Pacific-8Conference basketball game Thursday night. Ransom made two free throws to tie the game at 65-65 al the end of regulation time, rebounded a field goal for a tie at 83-83 that sent the game to a third overtime and got two free throws that de- adlocked the fourth overtime at 93-93with1: 14 left. Jn the fifth overtime, the Bears broke out of a 97.97 tie with six straight points on a lO·footjumper by Kevin Singleton, a pair of free throws by Jim Griffith and another pair from the line by John CaselU. Oregon moved to within two points at 104-102 with 46 seconds left, but Cal then cushioned its margin with two free throws by Mike Miller and anotherbyCaseJU Ransom, a5-9guard, hit on 11 of 23 field goal attempts and 14 of 19 free throws. He got 14 of his points in the overtimes and played 6312 minutes of the 65 before fouling out. He led Cal in rebounds with 11. Before fouling out, forwards Ray Murry and Doug True con· . tributed 15 and 13 points for Cal. · now 2-5 in the Pac-8 and 7-13 over· : all. True made one of two free j throws with 10 seconds left to send ' t~ game into lts second over· 1 titne. plng for a woman. That's a lot toueher than shootine 68. I didn't know what to get her. Ended up with a watch. Hope that's okay." The six-under-par 66 was con- siderably more than okay on ~e tough Tamar\sl< course an Thursday's second round or the five-day, 90-hole Desert. Golf Classic. It went with an opening 64 for a 130total, 14 under par and the best two-round effort on the tour since late in the 197Sseas on. In those two rounds , he's had 15 birdies and a single bogey. missed only two fairways and two greens. He's had a total of seven birdie putts of 20 feet or more, two of them from 40 r eet or more "Absolutely fabulous golf," said Bruce Lietzke, the only man able to keep Massengale in sight. ''He is definite ly the man to beat. Lietzke is a two-time wmner this season and suddenly the hot· test man on the tour. He extended to 23 the number or consecutive rounds at par or better with a 67 that put him in second place at 134 . Wally Armstrong, with another 67, was another two strokes back at 136. Tied at 137 were former Hope winner Hubert Green, with a second-round 68, and Irvine re· sidentAJanTapie, 70. Tapie played at La Quinta. thr host course and site of the pros· only final round Sunday. T he rcsl or the leaders were at Tam;m i.k. where former President Gerald Ford drew another enormou!> gallery to watch his round with PGA champ Dave Stockton, Flip Wilson and tournament director Saul Kamin "With all those people out there -it was a huge. huge, huge gallery -it was pretty difficult ror the President." Stockton sau1 "He played pretty well. made three pars, but he was kind of nervous. Itwasn'tcasy fo r h1m ·· Second rouro ~"'"" lOU G,-r•h*tf"l"'I 11 t.q I A I R Ma...,nqaleb<l 1>1> l]ll J~lf\Mc}n l(HI UI 8 Lu•tt_ .. 6 1 61 1)4 Gdry Pl)Tf"r 10 II 1•1 W Arm~tnq 6q 61 '"' lf'j E_ht .. , 17 '~ "' H (,o•,.n .... ,,, r r,.,,,., II 10 ,., All" T•Pt• '1~10 -1]1 (,''"'' L•ttlt /I 11 "' Ron C<>rruM 10 h8 1 Ill J W•"''""''' """ ,., P au1 Mnrd11 It ,.,, l]H j H ... u·rt ,,..,., 11/ O~vt Hill 11 bll 11' R M..;llb1r 10 11 141 Gav BrPw--r n 61 ,,. p On\1Prt1u"l1 rn 147 St••• M•lnvk 6q 10 ,,.. J \1 "'°''""'' n 10 u 7 Jerrv McO-<> 10 ~q ,,. M•k" Morl,•v 10 n 117 John L•''"' ,, hq ••n Boo Sn11.l rl'tr 6q 1) 1<7 Bob Mu•"'1v II 6• 1'0 B•llv C.a\per II 11 .. , C Coodv 1010 u o L Wad~in.-. h9 ,, .. , M F i!'O m&11 II 1(). 141 Gri"r Jon_., "Nil 1'7 Jack Newton 17-t.9-1" Douq T •wPll 11 10 1•1 Georq• Cadl• 11 70 ••• A+ll(,Jlt....-f• ,. •9 141 8 Jao<,PI 69 n U I I rn \1mf.W', 10 ,, 10 A Palmer llbll ,., H Tw1tl~ 11 11 141 jMarina Defeated Burt, Steinhaus Spark HB Victory By GLENN WHITE Ol I .. o.lty ~ .... ~" Cary Burt and Greg Steinhaus bltnded talents lo lead their Hun· Ungton Beach High teammates to .a 70-53 Sunset League basket· b~ll triumph over the host Marina <Huntington Beach) Vik· injs Thursday night before a turnoutoC 1,662. The triumph keeps coach Ebner Combs' Oilers In the run- n1og for a second place league firilsh and a berth in the Cl F playoffs. .. untington plays at Edison and hosts Newport Harbor in the final regular season games next week. N~ leads the Oilers by a game in the race for second Newport hosts Marina Wednes- day. Burt played superbly. He had lUa third highest point output of the sea.son with 24, can- ning five field goals and making good on 14 of 23 free throws. He alao blocked two shots, bad 10 re- bounds and two assists. Steinhaus also performed well, shredding the Marina defense wlth his faat-movin1 lay-ups. Held to four points in Marina's earlier victory over the Oilers, Steinhaus ripped the nets for 15. He bit from the comer on oc- casion but most ol hlt shots came from t.bo8e rlp-snorthlg lay-ups. Jt was a freakish game ... an ex- chan1e of aeoring outbunts. Huntinston grabbed the early lead, outscorin1 the Vlkes, 18-2 ln a rive-minute apan of tbe first quarter. However, Marina 8ot together a spurt of its own in the second and third periods to outrun the vis i ton 18-1. Randy Heidenrelcb's 14-foot shot off the glass capped tbe ex- plosion and 1ave Marina a 32-31 lead w1"1 5:29 rC'ma1 n1ng in the third quarter Hut that merelv set t he stage for another streak thtS time by the Oilers. They blitzed Marina 24-6 lo sur ge to a 55-38 lead w 1th 6: 22 to go 1n the game and the hosts w ere in credibly headed for their fourth league loss at home 10 as many outings. Burt, Steinhaus and the injured Gary Contreras accounted for all but two of Huntington Beach's points in that decisive ::.tretch. Both teams were plagued by fouls with 54 called for the even- ing, 32 against the V1k1ngs Three Marina starters and two Oilers regulars were ex ited with fi ve fouls. Marina simply couldn't get its shooting touch. The V1kes hit on- ly 29.4 percent or their fi eld goal attempts and one time limped through a S-for-30 stret ch They also missed their first six free throws.It was the first time this season no Viking has been able lo score in double figures. Huntington Beach hit a scorching 81.8 percent of its first quarter field goal attempts and wound up canning 55.8 percent for the game, despite going 2· for-12 in the second period. Clark Sims had 10 rebounds for the winners. Manny Torres col- lected nine for Marina. Team- mate Ken Crook had seven re- bounds to go with his nine points. " ... ~ 1191 (Jll ~11"• +tftllflP .. ft pf IP SMI-7 I l IS ltoell., • I 2 • o•ua•o J o 1 • warrp" 1 • s I 8urt 5 t• • 1• T OHH 1 ( ' I !.I"'' l 0 ) 6 ........ "" l , ~ • Owwn J O s 1> l ruc• • I 1 • Peslolesl 0 0 1 0 GlbOt I 0 S 1 Con\l't<M l l l " H••-IM o O 2 O C:.DOC<I-0 • O • WOiie 0 0 1 0 Croo-3 l J • SCNde 0 0 1 0 Totalt t• 'l? 12 70 TOI .. , 1' 15 Jt SJ Sc:ete llY °"9rten HllM lnQtrofl IHCI\ '° I 70 11 -It 1!441r1Ni I 1• I• l~Sl NE\A!!>O~T'S ~OB GALEY SHOOTS OVER GREGG SVALSTAO (54) INSIDE THE BARONS' MATCHUP ZONE DEFENSE. STEVE TIMMONS, FV'S BRIAN ROFER (35) BATTLE. Newport Falls Impressive FV Clinches Crown By ROGER CARLSON 01 \ .. O.lly Pll« Staff Fountain Valley High's Barons collected the Sunset League basketball championship on schedule Thursday night. claim· ing the crown with still two con- tests left on a IO-game schedule. Before a crowd of 1,800. coach Dave Brown's Barons came from behind with an impressive effort to stop the visiting Newport Harbor Sailors, 84·74, after a first half that saw the score tied or the lead change hands 27 times. Coach Jerry DeBusk's Sailors. still in the running for a CIF 4-A playoffs berth with a one-game edge over Huntington Beach. gave the Barons all they could handle in the first half and jumped to a 41-36 lead at the out· set of the third quarter. But then the explosive Barons shook loose with 15 straight points a s Newport went the following 4:17 scoreless lo take a 51-41 Jead . The 15-point spurt was keyed by five quick points from 6·312 junior Roger Holmes, who scored a season-high of 27, then George Barrios took over. Barrios hit from 16 feet. then blocked a shot, saved a turnover on the break and scored on a twisting.four-footer. Moments later it was Holmes with an as sis t from Bret Wilkinson, then Scott Ford with Wilkinson's ass is t. Wilkinson followed with a steal and scored and Newport was in big trouble. Refusing to fold , the Sailors battled back lo within 53·51 on Steve Timmons' s teal and bucket. but the Barons took com- mand again, jumping to a 64·53 edge early in the final quarter. Both teams played well. The Sailors· Rob Galey was unstop- pable from the corners. equaling his season best with 28 points, Timmons was everywhere with blocks. rebounds and key buckets and the Sailors s howed class in not panicking when the Barons went on their 15-potnl tear. As usual, the Barons had four players scoring in double fig_ures. Along Wlth Holmes' 27. W1lkmson scored 17 and Barrios and Ford tallied 15 apiece. Holmes had 10 rebounds and Wilkinson nine as the hosts won that battlE', 32·29. Newport shooters made 29 of 60 from the field for 48.3 percent as opposed to 32 of 60 for FV (53.3 percent>. N..,.porl O•I l t'I Ftl\ Vell•y crau1 ')chwAlll<' T1mmon\ G~lf'V GPronlm l 8 r .tdburn.o M•n•Y 1,. II pt tp ? 0 l A f'ord \ J l 11 Willii,1nt.on .. J • 11 , A•rr+O\ 17 J 78 Holme• J ) ~ S• •l\IM:I 1 • Car<oll 1 f> hr~tl\k'I 8oaold Alt>.,, TOIAt' Yt '"' \q 1A Tot•h S<Oft I)' 0u•r1en tq tt pf Ip 6 l J IS 6 s 3 11 6 ) 4 IS II S 3 21 ) I S S 1 I I J 0 1 I 2 0 0 I 0 0 0 I 0 11101114 N• #f'Md H tttY)r 14 7f) U 71-1 .. t OU' t \1'\\JolUt 'f 10 16 2\ 21.......aA 500th Win At USC's Expense SEATTLE -James Edwards' 27 points powered the University of Wastungton to a 72-58 Pacific-8 Conference basketball victory over Southern California Thurs- day night. The victory was Huskies coach Marv Harshman 's sooth and gave the Huskies a 5·3 league mark . The Troj ans took an 8·2 lead, but the Huskies scored 11 straight poin ts and 17 orthe next 19 to gain am argin they never lost. Edwards had 11 or those 17 points and 15 in the first half. USC 1131 H•n°"r\l>f\ 10 Wllof•9 Hoo\onqlot16 '>.>fiord 1~. Jonr• 8 Po•lor 1 Arnold l. Grffr 1. CMflno' M<Clo••n 1 WASHINGTON 1111 W.tl~•r 11 Sttw•rt 17 Edward< 27 AMtttn A Oo• .rv • S<otl 2. H.s.s 1. L•wl\• WI..,\) H•llt,,,,. W••~tnolon 11 11 Tol•l loul• -use ·~ Wa•h•119t0fl 7• l'oul•d oul H•n<Mn011 Edwtrd• A • e13 Eagles Stomp Falcons Walton Out PORTLAND. Ore. --Guard Don Buse of the Indiana Pacers will replace center Bill Walton or the Portland Trail Blazers in the Nat.ion al Basketball Association All-star game in Milwaukee Sun- day because Walton has an in- flamed right Achilles tendon. By CRAJG SHEFF Ol 1 ... O.tlly Pllol Sl•ll Estancia High 's basketball team clinched at least a share of the Century League cham- pionship Thursday night, rolling to an easy 7346 victory over visit- ing Santa Ana Valley. The victory gives coach Dave CarUsle's Eagles (10-2) a two- game lead over Tustin wltb two to play. Tustin fell to Foothill, S3-50, Thursday night. The championship is the first- ever for Estancia in any major sport since the school opened in 1965. Estancia beat Santa Ana Valley with good shooUng and some Cine defensive play. And Carlis)& admitted it was one of his team's best games of the season. "We did play very well tonight and lt was one of our better ball games. Our kids wanted it bad- ly," sald the Estancia coach. The Eagles put it away early in the second quarter. Ahead by a 19-14 count, Estancia tamed the next 10 points (eight of them by sbarp·shooUne guard Rey Org\ll) to take a commanding 29-14 advantage. In the l~point spree, Orgill hit the tint •ix point.'J, canning a driving jump shot, a 14-foot.er from the baseline and a 16·tooter nearthefreetbrow line. Then, alter teammate Kevin Corbett hit a 12-footer, Orglll followed with another Jumper to run thescoreto29-14. Orgill, showing some dazzling moves, hit five in a row in one stretch of the second quarter and finlabed with 20 points, playing little ln tbe fmal quarter. The Eagles also received good play inside from Doug Jardine, Pete Neumann and Jim Price, who sagged off well on Santa Ana Valley's 6·9 center Ron Cornelius, holding him to Just 14 points. A•de•Lead AUCKLAND, New Zealand - Australia took a 1-01ead over New Zealand in the singles of the Eastern Zone Davis Cup finals to- day when Mark Edmondson de- feated Onny Parun 6-3. 7-5. S·7, 8--4. Na.ta..e Win• MEXICO CITY -Romanian llie Nastase has advanced to the semifinals of the Me.xlco City ln- temaUonat tennis tournament. Bruins Hold Off Cougars, 65-62 And 8\lard Greg Krobnf eldt bad a good noor 1ame and con· tributed three key loqg juaipen in the opening half. The cloeest the Falcons could get to Eataneta ln Utre •~nd halt waa ~7-32 late in tho tblrd Nastase defeated Cliff Drysdale 6-4, 6-4 in quarter.finals play Thursday. t'aftfJl'Clr«b Roll Ted Bercerson scored 24 points • and hauled In 10 rebounds, spark- ing the Southern California Colle1e Vancuarda of Cost• MeJa to an 86-63 NAlA District 111 Southern Division basket.ball win over vis\ting Asuaa-Pacific Tburtday night. PULLMAN. Waah. (AP) - UCLA tlcbtaMd its bold on \he Pacific-I conlerenee basketball lead with a ea victory O¥er WaahlqtooState. Reserve Brett VoTman and Gree Slm1 paced a potent aeeond· · bait attack Thursday nl11\tfor lht JI Bru1Q,now7·1lnloqueplayand !NOGtbeMMOa. • "Vorman mid Slmt have been l 1pllttlni time for WI all year and } thq were a k97 ln t1tlt win," aald UCLA coach Gene Bartow. •'Together the1 scored 20 po\nta and arabbed 10 rebounds." The out.ak1e sbootin1 of WSU'a Harold Rhodes, the game'• high scorer with 18 points. and \he ln· aide work ol Uoot·2 sophomore James Donaldson helped the Couaars caln a four-polnt ballUmelead. Steve Puidokas, the Couran' •ll·tlme aconnc leader. played wltb a heavUy-uped ankle and didn't score until late in the first peT\od. He came on strong ln the second half to C!nlsh with lS polnta. 1 W Nhingt.on State's 2-3 zone de- f ente held Pac-8 scoring leader Ma rciues Johnson to nlM points. "I lboueht Marques playod welt. but t.hinas dJdn 'Uallfor him. I think. lt waii because of \he 7·2 (Donaldson> and 6-11 <Puldoka1) iuys bovcrln1 ovfr him," Bartow said "They just bit money baskets when it counted." said CcKisan coach Georse Raveuni. "When you fel down to a three- polnt l~!!t tt'a hard to ldent.Uy any one uun1 that l08cs lt tor you ." UCl.A 1•11 -~II, SPiii-t, "°"'""'" '· Kllftlltln •, llmt '4. Vl"OflMft 10, Ntll.wt4 • WA$HINOTC»f 1TAfl t•ll -~.-.at S. C>ofttW'911 lO, Olt-..ttf\4111 ' "'-*' ._ Jt~ I. Jeflfttlll tO, Oii llM 4. Htlfli-. WSU 1S "· Ttlfl twt•· W5U t i, UC~A IL ~M ",.,_ A 11.111 quarter. &tllt1""9V..ll.., CA61 ......... IEct#•"'s 3 O O 6 St\ lfflllld 2 0 J • COl'Mlh• 1 0 , ,. Dul"' 2 1 2 6 fO(l'ta • 0 • tt CamlOM 1 ~ t • mt••--• ,"" . °'9111 t • 10 KroMfttdll ) 0 \ • JtrCIM • • ' ,. N"'111 Ill" J 0 1 • Pt'fce 2 1 I I CMM\I J 0 t • ,_, , 0. 2 Camit I I I I H••u 0 t I 0 0.,0.11 I 1 I J GloKl1 I I I 1 to\al\ n I I) .. T•lel\ 11 II \4 ,, sc-..,~ . '-"'•A ... Ytltey It I 1' 1t •4' li1111<1• 11 it " n -n llCM °"'419' 1 .. 1 .. " .... 1 ' , " 1 0 I 1' .. ffOfl 0 11\ltr A .. mt .. , .. ,...,, Cr""k 2 10 • ,. IO 4 114 1 e l M Mal•IHd 1 t • A llretl\'lftlll I 2 0 S "'Kl.NII I 2 1 • Cl•'fl* 0 I I \ Willlemt 1 • I t fottl• Jt'10 1'" H•l111M116CX. U.tt. if I . ·Pirates ID7~6 Triinnph Uadefeattd Oran1e Cout Colleae rolled to lta t.blrd ~ vktGc7 wbUe Sadd.leback and Oolclea Wat were d• f..W ID JC ~ball aew .. ~. occ·, Pirates ec11ec1 bot\ 12 Camino, 1.a, lD non·conference acUon wbls. s.ddleback fell to Pierce, s.a. at Cerritos In the flrlt round of tbe Cue~eJ toa.rney. And Westwu~ teated by Ha.ncoek, M. iD another Stencel 1ame atGWC. Saddleback and Golden West returned to play this mornlq. OCC, wblcb scored three in the eiebtb to late a 7·5 lead. saw El · Camino score once ln the ninth. But relief pitcher Jim Funderburk abut down the uprisin&. With the tying run on third. Funderburk induced the lint batter to sround out, then struck out the next two. Rick Dostal and Glenn Robertson had three hits for the Bucs. At Golden Wes t, tbe RusUers banged oul 13 hita, but couldn't quiel Hancock. Five RusUers bad two hits with Mike Selwood getting a pair of doubles. S*itM<lllll ..,....,.... Moll1111,d ~ .. W .. 1~1b v.,...il.,c ... 11.rf K•Y.H y,.,,1111, If Ma-e11.21> RlchardlOll. pl\ H.ster, Jb s. .. 1.0 Tolel1 n r ' 0 l 0 J 0 a o ) 0 ' 1 3 1 • 0 l 0 1 0 I 0 0 0 31 , Sc_.., IMlfttl 000 010 000 010 ]10 00• G41..,.w." cu Brune•u•, rt St lwOO(I 'IO H11ppert, ( Ot~rO\ltr. Oh Kubacki 10 8+e<1ek.r1 MO\U,CI H•n$0n,pn Ev.ans. II Nemolll p.- Vt1•1<1uo1. » 0 s \ ' I J I l n I 0 ' 0 I 0 I ·-•\Oft, 7b • ' P•iM,p 0 0 Sc:~lePO.P I) 0 Leldenhe1mor o O 0 Totals 40 I ScW•ltfOIY,,.... r " • , • 0 s 9 1 ~ rlll 7 0 I ' 1 I ' ' 0 0 0 7 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 1 7 2 0 f) 0 0 0 0 n • r " ., 110 003 I~ U 1 JOO l<IO 00•-1l • 0r ..... c...1111 ')MJtft.rt Oo\\•I lO Xon1er\. 1b Nool•rct,<# llOftCtUlllo, 11 GI ROOe"-, u Frl(k0clll '10rt<I" c l • Fr•n<e., French c t<rl•or•don 7b :...n<,,.r.o .. It • \ ) s , I 0 0 I) 0 I • • 1 " ,... I 0 ) I I I ? 1 I 0 .l 1 I) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 PUnlNG ON THE PRESSURE -Mission Viejo High •s Roger Huffman (33) takes control of the ball (left photo> as Bernie Hawkins '(11) looks on. El Toro's Bob Charles ...... ---. ..._... ... -, Deity Pt'-' PM+lOI .-, htrkllO'~ll tl OAILVPILOT O~rDolplaf .. Tritons Notch 68-64 Victory :: ByHOWARDLBANDY . . . Of .. D.il'f Nl&Mlllf San Clemente ffltb School's Tritons let a·eom· fortable eight-point lead dlminlah to four in the flnal five seconda Thursday nlibt in postina a a.et ScMlth . , Cout Leaaue buketball victory over bolt Dana . f Hll~. \ Coach Stan DeMq1lo's Trttons thus remained on course with Corona del Mar tor t.be1r ,abowdown ··: batUe for the league tlUe next Friday nllbt. Botb ~· have 11·1 leaaue records with two 8UQes to play. San Clemeat49 used bellbt to advantqe qalmt tbe running Dana Hilla team. The bele.bt controlled • the tem,po of the 1ame, seldom Civinc the Dolpblns !t r a second shot. I The fir.It ball was close but the 1eccmd balf found San Clemente in front all the •IU'. twice by u i • many aa 10 poinu. Wllb 12 seconds t.o plQ, the " margin was 68-&> wheD Bob Stupin hit underneath and was fouled. A technical foul oD a San Clemente player made it a four-point play with Dana Hills ' ' j getting the ball at mid court. • ' A basket attempt underneath failed when the I final buuer sounded in a game that was marred by s loppy play OD both sides, much of it attributed to an erratic performance by the game officials. • (right photo) matched the tough defense of Mike Brawley (31), however. scoring 28 points to pace the "It is bad for both teams when they call them like they did tonight," De Maggio said a.ft.er the con-' test. "It wasn't one of the better jobs of oft1ciatlnC this year." · San Clemente was called for 23 personal fouls and Dana Hills for 22. Th&.Dolpbias bad but seven players and lost two of them on five personals with another baviog four at game's end. overtinletr~iu~m=·£P=h~·~--~----------------------~ CdM,Must~s Down Loop · Foes Stupin hll 21 points for game scoring honors • ' with u of the markers coming at the charity line. •' ' San Clemente's scoring was evenly divided ~ 'c with John Carson again high point man with 17. Tim · • Dunham who hit 30 in the first meeting of the two ' •· te ams, had 16 and Ted Hettinga, one of the leading rebounders, bad 15, eight of them in the f'lrst • quarter. Corona del Mar Hieh's Sea Kings kept pace with San Clemente in the race for the South Coas t League champions hip Thursday night, putting Irvine's Univ e r s ity down, 55-45, on the win· ner's floor. Co s ta M es a , m eanwhile, re bounded to trounce hos t Laguna Beach, 84·59, to st ay within out.side range of El Toro and third place in the circuit. Jack Tuz was the key to Corona del Mar's vie • tory, with 14 points and ·three key assists in t he third quarter which led .. to three baskets and a 38·29 lead for the Sea Kings. Tuz finished the night I. with eight rebounds and • Paul Akin scor ed 16 r~ .. ,_ .. points. Steve Esposito hit I a pe rsonal high or 10 poi n ts, wh1l<• University's scoring gun J;. was j uni o r R oger Poirier, who had 20 • The Mustangs of Costa ,....._ !,}' Mesa ripped the nets for • ~ 62 percent from the rield • ~1 (36 of 58) as the host A rtist s of Lagun a ,,. ~ J Beach wilted a fter an ~ha<ll lHI 8M:Ofl He119t11 G'"novol' ""*"°" Gompf M<M&nin 8 to1Mr\Gn 8 rfet1t Osweld fotats It fl pf Ip S t 1 11 3 1 ' ' s 1 • n • 0 s • 0 0 3 0 s 1 o n 0 2 0 2 I 0 1 2 1 0 1 ' 15 9 " 59 OlluMew 110 .. ft pf tp 2 '1'I 3 0 1 n .,.,.,lno ov .. rt Wiiis Mllltr M•slno !>now Bluett MulilQMn lOldl\ 13 J 0 0 1 1 • 0 J I l t I 0 1 0 ll> 11 U•l,..rsi1v IOI 2 18 l ~ ) 1 0 1 l '~ 8• "•'" Reeve 8 ro•n Cf'aPo St11pl" Atldrews Toi•\ OMe Hill1 (Ml .. " 2 0 6 , l ) 3 0 s " 2 4 n 20 SMC!ftMMe < .. I Dunham McOOfWlld Carson NHly H~tllnq.a s,,.,,.. Frank lotals •• « s ' ' l I> s 1 I • 3 I 0 I 0 JS 18 S<ore by OU.rt..,. ,. .. • • 2 ,. s t s • • 21 2 10 tt .. "' "' • 16 :J 11 2 17 s s 4 IS 7 1 l , ,, .. San Cl•mfflte 17 U 19 19 61 Cana Hiii\ 1• 15 11 73 -M Prep Tennis VAllllSITY O...MllkDMllral ll ...... .. , .. si..i-• ' ... "°' (01 dlf v-. .. ,. *"Mun • M, Clef Wll'Wfl M , fief -...oye .. ,: · Orent IOI _., '"'· '-3, "4. W; w .... , rlnvtOf'I <DI IOlt N, -M. lost .... _, I•, IC,....IA 101 tolt N, -t-4. ' ... ,., ... o..tllft Sperk.s0To .. d 11 (01 •Pllt "'''" Cspora Wiison 61!, S-7, clef Mor .. Franklin,..,, M ; COrbln-Wlnt ... ~lter , 10) solltf>.l,2-6:'9111 ... l,W. 'I JUMIOllll VAllllSITY oeu "'"' 14',.,I llV.l et....._. Ooltblft BKk.•Paul IOI def Lllywllll•·8t'Odle •• 6 o. 1>-1; Cllrl.,·Hnk.lnl IOI W>HI wllll ; 1 W1nlau·Hull0f'l 7-6, 6-7. lq 11 pt 10 --ljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij~ Po•"~' • 7 J 10 ' l 1 MllCMll 0 1 1 ' AUTO BROKERS , •. I C:.rotn S I S 11 A \ ~:~~II ; ~ ! ~ I ROLLS ® t 8.tQl •Y 1 0 ] • ROYCE }. .. t<ale9an 0 0 ? o HOOk 0 0 1 0 1) l(uDH o 0 I O OR · ' Tol•I> 10 S 14 •S ,. .' ' ow.i·'"'a::u~, ,. •o MERCEDES ~~~\•lo l ~ ; ~~ w • .,.w.. ....... ,.... . . e1~0 l 1 <> D.tWhfyN a1rt11....,,,c-.1tlon. ""'" 1 1 ·~ "Cal •rt Sore .... R•1f"I\ 2 1 4 ,._ ...,- IColllM 0 1 7 (7141 642-ISOS i Tot•h scw,11,.0.:,.~ '' ss Sales t 01039 ~U~n~.v~••~\•~t'~:__~l~J-~11_Jf~l2~-4~S~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'.__,t 2oron• ""'Mar 19 1' 8 11 SS We'll give you G• Aot.rUon ~lln<Mt-11. 0 0 0 0 0 0 18·all situation in the MARK HILL (15) TAKES AIM OVER MISSION VIEJO'S ZONE DEFENSE. first period. ~ ~ ---------~---Steve Parrino was the key to Costa Mesa's at· t ack, scoring 29 points, while teammate Ga ry Wtlls added 21 and Stan up to $100 in accessories when you purchase lo\-4~ ~ ' ,, ~ $C-"" ''""'"-' .. " . 3•0 aoo Ol0-7 11 • aoo 100 210..... " > 67-64 Win For Edison Steve D•vi1 scored with '3 ~ left and Glenn Garrity added • pair of free lbrowl with 28 seconds rema1nln1 u the F.cn.oo HIP (Hun~ incton Beach) Cbar1en rallied to defeat viaitln& Westminster Tburaday nl1ht, 87-&e, in SU.DHt League baaketball ac- tion. Sports For Girls aASKIT•AL.L VAltll TY LI..,.., OlriiliM (Ml IM I ........ Of<eyer (II F UI We.O Fr•nc:lt UU F 1111 C:.llson ltelff l•I c. <•l w,,,.ct Modtlln IO 0 111 H-• A""'I 1221 G IOI EM~ LC SCOrint ..-. ~ 2. Fella, a...n. HallUme: LC.11-12. VA.llllTY ~Wll•l~ty -....i.1111 " UI~ ._., UI F l•I Wiil ie Ii--O> c !al .. _. .. ~r 141 G 141 w .. WM '""'" l•I G f71 °"""9 MllflM_,,."*"' Marty\). Nul· -•• "'"''-'-Uni: ........... -2, Wllllam12.~1 Hltftlme: MatiM , 30-1'- VAIUfTY Matw Del (17) IZJI C..-.tly W11'Mt (\JI F \IOI Loc1 C. 0 191161 F <•> SH..,90 Urt f'lkl\ 001 C 101 llroderlcll Gfl"'' <ru G (01 Fut<umolo K. G..,. 141 O IOI Schmiot MO lltorl"I Sllbl: lllel J, H•~n s. ., .... , .. Hettllmr. MO, 30-13. El Toro Stops· MV Bob Charles of E l Toro High 's Chargers did it a gain Thursday night, ripping the nets for 28 points as El Toro posted a 64·57 overtime victory over the host Mission Viejo Diablos in South Coast League basketball action. The Ch ar gers, with Charles leading the way, hit s ix of seven free throw att49mpt& in lbe overtime period to clinch the victory after Mission Viejo's Roger Huffman bad sent the 1ame into overtime with a basket with ~seconds left in re· 1ulation. Charles. who scored 32 and 28 points in his two )filler 18. previous outings, had Parrino had five as. nine field goals and 10 sis ts hit 13 of 20 from tbe free throws to offset Mis· fiel~' for 6.5 percent and s lon Vlejo's balance-had 27 points after t hree Pete DeCasas and Mike quarters. Boster with 14 points Miller had 14 of his 18 apiece, Bernie Hawkins in the ftrst haH as the with lJ points and Huf· Mus t angs front line fman with 10. dominated the issue. IUTwelMl • Wills had 13 .r ebounds ""• Hiit 1 ~ "! u and Miller 11 caroms. HOimes 1 4 2 ~ Laguna Beach's Ben f:'.:::~ ~ ~ ! a Bacon was held to 11 e. c11erte • 10 1 21 points -his lowest out-~~;::." ! ~ ~ put of the season. Tota11 tl n 14 ... MINJeilVlej9 (S1) "°''•' ': •; ~ ~~ Pro Scores Hvflmen S o 4 10 P. O•C•MS o ? \ U NaA EotrllOfl o o 4 o Clevelet'd 11'. 1nc1.-101 H•wltll'I\ s J • IJ M•lweukff 112, K-.sClty 107 Brawley l o s & w as111no1on '°'• P-1• 103 S. OeCHM O 0 2 0 GoldtnState llA, 0.n'tff IOI Totall 2S 7 JS SI NHL M nar-L-v•e k-llYGolan.rt NY RM<Jtr\S,O.tnilt ~ 0 am I EITOIO " 10 IS " .._.. PllllldtlPlll•9,WMhlnvton2 a ChrySler outboard! Here's how It works: Go to anv port1c1pot1ng Chrysler outboard dealer oow. Buy o new Chrysler outboard engineered fo r the time of your Ute. a nd you'll get UP TO $100• In Chrysler outboard ocoessorles at NO EXTRA CHMGEI Chrvsierquolltyoccessonesttkebatterles, lnstrumerns, remote oontrors. fuel tonks and lubricants. You'll receive: $100* worth of accessories with the purc hase of every new Chrysler 35 hp. thru 135 hp. engine, lnciudlng the Soper 65 or Chrysler's new speedy 4-cytlndersl $50* worth of accessories with the purchase of f!Nery new Chrysler 4 hp. thru 25 hp. outboard. Including the amazing Chrysler "Sailor'' ouxlllarlesl Whether fishing. skiing or motOflng this summer, you'll be g lad you mode waves right now to your nearest participating Chrysler outboard d ealer. Because Chrysler's Great Giveaway • t : ' 'I ·. t I Garrity. who scored a personal blgh or 16 points, gave the Cbar1en lhelr three- po l n t mu1in, then Edison held on to post the triumph over the winleas Westmlnater L10111. * MlulonVl•lo u 11 10 14 1-s1 BufleloA.~tanl Mater D e i H i gh's.--------------------t "!.... * ~e0~:~~hs t': ~a:~ e ~: "I llw In n ~QJJ[i1)® ~fvo1n. n ®~ Is your perfect opportunity to get outstanding q uality at equally outstanding savings! Bob Henon added nine rebouadl and Davis bad six caroms to aaa1at the Cbaqen• victory. Pac. Ing WeatmJ.nater waa ?dike Sod.den wltb 2S pointa. uc•..,...<111 •1a......,._ Learue basketball acllon ~ u~ N9CMM NCI~..,..,._ .. ,. tonight. traveline to La but bought my new cat &.2; StOdttori <uco• "uelft9WM, Puente'• BisbUJi Amat . M :a-1ua10efo-.s...,..,: Hi b* 7 r· ln~~f PeterM11<uci1dlf..-11'"'1.1.w :Ar-g 1ora :30 • 0 ~ ~m redDftdo rva> • ~ w. •.i.. Tbe Monarchs, who I VI ~:,.c~:,~==.. .. ~:,.'t{ nipped Bishop Amat JOHMSON 6 SONn W ; Amli'""9 IUCO ... 1$11intN 82· 79 in the first 'round, •• .... -• .. • .. , ... ,. are paced by 1uard Jim ': ~ ': :'; Nec11•,_.=., cvc11 ftf Schultz. a four-year • 2 s '° o..,._,...._ ,.., .. ,: ........ _ starter who eclipsed the ~ ; ! ! ~-=~~·:.~ all-time a111lst record o o , o ....... u.1111-...r ,,., .. i : ic~1u. tbls aeason for CIF ' ' • .. ~<UOl *"OeMMe~·Eulh\oger SouthemSectinn c•0 ers. 4 2 ' to ,... .... ~,. - 2• .. 1ft .. _,;,.~======:;====-======:=:~==,--, --; ~ ': -: ·•'The .9etter B-:ga1n•• . 2 • • .. i ! i ~ CHINOOK t t I I lttS $eS9S t o I 't ,..... ,. " .. " . ..,..., .. ...:"9"':':'.. ....... for the best choice In Chinooks, .... 17 • • ....., select from the large ·inventory at Marquis Motors. · Como In ~t!i~~MJ~l!!~todlyf .. At Johnson 6 Son yoc./re treated like o ~~ of the fomlly. Thefr 501esmon, H.B. PT1ce wos highly recommerded, ond he took good cor~ of m.. Johnson & Son hos o good reputotlOn. ond their servl<:e deportment 1s outstanding. Thats why I tecommend you drtve ro Jotwon 6 Son. Giw em o tty.N I ( Offer exPlres Morch 15. 19n. Vold where prohibited. •eased on Monufao-• turer'a Suggested Retell Pr1oes for Chrysler Accessorles. Alifcdnvof~ 1W lbt dme of J"lllU W£; HOME OF PACIFIC BOATS 1.t71 Long Beath Bll/d. L..ong BHch ' . .. , .. .. ' •• ONLYPILOT N e wpo rt Har bor Hi lb'• Jeff Steven s ·•cored a blazlna sprint double but lt w asn't enough u Ute vtsitlng Sailors bowe<I to Foothlll o( Santa Ana, 8'-58, in a non-league swimming meet ThUtisday. Stevens won the so freestyle in 22.2 and the 100 free in 48.4. , Elsewhere, Fountain Valley's All-American Mike Kelly etapt\J.red the 100 free in 48.4 and 1he 100 .back in 56.1 a~ Corona d'el Mar defeated ·~ Foµl)tain Valley, 86-7$. • Meaowtille, Or,nge •Coast Col1ege'a Ron ·-Schafer turned fn a speedy 2:18.3 tb win the 200 breaststroke as OCC d efeated Cha Hey a nd h ost Rio Hondo in a tri- meet . I.~.,.,_ t.Ml\ M 1 OlaHty SI l Ill• HoncN l6 400 ~ey rel•Y I 0. .,OI Cont l H 4. 1.000 lrH-1 $1pyrk• IC) 10'41.i 1 Lltnd IOI 10 0 ~ J 8 Prl(Nrd <Ol 11·'11. 200 h ... -1 Eldor (0) l S6 4 2 Lre IC) 1 SI O. J. Uldl> (0) l Sf I ~ trff I Wy11t (01 11 4 1 Whit more IOI 13. l 3 Gulna ICJ 1• l 200 I M-t Ntrkowskl IC) 2 O'I O 2 s1111n (012· 12 1 J. l(lltzner 101? · 19 0 OM~-1. Zumbecoe 1011u • 20011y-t.Gumberl (0)7'34 • 100 lrff I WVlll 101 S? I 1 Cl~· -ft\~ ICJ Sl Sl. Wl\lt"""f' IOI S? • 100 bltk ' Luck IRI 1 "~ 1 McOoweU !OJ 2 lO O 3 Mor\n <Cl 1 U.• Friday, Fobruary 11, 1977 -,,..._, sa.vru ICI s n. , CMpentw <Cl s 11 .J 3. a. ,.,,CM•O COIS •t. • 20l ll<M$1-I. ScM~ IOI 2 11.J 7. Nerllo-1 CCI J.21, 3. HN9 IOI t·uo AOO ff" r•l•V-1 Ortnoe Cont 1·1u. YAHi TY Men!!a ltUI 1,.1 ._.,,. 100-.,,rel•Y-l.M•rll\a 1·51 I too tr .. -1. B•oitr lMI I SI 7 2. McGllHI CM) l Ol.O J. Bro\1(1 IL.I ?;11 4. 100 Ind, ~ley 1. &enMll IL.I 2: IS. I 1. W"11rey IMI 2. IS 13. YH IMI 2 ,, 0. SO lr"-1 Wlll•tel ILi ~S.J 1 Wll-len 11,J ~ ~ J. Wt11Mf\11troer CM I 24.1. Ol°1'11111 -1. LMbcnenco IM ) 2 o.w1n ILlnotlllro. 100 lly-1. Mlttln IL) 1 :03 6 2. 1tlnv IMH .~ U. Ge-ILi I'°' s. 100 lr--1. $10lte WI S.l.I 1 Wtl»tnllt'9t" IMI .W.U. Bennett ILi ll.1 500 h'w-1 a-IM) S U.I l SN rt JMIS .... , no f!lro. 100 ~_. Winfrey (Ml l·OS..O Z. Mlf\9 CM) I OU. l Scl>M<der IMI , •• ¥. 100 llffft-1 11\orlb'to IMI I 01.7 1 1iM9f'UUOll (Ml I 14.4 l. YN \Ml I 14 • *''"...i•v -1 Mlrln• J 43 1 e1nrtlM) ISHSaftt•Aftl 200 "'4dley relo-1 S.nl• An• I SI S 200 ,.... I 8 Rici.le \El I 5411 $11'111'\ IEI 2031 J. Rlca.o.ugti <El 2 ... 200 IM I Oloque .. u•nc:•(El 1 IA. 1 An91.,. <SI 1211 J 0 Rtthle !El , 211 so ,, .. I Slone ISi 14 . 1 Bauermann <EI 25 1 l G•rnt"I IS I 26 4 100 llv t. """''" •S> 5q 8 1 cno· QUthuanca <El I 00 l Sm1!11 IE) l Ol s. 100 lru I Wll<On IEI H 0 2 F•rmtr ISi 54 61 G<>rr•tt ISi S. 6 SOO frff-1 Bauermann IEI S J.f 6 2 RltUbo1"9n !El S.•5 S 3 MM~nall IE IS 41' 100 l>clt~-1 Tutlle IE I I OS 0 , An91or 15+-l:OS ~'· ~M•·tel 1 13 •· 100 br .. nl 1 Ston• ISi I 01 1 Wiiton U!I 1112 0 l I . IU<lff 1.1U. *''""" f<t1'. V...., OSI tMI C.. , .. MHit't rtll 't-1, ,tovftlelcj VllltY ,:O.t. < 2001,.._1 . .,.11 lfll l:S4.1 t. ICt.-1 ICl\!SU) ~(Fl l1"' 200 Ind. _...,_, "'Pt' ICI t• 1U 2. Welktf ICI t IS.I S. 5!•11., I,) t·u.•. lll lrH-1. w r111111 (Cl u • t. f'tomur1 11•1 n .u .1101ut1 Cfll2U. Olvln<.a-1. Corene 0.1 Mu . no wcono oc ll'llrd. 100 Uy-I. St-CCI 1:00.t 2. "4t<k !Cl 1:01.0 , Telldlllt 11'11102.2. 100 lr .. -1. ~ty IFI <41.41. DoCMr JCI M.U .OOit' lCI $4,1, JOO lrw-1. (tie) Nt (Ill) Md Heck ICI f ,Ot.1 l.""-• l"lt'ft 1. 100 llecll-1. l(tllY II") 56. ft. 1(""91 CCI J •. n. T\ltll ICl SU . 1ot ~-1-1. "°"""a (Fl I.OU t .. ~CCJl:Ol.hSltt ... 0111 :1U • Ir .. retlll"-1. °"OM clef ~ ,m .... "-' t•t lltl ,,_.•IH tto IPIHlllY ,., • .,_,, Poothlll 1 ~.'61. 200 fr•-1 Gani.el IFI I 47 I 1 ....... "'',,.,).-•or.in INI t ... o, 1tO IM-1 Sl~llltf' 11'1 2·'3 4 1 ~Iller CFI t·03 7 J v.11.-.ftlp (ftll tou 50 ,,_I 51•-IHI n,, OHn IF IU.U M'/'llnlNlll.O 100 lly-1 Fur nu (Fl SJ.3 2 Vell.UtnP INI .S6 1 II 3 1'oi.r1...,, (NJ st.• 100 lr"-1 Stewn. IN) •I 4 2. Ginsel !GI (Fl 41 '3 Deen (Fl'' 1 500 ''" 1 RevllOICb I"' • n' 1 Monto,ireln INI ' >5' J G•OOI IF) s 01 s 100 DICk-1. Strachan tFI S6 1 1 Y•ncev IFI 59 u Orutk•r (Fl, 00 I tOO br .. \t 1. 64rQ<l\Oll (NI l 04 11 Miller !Fl I 04 tl Grl4!r IN) I 01 I 4001roerel•Y I Foolhill3·1'2 JUNIOR VARSITY !"111.Y•lltY 11211 (111 COM Cage R esu lts 100 medley rel•Y 1. Founl•ln \l•llev 1 W 4. 2001--1 Nl<hOI\ IFI 1 016 '.IOO lno -Oley I CM Y .. , IF) 1 7~ l so ,,.. l 111•1 Olcli. IF I and Wolker IFI 111 100 lly t ROQ<r" IFI '07 8 •00 Ir .. 1 Nlcnol~ IFI ~ l 500 free t Dick !Fl S;O S. 100 b•<k I M<CI""'°"' (Fl I Ot7 100 ortul 1 Naour1 <F 1 1 11 q 400 Ir•• re•o 1 Founl••n Valley 3 s. n M••-1 14\ I 1111 ,oot1'111 100 rnpdfl'f tft•v 1 N {fwt>or! 1 S• l 200 tru • HowMCI IFl I SJ l .1001M I Trotltr <F l 1 110 I, SO free 1 1.1noh01m 1l • 100 fly : JUNIO. VAR$1TY .. w 11tahl V111.., <UI 101 Ne"'PO<I Ma1'11or MtKll llfl F 111 P1qu1n Aelll Ill F UI M•rt•ocn GrHnleal Ill C !41 Putman T OOIH 161 G <ti Swtell Simon Ill G I 111 Fr""'.., fV scorln<,1 sub' E<pl11011 8 Slchm•n 10. Skk"""' to. IC•ulm.., S C:llrl\ttl'I""' • NH Hall• MtC..rtlly 1 Louvo•r7 Halnlme FV,UU Co\IA MtMl IMI 1n1 L.1911na a.uh 0..w• (") F 0 6) RICll•rd\011 Rlch•rCl\Qn (1J F (41 l<IHSl'IDach T111q Ill C 1121 P•ll~r.on Miller (1'11 c. 121 Nl(llOI\ SIMkO\ Ul C. 171 C•lderwooo Colla Ml'•• «orlnQ \II~ EOSOll s Wllllnql'IAm 2 O'Nl'll 2 Williams 1 LB Lipson If L•sl.-, H•lnl-CM •I 10 l!dflOll (lll (J6) w .. 1mh111er Polttltk ,., F 181 Popi• ICanem•ru I&> F 1101 Perkrr Tunon ll•SI C u) Martln Rllodt< (1J G 161 Fo\IM Fruelenber9 Ill C. <11 Puck•tl EOhol'I scor1119 .ubs Gr•er 6, Zom mermMI, Pelk• 7. Gull• s. Rvan 3 Hl lltlme Edison,~, 10 M11"1l ..... 11 le11th (OJ C.41 M•rina Slttllll•"" 071 F t•I Bollm P~1ne111 1121 F Ill Tflonl Wooten <10 C !ISi Spl.,.v c. .. "' c. ''''Hatton TP>ompSon 1131 G 1a1 C-m•n H8 ...:or•no \ub l(n1<1hl 2 Marin• Atverer • H11ltome Mar1n1 l111 CM°"• eel M¥ Ull (411 Unlvertllf Antrn 14) F 21 Rod~" t1ro<1,...., 1191 r (41 "'°'u"" 8ut0tn 116>1 ( 1jj\ l1U,.\ P•Cllttl ll)t (, t4 1 0dVI\ Starn\ '10, G 11)t Crw.tth"' CCSM 'KOf'H'"Q, '\U~ t.Ni•r,on • Sr.•nnon 4 Z4h.U\ • Uni Ma~tOt'I 1 Hno:><>,. Mo\kJ Haltt1me COM +\ 1• \A V1lley 14'1 IU I lhlolncl1 Arr•leno Ill F I 111 Mo>f\on.·v Bui•• I~\ JO l•I \.,arlm~r ~" t Ill C 1111 Br.....,<(!orr Arm•lronq u 1 c, l•I Cru1 Clark 111 C. 1•1 M•-~ E s1•nct,a scor•nio \utK C•,,100 I• 11(.ttr•ml)f'O\A, W1nw<~ H11111mc E\l4n<1a 34 1• $a .. Cl-• , .. I (641 o .... Miii• P~rt !OJ F "' Ohon WAcl<! 11'1 f (1\) .letl'' \ Gffnov 141 ( ISi TIM>rnlOf' ~ MulllOlft !41 C. 111 H~noroc•-. 8 MulllQM "' C. 1161 (oll•"' SC ""''"' ,...,. 8•'" 4 Dotto 1 Ma•on 4 OH e. .. 2 H1fll'""' OH ll-10 ~MOM<>ttl ,,._ v.11.., '"I <Ml N __ , Sloll 0 f 111 O•"''' Ctw•n IJJ F 1•> Oooctv E-llW.,.,_r fl/Ir I IOI'-''""".,_ Reul•"" flOI G 1111 Eulllnh R•"'1re1 'I* r, n1 ~·,••t FY ~<O't"Q "'O\ Hfrtow "'°'""''' I H..-ro • Copoom • f:ttid"t I f\OtnGI• ' l=tt ) MH S..lllv•" 1 Olly 7 1•1 1 C."llon 1 BrCMn•Br...,..r? Hallll-~ 41 II J C Track ~-.o...,...._.cu.,.., (---KM ... } l~met., 1 lloAlll• <Gl 10 • 7 hvl°' IC) 11 ll M<Cleltal'IO IGI 11 1 IOO tneltn I Gold !0112.11 H•r ron <Cl 2iu Oavl• !Cl n 1 -00 melen I H,vlll~\ IC I 10 ' 1 01,..n-1 !GWJ St OJ Gold <01 n • too ,,,.,.,, I ICleln\OH• IC: I l. U.l 1 Wl'ltf'l4 IC) I SI s 3 Rooan 10 11·01.2 1,SOO mtl•" ' l(lefll,HMr cc I J·ff.11. Hiiien tGl 4 OS S 3 Grffft <Cl 1.01.1. J,000 lfl•'*" H .. Ple<llUe 1 )"C-IOI 10'°' • 2. l(efMy IG'N) 1o·n .n . $1tl,.,..utet 10110 l3 • 110 mtlllf' hlQll r>urOlei-1. Oan· duren IOWI "0 2 Bourne (C) 14 O l Ptltn1Gl164 400 -lnt•..--•tt hurdtn 1 R~n IOI U t 2 $11erar IC) SJ • 3 ltle l D•lldu<e11 IGWI a..O Cllubll• IGWl5'L .. Rt1..,-1 Cllrvs '4 ' 1 Gofcleft 11¥9'1'4..t ~II• lttl1y-I GI-tit l 1• 1 7 C/tru,3 GWC. HJ-I JollMon ICI ... 2 hwc !GI ~u. 1oe1 ... <GI M SP-1 Geswey IGWI »f't l...:1'0ol •e<0rd) 2 Petl~ IOI l , .. ,,, 1 ~c~lll! ICI 4~J>OI u -1 9Mr IOI 71·l 1 v...,.. ICI ~u . ...,,,_,. 101 ~ Javelln-1. lw1 l(lW) th > 7 Jtwell (GI *"1J Boe ICI IT>-4 T J-1. Oec.ro IOI 41·11 SCIHllor4 IGWl'4-Wt OISC\lt-1 MtC.11ltY IOI t4M 2 HoJl .. 14r IGWI US•J J lt'flHll CCI 132-t . "v-1. v~ fOW> 1+.ot -*'"toll 10114-01.~ IOI I~ E•lton Ual !561 WHlmi111tor 8olflftn tlt F 8) McW•flta"n Cudmore •111 F •61 M~let Ru91n UI C: 1731 Fouum ~n 111 c. 1~1 w111P.er Holt ()•I G 1101 P•rldo Ed1\on scorl"9 •ulX McOonalO 13. Mor91n • ""'' 1. II-•· Hdllll,,... Edoson. 31·17 Cor..,I d4" ~r (SJI ISll U11iwrsltY Mall lb) I' UI c;.n. .. NaQtl 161 F 181 Borsuk Jon~• (~I C 121 HooPt"r !;l\olhn 2ll G 1211 LdnQm.t~ McCorlll•fl t11 c. 12) MttrVIC" CdM \Co11nq \Ub\ Ount•r .a l>ocfotv 1 5mllh 2 Bora' Uno Brown 6 Pref! 1 Halllomo> C.dM 28 18 E•l.-i<l• f!oll 13'1 \A v111ev Gdf~r f~I F 141 Worth<>\ltr K~up 001 F l pl WllHam• Prico 1211 c 10 c .. voo• l\ulltY f?I <'.. <SI Cook Vam~ml !81 G 1171 Jdmt'>On E\IMIC•\• ~tofln9 \Ut)\ H~l<on 1 M•d<lf'n 1 Goctwin 1, Pl<k""Y 3 H•ltt1mt E\l.,,cia,2'-11 Sall Cl-nte (UJ (01 OoM Hlli' 5ullon !Ill F 16) Smv1t1 Oun1v111 <SI F 181 Graham Fonn19a •SI C 1131 S..mu~I\ Mlle "*II W G 11'1 Skll~• P•rk•r 1'1 G IOI Hawkin• S•n Cltomtnt• '\(Or •no \Ub ' Horvath a O'Halloran 6 MACGr~.., 1 P•tt•S 2 Whitt' 1 D•na .-..it\ Groon 1 Hallllmco Soon Clomentt 19-JJ Cotti~· I~) 13') Lagurw 11H<h H•rru t7\ F-Cit) Sm1tf\ N•umfft f1 ~ .t t ArtdPr\.OI\ .,._\\fol~IO 61 ( I) Co,.._f\ Dom.,,.· (II C. d 8 1nll'Y Bf'•\ltv •11> G 1131 Fll'cJ (.O\tA M•'• ...C:Ot•t\Q ~UO'\. Hp" <It •Ct \ ' T ~v 1 Uqvn~ Bt>•c n Fl•tf\trl\ 1 F-lf'tcrw-, 1 l<•lfl·""' Cost.> '>l~<a 21 1~ Hul't le.Cll (.,I (U I 111Yrln1 Gt-nn '&• F'. .u M~"''' 'Ta'ftor C41 F 11l Saytor Peona~111 ~hli c 41 P•uvn Eld .. 09~ "'' c. (131 NPI""' Av~•~ 1131 G 11Q I Gr4ham M.artn• Xtill'lnq \.\lb\ Ao\~6 Git»\ 4 H•lfhmt' ~nna 2611 U T•oC311141l MIHM Vte10 AU\k•UI F l?IV•!l L•eel~ R<Kn-ql~ 1)1 F 1101 Hullm"'1 Ho•~\ 11~\ C tll't Ben•d•• llAc fl'adcJeri 161 C. Il l Strother\ Formoto ~I C. 1171 Sthmodt Et TOf'o wonnq 'ub Grlt~lvll ' M 1Hlon V1e,t0 ()(ho..\" H~ltt lnw Miu.on \'i,.10 2• 11!1 l'RESHMAN llew~ !Ml (U J -t;il11 V•llO S Gadd•S 161 F IOI A•11ch A C..tddo\ 170 F 1101 Coppom C.•ldwt•l 1111 C 1211 Cowen L'"''• 111 c:, •21 lrw•n f<<t•\ ,t1 (", U1 Rtt-vnotd\ N•woort w_or·no \Ub'\ OrolC• 1 FV Lt1i•f"' l «•rcrwntav11 I Srr\•t"-' Hall11-Newport 3\·16 llllarlllt I.,) 1'1) H""11"9t.., 8HO A1fUQ '' F 1\ Ktrtq 0•'1119\0f't 10t F-•21) M TurfW'r "'•<9' ,,,, c 11) p.,,. Kart'\ t1t (; C71 AIJfdforM•c>e Gral\lm 1111 G 1~1 Col'll,..rH Merl,.. Korlf1Q WI>\ MtCltlld!l 1 9..,.,,.,,,, H•ln1me ~''"" •2 21 Gain <Fl 1 06 I . 100 trH l LI,.. dholm (Fl S4 I. SCIO lrH I M-r INI S 111; 100 blck-1 1.,.non <NI I 0111, 100 brH \I -1 Trotltr 11'1 I 1) 1. 400 lrM r~•Y I Foothill J .. ~ FROSH· SO PH N__, 1741 IM) ,_~Ill 200 medloy rtl•v I Newport I SI 6 1001r~• I T•rrv IFl1 Slt•en\INJ l Botrbilum lFI Tl,.,. I SS,S 100 I M l Wlllldm\ IN ) 7 Slromo,iren !NJ l ,fle(k tFJ Tltn• l I~ q SO fru I ~llrH•\ (NI l Oonoqllue IFl3 Hovcin1onlFJ Tom" 7\6 100 fly I S.rw llcJ tr I 1 Ow\lfY IN I J Flf'Ck IF I Tim• I 06 7 tOO Ire<> I Ttrry IF'I' Porl•V.nl IN 13 Sl~Wn\ IN) Tim• n 6 100 Dack I Wllli•m• IN I ' S<romor•n (NI J Oono9hu~ • F 1 T1mt104• 100 br~a\I 1 Alli.on INI 1 Crff INI 3 BtAllV (FJ Tl-I 11 II 400 lrH rctl•V I Footnlll l .0 1 Marina IM•'tl llllhl Loera 100 mtdltY r•lay 1 M•ron•, 1 11 I 100 lr.e 1 Ekber9 (Ml 1 10 1. no w cond or IN rd. 100 tno ""11!•v l Hamr• IMI J OS S no ""on<! or fhlrd ~O lrff I Tl\~llf'n IMI 1• 1 2 Oolll>aum IMJ 3 c..tr C.rovb•ll (LI 100 fly ' Jnt•r IMI I 09. 1 Nu90nl <Mil no11\1rd 100 ,,~ ' [)ollDeum (Ml I 00 I , 111~1 O.~q oMl-Hump <LI 100 bat• I l ubc .... nc:o IN J I 18I1 Bovd\lon IMI J C..mpC)C>ll MI 100 br•-"I l EwMI IMI I 1S A 2 '1emr• !Ml) """'"'~'<LI •00 fr ff rofay I Maron•• OS 1 El Tero (571 IMI Slnl• Ano 200 m.Oltv rel~y t S~nla Ana •1 00. 100 Ir_. l MC h11<1 HI ISi 1 07 8 1 Jonu fEI 2 16 1 l SIClllolnl tSI 1 16 I 100 IM I M< hoqerl ISi 1 ll • 1 51cll1an1 ISi 1 31 J l J Aw•rkamp tE 12 llo SO ft ft 1 't"V&'"O (')) /O 8 1 Jvnr~ IE\ 18 I 3 G. <1tlle 1)1 J6 I 100 fly I Sl<lllr.nl 1'>1 I •H I l '11~ qlns IE l; 11.ll Malo•\ •El I 1S 0 100 Iott I C Molle, 151 Sii 2 1 J ,.,..,hmµ 151 1 oo 7 1. Sl<lll•"' 151 1 01 8 100 IWl<k I McT1911arl •SI l OJ 01 t<u9h•' (EI 1 14 & J B Jolln\On (SI I IS 4 100 1>r••'1 1 vounq IS J I 16 1 2 c; Awt•k11mp IE) I It 0 3 Kelty !SI I 1' 4 400 rroe ret1v-1 Sanll An1 • 10 o l'ln.. V1lley <90 1141 CdM 100 meOlty <fl•Y I Founl1ln va11e,1 °' J 100 '"" I Kau .. n fC I 2 01 , , hylal 'Taylor,, I l JOM\IO<'I IF I 100 1"'1 "*"•' l Beldr~ <Cl I OI • 1 Bou""•" IF I ) Br He IF 1 10 Ire•-I Hollon ICI 11 q 1 Oempuy!Fll Mu .. IF I ~fly I 8rait1Fll001 ll<Juw•M IFI l Eci.tM!tln IFI 100 Ir.., 1 Belthe <CI S• S1 T aylot IF I J R-en (f l ~IMO I MuW IFJl1•1 K1u .. n ICI) ~.nler 11'1 SO brH'I I Mon ICI H 1 1 Oempwy IP'JJ Jol1n'11M'1 IF> 100 tr .. ,.,.., ·I Foun1a1n Valley I 4t • PARTS DEPT. NOW OPEN · 8 A.M. to 3 P.M. • SATURDAY IUHMTL.IAOUJ W L ""' Jf-llhlvallf\' I 0 S1' IQewPol'( HIAPr S l S6.$ Huntl119toft8Ncll 4 4 514 IAll-4 4 41S Merl,,. 1 S 406 W•st mll\lt8f' o t ,. ,,....,..sc- l'ou11t1lft Vall•'f ••. Newport "-14 Hllfltlnoton 9tlc.1110, 11Mri111 SJ £011.011'1, WeltlfllMlw M ......... ,..~ Huntlll(llOft 1Mc1' It £ell'°" FollnlAln VII..., at ~tmlMlet MarlMel~Htl'tlor SOUTit COAST LEAOUf '# L PP' Sin CftlMnle 11 I 7tS Corona dtl Mar 11 1 • 12 l!I Toro • 4 673 eo.11 Miu 6 • ru L19Uf't lleKh 8 ... Unlvtr1lty a ... , O•n• Hiiis ' 611 Minion Vl•Jo 1 11 S62 TllwtMy"sk-• Sin Clemente6t. Oan1 Hllls64 Corontdel M¥ SS, Unlversltt4S Cost• Mtts•M. U9UM S.acll S• El Toro64. MisslcJn Vielo n ~.Uy'aGamH 01n1 Miiis Al con»na clel M•r S•n Cl-le at El Toro MIHlon Vielo•I U.ouna Bea<:h Uni versify •t Cos le Mu• GINTURY L•AGUE W L "" ,.,. E\lanc1a· 10 1 6'4 514 Tusl"· 1 ( JS2 •n !Wint• Ana V•lley 1 s 7•• 110 Senta Ana l s JS. h1 Footl!ll: 1 .S 900 671 Et M_,.. 6 611 UO VIII• Plrk I 663 1'1 Or•nu 0 11 748 1'10 • C:llnched 1 lie lor 1~19ue <h•m-l>lon.,,lp. TllwMIJ'S Scwa. E•t111<I• n. SA V•lley 46 foothill Sl. T.mln so ~la Ana Sl,Or""9 S1 EI Moclena '3, VIII• P•r1' 61 ...,.....,.,Gemes VIiia P•r\ •I Estancia Footlloll at SA Valley Tu•lln•ISlnlaAn• EtM-•IOunoe ORANGE LEAGUE 8rt1 '1'1. FuflerlonM Valencl•••. Canvon 11 Sonora6S. El Oor-~ L• H•bre st E soeran1a •I GARDIN GROVE LEAGU E Bolsa Grandc8A. G•roen Grovt 7• Rench<> Al1"11tos 1'. Lii Quinta 69 LO' AmiQO\ SS. S..nt1ago S1 FRllEWAY LEAOUIE M•o,inolla80, AM!lelm61 BVf!na PMlt 61,S.vann; u ti Ol 1 Lowell 11, Troy 6' Sunny Hilll JS, WHltrn 6C1 EM .. IRELEA.GUE Cypress SJ Sldcll•b<tck 4S K•lctllalS, Ktnnedy64 LO\ Al• m1~ IO, U..u 64 Tennis R esults Or1n99 CO.HI 121 (I) U11lw. R..itallfl sc ...... Vltlr• <OCCI Cl*I Gon11l•s 6 • ._, Wl\olmer IAJ def N""'•u 6-2. 6 l ClpeloUlo IOCCl l•td Coltman o 4 J 6, ROiier IA I dtl Harns 6-•. o-4 Mor1"" (OCCJ lied Mam ls 6" 6·1; BrAnth !RI dtl Miii ... o. 1·b. Ta- IR I def Pl\1111.,., f>-1 6·J_ °"""' .. Wnlt"1~r MHhrf' UU det v1eo-•. N.-ft•u • J 6 4; Cu•f:'l"non AO\>C-tR) Od Hn• rl• 1-nllllp• 6 I /.). o l . 8 rohc.h Tewen U:U dt f C.e~lwto. MQf"tUt,O 3.6 ... s11t<11-ca II> <II oron ""'r« Slnl)I .. GotOberv <C.J dtl Albert 6·" 64; Orendain IG) d~f fuller 6.(t, II 0 , Finley ISi dal Tool"'" 1·6. 1·6. 7-6; Wall <GI dtt Brown 6-0, 6·3; Ma,shall !GI def LlnOI06 1, l>-1: Hiil IGI Oel Lu· l•no6 0,1,.1. °"""'" Goldt.r<,1-0rencllln ((;I Clef Finf•V· Brown 6-0, 6·1: Toobon·Mersh•ll IGl Oel Afbert·Llnd•9 7-S. l·S; LUke- Atllerly IGI Clef Fuller-LU)lll06·l. 6-1. Ot .... Wftt (SJ 141 EHl\.A sc ..... M41Snlk <LAI def ll;uyper H . 7 .... .... 61Mllr.e <LAI ~I C:..11~ 6-3 •·1; B•H (Glo.tSllMar .. , 61,6·); Men. na (LAI won by det1u11 . c;.,.n.111 ILAI dei L.Yl\Olt .. 1. ,_.; 8rOW1\ IGI def C.n1on1 ... 11 ... 1.s. Deo!Olft ltUYDer Br .. IOI dtl Munlk- S.lettr .. l.1•. Clllne-Lvnott IGI .,., Bl•n••CetllOfll.,.I 6-d 1 ... 6·3; Ul<ler· Allen IGI clef -Guentll ,.,_ 6·1. .. , VARSITY ... _ m ,., M1r1111 Edlton KOrinti-Crjlllllf' 2. We~ler CO.ta Mew m Ill L .. ...,. CM scorln<.a--<>o•ri " McLeod, Schmeisser. LB-KemD, ""rr111e. CIM Ill ltl U"lw"l\y Mla.lett Viejo Ill (2) IU Toro MV uorln<,1-:Shore J. El Hanav1<,MAtNeu. P't11. v.11.., m m H1Mt. e.1c11 FV scor""1-5teln~e 2. Woodford ••tMtle 111141 SA Vall•v est1H1t1ucoc1no-!> s.nc11e1 N _ _, Ill Ill Westmlluler JUNIOR VARSITY a.i-Ill II) M.tr111e fiOISon KOrlf1Q--COfef'll1n Cesl.IMeu 111 (41 L.allHWI L 9 'Kotl"<.1-1111 3. ROH CM Ph1 C:dM (01 111 \JlllWr\lly MIUlon Vie· lo (01 (\I E1Tor0t1K.o<l119 l<o•tK\ ,.,._ V ....... 111 hi HIM1 ... Kii FV M:OCffle-$1ell'llUl. l(lm l..l'-"la 111111 SA van•, l'ROSH·SO"H ,.,._ V11111y 111 CO HIM!. lelCll FV Korl"ll-<o<*. • ._ 111 (ti Ao\ar111• Edison Korlf19 S.l(IOmt. Rou<• .Jc Golf c,,.._ co•> 1"11 Of-CNst CMMese~CCI Slier ICl, 1tdtf. AftS...,tl',11. Stewwt 101.1' Oef. Lvont, 74 Crooll (Cl,ISOef. R..,,,...as,17. HOI,.,... lC>, JSdef. TMr11ull. n Fowler ICl. toclef. Gorslll. tt. Ctoulty IOI. n ... "°"-· 79. JF I I I I I ~ I INVENTORY CUARANcE We're loaded with Omegas and Jinuary Is inventory clearance month. If you've been thinking about Omega • this fs the month to make your best d~H .J ~ N. Orend AWi., Sent• Ane C714) 642·8811 (Oerdln Grovt Fwy, 01.-ll &icltl MUSIC CENTER PRESENTATIONS, in the grand tradidm of its robust 1975 sea film/lecturehit,"()'heLGsiofdleGreatSeaI>oss," is pleased to announce a stunning, new FIVE PART SERIES MUSl C CTNTER 0PAVitfoN and its saaling vessels Wednesday, March 2, 8 :30 pm I A ==~~'::necolllslOns oll Bo1mudd Thia splendid film Is English-made and con1a1na a apcc1a1 sound <rack narra(1on, BS does ns speclacular companion lllm for Mu11c Cen1er PreHnl&1lons. m • 7 crheAdmiraJltCllp'7.J - -I Ont Of England a grHI ytcht races. lllmed oll Cowea As In every program In <h11 new, red·b<oooed f11m/ l.cture serle1, 11 wlll heve lhe aoa lover chm1>1ng lhe rigging. AINI,• speclally filmed repon on the San Diego sea <rials of <he l>r1lh1n1. new 12·melfo .Amerlcan conlender ENTERPRISE tn the •77 Amenca'e Cup, "'"a<ed 1n pen on by a member ol lhe ship 1 sponsors -Wednesday, March 30, 8 :30 pm I:Awntanoe eou.ieou with expedltlo" diver Wlllltm .. •edon•ld natrallng In pereon. The o•eal Cou1tt1u 1<ory. lrom tht marine 1c1enl(sl'1 early profo11ional lilt, on lhe job 01 aea. rlghl up to Iha present Thia non· TV film Is eapec••llY odlled. megnrllcent foolage from 1he Cou11eau library. -Wedneadar, Aprll 13, 8 :30 pm Ya""" Saa. "'6 Mk with Capt. lrvl119 John•on narrating In peraofl tor lht Weal Coaet premiere ol hi• l1<a11 remarl!.1ble 111m accouni, comple1ed on lhe ••e of tile Egyp111n-lar1th war San wllh Irving •nd Elecl• Johneon 1n lhe w•ke of ahlp1 o r lhe Ph1roen1 and lhl barge ol Cleopal•IL ""d lhlt 11 tn edventure• No river cllerl or lfllOI boo!\ e l111. Tht Yenkee pru.ea elong, acr1pl119 bollom end tides. learning lhl way1 ol In. great rlvtr only from axpen•nca •"d atudy of 1h1 magnlllctnt l•luccu (Egyp<11n ... 111ng ve11e<1) who~e a~1pper5 have long since IH"*1ti>11mt the unprt<licteblt Niie. F"rom • •n<l to end. lrom the Suden to lht Mediltr· r8fllln the NII• It Egypt, In lour motllha, "'Uh uper1 pno1o0r1on•" from National G90- gra.ph1e Mag&Zine eboerd the Ynn•ff u111 thrOIJgll • CMllUtoon end culture tllet hu 111111.0 for over 6.000 y11ra Only Southern C1ilfornl1 Apptarence (et No Ytcllt Clube) Individual flcktt pr1Cfl for each event ere S5.00 (Orehealrt & Founders) S4 00 (L.e>gt) S3.00 (Baltony). Slgnlltoant dllcount• are ottered _,,en ett five ev'enta er• purchased on ... IOI\ .. rles. S..ton ticket pnc• ere $22.60 (OrchHlfe A FC>Ut!dert) $t1M (Loge) ltrld $12./50 (B1loony). Ord• yolir s .. &Orl Tick~• Now, encloalng cheek payable to -Mu11c Center Tlcktl Olflce, with •<•mf*l, Mlf·addrested envef4pe. lo 13S N. Grand Avenue, 1.ot Pleue olllCI( tt approprl1t1· I am ordtrln9 MelOn tlelt•ll only I am orotflllO t11191t tlok•ll only I tm ott1erlne llOtll M110n & 1lng1t tickets ..... 0 (W.501S17.&0lf12.50) 0 ('51 ... 113) 0 Wednesday, April 20, 8:30 pm Anmnd Cope Hom In 1975. MCP presen!ed Capt. Irving John50n·s Incredible ace1a111fllm1ccoun1 ol • voyage ol the hls1or1c 1quere-rtgger. Peking (now pretel'Wd as a monument • •· ':ii':" ·• In New York Coty Harbot). made "~' when Johnson was t 7 yeara "' ~,t old1 It was 1 1mash end hundreds V llllllllr ol requests wero 1ece1ved to -~ •• show It age1n ii ever "'e were lo organize a IJ*'!' sea aenea. Captain Johnson w•li MN'lt• 11. 11galn In peraon. For affllr 1n1erm1ss1on Music Cent•• Presentahons ooaa 10 Engh•h lllm makers for• second brilhanl and green-water crvlst eround lrHcherous Cape Hom. made• hall • c:enrury le<er -The Savio• Seas"-a colOr IC(:ovnt lwUh 1ound tree~ n1rr•t1onl 011 1973 ln1trn111on1I yec:hl race arovnd 1"e worlo l1om Plymou1h. England Seventffn yechl.s with 200 men and women from nine n111on1 p1rt1c1p1<ed in thll hl1101'1C race 1n .. hic:h hVH were loSI ~ Wednesday, Aprtl 27, 8 :30 pm flw R.ounfddArt and dK Sea, nafrlled. In pereon, by Slariley Ro1&nfeld Mu11C Center Preaentat•ona llas a pen I nearly e ye•r In orgtnlrlno 1"'1 mo11on lolm pre. aon1a11on wnh Mr Ro1ente<d. lo screen In e unique proc•u of "tnlmallng" prloaleu hlllorlo 11111 pho101. Which move In series, end wh•cll wm IHve lht y1chlsm1n In Iha thee1re drooling with eoch tool of film. A• Amer1cn'1 letd1nQ marine phol091aph1r, and lh• son ol th• lftle and great Morrl• Aosonteld. RoH11leld prosonls an h11torle view of y11chtlng and lh• lreM• ot the llmea. II covors Amorle1 •Cup Racing. Tall Shipe, ocean '9clng In the U"lled Sta111 ond Europ•, <h11 mooda end manner& o< <h• sea. Incisive momonlt ano.i. tht !)Ody h11'\Qtu10• or 11llor1 11 lhay lend lhelr 111k1, 11nd loceJ wind end waler lnllu&ncea. His ohologr1ph1 and commo111a rellec:l lhe 11xporlenc1 and tuagmenl dlY•lopod lhroogh two genera· 11on1 of ln<ttpre11ng y1chllng w11h the ctmor~ .,,ntre1n a 11nglt Rosenfeld photo lred111on1lly Is known 10 "Uy 11 ell." Angeles,' OA 90012. lnlormahon (213) 972·7211. You may elao order on this form llckeca to lndMdual eventa In the terln, but thele elngle mell ordera w ill not be jlHlgned (or fltled) unlll all •uon ueketa ll•v• bMrl procUHd afcer Feb. 2t. when no fllf· tti.r ..,'°" orcleta will be ecoaptect o"OUP SAL.I.It (213) 97~ 74«1. OflOOUnll for NIN alngl• perfor1111nce. for 3S or mote per90n1, only. OflOD ,OR~ '°" HAION TICKITa A llHQUI IVIN1' __ , r. J · J~CK1E HYMAN, Editor &EKENDE·R . . . Arts /Dining Out Entertainment" ' Who's Listening? Composer Notes Lack 0/ Audience By JACKIE HYMAN O.U.IN&ty ...... " ... Peter Odegard b94 no illusions about how many people listen to contemporary "serious" music. ''The audience for tbis type of musk is small enough lo put in your eye," he said. is made up or nine haiku which have to do with the four seasons," he said. ty. It was called 'The Love Ap-' ple ' (written w i th Ron Thronson). When I want to reacb After completing the work, he decided it followed the tradi· tional baroque form or a concerto grosso, so that is what be named it. a wider audiencp, I write wider· audience music." Odegard said be began writing music at the age or9. "What does a 9-year-0ld write? But the UC Irvine faculty m ember is not easily dis· couraged. Discussing a concert of new music scheduled for Feb. 20. heaaid, "Most of the pieces in this concert have one advantage. "Everybody expects rou to have a title for a piece, nght? I could have call it 'thinl' or 'piece' but that seemed to be as appropriate a title aa any.'• · He writes what everyone else bas written." How does be start a new com· position? "With a situation, anything. _;.I'bey are mercifully short. So one 'has a chance to hear them without going to sleep first." Asked to describe the work, Odegard said . "It's very good." The best way to start is to have somebody say, 'Why don't you write me a piece'?" "PEOPLE CAN hardly sit still and listen lo traditional musk Even if you go to a rock concert. the number of people who have the attention span to listen to a whole piece is an unknown quan· tjty," Odegard said, pointing oul that at rock concerts people talk, IDS COMPOSING is not limit· ed to "serious" forms. he said. '·Four years ago I wrote a musical comedy that was sold out when we did it at the universi· "I don't think a composer real- ly thinks about what 's going to happen to a piece after he's done with it," Odegard said. ·'What did Bach do with it? It ended up on the church shelf and the kids used it to wrap their lunches in." . eat and mother ways divert their 'attention. "We're a background music society. When we go to the supermarket we listen to Muzak. I would oot do a modem audience the disservice of insisting they listen for more than 10 minutes." His new piece. "Concerto Grosso." which will be given its world premiere . runs six minutes. CURRENTLY ON leave from UC I, Odegard a lso performs on the violin a nd· viola and 1s founder and director of the Irvine Conservatory of Music. "I believe that music is a pret- ty universal activity and. in this country at least, we have forgot· ten that between the tremendous interest in sports activity and the tremendous emphasis on pro. fessionalism ," Odegard said. ''In Southern California there's almost no emphasis on playing music as a healthy and reguJar recreational pastime," he said. "Most people don't know how to listen to music. Tbe rebson is that most people don 't play an in· strument or sing. J say. if you sing terrible, sing anyway." "THE Pll!:CE is written for one performer on each of the s tandard orchestral inslru ments," Odegard said, explain- ing that there will be four brass players, four wind instrument players, four string players and a percussionist. plus four vocal soloists. "The text that the singers sing Ppter Odegard Odegard's ne w work and pieces by UCl students of com· position will be presented at the UCI Concert Hall at 8 p m. Feb 20 Admission is free . . Calendar for Spring The following calendar is intended to assist Orange Coast readers in planning their spring entertainment activities. Advance tickets can be obtained at Liberty, Mutual, WaWchs and Ticketron outlets for most Los Angeles events. All scheduled activities are subject to change and should be; rechecked at a later date. FEB. 20 -Composers concert at UC Irvine Concert Hall FEB. 20 Festival of Leaming voice concert at Santa Ana College Phillips Hall FEB. 20 -Robert Merrill at Ambassador Auditorium. Pasadena FEB. 20 -Symphony concert at Golden West College Theater, Huntington Beach FEB. 21 -Skiles and Hendenon plus Windfield Summit at Knotl's Berry Farm FEB. 22·23 Cellist Mstislav Rostropovich at Ambassador Audltortum, Pasadena FEB. 22 26 "Butley," drama, at UC Irvine Little Theater FEB. 23 -Dance lecture-demonstration by The Moving Company, Golden West College Theater, Huntington Beach FEB. 24 -College orchestra concert at Santa Ana College Phillips Hall FEB. M·MARCH l -MAHLER festival with Utah Symphony at Ambassador auditorium. Pasadena FEB. 25 "Shakespeare in Opera." USC . Opera Workshop at Santa Ana College PhJllips Hall , FEB. 25 -Cal State Long Beach Jazz Ensem· ble. at Cypress High School in Cypress FEB. 2S -"Night o! Joy" with Andrae Crouch and the Di.sci pies, at Disneyland FEB. 25-26 -Jethro Tull at the Anahelltl Con· ventlon Center FEB. 25-26 -University Wind Ensemble at UC Irvine Concert Hall FEB. 25-26 -"Fascinatln' Rhythm" concert at Fullerton College FEB. 26 -Morning Glory Children's Tbeater· Puppet Play at Santa Ana College Phillips Hall FEB. 26 -VIOLA FAR BER Dance Company at Orange Coast College Auditorium, Cost a Mesa FEB. 26 -Newport Jan All-Stars at Am· bassador Audltprium, Pasadena FEB. 26 -Voice concert, UC Irvine Concert Hall FEa. Z1 -Jethro Tull at the Long Beach Arena. FEB. Z1 -Vl•dlmlr Horo.Sb at the Loa Angeles Music Center FEB. Z1 -Mac DavJ1 at the Anaheim Conven· tion Center FEB. 28-Frtd Wartne's Ptnmylvanbms, at Garden Gi'oveCoaununi\1 Church MARCH 2 -COncert.and sympbon)c bandi, at Cal State i'ullelion 1.J\Ue 'tbeatet Angeles Actors Theater MARCH 3·6 Mose Allison at Hungry Joe's. Huntington Beach MARCH 4·5 Opera scenes. at Cal State Fullerton Recital Hall MARCH 4-APRlL 3 "Fiddler on the Roof." Long Beach Civic Light Opera at Jordan -,.heater. Long Beach MARCH 5 -Craig Nies. pianist, with Long Beach Symphony at Long Beach City College Auditorium MARCH 5 -HARPSICHORDIST Igor Kipnis at Ambassador Auditorium, Pasadena MARCH !>-6 -University Chorale at Cal State Fullerton LltUe Theater MARCH 6 -Community Symphony Or c hestra In Orange Coast College Auditorium. Costa Mesa MARCH 7 -llthak Perlman al the Los Angeles Music Center MARCH 7. 9 Pianist Lazar Berman at Am- bassador Auditorium, Pasadena MARCH 8 -''Anc1ent and Modem Legends," new show at Tessmann Planetarium, Santa Ana College MARCH 8 -Violin Concert al UC Irvine Con- cert Hall MARCH 8 -"YANKEE Sails the Mediterra· nean." travel talk with Ir\l\ng Johnson, Santa Ana College Phillips Hall MARCH 8·MARCH 26 "Me and Bessie" starring Linda Hopkins at the Huntington Hartford Theater, Hollywood MARCH 9-27 -Los Angeles International Film Exposition at ABC Entertainment Center, <;entury City MARCH U -Van ·Cliburn. at Garden Grove Community Church MARCH 11-12 -University Chorus and Chamber Singers, UC Irvine Village Theater MARCH 11·12 -"The Lion in Winter," drama. at UC Irvine Little Theater MARCH U -27 -"The Night or January 16th," about Ayn Rand, at Golden West College Ac- tor's Playbox, Huntington Beach MARCH 12 -Los Angeles PhiUiarmonic at Santa Ana High School Auditorium . MARCH 12·APRIL 23 -"Two Gentlemen of Verona" at Sooth Coast Repertory, Costa Mesa MARCH 11 -THREE one-act plays at UC Irvine Uttle Theater MARCH 13 -Vladimir Asbkenuy at tbe Los An1etes Music Cen1.e?' · MARCH 13 -''Robin Rood," children's pJar; , at Santa AnaColleae Pbl1Upsffa11 MARCii t• -Ged'rge Benson at the Dorothy Chandler Pavllion • MARCH 18 -"Satlrlat Lecture" by Richard Armow, at SantaAQa Collqe PhUU Hall MARCH J.S.1•-Sorfng drama perfi mancc lri Orll\I Coaat Q)Ue • Atidlwnum, Costa Mesa MAl\CH 1&-20 ~ Alvin Ail~y Ctty Ce.nter D11Jce"lbeater.1U)CLA . MARCK17 •Cblft ... Circus of Talwan, at the Lons Beach Arena Friday, February 11, 1en DAIL. v PILOT • Cl Margaret Humphreys (reclining), Paul Picus (left) and Walt Douglas Coward Comedy Corning To Coast Noel Coward's comedy "Design for Living" will be staged Tuesday through Feb. 19 In the Orange Coast College Drama Lab, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Curtain time is 8 p.m . 3hd admission is free. Jack Holland directed the story of an Interior de- corator, a playwright and a painter. Margaret Hum- phreys, Paul Picus and Walt Douglas play the leading roles. The play was written in 1930. "It was one of Coward's biggest successes," Holland said . "The play was originally written for Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fon- tanne but has been a starring vehicle for other artists, most recently Maggie Smith." Also in the cast are Brian Fields, Ellen Russell, Brian De Lapp, Suzanna Bowling and Susan Wood . The set was designed by Thomas Smith and costumes are by Brad Elsberry. Calendar, Page 2 Beach MA RCll 17 27 N attonal Orange Show m San Bernardino MARCH 18 Vocal. instrumental concert at St Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach MARCH 18-20. 24·27 -"As You Like lt," Cal State Fullerton Little Theater MARCH 18-APRIL 2 "The Children's Hour." Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse MARCH 19 Afro·Amcncan dance concert in Chapman College Auditorium, Orange MARCH 20 -J aii ensembles in Orange Coast Coll~Ee J\llditorium. Costa Mesa MARCH 24 -Matrix in concert al Orange Coast Colle~c Auditorium. Costa Mesa MARCH 24 Chapman College Wind En!>emble concert. Orangt' MARCH 2.4-26-JAZZ festivai at Orange Coast College Auditor ium. Costa Mesa MARCH 24-21 "And Baby Makes Three," at Santa Ana Coiiegt', Laboratory Theater of Phillipi. Haii MARCH 25 -Orange County Master Chorale, ill Cypress H1 gh School in Cypress MARCH 2S Thad Jones· Mel Lewis Band at Oranse Coast College Auditorium, Costa Mesa MARCH 2G Shelly Manne-Ray Brown- Herb Ellis concert. a t Orange Coast College Auditorium, Cost11 Mesa MAftCa 26 -Bill Watrous and the Manhattan Wildlife Refuge concert at Orange Coast ColleieAud\torium, Cost a Meisa M,ARCH 2&27 "The Stone Flower" by Ballet Paclrtca at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse, Laguna Beach MARCH 27 -Choir concert at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. Newport Beach MARCH 37 -Ciech Cha mber Soloists at Am· bassad<>r Auditorium, Pasadena University or~hestra with Cal State Fullerton LitUe Long Reach City College Auditorium A PRlL 2 -Los Angeles Philharmonic at San· ta Ana High School Auditorium · APRIL 2·3 -Dance concert in Orange Coast College Auditorium , Costa Mesa APRIL 2·3 -Young pianists competition, at the Golden West College Theater. Huntington'·· Beach APRIL 4-GAUNA Vishnevskaya at the Los Angeles Music Center APRIL 4-7-"0z!" at the Golden West College Patio Theater. I luntington Beach APRIL 4.7 ~ Children's theater, Cal State Fullerton Recital Hall APR1L 4·9 ~ Easler Celebration at Dis· neyland APRIL 9 -Los Angeles Philharmonic al San· ta Ana High School Auditorium APR l L 12-"Pioneer s to the 'Outer Limits,' " new s h ow at Tessman Planetarium, Santa Ana College APRIL 12 -"Same Time, Next Year" with ' Dlck Van Dyke and Carol Burnett opens five- week nm at Huntington Hartford Theater • APRIL 13·14 -Hi g h sc hool c hoir festivai at the Golden West College Theater~ Huntington Beach . . ~-. .......... ----· C2 DAIL y PILOT Friday. February 1 t. t9n Calendar, Page 3 MAY 11-20 -•·cosi Fan Tulle," opera, in Oranse Coast College A.&Mji '901, Cotta APRIL 22 -"The Way ot the World" by John Houseman's Tbe Acting Company, Fullerton's Plummer Auditorium Meu .) " MAY 11-21 -"Promises, Ptomltel!" al tbe • Golden West College The J lfUntfncton APRIL 22, 23 -Max Moralb in "The Ractlme Years" at Tbe CJaremont CoUecu' Garrison Theater "APRIL22-JUNE4 -"Merton of the Movies," at the Los Angeles Music Center Ahmanson cTbeater -APRIL 2S -Masked Dance Drama of Korea at UCLA Royce Hall APRIL 23 -New Music Company at Cal State Fullerton Recital Hall APRIL 23 -"Camino Real" by The Acting Company, Fullerton's Plummer Auditorium APRIL 211 MAY l -VIRTUOSI d1 Roma at Am bassaaor Auditorium, Puadena APRIL 23-MA Y 8 -Ramona outdoor pageant in Hemet. San Diego County APRIL 24 -Jumpinc Frog Jamboree, Del 'ldar Falrerounds in San Diego County APRIL 26, 38 and 30 -"The Kitchen," by The Acting Company at UCLA Royce Hall APRIL 26-30 -Medieval festival at Cal State i Fullerton APRIL 27 -Los Angeles ¥armonic at 1 Santa Ana High School Auditorium APRIL 28-30 -Reader's theater at Cal State Fullerton Arena Theater APRIL 28·30 -Dance concert at Cal State Fullerton Little Theater APRILZ8·JULY 10-DECORATIVE mosaics and monumental silver, in the Frances and Armand Hammer Wing of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art APRIL 29-30 -Dance concert at Santa Ana College Phillips Hall APRIL 29-30 -Student dance concert in Orange Coast College Auditor,ium, Costa Mesa APRIL 30-MA Y 1 -Viva Mexico, at Dis- neyland APRIL 30-JUNE 11 -Play to be announced at South Coast Repertory. Costa Mesa MAY l "This Is Ballet," Ballet Pacifica at the Festival Forum Theater, Laguna Beach MAY 3-MJD.JUNE -"Irma La Douce." Los Angeles Civic Llght Opera production at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion MAY 4·8, 10· 15 -"The LltUe Foxes," Cal State Fullerton Recital Hall M.\ Y 5 -CINCO DE MA YO celebrations. various locations MAY 5 -Shearing Quintet at Ambassador Auditorium, Pasadena MAY 6 -Chjldren's Popcorn Theater at Santa Ana College Phillips Hall MAY 6·14 "The Desert Song" at San Bernardino Civic Light Opera MAY 7·8 Model and Craft Show, at the Anaheim Convention Center MAY 7 10 · "La Perichole." opera, at Cal State Fullerton L1lllt• 1'ht•nte: MAY 7 15 Los Angeles Ballet at Am - bassador Auditorium, Pasadena MAY 8 -Chamber singers concert at St. An- drew's Pn•sbytcrian Church, Newport Beach :\TAY R "Bnlh•t Folklorico de Santa Ana" at S;anla \nJ Collcgl' 1-'hll lips Hall ~A Y JO -MARVELEE Canaga at Am· : bassador Auditorium, Pasadena MAY 10 "Comets The Primeval ~ Iceberg, .. new s how at Tessmann f Planelanum, Santa Ana College t MAY 10-15 Ice Capades with Dorothy HamtJI at the Long Beach Arena MAY 11 Con cert Band at Cal State , Fullerton Lillie Theater •FOR \'AlENTINE'S DAY MON., fEB. 14th Come and see our F1oweri1 end Potted Plants for your 'Soec1al One ' You 11 rove the savings' We Wire F-t:>wcr-; Too, By FT D ,-----f,•l•rl•Til-----, r-----((1llJ:l•ID----, : ORANGES l: .. O.Mlw .... o.,f.! I I II ........ ,.... llllSMI I : 10,_., 1 oo :: PIAMUTs 1 I II 59c I I U.-.IOU... II • I I WlililC~ II U..JU.... I , _____________ ! L---~~----J I ---{(•llii!.11}-----· r-----c(•ltf:Mir---.... II I ,.,_,.Hew 1 t ,,........ SID I CUCUMBERS :! ..m~E I 3 25c II I ,.. 11 2r.r39c : U..tt Sb 11 u..lt 4 I wtfll C..,... 11 Wiii C..,... I --------------1 l---------------1 • ·• -----[(•llJJ•Jit----.... r-----rNlllltlil----, CAUFORMI& 1 11 CW.::> CAUOTS I I w I AVOCADOS l 1 ....._Siu 1 Me4. She I : C&UY _ l 2Sc.... :i 25c-..ct1 I ..,. LWt I 11 '=-,=' I -~---:!!~~----'~--------------~ I~ ~ [§] ' COWOMS UPtn .... 17-THUIS.. 7 f'.W. Beach , • MAY 12 -Chapman Coll .. Wind En&eJQble concert. Oran&e MAY 12·27 -One·act plays , at the Golden Wett College Actor's Playbox, Huntington Beach MAY 13 -University Wind Ensemble al Cal State Fullerton Little Theater MAY 13·15 -INDOOR Aircraft Show, at tbe Anaheim Convention Center MAY 14 -Bill Evans Dance Trio at Chapman College Auditorium MAV 14-lS -University Choir at Cal State Fullerton Little Theater MAY 15 -Film Festival, Cal State Fullerton University Center MAY 17 -Symphonic Band at Cal State Fullerton Little Theater MAY 18 -Women's Chorus at Cal State Fullerton Little Theater MAY 19 -University Orchestra at Cal State Fullerton Little Theater MAY 19-21 -"Carrousel of Anaheim '77," at the Anaheim Convention Center MAY 20-22 -NEWPORT Beach Arts Festival, at Fashion Island MAY 21-22 -University Chorale at Cal State Fullerton Little Theater MAY 22 -Community Symphony Orchestra in Orange Coast College Auditorium. Costa Mesa MAY 22 -Orange Coast College Symphonic Chorale at OCC Auctitorium MAY 27 -College Choir and Concert Band, Orange Coast College Auditorium, Costa Mesa MAY 27-JUNE 11 -"West Side Story," Fullerton Civic Light Opera at Plummer· Auditorium MAY 28-29 -Disneyl,and and AU That Jaz1 MAY 30 -Opening of Space Mountain at Dis- neyland JUNE 3 -"Cosi Fan TuUe," USC Opera Workshop in Santa Ana College Phillips Hall J UNE 3 -BAND concert at Golden West College amphitheater, Huntington Beach JUNE 3-18 -"Barefoot in the P.ark," Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse JUNE 4 -Choral concert at Santa Ana College Phillips Hall JUNE 4 -Chorale and Chamber Singers in Orange Coast College Auditorium, Costa Mesa JUNE 4-5 -Camp Pendleton rodeo, largest free rodeo in world, on Camp Pendleton Area 16, south of San Clemente JUNE 5 -Pops concert at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach JUNE 5 -Bach's "B Minor Mass" at Golden West College Forum 2, Huntington Beach JUNE 5 -Band concert in Santa Ana Coll ege Phillips Hall JUNE 5 -Pianist Jakob Gimpel at Am- bassador Auditorium, Pasadena JUNE 7-SEPT. 18 .-National Shakespeare Festival at Old Globe Theater, San Diego JUNE 8-10 -Student dance concert at Golden West College Theater. Huntington Beach JUNE 9 Philadelphia Orchestra with Eugene Ormandy, al Ambassador Auditorium, Pasadena JUNE 9-12 Lions Fullerton Community Fair at Cal State Fullerton JUNE 13-square Dancing, Golden West College Center, Huntington Beach 5th ANNUAL <DANA ~f)INT <9JIARBf)R 6FES'flytL . of ·~H~LGES Hourly Whale Watch Cruises FREE EVENTS: Marine Wildlife Speakers, Movies & Exhibits Special Events Military Exhibitions · See Schedules in Harbor Businesses (wheN 1-5 meets C-1 at the HG) 'SlaotDIJoat' Launched Gary Brunson and Rhonda Treischel star in the Fullerton Civic Light Opera produc- tion of Jerome Kern's ''Showboat." The musical with a cast of 40, directed by Ace Mask, will open Feb. 18 and run weekends through March 6, with 8 :30 p.m . performances Fridays and Saturdays and 2:30 p.m. matinees Sundays. Tickets are on sale at Wallichs Music Center, Liberty and Mutual agencies, and the box office, 879-1732 weekdays noon to 5:30 p.m . . Playwrights, poets and actora may be in- terested ln a workshop being conducted in Garden Grove .. Writers may submit works. which are then read by the actors at workshop sessions. All materials submitted will be read, according to coordinator Sondra Evans. There is no char1e. The next meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 27 at the Community Meeting Center, 11300 Stan- ford. Performers or writers interested in participating can contact Ms. Evaru1 at 11391 Acacia Parkway, Garden Grove, CA 92640, 638·6711. UMYaSrrt OF CAUF<>aHIA. lltVIHI! COMMITTEE FOR AITS PUSENTS SPECIAL EVENT UCI CONCBtT HA.LL I P'.M. FlllDAY, FllRUARY II, 1977 TURETZKY AHD FRJEH.DS U.--.941 lffltllMJ UC San Oteoo's Faculty Ensemble In a program of early and recent American Music performed with contrabass, piano. flute. banjo and voice. tracing the development of Instrumentation throughout American music. S3.00 general admisaion. Faculty/Slaff/students s2.oo. UCI students s1.60 UCI COMCUT HA.LL. a,. ••rickets Available Now in the ASUCI Box Office (71•) 833-55-49 Gateway Commons, First Floor. weekdays between 9am and 4·30pm and one hour before performance. If available. at the UCI Concert Hall Box Office. For further information. call Committee for Arts (7U ) 833-6378. Park 1n lots #9 and f10 for performances. Thts program 1s sPOnsored by the Comm1nee fOf Arts an cooperation with the californla Arts Council and the lnlercampus Cultural Exchange Committee. ( L M. BOYD ) INFORMS In the DAILY PILOT •~t+ r7r:;;=:~=1 Ice ·~t-~ ~ CAPISTRANO TRADING PUST ~ k ~ ~~ s ating ~ 103 to 503 savines on % · everyday. ~ American Indian Jewelry ~ [i] ~ durine our February Sale ~ g ~ This is a one-of-a-kind, while-they-last offer. Come look. ~ ~ Raprasanling outstanding Nn1/o. Zuni ind Hopi craftsman. ~ MESA VERDE CENTER ..__.I A4-, Cotto~ T•I. 17141 979-8880 ~~ Directly across from Mission San Juan Capistrano ~ ~ Open 7 days, 10:00 A.M. to 5:30 P.M./Telephone (714) 493-9088 ~ ~<§>~~<$>~~%<.§>%<§>~%~~<®-~A~~~ Come drive the Mercedes-Benz 4SOSEL. For you ••• for your passengers ••• it's ;a world unto itself. There is no other Sedan like the 450SEL. It is the premier Sedan in the entire Mercedes- Benz line. With its extended wheelbase. rt has more rntenor room than any other Mercedes- Benz available in the United Slates. Its extraordinary engineering and its host of soph1st1cated b1otechnical ideas all com- bine to make th rs car a unique expenence for everyone who rides 1n it. l he 450SEL comes to you with a comple- menl of safety. performance and comfort features-as standard equipment-that rs al- most unheard of these days It is fully equipped. right from the start. and priced to reflect its essential honesty What few items of optional equipment you m 1ght consider have more to do with your own sense of aesthetics. rather than engineering The 450SEL rs a very special 0 world unto 11self For you ... for every passenger. Call us today. A convinc- ing demonstration rs easy to arrange Seethe Mercedes-Benz at Mission Viejo Imports 831 17AO AuthorizedDealer 495 1700 • ~ 28701 Marauerlte Pkwy. • t San Diielo Fwy. 1t Avery. Minion Viefo I Out 'N About Norman Stanley The Inn Place For Gou""'1Wts Courteou9 and efficient lervlee wu most erident durtnc a visit to Lapila Beach•• Fred Harvey-operated Victor Hueolnn. Alic>. while dlninf at the Inn. you miibt be waited cm by a member of either sex, either one a • modem practitioner of an 8dmlrable custom that coea back more than 100 yean. to the parent company•• pollcy of good service aiilce its fou.ndiDI in 1816. The Victor HQlo Inn It.sell bespeab a kind of polbhed ele,uc:e also associated wi1b days lonllOM. And Utere's not only the sUCle5ilon ot anqlher time but of a distant place as well, an old world charm reminiscent of some grand bot.el at a European sea resort. THE IAKG:;.~~~ture windows provide one or the most breath g seascapes Laguna Beach bas to offer. And the ~iew is further enhanced by the beautiful floral artistry of the French garden landscaping the surroundlng bluffs. A very pleasant cocktail lounge is separated from the main dining room which, in tum. is somewhat ingeniously divided into a series of distinctly Individual areas. As restaurants in the area go, this place bas been around long enough to rate classification as · an institution. Nearly 39 years of continuous operation (since 1938) probably comes .close to set Ung the record. Even so, some major changes have occurred here in the past six months, the forem06t being the two new faces in the restaurant's top management posts: manager Jacques Mason and executive chef Jean Lafontan. MADAGASCAR·BORN Mason reeeived his training at Europe's highest-rated restaurant schools iii France and Switzerland. Prior to bis move to Laguna Beach he was director of restaurants for the Las Vegas Hilton. • Together with LA.f ontan. Mason bas com- pletely revamped the Inn's bill of fare. The result is a menu devoted wholly to gourmet continental cuisine. and featuring a staggering variety of dishes. All entrees include the garnish, beverage and a choice of soup or salad: tossed mixed greens and watercress, choice of dressing; spinach leaves and bacon dressing; potage du jour, soup a l'oignon,' with caJvados; oxtail Claire madere; vichyssoise glace. A la carte appetizer selections include tomate Nicoise. $1.25; chicken liver mousse. $1.25; linguini Bolognese, $1.75; prosciutto and melon, $3.SO; king crab cocktail or shrimp on ice. $3.75 each; Caesar salad. for two, $4.50; salmon poached in Moselle, $3. 75. MMMMINNNINtexkan Food •••••• from $1 .95 at LOS CASTILLOS, I Sot I teoelt ll•cL Walhal:alwc....~ -C.oddails & Moriachis--892-1347 Real cantonese Food eat here or take home STAG CHINESE CASINO 111 21st Pl., Newport Beach ORiol• J.tS60 .._to M .. 1c;.t o.ay-w...._., Ufttil 1:00 ..... O .... IJ_J .. __ '6U NOW A TRULY SENSATIONAL. SHOW!!l B 0 Friday, February 11. 1 m DAILY PILOT Q A Whale of a Festival Harpist Scott Grimes A number of temptine eiatrees were bypassed before we finally picked the tangerine duckling flambe, served oo a bed of wild rice, flared in orangt' liqueur. $9.50; and veal sweet· breads Mascotte, with artichoke bottoms. JDusbrooms, sauce madere, $8.50. · . Preparation. seasoning and cooking were superb on all counts. . Other entrees you might want to consider - among roughly ao possibilities -are Tnton•s tribute. oysters, shrimps, halibut and sea scallops. all deep fried, $7.75; medallions de veau. saut.e Marsala, $8.25; poulet saute a sec aux cbampignons, $6.50; roast leg of lamb, demi glace, mint sauce. $8.50; sirloin steak, New York cut, $11. TONIGHT, l'EBtt1dYU WHALE FEBnV AL -Eacb weekend this month at Dana Point Barbor. Hi1bll1bta: marine wildlife talb. 10:80 a.m. ud 1:30 p.m. today throuah Sunday at New Muina Inn meet- ing room: tidepooJ tours n:ao a.m. Saturday and 12:30 p.m. Suriday from Welt Bu1n pier; youth pet parade. 10 a.m. Saturday; nrtous exhibits and fi1ma; children's movie matinees at Marina Inn. 3:30p.m. today and lp.m.Saturday; arrival of Donald Duck. 9: 30 a.m. Sunday at Mariner's Village ~taurant. Free. Pet pll'ade lDlorma· lion. 496-475' or 496-3931. 'MY TBllEE ANGELS' -Comedy, 8:30 o'clock tonight tbroogb Marcb 5, Frtqya and Saturdays only. Garden Grove Community Theater at Late School auditorium. 10801 Oranaewood, Ju.st eaat of Euclid. 554-14.52. LEONAJtD BASS -Comedian. uncle of Dean Martin (replacing previously acMduled Kelly Monteith). 8:30and10 o'clock toai&ht and Satur- day at Laff Stop. 2122 S .E. Bristol st .. Newport Beach. $3.50plusooe drink miDimu.m. ~ CHAMBER OBCllE8TltA-9:15o'clock tonight in Memorial Hall Auditorto.m. Chapman College. 333 N. Glaasell st., Orange. $2 1eneral. $1 atu· dents and seniors. 99'7-6648. COlllC STRIP OPE&E'ITA-''Dict Tncy in B· Flat:• 8 o'clock tonight through Sunday at .Moulton Lab Studio, Chapman College, Grand . Avenue at Palm Street. Oranae. Free. 'UGBT UP THE SKY' -Comedy. 8 o•ctock tonight. Saturday and Feb. 17·19. Saddleback Valley Community Theater at Mission Viejo H1gh School lJttle Theater, 25025 Cbrlsanta Drive. $2.50 advance, $1.50 students, $3 at door. 586-8342 or 752-7300. SELECTIONS ON the Inn's wine list represent an awareness for the product of some •• of California's and Europe's best vineyards. ~ ICE CL\SSICS SHOW -Starring Ken Newfield and Judy Sladky. at South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol st., Costa Mesa.' and 7 o'clock tonight; noon and 1:30 and 3 p.m. Saturday, andland2:30 p.m.SUnday. Free. Ranging in price from $4.50 to $6.50, entrees ·I ou the special Sunday champagne brunch menu I, include eggs Benedict, cutlet of i>ristine veal, • chicken crepes, sauteed breast of chicken, quiche Lorraine, trout sauteed almondine. . 1 sirloin steak sandwich bordelaise. . SONS OF CILUIPUN -Tonight throuch Son· day at 'lbe Golden Bear, 30S Pacific Coast Highway, Huntington Beach. $S. 538-9600. Still another Sunday attraction is the after· noon's live jazz session featuring Jeff Harris-- in the view lounge. And Fridays and Saturdays there's a rare entertainment treat in the person of harpist Scott Grimes. Following college years and Involve· ment in the Collegium Musicum at both Indiana University and the University of Kansas, Grimes was awarded the post of the principal harpist for the Seattle Philharmonic Orchestra. Open for lunch, dinner and cocktails seven days a week, the Victor Hugo loo is located at 361 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach, adjacent to the Laguna Beach Art Museum and just off Coast Highway, 494·9477. Food, setting, service and longevity recom· 1 mend it highly. Ji1lANK SINATRA JR. -Tonlibt through Sun· day at Knott's Berry Farm Good Times Theater, plus Cindi Grecco ln the Cloud 9 Ballroom toniJht and Satu.nay. $6 adulta. $2 children. 'TOE CAVE DWELLERS' -By William Saroyan, 8:30 o'clock tonight, Saturday, Monday and Tuesday; 7:30 p.m. Sunday and 2:30 p.m. matinees Saturday and Sunday at the Cal State Long Beach Directing Lab, 6101 E. 7th St. $2. (213) 498-4oS40 weekdays from 10 a.m. to4 p.m. •THE SOUND OF MUSIC' -Now through > March 6 at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse, ~ 140 Avenida Pico, San Clemente. $10-$15, in-li.. eludes dinner. 492-9950. ·~~Jr. ~M;-~---­~·~v;J=•ci······r.::::.'d:.::.::.: ... li!I LA C~Y,,~ v~!~l~~RAHT l!!l ~ to our Romantic Cellar 4'B : Crab, Shrimp, : 1 • • I . , ....... Special-Shall & Lablhr ... $7.t .. ' . · Times/Places -rBE UONIN WINT£&•-Now~ Mateh 6, 8 p.m. 'l\leedaya..Saturdaya and e p.m. Sun-- <lays. Cabaret Theater Company, 1201 W. Malvern Ave., Fullerton ... 1Dc1Uclel ID .... 8'1M965.. ._UTl'DiUES AU Fll.EE' -Comedy at thl& San Clemente Community Theater, 202 Avenlda Cabrillo. S:30 o'clock tonl&ht and Saturdq. 492-0465. l 'LOVEBS AND OTBEB ST&ANGE&S' -~ Comedy, now throQgh March 19 at the Holiday l Inn, 3131 Bristol St.. Costa Mesa. $10.80. Includes dimler. 557..-00. J 'OLD TDIES' -Pinter drama. DOW tllroalb , Feb. 19 at South Coast Repertory. l.827 Newport : Blvd., Costa Mesa. I p.m. Tuesdays-Suncla.7S-ancl : 3 p.m. Sundays. $&.S0-$6..50. 6'6-1383 after 1 p.m. : daily. : , CONTINUING IN LOS ANGELES -Amerlem : Ballet '!beater through Feb. 21 at tlie Dorothy ' Chandler Pavilion: ''Travesties .. and ''Tbe Im· portance ol Being Earnest. .. through March 20 at the Mark Taper Forum: 11Vanities ... indefinite run at the Westwood Playhouse; 0 A Chorus Line, P indefinite run at the Shubert Theater. SATUJlDAY, FEBBUilY U • ' ' . THE SYLVERS -And the Bellamy Brothers. , and 9 p.m. Saturday at Magic Mountain, Magic Mountain Partway in Valencia. fl.95 adulta, • $6.95 children 3-11. includes rides. SUNDAY, FEBRUAllYU 'NEW' MOZAJlT SONATA -Assembled from · fragments by pianist J anne Irvine, played by her in concert 4 p.m. Sunda.y at Golden West College Theater, 15744 Golden West St., Huntington Beach. Also works by Bach. Chopin and others. $3. . BUCKBORN -Bluegrass music. jam session 2 • to 6 p.m. Saturday (free>. concert 7 p.m. ($1) at the Sheraton Beach Inn, 21112 Pacific Coast Highway, Huntington Beach. DllAMA WOllKSBOP -0 Swan Song" by Anton Chekhov. "Enchanted Night" by Slavomir Mrozek and "Love and How to Cure It" by Thornton Wilder. 8 p.m. Sunday in UC Irvine Lit· tle Theater, Room 161 of Humanities Hall. Free, NEW MUSIC ENSEMBLE -With soloist Gabor J Rejto, in honor of Prof. Emeritus Gerald Strange, 8 p.m. Sunday in Music Recital Hall, ~ Cal State Long Beach, 6101 E. 7th St. Free. <See MARDI GRAS. Page a> .RSH & CHl'5 • SCAU.OPS · SHRIMP • OYSTBS • CLAMS •SALADS• • I .Viii A. j'iuthtu :11 Featuring Steaks, Lobster. 5 1:· f . Ample free paridng II · :11 RESERVATIONS: 646-7944 :). 6•5-2175 • IJJ W. 19111 : 1695~ Irvine. eosta Mesa :), .. Y.,......,,... C-r, C..• •-~ ..... ~····~"'9.~ ... ~ .... iJ~~~~l:mllllllllDl:zm:SGn:Gisii:la:s:ams:DsilsB'lmmimt~ .,., .. Oii fltllQl/f SMORGASBORD RESTAURANT aANOlllT,ACllLmU-"'f01•PIOfU HUHT!NOTON atACH • COltOl«A Oil. .. All t22MAl•UT.AlnM -LCOASTHW't. I•:..-....... r ~t)J ~ 't The ~ 'APADANA· ~~ AWARD WINNING ~ · RESTAVRANT~·~~ AUTHENTICCUISINE . OF THE EXOTICMIDEAST ~ Persian, Armenian, Greek and Russian speclalUes Continental CU!sine Alao \ Luncheon -Monday thru Friday 1 1 :30 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Dinner~ Every Evening from S:OO p.m. ·;7 ~ 0.... ()i4enl1' (~) l~l!vv ~ 600 Newport Canter Drive 8Cf'OS5 from Fashion Island Reservations honofed-940-7502 .1TI1St6R. QS USTAUIAMT & COCKTAILS GET ACQUAINTED SPECIAL 2 Steak Dinners Sl.95 Complete with CtlOloe of Soup or Salad. Potato and Vegetable UMITEO OFFER GOOD THRV f'ea. 21. 1m HOW APPEARING . IH THI LOUMG£ CY DUIELL HowSer•lftg CHAMPAGNE l! SUNDAY IRUHCH i~ ..I __ H_a_p_p_.,,·_H_o_u_r -""-7 _. _Fr_ee_H_o_rs_d_'oe_u_v_re_s _ _.' I : ; 3100 '" ........ lMewpart leclcla Goff c ...... NEWPORT IEACH 751·522J B WHITE Formerf y With THEPlAmRS A New Supper Experience All In One Place Setting •.• a unique collection '---._ __ __.a:-=;===..-• ... , .. :;]) _,. R A y LOWDON BmRTAINMENT AND DANCING Tuesday thrv Saturday 9:o0 P .M. .. 2:bo AA OUTRIGGER ROOM KONA LANES J I Forcocktallsordlning I Servina late for the "After" Crowd I Oepes and other unique dishes I Wally Ruth at the piano bar I Comfortable, infonnaJ, with an ocean view 1 ., Please nuke rt.erv-Jlions by c:;alUn~. 714/640.4000 -. ~ ,N~ Beachtt® .1norr10 HoTU 103 ·FM of fine restaurants: • \1 rlu· 111.1 :.1 "'l11•pp111~ l l·11ll·r: eOTH CE1'T171lY LTD.1 Elegant dJn.log on The <neatest TralD ln the World. Lunch. dJnncr. chowder bu, cockt&Ua dail1. BA. MC & AB MiCq>ted .......... SALJl&GCNDl1 San Frandeco'a lntemaUoisal gour- met eoup reetaunnt. Alt!IO featuring quiche, home- made dcas<rta ........ 7 \I ti\\" "'''II I " l I",, I I' l.1:, I 11. 11 \ I: ALPRl?oo•sa A cJUl'llc Jtallan restaurant. Fine domestic & Imported wtnu. BA, MC. AB, DC, CB & UAL accepted. ato.aaoo BmJOar '110£.Ra 5"food epcctallate. Maine lob- ster llown IA dally. 0,.tu bv. MC. BA & AB .ecepted. 97 .. 1181 BOaJ&AWA.t Gndout J•~nc:.e dln.tf\g ltl an aun09PhueofttanquJJtty. Ntghtly cntcrtafnmcnt. A.E, CA. BA & OC aeccpt.td. aa7.a111 Alfredo's Horikawa 20th Century Ltd. Hungry Tiger Salmagundi l ,) l I I '-4 DAILY PILOT 1. . . T•PleflG•pla Pianist Paulina Drake will join the UC Irvine Symphony Orchestra at 8 p.m. Feb. 18 and 19 in UCl's Theater. She will play Chopin's "Concerto No. 1 for Piano and Orchestra." Tickets at $2 general and $1 students are availa- • ble by calling ·833-6617 or 833-6614. --··-· te<lli\644\ .... ,, .. ,, nos nu k•l•ll• •vt. •Mhe1m 17141Ut 29'4 . For Classified Ad ACTION Call A DAILY rlLOT AD·VISOl 642-5678 CONTINENTAi. DINING SINC£. 1938 Cclebu1c Ton11h1 NEW MLNU~LECTIONS FOR ALL OCCASIONS Lune~~,, o,.;:y SundJy ChJmp.ogne Brunch ll01rp1<l Ollld )dll (714) 494-94n lh1 Cliff Drivr. La~unil Br,1d1 TEMPLE (fARD£NS ~-· i CtJ'NGSS Restaurant ).~~S LUNCHEON AMD DIMMER DAILY Special Luncheon Mfe+ Monday thru Ft1day 11 30 10 1 30 RICt<SHA COCKTAIL LOU ... GE Fealuring Exotic Troo1ca1 Drinks 1500 Ai>AMS lat Harl>orl COSTA MESA s .. 0.1937 5 .. 0.1921 And. In Gol'Mn Grove 1220 I IROOICHURST (Al Chopmonl 638-7020 THI OML Y ll'UCE TO GET GREAT HEW YOH DELI rASTl.lMC • COlHlO IHF LOX CREAM CHEESE & IAGEL WEEKEND SPECIALS lnctUdes cup of soup or house salad. stuffed breast of veal. topped with our special gravy, served with vegetable & oven-browned potatoes, collee or tea STUFfED ROAST CHICKEN Includes cup of soup or house salad. $ 395 stuffed roast chicken. served with mashed potatOM and gravy, vegetable deli bread and bulter, coffee or tea SA~:L~UM. BAGELS 99c,_-.,. 0,... 1 ...... ,,,_ 7D.,. 421 I. 17flt St .. Coste W... U1·2120 c_Airporter qnn 'Hotel l'RESE~'TS OL'TSTANDISG DlSING & ENTERTAINMENT .. * MEDITERRANEAN ROOM FOR EXQUISITE CUISINE-SERVICE DINNER SERVED FROM 5 PM LUNCH FROM 11 :30 AM CHAMPAGNE SUNDAY BRUNCH FRO~ 10 AM -3 PM * Captain's Table Coffee Shop SERVING 24 HOURS DANCING & amRTAINMENT NIGHTl Y IN THE LOUNGE 18700 MacARTHUR-NEWPORT (°"°5m TMI Al 133•2770 HISIGRlt WAT£RFROltf Rl&tAURl?ft l'UtlRTAlftMINT Nl&ff1LY f P..i:EW11111ltJ.. ' INlN l VII.VI' IT ON KOCl·TV.CH SO , ?.WPM. 'BBIM SOIO l.al'AY!ii!, MWFGRT •ACK 71t-CS~ST17 'Lee Michael.s' Return Wins Ch£ers By MICHAEL PASXEVICH . Ofllll O•lty l"ltelMlff Welcome back Lee Michaels, a lol of people milaed you the Jest three yean. For example. the more than 1,800 ecllatic people wbo jammed The Golden Bear in Hunt· inaton Beach lut weekend for six inspiring shows, flv• of them sell-outs and eaob ck>Slng with a rousing standing ovation from farnllhed fans, many of whom wondered out loud Just why · it took so long. After stunning the rock world with bis high· powered organ and drum (Frosty) assaults in the late alxtles, Michaela achieved hi8 areatesl commercial success in 1972 with the release of hi.a fitlh album. He beean to experiment with guitar (which be unfortunatedly did not employ lut weekend) and, ln 197,, be stopped touring (following the release of his last album, "Tailface") amid false rumors he bad gone deal, spaced out or simply got bored. AcrtJALL Y. the interim period has been · spent sett.ling contract haaales with his former label (Columbia) and working in bb private studios in Hawaii and MW Valley. An attempt at re-forming a louring band about a year ago came lo a tragic close when guitarist and friend Frank Smith died in an auto accident. But Michaels has remained musically active and hi.9 independent album is slated for comple· tion in about a month. Based on his performances at the Bear, there's no doubt it will be an excellent effort and record companies once again will be drooling for a piece of the action. Friday night's opening show was perhaps the best of the lot, as Michaels, clad in ragged T- shirt and tom jeans he wore each sel, sat down al his "new toy": a $2,000 polyphonic synthesizer that combines lush orchestrations with the pierc- ing bite of his trademark Hammond B·3organ. Drop By El Matador Say Hello To Marcial TRY ORAMGE COUNTY1S FIMEST MEXICAN FOOD • 1MW1~• Now Serving American & Mexican ~ Areakfast from 7 A M. Sat. & Sun. UMCHIOH C.,.._E...,..i.oa•S.et $1 65 Doily Sl'lCIAl T ICO • 0-0.C. ol a. .... °" R·c• • COMrLETI OIHHERS ROM U .10 ta Sl.40 ~ 17" HEWftOltT llVD •• C.M.••45-3520 I pa;~ l ~ Ne:wPO~T BLVD O' 1911, ST~tET .,, ea Mon • Thur 1 O to 11 • Fri .. Sat., Sun. 7 AM to 12 Midnight Open 7 Days All SPORTS EVENTS GIANT 7 FOOT 1V SCREEN Mon.-Thur. 11:30 o.m to 10 p.m. Hot Dogs ~c Fri. & Sot 11:300.m. to 11 p.m. CCX:.KTAILS Sunday 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. 9093 E. ADANS. HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-7911 OPENING FEB. 15 MOXY For Dancing and Entertainment It's All Happening Nightly at The Lid() L()unae ~~~ 1107 JAMBOREE ROAD, NEWPORT BEACH (7141 64"-1700 . . . o.i·~--~ ...... Lee Michaels stirs up a storm of approval ~t the Golden ~ea~ Even thou&b lhe fool-pedals remained stranded in the bllzzard·striclten East, the toy's tone is wondrous and from the opening chord blasts, accompanied by delighted screams and smiles from the audience, il was obvious that Lee Michaels ls back to stay. Superbly backed by Alen Wehr on drums (created by Michaels out of metal garbage cans) and Woody Berry on guitar, Michaels turned in a powerful mixture of new material and classics like "Oak Fire," "Do You Know What I Mean," and "Heighty Hi." Looking fit, at ease and, above all, happy, Michaels was triumphant an bis return. His tortured, pleading vocals and phrasings never sounded better; even bis famous vibrato scream was at his command, sending chills up the spine. And, of course, there was the SQund itself: Michaels' patented pulsating rock/funk, pure . irresistible body music that gets you-moving no matter what. THE ENCHANTMENT of his music lies in its simplicity, the clutch-hook effect found in the pauses and Michaels' unerring sense or rock and roll dynamics. Since lt was only the band's second live gig, there were ragged spots that cpntinued through the weekend, some of which opened the way for some sparkling improvisational solos by Berry and Michaels. Many in the audience came to hear the older tunes and Michaels complied, at least partially, with spirited and spontaneous renditions of COSTA MESA'S MOST ELEGANT REST AU RANT Su,,_rb Food At Unbellevabty Low Prtcea ENTERTAINMENT AND DANCING NIQHTL Y SUNSHINE DESTINY. (.,..Piece Group} ~ Frtd•r and Saturd•1 1670 H•wpart lf¥d. IAt 17• SU .. c:..e....... . 64242•~. "Heighly m" each set, with the crowd vigorous-· ly joining in on the sing /clap-along clorus. It was magic. However, the most important facet of Michaels' return was the new material he un· veiled. The best of it, "I Hear Laughing," easily approaches his best work ever. The song, a touching mid-tempo ballad, demonstrated Michaels' ability to capture a feeling without overwriting. OBVIOUSLY to read it lacks the visual effect of his eyes-dosed, head-thrown-back posturings, but the line, "They say that love is for free, why can't lt happen to me," ls a sample of this capacity, Michaels, whose compositional skills blossomed in the late Sixties, has always had a flair for anti-establishment political statements. "The Amnesty Song,•· written some time ago but never recorded, is a cynical yet evocative look at American society, flowing in lhe vein of "Thumbs" and "What Now America." Another new tune, .. WhilOe Song," is along the lines of "Do You Know What I Mean," a light. carefree rocker with clear commercial poten· ti al. 1l may be lack of work, or perhaps because · Michaels pushed himself to extremes opening night, but his voice grew painfully hoarse as the weekend progressed. Still, he pushed on despite the unfortunate problem and at time seemed amused by his tendency to sound like Wilson Pickett with laryngitis. The huskiness will no doubt pass, as will the rough musicaJ edges since both Berry and Wehr proved skillful and pliable in their respective roles. · At any rate, Lee Michaels is back, sounding great, and the long.time void is Cilled. GENUINE CHINESE MANDARIN DISHES Specializing In Chinese A lo Corte Dishes . LUNCH•OIKNER DAILY Food to Tllke Ou1 11:30 AM. to 10 P.M. ·2ou...._..._ COSTA NRA 642-7162 • 64""'911 ,;~\l)U Jl!alJ'~n CROWN HOUSE ~"v 4t" RESTAURANT 32802 COAST HWY. LAOUHA MGUEL w cir-v.., r_.,, 499-2826 496-5773 Soil.IA Coat'• Fine11 CldlituJ IVY HOUSE RESTAURANT 3*4 POMl1' AYI. LAQUNA HACH (llt l'le'"' • ,,.,, Amp/• FrH P.ndng 494-9411 752-1558 . . ILY LOG ~lack Actors Enlighteµ .. eaoo ,I •• Cl)(!UJ(J) ..... ==~\:Cl) .... (l)C...,.,.. es......-. l•=.'!r•, 1e-:1.:..1 · -~~ •Dllllll C-.llcllldt 0.ny JM-. Jldlt ~. ~ta ~(dpr "'°*"' _...,.. ~ w.== .,..., .. i>~ (9(1)) .,......., 7 8DllWff * CWSOI ..... l·•n ...... U..CM • .., l1lrM ,,, ..... it.::"... l . ~ <a Cll> 111e r11111y ....... ..., -7:30-• DllWU Fa IEGAS! ;. ::,.va.1111~ ....... ....... "' Dllllfl (I) Tlle 0.. c:.,le 8 ®) @ Cl) 10 Holl.-od ~-()) The Mappets O Tiit Jobr's Wil4 CD (1211 rn> 8ndJ ldlt (en> (})) Doly l'Hton hr f»Cartoons IZll Hocan 's HelOIS &!'Channel 21 T111icltt G Desert Clmic Oil Uari Club ·m Mr Tro111 8:00 l'J CODE R! Emerncies * On Lind, Sea Alrlll 8 ((11) (3/) Code l Police Chief Robinson d1sc;~m tilt the ISiand ts · bttn& used lor a 1un srnuuhnc ()Jlef1l100. but r edenl •&ents Older him ott lhe use and the declSIOtl IS rqrelted when they become llosu1es of the ~lt11. 0 a1l CI> fl(I Saalord Hd 5111 .. Reverend Sa "Thtnklq lie C3ll 1el some laa eliel, f rtd sets llilmell ordained IU nttnisttf of the Oiv111e Ptopllet cllall, bat when the bl$!lo!I 1mm to colltct Ills 50'$, frtd starts Ills .,., reliaJOll. 8 MM: (C) {Nlr) ...... the Will WWI" (adv) 42-Jolln Wayne, ~san Hayward, Illy Milland, Paulette Coddlid. (I) MoM: (C) (k) •tau J.tmes" (1h) '!17-Bob ~~. Vera Mil~. Paul Oou&las. Ale-'1 Smllll, Darren McGrlm = <:',.,~~~t~J= Osllond pesl. Cl)C....& G lletlt: c:t:> > •o..k11 lllnw" (drl) '7 Ott, Dean StDwtll, Ed Btldb, Sam Jaffe, DolN llamls. -1-.......... a>""1-............. .,..,. S.ltlt . •• "dsz IDBQM ....... One of the more dramatic bacbtaa• atortes ot tbe year 1n local theater was played out re- -10-.lO-cently at Orange Cout CoUeee, ••me._ which bee.me the focal polnt ol fll lliftiil ~ .. an lntematlooal exerclQ 1n lfap- 11&00 · plin1 wltb tbe tentacles ol a• Ga.._ bureaucracy. e CJ) a CD Cll "-It belan. limply enoup, when D ~> lM Amrlm StJll OCC drama profeaaor James ~ ...... : ~..}':. Dwil's 1 .. Bertholf was visltine South (adv) '69-Cllrlstoplltt Gtor&•. A f r l c a a n d Y l e w e d a Fabian, bf1* Wtr. performance by four black ac· m 11ary ...,.... ..., ""'-ton from nearby Soweto. He de- •..,....... ctded to try to brinl tbem to the (()}) W> Tiie llldl s... United Statel for D8J'formancee • 111t" ...._.. at OCC and GtMr Callfonda col· • llrllllllk,.. leaes. -11:30-Berthold antlclp~ted •Cm> ())) Cll ca i. ... tome dlfflculU•, but nowni to ~ ~ ~~ ·.;, ~ compare with the entanalemeats (en) '4$-0tnis llorpe. lbrl!lllN be eneounUnd on both aidee ot Mlmy, Oa11t Cllf\ NM Hilt.-. the Atlutlc before tbe A.frtcan dl'u KlllL St-, Ridtts. fow'lomeflnallJ arrived an these elaCll>•SJU.r. abore1 last week. OCC'a ID.._ telepboae bill ak)'l"OCket.ed with I;=., 1 1 tranuUanUc char&•• u the ID ...... sticky problems of pusporta, 12•00 viau, cl~ and opposltloa a lllt 11 ei.i. from . America 'a actors' union, m c... Wis EquitY, were palnstaklntJy over· at llftte: a:> "11ie C.,tal•'• come. Talllt" (com>. '60-Jolln Gr!&son, ONLY AFl'EB the lnterven· P:I' Cummim. Donald S11de11. tlon of several mea:pber.a of N Cirly. l2:30 Conireu,. of whom California 'a • M-IUOt-~ .\,.i. ..., ,. Yvonne Braltbwalte Burke was ""'9 te Me 1 ...._ .. -r• · most Influential, '4.ld the South ,.._ , trt,• ' African troupe finally obtain per· • S..... n.tn milsl~ to travel to the Unit· m ....w. "Act " Mila" (dta) ed States. And the fruits of these '4~Vtn Heflin, Janet l.tlch. Robert labors socio will be on display in 11)111. • OCC's Drama Lab Theater. 11,...._1:00 The South' African Black u u oo tm IMllPt Special Theater Project wW be unveiled Dnrlllf ro lntennlsalon ] ~Tom Ti~ on tbe Co~ta Mesa campus March 1..,, followin1 a tour of campQICll ln nortbem California. But tbe talented and energetic )'OUDI 8eton st.aged a preview performance at the college last weelrlDd left little doubt that the quixotic struuie to bring them here wu cstaiDly worth the ef. fort. Their production la titled .. Survival," wbicb is appropriate for blleb trying to make their parenl The South African Black Theater Project ii an enllahten· in1, thou1bt-provoklac ·ex. perience that will be av&Uable for the ti.rat five days of March at Orans• Coast College. It ·is aometb!DI not to be missed. way ands apartheid (aegrega. Tb a_. _ ___.. •-M b ·u tlon) ID Soaeh Africa. What black e a.u--UI arc Wt Flamenco, · Folk, Rock In San Diego Amerhtaaa ·experienced 100 bring several top performers to yean ..... , tbele people are COD· San Dle&o in musical fields from r1 _... nameaco IUitar to rock. 'raathaltoday. On March 1, neetwood Mac Yet "Sunival" la neither 85 wW perform at 7:30 p.m. at the strideat DOI' •heavily political Sports Alena. Admlaalon of $5.75 u on.e m1Cbt expect. Tbe mes-k aaie ta clear, but tbe skill and to $7.75 includes par log. For in· formatloo, call 1·22M176. · •bowmanabip of these four Queen wW perform at 7:30 performen -Dan Meredl, p.m. March 5, also at the Sports David Ketana, Tbemba Ntinga Admis i ill b "7 and, eapedally, Seth Sibanda _ Arena. s on w e ..,. 5 to raises the production well above $61:· 8 p.m. March 6, Gordon thelevelotprotesttbeater. Llehttoot will a~ at Golden THE Fl8Bl' ACI', the lighter of Hall, Convention Performing the two, takes place in a South Arts Center, 202 C St. Admisaion African prison as three inmates is $5.50 to $7.50 and phone is haze a newcomer with often 1·238-MlO . hilarious results. In the second, Flamenco guitarist Carlos the spotlight moves outside and Montoya will play at 8:30 p.m. we see bow these men came to be March 6 at the Civic Theater, 202 lmprtamed -and the tragic im· C St., wltb the ticket prices to be pllcatlona of Soutb African announced. Phone number there persecution become all too ap-la l ·ZlMMISlO. ____ =ii; _________ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiJ 2:00 Cl Dllfllef..-. lloria: .... i. War," "S U I fllll" DEPMllED ·PE<dDEllT·IMlllRED :fJllittiiM1&tt ·:A CHORUS LlnE -3:05- U lllN: (t) "If A .... Allwws" (com) '62-Bobby Darin, Sandra Dee. John lund. M1eheline Ptes!e, C~r Romero, Stefanie l'owm. -3:30-m u-111Pt si.: "Tlttlt'1 1.111 a.... .. "Wzilll a. ......... SATURDAY. I MORNING MZI GllllYftY 19ff. ~ng BeacJi {lvicc:Ligqt Opera presents Live on Stage! Starring QOYGOllON Four Great Weeb! March 4 -27 Buy Tickets Now! FRI. (8:30 pm) S6.SO, S.50, 4.50, 3.00 SAT. (8:30 pm) S7,50, 6.50, 5.50, 4.00 SUN. MAT. (2:00~ SS.SO, 4.50,_!:5'«1 2.00 w.w. l 8 CMc: l• °'*' '.0. llc>a .rw.u. l.I. 90801 °'all fllJ) 01· 2lt ~-M TllNftt'fo500 AllMlic !we. (PG) GEORGE SEGAL JANE FONDA "FUN wrm DKX&JANE" MON.·FRI. 7:00..9:00..10:41 SAT.-SUN. 1:30-3:20-l:10-7:00..9:00..10:45 MIWIOB'I. OIDl'l'mi · · fAIMIOlt I Ciiftl~ ••• Eva Diinlap, MIGS Winter FNtlval, and Craft Guild head ram Leslie Winter Festival To Start Feb~··lB Tbe.J,ltb azmual ~Beach Winter Festival beflD,a Jtll 17-day run oil Felk 18, with aCtivities · lnclUd1og a "Fabulous 50 Faire" at the Festival ' of Arts~ 850 Lquna ~Road, from lOll.m. toduskclally. · Variety abowS will also be presented at the Irvine Bowl and Forum Theater, with sate dona-tion set at 50 cents. Tbe Patriota ~Parade opens with a 7:30 to 10:30 a.m. breakfast at th• library parking lot, following by tbe parade at 11 a.m .. Feb. 19. An auction will be held beginnlne·at 6 p.m. at the I:aguna Moulton Playhouse. A full acb~ule of events Is available at the chamber of commerce, 857 Glenneyre St .• 49'·1018. (R) ............ 1\.9 : 'iMl 50G'MI' . l QMWAHOO!f ·CM!IMMll!J ~IMSAM·JOMNCAAMDH ·IOllflMCA·AVAGAAOIQ i ~r;EMtEDMUNiQ1MINIJml.mV1A111llUH1'IOMllWTill·WWAIDDC , l NOW SHOWING : MON.·FRI. 7:0().9:00-10:45 l SAT.-SUN. 1 :30-3:20-5:10· l 7:00-10:45 EDWARDS HAR~ORclr:l':A2 HARBOR BLVD. AT WILSON ST, COSTA MESl 646·0573 J Cfl DAILY PILOT Friday, Februaty 11, 19n MARDIGilASSLATEDINNEWPORT (.f'loom Pase C3> •BLA<S C\JLTUaE PAGEAN'r -Part o( Black Culture Week. 3 p.m. &mclay lo Santa Ana Colle1e Phllllps Hall. l'ltb and Bristol atreets. Free. MONDAY, FEBBtJUY JC •LONG DAY'S JOUllNBY INTO NIGRI" • • • Drama with Charlton Heston and Deborah Kerr, previews Feb. 1'·17 ($2.25-$10>. regular run Feb. 18-April 2 ($3.25-$11) at the Ahmanson Theater of the Le» Anceles Music Center. Tickets at agen· cies, or m~or credit card charge (213) 972·7600 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. TUESDAY, FEBaUABY 1S TRAVEL FILM -•·Paris of the Parisians," 7: 30 p.m . Tuesday at Santa Ana College Phillips Hall, 17th and Briltol streets. Free. by Cal State Northridge Chamber Sin1en. I p.m . Feb. 18 at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. 600 St. Andrewa Road, NewportBeachfS31·2880. CAL TJADEB -9:30 p.m . to 2 a.m. Feb. 18-20 at Hun1ry J oe's Jaix Club, 1!506 Pacific Coul Highway, Huntineton Beach. $' plus oae drink minimum. •seOWBOAT'-Musical, 8:30p.m. Feb.18, 19,25 and 28, and March 4 and 5; 2:30p.m. Feb. 27 and March 16. Fullerton Civic Llght Opera al Plum· mer Auditorium, Chapman and Lemon streets. 879-1732 weekdays noon to $:30 p.m., or Walllchs, IJberty and Mutual agencies. LES BROWN -And his Band of Renown, plus Helen O'Connell and Skiles Henderson.. Feb. 18--20 at 7, 8:30 and 10 p. at .Knott'a Berry Fann, Buena Park. PIANO OONCERT -By Devetzi; mu.sic by Haydn, and Chopin, 8 p.m . Feb. 18 Campua Theater, 321 E . seneraJ, S2 seniors and stude fice or boz office. NATIONAL DATE FESTlV Indio, Rivenide County. In Jamboree Feb. 23 and 24, e and elephant races (3 p.m.). south of Palm Springs. 10 a .m. general; $1.501n sroups of 10 pianist Vasso art. Schumann erton College man Ave. $3.SO . At bu:rSar's of. -Feb. 1&-2'7 at des blue grias ta, daily earn.el ated 20 minutes lOp.m. daily. $2 ore.1·342-8247. •DESIGN FOR UVJNG• -Noel Coward com· edy, Feb. 15-19 at8 p.m. at Orange Coast College fu~.~~mlfik~~R~d.C~t.aMHa.·,~~~~------~-------------------~---~-~ Free. RENAISSANCE, ELIZABETHAN MUSIC -By Cbarltoo·Kastner Duo on variety of instruments, noon Tuesday at Orange Coast College Fine Arts Hall 119, 2701 Fairview Road, Cost.a Mesa. Free. SAMUELS AND COHEN -Comics, with Alan Bursley, 8:30 and 10 p.m. Feb. 15-21 at Laff Slop, 2122 S.E. Bristol St., Newport Beach. $2.50 weeknights, $3.50 Saturdays and Sundays, plus one drink minimum. · STEVE MARCH -8:30 and 11 p.m. Tuesda>'. at Crescendo, 1721 S. Manchester Ave . .,Anaheun. No cover charge. CMIJa MUltlOiN e CllllTlNA IAINU .. .,'-:"' J I ntl SINTINll 11> (2 53Hl580 klll IMllYO~ WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16 'BUBBLING BROWN SUGAR' -Musical revue from Broadway, opens Wednesday at Pantages Theater, 6233 Hollywood Blvd. $6.50·$15 al Mutual, Liberty and Ticketron agencies. (213) 469·7161. .,~~) -~~1 a.wr IAllW009 ntl INf01al11> Pild TUCICDOWN11> ..,.. ...... .. _ .. ....,,. 1 MAMIAIOllT & llOll CNt a. MINlllf , .. .., ......... ..,,.... llUMlll PAITY 111 ""' ...... ,,.. ..•. ROY AL SHAKESPEARE COMPANY -Five members, lectures at noon on Feb. 16 (on D.H. Lawrence) and17 ("ThePlay'stbeThing") al Cal Stale Long Beach Studio Theater, free. Plus performances at 8 :30 p .m . on Feb. 16 (Shakespeare and marriage). 18 ("Group· mp/Gropings") and 19 ("Loveh> and Madmen") at Studio 'l;'healer, 6101 E . 7th St .• Long Beach. $3 general. '2 students. (213) 498-4540 weekdays and the evening of performance. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17 FOUNTAIN VALLEY COMMUNITY BAND - 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Huntington Center, 1Tn Edinger. Ave., Huntington Beach. Free. AUTO SHOW -Including 1977 cars, experimen· tal auto6, puppet shows and bird circus. 5 to 10 p.m. Feb.17·18, noon to 10 p.m. Feb.19-21. Al the Anaheim Convention Cent.er. $2.SO general, $1 senior citizens and jun1ors (12· l 7 >, under 12 free. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18 LAGUNA BEACH WINTER FESTIVAL 'Fabulous 50 Faire," Feb. 18 at Festival of ArU grounds, 650 Laguna Canyon Roads, 10 a.m. to dus k. 50 cents; Patriots Day Parade, Feb.19at11 a.m .; Dixieland Band, Feb.191 to4 p.m. and Folk Dancers Festival, Feb. 192:30p.m .; other events throughMarch6. MARDI GRAS CELEBRA110N -6 to 9 p.m . Feb. 18 and noon to 9 p.m. Feb. 19 at Cannery Village. centered at 31st Street and Newport Boulevard. Newport Beach. Music, antique cars and bicycles. other activities, with emcee Dick Lane on Feb. 19. Free. 'THE OWL AND THE PUSSYCAT' -Adult com· edy, Feb. IS.March 6, 8:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 2:30 p.m. Sundays. Refryed Owl Theater Company at Artisans• Guild Hall, 9858 Garden Grove Blvd., Garden Grove. $3 general, $2 seniors and students. 530·8120. 'TURETZKY AND FRIENDS• -UC San Diego faculty playing American music, 8 p.m. Feb. 18 at UC Irvine Cpncert Hall. $3. 833·6378. CHINESE NEW YEAR -Feb. 18·20 in Chinatown, Los Angeles. Year of the Serpent. Parade 8 p.m . Feb. 18. UCI SYMPHONY ORCHESl'RA -With pianist Paulina Drake, 8 p.m. Feb. 18 and 19 in UCI Theater. $2. 833-6617. GUITA& MlISIC BREAKFAST -Christopher Gaynor and Georae Magula, Feb. 18 at Bullocks Tea Room, Santa Ana. Breakfast 9 a.m., music 10 a .m . Sponsored by Orange County Philharmonic Society. $3.25. U>-8485 or 833-0320; deadline for reservations Feb. 14 . HANDEL'S 'MESSIAH' -Portions, performed lnnUel ... henelf todlg. lllftllerflhermoiaer_ tlds lllOrlllng . THEY IECAlll IACH OTHER! A MICHi.Et llllNNU\ FlM "THE SENTtHEt' CHRIS SAAANDON ·CRISTINA RAINES · MARTIN OALSAM ·JOHN CAAAADINE ·JOSE FEAAER ·AVA GAP.ONER ARTHUR KENNEDY· OURGESSMEREDITH • SYLVtA MILES. DEDORAH RAFFIN • Ell LLACH x •-'PIOyl>y MICHAEL WINNEl\onc;JEFrnEY KONVITZ ·Clo~~'~ JEFF~EY KONVITZ M.-by GIL MELLE 0.t('(•tdby MICHAEL WIN Nm . P•oductdl>y MICHAEL WINNm ond JEFrnEY A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • TECHNICOLO~' l!tl~~~~~~I · .~ EDWARDS , . HUNTINGTON CINEMA ; • _.l • Hun1t119ton Buch •847 9608 Buena Puk •821-4070 I . . . . c • .. , ... . . . \ .. .. - M<ME RATINGS f:OR PARENTS AND \'OUNO PEOPLE ,,.. •• ,.""•fl .,.. . ....,. .•.• """9/fllt I _.,.,.,, __,,._. ...,_,., ..-.-........... ti'-•-... . all "U .lO•llllO ~,....,.,."'-'••o .. ~ Atl "II AMllllt ~ ,.,. .... ":_';'WWII" .... ~ w ... " ··~-.U,... . ·-•w-..o .. -...... ~ ................ .... -tHIATUt : CUMT IASTWOOO ~· ~ ~ THIATll.ff ---. ~'1UNNR VISION" • Also ·. tr.om PYTHON ' !THE HOLY GUil" : Color CIU • --- 'rtday. ,ebN..., t t. 1917 Musieal 'Roots' Traeed BLACX llUSIC BISTO&Y EXHIBIT -Records, inat.nunenta, film, slldes, mu.sic and pictures, now tbrou1h Feb. 27 at Bowers Mu.seum, 2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays. Saturdays; 7 to 10 p.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays; and 1 tos p.m. Sundays. Free. SHOW AND SUDE·LECfURE -By artist-in· residence Jack Beal, realist painter. Exhibit Monday through March 18 in the Fullerton Colle1e Library, 321 E . Chapman Ave. O~n:to­ public studio sessions in Fine Arts Building Room 1994, 10 a.m. to noon and 2 to 4 p.m. Feb . lS, 16 and 18; 10 a .m. lo noon Feb. 17. Sllde- lecture, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Campus Theater. Free. SCULPTUJlE EXHIBITION -By California artists, now through March 5 at Collector's Choice Gallery, 866 N. Coast Highway, Laeuna ' Beach. 10 a.m. to S p.m. Wednesdays.Saturdays and noon to S p.m. Sundays. Free. COLLAGE SLIDE·LECTUllE -By Carole Caroompas, Noon Tuesday in Orange Coast College Fine Arts Lecture Hall 116, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Free. ART SHOW AND SALE By Costa Mesa Art League. today and Saturday at Westport Square, 369 E.17thSt., Costa Mesa. PAIN'ITNG DEMONSTRATION -By Roger Armstrong for Laguna Beach Museum of Art Af. fillates, 2 p.m. Tuesday at the m~eum , 307 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. Open to public. $1.50. ART DEMONSTRATION -With discussion of upcoming art tours to Mexico and Guatemala, by ''THIS LAND IS YOUf. 1 t:.·vfl J J.US i ANn IS fvt Y t.1-.ND, 1--1r .. : ;/! CALIFO~N'. ,, .E 1./l:lV YORK t ... !\O. TH/$ LA.lVD V..'AS f'/1HDr. , 1• • .11:.1n fitlt. ~ The man who wrote these words was Woody Guthrie. His music has become as much a part of America as its mountains, its rivers, its forests and its people. His life has touched all of our lives. This IS his story. ROBERT F BLUMOFE presents A HALASH8YF•m11 BOUND FOR GLORY" ··Llflf19 DAVI D CARRADINE co Sl.llmQ RONNY COX. MELINDA DILLON GAIL STRICKLAND· 100 RANDY QUAID· Screeo~v by ROBERT GETCHELL Sa.sec! on rtit Wimy Gutnr·~ AutOOto<J~v • Muste by WOODY GUTHRIE-Acioored by LEONARD ROSEN MAN Proo~ t1y ROBERT F BLUMOFE ind HAROLD LEVENTHAL · D11ecieo by HAL ASHBY Pt0d\IC!t0n Sl'f'f<tS ~ l•flet /~...,,,~ &19111 I°""' ..... 1o1111'°" ""'""'' -•ut• "'"" '"° ,.,, '·"""' °'""'"o .. ,,," i-n •lrQiOoJ IPOIMOLllllMIM&UTE~D T UnllldArtl81• """"'""'"0'''"""'''° ...... --.., ........... . W "'-''""''"" tt>t••Nl.-..~W lllir•••••• ""•"-·~ • • '"'""""' ••-~ I& Tranu..,.,lca Company r1-tf1l9 r ...... •""""'. ~" 111 t . . Galleries /Exhibits· Frederick Rub, 1:30 p.m. Thursday at Artists Association of Huntlnaton Beach North m~etlng, Murdy Park Recreation Center <Golden West and W amer A venues). Free, open to public. PHOTOGRAPHY DISPLAY -By Oran1e Coast College s tudents, "Process in Progrei;s, Progreas in Process" at Mills House Art Gaitery, 12372 Main 8t., Garden Grove. Now t.hroucb Feb. 28. Noon to4 p.m. Thursdays-Mondays. Free. EARLY LAGUNA PAINTINGS -William Wendt retrospective, now through Feb. 27 at the Laguna Beach Museum of Art, 307 CWf Drive. 11 :30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. daily except Tuesdays. Free. ONE·WOMAN SHOW Oil paintings and de· monstrations by Phyllis Archbold, 11 a.m. to 5 p. m. Safurday and Sunday at Marriners Art ('Ul)lery at Dana Point Harbor. COUNTRY SCENE~ SEASCAPES-By Robert Dowswell and JohiOfaige. now through Feb. 28 at Glendale Federal Savings and Loan. 100 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mondays·Thursdnys and 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Fridays. Free. 11111111~ llU11sn•11 • I Wiii r IUIHlll 1111111~111 hl1: tr S1111111 m1 Wilm JIU ClAJBUR~H 11cme PHm u llllll l1l'll lllM ·s1tv1a srmr 1 v11111 ~ 111 t1:1111"11,1t1u1 1" ,., ., ~,, 11111 u1u 11~a 1tl PAIRICK McGOOHAN 111111111111111 • I ma',, P·1bt111 Ulllll !lllN1t 111 um 'II Ill ''•l11tl 11 IRUll 1 Mll.ll 111 !If Of M I I · t mt1I h llllil Rlllll • 1111111 Ir tllll ml~! lP<l!iiii!!~~o. Mu~ Ir 11111 Mlltlll · tllll 11111111 ' --~~~-·..J ... ,.,, '°'H C(NfU"" '0• Jack Beal created this self-portrait. He will be artist-in-resident next week at Fullerton College ('Show and Slide-lecture ') TARRING BURT LANCASTER JOSEPH COTTON MELVYN DOUGLAS RICHARD WIDMARK CINEMA CENTER HARBOR AT ADAMS, COST A MESA MESA VERDE CENTER 979-4 141 dENtiJAY SCHIQ>uLE . FRl • ..sAT. 2:0CM:I0-7:10 1:40-12:00 \ ·~.~le ''TWIUGBT•I LAST GLEAMING0 is a 1>0lemic qatqst Q'.S. Vietnam policy, cou9led with a suspense tale. A defrocked •~eral <Burt Lancaster) captures a mlllile.atlo and dmtatens 1 to Jauncb nuclear warheacll unless the President (Charles Durfting) 1, dls~--U.S. dupUcity in 1 Vietnam; 2. acta u hostage tot an escape. As long as director Robert Aldrich st.a~ with the sus~ose, he ls on saf• ground. Bott.be overlong film bogsdowninto1)umbingspeech~. R~ ~:. 1 "FREAKY l'BIDA Y'' ooses an intriguini ~ notion:' A housewife and her sprlghUy teen-ager change ldenUUes for a day. Barbara Harris and Jodie Foster are ideally cast as mother and daughter, but their talents are dissipated by : murkydevelopmentofthepremlse. You'renever quite sure who is who. Still, there are some good 1 Jaugbs, and a good Disney chase at the finish almost redeems the film. Rated G. "FUN WITH DICK AND JANE" can be just that -once you accept the situation of an un· employed aerospace executive and his wile turn· I ing to holdups and sale·cracldngs. Take that • giant step and you can enjoy this lighthearted if • amoral comedy. George Segal is expert at this sort of thing, and Jane Fonda makes a skillful re- turn to her comedic beginnings ("Barefoot in the Park," etc.). Rated PG. "MYSTllUIS llltOM llYOHD IAl'TH .. 2:3 ....... .,.. '1H HA•CH Of MOAWSAU" 4:1 .. 7:H JJi----~~· 1 Jlople ~OUNTAIN VALLEY ••• )O' ..... .:,i~ro::.~:' 11 ,,. '"'JI) .. ~- "FREAKY FRIDAY .. NtlUT/SIM. 11 4""-·l·l·l-M .t.c::TIOM P'.t.ClrBI DUMA SUSl9fM THIJU.ll "CASSANDRA CROSSING" !:IM'41-1:11-•,.I .... -111 People section keeps track of what people are feeling, saying and doing every day DAILY PILOT Baring Fun George Segal and Jane Fonda star in "Fun With Dick and Jane," a comedy aboui an upper-middle-class family hit by unemploy- ment who turn to robbery to make ends meet. The film is currently playing on the Orange Coast. Indians Viewed "The New Indians," a National Geographic Special examining the Ufe·styles of fowf Native Americans worfeing to revive interest in Indian heritage, airs Tuesday at 8 p.m. on Channel 28 and Wednesday at 9 p.m. on Channel 50. Robert Redford narrates the documentary, which inlerweaves the stories of James Sewid, a Kwakiutl Chief; 'Claudeen Arthur, a Navajo lawyer; SU..phen Tiger, a Miccosukee Indian rock musician; and Susan Supemaw, •a Creelr who lives in Chicago. Channel 28 repeats "The New Indians" Feb. 19 at 9 p.m. and Feb. 21 at 10 a.m. SNEAK PREVIEW TONIGHT 8:30 RM. ''JHIEYES'' HARBOR BLVD. AT WILSON ST. COSTA MESA 646-0573 1how•at 6:00 10:20 High OI01) 0 moUf'llOln ftt Ecu,.m ru-..r Ito 9lorw ~.000 y-old ~llllP C011io1nin9 hvtld•ch OI t!Ols oM <09" .. & ll MC».M ·~ IN.J STARRING BURT LANCASTER WEEKDAYS 7:15-1:45 SAT.-SUN. 1:~:»7:15 10:00 • . ' ' ~ . ..... 1 . : ~ To":'orrow's Supers~•·! • By LISA a OBINSON Jn makeup, Klsa are a~tan, bot ·tA»""e it Where are tbe future aapenrtus of rock! off and they loot like aov otbet Brooklyn pWtb. People have betlll aayina for years that roct Tbe .. New Wave" bands? Well, Televb!IDo .. ls dead. But new alars keep appeariJlt to di&· the Ramones and Talldn1 Heads are cons!~ .,.., · · • ~Tops in Popa Cl3\ prove tbat tbtory. ~ · "first 1eneratlon" band.a ln a New York lffO& And Y_. baveyou .._ (@] thatbaaalreadyalvenblrthtodozensololtien. • noUced tbat many _ ~ The future careers of "'91r Ensllsb •n· ••new" atan are the terparts (Sex Pistols, Clash, et al), look~, .. , same old sta.ra, or a reasonable facsimile? ing, but are in the early ata1ea. • Mick Jaeger is still around, but he's So, to find someone who will chanee \ho spawned a bunch of imitators. If Aerosmlth's world, make the covers of both Tlme ~d , Steven Tyler looks like Mick, then'Stan's lead Newsweek, cause teen-a1e rlota and sell milli~ • singer Michael Lee Smith loots like Tyler, and so of albums, we need a combln&tlon of Led Y.ep.-t oo. pelln, Bruce Springsteen and the Bay ~t.Y: I Rollers. If you've beard of someooe µe that; Jet DAVID BOWIE is a star, but he's been one me know for a while, and even refers to himself as the · I "granddaddy of glitter rock." MY NOMINATIONS for sai>ehtardom 't&o $ We'resWl stuck with the BBB's (Big British elude David Johansen (ex·Doll) and Tdrfi. ' Bands or Big Business Behemoths, if you like): Verlaine <Telev!4lon.> who have the ability-to I Yes, ELP, Led Zeppelin, the Stones, Black Sab· become major rock artJst.s as ,,..ell as the bath, the Who. And those considered "aging" charismatic performers tbey already are. • rock stars -Ian Anderson.. Peter Townshend, But for now, IC we're talkinc about R D vi 11 th S• d B u BIG ... well, even the pbeoom~non of P'1e,r i ay a es. a e ,~ones an ex· ea es -are Frampton, who sold seven million albums A ...... '~~ superstars through endurance, sort of the John Al.IV Q Waynes or rock. about to star in his first movie, isn't as bl( as, 'l So are the San Francisco bands that survived say• the Beatles. -Jefferson Starship and Grateful Dead. -------------..1.-__ _. _ _.J Elton John? Yes, very big. But EJ's an in-t stitution and be knows it. He's tiored and in the , process of "rethinking" his career. ; t LAST YEAR'S media onsfaugbt promoted Bruce Springsteen, Patti Smith and Bob Marley. • So now that they've lived through their "15 minutes of fame" phase, they can get on with their music. ..MONTY PYTHON a THI HOLY GRAIL .. tPG> "NETWORK" tRI 11SHAMP0011 IRJ "BOUND FOR GLORY" IPGJ "SILVER S~ .. cf.Gi MANN'S SO. COAST PLAZA hlll MIU m11t111t1 ~1111 SO. c~:rr·~UZA "IOUHD FOil GLOI~ .. l'!t) Ct1l1Mtu 1-ll&M >411 ...... , ""'~-...,..,,......,. ~urn MANN'S CINEIUUND MMS. ""'°' ....... IU.JMI MANN'S CINEMAUNO "94 SI. MM'" luUHI Ut·llfl MANN'S CINEMALAMO HMS. Ml ... U.INI• lU.Htl r111,_ Dl~S ""fnAn RID& TN IG) , ., ...... lilii/IAf~ll\)•f:s .. 111 .. 1..e • Hra PAM'" ..... ""'/9M-. .11J ... :-.et ilt£ SEVEM.PllCOO·SOltmOM" .. , • ., ... M/SAT/ __ ,_;t,·e "MlRATfflll MAM" "" ... ,,.,, ___ ,.,......... . "'ICING l(OMG" 7111 Nl/IAT/ __ l,..."1 ..... 4t "EMllYO" CPGJ STARRING fR) SOPHIA LOREN RICH,ARD HARRIS MARTY•SHEEN P. J . SIMPSOH edwards BRISTOL CIN A Mf\fOl At N.t.CAl°tl"M 4 .. ,. •• I BEAT THE PRICE INCREASE ••• BUY OR LEASE YOUR.!'ULTIMATE . \ . DRIVING MACHINE~' . NOW! IN ~DDITION, _, .. ~· WE1·VE GOT TO .·MOVE THESE EXCELLENT BMW RESALES TO MAKE ROOM FOR A SHIPME~T OF 177 BMWs DUE ANY DAY ••• HELP! ,,. 1970 IMW HOO.CS COUPI 4 speed, leather interior, mags & low mUes. (235CfS) \. 1973 IMW ZOU 4 sp eed t ransmission and sunroof. (6505) 1973 IMW l.OCSCOUPI 4 speed, sunroof. air cond. and stereo. (967 KLM) 1975 IMW 2002 4 speed. sunroof. air cond. & stereo. (907MFG)· 1975 IMW IJCM 4 speed, aJr cond .. sunroof stereo cassette. mags & low miles (624MWZ) 1'76DATSUH Wll2 DOOtt ·~··-·-.. -lOl>WAUI sz956 '1995 1971 IMW IAYAalA 4 speed, sunroof, air cond. and stereo. (168 DOZ) 197JIMW IAYAalA 4 speed. air conditioning & stereo. (680 PPM) 1974 IMW IAYAalA 4 speed. sunroof and stereo (~LFM). 1915 IMW 2002 Automatic. sunroof. air c:ond. & stereo. (0154) 1975 IMW IJOIA With air condlt1oning and stereo. XLNT! (062 NIF) . 1972 IMW ' nfl Autom•tlc, •i r conditioning &· AM /FM ra:flO. ( 121 FTQ) 197JIMW %00211 Loaded -Includes air cond., stereo cassette. alloy mag wheels, fog lamps. etc. (238.JtG) - 19741MW 2002 Automatic transmission and air cond. (3n LPF) 1975 IMW 2002 4 speed transmission. stereo and mag wheels. (820MMM~ 19761MW n• Air c:ond.. pwr. steering & brakes, stereo & only 11,000 miles. • (61 tROOJ. Guess which car dealer is mad because -. · he has the world's lousiest location? '2995 '2695 '4295 . lt74 DATSUN 1974 OPIL 197' t •CUIY 1'0'l MANTA NClltC.UCNetlA tt76 DATSUN 111290DI .. lleW)-Qlll-"-IO I cy1 -AM~ ..-0. elf 4 --· AM/FM-t.-& elf W111t•cooc:J111c11•4&,._.,~ ......,,,,... ...... ~ _,.'°""'4Nloec:.illlt\..JWI. ll7W'Ul0. ....... 9 '2195 s5595 . . . NEW '77 COROl1A <Tes12084el> •••••••••••••• ~ ••••• S28t8 . MEW '77 CORONA (01oloe of 2 ~aoons) • • • • • • •• • • • • •· •· • • •SA VE NEW '77 CELICA ST (4 Speed °' Automatic)• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •SA VE NEW 177 PICKUP TRUCK cRt-123048098) ••••• ; •••••••••• $3488 NEW '77 LANDCRUISER (Only Ooe Leth • • • • • • ~ • • • • • • • • •SA VE ALL REMAIMIMG NEW ~76s AMD DEMOs · TO BE SOLD AT FAMT ASTIC SAVINGS! 1973 TOYOTA 1975 TOYOTA tiWttC M C:OUPI Coiou.A 2 DOOi ~ ..::·=-r.: $ 2295 . lflMd. '*"°· --$ 2595 . --~~.. wrtn --~ui ~-CMclt--- Automatic, AM/FM stereo & air oond. (8733) I 55595 p~~ MIW PEUGEOT 504 4 speed, AM/FM stereo & "Moonstone" exterior. cosen 55250 pi~ 1974 VOLVO 145 WAC.OM s4295 NIW PEUGIOT 504 Automatic, stereo cassette & air cond. (0720). LEASE A 176 ALFETTA BUY A 176 SAAB Fu I ly factory equipped. (0480) •1 Thls newspaper wilt not knowingly aecept any advertlalnc for real estate which Is In vlol• tionolt.JJelaw. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ······~················ DISTRESS SALE Immediate possession! 3 bd, 2 bath, fresh paint in· \.\I J jl·:\· I( 1 ~:_ \I :r\· 1470 JAMOOAEt HD . N£WF'ORT UEACH PROFESSIONAL Bl1JG. Modern 12 Offtces, 2 secretary's or· -.,flees, plus .law library room. Land bu space !or lge. addiUon as well as plen· ty of parkina. Scheduled income $27,800. Absentee owner offen.n, for on.ty $225.ooo. WE'VE MOVED To larger quarte.rs lo the Great Western S&L Bldg., '50 Newport. Center Dr., ground fioor. · Rut llest 759•0810t,. 6'..t WutN Btq. "60 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE 759-0811 side" out. Owner needs G1Mral . IOOZ,Gfteral ' 1002 fast sale. '46·1711. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• cai...r.. 1002 ~ Walker & Lr.c Real fstate ____________ ... ____ ............................................. . DUPLEX 2 Bedroom units with dining rooms, builtlns and stucco interiors. Never a vacancy here These units rarely come on the market but when they do. they sell rast. S78,9SO. CALL 556·2660 CSELECT ESLEY N :AYLOR CO. HEA LTOR~ ... , ,h l ' l ~HH llG CAHYOM -szn.ooo Beautiful Country Club View! Prof. decorated thruout in lovely color tones. Choice wall coverings, lush cptng & drapes, parquet floor in en- try. 3 Bd.rms, 2'h baths. Jacuzzi. ; 2111 S. ,H ... •HllllMCI MEWPOIT cena. N.I. 644-49 I 0 T PR OPE RTI ES !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!! ____ !11111_m!!! LABJL~J':'Ol~~~Tll GeMt'at 1002,GeMnll 1002 !:~••••••••••~?~~ ~~~••••••••••~?~~ "''·,.. c""."") •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• fo..rTOODUCIMG JlEDuCEO! LJkdronl LARGE "'" + dock, lllr, 3Ba •• m . . ... POOL, .fBH. Cam rm A Cine, large 2 story 581 8115. 01wn Wc-el.(•ntb BA YFRONT, pier & float, Jots $165,000 din rm, on qu1et cul·de ~me 1~ a s mg_ula r :sel· --- --to $295,000, to build your own custom sac in Back Bar area ling. lnumate dining and SPANISH ESTATE home. Several areas to choose from. Bltn R&O. 2 frplcs. bit recre~tion areas amidst +GUEST HOUSE BBQ. wel bat. lntcrco trop1ral. plantings. + POOL-$57,500 lhruout watersoCtener Alt.hough it stand~ apart Authentic red lllr roor. ATTRACTIVE Linda Isle 5 BR, 4~ •moke.Hire alarm. Crom its neighbors. 1t .1s Sheltert'<f scrluded entry ba., fam. rm. & formal dining; lge. · Wrought-iron fcnc located amon_g very dis· to finest living room• tile patio & waterfront deck. $285,000 separates Juwn area llncllve residences in Cantinakitr hcnplusdln playhouse Arealfamll EastblufC, one or ing ! Three Bandsdo size home for 592,900. Newport Beach's finest hedroom ... plu' nl'\'er JACOBS REALTY family areas. Call before nc\l'r again wme 675-6670 673-3550 Ol'fN flf 0•11 S IUN 'OPf '• I' crllar "nrl '' ork ~hop ,_;;....;........;...-,,;,,::::.:;::;,,,;:====:=-~~a~~ll~~ :..ui"~rn~;1~.:~n [t&~.:~I Scparatr S.:U<'~l houM•! G I 1002 G-rol 1002 H~wMH~s . ~-~ P11n .. ho V1llJ mu ... 1 h,1\t1 ettero ....,. h\'rd 111·11· d1111 I II .Ill lor ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Many exlra reatures too COSTA MESA FOR SAL£ WOULD WI ILU" YOU7 Thia Delores PJan. 3 tMtr1'D. ts a wi.D· nerl a~ baths, a fantastic patio. large break:last area and all professionally decorated. In the new Bluffs area, private and secluded at $128,000. A better bargain, better buy. Would we Bluff you? UflllilCJUI: 11()Ml:S .CAl.L NOW 752-7315 DONALD M. BIRD· REAL TORS•, 675-6000 2443 E1st Coast Highway, Corona del Mar also in Mesa Verde. at 546·5990 Associates Re altors HUGE CUSTOM HOME Grandparents, aunts, un· des welcome. Pvt area for visitors. youo~ adulb or fill w /happy children. 5 Br, 38a. v~ry lg kitchen, huge den wtsuper wet bar. on a comer lot w torr street boat/camper parking Fireproof red slate roor. around the corner from Grammar schl. walk to all schls. bus hne. shop· ping, churches. S87.SOO Owner Bkr. 636-1854 or 49-i-8284 ON THE BLUFF Huntington Viewpoint OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 12·5 18506 VALLA RT A Beautiful 2 bedroom. 2 "NEW HOME" Buyer'• d ellte! All features & none oC the work. Near new 4 bd has 1t all. Upgraded t /o, tasteful ll!>e of decorative wallpaper. Pro! lndscpd. wd cov patio, adult OC· l'upied. Many xtras. Must see. near So. Coast Plata. $76,950. 546-17M Ol' 968-3371 ~ Walker & lee Real Estate bath. Custom carpeting 1-__;=====-- WATE.RFROMT & wallpaper. Fireplace. SPACIOUS RANCH PIER/ft.OAT large entry hall with SSl,OOO ' wood pegged fl oors. 2 OPEN SUH. .5 patios. double gara~e Secluded entry to large SOI 36thStred with elt-clnc opener. Family i.1zed Living Choice corner · ra.re • 4 Pool. tennis courts. Just Room with massive bdrm , 3 bath home, 2 9 months new. stone Cir~place. Country Crplcs., lge. covered $77,900 st yle Kitchen conve-pal10. New float! n1ently serves Formal SJ.795001 Located oCf Ellis . . Dining Room. Huge 25' HEY'J>ORT SHORES between Beach Blvd. & f'a'mlly Rec. Room and Profess. decor. 2 bdrm. Newland in Huntington De n. Lus h terrace. Beach. + den. 2 bath home; CoasthneRealty Separate wing for brick Crplc .. clubhouse. 636-3802 elegant Master Suite & pools. tennis, etc. Children's quarters. $15.500! --------Hurry! Call 963-7881 CORO HA DEL MAR Laguna Ranc:heHe 0>1"' ,,, o." s '•"" roi.• ¥<1 • Twm duplexes, S93,000 WITH VIEW [··-· I each. heller hurry on Nearly 2. acres nestled ; . , SpyCJlou By Owner lhese! Only one left! amon~ giant oaks only . , 6br Southport. li:e oak Balboa Bay Prop. 21,, miles to the surf with ~-==========~ paneled ~amc room. RealtOC"s a remarkable rustom 1---------th1:. rnm.11ll11 ,111\ t•nlui r STEPS TO POOL numerous to mention in Callqu1t·l-Hli tMJl l 2 ON 1 this highly upgraded ,,.,., , . ., , ,, r,,,, ol 1 :1 lid . :Hrn th home. Cul.tom wall cov· twnhmc 111 mo:.l popular t•rings, window and [~ - • .. ~ ··Tiburon''. llus.:c master carpets . .i Bcdrms. , IKlrm. dtn .ii l'J. wet b.tr. LOT spac1oui. Cam rm, formal bltns. lge sep din.rm, --------•I family rm home de-N 0 Cam.rm w/custom oak * 675-7060 * bwlt J bdrm + ch:n + sidc yd w/play hse for signed to max1m11.c the r b1ldrcn. lll'aul pool. EXTREME panorama r, hilly Jaculzi & Gazebo. On the PIUV ACY ranchland view. Also 5 Super Pool Home and View of ocean from 20x25 family rm, 3 hu ge bedrms. glassed ln patio. dining room and family SIZC pool. coven'<! patio, near new dining rm. fplc. On a rph. c.lrp .... qUll't end Eastside income proper-beuutsfully landscaped location JI\ movr in con· ty wilh a) bedrm home corner lot. S136,000. • market at $325,000. Make car covered parking + WORK us an offer. Our new ~~:r2~;:!\~~:/1~~ roomforcampers.boats. MOUNTAINS, d1t1on. 545-949l +a 1 bed rm rental. 644-7270 - home 1s being construct-the end of a cul-de-sac etc. The corral can ac- _ed_. 644_-07_09 _____ 1 with NO adjolning commodate as many HARBOR LITES, -Consistent income SUNSET OVER S62Slmo. CATALINA $87,500. --------•I neighbors. This 3 year horses as you could ever Just reserve your home DAMA POIMT new home has an over-want with room lo spare. andwat.chit grow.6New R·ZLOT·VIEW sized lot (R.V. access). OFFERING PRICE 546·4141 ~ Fantastic dbl q{'W from a~' -Ill. condo. units m East or upgraded carpe•· and a $220.000. Cos M SOxlOO In the heart "" Call 6,.,. 7" I I ta esa. at step saver kitchen. Cati """"" • COATS & WALLACE Uus 1mmac !\pt home --------View even from bJ:.e ~~~~~~~~~I REDC Dana Point. Priced ARPET 734-1202 collect <1141842-2535 REAL ESTATE, INC. ment workshop' Superb $5500. Down! ANYTIME o\·,ers11ed ram rm &. frml Air l'Ood1t1oned, 3 bdrm h\. rm. both w frpk:. beauty .... 1th hardwood --------Thi ... 3 bdrm hill home 1:. nonr'. s.ss.noo full price absolutely l1r!>l t·l.1" Cdll " m.m~ exlr.i::. Ju::.l 11 ... 1 UNOEHIAILY DESIGNED FORUVIMGIH MESA DELMAR associated llAOKlAS-llEALTOAS 20 2'> W Bolboo b11·l66l ~~:~ 83J.OS23 l::ves r-1,. ,,, o. ,, ~ 1u •1 •oti1 N<I' [®:--al I002G...,al 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• /Jn NIGf.L Ol\IL rv ,... A~SUCll\TES L'<i ~nil Walker& lee Atal Estate ESTATE SALE The rourt say.i. .. Sd I 11" ! Creal starter home for young fllm1ly. An· you handy wllh a paml hrui.h and toots" Here 1s your opportun1tv to h<JV{' a 111c. home In an up anll comm~ area Better hurry• Ca ll 'lo"'' b-&5-0:ru FORESTE OLSON ... ,, .... 1'"1•• ··~-'- FIXER UPPER fri-plexH 01\ N1d..er ... on fans rnl'ed at SH0,000. and S!lS .000 hrre's your t"hoice to hwld up eqwly fu t HURRY!! 531-5800 ·Westhaven Realtors Inti RE Networtt TRAILER PARK Wow' Loads or charm in .... with 19 spact.>s. 21'1 this beautifully decorat- acres with two houses cd home. Your family Pool and recreational wtll hve in warmth. Four Cacillltes. 4 Miles from Bedrooms ond Family PRIME Perris IAtk c. Reduced lo Room with vcrsallhty for Sl39,SOO. CALL 751·3191 lhe creative homeowner. MESA VERDE • SELECT Coonccling dooT between J,o,el~· ~hake roofed 4 bd R ES two 8edroom3 and you MV home L ge mstr 1......:=--.;;...P.;z.R..:..O=..;.P_,,E:;.;;...;;..;T'-'J.-=.;:=;. have a playroom. Do you w1atraum, 2 bai.. country EXUDES LUXURY need a Den? You have kttl·hen. cathedral cell· The floor plan has a one w I th t h r e c 1ng11 & mor~! Terms refreshlnl ot'tiinality Bedrooms. Th<i price ls 11vailable. VelS welc9me. that is !I peel acu 1 ar ! right at $12,SOO. Separate :>4.'>·M\ll fanuly Room. Formal Master bedroom and Dining Room and three dose to schools and shop. Bedrooms are within this pm~. Call now 346-2313 Janet Lcrwnnce IE.4UTIFUL 3 8droom unrversity Park ··o "Edinburg". Call J anei. for dela1ls REDCARPE1' 754·1202 . ~1~~~!~fes~o~e~d~n ;hec [zao ,;futoii[I~· --~~,:;:r~~se ~o ~I~~ ~~~ ""' :i.;11inJ11 4 BEDROOMS SURAOUMOED enler the Master. •••-HARIORVIEW IY WA TElt Bedroom through doublr HOME doors with a i>epnr:llr --------•I Ideally located for NEW OH MARKET doset. bdth and po" dcr children across from Lidos F1nl'St J::lq:anl 5 room as liAq.;e ai. i.ome Mesa Verde Greenbelt. Great family Bdrm h1,mc "Ith a bedrooms TAKE AD· 2STORY$95.950 homeoncornerlol Only heautaful pool and hrirk VANTAGE TODAY"! Luxurious 4 bedroom on 2•2 yeurs old. Price 111 pallo. Out.st41ndmi,: lurgc Call 546-2313 qui el cul-de·Sal' with Sl32 000. Call now for ap· homeon2fulllot:.and2 <~"'' 9 ·'1 '" ,,.,., '' formal dining room, pointmenl lo 1nspecl! E~:f.·~.j~j~1 ~iSl IUIJftl ~~~:.i'::l!~~~~ [i;;:Zrr:wl· ' ramily who enjoy• in· :~~~g;1r~~ ~~~~t~:~:O 'Qt:·ll~P\lllt doorJouldoOr hvmg and ... _______ •I sprinklers. covered . .--•z11••·-~ entertnlntnR. Shown by Meta v ... de 4 ldnn patios. and yard llihllnc a~"'onJy. VACANT le READY s)fstem. Looks llke a FOR VOU!t I NSPEC· model home. hurry won't TION . Super fllmily last,C&llS40·1151. WATERmONT HOMES REALESTATe 631-1400 ~ ~;&~ HERITAGE Lara• 4 bedrm family home close to M csa CALL US FOR Verde Country Club. Twmses/CQ&ldos Grand piano aiied hvln1 laT·-&1.. • 1_1_ . . Rf.AL10RS home with lg. Bdrms, dbl. brick fireplace, beaut. carpets. heavy sl\ake roof, family rooll\ and much more. Good iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiil•il1 location on quiet street--~"'-------..;;;.1 one block to park and •• .,,.. lOOZ O ... ral IOOJ room. lar!le separale """'• ........... family room comp\el• From'39.000toS98,000 with wet bar. bll( EXCELLENTTERMS bedrooms and heavy THIHOMESB.Uas shake roof. Cov~red Ph: 172.5353 patio and beautiful -------- schools. Rutry, don't ••••••••••••••• .. •• .. -•••••••••••••••••••'•" miuthisone! 546·5880 .. ~~HERITAGE . • REALTORS 3 HIW USTIMGS crounds surround An· WaotAdRf?ults 14,2.56'11 _ __._......_ _ _.__...__ __ fhOny rree form pool ------ Spaciou.s ~tom home 'located in Caroeo Shores on an estate size homesite \lritll park ijk~ grounds. 8 Nice size bednns. fafn rm., formal dining rm.. huge living rm. w/blgh, dramatic ceillnJ. P~quet floor en· try, poolt $199,950. Call S46-S180 foe Cull de· Ge111ral I 001 G ....... lalla. .,~_..HERITAGE . • REA L'TORS UACHlmEAT $44.100 ~ \o poundlq turf fad cmt&I Hod I Blck ymd ls bay att• play ~ Wlndlu wooden tralkwlJI toettluded _.. tl')'l G•tmtt ~lichen. .step.don convtr11Uon area + flrtplactl 9ansh1n• bruk!ut JlilUo: ft~ • Jatuul · Vlllleyball. Carde,I) llvln l finest. Call H7-IOIO ---· Lovely, elegant .c~unily home on estate sise homesite. Featurin1 2 stories, 8 ~" spiral atalrcue, faml.lj rm, P>QJ, Jacu.ai, pott•n1 lfemL $198,500. ' tJnsur'PMied oceQ views, private beach, 1Dall\lficent bomeaite, 4 bedrrm, a., dlnln~ .$189,900 . 1-'md whal you want in Dauly Pllot Classifieds . 1002 Getiercd ~ll macnab / Irvine .~ realty FINER HOMES FROM $67,950 to $1,200,000 UDO ISLE W /IAY VIEW "Almost" Bayfront! Corner location across from sandy beach. Single-story. 3 BR with newly decorated : Ii ving room. dining room & kitchen . Entry patio w/fountain & lg. walled yard. 60' lot incl. 3-car garage. $198.000. Appl. only. Cathy Schweickert 642-8235. (011) GOLFER'S PARADISE! Ranc ho San Joaquin end-unit w/view of lake & gold course. 2 BRs, den/game room w/bar, 2112 baths. fireplace, formal dining, 2 patios for outside entertaining. $110,000. Vee Stinson 642·8235. (012) LOCATION! L~CATIOH! R·2 lot. w/2 BR home newly painted w /fireplace -PLUS! PLUS! PLUS 1 $67 ,950. For inf or -Lois Miller 642·8235. (013) "A TOUCH OF CLASS'" Ocean view -city lights + 2-s tories of built·in elegance w/spacious entry. spiral staircase, cathedral ceilings, 4 BRs, family room w/brick fireplace wall, formal dinlng/livin~ room w/rirepJace & huge recreation room w I ocean view + balcony. Gorgeous PQOI, jacuzzi & s• fireptt. $315,000. Marjorie Mahon 044.QOO. (014) flULlllU.MMf Ofl YOUI DUAMS This spacious 2-story w/4 B~: 3 tun baths & family room tf/onck flr•P.lace la a dream bomel Famlly·slzcd formal d1n.ing room + IUMY kitchen w/nn abundance or custom c•binets. Brkht. bar, trash compactot + dishwasher. Easy yard maintenance. Close to parks & pools. $120.000. Lorraine Berulie 752·1414. CDlS) ' COM -$89,500 Warm and cozy 1 bdrm 1 ba home on quiet street w/another bdrm & bath underneath. R-2 lot with plenty of room for additional new unit. Walking distance to s hops & schools. COM -$139,5JIO Charming Duplex, So. of Hwy, near greenbelt park & ocean view. 2 Spacious BR's + new stainless bltn. appliances + patio, rear unit. Free. standing 2 HR front unit, and garages for both -New lasting. COM TRIPLEX -$159,500 New listing on this 2-story prop. All 2 BR Townhse design units w/pool & pvt. beach access. All new crpts & paint, and very low maint. Call for appointment today. 3 BmROOM HOME -C.M. Beaut. home, lrg Jot w/dollhouse in rear under shade tree. Use any )ender of your choice, but please do it quickly. $61,900. £/SIDE C.M. DUPLEX -$96,500 Plenty of green lawn on comer site, l~ blks to all E/Side 17th, C.M. amenities. 2 BR ln ea. unit and all freshly painted, crptd & draped. , E/SIDE C.M. TRIPLEX, NEW Select.)OW:.. d<!corator colors for thls new fftplex• to be completed May '77, w/w8.ftn ~ siding exteriors. Order now -pa}' later the S I st ,ooo. 13 UNITS -$299,000 A-1 Cood, E /Side C.M. units, close to all amenities . Contains lndry faci l 's. storage for tenants, workshop & spacious owner's unit on 2nd. level. C.M. -1& UNITS -NEW Four 1 BR & twelver 2 BR new units 1n xlnt C.M. rental area close to eve~. 1Qdry facll'1, lr1. htd. pool le r•c arf!a w/1as BBQ'•• worksho1) le real·live dlchonctra Jawm. Prlde-of-ownerabip~ Stucco & sbjngJe eNrlonr. Owner w/carry artd T.O. REM.TORS 675-1111 ~ f20 WHfTIWATR DI. -JASMIMI CllUs .. Me .. ntt•• ..... Pl• 4, .. rww ........ ._ 2 .....,. 1 .... , •• ~ r-. J'la ....... sllf .... ,...._~ ............ ,. w .. ...... ~· ............... !:::L ..... · IPedlJ CIClll-a lllltror1l. Al .. , - 24 .......... ,~ ..... lee-Pl. cl ti •• •• ...... ~ S 1'9,tol. 0,.. M..W.&S-..1.S. JI ' I C.-.-.. tt. IMilt ef •••(* I _, .................. u..Cdt . I bedroom condo wtth den and wet bar. Excellent view of Bay a~d Fashion Island. Underground f::aie1 air coadUiooed, 2~ baths. kea entrance for estr• security. Open Sat • Sun 1 to 5 p.JD. 320 Via Lido Nord 11 Newport Beach c.-aw .... ...,..,. '4M161 Sl7.fl0 Freedom ti-act. newly redeeor•led. New carpet, & palnl l.mide & OUt DO wax kitcbtm floor. detached wwbbOP & st.Ora~. 1\oom for expanaloo. WY· ered used brltk patio entry way. OPIM HOUSI SAT & S... IM '31·tfl6 COIN Mitta I 02 Coft Meta I 024 .............................................. DAVIMPORT ISi.A.MD Be•uutul $,500 sq. ft. Span.lah Est.ate on two lots. All custom reaturea. fabulous rear )'•rd wltb pool, jaciwl and aueat house. CALL f« more In formation. RAMCHUALTY SECURITY! s.,...v .. & 551.JOOO 3 Bed.nn. 2~ batb,secGri· S..pw Loe.._ ty locks. air cond .• 2IOO Sta.ft.. 4br. 3ba + TIIELAfiDlNG FOIMA.L garage door opener. 2"" ra~y. OUat.omiaed hme Mell 400 OD huge cuJ-de-... or informal. ll'I your car ear .• washer " in lieu Verde. Wtslump aec I«. Rtn for pool .t choice wltb tbia tune· dryer. much. much staeefenc'1..quletcornet boetgate.Perf.$12$.000. REA&.,TY:INC. tlonally deai1ned. more. Open House lot·patlo w /play hae. man sv. 714/846-1S71 beautifully appointed Sat/Sun. $84.SOO. Open hae ---------•home: lavtahmatr.$uit.e. Sa1/$in 10.5. 32300t'e&ol\ Zbr. lba hse. redeoorated. ~HOUSISU ... t-5 Wll.h vault~ cell.. p1uah • ~;. ~ ·o 1 ..... ~.~!!.":'. ·"""· L Lov-•y ~ BR. 3 .... din· w-an& area... . COLI OF .... EWPORT •e•••()llS ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• ... •••••• ""'U ownr .....,..,_ 0, • ... __ ._ 1 Bdrms .. 3 baths: brand " ~• ~ rm, am·rm fftJlllew / ree new. In Turtle Rock Ch•rGI 1002 a, .. ,.. 1002 ~ A Call c:c7 •332 b ~ -1..,..,. B _....,.. " ...__~ •-deck 4 25111. eo..t Hwy .. eos-.. Mer COSTA MESA ~HVUT~ MUA VlttDE SA v& BY OWNER. must formed pool. Be out. Glen. sua.soo 67~5511 4 HOROOM J:'""!, T1. . , u od 1 see. Up1raded • BR. J~aped. On Daven· Coata M esa's nicest Old« 'home l<><1ated in SUIFUALn fabulous \n·level floor ()penSat/Sun.6852Sban-lslapd In Hunt. Harbour. 552·7000 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!•!!.,,..!!!!!m!!!!!l!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Fant.asUcfamllyhome1n $36,500 ..... gest Republic M e • trplc. prime l9C'· t67.900. port Island. Nicest ~ 8wral I 002 Gi•ral 100 area. 4 large bedrooms HunUogton Bdch on ~~~~t7~t~·~I O~S~O~~~I plan, 5 Bl" J Ba. lge Fam non Dr. 892.SOO 16751 Beruna Ln. Agt. with massive master 60x"'''ft. lot neat school. Rm. wtwett>ar. 2 fplc's ... ________ 1 RenNewcomb.644-~ THE . · - ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• ... ••••• AtYV '""'mal dan••g massa've suite. Elegant dining park and new library. '"' ..... • HI.lie brick fireplace in Ottat starter home. For MESA VERDE mstr s uite. n r new v•enttr.rs lr¥IM 1044 VILLACE. . .. : IEST IUYS -ILUFFS ~ir~!~~;~~f. ~~ ~~~~~;h1~~7~1s 3 Bedrm .• ramUy room. !~~~ r~t ::::S! ···~;;;.:;.·... REALTORS orae HOUSI. Tues .• Thurs. & Fri .• l·S full price! o#Nt119•11s1u,.,0N>«t' carpet. drapes. rresh Owln ·t.a Mesa. Slt8.~. D~i~! By Owner. 4 Br. 2i,.. ba. Woodbridge Place . 319 Avenida Cerritos. On the bluffs Ol'fN1t1 9 •HHt.WT0&1Nl(1• paint, patio, large yard. nrtAgt.5.57-7'48 ~r. affordable pool End unit In Village II. Greenbriar Plan. 4 Br. edge in 'lbe Bluffs. A beautifully up-Fruit.trees! S7S,OOO. 1--------•I home. Large. airy 4 Paneled & wallpapered lam rm. 2 ba. Call raaded Delores model, 3 bdrms., 2~ Roy McCcrcl• Buainess ls areal! Just bedroom. idea.I for entet'· t.hruout. Bltn bkcases. 2 ..:.640-..;,;....2526 __ • -----Redtor f II 0 Hewporl don •t wall~ For yooJr new taioing. Gas BBQ. Loads frplc ·a. 1 tn mast br. Was ... •iatt I.Aki aths, wet bar & a view that won't 1.:::~~~~~~ii.I CostaMffaS48-7'729 home pickup the phone~ of decking. All for only model home & Is a N>.al .""" quit! $149,500. Bring your binoculars. RAMIUM R.AMCH A B Give us 8 ring, we'll find $72,SOO. gem s urrounded by Choice lakefront end un· llALLY IMMACULATE & ~CKOUSl.Y Y UJerS Just the thing. a hut or a o-eenbelt . ll·BY owner. "94-0SlS or FtX•·POOL VlllaConclo castle without any Moth · .. 1 ' 18105LeatberwoodWy ...:540-...:..:...12:_;_19-·----SO is this exceptional Linda model; 3 $64,990 Call Now hfferl"haltH•w! hassle. er·bnaw s .___C_al_l_M2_·7_933 __ Woodbrf.Arborbke bdnns .. 2 baths! in the early Bluffs AIMCDOHED Super sharp condo with 0 am 1--------•I NrLake·Luxury2Br.2ba area. Just listed! Shown by app't. Circu lar drive to comm. pool, tennis and ~ f8 DH:RFfB.D Condo $99,SOO. C2U> only. dramatjc home bwlt on play area. 2 bdrms + 2 Master suites. 2000 Pill 432·7423. ext 82. Prin 67~ .a.a"O single Level Huge family den, 21,oa baths. formal .sq . rt . 1 n c I u des 4 .. ... , • • ...._.5 only. --sized ll•ing room. Coun-dining. air conditioning bedrooms. I a r g e ""__... -•n try kitchen. Dane. Fama-sm.soo. caJl 540-1720. 6 separate family room & Here's contemporary Beaut S&S Woodbridge Jy entertainment area -----liiiii.iiiiliiiiiil SU1f UA&.n lol.s ol 5t.Ora.ge. Pool and elegance ln a tri·level \wnhm. Near park 4r overlooks covered ---------·~~-~• '79-IOSO RV access on beautiful home to saUsfy all your shopping. Well located Pavilion and sparkhng EASTSIDE INlll[lllaUI." _______ _. cul·de-sac. for only needs.Asba.rpentryway ~wood Model. 3 Br. l pool. Separate w1Dg for COSTA ME:SA S78,SOO. to .a sunken llvlnl rm.. ba, offered well below massive master suHe 2HOUSES-I LOT ''#:1 lliCaAfonlia" MESA HORTH • vaulted celllng1, a market. 833·2144. no and childrens quarters. Super starter Invest· Beautiful 3 bedrm. ram Roberts formal dining rip. and brokers please. Tremendous bargain ror nt. 2 ho MES ... VERDE (pl I family I'm. A home de· the bandy. Hurry won·t me spacious mes ~ rm, c. Lae corner ot. n. It signed for complete -------- 1-·• "·'I """7881. for the pnce of one 1n fan· 1782 Kinglet CL 3BR. 2ba trlr access. Most or Int. -acl y r -·· ll . I ... _ nd cor..,~A.~E! -. ~ ~ tasuc East Side Costa upgraded Buccota home repainted & crpt.d. C1-"' ail.UJY vanR nllwc a Ol'fN1u 9•11\11JN•ow..,~1· M y ....,..., .. ,_..._ eut. Owners anidoua. es.t. ou cao't do bet· in beaut nbrhood near lo freeway & shoppan1. .....--.... Calltoday. This is the lowest pnced [,.~ · .. ·(.· .. It~·. jl!a·,!J1 let' than lhs. Much too golf course and park. Call540·9922. S&S built Cornell 1n . ~---l'JH:ir-muchtodesc:rlbe. sog1ve Lotsofwrought-aron& ~ C.OUe&e Park! Why even us a call. 646·'t171. $91.950 brick. Ask for Jeff. •OStOCicltes BV OWN ER consider any other model REAL ESTATE SALES fu~~,~::,1Hw•o~1 .. ~1 · Agent 673·7001 1,1 • t~fia ·~::do.y~~~~~o~ ;~en~aab4o~mr-+;,::_~ 1002 SEMINAR [W IJJ~"!'!.'~· FIXER UPPER For sale by owner. &aut. 9?3·~57 . Open House patios. 15 rruit trees and For licensed agents In· . t1 d'lif IN $80.000. NBRHOOO. landscaped & designed 5 Sat/Sun 1·5 _W_ood ___ br_i-~---• =jge shed Is blger terested In our present a· ' , ·~ Seller wi.lling lo do br. 3 ba, 3.000 sq. rt. faml· BY OWNER 4 br. 2 ba. th ess e1 xmakperuuve an tion "How to earn com· =i: approx. $3,000. worth of ly home be!!l residenthal h~e cul-de·sac lot. tract 2 Bdrm .• 2 bath e unit e rest! t. es cents! missions through re· CoroeMadlt Mer I 022 off.sites. Asking $57.000. Mesa Verde area. Fam I· adl· HB Central Park. townhome 1 n Wood. -lots of them~! Better a Ito r . de v e 1 ope r ••••••••••••••••••••••• AGENT. 673·7601 Jeff ly rm. play rm, 3car gar. Prin. only. 847·3164 bridge .. Luxuriously ap. husri:c~ Realtors cooperation." F'ree BR.AND NEW Open house Sunday t'eb.•---------pointed, ready for oe· _,..., seminarattheLeBaron 41R Dl!.IJ EASTSIDEGEM 13th. JOam to 5pm. VocmttPooltto.e cupancyapprox.Aprill.----833-__ 3380 __ _ Hotel. Buena Park. call + sn Sharp 3 Br. 2 ba on lrg $129,950. 1789 Or'lole Dr. PriudUnder Let us s h ow you RANCHOSAN JOAQUIN for details & rescrva. lhe ideal combtnaUon of lot. Reduced to $00.900. 54()..4843 Mark.t neighborhood amenities. Best 2 Br + den on golf 4 B~3'h Bath. fam-rm, playroom, Jau room. All rooms open onto pool. Sq. ft. plus 2 car garage and R.V. arking. '*' HOUSE SAT • SUM l·S t1ons. <213l283·7201 or a new home in an _Bk_r._963-_83_n_. ____ "'--P-'nt 10,.6 Assume SS3,000 loan. 2 179.~ coune/lake.833-3613 ..... ..,.. .. .,...... .... <n4l82'1·9820 established neigh· -VII a H&HDEVELOPERS borhood. featuring all __ .. _____ •!••••••••••••••••••••••• story 3 or 4 br. Walk to Designers Builders the latest kitchen ap· Extra Special Dtx Duptex, SUS.000. 3br beach. $89,500. Rar:cbo CBrokerslnvitedtobring pomtments. oversized Vertdesirable.3Bcdrm, ea. Bltns. microwave, Lacuesta. Gillespie I 002 their saleutaff.) garage, large rooma, ~ d1nmg & family room Wall Realtors496-1435. Realtors. Beth Uun· ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ---------• baths. step down we\ H ge to e fireplace rombe. 963·891 l or bar. mlm ocean v1ew. All u s n B Toro I 032 835-0211 page038Y Elec bllns. upgraded •••••••••••••••••••••••.,_ __ .;.,.....o._ ___ _ OHL Y $54,SOO 4it1Mral •••••••••• ~ ~.: ~UM I·$ WTERNER'S Best Buy In walking distance l th r u out . L ove I y Sr 2 Ba. xlnl !~lion. private beach. Only landscaping. Call qwck. 0penHOU5e ~yOwnr. 4br. $72.500 Assumable $V•~ 116$.000. fee. won't last long! Askmg Cam.rm, l ,. ba. 23571 loan. 897~1<> A WAL.NUT SQUARE 3 bedroom condo wtlh in-side laundry service . Near park, pool. and bas cable TV. Call for ap- pomtrr · Newport ., gbis. N. e DWGHT•. Mesa Verde• Nearly c pleted , • bdrms . r1 1ly rm. FANTASTIC yard (large 4 Bedroom. 2 bath and frpk., beam ceil. Als< enough for pool and family. Private Spanish C .. 64 ... 7211 &..900.Call540-ll51 Duryea olf Rockr1eld ~,.. ii.ssun 172·'°°· VERY UNUSUAL lf5&;J""MPUS~IRVJlll /\Jn ~:L(L .. By Owner. Super custom OPEN DAILY .Uacent4 m. & faml B.V.>. trees. landscap-courtyard entrance. lg Sd•j\.M Option ly room mg. countt')' atmosphere. backyard. Great place ======== Great 2 Br Laite Fore11t UAILfr &· A5'llJCllHE5 ·~<;,$~HERITAGE- ' • • REALTORS decorated 38r. l'lfa ba. 8A.M. TO& P .M . Mmutes t.o ocean. Mwil W O O D B R I O G E see to apprecl~t.e. Low CREEKSrDE Poplar CdM R IRA Roomy high ceilings, 2 for children. Neat and DUPLEX ---------• Townhouse. AIC. 2 car •• ..-. 4 bed f 'l clean! See It today. Of· b · h Equals any Europeat _,.", rm. am. Y fer e d at 8 I 0 w Spacious 3 bdrm. & 2 M!SA VERDE gar. ag patio+ was er & fllllint yard. Highly up-Model Highly upgraded R ,,.....,.H 11r.•1 ·yy graded thru-out. $67,000. & l d d A d A.-o --Ph 968·4001 eves or n scp · •r con · 551.•ooo Show by apj)(. lo Prine. a Riviera Vle ! 3 Bdrm room with wet bar. baths, each unit. Large lmmac. 4 bdr. 2 ba. rm dryer. Pool. tennis. Jae. home. wor can't ex &paCIOWI kitchen. County ll8,900 ... S49-8655 mstr. bdrm .. beamed rm home. HAS sl;ite etc. Call Art or Georgia pn.as >'O'I h c to s~e It taxes. ~ re1 I.. x Int r e nt al s ! Pa l'os Verde s tone. ror details. 581-lOOO or caUf~app't. qourfltfOl.!'A IA-8UPERBI Sl39.500 beams. m af'blc. 586-9893Agt. ~1460days Only. 549·8888 btwni--------- &.5PM, Mon·Frl IEAUTIRIL c.M ---QMS:$4 PAUL MARTIN etc ... CHARM IN G! Super upgraded Condo. 2 ON THE BWf'f ·The Ranch" 3 BR. llv· A . ..... Y~ REALE.STATE 644·7383 Prtmeloc.OnJySSS.OOO BR.gar.AtC.pootNeed rm, din-rm. country • • PRIV TE p • fast escrow. S44,900 kltch /fam rm. frplc. CULVEROAU A HOMEY 4 bedroom borne with separate family room on a corner lot. Close t.o part. pool and school. Call to .... m.ooo SPAMISHVI~ SSS.250 • IUctf Wlnd1n1 walk a thr<1u1th Cas t 1l a <'O urtyar d Ir.ads l secluded ~try shelt ed by red lJJe roof l''I dJ.n.lng plus canlinll and gourmet kllch ! Soar\og st.elrcaae Master bdrm plus clu retreaL Pool plus tenn Make this Twnllm llvln al \ta ftoest. 1'ry SS. t.ota1 down. Call IN7-6010 Ol't"' II 9 . If\ llJH ION "'" A AR1 Y Owner. Prine. only. lndscpd w/shaded patio. Local resident wants 499-2109 e 6022 v-St l + P/R +POOL duplex or tr1 ·plex in ______ ...__ Huntingt n y owner. AIVll • +J-$2,000CiJ. CdM . Laguna or OCEAMYIEW foantalnValley 1034 0 S'74.000.Ml-4'T7 Vet.sifyouquallfyS2.000 Capistrano Bch area. $64.900. 3BR ~6A. new ····················-· Viewpo1"nt OWNERS ANXIOUS. is all you need to aet In _Pn_n_onl~y_494_·4420 ____ kltch & new roof. Boa\/ L--"'-"-~n Sat & Sun 1·5PM. .. trlr access. greenhse & --1-r•--• Ra h 1 tn lat this home. You may COUNTRYCOTTAGE da.rkrm.CALL 4 Bedrm. 2 bath ranch nc . m acu ~~fy>'~~ !Vg~l~~v'J~ 2 BR. 2 ba. s. of Hwy. RtdNrd D. Forney style home in Im mac. SOPEHU .... D!4YOIUS2·SE 4P!.':~1~~es~'r.~;g: S98,000. PauJ Martin & •· • R-~t condJtlon. Freshly paint· ,... ~ Low down to non vet o-aJ .,,_ 383 ,..soc I. ._ °" ed New cpts AJI bltns. 7~·7$4! A&\. Hurry! CaJl983-678'1 nc a>ta~ 544·7 640-1700 Sparkl!n~ 20X40 pool. (7{N '" 0. II s fUN 1011 'Kl. ..o d i di h v 11506 VALLARTA Oo6fW.,. ~ 41>r + en. n v ome wt TIMMIS AMYOHE1 acant, mmed. poss Super upguded 2 Br. lux RAMCH REALTY ~731rrur RE AL · ~~ £STA1 £RS teruus. Poe>l. spa. tecuri· Enjoy leisure time in s79.950. Call 545·8424· Beautiful 2 bedroom. 2 condo. near the lake. 551-.1000 ... .., ..... 3'1<! Acres overlook.In' "Upper Bey Sanctuary• . Sprawling rancho with pool & separate party house. Room for hones or tennis. A onc•·ln· lifetime opportunity I $550,000. PETE BARRETT -REALTY- '42 • szet ty auard. SI.».950. Owner BKR. th C U Sa s er t .,.h • ---------&44.al20 beautifully uperaded 4 br1---------ba . ust:om carpe n& ve ov nex .. aM. - +fem rm.home. Walk to 3 Br Deluxe Townhouse. & wallpaper. F\replace. ~9·1833; 4'9·2109 By SANJOSE Tennis Club & park. Call Newly redec. Dbl trplc large entry hall with Owner. A 3 bedroom ramlly nowS49-1002,ownertagl. Bltn bar & bkcue. Poot wood peare<I noon. 2a..---------• home with PRIVATE .. •• ac1er· h , 5 d clbbse. plar.ground1. patios. double garage POOL. Has a dog run and 3 BR. p()ol ald.e Con<I,). ~ s ome ~ep n park. FHA Assumable wltfl eledrlc opener. the yard Is separated DR. FR. Jacuul. tenn1a liv rm, fptcs. 2000 • 4 br, J()jln. ~.600.1139-~U. Pool. tennis couru. Juat from the poof with a ehlld N,67S-&IOO. ~.':3~r5· Bkr.1-----..._ ___ , 9montbsnew.· proof fence . a. V . For W. ly OWMr Cameo Highlands, tovely view 4 Br or 3 + deb. 1149,.500. 67$·3262 HURRY! HURRY! $77,900 o o DIR ID GI PARKING. Clean and 3 Bedroom, 3 bath, coo· Looa&ed off E 1111 ISTA'n$ sharp. Call for appoln\· BY OWMER do. 1wlmming pools & between Beach Blvd. & <tlk. fatn rm. 2~aa. pre· rncnt. 3 BR+Cam Rm. Zba. OtJ Beach. ... CO.LLEQE PARK. New Coa.UineReaJty Mon·Sat 833· 1802. prlva&.e Jacuu' in patlb. NeWland In Hunt.inatoo mlum lot. air ~nd. up. I grd flooring, $102,500. ijf ly redlec. $79,500. Mus 636-3802 ~M.ta 1024 eee.~7 Qf49.2·U85 Sun/eves (213)S4.5-481r7 ••••••••••-••••••••••• ~~..._.....___ 1021 "'_......_~-... tOZ.. he Colony.tmmac. •• ~......_ ---.. 211tory 3br, 3 ha. •ie A"IBE.Ast~DI ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• .................... r s1a AAo --RI h am.rm, ,vv . y Right toe a lion! g t appt. 551'2:542 Open HH RAMCHllAl.n 551-2000 • Hou1es o n a lot.. allie! Rllht _pnc.! Bring su 11 s ~.:.~me.~: ==~~~· :~s,: Grand Open1·ng n. . . Look at ueooJOllth &t. Oft tablo·Uke family room. at Pioneer. Ownr will Jar1e used bdck cona,der carry back fl.replace. Use your Im-TERESITA VILLAS' i..=..P9Pll';;:.....,_· ..... Alnl.=...-~......;...,..---i c:hn~ buL hurry I CONDOMINIUMS IUPC-ST'f' OLSON I I - ~OR INS n.EALTY 939 Glennevt'e 494-8519 FIXER UPPERS-uxr x ---------. 100' lot. Beaut ocn view HOME & OFFICE 1 BR shack S135.000. D!i!lightful 2BR home DUPLEX-iO fix up. Oen with ocean next door and view from upper unit. se_p. 3RD office over ex· $140,000. : ~able storage are•. JAY W. YEA TS u ~=~W)'. 494-8611 Realtor 499-2237 C'*1ttes Click! The Best Vest! S.per beach ....... Uke new a bt,., • l br, many xtna, ocean view. Call su.~. Property Houle --., _________________________________ __ 111 H U •• ... Nik I t • H•••• 'L._ ...• ... • t -·•·-lllZ ••,.rd hid Frtd-Ftit>ru_, t 1 t'"'n ,.... •• •••••••••••••••-•••• •••••••••••••-• .. ••••• ••••••••••••• .. ••-•••• •••••••••••-• .. -•... ••..,•• .-..,. _, • -.II. y fltt.OT !PW • I' f' .. •• • •••••••••••••••.. ·- I ......... 3240 lntM JJ4 ~..._.. UU l411i1Ui:1t..... JUt .... P-tsh-'• J7Q7.Apctw•t1....... ., twah~ h t I la........._ ....................... .......•.............• . ...•..•• ~ ............ el'"................. ... .................................................................. ~ .••....•. ::::::: .llbpooll.icSeJBra~a. DltLIJlt4Bt28a.~Rm. Vlew.TwtlerockTerr.31.M ,,_t ibt' raa.rra llliitlilii'V1Heis.ClnMUXlra e2br.Jbil,uUlln I' '•• )107 c..e.Nea41 J12 c.tle ...... ?oodatrearn Condo bltna. dabwa.hr. clbl 1ari ~Is ra7~ ~m.,. beaut vteW borne.~ 0.-· .~ ,. .. nr pwll a. el. Wint.er. 1115 W. 1••7::••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••-•-.Y •M•ltn. tpl~ er Mtll . l•m~ca _,mo -·-1 w~-.....a... -.$$,.mo.1~1 Balboell2~ • n .... aunUU.\Jtµpd. dbl l•r w1opnr, vie poaaeuion . &052 Br · ' Sl"-'lesok.t'tt lr:v\MAUolYWUly8ta Hardwick Cr. Spr· 4 Otz~~e(!Udrii-. OMGOLJCOUllSI LEASE Harbor View LSSl8rl8a.MU.2Brl MtinRentaJa.540-5:r70 TtH3f.2110 tn1ra1e1Westmtn1ter. fi'orni:,d::. 5~~~ 3Bt.3Ba.SBOOrno. =~~:,:«~:= ~~~t~~~ ~lfJ· c..M.,._ JIU &.&de 3 br. I ba dupfH ~~ ~.akz~~::te, MS-2330 =de:;~ street. Avail 2/1:\. 'ror ln-b-D'dSl. • •••• .. ,.•••••••••••••••• ~yd. KicS.. •mall c Turtlerock Glen new SSr lo or appt. caU l52·7U4. Ok. 10&1 MarlOQ Way. Im~. New 3 Br. 2 ba 3Ba ramrm twla pooi Lovely3br&denw/v ew. Frt,SaforSun.only. '= Yr'lybc~udlo apt. utU ms, Nt-0433 twnhle. Crpt/drps. dtw. ownrl850. 540.z.us • AvaJJ Ma.tth Ill. Only Waterfront-Doell 4 BR 2 Pb~S>GS l adult only. PGOI. dbJ encl pr., W I soo. per mo• Rllll Ba r l • • UJ• hookup. S11S.1161-9222. Univ. Pk. 3 Br 2 Ba. DR. Myers. Rltr. 494·5420 ctrPs bfU::.: ~w .U~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Condo 1 sty a Be pool beam cells. new paint & eeo.1101 or 752-8688 · C-. Mfta J7Z4 Tenols, Swht1'1. Huna, Call Kay' Hodie a · drp5.S4:5Qmo.S59-ml ~Va.to 3267 + ..................... .. OV\ comm. 2 Br 2 ita con 963·0Ml or Bob <i13 > ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~to~ ~ft.~ ~r $40.00 Wiii AU, do. D/W, wabr/dryr. M1·1048. •llENTALS• a8".2baAllsoVUlaCon· e: .:oo,r:~rly O~y •StTVl.ldlo"t88.Apta S315,&'JH078 2BR.2Ba ...•.... MOO do. single story. A/C, 1GZ548 evel·eM.e952 *' •MafdServAvalJ Otll 2ooo (l Uke new. xtra sharp. 3br. 2 BR 2~ Ba $425 cpta, drsle. v..W " pool • •PhocMServ, Hld pOOI Ba u:ea fl· t~ rRd 2ba. cpt~. drps. fr pl, 2 ea: 2~.., aa:.: .. : : : : $550 No pets. 830-5085 . 3 SR. 1"' ba. frpl. dbl. 2m Newport Blvd, CM S.7~ mo n~ ev • bltns. patio. Dbl gar. n 38R,2Ba .......... $400 garqe, a b&lt1 to bch. 548•97Mor~-398'7 ~~ r0'z.!!"~-·-- COAONA DEL MAR 2 Pr Town~o. frplc. Pool, tennis. ~m• ~an & Catalina views. Cloae to abopplna & fioe beach .. 644,2611 · · schools. Lse Ownr. 2BR,den.28a ...... S42S 48Ror3br4'den. Bltns .• Ref'•· NOQ. l.M. 7158-44:18 SUSCASITAS •.. _ . 3 •• .., 1163-214e lBR 2 ea .. ~30 frplc, cov. patio. Moveln or .... 7--..... 8e"'uUrut 0...,.. 3 ....... 2 ba ,_..., 4 •4 ' ••....• · ... "" ,..,...,, -_,..,1 VI """ """"""'" Minutes to NB. 1 BR .. ..... 0 • ••••••••••••••••••••••-PER" 38 a"~b 38R.FR2V,Ba ... ~ """1a.1.-..mo.-.. a ... di clupleit fir pt ,_ .. F . ....., mo. r ..... a. 3BRZ~ B. SS2S Bahia. 549·8867 orHARBORVlewSomereet .urn. A uts. no pets. • e acti. "'""e orest new chotc bltns. drpe, cpts, fenced. • s ... . . . . . ~·1100 S br. 3 ba, vi~. walk to l110Newport Blvd. CM. aarase. clOlie lo shopet & lakefront 4br, 3ba. we cw-de-sac. \714>536-8884. 48R.2Ba ..... , .... $450 pool fl tenn. S850/mo. !)each. S47S per mo. Ask Costa Mesa. Phone Bu1H1n1. bar, A/C. 1495. Lowered 1.213> 8M-Oll08 4 B 8 !· FR. 2 Ba ...... ~ 3 BR 1 h ba. A/C. blln.s.. LBe Aft 6p11 &44"8828 STUNNING tae 1 Br ardn ror ¥issl. 675·2311. 54.5-2300 1 enclosed aaratte. $3501 ror quick rental. • n.FR.28& ...... sooo sreat ~ Cov. pati · · apt.Poot&recrm.$220. mooth.AGT.~ 17l4>1184·1601days ' SWIMMING POOL wlfireptt. ~5. 22591 Via OCEANFRONT Exec. 710W. l8lhSt a8r 2ba w/fan&Mtl ~Br. 2 Ba. den unCurn apt NEW TOWNHOUSE z u 1 2 BR. Oen, dbl gar, pool Santa Mana. 549.s867 or home. 1900 sqft.. 3 Br 3 ' c vu. w1pauo. Matur~ aduJu, BR d · n~Y 38d. 1 ~Ba. Con· serv. incld in re:nt. S3'15. 58Hl00 Ba. Fam Rm. 2 (pie's. 2 Lt-....._ Z Ir Pvt ·• turn · av I• only. No pets. · eluxe. SUO•IT\4>-veruent loc. Frplc, patio mo.751.59,59 car sar. $9SO Yrly. Bltns, wtw. drps. Adlts. '350/wnlr. $5-00 t yrly Mallal .... Aph #Z Adult•. Call Dave El Toro 788·5055. 5JO.. 7980 67S-213S no pets. 1235. 645-:1871 17~6?S-3B24 215 E l8th S C M ,_546-41 __ 4_l. __ __,; __ _ 4 Br 2 Ba. IJ>lc. cpts, drps, 3~~ 2:!P.tc&~~ ! f~~· Greentree 3 Br. 2 ba ~~~~.~~ ... ?~!.~ IWfl Water View 1 er. S170. utll. pd. CPl& Up;t.airs 2 Br l Ba. new ,if .Joil · LARGE 3Br~ 2 b a . z paUo. poof. no pet.s. bcbMSOmo 642.374.Jeve house. Lrg lot. cul·de-80 TSU Be WIUl 8 BJ\ 2 Ba drp9, patio. quiet ilduJls. cpt.. sep snit gar, S290 ch&ldr•n OK . C II mo.'9MOIM · sac. S3901mo.6«-4646. A PW/CONDO, 3 -! · \'J · • M4-$S8 mo. 602 .... Narcissus . Loft ... Apt $40-443lorS!464776 Just S200' Nice 2 br ra mi BR. 2.,.. ba. Lille new _,,,mo. Lie. Agent. 644-G'l I Ir 21 ,. _. ,_...Verley 3234 1 & · t k • F · Woodbridge Place. close lliS>. Af. 6'4-U33 640-tl74 Senior Cltlten bach apt ' • w ,_.. ~EW BltEB.0 APTS •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ b Pe be 0 · e e · to Lake. 3 BR. 2 Ba. ram· . . . El Nido 1'rnller Pork· ¥EARL V. 2 B... l ba.. Im.mediate oct-up;tncy · l tic' w l l9(l. frt*'. appl , 3 BPRM, 1a~ Ba. Prestis ac com r. 631·2011 rm. din·rm. Finished Big Canyon preslls1ous S. at•llh lZ76 1840 Newport Blvd. Cl\f. w/l&e. sundeek + pauo. Pvt patio. aas fri>k & pool, Jac\Wi. MCI. p.t. area S400 mo. Agt. Ask Super 3br. w/rrpcl. ne Mll!"ch 15. ~ase 9·12 Broedmoor ho~e. 3000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Garagesp.fotl car. stove. ruu kitchen Incl. Adulti.. $260, mo .• '9J rorKeith968.1317 cpts & drps lge yd bik mos. w/opUon ·lo buy. gqft. back bay view.4 br. 1395. 2 Br + den. xJnt See this one! Nice 1 br. AsUorCathy refna. Pool&: rec room l Hamllton.~1 to bcb. 2 c~r gar.'S39S. 557-9001 2"' ~a. ram rm. Sl150. cond.walktobeh.pool& sinales ok. S145. f'e~. WIWAMWIMTOM Ytlease.Gas&waterpd. l"'antt.o ...... 2STORV 3Br.3 Ba. bonus Days. 591.42s8. Eves. Flmnbleterms. 640-1714 jacuui. Call J>at, Be.achcombel'.031·2011 REAL i'.STA'PE 675--3331 HAl&.OFT AnS llousi But ~really rm,cln,frplc.D/W.$395. 002.3155 HOWAmHG! BIGCANYON brandnew 493-9672; 831·9-'32 or Oc 28SA\'OCada.C.M. animmacduplex.l"' .. ve 114·963-4569 or 531·9545 2 Br. $325-"25 per mo. . . · l2131790-2986George ean side o1 Hwy. 2 en. Mon·FrUpm t.olpm ''" Agt.nof'ee YUlaPocfflcCondo 3Br.~·$471permo. spacious. SlD&le level 2 . 1 lcfr'WITf'tr. 1 Ba. frplc. uvall. 311, S t4'.Su 1~4 3 br's. 2 full batb.s. -----------1 3 BR l ~ Ba pool ten· 4 Br. $440-S59S per mo er 2 ~a. toUohome BRAND NEW Lrg +1633 From $140. Gas & water $340. mo. 673·91411 a 645-0a4a • spa c Io us k Itch ~JI Modern 3 br. 2 ba, fplc. nis. ;acing park. 'Near 4 Br. pool, spa, S700. · ~=~:s~ ~~ S7~UJ's~ sq. ft.) 2 Br & den or 3 Br pd. No klds/pe\I. 132 E. w/bltns. frplc. newcpt & OW. no wax rlrs. cpl, schl .. walk to bch. New I mo.·.·s"Jeat$'"".OOO pe ~ .. ~.n~d·to .2 GUapragr 88 aded1 16lhSt.C.M.642·126S · ~~LY. Beaut.. 2 BR .. Lge 2 br c«tage, E·t1ide pnt. 2 car encl gur drps, $395/mo. 963-4569 .. u... ...,...,.. g poo 2 'i ba. U!1Jl with spec-C.M. frptc;. beam ceU. w/washttc & dr)'~r s.11-9545.Agt.noree. ~-~7scrpl. S425. mo. iji Agenl640-~ & jacuizl. Quiet & lux· tacular view of bay & ·Encl.aar.S300.548·&300 hookups. & easy to care urious. Walk to bch. ocean. 2 Decks. frplc. & ror patio. back yard. lmH bh4bd 2b BLUFF:STOWNHOUSE Children OK. no pets ... lffncJtoaa.11e1tl740 gar.Walktobeach.SSSO rtpptrwoodAots, Drive by 1571 W10· Su Mo•h•l1tT 3 odcrvl 5~ [900 sq.rr;;:. h~g · 3Br. 2Ba. 1 balcony ptease.$395w/1 yrlease. •••••••••••••••••••••• Permonth "N£\V&NEARNEW" terareen In pnme Meia per s arp, 1 bedrm, 2 IOl 900.2992 w/V1ew. amp e storage. CaJI (714) 493·9fi12 Agt or STUDIO WIWAM WINTON Cpt.s .• drps. bltna. lg Verde CHl)&hborhood or ba. fpk, lg fenced yd. · ~J~~.,!'10. 673-4426 or (213>790-2988owner. "1L--$SSW--t..ay" REALESTATE 615·3331 patio. Washer & dryer call 546·3690. Sorry no xlnl area. $315.mo 3 br. crpts. drps. rncd. Ranch Rffllty Q'O#....._, F:ij'kllcben ~ bltups 1 & 2 br's. rrorn children or pets. $425. J)4!r 842·4"66 cover'd ·patio. detached 551·2000 NwptCrestlux 2 Br~Ba kltlll Lln-r•·UUliti .. ·s 3BEDROOM $205 Rea dy 2 /l5/7l ,mo. LEADERSH.IPR E gar. w /3 1 bath. Walkm ' · .,,....,. ,.. 5375. YEARLY 646-4262orG459543 -------··-1 chslance lo beach S395 Ranchos J 3 Br? Ba San split level condo. Green· MILE TO OCEAN 646-0111 · · Very Clean I br. crpt. 8-12 6091 Lws Rey." l(olf <'rse &: belt, wetbar · fplc · z•, car Royd s.ltn Motet Wesuu~e 2 br $220. Cpl., drps, bllns. pat. Laund. AVAJLABLENOW lake vu $000 ~7 7044 gar. tennis. pool, walk to Nlillht lllA 727Yortdow1t8'wd Close to beach 2 Br. drps, slv Children OK. rm. Adlts. No pets. $210. 2+ den twnhome. luxury 3 BEDHOOM --beach. S4SO. 645-8277 !...!!!!IY • .,. Beact\ Blvd at Yorktown roomy. garden patio. S48·959() aft. 5PM CaU 642-026S aft 5pm s hag, bllns; Atrium TOWNHO:\IE l'urtlerockGlenPlan 2.4 S27SSSS.8566·4943J2.l 278El6thSt paUo: elec garage opnr. Pool & rt!<' rm'. imml'd Br. Fam Rm. tcnms. FO«' lease 5005 Rrver Ave. S.. ..,_ 536-0411 · ' . Lge 2 Br. Fam Hm. 2 bu. · child OK . view Mile occupancy: rm mac. pool i600 $47_:71}H _ ~ll~~~~r. 2 ba. ~~ lZ7I Logi.GHilts 375 Brand New 2Br. lrpk. Pl!lio. tplc rn triple~ ~r Ew.-isrdc qwet 2&.3 bdrm Square Pk SlllO mo children O~. _no pet~. Terrace Condo 3Br. 2ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• bltru.. lndry rm. gar. ~25 shopi;. no pet~ 637-8828 unfurn w !patio. Som~ 1132.2322 S325 mo .,35 G302 din rm 1Dover1 Nr Rec BLUFFSCONDOS AUCIAl'l.Ali mo.644·1667eve 1714 1 ---~~~~~~~t_~onJy. At W0'4 ' Only ~!I Nu:t: 3 br. ~-5-L'>G cotr & pool Ph 548·8104 Leases startlllS at $450 IM CHAlMIHG Scenic Mounuun Views Quiet 2 Br apt Jbovc 2 Br. 2 Ba. Mesa Verde. Mm I~ .&....61 lgeyd l"ee BEST BUY ' Month. AgentG44·ll3J OLD SAM JUAM Large. dht udult 1& garage. Bcb side Hw}' F1P, D/W. encl ~aragc. -...... _,.., Beachcomber.631·2011 Grl'at loc<1t1on !\larinl.I NEWUNIV Prk2br.2ba THEBLUFFS-View! This charming 2 Bdrm Apt.S. Furn & un Adllb only. no pets Adults. no pets. S275 li77SantaAnaAve,CM HS. ,i Br 2 Ba. (pie. kid~. deta~h<!d hom_e. lhghl y bedroom. 2 bath & den rum Credit & Bao.It rers req 54fH081 646-5M2 HuntMCJt• leoch 3240 pets OK tmmL'<l cK:c} upgradt'd c·pts & dq:lb, s~e&'w ~E~~.~:!;\\ home has plush carpet Pool. Jacuzzi. B1lliur<b 67S-3303 Br. S210. all uu1 pd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $385 mo Call Onn al frpk. wet bar. vaulted J BR, 2''J Ba SJOOO Mo ir\g. fireplace. bullt-ins & 581-6l:H or581·6l30 ,.__,. M i Br garden upt. lrplc. adults. no peUI. 3tJ3 W. 3br. 2ba, 2 story twnhse tw6·137l or!H6 055>! ceding~. :\tstr. s uite BlO CANYON 2 car garage. Won·t las\ 252ll Stockport La , ....-ta "° 3124 patio. dshwhr. $24.5. Bay548-9616 w 1>001. xlnl location. -----w Homan tub. m1rror~d Htllb · ••••••••••••••••••••••• !;.5i 2&n S340.842·l739 Bt!ach Walk Twnhomc. wardrobt; & pvt. Patio. JBR.2'"Ba.S700Mo. loog!Call 646·2lS8days; c:,,._, CasadeHermosa Met»iaVorde2br"pgtairs. Beaut.2Sty.3br.l•·ibo. Micro. Om rm & llv rm. 493·0588 evenings & ~ • .,.nopets. 2br apt w/<ireplace, l'l Spac.3 braptoruseitas 2 New cpts. Rera & credit 4 BR, newly upgraded. ram rm. welbur. 2 patios open onto patio w/view weekends. "9wpori leach 376 bath. range, oven, dis· br & den. Frplc. patio & app. S240. 498-1936 Clc.e lo beach. $425/mo. S500 molb~t ofr Call Pool & s pa. s teps to 3 BR 2 Ba $385 N •••••••••••••••••••••• hwuher. S320. Also 3 br pool. Adults. s.125. No Ask!or Keith. 968·1317 Marge848-2801. ~ary , park & tenn Rec.'rac's. Avail ~tar~~: IEST IUY csep bldgJ $370. pets.S45-33Btor8!1·95n SJ.95 Sr:1 3 Br Or 2+den. Lge .... _.1_._ . mo 552-8587 496-5.593 a,._ 1 t 160W. Wilson 2br. no r;ts. Refrig & New gardel'I apt. 2 Br 2 ~ ~.,.-. ....,. .. e peop e say you ge · Ba studio encl gar cpts f yd. Destrablc loca HarbOur 3242 UNlVERSITY PARK Beautiful new 4 Br. 3 ba what YOU pay for! \\'.e O!· Adult E-Slde 1&2 br apts. stove me · $22S. mo & drps, NO PETS. No lion.S425 /mo.642·056Sor ••••••••••••••••••••••• Corner UnatTownhow;e house on cuJ-d-sac. Lge rcrmore.Andlhepncc lS E!'cl gar. patio. pool --96&-8064 Fee. Call Centur)21 892-3385 • 3 Hr. 3 !Ja townhoust· VILLAGE Ill fam rm w1frpk &: wel· less. Membership 111 8 Lake new. no pets. Large 2&.3 br apts. 2 ba. 636-6300.askfotLynd» Sparkl1n~ nt.'\\ cond 3 bdrm. 3 bath. Two bar. FrmJ din rm. Mster Health Club. /\ tennis 644-0878 PoOl. exercise & rec. rm.•------...::..--•Mew leochHous. 5470 Call ·t,.i;.i · fireplaces. Arnllable -.s23C.U.PUSJ>a,~IME Br suite w t fireplace rlub.Freetenrualessons. sauna.28SlBm.t~Sl Mesade1Mar.3 Br21N Get ready for !>ummer 8"6IJ7lor~G S l5tieH:. no~. lncludes u~l·ofall SS45mo.768-1947 Billiards. Swlmm1og MESA VERDE area. no pets. $275 per n'fo now !Walktobt!a<:hfrom ---fac1ht1ei..S-l95 OPE.~DAJLY Golf Driving Range Home atmosphere 2 & 3 2 BR. l &. encl pal10. & 64s.tlroor548·38'i4 here Walk to grade Brand ne"' lu,ur} 2 b1 552·7552 IJ A.M. T06 P :'It Nice small JBr condo. 1 Saunas + Rreut .i.c. brde.iuxe apts. 546-1034 single gar. no kids or ~ '>Chool & h1eh school ~ townhOUst! ~ frµk Pool ----THE ILUFFS ba. patio. drps. cpts, linties: Sunday BBQs pets. S23>.846·7l29 EASTSIDE 2 Br I &. ?J1 br. 3 bn. hugt! s undl.'ck teMJ'> ~op.;>ts :>J6.22Jl Turtlerock 1 Br. pool & stove.gar.$285.493·3406 Partte:> w1\h ll\e band:. FoxhoUowViUoge l6th Plac~ ~P uni\. P~1 dbl gar. $550 mo. a14 20th - -tenm'> facrl 5575 mo 3 Bdrm .. fumtly rm .. 2~ ir_.. ..___ 3280 FreeSunday brunch ti21 W. Wilson St $315 mo. DlxTwnhse2 Br. ynrd. nu t·p~ • drf>i\. Sl 5311 ITUI lrYMe 32 44 6+1-H57, short rental OK ba. $685. LeitSe. -a-646-2010 :: Ba. new cpl. dbr gar. S275. 979-3848 3 Bdrm .. 2 ba .. smgle ••••••••••••••••••••••• your rent dollar~ go even MODEL OPEN lO·SPM PoOf. S46-Q99. 557--0848 .i BR. 3 Ba up0 raded n·•~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• GREENTREE·l Br 2 Ba. le el ~•ac Le S185 2 br K'd E · th I f THE B •y L~ •F .. ~-IRVINE rp1 & f i \' · _...,, ll!le. · . garage, 1 s. further•1 •A tern fi e nJOY e pr vacy o "' ~ S650 . mo w grdnr 28 , ' ~ am rm. c ose t CORllH ASSOC. pet.s,sngJsolt. Fee maintenance crew. pro-your own home w lge Duplex 2nr IBa. adults. 2 Bdrms. water pd. S260 ~~·7161 Juhc 2 S:: ~ ~ .. ·. · ~ ~cl~~~ ~~~e Rfflton 759·0226 Maio Renla!s. 540-5370 ress1onal management fncd patio, au. gar. wood 00 pets. Sl50 mo. lsl/tasl. Beautiful. spacious new starr that c:ares. and burning rrpk. pool & &iS,5969 apl:i. Pool. pvt patios 3Br, l1-"baSurfsldeCon 2~~,2 Ba ....... $375/4&511iECOLONY beaulsngl ~ SoulhLClgtlftCa 3286 friendly neighbors . jacuu1.2br. l h ba:.tart· , . Adults.NoPelb do. Frplc. pool. patio. 2 ~ 2 Ba....... . . . fam. 3 Br. • poc;, &: tennis. w.-,.. Mow!!::+-.. ....................... Models open daily 10·7 mg at S3S5 mo. 3 BR. 2 ., BA Studio, els. 329 A do C M 831-981$or536-l817 3BR.28a ....... S435/ G d . 1 ---. Sprawling Ranch Home to schls. & shop'g. $310 voca • · · ---------1 38R.2.,..ba ..... $550/625 ~/~r ~~k s395. Su: .. rl .... als v pvt. Superb Ocea~ Sorry, no one under 21 & STUNNING 2 Br 2 Ba lge mo.998-()659 S46--0883 NEW 4 Br, 2~ Ba. Cplc. 4 BR.2 Ba ........... S465 · & ~atallna view. S550. no pets ~oblrn mate garden apt. Pool. rec Mother wishes to rent ~h. ~!;,Z~b~ ~~~ 4 BR..2~ ba. furn . . WOODBRIDGE Broad-LEASES Owner, 496·029~ Wed. ~;:;.';!0~Uia:;cu~n~:n area. $245. 7l0 W. lBthSt. 2 BR. l Ba. w1encl patio& modest2 Br house or apt ~aft jpM ~BBR.R·~"'eaBa ... S5SO~ moor home. 2b~. den or 2 Br. 2ba. eocld gar . nitethruSun. . CM. carport. 1225. mo. Lal & w1stove & refrig in C.M . ----------i .......... _.... 3bf' 2ba D R Hlghty up ste •A ... h .l. 0-1.. ood 0 d last + dep. 752·0160 days, Up to Si2l0. Willing lo BIG CANYON aded • · · · eps "' "" . ameru 1ea. West...._ 3Z98 ..... w ar en Apts BRAND new b~ch. apts. or 642-5673 evetwknds help w /upkeep •. upgrad· 3 BR 21,, Ba ~ gr · $475. 673-4976 UUJ pd. $400/mo. •••••••~••••••••••••••• Frplc Refng UtCI S<llO "' • · · · · · · · · · Woodbridge 4 Br. 3 ba. din 3 Br 2 b a patio B d 880 Irvine lat 17th> 645-8256 or97i33'1e · · Tri-pl.ex. 1 br. bll.ns, cpts. Ing. 645·0616, 642-5682 Park /bch'nearb ·' r . lrg yar ·Avail \714)64S-OSSO drps,adlts,nopel.ll.lBlk eves rm. fam rm.3 car $450/mo y . March l. S450t mo . JUSTCompleted.Beaul.1 loshop'n5.S210548--5717 W-e-·-t s_i_d_e_n_e_w_e_r_"_B_r garage. Lake &: pool. 3Br w 1~oodsy interior. 1M7-M20898-2636, Pat. 170016th St< at Dover I br apt. Freestanding " w "de m25/mo. CaJI 752·757&. blk to bch. Vacant & re-tt.sesFwwilMd or (714)642-8170 frplc. bllns. Many win· Now renting 2 br 1225. & w/garage. Ul consi r ~ leectt 3241 ady SSOO. ...,...dlH 3300 dows. S235. 645·8256 or S235. Adult.a. no pets. kids/pets. 5245· 64&-017& ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2Br. 2 ba East Ocean· •••••••··~··••••••••••• Yearly 2 Br 1 Ba, S350 mo 979-3376 P~. cn>ta. drpe. atove & E·slde 3 br, 1 ba dupleli. 3 BR. 2 Ba. ocean view hHI 'wronestt2BOcr.e2baan'rS450rontyr3lyr. OCEAMFIOMT l block to6oc7" ~'!"75. BAY MEADOWS r~ng. Next to all shop. f'ncd yd. Kids. small dog . ..._ho A il M h B .....,.. ptng. Sl3 11th Place al ok. 2061 Marion Way st""' me. va · arc · 2ba S700 yrly LAGUNA llACH Spac. 1 & 2 br apt.£, encL Santa Ana St. 842·2464 s.125 549-0433 l. 5425. Also2 BR. East& Turtleroclt Olen. New 5 ~R: 5 ~tbs. 2 fplcs .. 2 J! ~o b/pool/j~c gar. pOOI. jacuzzi. close i--·~ _ _. ____ _ W~~~'R:!~5. 3Br on best street rrwds unit. prlv. steps gar o ws\ra/yd~aytro tobeach&college.Avail. Logel br $195. Mesa del Havetomet.b.ln&100 1ra11t ..._2241 $750/molse. &o beach. Lease Sl300 mo. • Mar. lst. No kids or pets. Mar ~rea. nr. M!hools & &o sell? Clasatlied ada do Oceanfront 5Br Pri IUllie McCormack 137 S + u t 11 ' Tom B Fr.~. 646--0073 shopping 998-0659 it weU. 642-1178. J8R.2 BA. lpk.aupttu 4br, 3ba, suitable for Penln Point ~ :'o~ Realty 494-7551 ~:a dys. Wknd CodaMeso ltZ4 CostaMna llZ4 Coda...__-.... 4 .-ct. l*Da. OW. •tr• nJRTLEROCK 4 Br. 2 adults oaly. Wiii accept yrly C .a i-1 .__ _,,. i.cti: Jd. Slater /Beach. Ba. Fam Rm. den. patio. =~~ pet. $600 m o Wat .. fr.t HOMeSCJ::'• 3400 Only Sl45. Supreme area ....................... • ................................ ••••••••••••• Va e • n L SSt 5 /mo. waterfall. nr park. pool, Cll 631·1400 ............... "••••••• Studio, aJl util. Fee. =~ .. ~-~~ee. ~.S52Smo.640-1714 MOUSIUM1'AL ?bdrm. l~ ba. Yorktown Beacbcomber.631·2011 4 Br. z Ba. F'R. cptg drps, ~HACH Uk 5 8 Ba r Condo. pvt. patk>. pool, See Park Newport unde IMO.JbrT.H.Pool.K.idt. prof lndscpd. $625. s l ·Bdrm. A den. oJder ~°.Oreatv~ew.;ar;,<>gt garage, blt·lns S350. unforn. upts Newpor P9t1c*. Fee MONJJqdew. 552·7350 : lwJIM. Locat4d near Pot-beech. To see th.ls ~ 960-2559. Beach. f\lmiture avall lbia llantala. 540-S3'70 •2J30 WJ Skack. cl.oM lo shop-perty call Jim Berkthlre. C a.da ••• 1 '714 >644·-UIOO .,.... U44.... 3244 &*la• buallne. 2 Bib. ..-r.li hll 3425 --•••••••••-••••• _ ...... ••••••••••••• lroiD bMch. IZ50 Month ••••••••••••••••••••••• MISSIOM UAL.TY ---------t 494-0731 675-7900 wocema11 -•QADMOOa 3 BR. foanal dining room. 2 bath + 2·car aarage. Plush carpeting -3 r,•ttos -ready for move·in. (~~~~mo. Vee Stinson 642·82p.5. LeaselnEitctuslveJArcb OM MU COUISI Townbome w/areat view. Done in cannel color. Near UCl. lbopplng & new tennis club. Pool/jacuul. '415/mo. L~e Rothell "4 QOO. (017) WA&MUJ S~A· ' ~ ~ Plan 'Af ' -end-unit neu tecreatiOD area. New earth· tone cJrP8t; new paint" waUNper. Immediate oceupany. 2 BRa, family room. 2 batba. tl25/mo. John P.tiekham 752-1414. (018) \ C..r'MISe...... eo.nct... 0-11"' rial H I • .... T• ,..~"""..., ....,_,/hf!* .... s.r.ac. ·········~············ ................................................................................................................................................................ . ti* •an wUllay YoUn 'l cootr•clon. Coco· SHOPP1NO SERVlCE Haullna, movtn1. cleanup 1''ormtr lRS Aaient often Slate he Insured low PATCH PLASTERING Remov a I~. tr1 m min'. or min~. Repel rs le m'l/Rtsld. Allerat.tons. QIU BARBARA 11/up. Tteework. Re.s. complete. proresslMal prt eu too Eict~rlor ••ALL TVP~•· pruntna. rtete •t. Lie d deenl:na too! Guar wort rm 9ddl. &en C9rpcnlr)'. lT14> ~1..1163 last. freeest84Z-4.597 tueerv. 9&3-2035 1pec\alllt. Try me.Calico Free est. ~ F\lJly ln.s~. MJ.JU4 • bluu avin&s ..,. t Concrete. apec1allztn1 83$.SMS ~ ' · ea driveways. f'r est. AB HANDYMAN·Homea tc Sonny & Jer FREE haul· L..dlc.... •---------Homcs·Additlon1 R tuc rlmm1n1. topphtl. re· =-:"'-~~----.,....~...;;,.;.;...;;..:...;..;.._ __ .,,._ __ Conatructora. St lie Apts. Consclentloua lnl. cle.anup. tree w~k ••••••••••••••••••••••• P£TERS PAINTING co O\'er blk llo'alls. fo'rff movll\I. cleanup. Wint« ......... • P r of CARPET 3203M.M5-~. craftsman.Ph.~ fOf' usable Items. hn· T&A Maintenance & Expr'd. Reas Rates. Mt.lowrates518..a92 rot~. Llc/lnard. Ton1 •u•••••••l••••••••••• Q..EANINO.noor&wln· • cu/bldaa remov•d Repair. Landscaping & 1o~ree Eat . Call Gene MS~UI 86.,,.tt... tunt II . dow Cant 1>4ltch lhin· lhctrical 536-8596 Oon' Plumblna. $SHOOS H.nuli KM1·5730 SS?-04$8 ......... --------bit. •let' ~J· a:: • tenancesfrvlt'e53'7·1508 ....................... carpentry. electrical. H de I n . • ..................... . ta.OObr.~4 vea, ELECTIUCAL SERVICE 1ee'l rprs + car rpn. ::'!!: ....... ! ......... M•arw, ExcellentPaihtlnic PLUMBER Repair. r t · ..................... .. ----------1WtCareC.!l)etCleaners CALLS Sl5/hr. Call~ HOUSECLEANING ••••••••••••••••••••••• lm&Ext.Aeaa.Fr11e plpt'. lnstnllatton RlnEnJllsh·RHd Bab~ltUna. Mature re· &eamCleanorSbampoo ~ Relcreen1nia1J ls r 8 rel1 bl 1 Flreplaces·Planten est.call548·27e&eves st'rv1ces. G Gldlty. liable. drivee. Xlnt refa, Alto Upholatery·All El rlctan All t of ptckup fJ a II ~t'Y~r: Ref Y 8 e~~13 BrickConcretePatlo Co I l id U I 642-9315.. G perhr .&cs-0574 cuar. Ref~~. l"feeest :k. i:: &nd!'cr.tns. service. 8e42~0114 •rt MR: KI NGS C t Bl~~r~aJists.~lts w~:;;:~:.ha~:1n1~nre~. _K_O_M_E.S_A_V_E_R_S_P_lu_m_b_· Bab,..ltUoA. my home. Reu Rates dM.~·3'116 Free est 540.3404 5:30pm. Cl ~ & p 1 0arp~ · Contract.ors he 11328240. ln& & Heating Free ffl. -------- Altfw • .!!e .. 8A.r .. ~.!'~ew. /Cw-.a.. "w .. ~ Handyman. Odd jobs ... ~EnB00 1•Tn :•L?: Block. Slumpstone walls GaryGomp(4!W~. SlOHr. Honest & Reliable toridng. s~1 lall&lnta in -·-,_....,.,.,. ~ -_, L "brick planters. Expert· Svs. BorA & Mstrcha rea mg; e emen ary ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••-••••••••••••••••••• Quality workmanship. IZ-3561 ly lnslalled at special PAINTING. Int/Ext. l47-0383&'75l·3150 math. exper. rdttr. Bab>'alttlns, my home. PAT\OS·WALKS CabeJla-o & Sons. Expr R e a s . J l m IMMACULA...,_ winter pnces. Call Bob. Reas. dependable. f'ree 1w1ulable9624MTT. San J1aan Capo. lots PhWipg Cement Co. Lie. gardener. fr ffla, re· ~/642·9117 ''" ~9906orS35-43B4 est. Call Jay 645·7965 Former Col Cont. Non •--------- TLC. t rained Nurses Borlded For Eat 751.565., asonable646-4654 alt 4pin ff 0 U S E S 1 T T E R Cle• n l n a Service BofA & Masteri:hg acptd. Union Plumber 25 yn WMdow Cl.-inc) Aide. Julie 493-782D aft · & 8 · · Satlafactlon Guaranteed 'alfttfRcJJPoperiftCJ Repairing & Re piping no ••••••••••••••••••••• •• er&pm 7· am LAWN SER FREE EST Children. pet.a OK. Vaca-673-m6 ....................... rt.otogl •y )ob too small or too big. Cryst•I Clur window ..... SlrYlce Cowhod« Mow/Edge/Clean-Ups tion. wknd&. etc. Mature ....................... l''ree est. Reliable Al dunlnJt. Residential ••••tt••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• RJsLAWNSer834·1111 lady. refs. Non smoker COUPLES~EANING PalntYo.rCosfte Lang rhotogr1phy· Mowry.645-7161.7S1·3S39 Beautlrully <'leaned Tnliftl at home, any kind. LEEM. JARVIS or drinker. (2131431·5828 Cleaning with Care. Average Extr J Stry $345 SpeclaJlsl! that will help g 111 ss Good rat l!b. fleu~rata. will pickup & AddJt' R d JAPAN~E Gt_.._ DareJ & Paula. 631-0913 2·Slr)' S46S. lnlr S&Srm you sell your products & Roofing 5S7·228S deltver.545-:5441 s, m l'g.Hrs8-S. GARDENlNG ™'i Priceslnclmatr'l/labor ser vices. 494·1397 ........................ ---------Ph9Q,32QO,Uc317856 Completejob •·-clean up ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hsecln'g,alfordableprcs. G lnsrd f ::--::-:------1...:...:.:..:=:.=.:=:..:=.:..:.:.::.::::.::._ "' uar. • reeest. 51U""506 Roofing. Save20to25'k on ________ ,. Capeblefonnerexecsec· P\ITAROOMOVER Freeett.963·2598 Sldploader, dump truck. Free est. Rer. avail. Ted627·7900orSSZ·Ol34 •---fR-a.. anewroor.Callrorrates. t 'y l o aastat over YOUR GARAGE hauling, tree work.grad· 846-1939.979-1814 ..-n0 ,,... .. ,..... Don 646--0036 b \lrdened business For l 116• ·.....,., Prol Japanese Landscap-ing.demo.etc. 751-3930 •--T WORKGUARANTEED ••••••••••••••••••••••••--'------- To Place your "Fast Result .. b ree est ca .. 1 . ......., Ing " Gardening. Free -• I tr/E t Fr Eat s::ona at orne-or Plans & f inancing est,5'&5-7072Geo.lbushJ. Hlllliltg ....................... n x r. ee . VERVNEATPATCll TeevlsfonRepalt- __ bl_t_._C_al_l_MO-__ SM_7 __ 1 av ail able ••••• •• •• • • • • • •• •• • • ••• Pr ores s I on a I I n c Ta x 2S yrs Ex pr· 64.2·-029.'5 JOBS & TEXTURE •• •• • • • ••• •• • • • • • • •• • • • Service Directory ad .... C.ll Now Keo Ahrenberg IXOYE Okinawa Landscape lnc. YOU HAVE IT READY Preparatton for lndlv & Papering & Painting, 42 Free Est. 893-l439 ~~i!t~r:1S:iri:!:~l, BiUSherbacorr GardeningMalntenance. l'LLHAULITAWAV Business. 7S2·24 68 yrsexper. Lie. 101009. E. Have something to sell! ~ Licensed& Bonded Cleanup.54.s..-a TIM 548-6306 Anytime Salisbury 557·~ Classified ads doll well. CANOPY TV SERVICE 1st RATE SERVICE At Fair Pnt'es 9M-1633 642·5671 Id.JU AfalMeattu.rw.. Afs lw•t1u.twa. ........... ...._ Al&f1M"t1&Wln. R.tabtoShare 4 300 .,.._s Rtflfal 4450 ......_ ........ &Found 5300 ••••••••••••• .. ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ()pportuRity 5005 ()pportuRity SOOS ••••••••••••••••••••••• \°:oltaMesa 3824 CostaMfto 3824 1 -hach 384111t-,.., '"' 3876 Male to share rurn bch LAGUMAIEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOSf.1·29. sm male tan __,.... --.-IMlmt h U ·1 · I'd N d ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• m. t1 me . o rugs. Snlalt Used Beauty Shop equip. NINTIMG SHOP Shepherd/Collie doi;t -----BRAND NEW 2 br. 1 ba upStafrs apt Near New 2 Br. Oen Vu. smoklng.$125.499-4329 COMllH'clalSton from S Operator shop. &tab 40years w/blk marking11 head,. ~Itand llielt Stroll t~ f)o'llhlA'<'ll'> of.\ 11111" fon~ Me<'lndt>r f'ld'I tumbling w.1tl'rfol1, ilnd 4ulr1t pook LISll'n to the 10Uod o4 hl.ibblhy srrt>c'lms .llld yrcl\Alln~ rh111~ ~r c'lduh 111>.1rtrrwnr h<im" 111 Pint>crt>ck Vall.,gt-1~ a IOUll rvtrl'(ll Hli.'rl' you c"n "-'"lllY unu>ucll priVdCV Mld kowry A RECREATION PARADISE. TW(J h..'11111\ u1un~ S.W,mm1ng pool plus unlqw vollt>~ll pool J.icull! Sand 11{~11 court. Mounldin lodge cluhhou!>c IMth firepl.lcc. conversdtlon pit. btlhc>rds. !_Nin. >1unJ Hu~• 10 1hr1 goo<l hie <tnd rtw11 rd.ii. FROM S26S TO $355 Including Heat 11141540 um ( )11,• 11.!tlri><Jlll Orw B.i1ti lw.. l3..•dr. ... •m. Two &1h l~lOO Adclms Aw. In C<X>tcl M~. .icr~ from Ord~ Coost Collegt' bt>twt>en H.,mor and f.111'\new wlbalcony. 2 blks rrom avail Pvt deck, bltns. MALE TO SHARE or can be used as ro· 9601.836orS31H738aftS Exclusive beach town tall;.notag~.orcollar,ani; bcb. Walk to shopping & dshwshr. refrtg. S26S. 215 DUPLEX WITH SAME r~lonal office Locfted U'-,..mitvr• location. OverSlJ,000 mo. ~ Po&cat · Nr ~alrM & ~taurants. $37S/mo + W.Canada.492·1967 645-9645 in older shopping com SlSO~oo(>"ptyr and "row· sales. Partners agree to ~EW~~~1e54~17 · · uliJ. Avail March 1st. . plex with ruslit' at " d1Sagree Corcing sales. ----·----- M0-4236 after 6 pm. Beach ;:t u~ta1rsa::1~· Straightfemale over 30. ~o mosphere. $175 Mo .. util. ing. Owner will stay as Call for appt now. Lost: Sm. rem. Burmes~. u ~~""·~! "~1· "5·30· share 2 Br 2 Ba apt. in paid by landlord natio nal marketing UBI 837-4200 Please call 5S7·lll09 or ~-MW apthotMs .....-vouu,.....,...,_ v-. Oakwood South N ~. MlS.SION REALTY manager . SJS.000. will 979-4321. Reward. ~!.Y..oubr kids &1 pets' ~fth FwWslted S1Tf...!'A) mo. M8·5893 hi 98SS. Coas. t. Laguna ~~~ds~ tOpeC: J Jay's~ r MARIME DEALERS &.'ft"'.,...... rs. app 1ancea. or UnfwNshtd 3900 lP... 494-0731 .... ~ YACHT lllOKHS LOST f~m Irish Setter. enc•. gara~es, cpts & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""'--bo H UBI 751-3741 Prime Coast Highway Orn collar. "Bndgclle" drpa. Move lD now & get ..,.,...,. OW' me. nr unt NWPT BCH STORE e · I ·1 Reward 493-7241 SlOO off 1st mo. re nt mE EXCITING Harbour & Wa rner. Call ICE CREAM wuness ocat1on ava1 a · ----· ------ 84'MS66.10AM to5 PM PALM MlSA APTS. for Info. M2·S839 be(9am 2Q>AvonSt. i27~tmo MAJOR FRANCHISE ble !'ow in Dan'.1 Pt. FOUND beaut mini blk MJNUT.,..,TO NPT an lOp Jerry Wynn <213)477·7701 Retail. office & display . ~ or m. Grossed Sl46,000. in '76. space with maximum ex. ~le. Has Dutch lr1m. ~~~~-~~ ... ?~.~! Bae~.~~ BR. Offlu Rlfttal 4400 Stores for rent, Newport Outstanding So. Orange posure to large boating VIC Cypress/G G are::i ••••••••••••••••••••••• Blvd al Harbor Blvd. County toe. Training pro· market. Contact Gary 893-384!1 __ 3 br condo + bonus, 2 ba. I )T old model. Back Bay Cpts, drps. bllns. SUS ~95-13. 646· 1164 2 Br. 2 Ba tux. "pl over· looking Newport Bay vnlh balcony & flreplactc> 833-9234 BEACH RENT A.LS WINTER ·SUMMEH YEARLY 2 Br yrly. Unf. $400 . Burr WKit~ »(alt~r 2901 N e ..,porl Bt~CI NB from $1.95. 6& PERS"' FT downtown CM. Various v1ded Bank hnanc1ng Alkn Nc1Atport Supply Adults. No Pets v ,. Bob S48 1313 av a 11 Ag t . TI M E. · 1 Found. Black Cocker type 1561 Mesa Dr. 1617WESTCL1Ff·NB sizes · · 751-1400 Co.~ male dog 3 or 4 yn, 15 Blks East or Newport AGT. ~1·5032 CORONA Del Mar Store ArllCicial Flowe r Ar· <.:ollege Pk area. Nds Blvd. 1 over 1000 sq. rt. Top toe. •GIFTSHO~• rangements in Beautirut home 548·1TT:; __ 546·9860 1501 WntcHff Dr. $00mo 673·8()33 plus property. Primo lot' conlainer\I Mllhng to Found· Grey Schnauzer _Newport Financial Ctr on Balboa Is l. LORA chain stores. furniture Female . Balboa Point PREVIEWING &AasiltgOfflc. Spoc• lndintrial Rental 4500 VANCE. Realloc67J..4062 stores etc. Woman can area Call lo identify 2MDUNIT CallonSlteManager ••••••••••••••••••••••• U"'UORSTORE hand!e. Will tra•!'· 67541622 th Be h H 17141 642·3111 ext246 "" Bargam. Old man rellr -e ac QU$8 1300' w front ore. Ii? rear GrO&S $26.SOO. mo mg. l710 Pomona. no. FOUND. CAT lite color Contemporary & casual II You Need A Starred & door.12-lO Lo~an St. Unit Nets $3000. mo. Grow.ing H~. C.M. 548·1065 Female. FlufCy. V1r La ThebestorNewport'i. Furnis hed OHice. call L. CM. Day 540 5710. eve area. Super buy. Call 1m· Mir ada/ Cortez. Lag. good life TUE EX EC UT IV E &i0-0681 med. Other' to choose. lnvKfmtftt Bch 494.7470 •Beamt'dceillngs SUITE. Rent includes 1000 •-4000 ft 1 UBI 751-3741 Opporlunity 5015 I lime recept.. phone & · "' · sq c can ••••••••••••••••••••••• •2pools&reccentcrs mail service. ut1l & uruts. 220 3 phase pwr STEAL Investors needed for con •Plushcrpts&drapes ldealC .. , I"" 5-3 1417 •And so mut-h more j.mitorial. Sccy'i. & ore ·" "'-· • Closed san·shop. Sold for sumer electrical product Cost M J824f .. t~ hach3840 Furn.bachelor $230 equip avail Newport Spnnklered Bldg s11ace. $22.000 9 mo .. qio. readyror mkt mrcc& a tsOi '"+°" -... -~---R-T_M_"'_R_I ... -... -Unfurn 1 br .,., .. 5 Center. 640·5470 share yard In Costa M"sa Balance due S7900 Best boat'g areas ... ""·1179 • 7141 675·4630 SCRAM.f.ETS ANSWERS Demote -Moose Moust.' -P1r::ih: ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~,,..r"' ~ ~" ~ ~ ""° -1 ~ 2br "'-h 9191avc.1·..1-Drik• HURRYFOR Prime l""at1on 1n llunt· Call Russ Johnson. In buy In CM F\lll pnce ~t L 50•5 '-'&e .u.:am~.s a~.~r3 BR. 2 Ra . walk·1n r -UC' ... IESTS£.t~TIO...a ""8 h dustr1al lirokers. S7900cash 5579659 ....__, 0 oon "" mkls. Qwel ~~lls. S2la clOSt.'ls. dl>hwshr. frplr. NEW 2 br & 2 br widen ia.~ " Ing ton ea c u n ~l ••••••••••••••••••••••• MEDIUM Sign tacked on a fo rtune teller's door: "We Tell Your Fort une At A MEDIUM Price. MS-26106't2 2_211.1 pvt patio Owners apt. waterfront apts. Luxury 1433 Superior Brookhurst. 800 square -----COIH LAUNDRY 1st, 2nd & 3rdT.D.'s Family :?Br. child ok. OK. Close lo bch. Children a p po Int men t s. Pvt Newport Beach feeL Single, garden lyJM! Only SIM>OO. cash down LOANS AVAILABLE S230 mo. no Pl'li., n r OK. S375_mo 892 07 15 beach. boat slips avail to 646-8453 st.ore or omce. Good ex Stora,. 4550 So. Orani.te County maJor Credll not important tenants.Adults.nopcts. ---------1 posure. assigned park·••••••••••••••••••••••• shoppin" center lo r . 573,.oo"Broker Placentia & llHh 7!1~~ 67]..8414 4000 ing. Call Mr. Plummer Smallboal&tra1lers.ren· Goodnet~books """" Shah mar. Apl I OPE:-. 2 BEDROOM. 2 RATH •---------~~••••••••••••••••• 963-6767 tal space. $1 00 per foot. UBI 751-3741 5350 ~9492 Oclu'<c down.,ta1ri. aptii---------L1m1l lt>ngth 22· 1Hl91--------- w laritc patio. frpk encl ,EHIN. POINT Sleeping rms S60·S10S mo DauXE OfffCES Monrovia Ave CM ~ IITTERIOR 2nd T.O. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dnnkmg problem! Call Alcohol Uclphne 24_hrs a dat 83S 3830 2 Br 2 Ba. den. rpk. l{Jr. All ~ wk Sh kl/ Co ml •-· d ti OW.newlydecor'd,s.150 i;eara~e. lndry fac. all 2BR.lba.rurnwntrS350 ,,.,,.., a.re 1 m ""ins spaces. Mgrorcalls.iB-8621 DECORATOR LOW BANK RATF.S LONGTERM RMAMCIMG MECHANICS ~ Jdults. no pct~ ~l:IS mo. OCEANHOMT bath Shown Mon.Sat ~to 2000 sq. ft. As low -----P /Umc Associate for faal C7M>is.t72G22 BR B "on\y". Call aft \pm ~35-&q.ft.Lag Niguel& Storage gara~e ~s mo. · r ·t b EASrSIOE 3 BR. 2 lia.1'111111111'!!~~~~~~~~ 1 . l a. wntr. $l!IO Refs rc..>q'd, 5:16·00S8 or Mission Viejo areas l9S9 Maple Ave. C.M ~~w1~!est~°t wf1~ lr~i'~ deluxe Ceatur cs. 21· ZHR,Zba,yrly$4SO 548·59M Handy to S.D. f'rwy. Apl5.646-6505 INCLUDF.S UTILITIES 3 BR,2 ba, yrlyS700 ---------Call: S3J.l400 _ mature or retired person PREGNANT'.' Caring confidential counseling & referra l Abortion. adoption & keeping. scarages,S375 &t5·7554 Brand nt•w fr p l cs. STEPS TO BEACH ROOMS $25 wk up with---------only 7l4-63l-006Q D W's. exrept'l Tnplex 3BR.2ba, unf. S4.25 kitchen. S37 SO wk up ~OlltOfflcff ~n•Ht/ Motorlto-,...-R-..wt_al_a_ NATIONAL BANK ask fOf' 'at Grau 523-8292 28 R $3251 3 RR $360. 3 BR. 2 ba. wntr $350 apts. 548·9'1~ A\•a1I. 675-8141 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Books prove S30.000. net. {11)2 T11rl Am Nofe • 2 BR. 2 ba. wntr $375 ••••••••••••••••••••••• APCARE S.l-2563 MoMy Wanted 5030 -3826 . "'' \: Business or profess. Exec. Ofc. Spectacular ....... s E·Zopcrat1on. Mot1v11ted Very large 2~r. 2ba l b r l 0 w n h 0 u 5 e . person. Walk lobch .. lov· \flew of Newport Harb. & Opportunity 5005 seller asktn~ on M5.0oO. w~e & ~fng. New Wuher/dryer. refng & elyhome646·1035 ocean. Furn ; Secy & ••••••••••••••••••••••• bul 1nv1le a ll offors. ••••••••••••••••••••••• *SHARON'S* Want Sl00.000. will pay OUTCALL MASSAGE paint. P''t balcony. 1st. stove ~is mo No t r 'ce incl c t~ •··, Hurn on this one. -Room for rent. elderly recp · se vi s · ons ..... , .. ,IHJa-s. UBI 751-3741 luUrdep.496-0195 ctuldren.9QHl39 man. lndry, meals op PrimeLidoVlllageloc. Over 500 Active local market rates . H av11 •9!H224 garden apt.s as security 832·5607 17141 "THE EXPERIENCE" al H 8 UDO BUSfNESSCNTR bus I Pl aJI DLX duplex. 3 Br 2 Ba. Ocean breezes Sl&s 2 br. ~~~~~~~~~I lion · · · 963-6890. m• ~7S-4030 · istmgs. ease c KITES & KEYS c pll, drp1. b l tns. kids,petsok. Fee I-GYestHon. 4150 or stop by for free info. GIFTS&LAti-tPS balcony, no pets. 838-4949 Main Rentals. 540-5370 l Br I Ba, Westcurf area. ••••••••••••••••••••••• APPROX 400 sq. rt .. C·2 at ~~ ~~';:;.~;:: l~ ~fJ:55• Molt91N". Trust Adult mot~I. Closed Dffdj 5035 c.lrcwt TV. t 7 or Reserva· ••••••••• •••••• •••• •• •• ~ons_. 64_5_·396 ____ _ Walk to~ h Sl&s L 1 pool, no children or pets. Room m my pvt hm ror l3l E . 17th St, SUile E. you. r ,.,..., 3134 br.Petok~~e:e . 1e snsmo.646-5681 ret penon. Gd f~. gd ~/mo.Doyle548-0479 . 751·1741 , ·-••••••••••••••••••• MainRentals.540-5370 CZ> 3 Br apts on water, care. On bus line. CdM. 400-700 sq ft. cpts. UNITED BUSINESS Be your own ;.oss on Balboa Island. E·Z bus1· ness. Short hrs . Owner will train A steal al 9lOIX>. + Inventory Dick Park. Bkr G73·7348 LOANS8¥J% Aho 2ftd TD Lomtt Fairest Termi1~Ince1949 Sattfer MfcJ. Co. 642-2' 71 545-061 ' •KAREN1S * OUTCALL MASSAGE PACI RC WOODS Udolsle. 49'>8944. drlJs, A JC. ample free INVESTMENTS ~,j!':~:!~~ '::.r:e~:. Cll l 8rapt.L1dofslt' Suci.a.erRfftfcllla 42 00 parking. From 45<. IS25MesaVerdeDrE 48'-3'120. MZ·MS 'f~ see this property call ••••••••••••••••••••••• Masters.673-4120 <ac ross from Kona Lni,,) MEXICAN REST. Jun Berkshire. 5 BR rum home on ex· •I MO FREE RENT• &lite I06. Costu Mesa DESP ERATE' 6PM·2AM 838·178() A!'ORnOM Counseling & Referral Preg. lest·ava1I. wknds 2A Hr Helpline M7-IM9S SBR.2\.tball2BR.2Ba. ~ ~ elusive Balboa Pen Pt. No lease req. Dix or<'s UBI ()pen1day, Absentee owner cun't PRIVATE PARTY all conven iences Nr S500tweclt. From June l. Adj. Alrporter Hotel. MANUFACTURING handle Seuts over 80 Will pay more ror your Woodl.Wtlttrwtryt beac h . S36 ·1S79 _ 675·7900 . Ownera714:673·3620. Froml·rm.tonM>Osq rt Putentedltem XJnt leHSl' So Orange 2ndTD.642·3S73 mdY•" ~/wtnds VacatfCM1Rtflfals 4250 l.OWESTRATES.1'.U L.L 1 Unique piece of equip County Gencrousterms. Alinouncement ___ _ MASSAGE AGUIE MODILS ESCORTS OUTCALL OHL Y 9'MlfyAdliHAph Condo 2 br. 2 ba. Mlle 28r lBa frplc. Easthlurr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SERVICES 833·3223 lil mt>nl ll.foJecled ne Ull 837-4200 Ptnaftaft/ •/ I 121r/fwt9&_..... tr om be a c h . NB. Adults. 8()1 Dom· BIGBEARLAKEFRONT _noon ________ $280.000 Uus yr . Pre11en Hcrdw.-e-HomeCtr Lost&Foimd SonJnopeta Wuba'/dryer, dbl oven, lllgo.832·8343/644·1Ml Cabins. 1714 >866·7701 Two 300 Sq.f\. deluxe or-own~r unable lo handle MISSION VIEJO •••••••••••••••••··~·· eomr:::~ ;~u. Secwity. S370 •LArAIJSllMNI• 494·9727<>r839·5173. lit-es. 5120 each. C.M f:v~ra~~w~;J ... ~~~!~d sooo Sq fl Store located Lost& Found 5300 ... ~='t-6 1 "2 br Cum Ir unturn R .... tostlaN 4300 &t8-2130orffl·371$ Ull 751-3741 In Orange Co's fastest •••••••••••••••••••••••'_R_ELAX __ l_N_G_M_~_S_A_G_E_ ~ ti ....,._ 3144 from S:!l5. up. All •lee· •••••••••O•••••••••••• Ofc 3:zS sqf\. Pvt ba 2 ---------i growing ComQtun1ty. Lost male drlt /gold BobJames•Llc:. Masseur -..... •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• tr1c. Ftreplace. Healed C ft~ rms Pac Cat Hwy ~d Generoua terma. ret.never Reward vie Out .. -11-... 9, A""'-"lll lDlitliM'bor Blvd pool. Adults, no pet&. •-• • · Ull 937 • ..1•00 Bristol/Irv. 213/246·0978 .. .....,.,.. ~" at= P..UCWISTAl'TS -··--"~"' • ...,,.. u..a....~! 6d7~'!!,.s1 CdM. S\7S . NATURAL FOO ""'"" 1--------"'d l •· .,,.,..,_,.._.uvv • ...., ,,._ sandwich business. Fan LO T M I · EXOTICAllLI ~ 111. N. Sao so Fwy ~ u \ • fannty api.. Acrcta from aolf course Share a ome · WHTERM WEAR S n 1 a \ u r • w U.2140 from OU. Tenn.la. health *31Sant.a Ana Ave or aptment. 50' per sq. tt ~;5~~~=:S~P~~:cn'saoo ~-mOf\thly sales Schnauzer. 216. Sall & Massa&• .. Modolloa I~ <•IMdl Jl40 f~va~nA .. ~.ewlr·v3883ine. Out ..I•'--"~ .. "'". Uttl h-.. 1.0lvTJllHuMnu> 4001 Blrch-N.8 . Submit your cash offer Located in one or the pepper. upprox 201bl. vie _Ou_t_cal_ISG __ a1_69_154_3.a2.50 __ • ........ i~ .. AA•~ ur .. .., 1' -~ All 541 5032 finest Plaias in So. 40thSl NB ~2 BESLIM KIT -........... •••••• Owned 6 maaated by pd.Sn&tsoll. ee lIXe-'4«~~ · . Ed Riddle, Inc. 646--8811 --------•I Tllel.rvineCo.,5$2-~ MalnRentab,5'0-5370 c...~~ • OFC. SPACE Newport OranJ{e County. Carnes FOUND mixed male pup f.4b·l469 Aini., •• ., -D-b '""" n 3 r . aJIJeadlngnamebrands. approx 7JllOS old vie After6:00P.M *vw.-l!Ut.A* WOODBRIDGE EASTBLUFF lovely 3 br ForovcrSyrs. 832·4134 °" . ......,aq .. o cs.+ RESIDENTIAL BLD Ult 8J7 .. 200 Bus hard & Ada-s.1--------..... HA..,.ae. lg. room. + 2 toilets. f!d. PROGRAM Loe · N E '" O L V E V O U R IV"I v...... PINESAPTS condo. pvt patio, dbl g~r 'F. rmmatc to share 2Br cond. M. ls S400 per mo. m . 64H230Carla E M 0 T I 0 N A. L Ma 2 1r 3 8drm., blt·lns. 1. 2 & 3 bdrm units w/op\r •• pool&rec reca. Penh, apt Mar 1. reas Call. SanDieeoCo Sm Invest WAUCOVERIMGS 1 J>ROBLEMS 'ack ot -· .._ I II Designed like early 213.-.21.3S llll rctu.m. Contact Le .~ISSlONVIEJO F 0 \i N D m a e a.. .. .-......... t'ftc . aar .• a m>t. kit pnv. ideal loc. PACIFIC Real Eatat~ b f blk brn h Ba 1 ,. nfldence er •l1ht -.<UUl47·7S86.t0am· Cahforn1a bungalows , ... ., ... ~ 675-te95eve Gl'l'leHifl t4Z·0200 f.illy. e"<cluSl\.'e kr StorehandJesmoatoftM I iw l sset vc .. o ·ov w~ · lfm.1dya. From s 2 1 o . J 1 6 -" ,..!(;...,...._, North .\ m "c' r 1 c 1 new Home work m this Cabrilln Wc:1tm1n11tcr tension s moklng·seJC\lal Pinest.one.Ofchrs3·S:~ Bachelors. 1 or 2 Roommateto1hare2br.2 Spjlc. UiO aq. ft. olc in De velopment o. Inc rapidly expanding ~om 548~9 problems· New s°'uUon. wkdays. 9·S :30wk.nds. Oedrooms&Townhou.tes ba apt PrQmontory Newport Center for onJy 4020 Biren St. Suite lll munlly. Largeal sele~· FOUND.' VorkiJhlre "'er· onenled personal arowth 552-0400 From S24UO Point. GOO/mo. 673-M41 sioo. Call Dick M0.@83 =~1~~~ 1 ~~~r:i. Ca uons ol samples in area ner or Siiky male \.ic f~fi=: 1:a~ptb~:~~~~: S~acu.lar spa, tot•I ev -----1 UBI 837-4200 Fl onda. H.n ll00..4ue c •-H u recreation program, ---------•Sml dlx ortlcea In Cotta "" ment eni.er. un niton ~l&lp-ogrem.8pooh.8 Wife Jett. young man Mesa. From 16-0 mo. ""OCKTAILS ""lrrSH"'9 F d c ._ 81 .. Beach. \dnb ~.At fubiOn wanta to shar• 38r lnddutll. 751~ NEWPORT BEA.CH w r • "''" oun r u • "--------,_, _ _. J .._ a.. a.. a.....-. wtll -·t'"-......... ---v• ... year-·od l""allo" Laguna Beach Strlped Male KJttu. s..a..cwa.-.. ... ...,, am""'ee-~n ........,. .. v .... ._r .. .,... • .a.GUM•l•"'~H All~ '""' "' ·• S'Z0.000 Overooenullioft Wblt~ collar Nr '&;' c JoaqainHilt.Ro.ad. Dle or <.'OUple w/1 chikt. -"" _._ Better In 1ummer . people vial\ or walk by Westclllf Shopping. C&ll 1815 . El ant"'°RNI (7141644-1900 W.~C.M. '150 mo.+ Xlnt exposure corn r on Ownerinovln~rromare y It n 6 MS 7 San Clemente. l"ulbLlc. r----------1--.....;.:...:...:~..:...:._:_;:....:..:__ I.It utU. 540-5719 da,.., Of North COUt H'#y., street end must M111' Comptet( this store a ye~r ~ a pm, ·81_5 ___ 1 __ E_'or_a.;;..p.;..p_t _4_92_·'7298 __ _ --------•I t6W711 aft4PM , level. 320 to MO aq, n. kJttflen Seot¥ about 80. Crcttn' n~sla gpt~er rt f' 0 UN 0 Gt! rm an I T L ""-k .... OP!:NHOUSE.SATt.. F\'eeperklna. Alif'TIME7511400 ° ony J mos "· Sbepbetd blk muule · erry · uR: eraon, u.. uuJ 11 Wanted super career Hill.1t>McCormaclt cbeck1t bU •'j"'M•allOl· ;,, RodHlsl~.C M ,.wlll aot Sped at Lido • • v.unan 1n 30't to abare Realty 49..,551 Qtabl.Lsh~ .well loc:e\ Ull 837..CJOO ~da.:rt B <'968~11 11 be retp:msible ror an1 baytrumapertment,. IOf'84tOU• UOO aq. ft. Booicuorl'. N~wporl . · · debt.a, other than thoff •1mo 1-lyrlHavatl Nwpt Bch apt. Call dys, Sm. office •vttU. •n Beach. Pni;oo r\aht T "1'SHOP ~L"ND, Black/t an Male contracted by m.)'Mlf. H 4U Vta UdoSot.4d 6'4"'4W: Ev1. 6'fi.(!9$<> 1'' .. hlon ltland. Nwpt tte this property. <'a.I $1700 or bel'l olff'r Sb@herd Vic. Ward & cl l.'>e«mber 15, l9"ft. CeQter, Sl$0mo f7Nl61 Jim Berkshlrc• $S500 1iown. Nee-d Talb4-r\. FV. ~-&196, EL I 1' g SAUNA It ............ .......,._ ~rator 063-2077 . MASSAC£ U llO rULL -.r-". vnn;ft Ull IJ7 .. 200 REWA..Rb fOf ladle!l tan \'i Hour wttJ\ lhls • ~~~;. '1r!'m c.,,~~poN'! 675 ·7900 u9uo• STORIS P\l110. ~I\ on bench '*' FREEWhtrl(IOOI wnlffr. I u e re q t t1 c Id 1 ~ SfR3 Of(I Pt'r Mo foot~d o-eia St L D 218 ~t · lndv Rmt for <'PUldrps, JanJtbrlal vt, W.... . tO 'O Nut to ow nur I Ccntact 0.Uy Pllot 11 ~f!l'I " Women. IOAM · n& syaun. aJI ut.n. Sulto NETSs:uoo o otM'~to~ S'lt'.ouo Tre• Uletmcyre. L.8 ~·Mii :i8 :0C1;:;'t ~er~: ~. ~ l~) :s ,itr;~~ci ~ r-.=.J:·)'ra 1. ~~boO.. U3 .. 'fMI WO •yuNt> Bilk Lab. APPf'Of ·~-w Mc Fad &.Q. tblhiiw:tCarl'sJrt. U. 711-J741 Ull l l1·4l i.::OU."nce~=::. • t.tnna. 540-lll$ 631·3111 l .\ "-7 0 lllO ... W..e.ct 71 HltpWmted 7100 HllfpW..W 7100 tw.W..tM 7100 HllpW..t.d 71 00 ,11day.robru!ryt1.11m DAILV~LOT •t ··~········· .. ······· ~~T.-............. .. ............... ._ ............................... ~ ... "" .... _.... ........ ... .. . .. ... .... !.:,:;::.:J:.:.;..;=.:::;;:;:.,1.,;,,,;.;...;.;;.;...;.. _____ ""."""" ______ ~_ BebvstUtr needed. ' Dent.all"rC>QtOftlco ~W..ted 7l .... W..t.d 1100 ,...,W..tM 1'00 ORlNKJNC wll._4a. 1r•vtyd abUt. Qafcttriawork X Ra INl'EJUOa Plant Mala· afaml ~ ~ larn ••11-•••••••••••••-•• •-u•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• treetei problema. h H.B ~• "2·9114 •h PartUmt. • \ cxpcriNnce, noot tenanu Must be ••· Sl1J·S200 wk Fuller •tc8"1'10Ml5T • SALB doea.n'\ aolvt them. J 2Pll CaJJfTM403 ~~.~l4Tlewpot Pl!l''d.Phon•4BHUl9 -BrulhS&l•.~'l~l. fOll' 3 man P~a\lic: Of TMC.bloVI lonl.s hlr1nll THIUST 1ou n.ed help. 011 CA.a WA.SM MOoas nm. Mlsston VltJo. Pb &a1M Pf()pjt w11ltnM to PHOMI JOIS CAR!MANOR Ho.pila.I Babysitter. )'OW' l>c>fff. 4 MANAGa l>ISHW~HER Tues t.hna JEWELRY.SALES Patrltk T l\arnu. a ct5'1390 ~ork .-v~lnp le wkndl IN CA.UP. loOre1e.f.33.8$82 !!>fp~"._c!l!lleoMon·Ptl. lmmed emptovrnent !~IP~"v.esl~pplrvlylnt..aes•vvee. J. H......... Penthol.lae ContnbuUn1 uc.-.AMt•T In the M&u1on Vl•Jo Wl"Ht~AJI ("SC : ....., •· ...,,... avail. for ruU aettltt car "~ "> ...... " Hall J.welhtn Ph<ltoar•l)her ai. now ln _..' '"""',. are u C ha n n • I & Lona Dlatet't Un• ~~V=tCKI Babyaltter &: Ii &ht wub mll' lifuat ~ U· CM or call 646'7944 Now tntervk"W1ng ut So lt>rv1ewlna 0111 rl1 ror p~ lal financial Serv SHOWTULE MO.Vu: lndlvldu,I ()db -"' housdeepln1. Wkdys 2 per'd mall phases of car an)'Ume Coa:.t Pina location lur maaaune layuuta No firm ReeepttSecy f~t PM.Call~ ~1 l!:Qu.U Uwrly W•it.'ll ,_.._,_of t Children. Refl. Mr. wash mamt. Top tal + =Store,_,__.. Expcr'd Jewelry Soles prior exper Is nH<ltd dalk. Exper Rcfar, · OpporEmplyr Bonusn Commwions Strv1nt all Oranae Co. Hood. 1133-~. boous + coinm. For ln· ,.,._ -A~... c.."!u~t1me. Person. Call M9· L3'19 for and the PD1 I!\ \'l:I')' hlah Type eo wpm. 3118 an 51t.a. ..... STRESSES National Producl (21.3)8114.·2'7~ tel'View call 1144-4460 &'Ml """a.i .. u pt ror thoec uecepted. Only ?diauel Dr· N 8 · SI.lite _,.. l'\illy pA!d tr~lnlna ---------tBANKJNG l..llgun<aBeach494·7~16 ap · serious applic:an~ need 200. Ful\·Ume 642·6"U6 P1Umeevc:.3 309.lOpm hl-.cl•.,t. TIU.a EL E c TR o Lu x apply Call ror 1ntervw.v Receptionist. Salrs· & SICRETARl Sludtnt.:s. Kousowiv~~ &t &ieht.ltroc\a.1lD1Je.44. Our Costa Me.a branch CLERKS Authorlud sales & KEYPUNCH 9-S weekdays. Socretari1tl openlngs in Faah lsl f'&nancaal Serv. Moonhghtersflnd It an Own bus. U. •rad hu.anopenin1foranex· urvlce. Mff. Full DA.TA!NTRY t714)67S~ OranaeCowlty'slurgest flrm.Typin~70 ..,,,pm,sh l4.l~.iJJob·sow1Jlyou. Ve1et•rlan. Like to per'd commettial teller. FILE Cl£R"$ P/tlmeS42·4l53 OPERA.TOR uthJetlc club. Good hrs. 9(>-tOO 369 San Mlsuel ~ortl338008 walk. talt. read. Can do Qualified applicants will ft 'Jlle Jolly Roger. Inc. ls HURSIRYMA.M fnnge beuefita. 752.0404 Dr N 8 Suite 200 C<>ntat-t Jennlkr nndl, or rep fOl' part havo l yr oxper. Ttus SR. TYPISTS Energetkpeopleperson taklnf appllcations for a Ex,per'd. mime. Mature · · · TlMELff£. l'tM. PJeuecall &u-1995 pos!Uoet otrers an attrac· C.M. bsman look1n& ror Data Entry Operator male. over 21. 6 Du)'!! ln· RECEPT /SICRET.ARY secre~ary & asalst. to LJRRARIES, lNC. tJve work environment & ~lime aslOC. 556-4118 Mln o( 1 yrs ex per. on the eluding Sat/Sun. Work Bu.sy N.8. law firm bas pr<l8. ror small manul. EquaJ Opp Emplyr m tr • •:?W.:!. xlnt location. The salary REPRO n ·PISTS IBM 3741 or 3742 is re· w/pl11nts & trees. $3Hr & lmmed. opening for co. Sh 100, type 70 Trim ---------~..,...._ & employment benefits rw-1NEER c1u1red . Permnneot up. Overtime. 1na penonw/superiorsl<llJs. personal appeurunee . ... •••••••• .. •••••••••• .are competitive. Contact STAT TYPISTS U11I f/timedayshift. Pay will benefits. Advancement Hlgb accuracy. neatness Will req. travellna.l•-------- Schoaa•& Lealle Treece, (714) M...t~ bebasedonexper. level potential. Lacuna Hills & or~tlonaJ ability Salary open. C1tll TOOL ROOM .. ~~ ..... !!~~ ~~IAHK SECRETARIES ~rfur;h r:.'~~a:lT1~ls~~fi ~.f~1YM~oJ:;sUi~u8~: ~~· Inc. El Toro. ~~e t~\~:ec~:~ ifa•-Ma-·1'840 __ .______ MACHINIST MEN o EN M..lnortty Applicants Loo&&Short oomponents. Dearee not day, noo Giiiette Ave. ..u•asr.s Newport Ctr Dr. Ste 1220. SECRETARY /Girl Fri W M • Eneou.raged to Apply Term Auignment& n e c Sa I a r y com . Irvine. LVN~s·Ni·gh'"t 8._,rt Newport Bcarh. Ca 92660 dF~Y1 8St·30artt~ .. 325M .. ~. lBarhr~ Progressive l njection •=:r~ F.qual Oppoc Employer ~r~~~d~ 8 ~eal \ ~:rco~: Nurses Aide~'& RECEPTIOMIST ~u Realty 642.~zOO. ~:dt!ta~!~g ~cft~~'::it~ TWO WEEK CLASS Beauty operator. Hair S81·3830 betwn l·Spm LEGAL TRA.IMEE On:lerlm. All Shirts. Policy Typist Outgoing HWltington Beach .oeedi. NATION-WIDE JOB dresser w/Collowlng for For Newport Ctr La~ Lido Convalescent Clr personality. phone ex· SECRETARY, /HIM Machinists Man. 5 yrs PLACEMENT exciting new NpBch ENGINEER fo'arm Beginning Feb 1.SSSSupenor Ave. N.B. per & ss wpm typing 8 Permanent position for exper Xlnt wa1es & ASSISTANCE Siilon.642.fl\64 3141c....,...0r 2lst.Call7S9413t Call646·7164 mu:.t. lru.urance agency sh3rp cons c1ent1ous overtime. Profit sba.nng GOOD JOB BEAUTY Four chairs $46.4741 COMPOMEHTS NURSES A.IDES located in Newport Ctr ~:;ri~n~ ~0:1T~a~~ &other benefits. OPPORTUNITIES avail ror lse an newly de· I Across From Degree not n~ 4 Yrs LEGAL TR A JN Ek Ell AU shirts. Exper prer'd Call 640-605l oC aJI offi-duties. Liaht Sc.llMU Corp. AMWCAH rrun. exper. an high re· Bright. xlnt typing s 1 s ---------'"' • 1213)678-7SOO ••1tT• .... DERS coratedsalon,locatedon OrangeCo.Al.rport) liability small compo· rorrareer ~pporonMag Apply in pen.on, ParkHecept.&Typ1stfor small typing , abQut '3 or(2l3)673.2031 "' '"" Cout Hwy. In CdM. EqualOpporEmployer 11 typewriter an N.B Superior Conv. llos p. eng in eering fi rm workload is bookkeep 1~~~~~~~~~ SCHOOL Pref. knowledgeable nents. New facility. Mas l'State planning cor 1445 Supenor Ave. NB. Matenal Science Cntr, Ing. Must be careful &I UotE.l'lthSt.,SA quaJlfied & motivated a.-KTY .. ST slon VaeJo area. Xlnl poratelawpract1ce. Mag IWl!·~UO nrO.C.Airport.549-0343 thorough and not arraldl ________ _ 83.4·1960 halrcutters&designers. '"" n bene. Salary com 11 exper pref'd but will ---------------'-----to work. Pleasant at TYPISTS SchoolaCoast To Coast Xlnl opportunity t.o be in Heavy typing & gen'l otc mensur ate w I back· trrun ea"u t714> 833.9983. MURSES A.IDES R.E. SALE.5 mosphere in small de-_________ , business for yourself. duties for landscape ground. Call Cnrol, . 3-11, Exper. pref'd. ,..esa DON TYLER & AS· sign oriented mfg co. JC Be A Profsnl Can make up to 80% de· architecture/environ· 581·3830 betwn l·Spm. Let us help you build a Verde eonv Hosp. 661 SOCIATES REALTORS. you qualify, call Sally for Ufe la He•et" CocktaU Wa1tress pend.ingonweeklYiJ'OSS. mental plannlng firm in . Bus of your own . CcnterSt.C.M. haspos1t1onsopenCorex-an appolntmenl btwn 10 M"#lttt •$99.00• All repUes confidential. f.j.B.Min7Swpmtyping. Exterior Container Husband & Wire can perlenced full time Am and 3 Pm. 64S-6777. Offlc•Overfood I ca\l 714·581-6374 Cood grammar & spell· Lndscp malnt person work together. Oulstnd OFC MANAGEH. Typing. salespersons interested 9<>•w 17th St c.... J o'nThcTenm Exciting&Profilab c In.,. kill "~ d wanted. musthaveexper . w·11 . II & ctg exp ror . ,,.. . .. ....... • .. GI P r I ~"' s s. -=n res~me •. good driving record income poss. I tram, payro ac . . in es t ab Ii s h Ing ---------ThatOffersQpnnrtunlly amourous ro css on Beauty Assist. wanted for mch.adlng salary reqwre· °' · 642·0843 property mgmt co. S7SO themselves in sales & SECRET ARY Shit Typfsts •Learn. In 4o .hrs Crom one of Newport Beach's ments to: Classltied ad call Margaret 768-0Ml mow/benellts. 64~-4411 rentals on Balboa Jsl. & Mag II Operators profsnl 8 the fine art 01 finest salon. Great op· no. 817, c /o Daily Pilot. FA.ST FOOD SERV ----· ---Harbor Areaj To Sain Manager Xerox11000prs waitress techniques. portunily for the lulu.re. PO Box 1560, Costa · LVM 3·11 P/t Packiftq & R•nM~ Im med. open inn Top General T"insts •1'TeeJob Plcmnt Assist 640-6023 M Ca.....,..., Prepare Pi z z 11 & o eed 1· bl 1 "" ' •Oayorevenlngsesslons esa. """"""· Sandwiches.Overl8yrs. Medications . Me!>a l'Pl n s reia eman .. _'Y • typ1ng&cabreq'd. Major CALLUSTODAY CALL(714l7S19194 •-E r Cd M Verde Conv. Hosp. 661 for lighting fixture I .1 I; electronics corp. located STARTTOMOHROW · Bicycle repair °' counter Cook, breakfast. Full x pr· Pre · · Center St. CM. S48·5585. warehouse Apply 2031 S near o C. Airport. ~8~ ff · • For a free cons~ll in one sales. 2 yrs exper. Quali· time. exper req'd , Call 644-0210 E Main St.. Irvine DON TYL•R • Previou~ "ales ofc e• • ...-r. o lC e of the most profit proft?f>s ty workman. Age 20 or 642-8475 assoc .... •aLTORS ~ ~ ~..- So. Calaf Waitress. Inc. over.962-738511·6 Full or P tllme Unusual MACHINISTS Acros::. from o .c . )Ot.MArh~!•v• llAL>$L prd'd. Xlnt compco::.3· overload 17922 Sky Park Bl. Ste C Cook full Ume. breakfast 0 p po r .. I o r ma n or Auport. 546-2901. .-ooo t1on & benefits An Equal Irvine. Cahf., 92714 & tuncn. Coffee Shop & woman interested an ex· l eng lathe & l mill --------... ·------.--Oppor. Employer SS 7..006 l PROF. TENNIS INSTRUCTION MnoV~A.rea M . Ir Group Rotes FEB SPEC. S HRS/$.50 Rbt. C Isbell 631·3754 re:. Bkkpr/Coos~ _ $900+ Del.1. M2·1426 tra income. To arrange machirust. Mu st do own Call Becky 5-a0·7311 :n23 Birch St. N a. Travel Agent S800 appt. Phone Steve Clark, s e t u p & w 0 r k ptt'TE up RETAIL Chlef FileClk to$700 COOKS. BARTENDERS. 498-2021. w / m i n 1 m u m M "V ll'SISTANT SECRETARY-SA.LES Balling Clerk to $628 DRIVERS. P tUme. Over supervision. Short run ARJISJ "'1 l m m e d . open in g . i--------• FeesPald/AlsoFeeJobs 2lyrs.Jmmed.openlngs. FULL TIME Lady for commercial job s hop. MA.NAGER Secretarial duties TYPIST lnlne Personnel Agency Apply in person, Me n Women's Apparel shop 0 v er t Im e. fr i n g e Exper 1n llne & half tone Heavy customer contact TECHNICAL 4118E17th Costa Mesa Eds Pina, 410 E. 17th St, In Laguna Bch 494-8016 benefits. ind paid vaca· process. Camera strip· Or Manager Trainee Type 60.70. Major elec ~~ mtrOAA CapJtal Machine. 1642 NEVERAFEE lions w /nat 'l Jr. near o c Aarµort Sujte22.4 M2-l470 C.M. GEUEB .A.L OFC lion & medical ins. ping&paate·up. operung in several loca-tronic::. corp located TYPIST To $800 TyfM 60 Edinger. S.A. 541·2652 Local Areas Sponswear chain store. Previous sales ofc exper 540-8873 Pro~1~sh~O:'..!,P:__l•--------•I COOKS Employers Pay All Fees TEMPO Reta.a! ex per. preC'd. Ad· pref'd. Good comp<:osa Typist Cor technical & stalls llcal document i. Must type 65 wpm, will tram on work processm~ equip. Proficie ncy in grammar req'li. For appt contact. L .A . CO LLEGE or MASSAG I':. Low cost Uay·l':\C Sat Clasi-es in SANTA ANA. 556-717\ for pamphlet. Acrdt CA Dept. Ed. Jobs Wanted, 7075 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Exp hskpr seeks new as· sign. willing to llvc·ln + sal. Send Job dscrpt lo: ad •796. c/o Daily Pilot· PO. Bx 1560. Cost :\less.Ca. 92626. BLUE LINE OPERATOR Must have recent ex per. Long&Short Term Assignments VOLT •t ""'l'\)Ul\t.I• ~I 11~ 'I' The Jolly Roger Restaurant is accepting applications for Exper'd Cooks. Xlnt fringe Uz Reinders Agency Temporary Help v a n c e m e n t o P · lion & xlnt beneflls. An 4020 Birch St, Ste 104 MACHIHIST 17802 Sky Park lrvme port u n 1 l i es . XI n t Equal Oppor. Employer. Newport Beach 833·8190 Progressive growth 54M4SS benefits. Salary com· Call Becky S40·73ll CallforAppt/F.atab '6S oriented e lectronics EqiialOpporEmpoyer mensu.rate w/exper. AP· --------- benefits & hours. Apply General Car Wash Help. in person. 400 S. Coast Apply Birch & Dove Hwy. Laguna Beach. Streets, Newport Beach. 49!1·3137 manuf. has opening for ply in person: Secretary· Personal for machinist w/5 yrs exper. PETRI E'S fem. artlst. Mon, Tues, on lathes & mllls. Setup PIX..AdmltHng 147 Westminster Mall Wed. Adv exp. helpful. & operate c lose Exper pref'd.3·11 :30& Westminster Non-s moker . Mature tolerance. Days & swin g 11.7:30 split. Apply Sanl•--------woman. 968·9949 art 6pm, GIRLS & Guys shifts. Xlnt benefits In· Clem. General Hospital. lt.B. eluding medical/dental •\96-11.22, Mr. Greenwald. RETAIL STORE ---------Neat, alert. over 17. N~ plan. Air cond. plant. CLERK & MICPR SECRET A RV · Doa your OeorgeTaylor AVCO ~l .. Sft-•lcea 644-5800 F.qual Oppor Employer 314IC-Dr COUMTERHEl.P ajob?Liket.otravel en· DISC To operate marine boss appreciate yo~r -,.-Must be able to start by tire U.S.? Transporta· ht1~ hardware store \n Dana B.A. We will if you're, ________ _ 546.4741 u AM. 25.30 hrs per wk. tion furnished. Dally 102 E Bak C M PHONE SALES Pt Exper. in sales & ouu.tandlog. Send your yplst & phone receptloh <Across From Call Ami at El Roberto's. cash advance. For a p· · er. · · best wri llen reply to 8:30 to 1 pm for pleasaril Or ~c Air rt) l I' M 979.~ E.O. E business machs necess. Col\' A , l 567 d an o. po aller2.&44·2030 po ntment. ca r.1~~~~~~~~~ Phone Sales people. Make appt. w /Cathy ins ssocia cs. offices in lr9lne ln Practical Nurse EquaJ PClt" Empioyer Moraan, 714/642·3030. t: maJe or remalc. J6 lo 65 c 1 N t Su 1 San Nicolas Dr. Newport Complex. Call 752-0234 or Day or Nights. Lots o Comtter Help Ext. 4, 11 a.m. to 3 p. m. M A 1 o s W A NT E D , year'! or agt. Guarantel'd ~ ~os:;por PP Y Beach. apply 2082 Michelson. TLC Re_r_s._540_·07_22 __ _:·Bo-a-tCn_r_pe-nt_er_._Bo_a_t _m_f_g 11AM·3PM. ex per dally. F lime. Newport Chan· wages or commissions.--·-~-·------5-KW1--.-ty-Of-fl-c-..---1 Suite212.lr vine. Attorney. Tenn. lic'd needs carpenter w tsome helpful, apply in person GORDON'S Je el s oel Jnn. 6030 W Pac1r1c 250 East 17th S treet.I•--------Gate personnel. vaned T--'st/Cllt"k wants position. HH 20y exper. Apply In person only. 2233 Fairview Rd. P ti 't e~ Coast Hwy, N.B. Phone Suite 0 . Costa Mesa. RETAIL shifts. Must be alert. ,,.. exp Ins claims incl'tt P Willard Boa ta·, 1306 _C_M________ ::~~ s Io ':'~·c nnte~d~ _642_·_30_30_.______ between S.00 & 8.30 p.m neat & mature. Retired A Laguna Niguel ore. trial!., 1nvest11ataon l.AganAve,CoslaMesa. Counter or Yard person Cashier/Credit Clerk. MAJOSWANTED 646-422l. CLERKS welcome. App l y. I~~:rt!ll~~g~~ l~egedoUnat,1~ ~971alm20sl7or re BOAT Washer, full time. part time. 20h.rs wit, U-Willing to work e,ves & Top wages paid! The lnn Equ~~Ppro..,r~~mty Newport Dunes. 1131 exp. Hrs. 9-0. 4~·1980 -al e ...... .. . ruo to start. Apply In Haul Moving Center. wknds. Co. bene lls & at Laguna. 211 N. Coast ~ UTOTEM Ba(' k Bay Dr Ive. Mature lady desire penon; Newport J>acific Co5ta Mesa.631-1250 discounts. Apply io Hwy., Lag. Bch. Connnienu Markets Newport Beach. TYPIST /CLERK hoa.sewOC'k by the day. Boata. 2200 W. Coast CUSTOMER person. 280 Westminster --=---=------p 2nd & 3rd 60 WPM Accurately. ,.,,___ N Mall, Westminster. MANICURIST PllONESOLICITORS osillons open SECURITY P/Ume as needed. 4 Hrs Avail wknds. vwn trans Hwy, .B. s11:11VICE PED!CURJST shifts m San Clemente & Mrs FarmerMl-9933 -H We need lO glrls tosetup L 8 h Oth l!!..U,..RDS daily. Newport Ctr. • · · BOOKKEEPER ltECl!PTIOHtST Governess/ ousekeepcr , Wanted, fancy shop on dinner reservations. Mon aguna eac . er ., "" 640-0l23. Nancy . .W...W..tecl 7100 Ex""'r'd 3 mornltags a ,,. lk bghtfor2g1rls,agesu& Balboa, P eninsula thru Fri 4.9pm. Hrlv areas have openings Vacation. uniform & in·i---------._,.. ,... Growing artiuca ldncy 14 In N.B. Xlnt oppor. for 67" ...,.,0 J also No exper req'd f'/ 1 1 w Food c ._t ·1 ••••••••••-•••••••••• week4!M·l036 supply co, toe in the Irv former.school teacher. __ .,..,,_,, ______ wage + bonus. No sell· App.ly at any ·or ou~ sur. t me emp oy a1tress I oea aa s. · c 11 rt 3 pm menl. Contact Sgt. Kller, Apply art 4pm, Sid'a Blue •~SEMBl.ERS Bookkeeper, exper. Full Industrial complex. nds Afpllcant must have ge· Mam.lfacturing 'ng. a a • stores 549·1Z77 Beet.10721st Pl. N.B. "'1 char1e. Thru T r1al customer svs rep. Must n une Interest in TECHNICIAN 540·5464. 2588Newport8lvd. PRECISION Balance. Permanent be proficient typist, chUdren,cnjoysportsac· PHOTO LAB Costa Mesa 642-7702 Semi Retired profe11. Wajtresses, over 18, Only qualtned personnel poaltlon. Non smoker. knowledge or basic re-tlvltles & have an in· 3 Yrs min. exper. Xlnt ladyseekssametoahare aV-allable to work any need •pply . Goo 1175 wk start. Call cordkeeplngprocedure11 terestintheart1;4yr benefits.Exper.inhigh TR.AIMEE R .... D .... YCH•RGR SanClemres.Mayhave s hi f t. Car r ow a manual dex t erity ~forlnterview. & possess lid comm degree pref'd. Must reliability small compo-Student prel'd. Eve hrs "" "' "' is: outside job. Some cook· .Jlestaurant 620 Avenlda Microscope exper. Gro skills. Medicare & Medi· drive; car Is provided. nenta. Electronic back-Call842-6977. Apply in person, Parlr. ing etc in uch foc room l>lco.SanClement.e. w small co. ln Mlsslo IOOtCKIB'ER F/C Cal billing exper helprul. Should be flexible re· ground. Mission Viejo Sopertor Conv. Hosp., & board or aalary. Write VleJo area. Call Carol Holp. exper. pref'd. App-Please aend complete re· gardlng wknds. Lovely area. Call Carol, S81·3830 Production Http 1445 Superior Ave, N.B. aassifled ad no. 830. c /o Waitresses, exper·~. for S81·38:rlbehm l ·&pm. ly ln penon or ca.JI San sume & salary req to: ad pvt rm & ba. Salary ssso betwn l·Spm. New Costa Mesa sandal 642-2410. Daily Pilot, PO Box 1580, breaklast-lunch, dinner. Clemente General #797, c/o Dally Pilot per mo.+ room&board. maker needs l fu11sh1n , ColtaMesa,Call26ae Apply Ben Brown's Assastunt Optometric Hospital. 714 /496-1122. Newspaper P .O. Box Send resume to; M. •MASSAGETECH sander who mu.st be pro RN Supet'YtlOI' · . Rest.au.rant. auos Coast Mi&St typt. m.wr.. sale Kr. Greenwald. lSOO Costa Mess, Ca. Seeaer, PO Box 19547, ·FEM* ud or his work Also ne 11·7 full or p/time. Mesa Service Sta. Attendant, Hwy. So. Laguna oriented. will traln 11:2162111. 1rvlneCa92'7l3. SS't-Comm·Guar min. l capable or handhn Verde eonv. H06p, ~1 exper'd. Full or p/tJmv IM8-2'350or546-lsa BOOKKEEPER Full chg Full & P.T. work. Mbr variety of productao Center St. C.H. S48-5585. Apply Arco Station, 17th WAREHOUSE A'_,.. utXHANlC 5 Cor CPA olc. Exp'd. U\n.J D•T• -y HAIRDRESSERS wanted CMTA or 2 yrs exp. jobs. Need Immediately &Irvine, C.M. Male Clerk & Apparei u•v.. ' T/B. SalS'1 open toaxp "' "'_..," apply In person, Reels. Legit. Call Jim at 751--0350. ROBBIE'S RAG n' MOP Dlstribut.or IN-1805. 8:30 e=x~;~-,!~mSl.000~~-o quallt.yfssPHd.833-4Uo' OPERATOR So CoutPla.za,540-8888. ELITESPA 540·8195 Mature women needed Servirc Station Allen to5pm . ..,_....,... -R In I P/time Eves. Xlnt pay for housecleaning dant. exper'd D1tY & -~-------.Call Tu• -..a.'"-. full c--e. The Jolly oaer. c. s Handr;man for landscari· MATURE WOMAN United Maintenance service Eves.FuU&~lime.Ap.We need people sban> as •~ 131 3lJl ~-"""• _.._...., --e taldn& appllcat1oM for a l II . ,,. .. _ S'-b k th t ll . u.o<:. • uoa.... ..... 4bn da.il.J. C4lata Mesa Data Entry Operator. lni! ldg & re pa rs. W p Ill me to w e I c orn e •99-3846. No Pressures. 548-0757 ply, .,, .. 11 wi • 17t & neat. to ma e er vtng AatomoUve •»a Min. of 1 yrs exper. on tram. 847·5730 newcomers & contact Irvine. NB. on their fttt, working N-"'~-" e..._--... ·--/C ... _IBM374l-37"2l,te-H 0 US E B 0 y merchants. F1exJble hrs. P/t Sales, $40-$70 wk up SA..11.MA.Kf:RS outside dOOr to door. the ., .. ~ .._...., ·-__._ F "'""' ..,. • Need car lite typing Men. ladles, students f'\Jtl.tJme, 64.2-34.56 Service Sta. Help Full or Job u run I.he money's help. 'Ibtcuth &eMCal ted,aer quired . Permane nt GARDENER. exper'd, 3095 ' · Eves /Sal. 554·78H p/time. Apply. 890 E sure. A :.uper waatt & Topw•a•paJd. Enaln "financial atatement.s. t/tJmedaysblll.Paywlll fuJI lime. dependable. _54_7_· __ . ______ 839-7696. SALESLADY for ex · CoaatHwy,N.B. bonustoo,totallncomei~ Steamtrt, ena paJoten exp« reqwred.. Salary be based on exper. level. live-In: Reply Classified Med Asst. exper. Fr Ole. ---------1 cluslve chlldrens store up to you. If Iota or cash butr ... " poUaben. u optn. baaed 00 skill & Apply In peraon SAM · Ad #834 DaUy PUot, PO Billing no s moke. hrs RADlOlMMUNOLOGlS So. Coast Pl~ra, exper Service ~t.aUon Atten· gives you a thrill. call us holattry abampooera. ability. N .B. Area SPM Monday thru Fri· Box "80, Cotta Mesa. compensation opn . e.xporinRIAradiolabel ooly,549~ daot.P/Ume.Av~ll eves up atid ask ror Phil cheek ouM. klt·up &c de 671-'1272 ror ....... uk for day. 1'1042 Gillette Ave. ea. 82626 64&-Sl94 in g of pe pt ldea & wknds. Exper d only. 75~.5411 Uv.ryA •t .,.,.. Irvine steroids, BS level SALE.5LADY,maturetor Ne at a ppenr . &-c..__ ______ _ 20591 arbor Bl, CM Betty · · Houaeoleanlna. Mature 645-2111 a bakery, 494.9240 after· handwratlntJ. ApplYl•--------~1030 BOOKKEEPER. Accts A-II JM-. women wanted. P /Ume. MEDICALA.5SJSTANT noonB. QJOrns. 25~ Newport WISTCUFf Receivable Acc.U Paya· _...-y , .......... spaptf' Top st. car nec645·5123 Hu.nUngton Beach Phys!· REAL ESTATE SALES Blvd, Costd:fesa. , . HURSlS REGISTRY A\ll'OllorlV£ b1 .... ,,u.. t•u Perm.anent.part·t1meJob c\al\. Reply classlCled ad SEMINAR IODYMAM e,nu -11na.aom ..,p. delivering early morning Housekeeper & assist. to ll86l oauy Pilot, P.O. For-lleen!ed a(.'tentt1 In· SHE&TMITAL J611 WestclltrDr &xpr"d, eacellen Ln&.llM705 LA Times to homes in acml·lnvalld. Live In, Box ~. Costa Mesa, teratl'd in our presents· SALES MIOHAMIC stc2l.2, Newport Beach btnenta. Apply ln peno IOY$ A.HD GllLS lrvine/NB areaa. Nu1t La1W\a Beach. 494-4087 Ca. 9'2626. tlon "How to earn eom MulU-Milllon $S Corp. is MJn. s yrs exper. operal· 631.-06l0or 752:!}? at body 1bop. Allen Olds llilllon Viejo • El Toro be rellable" bave depcn· or&:M.alSS mi u Ions th r o u g staffing new office In lng shear brako & •trip. RN's·S60-S68 Oadlllac 2ISS2 Camln area. Earn )'O\ll' own dable tranaport.atlon. HOUSEKEEPER MEDICAL rcaltor-devl'\ope trvine. We need en· pit req'd . Salary com· t°VN~~::~r Caplstranu . La1un money Mlllng aubscr1p. Sa1aryS300mo.Me-0235. Part lime Nwptl{Jls RECIPTIOMIST cooperation.·· Pre tbusiast.lc. positive mensurate wlU\ educa. l46PrivateDuty Nlpel 831~• tiool alter 1~. For la· Dema1 Recept, Ex per. X· 64$.$.lhva. E.xper'd, group practice. seminar at the Le Baro minded people to In· Hon & ex per. XJnt health Aides $34-8\aff AUTOPARTS fonut.loD.call830·0913 Ray Uc. req'd. fln Vl'I Hous-~ In•. understandlns or Hotel. Buena Park, cal troduceanlnexpensive& Ii educational benefits. '35-Prtvatel>Uty area 968-l&48 u.u;r--Oat.a Processing bUllna tor details & reaerva nauonally known pro-Fuian Corp.. 10{)8 W. Serving All OrHte Co. ~OPPORTUNITY BOY Wu&ed 2 Rn per · 3 Umes a week. Must procedures. 84~·4870 t1ons. (213)283-7201 o duct. Pleasanlsurround· Hoover Ave. Oranu. WorklngHour'llliDaya Ott ot for 1811 dat aft._. school. Muat Dental Aaslatant tor In· have t ranspcrt&Uon At Mrs. Austen (714>C7·9820 incs ln a relaxed at· 639-1.893. Of Your Choice bqoodl G~Lo& Cbtv bavodrivenllc. 548-28118 surance work & chair rtfs. PtiS46-5M3 H&KDEVELOPERS mosphere. Available hrs --------u ai.o..-...,1 .... 1 ... •Req'd deaJerehlp parts dept. ..... Part tJ ..... r MEDICAL Des!""'tt1 Builders 3:30·t :30PM. Xlnt. ad· Telephone Sales People, .. q_,._ ...... ·-ettitlnt Orange Count.Y Buaineu Woman needs ;'8' ~e. """' ot HOUSEKEEPER TRAHSClllEA (Brokm01nvlted to brlni van~ e m en t o p . (3) pmttJona. P/tlmo ., Oroup lnaurtnc:e A1all. Alrp>rtComp&exwUladd PU\OU. P /Ume work. ary LAOUNABEACH thetraaleutaff) portunltla! Pltlmeahil\aav&ll.New OCcttraMon-SatU "IWO parts totmtermen. ~.tt4pm. DENTALAssistants.n.& We arc lookln1 for a Daytime bra. Exper'd , _________ , CALLNOW! & repeat ordora. Topi~~~~~~~~~ ~ It only need ~pply s~n ,,_..,,,,.. LU\-.a1 1. "''''''nuniirroradvanc:e Buaineq .Man needs a 'Pl time. busy H.B. prac tcsPOl\llblt. agp-9Slve, Clemcntl' General ~ot-pay,.,..,..,.,.,· meot. ltll~Jent pay. OM suc~f'UI person to 81• lice, exp'd w/x-rsy lie. rclfable lady who Is not Hospital. 71414gs 1122. AiknFMos;,_!~nn,iter ftl ..u sUIYIY expcriencetllffnUal. sistlDexpandinghl.sbus. Oatatandlnl aUH & ADtlsfiod wlth their pre t2S9 ~ "" • .....,...!_. P1nU Mar .• HOWAR Fully capltall aad beoeflta.962·T79'7 eent salary & po11Uoo. _e_" __ • ____ _......_ U8R.ARtF..S. tNC PJUme. ~ex hrs, Ideal Owt~ll. DoYo Is Qual sn.zm ' Dull f'Ol dllflcutt, but Equal()ppEmplyrtn/f rlK moth ofachool •It WOMEN w•.nted to work &s.,lfew Beach. must be thorouJb. No child. O~r ore, CdM. for Janlco'• RaCltdt CAllTBJA Dental Ole. Rec:ept1onlst, children, no pets. no 875-6380. Aon bouaceleaol•« Ex per f 'ret•d Co ex"r'd . Solid oppor. cooklf\I. Must bavo ur. wvica. Start Sl.50 bJ'. • btneflt1: Da)'1 'aam· w lR .'8. pvt. pracUco. Call (?ltl ~ <JU> HUD \o 3 Tu .. ll\ta Prl. lh40U. ~ ~~~--~-~~ VOLT f ', .. W ~ 1: • H, .ii: ~r I . .. ' ... ' ' ,, .. ·. '\ .fr· 1• . '"· . ' . .. ..... 141M 1011 Miu...... IOIO .. c..... TV~·--IDlh.W t060 c ···~s•z ................ ._..... ··-··················· w..... 808. ... ... 5tWeo 1098 ••••••••••••••••• •••••• ·-... .... ton fWi I•• MIO ~ AUC110M TRAIN SltTS· .. Mtnl ....................... ...................... IOAT SHO~ •••••••-'••••••••··~···· ... •••••••••• .. ••••••••• -·•••••••••••••••••••• MANY FINE tTEM!S OF 'hb". 3 f\. x a ft. cuatorn Wide wbftla tor vw (5· COLOR....,~ .,,.,,. • MW Hufty ..... 10 auuutw .... ~'"la· ZSTATE JSW&J..RY. 1a1out w /Uallou. bole). Pair or older 'y ~ SPICIAL a· Camsw t.bfJI. Ice bOs. ~ 8dMb, •-...i aft b&ewidun.a&.dulileodta· ART osJgCTS. AN· vW..ie. mountains, tUA· Model vw buek9' seate. Price1toAmutY®!~~ Lancer's. 2~· & 2S'ln cabtneb. dbl btd. T~ el>Mi.k'Dd9 bie both lit• Nl!W! WUI 11QUES, TIN~ FtJRN. neb. lake. fOf'S. etc. A I0-33'19 Fa~rffi>ndJUoned. stock,,atacb 10~ off llat ~ boot. Nlct. Un. : aac:riftce auz:zsror both. ETC. PHONE FOR IN· aat'rlrtce at $300! CaJI ~teed, Portables. pnceorrre.traller. ~·n83 ~ Of~! f Iii iMlllillf•IOZI MatnH01 atereo/TV FO. 6 BROCHURE. 6'2-0138. A':d~~. etc.wrT'.MW&.o.~~h, OANACOVI '75 ToYoUa ChlhOok Mlal~·: HUGE ;;J·a'"'rli0";1 ·-......... -...... con~ole •••0 ~lite ~ W $38-3546 ledltS.. Clmj11Ct.Ooodcoed.Oltl1 • w.....s wO °""' l'wrou,btll"Oft, CC)ftcrete NEWmc>.CaJlta 138' FREE GARAGE SALE ANTED ...., • ..._.... 341$1 CoaltoaPloc• '4~00. Auumci>OAC. ! •••le bOxea, nldrelo atalfwu. u risen, SUS. SAVI!! n:e. SALE. New SIGNS. Call ~l~ 21 TOP CASH DOLLAR NEED uaed aet En· .... ,.... O.OPoi..t 4ft.;f1'2 ~1..im : ct.a piano.. cfn1.11 or -.nu as used furn, appl'e. Weatcllll Realty Co. PAID FOR YOUR c:1ctopedlu to help • .;.-..••••••••••••••••• • atdlaiil ,.40 ... l•Ht wall elocka 3_1._.....,.-..., mlJe Willon'• Ba.ream ~mi ~OBJRYE.~ATCH00ES. ~~l<lren ... ~b.ome:-o1rt. •t . .,rc.""'••r#te•/ ?6Cllrv1terZZ' ............. , ......... • 1unafatber cloc:lu 1•v---Nook.28'cres,54Sasa14 '-&~ LD, ·-rww . .,..~reu .• air· fOZO SLOOP with traJler f..tnetlqaaUqlMI, Dre.di IG-G832 w. 1fllh. Cll. 6'1·'1930 6 Housewares. Clothing. SILVER SERVICE. lyrecent.pleas41.831·2551 ·-•n••••H•••n•••••• loaded electrtc ala t' <>vwa.ooo.ooowortb 541-Dl2 Rup. Hooda cenerator. FINE FURN. & AN· u.s. a\amPI 6 ~ col· 01stocn bt.dtt Yacbt..s. Boa l.Ohp oie. Used 6 um"ei AIMntu IOtwuUonal C4I IOJ 631-Zl?7 nQUES.645-Z!OO lectlons Pvt party pays remodtllnl & yeo'I S7300.Sl.500Un<1Jtllat. Call.tes; 1802-T KettA!r· •••••••• .. •••••••••••• **I BUY** Bdrm rum. ail' cond, elec LUGG •GI,.. •GS more. 6'is«meve marlne ttpalr. At antic DAMA COVI ln1 St., lrvlne. Tel. CUddJy ValenUae Good med Furniture " dryr, miac. Salli Sun w . "" •.,. Paclflc lhrlUcne Co. Yacht Sdet 754-l7T7. Open Wed HI--• .... ,_ ApDlt --OR 1 will -... Cl·-mont "'• Irv from your buslneq card. 1665 Ba'l..-ocl(. St. C. M. · S&tAIU.o4PM.Vialt! ·~~19· "" aellor•liilrorYou. (Ci:iv~JelSS9·m& • Send one card ror •ch..._._, --~:-~ 34'551 Coaffasf'loc• ~AUCTIOM . eve MASTIRSAUCTIOM tai plus one spare. We IMt .... , 1083 ~......... .,_.,olelt.496.f76Z MANY nNE ITEMS OF Doti 1040 U• 1616 Alll-9625 s::.:; ~~~I~ rf~: ~'!dnatfr~~v~0~."UL ..... .".";............... .,..,_. tOJO 27' Catalina 75 Dsl. ESTATE JEWELRY,••••••••••••••••••••••• GoodJunk&woodcbe.ap atup. meeting aJrflne Conn ain-0-MaUc elec. ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/'NeWpt'cbarterbua. & ART OBJECTS, AN· ch am P 1 0 0 AK c Coucb·2 Coordinating LO. requlrementa. Pre· oron. excellent condl· '76 Chrysler. SSHP., OB. Udosbp. Prormalnt. tax ' 11QUES, FINE F'URN. ...DJ)berman J>uos. Gre• chalra w /OUOcn. "'°· Call SUPER SALE! vent lou Ii theft! For a Uon. '8()0, P .P · 53z.t259 25 hrs. Pd Sl 7SO. Sac. advtgs. make ofr. Own.. Ere. PHONE FOR fN. tempennent,ahowquali· 641-2313. ~ilcl penonaUzed l4I enclose OOJTAA 9950. $SS-1544 oc an. 5, 673-7724 PO. It BROCHURE. ty.SU0.751·21112:8.C.M. C«ne1-group, 3 pieces, ~--WfttPri ~allpape.~, fabric or U.Pau1CopynewS95. ~ _lJ_OO_t_4-.Co--v-3-Sal-ls-. -Pvt-I • M5-Z200 Claamp. Irish Setter Pups. ::.,::ic " chair, MO. HaMIOWllll'I ,,Jt•Yb~~: l~ ~~ Call 496·1174 as hp Johnson O/B. $225. pty. Good cond. Sl200. LOVESEAT Dbt ·wine 41ilales.3'emsleft.CaJI =~=I~~~!. tags. Or try two cards Pe avy VTA 400 Bass '7620bpMero0/B.$550. 5'5-0080 eves. ~eter,.CouctaBlk. ~. Red lacquer, e panel, tionofhomefurnishlngs, back toback. Amp. SSSO. Alms Elec 991·365Safler5 SanClemenle23-5'eeps5 =b• r. walnu LAB pups yellow AKC etched screen from housewares . clotblns. PRICES: Guitar; Lea Paul Copy SLIP WANTED In fast. 3 salls. 0/8, head' ' dwnp Jines mAJes & malnlaodChlna.&MH806 toys,blkes,babyltems& S2eaor3/$S w /hard case $200. Newportfor27'newsail 1aJley, i tereo. Dana Pt' French Armoire 1625. tem'a.Npty:91iMi872 SAVE! FEB SALE. New much more. Everything 64~tlaa!!S1Sl .. ~~aa.. 61S-0258 boat·bY3·1·n.848-0107 aUp.l3995.S86.(Jf81. ,.._..,._Fr Din •bl 159$ Goes! Be here early tor "' .,., -~ u;n-a.r:eu W~a . AKC Ge>aden Retriever & used rur~. appl '~· best selection. Glen View lOormoreSUOea. Rolleillex '2.8. w/meter 36' wood disp hulls. $3500 loats. Sllps/ 1140 Oak Gatele tb P\q)s,dnthuntera,raml· mlac:. WUson s Barganl Park. localed at Sweet· SalesTaxlncluded SOOOorclosestorr. to S4000. l-72' wood dlsp Docb azo' Secy $42$ 1p p ly pe& wtr dog. 493-6861 Nook. 2 stores-MS & 814 briar Lane & Glenn Dr in NO CARD? 5Sl·aB39 bull Sl7.000. I· 3 to 1 Par· ••••••••••••••••••••••• M>-liet · · · ' W. l9th, CM. 642· 7930 & Huntington Beach. Draw your own or send ragon hyd trans. S3QO. Boat Slip ror rent. 50'. Pv.t · AKC Samoyed puppy, s..321152 nai;ne. address, pbooe & OfficeFwRlt & lOK.W. DC die gen, 15 bme Newport. 540-2344 .J>alnl•Varnlahremoval, mal!• 8 wka, xlntuv Rm Sofa u· Curud HU9160FAMILY wellmakeonecardper s-i-.a•• 8085 K.W.}l.COliverdlegen, dys;6'1~9672evs/wknd.s 1 _______ _ allo compl reftn1sblng b ped{gree. 673-29"4 end S75. Loung hr S25 GARAGE SALi. tag. Add~ each. ...,..,__.... 646-M91. AU antic Pacilic -_... UI uperta Low prices e c ; T Send check or money or· •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Maritime Co Pvt Bade bay SUp New J••a II"""", at immF.d. service. Da A Teacup Poodl11t 12wks Coffee tbl 125· Reg. 8 ~· games. rurruture. derto: Exec desk, dbl pedestal ' · to36' SlOO/mo. onw~SD$. ~~. ~-. m 20IM Y' old. champagne color all ~~ ~. m.uos or tt YFeb'~e~t~::~cs rtLOT PRINTING desb. legal ~ fetter sz '74 • 1$ HP John&e>n OB MS-'1814 nl,&Jlts ~:-:::;;=::==::::-::-:1.:'!!hota~~· fm.3C30~~~---1 01 Sk 1 k G po Box 1560 heavy duty rates, blue mtr, long shaft. manual MOPED r>euieot 4 mos Oat Buffet wtthou.l lep. 2 o--blk AKC G-ma GE Stereo console. btOt Pm. H Y ar 1< r~n· eo.n.'11m. ca. 9:2826 print rues, chrs, C. E. st.art. slig~Uy used $500. DOCK Nto 321'1 powebr. Stidoo $400. .. drawers, 2 cabinets.~ ~ n cond.oo.tS800.sac,Sl79. rreee Culomeal rvine. SurplusFum.900W.19th 673-2242Frt·Sun mo. o vea o~r . 848..-n Great for cocree tbl or de· ....... ., pups, 3 F. shOOI, re· 2 upholatered cbrs, mov· ar ver & Walnut. Beer drafter, hofdl '4 Keg St. a:u-27'77 615-5701wkdysall4PM corative storage SlOO. adyto£04Mrlll7 tng84(M396 Bedroom furn air cond ol beer. new ciond. $200. loats. Power 9040 . k '76 Bat.aw. Red, 280 ml. 1552-8SCZ. AKCMaleYorksbireTer· eaec dr e~. mlsc: 673-5276.CallaftllAM. Used steel olfice desks.••••••••••••••••••••••• Pnvate doc Cor rent, Just U~e oew. $400 .. _., 00 ld ...... rier.8mos.Sl7S. 54". round Oak tbl. S Sat/Sun~. 3741 Clare· !!rlOlf! .. '~es~1vall . TRADEINSALE ~ytt!~eshNg~· ~~~ 631·3754Rl(ll'n. • nnuque 1 yr o -S48-()340 swivel blk wrght iron m 0 n \ s l 1 r vi n e CUSTOM ._.1125.....,, moo-..-. · 1984 SS' Pacemaker All • . ,.. • · ~-------~~.~ Saoaic171!ble w980/6 chra. W/casters. Call tCulverdale)ssg.1076. Ml.OVEN WOODS Metal Secretary deak 5. Cabin Crulser . Twin Pre1714V>~l~nl!>r.!~~'irl.191 ·023C lasuearsJAWArorsaJe. • "'..... ... c. ..,.,. 673-4 963-82ee. .,..., ,, · VB's, &KW Gen, 800 hrs • • "uo $200. Clean, shop re· ' d f'ftetoY• 8045 Sat/Sun 9 ·5: Mahog 50'.l.T080"l(.0FF LI. yellow wtmagh cir total lime. Gen newly loah.SPffd& Allired.850 ml. 89fH88l. ~ .. =.Pc.;!~ ~9:: ••••••••••••••••••••••• '1,C:UYr ~·: :rcrro:' lux drol>tear din tbl. 2 blk Over40 ln·irtock P•ttel"JI• top, xlnt $99. 64().Z400 O.H. Lar.l!'e dbl t>t;d aft. Ski 90IO 1'3 8 1 l c a r d \ 1 t o • 2732 A, E. Cat . Hwy. Female Siamese/Manx Thlmasvllle k f d1° · recliners. M a1n.a v~x Abo MINI· Blinds IBM E~ec typewriter , Much eqwp. met dmghy, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Westintncter. CdM. cat. ebots. box tmd. will bdr t. 8 d.Jls u ster. console. 2 Twin 64S-8950 833-mo $325. File cab. legal sz, O~. davlts. elec 1alley, 13•3 .. BOSTON WHALER ·~::=:s/ ---------· lpa,)'664-0139 546-1308 m se . pc 1 erm bed.s. dresser. end lbl, $75. Adding mach. f1S. haller, windlass. VHF. TI SMIP E 1 d _ -~,,_,_ ,,.,,.. 10' OAK Table <Sear ' set.inatchingsofa&lov· king quilted cov'd bead· PUIUCAUCTIOM Stenorette dictapbone Catbo & n e w (1111 r r . v nru e, - Claw) 6 12 matching Beautiful a payed fem eseat. coffee & e~ tbls, brd w/match spread. 4 MANY ITEMS OF FINE SlOO. Miacitenaf73-4537 enclosure art. Boa\ in lights, new s teer~n.g, ~··••••••• .. ••••••••••• cbra. 100 Yrs oJd. GoldenLabtoxlnthom prof side chain. lighted solidMapleCapt.chrs.& ESTATE JEWELRY, . average condition. List-S1396.642·2046aft5P 71 BSA doc::c ThlJD· $4000/bsl ofr. See at oaly.~ eteeere, paUo rum. misc Much Misc:. 1541S Emel ART OBJECTS, AN· Olivetti Elec typewriter ed at $39,500. 1st $33,000. NEW Vanson boattrlJo. (or kbolt. Laa tban 10,000 Lee's Nursery 3601 E. F __ , St. Be--...a Lo fr,~· 675•3048 or Cr, lrvine. TIQU~. FINE FURN., model F.dilor4C. takes. Wasson Yacht 16 to 18' boat, $400. arCe. mUee. Rebuilt rtont CoastHwy,CdM67s-S750 ew.ae nuq..a. V· . ETC. PHONE FOR IN· $250. 538-1179 Sales(n4)223·2l609 675-S'107wltdysart4 suspension. racing cs kids. Needs good Moving sale. S&S Park FO Ii BROCHURE s~o~ks. mtcbanlcall)' •-.me" IOto home536-9844 CORNER Group w/bltn. Hunt. Telepbooe booth, 645.S . 27'TroJan. ExpCrW.er loClh. Storc19t 9090 perfect. st.000. Call ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• D 1 d condAM/FM stereo. Verj gd. sewing mach. OB mtr. Pett 8017 Twin V.S's, rad, soudder ••••••••••••••••••••••• 963· 1925 art er 6 or REFRIGERATORS arllng 4 mos 0 .$150.540-4032 Cront throw lawnmower. Furn.bsebo&ditems. ••••••••••••••••••••••• S6500 AY646~ BOATSTORAGES30mo. weelt.en'1sanytime. WASHERS-DRYERS Shep/Lab Mix lemale. New round redwood tbl Olympus camera. Metal t~wrtr. add mach. 55 Gal salt wtr aquar. • . Cree launch. Sall/Pwr. Recon.dilions·Repros & =tssl':;~\ home-Free. 4 director cbrs, s8o. detector & much more mecabnt, refrig, Dual _9&n. many xtras + lfe4·o: 1~rn,:ga trt.blull, Newport Dunes. 6«.0SlO 19?0 Yamaha 125 Enduro. Frit Damage Guar /Del · ~72 quality Junie. 20402 Run-Call 67S·7203. ftsb. ¥35. Eva 751-0116. 1 I th erh. myJ"· New top end, xlnt cond. 29YrsinOran',eeo. . Giving to good home nlng Spnngs Ln. H.B. E.AalHWORM SAU CAT GROOMING ~ ~ 1:i.5~ nt T~affon Callaf\5pm, '1Jl-96~ . DUMLAP'S female beige med si dog ADJUST·A-IEDS 962~-ffOUSEOFEOYPT · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75f1ondaCT~~nlrond 1815 Newport Bl. CM about tyr. 842~32 2 xlra long twins. less Garage Sale: Sat & Sun. FOR GARDENS. ~the S3S-07112 40' Seawolf Ketch. Fine C~, Sde/ ~ tell. mov1.., S300. CALLHJ.7780 than l old t ell p worm~pyO\lcultivate. world cruiser. Albin llli'lf 9120 ca a....u:c ...... n* · BEAGLE Mix, male, all yr • mus s lG-4 M. 24372 Barbados. 1000 for S4. 3000-SlO. Als, o 5' ~ $30 di-~•. 3 KW gen • .lulo ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,_......,a 9.30pm ---------• this week, pd Sl.400. Sac Dana Pt. <Dana Doro> • r·-"""" ~ Non workln1 appliances abota, 20 months. Adora-S595.644..wl2or640-8260 worm castings. B S 9624214 pilot. Fatho. VHF, SSB. '70 Ford Ecconoline E300 '71 BSA 650cc Thun· wanted. Also REPAIRS ble. G45-l8S2 Garage Sale: Sat. 9AM tU Worm Farm• 17362 Plush int. A perfecl1 ·ve· Bubbie top camper van. derbolt. Less than 10,000 6SALES&N-S848 Do '! 336 E. 20th St. CM . Gothard. HB. 847·~141 "-' & ,..___ 1090 aboard. 181,000. w son :m VS ens. stove. refrig, orig. miles. Rebuilt rront g , smaJI mix breed. r..--ir....t~ 8055 Cl_..__ beds -....-y h S d d . I Will b r I b b k 11-..,..-uu"'~" &more. Moving sale. Household •••••••••••••••••••••.. a c t a I s. I coo . se. &o apprec. s uspension. rac ng , uy some re r I • 5~ r n very we ••••••••••••••••••••••• r 1 (714)223-2609 • ~ s hocks, mechaplca11y appl s, work.Ing or not. trained. Free to gd SAT &SUN E th. , Garage Sale-2 Family. urn. f sbing t ackle. HAMMOND perfect. Sl.000. Call al9o1Crap metal 6'75-5251 home. 848-ll49 _ tisi Paul~i~:: C~~f~ ~L 1509 Abalone Place, ~~b i;:g:~~ c~ftP a~ 18' Diesel, classic re~1ca, 8' c_,.,. Shell 963· 1925 aft er 6 o r ,_.... 1050 Mesa UttleBal. lslaod. 7pm, 768-7'92 ORGANS Bristol, $1110. 642-3746 weeJcendaaQYUme. 67~ Dryer-Gu, like new ••••••••••••••••••••••• BIGG Sal F b Fri/Sat/Sunday 9 to 5. 940 COMPLETE LINE '76 VW Dix Camper. Xlnt '7 4 Kaw a s a k I 3 s O 1175.0wnr. Beautiful .ola ldoveseat· 9am. ~gPoln!etU~.· ~~ Congress, CM ~a r. •NEW OR USED• 25' Cbrl' Craft. bristol cond. AM /FM, low mi, Looiborn. OffJfwy, goocf M7-4266aft3. ~e9Ar,~gu 1BdnJr!Dd alleylCdM.Nopresale. redwood la~n Curn1ture, WANT SERVEL GAS 8'.IYwilbConfldence cood. Twin engmes. full .irl-312S cond.~.rirm.911-5&!4 11 .. ..., •I ftlotre, 111 drapes & misc. REFRlO F .r om l h e O Ides t galley. closed head. all ---------1----...,.------1.U Cu ft relrig, copper wood came set, corree Garace Sale' Feb 12 & 13 &46-scns Authorized HAMMOND canvas, xtras. Must sell Motol' Ho..t. MolofoHo.a. bronze. xlnl cond t~es. sola table, wall 1().4 Four 'Poster Bed, HUGE GARAG~ SALE! ORGAN DEALER In now! S2900or best offer. Sale/R...t 9160 S.11..t "'' S4().0737 UDils, Naug sofa & naug child's dresse.r. Recliner St:SSOO. Carpeting. a.P· Golf cart Ajay 875-W. Orange County!! We wUI 6'75·3198 •••••••••••••••··~··••• ••••••'•-;•••••••••••••• recliner, lamps. glass c hair Brick s Etc. plances, clothing, CBs. Neverused.SlS. not be knowingly un-,68 32, L UHRS . top dinettes, bookcase, 559-46290 5 Wildflower Cum. Much more! Al 215 Phon deraold ! ! · · t w 1 n barrel or wing back Irvine ' Agate. Balboa Island. eS73-0254 •FREE• Chrysle r e ng. VHF cba1rs. Xlnt cond. excep . f'ri-SUn. Ward,, signature portable ORGAN CLASSES radio, rathometer. CB tionaJ values. 554-C760 Hseb1d turnbhings, misc dishwasher. never used. Mon eve.Every 0 n e radio, bait tank, electro- ---------• Items. Sal M . 252 16lb sss. 546-6004 Welcome guard system. S22.SOO. Pt Apt B, CM 642-8860 MDrws 8060 STOP IN OR CALL C811 : Terry DeBarJi at l .. 'liiiiiiiiii=~=~~~~~~~~~= .. •-ISTATIS•• ........ s ..... 1ss.a. .... •WHAMDSTOll- CI ., 1•• se.di l .... lift II OlllrC t'J •• Dt .. asW..._ SS SAVE SS SAVE Love\y bedroom sets. drtasera, cbe1t1. OAK Pedestal tbl. 4 chrs. R.nd. top. m.8892 •SAU• •NIWSA.....as• FOR EVERY ROOM y INS 675-1900 644-9200 75.2-mt ore. 75.2-7074 res. Udi>VUlageColnN.B. aft6PM Pa,ys more-sells for less HAMMOND ORGAN •·'7-S_H_T_ahl_u_· _D_a_y_C_r_..w_· s-er & Pl ANO CENTER 21 '. 460 Ford Jet. tandem 2854 East Coast Hwy I •~ Xln Coronadel Mar tr r. cus...,m cover. t ________ 1~~~~~~~~~I cond. S82SO. 751-1919 to I · see. f'lELDS W arebouse sale 400 P ianos/Orga ns Marine Dealers. & Yacht d S · Btrs. See Business Op· ne w/use . plnets. portunltlesClassAds Gr&Dds, Players. Going -"--------"-- out (or business. Rent· ls 30' Dtesel Trawler F / B opt. Kawai. Steinway. $27,SOO. 40' EJco T/S F /b Baldwin, Chickering $20,000. Yamaha, .fOmball --------Wdtzr (714 >638-2770 17' Tollycraft speedboat 12072Brooldiunt.GG hull. damaged but watertight. No engine. YAMAHA Console Piano Bestofler. 673-3994 Walnut finish, 4 yrs old SllDI. Pb 556-1434 Upright Piano, x1nt ~-129$. 1'71 MloJCC, lg wbl trlr, many xtras, ln & out OD. OMC. 39 a.-11 Udo Pk 673-0160 Sailboat C6C ,. •, mtr. Muet ..u. orr. Moored at 8 ·30 Dena llarlna. ·-· j Mt:fe/ 9110 .~.!~!! ... !!!.~ !~~ .. -....... !!~!~~~ .... !?!~I frld1y,Februwy11 .1m OAILYPILOT .. ....................... 'Tl TtVl Tl lr u· Self cot\• •• Ford PU~ Ton.,. bed 'l'OP DOLLAR ''" ...... Ntw 9100 ....... Ntw • . flOO...... .... taoo ...... Mew ,. ~ .:I'/ b' Pvt w/aheU, boot. CB •PA. PAJD ••••••••••••••• .. ••-• ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••-•••••••••••••••••" ••••,•••••••••••• .. -•• ~_!amaba 1Z:5, lo. ml Jkb.·115-.,.:: ana. ' oew Ur-. man)' ltlru. JMMEDIATUY =~~· Aft. 6 Very ahnp. uooo FORAU. __ _.._. Serlicel... MW3Slar$48-3.9fil fOREJCNiCARS ~YetUba.OOMono lt4cc.u.Mt 9400 CAU.ORCOMBJN _ • "--. u 'T ...... ••••••• .. •••••••• Fofd cabover truck, 1973 TO SEE VS .... ar ~ ... ew JDOt«, new clutch, rear ~ar IM-RTS ,.and Low EDO. N ad net for Pkup, endfltires XlnlrunnlD& "5 "''""' rv ~~ ~. 1'71 ~ ton Cbevy cond Xt.ras suso llOOW.CstHwy,NB t1Mm ~~ft-if~~=)'· --. . 64%·'405 HO"DA 110, '11 comp . '73 Rucbero SOO. Beaut WEBUY tOUrtnt acceaaortea Q-qer Road Star Nap cond, low ml. PB/PS, •USEOCARS& ~ 1eat, A'1 cood. f7N, for Datsun PU. 1Slt8f AM. new radJall. $8100. TRUCKS• OWl>oDDwlcansca 15X7, 2 each. r.ns. al ae.2431attspm ComelnorCall ~.tlT-'JtAevea. M6ml FR.UAppralsal ~ C11rt. VWENGINE.5 '71 Datsun Plck·UP GrothC\tvroMt ~'I~, ti rues USED·REBUlLT w/shell C&Jnper. $l,29S 182llBeachB1vd. null, re, ~· Pbooel42-49CM ' a*t.oo SITS. tA·S635. Der Bute>' Shop 530-6940 Huolinaton Beach u....-....... Mlotfor$tle '7•NudaRotaryPULlke 147-,017•149-Jlll • a.,.._. .-cond. new, many xtru. 26,000 --------• • &ZOO •••• .. ••••••••••••• .. •• ml must see. 548·5760 TOP 491-1881 .,,,..,,.,, 1--·------- CltulC• 9520 '60 Ford " ton, sharp, DOLLAR ili"._!t~ld MX. 132$ or ••••••••••o••••••••••• every xtra. $1000. PAID ··=-~~odel lkc 1952 NBZ 3005 Classic 588+847l FOR CL~ ·---....,.,..-------• Collpe·Ooe ot onty, 86 pro-'75~ Dat. Pu. desert whls IMPOIT CARS '1-4 II Kawuall:t "°° 2· duced that year· Mu~t + Urea, abeU, xtras. 20M stf'c*e, xlnt mechanical see to appreciate! Pn. mi. $2900/oller. 968·9'62 ALL MODELS CGDd.: 04-2751 aft 5: 30 p.y. 581·7446. , Super sharp ·72~ Datsun ffODdaC'l'78lt'10.Good 53 BENTLEY R·~ype. PU. Gas Mizer. 493-3817 cooct. $175Jl'JRM. RllD, Snrf. 2 tone silver, eve/wknd C.JlSfS.8155 Randy. Pvt pty 846-3848 1--------• ------~---1. Ve1111 9570 1913 Stizukl 185. Street, 46 ~ton Chevy, good eng, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jlbllcond, $3$0. runa &ood. 962•5333 aft '71 Dodge Van. xlnt ~ond. ~l : "ll "'HI .\1. H BL 1\> ~iUN T INt, l<ll<; !<f .\< " Ii.I,' "~I ~ t<I IJ I.I. • ' 0.-14'13 7P~t Many xtras. Must see to 'tt Yema.U 350. Enclne ~ Y-8 Ford Pickup, all apprec. $3l00 firm . -Need--C-h,_e_v_'/_L_u_v_,_$2_000_1• lroaeb. Good ab ape. oriamal, sharp. Must 557-7621. cash. lo mi's, 8200/olr. 538-1233 see. $3000. Call <213) •73 Ford Van Econo 200 536-6688 --------t 442·27SOor<213)283-S714 . • --------•• With the Newest, Friendliest Ikalership in Qrange C.Ounty · We want to be the kind of autond>ile dealer you've been looking for. .. y 1 bu h a 2 5 0 )f x automatic. air cond, 302 Autos. New 9100 Mlltocr05& off road. 9675. Rtcr9CIHoad V8. radio, PS, PB, xlnt ......................... --------~--~---~---•••••••••••••••••111!1•• .. Sat. only, 3$3 La Perle VeMdfl 9530 $2450.552-0528 Ln. CM •• • • •• •• • • • •• • • •• • • • • • • •7 Ford V fi · hed i k _ ~ CORVAIR SAND RAIL & .!any ex::.~s. ~l~t co:J: '71 nonaa -1'. W /xtras, Trlr. $600. 2 eng extra only 18 000 ml 644•5663 1 · mlnt cond & low miles. parts. 645·3013 • ' " a"O. 962-8972 4 Wheel DriYff 9550 '70 FORD 9 Pass. Van. 1 -I~. ~' Li lon, VS, auto, lo ml. Good • nCMlltS. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. Call btwn S·5. Ph ·· ...... /.~::! ...... !~.~~, 4 WHEB. DRIVE _495_463_1 ______ 1 ,,, NEW'77 COROW' .. \ I• . . • .. • ... 251 OPEN ROAD SPECIAL '63 16' moving van, with 2 Fully self·cont. I --spd. $2200. 5'xS' U-llaul Wlnter rates. 644-8385 1977 GMC trlr. $WO. 768-5094 HEW CHINOOK $6495 l!RN28051631-76 • c )\'(:Tl\ l illNDDK Tryhfore Yoca luy Rental.Rebate1 at BILL MAXEY TOYOTA I 81!8 I ll~oc h lll•d. Hunltnqton ll~och 84 7-8S!>5 18' Pace Arrow. Sips 6, Sl45 wk or ~2 per da~. 4c per ml. 675·0625 SUIURBAM 4X4 ·1.i Ford Van, vs custom 9 passenger model. 400 int. Low mt. $3900. C ID. VS. automatic, air 552~ cond .. pwr. steering + --------- brakes, locking diff., oil Autos Wanted cooler, 40 gal. tank, tilt ••••••••••••••••••••••• wheel. cruii.e control. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR <TKR267F505176). FOR TOP USED CARS LJST ... $10,861.56 FOREIGN. DOMESTIC DlSCOUNT ... $1636.56 or CLASSICS NOW $9225 If your car Is extra clean Anett GMC Trucks see us first. s.o. Frwy.-Avery exit BAUER BUICK LAGUNA NIGUEL 2925 Harbor Bl vd. CAU ll l·OIOO Costa Mesa 979-2500 ·72 Jeep Renegade. PS. PB. VS, Roll bar, tires. must !>ell. 536·8JOI. '72 Chevy Blaser HARDTOP. Automatic, pwr. steering. locking hubs & AM /F!\1 radio W/lape. (J5808M). PRICED TO SELL MIRACLE MAZDA WE BUY CLEAN CARS &TRUCKS CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd. i2 Winnel:Sa.:o Ch1eftan 2l50 Harbor Blvd .. C.M. Loaded w/almost every 645-5700 COSTA MESA 546-1200 option. Slf>tless. Must be seen . iSvt. Asking Willys Wg n. 4 Spd, Warn SlUOO/oCr. 7~1·5224 Ot D. gd body big tires. lnvst'd ttsso. sell S875. Sale-1973 Mint Motor CallS48..a673. Hme. Sips 6. rully cont'd. T k 9560 Xtras. S75 2126 "" 1 --••.•.•......•.•...••.•. WE NEED CLEAN USED CARS HOW CAUPAPPY 540-5630 1011 \~O\ & SO\ • LINC\)LN MERCURY .~.6 . . a SIDEW ALI SALE SAT. 2·12-SUM. 2-IJ.77 ,.__.OfDollmsOf Parts Ir Acceuories Sold At Tre ..... ._ Snlncp DA TSUM"S 0NL Y SAU NICI SA ft ,.... , ... Off""" ................................ '' ·'' 11.00 ....................................................... , ... ...... ...................................... ~It.ti II.II ~ ......................................... 11.11 114.H C/I ~ ••••••••·•·························· ........... ,.., ..... ~ .................................. s.w ........ .... T ~...,.,. ............ ··············· ......... II.II Ml l+l"'Mli M ••••••••••••••••••••••••••..•.•..•••.••••••• UI I . 71 ...................................................... , .... ~ ......... ·····································" .11 ...... .............................................. . ... •• •• ••• • ••••••• •• • •••••••• ···············•" 17.t6 .............................................. ~" ....... ............................................ '-" BAtlC FINANCING O.A.C. EARLE IKE SA YSI 1 · • .: • art O•r C11to111r Wt leliue If Yo•~-~ StrYict CllMI Psh s~ cCMipled Week _. Ho19Ht .,.... • Dept. Opell 6 Days ~-Wll SH For yCMWHif MtW -Used c~w YOU .SAYE! ! 1976 CORONA MK U I JOuaDOOI 1•1000 . Discount FM window stic:l\lf. FIC. air. tape, I PoW9f steenng. AM/FM stereo. n.d1al hres , and much more. tMX13-026279 1 i-~~!: ~:--1 ~~' NEW'77 PICKUP 53192 . 53480 ~· ·. RN23-04771T ~7 -J:o;:.~ BUY OF THE WEEK 5 117~ NEW '76 414 M•• • lll'tmd ... 1977 COMET I BOBCAT or new 1976 CAPRI ~nd we will gi~v~ S. how It works? ••• YOU MAKE YOUR BEST DEAL FIUT ... and 'IHEN we give you the Factory Air Cond5'1onlng FREEi You get the best prlce ••• and the most expensive single option at no charge! It's THIS WEEKEND ONLY at Santa Ana . Lincoln Mercury. Come on over nowl ...._. cost of Air Coaditioni .. $429. OW-S1adf'w •wJ1I w. .. ............. wmaT IBICnaN Of CCllftlmfrALS & MUI IYa .............. FIVE '75 MARK IVs r Santa Ana Lincoln Mercury Gives Yoa MORE! •..., Plnandns All)'whent ec..tu11y ••••cted ea... •All _.. throughly reconditioned e Unbeatable YalueJ LOW91t Prlc& '71 MllC ....... 'ltM '14. AT. '-1. Iii. "· ,. ·-Illa Ills .... ~I '71 .-CUIY WllOMI '26M ••• Af ............. .... ..... '71 MllCUIY ...... 2 'DI. 'MM ... ., .............. ..... ..... -... 71 PLY DUS'ID 2 DI. '16M V4 AT '5 .... ...._ V .... l-..-11#CTA) '76 PONTIAC UMANS4 DI. '3999 v~ AT hct • .r I'S "· ._ -'f ..... ""' llJllltl _.._. ..... 77 HONDA Can MAH't To ce.oos. FtOml • UNIVERSITY Okkmobile HOllda c... • GMC TNCk5 2850 Harbor Blvtl. Costa Mesa 540·9640 ......_Mew HOO Alltos. Mew 9100 Autos. Mew 9100 ..................................................................... SPECIAL SALE ON BRAND MEW 1976 DATSUN SHOW CARS TOIE SOLD AT DEALER'S COST . 1976 DATSUN PICKUP SAVE '165654 Ffom O.o..., 1 Su-feel Rec111Poooo I•103$$$1 1976 DATSUN 2102 SAVE s34a5n rrom 0..twt Su~eel Rel111 l'loce l•21»&11 • eot,.. I 1 amiw s• Good o.tr w. • s-. ~/12/77, Z/IJ/77 Thelte veNclelS W9f'9 ahown at many auto shows In 1978. 'They are bo1h new and have never been registered. One of a kind! The two meet desirable models 1n Datsun's Line. Sold At O.ater's Cost 1a1s RACH ILVD .. HUHllH(ifOH llACH 540.0442 -842-7781 . -- AT BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 38 PICKUPS To -'°OM 4 IPltl ·I -·-·LWB SWB ,_ c~ .... Of•-a ....... All tn1c•1 pl•l•IJ •uh4' wltlli le4 T .... COME IAILY flOlmT S&IC1'IOM · Bill MAX Y TOYOT A I l'-11 • I • e "I • t I' 4' I . ... U ... ' ,,..,,. '•'h I f A' •• Jaguar ·~clo.ss1c . XKl~ moo:· . FJT486 645-~'· 85 Jag XKE. coupe., yellow. wire wheels. very good cond. No needed repairs. 68.000 ml. SJ.JSO . Pvt Pty. 586.7149 72 Jag. 2+2. 4. spd. rully eqwp'd. AM/FM stereo. silver w /black leath int 14.000 mi. a1klng. S7200 . (714 I 524·2564 Evs. '74 XJ6L. perfect. 34K miles. !8800. Will take trade. P/P.631·3388 '7: XJG. Dark blue w /&ray lntr. AM/FM tape. Lu miles. Days 548·7741 . evf'S/Wknds 645·3886. Kcrna•Ghia 97J5 • •••••••••••••••••••••• ·~ VW Karmann Ghia. 1--------• Bright yellow. Nice. Brand Mew 1977 SJ.700. Call 498·1641. Dahun HOMybee '68 Karmann Ghia, reblt 4 speed & fully factory eng. xlnt cond $1600/of· eqwpped. r ot96~ UIL82108111M·4864>. er eve. OMLY $2946 ·oo. Oris. owner. 47m. BARWICK DATSUM Runs, looll's ~iccellent : San Juan Capistrano S:Z,000 rlrm. 673·1479 831-1375 493.3375 '68KarmannGhia 72 Datsun 240Z. air. mags, Xlnt condition 493-8278 new steel radials, 4 spd . ._ ______ _ 53K ml, runs xlnt. $3200. 9738 768-8275 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Aaitoa, Mew 91001.a..-.. Mew taooj....._ Mew 9100 Autos, Mtw 9800 ·······················~················· .........................•............••....•. . miracle ....... mazda t CIVIC SEDAN IMMIDIA11 Dl\MIT 2150 H..oor llYd. c.... ._. ... 645-5700 ;4 Mazda RX3 Coupe, 4 spd. under wrnty. very clean 837 ·3202 ''72 Mazda, R1H. air . 111/blue. xlnt cond. New ena. 51245 /bst ofr . 494.zr92AM lim Mazda RX2 sedan. 23.000 ml on new ena. New paint. Steel belted radials. $1350. 963-1904 .,, "ud•. xlnl cond. 14,000 Ml. S2000. 89S.51176 MlrcHet letll 97 40 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... Mew·Us'td ova 100 MaCIDIS OMDISPLAT ~~=~· MERCEDES DEALER 6882 Manchester, Buena Park NJ.7210 Oftthl8ant-aAfta Fwy. '74 • .. EL. cm w ttan ltbt lat-•un too(, crufu COIStr'Ol. AM/Fil ater.o, l'Dtft1itru,11.1per clean. ll3.250. By ownt 837 ·39f1 '87 280 SL, new Mich'••· Oft top, AM /FM. air. Jlll500, 615·2306 '79 Mtrcedea 009L ftoadattt. pert. cond. Full pwr. U J,OOO. 49'·MU. <P.lnaQ~llac ., .. \Cit \"9el MERCEDES BENZ MEW CAR TRADEIHS 41MOSIAHI< AMAHCIHG •AVAILABLE "73 450SE. 4 to choose from starting at SI0.500 <960JLW> '11 TOYOTAs HERE NOW San Juan Capistrano 8J7-4100 49MSl 1 .,,vw $800. Aft 5. 675-2776 '74 4SO SEL. 2 to choose 1974 VW SUMIUG from starting ul S13,700 •HEW COLORS AM/FM stereo & mag '89VWCamper. Neweng. (8448l •HEW MODELS wheels wtth the sunroof. autch. good cond. SJ.850. '74 280 Sedans. 4 to Cherry 1hape ! 497.3585 choose from slarllng at Huge Savings on ALL re-(922LFG ). •---------• .. .,.....,_iiil S8900(762KXYI maaning new 76s & Sal•Pri~S2749 VWVan.new eng\$995 '74. ·75450 SLC. 10·10 ml, Demos. Mln"'ClEM"'."'"' or best offer ~7-9607 or conc.cond. (7014 ,113431 TheBetterBargaln -~"' 646-4840 · Immaculate MARQUIS TOYOTA 2L50ff4rbor8lvd.,C.M. DIESELS . '73 2200 · '712 MISSION Vf~JO 645-5700 76 Sclrocco, perfect cond 2400 · '75 3000. All 1m -831-2880 495-1210 Sbllunderwarrantyonly ma c ulate, econom} HEW * USED 11 .000 m1. AM /FM minded I ( J 6 7 (.i {) L . ·n Toyota Celi ca. 5$pd, vw·s cassette. must sell. S4500 097LGL.715LWlll ~hT w/blk.. Super clean. or bsl ofr PP. 979-4398 MBZSPORTS<:,\ltS '73 call (711)831·1~13 Over 125 aft 6PM wkdys/ all day ~t.~ s!r~ a c 01 at c · '76 Celle a lift back GT. IM STOCK ,_w_knd_s_. ------ US ED C t\ll air. AM/FM stereo. 5 H dtoflnd l!l75 VW bus 7 pax sun-L~ASI NG 11pd. s.&875. 631-197» aft ~-...._. r oof. 2 0 • 0 0 O m i . SPECIALIST 7PM muuinl ~/best orfer. 640-1048 HOUSE OF IMPORTS ii3i92l·11588 '71 Toyota CeUca ~1 or!nt-6396. 714i523·7250 Xlnt condition WITlllll 4 VW Dasher, A ta/FM. SJ.000 551-1342 646-1585 r /'/ rJ air, sunroof. leavtng . 'V!Jt'1fb<.V/ 1tr. area. 495-1248 evs. '77 2400 00 Blue Corona. 4-dr. 4-7600 weatmlnit•r Blvd •---------• spd. good tares & brakes. W••tmlnater 1~755; XLNT COND. '70 VW new b11ltery. carb and W es t p h . Pop · top val\'C job. well main· '12 SQUAREBACK, R & Camper . beaut. Must tain1.'<.1 car. $995. 893-&160 H. xlnt. cond. Lo. ml. see. Xtras. Beal orrer. DIESEL. 1000 m1. /\1r. arter7pm sUl95.536-1484&642·15S4 675·3198 Automati c. Sahara 1--------- Yellow w1lh Bamboo mt. Autos, UMCI Alltot, Used ~ u..cl AM -F'M $13 .000 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••-••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 714/551 ·3855 or 752 H822 or rice '66 M BZ 250 Si'; ~11 nt cond ll2 000 mt Im ITlllCUl:ll~ thru 11111 I ud lnJ. :ur. rbll cn1.; 'l'\\ _paint ~1011 Ph 6i:> ~;1.lll 61 Merced~ ~'tlon P s, I spcl. elec sunroor. xlnt rond PP. S3S·IS t-:,s. 821-80&8 L '57 l90SL w '260 f.'ord l'ng & rear-end Nol running Nds Iota or work. s1000 Ftrm as 11 Ph. ~13 MG 9742 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ~ 141&90VlHf1Rt• IOUlfYAR() •&flt• 114'9'01QOO•Jl~)'l'\I 1 77 M GR 's 1-"rce 5yr~.ooo ml ext Warr with '77 MGB purchase Choose one or our 27 8\u'/Lease Plans. A NEW MG MIDGETS ONLY $74 /mo <ser 806171 Cap 4313 red. 393, re.. SZ3S2.40. 48 mo1. O!L Sen sible pay. ~ 'TS MG Midget ll.000 mt, wtit. radials. mint rond. s:noo. m.3151 $ 30 fl 30 '«T Morns Minor Xlnl rond. New clutch. S800 ..... u.o Meil 9744 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1976 MGI With AM/FM stereo, lug· gage ack & low mil~. EJLcellent condition! (219PRCl. SalePriced-$49'5 MIRACLI MAD.A %UC> Harbor Blvd., C.M. 645-5700 ap.I 9746 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'Tl Opel CT. Must sell ll850. Call 556·7544 or art $.8~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• POISCHI '70 9 I I T Sportam Jllc. PP. AMtFM. maa.s. yellow, "Int cond 1 ownr . MS-sa>7 Stan, Mon.Sat w .•. :500 'TS 914 2 o. Yel t Blk, loaded. aharp. I ownt. SH001ofr. Pvt. Pty. ai.-r ... There's no need to tnrYet alt over tM temte>fy to find the beet buy in a used ~t You'll find It rtgnt here at Jonnt0n 4 Son Lincoln Mercury. Just drive In and loo« over our large selectk>n. Then get our price. We know you can get the deal you're loOklng tor here ... and now! ........ ,,..__,_, ... -~. pow.,.., ... po.er ., .. -.,o-_, IOelU CNM COftlrot .. IU"Yl s2795 .. 71 F•CIMUI .... _ -.. _._.,.,. co•uS1hofttft9. JH)wet ·--"'-·--- 11 lllU C09I .,. _ _,_ -•IOMOO --, _..,. __ __ ...... ood fUUed ql•I 6 •"*-' -maccv• 13CMWC MNMllft&I V9 --.. Ille.""· 11111 OO"l•r. tlereo ,eo10. ........---~ l'OOC. tW9CI .... ..,_ ~ • .._ -•Mo IC~lall w·d••P la~ ~llt*l&I 54295 NEW 1977 PONTIAC ASTRE wmtREBAT! NEW 1177 PONTIAC SUN BIRD wmtREIAlE NEW 1977 PONTIAC FIREBIRD NEW 1977 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX lllllEDIATE DELIVERY lllllEDIATE DELIVERY •EDA1E DEUVERY lllEDIATE DELIVERY $!~§~ s!l§~ ·~a§l~ ·~9§~ 2CnB7U12114 2M'11VnYJ7298 2587C7N150'102 2JS7R7P1944 NEW 1977 GMC NEW 1977 GMC NEW 1977 GMC NEW 1977 GMC 3/4 TON LONG-BED 4WD CUSTOM STEPSIDE PICK-UP PICK-UP VAN JIMMY IMMEDIATE DEUVERY ORDER YOURS TODAY mDIATE DELIVERY ORDER YOURS TODAY S4166 $4966 $4966 S5666 PLUS TAX & LIC. PLUS TAX & LIC. PLUS TAX & UC. PLUS TAX & UC. c•-•-1 TCDl S7U5073S8 GOODWILL USED CAR SPECIALS 1969TOYOTA PLUS TAX & UC. 1969 FORD 3/4 TON PICK·UP *1466 ~ PLUS TAX & LIC. 1972 MAZDA 618 COUPE 11466 105.FD PLUS TAX & UC. 1972 PONTIAC VENTURA 11466 444GrN Pl.US TAX & LIC. 1972 FORD 1974 FIAT 1974 FORD 1975 AMC TORINO 128 PINTO GREMLIN •1966 PlU9 •1966 PlUS •1966 PlUS •1966 PlU9 a3QFTC TAX I UC. OtetCMT TAX & UC. 014tlJI# TAX a UC. _. TAX & UC. PRICES GOOD FOR 72 HoURS AFTER PU8UCAT1Qt4. ALL CARS SUIJECT TO PRIOR SALE .. " l 'I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Quality and Price Guaranteed Le<1m1g Speciali~h Prelerrctl Rate) Largru Sc lee uon of New &. U..cd Cadillacs 1n Orc1nge County MU$l sell •73 El Dorado '68 Sta Wan V-8, runs '74 Monte Carlo. Low ml s I\ v er w 1b 1 k 1 n l , good. Make offer beauty. Blue w /blk vinyl 641.()73!1 top. New tires. xlnt cond, Cabriolet lop. All pwr. --. ---. --.-Must sell. Make ofr. Makeolr.498·763S .... <2> 15 Monte Carlo 11. 54d473Tor646-47SO '70 Cudallac Coupe de Ville. Vinyl top, gold leather interior, &reen exterior, all power 63.000 mlle1> <original>. •100 0 . 870 -4564 ( .Ullerton > '73 Eldo Convertible Classic. Immac cood. 49,000 mi. Consider '70 to '72 Fleetwood as trade lo. H, 750. Pvt. pty. Open SundJy Cadillac Master Dealer 2600 Harbor Bh d Costa Mesa 540-91 00 loaded 3895 & 14195 - --C.....-o 9917 <P/snrf,etc)645·7253 Chrytler 9925 '-!!!!!!!!~~~~~ WlteOW ...Cl S 11,7'5 DUMJOM"I DIAUM PllCI !>W-0555/ 581-5986 Classlfied Ads • 11 #rT...,.C.......AlrCu•h h1 tordew• ~ Vinyl root -moon "'°' oUlll ewh•ull tffff Mlt .. I ••0111 WtOe waw llr .. -·-"°"" "°"' OOl'-'"9 ._ "" _,. .,_ ,....,.,_C:O"Wol ·----_,.,...... *"°'°"-........ _ -.,....._ .._.nc --.,..._., -.......... ~ .. ...., '""'° Wiii\ 8 l•llCll ,_ f\iet -·-no ~ "9'" eo.o..... ""'"" 9"0<IO - -'""' --O'OUO '""" 91-llqf!I Q1'000 OOWtJip ~ Q"IJIUO l)Owftl W'I~ Wt'fh f'ntl,. ...,,tt -..0 °""' #u"" wne.t• ..,. o "11'0ft"4'W'M'\ ~, •8J81A 10"" 811o •IOO:' 176 GRANADA 2·DR. GHIA DEMO Vlftyl •ool 301 V-8 """"' -uae Olol" 111"'· ... IONllC 1.-..... btlled tll<llal -1 ..... co"v•n-Otl>IHI. "" ''"'1119 wheel. oower "~ -...-.--<'04 •• .., __ oower mio.I ditc era'" ftJuJll burn-orouo ~ ,_ -__.., Alol~M ,....., ,_ MCur'4y -~ I-.... -Illy 9'00.c> 119111 """"° __ ......,..19cv_,..,,,._ -OOOr IOQM. ~ v-wen•y -&If •llWl4"'4MM &Ito. •2111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• N Camaro Z28, new paint, '75 Camaro. ear cond, '68 Chrr StatJon Wagon. nares, sui.p. Xlnt cond. ~llto, otber xtras .. still Xln\ cOnd S'1SO/b6t orr. SU!OO. 331-8558 (2131 lika new, 20,000 m1, PP Call &42·~ 754·9644 or 654·~2 '73 Camarai fuUy equip. • -'IS Newporter, air cond, Xlntcond Have lOmethlng to sell! PS, PB, good cond, 551·1364 _ Oassifled ads do ft well. $750/bst ofr P,J>. 673-3067 A.tot. Mew tlOO AalloJ. Mew ......•....•............•..• ······-······· .. ·•··········•·········· EXECUTIVE &DEMO FORDS ...... ·11 Ford f..100 "StytnicM Plcbp" .,.... .• 0..-.Priu 54699 )$1 Y-8 _,,. •mo 4 o.t 9•"9ff ... _,.., ,,.,_ -s:-.,,,. --ager '91l'• -COOl"'9 r•dtator. reu •feo Dul'o•r 8•r tf10t1Alt"'31 S,,., •~ ' -·. New '77 Ford PWo2 Door 53399 2300 4 '1tond•• '"'ton• 4 •OHO lrant""S.->!eel 0.ff9d WIW It< .. 0911111• ~ Cl"JljO /4M '!MllC> s.. •tAIO'flOOZll~ t"°3111 ~ 54999 361 11·1 _,,,. »rno & "'' 9a119H Warne, T-18' ,~ transm••••o" coo-~ .,.. Ol'9hl -'9CI rn'"o"" cigar h9h1er e1o.1r1 cooR119 '8dl"°' 15) 1100•18 I I Pfl tna Ser ef':6t-tR09t809 Silo «300 4 speed. radio. ·heatet. v.a. auto. trans .. factOfY air. V-8, auto. tran's., factory air, wtlllewall tires. (762JFH) power steering. redlo. heater, power steering. radio. heater. #hitewall ti,..,. (27tHWI) whitewall tires (560ESS) 70 FOID 175 MAVERICK CTT. Ml'U'll W~G. COWi v-e. auto. trans. factory air, Auto. trans .. factoty air. 'S>O'We power ateer1ng, power brakes. steering. radio-. heater, radio. heater. wsw tires. tinted whitewall tires.. dlx. int. & e>Ct. glass. wheel covers. vinyl (257MJYI , Interior l«2BNC) •2991 '75 FORD L1D4~ v~. .Uto. trans.. factory air, power steering, power braJ(9s, radio. heater. whitewall tires, wheel covers, Landau top CSOOLNL) •3395 '75T-lllD HAaDTOP • Factory air, full power, power steering, powet btakea, power windOws, PQMf 9Nts. stereo radio, Landau top, leather Int. '74 PINTO '72 PINTO J~ . WAM* . speed. radio, heater, 4 aoeed. radto, heater, wheet · ltiree.(381KXYl covers. vinyl interior. (901LIO) •5795 '74 MBCUIY •73 PLY. FUIY II MOHTMO WAM* 2 DI. M.UDTOP · v-a. arto. trans.. fec::tOfY air, v.a. auto trant.. factory •r power steenng. powet brak... conditioning. power steering, radio. heat8f, whitewall tires, power brlket. radio. heater, (082KBP) v1nyl roof. tint~ glaai, wheel coven (7~U) (4CUE$pl '72PLYMOUTH CUSTOM SUL WA•. V-8, euto. trans , factOfY air, power steering, pow.r bral<ea. radio, heater, vlnyt Interior. 9 P8N (072PPH) • t GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY 1 bHOO Bt-.H h f1111d Hunlinqton Bt.'.lth 842-8844 74MARKIV Full power including WANTED '65& '68 AM /l''M st er eo. ti It Mustarias. anycood. whe~se control, 142-6269 viny~ top. leather an-terior. air cond. Must see Oldsmobile 9955 to appreciate' 1t,1c. •••••••••••••••••••••• .. 761NIX > * ' 1 3 C u t I a s a $6486. Su ......... V8. Auto. P /S, P /8, A/<;.., V 1T, Rall ye Wheels. $2995 !3J57K3R148846> . GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 8Pach Blvd ~iunl1ngton Bt·ach 842-8844 IOI BLACK OLD~. ~ 2345N.Grand Santa Ana ~-8811 '74 Continental 4 dr. . • beaut. gold, has ever· 66 Olds. rebll ena & trans _ ything. $5709. 644·5927 Auto. AM/FM, air. $500, ---963·8778 Continental 72, cream ---- pulC, leather & xtras, 1 1972 Auto -&-door. P /S, ownr, 59,000 ma. 642·5851 Brakes. windows. Gd. '64 Contmental A good ~~d. 282 Sherwood C l\t. ono, but needs muffler & 4484 baUery.557-1101 68 Convert pwr. top in Corvtfft 9932 xlnt c.ond . .t!'l5 eng. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8-&7·4304 or 1213J863·00l2 CORVETIES CHOICEOF 15 1961 THRU 1977 -I speeds & Automulu::. Orart«Je County's LanJed & Finest Selection EZ FINANCING WE LEt'\SJ.; CORVETIES HOWARD Chevrol~t Dove & Quail Streets NEWPORT BJ::ACll 833-0555 Pinto 9957 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 Pmto. Cpe. Good <'On· dtllOll $1250/h:.l ofr &tli 17-IO ask for Jerf ·74 HUNABOUT 32500 mi. A/C, best of care X.lnt con d $2000 Ca ll 640-4935 e\'e!> or :.ee at m>4 Pac1f1c llw~. So. Laguna days '74 Pinto wai::on deluxe. I spd. a /t·. ster eo. radials. lo mt, $2500. 893-7267 Cougar 9933 ·72 Pm~·A-.:;11, 21.ooo;;;, :'s8 .. ci:;~··1:;~·~~~r~~~·i new Hadial urt-s Sl500. owner si50C1 ti M H:111s or li-14·1630 aft ;> 673 3990 ptymouth 9960 * •73 COUGAR • ••••••••••••••••••• .... •• \'8, Auto. PS. PB \'T. and only 38,000 mil~s 13F91J1502292) Sl!MIS IOI ILACK OLDS 2345 Iii Grand Santa.Ana 542·8811 Doctg. t?lS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ATLAS Chrysltt /Plymouth Open Daily & Sun. 'til \0 PM 2929 ffarbOr Blvd., Costa Mesa '72 Charger SE NellV tu-es, xlnt concL Sl.95Cr. - 646-4848 "675-8258 546·1934 : •6faood ........ Dodge '69 Coronet. 2dr, lrt', 318 eng, auto trans, P S. PB. AC , $800. 003-8839 Steve. Plrse cat1963-53U: • ~ ''63VALIANT • • 6cyl., automatic. $33).00 645-9486 '74 Dodge Dart 4 dr., '74 '71 Station wagon (Sport Datsun 610 2dr. Phone S uburban). Loaded. 840·1091 art 6pm Pvt. $1050.549-0433 Pty. -'72 Plym. Fury, good Ford 9940 cond. Sell low whsle. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• fot tnro. 842·5839 l:>ef 9am 1913 FORD LTD or att 10pm. STATIOMWAGOM ,ontfac '965 10 P•sseoger. Loaded ••••••••••••••••••••••• inc. pwr ~teerin& + wi;'l· Firebird, xlnt eond , dows, cr:wae control, ttlt auto, air, maas nu blk v· wheel, air cond .. AM /Ftf !OP. $1350/oft. •·9433 stereo & luggage rack. -..... Al) this & only 32.000 Going Away to Sc)I miles. (639JPS) '71 Flrebird Formula Salehfced-$2995 400. air, PS. new tires, MtRACLE MAZDA new brks. good cond. 2t5011arborBlvd .. C.M. P lease make orfer. 645·5700 547·7902 1969 Ford Galax le PS.. Makeofrer. 642-5236 '68 Firebard Formula 400. PS, PB, AC, Sl,000/ofr. 968-0441aft6pm. :;--LTD, lo ml. ulr, vinyl '74 Gra~d ~rlx. Loaded roor. pwr, lo book $l7SO. L<>w m1., hke new, Pvl. 557-6434 .ply. $3850. 673-3599 ·m Faarlane St• v;gn 8 '74 Firebird. Must aeU. I f\llly loaded! pass, 302 V8, A/C, n pwr, 645•7155 crs cntrl, $1275. 842-7102. '65 Falcon Wgn, 289 V-8, auto. A/C, P IS. P /B, SJ75. 631-0223 * '74 TR.AMS AM * V8, Auto, AC, PS, PB, PW, Pwr locks. stereo (491KMW> Priced ri-ht ·oo Station Wgn, new tires, al only $4995 air, 390 vs. 1 ownr $900. 101 II.ACK OLDS 833-9570 2345 N. Grand '69 GaJax1e ~~Ana 542·8811 f\Jlly equipped '731..e Mans. PS, PS. vinyl 5895 !l68·4N~ to~ lo ml, xlnl eond1 '71 StatfOft Wagon S2 • 678•8456 ' • 4dr Country Sdn. VS '66 Convert Pont. Bon· AC.PB, PS, Top CQOd nt'V 111 e w h I w b I If Bst ofr over Sl.000. teat r int. Bsl orr ov~r 673-0160 tec!O, PH: 673-4403 ' • l j Auto., P""Steerlng, p·wlndows. deluxe bel~ dtvlded · se•ts. moldings, air conditioning, vinyt top. sports mirrors, cruise control, 350 V-3, tilt wheel, rallye . wheels, clock, AM·FM 8 track. (165630) '66 CADILLAC '74 OLDS 88 '73 BUICK 11 '74 CHEVY : ,COUPE 195 I REGAL"" 1/l TON , . ~~nc:::,' ~$1 055 ~o':.~·~:.·~.~o:~t~'-~$ 2155 ~'.~~~n:'t~~~0·;.';j~:$ 2355 ~t!!rtkn:.P~· ~·$ 315 radio, waw tires. R&H.(iM1735) heater.{959GLW) autom&tro, h•aler. (RUN394) • (13341~ \ ...... f .. &L-""'T•&~ . --r.&U-t -T•& 167 MUST ANG ·10 COUGAR CADIL'f •c ·73 BUICK , '14-98 COUPE LS t FASTBACK CONVERTIBLE II.A RIVIERA Air cond.. AWFM ttereo, 5 Wheel. F) brakes. rallye wheels. "LC>llded." (145588) • ~ . ~~i-t?~~-~&~i $1355 ~~~;. ~f~:~:!~·~r~~$ 2255 H. EARSE . ;~~.~~i:E$ 2655 ::~w=$ 345 (S30GXX) • ,..1'1111 a i -1•&~ ..... T .. &U-....._. ____ fta_T•&-U.-..... --...... -..-..... ( ! 71 OLDS 175 CHEVY (609EQO) '73 OLDS 76 OLDS 88 · I . CUTLASS : MONL\2+2 CUTLASS ROYAL.COUPE ~~PS-~· 't8: ~t~:cr$1955 :~:~~·!~rs4~9~;~ter,$ 2 255 ' -Off . r ~~~.~al:'8~o~~~~ .. R=i~$ 26 5 5 ~ '1"~.p~~to::e;.!~ 425 I condttlontng. vinyl top. wheels. (223NR0) tjr ... (324NKC) 'f (107589) .._T•&U.-"91'9T•&U---T .. &U..-,,_.._, l I ~ l ' I I I l f , CGafiiti COUP1 Y·8 . automatic. air conditiOnlng. power steering. pe>wer brakea, AM/FM radio, heeler. White lldewall tlr ... tilt wheel. UOINe 887PON. t4795 1974 FOID PIMl'OlmAM 4 cylinder. automatic. alt1 conditioning. radio. heater. bucket Mata. ralHd white i.ttertlrel. Llcen1e 119KXY .... ............ • ..,..__...., .. ~ ..... '"""'""'..,...~....,.. J • ,-• • 1974 PLYMOUTH ICAMPCOUPI 8 cylinder. automatic. air conditioning, power steering, tlldlo, hel!W. white sidewall tlrH. vinyl top~ License BNKXU. -···· v.a. automatic. fac. air, p. atMI' .. brks .• AM-FM 8 tf1(, hfr. tire rack, r. o aide spare..tutty equlpt. cap- tains chra. mtDI. ata. pop top. Mtr. f-18502 . 8 cylinder, automati~. air conditioning, power steering. power Ink•. radio, heater. Uoense 879N00) ... tNDIANAPOLIS (AP) - • Laua_ll;ba1. talldQf and e•lb:l• · witlt;llfll wile In a hospital room, W)lere there wu little outward ) 1 st1n ~ the O:bour ordeal lbat 'I , had jUst ended for Richard 0 . ~ Hill <Belated story, photos, A•>. 1 , "Yee, 1 am fiae, thank you,'.' Hall said Tbureday night, mo- menta aft.er Anthony G. "Tony" Kiritail, 44, removed a aaweckff : 1hotl\lb that be bad wired to his Natural Gas neck and freed him. Dr. Charles Williams, a Wlabard Hospital surgeon, said 1la1Jt '2, waa in "excellent condl- Uon lnd in &ood spirits" despite the trauma or being held captive since Tuesday. He was treated for two-inch neck and wrist lacerations, Williams said, caused by handcuffs and the wire used to hoJd the muzzle of the shotgun to bis neck. His wife, lbb1, an unldentifled chaplain, an.S Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Pinney, business as· sociat.es, were whisked into the hospital, 10 minutes after Dall arrived at the bospttal, wheeled t.hrouah a pollce.Uned corridor into the emet'&ency room. Lees than an l\oUr after enter· in1 the hospital. Han was al- lowed to return home to his four children~ "Thank God be's sare:· said Indianapolis Mayor William H. Hudnut moments after visiting Hall briefly in tbe emergency room. "Re's come tbfO\llh a grave ordeal, under great pr~· ssure and he's in good spirits." Authorities said Hall spent his entire time as a bostaee in handcuffs in his abductor's west side apartment. . . . Ban 'Eased' l I SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -The California ban on natural gas ·beating for all except therapeutic . swimming pools has been unor- ficlally eased for public and educational swimming facilities . President Robert Batinovich of the State Public Utilities Com- 7 Marines Injured by Shell Blast Seven Marines were injured - two seriously -when an unex· ploded shell detonated in their midst as they cleared a practice firing range not far from where Rep. Robert Badham, <R· Newport Beach > was visiting on . a VIP tour Thursday. One of the military helicopters in the congressman's party was diverted to participate in medical/rescue operations in the 1 incident. Badham aide Nancy 1 Bettcher, said today. The c.'Ollgressman did not see '. or hear anything connected with the explosion, but was aware of the incident due to radio transmissions, the aide said. Most seriously injured was Sgt. Gary Collen, ZS. of Oceanside. Sgt. Cooen underwent surgery at Naval Regional Medical Center for multiple serious fragmenta· • tion wounds received in the incl- denL He was reported today in satisfactory condition by a base spokesman. Sgt. James L. Connors. 23, of Derby. Ky.~ was reported in satisfactory condition after sus- taining minor-fragmentation wounds. The five other marines were released after emereency aid. The mcldent occurred In the Lu Niu area of the 196-square mile martne base. The range ls about five miles Inland from lbe San Diego Freeway. The Marines were all part or a special ordnance dlsposal unit and Weft clearing dud ammunl· tion from the target area when tbe lncldent occurred. Tbe shell was thouiht to be a 40 mm round. One ol the Badham aides. RoW.,.S Seeqe, cliclao over to see Uae lrOured, but aside from that, tlae Badbam party had no con- tact. Whtilesal,e Pric6a Up :ln]amuiry mission sent a letter to utlllties and mayors or each California cl· ty notifying them or the change. Referring to the pool heating ban, his Feb. 4 letter states in part: "We appreciate there may be a number of other responsible re- asons for s uch beating. The city may have a number or municipal and private pools, both indoor and outdoor. "I t is reasonable to arrange pool heating so as to reduce the overall consumption of natural gas. such as closing outdoor pools, reducing the warmth or the pool, or other arrangements, and we look to your leadership at the local level to make these hard dec1s1ons that can satisfy your local absolute needs and still as· sist us in our common eoal of saving every possible amount of natural gas." Batinovich pointed out Thurs- day that to put the voluntary gas conservation program into operation, it bad to legally be in- corporated in utility tariffs-rate filings with lbe PUC. "We are not a Gestapo." he said in acknowledgin& that en· forcerneflt is difficulL "We are not aoinC to go •fO\J.Dd cutiing orf gas. We're certaioly llOt aolng to do it now. But if we run out, there will benoneedtodoit." "We are asking the coopera· tion of everyone. and I've told each mayor to resolve the pro. blem as far as public and private institutional pools for their city. "We want mayors lo take the lead in establishing absolute local needs considering our goals and then put those needs ahead of goals." Dusting Off Abe National Park Service worker Archie Gatling uses a broom to remove dust and cobwebs from the ~tatue of Abraham Lincoln at Washington's Lincoln Memoi:tal. A ceremony is planned Saturday !or Lincoln's 168th birth· day. Mobil Bid Preferred • Irvine Company Poll Gives Oil Firm Nod By TOM BARLEY Of .. Oellyl"lilt"lt.lft If a vote could be taken today among the Irvine Compaey's top management personnel the Mobil Oil CompaJ17 would &et Ult nod over its competitor in the current takeover battle, Orange County &lpenor Court testimony revealed Tburlday. Company board Chairman John V. Newman told lrvlne helre11 Joan lrvlne Smith's lawyer that management penoo- nel, l.ncludlnt comp-.ny Presi- dent Raymond Watson, o:auch prefer a MobU takeover. Newmant wbo is also a director ()f the Jam.ea lrvlno Foun- dation., made lt clear tbat lte and senior li'vlM CompaaJ. staff lll•mbera •re convlncfd that Mobil will ,..ln the comeieny's top brass if its $281.9 millfon bid ls accepted. The statement followed testimony that a consortium headed by Detroit developer Alfred Taubman and Wllll Street financier Charles Allen would "weed out the dead wO<Jd" at the Irvine company if' ll took ov9r operations. · 'tbe Allen-Taubman bld or $282.7 million has the support or Mrs. Smith who brought the takeover lssue to court when she took 1-aJ action that halted the Uioo sale to Mobll or the t on's .SC.5 percent hold• in&• theirvtneCornpany. Provlaiona of the Federal Tu Reform Act of 1960 compel the foundatioe tto.nl to dispose of l\i comP1111-.,_.es by 1983. Mn. Smith, who named UM fo~oo as defendants in ber law•ult. holds 22.4 'fer cent or ~ Irvln.COrnpany'1Jasued shares. N"man confirmed for at· torney Howard Friedman Thurs- day that Watson was the man who negotiated the terms of the merger with Mobil. And he identified the late J. S. "Sy" F1uor as the man who fint Introduced ?,tobU lo the Irvine Company wben the foundation board or which Fluor was a member /ital faced the stock dis- posal lllue. Newman told Friedman that the Fluor Corporation at tllat time hacl an ~Uve busine1s rel•· tion1bJp with Mobil and provided equipmentf or the oil comp*"Y. He test.ifled that Fluor and fellow foundation dlc-ectors Mottil Doyle and E"'1t'ard Carter beaded the firat attempts to In- terest Mobil in the lrtlne Com· pany. Mrs. Smith cond'emned the S24 a share figure represented by the $200 mllliOb deal as much too low. The cutTent Mobil ofter <Sff MOBIL, •aae &!> Just three hours elU'li4'r Hall bad appeared on Uve television, U~e sbcqun wired to h1s neck to prevent bis escape tr the gun was fired. and Kirltaia' finlef wired to the trtuer. Kiritsia .repeated his sta~e­ ments that. be abducted Hall because he was convinced lbat l'lall 'I Meridian Mortga1e Co. tried to cheat him on a JJ.30,0C)O land development loan. Aa Klrltala reeled off tM cbariea for the televlalon camerat, Hall looked steadily ahead. He never spoke. His band.a shook, and he grimaced each Ume Kiritsis moved the 1un, tightening the wire around his neck. It was the fint time Hall bad been aeen since the abduction. Tbe Rev. Cauthon T. Boyd, a <See HOSTAGE, Page A2) 'Execation~•tgle' Mafia Leader Shot 4 Times SAN DIEG,O (AP l -Frank Bompensiero, a reputed Mafia leader, has been shot to death in a g anal and-style execution on the sidewalk outside his beach a.,art- ment. Bompensiero, 7 l , w.as re- garded as a cootender for the West Coast gang leadership which bas been in a power strug- gle since Jack Licata died in 1974, authorities said. Bompensiero was shot four times with a · .22-caliber automatic pistol, which police said may have been used with a silencer since neighbors in the Pacific Beach area said they beard no shots. Bompensiero was believed alive wben found in a pool. or blood when police arrived, but was pronounced dead on arrival at Mi.ssion Bay General Hospital. His •allel was round intact. The crime record of Bom- pensiero went back to 1928 with a bootlegging conviction. Jn 1941, he W&li i:barg-ed with murder but. that wd dropped when ont1 the blOQdstained car or his acRuain- tance Victor Carlino could be round. Bornpensiero, whp re.ularly too)[ evening waJks, was sbot as he passed an alley bealde hiS apartment buildin1, police said. Intelligence omcers said he was a known associate or Joseph "Joe Bananas" Bonanno, de- posed New York and New Jersey Mafia chieftain; James "Jimmy the Weasel" Fralianno, described by a Los Angeles police official as the "West Coast executioner for the Mafia .. at one Umet and the late Mickey Cohen. In ll!M, a jury convicted Bom- pensiero of bribing public of· ficiala l.n a state liquor license scandal. He spent five years in prison. Bompensiero and Fratianno were charged In an Imperial Valley trucking scandal in 1966, but the cbarees against Bom- penslero were 4ismissed for lack of evidence, as in the apparent killing of Carlino, whose body Tt'as pever found. Bompensiero once was a floorman at San Diego's Rain· bow Gardens owned by Tony Mlrable, reputedly tbe local Mafl11 leader before he wu shot to death t.n 1958. Bompensiero's widow Marla Rose IW'Vtves. A fruff and often hearty man he always amoked or chewed ct1an. Yo11th N@minat~ Fountain VaJa.y reat4ent JobD .. Bart" WJUllleld, 17, hat been no.-lnated' to attend the U .s. Air Fe>rce and Naval acad~mies by Congressman Jerry Patteraon (D·Santa Ana.) WJillrJeldt of 118'2 GJ~a Ave., la a •e:Pior stude-.t at Los Am1,os lJt1h Schopl. • A"w1......,.to MAFIA LEADER SLAIN Frenk BomJMn•lero HB School DiStrict Cuts Three Posts .Huntington Beach Union High School District trustees have eliminated three administrative positions. The job cutbacks, effective June 30, are aimed at saving the district a total of $107 ,583 in salary and other employe com- pensation costs in next year's budget, school officials said. Dislrictofftcials said two more administrative posts may be cut by-Marcb31. Tuesday trustees eliminated jobs currently held by Jim Sebr· tngt director of certificated personnel; Woody Smith, even· lng high school assistant direc· tor, and Ed Harcharick, com· munity classroom work ex- perience supervisor. All three men are tenured personnel with lbe high school district, according to assistant superintendent Howard Roop. Roop said the three ad- mlnisttatots will be eligible for some type of teaching poaitions with the district. If the administrators remain with the district, said Roop, they will rmeve tower Jalarlel baaed on lbelr educational quallftca- tlons and teaching experlen(:e with tbedlatrict. Roop aald the three men are aasured district jobs even thouth the district may teduce Us teacher population by 40 teacbm and three counselors. . ~. ..... , ..... 'FINE, THANK YOU' Freed Hostage Han ,,,..,. Page AJ HOSTAGE. • • Protestant chaplain with the police department, arranged a telephone call between Hall and his wife Tuesday. Kirltsis re· porledly acted as an in· termediary, relaying messages between the couple when Mrs. Hall telephoned. "Thal was a good boost for her." Mr. Boyd said. . ''Tony went back lo when he · was 7 years old, describing his Ji(e for Mrs. Hall. He said he was sorry for causing her any heartache, and added that if everyone left them alone it would be all right." Hall's four children, ranging in age from S to 11, tried to lead normal lives throughout the eris~. Mr. Boyd said. "The children really don't un· ·dersland the immensity or seriousness or this," Mr. Boyd said. He said the children were only kept home from school-Wednes· dar. I :Guard Injured ~In Huntington ,Auto Crash A 69-year·old Huntington Beach school crossing guard is convalesclna today from injuries sustained Thursday when his parked car was struck from behind by another as he sat wail· ing ror classes to end. Fred H. Orris, or 17151 Elm St., Huntington Beach, was treated at. the scene by fire department paramedics and replaced by another guard so he could see his doctor for further attention. Police said Orris was parked al McFadden Avenue and An· daman Lane al 2 p.m. waiting to escort Robinwood School pupils through traffic. Motorist Helen M. Nicosia, 3.1, of 5031 Tasman Drive, was iden- tified by police as the driver of the car that hit Orris' vehicle. Imease Still Undetermined ATLANTA <AP > -Further evidence that a previously un· known bacterium caused the '· 1egionnaire11 disease" which killed 29 persons who attended an American Legion convention in Philadelphia last July was dis- . closed tocily by the national Center for Disease Control. Bul researchers aald the source al the bacterium and the manner in which it was transmitted to humans at.ill has not been determined. Policeman Studies Huntington Beach police detec· tlve Arthur S. Droz ls amona 31 law enforcement officen lJl the • , current Delinquency Control • · Institute <DCI> juvenile justice · class at the Unlveraaly of • SoutbemCallfomla. ' . . . .. . . . ' .. . ' . .. . . ' -. ... ,.. , -. . . . . . . ... . . DAILY PILOT 'A new munJclpal code VloJaUon cbar" -been filed acalnlt • Runtlorton Beach vendtaa cnacblne route entrepreneur wboeejouats with the law show no li1n• flf abating. Louis L Hunaate, 40• of 1.!18S1 Wicklow 1,.aM, ta named in a new cltaUon 1llued by the ~lty at· torney's Office and served on him Tuesday by ui Orange County marshal. Thll one, filed by Deputy City Attorney Mark Travis, con· atltutes the s~ such charge and the fifth munlclpll move acainst Hungate in the past 18 moot.bl, with no concessions by ellberslde. He bas already been convicted of violating lbe city ordinance governing allowable home OC· cupations in a residential district once and fined $250 for ll. Hungate.has been chareed with orlound guilty or: -The original home occupation conviction. -Parking a commercial vehi· cle in a public street. -Yanking out a handful of Deputy City Attorney Travis' hair in a flt of pique while forking over his $250 fine after t.be original home occupation charge was up- held in court. -Committing an act of assault and battery upon Travis' person as a direct outgrowth or the hair· pulling episode. -The latest home occupation violation allegation, which in· volves his alleged acceptance of a load of vending machine wares from a truck for storage at bJs home lOdays ago. Counts 3 and 4 of the above ac· tually constitute a criminal charge lumped under state law, but Travis himself signed the bat· tery complaint that resulted ln another municipal court fine levied against Hungate. The defendant also had lo pay $2S in punitive damages to Travis for his hair Joss. And H\lllgate faces a hearine in West Orange County Judicial Dis· trict Court on char ges filed by the Orange County District At· torney'sOffice. The DA alleges Hungate de· liberately parked his boat trailer in his driveway and across the sidewalk. Still a sixth violation was pro- secuted by the deputy city at· lorney some time ago, when Hungate was forced lo pay city business license fees on about half the vending machines in his em· pire. "He only reported half the number of machines he actually has," declares Travis, whose sleuthing led to discovery of the rest in a warehouse in Orange and the subsequent court case. The latest chapter In the pro· tr acted case of Hungate vs. Hunt· inglon Beach City Hall and vice· versa stems from deli'Very of a shipment of wares a week ago last Monday. as neighbors spied. A quick telephone call brought Travis and city Building Depart· ment Land Use Technician Walt Lipps to photograph the goods be· Ing trundled into the suspect's house and garaae area as evidence. The two city emissaries were accompanied by a uniformed policeman in a marked, black· and-white patrol car, based on Senior Citizen Tax Assists Slated in BB Senior citizens and other Hunt· ln&t.on Beach residents "ho de· sire to may have their Income tax returns computed free this year under auspices of a pro- eram arranged by the LYNN Center.-. The volunteer service ls of. fered by advanced accounUn1 students from Cal State Long Beacb, and will include supervision by thelr depart· meot'1 lnltructors. However, warns a LYNN Center spokesman, anyone with vastly complex and detailed tax returns will be lavlted to talte t.beir business elsewhere • Tax returns will be processed at the volunteer commwi19' •· liatance center .i m Flfdi St., HunUncton Beach, Monday nl1bts from 1 lo 9 p.,n. and Tbunclays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., eecordlqtoADn Mc:Ct~. A call for an •PPointment 11 td· t'lsable. what la now cltJ ball ~licy in de· atin1 wtth Hunaate. Travis said Wednuday that Huncate's next court appearanee relative to his home oec~aUOll miseries will be Feb. 25, wbtn. the DA takes a crack at him on the boat trailer parktn1 matter. Notonetofacethe barof juatice atone and apparently blamhl& his neighbors for bis hassles with the law, Hun1at bas now sub· poenaed every IOUl on bla block for manct.tory court appearances too. "He dkt It befote too and lt 's nothl.nc but haruament," Deputy City Att.on,..yTtavlssays. • Their testlmOhy ls totally lr· relevant, and I've written presld· ing Judie Jamd Smith a letter about thl•." navissald. Torture Slayer Gets Li/ e T~rm in Prison One of four men and two women who subjected a Garden Grove man to hours of torture before injecting batleey acid in· lo hta veins was sentenced Thursday to Ure in state prison. Orange County Superior Court Judie Walter Smith ordered the maximum term for Richard Hamilton "Preacher" McKay, 22. Placentia, who had earlier been found guilty of first degree murder after a jury trial. McKay was identified during his trial as the principal figure involved in the killing last April 28 or Ervin Sutton, µ,·or Garden Grove. Sulton, accused by the defen· dants of giving police informa- tion that led to the arrest.a of the two women, was beaten, kicked, slashed and jumped on alter being bound and gagged and thrown into a bath tub filled with water. He died after one of. the women injected battery. acid in· lo his veins. One of the two women has . been ldentified by the prosecu· tion as Cynthia Mendenhall, 24, of 143-C Avenida Del Mar, San Clemente. She faces a pre- liminary hear),ng Thursday in Santa Ana Municipal Court on related murder charges. Co-defendant Gary. Essex, 24, Compton, races sentencing Wed· f'Nnll Page AJ MOBIL ••. represents a per share (igure of $33.50. Newman told Friedman that foundation director Carter serv~ on the board of American Telephone anCl Telegraph with a high ranking Mobil official in· volved in the negotiations. But he rejected Friedman's suggestion that this might con- stitute conflict or interest. Friedman has made those charges against foundation director Doyle, whose law firm worked for Mobil on other legal matters at the lime and founda· lion attorney Howard Privett, whose Los Angeles law firm handles litigation for the oil com pany. Newman said one or the foun - datlon 's main concerns at this point of the negotiations Is to pre- serve the identity of the Irvine Company and protect what he describes as .. well qualified and talented personnel." Judge James F. Judge ordered a three-day weekend break in the trial late Thursday. It will re- sume at 9 :45 a. m. Monday. * * * /rat Peanuts No Laughing Matter Now? Irvine Company Board Chairman John V. Newman brou&ht a touch of levity to a tense Oranae County Superior Court trial Thursday when he clarified com°'ents he made in a pretrial deposition. He confirm'ed for attorney Howard Friedman that he had referred to minor incrementa of five cents a share during recent frenzied bidding as being "just peanuts." "l now regret that kind ~ mark," he told Juda• James F. Judie. "l think it was ruppant. "However," he added with a erln wb!le Judae Judie and a battery of lawyers laughed out loud, "I dldo't realise In thole pre-elect.Ion days what kind ol value peanuta "ould have to-day." nesday in Judge Smith's courtroom after being found aunty of second deeree murder. Co-def&nd ant Jerome Dedrick Toles; 19, Compton, faces aentencina next Friday after pleading lullty to charees or conspiracy and being an ac- cessory to murder. Co-defendant Bllly Wayne Hollins, 22, Santa Ana, faces sentencing al a later date after pleading guilty to charges of be· ing an accessory to murder. Long Beach Oil Spill C/,eaned Up By 1be Anoct.ted Press Cleanup crewa were working today to soak up more than 500 gallons or oil spilled into Long Beach Harbor after an un· derwater pipeline burst, officials said. The spill was one or two in stat~ waters. Officials said the pipeline, which runs under the Cerritos Channel in a wedge-shaped in- dustrial section of west Long Beach, was shut down after it broke open, shortly after 8 p.m. Thursday. Champlin Oil, owner of the spilled oil, is respons ible for costs of the cleanup operation, harbor officials said. Meanwhile, oil spilled from a drydocked container ship spread several miles from the point where it entered the water, the Coast Guard said today in San Franc~o. Slicks had been sighted up to l.5 miles o((shore, a spokesman said. Helicopters and boats were to be used to keep track of the oil. The spill occurred Thursday afternoon wben a valve failed aboard the 720-foot cargo ship Hawaiian Progress in drydock at the Bethlehem Steel Shipyard. . Clouds Cover North State By Tbe Associated Press Fair skies today will turn cloudy Saturday over much of Northern California, with un- seasonably mild afternoon tem- peratures, the National Weather Service said. There is some chance that showers will fall during the weekend, but so far rain is ex· peeled only in the northwest cor· ner of the slate, forecasters said. Highs will range from the mid 60s to mid 70s during the day with overrught lows In the 40s. How's That? This sign outside a Huntington Beach motel caused photographer to stop and investigate Thursday. Motel operators said there isn't any hidden meaning -they're fans of Dr. George, the television weatherman. and he says the coast is clear. That's for sure. 2 Accused Indicted In Market Killing A man who is still being hunted by police and his 16-year-old al· leged companion in an Anaheim market killing were indicted Thursday by the Orange County Grand Jury. Victor Antonio Ledesma, 16, of Westminster, is scheduled for arraignment later today in Superior Court. The hunted man named with him in the indict· menl is Joseph Emanuel Cabral. 20, of Cypress. Authorities said the two are ac· cused of involvement with two other men in the murder last Oct. 7 of Jack Warren Mason, 20, who died from a shotgun blast in the stomach while four men robbed the Albertson's Market where he worked. Police said George Louis Ledesma of Westminster, Victor Ledesma's 19-year-old brother, fired the weapon. He and co· defendant Richard Frank An· dreason, 29, a transient. have been ordered to face trial Feb. 22 in Superior Court on charges of murder and robbery. The younger Ledesma and Cabral face the same charges. The indictment further accuses Cabral or armed robbery stem· ming from a holdup al Ralphs Market, 2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa, last Oct. 5. The younger Ledesma was held as a juvenile and prosecuted in that court following his arrest. The indictment means that he will be tried as an adult. An indictment is a formal charge made against a person by a grandjury. ltdoes not establish guilt or mnocence. Parking Lot Slayer Gets Lile Sentence A man who ended a fracas over a parking lot collision by plung· ing a bayonet into a motorist who argued with him was sentenced Thursday to life in slate prison. Orange County' Superior Court Judge Kenneth Williams ordered the maxiumum term for Robert David Esparza, 42, o( Anaheim, who earlier was found guilty of first degree murder in the killing of David Ray Goodman, 19, of Santa Ana. Police who investigated the killing in a Stanton parl<ing lot last Aug. 1 said Esparza became enraged when Goodman's car in· meted damage on the de(en· dant's brand new auto. They said Esparza pursued Goodman through the parking lot and repeatedly plunged the bayonet into him before byslan· den; came to lbe stricken man's ald. By lllLUYKA YB Ot_M!tt ........... • lloctoltbecandldates runni.DI ror the li'viM school board favw merit p.,-for teachers, would Uke to expand the Basics Plus fundamental school and object to Uae MW vid-.piq system now )>eloc used to hlre district employa. • Th<>M were soJDe of the view- S?OiDts revealed at Thursday's I . ~ School's Out i..- Wet-suited surfers wait for waves at Newport Beach surfing spot. This photo was taken at 8:45 this morning. School was out today because of Lincoln'1 birth· day, and local surfers were quick to take fromabowl. . li'viDe telldents will pick two b'Ulteel IA the March a election. Only one incumbent, Frank Burd, is running agldn. Several of the candidates said they were eenerally satisfied with the thrust of the school dis· trict and praised it.a success ln of. f eriq qualicy education. .. Right now we have a won- derful system here~ But tt'a got to Co. Boll advant'age of the free time and ft'arm weather along the Orange Coast. Lifeguards listed water temperatures in low ~ and air temperatures along the shoreline in the 70s. Mafia Leader Slain In Gang Execution Irvine Police Car Stoned On Party Call An 18-year-old Irvlr>e youth ended up in jail and a patrol car wound up with $200 wotth of dents and scralcbe$ Thursday night when Irvine police broke up a party of about 150 teena1ers. Officers arrested Sean Francis Graham, 15201 1'antes Circle, ou cbugea of distutbtng the peace. "rbey said he became "loud~ abusive•• when they tried to u.l~ the party, at l5.1S2 Norm e, in the Ranch section oflnine. Police said they found numerou.. beer bottles inside the house and that most of the partyaoers were minors. When the ftv-e officers left the house an hour later, one of their patrol can was marked with dents and acratcbes apparently caused by thrown rocks. Police Action Hit J 0 HANN.slrollG...-:&>uth Africa (AJt) -The Roman CathOle afarch said today it bas a .. multltude ol cases" of police brut.lity acatnst blacks to pre. Hilt to police inve1U1ators. be nurtured . . • Students are do- iDI well with scores fa~ above the national averace," commented DQrothea "Dottie" Blaine, an ad- mlnlstratlve analyst with Oran1e County. But others criticiied ever· ythin1 from the budget.in& p~ cess to me of 1overnment funds to implement new programs. "We're ru.nninc slip$hod as far as the budget eoes ... and are ovU'l>udl~ already In many areas," •.W Robert Gray, a busi· nessman, who said be wanted to "brine control in education back to tht people." • Loult zejd.a, a salesman, S(lfd be objected to tbe present system of ustni government money 'to pay for "innovative programs without evaluating the impact or effect ot the p"°"'am." Many of the questions bandied I by the candidates dealt with the new Basics Plus fundamental elementary school. Tbe election bo~efuls were asked if tMy would like to see the school expand, in light of the fact there are 400 students on the waiting list. Five of the candidates - Robert Gray, Dottie Blaine, Louis 1.ejda, Robert Shupe and (See FORUM. Pace AZ) Prefers Mobil Personnel Support Takeover By TOM BARLEY Ol h oe11, """"" s1•tt If a vote could be taken today among the Irvine Company's top management personnel the Mobil Oil Company would gel the nod over its competitor in the curr~nt takeover battle, Orange County Superior Court testimony revealed Thursday. Company board Chairman John V. Newman told Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith's lawyer that management person- nel. including company Presi- dent Raymond Watson, much prefer a Mobil takeover. Newman. who is also ,a director of the James Irvine F'oun-dation, made it clear that he and senior Irvine Company staff members are convinced that Mobil will retain the company's top brass lf its $281.9 million bid is accepted. The statement followed testi ntohy that a consorUum headed by Detroit developer Alfred Taubman and Wall Street financier Charles Allen would "weed out the dead wood" at the Irvine company if it took over operations. The Allen·Taubman bid of $28Z. 7 million has the support of Mrs. Smith who brought the takeover issue to court when she took legal action that halted the $200 million sale to Mobil or the foundation's 54.S percent hold- mgs in theirvineComeany. Provi.Sions of the Federal Tax Reform Act ot 1969 comt)el the fourulatjon board to.dispose of its company shares by 1983. Mrs. Smith, who named the foundation as defendants in her laws~. bolds 22.4 percent ol the Irvine COmpany's issued shares~ Mewman confirmed for at- torney Howard Friedman Thurs- day ~t Wat.soft was the man who nuotiated the terms of the mereei:. with Mobil. And he-ideritlfied the 1ate J. S. "Sy" ~uor as the man who first introduced Mobil to the Irvine Company when the foundation board of which Fluor was a member first faced the stock dis- posal issue. Newman told Friedman that the Fluor Corporation at that time had an active business rela~ tlonsbip with Mobil and provided equipment for the oil company. He testified that Fluor and fellow foundatioJS directors Morris Doyle and Edward Carter beaded the first attempts to in- terest M,obU in the Irvine Com- pany. • Mtl. Smith condemned the SU a share figure represented b)' the $200 million deal as mucti too <See ll081L, Pace Ai> Dusting Off Abe A,.WI,..._ National Park Service worker Archie Gatling uses a broom to remove dust and cobwebs from the statue of Abraham LincoJn at Washington's Lincoln Memorial. A ceremony is planned Saturday for Lincoln's 168th birth- day. Seven CdM StUdents Held in Robberies Seven Kudents from Linc:oln Middle Schoo} in Corona del Mar were auest~d Thursday by N••port Beacb police on Charges ran1tn1 from assault and ba~ to extortioo and armed robbery. Police said the seven boys ranee in -ae trom 11 to 1• an4 come from Balboa 1'1aod and Harbor View Hilb. The arrests CJllmJnated an in· veaU&atim*'Ught by school Prin- cipal Oeoreiana Mc~ who calledof(tcentoth~campusatter a tr:otU> of student.a told her tbey were belne ~cthnhred b)'. the group. Tbe vtdhm told police tbey were forced to tum over their hancb moaq when threateped by theotberatU®nta. ' Sat, )(lice Blitch, bead of the polJC*4eputment'1 Juveaile NO· U.. 1aldbe Md ~r offlcen in-._ ... teVeo rictims of the al- le•ed ~ operatie. IM he Mid tOdaY. ""'-tt P"babl, ue CJtberJ WhO m ifraMt to come forward. He said that. of the seven ar-. rested, me student was involved ln oneJ.ncjdent only -ao incident isolated troll) the others. Accordlos to Blitch the remain- inl si]t worked to,&ether in vary. ing combioaUoAS, with two in particular L1Sing a knlf e to extort money/torootherstudents. Police brought all seven stu- d'enta into the Police station where they were held until they were re- leuedtotheirparents. W.eatlier. Sunnt adcl warm throup s.tar4a7. 1118bl in 708. Lowa '5 to 53. Seven Marines were injured - 1.wo seriously -when an unq. plodecl shell detonated lo their ..mlc!at 81 tbeJ,. cleared a practice ;tlrln1 ranee not far from wbere Jlep. Robert Badham, (R· ~ewport Beach) was vlsltln«i on a VIP tour of Camp Pendleton Tbunday. One or the military bellcopten in the COQll'el1man'1 party wu diverted to participate tn medlcaJ/reacue operatlon1 ln the ·Jncldent.. Bad.ham aide Nancy Bettcher, said today. The coosressman did not see or hear anytblnc connected with the explosion, but wu aware of the incident due to radio transmissions, the aide said. . Most seriously injured was Sgt_ Gary Cooen, 25, ol Oceanside. Sgt. Cooeo underwent surgery at Naval Regional Medical Center for multiple serioua fra1menta· tion wound.I received in the inci- dent. He was reported today in satllfactory cood.Won b7 a base •PC>k•man. Set. Jame1 L coft.nors, 23, of De.-by. Ky., wu reported in aatlslactory condition aner sus· taining minor-fraementation WOllnds. The five other marines were released after emer1ency aJd. . The incident occurred 1D the Laa Pulau area of the 1984quare mile marine base. The ranie ls about five miles inland from the San Diego Freeway. The Marines were all part of a special ordnance disposal unit and were clearin1 dud ammuni· tlon from the target area when the incident occurred. Tbe shell was thought to be a 40 mm round. One of the Badbam aides, Howard Seelye, did go over to aee the injured, but aside from that, tbe Badham party bad no COD· tact. Irvine RlllCb Water Dbtdct directors have authorized con· structlon of water and sewer service aygtems costin• M.4 million ln tbe new villas• of Northwood. Tile new vlllqe b the larpst non-Irvine Company develop· ment in Irvine and encompasses nearly all of the area north of the Santa Ana Freeway, bet•een Culverl>rlve and Jeffrey Road. Tbe cllrect.ors approved an U· aesament dlatrict for that area, which ls a mechanism for ftnanc· ins the cost of the water and sewer capital improvements. Contracts were awarded by IRWD directors for pipelines, pump staUons and a reservoir withinNortbwood. TheIRWDand the city will jointly issue borldsfor the IRWD's and the city's assess· mentdislricts. IRWD Board President Laos· lng EberHn1 explained that aucb a joint lasuance will saye money for both agencies. The contracts, which are due to start immediately, include: I , Fr0111PageAJ -A four-million gallon re· servoir to be built by Rodon, Inc. of Oxnard for $762,000. • : MOBILE OFFER ••• -Pumping and booster sta- tions and a reclaimed water filtration plant, to be buUt by Jenkins Construction Co. of Long Beach for $1,463,906. 'low. 1be current Mobil offer ,represents a per share figure of $33.50. Newman told Friedman that foundation director Carter served on the board of American Telephone and Telegraph with a hiSh ranking Mobil official in- * * * .Just Peamlls ·No Laughing Matter Now? Irvine Company Board Chairman John V. Newman brought a touch of levity to a .-tense Orange County Superior ~Court trial Thursday when he ; clarified comments he made in a pretrial deposition. · He confirmed for attorney •Howard Friedman that he bad ;referred to minor increments of ;five cents a share during recent ~frenzied bidding aa being "just .peanuts." .. "I now l'egret that kind re· JDark," be told Judge James F. Judee. "I think it wu Oippant. · "However," he added with a grin while Judie Judge and a 'battery of lawyen lau1hed out :loud, "I didn't realise in those .pre-election days what kind of :value peanuts would have to- day." EXECUTE. • floorman at San Dieeo's Rain· bow Gardens owned by Tony Mirable, reputedly the local Mafia leader belore he was shot to death in 1958. Tbe reports of several or· ganized crime invesU,ationa, in· eluding those done by the Callloniia Crime Commission of 1959 and tbe Kefauer Committee :in the Senate, mentioned Bom· pensiero u bavtn1 been auoclat· -eel ia ~·1Nt1 with other well· knowaarpnbedcrimeftpres. Bompmslero'1 lut appearance before m investigatJve qency waa Noftmber. wbeD be was ,taken before. federal crand Jury )n Los Anaeles wbicb waa looking into the ponaotrapbJ bulinea in :ca.utonlla. He ref med toteaUfy. · An attorney for tbe Justice ~·a Orsanl.red Crime :ana Racketeeln1 unit tn Los ,An1els u well u San Dleco :authoritlel Hid' DO current ln· weat11aUon1 ln•o1Yln1 Bom- j»eDIJerowereanderway. : Bompmaiwo'a wl4ow Mada 8Gle1Urviva DAILY PILOT vo1ved in the negotiations. But he rejected Friedman's suggestion that th1s mi&ht con- stitute confiict of interest. Friedman has made those charges against foundation director Doyle, whose law firm worked fa, Mobil on other legal matters at the time and founda· lion attorney Howard Privett, whose Los Angeles Jaw firm handles litigation for the oil com- pany. Newman said one of the foun- dation's main concerns at this point of the negotiations is to pre· serve the identity of the Irvine Company and protect what he describes as "well qualified and talented personnel." Judge James F. Judge ordered a three-day weekend break in the trial late Thursday. It will re· sume at9:45a.m. Monday. Amputee Wounded " LOS ANGELES (AP> -An amputee was shot and wounded when a sheriff's deputy mistook the metal book on the end or his artificial arm for · a gun, authorities say. -Water, sewer and reclaimed water pipelines to be built by Bebek Co. and G.R. McKervy Inc. of Irvine for $2,189,250. Sports Sigrmps Set in Irvine · Tennis and racquetball signups will be taken Saturday morninj at the Harvard Community Athletic Park in frvine. Residents interested in either tennis or racquetball lessons may sign up between 9 a.m. and noon at the park, at 14701 Harvard Ave. Tennis classes are being of· fered at the Racquet Club Park Courts on Mondays and Wed· nf'Sdays and also .on Tuesdays ·and Thursdays. Cost is $10 for four week!; of twice-weekly classes. Racquetball classes are being offered at University Community park on Mondays and Wed- nesdays. 'Surviving' Trust~e Enters Race Again (Editor'& Note-Thia.article is one o/. a aeries profiling candidate• for three opera Nata on the Saddlebock College Board of Truateea. The March. B election is. at large. and the top wte getter m each tnutee. area wiUwin.) Deity ~lltlt ,...., ....... ·suRVMNO' TRUSTEE S8ddtebllck'a Beckua Books on Wheels Twice a week Irvine residents can spend time browslng the shelves of the Bookmobile that travels through Orange County. The portable library rolls up at the Walnut Village Shopping Center in Irvine on Mondays and Thursdays from l to 5 p.m. and from 6 t<? 8:30 p.m. Trustee Hopefuls Split Over Site Saddleback Community College District candidates who spoke to Irvine residents Thurs- day night were split over which site they favor for the new com· munity college campus. Two favored the Jeffrey /Irvine Center Drive site, one backed the ori1inal Myford·Bryan site and the fourth offered no opinion. The junior college candidates Heritage Park Soon to Get " Skateboards The Irvine City Council bas agreed to use some of Heritage Park as a commercial skateboard facility. Council members adopted that position with a 3·1 vote Tuesday after receiving a petition signed by about600students and parents requesting a commercial skateboard area in the new park on Walnut A venue. Councilwoman Mary Ann Galdo opposed the motion. She said she objected because the council did not approve her idea to use money gained by the city from the commercial skateboard venture to build more free skateboard parks in Irvine. The idea was shot down 2·2. Mrs. Gaido and Councilwoman Gabrielle Pryor voted in favor and Mayor David Sills and Coun- cilman Bill Yardoulis voted against. Councilman John Burton was absent. The council also instructed an advisory committee that is ex- amining the city's commercial recreation policy to review two skateboard park proposals already received and make a re- commendation to the council. Under the ~ity's park bond is· sue guidelines, up to 10 acres or Heritage Park may be used for commercial recreation facilities. The skateboard park proposes to use about 3.8 acres. . spoke briefly during a break in the forum held in Irvine· for hopefuls in the Irvine Unified School District race. Irvine residents will vote for ooe candidate in each of the three trustee areas up for election Marchi. Both candidates in area four spoke to the Irvine residents at the Irvine Tomorrow forum. Incumbent Patrick Backus re- affirmed his support for the original Myford/Bryan site, call- ing it a "logical and reasonable" choice. But his opponent, Eugene McKnight, said the site at Jef· frey /Irvine Center Drive is a "superior place for a college." Backus also said he would push for collective bargaining sessions with teachers to be open to the public, if be gets re- elected. McKnight. who noted he could give full time lo the trustee Job because he is retired, s a1d he views the community college as ·'the most dynamic unit of educa- tion today.'' One of the three candidates in area two. Clifton Brooks, also spoke at the forum. Dr. Brooks, a Tustin physician, did not offer an opinion regard- ing the site selection. He referred to himself as the "conservative candidate" and noted that if it came down to a choice between offering programs for younger people trying to earn two.year degrees and older people in- terested in lifelong education, he would favor the younger people. "They're the ones who have to go out and make a living," Dr. Broob commented. In area five, Robert Price is running unopposed because of the death of his incumbent oppo- nent, James Marshall. Price, who is the administrator at Leisure World in Laguna HUis, said be favors the site at Jeffrey- Irvine Center Drive. He said the facts pointing to that side are "loud and clear" because of the financial impact and geo- graphical preference of that location. F~ Page AJ FORUM •.•• Cathy Larkin -said they would favor expanding the fundam~ tat school so more students could attend. But Fred Gahm, a pun:hastne manager, said be is opposed to an expansion because he believes basics should be taught at each ol the schools. Lunceford, a psychologist ~nd sociologist, said his son attends Basics Plus and he supports it, but that maybe there can be another solution besides building a new Basics Plus school. Tom Wilson, an administrator at Newport Harbor Hlah, said there may be "a lot of ways of getting to the basics" without ac· tually expanding the one Basics P lus school. On the question of IJlerit pay, all of the candid candidates ex· cept Wilson said they would not object if it was a good, sowid system. Wil~ said he would favor in· stead what he called "competen- cy based pay" for everyone in the district. The contenders were also asked their viewpoints regarding _ the new $'10,000 system approved . by the school board, where a con- sulting firm videotapes can· didates for district jobs, thereby narrowing down the personal in- terviewing process. Gahm said he bell eves it lo he a ... worthwile" system. "Otherwise we'd have to hire ex· tra people in the district to pro- cess applications." But l.ejda called it "a dassic boondoggle.•• Lunceford snid the district shouldn't rely on other people to interview for them because Irvine is a unique com- munity. Gray, Mrs. Baline and Mrs. Larkin also said they oppose the system . Wilson said it might be valua- ble, but that be didn't know enough about it to offer an opi· nion. And Shupe, an attorney. said it's a good idea to try it for six months and see bow it works. Bradley'Endorsed LOS ANGELES (AP) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. bu .,.. dorsed mayor Tom Bradley's re- election bid. - l l I L 1Mafia Leader ' \ ~ .Sliot 4 Times SAN DIEGO <AP> -Frank 8ompensi,ro, a reputed Mafia leader, bas been shot to death in a gangland-style execution on the sidewalk outside his beach apart· ment. Bompensiero, 71, was re- garded as a contender for the \Vest Coast gang leadership which has been in a power strug- gle since Jack Licata died in 7 Marines Injured by Shell Blast Seven Marines were injured ~ two seriously -when an unex· ploded, shell detonated in their midst as they cleared a practice firing range not rar from where Rep. Robert Badham . <R · Newport Beach) was vis1tinll on a VIP tour of Camp Pendleton Thursday. One or the military helicopters in the congressman's party was diverted to participate in medical/rescue operations in the 'incident. Badham aide Nancy Bettcher, said today. Ttie congressman did not see or hear anything connected with the explolion, bui was aware or 1 the incident du e to radio transmissions, the ajde said. Moaueriously injured was Sgt. Gary Cooen, 25, of Oceansjde. Sgt. Conen underwent surgery at Naval Regional Medical Center for multiple serious fragment&· tion wounds received in the 10c1· dent. _ He was reported today in satisfactory condition by a base spokesman. Sgt. James L. Connors, 23. of Derby, Ky ., was reported 1n satisfactory condition after sus- tain lng minor-fragmentation wounds. The five other marines were released after emergency aid. The incident occurred ln the Las Pulgas area or the 196-square •mile marine base. The range is ~bout five miles inland from the anDiqo~way. The Marines were all part of a Jpec:lal ordnance disposal unit · d were clearing dud ammuni- fl'OD\ the tareet area when lnddent occurred. The shell I tboqbt to be a 40 mm round. ne of the Badham aides. H ard Seel~e. did go over to see U»e injured, but aside from that. tbe \Badbam party bad no con- tact. The clearin& of the practice field was a routine Marine pro- e.tu:re and had not.hint to do with •the Congressman's visit, Aide 8ettcber said. l.Dng Beach fouspill • JDeanedUp 1974, authorities said. Bompensiero was sboL !our times with a .22-caliber automatic pistol. which police said may have been used with a silencer since neighbors in the Pacific Beach area said they heardnoshotsThursdaynight. Bompensiero was believed alive when found in a pool of blood when police arrived. but was pronounced dead on arrival at Mission Bay General Hospital. His wallet was found intact. The crime record or Born· pensiero went back to 1928 with a bootlegging conviction. In 11941, he was charged with murder but that was dropped when only the bloodstained car of his acquain· tance Victor Carlino could be found. Bompensiero, who regularly took evening walks, was shot as he passed an alley beside his apartment building, police sajd. lntelHgence officers said he was a known associate of Joseph .. Joe Bananas.. Bonanno, de· posed New York and New Jersey Mafia chieftain; James "Jimmy the Weasel " F'ratianno, described by a Los Angeles police official as the "West Coast executioner for the Mafia·' al one lime, and the late Mickey Cohen. In 1954, a jury convicted Bom- pensiero of bribing public of· ficials in a state liquor license scandal. He spent five years in prison. Bompensaero and Fralianno were charged in an Imperial Valley trucking scandal in 1966, but the charges against Bom- pensiero were dis missed for lack or evidence. as in the apparent killing of Carlino, whose body was never found. Bompensiero once was a noorman at San Oif'go's Rain· bow Gardens owned by Tony Mirable, reputedly the local Mafia leader before he was shot to death in 1958. Bornpensiero's widow Maria Rose survives. A gruff and often hearty man, he always smoked or chewed cigars. 4 Principals Given New School Posts Supt. Jerome Themsley an· nounced this week that Al Capistrano Unified Scbool Dis· · trict princtpab but four will stay next year at the schools to which they are presently auigned. The four to be reassigned arc: -John Hencock, presently principal at San Juan School in San Juan Capistrano, wUI be U· signed to Capistrano School, also in San Juan, next ye•r. -McLean Kini, principal at Capistrano School, wm be San Juan School principal in ttJe fall. , -Charles Bossard, prlncipal of Concordia School ln San Clemente, will be principal of the district's new Harold A111buehl School. openlng in San Juan in September. -COftDe Barr, preseatlY as· sistant principal of Viejo School la MJ.ssiop Viejo, wW be Con· cordla School principal next year. ~hool'sOut Wet-suited surfers wait for waves at Newport Beach surfing spot. This photo was taken at 8:45 this morning. School was out today because of Lincoln's birth· day, and local surfers were quick to take advantage of the free time and warm weather along the Orange Coast. Lifeguards listed water temperatures in low 00s and air temperatures along the shoreline in the 70s . Burglary Suspects Nabbed in Clwrch Laguna Beach police beli,ve they wrapped up seve al burglary reports rather nicely Thurs~ay : the suspects tbey think committed the deeds were already in jail by the time the victims complain«I. A transient and a Dalla.s, Tex., man are being held on suspicion or burglary and possession or dangerous drugs charges after they were round sleeping inside St. Mary's Episcopal Church, 428 Park Ave. A patrolling officer shining bis nashligbt through a church win· dow noticed a pair of shoes, con· nected lo a man's (,!et, that weren 'tsupposed to be there. Booked were George Nash, 23. or Dallas, and Michael Randolph Roe, 20, address unknown. Police sald a q\iAlltitY or tran· quillzers worth hundreds of dollars at street prices was found. .,.. aen wwe j~,S. a C!a ler from the office of psychiatrist \Villiam Routt. 330 Park Ave.. reported burglan; bad smashed a rear window and stolen a quantity of tranquilizers. In another incident, police stopped a car for an alleged equipment violation and took lnto custody three teenagers they described as runaways. They said they found large amounts or liquor and rood items stashed in the car trunk with other items they linked to local burglaries. Held at county juvenile hall were a 16-year-old Colorado girl, and two boys, 16 and 14, who police sajd were identified as escapees from juvenile detention facn.llies in Colorado and Mon- tana. Later, employes or the Safeway market at 638 N. Coast <See ARRESTS, Page A2> Topless Part 2 Police 'Raid' Part of Act NEW YORK CAP) -When Charlotte Moorman played her cello topless in February 1967, police moved in and hauled her off to jail for giving an in· decent performance. A judge found her guilty but gave her a suspended sentence. Thursday night, Miss Moorman gave a loth an· nlversary .performance at Carnegie Hall. She performed the same work, "Opera Sextronique," by Koreanavant-gardecom~er Na~ June Paik, And a. she did in 1967, the classical eelllst ap· pearec:I topless -except fot 'J)asties With spinning propellers. • And just as in 196'7, the police moved in. But this time the 35 plainclothes "police" wbo swarmed onstage and growled ••up against the wall . . . · · weren't real police. They were part ol the act. Miss Moorman said she couldn't understand why an1one would think her performance was • 'leXJ Cl: erotic.'' Torture Slayer Sentenced One or four men and two women who subjected a Gm-den Grove man to hours of tortuN before injecting battery acid ill· to bis veins was sentenced Thursday to life in state prison. Orange County Superior Court Judge Walter Smith ordered the maximum term for Richard Hamilton "Preacher" McKay, 22. Placentia, who had earlier been found guilty of first degree murder after a jury trial. McKay was identified during his trial as the principal figure involved in the killing last April 26 of Ervin Sutton, 22, of Garden Grove. Sutton. accused by the defen· dants of givine police inform&· tion that led to the arrests of the two women, was beaten, kicked, slashed and jumped on after being bound and gagged and thrown into a bath tub filled with water. • He died after one of the women Injected battery acid in· to hls veins. One ·or the two women has been identified by the pr08eeu· tion as Cynthia Mendenhall, 24, of 143-C Avenida Del Mar, San Clemente. She faces a pre· liminary bearing Thursday in Santa Ana Municipal Court on related murder cbarees. Co-defendant Gary Essex. 24, Compton, faces sentencing Wed· nesday in Judge Smith's courtroom after being found guilty of second de1ree murder. Co-defendant Jerome Dedrick Tot~s. 19, Compton, faces sentellelng next Friday after pleading guilty to charges of conaplracy and being an ac· cessoryto murder. Co-defendant Billy Wayne Hollins, 22, Santa. Ana, faces sentencinl at a later date alter pleadm, euilty to cbar1es ot be- ing an accessory to murder. Af&era .. a N.Y. Siee TEN CENT Personnel SQpport Takeover By TOM BARLEY OltlleDallyl'llet~ If a vote could be taken today amon1 the Irvine Company's top management personnel the Mobil Oil Company would get the nod Qver its competitor in the current takeover battle, Orange County Superior Court testimony, revealed Thursday. Compal'\y board Chairman John V. Newman told Irvine h0eiress Joan Irvine Smith's lawyer thlt management person- nel, including company Presi· dent Raymond Watson, much prefer a Mobil takeover. Newman, who is also a director of the James Irvine 1''oun· datlon, made it clear that be and senior Irvine Company staff. members are convinced that Mobil will retain the company's top brass if its $281.9 million bid is accepted. The statement followed testimony that a consortium headed by Detroit developer Alfred Taubman and Wall Street financier Charles Allen would "weed out the dead wood" at the Irvine company if it took over operations. The Allen-Taubman bid of $282. 7 million has lhe support of Mrs. Smith who brought the takeover issue lo court when she took legal action that batted the $200 million sale to Mobil of the foundlttion's 54.5 percent hold· ings in the Irvine Company. Provisions of the Federal Tax Reform Act of 1969 compel the foundation board to dispose of its company shares by 1983. Mrs. Smith, wbo named the f o"ndation as defendants in her lawsuit, holds 22.4 percent of the Irvine Company's issued shares. Newman cQnfirmed for at· torney Howard Friedman Thurs- day that Watson was the man who negotiated the terms of the merger with Mobil. And he identified the late J . S. "Sv" Fluor as the man who first introduced Mobil to the Irvine Company when the foundation board or which Fluor was a member first faced the stock dis· posal lssue. Newman told Friedman that the Fluor Corporation at that time had an active business rela· tionship with Mobil and provided equipmentror the oil company. He testified that Fluor and fellow foundation directors Morris Doyle and Edward Carter headed the first attempts to in· terest Mobil in the Irvine Com· pany. Mts. Sknith conderoned the S24 a shaT~ ftgure represented by the $200 million deal as much too low. The curt'ent Mobil offer represents a per share figure of $33.SO. Newman told Friedman that foundation director Carter sl!rved on the board of American Telephone and Telegraph with a high ranking Mobil official in· volved in the negotiations. But he rejected Friedman's suueation that this might C(>n· 'stitute COl\flf ct of Interest. Friedman has made those chart~• against foundation director Doyle, who~e law finn worked for Mobil on other legal matters It the time and f~a· (See MOBIL. Page AZ> Wea tiler Suon1 and warm throqb Saturday. Highs in 10t. LOwl"5to53. I U'SC O.lty Plle4 Staff ,_. 'SURVIVING' TRUST£E Seddleback'a BKkua Fro..P~AJ MOBIL ••• tion attorney Howard Privett, whose Los Angeles law firm handles litigatioo for the oil com- pany. Newman said one of the foun- dation's main concerns at this point of the negotiations is to pre- serve the identity of the Irvine Company and protect what he describes as "well qualified and talented personnel." Judge James F. Judge ordered a three-day weekend break in the trial late Thursday. It will re- sume at 9:45 a.m. Monday. * * * Jus t Peanuts No Laughing Matter Now? Irvine Company Board Chairman John V. Newman brought a touch of levity lo a tense Orange County Superior Court trial Thursday when he clarified comments he made in a pretriaJ deposition. He confirmed for attorney Howard Friedman that he had . referred lo minor increments or five cents a share during recent frenzied bidding as being "just peanuts." "I now regret that kind re- mark." he told Judge James F . Judge. "I think it was flippant. "However," he added with a grin while Judge Judge and a battery of lawyers laughed out loud. "I djdn't realize in those pre-election days what kind of value peanuts would have to- day." Isolated Flu Cases Told ATLANTA <AP> -Isolated cases ol A· Victoria nu have been reported from Georgia, Illinois and tbe Carolinas, in addition to an outbreak in Miami, Fla., the national Center for Disease Con- . trol reported today. A spokesman said the newly reported cues are LSolated, and do not indicate that the more severe nu virus ls spreadlna. Outbreaks of milder Influenu B have beet reported in Vermont, Connecticut, New York. New Jeney, Pennsylvania, Mkhiean. Mluiulppi, Iowa, North Carolina; South Carolina, Ten- nessee, Geor1fa. Louisiana, Tex- as and Colorado. Student Killed FALLBROOK (AP> -A 15- , year-old freshman at Fallbn>ok Hilb School WU found beaten to death ID an avocado arove across the street from school. ln- veaUt' went to Anaheim to ·ques a 11·)'ear-old FaDbn>ok 'llfp student Jailed there today tor lnveas,.Uon 1D the beatiq death. · DAILY PILOT ( • ..,. lfoc.-nu. offlN ..... ol o ,..,., profU.mg ccmcHdol .. for '"'" °"" NGl.f on U.. Soddlrioct CoU.o• Boatd of 'Tnutff•. TIM March I el«tion ii ot laf'Pf! Giid the Cop vote¢Ur m each trultee.orea t0Uh.obl.) - By WILLIAM SCIDlEIBE& Of ... CNll~,..... ...... Patrick BackU1 ls in the unique po1ltton of having first-hand knowledge of aU the accomplish- ments and mistakes ever made by Saddleback College leaders. ''I am renewed and I thlilk there is a renewal of the colleee's desire to go,•· Backus said. "I think with my experience, I can provide additional expertise as a trustee." · Jn the comiq years. Backus aaid the board will have to ad-dre 1 It.sell to the rlslng cost of continued expansion, collective barcaJning and the ongolng dis· pule over the high ratio of part Vi ejo I ncid ent • time to ftil llm faculty mem-bers. Jn the financial arena, he said carefulatudywWbavetobegiven tootbersourceaofmoneythanthe, current "pay as-yau-co'' method. ••Bui l promise that lf J am elected, I will never vote for a re· venue el~on or a bond," ho said. "'lbati. waaUn1 taxpayers money and ls an Insult to the In· telligence oflhe voters." The '4-year-old elementary school principal is a "survivor" -the only remaining member of the college's original Board of Trult.ees, elected when the dis- trict was created a decade aeo. He's running for yet another term in the March 8 election against a seasoned and knowledgeable foe, 70-year-old Eugene McKnight, who lives just a few blocks away in Dana Point. Teen BtJys Firing Stolen Guns Held Backus, of 33382 Bremerton St.. conceded he very nearly cb~e to end bis tenure as a trustee after the current term He admits bis indecision last fall might be the reason McKnight decided to seek the post. "For a while there, I was get· ting terribly disco~raged with the way things were going," Backus said ... We Cthe trustees) always seemed to be at each others' throats and weren't get· ting anything accomplished. .. But then, for some reason. things started picking up," he said. "We started to have some togetherness on th•board." One of the things Backus thinks drew the board together was the decision lo buy 20 acres of Irvine Company land at Bryan Avenue and Myf ord Road as the site of a satellite northern campus -a concept the south county trustee strongly supports. But then. suddenly last month, that decision was thrown into turmoil when the landowner de· cided it would rather have the campus at another location 3.5 miles south. ·'I was really disappointed by this because I wanted to see us get started," Backus said, noting he will never support anything other than the board's originaJ site choice. 'Tm tired of hassling over it." Backus said he might even favor several m ore s mall satellites in the years ahead, possibly financed by sale ()f some or the existing campus property. which covers 200 acres. He said the school will never use more than haJf its land. purchased 10 years ago for the bargain price of S2.5 million. The incumbent trustee. who is married and has three children attending high school and junior high. said the college has had some tough sledding and "bad luck" through the years. But he said it is finally moving out of its dormancy due to a strong ad- ministration A former Royal Air Force flyer who drove past the Lake Mission Viejo area Thursday told Orange County sh.erlff's officers that what he h~ard reminded him or the flack he, new through over Dusseldorf. And a nearby woman resident who heard the racket as she washed dishes in her kitchen sink told deputies she thought the Mafia were carrying out exes::u· lions in the area behind her home. Alarmed deputies who rushed to the scene said lhey found: -Twenty handguns, rifles, and shotguns that were later iden· tified as weapons stolen from Reuben's Sportin"g Goods Store. at 28892 Marguerite Parkway, Mission Viejo. -More than 3.000 rounds or am- munation for all the weapons. It had also been taken from the burglt.-d store. -A van containing two male juvemles, 15 and 16, who were sur- rounded by spent shells but who were busy loading their weapons for a further round of target prac- tice on nearby trees and the adja- centlake. Deputies booked both boys into juvenile hall on charges or burglary and atlempted DUecue St il l LJ.-.1W1W ATLA CAP> -Further evidence that reviously un· known bacterium caused tne "legionnaires disease" which killed 29 persons who attended an American Legion convention in Philadelphia last July was dis· clos ed today by the national Center for Disease Control. But researchers said the source or the bacterium and the manne r in which it was transmitted to humans still has not been determined. School Building Needs Meet Topic Capistrano Unified School Dis· lrlct trustees will meet in a special meeting Tuesday to dis- cuss d.Jalrict building needs and a possible bond elecUoo May 31. The special meeting Is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. at school district offices, 32972 Calle Perfecto in San Juan Capistrano. According to a report prepared by Davis Duhaime Associates, architects, by Sept.ember, 1981, the Capistrano school district Watch Thief 'IJarorted by l.B ]etteler? Lasuaa Beacb'a watch bandit may have heisted his last timepiece from Jeweler William A. Farrar. Thursday, Farrar reported to , police tbat the eonaervatlve tl'ltef, who only takes one watch at a Ume, broke • louvered storefront wind.ow, stretched an arm through iron bars and grabbed a $65 Bulova watch. Only lat week apparently the same tbief did the same thine. Farrar said today be bad mo•ecl th• watch diapla)' further from the louvered win· doWa lifter' UM flnt htotdent. ''I didn't Udnk he could Nach UW far,'' the JeWeler 11ld. Next tline there won't be ~nyWna to take. Farrar Mid i.e•1 deddM to lock .,.p hli Cll.a- pJa11 at D1lhl should have $47.2 million worth of new schools serving the pro- jected school population. Supt. Jerome Tbomsley said this would mean building five standard elementary schools or a larger number of core module elementary schools. In addition, thedi1trictwouldrequiretwonew junior high schools and a fourth senior high by 1981. be said. Thomsley said he has "some rather definite feelings" on whether a bond election should be held, and secondly. whether it should be held May 31. He said the board Is not expect- ed to take formal action at the speoial meeting. It ls an op- portunity for trustees to arrive at an Wormal consensus on the bond election, he said. F,....PflfleAJ ARRESTS ••• Highway, reported burglars broke a window and pilfered severaJ grocery Items, including a half gallon of tequila, several six-pack$ of beer, packages or beef jerky, razor bladu and toilet articles. Police also connected a ltries of car bur1larie1 comm(tted Wednesday at tb• Vacation Vlllace and Cua Lacuna motels to the trio. taguna 18911es 33 burglary. They said the boys told them they had discussed shooting it out with officers but decided to surrender as patrol cars sur- roundedthem. Deputies said one or the boys blamed his father for their de- cision lo steaJ guns and ammuni· ti on v aJued al more than $5,000. The boy reportedly told an of· fie er that his father refused to buy him a .22-caliber rifle from the nearby K-Mart store. He and hb companion later tried to break in- to the store, were thwarted by a maintenance man and then broke into the Reuben's store. Surf SHde Surfer Stu Kenson slides down the face of a wave near the San Clemente city pier Thursday. Water tem- perature along the coast has been as inviting as the balmy air, standing about four degrees higher than normal at nearly 60 degrees -still a tad nippy without a wet suit though. School Pools Get Heat 'Respomi ble Reasons' to Be Considered SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The California ban on natural gas heating for all except therapeutic swimming pools has been unof- ficially eased for public and educational swimming facilities. President Robert Batinovich of the State Public Utilities Com· mission sent a letter to utilities and mayors of each California ci- ty notifying them or the change. Referring lo the pool heating ban. his Feb. 4 letter states in part: "We appreciate there may be a number of other responsible re- asons for such heating. The city may have a number or municipal and private pools, both indoor arid outdoor. "It is reasonable to arrange pool beating so as to reduce the overall consumption of natural gas, such as closing outdoor pools, reducing the warmth of the pool, or other arrangements, and we look lo your leadership at the locaJ level to make these hard decisions that can satisfy your local absolute needs and still as- sist us in our common goal of saving everr, possible amount or naturaJ gas. · Batinovich pointed out Thurs- day that to put the voluntary gas conservation program Into operation, it had to legally be in· corporated in utility tariffs-rate filings with the PUC. "We are not a Gestapo," he said in acknowledging that en- forcement is difficult. "We are not going to go around cutting off gas. We're certainly not going to do it now. But if we run out, there will beooneedtodoit." "We are asking the coopera- tion of everyone, and 1 've told each mayor to resolve the pro- blem as far as public: and private institutionaJ pools for their city. "We want mayors to take the lead in establishing absolute local needs considering our goals and then put those needs ahead of goals." Balinovich said the only pro- blem in lhe gas conservation pro- gram has involved pool heating, adding he anticipates modifica· lions in lhc next two weeks or so with a view to an ongoing, not just emergency. program. Seven CdM Students Held in Robberies Seven students from Lincoln Middle School in Corona del Mar were arrested Thursday by Newport Beach police on charges ranging from assault and battery to extoruon and armed robbery. Police said the seven boys range in age from 11 to 14 and come from Balboa Island and Harbor View Hills. The arrests culminated an in- vestigation sought by school Prin- cipal Georgiana McLeod, who ca lied officers lo the campus after a group of students told her they were being victimized by the group. The victims told police they were foreed to turn ov~r their lunch money when threatened by the other students. Sgt. Mike Blitch, head of the police department's juvenile sec- tion, said he and other officers in- terviewed seven victims of the al- leged shakedown operation, but he said today there probably are others who are afraid to come forward. He said that, of the seven ar· rested, one student was involved in one incident only -an incident isolated from the others. According lo Blitch the remain- ing six worked together in vary- ing combinations. with two in particular using a knife to extort money from other students. Police brought all seven stu- dents into the pol ice sta lion where they were held until they were re· leased to their parents. Oouds C o ver North S tate By 1be Aasocl•ted Press Fair skies today will turn cloudy Saturday over much or Northern California, with un- seasonably mild afternoon tem· peratures, the National Weather Service said. There is some chance that showers wlll fall during tbe weekend, but so far rain Is ex· pected only in the northwest cor- ner or the slate, forecasters said. Highs will range from the mid 60s to mid 70s during the day with overnight lows in the 40s . RUNNING ALL AROUND. YOUR ONE-STOP DECORATING CENTER SHOULD IE ALDEN'S AT ONE STORE YOU C•M IUY CARPETING, ~NYL. WOOD F.tOORS, jMO CUSTOM DRAPERIES. WE SELl TH! IEST IRAMDS AT COMPETITIVE PRICES. AND PROVIDE THE IEST INSTALLATION IN ORANGE COIMl:Y. ( L · -Ne•port Beach city coun- cibnen will bave· to decide Mon· day wbethtt to keep a private acbool on the site chosen for the city's ienior citizen center. Councilmen will have to make ~~r choice in two steps. First the1 are slated to bold a publle buring and approve de- velopment plans for the center in ' Corona del~11 .... After ~ tMY have to ddclde whether to "'*' . the lease on the school that now occupies the city-owned site ac Marguerite and Fifth A venuet. The issue is further compllcat· ed because the city recently gained control of a church build· ing on another park site - Ensign View Park in Newport Heights -and at lea.st one eoon- cllman baa indicated he ~Id on like the senior c:ltben center eatablishedUllete. . But the c1U1eo lfOUP backing the center voted last week to puab for the Corona del Mar site as., better place for the center. Tb at land is CUIT1!ntly occupi«l by the Cuden School, a private day Schoolman by Mr. and Mrs. John Wllaon. · The Wllsoa.s have leased the site on a yearly basis since 1975. Co. Poll Wet-suited surfers wait for ..!!'_ves at Newport Beach surfing spot. uwi photo was taken at 8:45 this morning.· School was out today because of Lincoln's birth- day, and local surfers were quick to take advantage of the free time and warm weather along the Orange Coast. Lifeguards listed water temperatures in low 60s and air temperatures along the shoreline in the 70s. Parkland Issue Delayed • Newport Petition Conmlemtion Mmt Wait 81 lllCRAEL PASKEVJCll OtUlt n.ay "9t ,. ... Newport Beach planning com- mbaionefs voted Tbunday ni&bt w bold oll cooslderaUon of a peti· tion calllna for increased parkJ..S dedJcatlon until April a..c.ame the iaaue may conflict with a March S open space bond election. Commissioners made few com· ments regarding the petition prior to a unanimous vote to wajt until after the open .apace elec- tion todiscuss tbetnitiaUve. Tbunda,y'a plf.lllliD& c:om· lle~ort Complex. mission decision will be forwarded to the city council. The peti~n circulated by Dr. Gene Atherton calls for de· velopers to dedicate five acres of parkland for every 1,000 new re· sidents their developments generate. Under the proposal, the city could gain as much as 150 acres for parks by 1995. . Expansion Back·ed The upcoming bond issue would provide $7 .l million to purchase 134 a~res of open space ~ on nine sites throut}lout the city and improve six exist.me sites. · Eventually, atty councilmen will have to enact the Atherton measure themselves, or put it to a voteoftbepeople. Tbe once contro•ers1at ex· p~"' ta. v...w......u. BJifta =ment ln Newport 8-e.b clOMJ' to rulit,y Tll9nday ntibt u pl ..... <*1)-m••loners appl'OfMplmfarGO .-condominlmna. CJom.milsJmera had DO C°llake la tlle matter aince the de· velopers• plau were 111 ac- eoaldance with city ·codes. Tbe (lnal vote •8' 4"° with ~ m ... ionen Paul Balal.i.s. WWillin AIM and Paul 8'ammfll ..... ~mmunt~ residents and city ..... ~orousl1 op(>08ed .. demlt1 ~the Versailles project. loeatilll oil HolJll&.d Bo.cl near Hoag Memorial Hoepital. when it WU introduced in 1970. F~ 1be coutndioa of ~ ~ a •• mtlllon law nit 'trU filed by tbe thea developer Donald J. Sch91& Company when rity officials Nfwed apprcwal of ea additional '11191lita. The suit alle ... tbe city w• de- DJiq the firm 1111 use ot tbe lad. Jt WU settled .19'12 with~ •ent from bOlll aides thlit 450 ..Wdbethemulnnun wiltlt.bo lleiltontbe:=:J21acr& <8eeCO ace AZ) The election w6U'ld cost about $3,200 and would be beld in April, 1978 with U.e election of city councilmen. Under the eldatlllg city re- quirement of two acres of parklaDd per 1,000 ~pulalion, Ci- ty Man.acer Bob Wynn says de- velopers would have to commit about as acres to the city. Under the Atherton initiative, the dedicatlori would be about 90 acres. WJnn said • The UO acres cited as tbe max-<See•AB.KJ..AND, Pace Al) Income from the lease, which wtll total $4.0,563 when it terminates m Au1ust. bu been set aside to pay opentlng ex- penses of the senior center. estimated at about $24,000 a year. The Wllsons, wbo were told the lease renewal granted for this school year would be their last, have asked city councilmen to consider extending tbe lease for one more year. TEN CENTS.' Center But members of the city's Community Development Citiun Advisory Committee, the group that recommended the institu· tion of the senior citizen center, have also suggested the city open the center in August when the Carden lease lapses. The land occupies a total or six acres on both sides of Marguerite -a site that has been bou&hl with moqey !tom a federal ffqus. ing and Urban Development er ant. The erant. aiven out over a three-year period. drew beat.eel debate in November alld December when residents of the area and parents of Carden stu- dents tried, unsuccessfully. to talk city councilmen out or apply- ing for a third installmel)t. City Manager Robert Wyun <See SCHOOL, Page AZ) Prefers Mobil Personnel Support Takeover By TOM BARLEY Of tlM o.11, ~ilot SIMI If a vote could be taken today among the Irvine Company's top management personnel the Mobil Oil Company would get the nod over its competitor in the current takeover battle, Orange County Superior Court testimony revealed Thursday. Company board Chairman John V. Newman told Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith's lawyer that management person- nel, including company Presi· dent Raymond Watson, much prefer a Mobil takeover. Newman, who is also a director or the James Irvine Foun-dation, made it clear that be and senior Irvine Company staff members are convinced that Mobil will retain the company's top brass if its 1281.9 million bid is a~cepted. The statement followed testimony that a consortium headed by Detroit developer Alfred Taubman and Wall Street financier Charles Allen would "weed out the dead wood" at the Irvine company if 1t took over oper ations. The Allen-Taubman bid or $282.7 million has the support or Mrs. Smith who brought the takeover issue to court when she took legal action that halted the $200 million sale to Mobil of the foundation's 54.5 percent hold- ings in the Irvine Company. Provisima of the Federal Tax Reform Act. or 1969 compel the foundation board to dispose of its company shares by 1983. Mrs. Smith, who named the foundation as defendants in her lawsuit, holds 22.4 percent or the Irvine Company's issued shares. Newman confirmell for at· torney Howard Friedman Thurs- day that Watson was the man who negotiated the terms or the merger with Mobil. And he identified the late J. S. "Sv" F'Juor 31 the man who f&.rst introduced Mobil to the Irvine Company when the foundation board of which Fluor was a member fint faced the stock dia· posalilsue,,. NeW'IDan. told hiedman that the Fluor Corporation at that time bad an active bWJiness rela-(See MOBIL, Pase AZ) Wholesale 'Prices Up In f llllUtlry.. Dusting Off Abe National Park Service worker Archie Gatling uses a broom to remove dust and cobwebs from the statue of Abraham Lincoln at Washington's Lincoln Memorial." A ceremony is planned Satu.tday for Lincoln's 168th birth· day. Seven CdM Students Held in Robberies He said that. ot the seven U"-rested, ooe student was involftd In one incident only-an incident laolatedfrom the others~ According to Blitch therematn- IDg alx wortted together In vary- ing combiJ\atJons, with two in parUcular using a knife to~ money from otberatudents. Police broulht all seven stu- dents lntotbe Police station where tlrey were held until they were re· leased to their parent.a. A I DAIL v PfLOf N Accused Slayer Hunted A man who la sUll beini bunted by police and his 16-year-old aJ. le&ed companion in an Anaheim market kUlin& were indicted Thunday b)' the Oraqe County Grand Jury. Vlctor Antonio Ledesma. 18, of Westm.Wter, is scheduled tor arralcnment later today in Superior Court. The bunted man named with him In the indict- ment I.I Joseph Emanuel Cabral. 20, of C)ipress. AutboriUes said the two are ac- cused· ol involvement with two other men in the murder last Oct. 7 of Jack Warren Mason, 20, who died from a shotgun blast lo the stomach while four men robbed the Albertaoo's Market where be worked. Police said George Louis Ledesma of Westminster, Victor Ledesma's 19-year~d brother. fired the weapon. He and co. defendant Richard Frank An· dreason, 29, a transient, have been ordered to face trial Feb. 22 in Superior Court on charges of murder and robbery. The younger Ledesma and Cabral face the same charges. The indictment further accuses Cabral of armed robbery stem· ming from a holdup at Ralphs Market, 2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa, last Oct. 5. The younger Ledesma was held as a juvenile and proaecuted in that court ronowina his arrest. The indictment means that he will be tried as an adult. An indictment is a formal charge made against a person by a grand jury. It does not establish euilt or innocence. Fra..PageAJ DEADLINE and was s eeking the balance from the state to fill out what was then a $200,000 price tag. Two bills one introduced in 1973 and one in 1975 authored by then As semblyman Bob Badham CR·Newport Beact\) would h a ve provided the balance. but both bills died in committee. In July, 1976, city councilmen gave up and used the county's .$100,000 to purchase the first phase of West Newport Park which is expected to open by this summer. Meanwhile. one other op- portunity for city acquisition materialized when city coun- cilmen agreed to put a Si.l million open space and park bond issue on the March 8 ballot. But the two Inspiration Polnt Jots were dropped from the ac· quisition list because bond propo- nents felt that tbe tood to be gained from public acquisiUon of the two lots did not match the $400,000 price U,. F,.._PageAJ COMPLEX. • • Thursday ni&ht's approvaJ of phase II will be forwarded to city councilmen for final action. Despite the long legal entangle· m ent.s and past protests from citizens who claimed the develop- ment wu not esthetically pleas· ing. no one spoke ln protest of the additional units durJng . Thursday's pubhc hearlne. Mother Suspect CORONADO (AP) -The mother of a 3·year-old &irl who ~ied Wednesday of '1beatln1 and evidence of sexual molestation" has been booked for tnveauaaUon of murder and chlld abuse, authoriUes said Tbund~. The woman, Marilyn L. McKenna, 23, was arrested a few hours after the al.rt, Danielle, died. DAILY PILOT A ltGl'J lJt TbUTJda1'1 Dill)' Pla.t lncornctl.Y stat· ed ~~Beach '9-' ~ bavenot.ruh ptckup Peb: 21 the day set aside for tho observance of W ••hlnitoo 'a birthday. Aceorc:linl to Jake Myn. derse, director of generaJ services, city refuse coUec· tors will t.ake no hoUd•Y• in February. That yneana trash will be picked up qn schedule on the 21st. The Daily Pilot rearets the error. E,....P~AJ MOBIL ••• tionship with Mobil and provided equipmentfortheoil company. He testified that Fluor and fellow foundation directors Morris Doyle and Edward Carter headed the first attempts to in· terest Mobil in the Irvine Com- pany. Mrs. Smith condemned the $24 a share figure represented by tbe $200 million deal as much too low. The current Mobil offer represents a per share figure of $33.50. Newman told Friedman that foundation director Carter served on the board of American Telephone and Telegraph with a high ranking Mobil official m· volved in tile negotiations. But be rejected Friedman's suggestion that this might con· stitute conflict or interest. Friedman bas made those charges against foundation director Doyle, whose law firm worked for Mobil on other legal matters at the time and founda· tion attorney Howard Privett, whose Los A,ngeles law firm handles litigation for the oil e<>m· pany. Newman said one of the foun· dation's main concerns at this point of the negotfations is to pre- serve the identity of lbe Irvine Company and protect what he describes as "well qualified and talented personnel." Judge James F. Judge ordered a three-day weekend break in the trial late Thursday. It will re· sume at9:45a.m. Monday. * * * ·Just Peanuts No Laughing Matter Now? Irvine Company Board Chairman John V. Newman brought a touch of levity to a tense Orange County Superior Court trial Thursday when he clarified comments he made in a pretrial deposition. He confirmed for a ttorney Howard Friedman th.at he had referred to minor increments of five cents a share during recent frenzied bidding as being "just peanuts." "I now regret that kind re· mark." he told Judge James F. Judge. "I think it was flippant. "However,'' he added with a grin while Judge Judge and a battery of lawyers laughed oul loud, "I didn't realize in those pre-election days what kind of value peanuts would have to- day." SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Tbe Califomla ban on natural au h•atln1 for all except therapeUtic awimmlna poob bu been unof • Oclally eased for l)Ubllc and educaUonal 1wtmmin1 f acWties. Presldent Robert Batlnovichol the State Public Utilities Com· mlasion sent a letter to utilitJea and mayors of each Callfomla cl• ty notif)'inl them of the change. Referrina to tbe pool beatiftl ban, bis Feb. 4 JeUer states itl part: "We appreciate there may be a number of other responsible re- asons for such heatin~. The city may have a number of municipal and private pools, both indoor and outdoor. "It is reasonable to arrange pool heating so as to reduce the overall consumption ol natural eas, such as closing outdoor pools. reduclne the warmth of the pool, or other arrancements, and we look to your leadership at the local level lo make these bard decisions thal can satisfy your local absolute needs and still as· slsl us in our common goal of saving every, possible amount of naturalgas. ' Batinovich pointed out Thurs· day that lo put the voluntary gas conservation program· into operation, it had to legally be in· corporated in utility tariffs-rate filings with the PUC. "We are not a Gestapo," he said in acknowledging that en- forcement is dif(jcult. "We are not going to go around cutting off gas. We're certainly not going to do it now. But if we run out, there will benoneedtodoit." "We are asking the coopera- tion of everyone, and I've told each mayor to resolve the pro- blem as far as public and private institutional pools for their city. "We want mayors lo take the lead in establishing absolute local needs considering our goals and then put those needs ahead of goals." Ballnovich said the only pro· ' blem in the gas conservation pro-· gram has involved pool heating, adding he anticipates modifica- tions in the next two weeks or so with a view to an ongoing, not just emergency, program. In other developments: -A legislative leader pro- posed mandatory water ration- in1 for California to 1uard against the possibility o( w\despread business failures, un- employment and price hikes generated by the two.year-old drought. "I perceive this to be a crisis of extraordinary magnitude,·· As· sembly Speaker Leo McCarthy said Thursday. Fro• Page Al PARKLAND imum the city could receive is based on all of the undeveloped or underdeveloped property in the city and the estimated max· imum population 0'95,000. Wynn said the city cunenUy owns 21 parks which total 95 a cres or 1.5 acres per 1,000 population. This does not include 224 acres of beach within the city. Mafia Leader Slain In Gang Execution SAN DIEGO <AP) -Frank Bompensiero, a reputed Mafia leader, has been shot to death in a 1an1land-style execution on the sidewalk outside bis beach llpart- ment. Bompenalero, '11, was re- garded as a contender for t.be West Coast. aang leadership which bas been in a power strut· gle since Jack IJcala died in 1974, autboritia said. Bompensiero w&1 shot four times with a .22-c a Uber automatic pistol, which police aai4 may bave been used with a silencer slnce neigbbon m the P aclfic Beach area aald tbey beard nosbota Thursday nig'bt. Bompenalero was believed alive when found tn a pool of blood wben police arrived, but wu ptoqounc«l dead oa urival at Mluta) Bay General Hotpltal. No wallet WN found on tbe body but "a quantity of mone1 .._in hle pocketa, •• an tnvesu1ator 1atd. · Bo The crime record of m- peuiero went back to 1928 with a bootleaaina e()(\.Vlctlon. In 19U, be wu cbar•ed With murcJet but tha\ yru ~ \.hea Clft1' .the bloodltJlned CU' Of b.la aoqualft'.: tanc• VJctor Carllno could bi fo'liML " lo~ero, wr.o nplarl)' took ~ walks, WU Mot U be palleit an alley btaJ6a b1I apaniDililt builctlJiC, ~ M)4; ~ omcera MN.-. •• • aon .-octate °',.... .. Joe ._..u" Bonall9''-~ "'*'awYcfttindNW....., ll.aa.a ....... J....,••Jlliill:r the Wea eel•• Fratianno .. described by a Los Angeles police official as the "West Coast executioner for tbe Mafia" atone time, and the late Mickey Cohen. Jn 1954. a Jul')' convicted Bom· penalero of brlbinJ public of· ficials in a stale liquor licenie scandal. He tpent five yea.n in prison. ' Bompenalero and FratJanno were charged bl an Imperial Valley truckinl scandal in 1986. but the charaes •lain.st eom. penslero were dlsrnisaed tor lack of evidence, as in tbe apparent killing of Carlino, wbose ~ was never found. C~bsUrged For Genter " . • -Reserve 1upplles in Southern California were being siphoned to the northern haU of the ataw, which is suffertna the moat. To allevt•t.o the problem In Marin County, Ju.st north or San Francisco, a contract was dre.tt· ed Thunday under wblch waler intended for Sout.Mtn California will be diverted tbrouab a tem· porary 18-lnch pipeline. -~Angeles' Metropolitan Water Diatrict, which serv.s 11 million people -haU the state's population -aald Tbunday it will surrender 01or~ than 130 billion gallons of water for agricultural and residential use in tbe north. The district expects to be paid $20 million in return. -The Public UUUUes Com- mission adopted an emergency con1erv•tion program for im· mediate use by the 400 water utilities under its Jurisdiction which serve more than a million customers. -In Oakland, water officials were harried by 8,000 complaints from customers objecting hotly to rationing that called for the same amount to be parceled to a family of s1¥ as • household of one. Marines Hurt By Explosion At Pendleton Seven Marines were injured - two seriously -when an unex- ploded shell detonated in their midst as they cleared a practice filing ranie not far from where Rep . Robert Badham, <R· Newport Beach) was vlsltlnt on a VIP tour of Camp Pendleton Thursday. One of the military helicopters in the congressman's party was diverted to participate in medical/rescue operations in the incident, Badham aide Nancy Bettcher, said today. The congressman did not see or bear anything connected with the explosion, but was aware of the incide nt due to radio transmissions, tbe aide said. M~tseriously injured was Sgt. Gary Conen, 25, of Ocean.side. Sgt. Conen underwent surgery al Naval Regional Medical Center for multiple serious fragmenta- tion wounds received in the lnci· dent. He was reported today in s atisfactory condition by a base spokesman. Sgt. James L. Connors, 23, of Derby, Ky., was r eported in satisfactory condition after sus- taining mlnor·fragmentation wounds. The five other marines were released after emergency aid. The incident occurred ln the Las Pulgas area of thn96-square mile marine base. The range is about five miles inland from the San Diego Freeway. The Marines were all part of a special ordnance disposal unit and were clearing dud ammuni· lion from the target area when the incident occurred. The shell was thought lo be a 40 mm round. One of the Badham aides, How anl Seelye, did 10 over to see tbe injured, but aside from that, tbe Badbam party bad no con· tact. ............ 'F1NE, THANK YOU' . fTeed Host•g• Hall !Vo Signs Of Ordeal By Hostage I E',....P ... AI SCHOOL ••• uld tocSJY he docs not know bow mucb 1DODlf · M atl-t:tnc. u coUld bt • mlnlmum ot $180,000 or a m•dm\lm of $S22,000. The funds wlll be used to com. plete PUrdiue ot the property from CaJTrana and to bectn de. velopment of the center. Those development plans call for some minor alLeratlou to tbe exlatlnl bulld.lnc, cooa~cUon of a parklns lot encl eafeteria· auditorium on the east side otthe school and construction of a park on the small piece of properf.1 on the west slde of Marguerite. Wynn said the $180,000 will cov- er the remainder of the purchaee and the mlllOI' alteraUona aeeckcl to tum the exisUn.c •cbooJ bW.ld· ines into somethlq usable lot senior citlzens. If that'J all the city gets. he said the balance ot tbe work will be bud&et~ m phase1 out of dt.y park and recreation funds, just as other city recreational facilities are buJlt. 17 Apprioved For School INDIANAPOLIS CAP) -p -1.1 p t Laughing, talking and eating 80.:; OS S with his wife in a hospital room, • where there was little outward All 17 applicants seeking p0Q.. slen of the 63-hour ordeal that Uona on two Newport-Mesa had just ended for Richard 0 . school district advisory commit.- Hall. (Related story, photos, A4). tees were approved by trusiee, "Yes, I am fine, thank you," Tuesday night . Hall said Thursday night, mo-The community volunteers wi,JI ment.s after Anthony G. "Tony" simultaneously serve u an adt Klrttsis, 44, removed a sawed-off vlsory body to tbe board of shotgun that he had wired to his education on financial matter$ neck and freed him. and future dbposal of surplus Dr. Charles Williams, a schoolsites. Wishard Hospital surgeon, said The members include: Hall, 42, was in "excellent cond.1-From Balboa: Mrs. Dorothy tion and in good spirits" despite Beek. the trauma of being held captive From Corona del Mar: Mrs. since Tuesday. Robert C. Baird. He was treated for two-inch From Coata Mesa: William neck and wrist lacerations, Bandaruk, James Jocelyn, Alvin Williams said, caused by L. Pinkley, Ruth M. Purcell, handcuffs and the wire used to Nathan O'Brien, Janet M. hold the muzzle of the shotgun to Pelichowsld, Howard P. Shelton his neck. and Christopher M. Steel. His wife, Ibby. an unidentified From Newport Beach: Evelyn chaplain, and Mr. and Mrs. R. Hart, Aileen R . Schrader, Lowell Pinney, business as, Mrs. Virginia F. Dunn, John sociates, were whisked into the Bernard Dunzer, Mrs. D. V. hospital, 10 minutes after Hall Skilling and Joan S. Windburn. arrived at the hospital, wheeled Front Santa Ana Heights: Ann through a police-lined corridor F. Beaupre. into the emergency room. Less than an hour after eqter. ing the hospital. Hall watt al· lowed to return home to his four children. "Thank God he's s afe," said Indianapolis Mayor William H. Hudnut moments after visiting Hall briefly in the emergency room. "He's come through a grave ordeal. under great pre· ssure and he's in good spirits." Authorities s aid Hall spent his entire time as a hostage tn handcuffs in his abductor 's west side apartment. Just three hours earlier Hall h ad appeared on live television, the shotgun wired lo his neck to prevent bis escape if the gun was fired, and K.iritsis' finger wired to the trigger. Kiritsis repeated his state- ments that he abducted Hall because he was convinced that Hall's Meridian Mortgage Co. tried to cheat him on a $130,000 land development loan. As Kiritsis reeled off the charges for the t e levision cameras, Hall looked steadily ahead. He never ~poke. His hands shook, and he grimaced each time Kiritsis moved the gun, tightening the wire around his neck. It was tbe nrst time Hall bad been seen since the abduction . Cooking Oil Sparks CdM Duplex Fire A late evening cooking project ended in disaster for a Corona del Mar resident whose kitchen sus- ta in ed an estimated $5,000 damageinafire. Firemen said they were called to the second floor duplex oc- cupied by Susan Barnes at S09lf.i Acacia Ave. at about 11 p. m. The woman told them she bad left some cooking oil unattended and itignited. Firemen sald they quickly doused the names, but not before substantial smoke damage had been done in the kitchen and din- ing area. Amputee Wounded • LOS ANGELES (AP) -An amputee was shot and wounded when a sheriff's deputy mistook the metal hook on the ead of his artificial arm for a gun .. autboritles say. Saddletiaeh Tnreker (]ntr~ked EI Toro cement truck driver Charles Hamilton. 36, got aid from fire department para medics Thursday a fter his fully loaded vehi cle went out of control on southbound Paseo de Valencia near Alicia Parkway in Laguna Hills and flipped over across the n orthbo und l a nes . The California Highw ay Patrol officers at the scene think the heavy truck hit a patch of water. Hamilton was treated and released at Saddleback Community Hospital for multiple contus ions and bruises. Fortunately for firemen cleaning up the wreck, most of the cement stayed in the truck. :~oro Group '• Teen Boys Firing. '.Views SACC City Study A proposed study of the .,asibility of incorporation and other government alternatives lor the Saddleback Valley re- eeived little support from the El '1'oro Homeowners Association Thursday. Kris Kister, president of the as· aociaUon, said they will ask tbe Saddlebact Area Coordinating Council <SACC>. which is propos- bla the study, to bold off until after the county service area six budget is analyzed in April. Bill Monoson. the association's re9resentatlve to SACC, ex- plained that the study was pro- f>osed to determine what in- CeirporaUon Involves: if there is enou&b ol a tax base to support a dty; what boundartes a future cl-t7 may have and what other altemall.a are available for the luiure. ffe saJd the estimated study C'Oel ol '50,000 would be shared by valleyeervtce area funds. Don Campbell, chairman olthe Governance Study Committee or Leisure World which has recom- ....,... the study, saJd residents need to consider future. ,-.uibillties becauae tbey are aow 1ovemed by flve county apervlsors, onl1 one of whom cSt;ecUy repreMflts the valley, at ~eetlnga in Santa Ana. :.. ·"We are out at the end ol' the OH of the dot and the dog wags '*tall and we're just hdn,m, on tarousb our own ablllty with SACC to impreu en the c:ounly (8ee8TUDY, p AJ) Stolen Guns HeliI A former Royal Air Force flyer who drove past the Lake Mission Viejo area Thursday told Orange County sherl(f's officers that what he beard reminded him or the flack he flew through over Du~eldorf. And a nearby woman resident who heard the r.acket as she washed dishes in her kitchen sink told deputies sbi! thought the Mafia were carrying out execu- tions in the area behind her home. ~lamted deputies who rushed to the scene said they found : -Twenty handguns, rifles, and shotguns that were later iden- tified as weapons stolen from Reuben's Sporting Goods Store, at 28182 Marguerite P arkway, Missim Viejo. -More than 3,000 rounds of am- munition for all the weapons. It had also ~ taken from the burc~atore. -A van containing two mU. Juvenlles, 15and 1.S, wboweresur- rounded by spent shells but who were busy loading their weapons for a further round of target prac. lice on nearby trees and the aclja- cent lalce. l.ongBeach Oil Spill C~Up Deputies booked both boys into juvenile ball on charges of burglary and attempted burglary. They said the boys told them they had discussed shooting it O\lt with officers but decided to surrender as patrol cars sur- rounded them. Deputies said one of the boys blamed his father for their de- cision to steal guns and ammuni· lion valued at more than $5,000. The boy reportedly told an of- ficer that his father refused to buy him a .22-callber rifle from the nearby K-Mart store. He and his companion later tried to break in- to the store, were thwarted by a maintenance man and then broke Into tbe Reuben's store Police Free ·Kidnap Victim MADRID (AP) -Police freed kldn•pecl Lt. Gen. Emilio Villaescusa unharmed today, the 1ovemment announced, but a aecondt.1"1 cftk!l~ kidnaped two months aao was whisked away • by hlt abductor• at the last minute. a Spanish news agency said. Several arrest.a were made, the government lDformatlon Ministry Nici. But the govern. ment aDDOU1tCement made no menUeiit 'of Antonio Maria de Od~ an advis« to King Juan Carlalllddnaped Die 11. SAN DIEGO CAP ) -Frank Bompensiero, a reputed Malla leader, has been shot to death In a gangland-style execution on the sidewalk outside his beach apart· ment. Bompensiero, 71, was re· garded as a contender for the West Coast gang leadership which bas been in a power strug- gle since Jack Licata died in 1974, authorities said. Bompensiero was shot four times with a .22-caliber automatic pistol, which police said may have been used with a silencer since neighbors in the Pacific Beach area said they heard no shots Thursday night. Bompensiero was believed alive when found in a pool or blood when police arrived, but was pronounced dead on arrival at Mission Bay General Hospital. No wallet was found on the body but "a quantity of money was in bis p~kels," an investigator said. The crime record of Bom- pensiero went back to 1928 with a bootlegging conviction. lo 1941, be was charged witb murder but that was dropped when only the bloodstained car or his acquain· lance Victor Carlino could be found. Bompensiero, who regularly took evening walks, was shot as he passed an alley beside his apartment buildin&. police said. Intelligence om~ers said be was a known assocfa.te of Joseph "Joe B~aM$" Be>1wrnno de· poaed fq°ew 1'ork and New Jb-;ey Mafia dlieftain; James "Jimmy the Weasel '' Fratianno1 described by a Loa Anaeles police ofliciaJ as the "West Coast executioner for the Mafia" at one time, and the late Mickey Cohen. In 1954, a jury convicted Bom- pensiero of bribing public of- ficials in a state liquor license scandal. He spent five years in prison. Bompensiero and Fratianno were charged in an Imperial Valley trucking scandal in 1966, but the charges agajnst 8om- pensiero were dismissed for lack of evidence. as In the apparent killing of Carlino, whose body was neverfound. Bompensiero once W'as a <See EXECUTE, Page A%) TEN CENTS1 National Park Service worker Archie Gatling uses a broom to remove dust and cob~bs from the statue of Abraham Lincoln at Washington'S Lincoln Memorial. A ceremony is p.1anned Saturday for Lincoln's 168th, birth- day. Irvine Co. Officials Pref er Mobil Bid By TOM BARLEY Ot .... Oeltyf'llotStaff If a vote could be taken today among the Irvine Company's top manage ment personnel the Mobil Oil Company would get the nod over its competitor in the current takeover battle, Orange County Superior Court testimony revealed ThW'S(iay. Company board Chairman John V. Newman told Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith's lawyer that management person- nel, including company Presi· dent Raymo.nd Watson, much prefer a Mobil takeover. Newman, who is also a director of the James Irvine Foun· datlon, made it clear that he and senior Irvine Company staff members are convinced that M,obil will retain the company's top brass if its $281.9 million bid la ac~epted. The statement followed testlmon~ that a consortium fteaded bt Detroit developer Altred Taubman and Wall Street TVFoulup Blamed for House Fire financier Charles Allen would "weed out the dead wood" at the Irvine company if it took over operations. Th.e Allen-Taubman ·bid of $282.1 mlllion bas the support of Mrs. Smith who brought the takeover issue to court when she <See MOBIL, Page A%) Marines Hurt By Explosion At Pendleton Seven Marines were injured - two seriously -when an unex- ploded shell detonated in their midst u they cleared a practice firing range not far from where Rep. Robert Badbam, <R· Newport Beach> was visiUn«i on a VIP tour of C~mp Pendleton Thursday. One of the miUtary bellcopteri in the con.,renman 's party was dtverted to participate ln medical/rescue operations in the lMldent, Badbam aide Nancy Bettcher, .aid today. Tbe eonarenman did not see or bear. Mythinl connected 'WjfJl the explosion, but was aware ol tbe incident due to radio transmlsaJonl. the aide said. Mostserioualy injured wuSgt. Gary eonen. 25, of Oceanside. Sst. Conen underwent aurgery at Naval Regloa.al a..dlcal Center for mulUple setiOUJ fragment&· tion wounds received in theitlcl· dent. He was repe>rted today in CSee llARINEB, Pace AZ> OAILVPILOT 58 ( Pilot Logbook J 'Susan B. Who?' District Comment By ANNE COOPER Of tlM Deity ~ .... f JACK BERG, principaJ of Moulton Elementary School m Laguna Niguel. first ran into Cyril Gallick when both men were assigned to Ole Hanson Elementary in San Clemente. Ga.llick was teaching musk at the time. "If somebody doesn 'l do something," fellow teachers told Bera. "Cyril is going to have half the school day for music.'' Gallick resh~ned recently as C.pistrano Unified School District music chairman, a posltlon he had held since 1968. Supt. Jerome Thornsley has credited Gallick with de- veloping one of the outstanding music education programs in the stale. Trustee Bob Hurst said Ga.llick has his own way of building the excellence of the district music program. "I remember when I was first on the board eight years ago, Mr. Gallick ap- peared before us to plead for the oaLL•ctt purchase of more instruments," Hurst said. "By the time he was finished. there wasn't a dry eye in the house.·· *** SCHOOLS THROUGHOUT the Saddleback Valley are celebrating Susan 8. Ahthony Day Tuesday as required by the state education code. ' Jer~me. Thor~sley, .superintendent of the Capistrano school distract, said a brief biographical sketch of Miss An· lhony, who led the fight for women's right to vote bas been distributed to all school principals. ' Saddleback Unified administrator Gary Shinkle said school dist.ricts have received letters from the Orange Coun- ty Educat1onal Task Force of the National Organization of Women CNOW). The NOW form letters were to remind ad- ministrators of the schools' responsibility to commemorate Miss Anthony's b1rlhday, he sald. A call to _one of the district offices may be an indication or the educational benefit of the commemoration. Ask~ f?r information on Susan B. Anthony Day, the school distncl employe said, "On who? On Susan who? l don 'l think we do that here." *** CAPl~TRANO UNI FIED trustees were treated to a bit of unant1c1paled cheerleading at Monday's board meeting San Clem1mte Hl~h School songleader JlU Jacobs had fellow s tudl'nts on t~e.ir r.eet, testifying to student support for keep ing this years Junior class together at San Clemente. Trustees voted to allow juniors lo apply for intradistrict transft>rs. beginning April 1. This gives Mission Viejo and San Juan students who have attended San Clemente or Dana Hills High Schools for three years the option of slaying where they are or attending a school closer to home the ~ew Capistrano Valley High School, opening in September in Mission V1eJO. Mass Jacobs had spoken up al a pre· v1ous school board roeeting, arguing logically and persuasively to keep her class together through graduation. She may have reminded trustees of <.1notht>r Jacobs her dad. Bradley J ac·obs. Oran~e County ·s outspoken tax Jacoes ai.St'Mi<>r. 14ho htts cnllc1zed high tax rates of governing bodies. mrludmg school d1stncts. F ro• Page A J MOBILE OFFER .•. look legal action that halted the $200 million sale to Mobil of the foundation's 54 .5 percent hold· ings in the lrvmeCompany. Provisions or the Federal Tax Reform Act or 1969 compel the foundation board lo d1~posc of its company shares by 1983. Morris Doyle and Edward Carter headed the first attempts to In· terest Mobil in the Irvine Com- pany. Mrs. Smith. who na med the foundation a~ defendant!'! in her lawsuit. holds 22.4 percent of the Irvine Company's Issued shares. Newman confirmed for at. t orncy Howard fo'nedman Thurs- day that Wat!\on was the man who negotrntt'd the terms or the merger Wlth Mobil And he identified the late J . S. "Sv" Fiuor as the man who first introduced Mobil to the Irvine Company when the foundation board of which Fluor was a member first faced the stock dis· posal issue. Newman told Friedm an that the Fluor Corporation al that time bad an active business rela- tionship with Mobil and provided equlpmenlfor theoil company. He testlfled that Fluor and fellow foundation directors DAILY PILOT ,,..°'=:-~ O.lly ......... _ .. (_ ==.., ...... ~:.:.=::: ,....,_ -............... "''*" ... c.. .. -· ""-' .... , M_....., ..... ,_ ···" v ...... ., •• ~. ~ ..... v ..... ..... . ~=~,:.~.:.:=-~;:; ~..r'c.':"~~.:,._uo .._ ... ··-·-PY .. IOtflt---,.,. c-tty YI<•"'~----­'-·"-..... ,_, .. ___ -~··­a.-.. .._ -~·-· AUl!l•M ... Uf ......... Mrs. Smith condemned the $24 a share figure represented by the S200 million deal as much too low. The current Mobil offer represeol.3 a per share fieure or $33.50. Newman told Friedman that foundation director Carter served on the board or American Telephone and Telegraph with a high ranking Mobil official In- volved in the negotiations. But he rejected Friedman's suuestion that this might con- stitute conflict or Interest. F r iedman has made those charges agains t foundation direct.or Doyle, whose Jaw firm worked for Mobil on other legaJ matters al the time and found&· tion a ttorney Howard Privett, whose Los Angeles law firm handles litigation for the oil com- pany . Newman said one or the foun- dation's main concerns al this point of the neeotiationa is to pre- serve the Identity ol the Irvine Company and protect what he describes as "well qualified and talented personnel." Judge James F. Judge ordered a three-day weekend break ln the trial late Thunday. It wtll re- sume at 9:45 a.m. Monday. f',....PageAJ EXECUTE. • floonnan at San Dteeo'1 Rain· bow Gardens owned by Tony Mlrable, reputedly the local Man• leader belon be was abot w death in~. The reports of senr aJ or- 11nlud ertme tnvestJ1ations, ln· c:ludl._g tboae done by tbe Callfomia Crtme Com mlaafon ol 1158 and the Kef auer Committee lo the Senate, mentioned Bom· pelllle.to .. bavina bee btoel•t· ed ln brustMll with otbw "'1U- tnOwnorclnlied ctim• fl~. Bomjenllero'a lut ap.,.~Nlce befOl'e m !ftY~ltlYe l~C')' •H Novemba, wbn be wn tUcn before a federal sranttJYa7 hi Loi AnceJ• wblcb WU~ lnto tbe ~Pti>' tMitfCPW la Calllarnla. He refuaed totat.lfi. 0.lly ~ ... , ~--· ~· 'SURVIVfNO' TRUSTEE Sllddleback's Backus Pat Backus Saddle back 'Survivor' fEditor'1 Note-This anicle is one of a series profiling candidates for three open B~B on the Soddlebcck College Board of Triutees. The March 8 election is at large and the top vote getter in each trustet area wiUwin J By WILLIAM SCHREIBER OI the D•llY Piiot Sl•ll Patrick Backus is in the unique pos ition of having first-hand knowledge of all the accomplJsh- ments and mistakes ever made by SaddJeback College leaders. The 44-year-old elementary school principal is a "survivor" the only remaining member of the college's original Board of Trustees. elected when the dis- trict was created a decade ago. He's running for yet another term in the March 8 election sgainst a seasoned and knowledgeable foe . 70-year-old Eugene McKnight. who lives JUSt a few hloch away in Dana Point Backus. of 33382 Bremerton St.. conceded he very nearly chose to end his tenure as a trustee after the current term. He admits his indecision last fall might be tM reason McKnight decided to seek the post. "For a while there, I was get· ting terribly discouraged with the way things were going," Backus said. "We (the trustees) always seemed to be at each others' throats and weren't get- ting anything accomplished. "But then. for some reason. things started picking up," he said. "We started to have some togetherness on the board." One of the things Backus thinks drew the board together was the decision to buy 20 acres of Irvine Company land at Bryan Avenue and Myford Road as the site of a satellite northern campus -a concept the south county trustee strongly supports. But then. suddenly last month, that decision was thrown into turmoil when the landowner de· cided it would rather have the campus at another location 3.5 miles south. "I was really disappointed by this because I wanted to see us get started," Backus said, noting he will never support anything other than the board's original slte oboice. "l 'm tired of hassling over it.•• Backus said he might even favor several more small satellites in the years ahead, possibly financed by sale of some of the existing campus property, which cove.rs 200 acres. H~ald the school will never use more tban half Its land, purchased 10 years ago for the bargain price of $2.5 million. T he incumbent trustee, who Is married and has three children attending high school and junior high, said the college has had some tough sledding and "bad luck" throueh the years. But he aald IL ls nnally moving out of its dormancy due to a strong ad- m lniatration "I am renewed and I think there ii a renewal or the college's desire to go," Backus said. "I thlnk with my experience, I can p rovide additional expertise as a trustee." In the coming yea.rs, Backu:o1 aaid the board wtll have to ad· dress Itself to the rising cost of continued expansion, collective bareaining and the ongoing dis· pule over the high ratio of part time to ruU time faculty mem-bers. 1n the financial a rena, be said careful study will have to be given to otherlOW'Cel of money than the. current "pay as-you-go" method. "But I promlae that if 1 am elected, I wtll never vote for a re, venue electJon or a bond," he aald. "'!bat is wut.tng taxp-.yen m oney and is an insult to lbe In· telU len<:e of the voters." LOS ANGELES <AP) -An 1mputee ... 1b0t aiid ~ wbn a •heiilf'1 d*PUQ' m•atoi* lb• md hOOtoo ~-end ~bla art ificial arm fo r a 1ua. acat.bodUta aay. E.tior.ttoa Raps Police Arr.est • 7 CdM Youths Seven students from Lincoln Middle School in Corona del Mar were arreated Thursday by Newport Beach police on charges rangina from aa.aault and battery to extortion and armed robbery. Police said the seven boys range ln age from 11 to 14 and come from Balboa Island and Harbor View Hills. The arrests culminated an in· veatigaUon aouaht by school Prin- cipal Georatana McLeod, who calledolficeratothecampusafter a group of studenu told her they were being victimized by the group. The victims told police they were forced to turn over their lunch money when threatened by the other students. Sgt. Mike Blltch. head of the police department's juvenile sec- tion, said he and other otflcert ln· tervlewed seven vicUma of the al· •~led shakedown operation, but he said today there probably are others who are afraid to come forward. He said that, or the seven ar· rested. one student was lnvolyed In one incident only -an incident isolated from the others. According lo Blitch the remain- ing six worked together in vary- ing combinations. with two in particular using a knife to extort money from other student.a. Police brought all seven stu· dents into the police station where they were held until they were re- leased to their parents. life Term Given In Torture Slaying One of four men and two women who subjected a Garden Grove man lo hours of torture before injecting battery acid in- to his veins was sentenced Thursday to life in state prison. Orange County Superior Court Judge Walter Smith ordered the maximum term for Richard Hamilton "Preacher" McKay, 22. Placentia, who had earUer been found guilty of first degree murder after a jury trial. McKay was identified during his trial as the pnncipal figure involved in the killing last April F rm11 Page A l STUDY ... the concerns we havl.," he said. Leisure World n:s1dcnts pro- bably would oppose an in· corporation m<'asurc, he said. But his group decided "the general good of the community needs to have a study of our own destiny." He said this should be done before the valley becomes fragmented with smaller areas sncorporating. Monoson said SACC offi cers also are concerned that changes being proposed In the county's supervisorial districts might also fragment the valley. Although residents al the meet ing seemed sympathetic to the::.e needs, they also expressed con· cern about the cost Allan Miller recalled that less than a year ago, voters rejected an El Toro Mun1c1pal Advisory Council <MAC > bct•ause of the in- creased laxes 1l required. Although he said he felt the need for a city government. he doubted the voters would agree with it. Jim Madewell, president or the Lake Forest I Homeowners As- sociation, questioned whether funding of the study would cut other projects from the service area budget. He argued that the study should be done by the county. Supervisor Thoma:. Riley, however, has said the study can't be financed by the county's general fund . Ancf Ed McKean. also object- ing to ~e taxpayers' costs. sug. gested it be done wlth voluntary constribullons from businesses. 26 of Ervin Sutton, 22, or Garden Grove. Sutton, accused by the defen- dants or giving police informa- tion that led to the arrests of the two women. was beaten, kicked, slashed and jumped on after being bound and gagged and thrown into a bath tub filled with water. He died after one of the women injected battery acid in· to his veins. One of the two women has been identified by the prosecu- tion as Cynthia Mendenhall, 24, of 143-C Avenida Del Mar, San Clemente. She races a pre- liminary hearing Thursday in Santa Ana Municipal Court on related murder charges. Co-defendant Gary Essex. 24. Compton. faces sentencing Wed· ncsday in Judge Smith 's courtroom after being found guilty of second degree murder. Co -defe ndant J ero me Dedrick Toles, 19. Compton. faces sentencing next Friday after pleading guilty lo charges of conspiracy and being an ac· cessory to murder. Co-defendant Billy Wayne Hollins. 22, Santa Ana, races sentencing at a later date after pleading guilty to charges or be· ing an accessory to murder. Front Page A l MARINES ..• sat1sfaciory condition by a base spokesman. Sgt. James L. Connors. 23, of Derby, Ky., was reported in satisfactory condition after sus· taining minor-fragmentation wounds. The five other marines "'.ere released after emergency aid. The incident occurred in the Las PuJgas area of the 196·square mile marine base. The range is about five miles inland from the San Diego Freeway. Th~ Marines were all part of a s pecial ordnance disposal unit a.nd were clearing dud ammuni· lion from the target area when the incident occurred. The shell was thought to be a 40 mm round. One of the Badham aides. Howard Seelye, did go over to see the injured, but aside from that, the Badham party had no con- tact. A~WI ....... 'ANE, THANK YOU' FrMd Hoatege Hall No Signs Of Ordeal By Hostage INDIANAPOLIS (AP ) - Laughing, talking and eaUn1 with his wife in a hospital room where there was litUe outward sign of the 63-hour ordeal that had just ended for Richard O. Hall. (Related story. photos, AO. "Yes. I am fine, thank you," Hall said Thursday night, mo- m ents after Anthony G. "Tony" Kir1ts1s, 44, removed a sawed-o(f shotgun that he had wired to his neck and freed him. Or. Charles Williams, a Wishard Hospital surgeon, sald Hall, 42. was ;n "excellent condi- tion and m good spirits" despite the trauma or being held captive since Tuesday. He was treated for two-inch neck and wrist lacer ations, Williams said, caused by handcuffs and the wire used to hold the muzzle of the shotgun to his neck llis w1h\ Ibby, an unidentified ('h<tpla111, and Mr. and Mrs Lowc·ll Pinn~y. business as· soc1ates. we-re whisked into the hospital. JO minutes after Hall arrived at the-hospital, wheeled through a police-lined corridor into the emergency room. Less than an hour after enter- ing the hospital. Hall was al· lowed to return home lo his four children. "Thank God he's safe," said Indianapolis Mayor William H. Hudnut moments after visiting llall briefly m the emergency room. "He's come through a grave ordeal, under great pre· ssure and he's in good spirits." Authorities said Hall spent his entire time as a hostage in handcuffs in his abductor's west side ~artmenl. Just three hours earlier Hall had appeared on live television, the shotgun wired to his neck to prevent his escape if the gun was fired. and Kiritsis' fi nger wired to the trigger. Kiritsis repeated his state- ments that he abducted Hall because he was convinced that Hall's Meridian Mortgage Co. tried to cheat him on a $130,000 land development loan. As Kiritsis reeled off t he charges for the television cameras. Hall looked steadily ahead. He never spoke. His hands shook. and he grimaced each time Kiritsis moved the gun. lightening the wire around his neck. -· It was the first time Hall had been seen since the abduction. RUNNING ALL AROUND. YOUR ONE-STOP DECORATING CENTER SHOULD BE ALDEN'S AT ONE STORE YOU CAN IUY CARPETING, VINYL, WOOD FLOORS, AND CUSTOM DRAPERIES. WE SELL lHE IEST . BRANDS AT COMPETmV.E P.RICES, AND PROVIDE THE IEST INSTALLATION IN ORANGE COUNTY. . . r Friday'• ' Afternoon Prieee NYSE COMPOSfl'E ,.. .... , • ,., a. ("9 .. ' "J 21~"" 1,.;J ~. ~:"' ~ ... ~ .. E-7 .. ~t-i ':! , !Of a: ~ ~~11 ! k ... : :::trno;" '° ~ .. 1::.~· ,~ ft ~ ~ lt'i~ z 1il J~-=·~ l=l'lpt1 ·~ 1 H'4 • -.. -PJ. • " ,,~ "' Y-pll, , • JO lS + "' bC.I() 1.21 • 17 ,,.,.._" Eir<lu 1.7.... 12 21"'• ._ f:Kl!OfO 2 ~!_!,I~ SI'-1' "MC 1 tt I ts.,.._ lli "MCDf Ui.. 10 1714-lill l'Arow 4!i' J1 I .... FeerfQr .11 6 $ 1'9-lill (ireatht " ' ...... .... ,~ ... , 17 ,._ \lo "•l•IM .OIO S2 I0\4+ "' "•lnntF M 1 IS II~ .... F ~-:.7,i:: I • I IJ\17-""° " 7 15 WI• .. ,._,,,_AO, 1: ~'.~ 1.•7 D ~"' ·••tn1' ..... = .tO 4 13 17\'t• ... I I l 11'11+ \lo 1•11 .. •2-llo F..,.o 1.2$ I 10 D""° ..... ~ •• 14 ·~····· FICIFI" .JOe 6 6 ~ .... . F"9itlU11t.AO 7 I 35141 .. . Fleld<rst I• 6 4 I~ lill l"U-5 7 II -1111 Fl11Sall9 .• S 11 llV. •••• Fl11IFed .so s 41 ,._ • • Fl,..&111 I 1014 SJ 12tlt-'' F•IOMlr .IOI 6 W 14\IJ .... FstOllC .'6 I 1"6 21'4-V. F18"Te• 1 9 17 ,, .. _ ._.. F•tl 118111.20 IO n 391.'> • -... F-tlMIU .3' 12 2SS 1SV>-~ F1tN9o 1a I 1l7 21'--"t FtNSl8n 2 I 3 251 ... -I'll F$tPa 1.3210 .:S I~ .... . FtPaMtQ . . IS l'llo .. .. .... tU11Rf I 14 J 1214 • "' FstVa&ll .45 11 11 1 • '4 l'WkCo 1.16 7 J 21'4• "' Flsc!IM 1.20 9 2 ~ -'Al f'IUll'dl .60 ' JO 12'4 .. "' Fl-SCI .lll 7 43 UV. • ''" FIMtEllt.401J 74 Ulllo-14 Fl«nlf19 .80 I 10 16'--"' Fle•IV .... 20tt a 13 -"' Flllltlto« 1.1410 40 21'--'-Fllftt pf 4..SO., dO 'S -I Ftlnt pf US.. I JO •••• Fl•ECst IS 5 2' + 'II FlaG.s I t 65 ttlll-°"' FlaPwLH611 lSS Ullt-~. Fl•Pow 2.211 t 2166 ~"'II Fluo.Cp .,_ 11• 35 .... Fill« pf l .. 2 '4 -J FdFalr .2013 l 6.\\ ...•• Foot.CB I 7 7 10~ .•... FordM l.20 5 1'9S 5''N-'4 F~McK I 1 4S 1 ........ . FMIC pf lM.. 1 77141-I'll FtOHr 11•.. 12 ISV.-.... Ft.._P .nn 11 ~I'll FotWll 1.lO t l6 3'111-~ Foll!lorO I t JI U"'-.. ......... _ .10 • \Ill :t:JY>-.. F reepM 1.AO t 13' 2'\lo ••••• Frlqfrn .to.1' HS 19""-.. Fn.flf 1 M I t 19 21\'t • .. FUQIM .l6 I 13$7 12111• '- -0-0 -GAFCp 6010 tO 11Yo ••. GAFpf 120 . 1' I~+ '4 GATX 1 IO ll SJ l?Yt • •• GATXpf?SO . l •l'h .... GCA Cp ~20 21 8''>-.... GF8usn .:nn 10 s ... Gelllelnd . 1 S-• I'll G•mSt. I.Cl S II 24 • .. GMinelt t t7 42 lS.-.. • 141 GeP5tr-s .I~ I :t:J 101\-llo Gerdl)el\.1617 .. 11 ....... Ge'11'* I G4 7 4 Uillo • '.\ GMSvc 1.20 t 6 I~+ l'o Gel•-' 1S 7~ ..• Geamrt .21111 26 2s -"" GemlnCaP • . 10 I._ .... GA111v 1.n.t . 5 1ov •. GnAmO lbll 87 llOV.-111. GenB•nc.tlOU 7'1 11'.Ao~ .. GnC•lll• .n 10 o 12 -"" GClnme 68 8 1• 2•v. + .. Ge110evl 6 s 5~. ~~r 190,; ~~~ ~=··--GnFood 1.64 t 203 31'1\ .••. GnGlll l.lote20 6 n v,-.... GenHCKI .60 • S6 nv. • 111 Gentnsl .221 IS 41 llf.\lo-v. GenMed .lO 10 46 ""-• V. GenMlll$ .7613 lll Jiii'• + ,,._ GnMot s.eo. 7 xl142 ~ i,\o GMot pf J 7S • I S214-llto GeftPort -:!O 7lllo ••••• GPU UI t 54 tl1'o •••• G@nAl!fr .10e 7 1' I -,,_ GnSIQllll U lol 13 10 SI-'°' C...Sl•I 6 1' 61'1 ••••• GTelEI 2 t SJO 2'.._+ \'o GT I Et ptUI.. 11 ~-•. GTlre I Jllb 6 7.0 21 -'It GenHco 7 10t ~-,,. Ge11,tar I.Cl S 2 ttll) • .... c..nuPI• 1614 61 JJI. .... GeP« .DIS 611 l3 .. GePwpf'lll.. 6 ~ ..... GePw pft.75. 3 2''~ Get'-' 1 JO• 1 2s .. -'• <;.tty() 2 .ID IS 61 109''>-• > c;.no pf1.20 1 " • ..., Gl .... PCMI I -·'• Glllr Fl11 5 20 ''-'"' GkNL-A II 16 t ll> . GiffdHlll .to 7 • IS • Gllle'tle 1.5010 117 2'111 • "' GI-Inc I II ~ .•• GINsW .Jtt.. 6 1111o ... .. G~ .. I I"-... . GI-Un I 7 " ~-141 GldWFn.1211 5 3 I~+ V. GolclWpf .11.. " .. • \lo Geodr1' 1. 12 . • :J14 21'4 .•..• Qooodyr 1.!016 329 22'.Ao ••••• GorJwtA.41> 6 7 11,__"' Gould 1.12 • 170 JO • "' Gotlld pf l.l5 . • 25 311-"' Gr-1.70 I '3 ~ .... ~=~1: ~ r~~ GQotlM -~ S W 14~ 'It ~:r.~ .. J ~ l~:+ .. ~ ~UC> 1.11111 • I 2W. •••• NOlr tjOelS I 201'> + i,\o '"°"" 1.10 • 13 29\lo-"' ~.'JI:;'° : ~ m:-~ IWnpf I.... 4 21 -14 GrGl-1.GU2 .. t~-._ Greytt 1 o.a • m 14"' •••• Gft'ltwl.. . . 13 1,,__ .... Gt"eller • • ,, 2~ ·~ Grumm ... s t1 ~+ I\ a.-d111 .JO 7 7 154-"' 0-•'9 .. 1 lllo ••••• G11irw.11.M 3 1!19 IS -'- GlfWllldwt •• 4Sl '"···. GlfWpl S 1S.. t 74 -"• (ilfWpl 117.. 10 7H .. I~ Gll'Wlll 2.SO . I J7"'+ 14 Gil1..fHICI AO I .. lilt ...• """~ .. 12 1 .•. Q.ilfOll 1a 1 M 2' -"' Gulfflft 1 • 51 " • '• ~lfR pfUO.. 18 ~+ '' GlfStUI 1 11 t 300 14 + ,._ o..1'°'1 .OS.10 15 S-.+ .... _,......._ HMll!I llld IO I lV.... • .... ,,. .Ml2 ., I-... IM!IM .eoa t 1 21"'+ \Ai Hallibn .IN n 134 5' -1 HMtrtP 1.10 7 4S ~ " .... ,s......... 31 1"-• .... H-..1111 ..... 6 21 ....... ~-··" " 4"+ .... ~"'· 7 " ,.,..__ ..... .._ ;1: ,; ~·~ Hat ... .I IM t 71 14 + .. ...... 7 2' .... .. =--· .. .._ .. .... t=w.,: ' Pi :~~; ~ ~r941U0 7 23 It+ \l't !4Mrlt MfJ !AS ~. "' &, ... ' 9 24Yt+ .... • 11' ' .. w.-.... It MlJ I 71'11+ 1i11 Hllt&=l..Mat2 I ltl6t .... , ....... "•' St tA.-\Ii .. _ tOib. • 1.-. ... l! =·_, .. s • 1CMi.-.. He<1!M jp !; 1~ ~ B:!:C,~: ~ ~~ ~·,,. .t2 • ,. 21 • "' ...._,._.." n~ n -1 .._.~ •• j 1 ••... E .-. 2 ai. ..... 'CVltl 110 ti ,,~ \lo ''·"' 14 ~-~~'!·: •; J-·;·~ t IO 101 ,,..,_ °" ....,, n j ,.._ ..... HiltlW 0.tt "'-· .. , ""... .. • 1 ""'. " Hll\llftMll!:f n fl~ .... ·~~i.·;~:i " 1iJ 1 ast:: ..-., :f n=+·IA .. J' h : "7.~ ~.J.~1 1 TSS -~I aq ··-1. t'@I·~ .. ij ··-~·L _ .... 1 14 t-:-'u ""-• -. ,. ut.. ' ..,..__" Of "''·•..:~· .... ''"' "'~·. Ula.. J *'•" rnANSACTIONS Sc-. IW ,. fldlll a-0.. J:::-.,it .• ~ '~~ ,_.. I I ul "' l::o'~:' '·:" .• ,,: 1"-: l•• 1 " 1 ....... "" ... \l I • ISJ ...,._ "-,:1,:a:r:; 1T ~.~ lt•O•T J w ......... \lo ••ll'ld ltl14 • ~-"-•• ,,.,t Ut• tao -\lo ? .. Int 14 tH °" IHO<k .1011 )M ,.,._""' t•Ulll 1.1110 aw ~ 14 (UO!f I.IOU 10 ~+ .... Hgffllf I , t Si -.. r::r~"1,1fi ,n im-.:·\.l TOlrpf ho" I n..+ :: l.!l'.!!f! I:...; ~ L.: 14 ~-s.. 117 i ~· 141 T'Mml.. • .. t tos llYt .. "' f"°"'"'W AO 1 J 1614-I'll TIWiflY .4011 2' t ..... Tfdw1Mr A 6 41 17.,.._ ..... T\9tt'lnt .40 7 21 11 ...... . Tlmel11< I "I' It ~ ""' Tl_M ...• eo 1 130 21"'+ "' TllM11 U0110 77 ~ 141 T~ SI JO 16\'t ..... T •• S tnhllll TOI Oh 2.11 9 5' 2' + "' Tel 41 t1 .. 1 ~·'-f .... 1-..-v. ;:::, ~, 2f ,~·~ l~~:.::: ~ ~~.~ fWA •di~­TW-'pf l .. I It~ 14 ~~::~.:: .~ ,.~ ~ TranlllC I ti.. S "'4 + "' Tr ... M:o tO • S$2 " ..... Tr-11 .SJ 7 » 10\ilt-"" TGPL-'4 .• dO .. +1 TGPLpfUO.. M lMI! .... . Trall()flF • 4 4 II .... , Tr_., 1 40 I M ZN-Ill Trev I rt I GI 10 IOU 31" + "' Tr• ... lr~ . I » + Yt ~~:~'· .. 'J ~·:·\\ Trl..,lnd • S N+"' TrlaPK .52920 u IS~ ... Tl111lyl11 .to • J07 Ullo-" , Tf'OClke11 .1019 JI 21\'t + " T11u11G I.GI I '2 Ult. ••••• TWef!Clft !O I fO llllt-14 T.,col.6b .«11> 111 n~"' TylffQI ;!!~JJ-21 -_. UAL Inc .t01' 1151 21lMl--I._ UAiL~ .40., 10 2l • ., UGI 1 40 t t ,,.,.._ Iii UGI p 2.75 • l100 31\lo + _. UMClnd I t I 1.-..-"' UMET Tr . • J 1'--Ye UOP ~ •• ~ I""'° .... UVllld 1.SO • l4 llV• • "" UAACO I.JO I II 21"' • \ti vnar<.o . .a ' 1 n"'-"' UlllHV l ... 6 JO 4'11> + \4t Uft8anc;p .M 10 14 11"1 + 1i11 u~ uon ,... SIV.-"' U UO I O• s1-.-lit U mrce ti 16 7~ • "' U111or!Q> 14 ,,. 61.'> ..... UllEI« I 3' I 13' IS.-+ "' UnElpf 4 5' .• uoo n .... V11Elpf J.n .. I ~"' Ull()Cal 2.10 I 131 Ullo• "' uoc.. pft.JO . ' 7Jl'l. "' UPM:~3 4012 ttl .. -.... UPM:Cpwi . 10 4'IYt • Unlro..i S0203 21' 10\oo-"' Unlry•I pf I . ISO •14 . .. UnBrelld II J3 ~ '4 U11lrlldlllAi . • 16 12-.-._ UnllCp .17e.. 2• ~ + Yt UnE11~~1 J2 6 100 • -"- UF'ln<AI 14 7 J3 t~ "' unGrn1., n II lM .... Ulilum 1.~ • • 27"'-.. Ullllllld 70 I 11 '°""'• "' Unhl1111 II 7 IS Siio .••.• UJerllt UM I tO 1!'11-"' UnllMM .Cl.. 41 n • "' U11Nuclr 11 239 ~ .. V11P .. M11 50 • J .... U11R~ .5'10 110 13V. • '4 tll§s~rotiltiO ,J ~-~ U .,CK I'° 1J 127 25"'-I'll u ypf 1.IO. , 21• .... -" USHom ... 9 20S 7V. • I'll USllld .4010 113 7"'-"' USLAe'4 .l2 6 17 11 -I'll US Rly .. J J -'-USSl>oe I 20 1 101 14 .... • .... us s1 .. 11 20 • ''° o --. . USTollC t.401l 4 27"'-'4 UnTe<ll 1.20 1 l76 15.,_-I'll U11Tcllpf I • t 161\oi •I UnTcllpf7.l2.. 1 117'11.-~ U11ITel I 2010 llJS IW.-I'll UnlTOlwt • '4 7 -141 U11TI Jpll . .SO .. 7 74 .... Ullltrod IO t l2 6"' + '4 u11•~•r sa 6 o ~-" u111v~ 1 • 1 ""7 ..... u11~.i 1,. • m JJ.,,_ "' ~~ ,,.,':1: ~ n -:-~ Usl leF ... . • aJ 11"9-\lo Ut•llPt.112 t SS ~. UIPLpf 210.. S llV.-'4 -V-¥- VFCp I IO 7 J 20V.-.... VSICorp tlO 6 19 19 -.... V•ll..,111 .AO I JI ,.._ • v.,1.., •n m 11-..-v. VerolllC .G5e o II , ..... v.-1 SI.II ., Vtt~ I l~ I> 1~ ..•• Vetco 20e • st 204\o-'4 VIKOm 16 SS 14~ V. VlclorC .OS. IS 'IYe • "" Val! Pw I 14 t SOI ISYI •• VaEP lllUD •• 1SO SS -"" VeEPpt?~.. 4 11-... 1" VeEP pfl.20 • noo ··~-\o V-IO U ~Yt-"" Vul<Mll I IO I I 27 ••••• -w-w-WKllOY• .S4 • 11 ,. -... Wecllllf UO.. l 51'1.-°"' Weclltttv • ?I 4 ........ W•tMart .1012 35 IJIH-1• Wa1Qr11 1. IO 1 •40 16 • "' Wl .. rl' uo. 9 • 28 WAlllut .6' I I 20 -I'll WallMu I 4 18 2J ..... WtlUlm I 20 9 '19 3Sloll-'II W•IU pft.tO.. 1 Jtl'J-"' Wardf'O ..41'1 .. 10 514 ••••• we ..... co . . lJ 111o-I'll wr11eom AO 1 54 11 ••••• Wemerl t 1' 1140 2' -"' We$h0\ 1a I 77 t2Yt • •.i. WeV!Nat .to 1 2 11\ti + I'll WnllSU I 1 J t~-'4 w .. w .. I 7' 7 '4 ?2'6-"' WMteM .2012 * 13""°-V. w.1 .. 111J .J2 u ' n~ . w • .,Gos .a ' SJ 6-..-.. Weatllrd so 7 s 111'>-"" Wttl«ll?:: 12 40 "'--.... ::::~;,r,.; ,; g ~~~= :: WtPP pl4 SO • • 110 SS • "t WtPtPe t Cl 7 JI lf> + " WMlrL «)e I 133 I'll. . . Wn8nc 1 40 1 .. a -" WllNOA 40b 7 20 11 . . . wnPM:l11 1 n ''°" • " WnPul:>I 9llb • S 11111 ••• WUnlon 1 Cl • 10'2 1"11 •••• WMJnpfOO • 2 S7 • WnU11pf2 S6 • 1 2"111 • _, WMIQEI '1 6 609 1.--"" West9pf3IO llO 41'°" • wu1mor . . s 1 . . . . WllYM:O 1 IO 9 tlO 2t -14 Weyl)rg .3' ~ • ~-V. We.,.tfir AOlt ltO 41'--'-W.yrpf UO. II 57~-lill ~IF.*1911 M 2414>-'--..1P1t MO • 11 ..... =IPllpf,.3 .. r10 611'>+1 """!~~1.101! ::: J:~= ~ 11¥'1 '"'°' . . 41 1-. •.... W?l llno I.JO 7 1 2• ..... Wl\lttMr 7 S4 6 .. ·~ WIC= .3"10 SS lJ-Wl •.12t,n 9 • =I~~ Ir! ;; 2:"'·;·" w "" .,'.J:1l 1 4~"' w 11 n , ....... Wllll«J .IOll S SI tJ-.--'- WltcEP 210 ti 10"'+ "- WlsGM 1.70 IO II 20 --WIKel-IAO 9 22 ~ '-W~..-~ '* t i ~ .. "' w11co uo 7 14 JO + --w ttrO .60 S 14 14 -.... wotww IOI t 7 ,.,._ " w-tco • 7 " 11-. ... .. WoodCCl.10. 4 2 I ... .. Wo.cl~et IO IS l1l 1'.,._ Ito Wolwlll I.Cl t 14S 2Sllo ••• 11 =pftlO . to 11 • "' .,,_IO S ~l\lt WV 2. . .012 J 1011o-'-wy1y -ri.:..Y~ I~ .... X-!! 1.tolJ •tt SI,._~ lhraqt ..-t 4' ,,_.__ \\ l:~. ': ~ :~~:: ' A AO . 2 ,, .... _ _, ta .lilt> 4 SI 11..--- WeCa ' 11 '"' .. .. ~1•tt t 11 us t•~ ... . 1114 A t a ,,...._ " Md!J. '!lbn!!J ,,, ,..,, 8 DAIL V PILOT ,t J J . Credit Shop IJooklet Luts Co1t1 87 SYLVL\ POllTE& About atx months aco. when h1a wUe'• car collaPMd. John Quinn. the 32-year-old bead of Maine's Bureau ol CoGlumer ProtocUon, knew be would bav• to take out a loan to b'9' • replaceme.nt. • Before Jooklnc for another car. be decided to estimat. wbat bis loUf mtpt coet. With tbe belp of b1a st.atr, be ftl\ll"Od out tbt monlblJ payment.a and total finance charges at various inier.t rates on tbe f',000 be needed. A couple of per<?entace p0inta oo a three-year auto loan added up to S2QO-plu.s aavetl or loaL BE DECIDED TO PROVIDE CONSUJIEBS wttb WI infonnation, so they would know preclaely bow mudl a loan would cost. Thus. Maine's Bureau of Consumer Protectioo'1 pocket·aize credit guide wu born. The paperbaclt bookla eoDJ\st.a ol three sets of euy-to-rad tables, livtnc the monthly payments and fmance costs of loans at varioua lD· Money'S Worth terest rates for various periods o! time. T~e tebles cover auto, furniture, home im· provement. appliance. mobile home and m~eloans. The prospecU ve --QM-. -----bomebuyer can, for instance, learn at a glance that a 30- year, $50,000 mortgage at 8 percent would cost $387 a month for a total finance charge of $82,080. The same mortgage at 8'1'.I percent would cost you $384 a month for a total fanance charge of $88.406. If the I~ of the mortgage is cut to 2$ years. the total finance charge would fall to $72,2.65. but the monthly payments would rise to $408. IN ADDmON TO mE LOAN COST TABLES, the "Down Easter's Pocket Credit Gulde" also contains some credit shopping tips. Among them: -"Put some pressure on the lender. Many lenderi think that consumers are only Interested in bow much the monthly payments are .... Your first question should be, 'What's the annual percentage rate?' Those who never ask usually end up paying the long dollar.'• -"Mobile home and car dealers usually get a certain percentage of the finance charge oo contracts they arrange. nus 'commission' ... can result in higher interest rates. Lower rates can usually be found by going direcUy to a bank or credit union.•• -"'l'HE BIGGEST SINGLE PROBLEM IN the credit market," says Quinn, is that people don't shop for the best buy. "Even those people who search lbe newspapers for grocery store specials and cut-rate sales or clothing and ap- pliances don't think about shopping around for the best in- terest rate. And one reason for their failure to bargain bunt for credit is the lack of any single resource to which lbey can tum." Quinn's office has been flooded with requests for lhe guide and reprint rights. Maine's largest credit union bu bought 10,000 copies. A United Auto Worker's consumers d · fairs spokeswoman says the union's central and regional headquarters are considering reprinting the guide. Massachusetts is working on a version. New Hamps~e publisher William Loeb wants to distribute the bookiit among bis readers. Federal Truth in Lending law went on the books years ago to require lenders to disclose full costs of loans and to help consumers learn the rules of the credit marketplace. But Quinn considers this law a "well·inlended failure" because the disclosures (even when given> come too late ror advance planning. Copies of the guide cost 50 cents. Send a stamped self· addressed envelope to the Bureau of Consumer Protection, State House, Augusta, Me. 04330. SpeciaJ rates are given to groups. Energy Saver Snug .'Habitat' Keeps Out Cold AMHERST. Mass. CAP> -Mike Edds says he's bard.t1 noticed the cold during this coldest winter in years, and be' a used only one-fourth the fuel it normally would take to beat a bo'1Se the size of his. But the normal house doesn't have lriple-gla:ed win· dows, three inches or insulation inside the doors and copper plates absorbing sunlight on the roof. EDDS IS RESIDENT ENGINEER of Solar Habitat 1, an experiment in alte.-nate-energy housing at the Universl· ty of Massachusetts here. As partoflbedeal, beano his wile Peggy get to live rent-free in the home. The "habitat" ian't finished yet. and neither the 200 square feet of cooper plate nor the 60-foot-bJgb windmill that runs a "wind furnace" b fully operational. Even ao, Edds said, they functioned. "I didn't really < notice the cold," h• ( ] aaid. "It hasn't been ENERGY that bad .. .I took read· Inga and the pre- -----------· Uminary results 1bowed that we used on.fourtll the amouol of beat a normal house this size would use during the firs! two weeb of January. That wu primarily because of the specially d• slped insulation." WALLS AND FLOORS ARE INSULATED with alx inches ol fiberglass, the roof panels have eight inches d fl!Mrblasa. There's oae tncb of polystyrene insulation oo the outllde ol the wood walls, and over that is a flberllau melb aad a compound of cement and plastic . Tbodoon are biib-dem:tty plywood wtth three lncbel ol inluladan. tbe windows have three layers of etua, each ft\ted wttb a fllter, and lncomina cold air "I.I preheated bJ the •unttabt th.rough the wlodowa," said Edds • The two-bedroom house ts deslped ao that lt can be taken down, moved and put together •=· lt'1 about 1,D> 1quare feec.. tbe slie of an averace New · land bome. TllB BN'JDB noncr IS BACKED by man than. qu..,.. ol a mUUoo dollars in &rant.a rrom dlree fedsal a1eacl•. private cont.rlbut.on and UM Unlventt7 of llwlduetta. mectrtdty 1enerated by the wlDclmill and tbe -· we.rmu. from the copper-plated lolar colHctcn I.I dal~ to beat --IA a a,ooo.1allon storqe tank in tbe buem Tbe ct.ID la GOW betna tested. The water la QPPOMd to IMat tbe ._ throqb • cuwea.Uonal clrcu1atln1 bOt w~ ·~· R•l*a 1 b.M u auxillary ~ IU huUnl 11t""-1 •kkll •Clneen bellnt wW be requtred to proflde oo rnc.'fi thD •~t oltbe boa;-r• heattna. TRI: SNGINBW SAY llOa• t.bu 21 pereent ol U. e1*0 ~ l9 tbe Um&.d SUU. I& med for buttn4 udcoallDI~ udbelltialdomestlo w1i.r. Ti.,\ila.roilte tJMN. ~ a{ a.at tbnl mu== boai• •located tbat IOCDe oocnblDatloa ol tolar ·a wtndmtD• c.Jd HY.e .a.o..t.• barrNa d pft .... 1ear per Mme. ~ tMY .. ~ Odm 8Ultable llJPlkatiOM GI tbe ~tam.N COClld r.nli la an -ualNYIAI WtUata ta. , u ....... olDurlJ •m1llklin Mrrtill of~,.. ~. I •